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•

to- The Daily Sentin~l. Middl~p&lt;&gt;rl·Pilmcrny. 0., Munday. July 14. l9HU

. Ford
Auditorium

Veterans

Memorial
Building

'

r--Ai=e_a_nt;;ib;-1

VETERANS MEMORIA~
ADMiiSIONS SATURDAY-Cora
Folmer, Pomeroy; Li.nnie Crary,
Reedsville; John Krider, Long Bot·
·Herman Wamer
tom; Cloyd .Brookover, Pomeroy;
Herman Warner, · 88, lonner . Carol Faddis, Guysville; Lawrence
Pomeroy businessman, died SUnday
Hoffner, Syracuse.
at Veterans Hospital, Johnson City,
DISCHARGES SATURDAY-Da·
Tenn.
rah McCarty, Harold Jeffers, DOnna
. Williams, William Wise, Ethel
Mr. Warner owned and operated
Warner's Barber Shop lor many Nelson, Eugene Fink, Ora Sirtclair,
years. He was a veteran of World Olice Winebrenner, Gladys ShUIJlo
War I and was employed many way, Doinna Dixon, Roger Athey,
Lucille Garten, Robert Dailey, Bon·
years ago as a street car conductor.
nie
Jackson, Luella Burson.
He was preceded in death by his
SUNDAY
ADMISSIONs-James
wife, Frances Warner and son, Bill
Pomeroy.
Henry,
Warner.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES-Dennis
He is survived by one daughter, Eynon, John Krider.
Mrs. Charles (Anna Lee) Grimm,
Fla,. ; four grandchildren, Jim War· ·
ner, Sryacuse; Jay Warner.. MidHOMECOMING SET
dleport; Mark and Claudia Grimm,
South Bethel .Church, located one
Fla.; two great granddaughters, and one-half miles wes to Eastern
Nicole and Tara Warner, Syracuse.
High School, will hold its annual
Funeral services will be held Wed- homecoming on July W, with mor·
nesday at 10 a.m. at Ewing Chapel ning service beginning at 9 a.m. A
'with the Rev. Willir.m Middleswarth basket lunch will be served at noon. ·
officiating. Burial will be in Mt. HerA songfest will highlight the
mon Cemetery. Friends may call at homecoming with singing by . the
the funeral home Tuesday from 7 to Sunrise group at I :30 p.m. The
·9. The family requests no flowers.
public is invited .

Renaissance Center

Meigs board Bdopts de icit.budget
BY LANCE OU\'ER
The Meigs · Local Board of
Education adopted a deficit budget
Monday night totaling $4,004,695, of
which an estimated $1,224,000 will be
generated thrdiJgh local taxes. The
exact tax figures are• not yet
available, according to Board
Treasurer Jan~ Wagner.
Other local ' receipts, including
tuition, transportation lees and earnings on investments, account for

$59,200. Local non-revenue sources
not itemized will add $1,025 bringing
the total of money generated fro!Jl
local sources to $1,284,225.
A total ct $2,719,sro will be
received from state sources,
$2,518,000 of which is from the Foundation Program. ' ·
•
·
This money, plus transfers from
other funds brings the total receipts
to the $4,004,695 estimate, to which a

projected balance of .$110,696.94
from 1980 is added to bring the total
of receipts and beginning balance to
$4,115,391.94.
·-The budget provides for a total ex·
penditure of $4,461,722 which would
create a deficit of$346,330.06.
Wagner·pointed out, however, that
revenues from local taxes would
almost certainly be higher than the
estimates in the budget, so the board
decided to adopt the budget as

presented.
. The expenditures include
$2,719,550 for instructional services
. and $1,699,472 for sujfporting ser·
.vices including administrative stall,
pupil support and business expenses. Extracurricular activities
accounted for $31,700 or seven-tenths
of one percent of the total ex·
penditure. ·
In the oply other business of the

Joe Louis

Ar~na

CQbo
Hall

enttne
VOL 31 NO. 64

FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO TUESDAY, JULY IS 1980
.

•

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I

1981 budget

•

Philip A. Hart
Plaza

Cobo
Arena

·gets approval

DETROIT'S REVITALIZED RIVERFRONT wil! be the focus of the 1980 Republican Co~ventioo, which convenes July 14
in the Joe Louis Arena. Other convention events will take place at Cobo Hall and tbe Renaissance Center·

Detroit hosts· Republican
Detroit - site of the 1980
Republican National Convention ~
could by no stretch of the
(Jpagination be,called a Republican
town.
Wayne County - the county that.
includes Detroit- gave Jimmy Carter more than 60 percent of its vote
in the 1976 presidential election.
That Gerald Ford went on to win the
state illustrates the dichotomy between Democratic, predominantly
black, heavily unionized Detroit and
the rest of Michigan.

co~vention

With a 1976 population of 1,314,000, promise of jobs in .those factories
Detroit is the sixth largest city in the brought waves of black emigrants
United States. It lost nearly 200,000 from the South. Today blacks make
residents between 1970 anq 1976, up about 55 percent of the city's
population.
however.
Sections of Detroit still bear the
Founded in 1701 as a French fort
and trading post, Detroit first gained scars of the 1967 riots in which 40
economic importance with com- . were killed, 2,000 were injured and
pletion of the Eric Canal in 1825. But 5,000 were left homeless. But the
the city's greatest period of growth spirit of Civic renaissance has been
did not begin unti11899, when R. E. in the air since the completion three
years ago of Renaissance Center,
Olds built Its first auto factory.
Begiiming in the . 1840s, the part of a massive downtown
redevelopment program.

Ohioans get royal treatment
DETROIT (AP) -Ohioans at the
National Republican Convention are
being treated royally - yacht rides,
fancy food and drink ,-and escorted
tours of more notable Motor City
digs.
.
The activities got under way Sunday under sunny skies in the affluent
subllrb of Bloomfield Pills where
their host, designated by the city,
.was Walter Teninga, a vice
president of the K-Mart Corp.

United. ..

Sunday night, it was another
reception, poolside at the Michigan
Inn in suburban Southfield. The 77member Ohio delegation and the In·
diana contingent, with 54 delegates,
are sharing the skyscraper hotel
which has a 24-hour health spa
featuring a sauna along with indoor
and outdoor swinuning pools.
The delegates and, alternates will
be guests for lunch Tuesday at the
Strohs Brewing Co. Wednesday,
· there will be another lunch at an an·
· tiquecar show, followed on .Thursday
' by yacht rides along the Detroit
River.

; Continued from page 1J

?uestion remail)ing is his selection
of a vice presidential running mate.
Mrs. Pope, a ·veterim member of
the Ohio House, commented Sunday
that ''I think it is nice we are going to
hold hands and walk off together into
the sunset. But daggone it, I wish I
had something to vote on."

From the A,noclated ~

CONTINUES ALL THIS WEEK

The economy of "Motor City" is,

of course, dominated by the troubled
auto industry. Hence, the recession
is expected to run longer and deeper .
in Detroit than in most of the rest of
the CQuntry.
As the auto industry has
dominated Detroit's economy, the
strongly Democr~.tic United Auto
Workers union" bas dominated
Detroit's politics. But if the economy
remains sluggish, many
autoworkers are expected to violate
tradition - and the advice of their
union leaders - by voting
Republican in November.
Naturally, the Republicans are
hoping that other traditionally
Democratic constituencies will do
the same. In fact, a major reason
behind the Republlcans' choice of
Detroit lor their convention was to
demonstrate the party's
reawakened interest in minority and
urban voters.
This will be Detroit's first majorparty convention. But a third party
once held in organizational meeting
some miles down the road in
Jackson. The year was 1854 and the
party was the Republican.

15 die in nursi.Dg home fire
MISsiSSAUGA, Ontario- Alire at a nursing home killed at least 15
people Monday night and 35 more were being treated for smoke
il\halation, fire officials said.
A spokesman for the Extendicate Ltd. nursing home, in this conr
munity west of Toronto, said the fire sterted on the third floor - where
most of the chronically-ill Jll!tients were l~ted - and forced the
removal of all198 residents of the home .
About W ambulances helped with the evacuation.
Some patients were being treated for smoke inhalation across the
street at Mississauga General Hospital.

BIG SAVINGS ON SUMMER
CLOTlnNG - MEN AND BOYS WOMEN'S
AND CHILDREN
•MEN'S SHORTS
•WOMEN'S DRESSES

•WOME

Four die in howling alley bloodbath

•JUN.IOR TOPS AND BLOUSES

•CHILDREN JEANS

•MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

•MEN'S SHIRTS

•MEN'S SUMMER CAPS

•BOYS' SHIRTS

•CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR

•CIULDREN'S TOPS

•WOMEN'S TOPS AND SHORTS

•CHILDREN'S SUNSUITS

HOUSTON - The bowling alley had been robbed just tlie night
before, so four young people volunteered to spend the night and guard
against burglars. When they were seen again, three had been shot to
death execution-sty)e.
·
Investigators said t)ley hoped the lone survivor of the !&gt;loodbath - a
teen-ager who 'fas shot in the heacl - could give them a clue to help
track the killers.
Investigators speculated that robbery was the motive for the bloody
break-in. About $800 was taken from a cash register near the bodies,
police said. The four were apparently told to lie on the floor and then · ·
each was shot once in the head.
Police identified those killed as Stepben Allen Sims, 25, assistant
manager of Fair Lanes Windfeyn Bowling Center in . northwest
Houston; Tonuny Lee Temple, a 17-year-()ld employee of the alley;
and Temple's girlfriend, Arden Alane Felsher;lilao 17.
Gregory Garner, 18, also an employee, was in critical cohdition .
following the shootings and authorities said he may lose an eye.

ELBERFELDS IN
'

WORK NOT COMPLETED
The painting being done on Hobson
Bridge is not completed according to
Manual Gheen. Painting will completed sometime this week,
however.

Donna M. Pope, co-chairman of
confronting me right now" and that
the Ohio. delegation, has one small
he hadn't made a decision.
"I am not sitting here with complaint about the convention,
MEETS THURSDAY
someone tucked away in the back of which has little left to decide.
The MaJ~!!olia Club will meet ThurRonald Reagan is virtually
my mind, comfortably waiting for
sday July 17, at 6:30 p.in. at the
the time to reveal it," sa'id Reagan. assured of the presidential
nomination,
and
the
only
major
roadside park .on U. S. 33. Everyone
"I have not made a decision and I
is
to bririg their own table service,
am still gafhering input."
and cover¢ dish.
beverage
Reagan said he doesn't expect to
MEETS
WEDNESDAY
make his fmal decision until late
The Southern Board of E&lt;lucation
IN HOSPITAL
,_,ednesday night alter a committee
will
meet
Wednesday
at
7
p.m.
in
the
GeraldM.
Tate, Bidwell, is a
delegates shows up at his suite on
high
school
cafeteria.
patient at Holzer M.edical Center.
the 69th floot,.·of tfle Detroit Plaza
Preceding the meeting all in·
Tate will celebrate his birthday on
Hotel to notify11jim that he has been
voted the party's presidential terested ·persons in the district are July 22. cards would be appreciated
invited to review the budget lor the
and may be sent to him in care of the
nomination.
hospital. His room number is 429.
On the eve of the convention, an calendar year oll981.
Associated Press survey gave .---------------------------1
Reagan 1,692 delega~es out of the
total of 1,994. Bush had 168, Rep.
John Anderson, now running as an
independent, had 21 and 113 were uncommitted.
Assured of the nomination,
Reagan also was buoyed by public
opinion polis showing him leading
President carter._...AIL..Msociated
Press-NBC poll said Reagan Was the
choice of 41 percent of likely voters.
carter was sup)iorted by 27 percent
and Anderson by 18 percent.
In addition, Republicans also are
touting surveys indicating a growing
number of people now believe the
GOP is better able to deal with the
major issues lacing the country.
Bush arrived· at the convention on
Sunday and planned fonnally to
release his delegates today and urge
them to vote for Reagan
As they arrived at the convention,
several men commented on , their
own vice presidential prospects:
Fonner Texas Gov .. John B. Connally said, "I'm one of the few men
in America, I believe, who's not
available."
Not only does the Columbia Gas "Everyday En·
"I'd take it so fast it would make
ergy
Saver's Guide" make great readmg, It makes·
his head spin," said Rep. Philip
grf\'al sense. Especially if you're out to ~ve money.
Crane of Illinois.
It's full of tips that you and your fam1ly can use
. Neither Connally or Crane is
evei-yday Lo help m~e your home more .energy
effic1ent. Which 1s good to know. And even bettA&gt;r,
·anyone's list of leading prospects.
most of the ideas won't cost you a cent. They t:ake
Senate Republican Leader
only a little extra care. but can lead to real savmgs
Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee,
in energy use.
·
..
·
the target of a strong conservative
And you can't beat the price. The booklet is t'nf.·
So ask for a copy: "The Everyday Energy Saver.•
campaign to block his nomination,
Guide " available on I{ from Columb1a Clas. All1t
said he has told Reagan "that it is
takes 'is a phohe cal or visit to your Columbia ;
my personal preference that he
office~ and a desire to save.
choose someone else,"
.
· Laxalt said he was startled by a
published report that he had been
eliniinilted and that he called
Reagan aides in Los Angeles who
Still your best ener~ v.alue. ,
assured him the s.tory )"as incorrect.
'r'·~
And we want to keep-It,..that way.
, "I. think it's Wide open,." . Said
Laxalt.
'

POMEROY ,~

Residents feelbigfoot has gone.
WEST MANSFIELD, Ohio - Residents of rural west central Ohio
seem convinced that Bigfoot apparently has decided to leave the area
and head elsewhere.
No sightings of the legendary creature h.Bve been reported since
mid.June, and the nonnally calm area of Union and Ugan counties
around West Mansfield appears to be almost back to normal.
·
The creature's supposed visit has left its mark. Residents say
Bigfoot T-shirts are being sold in a beauty shop.
" There haven't been any more sightings for some reason. He's
probably left or something," said IS.year-()ld Keith Warrick. "I
haven't heard nobody talk about him at all."
Bigfoot's trademark was a series of footprints measuring up to ro inches In diameter, which wereJound on the farm.
'

'I'

'·
At the Farmers Bank , how
well we do business is linked
to the type service we offer.
And at the Farmers Bank , we ·
think we offer fast , e fficient
and professio nal banking service. The kind you expect
. from the only community
baiik. Service. It means a
lot to us at the Farmers
Bank.

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Publisher
claims article malicious
.
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - An attorney for New Hampshire newspaper
publisher William Loeb says a March 1977 Hustler magazine article
was mallcious and designed to discredit his client.
Attorney Tom Tyack said the profile of the 74-year-old Loeb "was a
hatchet job, pure (lnd simple." His comments came during a hearing
Monday on a $10 million libel suit against Hustler and Its publisher,
Larry Flynt.
Attorneys for Flynt have asked Franklin County Common Pleas
Judge Frederick Williams to dismiss the case since similar suits fUed
by Loeb against other publishing companies were dismissed.
Tyack said HUstler's story, which was based on a book by a former
Manchester Union Leader reporter, "dulled that hatchet some,'' but
left no question of the intended malice. Loeb owns the Union Leader.

Fonner singer pleads no contest
CINCINNATI -Former lelevislon singer Dave McCoy has pleaded
no contest to 10 CQupts involving the alleged photographing of girls under the age oll3.
.
McCoy pleaded no contest Monday to five counts of creating obscene
material lor commercial exploitation, four counts of gross sexual imposition and one misdemeanor count of JIOII&amp;essing obscenity.
McCoy, a vocalist on Cincinnati television shows hosted by Bob
Braun and Nick'Ciooney from 1969 to 1975, faces a possible maximum
•
sentence of 22 to 65_ years, plus a $33,500 fine.
Attorney Thomas Stueve had contended that the allegedly obscene
material was obtained Illegally since Eastman Kodak Co. had
released McCoy's photographs to someone othe~ than McCoy.

,,

OSCAR CASTO

,Two veteran employes at the
Philip Sporn Plant in New Haven
were recently promoted. They were
Oscar 0. Casto, Jr. and Frank N.
Reynolds, maintenance machine
A' s. .
Casto was born at Millwood, w.
Va., and graduated fl'j)m Ripley
High School at Ripley, W. Va. Casto
was employed in 1952 as a coal han.dler in the yard department and also
worked as a barge attendant.
In 1953, he m!&gt;Ved into the Maintenance Department as a Maintel1jlllce Helper and held the
'positions of Maintenance Mechanic
C, ~intenance Mechanic B, and
Maintenance Mechanic A until his
recent promotion to Maintenance

WEllSTON .c.. Paul M. Weyrich,
executive director for the Commlttee lor the· Survival of a Free
Congress, a bi-partisan political aclion committee will be the speaker
at the Annual' Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council Golf Tournament
and Dinner, it was announced todsy
by Robert E. (Bob ) Evans,
president of the SEORC.
The golf outing and dinner will be
held at the Fairgreens Country Club
on Thursday, July 24. Weyrich will
speak following the 6: 30 banquet.
Deadline for golf reservations will
be Tuesday, July 22.
Golfers from throughout
southeastern Ohio will participate in
a handicap tournament with tfe.o!f 1
time beginning at 8 a.m. and con·
tinuing throughout the day. The
Board of Governors and
Professional Bill Gooch of
Fairgreens Country Club, 'have
hosted the event for the past several
years.
, .Weyrich is also President of the
! Committee for the Survival of a Free
Congress, Inc., a non-partisan
.organization engaging in analysis of
the political structure of the U. S.
govenunent. Weyrich came to
Washingion following the 1966 election as press secretary to Senator
. Gordon Allott of Colorado, a position
he held lor four years. In Mr. Allott's
last two years in the Senate.
Weyrich assisted him with his work
on the Transportation Ap·

Variable cloudiness, wann . and hwnld 1wlth a· chance of tljun·
derstorms through Wednesday. Highs Wednesday 9(1.95. Lots tonight
70.75. '
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The Community Owned Bank ·
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WIESBADEN, West Germany
(AP) 7 Rich\mt Queen, the '2&amp;-year-..
old U.S. vice consul freed from 250
days' captivity in Irlll) because of ill
h,ealth, suffers from multiple
sclerosis and will return to tbe
United states · "in the hext few
days,'' a doctor at the U.S. Air Force
hospital bere said'todsy.
"He will resume his duties as a
foreign service officer 81! soon as his
health permits," Dr. Jerome
Michael Korcak told a news con·
ference at this sprawling base.
"Mr. Queen developed symptoms
of the disease in December 1979
while he . was beld hostage in
Tehran," Korcak said. "His symptoms during the past eight months

Weather forecast ·

Meroill&amp; FDIC:

ExteDded Ohio arorecast: Thursday through Saturday: Fair.through
the period. Highs ranging from the low.80s north to the low 90s south.
,. LOws ranging from the low 60s north to the mld-7011 south.

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propriations Committee. Alliott ~as
Chairman of the Senate GOP Policy
Committ~.
.
.
.
He also served as spec1al p·-~tant
to Senator Carl T. Curtis of
Nebraska from 1973 through 1977.
During the period ,Weynch founded
and became the fii'St . Pres1d~nt r!
the Hentage Foundstion, which IS
now a fDB!Or re:'earch OJ)Ctration in
the ";'Ilion s capita.!. He gave up the
Pres1d~ncy of Hentage. to found the
Conuruttee lor theSurv~val of a Free
· Congr~ss m 1974 and has headed the
orga?W'tion eve~ smce.
.
Pnor to coRlUlg to Washington
~eyrich was a broadcaste~ and
Jo.urnalist lor seven y73rs pegmrung
wtth ra~o stations .m sou~eastern
W1sconsm and mcludmg the
Milwaukee Sentinel where Weyrlch
was C1ty Hall reporter, the CBS al·
filiate in Milwaukee where he was
News Director. He r.eceived
numerous awards for his jour·
nalistic pursuits during those years.
Mr. Weyrich now authors a monthly
column for the Conservative Digest.
Tickets for the golf tournament
. and dinner can be purchased from
Rhod Mills, Logan Chamber of Commerce, .Nelsonville Board of Trade,
Athens Chamber of Commer.ce, Bernie Fultz, Gallipolis ,Chamber of
Commerce, Roger ~rron, Portsmouth Chamber of Commerce,
Ironton Chamber of Commerce,
Howard Thompson', Jackson Chamber of Commerce, carl Dahlberg, S.
R Cline, and Jim Blower.

Queen suffers from
multiple sclerosis

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Supervisor. The Castos reside in
New Haven.
Reynolds was born in Point
Pleasant, W. Va. and graduated
from Wahama High School in
Mason, W. Va. His employment at
Philip Sporn Plant began in 1966,
when he was hired as a. U~ility
Worker.
In 1969, be moved to the Main·
tenance Department and held the
positions of Maintenance Helper,
Maintenance Mechanic C, Main·
tenance Mechanic B, and Maintenance Mechanic A until his recent
promotion to Maintenance Supervisor. The Reynolds reside in Long
Bottom.

ByKaUeCrow
Village Solicitor Fultz ·and request
Middleport Village Council Monthat Fultz notify Point View Cable of
day night approved its 1981 budget
its decision. Council indicated It
totaling $536,241.53. The measure
would like a collection point lor
must now be approved by- the Meigs · cable lees be located in the village.
County Budget Conunission.
In further action, council held a
In other major business, the
lengthy discusson on disturbances in
resignation of councilman Charles
the village at two local business
B. Mullen was accepted Monday
establishments. Council agreed that
night during a regular meeting of
residents were entitled to peace and.
t!Je Middleport Village Council.
quiet and that the situation would be
Councilman Marvin Kelly, who corrected.
A third reading was approved on
read the resignation, recommended
an
ordinance increasing sewage
that Jack Satterfield be named to fill
W percent. The new rate
rates
the vacancy. No action was taken on
becomes
effective Aug. 1.
the suggestion, but council agreed to
Upon
the
recnunendation of Harry
name a replacement at the next •
Evans, village financial advisor,
meeting.
council
agreed to invest $30,000 in
C&lt;iuncil decided to pave Russell
certificates
of deposit. Clerk Jon
Street, Dock Street, a portion of
Buck
announced
all grades of
Headley Street and the alley behind
gasoline
from
Ashland
on were
Foreman and Abbott's and North
decreased
three
cents
pergallon
efSecond Street as far as possible.
fective
June
28.
It was indicated enough funds are
A request to transfer a liquor
available to purchase 425 tons of
from Pete and Patricia Kloes
license
asphaltic hot mix lor the projects.·
to
Marvin
T. Hill was approved H.
Council agreed to amend the orKelly
opposedthe
motion.
dinance on cable television whereby
Mayor
Hoffman's
report ·for the
customers will be notified befor&amp;
month of June in the amount of
service is discontinued.
$2,885.50
was approved.
Mayor Fred Hoffman will contact

SEORC s.p eaker named .

WUISVIU:.E, Ky. - The body of Elvin Linville, !!8, of Louisvjlle,
has been recovered from the Ohio River at LouiBville. s
· .
The Jefferson County river patrol recovered the body Sunday night
between the Kennedy and Second Street bridges atter a search of more
than 24 hours for the mlin who drowned Saturd!lydurtng, raft race.
LouiBville pollee quoted witnesses as saying Linville was swept un-'
der a barge while trying to rescue two people who were thrown off a
raft near the finiah line. The two, Ronnie Hayea, 38, of Louisville, and
his son, Troy ,13, wel'e rescued by another boat. ··
Linville, an employee of the Louisville Water Co., was among about
1,000 people who took part in the fifth annual Ramblin'. River Raft
Race.

Farmers·
Bank

FRANK REYNOLDS

Announce promotions

Body recovered from Ohio River

A free how-to guide
for the frugal ·

C~U •MBI~ GAS

board member Dr. Keith Rlags.
Board member Larry Powell said
the board and OAPSE negotiating
teams would meet Tuesday evening.
Present at the meeting were
Superintendent David Gleason,
TreaSurer Jane Wagner and Board
members Larry Powell, Dr. Keith
•Riggs, Robert Snowden and Richard
Vaughan. Not present was Board
President carol Pierce.

•

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meeting, the B.oard voted 4-0 to
request an advance of $415,000 in
local taxes .
The bo;lrd then went into
executive session for one hour and 43
minutes And adjourned irrunediately
afterwards, •
·
Progress of contract negotiations
with OAPSE and peJ;SOnnel vacancies were discussed during the
executive session, according to

"·

·have included numbness 'and abo
normal sensations in his upper extremities and .some dilliculty· with
balan~ associated 'lfith nausea ilnd
vomiting."
DEADLINE NEARS
To avoid a 10 percent peoalty,
secoo,d half 1979 real estate taxes
must be paid by 4 p.m. July 18.
· Tax'books will be closed at that
lime to balanceut and add
penalties to unpaid taxes. Tues
paid by mall must be postmarked •
no .Inter lllan July 18. Books wlll
be open after Aug I, for payment
ol delinquent taxes.

.-

Heat death toll
nearing 600

By C. W. MIRANKER
AS&amp;oclated Press Writer
As the skyrocketing death toll
neared 600 1in the nation's threeweek-()ld heat wave, police in Allan·
ta · blared warniilgs 'Q'er loud·
speakers urging people to leave
home lor cool shelters and an army
of Red Cross volunteers in Kalisas
City delivered fans to the poor and
elderly languishing in Missouri's
qeadly heat.
Missouri's governor placed the
National Guard on alert and
declared a state of emergency Mon·
day as the state's heat-related
deaths mounted to 131.
"Missourians are suffering and
dying," sald Gov. Joseph Teasdale,
who is seeking $5 · million to $8
million in federal aid to provide fans
for the poor and old.
&amp;kansas Gov. Bill Clinton also
declared a state of emergency as
hundreds . of miles of highway
buckled and meltell and ·farmers
assessed cattle and crop losses in the
millions of dollars. He has requested
$11.7 million in federal aid .lor the
highway system.
The heat wave has claimed 91
lives in Arkansas, and in an unusual
weekendlaceldent, a Uttle Rock girl
was burned when she was sprayed
with water fnm an outdoor hose
that had been in the sunlight, doctors
said.
The death toll in 16 states that
have sweltered in unrelenting heat
stood at 598 Tuesday, according to
ari ·unofficial count by The
Associjlted Press. .
Heat and ~rought have killed

millions of chickens in Arkansas and
Florida, where citrus crops also are
showing signs of stress. In West
Texas, cattlemen are selling herds
early is pastureland bakes. And
without rain, the Illinois corn crop
may be stunted, agronomists say.
As the mercury in Kansas City
reached 109 degrees Monday above 100 for the 13th time in 15 days
- AI Cohn, a ~year Red Cross
veteran, and his partner, Larry
Widener, drove door-to-door
delivering fans.
Since the distribution program .
began Friday, about 1,000 electric
fans have been donated to the Red
Cross and Salvation Army and some
300 have been delivered.
In Georgia, where 45 people have
died in the heat, officials declared a
state of emergency in Macon, Floyd
County and Valdosta, where tbe
temperature was 108 degrees Mon-.
day.
In Atlanta, police used loud·
speakers to announce a van service
to an air conditioned neighborhood
center as they patrolled povertystricken areas.
·
In Birmingham, Ala., where temperatures hit 103 degrees Monday,
Mayor Richard Arrington called for
a coordinated relief program to open
emergency shelters, distribute electric fans and medical infonnation.
Other high temperatures Monday
wece l1l degrees in Falls City, Neb.,
108 in Wichita Falls, Texas, and 105
degrees in Dothan, Ga. Statewide
deaths in Texas stood ilt 96, and Del
, Rio had its 28th consecutive day of
loo-degreetemperatures or more.

·Drug trial continu,es
The trial of Dennis C. Butcher,
cbarged with aggravated trafficking
in drugs began Monday, July 14, in
•Meigs County Common Pleas Gourt
before J11dge John C. Bacon, according to Meigs County Prsecuting
.Attorney Fred W. Crow,III.
The defendant waived his right to
a ·trial by jury and the case ill being
heard by Judge Bacon alone.
Prosecutor Crow, .presented his
case Monday through a series of witnesses and the introduction of
several item of evidence.
The defense began its presentation
late Mond!y and will probably con,

elude oo Tuesday.
Aggravated trafficking is li felony
of the first degree. Tbe penalty, If
the defendant is found guilty, could
be a tenn of Imprisonment ina penal
Institution fo this state of not less
than five years nor more than 25
years, and a possible fine of$10,000.
The minimum term is set by statute
in c!rug cases of this type where the
drug involved and the quantit) involved make it a ml?re serious of· .
fense.
Butcher is being represented by
JamesCiifley:
·

.,

'

.

�)

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tu~sday, July 15, 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 15, 1980

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

Opinions
.
&amp;
.
.Comments -.

ou~,:oL.~

.

Jt1aj~r Leagu~

W'RI~VILL~ SOil~, IJ.C.

©~7SC.I-4ie6CI-IE"

W~AT'HER ...
U~~ULY . KIDS ... 00
MOTELS -T~I~

gAo

TI-lE WORSC"
\S l31.ll,)lfol' GAS ·

+OR A

LIKE 'mAT MESS UP

Houston

•

Soviets-fear
s~ militarism

h
•
d
Amencans support t Ir party concept

for president in a speech heralclng a
"new frontier. "
Ten years ago, Premier Alexei
Kosygin and President N•olai
Podgorny were rt&gt;-~~ppointed to their
posts by the Supreme Soviet in
Moscow.
. Five years ago, America's Apollo
and the Soviet Union'11 Soyuz
'spacecraft blast off on their way to a
rendezvous in space.
•
Last year, in a somber ad!jtess,
President Carter said Americif was
suffering "a crisis of confidlnce"
that threatened to destroy its social
and political fabric.
•
Thought For Today: Then. are
people·who want to be everywlia-e at
once, and they get nowhere "7. Carl
Sandburg (1878-1967).

•

f

•

.

By Robert Walters
ST. LOUIS (NEA) - One of the
most intriguing 'pieces of fresh information about the chances of success for Rep. John R. Anderson's
presidential campaign comes !roll) a
recent nationwide survey that didn't
even mention Anderson's name.
The little-noticed publi~-opinion
poll, .conducted by the Gallup
Organization, found that aimost onethird of aU registered volers interviewed would favor a new centrist party in preference to either the
Republicans or the Democrats.
Perhaps most significant, the
broadest base of support for such a
new political enterprise is here in
the Midwest '- not in the East or
West, where much of Andti~son's
backing has been identified in other
public-opinion surveys.
The Gallup Poll asked respondents
to choose among Republicans,
Democrats and "a new center party
that would appeal to people whose
'political views are middle-of-theroad, in between those of
Republicans and Democrats."
1'he results showed the
hypothetical center party was
preferred by 31 percent, surpassed
only by the Democrats' 36 percent.
The Republicans were favored by
only 10 percent, \vhile the remaining

13 percent had no opinion.
A regional analysis, however,
showed that the center party was the
favorite of 39 percent in the Midwest, making it by far the most
popular of the three choices in this
region. In contrast, a center party
was preferred by Tl percent in the
South, 28 (Jercent in the West and 30
percent in the East.

'

Today~s commen~arr.
Anderson is uniquely positioned io
take advantage of that sentiment
because he is a Midwesterner who
embraces a centrist philosophy that
includes liberal positions on many
social issues· and conservative
positions on most economic inatters
- an amalgam of ideology that
probably is most responsive to the
contemporary mood of the electorate.
Moreover, expanding Anderson's
base of support into the nation's
heartland would go a long way
toward obliterating his image as the
presidential candidate supported
aimost exclusively by the wine-andch!le!e set on the East and West
coasts.

The panel has heard many comByRobertJ. Wagman
.
plaints
from unions and other
WASHINGTON (NE~- A bluegroups
that illegal aliens are
worker
ribbon presidential panel' has been
laking
jobs
away
from Americans:
working for nine months on recomThe
estimated
3
mlllion
to 6 million
mendations to change and updale ·
illegal aliens in this country now national immigration policy. This
IS-member "Select Commission on ;plus the others afrlving daily clearly have a significant impact on
Immigration and Refugee Policy" is
urban job markets.
headed by the Rev. Theodore
Hesburg, the highly respected president of Notre Dame University and . ' Current law requires employetTS to
former head of the Civil Rights Com- ascertain lhal potential employees
are not illegal aliens; that includes
mission.
·'
asking aliens for the "green cards"
The Carter administration has
promised various minority groups documenting that they can· legally
that it will quickly implement the hold jobs in this country. But
commission's proposals, which are · e~loyers complain that it is oflen
likely to be presented by the end of dlflicult for them to determine·
citizenship or legal residency. In adthe year.
.
The White House no doubt based dition they are.lrequenUy accused of
that promise on its expectation that discrimination for only challenging
the recommendations would deal the status of Hispanics.
So, a num~r of commission
with things like visa quotas and lm-,
provements in Immigration and • ·members hit upon what Is essentialNaturalization Service operations. 1r ly a national system of worker iljendid not anticipate that along with tification cards. Proponents .argue
those proposals may come a bomb-. -that employers could routinely ask
shell: a call for national identifica· ·aU new employees for their cards to 1
lion cards to be issued to all citizens, • determine easily their immigration
status without appearing to
and legal aliens.

\

unknown quantity to most potential
voters.
In a recent CBS News-New York
Times Poll, an overwhelming 76 percent of those questioned could not
identify a single And~rson personal
characteristic or political position
they liked- and 80 percent could not
specify anything about him they
disliked.
·
Even more striking, only 22 percent of those interviewed thought
Anderson could win the November
general election. Even among Anderson supporters, only about half
clliimed he could win .
But a recent ABC News-Louis
Harris Survey concluded that "Anderson riow possesses the potentia l

for being the first independent to win
the White House in American
history."
· That poll showed putative
Republican presidential nomin.ee
Ronald W. Reagan with 39 percent,
President Carter with 33 percent and
Anderson with 23 percent.
But when . the question was
rephrased to include the assumption
"that Anderson had a real chance of ·
win~ing the presidential election in
November," the race became much
closer : Reagan, 3S percent; Carter, ·
31 percent; and Anderson, 29 per- '
cent.
The most dramatic figures were
produced when the if - Anderson - ·
had- a- real - chance- to- win stan- ·
dsrd was applied to the eight most
populous Northern states - California, New York, Illinois, Pen- ·
nsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, New Jersey and Massachusetts.
The startling results: Anderson
wnn those states with 36 percent,
followed by Carter with 31 percent
and Reagan with 29percent.
lf Anderson: in fact, carried those
eight major states in the November
election, hf would have amassed 216
votes in the Electoral College - and
that's 80 percent of all the electoral
votes he would need to become
pres1dent.

.158
.130

at Chicago

1

DETROIT (AP)- Ronald Reagan
is ready to endorse a Republican
platform including a foreign policy
plank maintaining the present U.S.
relationship§_with both the People's
Republic of China and Taiwan, his
lop foreign policy adviser said
today.
·""Governor Reagan recognizes the
lmporb!nce of our present relationship with the People's Republic of
China," said the adviser, l{ichard V.
Allen.
;f
.~

--.P

·He sai~gali's· position of sup- attention to foreign policy issues
port for the Taiwan regime has been today after overwhelmingly voting
misconstrued to suggest . that he down an atidh(lt on Wednesday to
might advocate a two China policy if renew 40 years of GOP support for
elected.
ratification of the Equal Rights
' "That is simply flOt accurate,"
Amendment.
Allen said. .,
. • The foreii!ll policy section of the
platform, expected to be approved
1 Allen held a news conference to
announce the prospective presiden- later today, calls for . major . intial candidate's . support for a creases in defense spending, blasts
proposed foreign policy section of the Carter adrninistratillorlOFweak
th~ 1980 Republican platfornr.
leadship and for l~s_llltfhe respect of
Committee members turned their allies and adv~"! a sustained ef-

'

J

(
'.'

'•

St.Louis, ltM ; Garvey, Los Angeles, l!H ;

Cromartie, Montreal, 101 ; K.Hen umdez,
St.Louis, 99.

DOUBLES: Rooe, Philadelphia, 28;
KniKf1l, Cincinnati, ~; K. Hernandez,

St.Louis, 23; Stearn.'i, New York , 22 ; Cham-

bliss, Atlanta, 21.
TRIPLES: R .Scott, Montreal, 6; LeFlore,

Montreal, 6; McB ride, Philadelphia, 6;
O. Moreno,

Pittsburgh,

6;

Landest Dy,

Holl3ton,6; Clark, San Francisco, &amp;.
HOME RUNS : Schmidt, Philadelphi11, 22;
Hendrick, Si.l.ouls, 19; Baker, Los AngeleJS,
· 19; Garvey, Los Angeles, IS; · Clark, San
Francisco, 17.
~
STOLEN BASES : LeFlore, Montreal, 49;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 49; Collins, Cin. d nnatl, 4.5; R.Scott , Montreal, Jl ; Richard.!! ,
San DiegO, ;w.
P ITCHING (8 Decisions) : Bibby, Pittsburgh, 1H, .917, 3.o:i; Re~, Los ~geles,
10-2, .833, 1.84; Carlton, Philadelphia, 14-t,
.n8, 2.2(1; G.Jack3on, PittsbW'gh, 7-2, .778,
~. 20; Wt!lch, Los Angeles, 9-3, .700, 2.40;
Palmer Montreal, ~2 • .750, 2.32 ; Bomba ck,

'

50
Ill
13
..
• ..
!9

28

.

.163

GB

Pirates, and the Middleport Braves
posting victories.
The New Haven Reds captured a
6-2 victory over Green I in the

SYRACUSE - First round action
continued in the annual Syracuse litUe league tournament Monday with
New Haven's Reds, Pomeroy's

New YOrk, 6-2, .750, U4 ; Moskau, CinciMati, 6-2, .750, 3.60.
. STRIKEOUTS ' Carlton, Philadelphia,
158; Richard, Houston, 119; Ryan, Houston,
10\ ; P.Niekro, Atl.anta, 100; Blyleven, Pit-

Foglestrom, Greg Wigal, singlet. ·
A tentative dale has been set for a
single game at McArthur Wed·
nesday al6 p·.m.
Friday, the Meigs club travels to
Athens for the District Tournament.
Game time is 5 p.m. at the West
State Field on Stale Street in Athens.

night's first contest. Matt Thompson
picked up the win with eight strike
outs and one walk.

Thompson helped his cause with
two key singles, while .Iohn Mueck
and Joe Burris each singled.
K. Halley suffered the loss for
I
Green with relie'f froin Amsbury,
.and Strait. Control problems led to
'
their downfall, as they slirrendered
16 free passes.
·
In the second game, Pomeroy:s
Pirates bombarded Murray City 30ching despite a bruised elbow; pinch-hitter Joe Morgan in the ninth. 5. Todd Cullwns picked up the win
hurled a tw&lt;&gt;-hitter and struck out 11 Richard, who recently complained . With relief from Rod Harrison.
as the Braves ended a five-game about a tired arm, allowed only one
Rex Haggy collected a double and
losing streak. Niekro, who was hit on hit· but left after 3f-3 innings with
two singles, Brian Freeman two
the right elbow while pitching bat- what was described as an upset
singles,
Cull urns three singles, Huey
ting practice before Saturday stomach.
Eason
two
home runs,. HarrisOn a
Atlanta got a run off Gordy ?ladnight's game, yielded only a thirdsingle,
Greg
Fields a single. Bob
inning double lo Houston pilc~er son in the fifth when Jeff Burroughs
Keeton
suffered
the loss.
J.R. Richard and a leadoff single by reached base on third baseman Enos
Bill
Swyer
had
a triple, and John
Cabell's fielding error, stole second
Snyder
a
single
for
Murray City.
and scored on a double by Br:uce
In
the
nightcap,
Middleport's
· Benedict. Bob Horner's 12th home
~
come--fromBraves
posted
a
run made it 2-0 in the seventh.
'
behind
victQry
over
the
Mason
Padres &amp;,Dodgers 3
Rangers.
Shwan
Baker
with.
relief
Gene Richards collected three hits
from
Nick
Bush
fanned
14
and
and scored three runs and Ozzie
walked four.
Smith drove in a pair of runs with a
.
Baker had a home run and triple,
single and a double as the Padres
Tim Cas8ell two singles, Paul Duff a
completed a three-game sweep and
11)3de it five of six over the Dodgers singl.e.
'
Rodney Long suffered the loss in
in San Diego this season.
the
close encounter. Darrell Mitchell
"They played like the 1927
...._
had
home run and a single for
Yankees against us," said Dodgers
CINCINNATI (AP) - Johnny Manager Tom Lasorda. "I'm not at
Mason, while Troy Tucker had two
Bench, the Cincinnati RedS' $400,ooo- all pleased, b!lt the pennant wasn't singles.
1
a-year catcher, won't be. given a decided here."
The Middleport squad came from
chance to renegotiate his contract,
behind by plating four times in the
Sieve Mura survived a three-run
fourth
Reds president Dick Wagner said
inning highlighted by Bakerls
Los Angeles third inning to finish
Monday.
long
home
run.
with a six·hitler and record only San
"The Reds have a contract with Diego's fourth ·complete game this
Tuesday - (Lower Field) 6:15 p.m. John Bench that bas about Lessons year. The other three belong to Ran- GLouster
Burr Oak vs. New Haven Cubs. (Main
to run. Both parties agreed to the dy Jones, who pitched shutouts on Field ) s,u p.m. - Middleport Indians 'IS.
Gallipollil White Sox; 7:30 ,P.m. - Pomeroy
contract in good faith in October, May 6, 11 and 16.
Powell's Giants vs. Rutland Dodgers ; 8:~ p.m.
- VInton vs. Pomeroy Tiger.~..,.
1977. At the time the contract was
. Pirates 13, ~hlllies 11
Wednesday - Reedsville Bombers, Racine
signed, it was one of the best in the
Dave Parker's tw&lt;&gt;-run ninthReds; Green n, Gallipolis Padres; Glouster's
history of the game and even today inning homer, h'i~ seconq of the
Mathews Jn.s., GaJlipolis Tigers.
ranks very high by au standards," night, gave Pittsburgh the victory in
· Wagner said.
a game that featured 36 hits and saw
'
Wagner said. club policy is not to '35 players pressed into service. Tim
renegotiate contracts.
Foli opened the Pittsburgh · ninth
SCIOO'O DOWNS
" I think John understands the with his fourth hit, a single. Parker,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sam
position of our club regarding who hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer in the third Noble III drove Hasty Decision to a
renegotiation of contracts," Wagner inning, then drove one over the right ·lo/•length victory in 2:01 4-li Monday
said. "This was explained to him field wall, his 12th homer of the night in the feature pace at Scioto
just this past off-season when 'he season. It camE; off Ron Reed, on~ of Downs.
"
· :
asked for a new contract. It is ob- 10 pitchers used . in the .3_ -hour
Hasty Decision returned $3.110,
vious he has tremendous ability. slugfest.
$3.40 and $2.40. Hi Kee Ho w.as
He's been playing very well. I hope
Pele Rose's seventh-inning bases- second and paid $4.40 and $2.60,
he will be a player for lhe Reds a loaded single had driven in a pair of while third-place Bull Shooter returlong time."
runs that gave the Phillies ;m 11-10 ned$3.20.
'
Wagner said . the public lead. But the Pirates tied it in the
The ninth race lrifecta of 1~2 paid. ·
availability of ail salaries and ail eighth on a single by Lee Lacy, a $581.10.
terms of player contracts makes it walk to pinch-hitter John Milner and
The crowd of 3,912 wagered '
"impossible to do anything special an RBI single by pinch hitler Ed Ott.
$346,505.
with one person and not share it with
everybody."
·
After Bench agr.eed to his contract
in 1977, the Reds awarded a $750,000a-year contract to George Fosler in
SHOP
the spring of 1979.
Wagner has been criticized for
driving. the Reds' IOIHllllaried stars
FOR THE BEST DEA.LS IN THE
out ..Or Cincinnati. The club traded
Tony Perez when it became obvious
TRISTATE AREA
he would become a free agent in
1977.
.
" If it weren't for the union
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
·agreement, Tony Perez wou14 still
be here today, ;, Wagner said. "He
8:30 to's : oo Thursday till12 Noon .
told us,''Tell me I'll play every day,.
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
or I won't sign.' Well, I'd never
promise that to llllYOne. But that
Herman Grate
Mason, w. va.
story has been told before."
773-5592
Bench said his decision to make
this season his last as a full-time catcher hils nothing to do with wanting
a higher salary. Bench said he
talked once to Wagner a bout
renegotiating.
" I have the feeling I don't have to
ask to have my contract
renegotiated. Why should I?
" Sure, you'd like to have
something more. But I realize what
happened in Kansas City when
George Brett wanted his contract
renegotiated. Everybody else on the
team wanted the same thing.!'

Sweep places Giants back in race

tsburgh, 98.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BAITING (200 a t bats) : B.BeU, Texas,
.34:»; Cooper, Milwaukee, .337 ; Paciorek,
Se.attle, .333; Carew, California, . ~; Bwn·
bry , BaiHumre, .324.
RUNS : Wilson, Kansas City, 65; Tram·
,nell, Detroit, 64 ; Yount, Milwaukee, 64;
Wills, Te~tas, 63 ; Bwnbry, Ballimore, 60 ;
Randolph, New York,60.
RBJ : Perez, Boston, 67 ; Oglivie,
MiJWauk~. 64 ; Oliver, Texas, ~ ; Hebner,
Detroit,6L ; Re.J ackson, New York, 61.
HITS: WUson, Kansas City, 122; Rivers,
Texas, 111 ; Cooper, Milwaukee, 106; BWTh
bry , Baltimore, liM ; Burleson, Boston, 103.
OOUBLES : Yount, Milwaukee, 26;
Morrison, Chicago, 26 ; D. Garcia, Toronto,
21; Carew, California, 21; McRae, Kansas
City, 21; Oliver Texas, 21.
TRIPLES : Griffin, Toronto, 8; Wilson ,
Kans.a s City, 8; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 7;
Wa:shingf.oo, Kansas City, 7; Hebner,
Detroit, 6; Randolph , New York, 6; Wathan,
Kansasaty,6 .
HOME RUNS ; Oglivie, Milwaukee, 23;
Re.Jackson, New York, 22; Thomas,.
Milwaukee, IS ; Armas, Oakland, 18; NetUes,
New York , l!i ; Mayperry, Turonto, 15.
STOLEN BASES : Henderson, Qakland,
42 ; · Wilson, Ka~ City, 40; Dilone,
Clevel and, 29; J .Cru.z, SeatUe, 24; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 2J ; Wills, TeiUlS, 23.
PI TCH IN G (8 Decision.s) : Stone,
Baltimor'e, l;J-3, .813, 3.00 ; John, New York,
IJ..J, .813, 2.88 ; Travers, Milwaukee, 9-3, .750,
3.03; Corbett, Minnesota, 6-2, .750, 2.07;
Gun1, Kansas City, 11-4, .733, 2.22; Rainey,
Bo!it.on, B-3, .7'n. 4.86 : Guidry. New York, to-

BROOKLlNE, Mass. (AP) - Eddie Dibbs scored a first-round vicJohn McNamara
tory over Bob 'rrogolo, who retired
because of the flu lifter losing the first set 6-1, in the ·$175,000 U.S. Pro
of confidence 1 Tenhis Championships.
In other matches, No.6 Hans
BASEBAlL
Gildemeisler beat John Austin 7-5, 6NEW YORK ( AP) - Buddy Bell of 3; No.8 Jose-Luis Clerc defeated
the Telt8B Rangers, who batted .500 Emilio Montano 6-1, 6-3; No.lO Eliot
and stretched his hitting streak to 17 'reltscher ousted Mel Purcell 6-1, 6games, was named ·American 3; TerryMoorbeatBenMcKown6-1,
League Player of the Week and Pete 6-1; and Andrt:S Gomez defeated
Rose of the Philadelphia Phillies, JohnJames6-3,6-0.
who hit .571 and drove in seven runs,
GSTAAD, Switzerland (AP) took the same.honor in the National Heinz GUE!nthardt became the first
League for the abbreviated period Swiss ever to win· the Swiss Open
after the AU Star Game.
·tennis championship when he fought
California reliever Mark Clear off six match points and defeated
also was ·named AL Player of the Kim Warwick of Australia 4-6, 6-4, 7- ·
Week lor the June 30-July 6 period 6 in the fin~l of the $125,000 injust before the All Star break.
- lern!ltional even,t :

Vore-

Wayland and Rogtr Kovalchik.
They fanned eight and walked three
while permitting three safeties.
The heart of the Meigs batting order aga in came through with Phil
King stroking three singles, Kenny
Brown, Kent Wolfe, Jerry ·Fields,
and Cliff Kennedy, two singles, Bob
Foster a double , and Art

Three more tea_nis ousted from tourney

TENNIS

BOWLING
,
TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) - Steve
Martin captured the top-seeded spot
for the finals of the $80,000 Southern
California Open at the Gable House
Bowl.
.Martin totaled 9,511 for 42 games
to 9,459 for Larry Gray ; 9,434 for
Torn Baker; 9,383 for Mark Roth and
.9,366 for Jim Winklepleck.

Cincy won't

.
renegotiate

Bench's lp act

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'

fort to " close the gap with the ::
Soviets."
.
The platform also calls for moder- : .
nization of nuclear weapons and : .
deployment of neutron weapons In •
Europe, which President Carter has · ·
rejected.
.
:Despite some efforts by ; ·
Republican ultra-conservatives .to • :
include a stong pro-Taiwan plank, , :
the platform calls for fbstering "the -::
peaceful elaboration of our relaUon- : ,
ship ..~ith the People's Republic
·

Knight, Cind nhatl, 56; Baker, Los Angeles,
56.
HITS : Templetoo , St. Louis, 120 Hendrick,

posts 14th win

Payton early platink four runs in the
first, one in the second and eight in a
big fourth inning.
The Meigs offense exploded for 14
hits sandwiched around several free
passes.
Greg Wigal was . the winning
hurler with ~lief help from Terry

McARTHUR - Meigs continued
its domination of area legion
baseball by posting a H-0 shut out
over Vinton County this past
weekend. The game was scheduled
as a twin-bill, but rains washed out
the nightcap afler Meigs jumped inio a ~first inning lead.
Meigs got to starting 1 pitcher

Summer league
results given

a national identity system," she
discriminate against any ethnic
says. "This system would ba~icaUy
group. Employer~ would then be
held responsible if illegais were
be the same kind that has always
been rejected."
hired.
To say this proposal has split the
panel would be a considerable
Mrs. Harris is also critical of the
understatement. Some civil libersuggestion that the new system be
tarians oppose the idea as a potentied to Social Secwity, which falls
tial invasion of P\ivacy - even as
under her department's jurisdicthe first step toward a totalitarian ' tion: "The prospects for fr.aud in
state. others oppose the proposal
such an ID system are so great that
because it might be tied to Social
if it were tied to Social Security it
Security, with Social S~curity
might threaten the very stability of
numbers used on the new worker
the entire Social Security system.''
identification cards.
' According to s~fers, the collll1li8.sion is evenly divided on the question
Hesburgh strongly favors the pr&lt;&gt;- of 10 cards. They predict more
posal. "With the nwnber of illegal heated debate and a close vote.
It appears that the panel will ·
aliens between those who are legally
able· to hold jobs and those who are recommend other controversial .
not. And with the rising unemploy- measures. Among them may be in- .
ment figures, it is clear that the.re ·creasing from 290,000 to 750,000 the . ·
are not an unlimited nwnber of jobs: number of aliens allowed to enter··
· available."
this , country annually, eliminating .
. Slr_ong opposition to the pro~ the clirrent ceiling· of 20,000 lm-· ~
lS vo1ced by ~Janel.member Patnc1a
migrants annually from any one ·
. Roberts Harris, secre~?' of health . ·country, and granting amnesty to
and hwnan . serv1~~s. We m this the millions of illegal aliens already
country have traditwnally acce~ted in this country, regardless of how or
the many strong arguments agamst when they arrived.

I

6
9\1
12

leton, St.Louis. S7; Murphy, Atlanta, S7 ;
.eF iure, Montrettl, 56; Rttie, PhiiHdelphia,
56; Collins, CinCinnati, 56.
,
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 6!1 ; Htmdrick,
St.Louis, 68; ScOffiidt, Philade lphia , 61 ;

McNamara gets new contract

accepts People's)Rep.uhlic of ~hina
'

'

On the other hand, Anderson
several months ago specifically
rejected the alternative of
establishing a new political party,
choosing instead to run as an ''independent.
And although he remains the
favorite of 19 percent to 24 percent of
all respondents in national publicopinion polls, Anderson still is an

t

Select commission on immigratio·n

R~agan

•

.)

"'

history~ • •

"WHEW! This has gotta b6 the worst dad-

.1i06
.500.

II
51;

r

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Don't
look now, but suddenly there
J;
.m 111
are four learns in what was supposed
Detroll
:rT
.538 10 ~
Baltimore
39
.130 II
to be a· three-way race in the
39
Boston
.530 11
National League West.
Cleveland
42
.481 15
Toronto
!; 47
.m 1911
The streaking San Francisco
WEST
Giants
are the party of the fourth
Kansas City
11 34
.1100
Texas
.476 lO Y.~
part.
They
won their seventh conChJcago
39 15
.464 lllh
secutive game Monday night,
,;M
11 \;
Mlnnesota
!9 ..
Oakland
.1110 ~
defeating the Cincinnati Reds 5-3
"' 47
36 49
.424 15
Sea"l•
and evening their record at 43-43, the
Ca.lifpmia
31 . 52
.373 19
Moaday'sGames
first time they have been at the .500
Seattle B, Mlnriesota 5
mark since July 3,1979.
Detroit 12, Boston I
Kauaa City 8, Baltimore 4
The Giants also became the first
Milwaukee 6, Toronto 4
team in the !~year history of-RiverNew York 7, Chlcago6
Texas 4, Cleveland 2
front Stadium to sweep a four-game
Oakland 6, California 4
series from the Reds in Cincinnati.
'hl_eaday'a Gamet
Kansas City (Gale $-7) at Boston (Renko 5Not since a series in Philadelphia in
2), (n)
May
of 1975 had the Reds been swept
Minnesota (Koosrnan 7-8) at New York
(Guidry !H). ( n )
in
a
four-game
set.
· Baltimore (Palmer !Hi ) at Milwaiukee
San-Francisco is only six games
(Cieveland.l--11. lnl
• Chicago (Burns ~7 ) t~ l Texl:lS (J enkins "1·
out
of first and trails third-place Cin7),(n)
cinnati by one-half game. The frontCleveland ( Denny~ ) at California (Aase
H ),l n)
running Houston Astros lost to the
Only a:ames Scheduled
AUanta Braves 2-0 but maintained
their half-game lead over Los
TOOA "'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
4, .714, J .Jl ; Clevela nd, Milwaukee , 7..J, .700,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Angeles when the Dodgers were
2.85.
.
BATTI NG (200 at bats) : Trillo,
bealen for the third time in a row by
STRIKEOUTS:
Guidry
,
New
York,
00;
Plliladelphia, .329; R.Smith , l...aJ Angeles,
M.Norris, Oakland, 99; Haas, Milw11ukee,
.326 ; TeJTJpleton, St.Louis, .323 ; Cromartie,
the
San Diego Padres, 6-3. In the
87 ; Keough, Oakland. 00 ; F .Banniste r. ~ t­
Montreal, .323; Hendrick, St.Louis, .322.
only
other NL contest, the Pittle,
86.
RUNS : Clark, San Francisco, 59; Tern-tsburgh Pirates outslugged the
Philadelphia Phillies 13-11.
The Giants aren't doing it with
mirrors but rather with some new
yoWig pitchers. The starters - and
winners - in the last three games
have been Bill Bordley, Allen Ripley
CINCINNATI (AP ) - When Cin- Sparky Anderson as Reds manager
and
Alan Hargesheimer, who
following
the
1978
season,
said
he
cinnati Reds Manager John Mcallowed
one rWI and five hits in five
was
"very
pleased
and
bappy
for
Namara renewed his contract last
innings
in his major league debut
yeal'towork
with
the
Reds.''
another
season, the Reds, 10 games out in the
Monday
night. 7
.
Club President Dick Wagner said
division race, rallied to win the
"The
only
lime
I
really
had
any
National League West the final week he and McNamara talked about the
doubts
was
in
the
second
inning
contract in Los Angeles over the Allof the season.
when I lofted a couple of bad pi\ches
McNamara, 43, signed a new one- · Star break.
"I thought it would be a good time : to both Johnny Bench and George
year contract Monday and said he
hopes a similar second-half rally to announce it before you (the press) Foster," the 23-ye"ar-old righthander said. " Both of them just
starts.
started to ask. "
After losing a four-game series to missed by a small fraction. I knew I
"I hope it has a positive effect, " he
was lucky that they didn't force me
the Giants, the Reds remain 5_
said. "Only time will tell."
oulofthegamethen."
'
McNamara, who succeeded games behind Houston.
Jack Clark got ihe Giants started
in the first inning with his 17th home
run of the season. In the fourth, Cin- ·
cinnati starter Charlie Leibrandt
issued tw&lt;H&gt;ut walks to Joe Pettini
and Johnnie LeMaster, who both
scored on Mike Sadek's double.
EAST MEI9S - The Pomeroy Hargesheimer then blooped a double
Royals, now 10-0, demonstrated its behind first base, scoring Sadek to
winning form ag~inst the Eastern make it 4-0. Lel\1asler doubled in the
Indians by taking a 6-1 decision.
sixth and scored on an error for the
Ace pitcher Roger Kovalchik was final San Francisco run.
the winning pitcher fanning 12 and,
Hargesheimer, who is only in his
issuing five free passes.
third year of pro ball, knows he
Mark Holler suffered the loss with
probably will go back to the minors
five strike outs and two walks.
after some injlired pitchers return ·
Randy Stewart tripled and singled from the disabled list.
for the winners, while J. R. Wamsley
"Realistically, when Vida (Blue)
doubled and singled, Harrison and Randy (Moffitt) return, they
singled twice, and Kovalchik,
will probably send me back to
Milhoan, Riggs, and Hawk singled.
Phoenix for more polishing," he
The two Eastern hits were collec- said. "I won't be heartbroken. I
ted by Jinuny Garter and Larry
know that my big days are ahead of
Cowdery.
me."
BRAVES 3 ASTROS 1
Knuckleballer Phil Niekro, pitNewYDrk
MUwaWtee

p

. bUrmid hflat wave tJver, tJfl, .TtJx?"

.:'.65

AMERlCAN LEAGUE
EASf
W L
Pet.

Soviet officials fear that growing "militarism" in the
. United States could trigger a confrontation between the
· two superpOwers, a new goverrunent report says. 'nle
Soviets were said to perceive President Carter's' foreign
policy.as inconsistent and "zig-zaggy."
The· Soviets want a workable relationship .with the
United States "to stabilize a frightening world," the report
says. But it adds, "There is a strong feeling that the SoViet
Union cannot do business with the current president."
The Soviet view was presented to Carter in a study by
the International Conunwtications Agency, an Jn·
dependent government entity that advises the administration on foreign perceptions ofthe United States.
The 19-page report was prepared by Gregory Gilroff,
chief of the agency's East European brancb, based on
det~iled
. interviews with American. diplomats,
busmessmen, reporters and professors cons1dered to have
especially good contacts among "middle to upper middle" .
Soviet officials.
Unidentified Soviet officials are quoted.in the repart as
calling Carter's foreign policy "inconsistent and ... 'zig·
zaggy,'" making the United States "unpredictable and
unreliable." .
The Americans interviewed said they found most Soviets
convinced that Russia would not be the first to launch a
nuclear attack and that direct military confrontation with
. America "appears to be an unthinkable thought." ·
Nevertheless, the report said Soviet officials view actions of Carter and his top advisers as increasingly hostile
and fear the United States "might be tempted to attack."
The Soviets' biggest fear that a third-country conflict,
such as Iran, might erupt ipto a superpower confrontation,
the report said.
The .report said the Soviets view the United States as
''trigger happy and erratic, willing to commit its miliW"y
strength much more readily than the Soviet \Inion .... Such
'militarism' is even more dangerous in Soviet eyes if the
U.S. perceives itself to be losing pre.eminence around the
world."
·
"If'there is any crack in the sanctity of Soviet foreign
policy," the report said, "it is a feeling perhaps even at
high levels, that the Soviet Union should have been more
supportive of the U.S. position in condemning the seizure
of the hostages" in Tehran.

...

.571

der7_.) , ( n) ·
Montreal (Palmer &amp;.Z) at Cincinnati
(M...Uu6-2).1nJ
San Diego (Jones 4-7) at St.Louis tB.ForIChW), ( n )
Philadelphia (Ruthven 6-S J at Hou.st&lt;ln

(Ryan5-7 J,( n)

u.

~; R~A; ··
~

'1l

(Krukow&amp;-101
San Franclsco (Knepper 8-9) at Pittsburgh
(Candelaria S-3 ) , ( n )
. New York (~c hry 3-5) at Atlanta (Alexan·
·

Today is Tuesday, July 15, the
197th day of 1980. There are 169 days
leftintheyear.
Today's highlight ip history:
On July 15, 1789, King Louis XVI of
France was awakehed in the middle
of the night and iold that his
authority has collapsed with the fall
of the Bastille:
On this dale:
•
In 1606, Rembrandt, the DutCh arj
list, was born in Leiden.
~
In 1945, Italy declared war on
Japan, its former Axis partner in
World War II.
In 1948, Harry Truman was
nominated by the Democrats tor reelection.
In 1960, John Kennedy accepted
the Democratic party's nomination

:li

48

Cincinnati
43· u
San Francisco
43 43
Atlanta
38 4:J
San Diego
37 49
Mooday's Games
San Diego 6, l...o:l Angeles J
Pittsburgh 13, Philildelphia 11
' San Francisco 5, Cincinnati 3
Atlanta 2, Houston 0
Only games sch~ uled
Tuesday's GamtJ
l..os Angeles (Hooton 7-3)

-·

Today in

48

l..os Angele3

RV !!

A VACAI!Ot.l ! !

Baeball

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L
Pet.
GB
Montreal
15 36
.556 Philadelphia
.. :rT
.:113
1
Pittsburgh
15 39
.536
1~
New York
41 12
.494
5
Sl. Louis
.424 11
36 "
Oticago
34 17
.120 11,
WEST

L~gion .teitm

Parts Plus

'

OIL. FILT~
Only

Trade-in

$1''

PASSENGER TREADS

·PLENTY .OF TIRES
IN STOCK
·-ANY SIZE··~ .
,I •

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
1ooE. M.1m, P o 11't-ro y, N ex t to t&lt;.r(lqcrs

992-2101
/

'

lo

�)

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tu~sday, July 15, 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 15, 1980

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

Opinions
.
&amp;
.
.Comments -.

ou~,:oL.~

.

Jt1aj~r Leagu~

W'RI~VILL~ SOil~, IJ.C.

©~7SC.I-4ie6CI-IE"

W~AT'HER ...
U~~ULY . KIDS ... 00
MOTELS -T~I~

gAo

TI-lE WORSC"
\S l31.ll,)lfol' GAS ·

+OR A

LIKE 'mAT MESS UP

Houston

•

Soviets-fear
s~ militarism

h
•
d
Amencans support t Ir party concept

for president in a speech heralclng a
"new frontier. "
Ten years ago, Premier Alexei
Kosygin and President N•olai
Podgorny were rt&gt;-~~ppointed to their
posts by the Supreme Soviet in
Moscow.
. Five years ago, America's Apollo
and the Soviet Union'11 Soyuz
'spacecraft blast off on their way to a
rendezvous in space.
•
Last year, in a somber ad!jtess,
President Carter said Americif was
suffering "a crisis of confidlnce"
that threatened to destroy its social
and political fabric.
•
Thought For Today: Then. are
people·who want to be everywlia-e at
once, and they get nowhere "7. Carl
Sandburg (1878-1967).

•

f

•

.

By Robert Walters
ST. LOUIS (NEA) - One of the
most intriguing 'pieces of fresh information about the chances of success for Rep. John R. Anderson's
presidential campaign comes !roll) a
recent nationwide survey that didn't
even mention Anderson's name.
The little-noticed publi~-opinion
poll, .conducted by the Gallup
Organization, found that aimost onethird of aU registered volers interviewed would favor a new centrist party in preference to either the
Republicans or the Democrats.
Perhaps most significant, the
broadest base of support for such a
new political enterprise is here in
the Midwest '- not in the East or
West, where much of Andti~son's
backing has been identified in other
public-opinion surveys.
The Gallup Poll asked respondents
to choose among Republicans,
Democrats and "a new center party
that would appeal to people whose
'political views are middle-of-theroad, in between those of
Republicans and Democrats."
1'he results showed the
hypothetical center party was
preferred by 31 percent, surpassed
only by the Democrats' 36 percent.
The Republicans were favored by
only 10 percent, \vhile the remaining

13 percent had no opinion.
A regional analysis, however,
showed that the center party was the
favorite of 39 percent in the Midwest, making it by far the most
popular of the three choices in this
region. In contrast, a center party
was preferred by Tl percent in the
South, 28 (Jercent in the West and 30
percent in the East.

'

Today~s commen~arr.
Anderson is uniquely positioned io
take advantage of that sentiment
because he is a Midwesterner who
embraces a centrist philosophy that
includes liberal positions on many
social issues· and conservative
positions on most economic inatters
- an amalgam of ideology that
probably is most responsive to the
contemporary mood of the electorate.
Moreover, expanding Anderson's
base of support into the nation's
heartland would go a long way
toward obliterating his image as the
presidential candidate supported
aimost exclusively by the wine-andch!le!e set on the East and West
coasts.

The panel has heard many comByRobertJ. Wagman
.
plaints
from unions and other
WASHINGTON (NE~- A bluegroups
that illegal aliens are
worker
ribbon presidential panel' has been
laking
jobs
away
from Americans:
working for nine months on recomThe
estimated
3
mlllion
to 6 million
mendations to change and updale ·
illegal aliens in this country now national immigration policy. This
IS-member "Select Commission on ;plus the others afrlving daily clearly have a significant impact on
Immigration and Refugee Policy" is
urban job markets.
headed by the Rev. Theodore
Hesburg, the highly respected president of Notre Dame University and . ' Current law requires employetTS to
former head of the Civil Rights Com- ascertain lhal potential employees
are not illegal aliens; that includes
mission.
·'
asking aliens for the "green cards"
The Carter administration has
promised various minority groups documenting that they can· legally
that it will quickly implement the hold jobs in this country. But
commission's proposals, which are · e~loyers complain that it is oflen
likely to be presented by the end of dlflicult for them to determine·
citizenship or legal residency. In adthe year.
.
The White House no doubt based dition they are.lrequenUy accused of
that promise on its expectation that discrimination for only challenging
the recommendations would deal the status of Hispanics.
So, a num~r of commission
with things like visa quotas and lm-,
provements in Immigration and • ·members hit upon what Is essentialNaturalization Service operations. 1r ly a national system of worker iljendid not anticipate that along with tification cards. Proponents .argue
those proposals may come a bomb-. -that employers could routinely ask
shell: a call for national identifica· ·aU new employees for their cards to 1
lion cards to be issued to all citizens, • determine easily their immigration
status without appearing to
and legal aliens.

\

unknown quantity to most potential
voters.
In a recent CBS News-New York
Times Poll, an overwhelming 76 percent of those questioned could not
identify a single And~rson personal
characteristic or political position
they liked- and 80 percent could not
specify anything about him they
disliked.
·
Even more striking, only 22 percent of those interviewed thought
Anderson could win the November
general election. Even among Anderson supporters, only about half
clliimed he could win .
But a recent ABC News-Louis
Harris Survey concluded that "Anderson riow possesses the potentia l

for being the first independent to win
the White House in American
history."
· That poll showed putative
Republican presidential nomin.ee
Ronald W. Reagan with 39 percent,
President Carter with 33 percent and
Anderson with 23 percent.
But when . the question was
rephrased to include the assumption
"that Anderson had a real chance of ·
win~ing the presidential election in
November," the race became much
closer : Reagan, 3S percent; Carter, ·
31 percent; and Anderson, 29 per- '
cent.
The most dramatic figures were
produced when the if - Anderson - ·
had- a- real - chance- to- win stan- ·
dsrd was applied to the eight most
populous Northern states - California, New York, Illinois, Pen- ·
nsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, New Jersey and Massachusetts.
The startling results: Anderson
wnn those states with 36 percent,
followed by Carter with 31 percent
and Reagan with 29percent.
lf Anderson: in fact, carried those
eight major states in the November
election, hf would have amassed 216
votes in the Electoral College - and
that's 80 percent of all the electoral
votes he would need to become
pres1dent.

.158
.130

at Chicago

1

DETROIT (AP)- Ronald Reagan
is ready to endorse a Republican
platform including a foreign policy
plank maintaining the present U.S.
relationship§_with both the People's
Republic of China and Taiwan, his
lop foreign policy adviser said
today.
·""Governor Reagan recognizes the
lmporb!nce of our present relationship with the People's Republic of
China," said the adviser, l{ichard V.
Allen.
;f
.~

--.P

·He sai~gali's· position of sup- attention to foreign policy issues
port for the Taiwan regime has been today after overwhelmingly voting
misconstrued to suggest . that he down an atidh(lt on Wednesday to
might advocate a two China policy if renew 40 years of GOP support for
elected.
ratification of the Equal Rights
' "That is simply flOt accurate,"
Amendment.
Allen said. .,
. • The foreii!ll policy section of the
platform, expected to be approved
1 Allen held a news conference to
announce the prospective presiden- later today, calls for . major . intial candidate's . support for a creases in defense spending, blasts
proposed foreign policy section of the Carter adrninistratillorlOFweak
th~ 1980 Republican platfornr.
leadship and for l~s_llltfhe respect of
Committee members turned their allies and adv~"! a sustained ef-

'

J

(
'.'

'•

St.Louis, ltM ; Garvey, Los Angeles, l!H ;

Cromartie, Montreal, 101 ; K.Hen umdez,
St.Louis, 99.

DOUBLES: Rooe, Philadelphia, 28;
KniKf1l, Cincinnati, ~; K. Hernandez,

St.Louis, 23; Stearn.'i, New York , 22 ; Cham-

bliss, Atlanta, 21.
TRIPLES: R .Scott, Montreal, 6; LeFlore,

Montreal, 6; McB ride, Philadelphia, 6;
O. Moreno,

Pittsburgh,

6;

Landest Dy,

Holl3ton,6; Clark, San Francisco, &amp;.
HOME RUNS : Schmidt, Philadelphi11, 22;
Hendrick, Si.l.ouls, 19; Baker, Los AngeleJS,
· 19; Garvey, Los Angeles, IS; · Clark, San
Francisco, 17.
~
STOLEN BASES : LeFlore, Montreal, 49;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 49; Collins, Cin. d nnatl, 4.5; R.Scott , Montreal, Jl ; Richard.!! ,
San DiegO, ;w.
P ITCHING (8 Decisions) : Bibby, Pittsburgh, 1H, .917, 3.o:i; Re~, Los ~geles,
10-2, .833, 1.84; Carlton, Philadelphia, 14-t,
.n8, 2.2(1; G.Jack3on, PittsbW'gh, 7-2, .778,
~. 20; Wt!lch, Los Angeles, 9-3, .700, 2.40;
Palmer Montreal, ~2 • .750, 2.32 ; Bomba ck,

'

50
Ill
13
..
• ..
!9

28

.

.163

GB

Pirates, and the Middleport Braves
posting victories.
The New Haven Reds captured a
6-2 victory over Green I in the

SYRACUSE - First round action
continued in the annual Syracuse litUe league tournament Monday with
New Haven's Reds, Pomeroy's

New YOrk, 6-2, .750, U4 ; Moskau, CinciMati, 6-2, .750, 3.60.
. STRIKEOUTS ' Carlton, Philadelphia,
158; Richard, Houston, 119; Ryan, Houston,
10\ ; P.Niekro, Atl.anta, 100; Blyleven, Pit-

Foglestrom, Greg Wigal, singlet. ·
A tentative dale has been set for a
single game at McArthur Wed·
nesday al6 p·.m.
Friday, the Meigs club travels to
Athens for the District Tournament.
Game time is 5 p.m. at the West
State Field on Stale Street in Athens.

night's first contest. Matt Thompson
picked up the win with eight strike
outs and one walk.

Thompson helped his cause with
two key singles, while .Iohn Mueck
and Joe Burris each singled.
K. Halley suffered the loss for
I
Green with relie'f froin Amsbury,
.and Strait. Control problems led to
'
their downfall, as they slirrendered
16 free passes.
·
In the second game, Pomeroy:s
Pirates bombarded Murray City 30ching despite a bruised elbow; pinch-hitter Joe Morgan in the ninth. 5. Todd Cullwns picked up the win
hurled a tw&lt;&gt;-hitter and struck out 11 Richard, who recently complained . With relief from Rod Harrison.
as the Braves ended a five-game about a tired arm, allowed only one
Rex Haggy collected a double and
losing streak. Niekro, who was hit on hit· but left after 3f-3 innings with
two singles, Brian Freeman two
the right elbow while pitching bat- what was described as an upset
singles,
Cull urns three singles, Huey
ting practice before Saturday stomach.
Eason
two
home runs,. HarrisOn a
Atlanta got a run off Gordy ?ladnight's game, yielded only a thirdsingle,
Greg
Fields a single. Bob
inning double lo Houston pilc~er son in the fifth when Jeff Burroughs
Keeton
suffered
the loss.
J.R. Richard and a leadoff single by reached base on third baseman Enos
Bill
Swyer
had
a triple, and John
Cabell's fielding error, stole second
Snyder
a
single
for
Murray City.
and scored on a double by Br:uce
In
the
nightcap,
Middleport's
· Benedict. Bob Horner's 12th home
~
come--fromBraves
posted
a
run made it 2-0 in the seventh.
'
behind
victQry
over
the
Mason
Padres &amp;,Dodgers 3
Rangers.
Shwan
Baker
with.
relief
Gene Richards collected three hits
from
Nick
Bush
fanned
14
and
and scored three runs and Ozzie
walked four.
Smith drove in a pair of runs with a
.
Baker had a home run and triple,
single and a double as the Padres
Tim Cas8ell two singles, Paul Duff a
completed a three-game sweep and
11)3de it five of six over the Dodgers singl.e.
'
Rodney Long suffered the loss in
in San Diego this season.
the
close encounter. Darrell Mitchell
"They played like the 1927
...._
had
home run and a single for
Yankees against us," said Dodgers
CINCINNATI (AP) - Johnny Manager Tom Lasorda. "I'm not at
Mason, while Troy Tucker had two
Bench, the Cincinnati RedS' $400,ooo- all pleased, b!lt the pennant wasn't singles.
1
a-year catcher, won't be. given a decided here."
The Middleport squad came from
chance to renegotiate his contract,
behind by plating four times in the
Sieve Mura survived a three-run
fourth
Reds president Dick Wagner said
inning highlighted by Bakerls
Los Angeles third inning to finish
Monday.
long
home
run.
with a six·hitler and record only San
"The Reds have a contract with Diego's fourth ·complete game this
Tuesday - (Lower Field) 6:15 p.m. John Bench that bas about Lessons year. The other three belong to Ran- GLouster
Burr Oak vs. New Haven Cubs. (Main
to run. Both parties agreed to the dy Jones, who pitched shutouts on Field ) s,u p.m. - Middleport Indians 'IS.
Gallipollil White Sox; 7:30 ,P.m. - Pomeroy
contract in good faith in October, May 6, 11 and 16.
Powell's Giants vs. Rutland Dodgers ; 8:~ p.m.
- VInton vs. Pomeroy Tiger.~..,.
1977. At the time the contract was
. Pirates 13, ~hlllies 11
Wednesday - Reedsville Bombers, Racine
signed, it was one of the best in the
Dave Parker's tw&lt;&gt;-run ninthReds; Green n, Gallipolis Padres; Glouster's
history of the game and even today inning homer, h'i~ seconq of the
Mathews Jn.s., GaJlipolis Tigers.
ranks very high by au standards," night, gave Pittsburgh the victory in
· Wagner said.
a game that featured 36 hits and saw
'
Wagner said. club policy is not to '35 players pressed into service. Tim
renegotiate contracts.
Foli opened the Pittsburgh · ninth
SCIOO'O DOWNS
" I think John understands the with his fourth hit, a single. Parker,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sam
position of our club regarding who hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer in the third Noble III drove Hasty Decision to a
renegotiation of contracts," Wagner inning, then drove one over the right ·lo/•length victory in 2:01 4-li Monday
said. "This was explained to him field wall, his 12th homer of the night in the feature pace at Scioto
just this past off-season when 'he season. It camE; off Ron Reed, on~ of Downs.
"
· :
asked for a new contract. It is ob- 10 pitchers used . in the .3_ -hour
Hasty Decision returned $3.110,
vious he has tremendous ability. slugfest.
$3.40 and $2.40. Hi Kee Ho w.as
He's been playing very well. I hope
Pele Rose's seventh-inning bases- second and paid $4.40 and $2.60,
he will be a player for lhe Reds a loaded single had driven in a pair of while third-place Bull Shooter returlong time."
runs that gave the Phillies ;m 11-10 ned$3.20.
'
Wagner said . the public lead. But the Pirates tied it in the
The ninth race lrifecta of 1~2 paid. ·
availability of ail salaries and ail eighth on a single by Lee Lacy, a $581.10.
terms of player contracts makes it walk to pinch-hitter John Milner and
The crowd of 3,912 wagered '
"impossible to do anything special an RBI single by pinch hitler Ed Ott.
$346,505.
with one person and not share it with
everybody."
·
After Bench agr.eed to his contract
in 1977, the Reds awarded a $750,000a-year contract to George Fosler in
SHOP
the spring of 1979.
Wagner has been criticized for
driving. the Reds' IOIHllllaried stars
FOR THE BEST DEA.LS IN THE
out ..Or Cincinnati. The club traded
Tony Perez when it became obvious
TRISTATE AREA
he would become a free agent in
1977.
.
" If it weren't for the union
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
·agreement, Tony Perez wou14 still
be here today, ;, Wagner said. "He
8:30 to's : oo Thursday till12 Noon .
told us,''Tell me I'll play every day,.
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
or I won't sign.' Well, I'd never
promise that to llllYOne. But that
Herman Grate
Mason, w. va.
story has been told before."
773-5592
Bench said his decision to make
this season his last as a full-time catcher hils nothing to do with wanting
a higher salary. Bench said he
talked once to Wagner a bout
renegotiating.
" I have the feeling I don't have to
ask to have my contract
renegotiated. Why should I?
" Sure, you'd like to have
something more. But I realize what
happened in Kansas City when
George Brett wanted his contract
renegotiated. Everybody else on the
team wanted the same thing.!'

Sweep places Giants back in race

tsburgh, 98.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BAITING (200 a t bats) : B.BeU, Texas,
.34:»; Cooper, Milwaukee, .337 ; Paciorek,
Se.attle, .333; Carew, California, . ~; Bwn·
bry , BaiHumre, .324.
RUNS : Wilson, Kansas City, 65; Tram·
,nell, Detroit, 64 ; Yount, Milwaukee, 64;
Wills, Te~tas, 63 ; Bwnbry, Ballimore, 60 ;
Randolph, New York,60.
RBJ : Perez, Boston, 67 ; Oglivie,
MiJWauk~. 64 ; Oliver, Texas, ~ ; Hebner,
Detroit,6L ; Re.J ackson, New York, 61.
HITS: WUson, Kansas City, 122; Rivers,
Texas, 111 ; Cooper, Milwaukee, 106; BWTh
bry , Baltimore, liM ; Burleson, Boston, 103.
OOUBLES : Yount, Milwaukee, 26;
Morrison, Chicago, 26 ; D. Garcia, Toronto,
21; Carew, California, 21; McRae, Kansas
City, 21; Oliver Texas, 21.
TRIPLES : Griffin, Toronto, 8; Wilson ,
Kans.a s City, 8; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 7;
Wa:shingf.oo, Kansas City, 7; Hebner,
Detroit, 6; Randolph , New York, 6; Wathan,
Kansasaty,6 .
HOME RUNS ; Oglivie, Milwaukee, 23;
Re.Jackson, New York, 22; Thomas,.
Milwaukee, IS ; Armas, Oakland, 18; NetUes,
New York , l!i ; Mayperry, Turonto, 15.
STOLEN BASES : Henderson, Qakland,
42 ; · Wilson, Ka~ City, 40; Dilone,
Clevel and, 29; J .Cru.z, SeatUe, 24; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 2J ; Wills, TeiUlS, 23.
PI TCH IN G (8 Decision.s) : Stone,
Baltimor'e, l;J-3, .813, 3.00 ; John, New York,
IJ..J, .813, 2.88 ; Travers, Milwaukee, 9-3, .750,
3.03; Corbett, Minnesota, 6-2, .750, 2.07;
Gun1, Kansas City, 11-4, .733, 2.22; Rainey,
Bo!it.on, B-3, .7'n. 4.86 : Guidry. New York, to-

BROOKLlNE, Mass. (AP) - Eddie Dibbs scored a first-round vicJohn McNamara
tory over Bob 'rrogolo, who retired
because of the flu lifter losing the first set 6-1, in the ·$175,000 U.S. Pro
of confidence 1 Tenhis Championships.
In other matches, No.6 Hans
BASEBAlL
Gildemeisler beat John Austin 7-5, 6NEW YORK ( AP) - Buddy Bell of 3; No.8 Jose-Luis Clerc defeated
the Telt8B Rangers, who batted .500 Emilio Montano 6-1, 6-3; No.lO Eliot
and stretched his hitting streak to 17 'reltscher ousted Mel Purcell 6-1, 6games, was named ·American 3; TerryMoorbeatBenMcKown6-1,
League Player of the Week and Pete 6-1; and Andrt:S Gomez defeated
Rose of the Philadelphia Phillies, JohnJames6-3,6-0.
who hit .571 and drove in seven runs,
GSTAAD, Switzerland (AP) took the same.honor in the National Heinz GUE!nthardt became the first
League for the abbreviated period Swiss ever to win· the Swiss Open
after the AU Star Game.
·tennis championship when he fought
California reliever Mark Clear off six match points and defeated
also was ·named AL Player of the Kim Warwick of Australia 4-6, 6-4, 7- ·
Week lor the June 30-July 6 period 6 in the fin~l of the $125,000 injust before the All Star break.
- lern!ltional even,t :

Vore-

Wayland and Rogtr Kovalchik.
They fanned eight and walked three
while permitting three safeties.
The heart of the Meigs batting order aga in came through with Phil
King stroking three singles, Kenny
Brown, Kent Wolfe, Jerry ·Fields,
and Cliff Kennedy, two singles, Bob
Foster a double , and Art

Three more tea_nis ousted from tourney

TENNIS

BOWLING
,
TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) - Steve
Martin captured the top-seeded spot
for the finals of the $80,000 Southern
California Open at the Gable House
Bowl.
.Martin totaled 9,511 for 42 games
to 9,459 for Larry Gray ; 9,434 for
Torn Baker; 9,383 for Mark Roth and
.9,366 for Jim Winklepleck.

Cincy won't

.
renegotiate

Bench's lp act

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fort to " close the gap with the ::
Soviets."
.
The platform also calls for moder- : .
nization of nuclear weapons and : .
deployment of neutron weapons In •
Europe, which President Carter has · ·
rejected.
.
:Despite some efforts by ; ·
Republican ultra-conservatives .to • :
include a stong pro-Taiwan plank, , :
the platform calls for fbstering "the -::
peaceful elaboration of our relaUon- : ,
ship ..~ith the People's Republic
·

Knight, Cind nhatl, 56; Baker, Los Angeles,
56.
HITS : Templetoo , St. Louis, 120 Hendrick,

posts 14th win

Payton early platink four runs in the
first, one in the second and eight in a
big fourth inning.
The Meigs offense exploded for 14
hits sandwiched around several free
passes.
Greg Wigal was . the winning
hurler with ~lief help from Terry

McARTHUR - Meigs continued
its domination of area legion
baseball by posting a H-0 shut out
over Vinton County this past
weekend. The game was scheduled
as a twin-bill, but rains washed out
the nightcap afler Meigs jumped inio a ~first inning lead.
Meigs got to starting 1 pitcher

Summer league
results given

a national identity system," she
discriminate against any ethnic
says. "This system would ba~icaUy
group. Employer~ would then be
held responsible if illegais were
be the same kind that has always
been rejected."
hired.
To say this proposal has split the
panel would be a considerable
Mrs. Harris is also critical of the
understatement. Some civil libersuggestion that the new system be
tarians oppose the idea as a potentied to Social Secwity, which falls
tial invasion of P\ivacy - even as
under her department's jurisdicthe first step toward a totalitarian ' tion: "The prospects for fr.aud in
state. others oppose the proposal
such an ID system are so great that
because it might be tied to Social
if it were tied to Social Security it
Security, with Social S~curity
might threaten the very stability of
numbers used on the new worker
the entire Social Security system.''
identification cards.
' According to s~fers, the collll1li8.sion is evenly divided on the question
Hesburgh strongly favors the pr&lt;&gt;- of 10 cards. They predict more
posal. "With the nwnber of illegal heated debate and a close vote.
It appears that the panel will ·
aliens between those who are legally
able· to hold jobs and those who are recommend other controversial .
not. And with the rising unemploy- measures. Among them may be in- .
ment figures, it is clear that the.re ·creasing from 290,000 to 750,000 the . ·
are not an unlimited nwnber of jobs: number of aliens allowed to enter··
· available."
this , country annually, eliminating .
. Slr_ong opposition to the pro~ the clirrent ceiling· of 20,000 lm-· ~
lS vo1ced by ~Janel.member Patnc1a
migrants annually from any one ·
. Roberts Harris, secre~?' of health . ·country, and granting amnesty to
and hwnan . serv1~~s. We m this the millions of illegal aliens already
country have traditwnally acce~ted in this country, regardless of how or
the many strong arguments agamst when they arrived.

I

6
9\1
12

leton, St.Louis. S7; Murphy, Atlanta, S7 ;
.eF iure, Montrettl, 56; Rttie, PhiiHdelphia,
56; Collins, CinCinnati, 56.
,
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 6!1 ; Htmdrick,
St.Louis, 68; ScOffiidt, Philade lphia , 61 ;

McNamara gets new contract

accepts People's)Rep.uhlic of ~hina
'

'

On the other hand, Anderson
several months ago specifically
rejected the alternative of
establishing a new political party,
choosing instead to run as an ''independent.
And although he remains the
favorite of 19 percent to 24 percent of
all respondents in national publicopinion polls, Anderson still is an

t

Select commission on immigratio·n

R~agan

•

.)

"'

history~ • •

"WHEW! This has gotta b6 the worst dad-

.1i06
.500.

II
51;

r

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Don't
look now, but suddenly there
J;
.m 111
are four learns in what was supposed
Detroll
:rT
.538 10 ~
Baltimore
39
.130 II
to be a· three-way race in the
39
Boston
.530 11
National League West.
Cleveland
42
.481 15
Toronto
!; 47
.m 1911
The streaking San Francisco
WEST
Giants
are the party of the fourth
Kansas City
11 34
.1100
Texas
.476 lO Y.~
part.
They
won their seventh conChJcago
39 15
.464 lllh
secutive game Monday night,
,;M
11 \;
Mlnnesota
!9 ..
Oakland
.1110 ~
defeating the Cincinnati Reds 5-3
"' 47
36 49
.424 15
Sea"l•
and evening their record at 43-43, the
Ca.lifpmia
31 . 52
.373 19
Moaday'sGames
first time they have been at the .500
Seattle B, Mlnriesota 5
mark since July 3,1979.
Detroit 12, Boston I
Kauaa City 8, Baltimore 4
The Giants also became the first
Milwaukee 6, Toronto 4
team in the !~year history of-RiverNew York 7, Chlcago6
Texas 4, Cleveland 2
front Stadium to sweep a four-game
Oakland 6, California 4
series from the Reds in Cincinnati.
'hl_eaday'a Gamet
Kansas City (Gale $-7) at Boston (Renko 5Not since a series in Philadelphia in
2), (n)
May
of 1975 had the Reds been swept
Minnesota (Koosrnan 7-8) at New York
(Guidry !H). ( n )
in
a
four-game
set.
· Baltimore (Palmer !Hi ) at Milwaiukee
San-Francisco is only six games
(Cieveland.l--11. lnl
• Chicago (Burns ~7 ) t~ l Texl:lS (J enkins "1·
out
of first and trails third-place Cin7),(n)
cinnati by one-half game. The frontCleveland ( Denny~ ) at California (Aase
H ),l n)
running Houston Astros lost to the
Only a:ames Scheduled
AUanta Braves 2-0 but maintained
their half-game lead over Los
TOOA "'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
4, .714, J .Jl ; Clevela nd, Milwaukee , 7..J, .700,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Angeles when the Dodgers were
2.85.
.
BATTI NG (200 at bats) : Trillo,
bealen for the third time in a row by
STRIKEOUTS:
Guidry
,
New
York,
00;
Plliladelphia, .329; R.Smith , l...aJ Angeles,
M.Norris, Oakland, 99; Haas, Milw11ukee,
.326 ; TeJTJpleton, St.Louis, .323 ; Cromartie,
the
San Diego Padres, 6-3. In the
87 ; Keough, Oakland. 00 ; F .Banniste r. ~ t­
Montreal, .323; Hendrick, St.Louis, .322.
only
other NL contest, the Pittle,
86.
RUNS : Clark, San Francisco, 59; Tern-tsburgh Pirates outslugged the
Philadelphia Phillies 13-11.
The Giants aren't doing it with
mirrors but rather with some new
yoWig pitchers. The starters - and
winners - in the last three games
have been Bill Bordley, Allen Ripley
CINCINNATI (AP ) - When Cin- Sparky Anderson as Reds manager
and
Alan Hargesheimer, who
following
the
1978
season,
said
he
cinnati Reds Manager John Mcallowed
one rWI and five hits in five
was
"very
pleased
and
bappy
for
Namara renewed his contract last
innings
in his major league debut
yeal'towork
with
the
Reds.''
another
season, the Reds, 10 games out in the
Monday
night. 7
.
Club President Dick Wagner said
division race, rallied to win the
"The
only
lime
I
really
had
any
National League West the final week he and McNamara talked about the
doubts
was
in
the
second
inning
contract in Los Angeles over the Allof the season.
when I lofted a couple of bad pi\ches
McNamara, 43, signed a new one- · Star break.
"I thought it would be a good time : to both Johnny Bench and George
year contract Monday and said he
hopes a similar second-half rally to announce it before you (the press) Foster," the 23-ye"ar-old righthander said. " Both of them just
starts.
started to ask. "
After losing a four-game series to missed by a small fraction. I knew I
"I hope it has a positive effect, " he
was lucky that they didn't force me
the Giants, the Reds remain 5_
said. "Only time will tell."
oulofthegamethen."
'
McNamara, who succeeded games behind Houston.
Jack Clark got ihe Giants started
in the first inning with his 17th home
run of the season. In the fourth, Cin- ·
cinnati starter Charlie Leibrandt
issued tw&lt;H&gt;ut walks to Joe Pettini
and Johnnie LeMaster, who both
scored on Mike Sadek's double.
EAST MEI9S - The Pomeroy Hargesheimer then blooped a double
Royals, now 10-0, demonstrated its behind first base, scoring Sadek to
winning form ag~inst the Eastern make it 4-0. Lel\1asler doubled in the
Indians by taking a 6-1 decision.
sixth and scored on an error for the
Ace pitcher Roger Kovalchik was final San Francisco run.
the winning pitcher fanning 12 and,
Hargesheimer, who is only in his
issuing five free passes.
third year of pro ball, knows he
Mark Holler suffered the loss with
probably will go back to the minors
five strike outs and two walks.
after some injlired pitchers return ·
Randy Stewart tripled and singled from the disabled list.
for the winners, while J. R. Wamsley
"Realistically, when Vida (Blue)
doubled and singled, Harrison and Randy (Moffitt) return, they
singled twice, and Kovalchik,
will probably send me back to
Milhoan, Riggs, and Hawk singled.
Phoenix for more polishing," he
The two Eastern hits were collec- said. "I won't be heartbroken. I
ted by Jinuny Garter and Larry
know that my big days are ahead of
Cowdery.
me."
BRAVES 3 ASTROS 1
Knuckleballer Phil Niekro, pitNewYDrk
MUwaWtee

p

. bUrmid hflat wave tJver, tJfl, .TtJx?"

.:'.65

AMERlCAN LEAGUE
EASf
W L
Pet.

Soviet officials fear that growing "militarism" in the
. United States could trigger a confrontation between the
· two superpOwers, a new goverrunent report says. 'nle
Soviets were said to perceive President Carter's' foreign
policy.as inconsistent and "zig-zaggy."
The· Soviets want a workable relationship .with the
United States "to stabilize a frightening world," the report
says. But it adds, "There is a strong feeling that the SoViet
Union cannot do business with the current president."
The Soviet view was presented to Carter in a study by
the International Conunwtications Agency, an Jn·
dependent government entity that advises the administration on foreign perceptions ofthe United States.
The 19-page report was prepared by Gregory Gilroff,
chief of the agency's East European brancb, based on
det~iled
. interviews with American. diplomats,
busmessmen, reporters and professors cons1dered to have
especially good contacts among "middle to upper middle" .
Soviet officials.
Unidentified Soviet officials are quoted.in the repart as
calling Carter's foreign policy "inconsistent and ... 'zig·
zaggy,'" making the United States "unpredictable and
unreliable." .
The Americans interviewed said they found most Soviets
convinced that Russia would not be the first to launch a
nuclear attack and that direct military confrontation with
. America "appears to be an unthinkable thought." ·
Nevertheless, the report said Soviet officials view actions of Carter and his top advisers as increasingly hostile
and fear the United States "might be tempted to attack."
The Soviets' biggest fear that a third-country conflict,
such as Iran, might erupt ipto a superpower confrontation,
the report said.
The .report said the Soviets view the United States as
''trigger happy and erratic, willing to commit its miliW"y
strength much more readily than the Soviet \Inion .... Such
'militarism' is even more dangerous in Soviet eyes if the
U.S. perceives itself to be losing pre.eminence around the
world."
·
"If'there is any crack in the sanctity of Soviet foreign
policy," the report said, "it is a feeling perhaps even at
high levels, that the Soviet Union should have been more
supportive of the U.S. position in condemning the seizure
of the hostages" in Tehran.

...

.571

der7_.) , ( n) ·
Montreal (Palmer &amp;.Z) at Cincinnati
(M...Uu6-2).1nJ
San Diego (Jones 4-7) at St.Louis tB.ForIChW), ( n )
Philadelphia (Ruthven 6-S J at Hou.st&lt;ln

(Ryan5-7 J,( n)

u.

~; R~A; ··
~

'1l

(Krukow&amp;-101
San Franclsco (Knepper 8-9) at Pittsburgh
(Candelaria S-3 ) , ( n )
. New York (~c hry 3-5) at Atlanta (Alexan·
·

Today is Tuesday, July 15, the
197th day of 1980. There are 169 days
leftintheyear.
Today's highlight ip history:
On July 15, 1789, King Louis XVI of
France was awakehed in the middle
of the night and iold that his
authority has collapsed with the fall
of the Bastille:
On this dale:
•
In 1606, Rembrandt, the DutCh arj
list, was born in Leiden.
~
In 1945, Italy declared war on
Japan, its former Axis partner in
World War II.
In 1948, Harry Truman was
nominated by the Democrats tor reelection.
In 1960, John Kennedy accepted
the Democratic party's nomination

:li

48

Cincinnati
43· u
San Francisco
43 43
Atlanta
38 4:J
San Diego
37 49
Mooday's Games
San Diego 6, l...o:l Angeles J
Pittsburgh 13, Philildelphia 11
' San Francisco 5, Cincinnati 3
Atlanta 2, Houston 0
Only games sch~ uled
Tuesday's GamtJ
l..os Angeles (Hooton 7-3)

-·

Today in

48

l..os Angele3

RV !!

A VACAI!Ot.l ! !

Baeball

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L
Pet.
GB
Montreal
15 36
.556 Philadelphia
.. :rT
.:113
1
Pittsburgh
15 39
.536
1~
New York
41 12
.494
5
Sl. Louis
.424 11
36 "
Oticago
34 17
.120 11,
WEST

L~gion .teitm

Parts Plus

'

OIL. FILT~
Only

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PASSENGER TREADS

·PLENTY .OF TIRES
IN STOCK
·-ANY SIZE··~ .
,I •

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
1ooE. M.1m, P o 11't-ro y, N ex t to t&lt;.r(lqcrs

992-2101
/

'

lo

�'

-

•
4- The Dauy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , July 15, 1980

~

Babcock
•
reunzon
success

Mrs. Blackwood honoree
a/bridal shower here
A bridal shower honoring Mrs.
Owen Blackwood, the form er Kaye
Hoover, was given recently. Marta
Blackwood hosted the shower at her
residence. A yellow shower umbrella schem e was carried out and
complimented by a yellow and white
cake in the shape of an umbrella.
Games were played with prizes
going to Jean Peavley, Betty
Barkec, and Jessie Martin. All the

•

Hattie Frederick
honored at 49th
'
•
.
SPencer reuruon
·

Hattie Spencer Frederick was
·
honored at the 49th annual Spencer
reunion held JWle 29 at Twin City
Shrine Park, Racine.

'

Ninety "persons attended. Gifts
·
·
were presented to Gene McElroy,
. · H8 tl 1e
'
0 ldest rna~ 1 a It e n d1ng •
Frederick, oldest woman; Randy
Bing son of Mike and Diane Bing
'
.
'
youngest boy; Martie Holter,
daughter of Gordon and Jill Holter,
youngest girl ; Lawrence and
Eleanor Singe11, Toledo, traveling
the loQgest distance. Entertainment
was provided by the Kentucky
Mountain Boys of Columbus.
Attending were Mrs. Mae Spencer, Elson and Dorothy Spencer,
Larry Spencer, David and Linda
S(l!!ncer, Ike and Judy and John
Henry Spencer, Waid and Gladys
Spencer, Harry and Avice Spencer,
Keith and Kelly, Esther Mays, Jeff
and Dean, Tom and Cathy Spencer,
Keith and Kelly, Esther Mays, Jeff
and Dean, Tom and Cathy Spencer,
Jared ·and Janel, Ray Spencer,
Dayton and Sara Spencer, Ron and
Marilyn Spencer, Trisha and Donnie, Avis and Lowell Bing, Mike and
Diane Bing, and Randy, Vance Spencer. All of the above are descendants
. of Harry Spencer, deceased.
Descendants 6f Hattie FrederiCk
· attending were Goldie Frederick,
Jerry Frederick, Mellisa and Brian,
Jack and Key Frederick, D'ackie,
Cylinda and Christian. Lawrence
and Eleanor Singer of the Cora
Singer family. Arvil and Mary
Holter, Gary and Judy Holter, Gary,
Jr., and Brenda, Gordon and Jill
Holter, Wesley and Marty, Sharon
and Curtis Riffle and Grella of the
Nora Spencer Holter family.
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Orr,
daughter Jackie and grandson,
Jason, Mr. and ,Mrs. Maurice Orr of
the Jessie Spencer Orr family. John
and Mary Jo Argabrite of the Bessie
Spencer Arga bri te family .
Marguerite Rasp, Elva Hammer, '
Sharon Zirrunerman and son, Gary,
Jr., and Marla Rasp of the
Marguerite Spencer Rasp family.
Harlan and Elsie Stahl of the Elsie
Spencer Stahl family.
Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Chrissie Powell,-Mr.-and Mrs.
Clifford· Woods, Dayton McElroy,
F'rancis Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit McElroy, Virgil McElroy, Mary
Buck and Viola Rumfield.

r---Social Calendar

TUE/)DAY
ME IGS COUNTY -Ja ycees
Tuesday 8 p.m. over Elberfelds. All
board mem ~J&lt;;rs urged to attend.
CHESHIRE OES regular meeting
with initiation of two · members,
·presentation of 50-year pins, nine 25
year pins.

guests were served refreshments of
cake, sherbet punch, mints and nuts.
Those who attended and presented
gifts to Kaye incl uded Thora Blackwood, Bett y Ba rker, Melissa
Barker , Trina ·Barker, Jea n
Peavley, Vicky Peavley, Jessie
Martin, Helen Jane Brown, Michelle
Hines, and Marta Blackwood. Gifts
were also sent by Hazel Oliver, Alice
Epple, and Ginny Hu b bf~rd .

The annual Babcock reunion was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
E-verett Calaway, J Uly 4th and 5th,
in Alfred.
Games were played and the day
was enjoyed by watching home
movies, swimming, fireworks, and
wierier roasts. Prizes were presented to the oldest in attendance, Ruby
Burke; the youngest, Joseph Babcock; and the persons traveling the
· farthest, Bud and June Cole!Jlan,
Fostoria, Ohio. Also receiving gifts
to a joint ventu re w 1~a fr tend today, weigh all
were Neil, Matthew, .and Tom
ttle altern ati ves. A fai111re lo think things thrQ.ugh
properly could get it off to a bad sta rt .
Chrisman,
Ruby Irene Burke, and
SAOriTARIUS !Nov. ZS.Dec. 211 Don't wait
Matthew Burke.
for others toda y in matter3 that mean something
to you fi n11ndally . Th~ i r help may not be for·
Attending were Bud and JWJe
th()oming and it could slow your progress.
Coleman , Murray and Karen,
CAPRICORN IDee. Z%-Jaa. 19) Be reasonable
when making requ ests today. Don·' t ask others to
Fostoria, Ohio; Dorsel and Grace
do something you wouldn't wan t to do yourseU.
Babcock and Hope, Rand y
They're not apt to enjoy the task, eit her.
·
AQU ARIUS jJ an. 2&amp;-Feb. 19 ) Treat things you
Buchanan,
Vicki and Christy BabInHnage or borrow from others with t he same
cock, Mike Babcock and De b~ie
respect you would treat your own. You could Jose
a friend if you behave too carelessly.
Walts, Bob and Sandy Babcock,
PISCES lFeb. ro-Mart b 20 ) Base your
Jason, Betsy and Joey, all of New
ded~ions .t oday on the facts as they are, nut on
what you hope they rrUty soon lw. Unrea llstic apConcord, Ohio; Kathy, Becky, Ryan,
praisals could lead to disa ppointments.
Evan, Craig and Janette Green,
ARIFS- March 2l·Apl11191 Don 't let youi' at· ten tion wander from your work today. Putting
Route I , Guernsey, Ohio; Brian and
restraints on h im or her will, create probl ems
Debbie- Babcock, Amy and Jody,
that could eastly be avo ided.
GE MINI (l\o1ay tl·June 20) In practi&lt;'a l matNorwich, Ohio; Paul and Martha
ters' toda y, you'r e likely to handle situations to
Babcock, Carl and Brett, Coshocton,
your advanta ge. Howe ver, socially you .may
· neglect to put your best foot forwa rd.
Ohio; Dan Coleman, Gahanna,
Ohio; Tinn Long, New Haven, W.
Va.; Lisa Perkins, Jim Burke, Jon
Burke, Ronald and Diane Burke,
Debbie · and Ronnie, all of Cambridge, Ohio; Charles and Mary Lou
Babcock, Coshocton, Ohio; Carl and
Kay Christman, Steve, Shelley,
Tom, Neil, Matthew, Joshua, and
Andrew, Mick a nd Sue Burke,;Jeff,
Jenni, Matthew, and Ruby Irene , a)!
of Route 3, Pomeroy; Garnet
but wishes to .enter college in the
Thomas, Columbus; Sue Kauff, and
Faii.•The course will begin Monday, · Sally and Charlie Bissell, Long BotJuly 14 and continue until Friday ,
tom; Robbie Saam · of Bradner,
August 15. Classes will be held MonOhio; Jane Pullins, Ruby Burke,
day through Friday from8 a.m. until
Bob and Joann Calaway, Robbie,
12 noon in Haning Hall on the Rio
J erome, Buck and Doroth y
Grande College Campus. Students
Calaway, Tammy, Missy and Adam,
will receive 100 hours of inaU of Alfred, Ohio.
troductory chemistry including lecThe home of Dorset and Grace
ture and laboratory exercises .
Babcock, New Concord, Ohio will be
The cost for the class is $125 per
the setting for the Babcock reWJion
person. This fee includes lab supfor 1981, and will be an event of July
plies and text. -Tne class limit is 24 5.
students and registrations will be accepted on a priority basis, with nursing students given first priority.
Other spaces will be available on a
first come first serve basis. Interested person should contact the
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Rowe, Former
Nursing Director or Continuing Cindy Demosky, Middleport, anEducation Of£ice . To register, noUJ)ce the birth of a son, Jeremy
please call (614) 245-5353; ext. 288 or JAy, born June 17 at Pleasant Valley
255, or Registration Day is July 14· Hospital. He weighted eight pounds,
from 9 a. m. until 7:30p.m. in the E. 10 ounces and measured 20 and 3-4
E. Davis Technical Career Center.
inches in length.
Grandparents lire Mr. arid Mrs.
William Demosky, Middleport, and
· Mrs. Virginia Rowe, Pomeroy.
Great grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Demosky,also Midacknowledgement of the un- dleport, and Mrs. Fern Harris, Lancomfortable circumstance would caster. The couple have one other
son, Ryan , age three.
alleviate it.
So, from Cronkite and Chancellor
and Reynolds and anyone who had a
mike and a camera, we were told
RECEIVE DEGREES
that this was, indeed, a convention
Two Meigs County residents
of, for, and by Ronald Reagan.
receiv.ed degrees from Ohio . State
" It is the GOP's big TV day,"
University at the flpring quarter
Chancellor cautioned, "designed to
commencement exercises held on
make you believe they are the party
June 13.
· of unity ... and all that.. .. " He didn't
Receivin g degrees were William
add 0 bushwa."
David Krawsczyn, Middleport, D. V.
The disclaimers emphatically M. and Richard Alan Couch,
registered, the networks then
Pomeroy, B.S. pharmacy.
P,roceeded to ferret out some news.
Thus did Sen. Jesse Helms become
one of the opening night stars. '
fer an opportunity to make a good
Helms, a conservative from North news division sho"wing ·and win
Carolina, has been mentioned as a viewers for the long fWl.
vice-presidential candidate.
In this regard, NBC - in its firstThat vice-presidential question, event test under news president Bill
the only WJscripted scene in this Small - outperformed the · comshow, was played large. Barbara petition on opening night. All of the
Walters introduced Indiana Sen. networks had co~ntators and
Richard Lugar as "tbe compromise polls and little filmed histories of
candidate;" Chancellor and David GOP conventions, but NBC seemed
Brinkley referred to NBC polls that to be working a little ~der.
showed George Bush as the
. The most impressive was NBC's
delegates' fa,vorlte; Howard Baker, clever method of making its pre8en- ·
Donald Rwnsfeld, Gerald Ford + ce seem less a blatant freebie : After
veeps were everywhere.
.
particularly baneful antiOf course, the networks come to Democratic speeches were made by
conventions for reasons in addition Republican orators, NBC cut to ·its
to (other than, some would suggest) Washington studio for comment
civic duty. ABC, CBS and NBC are , from Democrats Robert Strauss and
foremost, ratings competltors and Sen. Uoyd Bentsen.
there's a pretty hefty prize at stak~
That generous opportunity for
in that line + an estimated 50 million rebuttal will preswnably be exviewers will tWJe in to the GOP tended to the GOP when the
proceeding.
Democrats issue their dogma next
. Also, the political conventions of- month.

ASTROGRAPH
J ul}' lG, 1980
You are ln a ve ry creati\'e cycle and you cu uld
cvmc up with !lom e un ique ideas fur new items ,
meth ods or systems this coming year. It may be
necessary , howe~er, to find t he right teatnrrU~tes
to get them to the' marketplace.
CANCER fJuue 21-July%%) Treat others com passionately today, but don't let your heart rule
your head to the extent that you might do
something foolish. Be ki.nd, but also be lo~i cal.
Find out more of what 11es ahead for you m the
year fo Uowing your birt hday by senttin g for your
copy uf'Astro-G ra ph. Matl $1 for ea ch to AstroG"ph, &amp;x 489, ~dio City Station, N. Y. 10019.
Be sure tospectfybirlhdate.
LEO (July !3-Aug . 221 You " ' likely to b!'
alternately prudent and ca~eless in. managing
your resources today. D&lt;ln t permit your' extrava~ance to wipe ot4t 3'our gains.
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep.t. 22 !. ~ecognition today i.s
important to you, provtded ll s nota l the e1pensc
orsomeone else. Share the limeli~ht with those
whohe lpedboost yoo up the ladd".

U BRA i Sept. 23-0ct. !3) Success will not elude
you today unless yo~ spread yo.ur forces tO? ~.in ..
Focus on your g!leli.S· Exclude tdeas or actiVIties
that are not pertment.
SCORPIO lOci. Zt-Nuv. t21 Before jumping in-

Chemistry course offered
by Rio Grande College
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College and Community College is
pleased to announce that ' a
chemistry course will be offered
through the Continuing Education
Department" of the Rio Grande
College -and Community College
during the Second Summer Session,
July 14-August 15. This course will
be offered on a non-credit basis and
will be designed primarily for those
students who have not had a high
school chemistry course, (a nursing
program admission requirement)
ana still wish to be considered for acceptance to the nursing program for
fall, !!Ill(). The course will cover
basic foundations and principles of
chemistry in preparation for taking
Chern. 105: Principles of Chemistry
I in the Fall Quarter of the nursing
curriculwn.
"
This course is also available to any
student who has not had sufficient
chemistry in high school or who did
not take any high school chemistry

New arrival

•

Network coverage predictable
ByPETERJ BOYER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGEY:S (AP) - And so it
began, the teleVISIOn extravaganza
posed as a lesson in applied civics ;
with a prayer from·Pat Boone and a
duet from Glen Campbell and Tanya
Tucker, the Republicans opened on
prime time.
,
&lt;At this convention in particular, so
sealed on behalf of R~nald Reagan,
so carefully choreographed in his
cause, the networks faced the
challenge of making the event seem
a real news imperative, something
more than a show.
ABC, CBS and NBC responded, for
the most part, in predictable
fashion .
The favored method of appearing
to resist manipulatio,n by the
ll.eagan forces was to •constantly
remind viewers . that . the huge
television presence was so
vulnerable to manipula lion, as if

-

VAUGHAN'S
Middleport, Ohio:

FRIINDUIS.r SERYfCIJN TOWN
tiiGGIST iARoAINS IN 10WN

- -CORRECTION-

CHICKEN

Ta--Da!
THE INSURANCE STORE

•'

'

DEAR POLLY - Not too long ago
a reader asked about redoing the
back of a bathroom rug to keep it
from slipping. I am now making a
latch hook rug and was instructed to
paint the back of it with liquid latex
when it is finish ed. This would
probably also work on a used
bathroom rug and can be bought in a

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Tent Crusade planned
.. Several churches are planning to
sponsor the third . annual Lowe_r
Mason County Tent Crusade for
Christ, Aug. 111-24 at Apple Grove, W.
Va.
Preaching will be by pastors of
sponsoring churches during the first
week, and by the Rev. Ron Jackson,
P.Bstor of the Rock Hill Baptist Church in Inman, S. C., during the second
week.
The tent will be loated in a ball
field behind Sunnyside Elementary
School at Apple Grove. The community is about 25_miles north of
Huntington and 15 miles south of
Point Pleasant on W.Va. Route 2.
Special singing groups are
scheduled each night: Aug. 10, Bride
of Christ Singers; Aug. 11, Chestnut
Grove Trto; Aug . .12, the McSweeny
Family; Aug. 13, the Willing
Workers; Aug. 14, the Timesmen;
Aug. 15, Ashton Quartet; Aug. 16, the
Rejoicers; Aug. 17, the Jolnt Heirs;
Aug. 18, the New Dawnings ; Aug. 19,
the Perry Sisters ; Aug. 20, the
Kingsmen of Asheville, N. C.; Alig.
21 and 22, Dan Hayman and the
Couftry Hymntimers; Aug. 23, the
Pathways of Sandusky, and Aug. 24,
the Waymarks.
Dennis Weaver of Leon will direct
a choir made up of singers from the
sponsoring churches, and his wife,
Brenda, will play the piano.
Meetings will · begin at 7 :30
nightly. Only three offerings will be
taken: .Aug. 20 for the Kingsmen,
Aug. 22 for the evangelist, and Aug.
22 for the pathways. Free parking
and restroorns provided.

'-a.
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Ch

·Mr. Evans
Ryan ~va ns , son of Mr. and M1~,
Evans, observed his ninth birthday
on July 1 with a party at the home of
his parents ; Portland.
Gifts were presented to Ryan with
refres hments of cake a nd ice cream
being served to his grandillother,
Ada VanMeter, PortlaniJ; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wa rth .~arrin
and Amy, Pomeroy; Mrs. Don Hunnel and Art , Barb Talbott, Portland ;
La ura Ohlinger, Pomeroy ; Robert
Brown, Minersville; Missy VanMeter, Portland ; Alicia, Cindy and
Matt Eva ns and Mrs. Eva ns.
Sending gifts and remembrances
were Ryan's gramdmother, Mrs.
Bernice Eva ns of Gallip oli s;
Shawna Bobo, Portland ; Mr: and
Mrs. Charles Fitch and Jason, Portland; Andy and Sharon oWens,
Michigan ; Leota Birch and Donette
Talbott, both of Portland.

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HEARING TESTS sET

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FOR

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MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By

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MR. H. W. MATTINGLY
BE~TONE Consultant

i!j

Hearing Air Specialist

Who Will Be At:

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MEIGS INN - POMEROY , OHIO
THURSDAY, JULY 17- 9 AM to 12 NOON

Anyone .who h as troub le hea ring is welcome to have a

hea r in g te'st using· m'Pdern electrnic equipment t o d e termine it h is loss is One wh ich
may be helped. Some of the ca uses of hearing loss w il l be exp lained
and d iagr ams of how the ear work s w ill be s h own .
We Also Service and Repair All Mak es of Hearing Aid s.
Batteries And Suppli es For All M ak es For Sale
IF YOU CA NN O T COME IN .
C AL L TH E HOT EL FO R A HOM E AP PO IN TME NT .
.
PHONE 992 -3629

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You are cordially invited to attend

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A GOSPEL MEETING

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WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST

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200 West Main Street
........ - Pomeroy, Ohio
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JULY 14 thru JULY 20, 1980

POMEROY,O.
992-Sljl or 992-5739

pt•rsonnl lim:s o f insur~ncc for young
JW&lt;i plto ln c_luding n lot less hassle o ver auto,· boat, renttors ,
and homeowners insurance. We offer high qua lity stl.Jff at
low prices. G i ~·- ~s a cali and we'll1~ro•c it. .
' .. · '

HOT DOGS

store that sells latch hook supplies.
- MARJORIE
,
DEAR POLLY - When you take
bread out of the oven, leave it in the ·
pans for io to 15 minutes and then it
will come out easily. Watch the time
so you do not forget. If it stays in the
pans too long it will be soggy.
When baking a· cake, grease the
bottom of the pan or line it with
waxed paper but do not grease the
sides, as that makes it crisp, which
is undesirable if you plan to ice the
cake.
When a recipe calls for spices, etc.
tied in a bag so as to be eas ily
removed, I use an alumni urn tea ball
instead of the bag.
1 transfer hoUsehold bleach to a
squeeze bottle and label it carefully
and then put it with my dishwashing
detergent. When I put the soap in the
dishpan to do dishes I squirt in a
teaspoon or so of the bleach to help
kill germs and remove food stains.
The dishes dry without spotting after
they are rinsed and set.on the dish
dra iner ,- MRS. A. G.
Polly will send you one of h~r
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn~ Write POLLY'S f10INTERS in care of this newspaper.

DEAR M.J.S. - ·
I suggest that you
paint the inside of
these cans with
clear varnish or
shellac and then
put the various
staples in · plastic
bags inside the
cans. - POLLY

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Wi• ,1wcialize in

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Refinishing cans...
By Polly Cramer
Special ~orrespondent
DEAR POLLY - I have saved
some ni ce cans that pretzels came
in. I want to use them for storing
staples such as fl our and sugar.
However, the insides of these cans
have a funny, rusty look and I wonder if there is a way I could refinish
them or do something that would
make them safe for storing food
items. Many thanks to you and your
friends for helping so many people.
- M.J.S.

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214MAIN

GOLD KIST

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REUTER BROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE

FOR MONDAY, JULY 14 AD

1.

Polly 's Pointers

E:vangelist, Bruce Taylor of Zion, Illinois
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Nightly 7:30PM - Sunday 10 AM and 6 PM
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4- The Dauy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , July 15, 1980

~

Babcock
•
reunzon
success

Mrs. Blackwood honoree
a/bridal shower here
A bridal shower honoring Mrs.
Owen Blackwood, the form er Kaye
Hoover, was given recently. Marta
Blackwood hosted the shower at her
residence. A yellow shower umbrella schem e was carried out and
complimented by a yellow and white
cake in the shape of an umbrella.
Games were played with prizes
going to Jean Peavley, Betty
Barkec, and Jessie Martin. All the

•

Hattie Frederick
honored at 49th
'
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SPencer reuruon
·

Hattie Spencer Frederick was
·
honored at the 49th annual Spencer
reunion held JWle 29 at Twin City
Shrine Park, Racine.

'

Ninety "persons attended. Gifts
·
·
were presented to Gene McElroy,
. · H8 tl 1e
'
0 ldest rna~ 1 a It e n d1ng •
Frederick, oldest woman; Randy
Bing son of Mike and Diane Bing
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youngest boy; Martie Holter,
daughter of Gordon and Jill Holter,
youngest girl ; Lawrence and
Eleanor Singe11, Toledo, traveling
the loQgest distance. Entertainment
was provided by the Kentucky
Mountain Boys of Columbus.
Attending were Mrs. Mae Spencer, Elson and Dorothy Spencer,
Larry Spencer, David and Linda
S(l!!ncer, Ike and Judy and John
Henry Spencer, Waid and Gladys
Spencer, Harry and Avice Spencer,
Keith and Kelly, Esther Mays, Jeff
and Dean, Tom and Cathy Spencer,
Keith and Kelly, Esther Mays, Jeff
and Dean, Tom and Cathy Spencer,
Jared ·and Janel, Ray Spencer,
Dayton and Sara Spencer, Ron and
Marilyn Spencer, Trisha and Donnie, Avis and Lowell Bing, Mike and
Diane Bing, and Randy, Vance Spencer. All of the above are descendants
. of Harry Spencer, deceased.
Descendants 6f Hattie FrederiCk
· attending were Goldie Frederick,
Jerry Frederick, Mellisa and Brian,
Jack and Key Frederick, D'ackie,
Cylinda and Christian. Lawrence
and Eleanor Singer of the Cora
Singer family. Arvil and Mary
Holter, Gary and Judy Holter, Gary,
Jr., and Brenda, Gordon and Jill
Holter, Wesley and Marty, Sharon
and Curtis Riffle and Grella of the
Nora Spencer Holter family.
Mr. and Mrs. Starling Orr,
daughter Jackie and grandson,
Jason, Mr. and ,Mrs. Maurice Orr of
the Jessie Spencer Orr family. John
and Mary Jo Argabrite of the Bessie
Spencer Arga bri te family .
Marguerite Rasp, Elva Hammer, '
Sharon Zirrunerman and son, Gary,
Jr., and Marla Rasp of the
Marguerite Spencer Rasp family.
Harlan and Elsie Stahl of the Elsie
Spencer Stahl family.
Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Chrissie Powell,-Mr.-and Mrs.
Clifford· Woods, Dayton McElroy,
F'rancis Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit McElroy, Virgil McElroy, Mary
Buck and Viola Rumfield.

r---Social Calendar

TUE/)DAY
ME IGS COUNTY -Ja ycees
Tuesday 8 p.m. over Elberfelds. All
board mem ~J&lt;;rs urged to attend.
CHESHIRE OES regular meeting
with initiation of two · members,
·presentation of 50-year pins, nine 25
year pins.

guests were served refreshments of
cake, sherbet punch, mints and nuts.
Those who attended and presented
gifts to Kaye incl uded Thora Blackwood, Bett y Ba rker, Melissa
Barker , Trina ·Barker, Jea n
Peavley, Vicky Peavley, Jessie
Martin, Helen Jane Brown, Michelle
Hines, and Marta Blackwood. Gifts
were also sent by Hazel Oliver, Alice
Epple, and Ginny Hu b bf~rd .

The annual Babcock reunion was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
E-verett Calaway, J Uly 4th and 5th,
in Alfred.
Games were played and the day
was enjoyed by watching home
movies, swimming, fireworks, and
wierier roasts. Prizes were presented to the oldest in attendance, Ruby
Burke; the youngest, Joseph Babcock; and the persons traveling the
· farthest, Bud and June Cole!Jlan,
Fostoria, Ohio. Also receiving gifts
to a joint ventu re w 1~a fr tend today, weigh all
were Neil, Matthew, .and Tom
ttle altern ati ves. A fai111re lo think things thrQ.ugh
properly could get it off to a bad sta rt .
Chrisman,
Ruby Irene Burke, and
SAOriTARIUS !Nov. ZS.Dec. 211 Don't wait
Matthew Burke.
for others toda y in matter3 that mean something
to you fi n11ndally . Th~ i r help may not be for·
Attending were Bud and JWJe
th()oming and it could slow your progress.
Coleman , Murray and Karen,
CAPRICORN IDee. Z%-Jaa. 19) Be reasonable
when making requ ests today. Don·' t ask others to
Fostoria, Ohio; Dorsel and Grace
do something you wouldn't wan t to do yourseU.
Babcock and Hope, Rand y
They're not apt to enjoy the task, eit her.
·
AQU ARIUS jJ an. 2&amp;-Feb. 19 ) Treat things you
Buchanan,
Vicki and Christy BabInHnage or borrow from others with t he same
cock, Mike Babcock and De b~ie
respect you would treat your own. You could Jose
a friend if you behave too carelessly.
Walts, Bob and Sandy Babcock,
PISCES lFeb. ro-Mart b 20 ) Base your
Jason, Betsy and Joey, all of New
ded~ions .t oday on the facts as they are, nut on
what you hope they rrUty soon lw. Unrea llstic apConcord, Ohio; Kathy, Becky, Ryan,
praisals could lead to disa ppointments.
Evan, Craig and Janette Green,
ARIFS- March 2l·Apl11191 Don 't let youi' at· ten tion wander from your work today. Putting
Route I , Guernsey, Ohio; Brian and
restraints on h im or her will, create probl ems
Debbie- Babcock, Amy and Jody,
that could eastly be avo ided.
GE MINI (l\o1ay tl·June 20) In practi&lt;'a l matNorwich, Ohio; Paul and Martha
ters' toda y, you'r e likely to handle situations to
Babcock, Carl and Brett, Coshocton,
your advanta ge. Howe ver, socially you .may
· neglect to put your best foot forwa rd.
Ohio; Dan Coleman, Gahanna,
Ohio; Tinn Long, New Haven, W.
Va.; Lisa Perkins, Jim Burke, Jon
Burke, Ronald and Diane Burke,
Debbie · and Ronnie, all of Cambridge, Ohio; Charles and Mary Lou
Babcock, Coshocton, Ohio; Carl and
Kay Christman, Steve, Shelley,
Tom, Neil, Matthew, Joshua, and
Andrew, Mick a nd Sue Burke,;Jeff,
Jenni, Matthew, and Ruby Irene , a)!
of Route 3, Pomeroy; Garnet
but wishes to .enter college in the
Thomas, Columbus; Sue Kauff, and
Faii.•The course will begin Monday, · Sally and Charlie Bissell, Long BotJuly 14 and continue until Friday ,
tom; Robbie Saam · of Bradner,
August 15. Classes will be held MonOhio; Jane Pullins, Ruby Burke,
day through Friday from8 a.m. until
Bob and Joann Calaway, Robbie,
12 noon in Haning Hall on the Rio
J erome, Buck and Doroth y
Grande College Campus. Students
Calaway, Tammy, Missy and Adam,
will receive 100 hours of inaU of Alfred, Ohio.
troductory chemistry including lecThe home of Dorset and Grace
ture and laboratory exercises .
Babcock, New Concord, Ohio will be
The cost for the class is $125 per
the setting for the Babcock reWJion
person. This fee includes lab supfor 1981, and will be an event of July
plies and text. -Tne class limit is 24 5.
students and registrations will be accepted on a priority basis, with nursing students given first priority.
Other spaces will be available on a
first come first serve basis. Interested person should contact the
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Rowe, Former
Nursing Director or Continuing Cindy Demosky, Middleport, anEducation Of£ice . To register, noUJ)ce the birth of a son, Jeremy
please call (614) 245-5353; ext. 288 or JAy, born June 17 at Pleasant Valley
255, or Registration Day is July 14· Hospital. He weighted eight pounds,
from 9 a. m. until 7:30p.m. in the E. 10 ounces and measured 20 and 3-4
E. Davis Technical Career Center.
inches in length.
Grandparents lire Mr. arid Mrs.
William Demosky, Middleport, and
· Mrs. Virginia Rowe, Pomeroy.
Great grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Demosky,also Midacknowledgement of the un- dleport, and Mrs. Fern Harris, Lancomfortable circumstance would caster. The couple have one other
son, Ryan , age three.
alleviate it.
So, from Cronkite and Chancellor
and Reynolds and anyone who had a
mike and a camera, we were told
RECEIVE DEGREES
that this was, indeed, a convention
Two Meigs County residents
of, for, and by Ronald Reagan.
receiv.ed degrees from Ohio . State
" It is the GOP's big TV day,"
University at the flpring quarter
Chancellor cautioned, "designed to
commencement exercises held on
make you believe they are the party
June 13.
· of unity ... and all that.. .. " He didn't
Receivin g degrees were William
add 0 bushwa."
David Krawsczyn, Middleport, D. V.
The disclaimers emphatically M. and Richard Alan Couch,
registered, the networks then
Pomeroy, B.S. pharmacy.
P,roceeded to ferret out some news.
Thus did Sen. Jesse Helms become
one of the opening night stars. '
fer an opportunity to make a good
Helms, a conservative from North news division sho"wing ·and win
Carolina, has been mentioned as a viewers for the long fWl.
vice-presidential candidate.
In this regard, NBC - in its firstThat vice-presidential question, event test under news president Bill
the only WJscripted scene in this Small - outperformed the · comshow, was played large. Barbara petition on opening night. All of the
Walters introduced Indiana Sen. networks had co~ntators and
Richard Lugar as "tbe compromise polls and little filmed histories of
candidate;" Chancellor and David GOP conventions, but NBC seemed
Brinkley referred to NBC polls that to be working a little ~der.
showed George Bush as the
. The most impressive was NBC's
delegates' fa,vorlte; Howard Baker, clever method of making its pre8en- ·
Donald Rwnsfeld, Gerald Ford + ce seem less a blatant freebie : After
veeps were everywhere.
.
particularly baneful antiOf course, the networks come to Democratic speeches were made by
conventions for reasons in addition Republican orators, NBC cut to ·its
to (other than, some would suggest) Washington studio for comment
civic duty. ABC, CBS and NBC are , from Democrats Robert Strauss and
foremost, ratings competltors and Sen. Uoyd Bentsen.
there's a pretty hefty prize at stak~
That generous opportunity for
in that line + an estimated 50 million rebuttal will preswnably be exviewers will tWJe in to the GOP tended to the GOP when the
proceeding.
Democrats issue their dogma next
. Also, the political conventions of- month.

ASTROGRAPH
J ul}' lG, 1980
You are ln a ve ry creati\'e cycle and you cu uld
cvmc up with !lom e un ique ideas fur new items ,
meth ods or systems this coming year. It may be
necessary , howe~er, to find t he right teatnrrU~tes
to get them to the' marketplace.
CANCER fJuue 21-July%%) Treat others com passionately today, but don't let your heart rule
your head to the extent that you might do
something foolish. Be ki.nd, but also be lo~i cal.
Find out more of what 11es ahead for you m the
year fo Uowing your birt hday by senttin g for your
copy uf'Astro-G ra ph. Matl $1 for ea ch to AstroG"ph, &amp;x 489, ~dio City Station, N. Y. 10019.
Be sure tospectfybirlhdate.
LEO (July !3-Aug . 221 You " ' likely to b!'
alternately prudent and ca~eless in. managing
your resources today. D&lt;ln t permit your' extrava~ance to wipe ot4t 3'our gains.
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep.t. 22 !. ~ecognition today i.s
important to you, provtded ll s nota l the e1pensc
orsomeone else. Share the limeli~ht with those
whohe lpedboost yoo up the ladd".

U BRA i Sept. 23-0ct. !3) Success will not elude
you today unless yo~ spread yo.ur forces tO? ~.in ..
Focus on your g!leli.S· Exclude tdeas or actiVIties
that are not pertment.
SCORPIO lOci. Zt-Nuv. t21 Before jumping in-

Chemistry course offered
by Rio Grande College
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College and Community College is
pleased to announce that ' a
chemistry course will be offered
through the Continuing Education
Department" of the Rio Grande
College -and Community College
during the Second Summer Session,
July 14-August 15. This course will
be offered on a non-credit basis and
will be designed primarily for those
students who have not had a high
school chemistry course, (a nursing
program admission requirement)
ana still wish to be considered for acceptance to the nursing program for
fall, !!Ill(). The course will cover
basic foundations and principles of
chemistry in preparation for taking
Chern. 105: Principles of Chemistry
I in the Fall Quarter of the nursing
curriculwn.
"
This course is also available to any
student who has not had sufficient
chemistry in high school or who did
not take any high school chemistry

New arrival

•

Network coverage predictable
ByPETERJ BOYER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGEY:S (AP) - And so it
began, the teleVISIOn extravaganza
posed as a lesson in applied civics ;
with a prayer from·Pat Boone and a
duet from Glen Campbell and Tanya
Tucker, the Republicans opened on
prime time.
,
&lt;At this convention in particular, so
sealed on behalf of R~nald Reagan,
so carefully choreographed in his
cause, the networks faced the
challenge of making the event seem
a real news imperative, something
more than a show.
ABC, CBS and NBC responded, for
the most part, in predictable
fashion .
The favored method of appearing
to resist manipulatio,n by the
ll.eagan forces was to •constantly
remind viewers . that . the huge
television presence was so
vulnerable to manipula lion, as if

-

VAUGHAN'S
Middleport, Ohio:

FRIINDUIS.r SERYfCIJN TOWN
tiiGGIST iARoAINS IN 10WN

- -CORRECTION-

CHICKEN

Ta--Da!
THE INSURANCE STORE

•'

'

DEAR POLLY - Not too long ago
a reader asked about redoing the
back of a bathroom rug to keep it
from slipping. I am now making a
latch hook rug and was instructed to
paint the back of it with liquid latex
when it is finish ed. This would
probably also work on a used
bathroom rug and can be bought in a

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Tent Crusade planned
.. Several churches are planning to
sponsor the third . annual Lowe_r
Mason County Tent Crusade for
Christ, Aug. 111-24 at Apple Grove, W.
Va.
Preaching will be by pastors of
sponsoring churches during the first
week, and by the Rev. Ron Jackson,
P.Bstor of the Rock Hill Baptist Church in Inman, S. C., during the second
week.
The tent will be loated in a ball
field behind Sunnyside Elementary
School at Apple Grove. The community is about 25_miles north of
Huntington and 15 miles south of
Point Pleasant on W.Va. Route 2.
Special singing groups are
scheduled each night: Aug. 10, Bride
of Christ Singers; Aug. 11, Chestnut
Grove Trto; Aug . .12, the McSweeny
Family; Aug. 13, the Willing
Workers; Aug. 14, the Timesmen;
Aug. 15, Ashton Quartet; Aug. 16, the
Rejoicers; Aug. 17, the Jolnt Heirs;
Aug. 18, the New Dawnings ; Aug. 19,
the Perry Sisters ; Aug. 20, the
Kingsmen of Asheville, N. C.; Alig.
21 and 22, Dan Hayman and the
Couftry Hymntimers; Aug. 23, the
Pathways of Sandusky, and Aug. 24,
the Waymarks.
Dennis Weaver of Leon will direct
a choir made up of singers from the
sponsoring churches, and his wife,
Brenda, will play the piano.
Meetings will · begin at 7 :30
nightly. Only three offerings will be
taken: .Aug. 20 for the Kingsmen,
Aug. 22 for the evangelist, and Aug.
22 for the pathways. Free parking
and restroorns provided.

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·Mr. Evans
Ryan ~va ns , son of Mr. and M1~,
Evans, observed his ninth birthday
on July 1 with a party at the home of
his parents ; Portland.
Gifts were presented to Ryan with
refres hments of cake a nd ice cream
being served to his grandillother,
Ada VanMeter, PortlaniJ; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wa rth .~arrin
and Amy, Pomeroy; Mrs. Don Hunnel and Art , Barb Talbott, Portland ;
La ura Ohlinger, Pomeroy ; Robert
Brown, Minersville; Missy VanMeter, Portland ; Alicia, Cindy and
Matt Eva ns and Mrs. Eva ns.
Sending gifts and remembrances
were Ryan's gramdmother, Mrs.
Bernice Eva ns of Gallip oli s;
Shawna Bobo, Portland ; Mr: and
Mrs. Charles Fitch and Jason, Portland; Andy and Sharon oWens,
Michigan ; Leota Birch and Donette
Talbott, both of Portland.

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HEARING TESTS sET

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MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By

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MR. H. W. MATTINGLY
BE~TONE Consultant

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Hearing Air Specialist

Who Will Be At:

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MEIGS INN - POMEROY , OHIO
THURSDAY, JULY 17- 9 AM to 12 NOON

Anyone .who h as troub le hea ring is welcome to have a

hea r in g te'st using· m'Pdern electrnic equipment t o d e termine it h is loss is One wh ich
may be helped. Some of the ca uses of hearing loss w il l be exp lained
and d iagr ams of how the ear work s w ill be s h own .
We Also Service and Repair All Mak es of Hearing Aid s.
Batteries And Suppli es For All M ak es For Sale
IF YOU CA NN O T COME IN .
C AL L TH E HOT EL FO R A HOM E AP PO IN TME NT .
.
PHONE 992 -3629

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........ - Pomeroy, Ohio
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POMEROY,O.
992-Sljl or 992-5739

pt•rsonnl lim:s o f insur~ncc for young
JW&lt;i plto ln c_luding n lot less hassle o ver auto,· boat, renttors ,
and homeowners insurance. We offer high qua lity stl.Jff at
low prices. G i ~·- ~s a cali and we'll1~ro•c it. .
' .. · '

HOT DOGS

store that sells latch hook supplies.
- MARJORIE
,
DEAR POLLY - When you take
bread out of the oven, leave it in the ·
pans for io to 15 minutes and then it
will come out easily. Watch the time
so you do not forget. If it stays in the
pans too long it will be soggy.
When baking a· cake, grease the
bottom of the pan or line it with
waxed paper but do not grease the
sides, as that makes it crisp, which
is undesirable if you plan to ice the
cake.
When a recipe calls for spices, etc.
tied in a bag so as to be eas ily
removed, I use an alumni urn tea ball
instead of the bag.
1 transfer hoUsehold bleach to a
squeeze bottle and label it carefully
and then put it with my dishwashing
detergent. When I put the soap in the
dishpan to do dishes I squirt in a
teaspoon or so of the bleach to help
kill germs and remove food stains.
The dishes dry without spotting after
they are rinsed and set.on the dish
dra iner ,- MRS. A. G.
Polly will send you one of h~r
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn~ Write POLLY'S f10INTERS in care of this newspaper.

DEAR M.J.S. - ·
I suggest that you
paint the inside of
these cans with
clear varnish or
shellac and then
put the various
staples in · plastic
bags inside the
cans. - POLLY

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Wi• ,1wcialize in

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Refinishing cans...
By Polly Cramer
Special ~orrespondent
DEAR POLLY - I have saved
some ni ce cans that pretzels came
in. I want to use them for storing
staples such as fl our and sugar.
However, the insides of these cans
have a funny, rusty look and I wonder if there is a way I could refinish
them or do something that would
make them safe for storing food
items. Many thanks to you and your
friends for helping so many people.
- M.J.S.

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214MAIN

GOLD KIST

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REUTER BROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE

FOR MONDAY, JULY 14 AD

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Polly 's Pointers

E:vangelist, Bruce Taylor of Zion, Illinois
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Jul I' 1980
DICKTRACY
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,~Tuesday,

BUT I THOUGHT YOU. M IGHT
TO FAMILIARIZE YOUR ·
l::&gt;t,LF WITH THE QbQ ~ AREA.

'

July 15,1910-

CAR THAT HAS ~UST
PASSED LIZZ HAS A PASS6NGER

SHE MIGHT 6E INTERESTED IN-

.'.

Helen Heln Us

·No repu~able clinic would
make this ·k ind of call.

'

BY-HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN :
Special correspondent
.We're a two-career couple,
DEAR HELEN :
w1th excellent prospects in
I got a ph9ne call the other equally important jobs. My
day that really upset me. It husband's work requires
was "long'distance, from the rel~ation, if h~ wants to go
Department of Com- up in the company. He's in
municable Diseases."
line fpr a managership in a
The caller said my Southern town where my
husband had been examined public relations and-or adthere, and was found to have . vertising skills would go to
gonorrhea. He told me I waste.
If he turns this job down, ·
should immediately see my
doctor for an examination, he may not get another chanand P\JSSible treatment .
ce for years. But if he takes
When my husband got it, I'll wither away and die,
home I was in hysterics. He as I need fulfillment too. I
swore he'd never been to a don't want to hold him back,
VD clinic and had never been I can't bear losing him, but I
with another woman. Since I also can't ·face leaving a
was so upset I didn't get the career Ilove. ·
name of the town where the
Is there any solution? What
call was made, I can't check. have others done in these cirI guess · I believe my cwnstances? - CAREER
husband, but just in case I've WOMAN AND WIFE
made a doctor's ap- DEAR CAREER WOMAN:
pointment. Have you heard
A partial solution would be
of hoaxes like this before? to stay in your present job
CELIA IN WYOMING
until your husband relocates,
DEAR CELIA:
and cases the territory.
I certainly have! This is a Perhaps there's more here
cruel telephone trick that has for you than · you presently
traveled all over the country, think.
on the wings of publicity
Then, take several days off
generated by newspaper and visit the new town.
stories about the hoax.
Distribute your reswnes at
Be assured that ~likely companies, either
reputable clipic would make there or in nearby cities,
this kind of call to a wife. arrange for interviews, 'talk
H.
l to your husband's co-workers
- - who might know of openings.

. BORN LOSER

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IS W.A.KHif-}0 ME.

ANNIE

SORRY, MR. &amp;ARR!
I'M NOT AUTHOR. IZED TtJ DISCUSS
THAT 'HORK WITH
ANYONE BUT MR.
BAN6AVEL .'

··IT'S REALLY KINDOF THAT'~ THE
INSPIRING-THAT A MAN SPIRIT THAT
LikE MR. BAN6AVEL CAN
BUILT
O~ERCOME HIS BACK6ROOND THIS
THROUGHINITIATI~E AND
GREAT

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Got a problem? An adult
subject for discussiol)? You
can talk it over in her colurtm
if you write to Helen Hottel,
care of thi·s newspaper.

.C an handle cancer drug,
hut taste for food is gone

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DEAR HELEN:
My wife was offered an im·
portant job with a $15,000 a
year -raise at her company· ·
headquarters in San Diego.
After discussion, we decided
my pOsition was the expendable one;- But I didn't
give it up until I found work I
liked near San Diego - this
through an "executive sear·
ch" agency. It can be qOne, if
you're willing to live apart
and conunute on weekends
for a while. Also, I'd like to
say that it shouldn't always
be the wif~ who leaves her
job because her husbilnd is
transferred. If she gets the
better opportunity, she
should go for it, while he
makes the adjustments. EQUAL RIGHTS HUSBAND

HMlth

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It may take several months, but I think you'll
discover a way to continue
your career and still be with
your man- just as (I hope!)
he would, if roles were reversed. Opportunities are
everywhere, if you're really
determined to find them.
P.S. Here's reassurance ·
from one who did :

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G000 AN I7 THE
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By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Special correspondent
. DEAR D~. LAMB - I am
fmally convmced that for the
rest of m.Y ~ife I'll be a lymphoma v1ctnn. After a year
of che~otherapy injections
and takmg Cytoxan tablets
regularly, I have learned to
handle this drug ·but I have
no taste for my food which
causes loss of weight and
. nausea, etc. I eat almost
everything to stay alive but
the pleasure of hving is only
about 50 percent. I'msorryto
say the doctors in the cancer
program · where I'm being
seen apparently don't have
any interest in my lack of
taste. or are bored with
hearmg such a complaint.
Please help if you can.
DEAR READER - · There
are several reasons for
_weight loss from cancer but
one of them is loss of taste for
food or the food actually
tastes bad. A loss of taste in
cance.r patien~ is sometimes
assoctated wtth the zinc
deficiency. Your doctors
could give 'you some zinc
tabl~ts that might help if
that s part of the problem.
In addition, cancer patien~ . have a decreased sensttlv1ty
sweet substances.
You can perhaps make your
s~eet foods taste better by
usmg more sweetener than
you -~e~reviously ac-

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customed to using.

.·
often sqch problems may be
The~ canc~r _patients kept in relative remission for &lt;
sometnne.s don t like meat long periods of time. Under
because 1t suddenly tastes these circumstances it
bitter to th~m. That's becomes analogous to' the
~a.use of a different sen- .diabetic who- lives with
sitlVlty to the ure.a m me~t. regular treatment.such as inIncreased seasonmg or ~If- sulin and diet. It's important
ferent types of seasomng to realize that with modern
may mask this and help im: treatment, many cancer
prove t~e taste of the meat. patients can live for many
Dependmg on your own taste useful years.
sensatt?n,
actually
DEAR DR. LAMB- I had
sweetemng t~e . meat a heart attack four years ago
sometnnes ~elp dis~mse the and my heart specialist• put
flavor. An tllustratwn here me on Cownadin. I've been
would be. to roast beef with told that after you've taken
a~ples. s.mce meat often con- this for a period of time that
~ms a hidden am?unt of fat,
it is no longer effective. is
It the cancer pattent' really that true?
cuts. bac~ on meats,, he may
DEAR READER - No,
be s~gnif1cantly cu!ti~g back that's not correct. Cownadin
on ~s ne~ed calone mtake.
is an anti-clotting agent. It is
Smce I m sure you want true that the amount a permore general infonnation son needs to control the tenabout cancer, I'm sending ·dency of the blood to clot can
you The Health Letter nwn- vary. Even what you eat can
bl;r 14-8, Cancer: A Fact of affect how the medicine
rl!e ..Other readers who want works. However, doctors
th_is tssue can send 75 cents who are treatin~ patients
wtth a long, stamped, self- with such medicines· have
addressed envelope for it. blood tests taken inSend your request to me, in termittently to be sure that
care. of this ne:wsp~per, P: 0. they're getting the effect
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station, they desire. If, for any
Ne~ York, ~Y .10019.
reason, the blood clotting
Fmally, I d like to add that process isn't slowed down
lymphom_a and other can~er enough with the amount of
!lroblems. may often be like medicine the patient is
liymg w1th. other. ~hronic taking, the usual procedure
dise.ases. Wtth medtcme and is simply to increase the dose
avallable modern treatment,
to the desired amount. (

Evening televisio'!: listings
,, ·.....~"'l;"

JULY 16, 1980
8'00

i1J 8 C!)CJ {])@)(!i).dj

NEWS
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
[.tO/NED IN PROGRESS!
CD "Br111 T1ruet'' SopMia loren,
G~orge Kennedy. $260,000 of
miss ing dold unearth s questions

CD

BARNEY

I GOT FIVE
HEARTS,
SNUFFY!!

·THAT WIPES

ME OUT!! ·

WHAT

HEART BURN

AILS VOU,
PAW?

:I WIN
TH' POT!! ·
•

about General Patton 's 'a cc iden·
tal ' death in a car CHISM the day
before his retirement. (Rated PG)
@ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
&lt;IJ ABC NEWS
CIJ (llJ ZOOM
' '3D m U m NBC NEWS
([) I LOVE LUCY
&lt;IJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Gue!lt:
Rodd~

to change.

IJ C1J

CAMPAIGN '80: REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
The exact starting l ime and length
of convention coverage i&amp; subject
t.o change.
IJl DICk CAVETT SHOW
®J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
7 :58 (1) NEWS UPDATE
8 :00 (1) ORAL ROBERTS
Gl MO.V/E -(SUSPENSE) ' "

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(1) NEW$ UPDATE
CROSS WITS
PUPPET TREE GANG
uu HOGAN'S HEROES
&lt;IJ &lt;HlQ) FACE THE MUSIC
CV WILD KINGDOM 'People Thai
Time Forgot'
.
OCIJ TICTACDOUGH
C1J MACNEil-lEHRER REPORT
®I NEWS
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
(21U m 1980RE,PUSL/CANNA·
fi ONAL CONVENTI ON The e~act
starti ng' ti r:ne and to mJ tl1 ol conve n·
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CD FAITH THAT LIVES
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&lt;IJ &lt;!ZID TI'E '80VOTE , AEPUB-

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The exact starting l ime and length
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discovers this and dlamisaes Dick.
{Gioaed Captioned) (60mina.)

10:00

FOR THE CENTURY In I hie oocond

episode Mountbatten touratndla, ·
Burma, Ceylon and Japan andrlaes
lror.-~ sailpr to commander. (Ctosid
Captioned) (60 mins.}
· , l
(llJ NEWS
•:
, 10,28 (1) NEWS UPDATE
,, . , /'
10\30

examines

the

evidence fo r these popular theor·
ies and comea up with eome aur·
pr is ing earthbound explanations.
l Giosed Captioned) (60 mlns,)
®I CAMPAIGN '80: REPUBLICAN
NATIONAL CONVENTION The
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10,58
11 '00

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11 ,28
11:30

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chango.
B:30 (1) GOOD NEWS
8 : 58 (1) NEWS UPDATE

9,00 CD

70Q_CLUB
@@ GI THE ' 80VOTE : REPUBliCAN NATIONAL CONVENTI ON
The pxacl st art 1ng tirlu~ ~nd length
ol convent ion CO'Ieraoe is Subj ec t
to chang e.
Cil(ll) FLAM BA ADS 'En/ ry to a New
World ' Christina, Oick and William
plollo save Sweetbrier, but Russell

'

m FAITH 20
GJ

cient Astronauta ' ls itr "&gt;ssibla that
J) thousands of ve arseoo estronauts
lrom other w o fld s visit e d earth?

This program

Cil LORD MOUNTBATTEN: MAN

1H&gt;O

12:20

'
MOVIE ·(WESTERN) " '

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CID OVER EASV Guest : Agnes
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(Closed Captioned)
@ NEWS UPDATE
m U m ® NEWS
@ TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
@ MOVIE · (WESTERNt "I!!
"Major Dundee" 1065
CiJ DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
® DICK CAVETT SHOW
(1) NEWS UPDATE
ffi U m THETONIGHTSHOW
' Bet~t Of Carson ' Guasti : Jamea
Garner, Ellen Burstyn, Oavldlett erman. (Repeal; 90 mlns.) (Due to
convention coverage , the starting
lime of The Tonight Show Ia 1ubjact
10 cha.nge)
•
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Cll l!il OJ NEWS
C1J ABC CAPT/OI'IED NEWS
®I MOVIE ·(COMEDY)" "Andy
Hardy Meet1 a Debutante"
1940
.
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A!IC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
O CIJ NEWS
(JJ &lt;Ill Gl TUESDAY IIOV/l OF
THE WEEK 'River 0 1 Promil'ea ' "'
1979 Stars: Richard Yniquez. Joe
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Jul I' 1980
DICKTRACY
' •
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,~Tuesday,

BUT I THOUGHT YOU. M IGHT
TO FAMILIARIZE YOUR ·
l::&gt;t,LF WITH THE QbQ ~ AREA.

'

July 15,1910-

CAR THAT HAS ~UST
PASSED LIZZ HAS A PASS6NGER

SHE MIGHT 6E INTERESTED IN-

.'.

Helen Heln Us

·No repu~able clinic would
make this ·k ind of call.

'

BY-HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN :
Special correspondent
.We're a two-career couple,
DEAR HELEN :
w1th excellent prospects in
I got a ph9ne call the other equally important jobs. My
day that really upset me. It husband's work requires
was "long'distance, from the rel~ation, if h~ wants to go
Department of Com- up in the company. He's in
municable Diseases."
line fpr a managership in a
The caller said my Southern town where my
husband had been examined public relations and-or adthere, and was found to have . vertising skills would go to
gonorrhea. He told me I waste.
If he turns this job down, ·
should immediately see my
doctor for an examination, he may not get another chanand P\JSSible treatment .
ce for years. But if he takes
When my husband got it, I'll wither away and die,
home I was in hysterics. He as I need fulfillment too. I
swore he'd never been to a don't want to hold him back,
VD clinic and had never been I can't bear losing him, but I
with another woman. Since I also can't ·face leaving a
was so upset I didn't get the career Ilove. ·
name of the town where the
Is there any solution? What
call was made, I can't check. have others done in these cirI guess · I believe my cwnstances? - CAREER
husband, but just in case I've WOMAN AND WIFE
made a doctor's ap- DEAR CAREER WOMAN:
pointment. Have you heard
A partial solution would be
of hoaxes like this before? to stay in your present job
CELIA IN WYOMING
until your husband relocates,
DEAR CELIA:
and cases the territory.
I certainly have! This is a Perhaps there's more here
cruel telephone trick that has for you than · you presently
traveled all over the country, think.
on the wings of publicity
Then, take several days off
generated by newspaper and visit the new town.
stories about the hoax.
Distribute your reswnes at
Be assured that ~likely companies, either
reputable clipic would make there or in nearby cities,
this kind of call to a wife. arrange for interviews, 'talk
H.
l to your husband's co-workers
- - who might know of openings.

. BORN LOSER

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IS W.A.KHif-}0 ME.

ANNIE

SORRY, MR. &amp;ARR!
I'M NOT AUTHOR. IZED TtJ DISCUSS
THAT 'HORK WITH
ANYONE BUT MR.
BAN6AVEL .'

··IT'S REALLY KINDOF THAT'~ THE
INSPIRING-THAT A MAN SPIRIT THAT
LikE MR. BAN6AVEL CAN
BUILT
O~ERCOME HIS BACK6ROOND THIS
THROUGHINITIATI~E AND
GREAT

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Got a problem? An adult
subject for discussiol)? You
can talk it over in her colurtm
if you write to Helen Hottel,
care of thi·s newspaper.

.C an handle cancer drug,
hut taste for food is gone

:t

•

DEAR HELEN:
My wife was offered an im·
portant job with a $15,000 a
year -raise at her company· ·
headquarters in San Diego.
After discussion, we decided
my pOsition was the expendable one;- But I didn't
give it up until I found work I
liked near San Diego - this
through an "executive sear·
ch" agency. It can be qOne, if
you're willing to live apart
and conunute on weekends
for a while. Also, I'd like to
say that it shouldn't always
be the wif~ who leaves her
job because her husbilnd is
transferred. If she gets the
better opportunity, she
should go for it, while he
makes the adjustments. EQUAL RIGHTS HUSBAND

HMlth

~-

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It may take several months, but I think you'll
discover a way to continue
your career and still be with
your man- just as (I hope!)
he would, if roles were reversed. Opportunities are
everywhere, if you're really
determined to find them.
P.S. Here's reassurance ·
from one who did :

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WASTEI7 ALL THA1
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NOW I'VE GOT
A ' CONFESSION"
TO MAKE!

6ETTING TO KNOW

IT 'WA5TEI7'

TWIN ~!&gt;ROTHER ...
THINKING
WAS

OKAY, BUT

J UST THINK OF IT
AS TIME SPENT

DON ' T
CON? II7ER
TIME 1

MY

FAMILY. .. THE

G000 AN I7 THE
EIA17 9117E O F 11!

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Special correspondent
. DEAR D~. LAMB - I am
fmally convmced that for the
rest of m.Y ~ife I'll be a lymphoma v1ctnn. After a year
of che~otherapy injections
and takmg Cytoxan tablets
regularly, I have learned to
handle this drug ·but I have
no taste for my food which
causes loss of weight and
. nausea, etc. I eat almost
everything to stay alive but
the pleasure of hving is only
about 50 percent. I'msorryto
say the doctors in the cancer
program · where I'm being
seen apparently don't have
any interest in my lack of
taste. or are bored with
hearmg such a complaint.
Please help if you can.
DEAR READER - · There
are several reasons for
_weight loss from cancer but
one of them is loss of taste for
food or the food actually
tastes bad. A loss of taste in
cance.r patien~ is sometimes
assoctated wtth the zinc
deficiency. Your doctors
could give 'you some zinc
tabl~ts that might help if
that s part of the problem.
In addition, cancer patien~ . have a decreased sensttlv1ty
sweet substances.
You can perhaps make your
s~eet foods taste better by
usmg more sweetener than
you -~e~reviously ac-

w

customed to using.

.·
often sqch problems may be
The~ canc~r _patients kept in relative remission for &lt;
sometnne.s don t like meat long periods of time. Under
because 1t suddenly tastes these circumstances it
bitter to th~m. That's becomes analogous to' the
~a.use of a different sen- .diabetic who- lives with
sitlVlty to the ure.a m me~t. regular treatment.such as inIncreased seasonmg or ~If- sulin and diet. It's important
ferent types of seasomng to realize that with modern
may mask this and help im: treatment, many cancer
prove t~e taste of the meat. patients can live for many
Dependmg on your own taste useful years.
sensatt?n,
actually
DEAR DR. LAMB- I had
sweetemng t~e . meat a heart attack four years ago
sometnnes ~elp dis~mse the and my heart specialist• put
flavor. An tllustratwn here me on Cownadin. I've been
would be. to roast beef with told that after you've taken
a~ples. s.mce meat often con- this for a period of time that
~ms a hidden am?unt of fat,
it is no longer effective. is
It the cancer pattent' really that true?
cuts. bac~ on meats,, he may
DEAR READER - No,
be s~gnif1cantly cu!ti~g back that's not correct. Cownadin
on ~s ne~ed calone mtake.
is an anti-clotting agent. It is
Smce I m sure you want true that the amount a permore general infonnation son needs to control the tenabout cancer, I'm sending ·dency of the blood to clot can
you The Health Letter nwn- vary. Even what you eat can
bl;r 14-8, Cancer: A Fact of affect how the medicine
rl!e ..Other readers who want works. However, doctors
th_is tssue can send 75 cents who are treatin~ patients
wtth a long, stamped, self- with such medicines· have
addressed envelope for it. blood tests taken inSend your request to me, in termittently to be sure that
care. of this ne:wsp~per, P: 0. they're getting the effect
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station, they desire. If, for any
Ne~ York, ~Y .10019.
reason, the blood clotting
Fmally, I d like to add that process isn't slowed down
lymphom_a and other can~er enough with the amount of
!lroblems. may often be like medicine the patient is
liymg w1th. other. ~hronic taking, the usual procedure
dise.ases. Wtth medtcme and is simply to increase the dose
avallable modern treatment,
to the desired amount. (

Evening televisio'!: listings
,, ·.....~"'l;"

JULY 16, 1980
8'00

i1J 8 C!)CJ {])@)(!i).dj

NEWS
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
[.tO/NED IN PROGRESS!
CD "Br111 T1ruet'' SopMia loren,
G~orge Kennedy. $260,000 of
miss ing dold unearth s questions

CD

BARNEY

I GOT FIVE
HEARTS,
SNUFFY!!

·THAT WIPES

ME OUT!! ·

WHAT

HEART BURN

AILS VOU,
PAW?

:I WIN
TH' POT!! ·
•

about General Patton 's 'a cc iden·
tal ' death in a car CHISM the day
before his retirement. (Rated PG)
@ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
&lt;IJ ABC NEWS
CIJ (llJ ZOOM
' '3D m U m NBC NEWS
([) I LOVE LUCY
&lt;IJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Gue!lt:
Rodd~

to change.

IJ C1J

CAMPAIGN '80: REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
The exact starting l ime and length
of convention coverage i&amp; subject
t.o change.
IJl DICk CAVETT SHOW
®J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
7 :58 (1) NEWS UPDATE
8 :00 (1) ORAL ROBERTS
Gl MO.V/E -(SUSPENSE) ' "

"Eiger Sanction" 1075
@ MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE!"'" \'o
' 'FIIg_hl of the Phoenb ' ' 1966
®112101 2()-20

McDowall.

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CBS NEWS
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
@ OVE:A EASY Guest: Agnes
DeMille . Host : Hu gh Downs.

-

CD 0$
..

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IHt~dun
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Wf.lAT IF I TOLD I{OU
THAT LfOU HAD TO

·;,l.~d!h

C~OOSE

8 :58
7:00

6ETWEEN L(OUR

l"HAT WOULI7N'T
BE ,DIFFICULT

BIJT I'VE NEVER
ASKED l(OU TO C~005E,

I?

PIANO AND ME?

.
7,30

'·'

•.

•
I.

I

(

(

(!)® NOVA 'The Case of the An·

. CIJ

rtru:r~~
~~r~p ! .

-

{glosed Captioned}.
(!2) Gl ABC NEWS
(1) NEW$ UPDATE
CROSS WITS
PUPPET TREE GANG
uu HOGAN'S HEROES
&lt;IJ &lt;HlQ) FACE THE MUSIC
CV WILD KINGDOM 'People Thai
Time Forgot'
.
OCIJ TICTACDOUGH
C1J MACNEil-lEHRER REPORT
®I NEWS
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
(21U m 1980RE,PUSL/CANNA·
fi ONAL CONVENTI ON The e~act
starti ng' ti r:ne and to mJ tl1 ol conve n·
Hon coverage Is subject to
change.
CD FAITH THAT LIVES
(J) ALL IN THE FAMILy
&lt;IJ &lt;!ZID TI'E '80VOTE , AEPUB-

-

LICAN NAT/ONALCONV~NTION
The exact starting l ime and length
of convention coverage is subject

.

discovers this and dlamisaes Dick.
{Gioaed Captioned) (60mina.)

10:00

FOR THE CENTURY In I hie oocond

episode Mountbatten touratndla, ·
Burma, Ceylon and Japan andrlaes
lror.-~ sailpr to commander. (Ctosid
Captioned) (60 mins.}
· , l
(llJ NEWS
•:
, 10,28 (1) NEWS UPDATE
,, . , /'
10\30

examines

the

evidence fo r these popular theor·
ies and comea up with eome aur·
pr is ing earthbound explanations.
l Giosed Captioned) (60 mlns,)
®I CAMPAIGN '80: REPUBLICAN
NATIONAL CONVENTION The
e~e.ectaterting t i me and length of

me

&gt;J&lt;

.
10,58
11 '00

,

11 ,28
11:30

c on~enUon coVerage ill subject to
chango.
B:30 (1) GOOD NEWS
8 : 58 (1) NEWS UPDATE

9,00 CD

70Q_CLUB
@@ GI THE ' 80VOTE : REPUBliCAN NATIONAL CONVENTI ON
The pxacl st art 1ng tirlu~ ~nd length
ol convent ion CO'Ieraoe is Subj ec t
to chang e.
Cil(ll) FLAM BA ADS 'En/ ry to a New
World ' Christina, Oick and William
plollo save Sweetbrier, but Russell

'

m FAITH 20
GJ

cient Astronauta ' ls itr "&gt;ssibla that
J) thousands of ve arseoo estronauts
lrom other w o fld s visit e d earth?

This program

Cil LORD MOUNTBATTEN: MAN

1H&gt;O

12:20

'
MOVIE ·(WESTERN) " '

"Butch And Sundance: The Earl1
Day a"
CID OVER EASV Guest : Agnes
DeMille. Hoet: Hugh Oowna .
(Closed Captioned)
@ NEWS UPDATE
m U m ® NEWS
@ TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
@ MOVIE · (WESTERNt "I!!
"Major Dundee" 1065
CiJ DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
® DICK CAVETT SHOW
(1) NEWS UPDATE
ffi U m THETONIGHTSHOW
' Bet~t Of Carson ' Guasti : Jamea
Garner, Ellen Burstyn, Oavldlett erman. (Repeal; 90 mlns.) (Due to
convention coverage , the starting
lime of The Tonight Show Ia 1ubjact
10 cha.nge)
•
CD ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
Cll l!il OJ NEWS
C1J ABC CAPT/OI'IED NEWS
®I MOVIE ·(COMEDY)" "Andy
Hardy Meet1 a Debutante"
1940
.
lf) @ iD
A!IC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
O CIJ NEWS
(JJ &lt;Ill Gl TUESDAY IIOV/l OF
THE WEEK 'River 0 1 Promil'ea ' "'
1979 Stars: Richard Yniquez. Joe
S,aJll.O_a. _

•,

.'

'r

'.

�!o---lThe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , T uesday, July 15,1980.

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport:Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 15; i 980
•1
Business
1
Homes for Sale
~·

·~------------------------------------------~~----~
On the farm scene
r

f

• '

,.

Corn pr~duction reporf W·i dely read
·.

the heat and dry weather may . hit
deeply Into thl) big Corn Belt area of
the Midwest. .
•
Suppose - and this is strictly
theoretical - the heat and dry
weather. cuts Iowa's 1900 com
prospects sharply, say a 10 percent
reduction from July 1 Indications.
That would transl3te to a decline of
about 147 million bushels between
' July I and Aug. lin Iowa alone.
According to the July production
report, only nine states were expected to . produce enilre crops
larger than 147 million bushels.
Those are Illinois, Indiana, Kansas,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri,
Nebraska, Ohio and Wisconsin . •
The theoretical 10 percent reduction in Iowa corn prospects,. for
)eli8Illple, would l)e larger than the
expected combined com harvests of
Alabama, 24.4 million bushels
estintated as of July 1; Arkansas,
3.~ million bushels; Colorado, 90
million _bushels; and Oklahoma, 7.1
miPion bushels.
· Further, if Iowa's harvest as of
Aug. i would be down by 147 million
bushels, that would be almost as
large as the entire Kansas com crop,
estintated at 157.3 million bushels as
of July I. It would be within -40
million bushels or so of Missouri's
harvest, estimated at 188.6 million.
A drop of 147 million bushels in

WASIDNGTON (AP) - A month
from now, when farmers,
economists, the grain Industry and
foreign buyers analYze another new
crop production report by the
Agriculture Department, one of the
most widely read figures will be the
com estimate f!&gt;r Iowa.
Here is why: ,
The report, due , to be released
Aug. ll, will include new production
estintates for corn and · wlieat that
· will reflect the effects of this summer's heat wave.
Corn by far is the la'rg~st of the
U.S. grain crops and is the keystone
for the country's major food sector
comprised of beef, pork, poultry and ·
dairy products. And Iowa is the
largest com-growing state.
Last Friday, in its Initial estintate
of 1980, the department said that
based on July llndications ·the com
harvest could he about 7.28 billion
bushels, down 6 percent from last
fall's record 7.76 billlon. Iowa was
expected to product about :IJJ percent
of the U.S. crop at almost 1.47 billion
. bushels, down from almost, 1.63
billion last year.
The heat wave that has gripped
the Southwest for a month has
enlarged and is moving into the
Southeast and a bit farther north.
That is beglnning to worry the com
watchers, certainly those who fear

ENOUGH POWER FOR 15 homes Is expected to be generated by Ibis new wllidmill at an Euergy Department test
center IIi Rocky Flats, Colo. Tbe 126-foot-tall "Gyromill"
featores three vertl~al blades rotatllig around a central
sbafl.
·· ·

•t

said.

992·3921 ,

" Maggie's

ser'lliee~

Call

Upholstery "

vinyl samples. Call 7422852 .

/
Mortgage
Money
Available, Conventional ·5
Pet . down VA · no down

..

.....................
. . ... ,..
=======
-····
.......................

Piano. Tuning · Lan~
Danie,ls 742·_
2951. Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

In Memoriam

2

n loving memory of
Virginia Floral Hawk, who
passed away five years ago
1

Three y,,e ar old. five room
house with central air and
heat, carpet throughout, 24
acres .with fruit trees.
Loca ted on Eagle Ri.dge

-

Rd. Phone 949·2793.
Excellent ' location on SR
124. Three bedroom home
on approximately two
acres. Many extras. Call

'192-7255.
Three bedroom brick r anch
style home with l'h bath
and built-in kitchen , full
basement with wood stove,
large garage, b ig lot with
n ic e
garden
spot .

.;

Family .

missed

by

..

PAY
highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings 1 jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett 16arber
1

60c

lb .,

radiators 40c ea.; ye llow
lb. Riders Salvage, Rt . 4,
St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 992·5468 .

week~ old
go.

Call

6

Chester, Ohio.

r----------------------,
I
Curb Inflation. 1.
I

.

Classifleds and
Savell 1

Address,.___ _ _ _ _ _ __

,,

eAiiiNOUNCEMENTS

counts as a word . Count
name and address or
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
any ad . Your ad will be

,.
I
I
I

proper

11-Want.cl To Do

These cash rates
include discount

') For Rent

2. - - - - - 3. _ __ __
4. -- - -- -

5. _ _ _ __

-

9, _ _ __

---,

Servlus

_

10' - - - - - - -

J4. _ _ _ _ __

.

•'

.

Box

729

P omeroy Oh. 45769
I

,

,•

.,

t.,~- -1/.1-.s

Cllh
1dl'fl
ldtYI

l.ot
l.lt
1.10

1

I

....

''days

Chlrfl

uS

' 1.90

us

3.75

EICh worcl over tht minimum 1S words 114 ctnh ptr word per day.
Ads running other thin constcUtl\le days will bl cMI'Itd al_the t d•y

I

1
I• I
1!,: .
I;

rate.

'" mamorv. (lrell of Thank, and Obitut,.Y : '«lltl per wore, u .oo
minimum. C~.tor. '" 1dval'ice.
~oblll

ord•r. 2S c•nt Chlro• fl)r IdS

Sen""''·

• ''"

Homt utes•nd Y;ud 111•1•re1cnpttd aniYWII'IfPI (II w

c.-rryi~O

.

••• Number In Colrt at TIM'

l~~--------------,.-----'

~

~ery,

very, ~ERY becoming! It
wraps all the way actoss, then
ripples down to a curved hem.
Note news ol galhered shouldf~,
drama of dolman sleoves.
Printed Pattern 4812: Misses
Sizes 8, 10, 11, 14, 16. 18. Size
11 (bust 34) takes 1 7/ 8 yards
60·i nch labtic.
$1.75 ''" ucl1 p.llltm. Add 5M
far oath p.~ttem lar first·class
1it1Nil 1nd hindlina. Send 111:

l"~ 1
·

PIPit!
243 W..t 17 Sl1 _~1W Tart, IT
'10011. Print lAM(, ADDIIESS,
ZIP, SIZE, 1nd SITU NUIIIIER.
'
Busy women , the fastest·tosew
fashions ate tn our NEW SPRING·
(Insert n1me 0110111

.

• •

ltlly

I!

.~~------..---~--------·----, ·

4852

Anne Adlms

SUMMER PAITERN CATALOG!

Dresses. tops, jackets, panls.
Plus St.71 fteo pattern coupon.
Send $1 for Catalog.
121·Afpans 'n' Dailla ... $1.50
'129-Quicll/lar Tronsllll .$1.50
flrs.Sins 3H&amp;.Sl.50
UZ-Qollt Oriainlh .. . . .. $1.50

uoJ..

1973

Vulnerable: Neither

. for Sale
Fairpoint. 14x65 2

.....

MOBILE home for sale,
$6500, land contract with
$500 down or will negotiate
bedroom, built-in bunks,
cash sale . Also one
48xl0 mobile home, S2800,

land contract. $300 down .
Write J . Bowland, 15068

Empire Rd.,
OH . 43076 .

Thornville,

1969 Two Bedroom 12x60
Hollypark trailer fur ·

nished, air conditioning,
washer,
underpinning,
sm all metal building .

$7300.00. Call992-288l.
Fourteen foot wide three
bedroOm, 1'12 baths, fur·

nished. Must see to ap-

sell .

preciate. Priced to

Calll -304-675-6466.

1977 Schultz mobile home
and lot. 14x70 with three
bedrooms, 11h baths, at
l041 1f2 St . 2nd A'lle., Mid·

dleporl, Ohio. Call 992·2457 .
Farms tor Sale

road , three bedrooms,
living room , bath, kitchen,
dining room, three car car·
port,
cellar,
part
basement, good barn.

. Charles King, Rt . l,
Rutland, Ohio 45775. Call
742·2229.
Lots &amp; Acreage

35

One "acre gorund and full

••
Pus

PUI

PUI

PUI

p..,

Pau

.'

Opening lead:+ 7

bedroom

1965 y ·a nor 12x52, 2 bedr .
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
wv. 304-675 -4.424.

-·

Deater: Eut

ByO.waWJacalty
udAiuS.C.C

Eut toot 1111 ace oi dlamOIICII and led back tbe elcbt.
SoothwutDdummyandltUd·
led au pooalbllilles. .He could
cub ... of ·.duinmy'• cood

Housqs for Rent

Two bedroom furnished
home. Call 9'12·5914, 9'12·
3129, 992 ·5434.

3090 .
Three bedroom house for

AVOJ'l salespeople wanted .

Openngs in Tuppers Plains,
Chester,
Reedsvi lie,
Harrisonville, Pomeroy

21

Wi II do odds and ends.
Paneling, floor tile, and
ce iling tile. Call Fred

Miller 992-6338.

approximately 1100 square

uun

Help Wanted

'.
.
. ''.

Pomeroy, 0.
NEW LiSliNG - NR4l, New
hOme in the RiQQ$ Edit ion, J
oearooms, 1 tvll b~ths , tami lll
room , f ull ba ement , f irepl ace
with a hulalator, with a
beaut iful l•wn. Outst(lndlnQ
tamlly home Mav anume mor ·
fgolge Pr iced In me low SAO's.

the el igibility list at 992·
2156 or 9'12-2157.

m obi le home on
be aut i ful ac re
garage,
workshop ,
washer,

....

Remodeled throughout!

5

Rent with the option to buy.
Call 9'12-2528 or 9'12-2117
before 5.

Housing
H eadqua rters

I!

~~!tL 8.SR.~,!"!,~
•

1868

.

I

LIVING - ~

pro·

water heat, all utilities,

modern kiL carpeting
and full basement.

at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center. 992-11606 Mon·
day through Friday from 9·

bedrooms, 3 king size, 2

We offer the only 1rain·

ing package of its k'ind
in the counti-y. Qualified
!-•.applicants will get tree
medical care, earn 30
days' .v acation wi1h pay
and will receive·a $2,000
bonus upon completion
of training. Ideal candidates will have high
school diploma and
above average math
and physics skills. Age

17 · 25. CALL TOLL
FREE
1-800-282·1384
MON .·WED.
9AMI~2 PM

FIRST

AD

5

AUCTION

full baths, modern kit..
formal dining, full base·

SATURDAY JULY 19, 1980
12:30 P.M.

FIRST AD. - 13 lots,
utilities available. Only
$6,500 .
SPECIAL - 2 lots and

~~

.,

.'

I

ment, nat . gas furnace.
1 acre .

old house rlea(r

Jones

Boys . $3,500.
BARGAIN - One slory
building 24x80, with
· bath for flea market or
home. $11,000.
YOU CAN BUY - This
one fl .r&gt;3 bedroom home,
,ajl utilities, bath, flue
fQr wood burner and 2
lots.

1
1

WE WORK FULL TIME
~ IN
SELLING YOUR
HOME,
NO SIDE ·
LINES . REAL ESTATE
IS
OUR .
ONLY
BUSINESS, SO IF YOU
,HAVE A PROBLEM,
CALL US AT 992·3325 or
992-3876.

'

TERMS: CASH
Not responsible tor accidents or loss.
C. C,, BRADFORD, AUCTIONEER
Sale'by Bradford Auction Co., Racine, Ohio.

'I •

L.------------------~---------------- .·•

bedroom home on 1 acre
lot, hardWood flooring ,
new paneling, 'new wall
and base ca binets in kit·
full basement, l lf2 bath .

write-off . Dr illed well, 3
baths, on 'I&gt; ACRE .
REAL BUY
2
bedroom home, bath, all
ut ilities, 2 lots for only
$12,000.
FAMILY - Nice large'4
bedrooms, Ph baths, hot

1 have sold my home located near the end ot
Ru,t iand St.·where the Flood Road &amp; Middleport Hill
ROJd lnteresect. Watch lor signs at top of Mill st.
Htn, Mlddleporl, Ohio. The following porsonal prei.Perty will be sold:
.
Denmark 6 speed 11 n.p. Riding Mower B.S.rMotor
&lt;new condition), 5 h.p. Roto-TIIIer, Push Mower
Lot ot Hand Tools, Fishlf\9 !'qulpment, Cross-cui
Saw, Wood Porch Se•l &amp; Swing, Metal Single Bed
Electric Ml•er, Electric To•ster, Library T•ble'
·Other Household Items, Craftsman 22" Self Prdpeii:
ed MOWJ!:r, Push Garden Plow, 3 gal . Weed Sprayer
·3 Scythes, Much More (Odds &amp; Ellds) ., Living Room
. CHair, Dishes, Electric Iron, Radio;'Wall Picture

NEW LISTING
THERMOPANE ·WIN ·
DOWSI - 5 room, 3

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

time.shift.
Good
workingor con·
7:30
Part-lime
full ·

NUCLEAR
1
- ·"- POWER
TRAINING

bedroom

cnen, ,partially finished

perties. Live in one and
·use the other two for

~~===~~~~~~~~~~~~
d itlons. Contact Mr. Zldian

3

216 E. Second Street

FREE

M IDDLEPO' RT OHIO

room,

home, new paneling,
new carpeting, vinyl in
kitchen and bath, ther·
mopane w indows, ver·
tical siding. $21,500.00.

General

Real Estate

YOUR INSU!AN,C(NEEDS

dryer .

$11,500.00.
..,
NEW LISTING

ft . of work space. Also an
upstairs furnished apartment with two bedrooms.

992-2342
DCMNINGSQIILDS AGENCY, INC.

5.

$13,500.00.
NEW LISTING Points 2 beodro&lt;&gt;rr

meta l storage building.

CALL US

Needed R D or LPN tor lllo

bedrooms, nice II vi
room, utility, part
ment, .56 ac re, . Meiigsl
School
Distr i

Chtrlts M. H1yes, Ruttor

JNSURANCE

All

NEW LISTING OF REMODELING

N.. cll E. C1rsey, 8r.- Mtr.
Ph. H1-140l or "2·2710

YOU~AVETHECOVERAGE?

FOR

I'

Rutland, Main St., by Stans

1979 Honda Hawk, $400.00
and take over payments.
Call after 3:30, 992·2830 .

and organs in · vour

..........
-__.-···-·
.......
...
..
.
..
.
................... .
Farm Equipment

Simplicity Lawn and Gar· ,
den Eqipment . Special
on

Everything .

Meigs Equipment co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
Phone614-992-2176.

bedroom furnished
apartment in Middleport.
No children. 1·304-882·2566.

Housing
HearfsL11_arters

Really nice! 525,000.00.
ACREAGE TO OE ·
VELOP - In Eastern
District! 25 acres Wood·
I and / hamesites, 4 lots
surveyed for homes.iteS 1
water and electric to
property
available.

$27,500.00 .
NO GAS BILLS! Approx. 70 acre farm with

modern

4 bed. home,

proerty has its own
operating gasd well,

newly remodeled buill·
in kitchen , full base ·
ment, central air, stock ·
ed pond, horse stable,
barn,
other
ca ttl e
buildings. Country liv ·
. ing for your family!
Gi ve us a call to see
·
this!

HOT SUMMER? Dial ·
your own weather! cen 1tral air in this 3
bedroom ranch on a

large

lot,

lev~ l

tully

equipped kitchen. Fi\le
Po i nts
area
for

$30,500.00,
EASTERN
-

DISTRICT

Comfort

is

what

'

Furnished apartment, four
rooms and bath, adults

only, no pets, in Mid·
dleport. Phone 9'12·3874.
Two room furnished clpairt ·

ment all utilities paid.
Working men only. Call
992-5007. Also sleeping
4S

Furnished Rooms

Will nave vacancy July
15th for elderly lady, room,
board,

laundry,

reasonable . Phone 9'12·6022 .
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Ca 11
9'12·7479.

···- .............. .
o 0' '

S3

t

'

•

'

'

"

I

Antiques

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec ·
tibles or

entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections •. Call 614·
767-3167 or 557·3411 .
S4

LADIES' 'beautiful high·
quality size 16 dresses,
brands : David Crystal,
Verona, Lllty Pulitzer. One
is 100% silk. $10 each.

roofs,

Seasonal discount on a,ll

Dozer,

Endloader

and

dump truck. Type work in·
eludes basements, ponds/
landcleaning
and
e)( ·

cavatlng .
Discounts
available through July . Fill
dirt also available. Randy
or Roger Butcher. Phone

742-2'140.

processing,

retail

56

Pets tor,Sale.

IAKC Registered.collie pup·
pies for sale. Eight weeks
old . $62.00 each. Phone.H2·
2292.

1_·- ------------'---HOOF HOLLOW : Horses'"
and

1 ponies
les$on~ .

and riding
Everything

imaginable In horse equip·

ment . Blankets, belts,
boots, etc . English and
We.stern.. Ruth1 Reeves
(614) 698·3290.

- ---;-------- ---

General Hauling

85

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel . Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742-2455.

86

Aulas lor Sale

coating , labor and
material : 14' wide, S2 per
toot; 12' wide, $1.75 per
foot; 10' wide, 51.50 per
foot . See us also tor tree
estimates on awnings, car·

porl5 and skirting. We are
your authorized dealer for
the b~st awn Inos on the
market bY Urban 1n·
dustrles. Kingsbury Home
Sales, 1100 E. Main St.,

1976 Dodge Cha\-ger s . E .
37,000 actual miles, good
r-adials. good condition .
Call Marcia Houdashelt at
992-3612 after 4:30.
19H Chevy

Pickup

lngs

• New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·30·1 mo.

Utility Buildings
Si1es from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
R1. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.

Brush clearing work.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl.3, BoxS4

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992 ·

7034.

I

LANDSCAPING
SERVICE.
·
'
Grading-Seeding

farm Buildings
Sizes
" From 30x30"
SMALL

Shrubbery

New

Driveways

UtiJity

~:~~~~s;, 0111~o~~~~u':
992-6 323 or

6-30·1

Buildin~

Racine, Oh.

CA

or (. '3041 992·2276

Ph . 614-B43·2S91
6·15-tfc ·

f.------------t----------4----------Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding ·

~ew•~td'

.
BISSEll
SIDING CO:
Call

lor

remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
·
- Concrete work

by lHOMAS JOSEPH
, ACROSS
DOWN
I "The Joint" I Espound '
7 Caesar's
%Ben
. back problem Cartwnght,
11 FJ'081lke
for eumple
1% oanaerous 3 CentraUy
emotion
4 Term
13 Admlaalon
&lt;l addresa
14 Consani "Bad N"""
gulneous
Bean" star
1J outcry
I Had OC·
in Berlln
cuton lor
II Ohio college 7Shinto
'town
temple
II O'Neill play 8 RemaiDing
II Guevara
neutral
%1Famoua

OsCar
!2 Rope
material
!4 Sound,'

-Plumbing and

u a bell ,

electrical work

(Free Estimates)
V.C. YOUNG II
992-6215 or 9'12-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

M. H. Repair

preventive
main ·
tenance--mobile home roof

1976 Flat 128. Excellent
condition. Caii949·2SJ7 .

3/81nch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 ft . section only . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
Summit Rd ., Middleport,
OH . 9'12-5724. ,

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
.

NOW IS THE TIME for
71

siz~!

Free Estimates
Ph. (304)773·5131

949· 2860.

appliances. Lawn mower.

,

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

ALLBST~IdE"L

Sizes from 4x' to 12x4D
'

-

SEWING
MACH fNE ·
6·13·1 [TIO. '
Repairs , service, all
makes. 992· 2284. Tne · ~---------Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
"YOUNGS
and Ser'llice. We sharpen
Scissors.
CARPENTER ·
ELWOOD
BOWERS
SERVICES"
REPAIR Sweepers,
- AddOn$and
toasters, irons, all small

......... •.....
... ......,.
.........

1 mo.

Gravel or Concrete.
. Regrade driveways &lt;&amp;
repair). Sidewalks and

calls.

meat.

Eight piece old fashlom:,d
dining room suite. Old
couch . Phone 992-2779.
Building Supplies

84

Washington Co. Rd. 248,
Little Hocking, OH. 6iJ7·
6133.

.

Most Dates
No Sunday Calls

CONTRACTORS
_:DRY
WAlliNG
_- ROOfiNG
-RE-MQDEIJNG
-CONCR£rE

Estimate,

JONES Meat Packing
slaughtering , custom

Never been worn. 992·3283.

ss

Bulldozer work, small jobs
a specialty. Call/42·2753.

Livestock

63

D
.
OUA

Ph. 614-843·2591
6·14·1 mo.

'---------.....J

1972 Vega, 2 door four
speed for 5200.00. Call 9'12·
5121.

at Home", On a 1 acre

992-22S9

barns,

pumps and accessories .

GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP· T&lt;l&gt;· DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
,BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 9'12&lt;1~76.

Misc. Merchanlse

POODLE GROOMiNG .
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220. ·

Jean Trusseii949·2UO ·

job;

Excavating
83
Water well drilling. Tom
Lewis.
304 · 895 · 3802 .

6462 .

SILVER
RS
9402801
~

lr====D~&amp;~M~:::==:JI;:=:;~~;;:;;;;==~;:=====::==:.
ALL STEEL

'1'12-3941 or992-3519,

OLD COINS, pocket wal·
ches, Class rings, Wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. ('.. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592-

novelty

"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST

Flooring, ceiling: panel ing,
doors. and windows, also ·

free
estjmates .
Ex ·
perienced
and
have
references. Call 992·5126,

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 9'12·
3161 .

and

Evenings &amp;

houses, etc. Will provide

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma. .
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. 510 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

.'•.

PRICES FOR

99 2· •3795
4-2-lfc

.

arm

Ph . 614-949·23S8

size

Wanted to Buy

F

anything!''

room.

counts! ·And this 3 bed .
ranch has all the thing$
you need to feel "Right
lot for $34,900 .00.
IT'S THE "LITTLE BIT
MORE
THAT
COUNTS"! ~. ~0 WE
STRIVE T.O QO MOREl
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner ·
742·2474

Reasonable

rates. scotchguard. 9926309 or 742 ·2211 .

Now is the time · for home
improvement. Beat the bAd
weather . We will do ;~ny ·

Steel

EXTREMELV

"From 30x30"

shirts for politicians,
ball teams, business or
indivi duals.
Shirts S4.00 Each

painting . call'l'/2-2759.

styles. (Leftover from
spring clearance) 21M28X8
for $2,696 .00 (3 . left) .
21Ml4x8 for $1,798.00 (4
left) . Call collect today for
price guarantee. T·614·2942677.
62

T ' shirt

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

One nine inch post hole
digger. Speical $475.00. ·
Meigs Equipment Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
Phone 614-992-2176 .

Prices

Oh

om eroy;

Shop

I mpravemen1s

estimate .

STILL

rs=~~======3~~~:::::;~~~~t~~;~~~~~~~

Home

8.1

rent ; with two baths, two

TWO bedroom trailer .
Adults only . Brown's
Trailer Court . Call'l'/2-3324.

p

Custom
Print

Three Point Hitch fertilizer
spinners. Special S325.oo·.
Meigs Equipment co .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
Phone 614-992-2176 .

Mobile Homes
for Renl

618 E . M a .tn

,, _ ,

and bath . Deposit required.
No inside pets. Call 9'12·
3090.

42

1 mo .

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

end
2779. parts. rear glass. 992-

61

car garage In the Eastern
Local School District .
Phone61H85-4323.

Auto Parts

--·~-

.

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Windows and
Rooting

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

&amp; Accessories

1972 Monte Carlo body par ·
ts. one hood , two doors, one
trunk lid, assorted front

BURROUGH'S

SIDING, SOFFIT.

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping
Service

Instruments

piC~Jnos

1-22-tfc

~==========:;===========~-==========

Motorcycles

76

T. L

' Superior Vinyl Products

354.4.

We are picking up several

9&lt;9-2160

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

.Did Bargain Land .

Muslc~l

S7

Real Estate Loans
11 112% lnterest-JQ.Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
.,
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on

$2S,QOO; . 5% down on
balance, FHA 26S Subsidy Program. 'FHA 24S
Gradual Payment Mort.

Open M·W·F 9:00 to 1:00
By ApPointment
Olfice 99HS44
Home992·6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, OH.

SIMaln
artary
StCamplire
debris

!I Baby
carriage

%1Geralnt's

. love
Z8 Of Sadat's
~Worry
capitol
ISianting
• Newtot&gt;John's 41Witbln
(comb.
liNolaflrot film
form) ,
11 Athirst
3% Toot
good
UGeorge's
%1 Prollflc
lyricllf:
author (abbr.) advla!

Z5 Lall8h (Fr.)
2'1 '"""'.
in Tooloo
%1 Dadbum!
31 "Two by T-..&gt;"1:...-!-+-role
331dolhe
S5 You (Ger.)
II Sun deity
3711A!p.'s
opponent
i8 Acrimony
3t;&lt;.rboretum
alght
II Endured
43 Jacket style
t4 Plaeld
4fi Blow

IID!dtbe
blackbolrd

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

V·8,

· automatic,
Plymouth 51095.00.
Duster, 1974
318 t;:==~;;;::::;:::::=:::;-t=;;~:.:~==::::;:j
automatic 51095.00. 1972 ' r--==LE~R.....;'-'---,
Chevrolet Pickup 6 cylln·
D. BUMGARDNER
der, standard tor S695.oo.
CON~UcnON
l,nqulre at Eber's Gull,
~•n
SALES
E;lm St., Racine, .Ohio._
--Back hoe and dUIJip

~ow

to work It:

AX:YDLBAAXB
11 · LONGFELLOW

'

One letter simply 1tands tor another. 1n thia aarp.ple , A ~
used for the three ~·s, X for th e two O's, etc. Sin1le letters,
apQJtrophea, the leneth and formation of the word1 are all
.hints. Each day the code teuen are different.

CRYP;I'OQUMU

truck service

19"79 Honea Accord LX. Air

-Shop .and

cc;mdltloning, cassette tape r

player,

arl),-fm

~adlo .

portable

welding

THE POOL PEOPLE

.-Concrete work

Phone992·60S8. ·1
-;-.:_-...-- ·- - - - -·
1978
Mustang,
power
steering, air condlilonil'lg,
arrHm radio, four speed,

-Commercial plumbing
-Underground
fuel
s1orage tnstailation
- .Fibergla ss pools

l1711 Noble sum it Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-S724

A

11,000 miles, e.cellent con.dltlon for $3500.00. Call'l'/2·
7689.

.,

- - --:,

all around price Sj350.00.

74

949·2862

Ph. 992· 2772
6-25-1 mo.

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

Call or see at 742-2263,

pickup,

Call Howard

ROOANG
'
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

body . Motor runs good.
Racks on top, new brakes,

J20

James Keesee

VINYL SIDING

1970 Qpdge Van 6 cylinder,

Jeep

Reasonable Prices

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t;~~~~~~~~~

three~peed, good tires and

1974

Free Estimates

Free· Estimate

CALL 949·271 0
6·18·1 mo.

· Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

Also AKC
registered
. Dobermans. 614·4.46·7795.

House for rent. Four rooms

Three bedroom house tor

For More Information

miles. Phone 9'12·5348 .

indoor·out.d oor , facilities.

Six miles east of Chester on

T\JO

Business
Opportunity

Ex perienced front end '
alignment and air con·
For Rent the former War ·
ditioning technician. Will
ners Barber and Beautv
pay for experience. Ex·
Shop building on Secono st:
perienced persons only .
tn Pomeroy . Business or
Two Rivers Ford,
Pt .
professional bilding wiiN
Pleasant, W. Va . Phone

with many extras in ex·
cellent condition. 32,500

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean

SR 248. Well lnsul•ted two·
bedroom nouse. P•one 614·
985·424.4.

PARTIALLY furnished
apartment. 4 rooms and
bath. Call'l'/2·5908.

for 5600.00. Call 9'12 -5664 af ter 6:30p.m.

4209.
1977 Ford four wheel drive

cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .

Windows

"BA&amp;L!i'iJi.!~P

tour

All types of roof work,

• Replacement

Phone Terry Life at 667 ·

area . Price~ from $250 and
up . Call credit manager
today . 304-485-2170.

Local School District.
Phone 614·985·4323.

Manor apts. Call'l'/2·7787 . ·

'

Pickup

slon. Will take cargd trailer
in with deal. Call 614·985·

•

rent, with two baths, two

RENTER'S assistance for

...
'.
'.

Ford

speed transmission. New
tires, heavy duty suspen·

(NEWSPA!'f!RENTERPIUSE ASSN .:

car garage in the Eastern

Beans . Pick your own . Call

$135.00. Eight fool camper

1967

upaet Sooth'• apple cart.
U be tried to Ioree dummy
wtth dlamooda, Sooth COilld
•ruff low tbe llrlt tlme l!ld
EQt COilld 1101 establllb a
trump triek lor hlmoetf.
Some of you readen are
101n.1 to ut: ''Su- w.at
6eld-tbe club qoeeDl CouldD't
be l..d a bear! l!ld force
South to looe a bear! triek.''
'lbe ...... to that ... Ia
that Sooth wu a n.tUy &amp;ood
player.
He knew )hat I!'Mt beld the
ace of clublllj) be led tbe kinC
from dummy. Eut had to wiD
that trick and It did not matter wbere tbe queen was.
Sooth would pi 1111 elubl ael
up before a bear! could be led
lfiroocJ! dummy.
.

repossessed and trade·in

Senior Citizens in Village

Four 1200x16.5 on and off

caabed

HOuse for rent. Four rooms

and bath. Deposit required .
No Inside pets. Call 9'12-

The Last Day to Sign
Up Is July 14th

brakes, steering,
air conditioning,
power
power

41

~

pew or repair gutters
"·and downspquts, gutter

• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows

IS NOW UNDERWAY

con ·

dition. Call949-2537.

Garage one and . two car

see anytime day or night.

Excellent

tilt wheel, am-fm stereo,
tl~~~~~~~~fT~~~;~~~~~~
gOOd condition. $3,000.00.
Pet•
for
Sale
56

condition. Can see at 305 w.
Main St .• located at the bot tom of Monkey Run. Can

road tires in good shape tor

topper .

·
S
ummum idin,g
elnsulation

AI

DANCE
STUDIO

72
,Trucks for Sale
1975 Chevrolet Pi c kup with

one of
dlll!lllly'• trompo and led a
club from dummy. I!'Mt was
tD and could do tiOiblDI to
he

Business Services

mileage. $3500.00 .

~~e~to~er._c_al~~~~~ ~· ~=;~~~~~~~~~~:-=:==::::-T:::::=~~~~~~~
1978 F iat X· l9 four cyli n·
Summ~entEnrolh
J&amp;LBLOWN
H. l WRITESEL
der, four speed , air con·
ditioning, runs on regular
gas. 30 plus mpg . Call 992·
CAR;ENTER'S·
IN~~~ON
ROOFING
5454.

trum... l..d ........ trump .
to 1111 ace, tOld tbe jaek of
elul&gt;o and let lt'ride.
U West beld the queea, eveI'Yibln&amp; would be fiDe . Bul If
E.ut l&gt;eld ber vace l!ld
lrUinl&gt;l
H, be would
pi lo force dummy lwlce
with dlamOIICII before a elub
trick ..,uld be establlllled ancJ
be would bave to looe a trump
triek.
So

~as

gOOd

BUILDINGSII

tran· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~NING CHILDS AGENCY INC.

. ·as a young btJsiness person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

SIZES 8-18

N-M. H. RtPtlr
17-Ut:itlall..ry

·\ \i.ISWordlorUndtrI

1

old

GET VALUABLE training

The Daily Sentinel
'

I'

. t,

I.

Mobile Homes

32

G~neral

ARE YOU PAYING TO'O M!JCH? DO
11

IW-Eitctrlcal
&amp; Rtlrlvtrlflon
1$-Gintrll Hnllng

SOUTH

ment slz ranges in superb

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

Rates and Other Information

I
Mail This Coupon with Remit•ance
The Daily Sentinel

'

two

---

U - E,cavaflftl

t\

I
II

BUY

sm l sslons ,
batteries,
engines,
or scrap
.metals,
etc. Call 2~·9188.

12- Piumblnll Ellcavatlnv

II

4 P .M. D~ily
12 Nocn S1turdrt
torMond~y

,.

WILL

11-.. omtlmprovtmtnll

'

.

' 1: .
I ,
II

sell ing. Also do appraising.
Osby (Ossie) Marlin. 9'126370.

,_eSERVICES

Wani·Ad ·A~J,erti~ing
lll!adllnes \

II
II

35. _ _ _ __

.

'•' " '

~ \

Sale,

Cal1992·7226.

675-1490.
dollar, or complete estates. ]"2'---'s..,t,.
tu,..a,_,t,io,.n,e_
s -"
W'-'a'-'n'-'te, d,__

.'

.,.

Misceflilneous

self -contained
newly .
reupholstered good shape

glass or china, will pay top

&amp; .ICctiiOt"ltl
77-Auto RtPIIr

U-Lotl&amp; Acrtlll I
34-Real Est•te W•nttd

37-Rt•ltors

Help Wanted
11
Someone to help care for
aged lady with arthritis.

and Middleport . Call 742·
2354 or 742-29'15.
'

Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture,

'

7l-VInl &amp;4 W. D.
74-Mottfcycltl
nAuto P1rts

34-lulklbl ll.IIICIIftltl

32 · - - - - - - , . - 33. _ _ _ _ __

wanted to Buy

10 karat. 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Dental gold ana gold
ear pins . 675 -3010.

eTRANSPORTATION

+7131

.KII
t A J 101
+AQI

basement . Phone 667-3826.

843·2353 after 6 p.m .

FLV·BY·NIGHT

1ron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, go ld
rings,
jewelry,
s i l'ller
dollars, sterling, etc ., wood
ice bOxes, antiqueS, etc .
Comple~e
households .

71-Autot tor sate

:u-Homll lor Saltf
l2-Mo1Mit+tomes
for Slit
33-llarms lor S.te '

31 . _ _ __ _ _

11 .
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

I

eREALESTATE

29.
30.

A

7760.

65-·Snd &amp; Pllf11111tr

2:1-Pr(lftSIIOnal

27
. - - - - - - I·
28_

7. - - - ' - -- -

bec•uae they auapeeted he waa this-

Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992 ·

61-l.lvtltock
64-HIY I Gr11ln

22--Monev to Loan 1

,26. - - - - - --

6. - - -- - 8. - --

21- Bllslness
Opportunliy

.21.
22 .
23.
' 24 .
25.

1. - - - - --

a1 td

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,

61-lll'arm lqlfl,mtnf
n-wanttd te luy
72-TMKkl tor Slit

eFINANCIAL

17.
18.
19.
20.

) For Sale

•: ,. , (Anlwef'l tomo1 row)
,

•

9

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I CJAt,.lr

) Announcement

''(IJ ex I.I I) [I)!"

Printed Pattern

s1-HouuholdQood5
U-C8, TV, Aadla Equipment
n-Anllqutl
14- Misc. Mtrchtndlst
n-llllldlng Suppllts
s..-Pet• for S..lt

13-lilsllrance
•1 14-Buslnns Training
15-5tiiOOillnstrucflon
16Atdlo, TV

box

992·2143 .

eMERCHANDISE

.. n - Sihtattd wantecl

have

operator's li cense? Phone

Yealerday't l Jumbln : YACHT NEWLY GALAXY FOIBLE
.-.newer: They turned doW'n Oracula'a application

lorRtnl
44-Ap•rtmtnl tor Rent
U-PIIt:oom•
u-s,.ce tor Rtt~t
47-wanftlCI to Rent
4t-lqu(jtmtnt for Rtnt

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
- ,l _ Help w1 ntt&lt;l

you' ll

Side-Rippled Wrap

eREN:fALS

I Auction
9-WantedtoBuy

hour .

t752

44

M8Wtrllere:

41-Hou ..slor-Renl·
42-MobUt Homes

1- Cud ol TIYnltt
l-In Memoriam
3-AnnOuncements
4- GIVHWIY
5-Happy Ad.s
. 6-Lostand Fauncs
7--Yird Slit
I -Public S.lt

·itial or group of figures

if

J

(

MONEY - MONEY
First mortgages;
secon,d mortgages,
nd
refirian
Call
Mortga
ervices
•
lipolis, Ohio
1517 for

house cleaning,

per

.JIOI52

Electric &lt;electric) apart-

Starting July 8·10 from 9-5
daily, lots of clothing,
·Ut ility table and lots of
what·nots. Address 185 S.
Front St .• Middleport .

appreciate

I

do

+toil

+JO

Eighty Acr:es. 2 acres bot·

lJ
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
S U RANCE
been can ·
celled?
Lost
your

No item too large or too
small. Check prices before

I
I

Print one word in each

classification

a

J

175,000.00 . Phone 667 ·3643 .

references. Phone 992·5094.

Ohio, Critt Bradford .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

space below. Each in -

I HALTE

For

SOUTHERN

•'•'

I
I
I
I

b
I I K

Will

WI!ST

+A1713

tom. 68 pasture, blacktop

$3 .00

tKQ
+KtOU
EAST

+5 .

Five room house In Brad·
bury , modern kitchen and
bath . Carpet and air con·
ditioniJ19 across WMPO .

weather hits. By the way,
free estimates are
provided .

949-2487 or 949-2000. racine,

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

I'
I,

I I I

• • Q7

Autos for Sate

IY TI Pontiac Sunbird,
sunroof, automat ic, am ·fm
radio, excellent condition 1

-e

NORTH
+KQJI

$14,500.00 . Call742·3074.

33

17

PHONE 992-2156

I
I

LIMPE

BRIDGE

Defense disarmed handily

Three bedroom hOYse with.
bath. Large lot. Insulated,
storm windows, carPet, gas
furnace, basement, ci1Y
water, septic sy~tem .

Call 992·3519, 992-3941, or
992·5126 and get things all
fi•ed up before that bad , .

Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Phon•---~------- I

11check the proper
1.below.
I
I
) Wanted

BRADFORD ~

All kinds of items. Starts at

at a II . Phone 949-2413.

1:

the

and27 . 9a . m. · 5p. m.on

9a . m.

knowing· any information

I
II

Write _your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon , cancel your ad by phone wnen you get
r:esults . Money not refundable.

in

8
PublicSale
_ _ _,&amp;_.A,u,_.c""ll,..on,.__ _

Ilh-------....!...--.-"'----'-.,

Pay Cash for .

put

THREE family yard sale.
Thurs. and Fri ., June 26

yard sale Tuesday, July ·2,
at tne Bob Roy residence .

Male Beag le, mostly black,
in Mile Hill area, Racine.
Not iced niissing Wed nesday morn ing, child's

would

one letler to each square. to form
lour ordinary warda .

on Saleln Twp . 34. or off 124
at 325 then r ight on Salem
Tw. 34. Clothing of all sizes,
guienas $1.00 and up,
chicks, 50c, stone jars,
Avon and many things.
Wednesday, Ttiursday and
Friday .

byHentiAmoldlnciBoblee

Unscramble these four Jumbfes,

124 to left on County Road 1

Yard Sale

Cheerleaders wi II have

Lost and Found

pet,

Fox

Hound .
In
vicinityof
Detroitts Run . One front
leg brown, others wh ite.
Extremely shy, it seen call

THE

(=::J~!.!j~~~==

985 ·3528,

Walker

right on top of Chester Hill.

Miniature collie puppies.

All colors, six
and ready to
anytime
at

Female

At Glen Caton residence off
about one mile to top of hill

Maple bar stools, house
paint, toys, misc .

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

GOLD,
SILVER,
STERLING,
ETC .,
BROWN 'S MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO. PHONE : 614-9925113.

Three bedroom bri ck home
tor sale . Three acres with
pond . Two baths and
double car garage . Owner
will help finance. Located
in
Tuppers
Plain s.

Home needing painted?
Guters in need of repair? Is
that roof beginning to leak?

~THATBCIWIIILlDWOIIDO&amp;ME

\Y ~~·

~

Wednesday and Thursday · Thursday, July 17, on old
from 8·4 at 698 La.urel St ., Rt _ 33, between Co. Rd. 18
and 19.
Middleport .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Shop, Middleport.

brass 30c lb., aluminum l5c

Call/42-2244.

1

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

Closed Tuesdays and Sun·
'
days.

autos '\nd bodies. Buying
copper

ICE CREAM

day 9 · 8 , Wednesday
through · Saturday 9-5.

Young Siamese cat found .
Has collar and flea collar.

'i}f)l}l.\fifii}'iJ

Yard Sale

7

843,-2354 .

FREE!

appointment. Hours Mon·

The

Picking up and buying junk
clean

3760.

E. T. Jones. Ca,!l 614-667·
6133 f~r your slaughering ·

Announcemen1s

3

home. Six terrier pups
ready in 5·6 weeks, 6 mixed
· breed ready in 1·2 weeks.
Also six kittens ready in
about one · week . Call 992·

Jones Meat Packing wil l
reopen July 9 having been
closed due to the death of

You gave no one a last
farewell,
Or even said good· bye.
You were gone before we
knew it,
And'only God knows Why .

Lost and Found

6

Giveaway

Twelve puppies to good

992-2082 .

on Ju ly 15, 1975.

Sadly

4

fa m ily room, air con·
ditioner, 3 car garage.
Baum Addition, Meigs

71

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

basement,

payment 2nd mortgages. · bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14M65, 2
bedr.
Call 99 2·7000 for ap · 1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
pointment. ,
bdr., bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14M65 2

Brownell Ave ., Middleport.
phone 992·5204 .

.

Announcements

3

fi replace. full

cunningham and Associate·
s. inc . Mortgage Bankers.

Five rooi"n house, bath,
utility room, wall to wall
carpet, storm doors and
windows, aluminum siding,
o n~ car garage. Located on

"The hot, dry weather that has
hurt crops in the southern plains has
persisted through early July and has
spread to limited areas of the central plains and the southeast
Generally, subsoil moisture remaina
adequate in major com-soybelin
producing areas."

.

·

tl813

Small investment; large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
.

••

Beautiful large home. Low

utilities, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,

Caii992-SJ10.

$52,000 .00 . Phone 667·3288.

r

------====-==--,.,-----

County . Cal1985-4169.

.Rebuilding, Refinishing ,
'Reupholstery, Fabric and

I _ / \ , .,

.,

Call

St..

773-5839 or 773-5788.

' "Yield prospects have declined
especially for spring-planted crops
in the northern plains, and parta of
Montana and Minnesota," theJ\eport

WASIDNGTON (AP) - With com
production expected to be down
fr&lt;m last year~s record harveSt,
overseas demand for U.S. commod!tles ls thriving and will help
keep gram supplies relti~ely tight in
the coming year, says the
Agriculture Department. ·
Last Friday, the , departtnf'~t

Main

Ditch digging

~od~~:~;:!re~of~;;:.tch

of

E.

Professional
Services

2)

of 2.4

of

514

Pomeroy .
i 20,000.

estimated the '19110 Corn harvest at:
7.28 billlon buahels, down 8 percent
from last year's record 7.76 billlon.
But the wheat harvest was put at a
nlllf high of 2.32 billion bushels, uP 8
percent from 1aat yel!l'.
_
"Domestic grain use in 1980-31 is
expected to remairi at a high level,
while exports are likely to expand
for both UJl. food grains and feed·
stuffs," the department's outlook .
board said In a report.
Wheat exports, for example, are
expected to reach .a record l.45
b(llion ~ls, up 75 million bushels
from 1979-80, the report said. Com
exports could rise to 2.6 billion
bushels, exceeding the record
billion estimated In 1979-80.
Although the U.S. acreage of
major crops is up from last year,

Iowa's harvest outlook would be
larger than the JUly1 indications in
Texas, 128.3 nnilllon bushels; South
Dakota, 135 nnilllon; Kentucky, 138
million; North Carolina, 121.8
million; South Carolina, 25.8
million; Georgia, 74.2 million; Tennessee, 53 million; or Virginia, 46.5
million.
'rhe statistical exercise in no way
diminishes the hurt to farmers and
the effect short harvests in smaller
producing states would have on the
U.S. supply.
A main point, however, is the inr
portance of the Corn Belt and how
heat and drought in that region could
reduce yields and greatly overshadow losses in some other parts
the country.
As cruel as it may sound, that Is
why some "big picture" economists
.a re not alarmed so much by the lOllS
the entire com crop In some states
as they are by the threat of serious
reductions in Iowa and Illinois.

Opportunity
A·frame business building
Nith c.oncrete park ing area

:n

-. '992-7354

Sates, .service and sUp-plies. In ground and
above ground pools •

5·1-lfc

MIDDLEPORT,O .

·G K A N
IQC

ABLCHKHW

X G G J

R G R Q A F W.

FDCHW

\

•

F

LGYHCEBKX. . -

BL

KGC

HT H WN ME H WH ,

MEBAH

EH

MBALGK

UKG '-.IL
YBPKHW

·Yealerday'o Cryptoquo.te: WHEN IT COMES 1'0-'MAXING
LOVE, A GIRL CAN ALWAYS USTEN SO MUCH FASTER
THAN A MAN CAN TALK.-HELEN RQWLAND '
Cl

.1
I,

F

'* Klnt I"NivrH

$~Micale , ! r~e .

�!o---lThe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , T uesday, July 15,1980.

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport:Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 15; i 980
•1
Business
1
Homes for Sale
~·

·~------------------------------------------~~----~
On the farm scene
r

f

• '

,.

Corn pr~duction reporf W·i dely read
·.

the heat and dry weather may . hit
deeply Into thl) big Corn Belt area of
the Midwest. .
•
Suppose - and this is strictly
theoretical - the heat and dry
weather. cuts Iowa's 1900 com
prospects sharply, say a 10 percent
reduction from July 1 Indications.
That would transl3te to a decline of
about 147 million bushels between
' July I and Aug. lin Iowa alone.
According to the July production
report, only nine states were expected to . produce enilre crops
larger than 147 million bushels.
Those are Illinois, Indiana, Kansas,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri,
Nebraska, Ohio and Wisconsin . •
The theoretical 10 percent reduction in Iowa corn prospects,. for
)eli8Illple, would l)e larger than the
expected combined com harvests of
Alabama, 24.4 million bushels
estintated as of July 1; Arkansas,
3.~ million bushels; Colorado, 90
million _bushels; and Oklahoma, 7.1
miPion bushels.
· Further, if Iowa's harvest as of
Aug. i would be down by 147 million
bushels, that would be almost as
large as the entire Kansas com crop,
estintated at 157.3 million bushels as
of July I. It would be within -40
million bushels or so of Missouri's
harvest, estimated at 188.6 million.
A drop of 147 million bushels in

WASIDNGTON (AP) - A month
from now, when farmers,
economists, the grain Industry and
foreign buyers analYze another new
crop production report by the
Agriculture Department, one of the
most widely read figures will be the
com estimate f!&gt;r Iowa.
Here is why: ,
The report, due , to be released
Aug. ll, will include new production
estintates for corn and · wlieat that
· will reflect the effects of this summer's heat wave.
Corn by far is the la'rg~st of the
U.S. grain crops and is the keystone
for the country's major food sector
comprised of beef, pork, poultry and ·
dairy products. And Iowa is the
largest com-growing state.
Last Friday, in its Initial estintate
of 1980, the department said that
based on July llndications ·the com
harvest could he about 7.28 billion
bushels, down 6 percent from last
fall's record 7.76 billlon. Iowa was
expected to product about :IJJ percent
of the U.S. crop at almost 1.47 billion
. bushels, down from almost, 1.63
billion last year.
The heat wave that has gripped
the Southwest for a month has
enlarged and is moving into the
Southeast and a bit farther north.
That is beglnning to worry the com
watchers, certainly those who fear

ENOUGH POWER FOR 15 homes Is expected to be generated by Ibis new wllidmill at an Euergy Department test
center IIi Rocky Flats, Colo. Tbe 126-foot-tall "Gyromill"
featores three vertl~al blades rotatllig around a central
sbafl.
·· ·

•t

said.

992·3921 ,

" Maggie's

ser'lliee~

Call

Upholstery "

vinyl samples. Call 7422852 .

/
Mortgage
Money
Available, Conventional ·5
Pet . down VA · no down

..

.....................
. . ... ,..
=======
-····
.......................

Piano. Tuning · Lan~
Danie,ls 742·_
2951. Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

In Memoriam

2

n loving memory of
Virginia Floral Hawk, who
passed away five years ago
1

Three y,,e ar old. five room
house with central air and
heat, carpet throughout, 24
acres .with fruit trees.
Loca ted on Eagle Ri.dge

-

Rd. Phone 949·2793.
Excellent ' location on SR
124. Three bedroom home
on approximately two
acres. Many extras. Call

'192-7255.
Three bedroom brick r anch
style home with l'h bath
and built-in kitchen , full
basement with wood stove,
large garage, b ig lot with
n ic e
garden
spot .

.;

Family .

missed

by

..

PAY
highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings 1 jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett 16arber
1

60c

lb .,

radiators 40c ea.; ye llow
lb. Riders Salvage, Rt . 4,
St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 992·5468 .

week~ old
go.

Call

6

Chester, Ohio.

r----------------------,
I
Curb Inflation. 1.
I

.

Classifleds and
Savell 1

Address,.___ _ _ _ _ _ __

,,

eAiiiNOUNCEMENTS

counts as a word . Count
name and address or
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
any ad . Your ad will be

,.
I
I
I

proper

11-Want.cl To Do

These cash rates
include discount

') For Rent

2. - - - - - 3. _ __ __
4. -- - -- -

5. _ _ _ __

-

9, _ _ __

---,

Servlus

_

10' - - - - - - -

J4. _ _ _ _ __

.

•'

.

Box

729

P omeroy Oh. 45769
I

,

,•

.,

t.,~- -1/.1-.s

Cllh
1dl'fl
ldtYI

l.ot
l.lt
1.10

1

I

....

''days

Chlrfl

uS

' 1.90

us

3.75

EICh worcl over tht minimum 1S words 114 ctnh ptr word per day.
Ads running other thin constcUtl\le days will bl cMI'Itd al_the t d•y

I

1
I• I
1!,: .
I;

rate.

'" mamorv. (lrell of Thank, and Obitut,.Y : '«lltl per wore, u .oo
minimum. C~.tor. '" 1dval'ice.
~oblll

ord•r. 2S c•nt Chlro• fl)r IdS

Sen""''·

• ''"

Homt utes•nd Y;ud 111•1•re1cnpttd aniYWII'IfPI (II w

c.-rryi~O

.

••• Number In Colrt at TIM'

l~~--------------,.-----'

~

~ery,

very, ~ERY becoming! It
wraps all the way actoss, then
ripples down to a curved hem.
Note news ol galhered shouldf~,
drama of dolman sleoves.
Printed Pattern 4812: Misses
Sizes 8, 10, 11, 14, 16. 18. Size
11 (bust 34) takes 1 7/ 8 yards
60·i nch labtic.
$1.75 ''" ucl1 p.llltm. Add 5M
far oath p.~ttem lar first·class
1it1Nil 1nd hindlina. Send 111:

l"~ 1
·

PIPit!
243 W..t 17 Sl1 _~1W Tart, IT
'10011. Print lAM(, ADDIIESS,
ZIP, SIZE, 1nd SITU NUIIIIER.
'
Busy women , the fastest·tosew
fashions ate tn our NEW SPRING·
(Insert n1me 0110111

.

• •

ltlly

I!

.~~------..---~--------·----, ·

4852

Anne Adlms

SUMMER PAITERN CATALOG!

Dresses. tops, jackets, panls.
Plus St.71 fteo pattern coupon.
Send $1 for Catalog.
121·Afpans 'n' Dailla ... $1.50
'129-Quicll/lar Tronsllll .$1.50
flrs.Sins 3H&amp;.Sl.50
UZ-Qollt Oriainlh .. . . .. $1.50

uoJ..

1973

Vulnerable: Neither

. for Sale
Fairpoint. 14x65 2

.....

MOBILE home for sale,
$6500, land contract with
$500 down or will negotiate
bedroom, built-in bunks,
cash sale . Also one
48xl0 mobile home, S2800,

land contract. $300 down .
Write J . Bowland, 15068

Empire Rd.,
OH . 43076 .

Thornville,

1969 Two Bedroom 12x60
Hollypark trailer fur ·

nished, air conditioning,
washer,
underpinning,
sm all metal building .

$7300.00. Call992-288l.
Fourteen foot wide three
bedroOm, 1'12 baths, fur·

nished. Must see to ap-

sell .

preciate. Priced to

Calll -304-675-6466.

1977 Schultz mobile home
and lot. 14x70 with three
bedrooms, 11h baths, at
l041 1f2 St . 2nd A'lle., Mid·

dleporl, Ohio. Call 992·2457 .
Farms tor Sale

road , three bedrooms,
living room , bath, kitchen,
dining room, three car car·
port,
cellar,
part
basement, good barn.

. Charles King, Rt . l,
Rutland, Ohio 45775. Call
742·2229.
Lots &amp; Acreage

35

One "acre gorund and full

••
Pus

PUI

PUI

PUI

p..,

Pau

.'

Opening lead:+ 7

bedroom

1965 y ·a nor 12x52, 2 bedr .
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
wv. 304-675 -4.424.

-·

Deater: Eut

ByO.waWJacalty
udAiuS.C.C

Eut toot 1111 ace oi dlamOIICII and led back tbe elcbt.
SoothwutDdummyandltUd·
led au pooalbllilles. .He could
cub ... of ·.duinmy'• cood

Housqs for Rent

Two bedroom furnished
home. Call 9'12·5914, 9'12·
3129, 992 ·5434.

3090 .
Three bedroom house for

AVOJ'l salespeople wanted .

Openngs in Tuppers Plains,
Chester,
Reedsvi lie,
Harrisonville, Pomeroy

21

Wi II do odds and ends.
Paneling, floor tile, and
ce iling tile. Call Fred

Miller 992-6338.

approximately 1100 square

uun

Help Wanted

'.
.
. ''.

Pomeroy, 0.
NEW LiSliNG - NR4l, New
hOme in the RiQQ$ Edit ion, J
oearooms, 1 tvll b~ths , tami lll
room , f ull ba ement , f irepl ace
with a hulalator, with a
beaut iful l•wn. Outst(lndlnQ
tamlly home Mav anume mor ·
fgolge Pr iced In me low SAO's.

the el igibility list at 992·
2156 or 9'12-2157.

m obi le home on
be aut i ful ac re
garage,
workshop ,
washer,

....

Remodeled throughout!

5

Rent with the option to buy.
Call 9'12-2528 or 9'12-2117
before 5.

Housing
H eadqua rters

I!

~~!tL 8.SR.~,!"!,~
•

1868

.

I

LIVING - ~

pro·

water heat, all utilities,

modern kiL carpeting
and full basement.

at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center. 992-11606 Mon·
day through Friday from 9·

bedrooms, 3 king size, 2

We offer the only 1rain·

ing package of its k'ind
in the counti-y. Qualified
!-•.applicants will get tree
medical care, earn 30
days' .v acation wi1h pay
and will receive·a $2,000
bonus upon completion
of training. Ideal candidates will have high
school diploma and
above average math
and physics skills. Age

17 · 25. CALL TOLL
FREE
1-800-282·1384
MON .·WED.
9AMI~2 PM

FIRST

AD

5

AUCTION

full baths, modern kit..
formal dining, full base·

SATURDAY JULY 19, 1980
12:30 P.M.

FIRST AD. - 13 lots,
utilities available. Only
$6,500 .
SPECIAL - 2 lots and

~~

.,

.'

I

ment, nat . gas furnace.
1 acre .

old house rlea(r

Jones

Boys . $3,500.
BARGAIN - One slory
building 24x80, with
· bath for flea market or
home. $11,000.
YOU CAN BUY - This
one fl .r&gt;3 bedroom home,
,ajl utilities, bath, flue
fQr wood burner and 2
lots.

1
1

WE WORK FULL TIME
~ IN
SELLING YOUR
HOME,
NO SIDE ·
LINES . REAL ESTATE
IS
OUR .
ONLY
BUSINESS, SO IF YOU
,HAVE A PROBLEM,
CALL US AT 992·3325 or
992-3876.

'

TERMS: CASH
Not responsible tor accidents or loss.
C. C,, BRADFORD, AUCTIONEER
Sale'by Bradford Auction Co., Racine, Ohio.

'I •

L.------------------~---------------- .·•

bedroom home on 1 acre
lot, hardWood flooring ,
new paneling, 'new wall
and base ca binets in kit·
full basement, l lf2 bath .

write-off . Dr illed well, 3
baths, on 'I&gt; ACRE .
REAL BUY
2
bedroom home, bath, all
ut ilities, 2 lots for only
$12,000.
FAMILY - Nice large'4
bedrooms, Ph baths, hot

1 have sold my home located near the end ot
Ru,t iand St.·where the Flood Road &amp; Middleport Hill
ROJd lnteresect. Watch lor signs at top of Mill st.
Htn, Mlddleporl, Ohio. The following porsonal prei.Perty will be sold:
.
Denmark 6 speed 11 n.p. Riding Mower B.S.rMotor
&lt;new condition), 5 h.p. Roto-TIIIer, Push Mower
Lot ot Hand Tools, Fishlf\9 !'qulpment, Cross-cui
Saw, Wood Porch Se•l &amp; Swing, Metal Single Bed
Electric Ml•er, Electric To•ster, Library T•ble'
·Other Household Items, Craftsman 22" Self Prdpeii:
ed MOWJ!:r, Push Garden Plow, 3 gal . Weed Sprayer
·3 Scythes, Much More (Odds &amp; Ellds) ., Living Room
. CHair, Dishes, Electric Iron, Radio;'Wall Picture

NEW LISTING
THERMOPANE ·WIN ·
DOWSI - 5 room, 3

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

time.shift.
Good
workingor con·
7:30
Part-lime
full ·

NUCLEAR
1
- ·"- POWER
TRAINING

bedroom

cnen, ,partially finished

perties. Live in one and
·use the other two for

~~===~~~~~~~~~~~~
d itlons. Contact Mr. Zldian

3

216 E. Second Street

FREE

M IDDLEPO' RT OHIO

room,

home, new paneling,
new carpeting, vinyl in
kitchen and bath, ther·
mopane w indows, ver·
tical siding. $21,500.00.

General

Real Estate

YOUR INSU!AN,C(NEEDS

dryer .

$11,500.00.
..,
NEW LISTING

ft . of work space. Also an
upstairs furnished apartment with two bedrooms.

992-2342
DCMNINGSQIILDS AGENCY, INC.

5.

$13,500.00.
NEW LISTING Points 2 beodro&lt;&gt;rr

meta l storage building.

CALL US

Needed R D or LPN tor lllo

bedrooms, nice II vi
room, utility, part
ment, .56 ac re, . Meiigsl
School
Distr i

Chtrlts M. H1yes, Ruttor

JNSURANCE

All

NEW LISTING OF REMODELING

N.. cll E. C1rsey, 8r.- Mtr.
Ph. H1-140l or "2·2710

YOU~AVETHECOVERAGE?

FOR

I'

Rutland, Main St., by Stans

1979 Honda Hawk, $400.00
and take over payments.
Call after 3:30, 992·2830 .

and organs in · vour

..........
-__.-···-·
.......
...
..
.
..
.
................... .
Farm Equipment

Simplicity Lawn and Gar· ,
den Eqipment . Special
on

Everything .

Meigs Equipment co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
Phone614-992-2176.

bedroom furnished
apartment in Middleport.
No children. 1·304-882·2566.

Housing
HearfsL11_arters

Really nice! 525,000.00.
ACREAGE TO OE ·
VELOP - In Eastern
District! 25 acres Wood·
I and / hamesites, 4 lots
surveyed for homes.iteS 1
water and electric to
property
available.

$27,500.00 .
NO GAS BILLS! Approx. 70 acre farm with

modern

4 bed. home,

proerty has its own
operating gasd well,

newly remodeled buill·
in kitchen , full base ·
ment, central air, stock ·
ed pond, horse stable,
barn,
other
ca ttl e
buildings. Country liv ·
. ing for your family!
Gi ve us a call to see
·
this!

HOT SUMMER? Dial ·
your own weather! cen 1tral air in this 3
bedroom ranch on a

large

lot,

lev~ l

tully

equipped kitchen. Fi\le
Po i nts
area
for

$30,500.00,
EASTERN
-

DISTRICT

Comfort

is

what

'

Furnished apartment, four
rooms and bath, adults

only, no pets, in Mid·
dleport. Phone 9'12·3874.
Two room furnished clpairt ·

ment all utilities paid.
Working men only. Call
992-5007. Also sleeping
4S

Furnished Rooms

Will nave vacancy July
15th for elderly lady, room,
board,

laundry,

reasonable . Phone 9'12·6022 .
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Ca 11
9'12·7479.

···- .............. .
o 0' '

S3

t

'

•

'

'

"

I

Antiques

ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec ·
tibles or

entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections •. Call 614·
767-3167 or 557·3411 .
S4

LADIES' 'beautiful high·
quality size 16 dresses,
brands : David Crystal,
Verona, Lllty Pulitzer. One
is 100% silk. $10 each.

roofs,

Seasonal discount on a,ll

Dozer,

Endloader

and

dump truck. Type work in·
eludes basements, ponds/
landcleaning
and
e)( ·

cavatlng .
Discounts
available through July . Fill
dirt also available. Randy
or Roger Butcher. Phone

742-2'140.

processing,

retail

56

Pets tor,Sale.

IAKC Registered.collie pup·
pies for sale. Eight weeks
old . $62.00 each. Phone.H2·
2292.

1_·- ------------'---HOOF HOLLOW : Horses'"
and

1 ponies
les$on~ .

and riding
Everything

imaginable In horse equip·

ment . Blankets, belts,
boots, etc . English and
We.stern.. Ruth1 Reeves
(614) 698·3290.

- ---;-------- ---

General Hauling

85

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel . Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742-2455.

86

Aulas lor Sale

coating , labor and
material : 14' wide, S2 per
toot; 12' wide, $1.75 per
foot; 10' wide, 51.50 per
foot . See us also tor tree
estimates on awnings, car·

porl5 and skirting. We are
your authorized dealer for
the b~st awn Inos on the
market bY Urban 1n·
dustrles. Kingsbury Home
Sales, 1100 E. Main St.,

1976 Dodge Cha\-ger s . E .
37,000 actual miles, good
r-adials. good condition .
Call Marcia Houdashelt at
992-3612 after 4:30.
19H Chevy

Pickup

lngs

• New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·30·1 mo.

Utility Buildings
Si1es from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
R1. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.

Brush clearing work.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl.3, BoxS4

Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992 ·

7034.

I

LANDSCAPING
SERVICE.
·
'
Grading-Seeding

farm Buildings
Sizes
" From 30x30"
SMALL

Shrubbery

New

Driveways

UtiJity

~:~~~~s;, 0111~o~~~~u':
992-6 323 or

6-30·1

Buildin~

Racine, Oh.

CA

or (. '3041 992·2276

Ph . 614-B43·2S91
6·15-tfc ·

f.------------t----------4----------Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding ·

~ew•~td'

.
BISSEll
SIDING CO:
Call

lor

remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
·
- Concrete work

by lHOMAS JOSEPH
, ACROSS
DOWN
I "The Joint" I Espound '
7 Caesar's
%Ben
. back problem Cartwnght,
11 FJ'081lke
for eumple
1% oanaerous 3 CentraUy
emotion
4 Term
13 Admlaalon
&lt;l addresa
14 Consani "Bad N"""
gulneous
Bean" star
1J outcry
I Had OC·
in Berlln
cuton lor
II Ohio college 7Shinto
'town
temple
II O'Neill play 8 RemaiDing
II Guevara
neutral
%1Famoua

OsCar
!2 Rope
material
!4 Sound,'

-Plumbing and

u a bell ,

electrical work

(Free Estimates)
V.C. YOUNG II
992-6215 or 9'12-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

M. H. Repair

preventive
main ·
tenance--mobile home roof

1976 Flat 128. Excellent
condition. Caii949·2SJ7 .

3/81nch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 ft . section only . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
Summit Rd ., Middleport,
OH . 9'12-5724. ,

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
.

NOW IS THE TIME for
71

siz~!

Free Estimates
Ph. (304)773·5131

949· 2860.

appliances. Lawn mower.

,

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

ALLBST~IdE"L

Sizes from 4x' to 12x4D
'

-

SEWING
MACH fNE ·
6·13·1 [TIO. '
Repairs , service, all
makes. 992· 2284. Tne · ~---------Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
"YOUNGS
and Ser'llice. We sharpen
Scissors.
CARPENTER ·
ELWOOD
BOWERS
SERVICES"
REPAIR Sweepers,
- AddOn$and
toasters, irons, all small

......... •.....
... ......,.
.........

1 mo.

Gravel or Concrete.
. Regrade driveways &lt;&amp;
repair). Sidewalks and

calls.

meat.

Eight piece old fashlom:,d
dining room suite. Old
couch . Phone 992-2779.
Building Supplies

84

Washington Co. Rd. 248,
Little Hocking, OH. 6iJ7·
6133.

.

Most Dates
No Sunday Calls

CONTRACTORS
_:DRY
WAlliNG
_- ROOfiNG
-RE-MQDEIJNG
-CONCR£rE

Estimate,

JONES Meat Packing
slaughtering , custom

Never been worn. 992·3283.

ss

Bulldozer work, small jobs
a specialty. Call/42·2753.

Livestock

63

D
.
OUA

Ph. 614-843·2591
6·14·1 mo.

'---------.....J

1972 Vega, 2 door four
speed for 5200.00. Call 9'12·
5121.

at Home", On a 1 acre

992-22S9

barns,

pumps and accessories .

GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP· T&lt;l&gt;· DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
,BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 9'12&lt;1~76.

Misc. Merchanlse

POODLE GROOMiNG .
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220. ·

Jean Trusseii949·2UO ·

job;

Excavating
83
Water well drilling. Tom
Lewis.
304 · 895 · 3802 .

6462 .

SILVER
RS
9402801
~

lr====D~&amp;~M~:::==:JI;:=:;~~;;:;;;;==~;:=====::==:.
ALL STEEL

'1'12-3941 or992-3519,

OLD COINS, pocket wal·
ches, Class rings, Wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. ('.. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592-

novelty

"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST

Flooring, ceiling: panel ing,
doors. and windows, also ·

free
estjmates .
Ex ·
perienced
and
have
references. Call 992·5126,

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 9'12·
3161 .

and

Evenings &amp;

houses, etc. Will provide

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma. .
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. 510 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

.'•.

PRICES FOR

99 2· •3795
4-2-lfc

.

arm

Ph . 614-949·23S8

size

Wanted to Buy

F

anything!''

room.

counts! ·And this 3 bed .
ranch has all the thing$
you need to feel "Right
lot for $34,900 .00.
IT'S THE "LITTLE BIT
MORE
THAT
COUNTS"! ~. ~0 WE
STRIVE T.O QO MOREl
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner ·
742·2474

Reasonable

rates. scotchguard. 9926309 or 742 ·2211 .

Now is the time · for home
improvement. Beat the bAd
weather . We will do ;~ny ·

Steel

EXTREMELV

"From 30x30"

shirts for politicians,
ball teams, business or
indivi duals.
Shirts S4.00 Each

painting . call'l'/2-2759.

styles. (Leftover from
spring clearance) 21M28X8
for $2,696 .00 (3 . left) .
21Ml4x8 for $1,798.00 (4
left) . Call collect today for
price guarantee. T·614·2942677.
62

T ' shirt

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

One nine inch post hole
digger. Speical $475.00. ·
Meigs Equipment Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
Phone 614-992-2176 .

Prices

Oh

om eroy;

Shop

I mpravemen1s

estimate .

STILL

rs=~~======3~~~:::::;~~~~t~~;~~~~~~~

Home

8.1

rent ; with two baths, two

TWO bedroom trailer .
Adults only . Brown's
Trailer Court . Call'l'/2-3324.

p

Custom
Print

Three Point Hitch fertilizer
spinners. Special S325.oo·.
Meigs Equipment co .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
Phone 614-992-2176 .

Mobile Homes
for Renl

618 E . M a .tn

,, _ ,

and bath . Deposit required.
No inside pets. Call 9'12·
3090.

42

1 mo .

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

end
2779. parts. rear glass. 992-

61

car garage In the Eastern
Local School District .
Phone61H85-4323.

Auto Parts

--·~-

.

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Windows and
Rooting

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

&amp; Accessories

1972 Monte Carlo body par ·
ts. one hood , two doors, one
trunk lid, assorted front

BURROUGH'S

SIDING, SOFFIT.

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping
Service

Instruments

piC~Jnos

1-22-tfc

~==========:;===========~-==========

Motorcycles

76

T. L

' Superior Vinyl Products

354.4.

We are picking up several

9&lt;9-2160

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

.Did Bargain Land .

Muslc~l

S7

Real Estate Loans
11 112% lnterest-JQ.Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
.,
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on

$2S,QOO; . 5% down on
balance, FHA 26S Subsidy Program. 'FHA 24S
Gradual Payment Mort.

Open M·W·F 9:00 to 1:00
By ApPointment
Olfice 99HS44
Home992·6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, OH.

SIMaln
artary
StCamplire
debris

!I Baby
carriage

%1Geralnt's

. love
Z8 Of Sadat's
~Worry
capitol
ISianting
• Newtot&gt;John's 41Witbln
(comb.
liNolaflrot film
form) ,
11 Athirst
3% Toot
good
UGeorge's
%1 Prollflc
lyricllf:
author (abbr.) advla!

Z5 Lall8h (Fr.)
2'1 '"""'.
in Tooloo
%1 Dadbum!
31 "Two by T-..&gt;"1:...-!-+-role
331dolhe
S5 You (Ger.)
II Sun deity
3711A!p.'s
opponent
i8 Acrimony
3t;&lt;.rboretum
alght
II Endured
43 Jacket style
t4 Plaeld
4fi Blow

IID!dtbe
blackbolrd

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

V·8,

· automatic,
Plymouth 51095.00.
Duster, 1974
318 t;:==~;;;::::;:::::=:::;-t=;;~:.:~==::::;:j
automatic 51095.00. 1972 ' r--==LE~R.....;'-'---,
Chevrolet Pickup 6 cylln·
D. BUMGARDNER
der, standard tor S695.oo.
CON~UcnON
l,nqulre at Eber's Gull,
~•n
SALES
E;lm St., Racine, .Ohio._
--Back hoe and dUIJip

~ow

to work It:

AX:YDLBAAXB
11 · LONGFELLOW

'

One letter simply 1tands tor another. 1n thia aarp.ple , A ~
used for the three ~·s, X for th e two O's, etc. Sin1le letters,
apQJtrophea, the leneth and formation of the word1 are all
.hints. Each day the code teuen are different.

CRYP;I'OQUMU

truck service

19"79 Honea Accord LX. Air

-Shop .and

cc;mdltloning, cassette tape r

player,

arl),-fm

~adlo .

portable

welding

THE POOL PEOPLE

.-Concrete work

Phone992·60S8. ·1
-;-.:_-...-- ·- - - - -·
1978
Mustang,
power
steering, air condlilonil'lg,
arrHm radio, four speed,

-Commercial plumbing
-Underground
fuel
s1orage tnstailation
- .Fibergla ss pools

l1711 Noble sum it Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-S724

A

11,000 miles, e.cellent con.dltlon for $3500.00. Call'l'/2·
7689.

.,

- - --:,

all around price Sj350.00.

74

949·2862

Ph. 992· 2772
6-25-1 mo.

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

Call or see at 742-2263,

pickup,

Call Howard

ROOANG
'
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

body . Motor runs good.
Racks on top, new brakes,

J20

James Keesee

VINYL SIDING

1970 Qpdge Van 6 cylinder,

Jeep

Reasonable Prices

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t;~~~~~~~~~

three~peed, good tires and

1974

Free Estimates

Free· Estimate

CALL 949·271 0
6·18·1 mo.

· Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

Also AKC
registered
. Dobermans. 614·4.46·7795.

House for rent. Four rooms

Three bedroom house tor

For More Information

miles. Phone 9'12·5348 .

indoor·out.d oor , facilities.

Six miles east of Chester on

T\JO

Business
Opportunity

Ex perienced front end '
alignment and air con·
For Rent the former War ·
ditioning technician. Will
ners Barber and Beautv
pay for experience. Ex·
Shop building on Secono st:
perienced persons only .
tn Pomeroy . Business or
Two Rivers Ford,
Pt .
professional bilding wiiN
Pleasant, W. Va . Phone

with many extras in ex·
cellent condition. 32,500

HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean

SR 248. Well lnsul•ted two·
bedroom nouse. P•one 614·
985·424.4.

PARTIALLY furnished
apartment. 4 rooms and
bath. Call'l'/2·5908.

for 5600.00. Call 9'12 -5664 af ter 6:30p.m.

4209.
1977 Ford four wheel drive

cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .

Windows

"BA&amp;L!i'iJi.!~P

tour

All types of roof work,

• Replacement

Phone Terry Life at 667 ·

area . Price~ from $250 and
up . Call credit manager
today . 304-485-2170.

Local School District.
Phone 614·985·4323.

Manor apts. Call'l'/2·7787 . ·

'

Pickup

slon. Will take cargd trailer
in with deal. Call 614·985·

•

rent, with two baths, two

RENTER'S assistance for

...
'.
'.

Ford

speed transmission. New
tires, heavy duty suspen·

(NEWSPA!'f!RENTERPIUSE ASSN .:

car garage in the Eastern

Beans . Pick your own . Call

$135.00. Eight fool camper

1967

upaet Sooth'• apple cart.
U be tried to Ioree dummy
wtth dlamooda, Sooth COilld
•ruff low tbe llrlt tlme l!ld
EQt COilld 1101 establllb a
trump triek lor hlmoetf.
Some of you readen are
101n.1 to ut: ''Su- w.at
6eld-tbe club qoeeDl CouldD't
be l..d a bear! l!ld force
South to looe a bear! triek.''
'lbe ...... to that ... Ia
that Sooth wu a n.tUy &amp;ood
player.
He knew )hat I!'Mt beld the
ace of clublllj) be led tbe kinC
from dummy. Eut had to wiD
that trick and It did not matter wbere tbe queen was.
Sooth would pi 1111 elubl ael
up before a bear! could be led
lfiroocJ! dummy.
.

repossessed and trade·in

Senior Citizens in Village

Four 1200x16.5 on and off

caabed

HOuse for rent. Four rooms

and bath. Deposit required .
No Inside pets. Call 9'12-

The Last Day to Sign
Up Is July 14th

brakes, steering,
air conditioning,
power
power

41

~

pew or repair gutters
"·and downspquts, gutter

• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows

IS NOW UNDERWAY

con ·

dition. Call949-2537.

Garage one and . two car

see anytime day or night.

Excellent

tilt wheel, am-fm stereo,
tl~~~~~~~~fT~~~;~~~~~~
gOOd condition. $3,000.00.
Pet•
for
Sale
56

condition. Can see at 305 w.
Main St .• located at the bot tom of Monkey Run. Can

road tires in good shape tor

topper .

·
S
ummum idin,g
elnsulation

AI

DANCE
STUDIO

72
,Trucks for Sale
1975 Chevrolet Pi c kup with

one of
dlll!lllly'• trompo and led a
club from dummy. I!'Mt was
tD and could do tiOiblDI to
he

Business Services

mileage. $3500.00 .

~~e~to~er._c_al~~~~~ ~· ~=;~~~~~~~~~~:-=:==::::-T:::::=~~~~~~~
1978 F iat X· l9 four cyli n·
Summ~entEnrolh
J&amp;LBLOWN
H. l WRITESEL
der, four speed , air con·
ditioning, runs on regular
gas. 30 plus mpg . Call 992·
CAR;ENTER'S·
IN~~~ON
ROOFING
5454.

trum... l..d ........ trump .
to 1111 ace, tOld tbe jaek of
elul&gt;o and let lt'ride.
U West beld the queea, eveI'Yibln&amp; would be fiDe . Bul If
E.ut l&gt;eld ber vace l!ld
lrUinl&gt;l
H, be would
pi lo force dummy lwlce
with dlamOIICII before a elub
trick ..,uld be establlllled ancJ
be would bave to looe a trump
triek.
So

~as

gOOd

BUILDINGSII

tran· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~NING CHILDS AGENCY INC.

. ·as a young btJsiness person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

SIZES 8-18

N-M. H. RtPtlr
17-Ut:itlall..ry

·\ \i.ISWordlorUndtrI

1

old

GET VALUABLE training

The Daily Sentinel
'

I'

. t,

I.

Mobile Homes

32

G~neral

ARE YOU PAYING TO'O M!JCH? DO
11

IW-Eitctrlcal
&amp; Rtlrlvtrlflon
1$-Gintrll Hnllng

SOUTH

ment slz ranges in superb

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

Rates and Other Information

I
Mail This Coupon with Remit•ance
The Daily Sentinel

'

two

---

U - E,cavaflftl

t\

I
II

BUY

sm l sslons ,
batteries,
engines,
or scrap
.metals,
etc. Call 2~·9188.

12- Piumblnll Ellcavatlnv

II

4 P .M. D~ily
12 Nocn S1turdrt
torMond~y

,.

WILL

11-.. omtlmprovtmtnll

'

.

' 1: .
I ,
II

sell ing. Also do appraising.
Osby (Ossie) Marlin. 9'126370.

,_eSERVICES

Wani·Ad ·A~J,erti~ing
lll!adllnes \

II
II

35. _ _ _ __

.

'•' " '

~ \

Sale,

Cal1992·7226.

675-1490.
dollar, or complete estates. ]"2'---'s..,t,.
tu,..a,_,t,io,.n,e_
s -"
W'-'a'-'n'-'te, d,__

.'

.,.

Misceflilneous

self -contained
newly .
reupholstered good shape

glass or china, will pay top

&amp; .ICctiiOt"ltl
77-Auto RtPIIr

U-Lotl&amp; Acrtlll I
34-Real Est•te W•nttd

37-Rt•ltors

Help Wanted
11
Someone to help care for
aged lady with arthritis.

and Middleport . Call 742·
2354 or 742-29'15.
'

Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture,

'

7l-VInl &amp;4 W. D.
74-Mottfcycltl
nAuto P1rts

34-lulklbl ll.IIICIIftltl

32 · - - - - - - , . - 33. _ _ _ _ __

wanted to Buy

10 karat. 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Dental gold ana gold
ear pins . 675 -3010.

eTRANSPORTATION

+7131

.KII
t A J 101
+AQI

basement . Phone 667-3826.

843·2353 after 6 p.m .

FLV·BY·NIGHT

1ron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, go ld
rings,
jewelry,
s i l'ller
dollars, sterling, etc ., wood
ice bOxes, antiqueS, etc .
Comple~e
households .

71-Autot tor sate

:u-Homll lor Saltf
l2-Mo1Mit+tomes
for Slit
33-llarms lor S.te '

31 . _ _ __ _ _

11 .
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

I

eREALESTATE

29.
30.

A

7760.

65-·Snd &amp; Pllf11111tr

2:1-Pr(lftSIIOnal

27
. - - - - - - I·
28_

7. - - - ' - -- -

bec•uae they auapeeted he waa this-

Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992 ·

61-l.lvtltock
64-HIY I Gr11ln

22--Monev to Loan 1

,26. - - - - - --

6. - - -- - 8. - --

21- Bllslness
Opportunliy

.21.
22 .
23.
' 24 .
25.

1. - - - - --

a1 td

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,

61-lll'arm lqlfl,mtnf
n-wanttd te luy
72-TMKkl tor Slit

eFINANCIAL

17.
18.
19.
20.

) For Sale

•: ,. , (Anlwef'l tomo1 row)
,

•

9

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I CJAt,.lr

) Announcement

''(IJ ex I.I I) [I)!"

Printed Pattern

s1-HouuholdQood5
U-C8, TV, Aadla Equipment
n-Anllqutl
14- Misc. Mtrchtndlst
n-llllldlng Suppllts
s..-Pet• for S..lt

13-lilsllrance
•1 14-Buslnns Training
15-5tiiOOillnstrucflon
16Atdlo, TV

box

992·2143 .

eMERCHANDISE

.. n - Sihtattd wantecl

have

operator's li cense? Phone

Yealerday't l Jumbln : YACHT NEWLY GALAXY FOIBLE
.-.newer: They turned doW'n Oracula'a application

lorRtnl
44-Ap•rtmtnl tor Rent
U-PIIt:oom•
u-s,.ce tor Rtt~t
47-wanftlCI to Rent
4t-lqu(jtmtnt for Rtnt

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
- ,l _ Help w1 ntt&lt;l

you' ll

Side-Rippled Wrap

eREN:fALS

I Auction
9-WantedtoBuy

hour .

t752

44

M8Wtrllere:

41-Hou ..slor-Renl·
42-MobUt Homes

1- Cud ol TIYnltt
l-In Memoriam
3-AnnOuncements
4- GIVHWIY
5-Happy Ad.s
. 6-Lostand Fauncs
7--Yird Slit
I -Public S.lt

·itial or group of figures

if

J

(

MONEY - MONEY
First mortgages;
secon,d mortgages,
nd
refirian
Call
Mortga
ervices
•
lipolis, Ohio
1517 for

house cleaning,

per

.JIOI52

Electric &lt;electric) apart-

Starting July 8·10 from 9-5
daily, lots of clothing,
·Ut ility table and lots of
what·nots. Address 185 S.
Front St .• Middleport .

appreciate

I

do

+toil

+JO

Eighty Acr:es. 2 acres bot·

lJ
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
S U RANCE
been can ·
celled?
Lost
your

No item too large or too
small. Check prices before

I
I

Print one word in each

classification

a

J

175,000.00 . Phone 667 ·3643 .

references. Phone 992·5094.

Ohio, Critt Bradford .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

space below. Each in -

I HALTE

For

SOUTHERN

•'•'

I
I
I
I

b
I I K

Will

WI!ST

+A1713

tom. 68 pasture, blacktop

$3 .00

tKQ
+KtOU
EAST

+5 .

Five room house In Brad·
bury , modern kitchen and
bath . Carpet and air con·
ditioniJ19 across WMPO .

weather hits. By the way,
free estimates are
provided .

949-2487 or 949-2000. racine,

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

I'
I,

I I I

• • Q7

Autos for Sate

IY TI Pontiac Sunbird,
sunroof, automat ic, am ·fm
radio, excellent condition 1

-e

NORTH
+KQJI

$14,500.00 . Call742·3074.

33

17

PHONE 992-2156

I
I

LIMPE

BRIDGE

Defense disarmed handily

Three bedroom hOYse with.
bath. Large lot. Insulated,
storm windows, carPet, gas
furnace, basement, ci1Y
water, septic sy~tem .

Call 992·3519, 992-3941, or
992·5126 and get things all
fi•ed up before that bad , .

Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Phon•---~------- I

11check the proper
1.below.
I
I
) Wanted

BRADFORD ~

All kinds of items. Starts at

at a II . Phone 949-2413.

1:

the

and27 . 9a . m. · 5p. m.on

9a . m.

knowing· any information

I
II

Write _your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon , cancel your ad by phone wnen you get
r:esults . Money not refundable.

in

8
PublicSale
_ _ _,&amp;_.A,u,_.c""ll,..on,.__ _

Ilh-------....!...--.-"'----'-.,

Pay Cash for .

put

THREE family yard sale.
Thurs. and Fri ., June 26

yard sale Tuesday, July ·2,
at tne Bob Roy residence .

Male Beag le, mostly black,
in Mile Hill area, Racine.
Not iced niissing Wed nesday morn ing, child's

would

one letler to each square. to form
lour ordinary warda .

on Saleln Twp . 34. or off 124
at 325 then r ight on Salem
Tw. 34. Clothing of all sizes,
guienas $1.00 and up,
chicks, 50c, stone jars,
Avon and many things.
Wednesday, Ttiursday and
Friday .

byHentiAmoldlnciBoblee

Unscramble these four Jumbfes,

124 to left on County Road 1

Yard Sale

Cheerleaders wi II have

Lost and Found

pet,

Fox

Hound .
In
vicinityof
Detroitts Run . One front
leg brown, others wh ite.
Extremely shy, it seen call

THE

(=::J~!.!j~~~==

985 ·3528,

Walker

right on top of Chester Hill.

Miniature collie puppies.

All colors, six
and ready to
anytime
at

Female

At Glen Caton residence off
about one mile to top of hill

Maple bar stools, house
paint, toys, misc .

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

GOLD,
SILVER,
STERLING,
ETC .,
BROWN 'S MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO. PHONE : 614-9925113.

Three bedroom bri ck home
tor sale . Three acres with
pond . Two baths and
double car garage . Owner
will help finance. Located
in
Tuppers
Plain s.

Home needing painted?
Guters in need of repair? Is
that roof beginning to leak?

~THATBCIWIIILlDWOIIDO&amp;ME

\Y ~~·

~

Wednesday and Thursday · Thursday, July 17, on old
from 8·4 at 698 La.urel St ., Rt _ 33, between Co. Rd. 18
and 19.
Middleport .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Shop, Middleport.

brass 30c lb., aluminum l5c

Call/42-2244.

1

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

Closed Tuesdays and Sun·
'
days.

autos '\nd bodies. Buying
copper

ICE CREAM

day 9 · 8 , Wednesday
through · Saturday 9-5.

Young Siamese cat found .
Has collar and flea collar.

'i}f)l}l.\fifii}'iJ

Yard Sale

7

843,-2354 .

FREE!

appointment. Hours Mon·

The

Picking up and buying junk
clean

3760.

E. T. Jones. Ca,!l 614-667·
6133 f~r your slaughering ·

Announcemen1s

3

home. Six terrier pups
ready in 5·6 weeks, 6 mixed
· breed ready in 1·2 weeks.
Also six kittens ready in
about one · week . Call 992·

Jones Meat Packing wil l
reopen July 9 having been
closed due to the death of

You gave no one a last
farewell,
Or even said good· bye.
You were gone before we
knew it,
And'only God knows Why .

Lost and Found

6

Giveaway

Twelve puppies to good

992-2082 .

on Ju ly 15, 1975.

Sadly

4

fa m ily room, air con·
ditioner, 3 car garage.
Baum Addition, Meigs

71

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

basement,

payment 2nd mortgages. · bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14M65, 2
bedr.
Call 99 2·7000 for ap · 1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
pointment. ,
bdr., bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14M65 2

Brownell Ave ., Middleport.
phone 992·5204 .

.

Announcements

3

fi replace. full

cunningham and Associate·
s. inc . Mortgage Bankers.

Five rooi"n house, bath,
utility room, wall to wall
carpet, storm doors and
windows, aluminum siding,
o n~ car garage. Located on

"The hot, dry weather that has
hurt crops in the southern plains has
persisted through early July and has
spread to limited areas of the central plains and the southeast
Generally, subsoil moisture remaina
adequate in major com-soybelin
producing areas."

.

·

tl813

Small investment; large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
.

••

Beautiful large home. Low

utilities, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,

Caii992-SJ10.

$52,000 .00 . Phone 667·3288.

r

------====-==--,.,-----

County . Cal1985-4169.

.Rebuilding, Refinishing ,
'Reupholstery, Fabric and

I _ / \ , .,

.,

Call

St..

773-5839 or 773-5788.

' "Yield prospects have declined
especially for spring-planted crops
in the northern plains, and parta of
Montana and Minnesota," theJ\eport

WASIDNGTON (AP) - With com
production expected to be down
fr&lt;m last year~s record harveSt,
overseas demand for U.S. commod!tles ls thriving and will help
keep gram supplies relti~ely tight in
the coming year, says the
Agriculture Department. ·
Last Friday, the , departtnf'~t

Main

Ditch digging

~od~~:~;:!re~of~;;:.tch

of

E.

Professional
Services

2)

of 2.4

of

514

Pomeroy .
i 20,000.

estimated the '19110 Corn harvest at:
7.28 billlon buahels, down 8 percent
from last year's record 7.76 billlon.
But the wheat harvest was put at a
nlllf high of 2.32 billion bushels, uP 8
percent from 1aat yel!l'.
_
"Domestic grain use in 1980-31 is
expected to remairi at a high level,
while exports are likely to expand
for both UJl. food grains and feed·
stuffs," the department's outlook .
board said In a report.
Wheat exports, for example, are
expected to reach .a record l.45
b(llion ~ls, up 75 million bushels
from 1979-80, the report said. Com
exports could rise to 2.6 billion
bushels, exceeding the record
billion estimated In 1979-80.
Although the U.S. acreage of
major crops is up from last year,

Iowa's harvest outlook would be
larger than the JUly1 indications in
Texas, 128.3 nnilllon bushels; South
Dakota, 135 nnilllon; Kentucky, 138
million; North Carolina, 121.8
million; South Carolina, 25.8
million; Georgia, 74.2 million; Tennessee, 53 million; or Virginia, 46.5
million.
'rhe statistical exercise in no way
diminishes the hurt to farmers and
the effect short harvests in smaller
producing states would have on the
U.S. supply.
A main point, however, is the inr
portance of the Corn Belt and how
heat and drought in that region could
reduce yields and greatly overshadow losses in some other parts
the country.
As cruel as it may sound, that Is
why some "big picture" economists
.a re not alarmed so much by the lOllS
the entire com crop In some states
as they are by the threat of serious
reductions in Iowa and Illinois.

Opportunity
A·frame business building
Nith c.oncrete park ing area

:n

-. '992-7354

Sates, .service and sUp-plies. In ground and
above ground pools •

5·1-lfc

MIDDLEPORT,O .

·G K A N
IQC

ABLCHKHW

X G G J

R G R Q A F W.

FDCHW

\

•

F

LGYHCEBKX. . -

BL

KGC

HT H WN ME H WH ,

MEBAH

EH

MBALGK

UKG '-.IL
YBPKHW

·Yealerday'o Cryptoquo.te: WHEN IT COMES 1'0-'MAXING
LOVE, A GIRL CAN ALWAYS USTEN SO MUCH FASTER
THAN A MAN CAN TALK.-HELEN RQWLAND '
Cl

.1
I,

F

'* Klnt I"NivrH

$~Micale , ! r~e .

�12 _ The oaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., ruesoay, J11ty 15, 1980

..

I

Area deaths

,

Litter control program now Ohio low

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Associated Press Wrtler
and Dorothy Vine.
.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP) - Eight
Surviving are her husband, Paul;
Mrs. Paul McElhaney
months
after
voters
rejected a mana daughter, Loraine; a son, Palil L.,
datory
can
·and
bott\e
deposit bil~
all of Johnstown, Ohio; three sisters,
Mrs. Paul Nellis Stanley
Ohio
has
a
new
law
creating a
Mrs. Tom (Leta) McDaniel,
MeElhaney, 43, Johnstown, Ohio
statewide
litter
control
program.
Cleveland, Ohio; Helen Gibbs,
died Saturday morning at UniverGov. James A. Rhodes signed the
Mason; Mrs. Andrew (Martina)
sity Hospi~, Columbus.
bill
into law MOhday, but vetoed one .
VanMaire, Clifton; two brothers,
Mrs. Mcelhaney was born August Kenneth and Martin Stanley, section. The vetoed portion would
23, 1936, the daughter of the late
Mason; several neices and nephews. have outlawed plastic ring tops on
Martin and Lula Grey Stanley of
Services will be held Tuesday, 2:30 beverage six-packs uniess made of
Mason. She was also prededed in
p.m. at the Crouse and Son Funeral photodegradable material, which
death by two brothers, Robert and
Home, Johnstown, with burial · disintegrates after prolonged exHarley Stanley and three · sisters,
following in the Johnstown posure to the sun.
Gertrude Harding, Barbara Grimn'l, cemetery.
The l!leasure, which took effect as
soon as Rl!odes signed it, "addresses
the can of Ohioans for a practical litter law," he said. The measure had
been touted as an alternative to the
ill-fated November 1979 ballot
proposal which would have mandilled !!kent deposits on beverage
cans and bottles.
Sponsored by Rep. Thomas J. CarDETROIT ( AP) - Fol!f years
younger than Reagan.
ney, D-Boardman, the new law
ago, Gerald R. Ford needed Ronald
He got an elder stateSman's af. levies a Htw()-tiered" tax which is
Reagan. Now it's the other way
fectionate ovation. After a half·
I
around·,
dozen convention speeches that left
As the 1980 Republican presidenthe delegates conversing in disin- OSU staff member
tial nominee, Reagan needs con·
teres!, Ford's appearance got their resigns after check
vention and campaign help from the
attention.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
fanner president he chaUenged nil·
Many are the same delegates who
successfully in 1976. And Ford is
almost demed him norniliati.on ·in · Ohio State University Development
promising to go aU-out for the elecfavor of Reagan last time, but that's Fund staff member resigned after a
lion of his former rival.
forgotten now. Ford flirted with 1980 routine check indicated that he may
There are. Ford associates who
candidacy, deCided against it, and have used university funds imstiU bristle at what they contend was
obviously is through running for of- properly.
The employee, Patrick H. Welsh,
a half-hearted Reagan effort to help
fice. He's no threat .to any
33,
of Lancaster, resigned Monday
politician's job or ambitions.
elect the president in the last cam·
paign.
.
.
But he is a key figure in Reagan's after four years with the university.
"This is a terribly unfortunate
Reagan always tlaimed he did his
quest for Republican unity, and he
best for Ford, although his cam·
can be a highly villible and valuable situation," said Rick Buxton, the
university's vice president for
paign schedule was a llrnited one.
campaigner in the fall.
But if Ford resented it, there's no
He's basically a conservative, but development. "We intend to get to
evidence now, ail he tries to unify
tlis credentials and his appeal reach the bottom of ·.this as soon as
to the moderate middle of the possible."
Republicans behind his one-time
Art investigation ill continuing into
challenger~ and promises intensive
Republican Party. That makes him
campaign efforts or his own.
all the more important to Reagan the situation.
"This Republican is goiqg to do
today, as the former California
•
everything in hill power to elect our
governor tries to broaden his own
Soybean producers
nominee to the presidency of the
appeal so as to align moderate and
will vote on issue
United States," he said Monday
even liberal Republicans behind the
night, to ·the cheers of the
ticket.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Mter his nomination four years soybean producers will be asked to
Republican National Convention.
"We've got a lot of work to do, and
ago, Ford sought out Reagan for a vote within 90 days on creation of a
you are looking at one volunteer who
reconciliation. Now the gestures are soybean marketing program.
will try harder, work longer, ·and
corning from Reagan. One of his fir·
More than 2,000 soybean growers
speak with more conviction to get · st stops in Detroit on Monday was at si~ed petitions requesting such a
this country a competent president . Ford's hotel suite, to pay birthday program. The pro)IOied system was
$gain... .
,.
respects. They're to meet ·again designed by an adVisory committee
"sQ, when you field the team for
today, this time for the serious .or 30 soybean producers.
Governor Reagan, count me in,"
business of disfussing Reagan's vice
Voting on the program, which
Ford said.
·
preside~tial selection.
calls for a 1~ent charge per bushel
The former president made a
Ford said access to the president of soybeans for market promotion
point of saying that he's not ready to
and his high command is the key to
and development, is set for Sept. 11&gt;become an elder statesman and sit
influence for an unofficial adviser.
18.
on the sidelines. At 67 _.. Monday
And he's .obviously been promised
was his birthday- he's two years
thathewillhavethat.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
Whatever Ford's future role as a
Art ice cream social will be held at
coLinselor, it is ciEI(lr that Reagan the Forest Run Methodist Church
and his managers ~ anxious to July 18, beginning at 6 p.m.
make sure that his current rlile is as
To place orders call Virginia
' a campaigner, for Republican unity Davis at 992-7609 or Marcia Arnold
and then for the Republican ticket.
992-2249. The event will be held in the
basement of the church.

Reagan needs help
\hom president Ford

.

ADMIRAL

DEHUMIDIFIERS

An

Admiral

dehumidifier can

make vour basement or other
..dam,D area more comfortable by
taking the e)(cess moisture out ot
the air. It helps protect ~ turniture
and woodwork from the damag ~
ing effects of constant dampness.
It retards mildew, mold, musty
odors and rust- gives your home
more.living area.

Baker Furniture
Middleport, Ohio

REVIVAL SLATED
A weekend revival beginning July
18 and lasting through J lily 20 will be
held at the Faith Tabernacle Church, Baileys Run Road, Point
Pleasant with the Reverencj Bob
Hall. Services will begin at 7:30
nightly with the public cordially invited to attend.

END MARRIAGES
Dissolutions of marriage were
granted to Roger and Barbara
Shultz and Marshall and JeweU
Blake Logston in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

expected to raille an estimated $13
million to finance the program.
The law imposes a fractional boost
on aU businesses paying the cor·
porate franchise tax and a slightly
steeper increase on manufacturers
of certain products which become
part of the litter stream. No business
assessed both parts of the tax wolild
pay more than $10,000 a year,
Revenue yielded by the tax will be
used by the state Natural Resources
Department to assist communities
in establishing litter coUection and
recycling programs.
In addition; the law bans pullaway
snap-tab cans after July 1, 1982. It
had proposed to ban the pla~ic ring
. connectors unless they are
photodegradable after 180 days' exposure to swilight, but Rhodes said
that is not feasible.
"While I support the efforts of the
Genera!.Assembly in its attempt to
address the problems created by
this fonn of potential litter, I believe

the mandate which has been imposed iS impossible to . meef with
current technology," Rhodes said in
his veto message.
The governor said he was concerned about the bill's definition of
photodegradable items as material
which is capable of being decomposed into "basic elements. " He
said he was unaware of any present
technology \hat would ' aUow in· .
dustry to meet that goal by the July
1983 deadtine.
"If the intent of the General
Assembly is to require · the use of
plastic riJJgs which become brittle
and break apart into pieces of sandlike consistency. after lengthy , ex·

GOP Will nominate Reagan tonight

posure to"the sun, the intent has not
been carried out by the bill's
language," he said.
·
Rhodes also signed a bill requiring
non-government shippecs of nuclear
materials to notify Ohio officials
before · transporting such items
through the state. It, too, took .effect
irrunediately.
The new law, sponsored by Sen.
Thomas E. Carney, D-Girard,
requires companies to . provide
routes and 'destinations of the ship.
ments l;lefore sending them into or
through the state. The measure ill
designed to avoid possible accidents
which colild expose peJ!ple to
radioactive danger.

-By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
AP Political Writer

- DETROIT (AP) - Ronald
Reagan's long-sought moment of
tnwnph and decision arrives tonight
when the Republican National Convention nominates him for President
of the United States and then awaits
his choice of a running mate.
While the outcome of the ~residen·
tial balloting is a 'foregone conclusion with Reagan the only surviving candidate from a oncecrowded field,. his choice for second
spot on the ticket remaiJJg the con·
vention's only guessing game.
Will it be George Bush, the man
who gave him the toughest fight in
the Republican primaries? Or Rep.
Guy Vander Jagt of Michigan,

Reg . Ret•llt1.79

IIAIR

...,.

PLARS

Reg . Attllll3 .06

lA. SPRAY

Surgeons study Shah's condition

IIG\K.AI Oll11'1A MOlD

'

I: W
I
·~'
l~~

CAIRO, Egypt - A French surgeon arrived in Cairo today to decide
whether the deposed Shah of Iran must undergo surgery again, this
time to drain an abscess in his left leg, an Egyptian doctor treating the
fanner Iranian monarch said.
·
But the Egyptian doctor, who has proved reliable in the past, denied
reports in the Cairo newspapers AI Abram and AI Akhbar that the
surgery already had been perfonned. "H~ arrived at three in the mornipg today," the Egyptian doctor said of the French surgeon. "He
hasn't done anything yet."
AI Abram said the abscess was " the size of an orange," had
developed at the top of the thigh and that doctors considered surgery
necessary because they.feared a blOod clot could develoP, and block
circulation.

R-.g . Aellll S1 .VV

SOLARCAINE
LOTION

WELCH'S
GRAPE JUIC~

~. $139

~-.$·1 39
..

Aet . Ritllll1 .14

20-26

WASH UP
TOWELEI IES

....

GAL.
l.U MIL.

Reg. Retail 1.ee

Wife believes husband was moved
ELYRIA, Ohio - The wife of one of the American hostages in Iran
believes her husband was moved from the U.S. Embassy in Tehran to
an undisclosed site.
· Cherlynn Hall, 28, recently· received a let!Pr from her husband,
Joseph HaU, in which he said that although he was well treated, he
didn't know where he was. Port.ions of the letter were printed in a
copyright story in Tuesday's editions of the Elyria ChronicleTelegram.
· "I am with two fellows- where, I do not know," Hall wrote his wife
in a letter dated June 11 . "I do know that I am healthy, exercise daily,
have fresh air, books, gOOd fOOd, toilet facilities and can keep clean."
Portions of Hall's letter were disclosed to the newspaper by Mrs .
HaU's mother, Patricia Boggs of Elyria. The newspaper said Mrs.
Hall has been complying with a State Department request not to
discuss the Iranian situation.

WINDSHIELD
WASHER

JOHNSON &amp; JOIIIISON

RISIAID

TIAYELIR .

floW . . .

5449

ELBERFELD$
KODAK
COLORBURST 250
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From th~ Associated Press

RAVE

~

Reg , Aetlll11 .14

Reg . Ret.us2 .13

AIKA

SELTZEI
Ill POll

-

a
_
s.M•
c;...
..M•

COLUMBUS, Ohio - S.tate Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson said
Tuesday that 609 local governments in Ohio ended fiscal 1978 with
deficits in funds they control.
That included 193 townships, 106 vUages, 88 cities, 88 local school
districts, 56 counties, 48 city school districts; 1li joint vocational school
districts, eight exempted village school districts, one library, and one
county board of education, he said.
·
Ferguson said 744 units of government ended fiscal 1977 with
deficits. Although a state statute prohibits deficit financing and
requires prosecution of violators of that law, prosecution of such cases
has been non-existent or negligible in the past, he said.

..

3.."•

-·
$259
...

Reg. Rttllll-4 .00

Rtg . Retl!ll1. Itt

CEPACOL

WHAT A lAIII

MOUTHWASH

DUITAIILOIMIII 01 Oil

1

5 19
llfl.

609 local governments had deficits

FIUZEI
COIITAINEIS

PIII&amp;IMf

H1.

Last working mill closes doors
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - The last working miD at U.S. Steel Corp.'s
Youngstown operations, which have been pouring steel in the
Mahoning VaUey since the early part of the century, has been closed.
When the whistle ending work soWided at 10 a.m. Tuesday, about 8li
steelworkers completed their last day in the No. 14 miD at the company's plant in the village of McDonald.
Another 200 workers will remain .for another week to complete shi!)"
ments and clean up the plant.
U.S, Steel last year announced the closing of the McDonald and Ohio
Wor~ as part of a nationwide /retrenchment that shut lli plants and
cost about12,000 jobs..
•1
The McDonald Works was built in 1916. The small community,
depending on the steel industry for its livelihOOd, became a company
town.

-

Ret . AIIIIIS2.08

EATEIS

"JNI·1UIPf 1180LD

Reg . Attell S2.32

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

__......

---.

n ....

.

Bank"

·

Beverly Hills trial in second day
CINCINNATI - Attorneys for Beverly Hills Supper Club fire victims say that polyvinyl chloride, a wiring insulation, gives off
poisonous gas when burning and tur'!ed the club's Cabaret Room into
a gas chamber.
·
Defense attorneys for 15 companies on trial in U.S. District Court
said PVC has a gOOd s.afety record and disputed the plaintiffs' contention. ·
The jury in the second civil trial stemming from the JMay 28, 1977,
Beverly Hills Supper Club fire wlU determine PVC's role in the 16li
deaths ,and approximaiely :;o· injuries that resulted when the
Southgate; Ky., club burned tothe ground.
A jury in the first trial decided in February that alwninum electrical
wire was not to blame for the fire, although four alwninwn wire
manufacturers agreed to a $3.6 million out-of~ourt settlement during
the trial.

DUTTON'S
NOW FILLS
PCS
PRESCRIPTIONS

FIDDLE
FAlKE

Just regular deposits into a good, solid
savings plan will do ...one that offers
the highest interest rates allowed by
law. We have a number of plans to fill
"The the bill . ... one's just right for v.ou!
.

SILII-1
SHAMPOO
llGIUI
Dl IIllA _ ,

79°

BARGAIN MATfNEES ON SAT &amp; SUN1
All SEATS JUST St.SD

You Don't Need a Ma~c Fonnula
to Make Money Grow!

-

•4L55°

Open M·W ., 9 Ill J

•.

Weather forecast
'

Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday with a chance of thunderstorots
tonight and Thursday morning. Lows tonight 7l&gt;-75. Highs Thursday in
the upper 80s and lower 90s. Chance of rain 40 percent tonight and 30
percent Thursday. Northwesterly winds 1().)5 mph Thursday.

Thurs. a, ·sat. v r1112
Frictay9flll&amp;Stll7

@THE CENT!!~JR~~T CO., .NA.

,

)

J

(Continued on page 14 }

•

IL• •ID
PAPER

,

criticized Reagan for failing to
respond to an invitation to address
the NAACP convention in Miaini.
Reagan blamed the incident on a
staff error.
Hooks appealed to the delegates to
support economic and civil ·rights
program to wipe out "rac\Slll.
sexism and poverty in the best manner possible." He also asked them to
"seek out and support black
Republicans for public office."
The delegates gave one of their
most emotional greetings to Sen.
Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the
1964 GOP · presidential nominee,
whose campaign gave Reagan his
first national exposure.
The Arizona coruiervattve blamed

FIFTEEN .CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1980

Violence erupts
in·. Miami streets

Reg. Aet.U 11.56

THURSDAY PICNIC
The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will have a picnic Thursday at
noon at Francis Goeglein's residen·
ce. Meat will be furnished by the
. club and members should bring
table service and a covered dish.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

' '' &lt;:I

VETERANS MEMORIAL
AdmissionsDonald Elliott, Guysville; Robert
Milburn, Middleport; Thelma
Chase, Albany; Thelma HyseU,
Rutland; Mary Lawhorn, Mason;
Charles Jones, Pomeroy.
DischargesLori Brooks, Audrey Swett.

REGISTER COPY
Travis Gray, Mason, was awarded
a $25 gift certificate from R&amp;R
Market in Hartford for winning tbe
closest-to-the-pin contest on the 14th
hole during the final round of the
Riverside Open Golf Tournament
Sunday.

VOL. 31 NO. 65

DIPILA-Y
WI1111Ait 011 1011011

children, Maureen and Michael, at·
foreign policy, broad tax cuts, boosts
tended Tuesday night's session.
in defense spending and restraints
They were welcomed by cheering on growth of goverrunent in other
delegates and chants of "Viva, Ole"
areas.
from the Texas delegation.
Potential fig)lts over two planks The chants reminded many
one dropping party support for the
onlookers of the moment four years
Equal Rights Amendment, the other
ago when Nancy Reagan and Betty
endorsing a constitutional amendFord arrived at the convention haD
ment banning abortions except to
in Kansas City with the presidential
save the life of the.mother - didn't
contest between their husbands still · materialize.
undecided and delegates on both
Opponents had failed to muster
sides started up competing demon· · enough support to get a roll caD vote
strations.
on the platform. A majority in at
Before Mrs. Reagan took her seat
least six state delegations is
at one enil of the hall this time, the
required to force a ron can vote.
convention had quickly approved a
It was a night of speeches, 24 in aU,
conservative platform spiced with
including one by Benjamin Hooks,
sharp attacks.on President Carter's
president of the NAACP, a late adrecord and calling for a tougher
dition to the program. Hooks had

en tine

at

Emergency squad runs
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reported the following runs
made by local units Monday.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called at 9:35a.m. to 301 Wright
St. for .Gladys Moore who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
The Syracuse was called at 9:45
a.m. to Snowville for Thelma Chase
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial. The Racine unit was
caUed at 11 :35 p.m. to Great Bend
· for Gene Lemley who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

had not made up his mind.
ForReagan, (he balloting 'on the
presidenQal nomination '!ill be like
a moment out of one of his
HoUywOod movies.
Beattn in two earlier tries for the .
nomination, he tried again, his last
chance at age 69, and this time he
overwhein\ed the opposition.
The fanner California governor,
following tradition, has i\o plans to
go to Joe Louis Arena until Tnursday
night when he will accept the
nomination with a speech, already
written, which wiD make a strong
appeal to DemocratS to cross party
lines and · vote for the Republican
ticket.
But Nancy Reagan, the can'
dictate's wife, and his two oldest

•

CAMERA DEPT., 1ST FLOOR

Fnendly

whose convention keynote speech
was put off until tonight when
Tuesday night's program ran past
midnight. Or Rep. Jack Kemp of
New York, whose supporters staged
a noisy, sign-waving demonstration
when he addressed the convention
Tuesday night.
Others on most speculative lists
include Sens. Richard Lugar of Indiana and Palil Laxalt of Nevada,
and former Cabinet members
Donald Rwnsfeld and William
Simon.
Party leaders streamed in and out
of Reagan's suite on the 69th floor of
the Detroit Plaza Hotel on TuesdaY
to. discuss the vice presidential
nomination and most came away
with the .same impression : Reagan

Exten~ Ohio Forec~~t-Friday through Sunday: Warm with a chance of showers or thunderstorms each day.·Highs in the upper 80s to low
90s and lows in the 60s.
.

.

..

MIAMI (AP) - Gangs of black May 17 riots) has not eased. It is still
youths roamed the streets of Liberty acute..''
However, George Knox, Miami
City overnight after five white
policemen were shot and wounded, city attorney and a leader in the
and 500 officers in riot gear cordoned black conununity, said the conoff a ~square-mile area of nor- siderable "pollee presence" could
thwestern Miami. Police said most keep violence .from reaching the
of the youths had gone home by proportions of the May rioting.
. Marvin Dunn, a leader in Miami's
dawn and streets were empty.
More than25 people were reported black community, said Liberty City
injured dliring a night of rock-and residents were "scared of. what's
bottle-throwing, sporadic looting, happening, and they're scared the
pollee officers are going to march
arson, firebombing and sniper fire.
Police said " under a dozen" down and shoot them.
"My concern is that the pollee will
1people had been arrested by early
today but could .riot give an exact be so fearful we won't be able to get
number. Pollee reported the Liberty any protection down there.' '
Commul]ity Relations Board
City area was quiet at6 a.m.
The nightlong violence by hun- · member Preston W. Marshall said
!lreds of youths was triggered many black teen-agers told him they
TuesdaY, by a plainclothes officer's participated in street violence
attempt to stop two black youths because they were dissatisfied with
from ·robbing a white motorist in the low-paying summer jobs and the
same neighborhoOd devastate&lt;: by federal aid provided by the Carter
race riots two montbs ago, officials administration after the May riots.
Dade County Lt. Robert Fortney
said.
A smaller area in Coconut Grove said police reported more gunfire
in southwestern Miami also was Tuesday than in the May riots,
sealed off by police carrying perhaps because of the looting of
·g unshops during the riots that left 18
shotguns and automatic weapons.
"Hell, man, we're fighting back," people dead. Some of the victims
were motorists caug)lt in the blOOdy
one black teen-ager said.
"Blacks have to stand up, man," outpouring.
Terrified white drivers raced
said 17-year-old Jerry Pounder.
"The way they fthe police) handle through Liberty City as bricks and
things is aU wrong. It's just a rocks pelted their cars Tuesday. "I
disgrace. They come in here bluffihg thought I · wouldn't make it out
alive," said Jose Fernandez, 26.
somebody down." .
Firefighters were battling three "It's just not fair."
Pollee fired tear gas to disperse
fires, including one at.a gasoline ser·
vice station where youtlf shoved a' throngs of black youths. Several
tow truck into the middle of a street people, including a 7-month-old
baby, were treated for gas
and set it afire.
Police, ham~red by sporadic inhalation,
Much of the violence Tuesday was
gunfire, a~o were trying to move
several garbage bins that had been !limed at police, who were not
shoved into the path of a freight caUing it a racial problem, actrain. The · train stopped before cording to Sgt. Peter Cuccaro.
The violence erupted late in the af·
reaching the bins.
ternoon
after three officers on a
"We've had nwnerous sniping incidents reported throughout the stakeout broke up the robbery of a
night," said Dade County Central white motorist by a pair. of black
Dilltrict officer Jim Bigler. "But for youths. Sgt. Fred Pelny, 39;- and of·
the most part, we've been trying to ficers Les Blumen and Michael
stay out of the area and let things Cummings chased two suspects into
·•
calm down. The tension (from the a Liberty City housing project.

SWORN tN - Phitip Roberts, left, newly appointed engineer for
. Meigs County, was sworn in Tuesday by Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon. Roberts fills the vacancy created by the recent death of Wesley
Buehl. Buehl had the remainder of this year on his current tenn. A 1!162
graduate of Southern High School, Roberts received his bachelor of science degree in civil engineering&gt;from Ohio University in 1!167. He is married ·
to the former Karen Leigh Dailey, who received her degree in nursing at
Ohio University this year. She is a nursing supervisor at the Holzer
Medical Center. Roberts is the son of Mrs. Frances Roberts, Racine, and ·
the late Marvin Roberts.

Motorcycle driver
injured in mishap
Two motorists were cited and one cited on an assured clear distance
person was injured in three area ac- charge following a collision on Mill
cidents rePorted Tuesday by the Creek Rd. , around 1:35 p.m.
Gallia·Meigs Post, State Highway Tuesday.
Patrol.,
Patrol reports Karl Halley, 18, Rt.
The injury mishap took place at 1, Gallipolis, was stopped for inud on
11:15 p.m. on Rt. 124 in Meigs Coun- Mill Creek Rd. Hill vehicle was hit in
ty, twomileseastofRt. 33.
the rear by the Lucas vehicle. There
According to the patrol, David G.
was moderate damage · to both
Dodson, 'J:l, Middleport, was westvehicles.
.
bound on a motorcycle. Dodson los~
At 6:40p.m. Tuesday on Webster
control of the cycle and hit a guard'
Rd., one and 3/10 miles south of Rt.
rail on the left side of the road. He
141, vehicles driven by Earl Ross,31,
was taken to Holzer Meflical Center · Rt.l, Patriot, and Junior E. Massie,
tiy the Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
23, Pedro, collided. Ross was cited
The vehicle had moderate damage.
for failure to yield the right~f-way.
Dodson was admitted at 12:20 a.m.
There were11o injuries. Damage was
today for multiple contusions and
minor to the Ross auto and moderate
abrasions and released at2:20 a.m.
to the Massie vehicle.
Ora G. Lucas, 'J:l, Gallipolis, was

Mercury climbs, .highWays buckle

By TIIOMAS RIZZO
slowed down, but there were no accidents.
Associated Press Writer
Record_high temperatures Wrap.
The stifling weather caused three
ped Ohio in a sticky blanket of heat similar problems in central Ohio
and hwnidity Tuesday, ·keeping almost at the same time, according
people indoors where they could be to U. Carl Brown of Highway Patrol
headquarters in Colwnbus.
protected by air conditioning units.
Few serious health problems were
At about 5:15 p.m., the roaaway
buckled
on westbound Interstate 70
reported across the state Tuesday as
temperatures pushed into the high at the border between Madison and
90s in most areas and cracked the Clark counties, on I-70 near the
century barrier in one citY.
Muskingum County line and on I-'J:/0
The state's hot spot was Dayton, near the I-71 interchange, he said.
"The eruptions created some temwhere a 101-d,egree reading ·broke a
record set in 1936 by 2 degrees. ,
porary problems and we had to
Records also were set in reroute traffic along the benn,"
·
Cleveland, where it was 97, Brown said.
Youngstown, with a 92-degree temBob Paddock, a meteorologiSt for
perature, and zanesville, with a the National Weather Service in
reading of 94. Temperatures of 97 Cleveland, · said the humidity "is
and 93 tied high marks in Colwnbus 1118king an uncomfortable situation
worse' ' and expects niore of the
and Mansfield respectively.
Portions of the state's highway same throughout the week.
system buckled from the oppressive
"!don't know if we'll have record
heat, causing traffic problems.
breakers, but it wiU continue wann
Southbound Interstate 77, one mile and hwnid," he said.
Ohioans weren't prepared for the
east of Ohio 800 in Stark County, ex·
panded and buckled across both ' sudden change in the weather,
lanes, said Lt. Don Mack of the state mainly because of the relativ~ly cool
1
Highway Patrol. The state Tran- spring, Paddock said.
"We've
had
very
few
80-or
even
7().
sportation Department has made
temporary repairs and plans per- ·degree days in April, May and
June," he said. "Suddeilly, this very
manent .repairs today, he said. .
The bu~kling was not a major · typical warm, humid July weather
problem because the concrete, 1s rather a contrast to what we have
though broken accoss boll. lanes, been used to. So it's not too abnormal. We just haven't had . too
~id(l 't rise up, he said. Traffic was

.

. I

much of it, and ' consequently,
weren't really prepared for it."
In Cincinnati, where the high
reached !16, area hospital spokesmen
said they did not notice an increase
iii the nwnber of heat-related
illnesses. Heavy demands for elee:
tricity caused a power outage for 2t ·

hours in some parts of the Cincinnati suburb of Delhi Township.
Jerry Lindsey, a National
Weather Service weather specialillt,
caUed the heat typical for an Oliio
VaUey surruner. Lindsey said the
· vaUey norrnaUy has 26 days a year
·with temperatures above 90.

Commission approves
'81 deficit budget
1

Meigs County Commissioners of the highW'\Y department.
Tuesday adoptetl a 1981 budget
Roberts said the gradall has not
showing a $221,249 deficit:
'
been repaird satisfactorily ahd is not
yet in operatt~n .
The 1981 budget wiD be submitted
to the county budget commission for
The commissioners voted to adIts approval. No individual a~ency
v.ertise for a new 1980-81 truck (flat·
appeared for the hearing on the
bed) for the highway department
budget based on figures furnished by
with bids to be opened at 2 p.m. on
Aug.5.
each office holder:
1
The commissioners said ·a comAlso meeting with the complete review of departmental missioners was Jack Bartrum who
budgets would have to be made with
requested the county clean out the
office holders before Jan. 1, and creek along county road 13 in
some drastic cuts would have to be Rutland Township. The commade in anticipated expenditures in missioners and ~ngineer will view
1981.
the site with Bartrwn.
Meeiing with the commissioners -· Don'Watson a~d Rosalie Whitlatch
were Philip Roberts; county met with the board to make ap.
engineer, and assistant, Charley plication to the county to receive
Smith \o dif:uss various operations
(Con(lnued on page IAI

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