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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
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JU·LY CLEARANCE SALE
SAVE 20% • 30 ·% ·EVEN 50% ·
ON WEARING APPAREL FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY

.

.OPEN .FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

-~~;;~~~~--l-:.~:~~~:;:--r-=;---Months sizes thru 7 to 14 range. Cool
summer fabrics and colors .

REG. '2.75 ....•...•..•....... SALE '2.09

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BASIC ,JEANS

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Sizes 29 to 42 waist. No fault,
14 oz. pre-washed blue denim

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SWIMWEAR
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SALE

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r in straight leg or boot flare
style.

Pre-teen, Junior and Misses
sizes in one and two piece
suits.

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REG. 13.75 .................1 • SAL£ 12.79 I

l . '1500 . I
·IA PRICE
~~~~~~;:~-~~~-SA~ ~·~:t-------;~~~:;----~+----·-~-·---·M-;-~··--~-~~·--·----==-·==-1
REG. 14.50 .................... SALE '3.39

SUMMER WEIGHT

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JACKETS .

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15.95 JACKETS .......... ,....... 11.25 !
'24.95 JACKETS ..............,.... -'17.45 1
I

Sizes s, M, Land XL . Good selection
of styles.
·&amp; .1

Third annual dulcimer event
scheduled July 26-27 at Rio
· Appalachian folk music will echo
throughout the hills of southeastern
Ohio during the third annual
Dulcimer Festival, which is to take
place on Saturday and Sunday, July
26 and '1:1, at the Bob Evans Farm
near Rio Grande.
The dulcimer is a musical instrument related .to those brought
here from the Old World by
European immigrants . The
American version of this stringed instrument originated during the 1900s
in the Appalachian foothills.
Although there will be open concerts from 10 a.m. until noon each
day, and workshops at 9 a.m., noon
and 3 p.m., an important part of the
Bob Evans Dulciriler Festival is the

competition. Categories include solo
instrumentals, courting dulcimers,
hammered dulcimers and vocals
with dulcimers. Those wishing to
compete must register· between 9
a.m. and noon' each day, paying a
$2.50 entry fee .
Contestants will be required to
perform three songs of their choice
in their events with three placings in
each class. The Grand Champion
competition will put award winners
from all categories in competition,
each playing one selection while
vying for the $100 cash prize.
Admission and parking are free,
and the Bob Evans Farm is located
on Route 3:&gt; just east of Rio Grande . .

DRESS SLACKS

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our entire stock of sportswear in
junior, regular and extra sizes is
reduced tor our July Clearance Sale.
Famous names like Devon, Red-i,
Bradley, Dotty Mann, Dov_glas
marc, Cos Cob and Aileen.

Sizes 29 to 50 waist. Regular
prices $9.95 to $24.95. Good
selection solids and patterns_ ·

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'27.95 .JACKETS ...-··--·--···-- .. -'19.50 I
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ALE
PRICES
29.95 ~ACKETS .................. 20.95 I
SAVE 30% +
.
---·--~~;;;;-~--~----80vs·~ioilsl£Ev~- l -~~;c:.~-;~CE
DRESS SALE I KNIT SHIRTS l
CHILDREN'S

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DULCIMER FESTIVAL - The hammered dulcimers, pictured
here, are among several types of dulcimers that will be played at the
third anual Dulcimer Fesli ~al on July 26 and 27 at the Bob Evans
Farm.

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COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

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July Clearance Sale of junior,
misses and half sizes summer
dresses.

Sizes B to 20. All of our boys' knits
are included. ·

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REG. '17.00 ................. SALE '11.29
4.95 SHIRTS......................14.20
REG. 123.00 ...... ;......... SALE' 115.19 1 '5.95 SHIRTS .................... '5.10
REG. '32.00 ................ SALE '21;19
'6.95 SHIRTS .................... '5.90

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~~~~...:::.:.:::.::::_::~~~~~~+...:S·~:.~~::.:.:::::::.:::.::.:;: 7.60 .
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MEN'S SUMMER

CAPS AND HATS
1Regular prices $1.39 to $2.95.
Good selection of styles .

PRICE

1/2

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

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CHILDREN'S
SHORTS

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SPORT SHIRTS

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Assorted styles and . colors in
months sizes thru 7 to 14.

1h OFF

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Regularly $8.95 to $17.00. S, M, Land
XL sizes. Solid colors and patterns.
Entire stock included.

REDUCED

30%

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--~-------------------·~-----._..-------..---~-----------·
'
JULY CLEARANCE
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MEN'S
JULY CLEARANCE

MEN/

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LITTLE GIRLS'

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DRESSES AND 1 KNIT SHIRTS
SPORTSWEAR !
Overalls. sundresses, pantsuits, 2
pc . dress outfits and skirts. Months
sizes to 14.
REG. S5.oo •. •..... ..•. SALE 53.50

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:~~: :~i~~o:: :::::: ::: SALE
~!~~ :i:~~
RE'G .

1

SUMMER
HANDBAGS

1

Prices range from $3.95 to
$17 .95. Good selection of styles
and colors in S, M, L and XL
siz~s .

1

11 Save

20% on our remaining

i stock of women's summer
1 handbags and purses.

+-REDUCED 30m + 20 OFF
_..._.,__.._..__...__.-:-------- ----- I-·--·- --. . . ---------$15.00 .. ... • ....

1

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o/
/0

/0

$10.50

-~-

We've Been Saying "YES"
To Loans for a Long Time!

Sizes 8 to .18 - Enitre
stock on

When you need a loan, what
you real ly need is a quick, simc
pie "yes" .. . and we'd like to
see th at you get it! Th at's why
we try to say " yes" when you
see us for a loan, and "yes" to
low cost payments too ! Get
facts!

- Regular

A PRICE

1

Meigs County

2

RACINE

· S~RVICE ·

HOME NATIONAL

WOMEN'S

.,!

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TOPS AND SHORTS
Regular and extra sizes in

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DETRO!'!' (AP)- Ronald Reagan "begin olll' crusade with a moment ·
and George Bush, accepting their of silence." With that, he bowed his
roles as.the Republican presidential h€1ld, his eyes closed. The hall fell
ticket at a festival of party unity, are silent.
opening a campaign that will be
A moment !liter, Reagan opened
directed at traditionally Democratic his eyes, jerked his head upright and
strongholds in the Northeast and in- said, "God bless America." The
dustrial Midwest.
delegates erupted mto a tumultuous
"We're obviously ·going to con- demonstration. , centrate in the Eastern and Central
Reaga~Bush and their families
time zones," Drew Lewis, a top stood on the podium waving to the
Reagan campaign aide, said Thur- joyful t ng. Joining the 1980
sday night, on the floor of the GO!;' Republican ticket on the podium was
National Convention as delegates former President Gerald R. Ford
waited to hear the acceptance \ and his wife, Betty. ··
speeches of the two nominees.
All day Wedne:~day, even through
Bush, who spent his youth in the balloting that gave him the
Mal;sachusetts and Connecticut and presidential nomination, Reagan ·
was educated in the .Northeast, is a had sought a way to convince Ford
key element in that strategy.
to take the vice presidential
Accepting the presidential nomination and when the
nomination he had sought for 12 negotiations failed settled on Bush
years, Reagan expressed his as his choice and ibade a dramatic
strategy with a speech that called on midnight appearance before the conAmericans. to cross party lines i'to vention to announce it.
Thursday's final session of the ,
build a new consensus with all those
across the land who share a com- convention had none of the high
munity of values embodied in. these drama of the night before. It was a
words: farnil~ work, neighborhood, happy show staged by a party conpeace and freedom."
fident it had niuned a strong ticket
Reagan closed his acceptance and buoyed by polls showing lteagan
with a substantial lead over
speech by urging the delegates to

shorts including walk shorts -

President Carter.
Bush, Reagan's former rival and
now running mate, warned
Republicans that "though Jimmy
Carter has in the past four years
lleen a failed pr'!"ident, he is a formidable campaigner who can be expe~ to use the power of his office
to suit his own political ends...
"Remember only that political
victories are won by hard dedicated
work - and that in this crucial election year, the stakes for America
and the free world are too great to
allow ourselves to become complacent."
Attempting to tie .down loose ends
of potential diSsent, Reagan and his
campaign managers agreed to give
Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina,
an arch conservative unhappy with
the choice of Bush, a chance to address the convention.
When Helms strode to the podium,
a delegate shouted: " Give 'em Hell,

Jesse."
"! wil(" replied the senator. But
his speech was conciliatory,
referring to "a common commitment to the pro-American and
pro-family principles."

BLUE CHAMBRAY

I

From the Associated Pre..

Plant has high radiation levels
PIKETON, Ohio - A federal government report says the Piketon
nuclear enrichment plant has exposed Its workers to the highest
radiation levels and most radiation leaks among tl:le three such plants
in the country.
.
.
Radiation doses at the southern Ohio plant have not exceeded government standards, but have been higher than warranted, the General
Accounting Office report sai&lt;h
Auditors who conducted the study blam:e many potential hazards at
Piketon and plants in Paducah, Ky., and 01$ Ridge, Tenn., on the U.S.
Department of Energy, which owns the plants but contracts with
private compar~es to run them.
The report said DOE has not only failed· to inspect the plants annually, but has omitted regular evaluations of the companies' safety
·programs and ignored many employee complaints.

10,800 workers called back to work
,

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CLEVELAND - About 10,800 Cleveland-area Ford Motor Co. em-

ployees who have been off work because of vacation shutdowns or
layoffs are being called back to work Monday at plants in Brook Park
and Lorain County, the company said.
Included are 3,600 at the Brook !;'ark foundry,who have been on a
three-week vacation; 5,800 at the Lorain assembly plant and 1,400 at
the Avon Lake truck plant who have been on vacation and temporary
layoff.
Some 1,400 production employees at the Walton Hills stamping plant
and 770 workers at a Brook Park engine plant will remain on temporary layoff, but are expected to return to work the week of July 28,
the copany said.

Weather forecast, state and local

-

Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday with a chance of thunderstorms
Saturday. Uiws tonight around 70. Highs Saturday in the mid-90s.
Chance of rain 10 percent tonight and 30. percent Saturday.
Southeasterly to southerly winds 5-10 mph tonight. .
Extended Ohio Forecast - Sunday through TueSday: Warm and
hwnid with a chance of thunderstorms each day. Highs in upper 80s
and 90s. Uiws in upper 60s to low 70s.

action shorts in terry cloth and
,po.ly_ cotton olends. All sizes.
Regular prices $4.95 to $13.95.

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~ · 2 pockets

s,

_ full tails. Sizes
M, L, and XL . 50% cotton 50% polyester.
Sale Price

Ill

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By DAVID GREEN
Associated Press Writer
The unofficial death toll from the
27-day heat wave that is smothering
the South and Midwest neared I ,000
today, with close to 700 ~ the
fatalities re,POrted in the past week
alone.
There have been 986 deaths in 20
states, according to an unofficial
count by The Associated Press. Last
week at this time , there had been 294
fatalities.
·
There were no prospects of Immediate relief.
The National Weather Service
predicted that the searing heat will
continue at least through the beginning of next week. Temperatures
over 100 degrees were reported in
many areas Thursday, with Hutchinson, Kan., among the hottest at
112. The thermometer at the DallasFort Worth Airport hit 100 for the
25th consecutive day.
In Georgia, Gov. George Busbee
declared a state of emergency Thursday, sayirig the state's fanners
face disaster if the heat -..ave continues. Emergencies have also been
declared in Alabama and Missouri.
The U.S. Agriculture Department
said a variety of crops, including
cotton, sorghum and,soybeans, have
suffered in the heat belt. Millions of
chickens have died.

COLUMBUS - State Representative Ron James (D-Proctorville)
said today he has written to David
Weir, Director of the _Ohio Department of Transportation, requesting
a personal response to the criticism
that state officials have ignored
highway problemS in Meigs C01mty.
. Representative James said he
requested Weir's presence at a
public1 meeting in Meigs County to
discuss problei!IS of CODI!tructing a
connecting road to the bridge across
the Ohio River at Ravenswood, W.

~ PRICE

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FAIR KING AND QUEEN CANDIDATES- Candidates for Meigs County Junior Fair King and Queen
are, front, 1-r, Denise White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin White, RD, Pomeroy, Patty Parker, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Parker, RD, Pomeroy, Tammie Starcher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Star-

cher, RD, Pomeroy; hack, Carla Rife, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Rife, Middleport, Rocky Pitzer, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Pitzer, Reedsville, and Tammy
Ervin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin,
Racine. The winners will be announced Aug. 5.

In IllinoiB, heat-relief centers
opened throughout the state, but the
turnout has been low.
"People just don't seem to want to
leave their homes," said Alexander
County Coroner Tom Bradshaw.
''A lot of older people have air conditioning, · but they don't use it
because ,it's too expensive to run,"
said Judy Bogart, a spokeswoman at
Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati.
Glenn and Lorinea Graham of
Wichita, Kan., don'\JIIlve an.air conditioner, but have discovered a
cooling-off device that children have
known about for a long time - a
lawn sprinkler.
"We just sit on the porch in the afternoon and set the sprinkler so it
hits us every time. it comes by,"
Mrs. Graham said. "People think
we're nuts, butitfeelssogood." .
The National Oceanic and . Atmosph~ric Administration said
Thursday that the hot weather iB
being caused by an unusually persistent wind pattern in the upper atmosphere.
There is a strong clockwise flow of
air at about 10,000 to 20,000 feet over
most of the country, with strong
counterclockwise wind flows along
both coasts, according to Robert E.
Livezey of the agency.
In such a system, air sinks toward

the earth and compresses, causing it
to ~t and dry, Livezey said.
In another weather-related
development, Michigan Gov .
William Milliken said he will seek ·

federal disaster assistance for state
residents who had property
damaged · in the severe thunderstonns that hit the southern part
of the state Wednesday.

Patrol investigates three
mishaps, one driver cited
One driver was cited by the GallaMeigs Post, State Highway Patrol
Thursday following an accident on
Rt. 7, five tenths of a mile north of
County Rd. 20.
According to the patrol, Thomas
Ball, 25, Pomeroy, was southbound
at 9:40 p.m. on Rl. 7, and was
making a left tum into a private
drive.
·
A vehicle · driven by Denny L.
Roberts, 44, of 155 Pearl St., Middleport, also headed south, attempted to pass the Ball vehicle. The
Roberts vehicle struck the Ball auto.
then went off the left side of the road,
across the highway into an embankment.
There was moderate damage to
both vehicles. Roberts claimed injury, but was not treated immediately. Roberts was cited on
passing within an intersection.
Two other wrecks were reported

by the patrol during the past 24
hours.
On Cora-Mill Rd., at 2:50p.m. in
Gallia County, two-tenths of a mile
east of Rt. 325, vehicles drivne by
Tamara L. Woodward, 24, Patriot
Star Route, and Denver A. Walker,
67 , Rt. I, Bidwell, collided on a cur·
ve. Woodward showed visible signs
of injury, but was not treated im- ·
mediately . .Damage was severe to
both vehicles. There were no
citations.
At 3:55 p.m. on Staffonl School
Rd ., 175 feet south of Rt. 588 in Gallia
County, vehicles driven by Mllllie E .
Roberts, 23, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, and
Alfonzo Johnson , 51 , Rt. 2,
Gallipolis; met on a curve. There
was moderate damage to the Roberts vehicle and slight damage to the
Johnson auto. Johnson claimed injury, but was not trea ted im- .
mediately . There were no citations.

Va.
Representative James asked Weir
to explain what plans for new highway construction have been made
and why those plans are halted._
In his letter, Representative
James described the meeting as " an
opportunity to discuss the future
plans, the lack of current action, and
the gasoline tax situation in Ohio. "
"My letter was written in response
to an editors! in The Daily Sentinel
on July 3, which strongly criticized
state officials, including me, for a
lack "Of action regarding additional
highway construction to meet the
Ravenswood Bridge on the Ohio
side. I have been following this
situation for a long time, and I knew
that, although Ohio had drawn up

ptans for additional construction, gasoline. We are actually selling less
there was simply no way !hat we · gasoline in Ohio now, and highway
would have the financial resources funds have actually declined at the
to begin construction. I also know it same time that the cost of conis disgraceful that the new Raven- struction has increased subswood Bridge ·will meet State·Route stantially . No new highway projects
338 on the Ohio side, especially since are going forward in Ohio at this
State Route 338 is a winding, time, and it is unfair to say as the
treacherous road that has been Sentinel maintained, that Franklin
knoJn to slip in certain places," County or Cuyahoga Cow1ty is any
James said.
better off."
"However,"
Representativ e
Representative James indicated
James continued, " it has also been he was pleased that the Daily Sen. no secret that highway funding in tine! had printed its editorial calling
' Ohio is in a desperate situation. Fun- attention to the problem and asking
ding for state roads must come that people call and write state ofprimarily from the gasoline tax, ficials to express their concerns.
which is levied on the number of "The public meeting that I hope we
gaUons sold and not on the price of will soon set up with Director Weir
• wiU provide a forum for Meigs County residents to discuss the highway
pr·oblems, plans, and possible
solutions," Representative James
concluded.

Anderson may be 9n ballot

WOMEN'S

Long summer-weight gowns and
robes in nylon or cotton. Sizes:
Small, medium, large, X-large.

REG, $6.00 ..... .... ... SALE $4.19
REG. $7.50 ••.••.• • .... SALE $5.29
REG. $11.00 ..•• . •• .. . . SALE $7.69
REG. $16.00 •.•• • . ,· .•• SALE S1Ll'
REG. 523.00 • • ••••• . • • SALE $16.09

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

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Highway chief .ask.ed to attend meeting

..-~~--------~---·--·--~~~~ .... ·--·--·-------· -·

. Racine, uno ..

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Death toll from heat nears ·I,OQO

!. WORK SHIRTS I GOWNS AND ROBES

REG. '11.00 ................... SALE '8.28 ..
REG. 'J7.00 '"·-·.: --·-- ..... SALE 112.78

BANK
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I REG. '5.00 .................... SALE '3.75 I
SALE '6 75
1 REG '9 oo
!REG:REG. ~;16.00,
.o ·."."."......"."."."...........
.:;·:."."."."..". SALE
SALE.~~~
12.00 !

REG. 14.99 ............. :..... SALE 13.78
REG. '7.00 .................... SALE '5,28 I

GW.

Special group of jeans in blue denim
and assorted colors.
Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.

Reagan, Bush prepare
for rugged campazgn

--~~~~;~;~;---~--~M;~s;~r~Ee;----r----~~~~:~~~----

assorted styles and colors.
•
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People

ffiit

~ale

prices $3.95 and 15.95

~~~~~~irri A Home
Bank
For

\ [: ANI&lt; •

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FIFTEEN CENTS
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PRICE

·-..,.--·~··--------

JULy CLEARANCE

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enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1980

Little boys' swim .trunks and
little girls' one and two piece
suits.
·

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-a t y
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VOL 31 NO. 67

SWIMWEAR

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12- The_Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursda~. July 17, 1980

COLLECTING SIGNATURES -'- Uiuis DeLuz,
Portland, iB collecting signatures of.peophi In favor. of a ,
new road being built to the bridge constructed across
the Ohio River at Ravenswood. DeLuz collected

1

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signatures yesterday In front C·f the Krogers store in
Pomeroy and will be back today until5 p.m. DeLuz has
placed petidons in Stiversville, Portland, Stullrts Rim
and Long Bottom.
•

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ·u.s. name should be on the ballot for the
Rep. John B. Anderson, R-Ill., has Nov. 4 election.
noiched another victory in his drive
Celebrezze and Anderson were out
for a spot nationwide as an in- of the country and unavailable for
dependent on the Nov. 4 general comm'lint. Anderson is in Uindon,
election ballot.
·
ending an !Hlay visit ·to leaders of
U.S. · District Judge Robert M. several foreign nations. Celebrezze,
Duncan .ruled Thursday !hilt an Ohio a Democrat, is traveling in the west
election law ·is unconstitutional African ·nation of·Senegal with Vice
because it fixes the filing deadline President Walter Mondale.
;
CLEVELAND (AP) - The winfor independent candidates at 75
Celebrezze was ·named defendant
Ding uumber drawu Thlll'llday llllbe
days before a primary. He said it in the suit, which Anderson riled ~I­ · Qhlo Lottery's daUy game "Tile
discriminates against independent ter being turned down on May 16 for
Number" was 578. .
'
candidates because major party
a ballot position.
In the weekly "Pyramid" game,
candidates are not nominated until
Anderson announced last April
tbe winning uumbers were 05, n9
late in the sununer.
, that he would withdraw from the
aud B4ll7.
--;
p uncan order~ Secretary of State
Republican race and become an in' .
Tbe lottery reported llllflllogs of
Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr., Ohio's
dependent candidate. It was already
$167,800.54) on the dljlly game.
chief election officer, to accept Antoo late for him to.try for a spot as an
The earnings came on sale&amp; of
derson 's petitions fo,r a place on the
independent on . the · Ohio ballot
$545,:131, while holders of wlnnlDg
ballot. If ·Anderson meets other
because of the state's filing deadline
tickets are eatiUed to &amp;bare a total Gl
qualifications, Duncan said his
of March20.
$377,527.50', lottery officials ~ld. ·

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middl,eport-Pom~roy, 0., Friday, July 18,1980

2-Th; Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 18, 19110

r.;P hils' 'CarletOn wins .
f1~th game; Reds lose

Opinions &amp;
Comments

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPS 145-Me)
DEVOTED TO 111E

46SSI'K, l&lt;ONALO
'RE~GAN HAD A e,\G
"BLOW-OUT ll't' I~

Publlabecl datly ueept Sltarday by The Obio VaUty P\lbU.hfq Compauy- Multimedia, loc.,

D"EfROII !!

Ill Cclm1St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4$7•. Bul!.u OffI« Pboot ftZ.. Zl5t. E'AUtorlal Pboat tb-%157 .
Secood clan potlll&amp;:e p.Jd at Pomeroy, Ohio
Nadoul advertllln&amp; r.pre~enlaHft, Laudon Alletlllel 3101 Euclkl Ave

•

BY TilE ASSOCIATED PRESS
:·
It was aU uphill for Steve Carlton
~
Thursday rught.
,
"They have a fwmy kind of a
motmd here. It sort of moves around
:
~ . , on you," Philadelphia's ace pitcher
, . said after beatmg Houston 2-1 in the
,
Astrodome to raise his season
: record to 15-4, the winningest mark
1 · in the major leagues.
\·
"When you throw," Carlton went
:
on, "tt feels as if your front foot is
• higher than your back foot. I was
:• constantly adjusting .. . trymg to
,
throw strikes." He threw enough of
: them to garnish his seven-hitter with
: 10 strikeouts.
~Elsewhere in the Nat10nal League,
•· Los Angeles beat Chicago 3-1, St.
• Louis battered San Diego 15-3, Mon,
treal defeated Cincinnati 6-1 Pit, ,, tsburgh edged San Francisco 3-2 and
!. ;: New York blanked Atlanta 6-0.
1
Carlton had a five-hit shutout
'.:
: .~ gomg into the ninth, then gave up a
~ · leadoff single to Luis Pujois and a
:· ·. two-out triple to Rafael Landestoy
• · The loss dropped the Astros onehalf game behind Los Angeles in the
duel for first place m the West
DtvlSion.
Dodgen 3, Cubs I
"I love shutouts; I love those sons
j;;, of guns," Don Sutton of Los Angeles
~ satd after coming within one out of'
getting the 53rd of his major league
career. But he was delighted to settie for a three-hit victory.
He had a one-hitter going mto the
ninth in · Chicago's c&lt;Jly Wrigley
"Fteld, but after Mike Tyson smgled
and raced to second as Sutton threw
out Ivan DeJesus, Lenny Randle
singled for the Cubs' run.
Tbe Dodgers scored twice in the
first inrung on smgles by Dave
Lopes, Rudy Law and Reggie Smith
and a double by Steve Garvey. Lopes
had an RBI single m the fourth.
CanllDals 15, Padres 3
"We've gotten an awful lot of runs
in some games and not enough in
others," said St. Louis Manager
Whitey Herzog. AgalllSt San Diego,
the Cards got an awful lot of runs in

•

CleVeland Olllo

•

HE's -nu::
~IRSf Wl~\\ER Ou-rfA
11\ERE SIWCE TilE
'72 G\EV'tl !!

Tbe Auoclatecl Prtt• b eac:laaJvely eatiUed to Uie use lor pubiJcaUoD of aU oeW. diap1tebe•
41&gt;ed1ied lo tlle newsp.per aod also tbe loclliMWI publlabelhereln.
PubUslttr
Robert Wlugett
Gt-aeral Mgr. A Ctty EdJior
Robert Hoefilch
New1 Ed.ltor
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DaJe Rotllgeb, Jr.
17
Adv Mlllllll!f
Y~
Carl Gbeea
Bm:51 .-n......
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Backs police chief
In aU due respect to our vtUage officials past and present, I can no
longer refrain from expressing my
opinion as to the job our new police
chief is trying to do to make
Pomeroy a better place to live I say
trying because a spec1al meeting d
council has been caUed as I understand to questton the status of his
authority. Why question that ?
Wasn't he hired to be the Chief of
that department to give orders to
uphold law and order as he sees fit.
All I have heard is praise for Chief
McKinney for the excellent and competent job he is doing.
Now, I am confused. Why did the
Chief of Police have to hire an attorney as to the extent of his
position? Did he step on someone's
toes or has he refused to be considered a yes man. If so, to whom? I
know what is going through the minds of a lot of people in our town. I
personaUy thought it was great to
bring an outsider m but then agam
why hire anyone for that pos1tion if

they cannot have full authortty It's

just a waste of money
I believe it is time the cttizens of '
Pomeroy, even surrounding communities (and they do come here to
shop), know what is going on with no
more closed doors keeping us m the
dark to sometimes doubt the people
we voted for.
Why not give Chief McKinney the
absolute control of his department
and stand behind him 100 percent?
If we have to watt for justice until
we all face the highest court and
judge then what IS to and can happen
between now and then.
I do not know Chief McKinney personaUy, but more power to him, after all, he did uproot his family and
home to come here to help each and
everyone of us.
I think he can do just that if more
people in Pomeroy will make thetr
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Defense
feelings known to our officials.
spending
has emerged as one of the
Mrs. Josephine Balinger
chief
issues
in the fight over the 1981
Pomeroy, Ohio
federal budget. Many m Congress
think the Pentagon 1s receiving too
little money. Others - and the White
House - think the Pentagon is
teachers and coaches. '!'hat 1s aU
receiving too much, taking billions
that we can say.
. of dollars a way from needed social,
How much money has the govern- program.
ment of the U.S. loaned these people
Now comes a CW!gressman who
to go to coUege and it has never been
believes he knows how to cut $2
patdback.
billion or so annually from the defenI am a dropout. I always made a se budget without affecting national
living by driving truck at the coal securtty. He is Rep. Les Aspin, DITUnes. 40 years. When I got out of Wis., a frequent Pentagon critic.
school, I had to have a job because Asp in - who holds a B A. from Yale,
the employer had to sign my work
an M.A. from Oxford 'and a Ph.D. (in
certificate.
econOffilCS) from MIT - worked as
If I quit my jeb I would have to go
a Defe11se Department budget
back to school. The government has analyst from 1966 to 1968.
lots of good opportunities for
Aspin says the money could be
dropouts.
·
saved simply by "expunging a
The Army, Navy, Marines and Air
mountam of wasteful programs."
Force are advertising for school
He offers this hit list of just 10 of
dropouts to learn a trade. We have
them:
lived in the land of milk and honey.
Unneeded instaUatlons. Aspin
But we are about to lose the honey
says $400 nullion could be saved anpart. I think the best thing for Meigs
nuaUy by closing unneeded bases.
Co. and I say all of United States, IS
Moving costs. The Pentagon spento get back to "God "
ds $3 billion a year to move perYours truly
Ben Batey

Middleport, Ohio
July 15, 1980

Dear Editor:
In answer to Mr. &amp;hmidt's letter
that was in the paper last night. You
JUSt answered part of my quest10n.
Yes, I am against our government
throwing money away on people that
had a chance and did not take it. The
reason our country is in such a shape
now is the government spending
money foolishly and people SUP"
pOrting it.
These people going to this library
to school. People that want books
can't get near the library.
Especially the old people.- - - Do you know education is helping
to bankrupt our governments? It is
not the education but aU the sport
that has to be financed for it. And after the county and goverrunent
spend aU this money on sports, after
the boy or girl graduates, what good
does the sport do them
They seldom make a living on 1t.
Oh yes, we have a lew that make

Dear Editor :
On behalf of the Mental Health
Association of Ohio and myself, I
would like to sincerely thank
everyone who gave so generously to
the mental health drive conducted
during May, Mental Healt)l Monthy.
our commuruty contributed t total d
$28.42 to help the work of the Mental
Health Association.
The Association . IS a group of
ctllzen volunteers working to

•

soMe! and their families from base
to base. Aspm calculates that $600
million could be saved annuaUy by
extending every tour of duty just
four months.
.
Empty housing. On-hase housing
stands empty at many mstaUations
while servicemen and servicewomen are paid IDlllions of
doUars in housmg allowances so
they can live off base. Aspin figures
that $50 million could be saved annuaUy by just filling existing empty
housing with those currently
receiving housil!g aUowances.
Servants for generals. More than
300 enlisted people still work .full
time as domestic servants for
generals and admirals, says Aspin.
Elimination of this perk would save
$5million annuaUy.
Subsidized 190ches. Top Pentagon
brass lunch in ornate dining rooms,
paymg cut-rate prices that cover
only a fraction of the cost of
preparing and servmg thetr food.
Aspin says that eliminating the sulr
sidy wouldsave$1 million a year.
Subsidized pet care: Taxpayers
could save $1.4 million a year, says

Aspin, if the military charged normal rates for the care provided to
the pets of its personnel.
Message sending. Aspin cites
General Accounting Office
estimates that $20 ITUUion could be
saved annually if the military sent
non-urge•Jt messages by mail rat)Jer .
than by wire or teletype.
Hospital stays. One recent survey
found that average stays m military
hospitals are one to seven days
longer than average stays for the
same conditions m civthan
hospitals. Brmgmg stays at military
hospitals mto line with those at
civilian hospitals would save $30
million annuaUy, says Aspm.
Spectal spectficahons. · The
mtlitary
wntes
special
specificatiOns for thousands of its
purchases, thus requiring suppliers
to custom make or modify products
ranging from soap and room
deodorizers to cars and pick-up
trucks. If the perfectly acceptable
civtlian counterparts or many of
these items were purchased on the
open market, says Aspin, the
savings could run m the hundreds of

millions of dollars annually.
FinaUy comes Aspin's pet peeve:
cmmissartes. Last year the Pentagon spent r157 million 'to subsidize
supermarkets and department
stores for military personnel and
their families.
Says Aspin: "If the military wants
to operate stores f6r its personnel
and seU them goods at cost plus
exact overhead, that's fine. But I olr
jed to the taxpayer footing a threequarters of a billion doUar tab so
that tlie serviceman can buy his candy bars and cameras at weU under
actual 00!11.
"Right now we are spending more ·
on conunlssaries than we are on cancer research. I think that we have
our national priortties rather mixed

promote mental health and prevent
mental illness in Ohio, and aU who
gave are a_part of this important effort.
I would especially like to
acknowledge the Bellringer workers
who coU~ted hot~Se"to-house, Melinda Hill, Mandy Hill and Roberta
Greene.
Dorothy M. Sayre
Letart Falls

Berry's World
rc;;;;t

~

ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
Di:TROIT (AP) - Conservative
qualms notwithstandi)lg, George
Bush is no flaming Republican
liberal.
He might be a smoldering
moderate - and that's enough to
make him suspect with some m a
GOP world that has turned toward
the right.
It also is enough to convmce
pragmattc conservatives that it
might be a good idea for. Ronald
Reagan to make him No. 2 man on
the 1980 ticket, to balance and
broaden 1ts appeal.
Some balance. Bush agrees with
Reagan on almost every issue.
There's more symbol\Sffi than substance to thetr differences. They are
both conser\latives, differing only in
degree.
Dean Burch works with Bush: he
was Barry Goldwater's Republican
natwnai cha1rman. William E. Timmons is deputy campaign manager
for Reagan; he • engineered the
takeover that made young
' Republican organizations into Goldwater cadres 16 years ago.
At the Republican National Convention, men whose political roots
are deeply and firmly conservative
are biU\!{1, suddenly, as the new
moderates.
t'

It was in the debate on extremism
That's because the convention that
RockefeUer was booed by conthat
will nonunate Reagan for president
servative
delegates when he argued
tonight is, in fact, moce conservative
that
a
radical
minority "alien to the
in outlllok than the San Francisco
middle course...the mainstream"
convention that nominated Goldwas trying to take over the party.
water.
Mainstream
one of
In Goldwater's time, there was a
RockefeUer's favorite words m that
liberal wing, identified with his arch
rival, the late Nelson A. RockefeUer. campaign - means something different now. "The whole cotmtry has
Goldwater trounced him for the
nol1UD8tion, rubbed it iii With con- moved to the right, so the
Republican Party finds 1tself m the
servative rhetoric, and lost the election to a Lyndon B. Johnson lan- mainstream," satd Gov. AI Quie of
Minnesota.
dslide.
'
Edwin Meese, Reagan's chief of
At this convenbon, .there are few
staff,
said "the mamstream
survivors of the RockefeUer wars.
thinking"
of the nation has moved
Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York is
toward
conservatism,
so that the
one: he's for Reagan, although not
views
of
the
voters
parallel
those of
for the more conservative planks in
the
former
Califorrua
governor.
the GOP platform. Former
Edwm Meese, Reagan's chief of
Michigan Gov. George Romney is
staff, said "tHe mainstream
another, but he's not sayl!lg much.
thinking" of the nation bas moved
That's why critics of a Republican
platform that withholds en- toward conservalisrn, so that the
views of the voters parallel those of
dorsement of the Equal Rights
Amendment couldn't muster the . the former California governor.
So it was nostalgia With a message
support of six states Tuesday night
when Goldwater took the cheers of
to get the platform debated on the
the convention Tuesday night, for a
convention floor. ·
speech that sounded the themes of
At the 1964 convention, there was
his 1964 campaign.
ample minority support to force
"A prophet;., ~us own time?" said
fights, although losing fights, on the
Rep.
Barry Goldwater Jr., R-calif.
equaUy symbolic issues of that GOP
"You're
damn right. In our hearts,
campaign : ·extremism and ctvll
we
knew
he was right."
rights legislation.

· ·
Uvmg standards have been forced
lower.
about its problems has eroded 'con!idence, the very confidence needed
togetthings done.

up."

On the other hand, Aspin supports
the current effort m Congress to
boost military pay. "But rather than
simply appropriate more dollars for
pay,'' he argues, ''what we should do
IS cut the waste and transfer the
money where it is needed: into the
pockets of the underpaid enlisted

men."

Goldwater didn't do his ticket any
good by invtting the RockefeUer
wmg out of the campaign although the liberals probably would
have done, li.ttle or nothing to help
him anyhOw. Defiant m victory, he
sa1d be didn't expect the support ci
"those who do not care for our
cause," and added his most famous
lines:
"... Extremism in the defense of
liberty fs no vice... Moderation in the
pursuit of justice is no virtue."
But he told Reagan's convention
that "we cannot be a party of
thousands and thousands of interpretations of morality "Or immorality or ethics or conservatism
or middl~f-the-road or liberal.
"We are Republlcaru~."
' Goldwater's was the ·convention
and the campaign, in which Reag~
emerged as a political figure. He
was an alternate California delegate
at the convention, a potent campaign fundratser in the months that
foUowed.
And Reagan's Is the convention at
which Goldwater saw cOnservative
philosophies like his own come to
overwhelmlng dominance.
"Sixteen years later, princlpllls
that be stood for are being trumpeted by politicians everywhere,"
said his son the congresaman.

M
oreover, say s?me of those who
poU consumer feelmgs, the repeated
fadureofthenationtodoverymucb
men! ts failing to fulli111ts part of the
bargain, and all)ong those who com-

sultants.
The country's inabil"t to
about another centra ty domuch
of inflation, has clea:l~=m,
IDlllions of people as doc
ur~ in

1970, the Conference Board reports
prevail about the Soctal Security
· m federa,l irr.· . system: The threa t of ev~ut ua11·r not
And -$3 ,408 of th a1, IS
comeandSocialSecunty taxes.
lmmedtate collapse ts the theme of
Nevertheless, ,there seems to be a
repeated commentaries in the
comn1on flerception that gr. vernmedta aPd among pension con-

with it inflation is still~Y expertence
' to •both Pr f very
a
mystery
i much
al
amateur observers ~~on dan~
understand it, how~ ou y~u ?~ t
Y so ve It .

': While you were rloz(na, I gave you a Ronald
Reagan."
1-

,,

I

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds ace Tom Seaver was "encouraged" Thursday by his first
strenuous pitching workout m two
weeks.
The three-time Cy Young Award
wmner threw abom 50 pitches from
the mound before Cincinnati's game
Wlth Montreal. He reported no PIIID
m his tendinitis-troubled right
shoulder.
"I didn't feel any pain, which is
what we were looking !or," Seaver
said. "Now, we'U be looking to see
what the reactton IS, if tt's 1rntated
(by the throwmg) .''
Seaver started throwing on .the
stdelines about three days earlier.
He satd the shoulder wasn't stiff
during his first workout from the
mound since gomg on the disabled
list.
"! had very good extenswn. I got
my arm in the nght throwmg
position. I'm encouraged. We just
have to see how it reacts."

Seaver said he threw fastballs at
about 80 percent of his normal
speed, but no breakmg pttches.
If the shoulder doesn't bother him,
Seaver said he could throw again on
Sunday as he tries to work back into
pitching shape.
Seaver was depressed by his June
30 performapce m San Francisco,
when he lasted just four innnings. He
flew back to Cmcmnatt for tests, and
admitted the contmuing shoulder
problem had him thinking about the
posstbthty his career was near an
end
· But tests showed no damage to the
shoulder that would dictate surgery,
and Seaver went on a program to
stretch and strengthen the shoulder.
Seaver sa1d Wednesday his mental
attitude is improvmg during the
rehabilitatiOn.
"Now it's not tembly difftcult
(mentally), as long as I make
progress. It seems to be getting better every day," Seaver said.

for four runs with two out m the
second mning on a pa1r of walks and
consecutive singles by Graig Nettles, Rick Cerone, Bucky Dent, Fred
Stanley, Jones and Lou Ptmella.
Jackson homered in the third, Jones
connected an Inning later and Oscar
Gamble rapped a twC~-run smgle m
the siXth.
A's 5, Tigers 2
Tony Armas drove in four runs
with a triple and homer while lighthitting Mario Guerrero drove in the
wmnmg run wtth a smgle. Guerrero,
who had driven m only rune runs
bef9re knocking in two Wednesday
night, st.roked a !ourth-inrung single
off loser Jack MorriS to break a 2-2
tie --- - Annas, who gave the A's a Hi lead
in the first inning wtth a triple, added a two-run homer m the e~ghth. It
was his 19th of the season and fifth in
the last seven games." Meanwhile,
Matt Keough pttched his 15th complete game of the season.

Steve Carleton
records 15th win

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Montreal's
&amp;ott Sanderson was aware he had a
perfect game going mto the fifth inning Thursday aga1nst Cincmnati.
"Usually, I give up a hit the first
two innings and say to mY.self,
'There goes the no-hitter,'" said Sanderson, who checked the Reds on
four hits for a 6-1 victory.
Ray Knight's twQoOut single in the
fifth broke the speU, but Sanderson
wasn't upset by the end of his brtef
flirtation witli perfection.
" The most important thing was to
keep them off the scoreboard,'' said
Sanderson, 9-5. "We're m a tight
race (in the National League East).
How often can you start scoreboard
watching at the AU-Star break?
"Every game from here 9n is important."
., puttielder Ron Leflore, a secondhalf bloomer, rapped three hits and
stole three bases to lead the Expos'
attack. He entered the game leading
the National League in triples, lied
for third in runs scored, and tied
.with Pittsburgh's Ortutr Moreno for
the lead in stolen bases.
AU that, despite hitting an uncharacteristic .255 at game tlme.
"The • last three ye,rs (with
Detroit) I did my best in the second
half of the season,'' said LeFlore. "I
,hope I can continue that. • '
"It's been a real adjustment I've
had to make coming to th~ National

0::

•

-

.i

I ~

League apd playmg a strange four times this season," Reds
positiOn (left field). I think I've ad- manager John McNamara insisted.
' "We have to stay close (to the top of
justed well."
"He had a mght, didn 't he•" said a the NL West) and get healthy , get
beanung Expos manager D1ck our pitching straightened out."
WilliaiJlSo. "He has a .297 lifetime
Reds starter Mike LaCoss, 5-9,
major league batting average. If he was relieved in the top of the fourth
because of a knee mjury suffered
hits for what he bas 'llone over the
past six years in the majors, that when Rodney Scott bounced a grounwould be exciting."
der off his le.jl in the third.
The Reds' loss, thetr sixth In seven
"If we coUld have gotten enough
games, dropped them to the .500 mnings out of Mike and not had to
mark for the first time this season. use our buUpen, we would be in
The last time they were in a com- decent shape going into tomorrow (a
parable posttion was Aug. 14, 1977, doubleheader with New York), " Mcwhen they had an even won-loss Namara sa1d of his over-worked
relief eorps
record.
"We are definitely capable of turInstead, McNamara went to his
nin~ around as we've done. three or
bullpen three times.

Ron LeFlore
3 hitS, 3 steals

John Bibby

Second round action begins
in Syracuse LL Tournament
SYRACUSE - Second round action began Thursday evening in the
Syracuse Uttle League Tournament
wtth Albany, New Haven's Cubs,
and Rutland's Reds posting victories.
In the night's opening game,
Alhany's Fanners . .red an 1&amp;-5
victory over Cheshire. Mark ChaP"
man was the winnmg pitcher with 11
strikeouts and nine walks. Chap(nan
went the distance holding Cheshire
to just five hits.
Mark Chapman had a trij)le and
three smgles, Mike Chapman three
smgles, J unmy Allman a trtple and
two singles, Doug Hooper a triple
and single, Davey Lawson, Tommy
Farley, and Sam Patterson aU with
singles for the wmners.
Johnnie Sigman suffered the loss
w1th relief help from Richie
Gtlmore. They combined for seven
strikeouts and SIX walks. Stgman led
Cheshire with a triple and single,
Brian Peck and Richie Gilmore ,
doubles, and Randy Stgman a single.
The second scheduled game which
throughout the tournament has
produced the closest contests agam

slanuned a three-run triple that
scored what proved to be the winning margin.
In the fifth inning, T. P. made a
slight threat when Royce Bissell
tripled to lead oft the inning, then
scored on an error. Bartrwn than
buckled down to strike out the side.
In the final and most exciting
round of play, Tuppers Plains made
a major threat, putting runners on
second and third after Brian Durst
and Jeff CaldweU led off with consecutive singles. The duo then advanced on a double steal. Bartrwn
reached back for something extra
and fanned the remaining batters.
Doze! had a triple while Rick
Laudennilt singled twice for the
wmners. Bartrum also added a
single.
·
Kevin Barber suffered the loss
with the aid of Eddie Collins in the
third. They hooked up for a good performance fanning 10 and walking ..
five.
Brent BisseU had a first inning .
home run, Royce BtsseU a triple, _
Brian Durst two singles, and Jeff
Caldwell a single for Tuppers
Plains.
Tonight's schedule:' New Haven
RedS vs. Pomeroy l&gt;irates, Pomeroy
Tigers vs. Middleport Braves,
Racine Reds vs ..Gallipolis Padres.
Saturday night: Gallipolis .
lodlaos 5, Angels 3
Yankees vs. New Haven Cubs,
Gary Gray, just baCk from the Gallipolis Senators vs. Albany, HanITUDors, homered and Ron Hassey nan Trace vs. Rutland.
doubled home two rwiS to support
the six-hit pitching of Len Barker.
Gray, playing in his first game since
being recaUed from the Pacific
GOLF
poast League, hit a towering baseg.
COALVALLEY,ill.
(AP) -&amp;ott ·
empty drive into the Cleveland
Hoch
fired
a
7-under-par
63 to match
buUpen in left field off Chris Knapp
the PGA tour's lowest score of the
to give the Indians 3-0 lead in the
and take the first-round lead ol
year
sixth inning. After California scored
the
$200,000Quad
Cities Open.
twice in the bottom of the inning,
Tied
for
second
place at 65 were
Hassey provided some breathing
Bill
Sander,
Canada's
Dan Raiderroom in the seventh with his two-run
son,
and
Tom
Jones.
double foUowing singles by Jorge
Orta and Toby Harrah.
Mariners 5, Blue Jays 3
Tom Paciorek broke a 3-3 tie and a
1-for-16 batting slmup with a two-run
MEIGS
1
homer off Jesse Jefferson in the
eighth inning. The Mariners scored
'QUIPMENT CO. J
twice in the sixth inning on Juan
Poll)ergy, 0. Ph. 992-2176 fl
Beruquez' borne run to take a 3-0
lead. Beniquez, who had three hits,
Hours : I -S Mon.-Fri.
1-12 Sat.
scored the game's first run . in the
Closed sunday
I
fourth inning when he doubled and
'International
New.lctH
came home on Mario Mendoza's
IH•rvester
l!qulpmen~
single.

provided a thl'iller, as the New
Haven Cubs took a 5-2 decision from
Bidwell
Richie Clark, the winning hurler,
went aU the way for New Haven. He
had seven strikeouts and three
walks.
For the winners Clark had two
smgles, Lane Gandee a triple, and·
Shane McKnight a single.
Todd Holstein took the loss for BidweU although pitching a fine game
Wlth seven strikeouts and eight
walks.
Shane Glassburn ~ed Bidwell with
a long home run and single, Bryan
SIIUth and Dave Hammond singles.
In the nightcap, ten-year old
Michael Bartrwn didn't pitch a n~
hitter, but came close as his 17
strikeout performances led
Rutland's Reds to a 5-3 v1ctory over
Tuppers Plains' Tigers. Bartrwn
struck out the side on five different
occastons, while walking 1\lree batters.
After a shaky first inning in which
Tuppers Plains took a 2-0 lead,
Rutland battled back scoring ftve
times in the third inning. Todd Dozci

win over Brewers
Red Sox 12, Royals 4
Rookie Dave Stapleton triggered a
seven-run fifth inning with his fourth
homer. Boston sheUed Renie Martin
in a four-run fourth and then bombed
relievers Marty Pattm and J elf
Twttty m the fifth, handing the
Royals only thetr second loss in eight
games since the All-Star break.
Staked to a 12.0 lead, rookie John
Tudor hurled a five-hitter.
Stapleton, given a starting shot at
second base with veteran Jerry
Remy disabled with a knee injury,
doubled to drive m Boston's first run
m the third mnmg.
Rangen 3, White Sox 2
Richie Zisk's two-out ninth-inning
smgle following an intentional walk
to Buddy BeU scored Bump Wills
from second base with the winning
run. Wills singled with two out off
Mike Proly and stole second. Proly
then walked Buddy Bell intentionally. Ed Farmer, Chicago's
bullpen ace, came on and Zisk hit the
ftrst pitch into centet' field to end the
game.

Bad news--latest loss puts Cincinnati
at .500 mark; pitching fails again

2
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cq~en~~
a~~~~:
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~~:~~~r~~~~~~~~:~t;~~~=~~
in- ~:~~l~u~~~:::e::S and
1
1
Economic r
e1r e.
buymg power the $1Q,OOO income of
A sense of msecurtty seems to
Despite their da"l ·
,

comes aren' Pt ogress, at least. In· to .
make much dill11rowmg
·
Menough
11
s'hut out of theer~nce. I Ions are .
. Debt lumts have Ol:!:ng markets.
en reached.

.on Cesar Ger9nuno's pinch-double
and Dave Concepcion's single. Gary
Carter hit his 16th homer for the Expos.
Pira!e• 3, Giants 2
Jim Bibby took a three-htt shutout
into the ninth inning, then Larry
Herndon smgled and DarreU Evans
h~mered . Before the inning ended,
Btbby was out of the game.
Kent Tekulve stlenced the Giants
the rest of the way and got the wm
when Omar Moreno hit an RBI
smgle in the bottom of the runth .
Mets 6, Braves 0 - ·
EUiott Maddox had a run-scormg
smgle m the New York's four-run first inning and added a two-run double
in the third, while unbeaten rookie
John PaceUa pitched four-hit baU
before a bltster knocked him out of
the game in the seventh inning. Jeff
Reardon checked the Braves to complete the shutou~.

Seaver improving

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Indians defeated the California
The Baltimore Orioles were Angels ~3 and the Seattle Marmers
hoping the return of pitcher Dennis downed the Toronto Blue Jays 5-3.
Martinez would help provide a penThe Orioles managed only two hits
nant race in the American League off Milwaukee's BiU Travers but one
East. Now that he's back, they're of them was Doug DeCinces' seconddomg their best to see that there is
mning home run, his seventh of the
no semblance of a race.
season.
Meanwhile, Martinez retired the
Martinez, making his f1rst. start
since May 8 after being sidelined
first 12 Milwaukee batters before
. Wlth a sore shoulder, aUowed just G.onnan Thomas led off the ftfth
ftve hila in 82-3 mnings Thursday as
with a double. He then rellred the
the Orioles made it three in a row
next seven hitters !Jefore Cecil
over the second-place Milwaukee
Cooper and Thomas singled with one
Brewers with a1.0 triumph.
out in the seventh. He eventuaUy
Coupled With New York's 10.3
needed last-out help from unrelated
thrashing of the Minnesota Twins it
T1ppy Martinez.
dropped the Brewers 9_ -games ~If '
Yankees 10, Twins 3
the pace, giving the Yankees the1r
Tommy John scattered eight hits
largest bulge of the season. The
while Reggie Jackson and Ruppert
Jones homered as the Yankees won
Orioles, 10 games out, slipped past
Detroit into third place when the
for ·the 23rd time in the tast 31
Tigers were beaten by the Oakland ' games. John, 14-3, tied Baltimore's
A's 5-2.
Steve Stone for the league lead in
Elsewhere, the Boston Red Sox
victories and Jackson took over the
hanunered the Kansas City Royals · major league home run with 24.
New York jumped on Geoff Zahn
12-4, the Texas Rangers edged the
Chicago White Sox ~2. the Cleveland

Progres~ stopped in many areas of American-way' of life
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Anal st
NEW YORK AP Y
.
politicians ro
( J - While
try movm~ . ~!~nto ~~t the counreality for Amenca' • mil~ present

the third inning alone - 10 of them,
to be exact.
George Hendrtck and Garry Templeton drove home two runs aptece
in the burst. Hernandez had four
RBI and Hendrick three in the
game, each contributmg a home run
to the 17-hit assault.
Wmner Jim Kaat, who pttched a
seven-hitter, noted: "Everybody
thinks that when you get 10 runs it's
a piece of cake, but you sttU have to
get 'll outs. I tried to pttch like tt was
a 0.0 baUgame."
Expos 6, Reds I
-Ron LeFlore dr1Ued three hits and
swiped three bases while &amp;ott Sanderson's scattered four Cincmnati
hits to keep the Expos on top in the
· East, one-half game ahead of Pittsburgh.
Sanderson retired the first 14 batters before Ray Knight singled in the
!iftt. The Reds scored in the seventh

Martine·z returns to post 1-0

George Bush no flaming G.O P liberal

Thanks hellringers

'

.z.-

As pin knows how to ·save $2 billion

A Batey reply.
}

.

:.,

rNTEliEST OF
MEIGS-MABON AREA
l..t!ttcn ., opiD1ua ~ wrlcomrd. Tltey Jbwld be ltll tban JOG wordi lone (ol~t~bj~t to reductloll. by 1M editor I aod mUJt bt slped wllb tbe slpee's address. Names may be wtl.bbeld ~n
pabUe~d-. Howner, oa requeat. Damet wW be dltelclled , Let1era 1bou.ld be Ia good taaLe addrfttlq IIIaH, aot penoullttn.
'

au5

.

LeFlore led off the game with a
walk, stole second and scored on Andre Dawson's double . Warren
Cromartie doubled one out later for
another run.
LeFlore's RBI triple and &amp;ott's
smgle made tt 4-0 Montreal in the fifth. Gary Carter's homer in the sixth
and Scott's RBI double in the seven- .
th added two more runs .
Cincinna!t scored m the sixth
when pmch-hitter Cesar Gerorumo
doubled and Dave Concepcion
smgled.

a

I

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CAMDEN -PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY,_JULY 19th
.
11
ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
AND
K .V. COMPUTING DEPT.
OF

'; UNION CARBIDE TECH. C:ENTER
OPEN TO PUBUC AFTER s·P.M.,
· ,, ' U.S. 60 WES'r-HUNTINGTO ....
DAY EXCE

..

.,

•vf

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middl,eport-Pom~roy, 0., Friday, July 18,1980

2-Th; Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 18, 19110

r.;P hils' 'CarletOn wins .
f1~th game; Reds lose

Opinions &amp;
Comments

' ..
....

.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPS 145-Me)
DEVOTED TO 111E

46SSI'K, l&lt;ONALO
'RE~GAN HAD A e,\G
"BLOW-OUT ll't' I~

Publlabecl datly ueept Sltarday by The Obio VaUty P\lbU.hfq Compauy- Multimedia, loc.,

D"EfROII !!

Ill Cclm1St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4$7•. Bul!.u OffI« Pboot ftZ.. Zl5t. E'AUtorlal Pboat tb-%157 .
Secood clan potlll&amp;:e p.Jd at Pomeroy, Ohio
Nadoul advertllln&amp; r.pre~enlaHft, Laudon Alletlllel 3101 Euclkl Ave

•

BY TilE ASSOCIATED PRESS
:·
It was aU uphill for Steve Carlton
~
Thursday rught.
,
"They have a fwmy kind of a
motmd here. It sort of moves around
:
~ . , on you," Philadelphia's ace pitcher
, . said after beatmg Houston 2-1 in the
,
Astrodome to raise his season
: record to 15-4, the winningest mark
1 · in the major leagues.
\·
"When you throw," Carlton went
:
on, "tt feels as if your front foot is
• higher than your back foot. I was
:• constantly adjusting .. . trymg to
,
throw strikes." He threw enough of
: them to garnish his seven-hitter with
: 10 strikeouts.
~Elsewhere in the Nat10nal League,
•· Los Angeles beat Chicago 3-1, St.
• Louis battered San Diego 15-3, Mon,
treal defeated Cincinnati 6-1 Pit, ,, tsburgh edged San Francisco 3-2 and
!. ;: New York blanked Atlanta 6-0.
1
Carlton had a five-hit shutout
'.:
: .~ gomg into the ninth, then gave up a
~ · leadoff single to Luis Pujois and a
:· ·. two-out triple to Rafael Landestoy
• · The loss dropped the Astros onehalf game behind Los Angeles in the
duel for first place m the West
DtvlSion.
Dodgen 3, Cubs I
"I love shutouts; I love those sons
j;;, of guns," Don Sutton of Los Angeles
~ satd after coming within one out of'
getting the 53rd of his major league
career. But he was delighted to settie for a three-hit victory.
He had a one-hitter going mto the
ninth in · Chicago's c&lt;Jly Wrigley
"Fteld, but after Mike Tyson smgled
and raced to second as Sutton threw
out Ivan DeJesus, Lenny Randle
singled for the Cubs' run.
Tbe Dodgers scored twice in the
first inrung on smgles by Dave
Lopes, Rudy Law and Reggie Smith
and a double by Steve Garvey. Lopes
had an RBI single m the fourth.
CanllDals 15, Padres 3
"We've gotten an awful lot of runs
in some games and not enough in
others," said St. Louis Manager
Whitey Herzog. AgalllSt San Diego,
the Cards got an awful lot of runs in

•

CleVeland Olllo

•

HE's -nu::
~IRSf Wl~\\ER Ou-rfA
11\ERE SIWCE TilE
'72 G\EV'tl !!

Tbe Auoclatecl Prtt• b eac:laaJvely eatiUed to Uie use lor pubiJcaUoD of aU oeW. diap1tebe•
41&gt;ed1ied lo tlle newsp.per aod also tbe loclliMWI publlabelhereln.
PubUslttr
Robert Wlugett
Gt-aeral Mgr. A Ctty EdJior
Robert Hoefilch
New1 Ed.ltor
~ ......._
DaJe Rotllgeb, Jr.
17
Adv Mlllllll!f
Y~
Carl Gbeea
Bm:51 .-n......
....--o;;;l ....

~~

._--r,

r------------------------~1

I
~t

B~

•••

. I

~Ltl 5/iUit:
~
.

~
I

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Backs police chief
In aU due respect to our vtUage officials past and present, I can no
longer refrain from expressing my
opinion as to the job our new police
chief is trying to do to make
Pomeroy a better place to live I say
trying because a spec1al meeting d
council has been caUed as I understand to questton the status of his
authority. Why question that ?
Wasn't he hired to be the Chief of
that department to give orders to
uphold law and order as he sees fit.
All I have heard is praise for Chief
McKinney for the excellent and competent job he is doing.
Now, I am confused. Why did the
Chief of Police have to hire an attorney as to the extent of his
position? Did he step on someone's
toes or has he refused to be considered a yes man. If so, to whom? I
know what is going through the minds of a lot of people in our town. I
personaUy thought it was great to
bring an outsider m but then agam
why hire anyone for that pos1tion if

they cannot have full authortty It's

just a waste of money
I believe it is time the cttizens of '
Pomeroy, even surrounding communities (and they do come here to
shop), know what is going on with no
more closed doors keeping us m the
dark to sometimes doubt the people
we voted for.
Why not give Chief McKinney the
absolute control of his department
and stand behind him 100 percent?
If we have to watt for justice until
we all face the highest court and
judge then what IS to and can happen
between now and then.
I do not know Chief McKinney personaUy, but more power to him, after all, he did uproot his family and
home to come here to help each and
everyone of us.
I think he can do just that if more
people in Pomeroy will make thetr
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Defense
feelings known to our officials.
spending
has emerged as one of the
Mrs. Josephine Balinger
chief
issues
in the fight over the 1981
Pomeroy, Ohio
federal budget. Many m Congress
think the Pentagon 1s receiving too
little money. Others - and the White
House - think the Pentagon is
teachers and coaches. '!'hat 1s aU
receiving too much, taking billions
that we can say.
. of dollars a way from needed social,
How much money has the govern- program.
ment of the U.S. loaned these people
Now comes a CW!gressman who
to go to coUege and it has never been
believes he knows how to cut $2
patdback.
billion or so annually from the defenI am a dropout. I always made a se budget without affecting national
living by driving truck at the coal securtty. He is Rep. Les Aspin, DITUnes. 40 years. When I got out of Wis., a frequent Pentagon critic.
school, I had to have a job because Asp in - who holds a B A. from Yale,
the employer had to sign my work
an M.A. from Oxford 'and a Ph.D. (in
certificate.
econOffilCS) from MIT - worked as
If I quit my jeb I would have to go
a Defe11se Department budget
back to school. The government has analyst from 1966 to 1968.
lots of good opportunities for
Aspin says the money could be
dropouts.
·
saved simply by "expunging a
The Army, Navy, Marines and Air
mountam of wasteful programs."
Force are advertising for school
He offers this hit list of just 10 of
dropouts to learn a trade. We have
them:
lived in the land of milk and honey.
Unneeded instaUatlons. Aspin
But we are about to lose the honey
says $400 nullion could be saved anpart. I think the best thing for Meigs
nuaUy by closing unneeded bases.
Co. and I say all of United States, IS
Moving costs. The Pentagon spento get back to "God "
ds $3 billion a year to move perYours truly
Ben Batey

Middleport, Ohio
July 15, 1980

Dear Editor:
In answer to Mr. &amp;hmidt's letter
that was in the paper last night. You
JUSt answered part of my quest10n.
Yes, I am against our government
throwing money away on people that
had a chance and did not take it. The
reason our country is in such a shape
now is the government spending
money foolishly and people SUP"
pOrting it.
These people going to this library
to school. People that want books
can't get near the library.
Especially the old people.- - - Do you know education is helping
to bankrupt our governments? It is
not the education but aU the sport
that has to be financed for it. And after the county and goverrunent
spend aU this money on sports, after
the boy or girl graduates, what good
does the sport do them
They seldom make a living on 1t.
Oh yes, we have a lew that make

Dear Editor :
On behalf of the Mental Health
Association of Ohio and myself, I
would like to sincerely thank
everyone who gave so generously to
the mental health drive conducted
during May, Mental Healt)l Monthy.
our commuruty contributed t total d
$28.42 to help the work of the Mental
Health Association.
The Association . IS a group of
ctllzen volunteers working to

•

soMe! and their families from base
to base. Aspm calculates that $600
million could be saved annuaUy by
extending every tour of duty just
four months.
.
Empty housing. On-hase housing
stands empty at many mstaUations
while servicemen and servicewomen are paid IDlllions of
doUars in housmg allowances so
they can live off base. Aspin figures
that $50 million could be saved annuaUy by just filling existing empty
housing with those currently
receiving housil!g aUowances.
Servants for generals. More than
300 enlisted people still work .full
time as domestic servants for
generals and admirals, says Aspin.
Elimination of this perk would save
$5million annuaUy.
Subsidized 190ches. Top Pentagon
brass lunch in ornate dining rooms,
paymg cut-rate prices that cover
only a fraction of the cost of
preparing and servmg thetr food.
Aspin says that eliminating the sulr
sidy wouldsave$1 million a year.
Subsidized pet care: Taxpayers
could save $1.4 million a year, says

Aspin, if the military charged normal rates for the care provided to
the pets of its personnel.
Message sending. Aspin cites
General Accounting Office
estimates that $20 ITUUion could be
saved annually if the military sent
non-urge•Jt messages by mail rat)Jer .
than by wire or teletype.
Hospital stays. One recent survey
found that average stays m military
hospitals are one to seven days
longer than average stays for the
same conditions m civthan
hospitals. Brmgmg stays at military
hospitals mto line with those at
civilian hospitals would save $30
million annuaUy, says Aspm.
Spectal spectficahons. · The
mtlitary
wntes
special
specificatiOns for thousands of its
purchases, thus requiring suppliers
to custom make or modify products
ranging from soap and room
deodorizers to cars and pick-up
trucks. If the perfectly acceptable
civtlian counterparts or many of
these items were purchased on the
open market, says Aspin, the
savings could run m the hundreds of

millions of dollars annually.
FinaUy comes Aspin's pet peeve:
cmmissartes. Last year the Pentagon spent r157 million 'to subsidize
supermarkets and department
stores for military personnel and
their families.
Says Aspin: "If the military wants
to operate stores f6r its personnel
and seU them goods at cost plus
exact overhead, that's fine. But I olr
jed to the taxpayer footing a threequarters of a billion doUar tab so
that tlie serviceman can buy his candy bars and cameras at weU under
actual 00!11.
"Right now we are spending more ·
on conunlssaries than we are on cancer research. I think that we have
our national priortties rather mixed

promote mental health and prevent
mental illness in Ohio, and aU who
gave are a_part of this important effort.
I would especially like to
acknowledge the Bellringer workers
who coU~ted hot~Se"to-house, Melinda Hill, Mandy Hill and Roberta
Greene.
Dorothy M. Sayre
Letart Falls

Berry's World
rc;;;;t

~

ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
Di:TROIT (AP) - Conservative
qualms notwithstandi)lg, George
Bush is no flaming Republican
liberal.
He might be a smoldering
moderate - and that's enough to
make him suspect with some m a
GOP world that has turned toward
the right.
It also is enough to convmce
pragmattc conservatives that it
might be a good idea for. Ronald
Reagan to make him No. 2 man on
the 1980 ticket, to balance and
broaden 1ts appeal.
Some balance. Bush agrees with
Reagan on almost every issue.
There's more symbol\Sffi than substance to thetr differences. They are
both conser\latives, differing only in
degree.
Dean Burch works with Bush: he
was Barry Goldwater's Republican
natwnai cha1rman. William E. Timmons is deputy campaign manager
for Reagan; he • engineered the
takeover that made young
' Republican organizations into Goldwater cadres 16 years ago.
At the Republican National Convention, men whose political roots
are deeply and firmly conservative
are biU\!{1, suddenly, as the new
moderates.
t'

It was in the debate on extremism
That's because the convention that
RockefeUer was booed by conthat
will nonunate Reagan for president
servative
delegates when he argued
tonight is, in fact, moce conservative
that
a
radical
minority "alien to the
in outlllok than the San Francisco
middle course...the mainstream"
convention that nominated Goldwas trying to take over the party.
water.
Mainstream
one of
In Goldwater's time, there was a
RockefeUer's favorite words m that
liberal wing, identified with his arch
rival, the late Nelson A. RockefeUer. campaign - means something different now. "The whole cotmtry has
Goldwater trounced him for the
nol1UD8tion, rubbed it iii With con- moved to the right, so the
Republican Party finds 1tself m the
servative rhetoric, and lost the election to a Lyndon B. Johnson lan- mainstream," satd Gov. AI Quie of
Minnesota.
dslide.
'
Edwin Meese, Reagan's chief of
At this convenbon, .there are few
staff,
said "the mamstream
survivors of the RockefeUer wars.
thinking"
of the nation has moved
Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York is
toward
conservatism,
so that the
one: he's for Reagan, although not
views
of
the
voters
parallel
those of
for the more conservative planks in
the
former
Califorrua
governor.
the GOP platform. Former
Edwm Meese, Reagan's chief of
Michigan Gov. George Romney is
staff, said "tHe mainstream
another, but he's not sayl!lg much.
thinking" of the nation bas moved
That's why critics of a Republican
platform that withholds en- toward conservalisrn, so that the
views of the voters parallel those of
dorsement of the Equal Rights
Amendment couldn't muster the . the former California governor.
So it was nostalgia With a message
support of six states Tuesday night
when Goldwater took the cheers of
to get the platform debated on the
the convention Tuesday night, for a
convention floor. ·
speech that sounded the themes of
At the 1964 convention, there was
his 1964 campaign.
ample minority support to force
"A prophet;., ~us own time?" said
fights, although losing fights, on the
Rep.
Barry Goldwater Jr., R-calif.
equaUy symbolic issues of that GOP
"You're
damn right. In our hearts,
campaign : ·extremism and ctvll
we
knew
he was right."
rights legislation.

· ·
Uvmg standards have been forced
lower.
about its problems has eroded 'con!idence, the very confidence needed
togetthings done.

up."

On the other hand, Aspin supports
the current effort m Congress to
boost military pay. "But rather than
simply appropriate more dollars for
pay,'' he argues, ''what we should do
IS cut the waste and transfer the
money where it is needed: into the
pockets of the underpaid enlisted

men."

Goldwater didn't do his ticket any
good by invtting the RockefeUer
wmg out of the campaign although the liberals probably would
have done, li.ttle or nothing to help
him anyhOw. Defiant m victory, he
sa1d be didn't expect the support ci
"those who do not care for our
cause," and added his most famous
lines:
"... Extremism in the defense of
liberty fs no vice... Moderation in the
pursuit of justice is no virtue."
But he told Reagan's convention
that "we cannot be a party of
thousands and thousands of interpretations of morality "Or immorality or ethics or conservatism
or middl~f-the-road or liberal.
"We are Republlcaru~."
' Goldwater's was the ·convention
and the campaign, in which Reag~
emerged as a political figure. He
was an alternate California delegate
at the convention, a potent campaign fundratser in the months that
foUowed.
And Reagan's Is the convention at
which Goldwater saw cOnservative
philosophies like his own come to
overwhelmlng dominance.
"Sixteen years later, princlpllls
that be stood for are being trumpeted by politicians everywhere,"
said his son the congresaman.

M
oreover, say s?me of those who
poU consumer feelmgs, the repeated
fadureofthenationtodoverymucb
men! ts failing to fulli111ts part of the
bargain, and all)ong those who com-

sultants.
The country's inabil"t to
about another centra ty domuch
of inflation, has clea:l~=m,
IDlllions of people as doc
ur~ in

1970, the Conference Board reports
prevail about the Soctal Security
· m federa,l irr.· . system: The threa t of ev~ut ua11·r not
And -$3 ,408 of th a1, IS
comeandSocialSecunty taxes.
lmmedtate collapse ts the theme of
Nevertheless, ,there seems to be a
repeated commentaries in the
comn1on flerception that gr. vernmedta aPd among pension con-

with it inflation is still~Y expertence
' to •both Pr f very
a
mystery
i much
al
amateur observers ~~on dan~
understand it, how~ ou y~u ?~ t
Y so ve It .

': While you were rloz(na, I gave you a Ronald
Reagan."
1-

,,

I

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds ace Tom Seaver was "encouraged" Thursday by his first
strenuous pitching workout m two
weeks.
The three-time Cy Young Award
wmner threw abom 50 pitches from
the mound before Cincinnati's game
Wlth Montreal. He reported no PIIID
m his tendinitis-troubled right
shoulder.
"I didn't feel any pain, which is
what we were looking !or," Seaver
said. "Now, we'U be looking to see
what the reactton IS, if tt's 1rntated
(by the throwmg) .''
Seaver started throwing on .the
stdelines about three days earlier.
He satd the shoulder wasn't stiff
during his first workout from the
mound since gomg on the disabled
list.
"! had very good extenswn. I got
my arm in the nght throwmg
position. I'm encouraged. We just
have to see how it reacts."

Seaver said he threw fastballs at
about 80 percent of his normal
speed, but no breakmg pttches.
If the shoulder doesn't bother him,
Seaver said he could throw again on
Sunday as he tries to work back into
pitching shape.
Seaver was depressed by his June
30 performapce m San Francisco,
when he lasted just four innnings. He
flew back to Cmcmnatt for tests, and
admitted the contmuing shoulder
problem had him thinking about the
posstbthty his career was near an
end
· But tests showed no damage to the
shoulder that would dictate surgery,
and Seaver went on a program to
stretch and strengthen the shoulder.
Seaver sa1d Wednesday his mental
attitude is improvmg during the
rehabilitatiOn.
"Now it's not tembly difftcult
(mentally), as long as I make
progress. It seems to be getting better every day," Seaver said.

for four runs with two out m the
second mning on a pa1r of walks and
consecutive singles by Graig Nettles, Rick Cerone, Bucky Dent, Fred
Stanley, Jones and Lou Ptmella.
Jackson homered in the third, Jones
connected an Inning later and Oscar
Gamble rapped a twC~-run smgle m
the siXth.
A's 5, Tigers 2
Tony Armas drove in four runs
with a triple and homer while lighthitting Mario Guerrero drove in the
wmnmg run wtth a smgle. Guerrero,
who had driven m only rune runs
bef9re knocking in two Wednesday
night, st.roked a !ourth-inrung single
off loser Jack MorriS to break a 2-2
tie --- - Annas, who gave the A's a Hi lead
in the first inning wtth a triple, added a two-run homer m the e~ghth. It
was his 19th of the season and fifth in
the last seven games." Meanwhile,
Matt Keough pttched his 15th complete game of the season.

Steve Carleton
records 15th win

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Montreal's
&amp;ott Sanderson was aware he had a
perfect game going mto the fifth inning Thursday aga1nst Cincmnati.
"Usually, I give up a hit the first
two innings and say to mY.self,
'There goes the no-hitter,'" said Sanderson, who checked the Reds on
four hits for a 6-1 victory.
Ray Knight's twQoOut single in the
fifth broke the speU, but Sanderson
wasn't upset by the end of his brtef
flirtation witli perfection.
" The most important thing was to
keep them off the scoreboard,'' said
Sanderson, 9-5. "We're m a tight
race (in the National League East).
How often can you start scoreboard
watching at the AU-Star break?
"Every game from here 9n is important."
., puttielder Ron Leflore, a secondhalf bloomer, rapped three hits and
stole three bases to lead the Expos'
attack. He entered the game leading
the National League in triples, lied
for third in runs scored, and tied
.with Pittsburgh's Ortutr Moreno for
the lead in stolen bases.
AU that, despite hitting an uncharacteristic .255 at game tlme.
"The • last three ye,rs (with
Detroit) I did my best in the second
half of the season,'' said LeFlore. "I
,hope I can continue that. • '
"It's been a real adjustment I've
had to make coming to th~ National

0::

•

-

.i

I ~

League apd playmg a strange four times this season," Reds
positiOn (left field). I think I've ad- manager John McNamara insisted.
' "We have to stay close (to the top of
justed well."
"He had a mght, didn 't he•" said a the NL West) and get healthy , get
beanung Expos manager D1ck our pitching straightened out."
WilliaiJlSo. "He has a .297 lifetime
Reds starter Mike LaCoss, 5-9,
major league batting average. If he was relieved in the top of the fourth
because of a knee mjury suffered
hits for what he bas 'llone over the
past six years in the majors, that when Rodney Scott bounced a grounwould be exciting."
der off his le.jl in the third.
The Reds' loss, thetr sixth In seven
"If we coUld have gotten enough
games, dropped them to the .500 mnings out of Mike and not had to
mark for the first time this season. use our buUpen, we would be in
The last time they were in a com- decent shape going into tomorrow (a
parable posttion was Aug. 14, 1977, doubleheader with New York), " Mcwhen they had an even won-loss Namara sa1d of his over-worked
relief eorps
record.
"We are definitely capable of turInstead, McNamara went to his
nin~ around as we've done. three or
bullpen three times.

Ron LeFlore
3 hitS, 3 steals

John Bibby

Second round action begins
in Syracuse LL Tournament
SYRACUSE - Second round action began Thursday evening in the
Syracuse Uttle League Tournament
wtth Albany, New Haven's Cubs,
and Rutland's Reds posting victories.
In the night's opening game,
Alhany's Fanners . .red an 1&amp;-5
victory over Cheshire. Mark ChaP"
man was the winnmg pitcher with 11
strikeouts and nine walks. Chap(nan
went the distance holding Cheshire
to just five hits.
Mark Chapman had a trij)le and
three smgles, Mike Chapman three
smgles, J unmy Allman a trtple and
two singles, Doug Hooper a triple
and single, Davey Lawson, Tommy
Farley, and Sam Patterson aU with
singles for the wmners.
Johnnie Sigman suffered the loss
w1th relief help from Richie
Gtlmore. They combined for seven
strikeouts and SIX walks. Stgman led
Cheshire with a triple and single,
Brian Peck and Richie Gilmore ,
doubles, and Randy Stgman a single.
The second scheduled game which
throughout the tournament has
produced the closest contests agam

slanuned a three-run triple that
scored what proved to be the winning margin.
In the fifth inning, T. P. made a
slight threat when Royce Bissell
tripled to lead oft the inning, then
scored on an error. Bartrwn than
buckled down to strike out the side.
In the final and most exciting
round of play, Tuppers Plains made
a major threat, putting runners on
second and third after Brian Durst
and Jeff CaldweU led off with consecutive singles. The duo then advanced on a double steal. Bartrwn
reached back for something extra
and fanned the remaining batters.
Doze! had a triple while Rick
Laudennilt singled twice for the
wmners. Bartrum also added a
single.
·
Kevin Barber suffered the loss
with the aid of Eddie Collins in the
third. They hooked up for a good performance fanning 10 and walking ..
five.
Brent BisseU had a first inning .
home run, Royce BtsseU a triple, _
Brian Durst two singles, and Jeff
Caldwell a single for Tuppers
Plains.
Tonight's schedule:' New Haven
RedS vs. Pomeroy l&gt;irates, Pomeroy
Tigers vs. Middleport Braves,
Racine Reds vs ..Gallipolis Padres.
Saturday night: Gallipolis .
lodlaos 5, Angels 3
Yankees vs. New Haven Cubs,
Gary Gray, just baCk from the Gallipolis Senators vs. Albany, HanITUDors, homered and Ron Hassey nan Trace vs. Rutland.
doubled home two rwiS to support
the six-hit pitching of Len Barker.
Gray, playing in his first game since
being recaUed from the Pacific
GOLF
poast League, hit a towering baseg.
COALVALLEY,ill.
(AP) -&amp;ott ·
empty drive into the Cleveland
Hoch
fired
a
7-under-par
63 to match
buUpen in left field off Chris Knapp
the PGA tour's lowest score of the
to give the Indians 3-0 lead in the
and take the first-round lead ol
year
sixth inning. After California scored
the
$200,000Quad
Cities Open.
twice in the bottom of the inning,
Tied
for
second
place at 65 were
Hassey provided some breathing
Bill
Sander,
Canada's
Dan Raiderroom in the seventh with his two-run
son,
and
Tom
Jones.
double foUowing singles by Jorge
Orta and Toby Harrah.
Mariners 5, Blue Jays 3
Tom Paciorek broke a 3-3 tie and a
1-for-16 batting slmup with a two-run
MEIGS
1
homer off Jesse Jefferson in the
eighth inning. The Mariners scored
'QUIPMENT CO. J
twice in the sixth inning on Juan
Poll)ergy, 0. Ph. 992-2176 fl
Beruquez' borne run to take a 3-0
lead. Beniquez, who had three hits,
Hours : I -S Mon.-Fri.
1-12 Sat.
scored the game's first run . in the
Closed sunday
I
fourth inning when he doubled and
'International
New.lctH
came home on Mario Mendoza's
IH•rvester
l!qulpmen~
single.

provided a thl'iller, as the New
Haven Cubs took a 5-2 decision from
Bidwell
Richie Clark, the winning hurler,
went aU the way for New Haven. He
had seven strikeouts and three
walks.
For the winners Clark had two
smgles, Lane Gandee a triple, and·
Shane McKnight a single.
Todd Holstein took the loss for BidweU although pitching a fine game
Wlth seven strikeouts and eight
walks.
Shane Glassburn ~ed Bidwell with
a long home run and single, Bryan
SIIUth and Dave Hammond singles.
In the nightcap, ten-year old
Michael Bartrwn didn't pitch a n~
hitter, but came close as his 17
strikeout performances led
Rutland's Reds to a 5-3 v1ctory over
Tuppers Plains' Tigers. Bartrwn
struck out the side on five different
occastons, while walking 1\lree batters.
After a shaky first inning in which
Tuppers Plains took a 2-0 lead,
Rutland battled back scoring ftve
times in the third inning. Todd Dozci

win over Brewers
Red Sox 12, Royals 4
Rookie Dave Stapleton triggered a
seven-run fifth inning with his fourth
homer. Boston sheUed Renie Martin
in a four-run fourth and then bombed
relievers Marty Pattm and J elf
Twttty m the fifth, handing the
Royals only thetr second loss in eight
games since the All-Star break.
Staked to a 12.0 lead, rookie John
Tudor hurled a five-hitter.
Stapleton, given a starting shot at
second base with veteran Jerry
Remy disabled with a knee injury,
doubled to drive m Boston's first run
m the third mnmg.
Rangen 3, White Sox 2
Richie Zisk's two-out ninth-inning
smgle following an intentional walk
to Buddy BeU scored Bump Wills
from second base with the winning
run. Wills singled with two out off
Mike Proly and stole second. Proly
then walked Buddy Bell intentionally. Ed Farmer, Chicago's
bullpen ace, came on and Zisk hit the
ftrst pitch into centet' field to end the
game.

Bad news--latest loss puts Cincinnati
at .500 mark; pitching fails again

2
~~~;~:~t;~r;;:~~
~~~i~e;
~~~~s~~
~~~
cq~en~~
a~~~~:
:r~:;~~e-::a/~~
~~:~~~r~~~~~~~~:~t;~~~=~~
in- ~:~~l~u~~~:::e::S and
1
1
Economic r
e1r e.
buymg power the $1Q,OOO income of
A sense of msecurtty seems to
Despite their da"l ·
,

comes aren' Pt ogress, at least. In· to .
make much dill11rowmg
·
Menough
11
s'hut out of theer~nce. I Ions are .
. Debt lumts have Ol:!:ng markets.
en reached.

.on Cesar Ger9nuno's pinch-double
and Dave Concepcion's single. Gary
Carter hit his 16th homer for the Expos.
Pira!e• 3, Giants 2
Jim Bibby took a three-htt shutout
into the ninth inning, then Larry
Herndon smgled and DarreU Evans
h~mered . Before the inning ended,
Btbby was out of the game.
Kent Tekulve stlenced the Giants
the rest of the way and got the wm
when Omar Moreno hit an RBI
smgle in the bottom of the runth .
Mets 6, Braves 0 - ·
EUiott Maddox had a run-scormg
smgle m the New York's four-run first inning and added a two-run double
in the third, while unbeaten rookie
John PaceUa pitched four-hit baU
before a bltster knocked him out of
the game in the seventh inning. Jeff
Reardon checked the Braves to complete the shutou~.

Seaver improving

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Indians defeated the California
The Baltimore Orioles were Angels ~3 and the Seattle Marmers
hoping the return of pitcher Dennis downed the Toronto Blue Jays 5-3.
Martinez would help provide a penThe Orioles managed only two hits
nant race in the American League off Milwaukee's BiU Travers but one
East. Now that he's back, they're of them was Doug DeCinces' seconddomg their best to see that there is
mning home run, his seventh of the
no semblance of a race.
season.
Meanwhile, Martinez retired the
Martinez, making his f1rst. start
since May 8 after being sidelined
first 12 Milwaukee batters before
. Wlth a sore shoulder, aUowed just G.onnan Thomas led off the ftfth
ftve hila in 82-3 mnings Thursday as
with a double. He then rellred the
the Orioles made it three in a row
next seven hitters !Jefore Cecil
over the second-place Milwaukee
Cooper and Thomas singled with one
Brewers with a1.0 triumph.
out in the seventh. He eventuaUy
Coupled With New York's 10.3
needed last-out help from unrelated
thrashing of the Minnesota Twins it
T1ppy Martinez.
dropped the Brewers 9_ -games ~If '
Yankees 10, Twins 3
the pace, giving the Yankees the1r
Tommy John scattered eight hits
largest bulge of the season. The
while Reggie Jackson and Ruppert
Jones homered as the Yankees won
Orioles, 10 games out, slipped past
Detroit into third place when the
for ·the 23rd time in the tast 31
Tigers were beaten by the Oakland ' games. John, 14-3, tied Baltimore's
A's 5-2.
Steve Stone for the league lead in
Elsewhere, the Boston Red Sox
victories and Jackson took over the
hanunered the Kansas City Royals · major league home run with 24.
New York jumped on Geoff Zahn
12-4, the Texas Rangers edged the
Chicago White Sox ~2. the Cleveland

Progres~ stopped in many areas of American-way' of life
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Anal st
NEW YORK AP Y
.
politicians ro
( J - While
try movm~ . ~!~nto ~~t the counreality for Amenca' • mil~ present

the third inning alone - 10 of them,
to be exact.
George Hendrtck and Garry Templeton drove home two runs aptece
in the burst. Hernandez had four
RBI and Hendrick three in the
game, each contributmg a home run
to the 17-hit assault.
Wmner Jim Kaat, who pttched a
seven-hitter, noted: "Everybody
thinks that when you get 10 runs it's
a piece of cake, but you sttU have to
get 'll outs. I tried to pttch like tt was
a 0.0 baUgame."
Expos 6, Reds I
-Ron LeFlore dr1Ued three hits and
swiped three bases while &amp;ott Sanderson's scattered four Cincmnati
hits to keep the Expos on top in the
· East, one-half game ahead of Pittsburgh.
Sanderson retired the first 14 batters before Ray Knight singled in the
!iftt. The Reds scored in the seventh

Martine·z returns to post 1-0

George Bush no flaming G.O P liberal

Thanks hellringers

'

.z.-

As pin knows how to ·save $2 billion

A Batey reply.
}

.

:.,

rNTEliEST OF
MEIGS-MABON AREA
l..t!ttcn ., opiD1ua ~ wrlcomrd. Tltey Jbwld be ltll tban JOG wordi lone (ol~t~bj~t to reductloll. by 1M editor I aod mUJt bt slped wllb tbe slpee's address. Names may be wtl.bbeld ~n
pabUe~d-. Howner, oa requeat. Damet wW be dltelclled , Let1era 1bou.ld be Ia good taaLe addrfttlq IIIaH, aot penoullttn.
'

au5

.

LeFlore led off the game with a
walk, stole second and scored on Andre Dawson's double . Warren
Cromartie doubled one out later for
another run.
LeFlore's RBI triple and &amp;ott's
smgle made tt 4-0 Montreal in the fifth. Gary Carter's homer in the sixth
and Scott's RBI double in the seven- .
th added two more runs .
Cincinna!t scored m the sixth
when pmch-hitter Cesar Gerorumo
doubled and Dave Concepcion
smgled.

a

I

Mullen Insurance Agency, Inc.
life Insurance Since 1950
Auto, Fire, Liability Etc. since 1954
Aetna Life &amp; Casualty
Hartford Steam Boiler
Aetna Life Insurance
Standard Fire Insurance
Grange Mutuafcasualty
Western Surety
Grange Mutual Life Insurance Complete Brokerage Service

Charles B. Mullen and Don E. Mullen
113E.2nd

992-3381

Pon1erov. Oh.

CAMDEN -PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY,_JULY 19th
.
11
ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
AND
K .V. COMPUTING DEPT.
OF

'; UNION CARBIDE TECH. C:ENTER
OPEN TO PUBUC AFTER s·P.M.,
· ,, ' U.S. 60 WES'r-HUNTINGTO ....
DAY EXCE

..

.,

•vf

�6--!!te DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jui}· 18, 1980
4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July 18, 1980

I• • • •
~L·~

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major Lr•tut BaaebaU

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

W L

Montreal

Pittsburgh
Philadetphlll
NewYor\:
St. Louis
Olicago

17

'!/
ll

16
Q
39

38

18

3:i
WEST

Los Angeles
Houston

50
49

Cindnnati .

K

'

Pd.

43
tl
19
38

:II
i4

GB

.580
.552
.541
.500
.143

-

.417

12

.568
.56.1
.500

-

San Francixo
l3 ~
.483
Atlanta
39 f1
.453
SanDiego
n ~
.416
. 1blll'lday'aGIUQes
Los Angeles 3, ctticagu 1
Pittsburl!h 3, San Francisco 2

""
I
5
10

"'
6
7¥.1

10
131,1,

New York&amp;, Atlanta 0

r
I
I
I
I
I

Montreal &amp;, Cincinnati I
St.Louis 15, San Diego3
""hiladelphia 2, Houston 1
Friday'aGama
San Diet~o (Eichelberger 2-I J at CtUcago

(Krukow6-10 or CapilLB 2-1)

New York (Bomback 6--2 and Falcone~)
at·Clncinnati (Pastore IO..Sand 8erenyi 0.0)
· lDs Af18eles (Welch 9-3) at Pitbburgh
(RhodenO.l ), (n )
Philadelphia { Espinosa 0-1) at AUanta

!P.Niekro 7-ll l. In)

San Fran~i.sco (MontefWIW ~ ) at
St.Louis !Martine&gt;&gt;-:!), (n)
.
.
Montreal (Lee 3-4) at Houston (Ruhle 6-2,,
{ n)

.

Salu!l'"y'o Gamct

Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
san Diego at Chicago

fi.
Ia
OJ
cl
p
tr
Cl

do
ao

"

tl:
UJ

M
pi

a
to
pi

to
si
kJ
ill
pi

bt

w

Philadel1fhia !li t Atlanta, 2, ( n)

,Montrea atHouston,2, (n)

NewYark at Cinciqnati, (nl
Sa n FrancisccoatSt. Loui..s, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
L Pet. GB
New York
57 29
.663 Milwaukee
18 ll
.552
9\\o
Baltimore
47 ll
.547 10
Detroit
.. 38
.SST 11
Boston
.. IJ
.523 12
Cleveland
41 43
.ltla 15
Toronto
38 18
.429 a!
WEST

w

Kansas City
Texas
Oakland

53
12
II

J5
4i
18

~esota

411
411
'!/

47
47

Chic&lt;~go

SeatUe
California

32

50
:;4

.602
.183
.461
.160

10\\o
12'AI
12\\o

.460

12~

.125
.372

15\\o
31

TbW'Jiday's Game.
Baltimore I, MllwaukeeO

Oakland 5, Detroit 2
Boston 12, Kansas City 4

New York 1.0. Mlnnesota 3

Te us 3, Chicago 2
Cleveland 5, California 3

SeatUe 5, Toronto 3
.
Friday'• Gamea
Minnesota

(Ericksoo 3-,5) at Boston

(Torrez:4-10), (n)

Teus

(Medi ch 8-t)

at Baltimore

{Flanagan 8-8), (n )

Kansas City (Gura 11-4 ) at New York
{May 7-3 ), (nl
Chicago (Trout 4-9 ) at Milwaukee ( Haas~
8), In)
Toronto (Kucek 2-1) at California (Halicki
2-1), In)

ClevelaOO

(Spillner 7·7) at Oakland

( Norris 11-6), (n)
Detroit (PEltry ~)

atSeatUe (Beattie 1-7),

(nl
' []

tl
l·1

S.bln:lay't Gamet
Minnesota at Boston
Cleveland at oakland 1 ·
Teus at BaltimoN!, (rl)
KansasCityatNewYork,{n)
Chicago at Milwaukee, (n)
Toronto at California, (D)
Detroit at SeatUe, (n)

-

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEA.DEKS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (200 at bats): Trillo,
Philadephia, .331 ; Templeton, St.Louis, .328 ;
R.Smith, Los An@;eles, .m ; Hendrick,

St.I...oois, .~;Croma rtie, Montreal, .322.

RUNS : LeFlore, Montreal, 60; K.Hernande!i, St.U!ui3, 6(1; Templeton, St.I.A&gt;ui.'l,
00; CJ.aril. • San Franci3co, 66; Rose,
Philadelphia, 59.
RBI : flendrick, St.Loul.!, 72; Garvey, LoS
An~eles, .71 \ Schmidt, Philadelphia , 61;
Knight, CincumaU, 58: Baker, l...cs Angeles,

n ·
IT

p

New York, 11-2,. 750, 4.44.
STRIKEOUTS: C.arltoo, Philadelphia,
168; Richard, Houston, 119; Ryan, Houston,
103; Blyleven, .PittsbW'gh, 100; P.Niekro,
Atlanta,lOO.
·
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATMNG (200 at ball ): Brett, Kansas
Q ~y , :3811 ; Dilone, Cleveland, .354; Cooper,
Milwaukee, .347 ; B.Bell, Texas, .346;
Paciorek,Seatue, .3%7 •
RUNS: Wilson, Kansas City, 68; YoWll,
Mihv.auk:ee, 66; TranuneU, Detroit, 65; Wills,
Texas, 65; Bumbry, Baltimore, ti2 ; Randolph, New York,62.
RBI : Perez, Boston, 68 ; OgilVie,
Milwaukee, 66; Re.Jackson, New York , 66;
Oliver, Texas, 86; Hebner, Detroit, 63.
mts: WUson, KansaS City, I26 i Cooper,
Milwaukee, 113; RJvers, Texas, 113; Bumbry, Baltimore, 107: Burleson, Boston, 107.
DOUBLES: Yount, Milwaukee, 27 ;
Morrison, Chicago, 26; Oliver, Texas, 22;
Cooper, MUWallkee, 21; D:Garcia, Torooto,
21; Carew., California, 21; MeRae, Kansas
City, 21.
..
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Wilson,
Kansas City, 8; Bwnbr'y, Baltimore, 7;.
Washington, Kansas City, 7; Hebner.
Detroit,6; Randolph, New YCH'k, 6; Wathan,
Kansas City, 8; Brett, Kansas City, 6.
HOME RUNS : Re.JacUon, New York, 24;
Oglivie, Milwaukee,23; Armas, Oakland, l9;
Thomas, MUWaukee, 18; Mayberry, Taronto, 17.
STOlEN BASES, Hendecson, Oakland,

42; Wilson, Kansas City, 11 ; Dilone,
Cleveland, 31; J.Cruz, Seatue, 25; Wllb,
Teua,25.
'
PITCWNG (8 Decisions): Darwin, Texu,

.au,

-3.11; fohn, New Y(lrk, 14-3, .824, 2.83; Corbett, MiMeS(Ita, 6-2, .150, 2.04; Gura, Kansas
City, IH, .733, 2.22; RaiJI!'y, Boston, &amp;-,!,
.711, 4.86; R.May, New York , 7-3, .700, 1.91 ; _
TrJUien, Milwaukee, 9-4, .692, 2.85.
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry, _New Yori;-Hl6;
M.Norrts, Oakland, 99; Keough, Oakland,
90; F.Bannister, Seattle, 89 ; Hus,
Milwaukee, 87; Koosman, Minnesota,87.

Ohio Sportlight

u·

By
George Strode

SJ ()

d

o.

· • SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) , .Wittenberg University's Tigers,
already recognized as one of the
nation's best Division III basketball
Ill powers, are earning some in' .ternational exposure.
M : Nine Wittenberg . players and
wo Coach Larry Hunter will leave Sunev llay for a 1:klay tour of Europe. The
th Tigers rolled up a ~ record last
d~ .winter and finished fourth in the
ou National Collegiate Athletic
$2 Association Division III tournament.
H• . The 31-member tour group will be
. JIPOnsOred by International Sports
Cl Exchange and will visit Luxemhourg, France, England, West Germany and Belgium.
The Wittenberg players worked on
several projects to pay their own
way.
: The nine players include two
graduated · seniors, All-American
guard Brian Agler and Mike Van·
'nett; seqiors Tyrone Curtis, Alan
Watson and Doug Brandewie,
juniors Mike Anderson and Ric
Simon, and sophomores Chris Huff
]lnd Jeff Arnold.
• "This will be a ttemendous
-educational eJ~perience for our
players," said Hunter. "We'll be ex·
posed to different social habits,
customs and governmental systems
and·will have the opportunity to play
.against foreign countries."
; The Ohio, Conference representatives will play single games in
:Paris and Cologne, West Gennany,
'and will complete in a tournament in
London•.They will play as many· as
three games in London.
Between games, the players will
see such sites as Notre Dame
~thedral, the Eiffei'Tower, the Arc
. 1!1e Triomphe, Windsor Castle, Dam
Cathedral, the white cliffs of Dover
and the English Channel.
. The Wittenberg players' fundraising 'efforts will enable each of ,
.them to pay Jess than half the,
Jlriginal cost of $1;150 per person.
.Various fund raisers reduced the
cost to $550 per player.

very strong team," said Dennis
Johnson, a coach with the Jamaican
track and field team. "Their not
,being here will make it a lot easier
for others to win medals.' •
. And the .American influence is
strongly felt outside the sports
arena, in the political dispute over
raising the U.S. flag and playing the
"Star Spangled Banner" at the

MUIRFIELD, Scotland (AP) When the squalls sweep in from the
stormy North Sea, Lee. Trevino is
apt to shudder and Tom Watson
remembers freezing winter days in
Kansas City.
But both men conquered
miserable conditions in the first
round of the British Open golf championship to score 3-under-par 68s and
share the lead in a field that includes
golfers from 14 nations.
Trevino is not a cold weather
player and says he never has been.
"I don't like the cold. I can't get
loose. My back hurts," He said
before the ~pionship started.
But when the' chips were down and
. the tournament opened Thursday in
bone-chilling temperatures and

pounding rain, Trevino played
steadily through the first nine and
scorched home in 33 to belie his own
words.
Trevino holed out on the 18th green
more than four hours after Watson
had returned to the clubhouse with
his pace-setting perfonnance.
Watson said nobody liked playirig
in the rain, but he made a point of
working on his game while wintering
in Kansas.
"l prefer &amp;:;-degree heat and shir·
!sleeve weather," said the No.1 U.S.
player. "But I practice a lot at home
in the cold and the rain. It's not an
intentional program. But those are
the conditions we get there at that
time of the year and I'm stuck with
them.''

ANAHEIM, Calil. (AP) - Right·
handed pitcher Len Barker and first
baseman-outfielder Gary Gray both
came up through the Texas
Rangers' organization on their way
to the Cleveland Indians- but there
the similarity ends.
Barker, who went the distance as
the Indians defeated the California
Angels 5-3 Thursday night, was a
eralded prospect in Texas and was
acquired at a high price (reliever
Jim Kern) in a trade two years ago.
Gray, who hit a towering sixth inning home run in his first game since
being recalled from Tacoma of the
Pacific Coast. League, barely got a
glance in TellliS during three brief
trials and was sent to Cleveland last
winter as a throw-in of a multi·
player trade.
While Barker has been given the
opportunity to realize his potential
and now is the top winner on the Indians' staff with a ~7 record, Gray
hopes that finally, this is his chance.

"They've told me I'm going to be
in the lineup," said Gray, who sat
put Wednesday's game after his af.
ternoon arrival from Tacoma.
"That's all I want, a chance to play.
If I play, I'll hit."
Gray was batting .350 with 20
homers at Tacoma. He's had comparable statistics before in the
minors, but had been able to get into
only 34 games in parts of three
seasons with Texas.
"They never said anything to
me," said Gray, a stocky 27-yearold. "l got down again this spring
when Cleveland sent me out pretty
early, but I gave 100 percent and
made the best of it."
Barker is· one of the game's hardest throwers, but has been plagued
by inconstitency. "I always seem to
have one bad illning," said Barker,
who turned 25 last week. " The difference this time is that I was able to
correct myself in time.

Racing results

c. .
E

tl

MOSCOW (AP) - Even in absentia, the United States has had a
very real presence at the Moscow
Games.
The U.S. impact . is felt by the
athletes who sympathize with their
missing fellow sportsmen and wonder how the Swruner Olympics will
be with the boycott - and would
have been without it.
"The Am~ricans would have had a

Barker beats ·old teammates

t&lt;

.t&lt;

boycoufelt in .Moscow

•

TRIPLES: LeFlore, Montreal, 8; l..alldeStoy, Houston, 7; R. Scutt, Montreal, 6;
McBride, Philadelphia, 6; O.Moreno, Pit- ·
tsbqtl, 6; Clark, San Francisco, 6.
HOME; RUNS : Sdunidt, Plliladelphla,22;
Hendrick, St.Lolilil, 20; Baker, Los Angeles,
19; Gar-vey, UJol Angeles, 18; Clark, San
FranciJ«l,l7.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, 54;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 51 ; CoUin.'l, Cincinnati, 45; R.ScGtt, Montreal, 32; Richards,
San Diego, l2.
PITCHING (ll Otcisions): Bibby, Pit·
t.abuqh, ll·l, .917, 3.00 ; Ca rlton,
Philadelphia,~ •. 789, 2.1j;.G.Jac~n , Pit·
t.sburgh, 7-2, .ns, %.09; M&lt;Mau, Crncmnati,
7·2, .TlS, 3.96 ; Sutton, Los Angeles, 7·2, .na,
t.J3 ; Reuss, Los Anjeles, IG-3, .769, l-82 ;
Welch, Los Angeles, 9-3, .750, 2.40; Bomlick,

7-l, .87.5, 1.83; Stone, Baltimore, If.3,

Bridal shower honors
Miss Shelly Roush

closing ceremony Aug. 3.
On Thursday, 1 the White House
demanded that the International
Olympic Committee refrain from its
unauthorized use of the American
flag and anthem, callings uch an action inappropriate since the United
States had chosen to boycott the
Games in response to the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan..
The protest came in the. fonn of a

letter from Lloyd N. 'Cutler, counsel
to President Carter.
"The United States objects to·any .
use of its national flag and allthem at
the Games in Moscow, including the
closing ceremony," said the Jetter
which was carried to the roc by
Wallace W. Littell, the U.S. Embassy's counselor 'for press and
cultural affairs.
Monique Berlioux, .. the IOC's
executive director, acknowledged
receipt of the letter and said : "We
are studying it." When asked if it
would cause a change in roc policy,
Berlioux offered a stiff: "No."
roc tradition dictates that the
symbolic linking of one Games to the
next be demonstrated by raising the
flag and playing the anthem of the
host nation four years hence. The
Watson and Trevino each has wog_ 1984 Summer Olympics are
the British Open twice.
scheduled for Los Angeles.
Trevino's late surge . prevented
"This is our protocol and this is
Watson from leading alone at the
w)lat we're going to do," Berlioux
end of the first day, the position he has said prior to receiving Cutler's
had promised himself. For Watson is message Thursday.
a finn believer in getting out front
It would be a terrible irony for the
and staying there.
U.S. Government if the Moscow
His round was a model of control,
Olympics, which the Carter Adout in'34 and back in the same figure. ministration so desperately wanted
He notched five birdies and his only
to destroy, ends Aug. 3 with the
bad drive of the day came on the
flying of the red, white and blue
second where he pushed to the right,
while "Oh, say can you see
bunkered his next shot but blasted
.. ."strikes up in the background.
out to three feet for his par.
· Proof of the pervasive "presence"
Jack Nicklaus, another top
of the invisible American giant is
American threat here, finished five · that some of the focus here has shif·
off the pace with a 73 in what he
ted to the closing ceremony when the ·
called one of those "rounds when ·opening ceremony is still one day
you never really get going."
away.
But British Ryder Cup player Nick
In preparation for Saturday's
Faldo went around with Nicklaus
traditional Olympic pageant, the
and reported there was nothing
Olympic flame was to arrive here
. much wrong with his game. "Jack · today at Sovietskaya Sqnare for
was hitting them solidly but missed
public viewing at City Hall.
a few greens."
The boxing draw was also
Faldo returned a 69 along with
scheduled for today. Alberto Mer·
Australia's Jack Newton, Argencado of Puerto Rico was expected to
tina's Vincente Fernandez and
be entered in the 112-pound class,
fellow Britons Mark James and
and there was speculation that two
Gleru1 R.alph.
of his countrymen, who came here to
R.alph, a newcomer to the circuit
help ·him train, would also be
whose best tournament finish is
nominated to fight.
23rd, could only record astonishment at his one-round showing.· "l·
don't think I've quite come down to
earth yet," he said.
The 6,926-yard 71 par Muirfield
1t
/h4'(J/f(
•
course was expected to play ea ~ier
today.
Brighter weather was forecasb
FRI : THRU THURS.
with occasional showers, but tern·
peratures were due to continue in
''
the chilly mict.fifties.
Only eleven players broke par for
the course on the first day and defen·
ding champion Seve Ballesteros was
not among them. The young
Spaniard, who won this year's U.S.
M.asters, held for a 72 despite of
SPECIAL MATINEE
some bad shots and said hjs confidence is still taking a beating. He
SUNDAY, JULY 20th
added however that he hoped things
would change before the four-day
2 PM
· tournament ended.

" The university has been very
positive about our taking this trip,"
said Hunter. "They gave us per·
mission to conduct a number of fundraising projects that would not interfere with the capital campaign
that is under way."

NORTH RANDAlL, Ohio (AP) Vibratory, a long shot who rushed at
the end, took the featured Allowance
at Thistledown, rwming the mile and
40 yards under Bennie Feliciano in
1:423-li.
•
Vibratory paid $33.40 to win, $13 to
place and $9 to show on Thursday.
Heavily Detailed paid $8.40 to place
and. $5 to show and Dandy Darby
paid $8.60 to show.
•
The combination 9-1-3 paid
$3,326.40 in the final trifecta. A
crowd of 4,100 wagered $498,916.
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP)
Macadamia won the featured onemile conditioned trot in 2:04 3-5 at
Latonia on Thursday and paid $3.40,
$2.80 and $2.40.

Open tennis tournament set

.

.

Arrow Pnncess placed for $3.20
and $2.40, and Real Doll showed for
$2.80
The 1-4 daily double combination
of Second Heaven and Princess
'Cloud returned $86.
Acrowd of 1,030 wagered $85,035-.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Gitty Up
Gal was featured to win the featured
eighth race at River Downs friday.
Windy Prospect won the fivefurlong featured race Thursday by a
half.length and returned $3.20, $2.60
and$2.20.
Hit A Gusher paid $3 and $2.60 to
place, and Royal R.ajoe returned
$4.60toshow.
The 1-3 daily double of Soric's
Sword and Buttered Toast paid
$57.40. The 1-2 consolation double
returned $7.60.
Acrowd of 3,925 bet $448,634.

POMROY - An open tennis tournament will be held at the Syracuse
Park .iuly 24 through July 27 under
the sponsorship uf Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
Deadline for entering the tourna·
mcnt is July 21 and phases of com·
peliliu~ will include singles, $5 entry
fee; doubles, $10 entry fee, and mix·

How to clean brass?

A bridal shower honoring SheUy
Presenting gifts to Miss &amp;lush
&amp;lush, bride-elect of Chuck For- were Gail Ohlinger, Jennifer Shuler,
tune, was held recently at the River· Phyllis Beaber, Sue Grueser,
boat Room, with Gail Ohlinger and Virginia Fisher, Mrs. Harlan WarLura Swiger as hostesses.
ner, Connie Smith, Anna Obitz,
A yellow and .mint' green color · Shirley Roush, Kim Roush, 'rerri
scheme was carried out with cake,
Roush, Golda &amp;lush, Lura Swiger,
punch, mints and nuts being served. Sherry Holtz, Angela Swiger, Bernie
Games were played with prizes Anderson, Sara Anderson, Barbie
going to Mrs. Harlan Warner, Anderson, Sara Dawson, Leafy
Virginia Fisher, Shirley Roush and
Chasteen, Crystal Glaze, Virginia
Connie Smith. Sue Grueser won the
PiruJell, Mary Beth Obitz, Sibley
door prize.
Ward and Dolly Mowery.

Trevino, Watson share lead
•
m British Open Golf event

57.
'
HITS: Templeton, St.Louis, 126; Garvey,
Los Angeles, 110; Hendrick, St.Louis, 109;
Croma~e, Montrtal, ' 104; K.Hernandez.
St.Loui&gt;, 101.
DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia, 30;
Knight, Cincinnati, 27; Steams, New York ,
23; K.He'mand.ez, St.Louis, 23; Chambliss ,
A!lanla,21 .

~~======================~~

II
ro ·

s.

u~

~--]
'~-~
••••••• j•••
••
• •

Polly's Pointers

Meigs. ACS meets, discusses
several upcoming projects
The executive conunittee meeting'
of the Alnei'ican Cancer Society,
Meigs County Unit, met at V~terans
Memorial Hospital recently with
president Bernadette Anderson
presiding. The minutes were read
and approved. Erma Smith,
treasurer, reported that the total
balance for the present time was
$8,583 . Many projects were
discussed, with plans being made for
many events in the near future. It
was reported that several people
had been helped in the past month,
but that several more are still in
need.
·
Delores Frank, director, ·
discussed wh8t fihns, literature,
posters, etc., would be used at the
fair booth. She also noted .that the
move from the old senior citizens'
building to the former TB clinic
would soon be cqmplete. Persons
needing assistance will be able to
use the same nwnber as before,
which is 992-7531. Plans are in·
complete for the free pap clinic, but
progress is being made.
S. Michael stated that there .are
several warning signals, but
pethaps the ones most overlooked,
but probably most important, are
the seven warning signs of cancer. .
The American Cancer Society
wants to tell more about these import.ant signals. Knowing these
signals and being on the lookout for
them is one of the best protection!;
olie can ·have. Following are the

. COLO\' · .

seven warning signs: I. Change in
bowel or bladder habits; , 2. A sore
that does not heal; 3. Unusual
bleeding or discharge; 4. Thickening
or lump in breast or elsewhere; 5.
Indigestion or difficulty in
swallowing; 6. Obvious change in
wart or mole; and 7. Nagging cough
or h01ir5e!less,
The Cancer Society recommends
that one consult a doctor if he
recognizes any of these signs in himself or a loved one. Early detectioand prompt treatment make. the
difference in the cancer statistics.
Of the Americans who died of cancer
in 1980, 131,000 might have been
saved by earlier treatment. Of every
six people who get cancer, two will
be saved. But of the four who died,
one might have been saved with
earlier diagnosis and prompt tret·
ment.
The next executive conunittee
meeting will be August 7, 8 p.m. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, with
the board meeting to be August 21, 8
p.m. with new officials to be installed at that time. Dr. Wilma Man·
sficld will be guest speaker and
refreshments will be served. The
public is invited to attend.
Those attending the meeting were
Bernadette Anderson, Joan Anderson, Pastor William Mid·
dleswarth, Dr. Wilma Mansfield,
Delores Frank, Dorothy Will, Enna
Smith, Kimberly Michael, and
Sharon Michael.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - My very old
brass coffee table is turning dark so
I wonder if anyone can tell me how
to clean it. - GENE
DEAR GENE - Of course, the
easiest and probably best way is to
take the table to a professional brass
finisher. Brass. will turn ·dark with
tarnish unless it is protected~ Clean
it thoroughly and when the desired
. gle~ is acquired apply a thin coat
of wHite shellac - two coats would
be even better - and thereafter
dusting is all that is needed.
For
the ·
cleaning there are
several good commer cial brass
polishes. Follow
.directions on the
container. Or you·
can make your
own with a mix·

Social Calendar
SUNDAY
ANNUAL REUNION of the
descendants of Ed and Eliza
Hayman Sunday at Forked Run
State Park. AU relatives and friends
invited.
HOMECOMING at South Bethel
Church, located one and one-half
miles west of Eastern High School,
Sunday. Morning services at 9 a.m.
and ·basket lunch at noon. Sunrise
group will be featured at I :30 p.m.
Public invited.
ANNUAL MA;TLACK REUNION
Sunday at fairgrounds in Lancaster.
All families and friends invited to at·
tend.
VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
beginning Sunday at Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport, from
7 to 9 p.m. Classes for pre-schoolers
and adults. Theme "Jesus I Believe
in You."

LADY AND

THE TRAMP

installation at 7:30p.m. To be held at
Middleport MJisonic Temple.
CIDCKEN BARBECUE Saturday
11 a.m. until all chicken sold at fire
station in New Haven. Sponsored by
New Haven Fire Department.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL Saturday at
Salem Township Fire Department,
Salem Center. The event will be held
aU day Saturday with music to be
provided in the afternoon and
evening hours. The menu, in all- .
dition to the ite cream, includes hot
dogs, roast beef sandwiches,
homemade pie and cake.

.

Plus tt.48 F.E .T.
and old tire.

·

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Economy.prfced ~fit your budaet and available in
popular llze&amp; to fi t most foreign and domestic cars.
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1980
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ture of salt, vinegar and a bit
of flour to make a thln paste. Be
sure to rinse thoroughly after
cleaning and dry well.
If there are any green spots dip a
cloth in a weak solution of arrunonia
and water, dry immediately and
then proceed with cleanihg. This"can
be a most rewarding .job as tile
results can be so spectacular. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I am answering
the reader who has a yellow sticky
stain left in her bathtub after
removing a decal. I had the same
problem with such a spot left on my
refrigerator. Plain rubbing alcohol
and a soft cloth did the trick for me:
It takes some rubbing but there are
no traces of glue or stain. HELENA
TOCONDUCfSERVICFS
_
CLARIFIES ISSUE
DEAR POLLY - Whenever my ·
The
Rev.
Cecil
Wise
will
be
con•
Charles. B. Mullen, Middleport
husband shaves he cleans his
.
Councilman,
who resigned Monday ducting Sunday morning and :
glasses with his shaving brush and
night has issued the following evening worship services at the :
always has sparkling glasses.
Hysell Run Methodist .Church due to
Facial tissues are so expensive statement clarifying his position for tbe absence of Rev. Theron Durham.
now so I fill three empty boxes with the resignation.
Mullen said he was cited to court r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
tissue from one roll of nice crinkled
toilet tissue. Using two sheets I fold . because of his barking dogs. He
them back about an inch lengthwise stated that he did not want Mayor
Fred Hoffman or council members
to make them readily available. to be accused of favoritism.
DOROTHY C.
DEAR POLLY - When putting
dinner plates away I slip a paper
NOT SUPERVISOR
napkin between each one as a
Mrs. Philip Roberts, former
protection, and also. for faster table Karen Dailey, is not nursing super·
setting.
·
.visor at Holzer Medical Center as
A little fresh lemon juice and a was reported. She iS presently part~
pinch of salt added to fruit pies will time staff nurse at the hospital.
bring out the flavor.- ULUAN
Polly will send you one of her r - - - - - - -- - - - - - - t
signed ~nk-you newspaper coupon
clippet'S if she uses your Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her colwnn.
Write POLLY POINTERS in care of
this-newspaper.

All Cars Have Air Cond. • Undercoating • And WaJ

··-

tlliDAY
ICE CREAM social Friday in
basement at Forest Run Methodist
Chu,rch beginning at 6 p.m.
WEEKEND MEETING at Danville Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
nightly. Guy Mallory, Winter Garden, Fla., guest speaker.
PAST MATRONS Evangeline
Chapter 172 at home of Dorothy
Young Friday at 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
MEIGS CHAPT~R of DeMolay
dinner and installation of officers
Saturday. Dinner at 6:30 p.m. and

However, sell-doubts over your abilitY to utllif.e :
Saturday, J~aly 19
1l c.;uuld hamper you.
•
Mtmy thinl!l:$ v.·tll fall intv pbic~ this coming
. SAGITTA RIUS (Nov . tl-~. !I) Situa~onl •
)'t:&lt;tr wLUllitlle ur nucffurt un your pc~rt. In olht!r
where you deal with seve ral persons re~ardQ a ..
inslaoct!!t, however, 'Wtuityou thoughl were wellc.:ulh:l'llVC intercl!l are very favprable todM)'· ..
laid plans c,:uuld run tnto u~xpected obsWc lcs.
Don't let any one person try to t.akta_ charge,
a
Accept them both graciously,
CAPRICORN (Ike: . tZ..Jau, ltJi'our chancel ..
CANCER tJuot 2J-July 22. Whut you w11nt to
accomplilill can now be done successfully, · for success are quite good in areas of work where
uriijlmdi ty is called fGr. Listen politely lo otheJ"J, •
provided you don't t!l ll too much attention to
but llo yuur own thin~ .
yourself or the methods you use. Find out more
AUUARIUS iJaa. ZO.Feb. 19) People who are
of what lies 11he.ad for you in the year following
essenlial to your plans will now give you a tfi:enyour birthday by sendinl( ft:~ r your copy of Astrodly eMr. Just be cel"t.&lt;lin your proposals are weD "'
GraP,h. Mail$1 for each to A.Jtro-Graph, Box 489,
U!ought-out, and that they include an concerned,. "
Radio City St.aUGn, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
PISCES (Feb. ZO..March 20) A member ol your ..
birth date .
family may make it pussible.for you to acqWr':
LEO (July tJ.Aug. Z%) You could be l!tettinJ::
something today you've wanLed ve ry mue~...
somt: very creative ideas today, but don'l allow
Vuu'll hurt thjs persm if you don't !how ~ "'
negative lhinkinK to stop you from developing
proper gratitude.
.
•
them . Htave faith in your abilities.
ARIES (March 21-A.prll 19) Any large l8.'1ue5 •
VIRGO lAlii. U&amp;pt. 22) Conditions thal
disturbing you can be overcome tt:lday ~y •
could enhance your material Security are exallowing your emGlional judgment, to blelld wath ·
ceptiorwlly promising tOOay. Don't. h(lweVer,
logical ones. Be wiUir.g to change a little.
.
•
allow anothu to butt in and di lute what you acTAURUS 1AprU 20-May 2DJ Your more artmic •
complish.
pursuits are the ones that willl!!ive you the most ..
LIBRA ISept. 23-0ct. ~JJ Take t he initiative by
pleasure todl:ly and bring you ample rewards. •
expressing all those marvelous, creative things
She lve other pr(lject.s for another day.
~
l§om~o: · on in your head today. Just remember to
GE~INI ( May ~ 1-Juoe !0) You ' re more In the •
tread sofUy . Don't become too pushy .
hearts of othe rs today than you may rtHiize. I£ ,
SCORPIO (~1. 2t-Nov. 221Somt1thing is being
trouble· GCCurs, you'll extricate yourself easily
presented to you today that· 1s' hi~hl.v a rtistic.
because (If their kindness

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.

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TO OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTUMERS FOR THE CARDS,

1980

ROYALE

COUPE

Black,

black

'9000.00
'9600.00

Events being entered: Single---; double---; mixed

-

-

Glm.AND FLOWERS. WE WIU ALWAYS HAVE FOND
MEMORIES OF OUR .STORE AND CUSTOMERS.-

Seeds - Bird Seeds - Oyster Shells and Grit · Fertilizers · Lime - c.,.
ment &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt · Water Softener ·,Remedies - Salt · Litters ·
Vacclile · Roofing · Paints - Reel Brand Fencing · Baler and Binder
Twine - Sprays - Gates · Hay · Straw •

THANK YOU AGAIN

ROGER ~- PHYLLIS SPENCER'
.• · -:·!PstaR'S MARKET
•f

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Pomeroy

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.
.,

_,

.

242 W. MAIN .ST.
POMERQY, OHIO

Ph.992-6614

_ .c

�6--!!te DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jui}· 18, 1980
4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July 18, 1980

I• • • •
~L·~

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major Lr•tut BaaebaU

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

W L

Montreal

Pittsburgh
Philadetphlll
NewYor\:
St. Louis
Olicago

17

'!/
ll

16
Q
39

38

18

3:i
WEST

Los Angeles
Houston

50
49

Cindnnati .

K

'

Pd.

43
tl
19
38

:II
i4

GB

.580
.552
.541
.500
.143

-

.417

12

.568
.56.1
.500

-

San Francixo
l3 ~
.483
Atlanta
39 f1
.453
SanDiego
n ~
.416
. 1blll'lday'aGIUQes
Los Angeles 3, ctticagu 1
Pittsburl!h 3, San Francisco 2

""
I
5
10

"'
6
7¥.1

10
131,1,

New York&amp;, Atlanta 0

r
I
I
I
I
I

Montreal &amp;, Cincinnati I
St.Louis 15, San Diego3
""hiladelphia 2, Houston 1
Friday'aGama
San Diet~o (Eichelberger 2-I J at CtUcago

(Krukow6-10 or CapilLB 2-1)

New York (Bomback 6--2 and Falcone~)
at·Clncinnati (Pastore IO..Sand 8erenyi 0.0)
· lDs Af18eles (Welch 9-3) at Pitbburgh
(RhodenO.l ), (n )
Philadelphia { Espinosa 0-1) at AUanta

!P.Niekro 7-ll l. In)

San Fran~i.sco (MontefWIW ~ ) at
St.Louis !Martine&gt;&gt;-:!), (n)
.
.
Montreal (Lee 3-4) at Houston (Ruhle 6-2,,
{ n)

.

Salu!l'"y'o Gamct

Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
san Diego at Chicago

fi.
Ia
OJ
cl
p
tr
Cl

do
ao

"

tl:
UJ

M
pi

a
to
pi

to
si
kJ
ill
pi

bt

w

Philadel1fhia !li t Atlanta, 2, ( n)

,Montrea atHouston,2, (n)

NewYark at Cinciqnati, (nl
Sa n FrancisccoatSt. Loui..s, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
L Pet. GB
New York
57 29
.663 Milwaukee
18 ll
.552
9\\o
Baltimore
47 ll
.547 10
Detroit
.. 38
.SST 11
Boston
.. IJ
.523 12
Cleveland
41 43
.ltla 15
Toronto
38 18
.429 a!
WEST

w

Kansas City
Texas
Oakland

53
12
II

J5
4i
18

~esota

411
411
'!/

47
47

Chic&lt;~go

SeatUe
California

32

50
:;4

.602
.183
.461
.160

10\\o
12'AI
12\\o

.460

12~

.125
.372

15\\o
31

TbW'Jiday's Game.
Baltimore I, MllwaukeeO

Oakland 5, Detroit 2
Boston 12, Kansas City 4

New York 1.0. Mlnnesota 3

Te us 3, Chicago 2
Cleveland 5, California 3

SeatUe 5, Toronto 3
.
Friday'• Gamea
Minnesota

(Ericksoo 3-,5) at Boston

(Torrez:4-10), (n)

Teus

(Medi ch 8-t)

at Baltimore

{Flanagan 8-8), (n )

Kansas City (Gura 11-4 ) at New York
{May 7-3 ), (nl
Chicago (Trout 4-9 ) at Milwaukee ( Haas~
8), In)
Toronto (Kucek 2-1) at California (Halicki
2-1), In)

ClevelaOO

(Spillner 7·7) at Oakland

( Norris 11-6), (n)
Detroit (PEltry ~)

atSeatUe (Beattie 1-7),

(nl
' []

tl
l·1

S.bln:lay't Gamet
Minnesota at Boston
Cleveland at oakland 1 ·
Teus at BaltimoN!, (rl)
KansasCityatNewYork,{n)
Chicago at Milwaukee, (n)
Toronto at California, (D)
Detroit at SeatUe, (n)

-

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEA.DEKS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (200 at bats): Trillo,
Philadephia, .331 ; Templeton, St.Louis, .328 ;
R.Smith, Los An@;eles, .m ; Hendrick,

St.I...oois, .~;Croma rtie, Montreal, .322.

RUNS : LeFlore, Montreal, 60; K.Hernande!i, St.U!ui3, 6(1; Templeton, St.I.A&gt;ui.'l,
00; CJ.aril. • San Franci3co, 66; Rose,
Philadelphia, 59.
RBI : flendrick, St.Loul.!, 72; Garvey, LoS
An~eles, .71 \ Schmidt, Philadelphia , 61;
Knight, CincumaU, 58: Baker, l...cs Angeles,

n ·
IT

p

New York, 11-2,. 750, 4.44.
STRIKEOUTS: C.arltoo, Philadelphia,
168; Richard, Houston, 119; Ryan, Houston,
103; Blyleven, .PittsbW'gh, 100; P.Niekro,
Atlanta,lOO.
·
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATMNG (200 at ball ): Brett, Kansas
Q ~y , :3811 ; Dilone, Cleveland, .354; Cooper,
Milwaukee, .347 ; B.Bell, Texas, .346;
Paciorek,Seatue, .3%7 •
RUNS: Wilson, Kansas City, 68; YoWll,
Mihv.auk:ee, 66; TranuneU, Detroit, 65; Wills,
Texas, 65; Bumbry, Baltimore, ti2 ; Randolph, New York,62.
RBI : Perez, Boston, 68 ; OgilVie,
Milwaukee, 66; Re.Jackson, New York , 66;
Oliver, Texas, 86; Hebner, Detroit, 63.
mts: WUson, KansaS City, I26 i Cooper,
Milwaukee, 113; RJvers, Texas, 113; Bumbry, Baltimore, 107: Burleson, Boston, 107.
DOUBLES: Yount, Milwaukee, 27 ;
Morrison, Chicago, 26; Oliver, Texas, 22;
Cooper, MUWallkee, 21; D:Garcia, Torooto,
21; Carew., California, 21; MeRae, Kansas
City, 21.
..
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Wilson,
Kansas City, 8; Bwnbr'y, Baltimore, 7;.
Washington, Kansas City, 7; Hebner.
Detroit,6; Randolph, New YCH'k, 6; Wathan,
Kansas City, 8; Brett, Kansas City, 6.
HOME RUNS : Re.JacUon, New York, 24;
Oglivie, Milwaukee,23; Armas, Oakland, l9;
Thomas, MUWaukee, 18; Mayberry, Taronto, 17.
STOlEN BASES, Hendecson, Oakland,

42; Wilson, Kansas City, 11 ; Dilone,
Cleveland, 31; J.Cruz, Seatue, 25; Wllb,
Teua,25.
'
PITCWNG (8 Decisions): Darwin, Texu,

.au,

-3.11; fohn, New Y(lrk, 14-3, .824, 2.83; Corbett, MiMeS(Ita, 6-2, .150, 2.04; Gura, Kansas
City, IH, .733, 2.22; RaiJI!'y, Boston, &amp;-,!,
.711, 4.86; R.May, New York , 7-3, .700, 1.91 ; _
TrJUien, Milwaukee, 9-4, .692, 2.85.
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry, _New Yori;-Hl6;
M.Norrts, Oakland, 99; Keough, Oakland,
90; F.Bannister, Seattle, 89 ; Hus,
Milwaukee, 87; Koosman, Minnesota,87.

Ohio Sportlight

u·

By
George Strode

SJ ()

d

o.

· • SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) , .Wittenberg University's Tigers,
already recognized as one of the
nation's best Division III basketball
Ill powers, are earning some in' .ternational exposure.
M : Nine Wittenberg . players and
wo Coach Larry Hunter will leave Sunev llay for a 1:klay tour of Europe. The
th Tigers rolled up a ~ record last
d~ .winter and finished fourth in the
ou National Collegiate Athletic
$2 Association Division III tournament.
H• . The 31-member tour group will be
. JIPOnsOred by International Sports
Cl Exchange and will visit Luxemhourg, France, England, West Germany and Belgium.
The Wittenberg players worked on
several projects to pay their own
way.
: The nine players include two
graduated · seniors, All-American
guard Brian Agler and Mike Van·
'nett; seqiors Tyrone Curtis, Alan
Watson and Doug Brandewie,
juniors Mike Anderson and Ric
Simon, and sophomores Chris Huff
]lnd Jeff Arnold.
• "This will be a ttemendous
-educational eJ~perience for our
players," said Hunter. "We'll be ex·
posed to different social habits,
customs and governmental systems
and·will have the opportunity to play
.against foreign countries."
; The Ohio, Conference representatives will play single games in
:Paris and Cologne, West Gennany,
'and will complete in a tournament in
London•.They will play as many· as
three games in London.
Between games, the players will
see such sites as Notre Dame
~thedral, the Eiffei'Tower, the Arc
. 1!1e Triomphe, Windsor Castle, Dam
Cathedral, the white cliffs of Dover
and the English Channel.
. The Wittenberg players' fundraising 'efforts will enable each of ,
.them to pay Jess than half the,
Jlriginal cost of $1;150 per person.
.Various fund raisers reduced the
cost to $550 per player.

very strong team," said Dennis
Johnson, a coach with the Jamaican
track and field team. "Their not
,being here will make it a lot easier
for others to win medals.' •
. And the .American influence is
strongly felt outside the sports
arena, in the political dispute over
raising the U.S. flag and playing the
"Star Spangled Banner" at the

MUIRFIELD, Scotland (AP) When the squalls sweep in from the
stormy North Sea, Lee. Trevino is
apt to shudder and Tom Watson
remembers freezing winter days in
Kansas City.
But both men conquered
miserable conditions in the first
round of the British Open golf championship to score 3-under-par 68s and
share the lead in a field that includes
golfers from 14 nations.
Trevino is not a cold weather
player and says he never has been.
"I don't like the cold. I can't get
loose. My back hurts," He said
before the ~pionship started.
But when the' chips were down and
. the tournament opened Thursday in
bone-chilling temperatures and

pounding rain, Trevino played
steadily through the first nine and
scorched home in 33 to belie his own
words.
Trevino holed out on the 18th green
more than four hours after Watson
had returned to the clubhouse with
his pace-setting perfonnance.
Watson said nobody liked playirig
in the rain, but he made a point of
working on his game while wintering
in Kansas.
"l prefer &amp;:;-degree heat and shir·
!sleeve weather," said the No.1 U.S.
player. "But I practice a lot at home
in the cold and the rain. It's not an
intentional program. But those are
the conditions we get there at that
time of the year and I'm stuck with
them.''

ANAHEIM, Calil. (AP) - Right·
handed pitcher Len Barker and first
baseman-outfielder Gary Gray both
came up through the Texas
Rangers' organization on their way
to the Cleveland Indians- but there
the similarity ends.
Barker, who went the distance as
the Indians defeated the California
Angels 5-3 Thursday night, was a
eralded prospect in Texas and was
acquired at a high price (reliever
Jim Kern) in a trade two years ago.
Gray, who hit a towering sixth inning home run in his first game since
being recalled from Tacoma of the
Pacific Coast. League, barely got a
glance in TellliS during three brief
trials and was sent to Cleveland last
winter as a throw-in of a multi·
player trade.
While Barker has been given the
opportunity to realize his potential
and now is the top winner on the Indians' staff with a ~7 record, Gray
hopes that finally, this is his chance.

"They've told me I'm going to be
in the lineup," said Gray, who sat
put Wednesday's game after his af.
ternoon arrival from Tacoma.
"That's all I want, a chance to play.
If I play, I'll hit."
Gray was batting .350 with 20
homers at Tacoma. He's had comparable statistics before in the
minors, but had been able to get into
only 34 games in parts of three
seasons with Texas.
"They never said anything to
me," said Gray, a stocky 27-yearold. "l got down again this spring
when Cleveland sent me out pretty
early, but I gave 100 percent and
made the best of it."
Barker is· one of the game's hardest throwers, but has been plagued
by inconstitency. "I always seem to
have one bad illning," said Barker,
who turned 25 last week. " The difference this time is that I was able to
correct myself in time.

Racing results

c. .
E

tl

MOSCOW (AP) - Even in absentia, the United States has had a
very real presence at the Moscow
Games.
The U.S. impact . is felt by the
athletes who sympathize with their
missing fellow sportsmen and wonder how the Swruner Olympics will
be with the boycott - and would
have been without it.
"The Am~ricans would have had a

Barker beats ·old teammates

t&lt;

.t&lt;

boycoufelt in .Moscow

•

TRIPLES: LeFlore, Montreal, 8; l..alldeStoy, Houston, 7; R. Scutt, Montreal, 6;
McBride, Philadelphia, 6; O.Moreno, Pit- ·
tsbqtl, 6; Clark, San Francisco, 6.
HOME; RUNS : Sdunidt, Plliladelphla,22;
Hendrick, St.Lolilil, 20; Baker, Los Angeles,
19; Gar-vey, UJol Angeles, 18; Clark, San
FranciJ«l,l7.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, 54;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 51 ; CoUin.'l, Cincinnati, 45; R.ScGtt, Montreal, 32; Richards,
San Diego, l2.
PITCHING (ll Otcisions): Bibby, Pit·
t.abuqh, ll·l, .917, 3.00 ; Ca rlton,
Philadelphia,~ •. 789, 2.1j;.G.Jac~n , Pit·
t.sburgh, 7-2, .ns, %.09; M&lt;Mau, Crncmnati,
7·2, .TlS, 3.96 ; Sutton, Los Angeles, 7·2, .na,
t.J3 ; Reuss, Los Anjeles, IG-3, .769, l-82 ;
Welch, Los Angeles, 9-3, .750, 2.40; Bomlick,

7-l, .87.5, 1.83; Stone, Baltimore, If.3,

Bridal shower honors
Miss Shelly Roush

closing ceremony Aug. 3.
On Thursday, 1 the White House
demanded that the International
Olympic Committee refrain from its
unauthorized use of the American
flag and anthem, callings uch an action inappropriate since the United
States had chosen to boycott the
Games in response to the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan..
The protest came in the. fonn of a

letter from Lloyd N. 'Cutler, counsel
to President Carter.
"The United States objects to·any .
use of its national flag and allthem at
the Games in Moscow, including the
closing ceremony," said the Jetter
which was carried to the roc by
Wallace W. Littell, the U.S. Embassy's counselor 'for press and
cultural affairs.
Monique Berlioux, .. the IOC's
executive director, acknowledged
receipt of the letter and said : "We
are studying it." When asked if it
would cause a change in roc policy,
Berlioux offered a stiff: "No."
roc tradition dictates that the
symbolic linking of one Games to the
next be demonstrated by raising the
flag and playing the anthem of the
host nation four years hence. The
Watson and Trevino each has wog_ 1984 Summer Olympics are
the British Open twice.
scheduled for Los Angeles.
Trevino's late surge . prevented
"This is our protocol and this is
Watson from leading alone at the
w)lat we're going to do," Berlioux
end of the first day, the position he has said prior to receiving Cutler's
had promised himself. For Watson is message Thursday.
a finn believer in getting out front
It would be a terrible irony for the
and staying there.
U.S. Government if the Moscow
His round was a model of control,
Olympics, which the Carter Adout in'34 and back in the same figure. ministration so desperately wanted
He notched five birdies and his only
to destroy, ends Aug. 3 with the
bad drive of the day came on the
flying of the red, white and blue
second where he pushed to the right,
while "Oh, say can you see
bunkered his next shot but blasted
.. ."strikes up in the background.
out to three feet for his par.
· Proof of the pervasive "presence"
Jack Nicklaus, another top
of the invisible American giant is
American threat here, finished five · that some of the focus here has shif·
off the pace with a 73 in what he
ted to the closing ceremony when the ·
called one of those "rounds when ·opening ceremony is still one day
you never really get going."
away.
But British Ryder Cup player Nick
In preparation for Saturday's
Faldo went around with Nicklaus
traditional Olympic pageant, the
and reported there was nothing
Olympic flame was to arrive here
. much wrong with his game. "Jack · today at Sovietskaya Sqnare for
was hitting them solidly but missed
public viewing at City Hall.
a few greens."
The boxing draw was also
Faldo returned a 69 along with
scheduled for today. Alberto Mer·
Australia's Jack Newton, Argencado of Puerto Rico was expected to
tina's Vincente Fernandez and
be entered in the 112-pound class,
fellow Britons Mark James and
and there was speculation that two
Gleru1 R.alph.
of his countrymen, who came here to
R.alph, a newcomer to the circuit
help ·him train, would also be
whose best tournament finish is
nominated to fight.
23rd, could only record astonishment at his one-round showing.· "l·
don't think I've quite come down to
earth yet," he said.
The 6,926-yard 71 par Muirfield
1t
/h4'(J/f(
•
course was expected to play ea ~ier
today.
Brighter weather was forecasb
FRI : THRU THURS.
with occasional showers, but tern·
peratures were due to continue in
''
the chilly mict.fifties.
Only eleven players broke par for
the course on the first day and defen·
ding champion Seve Ballesteros was
not among them. The young
Spaniard, who won this year's U.S.
M.asters, held for a 72 despite of
SPECIAL MATINEE
some bad shots and said hjs confidence is still taking a beating. He
SUNDAY, JULY 20th
added however that he hoped things
would change before the four-day
2 PM
· tournament ended.

" The university has been very
positive about our taking this trip,"
said Hunter. "They gave us per·
mission to conduct a number of fundraising projects that would not interfere with the capital campaign
that is under way."

NORTH RANDAlL, Ohio (AP) Vibratory, a long shot who rushed at
the end, took the featured Allowance
at Thistledown, rwming the mile and
40 yards under Bennie Feliciano in
1:423-li.
•
Vibratory paid $33.40 to win, $13 to
place and $9 to show on Thursday.
Heavily Detailed paid $8.40 to place
and. $5 to show and Dandy Darby
paid $8.60 to show.
•
The combination 9-1-3 paid
$3,326.40 in the final trifecta. A
crowd of 4,100 wagered $498,916.
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP)
Macadamia won the featured onemile conditioned trot in 2:04 3-5 at
Latonia on Thursday and paid $3.40,
$2.80 and $2.40.

Open tennis tournament set

.

.

Arrow Pnncess placed for $3.20
and $2.40, and Real Doll showed for
$2.80
The 1-4 daily double combination
of Second Heaven and Princess
'Cloud returned $86.
Acrowd of 1,030 wagered $85,035-.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Gitty Up
Gal was featured to win the featured
eighth race at River Downs friday.
Windy Prospect won the fivefurlong featured race Thursday by a
half.length and returned $3.20, $2.60
and$2.20.
Hit A Gusher paid $3 and $2.60 to
place, and Royal R.ajoe returned
$4.60toshow.
The 1-3 daily double of Soric's
Sword and Buttered Toast paid
$57.40. The 1-2 consolation double
returned $7.60.
Acrowd of 3,925 bet $448,634.

POMROY - An open tennis tournament will be held at the Syracuse
Park .iuly 24 through July 27 under
the sponsorship uf Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
Deadline for entering the tourna·
mcnt is July 21 and phases of com·
peliliu~ will include singles, $5 entry
fee; doubles, $10 entry fee, and mix·

How to clean brass?

A bridal shower honoring SheUy
Presenting gifts to Miss &amp;lush
&amp;lush, bride-elect of Chuck For- were Gail Ohlinger, Jennifer Shuler,
tune, was held recently at the River· Phyllis Beaber, Sue Grueser,
boat Room, with Gail Ohlinger and Virginia Fisher, Mrs. Harlan WarLura Swiger as hostesses.
ner, Connie Smith, Anna Obitz,
A yellow and .mint' green color · Shirley Roush, Kim Roush, 'rerri
scheme was carried out with cake,
Roush, Golda &amp;lush, Lura Swiger,
punch, mints and nuts being served. Sherry Holtz, Angela Swiger, Bernie
Games were played with prizes Anderson, Sara Anderson, Barbie
going to Mrs. Harlan Warner, Anderson, Sara Dawson, Leafy
Virginia Fisher, Shirley Roush and
Chasteen, Crystal Glaze, Virginia
Connie Smith. Sue Grueser won the
PiruJell, Mary Beth Obitz, Sibley
door prize.
Ward and Dolly Mowery.

Trevino, Watson share lead
•
m British Open Golf event

57.
'
HITS: Templeton, St.Louis, 126; Garvey,
Los Angeles, 110; Hendrick, St.Louis, 109;
Croma~e, Montrtal, ' 104; K.Hernandez.
St.Loui&gt;, 101.
DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia, 30;
Knight, Cincinnati, 27; Steams, New York ,
23; K.He'mand.ez, St.Louis, 23; Chambliss ,
A!lanla,21 .

~~======================~~

II
ro ·

s.

u~

~--]
'~-~
••••••• j•••
••
• •

Polly's Pointers

Meigs. ACS meets, discusses
several upcoming projects
The executive conunittee meeting'
of the Alnei'ican Cancer Society,
Meigs County Unit, met at V~terans
Memorial Hospital recently with
president Bernadette Anderson
presiding. The minutes were read
and approved. Erma Smith,
treasurer, reported that the total
balance for the present time was
$8,583 . Many projects were
discussed, with plans being made for
many events in the near future. It
was reported that several people
had been helped in the past month,
but that several more are still in
need.
·
Delores Frank, director, ·
discussed wh8t fihns, literature,
posters, etc., would be used at the
fair booth. She also noted .that the
move from the old senior citizens'
building to the former TB clinic
would soon be cqmplete. Persons
needing assistance will be able to
use the same nwnber as before,
which is 992-7531. Plans are in·
complete for the free pap clinic, but
progress is being made.
S. Michael stated that there .are
several warning signals, but
pethaps the ones most overlooked,
but probably most important, are
the seven warning signs of cancer. .
The American Cancer Society
wants to tell more about these import.ant signals. Knowing these
signals and being on the lookout for
them is one of the best protection!;
olie can ·have. Following are the

. COLO\' · .

seven warning signs: I. Change in
bowel or bladder habits; , 2. A sore
that does not heal; 3. Unusual
bleeding or discharge; 4. Thickening
or lump in breast or elsewhere; 5.
Indigestion or difficulty in
swallowing; 6. Obvious change in
wart or mole; and 7. Nagging cough
or h01ir5e!less,
The Cancer Society recommends
that one consult a doctor if he
recognizes any of these signs in himself or a loved one. Early detectioand prompt treatment make. the
difference in the cancer statistics.
Of the Americans who died of cancer
in 1980, 131,000 might have been
saved by earlier treatment. Of every
six people who get cancer, two will
be saved. But of the four who died,
one might have been saved with
earlier diagnosis and prompt tret·
ment.
The next executive conunittee
meeting will be August 7, 8 p.m. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, with
the board meeting to be August 21, 8
p.m. with new officials to be installed at that time. Dr. Wilma Man·
sficld will be guest speaker and
refreshments will be served. The
public is invited to attend.
Those attending the meeting were
Bernadette Anderson, Joan Anderson, Pastor William Mid·
dleswarth, Dr. Wilma Mansfield,
Delores Frank, Dorothy Will, Enna
Smith, Kimberly Michael, and
Sharon Michael.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - My very old
brass coffee table is turning dark so
I wonder if anyone can tell me how
to clean it. - GENE
DEAR GENE - Of course, the
easiest and probably best way is to
take the table to a professional brass
finisher. Brass. will turn ·dark with
tarnish unless it is protected~ Clean
it thoroughly and when the desired
. gle~ is acquired apply a thin coat
of wHite shellac - two coats would
be even better - and thereafter
dusting is all that is needed.
For
the ·
cleaning there are
several good commer cial brass
polishes. Follow
.directions on the
container. Or you·
can make your
own with a mix·

Social Calendar
SUNDAY
ANNUAL REUNION of the
descendants of Ed and Eliza
Hayman Sunday at Forked Run
State Park. AU relatives and friends
invited.
HOMECOMING at South Bethel
Church, located one and one-half
miles west of Eastern High School,
Sunday. Morning services at 9 a.m.
and ·basket lunch at noon. Sunrise
group will be featured at I :30 p.m.
Public invited.
ANNUAL MA;TLACK REUNION
Sunday at fairgrounds in Lancaster.
All families and friends invited to at·
tend.
VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
beginning Sunday at Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport, from
7 to 9 p.m. Classes for pre-schoolers
and adults. Theme "Jesus I Believe
in You."

LADY AND

THE TRAMP

installation at 7:30p.m. To be held at
Middleport MJisonic Temple.
CIDCKEN BARBECUE Saturday
11 a.m. until all chicken sold at fire
station in New Haven. Sponsored by
New Haven Fire Department.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL Saturday at
Salem Township Fire Department,
Salem Center. The event will be held
aU day Saturday with music to be
provided in the afternoon and
evening hours. The menu, in all- .
dition to the ite cream, includes hot
dogs, roast beef sandwiches,
homemade pie and cake.

.

Plus tt.48 F.E .T.
and old tire.

·

5·rib tr·ead .

Economy.prfced ~fit your budaet and available in
popular llze&amp; to fi t most foreign and domestic cars.
I

•

I

FITS MOST CARS!
s 'lze

Dl•d~

F.E.T.

~ Ou

Dt.cl. F.E.T.
142 12.23
078·14
43 2.38
078·15
45
2.46
3S
1.96
H 78-15
48
2.66
39
2. 12
L78 ·t 5
51
2.96
OTII E R S IZES' LOW PRICED
TOO!
'
Wh ltewtdl 11 ut.n . *5·rib tr 11ad . , '

•A7B-13
8 78- 13
C78·14
018· 14
E78· 14

130 1 1.62
33
1.77
37
J.92

F78· 14

-

CCA Treated Lumber
FOR
-PORCHES
-POOLS
-OTHER NEEDS.
CALL FOR OUPTE

CHESTER 0.

985-3301

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
POMEROY

-NJGNMENTS

Seed and Milling
HEADOUARTERS

TENNIS TOURNAMENT

GENERAL
TIRE
SALES
·' 111. 2nd Ave.

Millard VonMeter
"'·5711

Middleport, Ohio

JULY SALE BIG SAVINGS

TREATED
LUMBER

BAUM TRUE VALUE

-I

PH. 992-7161

FDwerShop

WHOLE TAPIOCA CHEAPER
Whole tapioca, hought at health. food stores and blended at home, is
cheaper than the ready-made blend.

1980
1980

NOW IN STOCK -

CALL FOR
LOW PRICES

Pom*'J

CUTlASS

GREAT
· -LANDSCAPING
-DECKS
-FENCING

*TIRES
*RETREADS

•· ·

!WLII:f~Qu2~~

SEDAN

(

$24 6.00·12.~tackwall,

I

CUTlASS

'

CJ Budget Balancer!

NEW

1980
1980
1980
1980
1980

ELECT FIRESTONE

X Your tire company!

ture of salt, vinegar and a bit
of flour to make a thln paste. Be
sure to rinse thoroughly after
cleaning and dry well.
If there are any green spots dip a
cloth in a weak solution of arrunonia
and water, dry immediately and
then proceed with cleanihg. This"can
be a most rewarding .job as tile
results can be so spectacular. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I am answering
the reader who has a yellow sticky
stain left in her bathtub after
removing a decal. I had the same
problem with such a spot left on my
refrigerator. Plain rubbing alcohol
and a soft cloth did the trick for me:
It takes some rubbing but there are
no traces of glue or stain. HELENA
TOCONDUCfSERVICFS
_
CLARIFIES ISSUE
DEAR POLLY - Whenever my ·
The
Rev.
Cecil
Wise
will
be
con•
Charles. B. Mullen, Middleport
husband shaves he cleans his
.
Councilman,
who resigned Monday ducting Sunday morning and :
glasses with his shaving brush and
night has issued the following evening worship services at the :
always has sparkling glasses.
Hysell Run Methodist .Church due to
Facial tissues are so expensive statement clarifying his position for tbe absence of Rev. Theron Durham.
now so I fill three empty boxes with the resignation.
Mullen said he was cited to court r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
tissue from one roll of nice crinkled
toilet tissue. Using two sheets I fold . because of his barking dogs. He
them back about an inch lengthwise stated that he did not want Mayor
Fred Hoffman or council members
to make them readily available. to be accused of favoritism.
DOROTHY C.
DEAR POLLY - When putting
dinner plates away I slip a paper
NOT SUPERVISOR
napkin between each one as a
Mrs. Philip Roberts, former
protection, and also. for faster table Karen Dailey, is not nursing super·
setting.
·
.visor at Holzer Medical Center as
A little fresh lemon juice and a was reported. She iS presently part~
pinch of salt added to fruit pies will time staff nurse at the hospital.
bring out the flavor.- ULUAN
Polly will send you one of her r - - - - - - -- - - - - - - t
signed ~nk-you newspaper coupon
clippet'S if she uses your Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her colwnn.
Write POLLY POINTERS in care of
this-newspaper.

All Cars Have Air Cond. • Undercoating • And WaJ

··-

tlliDAY
ICE CREAM social Friday in
basement at Forest Run Methodist
Chu,rch beginning at 6 p.m.
WEEKEND MEETING at Danville Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
nightly. Guy Mallory, Winter Garden, Fla., guest speaker.
PAST MATRONS Evangeline
Chapter 172 at home of Dorothy
Young Friday at 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
MEIGS CHAPT~R of DeMolay
dinner and installation of officers
Saturday. Dinner at 6:30 p.m. and

However, sell-doubts over your abilitY to utllif.e :
Saturday, J~aly 19
1l c.;uuld hamper you.
•
Mtmy thinl!l:$ v.·tll fall intv pbic~ this coming
. SAGITTA RIUS (Nov . tl-~. !I) Situa~onl •
)'t:&lt;tr wLUllitlle ur nucffurt un your pc~rt. In olht!r
where you deal with seve ral persons re~ardQ a ..
inslaoct!!t, however, 'Wtuityou thoughl were wellc.:ulh:l'llVC intercl!l are very favprable todM)'· ..
laid plans c,:uuld run tnto u~xpected obsWc lcs.
Don't let any one person try to t.akta_ charge,
a
Accept them both graciously,
CAPRICORN (Ike: . tZ..Jau, ltJi'our chancel ..
CANCER tJuot 2J-July 22. Whut you w11nt to
accomplilill can now be done successfully, · for success are quite good in areas of work where
uriijlmdi ty is called fGr. Listen politely lo otheJ"J, •
provided you don't t!l ll too much attention to
but llo yuur own thin~ .
yourself or the methods you use. Find out more
AUUARIUS iJaa. ZO.Feb. 19) People who are
of what lies 11he.ad for you in the year following
essenlial to your plans will now give you a tfi:enyour birthday by sendinl( ft:~ r your copy of Astrodly eMr. Just be cel"t.&lt;lin your proposals are weD "'
GraP,h. Mail$1 for each to A.Jtro-Graph, Box 489,
U!ought-out, and that they include an concerned,. "
Radio City St.aUGn, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
PISCES (Feb. ZO..March 20) A member ol your ..
birth date .
family may make it pussible.for you to acqWr':
LEO (July tJ.Aug. Z%) You could be l!tettinJ::
something today you've wanLed ve ry mue~...
somt: very creative ideas today, but don'l allow
Vuu'll hurt thjs persm if you don't !how ~ "'
negative lhinkinK to stop you from developing
proper gratitude.
.
•
them . Htave faith in your abilities.
ARIES (March 21-A.prll 19) Any large l8.'1ue5 •
VIRGO lAlii. U&amp;pt. 22) Conditions thal
disturbing you can be overcome tt:lday ~y •
could enhance your material Security are exallowing your emGlional judgment, to blelld wath ·
ceptiorwlly promising tOOay. Don't. h(lweVer,
logical ones. Be wiUir.g to change a little.
.
•
allow anothu to butt in and di lute what you acTAURUS 1AprU 20-May 2DJ Your more artmic •
complish.
pursuits are the ones that willl!!ive you the most ..
LIBRA ISept. 23-0ct. ~JJ Take t he initiative by
pleasure todl:ly and bring you ample rewards. •
expressing all those marvelous, creative things
She lve other pr(lject.s for another day.
~
l§om~o: · on in your head today. Just remember to
GE~INI ( May ~ 1-Juoe !0) You ' re more In the •
tread sofUy . Don't become too pushy .
hearts of othe rs today than you may rtHiize. I£ ,
SCORPIO (~1. 2t-Nov. 221Somt1thing is being
trouble· GCCurs, you'll extricate yourself easily
presented to you today that· 1s' hi~hl.v a rtistic.
because (If their kindness

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.

I

Sentinel Social Calendar

----ASTROGRAPH----

' "'

..

'7090.00

Meet cainel

Tan

LS SEDAN

Lt. Blue

Blue

CUTlASS

LS SEDAN

Beige

Tan

CUTlASS

LS SEDAN

Beige

Tan

CUTLASS

CALlAS CPE.

White

Tan

'8835:57

CUTlASS

CUT. BRM· CPE.

Dr. Claret

Red .

'8163.57

CUTlASS

BRM. SEDAN

Beige."Tan

Tan

'9163.57-

1980

CUTlASS

BRM. CPE.

Claret, 'h White

Red

1980
1980
1980

CUTlASS ;- ·

SUP. CPE.

Yellow

Tan

CUTlASS

SUP. CPE

u . camel

Tan

CUTLASS

SUP. CPE.

Black

Red

1980

CUTlASS

SUP. CPE.

Lt. Blue

Blue

1980

CUTlASS

. SUP. CPE -

Silver

Blue

'1087;51""

1980

OMEGA

2 DR CPE.

White

Red

'808157

1980

Or,tEGO

2 DR CPE.

Blue

-'741j0.51

1980

88 ROYALE CPE.

2 DR CPE

Blue

19649.51

1980
1980
1980

88 ROYALE

2 DR CPE.

Green

19718:51

88 ROYALE

4 DR. SED.

Red

Dark Blue
Silver, 1f2 Blue

Beige, Tan

Tan

'166157

~.oo

'7780.00
'7250.00
'7770.00
'8070.00
8060.00
SS235.00
'7350.00
$7200.00
'7200.00
'7200.00
·1' $7100.00

snoo.oo
UIO.OO

-*78.51"'

DIESELS

Name .................. ... .. .. ..... . .... . ...... : ............ ,

Introducing an exciting
new line of custom-fitted

Age . ................. ....... Address ..... .................. . .

1980

TURON ADO

2 DR.

Beige, Tan

Tan Leather

-15 420.68-

'13,800.00

Heginner . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . .. Advanced . .. , , , , , , .. ..... .... .

1

1980

t;UILA~

LS SEDAN

J.,t_ Gray

Red

-'992657-

l9100.00

1980

ROYALE

4 DR SED.

White

Red

'10,i&amp;t7!

'9400.00

.WE·WISH TO EXPRESS lJUR APPRECIATION AN.D.THANKS

1980

DELTA 88

SEDAN

Beige,

·Interior tan

_19184.)!

TO OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTUMERS FOR THE CARDS,

1980

ROYALE

COUPE

Black,

black

'9000.00
'9600.00

Events being entered: Single---; double---; mixed

-

-

Glm.AND FLOWERS. WE WIU ALWAYS HAVE FOND
MEMORIES OF OUR .STORE AND CUSTOMERS.-

Seeds - Bird Seeds - Oyster Shells and Grit · Fertilizers · Lime - c.,.
ment &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt · Water Softener ·,Remedies - Salt · Litters ·
Vacclile · Roofing · Paints - Reel Brand Fencing · Baler and Binder
Twine - Sprays - Gates · Hay · Straw •

THANK YOU AGAIN

ROGER ~- PHYLLIS SPENCER'
.• · -:·!PstaR'S MARKET
•f

'.

-'19,5l75l

SUGAR RUN MILLS
I,

.BOOK ·

MlllDLEPORT;O,

.,.,

' ...·;.
:: l ·.' ·'

J- ·

Mulberry AVe.

'

'

'.

992·2115 '

Pomeroy

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.
.,

_,

.

242 W. MAIN .ST.
POMERQY, OHIO

Ph.992-6614

_ .c

�..

6-Tiie Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 18, 1,'180

Area goings
on. • •

••

----Cancer Answer Line. ---

Aregular feature, prepared by the speCial comfort items to assist in
AI11erican Cancer Society, to keep 1 caring for homebound patients. Inyou informed about cancer.
· cl uded are hospital beds,
Question: "What exactly does at wheelchairs, etc.; 3)o surgical
dressings · which usually , are ·
high risk mean?"
ANSWERiine: Genetic and en- prepared by volunteers; 4) tran·
vironmental risk factors have been sportation of patients to and from
UMW HOLDS PICNIC
associated with several of the most doctors' offices, clinics or hospitals.
The .United Methodist Women of
common forms of cancer. These fac- Depending on local PQlicies and
the Heath United Methodist Church
tors have been identified after .resources, ACS service programs
held its armual picnic on the lawn at
detailed study of vast numbers of may include more extensive service
· the home of Mrs. Betty Fultz recenhealth histories - those of cancer in some communities. Among them
tly. Grace was given by the Rev.
patients and of peopl~ who did not are: home health care, blood
Robert Robinson. Following the dinhave cancer. Examples of genetic programs and activities designed to
ner a short business meeting was
risk factors are. a family history of meet the special needs of families
held with Clara Criswell presiding.
rectal polyps in the occurrence of with children who have cancer.
Mrs. Criswell opened the meeting by
Call 992·7531 for further in'
colorectal
cancer; fair complexion
reading, "To The Master Gar·
related to skin cancer; family formation.
dener." A report on the day apart at
histqry of breast cancer or of
the Heath Church was given.
stomach cancer which appears to in·
Ullian Smith entertained with a
short program. The Rev . Robinson
crease the probability of developing
cancer in those particular sites.
and JoAnn Robinson provided
SPECIAL NOTE: This does not
musical entertainment. Mrs.
Cri.. ·veil clqsed the meeting with
mean that everyone with a genetic
prayer.
factor is going to develop cancer - it
merely means that such people
Hostesses were Betty Holtz, Don·
FRISAT
;i should he aware of their slightly in·
na Byer, Pauline Horton, Juanita
JULY-18·19
,g; creased risk and have periodic
Bachtle, Lillian Smith, Edith
health checkups.
Jividen, Enuna .Wayland, Rose McDade and Marjorie Milhban.
Among environmental factors,
RECEIVE ALL A's - Seven nursing students at Hill; Claudia Fisher, · Wellston; Glenda Ross,
lfiETEOR
cigarette smoking is the ·greatest,
Gallipolis, W.Va.; Betty Hammack, 1;'1. Pleasant, W.
the
Practical
Nursing
School
of
Buckeye
Hills
Career
accounting for more than 70 percent
BffiTHDAY ANNIVERSARY
Rolu&gt;~~ I• MR!In l~~
Center achieved an A average for the spring term. Pic- Va.; Dorma Pearson, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Not pic·
ofthe 100,000 new cases of lung canDINNER HEW
.iiRIIi 1 1m~ lllmi H
illf.t
tured above., left to right, are: Wanda McGuire, Oak lured are Beverly Church, Pi. · Pleasant, and Susan
A surprise birthday . and an- '
cer
in
the
U.S.
annually.
Other
en·
"'I'
Fox, Oak Hili.
vironmental factors are those found
niversary dlrmer was held in honor
in
the workplace - substances such
of Mrs. Terri Smith and Harold E.
Lamaze
cksses
offered
as asbestos, creosote, coal, tar, arSmith celebrating their twentiety
senic, pitch, etc. Your local Unit of
and forty-sixth birthdays respecATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation classes, the American Cancer Society will be
tively. Also honored were John and
sponsored by O'Bieness Hospital, glad to provide more detailed inDebbie. Davidson, ·who were
formation.
will begin on Wednesday, July 30.
celebrating their first anniversa11'.
A turkey dlrmer was served at the
This class is lor couples whose exQuestion: "I see lots of in·
Reports on upcqrning events and malting lists. New names and ad·
pected date of delivery is prior to formation from the American Can·
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
the introduction of a new minister in dresses are also needed.
September 22.
SMith, Middleport. Enjoying the day
cer Society about cigarette smoking,
· . the colmty were highlights of the
Vernon Nease noted three upThe fee for the 5eries is $35. To breast cancer, etc., and I know the
were Mr. and Mrs. Smith and
recent meeting of the Council Coun- corning activities of the County
daughters, Cindy, Tina anc( Kelly,
pre-register for this series, or to Society supports research, but doeS
cil on Ministries · of the United United Methodist Men. The July
request a schedule of future classes,
it give any direct aid to cancer
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Smith and sons,
Methodist Churches held at the Long meeting will he at the Forest Run
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside patients?''·
Ricky and Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
Bottom United Methodist Church.
Church on July 28 at 7:30p.m. There
Drive, Atl)ens, OH. 45701, or call593ANSWERiine: in 1978-79 more
John Davidson, all from Middleport · .
Rev. Richard Thomas, host will be an Ice Cream Social span5049.
than 450,000 cancer patients were ·
and Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Smith,
pastor, led devotions based on II sored by the U. M. Men at the
Pomeroy.
assisted through one or more Ser·
Corinthians 5:17-20. Rev. Thomas Asbury Church on Aug. 23. Proceeds
vice and Rehabilitation programs
Later that evening, homemade ice
concluded
with prayer and led in will go to assist our student ' GBC honor roll named
carried on by more than 3,000 local
cream was served.
' group singing, accompanied by Mrs. ministers in Meigs County. There
Units of the ACS. Units conduct a
Steve Eisnaugle, director of educatioo at
Bonnie Thomas at the piano.
will be a Corn Roast on Aug. 25. - Gallipolis
BLUiness College, has listed the
RECENT VISITORS
basic service program which in·
foUowing students as being on the honor roU for
Mrs. Fay Sauer, council president, Families are invited to attend this
eludes : I) information and guidance
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
the spring quarter which ended June 19,1980.
was tin charge of the business event.
All A's - Gail Anderson, Barbara Burris,
for cancer patients and their
Roscoe Wise and family, Mid·
Elizabeth Double, Sharon HJbdon, Lula Holsteln,
Rev.
Richard
Thomas,
parish
sessi'on.
The
secretary
and
dleport, were Mr. R. C. Wise and
families by helping them make the
De~ie Moore, Sheryl Roush Oliver, Shirley
treasurer's reports were approved, coordinator, announced that he will
Stephenson, Marilyn Stodola, Fran Unroe, Jeff
: daughter, Mrs. William Brown,
best use of ACS services, cominunity
Witlrn!Jn, Sally Humphreys, Tom Perry, Mary
with the Rev. Florence Smith ser· he on vacation July 19-Aug. 4. The
he;llth
services and other resources;
• Dunellon, · Florida. They came
Elkins, Denita Petrie, Cheryl Roush, Sue Turley.
ving as acting secretary for the
Rev. Rohert McGee will be in charge
B or better - Tum Abbott, John Anderson, An; especially for the Wise-Harrison
2) loans of sickroom supplies and
ne Armstrong, carol Bailey, Madenia Cannan,
: wedding which was an event of June session. It was ·noted that two until his return. The Contact
Teresa Clark, Hazel Dnunmond, Cathy Emministers'
were
in
attendance
at
deadline
will
be
Aug,
5.
Sunday,
mert, Mar&lt;:us Geiger, Kaye Hafey, Anrui Hall,
; 14 at the Heath United Methodist
Donald Hill, Thelma Jackson. Fied Jones, Suaie
• Church. Other out..of-town guests Camp Lancaster for the week. They Aug. 10, will be the date for the CoonLee, Rebecca Maynai'd, Rotiert MeMick, Connie
were the Rev; Mark Flyrm and the ty-Wide Pulpit Exchange, with most
Moodl.spaugh, Brenda Nicholson, Joyce Norton,
· who attended the wedding were Mr.
Your love
Pa!Jl Rowe, Ruth Sellers, Darle~e Thornton,
; and Mrs. Ted Scott, Westland, . Rev. David Harris, bOth of the United Methodist ministers par·
Kathryn Trimble, Phillip Weikle, Charla Whitt,
Southern Cluster.
ticipating.
deserves
Joanne Wilson, l...isa Young, Deborah Leach,
; Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Darell Griggs,
Peggy Stevens, Connie Evaru~, William Linn,
Rev.
Robert
McGee,
education
Concern
was
el!J)ressed
for
the
• Columbus;. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam
the finest
Randy Mulford, Drema Roach, Donna Strait, Jill
Walburn, ShHron Rhodes, Janie Exline.
: Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Knight Jr., chairperson, reminded the group "'tev. Wilbur Hilt, pastor of the
The foUowlng students were listed as havinf!
rings.:.
: Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. and about the County-Wide School of Rutland-Salem Center U. M. Cburperfectattendance:
.
Religion for Oct 20-23. The school ches, who has been hospitalized sinDavid Clarkson, Madge Clarkson, Pauline
Keepsake
: Mrs. John Knight, Memphis, Tenn.;
'I
Delaney, Elizabeth Double. Fred Jones, Debbie
will be held at the Chester Church
ce Palm Sunday. Council members
•.Mr. and Mrs. William Sheridan and
Moore, Diane Taylor, Fran Unroe, Dtinita
Petrie, Sue Turley.
· daughters, Maria, Anita, and from 7-9:30 p.m. each evening with approved unanimo~ly a motiqn that
?~~
five classes available: The each church or charge undertske a
.. i-Christina, Waverly; Rick Knight, Sacraments,
Com'parative moneymaking rpoject of their own
·~ ~ ' )..h
: Point Pleasant, W. Va, ; ~r. and
Religions,
The
Book
of Discipline,
choosing
to
help
the
Hilts
witfi
ex·
~
·. ~,,.,,
· Mrs. Doug Lash, McArthur; Mr. and
Youth
Topics,
and
Death
and
Dying.
penses.
:Mrs. Glenn McDonald and daughter,
·:l.~' .
A week of evangelistic services is
The Rev. Robert Robinson reporATTEND SEMINAR
:Ann, Lexington, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
~~'!
IN NEW·YORK
r •.
: Lawrence Harrison, Mrs. Kathy plarmed for Sept. 21·26 at the ted for the Social Concerns ComPomeroy
United
Methodist
Church.
mittee.
Membership
in
the
Food
CoRoger
W.
Hysell
and
Paul
G.
Eich,
M!I GI\IET
.:
BEANADE l iE
· Brown, Athens; Mr. Ted Lynch, The
Keepsa ke guaranteed perfec t diamond engage , Plains; Miss Bebby Lambert, Oak Ji;vangelist will he the Rev. Paul Op now numbers 66. Food deliveries representing the Farmers Bank of
will be July 17, Aug. 14, and Sept. 11, Pomeroy, are in New York City to
ment rings and 14 Karal go ld wedding rin gs co me
, Hill, and Miss Chrisako Hazama, Hawks, formerly of Gallipolis-Grace
Church. Local pastors and charges with orders due Aug. 7 and Sept. 4. attend a one day seminar to be held
in a large range o f st yles a nd prices.
: Osaka, Japan.
Choose Kee psa ke rings, the perfec t way tu \ h (l \\
will provide leadership and special
Following adjournment, refresh- Friday, July 18, on NOW accounts.
yo
ur Jove , when it 's for keeps.
music
each
evening.
'
ments
were
served.
The
next
This seminar is being sponsored by
RETURN HOME
. The Rev. Florence Smith, commeeting will he Aug. 18 at the Heath Manufacturer's Hanover Trust
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Young and
Keepsake~·
munications chairperson, noted the · Church, Middleport.
Company. The Farmers Bank has
Elmora Boice have recently retur- need to upgrade the "Contact"
•
been a correspondent of Manufacneil home from a trip to San Fran·
turer's
Hanover since it opened for
cisco, Calif. They flew from Colum·
business
in 1904 and utiliZes this
. bus for their visit with Dr. and Mrs. ·
Bank
exclusively
for aU its foreign
· R. R. Boice, and while there visited
monetary
transactions.
: the Winchester House, in San Jose,
21&lt; E. MAIN • POMEROY
: toured Tapa Valley Wine Country,
Christian Brothers Winery, and
The birthday of Dorthy Ritchie Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Esther
Charles King Winery, went to Car- ;r&lt;as celebrated when Chester Coun- Ridenour, Betty Roush, Zelda
mel, Monta Ray, Big Sur, Lake
cil Daughters of America met Weher, Julie Rose, Lethil Wood,
Tahoe, Nevada and enjoyed a bay
Tuesday night.
Elizabeth Hayes, Alta Ballard, Jean
cruise in San Francisco under the
District Deputy Dorthy Ritchie Frederick, Leona Hensley, Ada
:Golden Gate Bridge.
talked about State session, and Morris, Dorthy ' Ritchie, Erma
: Dr. Jim Russell, cousin of Mrs.
asked the District to present Colors Cleland, Margaret Tuttle, and Mar·
· :Young, flew down in his private
and .to have the ailver offering on cia Keller.
:plane and took Mr. and Mrs. Young
Tuesday and Wednesday. There will
Refreslunents were served by Er.BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
and Mrs. Boice to San Diego to visit
be a practice set later.
ma Cleland and Opal Hollon.
ALL SEATS JUST $1.50
several points of interest including
.
.
The next regular meeting will be
531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35 NORTH -Phone 446- 4524
Tlajuana, Mexico and LaJolla.
Aug. 5 at 8 p.m.; there will be
initiation and all members are asked
to weaqvhite.
CWTHING DAY SET
At the close of the meeting, Dorthy
The Gallia·Meigs Community AcRitchie was escorted to the altar and tion Agency will hold a free clothing
presented a gift from the counciL All day for aU low income families on
sang "Happy Birthday," then Monday, July 21, from 9 a.m. until
A picnic dinner was enjoyed at the
Elizabeth Hayes performed a birth- noon. The agency's clothing bank is
home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tuckerday skit and presented a gift
now located in the old high school
man Saturday, June 28. Attending
Those present were Opal Hollon, building in Cheshire.
:rrom Springfield, Ohio were Mr. Guy
'Tuckerman, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Tuckerman and daughter, Melanie
Johnson and Mrs. Gertrude Johnson
Yon are cordiaJiy invited to attend
and local relatives attendihg were
Dorothy Reeves, Mr. -and Mrs.
Robert Reeves, Bryan, Brandi and
A GOSPEL MEETING
·Robbie, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell
'and Jeffrey, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda, Ronald and Leslie
at the
S'fl"' ngCHEECH MARIN o11d THOMAS C H~G
1st WEEK ! 7:00 &amp; 9:00 P.l~ .
Frank and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam,
SAT
&amp;
SUN MATINEES ONLY 1:00 &amp;3:00
Bill and Carolyn.
WESTSIDE
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Mr. and ·Mrs. Bill McElroy, Jeff,
Joey and Jessica, spent Saturday at
the Zoo, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
200 West Main Street- Pomeroy, Ohio
COlumbus were weekend visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElrOy.
Iva Johnson was weekend visitor
of Mrs. J. R. Murphy a~d family. ,
JULY 14 thru JULY 20, 1980
~-

..

JUDGING - Kristin Anderson, Pomeroy (left) and Tammy ErVin, Racine present their horses to the
judges in the showmanship competition.

t

LAST MINUTE PREPARATIONS- Lady Sunrise Queen is prepared
for competition by her owner Kristin Anderson of Pomeroy. Kristin was
one of the five winners selected to represent the area at the State F'air in
Colwnbus. The other winners were Erin Anderson, Pomeroy, Betty Jo
Hunt, Long Bottom, Tarruny Kennedy, Tuppers Plains, and Brenda
Williams, Harrisonville.

, UMA, Ohio (AP ) - A political
and economic tug-of-war is delaying
the proposed .conversion of Lima
State Hospital from a hospital for
.the criminally insane to a prison.
Dr. Timothy Moritz, .director of
the Ohio Department of Mental
Health, announced two Years ago
that his department would close
Lima State by 1982 and replace it
with three new forensic psychiatry
centers in Cleveland, Columbus and
Dayton.
The original timetable, however,
has been disrupted because of
population increases at Lima State
and construction delays at the new
centers.
.
When Moritz revealed his pliJn on
Aug. 2, 1978, Lima State housed 386
patients. He predicted the number
would be gradually reduced until aU
the patients could be transferred to
the three smaller centers which
would have a total capacity of 294.
But the population has not
declined at Lirna State, which tills
week houses 417 patients.
Mortiz explained the. number of

Firestone Co. gets tempora·r y ·restraining order .
Bernard Frazier said Thursday. He
AKRON , Ohio (AP) - A tern·
said
the onler was expected be
porary restraining order blocking a
signed
by U.S. District Judge Robert
Labor Department ban on governM.
Parker
in Beaumont, Texas.
ment contracts with Firestone Tire I
Parker
on
Thursday issued a verRubber Co. is e~pected to be signed
bal order giving Firestone tern·
today by a federal judge in Texas, a
Firestone spokesman said.
-- porary "injunctive relief" and said
further .action could be expected
. " I was told by our attorneys that a
today.
temporary restraining order had
The Labor Department charged
been granted and that there would
Firestone with violating federal
be a hearing pn Aug . 28," spokesman

.

hiring practices at a plant in
Orange. Texas, and barred the firm
from future goverrunent contracts.
. The department also ordered
suspension or cancellation of
Firestone's current contracts with
the government, subject to review to
assure such action won't impair
national security. Firestone's gover·
nment contracts are estimated to be
worth at least $40 million a year.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Federal ' Aviation Administration
will conduct a safety symposium
next Tuesday for representatives of
air taxi and commuter airlines
operating in Ohio.
The program is designed to help
the participants meet new

Qf!S!'

I

overall plan is still that it will be
ours eventually.''
Denton said be needs the Lima
State facility because of over:
crowding. The prison system now
has about 13,800 inmates, but is
designed to hold only 11,000.
The prison director's hopes of
building new prisons have been
jeopardiZed by Gov. James A.
Rhodes' plans to slash aU sta~ spen·
ding by at least 3 percent in 1981.
If mental health treatement within
the prisons system could be
upgraded, Denton said fewer inmates would have to be transferred
to Lima State.

SBA says program
will reduce red tape
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
'federal Small Business Administration has announced a
program to speed up loans to
automobile· dealers and simplify
paperwork and red tape connected
with such loans.
SBA Disll'ict · Director Walter
Fronstin of Columbus said the
program would give special consideration to applications from auto
dealers for bank loans guaranteed
by the SBA. The agency is
authorized to guarantee as much as
90 pe~cent of such loans.
Under the program, special
audited financial statements would
be required in loan applications that
auto dealers submit to banks.

regulations, enhance safety and
provide better understanding bet·
ween the FAA and the affected
airline companies.
The meeting will take place in the
Ohio Division of Aviation offices at
the Ohio State University Airport.

ALL PRICES CUT
· WE NEED MORE ROOM
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE. LIFTBACK
•

WAS !.1595

-

&lt;6.9oo miles&gt;

0 •••••••••••••••••••••

NOW '1295

No, 103 - 1975 OLDS 98 LS
No. 102-A - 1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE.
No. 106 - 1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN
No. 111

1975 OLDS CUT. SUP. SEDAN

No. 116

1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON

.

No. 107 - 1974 OLDS CUT. "S" CPE.
(All Cars Sold As

we·n meet or ~eat anJ deal JOU can make

R~NAIIOUT
~

14295
1977 TOYOTA CELECA
1973 CHEVY ELCAMIN0 .. :............. ~.~ 1•0;:!':.5.: !':·.~ .. 11095
auto., P .S. 11595
1975 DODGE DART ......................Slant
....6,·...........
.
4 Dr., auto ., air, P .S., P . B · 11495
1975 CHEVY IMPALA
1973 OLDS TORONAOO !'.~~~: ~~~:: ~~!~~~?.~~ ;·.~~!~: .~ 1 ~; 11095
1 owner, A·l cond., 4 sp., air .

•

• •••••••••••••• •••••• 0 •

•

• ... •

•

•

•

•

• •

•

•

•

•

• •••• •••••• •• ••••••••••••••••• 0 •••••

1975 MERCURY MONARCH ............. ~.~~~;: :..5:::••~~ 11995
4 Dr., auto ., air, real clean. 12995
GRANADA
1976 FORD
. . ····· ···· ·•··•· ·•···· ·····•······•·
1
1973 FORD MAVERICK ........... :~.".'.~'. ~.~ 1•0·;;, .~-; ;,:.~ • • 1295
1969 FORD STATION WAGON ............................. '19.5
Cl
OO
6 cyl., std .. good cond . 12995

191I' FORD f·l

.................. .········· .........•..

1976 FORD CLUB CAB ....... ~ .......... ~.u.'?; ·.::~;·.~; ~; '2295
1974 CMEVY............. j •• : .......... ~~~~~:~~-.~.c.v.1 :·.~~~~. 11295
.

..

~~

.
DEL RAY TRUCK CAMPER .....................
;........ .. '600
Speci-a l This Week Only . Equipped for LP gas and elec ., self ·
contained, sleeps 6, red and white.

cyl.,

4

spd.

IJSAVE$$
Cr111118 Puff
1977 MUSTANG II
ZDR

1977 PllllO

--

I~)

p

trans.•

AM/FM/1 Track .

V-8, Auto. Trans., Radio.

new tires.

'2995
1976 PONTIAC
lltANS AM

1977 FORD

AM/FM/1 Track. air cond.,

rear defroster,
mileage. Sharp,

low

.'4095
1974 GAWIE 5011
401
VB. auto. trans., PS, PB,
radio_ ·

'795

nso

PICIUP
6 cyl., auto. trllns., PS, p·o .
Radio. One oWner.

'3295
1973 DOOGE POlARO
4DR
va, auto. trans., air, radio.

'595

PAT HILL
. FORD, ·INC.
for A Friendly 0...1, See: Curtis

Jenkinson or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.
PH. HH196

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·

,4,/UO Miles
1976 CAD. DEVI LLE CPE... ............................. 14295

..... i795-

1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE. ...............~~~.'.~i:~~:.·

l979 OLDS TORONADO ...... ........................... 134g5'
1976 OLDS VISTA CRUISER ............................ 12795
1978 OLDS ROYALE CPE................................ 13695
1976 BUICK LIMITED CPE. ........ ...................... 13295•
1977 OLDS CUT. SUP. BRM ................. ~...... ,.... 13295
1977 BUICK C.ENTURY CPE.............................. 13595
'•

.

1980 OLDS CUT. LS SEQ................ ~~.'.1 :~~~.~~! .. ..17250
1980 OLDS 88 ROYALE SED............. ~~...~.0!........ SS870
.1980 OLDS 98 REGENCY SED. 1........... :&lt;~~~~?: ... ~10,500
'

·.

~

.

1980 OLDS CUT. CALAIS CPE............&lt;.~~~~~ ....... 17770;
1977 FORD F-150 .................. }:.:~~;~:'.h;:~~\'?~;.'3995
see One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLD,S-CADILLAC ·INC.
"You: n Like Our Qijalitv Wav of Doing Business''

992-5342 POMEROY

-Sunday 10 AM and 6 PM

I
I.

'i

'5495

No. 119-A - 1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN

My Father's personal
truck, l&lt;anger, Tulane
paint, topper, air cond _, va,
auto trans., PS, PB, Les
f~an 8,000 miles, radial
hres.

:News Notes

GROWS MOST POTATOES
The Soviet Union is the world's
leadi11g grower of p(,tatoes. The
' 1•• .!/nited States•. China,,Polalld and
West Germany fdUow.
· 1

tors by sending them to Lima."
Of the three new psychiatric cen·
ters plarmed, only Dayton's is open.
Construction problems have delayed
the Columbus facility, which is now
expected to be open early next year.
Construction hasn't even begun on
the center planned fqr Cleveland.
Moritz and Rose indicate there is a
possibility of one wing at Lima State
being vacated by about 1983, in
which case it would be taken over by
the state prison system.
" I'm as interested in Lima State
as ever, t• said George Denton, director of the Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction. " The

_ _ _ . CADILLACS

:wolf Pen

Evangelist, Hru'c~ Taylor 9f Zion, IlliDois

convicts transferred to the 64-year
old facility by state prison
psychologists has been unusually
high. Although the new patients
were found legally sane when they
were convicted, . the director said
they were ruled mentaly ill in prison
and sent to Lima State for treat·
men!.
· State Rep. Ben Ros~. R-Lima,
proposes two reasons for the increase in prison transfers.
"First, it may be that the extreme
overcrowding in the state pri!ons,is
causing more mental illness in
prisoners that ever before," he said.
"The second possibility is that the
workers on the line in the prisons are
simplying getting. rid of their bad ac-.

Safety symposium to be held next Tuesd,ay

..

•.

members 'competed' in Showmanship and Horsemanship categories to determi .e who would
represent the area in competition at the State Fair in
Columbus. Betty Jo was one of the five winners selected.

Political tug·o·war. delays conversion

County Council on Ministries
meets at Long Bottom recently

l)orothy Ritchie honored

RIBBON CUTTING - Mikki Conley, Coolville and
Betty Jo Hunt, Long Bottom trim the ribbons on Jess
just prior to the competition at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds Wednesday. About 35 Meigs County 4+H

'.

Sat•

, ..

....

... j

�..

6-Tiie Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 18, 1,'180

Area goings
on. • •

••

----Cancer Answer Line. ---

Aregular feature, prepared by the speCial comfort items to assist in
AI11erican Cancer Society, to keep 1 caring for homebound patients. Inyou informed about cancer.
· cl uded are hospital beds,
Question: "What exactly does at wheelchairs, etc.; 3)o surgical
dressings · which usually , are ·
high risk mean?"
ANSWERiine: Genetic and en- prepared by volunteers; 4) tran·
vironmental risk factors have been sportation of patients to and from
UMW HOLDS PICNIC
associated with several of the most doctors' offices, clinics or hospitals.
The .United Methodist Women of
common forms of cancer. These fac- Depending on local PQlicies and
the Heath United Methodist Church
tors have been identified after .resources, ACS service programs
held its armual picnic on the lawn at
detailed study of vast numbers of may include more extensive service
· the home of Mrs. Betty Fultz recenhealth histories - those of cancer in some communities. Among them
tly. Grace was given by the Rev.
patients and of peopl~ who did not are: home health care, blood
Robert Robinson. Following the dinhave cancer. Examples of genetic programs and activities designed to
ner a short business meeting was
risk factors are. a family history of meet the special needs of families
held with Clara Criswell presiding.
rectal polyps in the occurrence of with children who have cancer.
Mrs. Criswell opened the meeting by
Call 992·7531 for further in'
colorectal
cancer; fair complexion
reading, "To The Master Gar·
related to skin cancer; family formation.
dener." A report on the day apart at
histqry of breast cancer or of
the Heath Church was given.
stomach cancer which appears to in·
Ullian Smith entertained with a
short program. The Rev . Robinson
crease the probability of developing
cancer in those particular sites.
and JoAnn Robinson provided
SPECIAL NOTE: This does not
musical entertainment. Mrs.
Cri.. ·veil clqsed the meeting with
mean that everyone with a genetic
prayer.
factor is going to develop cancer - it
merely means that such people
Hostesses were Betty Holtz, Don·
FRISAT
;i should he aware of their slightly in·
na Byer, Pauline Horton, Juanita
JULY-18·19
,g; creased risk and have periodic
Bachtle, Lillian Smith, Edith
health checkups.
Jividen, Enuna .Wayland, Rose McDade and Marjorie Milhban.
Among environmental factors,
RECEIVE ALL A's - Seven nursing students at Hill; Claudia Fisher, · Wellston; Glenda Ross,
lfiETEOR
cigarette smoking is the ·greatest,
Gallipolis, W.Va.; Betty Hammack, 1;'1. Pleasant, W.
the
Practical
Nursing
School
of
Buckeye
Hills
Career
accounting for more than 70 percent
BffiTHDAY ANNIVERSARY
Rolu&gt;~~ I• MR!In l~~
Center achieved an A average for the spring term. Pic- Va.; Dorma Pearson, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Not pic·
ofthe 100,000 new cases of lung canDINNER HEW
.iiRIIi 1 1m~ lllmi H
illf.t
tured above., left to right, are: Wanda McGuire, Oak lured are Beverly Church, Pi. · Pleasant, and Susan
A surprise birthday . and an- '
cer
in
the
U.S.
annually.
Other
en·
"'I'
Fox, Oak Hili.
vironmental factors are those found
niversary dlrmer was held in honor
in
the workplace - substances such
of Mrs. Terri Smith and Harold E.
Lamaze
cksses
offered
as asbestos, creosote, coal, tar, arSmith celebrating their twentiety
senic, pitch, etc. Your local Unit of
and forty-sixth birthdays respecATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation classes, the American Cancer Society will be
tively. Also honored were John and
sponsored by O'Bieness Hospital, glad to provide more detailed inDebbie. Davidson, ·who were
formation.
will begin on Wednesday, July 30.
celebrating their first anniversa11'.
A turkey dlrmer was served at the
This class is lor couples whose exQuestion: "I see lots of in·
Reports on upcqrning events and malting lists. New names and ad·
pected date of delivery is prior to formation from the American Can·
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
the introduction of a new minister in dresses are also needed.
September 22.
SMith, Middleport. Enjoying the day
cer Society about cigarette smoking,
· . the colmty were highlights of the
Vernon Nease noted three upThe fee for the 5eries is $35. To breast cancer, etc., and I know the
were Mr. and Mrs. Smith and
recent meeting of the Council Coun- corning activities of the County
daughters, Cindy, Tina anc( Kelly,
pre-register for this series, or to Society supports research, but doeS
cil on Ministries · of the United United Methodist Men. The July
request a schedule of future classes,
it give any direct aid to cancer
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Smith and sons,
Methodist Churches held at the Long meeting will he at the Forest Run
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside patients?''·
Ricky and Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
Bottom United Methodist Church.
Church on July 28 at 7:30p.m. There
Drive, Atl)ens, OH. 45701, or call593ANSWERiine: in 1978-79 more
John Davidson, all from Middleport · .
Rev. Richard Thomas, host will be an Ice Cream Social span5049.
than 450,000 cancer patients were ·
and Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Smith,
pastor, led devotions based on II sored by the U. M. Men at the
Pomeroy.
assisted through one or more Ser·
Corinthians 5:17-20. Rev. Thomas Asbury Church on Aug. 23. Proceeds
vice and Rehabilitation programs
Later that evening, homemade ice
concluded
with prayer and led in will go to assist our student ' GBC honor roll named
carried on by more than 3,000 local
cream was served.
' group singing, accompanied by Mrs. ministers in Meigs County. There
Units of the ACS. Units conduct a
Steve Eisnaugle, director of educatioo at
Bonnie Thomas at the piano.
will be a Corn Roast on Aug. 25. - Gallipolis
BLUiness College, has listed the
RECENT VISITORS
basic service program which in·
foUowing students as being on the honor roU for
Mrs. Fay Sauer, council president, Families are invited to attend this
eludes : I) information and guidance
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
the spring quarter which ended June 19,1980.
was tin charge of the business event.
All A's - Gail Anderson, Barbara Burris,
for cancer patients and their
Roscoe Wise and family, Mid·
Elizabeth Double, Sharon HJbdon, Lula Holsteln,
Rev.
Richard
Thomas,
parish
sessi'on.
The
secretary
and
dleport, were Mr. R. C. Wise and
families by helping them make the
De~ie Moore, Sheryl Roush Oliver, Shirley
treasurer's reports were approved, coordinator, announced that he will
Stephenson, Marilyn Stodola, Fran Unroe, Jeff
: daughter, Mrs. William Brown,
best use of ACS services, cominunity
Witlrn!Jn, Sally Humphreys, Tom Perry, Mary
with the Rev. Florence Smith ser· he on vacation July 19-Aug. 4. The
he;llth
services and other resources;
• Dunellon, · Florida. They came
Elkins, Denita Petrie, Cheryl Roush, Sue Turley.
ving as acting secretary for the
Rev. Rohert McGee will be in charge
B or better - Tum Abbott, John Anderson, An; especially for the Wise-Harrison
2) loans of sickroom supplies and
ne Armstrong, carol Bailey, Madenia Cannan,
: wedding which was an event of June session. It was ·noted that two until his return. The Contact
Teresa Clark, Hazel Dnunmond, Cathy Emministers'
were
in
attendance
at
deadline
will
be
Aug,
5.
Sunday,
mert, Mar&lt;:us Geiger, Kaye Hafey, Anrui Hall,
; 14 at the Heath United Methodist
Donald Hill, Thelma Jackson. Fied Jones, Suaie
• Church. Other out..of-town guests Camp Lancaster for the week. They Aug. 10, will be the date for the CoonLee, Rebecca Maynai'd, Rotiert MeMick, Connie
were the Rev; Mark Flyrm and the ty-Wide Pulpit Exchange, with most
Moodl.spaugh, Brenda Nicholson, Joyce Norton,
· who attended the wedding were Mr.
Your love
Pa!Jl Rowe, Ruth Sellers, Darle~e Thornton,
; and Mrs. Ted Scott, Westland, . Rev. David Harris, bOth of the United Methodist ministers par·
Kathryn Trimble, Phillip Weikle, Charla Whitt,
Southern Cluster.
ticipating.
deserves
Joanne Wilson, l...isa Young, Deborah Leach,
; Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Darell Griggs,
Peggy Stevens, Connie Evaru~, William Linn,
Rev.
Robert
McGee,
education
Concern
was
el!J)ressed
for
the
• Columbus;. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam
the finest
Randy Mulford, Drema Roach, Donna Strait, Jill
Walburn, ShHron Rhodes, Janie Exline.
: Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Knight Jr., chairperson, reminded the group "'tev. Wilbur Hilt, pastor of the
The foUowlng students were listed as havinf!
rings.:.
: Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. and about the County-Wide School of Rutland-Salem Center U. M. Cburperfectattendance:
.
Religion for Oct 20-23. The school ches, who has been hospitalized sinDavid Clarkson, Madge Clarkson, Pauline
Keepsake
: Mrs. John Knight, Memphis, Tenn.;
'I
Delaney, Elizabeth Double. Fred Jones, Debbie
will be held at the Chester Church
ce Palm Sunday. Council members
•.Mr. and Mrs. William Sheridan and
Moore, Diane Taylor, Fran Unroe, Dtinita
Petrie, Sue Turley.
· daughters, Maria, Anita, and from 7-9:30 p.m. each evening with approved unanimo~ly a motiqn that
?~~
five classes available: The each church or charge undertske a
.. i-Christina, Waverly; Rick Knight, Sacraments,
Com'parative moneymaking rpoject of their own
·~ ~ ' )..h
: Point Pleasant, W. Va, ; ~r. and
Religions,
The
Book
of Discipline,
choosing
to
help
the
Hilts
witfi
ex·
~
·. ~,,.,,
· Mrs. Doug Lash, McArthur; Mr. and
Youth
Topics,
and
Death
and
Dying.
penses.
:Mrs. Glenn McDonald and daughter,
·:l.~' .
A week of evangelistic services is
The Rev. Robert Robinson reporATTEND SEMINAR
:Ann, Lexington, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
~~'!
IN NEW·YORK
r •.
: Lawrence Harrison, Mrs. Kathy plarmed for Sept. 21·26 at the ted for the Social Concerns ComPomeroy
United
Methodist
Church.
mittee.
Membership
in
the
Food
CoRoger
W.
Hysell
and
Paul
G.
Eich,
M!I GI\IET
.:
BEANADE l iE
· Brown, Athens; Mr. Ted Lynch, The
Keepsa ke guaranteed perfec t diamond engage , Plains; Miss Bebby Lambert, Oak Ji;vangelist will he the Rev. Paul Op now numbers 66. Food deliveries representing the Farmers Bank of
will be July 17, Aug. 14, and Sept. 11, Pomeroy, are in New York City to
ment rings and 14 Karal go ld wedding rin gs co me
, Hill, and Miss Chrisako Hazama, Hawks, formerly of Gallipolis-Grace
Church. Local pastors and charges with orders due Aug. 7 and Sept. 4. attend a one day seminar to be held
in a large range o f st yles a nd prices.
: Osaka, Japan.
Choose Kee psa ke rings, the perfec t way tu \ h (l \\
will provide leadership and special
Following adjournment, refresh- Friday, July 18, on NOW accounts.
yo
ur Jove , when it 's for keeps.
music
each
evening.
'
ments
were
served.
The
next
This seminar is being sponsored by
RETURN HOME
. The Rev. Florence Smith, commeeting will he Aug. 18 at the Heath Manufacturer's Hanover Trust
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Young and
Keepsake~·
munications chairperson, noted the · Church, Middleport.
Company. The Farmers Bank has
Elmora Boice have recently retur- need to upgrade the "Contact"
•
been a correspondent of Manufacneil home from a trip to San Fran·
turer's
Hanover since it opened for
cisco, Calif. They flew from Colum·
business
in 1904 and utiliZes this
. bus for their visit with Dr. and Mrs. ·
Bank
exclusively
for aU its foreign
· R. R. Boice, and while there visited
monetary
transactions.
: the Winchester House, in San Jose,
21&lt; E. MAIN • POMEROY
: toured Tapa Valley Wine Country,
Christian Brothers Winery, and
The birthday of Dorthy Ritchie Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Esther
Charles King Winery, went to Car- ;r&lt;as celebrated when Chester Coun- Ridenour, Betty Roush, Zelda
mel, Monta Ray, Big Sur, Lake
cil Daughters of America met Weher, Julie Rose, Lethil Wood,
Tahoe, Nevada and enjoyed a bay
Tuesday night.
Elizabeth Hayes, Alta Ballard, Jean
cruise in San Francisco under the
District Deputy Dorthy Ritchie Frederick, Leona Hensley, Ada
:Golden Gate Bridge.
talked about State session, and Morris, Dorthy ' Ritchie, Erma
: Dr. Jim Russell, cousin of Mrs.
asked the District to present Colors Cleland, Margaret Tuttle, and Mar·
· :Young, flew down in his private
and .to have the ailver offering on cia Keller.
:plane and took Mr. and Mrs. Young
Tuesday and Wednesday. There will
Refreslunents were served by Er.BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
and Mrs. Boice to San Diego to visit
be a practice set later.
ma Cleland and Opal Hollon.
ALL SEATS JUST $1.50
several points of interest including
.
.
The next regular meeting will be
531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35 NORTH -Phone 446- 4524
Tlajuana, Mexico and LaJolla.
Aug. 5 at 8 p.m.; there will be
initiation and all members are asked
to weaqvhite.
CWTHING DAY SET
At the close of the meeting, Dorthy
The Gallia·Meigs Community AcRitchie was escorted to the altar and tion Agency will hold a free clothing
presented a gift from the counciL All day for aU low income families on
sang "Happy Birthday," then Monday, July 21, from 9 a.m. until
A picnic dinner was enjoyed at the
Elizabeth Hayes performed a birth- noon. The agency's clothing bank is
home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tuckerday skit and presented a gift
now located in the old high school
man Saturday, June 28. Attending
Those present were Opal Hollon, building in Cheshire.
:rrom Springfield, Ohio were Mr. Guy
'Tuckerman, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Tuckerman and daughter, Melanie
Johnson and Mrs. Gertrude Johnson
Yon are cordiaJiy invited to attend
and local relatives attendihg were
Dorothy Reeves, Mr. -and Mrs.
Robert Reeves, Bryan, Brandi and
A GOSPEL MEETING
·Robbie, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell
'and Jeffrey, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda, Ronald and Leslie
at the
S'fl"' ngCHEECH MARIN o11d THOMAS C H~G
1st WEEK ! 7:00 &amp; 9:00 P.l~ .
Frank and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam,
SAT
&amp;
SUN MATINEES ONLY 1:00 &amp;3:00
Bill and Carolyn.
WESTSIDE
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Mr. and ·Mrs. Bill McElroy, Jeff,
Joey and Jessica, spent Saturday at
the Zoo, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
200 West Main Street- Pomeroy, Ohio
COlumbus were weekend visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElrOy.
Iva Johnson was weekend visitor
of Mrs. J. R. Murphy a~d family. ,
JULY 14 thru JULY 20, 1980
~-

..

JUDGING - Kristin Anderson, Pomeroy (left) and Tammy ErVin, Racine present their horses to the
judges in the showmanship competition.

t

LAST MINUTE PREPARATIONS- Lady Sunrise Queen is prepared
for competition by her owner Kristin Anderson of Pomeroy. Kristin was
one of the five winners selected to represent the area at the State F'air in
Colwnbus. The other winners were Erin Anderson, Pomeroy, Betty Jo
Hunt, Long Bottom, Tarruny Kennedy, Tuppers Plains, and Brenda
Williams, Harrisonville.

, UMA, Ohio (AP ) - A political
and economic tug-of-war is delaying
the proposed .conversion of Lima
State Hospital from a hospital for
.the criminally insane to a prison.
Dr. Timothy Moritz, .director of
the Ohio Department of Mental
Health, announced two Years ago
that his department would close
Lima State by 1982 and replace it
with three new forensic psychiatry
centers in Cleveland, Columbus and
Dayton.
The original timetable, however,
has been disrupted because of
population increases at Lima State
and construction delays at the new
centers.
.
When Moritz revealed his pliJn on
Aug. 2, 1978, Lima State housed 386
patients. He predicted the number
would be gradually reduced until aU
the patients could be transferred to
the three smaller centers which
would have a total capacity of 294.
But the population has not
declined at Lirna State, which tills
week houses 417 patients.
Mortiz explained the. number of

Firestone Co. gets tempora·r y ·restraining order .
Bernard Frazier said Thursday. He
AKRON , Ohio (AP) - A tern·
said
the onler was expected be
porary restraining order blocking a
signed
by U.S. District Judge Robert
Labor Department ban on governM.
Parker
in Beaumont, Texas.
ment contracts with Firestone Tire I
Parker
on
Thursday issued a verRubber Co. is e~pected to be signed
bal order giving Firestone tern·
today by a federal judge in Texas, a
Firestone spokesman said.
-- porary "injunctive relief" and said
further .action could be expected
. " I was told by our attorneys that a
today.
temporary restraining order had
The Labor Department charged
been granted and that there would
Firestone with violating federal
be a hearing pn Aug . 28," spokesman

.

hiring practices at a plant in
Orange. Texas, and barred the firm
from future goverrunent contracts.
. The department also ordered
suspension or cancellation of
Firestone's current contracts with
the government, subject to review to
assure such action won't impair
national security. Firestone's gover·
nment contracts are estimated to be
worth at least $40 million a year.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Federal ' Aviation Administration
will conduct a safety symposium
next Tuesday for representatives of
air taxi and commuter airlines
operating in Ohio.
The program is designed to help
the participants meet new

Qf!S!'

I

overall plan is still that it will be
ours eventually.''
Denton said be needs the Lima
State facility because of over:
crowding. The prison system now
has about 13,800 inmates, but is
designed to hold only 11,000.
The prison director's hopes of
building new prisons have been
jeopardiZed by Gov. James A.
Rhodes' plans to slash aU sta~ spen·
ding by at least 3 percent in 1981.
If mental health treatement within
the prisons system could be
upgraded, Denton said fewer inmates would have to be transferred
to Lima State.

SBA says program
will reduce red tape
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
'federal Small Business Administration has announced a
program to speed up loans to
automobile· dealers and simplify
paperwork and red tape connected
with such loans.
SBA Disll'ict · Director Walter
Fronstin of Columbus said the
program would give special consideration to applications from auto
dealers for bank loans guaranteed
by the SBA. The agency is
authorized to guarantee as much as
90 pe~cent of such loans.
Under the program, special
audited financial statements would
be required in loan applications that
auto dealers submit to banks.

regulations, enhance safety and
provide better understanding bet·
ween the FAA and the affected
airline companies.
The meeting will take place in the
Ohio Division of Aviation offices at
the Ohio State University Airport.

ALL PRICES CUT
· WE NEED MORE ROOM
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE. LIFTBACK
•

WAS !.1595

-

&lt;6.9oo miles&gt;

0 •••••••••••••••••••••

NOW '1295

No, 103 - 1975 OLDS 98 LS
No. 102-A - 1974 OLDS CUT. SUP. CPE.
No. 106 - 1975 OLDS ROYALE SEDAN
No. 111

1975 OLDS CUT. SUP. SEDAN

No. 116

1975 BUICK ESTATE WAGON

.

No. 107 - 1974 OLDS CUT. "S" CPE.
(All Cars Sold As

we·n meet or ~eat anJ deal JOU can make

R~NAIIOUT
~

14295
1977 TOYOTA CELECA
1973 CHEVY ELCAMIN0 .. :............. ~.~ 1•0;:!':.5.: !':·.~ .. 11095
auto., P .S. 11595
1975 DODGE DART ......................Slant
....6,·...........
.
4 Dr., auto ., air, P .S., P . B · 11495
1975 CHEVY IMPALA
1973 OLDS TORONAOO !'.~~~: ~~~:: ~~!~~~?.~~ ;·.~~!~: .~ 1 ~; 11095
1 owner, A·l cond., 4 sp., air .

•

• •••••••••••••• •••••• 0 •

•

• ... •

•

•

•

•

• •

•

•

•

•

• •••• •••••• •• ••••••••••••••••• 0 •••••

1975 MERCURY MONARCH ............. ~.~~~;: :..5:::••~~ 11995
4 Dr., auto ., air, real clean. 12995
GRANADA
1976 FORD
. . ····· ···· ·•··•· ·•···· ·····•······•·
1
1973 FORD MAVERICK ........... :~.".'.~'. ~.~ 1•0·;;, .~-; ;,:.~ • • 1295
1969 FORD STATION WAGON ............................. '19.5
Cl
OO
6 cyl., std .. good cond . 12995

191I' FORD f·l

.................. .········· .........•..

1976 FORD CLUB CAB ....... ~ .......... ~.u.'?; ·.::~;·.~; ~; '2295
1974 CMEVY............. j •• : .......... ~~~~~:~~-.~.c.v.1 :·.~~~~. 11295
.

..

~~

.
DEL RAY TRUCK CAMPER .....................
;........ .. '600
Speci-a l This Week Only . Equipped for LP gas and elec ., self ·
contained, sleeps 6, red and white.

cyl.,

4

spd.

IJSAVE$$
Cr111118 Puff
1977 MUSTANG II
ZDR

1977 PllllO

--

I~)

p

trans.•

AM/FM/1 Track .

V-8, Auto. Trans., Radio.

new tires.

'2995
1976 PONTIAC
lltANS AM

1977 FORD

AM/FM/1 Track. air cond.,

rear defroster,
mileage. Sharp,

low

.'4095
1974 GAWIE 5011
401
VB. auto. trans., PS, PB,
radio_ ·

'795

nso

PICIUP
6 cyl., auto. trllns., PS, p·o .
Radio. One oWner.

'3295
1973 DOOGE POlARO
4DR
va, auto. trans., air, radio.

'595

PAT HILL
. FORD, ·INC.
for A Friendly 0...1, See: Curtis

Jenkinson or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.
PH. HH196

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·

,4,/UO Miles
1976 CAD. DEVI LLE CPE... ............................. 14295

..... i795-

1979 CAD. DEVILLE CPE. ...............~~~.'.~i:~~:.·

l979 OLDS TORONADO ...... ........................... 134g5'
1976 OLDS VISTA CRUISER ............................ 12795
1978 OLDS ROYALE CPE................................ 13695
1976 BUICK LIMITED CPE. ........ ...................... 13295•
1977 OLDS CUT. SUP. BRM ................. ~...... ,.... 13295
1977 BUICK C.ENTURY CPE.............................. 13595
'•

.

1980 OLDS CUT. LS SEQ................ ~~.'.1 :~~~.~~! .. ..17250
1980 OLDS 88 ROYALE SED............. ~~...~.0!........ SS870
.1980 OLDS 98 REGENCY SED. 1........... :&lt;~~~~?: ... ~10,500
'

·.

~

.

1980 OLDS CUT. CALAIS CPE............&lt;.~~~~~ ....... 17770;
1977 FORD F-150 .................. }:.:~~;~:'.h;:~~\'?~;.'3995
see One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS OLD,S-CADILLAC ·INC.
"You: n Like Our Qijalitv Wav of Doing Business''

992-5342 POMEROY

-Sunday 10 AM and 6 PM

I
I.

'i

'5495

No. 119-A - 1974 OLDS 98 SEDAN

My Father's personal
truck, l&lt;anger, Tulane
paint, topper, air cond _, va,
auto trans., PS, PB, Les
f~an 8,000 miles, radial
hres.

:News Notes

GROWS MOST POTATOES
The Soviet Union is the world's
leadi11g grower of p(,tatoes. The
' 1•• .!/nited States•. China,,Polalld and
West Germany fdUow.
· 1

tors by sending them to Lima."
Of the three new psychiatric cen·
ters plarmed, only Dayton's is open.
Construction problems have delayed
the Columbus facility, which is now
expected to be open early next year.
Construction hasn't even begun on
the center planned fqr Cleveland.
Moritz and Rose indicate there is a
possibility of one wing at Lima State
being vacated by about 1983, in
which case it would be taken over by
the state prison system.
" I'm as interested in Lima State
as ever, t• said George Denton, director of the Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction. " The

_ _ _ . CADILLACS

:wolf Pen

Evangelist, Hru'c~ Taylor 9f Zion, IlliDois

convicts transferred to the 64-year
old facility by state prison
psychologists has been unusually
high. Although the new patients
were found legally sane when they
were convicted, . the director said
they were ruled mentaly ill in prison
and sent to Lima State for treat·
men!.
· State Rep. Ben Ros~. R-Lima,
proposes two reasons for the increase in prison transfers.
"First, it may be that the extreme
overcrowding in the state pri!ons,is
causing more mental illness in
prisoners that ever before," he said.
"The second possibility is that the
workers on the line in the prisons are
simplying getting. rid of their bad ac-.

Safety symposium to be held next Tuesd,ay

..

•.

members 'competed' in Showmanship and Horsemanship categories to determi .e who would
represent the area in competition at the State Fair in
Columbus. Betty Jo was one of the five winners selected.

Political tug·o·war. delays conversion

County Council on Ministries
meets at Long Bottom recently

l)orothy Ritchie honored

RIBBON CUTTING - Mikki Conley, Coolville and
Betty Jo Hunt, Long Bottom trim the ribbons on Jess
just prior to the competition at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds Wednesday. About 35 Meigs County 4+H

'.

Sat•

, ..

....

... j

�,_

8-The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 18,1980

~----~------------~~--~T---~~
£
EUIS &amp; SONS 501110
The t:hurch

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINITY CHURCH . Rev

W

H

Comptete
Automotive
Serv•ce

of Your t:hoice
This Sunday.

Pernn

pastor , Roy Moyer , Sunday schoo l su pt
Church School 9 J S o m wo rsh1p ser
..-ICe 10 JOo m Cho1r rehear sal , Tuesday
7 30 p m under dm!c:tton of Al 1ce Nease
POMEROY CH URCH OF THt NAZARENE

Corner Un1on and Mulberry Rev Clyde V
Henderson pastor Sunday school 9 30
om Glen McClung sup! mornmg war
sh 1p, 10 30 om e\lemng serv1ce 7 30
mid week serv1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 32b E
Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Uroves rector Summer sc hedule - Sun
day se rv1ces at 10 30 a m Holy Ccmmu
n1on to be ce lebra ted Jufl' t&lt;~Q, Aug 3
Aug 17 and Sep t 7 Morn1ng Preyer and
sermon on all other' Sunday s N o Church
S&lt;hool or nursery core prov1ded dunng
su mmer months Coffee hour m the Ponsh
Hall1mmed•ately fo ll owmg th e serv1ce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Mom St N e •l Proudfoot pa stor . B•ble
school 9 30 a m mormng wprsh•p 10 30
am Youth meetin gs , 6 30 p m evenmg
WOI.o•llp 7 30 V{ednesdoy mght prayer
meetin g and 81b le study , 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ~RMY 115 Butternu l
Ave Pomeroy En\loy and Mrs Roy W1n
mg olh ce rs 1n charge Sunday hohness
meehng 10 am Sunday Schoo l 10 30
o m Sunday sc hoo l leader YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p m
sal val10n meehng
venous speakers and mus1c spec1als
Thursdoy - 10 om to '2 p m lod•es Home
League all women mv 1ted 7 30 p m
prayer me etmg and B1ble study Rev Noel
Herman , teacher
BURLINGTON
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEL Route 1, Shade - Pa stor Bobby
EUons Sunday schoo l 5 p m
Sunday
worship 5 45 p m
Wednesday prayer
se rv1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHfHST ~00 W Mom Sl , ~n. 5235 Vocal
mu siC Sunday worsh1p 10 a m
B1bl e
study 11 a m worsh1p , b p m Wed nes
day 81b le study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Rev Rolph Sm1th pastor Sunday school
9 30
a m , Mrs
Worley FranCIS
supenntendent Preochmg serv•ces f1rsl &amp;
tt-urd Sundays followmg Sunday School
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preachmg 9 30 a m , hrst and second Sun
days of each month , th1rd and fourth Sun
days each month worship serv •ce at 7 30
p m Wednesday evem n gs at 7 30 Prayer
and B1ble Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albe rt
01ttes Sabbath School Supenntenden t
R•to Wh1te Sabbath School Saturday
afternoon at 2 00 w 1th Worsh1p Serv•ce
tolla wmg of 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sis ter Harnett Worne r Supt
Sunday
Schoo l, 9 30 o m mornmg worsh 1p 10 45
am
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Cas fo
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m evenmg
worsh1p 7 30 Thursday evenmg p ra yer
serv•ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Dov1d Mann
mm1 ster W1lllam Watson Sunday school
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m mornmg
worsh1p 10 30 a m
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTIST 2H1 Mulbe"y
Ave , Pomeroy Hershel McClure, Sl.Jndoy
schoo,l supe n ntendent Sunday school
9 30 am morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 even
1ng worsh1p 7 00 p m M1dweek prayer
serviCe 7 00 p m
1
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER De xter
Rd , Langsvi ll e Oh •o . Rev C lyd e Ferrell,
Pastor Sunday School 11 a m Saturday
preochmg ser\IICes 7 30 p m Wednesday
evemng 81ble study of 7 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Ba1ley
Run Rood Rev Emmett Rowson , pasto r
Handley Dunn supt Sunday school 10
a m Sunday evemng serv •ce 7 30 B•ble
teachmg 7 30 p m Thursday
DYESVIllE COMMUNITY
CHURCH
l'toger C Turner pastor Sunday sc hdol
9 30 a m
Sunday mornmg worsh ip
10 30 Su nday evening serviC e 7 30
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
pastor, Mrs
Russell Young , Sunday ~
Sc hool Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Even•ng worsh 1p 7 30 Wednesday prayer
meetmg , 7 30 p m
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
RaCin e- Rev Jame s Satterfield pastor
Sunday
M orn mg worsh1p 9 11 5 o m
schoo l 10 45 a m even1ng worsh1p , 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
lad1 es prayer
meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
S1xt h and Palmer t he Rev Mark M cC lung
Sunday sc hool 9 15 a m Randy Hayes
Sunday School
supermtendent
Don
R1ggs ass t supt Morn1ng Worsh•p 10 15
om Youth meeting 7 30 p m Wednesday 1ncludmg wee tots eager beaver s
tumor astronauts , and 1un1or and semor
h1gh BVF
ch01r pract1 ce
8 30 p m
Wednesday prayer mee ting and Btble
study Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST Mtddlepa't 5th
and Motn , Bob Melton m1n1ster M 1ke
Gerlach super mtendent 81ble school
9 30 om , mormng worship 10 30 o m ,
youth group Sunday 6 30 p m e\len•ng
worsh1p , 7 00 pray e r serv1ce 7 00 p m
Wednesdoy
M ID DLEI'.ORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broom e pastor B1ll
Wh 1te , Sunday schoo l supt
Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 a m mornmg worshtp I 0 30
am Sunday ev ongelisllc meet1ng 7 00
p m Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY , Dw1ght L Zav1tz d~rec
to'
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernes t Stnck lm pastor Sunday church
schoo l 9 30 a m Mrs Home$ ' , supt
morning worshtp 10 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school , 9 30om
RIChard Va ughan supt Mornmg worsh 1p

the t:hurch
of Your t:hoice
This Sunday

Sunday

RIGGS' USED CARS, INC.

Psalms

MARK tSTORE
'
Middleport

Psalms

4 1·8
Monday
Psalms

3 1-8

Tuesday
~_Jc_

~
Ray A:lgos
I StRt7
Ph 915 4100

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F Ful11, Mgr
' Ph "2 2101
Pomerov1

PIZZA SHACK

1

2 1- 12

E1t In or
Carry Out
124 E

Wednesday

,...,n

Job
42 1-10

"2 6304
pomeroy

Thursday
Zephameh
2 1·3

HEINER'S
BAKERY

Fflday
II Chromcles

121 ·1 2

Saturday
1sa1ah

49.6·16

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescrtpf1ons
992 7955
Pomeroy

Meigs County Br•nch

They had waited lor this real vacation - th•s long tnp
-

216E Makl

for years. But thts time it was different. thts Hme he

wouldn"t be goong bock to hos 1ob.
At first, retirement seemed frightening, like betng shut

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance

P. I. PAULEY,
AGENT

off from the mainstream of 6fe. He had seen too many
men age beyond the1r ~ears, after the1r career ended He
had no w1sh to be on the srdelmes. He and hts Wife could
have mo...ed to a warmer clrmate and JUSt have taken It

Services

Nationwide Ins. Co
of Columbu!l, 0
104W Main

easy. He didn"twanlthal So, before he lelthome, he had •
long talk with his minister.
He found thot there was plenty a man his age could do

H4 E. MIIn

tt2-5130 Pomeroy

WAID CROSS

m -:n11 Pomeroy

VIRGIL B.

Financially secure. he could afford to volunteer for a Job. ln

fact, through the Church there was work he could do that

SONS SJORE

TEAFORD SR.

would spread to the farthest comers of the wo11d.

Groar•i-

Gen~r•l

MtrchlndiM
R•c:lrw Mf-2550

'"
SecOnd
PDmllf'Gy
m-nu

R1ght now, he is enJoying this 't'Bcation. He IS savoring
e't'ery moment of tl Because. when he gets home, he s
COPYRIGHT

goong to lead a full and useful hie And thafs the way he

19110

wants tl

KEISlER AOVEATJSING SERVICE
p 0 B01lll02•
CHARLOTTESVILLE ¥1AGNIA l~

ttend The t.;b. url~hl
of Your Choice

Church &amp; OffiCe Supplies
GIFTS

'

NEW YORK
CLOTHING

M 1ddleport

/? '

~(~

HOUSE-,~
-, v1~.

IIERMIT"S KORNER
Pomeroy , Oluo

\

RIDENOUR SUPPLl

This Sunday.

1

Attend The
Church of
Your t:hoicc

FURNITURE I HARDWARE
Hetmel•te S.ws

FRENCH'S

SUNOCO

SERVICE

CENTERS

~
510 N. 2nd

212 W Moln

-

Pomero., m -tH2 Mlddleoorl m ·:t&lt;51

Wm

Bill
Owner

P'~tt14)7412177

'

ZION CHURCH O F CHRIST , Pome roy
FLATWOOD S Church School 10 am
6
Hamsonvdle Rd Robert Purtell po ster
Wo rsh1p II a m
B• l l M cEirov , Sunday sch oo l su pt Sunday
MIDDLEPORT ClUSTER
school 9 30 om mormng worsh1p and
HEATH , Chu rch School 9 30 am War
commun 1on , 10 30 om . Sunday worsh1p
shtp I 0 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
serv 1ce
7 p m Wednesday even1ng
Robmson Pastor
prayer me et ~ng and B1ble study 7 p m
RUTLAN D Chur ch School 9 30 a m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHUR CH Pone
Wors h1p 10 30 a m Wdbur H1lt Post o r
Grove The Rev W1 lhom M idd leswo rth
SAlEM CENTER " Worsh1p 9 a m Church
Pastor Church serv1ces 9 30om Sun day
Schoo l 9 45 a m
Sc hool l O 30 am
SYRACUSE CLU STER
BRADBURY CH UR CH OF CHRIST Je" y
Rev, Stan ley Mernhed Mm1 ste r
Pmgley past o r Sunday school 9 30 a tn
~OREST RUN Worshp 9 o m Church
mormng worshtp , tO 30om Wednesday
School lOam
evemng service 7 30
MINERSVILLE, Church School 9 om
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev Earl Shu ler
Worsh1p 10om
pastor Sundov school 9 30 a.m Church
ASBURY Church School 9 50 c m Wor
se rviCe
7 p m , youth mee1mg 6
shtp 11 a m B1ble Study 7 30 p m Thurs
p m Tuesday B1ble Study 7 p m
dov UMW f1 st Tuesday
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZAREN E.
SOUTHERN CLU STER
Rev John A Coffman pastor Martha
Rev Dov1d Horns
Wo lfe Cha1rman of the Boa rd o f Chnst1on
Rev Mark Flyn n
L1f e Sundoy School 9 30 a m morn1ng
Rev Florence Sm11h
wo rsh1p 10 30 Sunday evemng worsh•p
H1 lton VVolfe
7 30 p m Prayer meet111Q Wednesday
BETHAN Y (Dorcas) Worship 9 00 a m
7 JO p m
Church Sc hool I 0 00 o m
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don L Walker
CARMEL Chruch Schoo l 9 30 o m War ·
Pastor , Robert Sm1th Sunday sc hool
sh1p 10 30 a m 2nd and .4th Sundays
sup t Sunday school 9 30 a m mormng
APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30 a m
worsh1p 10 40 a m Sunday even 1ng wor
Wors hip 7 30 p m h t and 3rd Sundays
sh1p 7 30 Wednesday cvemng B1ble
Prayer meehng Wednesday 7 30 p m
study 7 30
Fellowsh1p supper f1rst Saturday 6 p m
Rev
R D
DAN VIlLE WE SLEY AN
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30 c m
EAST LETART Chruch School 9 a m
mornmg worsh1p 10 45 youth serv1ce
Worshtp serviCe 10 o m Prayer meehng
b 45 p m
evenmg worsh•p 7 30 p m
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tues·
prayer and pro1se , Wednesday 7 30 p m
day7 30p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPT IST Rev Morv1n
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schoal l O
Morkm , pa stor Steve llftle Sunday school
a m , worsh1p 11 o m Cho1r proct•co
su p t Sunday sch ool 10 om
mornmg
Thursday , 8 p m
wors h1p 11 om Sunday evemng worlETART FALlS- Worship servi ce Yom
ship 7 30 Prayer meel •ng and B1ble
Ch urch Schoo l1 0a m
study Thursday 7 30 p m yo uth ser v1ce
MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 am
bp m Sunday
,
Church School10 30 a m
CHE STER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E
MORSE CHAPEL Church Schoo l 9 30
Ro bmson pastor Sunday sc hoo l , 9 30
am Worsh •p 11 am
o m wors h1p serviCe 11 a m evemng
PORTLAND Church Schoo l 6 30 p m
serv •ce 7 00 youth serv iCe We dn es day
Even1ng Wors h1p
7 30 p m
You lh
7 OO p m
Meetmg , Tuesday &amp;\lenmg
lAN GSVI llE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
SUTTON Church 'school 9 30 a m War
Robert Mu sse( pastor Sunday schoo l
sh1p 1st and 3rd Sundays 10 30 o m
9 JO a m Roy S1gmon supt m ornmg
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
worsh 1p 10 30 Sunday evenmg serviCe
Re; RIChard W Thomas
7 30 m•d week se rviCe Wednesday 7
Duane svdenstncker Sr
pm
John W Do uglas
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA ZARE NE .
•
Charles Dom1gan
10 30
Rev Jorhes B Kittle past or N o rman
JOPPA Worsh1p 9 00 a m
Church
SY RACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Presley Su nday Schoo l Su pen nt enden t
School 10 00 o m
Church Worsh•p se rviCe 9 JO a m Sunday
Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m mornmg wor
CHE
STER
Worsh•p
9
o
m
Church
Sc hool 10 30 am Mrs. Sampson Hall
sh1p 10 45 a m
evangelistiC ser v1ce 7
School I 0 a m Choir Rehearsal 7 p m ,
supt
p m Prayer and Pro1se Wednesday 7
Thursdays a,b le Study Thursdays
RUTLAND CHURC~ OF GOD Rev Bob
p m youth meetmg 7 p m M en s pray er
7 30 p m
by Porter pastor Su nday school, 10 a m ,
meehng Soll.J rday , 7 p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School al 9 30
Sunday worsh 1p 11 a m Sundov evenmg
EDtN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRI ST
serviCe 7 p m Wednesday Fom• ly Tro• ~ a m Evemng Worsh1p ot 7 30 p m Th ur s
Elden R Blake pa stor Sunday Sc hoo l 10
day
81ble
Study
7
JO
p
m
mg Hour , 7 p m Wednesday worstup ser
o m
~obert Reed supt
M ornmg se r ·
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 o m
VICe, 7 30p m
man 11 o m
Sunday n1ght serv1ces
Mormng Worship 10 30 om Even1ng Wor·
HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH Nea'
Chm flon Endeavor 7 30 p m Sor1g ser
sh p 7 30 p m B1ble Study WednesdaYs at
long Bottom Edsel Hart pas to r Sunday
v1ce
8 p m
PreOchltlg 8 30 p m
7 JOp m
schoo l lOam Church 7 30 p m praye r
M •dwee k Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7
ALFRED Sunday School ot 9 115 om
meet1ng 7 30 p m Thursday
p m Alv1n Reed lay leader
M o rn.ng Worsh1p o t 11 am Youth b 30
MIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAl
Th"d
CH UR(.H OF JESUS CHRI ST lacaled al
p m Su ndays Wednesday N1ght Prover
Ave
the Rev W•ll1om Kn1ttel pm tor
Ru t land on New L1mo Road nex t to Forest
Meeting 7 30 p m
Tho~os Kelly SuMdoy School Supt Sun
Acre l'ark Rev Ray Rouse pastor Rober t
ST PAUL (Tuppers Plo1ns ) Sunday
day schoo l 10 o m Classes fo r all a ges ,
Musser
Sundav Schoo l supt
Sunday
Schoo l 9 00 a m M or n1ng Wo rs h1p at
evenmg servtc e
7 30
B1bl e study
school I 0 JO a m worsh1p 7 30 p m 81
I 0 00 a m 81ble Study 7 30 p m Tu es day
Wednesday 7 30 p m
you th serviCes
ble St udy , Wedn esday , 7 30 p m Sotur
SO UTH BETHEL (S il ver H1dge) Sunday
Fudav, 7 30 p m
Sct1oo l 9 00 a m Mornmg Wosh 1p 10 00 day n1ght prayer serviCe 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTI ST Come'
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI ST IAN Roge'
a m Wednesdov B1ble StiJdy , 7 30 p ~ m
Ash and Plum , Rolph But cher, pastor
' Watson pastor M•ldred ltegl er Sundav
KENO
CHURC
H
m
CHRIST
Olove'
Saturday eventng serv1ce 7 30 p m Sun
Swam, suPenntendent Sun day sc hoo l sc hool supt M ornmg worsh 1p q 30 a m
day school, 1o 30 a m
!:iundoy schoo l HJ ~ a m eo~enl ng ser
1./ JO every week
MEIGS
VICe '/ 30 ,
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION
Rev
Ke1th
COOPERATIVE PARI SH
MT UNION BA PTIST Joe Sayre Sunday
l:.bl.n pastor Sunday School, '} 30 o m ,
METHODIST CH URCH
Sc hoo l Super~ ntenen t Su ndew school li 45
Leonard G1lmore f1rs t e lder even mg ser RIChard W Thomas O~rector
a m evem ng worsh1p 7 :JO p m Praye r
VICe, 7 30 p m
Wednesday
praye r
POMEROY CLU STER
meo llng 7 30 p m Wednesday
meetmg 7 30 p m
Rev Robe rt M cGee
rU PP~R &gt; PLAINS CHURCH Of CHRI&gt;T
BEAR WAllOW RIDGE CH URCH O F
Rev , James Corb11t
Vmcen f Wa ters pas~or Howord Bla.r (ol
Duane
Wordyn
m1n1st ~r B1ble
CHRIST
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 am
well su pe nnf.enden! Sunday School 9 30
class 'I :JO am mornmg wo r shi p , 10 :JO
Worship serv •ce 10 30 a m Cho•r reh ear
om , morn .ng chu rG h 10 JO o fli . Sunday
o 111
sven1ng
worsh1p
6 JO p m
sal Wednesday 7 p m k ev Robert
evon lf19 !lei v1ce 1 :.10 ~\led nesdoy 81b le
Wed nes day I:S1ble s tu dy b JO p m
McGee , pastor
~ t udy I :JU p m
Nt
W
&gt;TI
Vt
HSVIllE
COM
M
U
NIT
Y
ENTERP~ I SE Worsh 1p f.J a m '::hurch
LHA RT t-A LL ~ UNIH:O 8RI:THIU:N Re\1,
Church Sunde¥ Scho"i &amp;erviCc '! 45 a m
SchoollUo m
h ccla nd Notrts, pastor Floyd Noms
Worsh •p serv 1ce I U JO Evo 11 gei1S t •c Su r
ROCK SPRINGS Churct'l Sc hool 10 o m
sup I ~ undoy sc hoa~ '130 a m , mormng
v1ce
'I :JU p m
Wednesday
~•oyer
Worslltp lOam UM Yf. b JO p m
sc tmo n,
10 ,10 o ..m, 1 fo'tov.er se r v'"ce,
·~s •
•
Jneet1ng f JU
¥
..,,

"v&gt;c,,..

· Athens Coonty
Sallinp &amp; loin
Co.

.J:

"' •'

Wednesday 7 JO p m
CHE sTER CH URCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote pa stor Fronk Rttfle
supt Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m Worsh •p
serv•ce I I a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
lAUREl
CliFF FREE
METHODI ST
CHURCH Rev Floyd "'f.t, Shook pas tor
Lloyd W nght Sunday School Supt Morn
•ng Wo r sh1p q 30 om
Sunday School
10 :.!0 o m . Wednesday Praye r and B1bi e
Study 7 30 p m Sunday evemng worsh1p
7 30 p m Chelf Pracllce Thursday , 7 p m
DEX TER CHURCH O F CHR IST Cha d es
Russell Sr
m1m ster RICk Macomber
sup! Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m worshtp
serv1ce 10 30 am H1ble Study Tuesday
730pm
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JE SUS
CHRI ST OF LATTER DAY SAI N TS Pod land
Rae~ne Road
W• l l1am Roush
pos l or
Phyl l1 s Stobart Sunday School Supt Sun
d ay School 9 30 o m Morn~ng wo rsh1p
10 30 a m Sun day eve ntng se r \IICe 7 p m
Wednesdav evemng pray er serv•ces 7 30

pm
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shu ler
posior Worsh1p serviCe 9 30 o m Su nday
sc hoo l 10 30 a m 81bl e Stu dy and prayer
serviCe Thursday 7 JO p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury Rood
Gorv Kmg po ster Sunday sc hoo l 9 30
am Ralph Car l s up e r~ntendent evemng
warsh •p
7 30 p m
Prayer meehng
Wednesda y 7 30 p m
LONG
BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Tom
RKhoson past or Wallace Dam ewood
S undoy-Sc h oo~ · Supermtendent Worsh1p
serv1ce at 9 a m B•ble Schoo l 10 a m
HYSEL L RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Thurs.
day eve nmg serviCes 7 30 Rev Cart Sun
day mornmg serviCes 9 30 and eve n1n~
serv1ces 7 30 p m , Rev Durham
•
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a ! Bo ld
Knob located on Coun ty Rood 31 Rev
Law rence Gl l.J ese ncamp , pasto r , Rev
Roger
Wd lto rd
o ss •stont
poslor
Preoch1ng serv •ces Sunday 7 30 p m
praye r meeting , Wedn esday 7 30 p m
Gary G n f flth leader Youth groups Sun dav evemg 6 30 p m w11h Rog er and
V1olet W1 llford o s leade rs Commumon
serviCes hr st Sunday each month
WHITE s·c HAPEL Coolvtlle RD Rev Roy
Dee ter pa stor Sunday sc hool 9 30 o m ,
worsh1p serv1ce 10 30 a m B1ble study
and prayer ser viCe Wedne sday, 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Bmd
Hende rson , pa stor Herb Ell 1ott Sunday
school supt Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m
mormng worsh1p and comun1on , 10 30'
am
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH .
Amos T1 lli s pasto r Don ny Tillis Sunday
Schoo l Supt Sunday School . 9 30 a m
foll owed by mornmg worship Sunday
eve mng se r\I ICe, 7 00
p m
Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 00 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev lloy d D Gnmm Jr , pastor Sunday
schoo l 9 30 o m worsh1p ser v•ce 10 30
a m Broa dcas t hve over WMPO young
peop les serviCe 7 p m Evangelistic ser
v1ce 7 1 30 p m Wednesday serviCe, 7 30

pm
FI RST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of Se
cond and Ande rson Mason Po slo r Frank
'Lowther Sunday sc hool , 9 45 o m , war
sh1p service 11 o m and 7 30 p m Week 1v IJ•ble Study Wednesday , 7 30 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Moiler St
Mason W Vo Aunce M1ck , pastOr Sun day Bible Study 10 am Worship 11 o m
and 7 p m 81b!e Study Wednesday 7 p m ,
Vocal musiC .
M ASON 1ASSE MBLY OF GOD Dudd1ng
Lane Mason W Va Rev Ronm e B Rose
Pasto r Sunday Sc hoo l 9 45 a m Morn1ng
WorSh ip 1'1 a m Even mg Ser\IJCe 7 JO
p m Wednesday Women s Mm• stnes 9
a m (meehng and pray e r Pray er and 81
bl e St udy '/ p m
HARTfORD CHURCH 0~ CHRIST' IN
W1lllam
CHNI ) TI A N UNION The Rev
Ca mpbell p a,s tor Sunda y School 9 :JU
o m James Hu gt1•
sup t , even tng ser
w1&lt;.e
7 JO p m
Wed n ~s doy
even1n9
;

{ . "'

'

~ ' I'

prayer meelln g 7 JO p m You th prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart , W
Va Rt 1 Mark lrwm pastor Worship
serv1ces 9 30 a m , Su nday sc hool, 11
q m eve nmg worsh1p 7 30 p m Tuesdoy
colta ge prayer mee llng and B1ble study
9 30 o m Wo rsh1p se r\I ICe Wednesday
7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy P1ke, County Rood 25 near
Fla twoods Rev Blackwood pastor Ser
v1ces on Sunday ot 10 30 o m and 7 30
p m w1ih Sunday sch ool 9 30 a m 81b le
stu dy Wednesdov 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH INC
Pea rl St
M1ddlepo rt Re v O'Dell
Manley pastor Arthur Barr , Sunday
schoo l superi ntendent Sun day sc h oo l
9 30 a m ' evemn g wors h1p 7 30 p m
Prayer and pr otse serv •ce Wednesday
7 30p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRI ST Elder James M1ller 81b le
Sunday
study Wednesdoy 7 30 p m
School 10 am Sunday n•ght serviCe , 7 30

pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS
Horrtsonvd le Road Dewey Kmg pastor
Ed1so n Weaver, oss•stont Henry Eblm
Jr Sl.Jndoy schoo l supt Sunday school
9 30 a m morntng worsh1p 11 a m Sun
day
even mg serv1ce
7 30
prayer
meetmg , Thursday 7 30 p m
S'IRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD No! Pen tecos tal
Rev George Oi ler
pastor Wor sh1p servtce Sunday , 9 45
o m
Sunday school , 11 p m
worsh1p
7 JO p m
Thursday prayer
serviCe
meeting 7 30 p m
MT HERMON United Brethren m Chmt
Church Rev James Leach pastor Dan
Wd l lay l eader located 1n lexos Com
mun 1ty oft CR B2 Sunday school 9 30
a m , M ornmg worsh 1p ServiCe , 10 45
a m evenmg preactl•ng serviCe second
a nd fou rth Su ndays 7 30 p m , Chns ti an
Endeavor ft rst and th~rd Sundays 7 30
p m Wednesday prayer me@tmg and B1
ble st udy 7 JO p m
JEHOVAH S W ITNE SSES, 1 m de east of
Rutland /Unct ion of Route 124 and Noble
Sl.Jmmit Rood (T 174) Sunday B1ble lecture , 9 30 a
Watct1tower study 10 30
om
Tuesday , B1b le study , 7 and B 15
p m
Tt1ursday theocrot1c school 7 30
p 1]'1 se rv1ce meetmg 8 30 p m
RUTLAND FRE EWill BAPTI ST Chu"h Churck McPher son pastor Guy Prtddy ,
supen nte ndent Sunday school, 10 o m ,
Su nday evenmg and Wednesday services ,
7 30p m
CHURCH OF GOD o f Prophecy located
on the 0 J Whtt e Rood off h1ghway 160
Sunday Sc hoo l I 0 a m Supe nntendent
John lovedoy F1rst Wednesday n1gt1t at
month CPMA serv1ces second Wednes
day WMB meelmg , th1rd through fltth
youth service George Croyle pastor
HOP&amp; BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 G'ant Sl •
Middleport , Rev Don Bloke pastor Sun·
day school 9 30 o m morn1ng_ worsh1p
10 30 a m
evenmg worst11p 7 p m
Wednesday even•ng Btble study and
praye r meel1ng 7 p m Afliltoted w1th
Southern Bapt1st Convent1on
BRADFORD CHURCH O F CHRISTEug ene Underwood , pastor , Harry Hen ·
dn ck s, sl.lpermtendent Sunday school
9 30 a ~ ma rnmg worsh(p 10 30 am
evenmg worsh1p, 7 p .m Wednesdby B1ble
s tudy 7 p m
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENT~ER - George s
Creel-. Rood Rev C J Lemley , pastor
John Fel lur e
supermtendent
Church
school
9 30 a m
morning worsh ip
10 30 evening serv•ce, 7 p m Youth
meeting Sunday 6 p m Bible study 1n
depth Wednesday 7 p m Classes for all
ages Nursery provtded for worship ser·
VICe
ST&lt; PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH. Cornet
o l Sycamore and Second Sts . Pomeroy
The Rev W•lltom M1ddlesworfh , Pastor
Sunday School at q AS a m and Chvrch
Services 1 I a m
SACRtiD H ~!!J,&lt; )!~ - Fath e' , Paul ' D

1

Welton pastor Phone 992 2825 Sat urday
evening Mass 7 30rday Mass , 8 and
10 a rn
Confess•
Saturday, 7 7 30

9--'The O..IIy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 'Friday July 18 1!180

DICK TRACY

'

'

p ~ICTORY RAPT IS - On t he Route 7
bypass James ~ Keesee, pastor Sunday
school 10 am
mornmg worsh1p, 11
a m evemng se rv1ce, 7
TRINIT Y Chm ttan Assentbly , Coolv1lle
G 11be rt Spencer
pastor
Sunday
school 9 30 om mormng worsb1p , 11
a m Sunday evemng serviCe , 7 30 p m ..
m1dweek prayer serviCe Wednesday, 7 30

pm
h
MQUNT Olive Commun•ty Churc
Lawrence Bush pastor, Ma x Folmer , Sr
Su pen nt en den t Sunday Sc hool and morn·
1ng worsh1p 9 30 a m. Sunday evehlflQ
serv 1ce , 7 p m Youth meetmg and ~1ble
study Wednesday 7 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Meson , meet ot
Un1ted Sleel Workers Un1on Hall, Railroad
Street , Mason Pastor tf:ev Joy M 1tchell
Mornmg worship 9 .45 a m , Sunday
SchooV I 0 30 a m
Prayer meet ing
Wednesday 7 30 p m
fO RE ST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyl e
Bo r de n
pastor
Co rnelius
Bun ch ,
supenntendent Sunday school. 9 30om.
second and fourth Sundays worsh1p ser·
VICeOI2 30p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Mom St M•ddleport Rev Colvm Mmnts :
poslor Mrs Elv1n Bumgardner, supt Sun ·
day school 9 30 a m worsh1p ser\lte8,
10 45 a m
'
NORTH
BETHEl Umted
Method1st
Church , Rev Char les 0 0m 1gan pastor .
Su nday Schoo l 9 30 o m , Worsh1p Ser ·
v•ce, 10 45 am Sunday B•ble St udy 7 00
p m Wednesday prayer m ee hng, 7 30
pm
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHURCH Route 1 Shade Pastor Don
Block Atf•lioted w1th Southern 8ophst
Conve ntion Sundoy school 1 30 p m
Sundov worsh1p, 2 30 p m
Thursday
evenmg B•bl e st udy 7 p m
PENTECOSTAl
A~SEMBL Y .
Racona
Route 124, W1lham Hoback pastor Sun ·
day sc hoo l 10 am Sunday e\le ning serv•ce 6 30 p m Wednesday eenmg ser ·
VICe, 7
CA RPENTER BAPTIST 1 Rev
Freelon
Norns , pasto r Don Cheodle 1 Sup! Sun J
day Schoo l 9 30 am Morntng Worship.
10 30 o m Prayer Serv•ce, alternate Sun ·
days
NEA SE SETTLEMENT FREE Will BAPtiST .
Conoid R Karr Sr , pastor. Fndoy even
1ng se r \1 1ce , 7 30 p m Sunday school I 0

DON'T G IVE Mri AIVY
SMART CRACK;&gt;, PRETTY
BOY--OR YOU' RE 60NNA
NEED ANOT HER APPOI&gt;J TMENT AT THE BEAiJTY

JUH THINK OF THE
MAGNIFICENT FOOTAGE
I'EREI&lt; GOT!

PAR:L.OR:!

FOI? A MOMEN\
THERE I WAS AFRAI D

OH,

ESPECIALLY, POPPY! THE
COMF\JTER ~ENT KAFLOOEY
AND l'fE COUW'I'T EoET IN
TOUCH l'fiTH THE TECHNICIAN,
AND"'
NOT

I'D HAVE TO ~EAR
TRACK ~0E5 TV WORK
- BUT MR 8 IS A

RA!711 OF
!'luc-.;GIIft5G RAVAGE{}
THE CITY TillS

WEEK"

I ·· A~IOfl6

THE V!ClltfiS

WAS I?. I' TI!!ILER,
AC().A1Pf/TEI7

~~

TECH/f/C/AH f'IHQ .. ,

d

am

Property
Transfers ;
Jose M. Mascarro, Virgie'
Mascarro to Robert J . Lindeman,
AnnaL. Lindeman, 5 acres, Chester. 1
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A.
Graham loJolmJ. Blake, TamelaS. ,
'
Blake, .&amp;1 acre, Ruiland.
Herman Will, Affu!av1t, Salisbury.
Lewis H. Mornson, AffidaVIt,
Colwnb1a.
Don Clark Coates, Judy
Caruthers, Robert Caruthers to June
Wickersham, Lots, Middleport
Frank T. Baldy, C;ionel M. Baldy
to Rockford D. Merriman, Suanne
Barnes Merriman, Michael J .
Small, Karen A Small, 18 acres, 22
acres, Salem.
Johneta Pearson, Johnetta Cha!r.
man, Martin J. Chapman to Amos·
Tillis, Ruth Tillis, 2 1882 acres,
Salisbury.
Clifford Manley, Faye Manley to
John Bechtle, Euvetta Bechtle, N. I&gt;
Lot 309, Middleport.
Danny B. Brown, Cordelia C.
Brown to VIctor L. Brown, Lots,
Minersv1Ue.
Bobby G. Back, Joyce E Back to
William R. Anderson, Jennifer M.
Anderson, 5.276 acres, Salem.
June Wlckershlun to Don Clark
Coates, Judy Coates Caruthers,
Lots, Middleport.
Floyd Vincent Hawk, Mary A.
Hawk to Floyd Vincent Hawk, Mary
A. Hawk , Parcels, Orange.
Dale L. UWe, Jermie L. UWe to
Herald Oll and Gas Co., R.W.,
Saliabury.
Ray D. UWe, Goldie V. UWe to
Herald Oil and Gas Co., R.W.,
Saliabury.
Wllliam D. Righthouse, Helen A.
Righthouse to Herald Oil and Gas
Co., R. w.• Salisbury.
Bernard V. Fultz, Exec., Roger
Adams, dec., to James E. Diddle,
Assgn. ofR.W., Rutland.
BeEmart! V. Fultz, Exec., Roger
Adams, dec., dba Adams Drilling
Col, to JameB E. Diddle, dba J.D.
Drilling Co., R.W. Assn., Letart,
Bedford, Sutton, Salisbury, Scipio,
Sutton, Orange, Olive.
HaWe E. Powell, dec . to Addie
Powell, Addle M. Powell, Gerald
Powell, MaWe Beegle, Cert. rl

Trans.
. Denzie Proctor, Bonnie M. Proctor to Homt!l" L. Miller, 3.61 A.,
Salisbury.

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mrs. VIrginia Archer and Mlllle
Vanhorn, St. Joseph, Mich., visited
with Ev~ Archer recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle and Verna Circle.
,
Those spending Sunday with Mary
Circle were Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Perry and family of Toledo, Mr. and
Mrs. Willlam Perry of Holland, Mr.
and Mrs. Donlild Pierce ol Athena,
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle and
daughter Oleryl, Mr.• and Mrs.
JameB Circle from -New Haven, W.
Va,, and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin CirCle
and family fJWTI Wltchita, Kan.
Arthur Earl Johnson and •
daughter Sheryl Leann cai1ed at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dougiu Johnson ol Racine on Sunday.
• Jilra_Robert Lee and daughter
'Becky called at the home of Mr. anc1
Mrs. Arthur Orr ol Cheate~ Sunclay
afternon.

- ·

YES, ~ll , IT'5 ME .

YOU MEAN WE 'RE

THAT WONT BE

NOT M Y BROTHER I 'M

SUPPOSED TO LOOK

THE ONE WITH THE

FOR THAT liTTLE

NECESSA RY
1 5ENT MY

BIRTHMARK ON

MY

WR LS T

THING EVERY TIME
WE S EE YOU?

Y£5, I SENT HIM
PACKING THI S

MORNING.

BROTHER
PACKING 1/(i5
MOR NING 1

DURING MY ABSEN C E,
HE NOT ONLY US ED
MY CAR, BUT RAN UP
A STRIN G OF BILLS I

I'VE

CARRIED HIM

LONG ENOUGH I

17'5

TfME He 57000 011/
HIS OWN TWO FEET/

PEANUTS

((

Evening .television listings
JULY 18, 1180

8 30

([)IJal MEANDMAXKThe l ree

ap 1rtted llfest y le ol divorce Norman
DB VIS undefgoese n abrupt change
600
NEwS
[J) LAST OFTHE WILD
wtlen h•s 1 I year old daughter,
I])
ROSS &amp;AGLEY SHOW
(j) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
Ma
xx,
arnve8
with
a
letter
from
IIOtNED IN PROGRESS)
illJ DICt&lt; CAVETT SHOW
Mom
(Repeal)
(!) MOYIE ·(ADVENTURE) •••
11 . 28 C3J NEWS UPDATE
(])
(ll)
WALL
STREET
WEEK
"Magic Of Laule" 1978
11 .30 CIJ IJ (l) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Abuse on Wall Street Host Louis
(() ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
'Best Ot Carso n' Gue sts Robert
Rukeyser
(]) ABC NEWS
Blake Bob Anderson Muhammad
8.S8
ffi
NEWS
UPDATE
II)@ ZOOM
AU (Repaat 90 mma )
000 CIJIJCD THE ROCKFORD FILES •
6 30 []) IJ (l) NBC NEWS
ffi ROSS &amp;AGLEY SHOW
Manette Hartley Quest l'll&amp;rs as a
[J) t LOVE LUCY
lUMOVtE-!HORRORl'' % " Tat•a
hard flO&amp;ed, co urt appointed
1]]. CAROL BURNETT AND
ot T•rror" 11t62
receiver aea1gned lo collect a Jud
FRIENDS
(J)Il2J II) FRIDAYS
;ement
agamat
Rockford
ll) llJ@I CBS NEWS
0 ()) CBS LATE MOYIE THE
(Repeal 60mlns)
(()
WILD WILD WORLD OF
AVENGERS Ae lurn Of The Cyber
(1) TOO CLUB
ANIMALS
nauta' Powerlulmec hanJcs lrobola
(I) (j}) II) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
(jj) SliM CUISINE
have kidnapped ac •entlslaRusaall
' The Fortune t975 Stars warren
!DliD ABC NEWS
en d Chadwick "THE RETU RN OF
BeaJ!~
Jack
Nicholson
8 18 ([) NEWS UPDATP!
THE SAINT ColhSionCourae (Pert
cttu
@I
THE
DUKES
OF
HAZ·
7 00 []) 0 CROSS WITS
II) Stars lan Og 1tv~ Gay le
Ev1dance
of
hidden
tre
uure
ZARD
ffi STUFF
Hunn1cutt
tn Hazzard Co unt~ bn nga out tha
[J) HO!!_AN'SHEROES
(}) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
greed II\ Bos s Hogg u well as a
llJIHl 118 FACE 1'HE MUSIC
[Q) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) ••• ~
co uple ol sin ister stranger s
C1) COUNTRY ROADS
"Gaslight'' 1Q44
(AepeBI, 60mlna )
D ill TICTAC DOUGH
12:00 (]) MOVIE ·(MUSICAL-COMEDY)
Cil MOVIE ·(MYSTERY·DRAMA)
(() MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
n " Funny Lady" 1975
o~~• ' Laatoa,aotOotwyn" 1948
ffGI NEwS
(}) DAVID SUSSKIND SHOW
(fi) OLD FRIENDS, NEW FRIENDS
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
12 •40 (]) EMERGENCY
Fred Rogert Ylaifa tha hom e ofba ·
7.30 (]) 8 PRtCEISRIGHT
12 :41 ® CD $1 .98 BEAUTY StiOW
seball auporatar Willie Stargel l of
ffi THE LESSON
1,00 []) I) ClJ
THE MIDNIGHT
the Pittsburgh Pirates, where they
(I) ALL IN THE FAMILY
SRECIAL
dl!lc uu how 11 tee ts to ca pta in a
(I) SHA NA NA Gues t Charlie
(JJ INSIGHf
World Series wmnet (Closed
P11de
_
1 11 JH1 CD NEWS
Capt ioned)
CD ll2J .., POP GOES THE
1.25 I}) NEWS
HUM-N FACE OF CHINA
0 30 ®
COUNTRY
1 30 ffi JIMMY SWAGGART
'Somethmg l or Everyone' ThiS pro
D ill JOKER'S WILD
1.4~ [J) MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) • \1
gram la&lt;: uaes on the wo•kmgs of a
(}) DICK CAVEn SHOW
"Action Man" 1967
~)ple at commune
@I FAMILVFEUD
2·00 (jJ) I BEliEVE
10·00 CAl MOYIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
(jj) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
2·16 00 MOVIE · (NO INFORMATION
"J1Wa2 "
..
7:68 (]) NEWS UPDATE
AVAILABLE) •• Y. " Sunnyside'
Cll PERSPECTIVE ON GREAT·
8'00 []) D ClJ Ho;RE'S BOOMER
NESS The Female Rebetlllon'
Boomer tea che s a troubl esome
2.30 Cil I) NEWS
(!) A MAN CALLED SLOANE
teenager a lesaon m aurvivalln tne J
8 ()) [d) DALLAS Alter CHit
{]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
wilderness aller the boy almost
3•45 CJJ MOYIE ·(DRAMA)· ~ " As·
Barneaannouncea he 11 qu1111ng the
eauaeea dlaalllerwhlleofla&lt;:amp·
IUtlnatlon" 1967
ra ce tor Congress, D1gger ret urn s
tngtrlp wtlh hl s lamlly ( R~tpeal)
lo the bottle and drunkenly tell as
700CLUB
W IN TOUCH
&amp;.30 ffi JUST PASSING THRU
reportar,that Cllllla rea llythat ather
(!} MOYIE ·(DRAMA) •••
at Sue Ellen s baby (Repeat 6 0
" Vole••" 117D ,
JULY 19, 1980
~+J
m1na)
,
ill MOV I! ·(SCIENCE·FICTION I
liD NEWS
••• .,.. " tnwaaton Of The Body
6·00 11J D U NEWS
10.28 ffi NEWS UPDATE
Sn•tchera" Ut56
[ ,f) MOVIE (SUSPEN SE) • ''If.
10
30
(])
RICHARD
HOGUE
[J)~ IIJ BUCKSHOT
''The Chine Syndrome' 1979
(fi)
bVER
EASY
Guests
Metlua
D llJ!ltl THE INCAEDIBLEHULI&lt;
[J)
CHAMPIONSHIP
Manchetter
and
hartather
David
McGee followa Banner lo a rna•
WRESTliNG
Mancheater
Hos
t
Hugh
Downs
' queraoe Jl&amp;fly where Banner 11 a
(JJ GOO HAS THE ANSWER
~oaed Capt•oned)
retuctant guell and th e Hu.~l..just
Ill {IJ CONCERN
\
anoUUi r , coalum•d reve ler
(tJ lOOKATME '01SC1Qiine'
Cil
@I (j)) Ill
IROI!!!•J. eo min• )
~~ EXTENSIONS
NEWS
I]] (jj) WASHINOTON WEEK IN
e 30 Cf\ D ffi NBC NEWS
{)) DAN O.,qiFFIN
REVIEW
lfJ NEWS

ffi D CIJ IJCIJC!OiiliiGJ

•oo [])

~~::.

l iM 't;,;~

"f.

Ill ill MUPPo'TS SHOW
([) OLD FRIENDS,NEWFAIENDS
Fred ROQGfS IIISIIS lhe home Of ba
eebal t superstar Wdhe Stargell o f
the P1tt sburgh P~ratea wh ere they
discuss llow 1ll8els to ca pt am a
World Sarles w1nner (Closed
Caplloned)
@I CBS NEWS
liD VICTORY GARDEN
ll2J .
ACTION NEWSMAKER
7&lt;)0 CIJ D DANCE FEVER
(]) BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
(I) CJ (]) HEEHAWGueets TG
Shepard, GeneWalaon, Jed Allan ,
Stoneman Fam1ly (Repe al 60
mma )

(!) LAWRENCE WELK SHOW

(})liD

ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'Old Cunoa1 ty Shop' Ktl " treed
hQm Jail, and the Brasse s' wrong ·
domga &amp;r9 revealed (Closed
Captione d)
@I BUGS BUNNY
ll2J 118 FEELINGS
7,30 Ill 0 INSIOELOOK
(I) THE LUNDSTROMS
{]) WORlD OF THE SEA
liD GROUCHO
i!2l 118 $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
8 .00 CIJ D C_7l BJ AND THE B EAR OJ
tallaund e• til e speltolawomanwha
ct" •ms to be a w1tch, and whose life
IS endangered by sup e rstii iOI.IS
l owna people afra1d oth er magic
epeal, 60mms )
•
700CLUB

ffi

MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ••••

"From AU ..II Wllhlo,..." 1963

[J) MOYIE -iMUSICAL· COMEDY)
•• ' 'WhlteChrl•tm..''1tJ54
([) l1l) . 240 ROBERT Trap and
Th•b la ce an underwater deatn
when gtwen lUSt second s to disa rm
a ttm e b om b set to blow up an 011
tanker. (Repeat, eo mtna)
Ill ill @I UNIVERSE
(() ALLCREATURESGRf:AT AND
SMALL Ways and Means
liD MASTERPIECE THEATRE
lillie TheJe•aeylllhe Episode Ill
Aa Ull1e arrives as.lhej:lrofes&amp;IOnal
beauty ol her day, her li st ol ed·
m~re rs gfows rapidly
(C losed
Cap!l one d)
8' 30 Ill (}) ~l!l THE BAD NEWS BEARS
The Bears tell the.r pa rents a hlll e
wh1te he' m order to attend a rock
co ncert and wmd up sutteflng a rare
p~mshmenl

8,00

ll!DCll

SANFORD
THE lOVE BOAT
D (Ji 'tit' SATURDAY NIGHT
MOVIE Thelstande, 1&amp;78SiaJ8

(I) [f)

1

a

I'M

AW&lt;IJ&lt;E~

ntE SUN 15 51411\lfNG!

IT'S A BRAND NEW
DAI{, AND I'M AL IVE!!

Oenn1s Weaver, Sharon Glees
(]J MOVIE -(DRAMA!••• " I Want
You" 1851
I]D LORD MOUNTBAnfN MAN
FOR THE CENTURY lh1s senu
covers t ha llte otLord Mountb a !ten
world hgure and Bnt• sh war hero
This ep1sade looks at Mountbat
len s l ormat •ve pre World Wa r I
years (Closed Captioned) (60
mlns.J
8'30 CIJ IJ Cll JOE'S WORLD A bl'e
co llar uni on pemt er strugg les I a
makeends meal for h 11 w1f eand t1ve
children while proelchng h1a f&amp;luc·
tanlaldestaon tololtow 1n hiS toot·
steps (Repeat)
ffi THE LESSON
10 00 CIJ IJ (l) GOOD TIME HARRY A
brlll l&amp;nt apons wr lter who let a
women get tn the way ol h1a ~ork
trlaa to gat h•a1ob beck on the San
Ffanclac o Sent1ne l Stars Tad
BB!IB&amp;ll
Marc 1a Stra&amp;sman
emle re , 60 m1na)
ROCK CHURCH
MOVIE ·( SUSPENSE) n•
" Eiur Sanction" 1975
ilJW 118 FANTASY ISLAND An
o • dlnar~ man 1s lhnl led when he
gets to lead the sw1nglna til e ot h1s
tal:lulously wealth~ double but the
tun 1urns da no erous when he learns
that he is responsible l or hie dou
l:lle a huge gambling debt s
(Bepeat 60 mms)
(J]) J.UZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP ' Dexter Gordon Ouartel
Par! II
10 30 CIJ SOCCER Atlanta Chlefsvs Los
Angeles Aztec s
118
, ,00 Ill • Ill Cll • Ill ®l
NEWS
ffi ZOLA LEVITT
I]] PET!R BATTY
@
HOCKING
VAlLI!:Y~
BLUEGRASS
11'30 CIJ • ctJ 801 AND RAY, JANE,
LARAINE AND GILDA
ffi RICHARD HOGUE
I]) MOWlE ·(DRAMA) •I'll " Where
LD¥e H. . Gone" 1~
llJ
Cll
MOVIE
·(MUSICAl· COMEOY) n a;. "Par
adlle. Haw•lfen Style' 1966
(JID MOVIE ·( ADVENTUR E) ••• ~
''Northw••t Paaaage' 1940
ll2J IAIC NEWS
11 &lt;45 (!}}
MOYIE 'Necromancy' 1972
Orso n Wailea, Pamela Franklin 2)
Legacy of Blood 1974
10'00 ffi HI DOUG
(I) MURDER MOST ENGLISH
1
Mu rder ~us! Advert•se Pori IV

~

w

Today's thoughts
Friday
Naonu and Ruth are the model

mother-111-law llnd daughter-m-law.
Ruth's saymg, begmrung "Whither
thou goest, I will go" IS famous, but
the words of Boaz, her future
husband, are not so well known.
" It iulth fully been shewed me, 1111
that thou hast done unto thy motherID-Iaw .mce the death of lhlne
husband: and bow thou bast left thy
lather aud thy mother, and the land
of thy oaUvtty, and art come unto a
pe&lt;&gt;ple which thou lmewesl not
her etofore '' -

Rutb%:1

BOOK PRIZES

LOS ANGELES (AP ) - The Los
i\ngelcs Tunes 1!180 Book Pr1zes - a
prograth to honor

literary ex·
cellen cc m f tvc wrtttng cate gon es -

has b&lt;Jcn announced by Art Seidenhawn, book editor of the Tunes
Pnze wmners Will be selected
from among ftve nommees m the

fields of fiction, general , poetry and
biography-history. A pnze will also
be given lor an out.standing btt&lt;ly ol
work by ah aulhor Irom the West or
featuring the West.
The prizes will be announced m
Los Angeles Nov. 21 They Include a
$1,000 awurd

PRESIDENT NAMED
BOSTON lA P) - Lawrence E.

Fnuraker has been elected prestdent
of the boit l'd o£ trustees of Boston 's

Muscwn of r"me Arts.
Fauraker succeeds Howard W.
Johns011, who was elected cha1nnan
of the bOard of- overseers of the
mu.seum Both appomtments take

elfc'Ct on Septembe"J

�,_

8-The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 18,1980

~----~------------~~--~T---~~
£
EUIS &amp; SONS 501110
The t:hurch

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINITY CHURCH . Rev

W

H

Comptete
Automotive
Serv•ce

of Your t:hoice
This Sunday.

Pernn

pastor , Roy Moyer , Sunday schoo l su pt
Church School 9 J S o m wo rsh1p ser
..-ICe 10 JOo m Cho1r rehear sal , Tuesday
7 30 p m under dm!c:tton of Al 1ce Nease
POMEROY CH URCH OF THt NAZARENE

Corner Un1on and Mulberry Rev Clyde V
Henderson pastor Sunday school 9 30
om Glen McClung sup! mornmg war
sh 1p, 10 30 om e\lemng serv1ce 7 30
mid week serv1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 32b E
Mom St Pomeroy The Rev Robert B
Uroves rector Summer sc hedule - Sun
day se rv1ces at 10 30 a m Holy Ccmmu
n1on to be ce lebra ted Jufl' t&lt;~Q, Aug 3
Aug 17 and Sep t 7 Morn1ng Preyer and
sermon on all other' Sunday s N o Church
S&lt;hool or nursery core prov1ded dunng
su mmer months Coffee hour m the Ponsh
Hall1mmed•ately fo ll owmg th e serv1ce
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Mom St N e •l Proudfoot pa stor . B•ble
school 9 30 a m mormng wprsh•p 10 30
am Youth meetin gs , 6 30 p m evenmg
WOI.o•llp 7 30 V{ednesdoy mght prayer
meetin g and 81b le study , 7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ~RMY 115 Butternu l
Ave Pomeroy En\loy and Mrs Roy W1n
mg olh ce rs 1n charge Sunday hohness
meehng 10 am Sunday Schoo l 10 30
o m Sunday sc hoo l leader YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p m
sal val10n meehng
venous speakers and mus1c spec1als
Thursdoy - 10 om to '2 p m lod•es Home
League all women mv 1ted 7 30 p m
prayer me etmg and B1ble study Rev Noel
Herman , teacher
BURLINGTON
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEL Route 1, Shade - Pa stor Bobby
EUons Sunday schoo l 5 p m
Sunday
worship 5 45 p m
Wednesday prayer
se rv1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHfHST ~00 W Mom Sl , ~n. 5235 Vocal
mu siC Sunday worsh1p 10 a m
B1bl e
study 11 a m worsh1p , b p m Wed nes
day 81b le study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Rev Rolph Sm1th pastor Sunday school
9 30
a m , Mrs
Worley FranCIS
supenntendent Preochmg serv•ces f1rsl &amp;
tt-urd Sundays followmg Sunday School
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preachmg 9 30 a m , hrst and second Sun
days of each month , th1rd and fourth Sun
days each month worship serv •ce at 7 30
p m Wednesday evem n gs at 7 30 Prayer
and B1ble Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor Albe rt
01ttes Sabbath School Supenntenden t
R•to Wh1te Sabbath School Saturday
afternoon at 2 00 w 1th Worsh1p Serv•ce
tolla wmg of 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sis ter Harnett Worne r Supt
Sunday
Schoo l, 9 30 o m mornmg worsh 1p 10 45
am
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Cas fo
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m evenmg
worsh1p 7 30 Thursday evenmg p ra yer
serv•ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Dov1d Mann
mm1 ster W1lllam Watson Sunday school
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m mornmg
worsh1p 10 30 a m
FIRST SOU THERN BAPTIST 2H1 Mulbe"y
Ave , Pomeroy Hershel McClure, Sl.Jndoy
schoo,l supe n ntendent Sunday school
9 30 am morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 even
1ng worsh1p 7 00 p m M1dweek prayer
serviCe 7 00 p m
1
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER De xter
Rd , Langsvi ll e Oh •o . Rev C lyd e Ferrell,
Pastor Sunday School 11 a m Saturday
preochmg ser\IICes 7 30 p m Wednesday
evemng 81ble study of 7 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Ba1ley
Run Rood Rev Emmett Rowson , pasto r
Handley Dunn supt Sunday school 10
a m Sunday evemng serv •ce 7 30 B•ble
teachmg 7 30 p m Thursday
DYESVIllE COMMUNITY
CHURCH
l'toger C Turner pastor Sunday sc hdol
9 30 a m
Sunday mornmg worsh ip
10 30 Su nday evening serviC e 7 30
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
pastor, Mrs
Russell Young , Sunday ~
Sc hool Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Even•ng worsh 1p 7 30 Wednesday prayer
meetmg , 7 30 p m
MT
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
RaCin e- Rev Jame s Satterfield pastor
Sunday
M orn mg worsh1p 9 11 5 o m
schoo l 10 45 a m even1ng worsh1p , 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m
lad1 es prayer
meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
S1xt h and Palmer t he Rev Mark M cC lung
Sunday sc hool 9 15 a m Randy Hayes
Sunday School
supermtendent
Don
R1ggs ass t supt Morn1ng Worsh•p 10 15
om Youth meeting 7 30 p m Wednesday 1ncludmg wee tots eager beaver s
tumor astronauts , and 1un1or and semor
h1gh BVF
ch01r pract1 ce
8 30 p m
Wednesday prayer mee ting and Btble
study Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST Mtddlepa't 5th
and Motn , Bob Melton m1n1ster M 1ke
Gerlach super mtendent 81ble school
9 30 om , mormng worship 10 30 o m ,
youth group Sunday 6 30 p m e\len•ng
worsh1p , 7 00 pray e r serv1ce 7 00 p m
Wednesdoy
M ID DLEI'.ORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broom e pastor B1ll
Wh 1te , Sunday schoo l supt
Sunday
sc hoo l 9 30 a m mornmg worshtp I 0 30
am Sunday ev ongelisllc meet1ng 7 00
p m Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY , Dw1ght L Zav1tz d~rec
to'
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
Ernes t Stnck lm pastor Sunday church
schoo l 9 30 a m Mrs Home$ ' , supt
morning worshtp 10 30
MIDDLEPORT Sunday school , 9 30om
RIChard Va ughan supt Mornmg worsh 1p

the t:hurch
of Your t:hoice
This Sunday

Sunday

RIGGS' USED CARS, INC.

Psalms

MARK tSTORE
'
Middleport

Psalms

4 1·8
Monday
Psalms

3 1-8

Tuesday
~_Jc_

~
Ray A:lgos
I StRt7
Ph 915 4100

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F Ful11, Mgr
' Ph "2 2101
Pomerov1

PIZZA SHACK

1

2 1- 12

E1t In or
Carry Out
124 E

Wednesday

,...,n

Job
42 1-10

"2 6304
pomeroy

Thursday
Zephameh
2 1·3

HEINER'S
BAKERY

Fflday
II Chromcles

121 ·1 2

Saturday
1sa1ah

49.6·16

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescrtpf1ons
992 7955
Pomeroy

Meigs County Br•nch

They had waited lor this real vacation - th•s long tnp
-

216E Makl

for years. But thts time it was different. thts Hme he

wouldn"t be goong bock to hos 1ob.
At first, retirement seemed frightening, like betng shut

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance

P. I. PAULEY,
AGENT

off from the mainstream of 6fe. He had seen too many
men age beyond the1r ~ears, after the1r career ended He
had no w1sh to be on the srdelmes. He and hts Wife could
have mo...ed to a warmer clrmate and JUSt have taken It

Services

Nationwide Ins. Co
of Columbu!l, 0
104W Main

easy. He didn"twanlthal So, before he lelthome, he had •
long talk with his minister.
He found thot there was plenty a man his age could do

H4 E. MIIn

tt2-5130 Pomeroy

WAID CROSS

m -:n11 Pomeroy

VIRGIL B.

Financially secure. he could afford to volunteer for a Job. ln

fact, through the Church there was work he could do that

SONS SJORE

TEAFORD SR.

would spread to the farthest comers of the wo11d.

Groar•i-

Gen~r•l

MtrchlndiM
R•c:lrw Mf-2550

'"
SecOnd
PDmllf'Gy
m-nu

R1ght now, he is enJoying this 't'Bcation. He IS savoring
e't'ery moment of tl Because. when he gets home, he s
COPYRIGHT

goong to lead a full and useful hie And thafs the way he

19110

wants tl

KEISlER AOVEATJSING SERVICE
p 0 B01lll02•
CHARLOTTESVILLE ¥1AGNIA l~

ttend The t.;b. url~hl
of Your Choice

Church &amp; OffiCe Supplies
GIFTS

'

NEW YORK
CLOTHING

M 1ddleport

/? '

~(~

HOUSE-,~
-, v1~.

IIERMIT"S KORNER
Pomeroy , Oluo

\

RIDENOUR SUPPLl

This Sunday.

1

Attend The
Church of
Your t:hoicc

FURNITURE I HARDWARE
Hetmel•te S.ws

FRENCH'S

SUNOCO

SERVICE

CENTERS

~
510 N. 2nd

212 W Moln

-

Pomero., m -tH2 Mlddleoorl m ·:t&lt;51

Wm

Bill
Owner

P'~tt14)7412177

'

ZION CHURCH O F CHRIST , Pome roy
FLATWOOD S Church School 10 am
6
Hamsonvdle Rd Robert Purtell po ster
Wo rsh1p II a m
B• l l M cEirov , Sunday sch oo l su pt Sunday
MIDDLEPORT ClUSTER
school 9 30 om mormng worsh1p and
HEATH , Chu rch School 9 30 am War
commun 1on , 10 30 om . Sunday worsh1p
shtp I 0 30 a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
serv 1ce
7 p m Wednesday even1ng
Robmson Pastor
prayer me et ~ng and B1ble study 7 p m
RUTLAN D Chur ch School 9 30 a m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHUR CH Pone
Wors h1p 10 30 a m Wdbur H1lt Post o r
Grove The Rev W1 lhom M idd leswo rth
SAlEM CENTER " Worsh1p 9 a m Church
Pastor Church serv1ces 9 30om Sun day
Schoo l 9 45 a m
Sc hool l O 30 am
SYRACUSE CLU STER
BRADBURY CH UR CH OF CHRIST Je" y
Rev, Stan ley Mernhed Mm1 ste r
Pmgley past o r Sunday school 9 30 a tn
~OREST RUN Worshp 9 o m Church
mormng worshtp , tO 30om Wednesday
School lOam
evemng service 7 30
MINERSVILLE, Church School 9 om
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev Earl Shu ler
Worsh1p 10om
pastor Sundov school 9 30 a.m Church
ASBURY Church School 9 50 c m Wor
se rviCe
7 p m , youth mee1mg 6
shtp 11 a m B1ble Study 7 30 p m Thurs
p m Tuesday B1ble Study 7 p m
dov UMW f1 st Tuesday
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZAREN E.
SOUTHERN CLU STER
Rev John A Coffman pastor Martha
Rev Dov1d Horns
Wo lfe Cha1rman of the Boa rd o f Chnst1on
Rev Mark Flyn n
L1f e Sundoy School 9 30 a m morn1ng
Rev Florence Sm11h
wo rsh1p 10 30 Sunday evemng worsh•p
H1 lton VVolfe
7 30 p m Prayer meet111Q Wednesday
BETHAN Y (Dorcas) Worship 9 00 a m
7 JO p m
Church Sc hool I 0 00 o m
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don L Walker
CARMEL Chruch Schoo l 9 30 o m War ·
Pastor , Robert Sm1th Sunday sc hool
sh1p 10 30 a m 2nd and .4th Sundays
sup t Sunday school 9 30 a m mormng
APPLE GROVE Sunday School 9 30 a m
worsh1p 10 40 a m Sunday even 1ng wor
Wors hip 7 30 p m h t and 3rd Sundays
sh1p 7 30 Wednesday cvemng B1ble
Prayer meehng Wednesday 7 30 p m
study 7 30
Fellowsh1p supper f1rst Saturday 6 p m
Rev
R D
DAN VIlLE WE SLEY AN
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30 c m
EAST LETART Chruch School 9 a m
mornmg worsh1p 10 45 youth serv1ce
Worshtp serviCe 10 o m Prayer meehng
b 45 p m
evenmg worsh•p 7 30 p m
7 30 p m Wednesday UMW second Tues·
prayer and pro1se , Wednesday 7 30 p m
day7 30p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPT IST Rev Morv1n
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schoal l O
Morkm , pa stor Steve llftle Sunday school
a m , worsh1p 11 o m Cho1r proct•co
su p t Sunday sch ool 10 om
mornmg
Thursday , 8 p m
wors h1p 11 om Sunday evemng worlETART FALlS- Worship servi ce Yom
ship 7 30 Prayer meel •ng and B1ble
Ch urch Schoo l1 0a m
study Thursday 7 30 p m yo uth ser v1ce
MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30 am
bp m Sunday
,
Church School10 30 a m
CHE STER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E
MORSE CHAPEL Church Schoo l 9 30
Ro bmson pastor Sunday sc hoo l , 9 30
am Worsh •p 11 am
o m wors h1p serviCe 11 a m evemng
PORTLAND Church Schoo l 6 30 p m
serv •ce 7 00 youth serv iCe We dn es day
Even1ng Wors h1p
7 30 p m
You lh
7 OO p m
Meetmg , Tuesday &amp;\lenmg
lAN GSVI llE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
SUTTON Church 'school 9 30 a m War
Robert Mu sse( pastor Sunday schoo l
sh1p 1st and 3rd Sundays 10 30 o m
9 JO a m Roy S1gmon supt m ornmg
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
worsh 1p 10 30 Sunday evenmg serviCe
Re; RIChard W Thomas
7 30 m•d week se rviCe Wednesday 7
Duane svdenstncker Sr
pm
John W Do uglas
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA ZARE NE .
•
Charles Dom1gan
10 30
Rev Jorhes B Kittle past or N o rman
JOPPA Worsh1p 9 00 a m
Church
SY RACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Presley Su nday Schoo l Su pen nt enden t
School 10 00 o m
Church Worsh•p se rviCe 9 JO a m Sunday
Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m mornmg wor
CHE
STER
Worsh•p
9
o
m
Church
Sc hool 10 30 am Mrs. Sampson Hall
sh1p 10 45 a m
evangelistiC ser v1ce 7
School I 0 a m Choir Rehearsal 7 p m ,
supt
p m Prayer and Pro1se Wednesday 7
Thursdays a,b le Study Thursdays
RUTLAND CHURC~ OF GOD Rev Bob
p m youth meetmg 7 p m M en s pray er
7 30 p m
by Porter pastor Su nday school, 10 a m ,
meehng Soll.J rday , 7 p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday School al 9 30
Sunday worsh 1p 11 a m Sundov evenmg
EDtN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRI ST
serviCe 7 p m Wednesday Fom• ly Tro• ~ a m Evemng Worsh1p ot 7 30 p m Th ur s
Elden R Blake pa stor Sunday Sc hoo l 10
day
81ble
Study
7
JO
p
m
mg Hour , 7 p m Wednesday worstup ser
o m
~obert Reed supt
M ornmg se r ·
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30 o m
VICe, 7 30p m
man 11 o m
Sunday n1ght serv1ces
Mormng Worship 10 30 om Even1ng Wor·
HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH Nea'
Chm flon Endeavor 7 30 p m Sor1g ser
sh p 7 30 p m B1ble Study WednesdaYs at
long Bottom Edsel Hart pas to r Sunday
v1ce
8 p m
PreOchltlg 8 30 p m
7 JOp m
schoo l lOam Church 7 30 p m praye r
M •dwee k Prayer meetmg Wednesday 7
ALFRED Sunday School ot 9 115 om
meet1ng 7 30 p m Thursday
p m Alv1n Reed lay leader
M o rn.ng Worsh1p o t 11 am Youth b 30
MIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAl
Th"d
CH UR(.H OF JESUS CHRI ST lacaled al
p m Su ndays Wednesday N1ght Prover
Ave
the Rev W•ll1om Kn1ttel pm tor
Ru t land on New L1mo Road nex t to Forest
Meeting 7 30 p m
Tho~os Kelly SuMdoy School Supt Sun
Acre l'ark Rev Ray Rouse pastor Rober t
ST PAUL (Tuppers Plo1ns ) Sunday
day schoo l 10 o m Classes fo r all a ges ,
Musser
Sundav Schoo l supt
Sunday
Schoo l 9 00 a m M or n1ng Wo rs h1p at
evenmg servtc e
7 30
B1bl e study
school I 0 JO a m worsh1p 7 30 p m 81
I 0 00 a m 81ble Study 7 30 p m Tu es day
Wednesday 7 30 p m
you th serviCes
ble St udy , Wedn esday , 7 30 p m Sotur
SO UTH BETHEL (S il ver H1dge) Sunday
Fudav, 7 30 p m
Sct1oo l 9 00 a m Mornmg Wosh 1p 10 00 day n1ght prayer serviCe 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTI ST Come'
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI ST IAN Roge'
a m Wednesdov B1ble StiJdy , 7 30 p ~ m
Ash and Plum , Rolph But cher, pastor
' Watson pastor M•ldred ltegl er Sundav
KENO
CHURC
H
m
CHRIST
Olove'
Saturday eventng serv1ce 7 30 p m Sun
Swam, suPenntendent Sun day sc hoo l sc hool supt M ornmg worsh 1p q 30 a m
day school, 1o 30 a m
!:iundoy schoo l HJ ~ a m eo~enl ng ser
1./ JO every week
MEIGS
VICe '/ 30 ,
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN
UNION
Rev
Ke1th
COOPERATIVE PARI SH
MT UNION BA PTIST Joe Sayre Sunday
l:.bl.n pastor Sunday School, '} 30 o m ,
METHODIST CH URCH
Sc hoo l Super~ ntenen t Su ndew school li 45
Leonard G1lmore f1rs t e lder even mg ser RIChard W Thomas O~rector
a m evem ng worsh1p 7 :JO p m Praye r
VICe, 7 30 p m
Wednesday
praye r
POMEROY CLU STER
meo llng 7 30 p m Wednesday
meetmg 7 30 p m
Rev Robe rt M cGee
rU PP~R &gt; PLAINS CHURCH Of CHRI&gt;T
BEAR WAllOW RIDGE CH URCH O F
Rev , James Corb11t
Vmcen f Wa ters pas~or Howord Bla.r (ol
Duane
Wordyn
m1n1st ~r B1ble
CHRIST
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 am
well su pe nnf.enden! Sunday School 9 30
class 'I :JO am mornmg wo r shi p , 10 :JO
Worship serv •ce 10 30 a m Cho•r reh ear
om , morn .ng chu rG h 10 JO o fli . Sunday
o 111
sven1ng
worsh1p
6 JO p m
sal Wednesday 7 p m k ev Robert
evon lf19 !lei v1ce 1 :.10 ~\led nesdoy 81b le
Wed nes day I:S1ble s tu dy b JO p m
McGee , pastor
~ t udy I :JU p m
Nt
W
&gt;TI
Vt
HSVIllE
COM
M
U
NIT
Y
ENTERP~ I SE Worsh 1p f.J a m '::hurch
LHA RT t-A LL ~ UNIH:O 8RI:THIU:N Re\1,
Church Sunde¥ Scho"i &amp;erviCc '! 45 a m
SchoollUo m
h ccla nd Notrts, pastor Floyd Noms
Worsh •p serv 1ce I U JO Evo 11 gei1S t •c Su r
ROCK SPRINGS Churct'l Sc hool 10 o m
sup I ~ undoy sc hoa~ '130 a m , mormng
v1ce
'I :JU p m
Wednesday
~•oyer
Worslltp lOam UM Yf. b JO p m
sc tmo n,
10 ,10 o ..m, 1 fo'tov.er se r v'"ce,
·~s •
•
Jneet1ng f JU
¥
..,,

"v&gt;c,,..

· Athens Coonty
Sallinp &amp; loin
Co.

.J:

"' •'

Wednesday 7 JO p m
CHE sTER CH URCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev Herbert Grote pa stor Fronk Rttfle
supt Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m Worsh •p
serv•ce I I a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
lAUREl
CliFF FREE
METHODI ST
CHURCH Rev Floyd "'f.t, Shook pas tor
Lloyd W nght Sunday School Supt Morn
•ng Wo r sh1p q 30 om
Sunday School
10 :.!0 o m . Wednesday Praye r and B1bi e
Study 7 30 p m Sunday evemng worsh1p
7 30 p m Chelf Pracllce Thursday , 7 p m
DEX TER CHURCH O F CHR IST Cha d es
Russell Sr
m1m ster RICk Macomber
sup! Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m worshtp
serv1ce 10 30 am H1ble Study Tuesday
730pm
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JE SUS
CHRI ST OF LATTER DAY SAI N TS Pod land
Rae~ne Road
W• l l1am Roush
pos l or
Phyl l1 s Stobart Sunday School Supt Sun
d ay School 9 30 o m Morn~ng wo rsh1p
10 30 a m Sun day eve ntng se r \IICe 7 p m
Wednesdav evemng pray er serv•ces 7 30

pm
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shu ler
posior Worsh1p serviCe 9 30 o m Su nday
sc hoo l 10 30 a m 81bl e Stu dy and prayer
serviCe Thursday 7 JO p m
CARLETON CHURCH Kmgsbury Rood
Gorv Kmg po ster Sunday sc hoo l 9 30
am Ralph Car l s up e r~ntendent evemng
warsh •p
7 30 p m
Prayer meehng
Wednesda y 7 30 p m
LONG
BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Tom
RKhoson past or Wallace Dam ewood
S undoy-Sc h oo~ · Supermtendent Worsh1p
serv1ce at 9 a m B•ble Schoo l 10 a m
HYSEL L RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Thurs.
day eve nmg serviCes 7 30 Rev Cart Sun
day mornmg serviCes 9 30 and eve n1n~
serv1ces 7 30 p m , Rev Durham
•
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a ! Bo ld
Knob located on Coun ty Rood 31 Rev
Law rence Gl l.J ese ncamp , pasto r , Rev
Roger
Wd lto rd
o ss •stont
poslor
Preoch1ng serv •ces Sunday 7 30 p m
praye r meeting , Wedn esday 7 30 p m
Gary G n f flth leader Youth groups Sun dav evemg 6 30 p m w11h Rog er and
V1olet W1 llford o s leade rs Commumon
serviCes hr st Sunday each month
WHITE s·c HAPEL Coolvtlle RD Rev Roy
Dee ter pa stor Sunday sc hool 9 30 o m ,
worsh1p serv1ce 10 30 a m B1ble study
and prayer ser viCe Wedne sday, 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Bmd
Hende rson , pa stor Herb Ell 1ott Sunday
school supt Sunday sc hoo l 9 30 a m
mormng worsh1p and comun1on , 10 30'
am
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH .
Amos T1 lli s pasto r Don ny Tillis Sunday
Schoo l Supt Sunday School . 9 30 a m
foll owed by mornmg worship Sunday
eve mng se r\I ICe, 7 00
p m
Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 00 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev lloy d D Gnmm Jr , pastor Sunday
schoo l 9 30 o m worsh1p ser v•ce 10 30
a m Broa dcas t hve over WMPO young
peop les serviCe 7 p m Evangelistic ser
v1ce 7 1 30 p m Wednesday serviCe, 7 30

pm
FI RST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of Se
cond and Ande rson Mason Po slo r Frank
'Lowther Sunday sc hool , 9 45 o m , war
sh1p service 11 o m and 7 30 p m Week 1v IJ•ble Study Wednesday , 7 30 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Moiler St
Mason W Vo Aunce M1ck , pastOr Sun day Bible Study 10 am Worship 11 o m
and 7 p m 81b!e Study Wednesday 7 p m ,
Vocal musiC .
M ASON 1ASSE MBLY OF GOD Dudd1ng
Lane Mason W Va Rev Ronm e B Rose
Pasto r Sunday Sc hoo l 9 45 a m Morn1ng
WorSh ip 1'1 a m Even mg Ser\IJCe 7 JO
p m Wednesday Women s Mm• stnes 9
a m (meehng and pray e r Pray er and 81
bl e St udy '/ p m
HARTfORD CHURCH 0~ CHRIST' IN
W1lllam
CHNI ) TI A N UNION The Rev
Ca mpbell p a,s tor Sunda y School 9 :JU
o m James Hu gt1•
sup t , even tng ser
w1&lt;.e
7 JO p m
Wed n ~s doy
even1n9
;

{ . "'

'

~ ' I'

prayer meelln g 7 JO p m You th prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart , W
Va Rt 1 Mark lrwm pastor Worship
serv1ces 9 30 a m , Su nday sc hool, 11
q m eve nmg worsh1p 7 30 p m Tuesdoy
colta ge prayer mee llng and B1ble study
9 30 o m Wo rsh1p se r\I ICe Wednesday
7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy P1ke, County Rood 25 near
Fla twoods Rev Blackwood pastor Ser
v1ces on Sunday ot 10 30 o m and 7 30
p m w1ih Sunday sch ool 9 30 a m 81b le
stu dy Wednesdov 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH INC
Pea rl St
M1ddlepo rt Re v O'Dell
Manley pastor Arthur Barr , Sunday
schoo l superi ntendent Sun day sc h oo l
9 30 a m ' evemn g wors h1p 7 30 p m
Prayer and pr otse serv •ce Wednesday
7 30p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRI ST Elder James M1ller 81b le
Sunday
study Wednesdoy 7 30 p m
School 10 am Sunday n•ght serviCe , 7 30

pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS
Horrtsonvd le Road Dewey Kmg pastor
Ed1so n Weaver, oss•stont Henry Eblm
Jr Sl.Jndoy schoo l supt Sunday school
9 30 a m morntng worsh1p 11 a m Sun
day
even mg serv1ce
7 30
prayer
meetmg , Thursday 7 30 p m
S'IRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD No! Pen tecos tal
Rev George Oi ler
pastor Wor sh1p servtce Sunday , 9 45
o m
Sunday school , 11 p m
worsh1p
7 JO p m
Thursday prayer
serviCe
meeting 7 30 p m
MT HERMON United Brethren m Chmt
Church Rev James Leach pastor Dan
Wd l lay l eader located 1n lexos Com
mun 1ty oft CR B2 Sunday school 9 30
a m , M ornmg worsh 1p ServiCe , 10 45
a m evenmg preactl•ng serviCe second
a nd fou rth Su ndays 7 30 p m , Chns ti an
Endeavor ft rst and th~rd Sundays 7 30
p m Wednesday prayer me@tmg and B1
ble st udy 7 JO p m
JEHOVAH S W ITNE SSES, 1 m de east of
Rutland /Unct ion of Route 124 and Noble
Sl.Jmmit Rood (T 174) Sunday B1ble lecture , 9 30 a
Watct1tower study 10 30
om
Tuesday , B1b le study , 7 and B 15
p m
Tt1ursday theocrot1c school 7 30
p 1]'1 se rv1ce meetmg 8 30 p m
RUTLAND FRE EWill BAPTI ST Chu"h Churck McPher son pastor Guy Prtddy ,
supen nte ndent Sunday school, 10 o m ,
Su nday evenmg and Wednesday services ,
7 30p m
CHURCH OF GOD o f Prophecy located
on the 0 J Whtt e Rood off h1ghway 160
Sunday Sc hoo l I 0 a m Supe nntendent
John lovedoy F1rst Wednesday n1gt1t at
month CPMA serv1ces second Wednes
day WMB meelmg , th1rd through fltth
youth service George Croyle pastor
HOP&amp; BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 G'ant Sl •
Middleport , Rev Don Bloke pastor Sun·
day school 9 30 o m morn1ng_ worsh1p
10 30 a m
evenmg worst11p 7 p m
Wednesday even•ng Btble study and
praye r meel1ng 7 p m Afliltoted w1th
Southern Bapt1st Convent1on
BRADFORD CHURCH O F CHRISTEug ene Underwood , pastor , Harry Hen ·
dn ck s, sl.lpermtendent Sunday school
9 30 a ~ ma rnmg worsh(p 10 30 am
evenmg worsh1p, 7 p .m Wednesdby B1ble
s tudy 7 p m
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENT~ER - George s
Creel-. Rood Rev C J Lemley , pastor
John Fel lur e
supermtendent
Church
school
9 30 a m
morning worsh ip
10 30 evening serv•ce, 7 p m Youth
meeting Sunday 6 p m Bible study 1n
depth Wednesday 7 p m Classes for all
ages Nursery provtded for worship ser·
VICe
ST&lt; PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH. Cornet
o l Sycamore and Second Sts . Pomeroy
The Rev W•lltom M1ddlesworfh , Pastor
Sunday School at q AS a m and Chvrch
Services 1 I a m
SACRtiD H ~!!J,&lt; )!~ - Fath e' , Paul ' D

1

Welton pastor Phone 992 2825 Sat urday
evening Mass 7 30rday Mass , 8 and
10 a rn
Confess•
Saturday, 7 7 30

9--'The O..IIy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 'Friday July 18 1!180

DICK TRACY

'

'

p ~ICTORY RAPT IS - On t he Route 7
bypass James ~ Keesee, pastor Sunday
school 10 am
mornmg worsh1p, 11
a m evemng se rv1ce, 7
TRINIT Y Chm ttan Assentbly , Coolv1lle
G 11be rt Spencer
pastor
Sunday
school 9 30 om mormng worsb1p , 11
a m Sunday evemng serviCe , 7 30 p m ..
m1dweek prayer serviCe Wednesday, 7 30

pm
h
MQUNT Olive Commun•ty Churc
Lawrence Bush pastor, Ma x Folmer , Sr
Su pen nt en den t Sunday Sc hool and morn·
1ng worsh1p 9 30 a m. Sunday evehlflQ
serv 1ce , 7 p m Youth meetmg and ~1ble
study Wednesday 7 p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Meson , meet ot
Un1ted Sleel Workers Un1on Hall, Railroad
Street , Mason Pastor tf:ev Joy M 1tchell
Mornmg worship 9 .45 a m , Sunday
SchooV I 0 30 a m
Prayer meet ing
Wednesday 7 30 p m
fO RE ST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyl e
Bo r de n
pastor
Co rnelius
Bun ch ,
supenntendent Sunday school. 9 30om.
second and fourth Sundays worsh1p ser·
VICeOI2 30p m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Mom St M•ddleport Rev Colvm Mmnts :
poslor Mrs Elv1n Bumgardner, supt Sun ·
day school 9 30 a m worsh1p ser\lte8,
10 45 a m
'
NORTH
BETHEl Umted
Method1st
Church , Rev Char les 0 0m 1gan pastor .
Su nday Schoo l 9 30 o m , Worsh1p Ser ·
v•ce, 10 45 am Sunday B•ble St udy 7 00
p m Wednesday prayer m ee hng, 7 30
pm
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHURCH Route 1 Shade Pastor Don
Block Atf•lioted w1th Southern 8ophst
Conve ntion Sundoy school 1 30 p m
Sundov worsh1p, 2 30 p m
Thursday
evenmg B•bl e st udy 7 p m
PENTECOSTAl
A~SEMBL Y .
Racona
Route 124, W1lham Hoback pastor Sun ·
day sc hoo l 10 am Sunday e\le ning serv•ce 6 30 p m Wednesday eenmg ser ·
VICe, 7
CA RPENTER BAPTIST 1 Rev
Freelon
Norns , pasto r Don Cheodle 1 Sup! Sun J
day Schoo l 9 30 am Morntng Worship.
10 30 o m Prayer Serv•ce, alternate Sun ·
days
NEA SE SETTLEMENT FREE Will BAPtiST .
Conoid R Karr Sr , pastor. Fndoy even
1ng se r \1 1ce , 7 30 p m Sunday school I 0

DON'T G IVE Mri AIVY
SMART CRACK;&gt;, PRETTY
BOY--OR YOU' RE 60NNA
NEED ANOT HER APPOI&gt;J TMENT AT THE BEAiJTY

JUH THINK OF THE
MAGNIFICENT FOOTAGE
I'EREI&lt; GOT!

PAR:L.OR:!

FOI? A MOMEN\
THERE I WAS AFRAI D

OH,

ESPECIALLY, POPPY! THE
COMF\JTER ~ENT KAFLOOEY
AND l'fE COUW'I'T EoET IN
TOUCH l'fiTH THE TECHNICIAN,
AND"'
NOT

I'D HAVE TO ~EAR
TRACK ~0E5 TV WORK
- BUT MR 8 IS A

RA!711 OF
!'luc-.;GIIft5G RAVAGE{}
THE CITY TillS

WEEK"

I ·· A~IOfl6

THE V!ClltfiS

WAS I?. I' TI!!ILER,
AC().A1Pf/TEI7

~~

TECH/f/C/AH f'IHQ .. ,

d

am

Property
Transfers ;
Jose M. Mascarro, Virgie'
Mascarro to Robert J . Lindeman,
AnnaL. Lindeman, 5 acres, Chester. 1
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A.
Graham loJolmJ. Blake, TamelaS. ,
'
Blake, .&amp;1 acre, Ruiland.
Herman Will, Affu!av1t, Salisbury.
Lewis H. Mornson, AffidaVIt,
Colwnb1a.
Don Clark Coates, Judy
Caruthers, Robert Caruthers to June
Wickersham, Lots, Middleport
Frank T. Baldy, C;ionel M. Baldy
to Rockford D. Merriman, Suanne
Barnes Merriman, Michael J .
Small, Karen A Small, 18 acres, 22
acres, Salem.
Johneta Pearson, Johnetta Cha!r.
man, Martin J. Chapman to Amos·
Tillis, Ruth Tillis, 2 1882 acres,
Salisbury.
Clifford Manley, Faye Manley to
John Bechtle, Euvetta Bechtle, N. I&gt;
Lot 309, Middleport.
Danny B. Brown, Cordelia C.
Brown to VIctor L. Brown, Lots,
Minersv1Ue.
Bobby G. Back, Joyce E Back to
William R. Anderson, Jennifer M.
Anderson, 5.276 acres, Salem.
June Wlckershlun to Don Clark
Coates, Judy Coates Caruthers,
Lots, Middleport.
Floyd Vincent Hawk, Mary A.
Hawk to Floyd Vincent Hawk, Mary
A. Hawk , Parcels, Orange.
Dale L. UWe, Jermie L. UWe to
Herald Oll and Gas Co., R.W.,
Saliabury.
Ray D. UWe, Goldie V. UWe to
Herald Oil and Gas Co., R.W.,
Saliabury.
Wllliam D. Righthouse, Helen A.
Righthouse to Herald Oil and Gas
Co., R. w.• Salisbury.
Bernard V. Fultz, Exec., Roger
Adams, dec., to James E. Diddle,
Assgn. ofR.W., Rutland.
BeEmart! V. Fultz, Exec., Roger
Adams, dec., dba Adams Drilling
Col, to JameB E. Diddle, dba J.D.
Drilling Co., R.W. Assn., Letart,
Bedford, Sutton, Salisbury, Scipio,
Sutton, Orange, Olive.
HaWe E. Powell, dec . to Addie
Powell, Addle M. Powell, Gerald
Powell, MaWe Beegle, Cert. rl

Trans.
. Denzie Proctor, Bonnie M. Proctor to Homt!l" L. Miller, 3.61 A.,
Salisbury.

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mrs. VIrginia Archer and Mlllle
Vanhorn, St. Joseph, Mich., visited
with Ev~ Archer recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Circle and Verna Circle.
,
Those spending Sunday with Mary
Circle were Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Perry and family of Toledo, Mr. and
Mrs. Willlam Perry of Holland, Mr.
and Mrs. Donlild Pierce ol Athena,
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle and
daughter Oleryl, Mr.• and Mrs.
JameB Circle from -New Haven, W.
Va,, and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin CirCle
and family fJWTI Wltchita, Kan.
Arthur Earl Johnson and •
daughter Sheryl Leann cai1ed at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dougiu Johnson ol Racine on Sunday.
• Jilra_Robert Lee and daughter
'Becky called at the home of Mr. anc1
Mrs. Arthur Orr ol Cheate~ Sunclay
afternon.

- ·

YES, ~ll , IT'5 ME .

YOU MEAN WE 'RE

THAT WONT BE

NOT M Y BROTHER I 'M

SUPPOSED TO LOOK

THE ONE WITH THE

FOR THAT liTTLE

NECESSA RY
1 5ENT MY

BIRTHMARK ON

MY

WR LS T

THING EVERY TIME
WE S EE YOU?

Y£5, I SENT HIM
PACKING THI S

MORNING.

BROTHER
PACKING 1/(i5
MOR NING 1

DURING MY ABSEN C E,
HE NOT ONLY US ED
MY CAR, BUT RAN UP
A STRIN G OF BILLS I

I'VE

CARRIED HIM

LONG ENOUGH I

17'5

TfME He 57000 011/
HIS OWN TWO FEET/

PEANUTS

((

Evening .television listings
JULY 18, 1180

8 30

([)IJal MEANDMAXKThe l ree

ap 1rtted llfest y le ol divorce Norman
DB VIS undefgoese n abrupt change
600
NEwS
[J) LAST OFTHE WILD
wtlen h•s 1 I year old daughter,
I])
ROSS &amp;AGLEY SHOW
(j) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
Ma
xx,
arnve8
with
a
letter
from
IIOtNED IN PROGRESS)
illJ DICt&lt; CAVETT SHOW
Mom
(Repeal)
(!) MOYIE ·(ADVENTURE) •••
11 . 28 C3J NEWS UPDATE
(])
(ll)
WALL
STREET
WEEK
"Magic Of Laule" 1978
11 .30 CIJ IJ (l) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Abuse on Wall Street Host Louis
(() ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
'Best Ot Carso n' Gue sts Robert
Rukeyser
(]) ABC NEWS
Blake Bob Anderson Muhammad
8.S8
ffi
NEWS
UPDATE
II)@ ZOOM
AU (Repaat 90 mma )
000 CIJIJCD THE ROCKFORD FILES •
6 30 []) IJ (l) NBC NEWS
ffi ROSS &amp;AGLEY SHOW
Manette Hartley Quest l'll&amp;rs as a
[J) t LOVE LUCY
lUMOVtE-!HORRORl'' % " Tat•a
hard flO&amp;ed, co urt appointed
1]]. CAROL BURNETT AND
ot T•rror" 11t62
receiver aea1gned lo collect a Jud
FRIENDS
(J)Il2J II) FRIDAYS
;ement
agamat
Rockford
ll) llJ@I CBS NEWS
0 ()) CBS LATE MOYIE THE
(Repeal 60mlns)
(()
WILD WILD WORLD OF
AVENGERS Ae lurn Of The Cyber
(1) TOO CLUB
ANIMALS
nauta' Powerlulmec hanJcs lrobola
(I) (j}) II) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
(jj) SliM CUISINE
have kidnapped ac •entlslaRusaall
' The Fortune t975 Stars warren
!DliD ABC NEWS
en d Chadwick "THE RETU RN OF
BeaJ!~
Jack
Nicholson
8 18 ([) NEWS UPDATP!
THE SAINT ColhSionCourae (Pert
cttu
@I
THE
DUKES
OF
HAZ·
7 00 []) 0 CROSS WITS
II) Stars lan Og 1tv~ Gay le
Ev1dance
of
hidden
tre
uure
ZARD
ffi STUFF
Hunn1cutt
tn Hazzard Co unt~ bn nga out tha
[J) HO!!_AN'SHEROES
(}) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
greed II\ Bos s Hogg u well as a
llJIHl 118 FACE 1'HE MUSIC
[Q) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) ••• ~
co uple ol sin ister stranger s
C1) COUNTRY ROADS
"Gaslight'' 1Q44
(AepeBI, 60mlna )
D ill TICTAC DOUGH
12:00 (]) MOVIE ·(MUSICAL-COMEDY)
Cil MOVIE ·(MYSTERY·DRAMA)
(() MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
n " Funny Lady" 1975
o~~• ' Laatoa,aotOotwyn" 1948
ffGI NEwS
(}) DAVID SUSSKIND SHOW
(fi) OLD FRIENDS, NEW FRIENDS
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
12 •40 (]) EMERGENCY
Fred Rogert Ylaifa tha hom e ofba ·
7.30 (]) 8 PRtCEISRIGHT
12 :41 ® CD $1 .98 BEAUTY StiOW
seball auporatar Willie Stargel l of
ffi THE LESSON
1,00 []) I) ClJ
THE MIDNIGHT
the Pittsburgh Pirates, where they
(I) ALL IN THE FAMILY
SRECIAL
dl!lc uu how 11 tee ts to ca pta in a
(I) SHA NA NA Gues t Charlie
(JJ INSIGHf
World Series wmnet (Closed
P11de
_
1 11 JH1 CD NEWS
Capt ioned)
CD ll2J .., POP GOES THE
1.25 I}) NEWS
HUM-N FACE OF CHINA
0 30 ®
COUNTRY
1 30 ffi JIMMY SWAGGART
'Somethmg l or Everyone' ThiS pro
D ill JOKER'S WILD
1.4~ [J) MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) • \1
gram la&lt;: uaes on the wo•kmgs of a
(}) DICK CAVEn SHOW
"Action Man" 1967
~)ple at commune
@I FAMILVFEUD
2·00 (jJ) I BEliEVE
10·00 CAl MOYIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
(jj) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
2·16 00 MOVIE · (NO INFORMATION
"J1Wa2 "
..
7:68 (]) NEWS UPDATE
AVAILABLE) •• Y. " Sunnyside'
Cll PERSPECTIVE ON GREAT·
8'00 []) D ClJ Ho;RE'S BOOMER
NESS The Female Rebetlllon'
Boomer tea che s a troubl esome
2.30 Cil I) NEWS
(!) A MAN CALLED SLOANE
teenager a lesaon m aurvivalln tne J
8 ()) [d) DALLAS Alter CHit
{]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
wilderness aller the boy almost
3•45 CJJ MOYIE ·(DRAMA)· ~ " As·
Barneaannouncea he 11 qu1111ng the
eauaeea dlaalllerwhlleofla&lt;:amp·
IUtlnatlon" 1967
ra ce tor Congress, D1gger ret urn s
tngtrlp wtlh hl s lamlly ( R~tpeal)
lo the bottle and drunkenly tell as
700CLUB
W IN TOUCH
&amp;.30 ffi JUST PASSING THRU
reportar,that Cllllla rea llythat ather
(!} MOYIE ·(DRAMA) •••
at Sue Ellen s baby (Repeat 6 0
" Vole••" 117D ,
JULY 19, 1980
~+J
m1na)
,
ill MOV I! ·(SCIENCE·FICTION I
liD NEWS
••• .,.. " tnwaaton Of The Body
6·00 11J D U NEWS
10.28 ffi NEWS UPDATE
Sn•tchera" Ut56
[ ,f) MOVIE (SUSPEN SE) • ''If.
10
30
(])
RICHARD
HOGUE
[J)~ IIJ BUCKSHOT
''The Chine Syndrome' 1979
(fi)
bVER
EASY
Guests
Metlua
D llJ!ltl THE INCAEDIBLEHULI&lt;
[J)
CHAMPIONSHIP
Manchetter
and
hartather
David
McGee followa Banner lo a rna•
WRESTliNG
Mancheater
Hos
t
Hugh
Downs
' queraoe Jl&amp;fly where Banner 11 a
(JJ GOO HAS THE ANSWER
~oaed Capt•oned)
retuctant guell and th e Hu.~l..just
Ill {IJ CONCERN
\
anoUUi r , coalum•d reve ler
(tJ lOOKATME '01SC1Qiine'
Cil
@I (j)) Ill
IROI!!!•J. eo min• )
~~ EXTENSIONS
NEWS
I]] (jj) WASHINOTON WEEK IN
e 30 Cf\ D ffi NBC NEWS
{)) DAN O.,qiFFIN
REVIEW
lfJ NEWS

ffi D CIJ IJCIJC!OiiliiGJ

•oo [])

~~::.

l iM 't;,;~

"f.

Ill ill MUPPo'TS SHOW
([) OLD FRIENDS,NEWFAIENDS
Fred ROQGfS IIISIIS lhe home Of ba
eebal t superstar Wdhe Stargell o f
the P1tt sburgh P~ratea wh ere they
discuss llow 1ll8els to ca pt am a
World Sarles w1nner (Closed
Caplloned)
@I CBS NEWS
liD VICTORY GARDEN
ll2J .
ACTION NEWSMAKER
7&lt;)0 CIJ D DANCE FEVER
(]) BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
(I) CJ (]) HEEHAWGueets TG
Shepard, GeneWalaon, Jed Allan ,
Stoneman Fam1ly (Repe al 60
mma )

(!) LAWRENCE WELK SHOW

(})liD

ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'Old Cunoa1 ty Shop' Ktl " treed
hQm Jail, and the Brasse s' wrong ·
domga &amp;r9 revealed (Closed
Captione d)
@I BUGS BUNNY
ll2J 118 FEELINGS
7,30 Ill 0 INSIOELOOK
(I) THE LUNDSTROMS
{]) WORlD OF THE SEA
liD GROUCHO
i!2l 118 $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
8 .00 CIJ D C_7l BJ AND THE B EAR OJ
tallaund e• til e speltolawomanwha
ct" •ms to be a w1tch, and whose life
IS endangered by sup e rstii iOI.IS
l owna people afra1d oth er magic
epeal, 60mms )
•
700CLUB

ffi

MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ••••

"From AU ..II Wllhlo,..." 1963

[J) MOYIE -iMUSICAL· COMEDY)
•• ' 'WhlteChrl•tm..''1tJ54
([) l1l) . 240 ROBERT Trap and
Th•b la ce an underwater deatn
when gtwen lUSt second s to disa rm
a ttm e b om b set to blow up an 011
tanker. (Repeat, eo mtna)
Ill ill @I UNIVERSE
(() ALLCREATURESGRf:AT AND
SMALL Ways and Means
liD MASTERPIECE THEATRE
lillie TheJe•aeylllhe Episode Ill
Aa Ull1e arrives as.lhej:lrofes&amp;IOnal
beauty ol her day, her li st ol ed·
m~re rs gfows rapidly
(C losed
Cap!l one d)
8' 30 Ill (}) ~l!l THE BAD NEWS BEARS
The Bears tell the.r pa rents a hlll e
wh1te he' m order to attend a rock
co ncert and wmd up sutteflng a rare
p~mshmenl

8,00

ll!DCll

SANFORD
THE lOVE BOAT
D (Ji 'tit' SATURDAY NIGHT
MOVIE Thelstande, 1&amp;78SiaJ8

(I) [f)

1

a

I'M

AW&lt;IJ&lt;E~

ntE SUN 15 51411\lfNG!

IT'S A BRAND NEW
DAI{, AND I'M AL IVE!!

Oenn1s Weaver, Sharon Glees
(]J MOVIE -(DRAMA!••• " I Want
You" 1851
I]D LORD MOUNTBAnfN MAN
FOR THE CENTURY lh1s senu
covers t ha llte otLord Mountb a !ten
world hgure and Bnt• sh war hero
This ep1sade looks at Mountbat
len s l ormat •ve pre World Wa r I
years (Closed Captioned) (60
mlns.J
8'30 CIJ IJ Cll JOE'S WORLD A bl'e
co llar uni on pemt er strugg les I a
makeends meal for h 11 w1f eand t1ve
children while proelchng h1a f&amp;luc·
tanlaldestaon tololtow 1n hiS toot·
steps (Repeat)
ffi THE LESSON
10 00 CIJ IJ (l) GOOD TIME HARRY A
brlll l&amp;nt apons wr lter who let a
women get tn the way ol h1a ~ork
trlaa to gat h•a1ob beck on the San
Ffanclac o Sent1ne l Stars Tad
BB!IB&amp;ll
Marc 1a Stra&amp;sman
emle re , 60 m1na)
ROCK CHURCH
MOVIE ·( SUSPENSE) n•
" Eiur Sanction" 1975
ilJW 118 FANTASY ISLAND An
o • dlnar~ man 1s lhnl led when he
gets to lead the sw1nglna til e ot h1s
tal:lulously wealth~ double but the
tun 1urns da no erous when he learns
that he is responsible l or hie dou
l:lle a huge gambling debt s
(Bepeat 60 mms)
(J]) J.UZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP ' Dexter Gordon Ouartel
Par! II
10 30 CIJ SOCCER Atlanta Chlefsvs Los
Angeles Aztec s
118
, ,00 Ill • Ill Cll • Ill ®l
NEWS
ffi ZOLA LEVITT
I]] PET!R BATTY
@
HOCKING
VAlLI!:Y~
BLUEGRASS
11'30 CIJ • ctJ 801 AND RAY, JANE,
LARAINE AND GILDA
ffi RICHARD HOGUE
I]) MOWlE ·(DRAMA) •I'll " Where
LD¥e H. . Gone" 1~
llJ
Cll
MOVIE
·(MUSICAl· COMEOY) n a;. "Par
adlle. Haw•lfen Style' 1966
(JID MOVIE ·( ADVENTUR E) ••• ~
''Northw••t Paaaage' 1940
ll2J IAIC NEWS
11 &lt;45 (!}}
MOYIE 'Necromancy' 1972
Orso n Wailea, Pamela Franklin 2)
Legacy of Blood 1974
10'00 ffi HI DOUG
(I) MURDER MOST ENGLISH
1
Mu rder ~us! Advert•se Pori IV

~

w

Today's thoughts
Friday
Naonu and Ruth are the model

mother-111-law llnd daughter-m-law.
Ruth's saymg, begmrung "Whither
thou goest, I will go" IS famous, but
the words of Boaz, her future
husband, are not so well known.
" It iulth fully been shewed me, 1111
that thou hast done unto thy motherID-Iaw .mce the death of lhlne
husband: and bow thou bast left thy
lather aud thy mother, and the land
of thy oaUvtty, and art come unto a
pe&lt;&gt;ple which thou lmewesl not
her etofore '' -

Rutb%:1

BOOK PRIZES

LOS ANGELES (AP ) - The Los
i\ngelcs Tunes 1!180 Book Pr1zes - a
prograth to honor

literary ex·
cellen cc m f tvc wrtttng cate gon es -

has b&lt;Jcn announced by Art Seidenhawn, book editor of the Tunes
Pnze wmners Will be selected
from among ftve nommees m the

fields of fiction, general , poetry and
biography-history. A pnze will also
be given lor an out.standing btt&lt;ly ol
work by ah aulhor Irom the West or
featuring the West.
The prizes will be announced m
Los Angeles Nov. 21 They Include a
$1,000 awurd

PRESIDENT NAMED
BOSTON lA P) - Lawrence E.

Fnuraker has been elected prestdent
of the boit l'd o£ trustees of Boston 's

Muscwn of r"me Arts.
Fauraker succeeds Howard W.
Johns011, who was elected cha1nnan
of the bOard of- overseers of the
mu.seum Both appomtments take

elfc'Ct on Septembe"J

�Mr and Mrs. Joe Manuel and son
Tun, Std and Demse Manuel all enJOyed a ptcmc at the ho111e of Mr . and
M1 s Marvm McGUire.
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush and
daughter Cmdy, Mr and Mrs Dana
Lewts spent Saturday evemng wtth
Mr. and Mrs. Edd1e Hupp and
Jeremy, and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Hupp at Portland.
Stacey Cratg spent a week wtth
her grandpa rents, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Prolhtt and fanuly at Canton.
Mr. and Mrs, Russell Roush spent

10-The Da1ly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fr1day, July 18, 1980

Fairview News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Wyatt South of Columbus Vlsttetl
his mother, Mr. imd Mrs. Don
Manuel and attended the Hart
reumon at the home of Earl Hart m
RacmeSunday.
Mr and Mrs Bob Lawson, Debbte
Lawson and daughter. Tara of Mtd·
dleport v1s1ted Mr. a nd Mrs. Charles

Lawson and W1lda Sunday
Joyce, Domta and Robm Manuel
VISited Eldred and Elh~ Hart and
daughter Debb1e a nd granddaughter
Sara of Elliot, Mame at the home, of
Earl Hart m Racme Monday. On
Monday, J oyce, Domta and Robm
also vtstted Mr. and Mrs. Gtlbert
Hart and family a t Racme

11-The Dally Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 18

Laurel Cliff News Notes

Sunday evemng wtth Mrs. Edna
Roush at R.J,Icme.
Mr •and Mrs Clarence Roy and
daughter Nancy of Racme ;md Arthur Wa rner vtstted Mrs Etha War·

Attendance at Sunday School at
the Free Methodist Church July 13
was 75. Chmr members present were
12. A duet was sung by Ida May Martin and Shirley Fnend.
Rev Hicks peached Sunday marrung m absence of Pastor Shook. Mr.
and Mrs. Shook were attending conference m Lancaster.
Mrs. Una Jacobs remains a.
patient m Holzer Medical Center

ner.
Mr. ' and Mrs. Russell Roush
vtstted Sunday evemng wlth Mr a nd
Mrs. Arnold Anderson at Letart
Falls.
Dana and Roberta Lew1s of Clifton
spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs
Russell Roush and asststed them m
repamng the bathroom.

13

l
I
'

-~--------------~--------.

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

WANT AD INFORMAnON

IN
can
ce lled?
Lost
your
operator's license, Phone
9'12 2143.

Opportunoty
A·frame business butldlng
with concrete parkmg area

at 514 E
Ma1n St,
Pomeroy. Call 992 3921
$20,000
'

Address,...__ _ _ _ _ _ __.

I CBihp;~lr
11--Winfed TO Do

eFINANCIAL
21-

These cash rates

e REAL ESTATE

mclude dtscount

31-Homts tor S.atet
32-Mobile&lt;Home•

22

23
24
25
26
27
28
29

30

.

I

tor Sale
ll-- F~rm• for S.le

I
I
I
- - - - - - - 1'

----- 1

_ _ _ _ __ I I

------ J,,

,4..----Board

of

Me1gs

County

Commissioners
Nottce to Motor
Veh•cle Dealers.
In accordance wtth Sec

t 1on 307 86 of the Oh1o
Revtsed Code, sealed b•ds
wil l be

recetved by the

Me1gs County Board of
Commtsstoners, m their of
ftce, located '" the court
House , Pomeroy, Ohto
45769, unt11 12 noon on Aug
5, 1980, the b1ds w ill be
opened at 2 o'clock PM on
Aug 5, 1980 and read a lou~
for th e following vehtcle
Each btd to meet the con
dtttons and spectf tcattons

as f ollows
1981 Flatbed Truck
l- One 1980 or 1981 model
flatb~d truck w1th Peabody
Galton or equtvalent dump
body , 16' 4" long • 96" w1de
contractors body w 1th wood
fl oor,
42" high steel
bulkhead, 14" Removable
stdes.
14" 1aoo Drop
Ta1tgate : mcludes lights,
mudtlaps and mstallat1on
The bed mijst ~ have an
opentng m the front m1ddle
sect1on (22"x48" ) to ac
commodate a mounted
truc k wen ch

6-9,000 # I beam front
axle

7- 18,500 # 2 speed rear
ax le
8- 5 speed transmtston
( Syncromeshl , dtrect m fif

th
1n v 8 gas

eng me or larger

lD-Step fuel tank, lett
j mtntmum

ca pac1ty 50 gallons
11- 4.000 N mmimum
front sprmg ca pac tty
12- 11,000 N m1n1mum
rea r sprtng capacity
13- Auxlltary
rear
spnngs
14- Combinat ,on front
and rear d1rect 1onal s•gna l

l&lt;ghts
15-Trafftc; hazard swtt

ch
16-Dual electnc horns

17- Heater and defroster
18- Two spee9
wtn
dshteld w tpers and washers

19-Power Steenng

'

AUCTION
SATURDAY JULY 19, 1980
12:30 P.M.
1 hav e sold my home located nea r the end ot

Rutland St. l"here the Flood Road &amp; Middleport Hill
Road .nteresect. Watch tor s1gns at top of M1ll St I
Hill, Mtddl eport, Oh1o The followmg personal pro·

perty w1ll be sold
Denmark 6 speed 11 h p R1d 1ng Mower B S Motor
(new con dttlon) , 5 h p Rot a T tl!er, Push M ower ,
Lot at Hand Tool s. Ftshtng E qutpme nt, Cross-cut
saw, wood Parch Seat &amp; Sw tng , M eta l SmgJe Bed,
E l ectrtc M1xer, E lec tr1 c Toas t er, Ltbra r y rab le,
Other Household Items, Craftsman !2 " Self Propell
ed Mower , Push Gar den Plowr 3 gal Weed Sprayer,
3 Scy thes. Mu ch Mor e !Odds &amp; Ends) L1vmg Room
Cha~r.

Dis hes, Electnc Iron, Rad 10, Wall Plcture.t l

Old Trunk, Some Avon Battles, Some Ant1ques, J -

I
I
:Z
J

25
90
25
75

Public Not1ce

Pubhc Nottce

ttres, on and off road tread
22-0ne add1t1ona1 7''
nm and rmg
23-Cast spoke wheels

24-Heavy duty clutch
25-Heavy duty brake
and front tow hooks

mount e d ,

DO
50
10
00

Sent1ne1

toot dump body)
5-2 4,000 # GVW

1&gt;-360 c u

Char9e

Mobile Hom• sales •nd Y:.rd ••Itt are.cctpl-.:1 only with c•sll wltll
order :zs cent chuge lor •ds urry1ng Box Number In Care of Ttlt

booster wtth 7" rear brakes

heavter

26-Heavy duty bumper
27-L H. and R. H. sen.or
west coast mirrors

28- 77 amp
heavy duty
29--60 amp
alternator

battery,
or

PUBLIC NOTICE
A summary of the 1961
Budget

3D-Cab grab handles L &amp;
31- Full depth foam ben·
ch seat, heavy duty trim

32- Heavv duty factory
remforce d frame

33-Color- Omaha Oran

ge

The front of the envelope
enclostng the btd must be

marked (Flatbed Truck)
Bidder to furn1sh thetr
own btd farms, listing bid
pnce as 1nd1cated on the
11ne 1tem spectficat1on
sheet as advertised
Deltvery ~ must be made
by the successful btdder 90
days after btds are awar

ded, or b1d 1S voided
The County Com
mtsstoners may accept the
lowest bid, or select the

(7118,252tc

Revenue

Fred Hoffman, Mayor

Village of Middleport
JulylB(lt)
Public Nottce

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids w•ll be rece1ved by
the V1llage of M&lt;ddleport,
Ohio, Meigs County at the
Mayor's Office at the
V&lt;llage Hall, 237 Race
Street, unt1l 3 PM, August
7, 1980 for the following
materials:

425 tons, more or less,
Asphalt« Concrete m place
and rolled.
Streets bemg considered
far
resurfact ng
are

available at the Mayor's
Office, 237 Race Street,
Middleport, Oh10
•
The Village reserves the

nght to re1ect any or all
bidS.
•
Fred Hottman, Mayor
V1llage of Middleport
July 18,25 (21)

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

best b1d tor the mtended
purpose, and reserve the
nghJ' to accept or re1ect
any or all b1ds, and/ or any
part therof
Mary Habstetter, Clerk
Meigs County Board
of Comm1sstoners

and

Sharing Use of the V1llage
of Middleport, Ohio, asap
proved by Village counc11
on July 14, 1980 will be
ava1lable tor publiC m
spection at the Mayor's of
ftce, 237 Race Street, bet·
ween the hours of 8 A.M
and 4 P M
Monday
through Fnday throughout
the month of August. 1980.

larger

R

_,,,. •.

3

, .,,

~.

,~_,,,,.,,.r

Announcements

I PAY. highest pnces
possible for gold and silver
cams, rmgs, 1ewelry, etc

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP

house

2 FAMILY yard sale Z1d·
dtan I F1fe

F 1ve Potnts

Sat 10 6, Sun l 6. Lad1es
clothes 8·18, Men's sports
coats 1 su1ts 48 reg. Lots of
these are new.

WI L L

BUY

ol d

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some grea t gdts as a Sen
tmel route ca rr. 1er . Phone
us nght away and get on
the e ltglbiltty l1st at 992

Wtll

Needed RDor LPN tor 11 to

Ir a n

SmiSSIOnS,
batterieS,
engmes, or scrap metal s,

Help Wanted

Baby

clothes,

SALE four family maybe
more,
somethtng
for
everyone new and used
1tems, ant1que dishes of all
kinds. art glass, cut glass,
depression,
carntval.
stoneware, tron sk1lle1s,

Hull, McCoy , and Rosvdle
pottery. Many other old
items Household l,tems tn

elude dishes,
phances,

small

curtams,

and more

ap·
rugs

Clothing of all

stzes mens, womens, and
childrens We have shtrts,
shoes, pants, tops , 1eans,
we
even have fresh
produce
Everyth 1ng

marked cheap, must sell ,
so came see us this Satur

day and Sunday, l9·20fh, 4
miles north of Chester, tust
below Ea$tern Htgh School

Sa te starts at 9 No sates
before Saturday, for more
tnformatton call985 4396

YARD SALE Middleport
Youth League, M1ddlepor\
Park,Saturday 9· ?, bats,
untforms, equipment

YARD SALE

Lin Hart

Res i Qence,
Vtne
St.,
Ractne Frtday and Satur

day, 9 to 4.
8

Publ•c Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Auct1oneer ,
Complete Serv1ce . Phone
949·2487 or 949· 2000. rac1ne,
Oh10, Cntt Bradford.
9

Wanted Ia' Buy

I ran and brass beds, old

turmture,

desks,

gold

rings,
jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc , wood
tee bO)(eS, ant1ques, etc

Complete
households
wnte M o M1ller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992
7760
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Dental gold and gold
ear pins 675·3010

'3"

"TURF "

RUBBER

Sci Yd.
Reg.$5.99

I Price Does Not
tnctude

st.:u1a110nt

In ·

'4"
BACK

Sq.Vd, ,
tash-N-CarrY

~92 - 2259

NEW LISTING OF REMODEL!

baths, on •;, AC RE
REAL
BUY
2
bedroom home, ba th , all

bedroo m s, nt c e
roo m, uftlttv. part
men!, 56 acre, Ml, ig!s l
Sc hool
Dts tr tc f

$12,000
FAMILY - N.ce large 4
bedroo ms, 1'12 baths, hot

$13,500 00
NEW LISTING -

F1ve

Po1nts 2 bedroom
mob1le home an one
beautiful acre wtth
ga r age,
wo r kshop ,
metal storage butl d .n g,
wa s h er,
dry er

$11,500 00
NEW
LISTING

Installed

• __ andup'
w/paddtng

t1cal s 1dmg $21.500 00
NEW
LISTING
THERMOPANE WIN
DOWS! ~ 5 room , 3
bedroom hom e on 1 acre
lot, hardwood floortng,
new panelmg, new wall
and base ca bmets tn k1t
chen, part1ally f1n1 shed
full base ment, l lf2 bath

Really n&lt;ce' $25,000 00
ACREAGE TO DE ·
.W'f!LOP - In Eastern
Dt stn ct I 2'5' acres wood
l and/ homesttes, 4 lots
surveyed f or hames1 tes,
water and elec tr• c to
p r ape rfv
ava ilabl e

$27,500 00
NO GAS

BILLS!

Ap

prox 70 ac r e fa rm Wtth
modern .. bed home,
proer ty has 1ts own
operat1ng gasd well,
new ly remode led budt
1n kttc hen , full base
ment, centra l atr, st oc k
ed pond, horse st able,
cattle
barn,
other
butldmgs Country ltv
mg for your fam tly'
G1ve us a ca ll t o see
thts!
•

HOT SUMMER?

Dial

you r own weather I Cen
tral a •r 1n tht s 3
bedroom r anch on a
large l evel lot, fully
eq u1pped k1tchen F1ve
Potnt s
a r ea
for

DISTRICT

/Henry E Cleland, Jr.
9~2 -6191

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dotfte Turn er

,

Not r es ponstble fdr acctdents or lo~s

Main

742-221i

Ch.rleiiM MJyts, Reauor
Neacll E Caney, Br ·Mgr
orft2 -tiao

HOBSTEIJER
REALTY

MORTAGE

MONEY

s

available, conventional
percent down, VA. no down

payment,FHA low down
payment , FHA 245
graduated
payment
program, FHA 265 subsidy

742·2003

program 2nd mortgages
Cunningham
and
A.ssoctafed, l nc , Mortgage

Bankers Call 992 7000 tor
appamtment

FIRST

AD

carpet, storm doors and
windows, a1um1num Siding,
1 one car garage. Loc.ated on
Brownell Avenue,
Mtd

dleport, PhOne 992 5204
32

a call.
RUTLAND E•tra
well kept 3 bedroom

full ba ths, modern k1l ,

1975 Western ManSion 14 x
70 lhree bedroom . 1971

home
Alumtnum
s•dtng
Home
ts
matntenance free . On

formal dmmg, full base
ment1 nat gas furnace .
1 ac r e

64 two
bedroom , 1971 Liberty, l4 x
65 two bedroom, 1968
Atlant1c,
12 • 60 two
bedroom ,
1968
New
Cameron ,

n&lt;ce lot S36,500 00
RUTLAND - Large 2

13 lots,

story home on Mam
Street Extenstve tnstde
remodeling Tne new
furna ce, blown •n tn ·
sulatton are only a few
ntce things about th1s
home G1ve 1t a look! 1
Pr1ce
reduced
to

uttltttes available Only

$6,500
SPECIAL - ' n&gt;ts and
old houst !:jl\.'11 Jones
Boys $3,5uu
BARGAIN - One story
bUilding 24•80, With
bath fo r flea marke t or
ho m e $11,000
YOU CAN BUY - ThiS

$35,000 00
ATHENA ACRES -

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1977 Schultz mob1le home
and lot 14•70 w1fh three
bedrooms, Jlh baths, at
1041'1' St 2nd Ave, M1d
dleport , Oh•o Call 992· 2457

We have some'' G 1ve us

5

annex

bu1ldmg

14

Mobile Homes
for Rent

TWO

bedroom

trader

fully

Ask1ng •.

Apartment
for Rent

742· 2474
Je.1n rrussell949 -2660

OF:f

up and '12 bath on matn floor , Many extra ntce
f ea tures tn qu•et area Ask1ng $57,500

in• 1'\ small outbu,rd,ng for

storage, on qu1et street ~\o\!J

3 BR, kil, LR , DR &amp;

''.
!'

family roam wtth woodb'urnmg stove on good stze

lot, rqom tor garden, well landscaped . Carport 8.
storage bldg. $37,000

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over 100 ac res,
could be housing development - gas already drill· ·
~ d. on property water lines close. All mineral rights
go w1fh property T1mber ready to be cut Call tor
mare.tnformattOn.

1n clean neighborhood, 3 BR,

NEEDED: Low Cost and Low
Ready Buyers

Pr~ce

reg1stered

HOOF HOLLOW

Horses

boots, etc English and
Western . Ruth Reeves
(614) 698·3290

RENTER' S ass1stance for
Senior Ctt tzens In Village

apartment, ~

bath Call992 5908

1

Homes, Have

992 5007

Also

sleepmg

room

46

Supenor Vinyl Produ~ts

VOLKSWAGON

BEETLE extra clean, runs

good. 985 3912.

57

j~~e.~8~e~r~t~d~a~n~d~ls~e~~J•

:

53

We are Ptcktng up several
repossessed and trade·in
ptanos and organs 1n your
area PriCeS from $250 and

up Call cred1l manager
today. 304 485 2170

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

pay cash or certifted check

tor

ant1ques and collec
or

enttre estates

coin collections Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
Mtsc. Merchan1se

LADIES' beau)lfUI high
quality si!e 16 dresses.
brands
Dav1d Crystal,
Verona, LillY Pul1tzer One

,.

100%

silk

$10 each

Never been worn 992 3283

~

BIS SE LL
CARPET
SWEEPER, Eureka elec
trtc broom... two wood
foldtng clla lrs, electr.c

sk11iet, bathroom scales,
and d1shes 992 2961
USED

sell·contamed

a~r

conditioner . Can be seen at
Kingsbury Park Sales.

Minersville , Oh S250
55

Butld1ng Supplies

3/ 8 mch rebar- l7c per toot
by 20 tt sect1on only D
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
summ1t Rd., Mtddleport,

Ml=

REGULAR

SALE

PRICE

PRICE
$20,730
$22,780
$5,975
$8,250
$13,595
$15,020
$1,150
$3,695
$5,6$0
$01;550

Trucks for Sale

f~rm

992 7292,992

61

USEDFarm
HAYEquipment
Baler, New
_l-lolland, Model67 . 742·2014
I N" STOCK
MODELS
ONLY
NO
TRADES
RID ING TRATORS 3830
E 30 " Cut Rider, L1st
$1186 95 , Sale $999, l 8122
R 1der 50" Mower 12 h.p ,
L&lt;Sl $3385, Sale $2799 , 2·
8123 12 h p. R1der 50" (hyd .
IIIII. List $3710, Sale $3099,
l 8162T 16 h p Rider TWin
Cyl, SO" mower, L1st $3820,
Sa le $3199 , l 816B 16 h p
R tder Stngle Cyl , 50"
mower, List $3710. Sale

$3099 , 2 8163 T 16 h p R1der
Tw1n Cyl, 50" Mower (hyd
lift). L.st $4155, Sa le $3499,
R1der,
l 8163 B 16 h p
S1ngle Cyl 50" Mower
lhyd l1ft) List $4055, Sale
53199 , 8 8163 T 18 h p. R1der
Twm Cyl , 50" Mower (hyd
L•ftl, L1st $4435, Sate $3699.
WALKING TRACTORS 3
5240 8 h p Hand Start w1th
30" Mower, LISt $1954 25,
Sale $1569 50 ; 2 5260 8 h p.
Elec. start With 30" mower,
L• s f S2139 25, Sale $169'1 50,
1 5660 12 h p Elec Start
w1th 40" Mower , List
$2741 45 , Sa le S2199 50,
Graely Tractor Sales, 210
Condor St , Pomeroy , Ohio

Phone 992 2975
6~2~--~w
~
a~
nt~e~d~t~
o ~B~u~y~-- 1

CHIP WOOO Pole s ma.. l
d1ameter 10" on largest
end $12 per ton Bundled
slab. SlOper lon. Delivered
to Oh&lt;O Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689
ANTIQUES ,

FUR

NITURE, glass, chma,
anythtng •See or ca ll Ruth

Gosney, 'l'''ques, 26 N.
2nd, Middfport, OH 992·
3161
.
OLD COINS, poc ket wat·
ches, class nngs, wedd1ng
bands, d•amonds Gold or

s11ver . Call J A. Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop, Athens, OH 592 ·
6462
GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
RINGS ,
JI;WELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC IT EMS . PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP· TO DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10, OR CALL 992 3476.

1970 Dodge Van 6 cy11nder,
three speed, good fires and
body Motor runs good
Racks on top, new brakes,
all around pnce Sj350 00
Call or see at 742 2263,
Rutland, Main St .• by Stans
Old Bargain Land .
1974 Jeep
J20 pickup,
power
steenng,
power
brakes, a~r cond1t1oning,
111t wheer. am tm stereo,

$6,500
$6,990
$10,150
$4,800
$5,500

$4,500
$5,995
$9,250
$4,350
$4,995 .

JONES Meat Packmg
slaughlering, custom
retatl · meat

Washington Co Rd. 248,
Little Hocking, OH 61&gt;7
6133

SHINNS TRACTOR ,SALES
240 UPPE~ RIVER ROAD
r
GALLI PO.LJS, OHIO
446·l044 ""'~

ONE PONY tor sale. 843
2353'

- - - - - - - -1ranspartatlan
71
1978

- :

Pomeroy, Oh.

Custom

Sh

0p

"We pnnt
anythtng on
anything'"

new or repatr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleantng and pa1ntmg.
All work guaranteed

ALMOST
ALMOST

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS
-DRY WAUING
-ROOFING
-REMODELING
-CONCRETE
Free Esttmates
Ph, (304) 773-5131
or ( 304) 992· 2276
6 30 l mo

estimates

Call

Charless,nclalr, 985 4121
83

6 l3 1 mo

Excavating

Water well dnlllng. Tom

Anne Adams

Stzes
"From 30x30"

Pattern Oepl
The Da1ly Senttnel

Utility Buildings

243 West 17 Sl,

10011. Pnnl NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STlLE NUMBER.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54

Busy women the fastest to-sew
fashions are mour NEW SPRING
SUMMER PATIERN CATALOG '
Dresses. tops rackets pants
Plus $1 lj irl!f pattern coupon
Send Sl for Calaiog
127-Af~ans 'n' Doilies
$1.50
129-QutciiEISJ Toanslen $1.50

Ractne, Oh

Ph. 614·843· 2591
6 15 tfc

130-Sweaters-Stzes 31·56 $1.50

132-Quilt 01icmals

NSTRUCTION
- Back hoe and dump

truck servtce
- Shop and portable
weldmg
- Concrete work
-Commerctal plumbmg
-Underground
fuel
storage •nstallatton
- F•berglass pools

MIDDLEPORT,

Loans, No Down Pay·
525,000;

5°'0 down

on

balance, FHA 265 Subsody Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.

UpiSJulyl4th
"BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ"

OpenM· W· F9 OOtol.OO
By Appomtment
Off1ce 992 7544
Home 992 ·6191

CALL 949-2710

10 7 Sycamore St
Pomeroy, OH

l~::::::::::6:l:B:l:m::o:::_L:::=:=:::::::::::::::.
-

Pul ins
Excavating

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Jl711 Noble Sum1t Rd .
Middleport, Oh&lt;O
I 992·5724
Sales, senltCe and sup·
plies. In ground and
above ground pool s

Expertenced Operators
avatlable for local work
• 2 rubber t1re backhoes
el e:JCcavatot hoe 1114

yd.
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ1pment .

992-2478
7 17 1 mo pd

5 1 ttc

"IW Yorll, NY

Stres from 4x6 to 12x4C

86

$1.50

M. H. Repair

NOW IS THE TIME for
prevent1ve

main

tenance-mobile home roof
coating, labor
and
matertal. 14' W1de, S2 per

foot, 12' wide, $1 75 per
toot, 10' Wide, $1 50 per
foot . See us also tor free

992-7354

The Last~Day to Stgn

esttmates on awntngs, car·

ports and skirting We are

o.

your authorized dealer for
awn~ngs

the best

'
85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL limestone and
grave I AI SO, I1me hau I1ng
and spreading Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742 2455.

on · the

market by Urban
t n·
dustrles K mgsbury Home

Sates, 1100 E. Ma1n St.,
Pomeroy , Oh1a

Call 992·

7034

61~rr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 ServUe
1 Sherlock
5 Famous
Holmes
American
street
lawyer
%Spry
10 Erpeelant
3 Kind
II May
of boom
or Strltc;h
4 Heckler's
1J Silent '
mlsaUe
boblieal
5 In fanner
film classic
days
IS "Boola BooiJl"G Nevada city
boy
7 8111'11We
16 Albee's
hill dfftller

"-story"

'

II AUanla
Stadium

structure
!a Greek

ezplorer

poet

32 Donlzetti '

8 Guard.

17 Datm deity
Iackie or
18 Chlll'&lt;hman
cenler
28 Female
9 Enlertng
friend (Fr 1 12 Early Jewish
%1 Chemistry
ascetic
sulfi.I
14 Fresh air,
!% lrWt verse
inlonnaUy

Z8Vlneent
Price film
31 Engliah

=Predatory
bird
hlnto
medicine
zs Perlonner
%1 Okefenokee
Is ooe

heroine
33 ~rrect

a ten
35 Dormouoe
38 Medlt. Ill.
3!1 Ot:algic
site

~~nw~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==::::::::::~
J&amp;L BLOWN
84

Electrical
&amp; Relrogerallon
SEW 1 NG
MA C H 1 N E
R
epalrs,
servtce,
all
makes
992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop,
Pomeroy
Authonzed Singer Sa les
and Serv1ce
Scissors

Will do remodeling,
rooting, painting I elect.

V.C. YOUNG
9'12 ·6215 or 992-7Jl4
Pomeroy , Oh.

For More lnformat1on

Now 1S the time tor home
1mprovement Beat the bad
weather We Will do any
size rob . barns, roofs.

way. By the way, free
estimates are provided

II ,

Sunday

THE POOL PEOPLE

bad weather thats on Its

•
-Addons and
remOdeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
electncal work
.,..
t Free Esttmates)

ment. Federal HOUSing
Loans, J 0 'o 'down on

Floonng ceiling. paneling,
doors and windows, also

HOME NEEDING pa1n
ted• Gutters in need of
repa~r• Is that roof beg,n
'ning to leak? Call 992·3519,
992 3941, or992 5126and get
things all f1xed up for thai

Farm Buildings

CO

CARPENTER 'S
DANCE
STUDIO

concrete work, basement,
dnveways, etc , etc

reterences. Call 992·5126,
992 3941 or992 3519 .

"YOUNGS

Rear Estate Loans
ll'
,% Interest
30 Yrs .
PARK
FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automat•c

992

houses, etc Wtll provide
free
est1mates
Ex
pertenc~d
and
have

I CALL:
992·632J or 992-6011
7 l l mo

Summer
Enroll ·
ment
For

6309 or 742 2211

pa1nl,ng Call 992 2759

101 each pattern fO&lt; first-class
anmatl and handling. Send to:

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

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

Free

No

IS NOW UNDERWAY

Vtnton

18 \\ 20\1
'
'
$1.75 f01 each pattern. Add 504

Shrubbery

CARPENTER
SERVICEC:"

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

Home

work,

St1tch up each casual top 1n a
mornmg- they re lhat EASY'
Save $$$ on thnfly W1de-w1dlh
cotton blends-slnpes. pnnts or
border tabncs
Pnnted Pattern 4501 MISses
SIZes B. 10 11 14 16 18, 20
Ha lf S11es 10\1 1211 14 \\ 16 1'1

SMALL

New
Drtveways
Gravel or Concrete.
Regrade dnveways (&amp;
repa1r) Stdewalks and
Pattos .
Complete
mob1le home hook-up .
Brush cteanng work.

8-20 IOY2-20Yz

t.,-1/n_ -/1.1-s

• New Homes- extensive remodeling
• Electncal work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph , 992-7583
6 30 l mo

ALL STEEL

Grad.ng-Seedtng

Siding

Improvements

Cemenl Floor Company ,
B1dwell, Ohio, 388 9877 All

SIZES

S ULER

949·2860.
calls.

Cement

l 22 tfc

MPLETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE

Vinyl and Aluminum

2· SMALL 2 wheel tra•lers .

Scotchguard

94• 2862
94~ 2160

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

r~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~r;~~~~~~~~~~~~====~;:;:::~~~~

tall tor Free Stdlng
Est1mate, 94,~2801 dr

rates

Free E st. mates
Reasonable Pr.ces
Call Howard

Ph 614·949·2J58
~vemngs &amp; Weekends
6 16 ttc

2779

81

Most Oates
6 9 1

All types of roof work,

T·shtrt and novelty
sh1rts tor po1tt1C1ans,
ball team~ bus•ness or
tndiYtduals.

1972 Monte Carlo body par

l Reesetruck
trader
pickup
bedhitch
rans.$175,
$40 •
1, 4 wheel , 20 tt tag a long
travel tra1ter, tully equ1p·
ped $3,500 Nate Vanaman,
Rutland, Oh 742 2761

SILVER
DOLlARS
949-2801
No Sunday Calls

ROOFING

'

$75. each, l set of 8 ft

992·3795

H. L WHITESEL

Prl' nt

&amp; Accessones

ts, one hood, two doors, one
trunk lid, assorted front
end parts, rear glass 992·

PRICES FOR

~~=:;=======:;=jfr~~~~~~~4~2*tf~c~~~;=::;;::=:=:s~~~m~o~H

Auto Parts

ELWOOD
REPAIR

we sharpen

BOWERS
Sweepers,

INSULATION '
Vrnyl &amp;

lilBurn
Z7 Present
Z8 Duad
:!!1 Eva!Ullle
38Moniker
34Asianriver

'

35 Moon
vehicle

Alum)num Siding
elnsulatton
• Storm Doors

36 Jamatcan
elport

• Storm Windows

37 SymboUc
embrace
4l&gt;Beaprerequisite
41 From tile
same mold
4% Name before ~:+-1-+-+-1-

• Replacement

toa sters, trans, all small
appltances Lawn mower.

Ne•t to State H1ghway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825

Wmdows
Free Estimate
J ames Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
6 ~5 l mo

Lewis . discount
304 895 on
· 3802
Seasonal
all 1~ I1_~=========-~--------.::_- 43 Interpret
pumps and accessories
Dozer, Endtoader and
d ump truck . Type work 1n
eludes basements, ponds,

lanctcleanlng

and

e•

Discounts

ava•lable through July. Fill
dirt alsO ava•lable Randy
or Roger Butcher Phone
742 2940
Bulldozer ,w ork, small 10bs
a spec1ally Call 742·2753

Autos for Sate
Mustang,

618 E. Matn

good cond1f1on $3,000 00.
Phone Terry L1te at 667
3544
~6

EXTREMELY HIGH

"rnander"

Ltvestock

processing,

Vans&amp;4W.D.

STILL PAYING

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

· · · -·

&amp; Ll"tsteek

63

73

f: avat1ng

USED EQUIPMENT
INT. 464 Gas Tractor
MF 245 Diesel Tractor
MF 1085 Diesel Tractor
MF 165 Diesel Tractor
MF 560 Round Baler

0

-Antiques

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

54

MUSICal

.....

611mopd

Business-Farms-- PartnershiPS
and Corporattons
Payrools, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

1970 CHEVY IMPALA 943·
2353
'

51325
2098.

_

Carl Reed 667·J327
Tom Burrough s 667 6150

7 10 l mo

ShirtS $4.00 Each

1971

1974 CHEVY c 10 PICkUp,

--·~

-

FREE ESTIMATES

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

1978 Flat X 19 four cylin
der, four speed, air con·
d1t1on1ng, runs on regular
gas 30 plus mpg &lt;;all 99'2 ·
5454

7300 eventngs,keep trytng

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy Large rots Call
992 7479

MF40B Backhoe
$26,650
MF50C Backhoe
$28,500
MF230 Gn Tractor
$8,288
MF245 Diesel Tractor
$11,380
· MF275 Diesel Tr01ctor
$17,999
MF285 Diesel Tractor
$19,715
MF Bar Type Hay Kakes $1,375
MF 120 Hay Balers
$4,475
MF 450 Round Hay Balers $7,575
M,F 725 Mower-Conditioner
$5,495

1

good gas mileage. $3500.00.
or best offer. Call 985 3596

radto, excellent condttiOn,

72

Space lor Rent

Right now is the time to MasseY Fergu10t1
cons1der MF because we
have some special factoryL-.-------'
allowances on our full !ine

•

Autos lor Sale
1977 Ponf&lt;ac Sunblrd,
sunroof, automat1c, am fm
71

Instruments

Two room furntshed apart
ment all uttl lttes patd
Work1ng men only Call

-

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

INEWSPAPER ENTERPRtSE ASSN l

ADORABLE
FULL
blooded co111e pupp1es, 7
weeks old. $25 each 992

furnished

4 roams and

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Windows and
, Rooltng

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

take his third spade trick, bul
the etght of spades In dummy
would naw be a winner. South
would get in with dummy's
last trum~ to discard his
queen of daamonds.

new clutch, ttres, exhaust.

PARTIALLY

NEW EQUIPMENT

COULD BE YOUR DREAM HOME - 2 story With
dble garage, home Includes 3 BR's with large bath

alum s1d1ng &amp; storm wtndows . Priced in $30's

AKC

and pontes and nding
lessons
-Evervth1ng
imagmabl e 1n horse equ1p
ment
Blankets, belts,

FARM MACHINERY
CLEARANCE SALE

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

NEW LISTING -

KEN NELS

BEDROOM
Mob1le
Home Adults only 992 2598

and Save!

Phone 742·J092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
""
Phone 742·3171

GOOD STARTER HOME -

Unfor·

Dobermans 614 446 7795.

Buy Now

velma Ntctnsky, Assoc.

TRAILER - 2 BR , on r

Also

OH 992 5724

acres w•th 1 bedroom

Housing
Headquarters

f\

Adults
only
Brawn ' s
Trailer Court Call992 3324

24

eluded with property .
Shown by appt only .
HYSE'LL RUN RD. - 8
dwelling
$21,500 00

4•

Pass

Boardmg , all breeds Clean
tndaor outdoor faciltties

)(

two bedroom , 1967 Buddy,
12 x 50, 2 bedroom
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sales
PI Pleasant, W VA
675 4424

a round or blddln&amp; the101t two
out ol lffO l i n -. Be wu
wrotl( ffhlll "' lAid ba hid to
be aet at 11111 lour-hurt
coatraet.
Will hid opened the kin&amp; of
apadeaand llllllod wthe I Dof
clubl.
SOutll thoulcl bave hopped
rl&amp;ht up with dummy'• ace ol
clubl, fed the 10 of apadeaand
dlocarded his club 1ooer. He
didn't need the elub lineae
nor would be
the dla·
mond llnes5elaler.
Wesl would win that oeeond
spade and probably lead a
club South would ruff and
play two rowu:IJ of trumps,
stopr.lng In dummy Tben he
wou d read dummy's rune of
spades and diSCard dummy's

1:=========-r~=::;::.::~~~==-·

Moon, 12 x 60 w1th expando,

1

heated and atr condt
t1oned. Orcnard has
manv frUit and nut
trees All mmerals m ,

WE WORK FULL TIME
IN SELLING YOUR
HOME , NO
SlOE·
LINES. REAL ESTATE
IS
OUR
ONLY
BUSINESS, SO IF YOU
HAVE A PROBLEM,'
CALL US AT 992 JJ25 or
992· J876.

Pau

Pass

"Well," sa1d South, "I saved

acres wtth a beauttful
home, swtmmtng pool ,

one f I , 3 bedroom home,
all utlltttes , ba t h, flue
for waodburner and 2
lots

1•
Pass

a round of b1ddmg

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

ttbles

FIVE ROOM house, bath,
ullllty room, wall to wall

that ' down home feel
1ng ' Askmg $26,500 00
BUILDING SITES -

bedrooms, 3 ktng stze, 2

So•tb

and Alan Sontag

Nothmg too large Also,
guns. pocket watches and

bedroom home Large
spac1aus rooms g1ve you

water heat, all uttltt1es ,
modern ktt , carpetmg
a nd full ba sement

East

By Otwlld Jacoby

House for rent. Four rooms

4

tor.$34,900 00
S rHE " LITTLE BIT
MORE
THAT
COUN'rS " ' SO WE
' S rRIVE ro DO MORE!
REAL'rOR
,

JULY CARPET SALE
ALL CARPET

lots of storage, 2_ baths,

ott street park ing Sell ·
mg pnce $26,500 00
POMEROY - On Con
dor St Extra n1ce 3

uttltttes, 2 lots for only

FIRST AO -

Remodeled throughout!
5 roo m , 3 , bedroom
home, new paneling,
new carpet1ng , v tnyl tn
k1tchen and bath, t her
mopane wmdows, ver

Comfort •s what
counts' And th1 s 3 bed
ra nch has all the th1ngs
need t o f eel " Right
Hom e ' On a 1 acre

S995
Sq Yd

two
Call

garage, 1 acre lot 992 3454

story home on Unton
Avenue Home has ... 3
bedrooms, gas forced
a1r f urnace Garage for

perttes live tn one and
use t he other two for
wn te off On lied well, 3

North

Houses tor Rent

3 AND 4 RM turn1shed ap
ts . Phone 992 5434

NEW 3 bedroom home for

Only $41 ,000 00
POMEROY - La rge 2

FREE LIVING - 3 pro

·41 ·

SIDING, SOFFIT

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

small d1amond West would

EXcellent locat1on on SR

and fam1ly roam 2 car
garage and s~d. also I!

608
MAIN
POMEROY , O.

Weat

Openmg lead •

nn... '

BURROUGH'S

"*

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer North

6279 after 5 p m

44

sale
Bullt · ln kitchen,
d1n1ng
room,
large
recreat•on room , fireplace,

full baths, d1n1ng room
Phone
1- (614) -992-3325

•a

One acre gorund and lull
basement Phone 61&gt;7 3826

Located on Eagle R1dge
Rd Phone 949 2793

nice
garden
spot
S52.000 00 Phone 667 3288

bedroom home wtth 2

$30,500 00
EASTERN

CARPET

have ~

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - On
Bradbury Rd Lovely 3

675 1490

boys

YARD

85

and butl1 tn kttchen, full
basement w1th woad stove ,
large garage , b 1g lot wtth

Real Estate - General

PHONE

tAQI

Lots &amp; Acreage

Three bedroom br1ck ranch

The mostly densely
populated nation in EuropeIS The Netherlands.

Expertenced front end
alignment and atr con ·
dttion1ng tec hnt c1an Will
pay for expertence Ex
penenced persons only
Two R tvers Ford, Pt
Pleasant, W Va Phone

clothes, stze I 3, playpen,
car seats, etc ,m1sc tt em~

FLEA MARKET

basement.
a1r con

are

-------------------- ·

Someone to help care tar
aged lady wtth arthnhs
Ca ll 992 7226

.QJIOIIII
35

Manor apts Call 992 7787

referen ces Phone 992 5094 '

7 30 s h 1ff Part l1meorfull
t1me Good workmg con
dtt1ons Contact Mr Ztd1an
at the Pomeroy Health
Ca r e Center 992 6606 Man

day through Fnday from 9
5

11

hoUr ,

tQ

HILLCRE ST

baths,

992 7255

do house cleamng,

per

.KJ14

4-2

2

style home w1th l'h bath
$3 00

•10111

fireplace, full
family
room.
t
3

bedrooms,

on approximately
acres Many extras

weather hils By the way ,

2156 or 992 2157

tiOt71

Local SchOOl DIStrict
Phonr614 985 4323

124. Three bedroom home

f 1xed up ,before that bad ~

free
es ftmates
pravtded

tKJI

H~l

BeautifUl large home. Low
utilll1es, bnck ranch style,

Three vear old, f1ve roam
house wtth ce ntral a1r and
heat, carpet throughout, 24
acres w1th fru1t trees

Em ·

Call 992 3519, 992 3941, or.,
992 5126 and get th,ngs all

at Hayward B1ssellresiden

Rutland Street
Middleport, Ohto

C. C. BRADFORD, AUCTIONEER
Sat'e b,y&gt;Bfadtord Auct1011 Co , Racm e, Oh10.

GE T VALUABLE tra1n,ng

IIABT

SOUTH

car
rent,garage
w1th two
In the
baths,
Eastern
two

car garage
~au";' t~~; 1 1 on , Me&lt;gS
4169
aon y. a

Home needing pamted?
Guters 1n need of repatr ? Is . .
that roof begmning to le~k? ,

Help Wanted

$7300 00 Call992 2981

and bath Deposit requ~red
No Inside pets Call 992
3090

Homes for Sate

d 1 tOner,

SitUations Winfed

12

YARO SALE July 17,18,19
from 9 0 on county road 28

OWNERS. CALVIN &amp; MABEL LANE

TERMS CASH

Osby (Oss.el Marlin 992
6370

5 p m on

"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED
iiiiASsffi""P'ET
Bru';.&amp;.Gord
sHAG-

5 Gallon Gas Cans, 1 TV Stand, l Small Gas Heater,
1 Gas Hot Plate, Some Plasl1c Hose, Some Steel
Traps.
l

Gold, silver or fore ,gn
coms or tany gold or sliver
1tems Anttqu e turntture,
glass or chtna, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pr1ces before
selling Also do appra1s1ng

Sale

Maple bar stools,
paint, toys, mise

ce

axle or suitab le or body ( 16

or

Yar~

and 27 9 a m

m1n1mum Cash in .advance

21- 10 00•20 12 ply rear

4-Wheel base lOB cab to

Black

11

THREE tam1ly yard sale
Thurs and Fn ., June 26

In memory, Card of Tt\antl"i and Obituary 6 cents per word. $J 00

nms

'2- Mtntmum
12
ton
SCISSOr type hOISt Installed
under above body
3-Cab lights, 4 corner
lights and 6 reflectors

Lost and Found

7

rate

2D-l0.00•20 12 ply front
t•res, highway tread 7'

PUbliC NOtiCe

Wanted to Buy

Opportuntty

WilT

.AKJII

56
Pets for Sale
POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

3

ployer.

Each word over the minimum 15 words Is 4 cents per word perUy
Adt runnu19 other than consecutive dayt W1ll be ch•r1ed at ttle I d•v

I

-

mal e

I

Equal

Jumbleo PRUNE RAPID WEASEL OUTCRY
Answer The autlior of the play certainly committed
lhlo ' -WORDS TO PAPER

e tc Call245 9188

:·~------+------.....j

----

·-

I
I
I
J

Jdays
6days

I·
I
I
I
I
I

Mail This Coupon with Rem;ttance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Cash

I day
2 days

I:
I,
I
I
I

35 _ _ _ __

LEGAL NOTICE

15 Words or Under

-~---- 1

34., _ _ _ _ __

home

may call992·5040 to eta 1m

Rates and Other Information

----- 1

31 _ _ _ __

Yesterdays

nght on top of Chester H11l

---"-c---~ I1
-----------~.

(Anawtrt tomorrow)

Hollypark trailer fur·
n1shed, atr condlflonmg,
washer,
underptnning.
sma ll metal building

Three bedroom house tor
Jl

Op·

'southeastern Ohio Legal
Serv1ces, 24_ W Unlon,
Athens, Oh&lt;o 45701
An

"t 1 X I XXJ"

Prlntenswer hers:

female cat, one eye
m1ss.ng, area of fatrgroun
ds and gunclub
Owner

14-Eiftfrical
.&amp; Aefrlguation
15--Gener•l Hauling
16-M H Rep•lr
87- Upholstery

4P M Dilly
12 Noon S~turdiJY
lor Monday

good

FOUND LARGE

a:z-Piumblng&amp; ExcaYahng
n--Eilcav•tlnt

Deadlines

gnttd by tilt abow cartoon

Call 742

Real Estate

hou~r week, salary and.
fringl' beneftts negotiable .
Must subm1t ,resume to :

Now 1rr11nge thl cj~l(j lttttrl to
lorm the at.~rprlll antwtr, 11 aug·

9

Mtntatyre

6

eSERVICES

want· Ad Advert1stng

TO

Equal

., ...

1969 Two Bedroom 12•60 •

would ffin one ol lffo
1

tUI
.AQI

T. L

VINYl SIDING

South Wu rllbt on two or
hll atetemontl. lie bad u"cl

·~K7

Upholstery "

v1nyl samples
2852

PARALEGAL POSITION,
Part time paralegal , 2()

Dachshund 992 3340.

81- Home lrnprovemenb

-----1

33 _ _ _ __

I
I
I
I

34-Busineu Buildings
35-Loh &amp; Acreage
36-Aeal Est•tt wanted
37-Realton

I'

32 _ _ _ _ __

I

71---Auto, tor S.lt
n - vans &amp; 4 w D
74-Motercvcles
nAuto Parts
&amp; Accenorits
77-Auto Rell!lir

FREE

An

1-11-10

.10118

Thornville,

l ACRE LOT S Secluded 1n

Rebulldtng , Reflntshing,
Reupholstery, F=atinc and

respon 1

portunity Employer

TWO CALl CO klttens both
female 992 3738 .

eTRANSPORTATION

1980

NORTH

11 entals

marked no later than July

G1veaway

4

U - Seed&amp; Fertillter

Serv•ces

21

11
12
13
14
15
16

eusiness

Opportun•ty
22-Money to Loan
23-Proleuional

) Announcement

10~~----

•1-Farm Equipment
•:z-wuttd to Buy
n-Trucll• tor s•••
U-LIVUIOCk
'-'- M•v &amp; Gnln

"Maggie's

25,

Main St.
Pomeroy - 992-2181

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

Rd10, TV

netghborlng counties Must
diverse

w

I~~~~Ately, I had
looe tffo
f~ ud IO do.... one The
oddl fftl't tllree to one IIIII I

the heart of Pomeroy 992

Dttch dtggtng servtce Call

773·5839 or 773 5788.

!hood of Southeast Oh10, 8
North court St, Athens,
Oh1o 45701 . Must be post·'

POMEROY'
LANDMARK

15--Schoolslnstructlon

in criSIS coun

tncrease to :If.! or full Send
resum e to Planned Paren·

WithAnyUNICO
FREEZER PLUS :
$25 DISCOUNT
Stop in for Details

51-Hounl'lold Goods
51--CB, TV, A•dlo EqUipment
53-Anllql.les
54-Mi~c Mtrchudlse
55-- Bulldlna Supplies
56-Pets lor S.le

SERVICES

ex

Slbllllle,. Half t1me
pos•lion to start; possible

ICE CREAM

e MERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT

16-

I For Rent

8
9

9-WantedtoBuy

lb ,

FREE!
.

Rtmt

• 4t-Equipmentlor

60c

Professional
Servtces

23

w1th

selmg; based In Meigs
County, will1ng to travel to
have

lb Riders Salvage, Rt 4,
St Rt 124, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992 5468.

46--Sp•ce tor Rent
47-Wnted to Rent

13-lnsurance
14-Busineu Tnin1ng

17
18
19
20

5
6
7

45--~Room•

copper

appro•lmately 2500 square
feet Call992 3921 , $20,000

be highly orgamzed. w111

Buy mg

rad1atars 40c ea ; yellow
brass 30c lb , alum mum 15c

torRent

1t_ HI!Ipw.nttd
12- Situated wanted

I Wanted
) For Sale

4

5--HiiPPY Ads
6-Lost .tnd Found

cleiln

44-Apertment tor Rent

7-YardSal@
8-Publlc hit
&amp; AUctiOn

Phone~·~-~--------

2
3

eRENTALS
41 - Houses lor ttent
4:Z- Moblle Homes

perience

Picking up and buy ing junk
autos and bodies

buildmg for shop or storage

degree,

Foolilh flne111ng fatal

cash
sale
Also one
bedroom, but It in bunks,

Rd ,

Quick Tops!

Business Servic·es

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

OH 43076

Level lot on Condor St ,
Pomeroy 129' frontage 72'
deep, has concrete block

Worker

Bachelor's

992 2()82

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

Social

lor Sate
MOBILE home tor sate,
$6500, lan d cont rac t W1fh
SSOO down or will negot1ate

E mptre

Busmess

21

Help wanted

11

BRIDGE

Mobile Homes- -

48xl0 mob1l e home, $2800,
land contract. $300 down
Wnte J Bowland, 15068

IMMEDIATE opemng for.

Lane

Tunmg

and Repair Service smce
1965. If no answer phone

or Write Da)Jy Sentinel Classified Dept,
111 Court St., Pomero.,.., 0., 45769

1-Cardof Th•nks
:Z- In Memor•am
3-:-Announcements
4-Give•wily

Tunmg

Dan1els 742 2951

PHONE 992-2156

Wnte your own ad and order by matl wtth t hts
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundab le

Pr.nt one word in each
space bel ow Each 10
lttal or group of ftgures
cou nts as a word Count
name and address or
phone nurnber •f used
You'll get better r esults
1f you descnbe fully ,
gtve pnce The Sentmel
reserves the r tght to
class•fy, edtt or reJect
any ad. Your ad w1 11 be
put m
th e proper
classlf•catton tf you'll
1check the proper box
below

P1ano

I

I-------------------.-,

Announcements

3

32

AUTOMOBIL·E
SURANCE
been

A family gathering was held Sun· '
day at the home of Bertha Parker.
Mrs. Jeannme Tally and son Mark :
and daughters Tamara 8lld Amanda
of Texas, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire,
Miss Cleo Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Carter, Mrs. Jeraldine
Ferguson and son James of Colum,bus ; Mr. and Mrs. Hennan Karper,
' Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Thoams G,ene
, Parker, local.
if

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
,r-----------------·-·------··"'

Insurance

power

steermg, atr condit10n1ng,

am fm rad io, four speed,
11 ,000 rnlles, e•cellent con·
dil1on tor $3500 00 C ~ ll 992
7&amp;89
"
I,

J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE llscensed and bon

ded,

septic

tank

1n

stallalton, water and gas
lines
Excavat1ng work

and trans1t layout 992 7201

IXMNING CHILDS AGENCY INC.
· INSURANCE
SERVING ·SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

1868

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVE: RAGE?

AXYDLBAAXII
L 0 N ·G F E L L 0

vri

One letter Simply stands for another In thl• sample A II

used f or the thre e L's X for the two O"s, etc Single letten.

apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordp are aU
hints Eat'h day the code letters are dif1'erent

CIIYPTOQUOTES

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US

992:2342 - OOWNINGS-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

VXB

XOLLNBAV•

VXB

LBlAME

VXB

Y M AV

LBlAME

QXM

NA

V'XNEGA

NEVBIBAVNEP
I

VXMDPXVA , - Q
R '.
LXBRLA
Yeoterday'o Crjptoquole: WHERE ALL THINK A!JKE, NO
ONE THINKS VERY Mt1CH.-WALTER LIPPMANN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

C 1910 Kina 'Hturn t.,l'tdlclle, Inc

I

�Mr and Mrs. Joe Manuel and son
Tun, Std and Demse Manuel all enJOyed a ptcmc at the ho111e of Mr . and
M1 s Marvm McGUire.
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush and
daughter Cmdy, Mr and Mrs Dana
Lewts spent Saturday evemng wtth
Mr. and Mrs. Edd1e Hupp and
Jeremy, and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Hupp at Portland.
Stacey Cratg spent a week wtth
her grandpa rents, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Prolhtt and fanuly at Canton.
Mr. and Mrs, Russell Roush spent

10-The Da1ly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fr1day, July 18, 1980

Fairview News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Wyatt South of Columbus Vlsttetl
his mother, Mr. imd Mrs. Don
Manuel and attended the Hart
reumon at the home of Earl Hart m
RacmeSunday.
Mr and Mrs Bob Lawson, Debbte
Lawson and daughter. Tara of Mtd·
dleport v1s1ted Mr. a nd Mrs. Charles

Lawson and W1lda Sunday
Joyce, Domta and Robm Manuel
VISited Eldred and Elh~ Hart and
daughter Debb1e a nd granddaughter
Sara of Elliot, Mame at the home, of
Earl Hart m Racme Monday. On
Monday, J oyce, Domta and Robm
also vtstted Mr. and Mrs. Gtlbert
Hart and family a t Racme

11-The Dally Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 18

Laurel Cliff News Notes

Sunday evemng wtth Mrs. Edna
Roush at R.J,Icme.
Mr •and Mrs Clarence Roy and
daughter Nancy of Racme ;md Arthur Wa rner vtstted Mrs Etha War·

Attendance at Sunday School at
the Free Methodist Church July 13
was 75. Chmr members present were
12. A duet was sung by Ida May Martin and Shirley Fnend.
Rev Hicks peached Sunday marrung m absence of Pastor Shook. Mr.
and Mrs. Shook were attending conference m Lancaster.
Mrs. Una Jacobs remains a.
patient m Holzer Medical Center

ner.
Mr. ' and Mrs. Russell Roush
vtstted Sunday evemng wlth Mr a nd
Mrs. Arnold Anderson at Letart
Falls.
Dana and Roberta Lew1s of Clifton
spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs
Russell Roush and asststed them m
repamng the bathroom.

13

l
I
'

-~--------------~--------.

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

WANT AD INFORMAnON

IN
can
ce lled?
Lost
your
operator's license, Phone
9'12 2143.

Opportunoty
A·frame business butldlng
with concrete parkmg area

at 514 E
Ma1n St,
Pomeroy. Call 992 3921
$20,000
'

Address,...__ _ _ _ _ _ __.

I CBihp;~lr
11--Winfed TO Do

eFINANCIAL
21-

These cash rates

e REAL ESTATE

mclude dtscount

31-Homts tor S.atet
32-Mobile&lt;Home•

22

23
24
25
26
27
28
29

30

.

I

tor Sale
ll-- F~rm• for S.le

I
I
I
- - - - - - - 1'

----- 1

_ _ _ _ __ I I

------ J,,

,4..----Board

of

Me1gs

County

Commissioners
Nottce to Motor
Veh•cle Dealers.
In accordance wtth Sec

t 1on 307 86 of the Oh1o
Revtsed Code, sealed b•ds
wil l be

recetved by the

Me1gs County Board of
Commtsstoners, m their of
ftce, located '" the court
House , Pomeroy, Ohto
45769, unt11 12 noon on Aug
5, 1980, the b1ds w ill be
opened at 2 o'clock PM on
Aug 5, 1980 and read a lou~
for th e following vehtcle
Each btd to meet the con
dtttons and spectf tcattons

as f ollows
1981 Flatbed Truck
l- One 1980 or 1981 model
flatb~d truck w1th Peabody
Galton or equtvalent dump
body , 16' 4" long • 96" w1de
contractors body w 1th wood
fl oor,
42" high steel
bulkhead, 14" Removable
stdes.
14" 1aoo Drop
Ta1tgate : mcludes lights,
mudtlaps and mstallat1on
The bed mijst ~ have an
opentng m the front m1ddle
sect1on (22"x48" ) to ac
commodate a mounted
truc k wen ch

6-9,000 # I beam front
axle

7- 18,500 # 2 speed rear
ax le
8- 5 speed transmtston
( Syncromeshl , dtrect m fif

th
1n v 8 gas

eng me or larger

lD-Step fuel tank, lett
j mtntmum

ca pac1ty 50 gallons
11- 4.000 N mmimum
front sprmg ca pac tty
12- 11,000 N m1n1mum
rea r sprtng capacity
13- Auxlltary
rear
spnngs
14- Combinat ,on front
and rear d1rect 1onal s•gna l

l&lt;ghts
15-Trafftc; hazard swtt

ch
16-Dual electnc horns

17- Heater and defroster
18- Two spee9
wtn
dshteld w tpers and washers

19-Power Steenng

'

AUCTION
SATURDAY JULY 19, 1980
12:30 P.M.
1 hav e sold my home located nea r the end ot

Rutland St. l"here the Flood Road &amp; Middleport Hill
Road .nteresect. Watch tor s1gns at top of M1ll St I
Hill, Mtddl eport, Oh1o The followmg personal pro·

perty w1ll be sold
Denmark 6 speed 11 h p R1d 1ng Mower B S Motor
(new con dttlon) , 5 h p Rot a T tl!er, Push M ower ,
Lot at Hand Tool s. Ftshtng E qutpme nt, Cross-cut
saw, wood Parch Seat &amp; Sw tng , M eta l SmgJe Bed,
E l ectrtc M1xer, E lec tr1 c Toas t er, Ltbra r y rab le,
Other Household Items, Craftsman !2 " Self Propell
ed Mower , Push Gar den Plowr 3 gal Weed Sprayer,
3 Scy thes. Mu ch Mor e !Odds &amp; Ends) L1vmg Room
Cha~r.

Dis hes, Electnc Iron, Rad 10, Wall Plcture.t l

Old Trunk, Some Avon Battles, Some Ant1ques, J -

I
I
:Z
J

25
90
25
75

Public Not1ce

Pubhc Nottce

ttres, on and off road tread
22-0ne add1t1ona1 7''
nm and rmg
23-Cast spoke wheels

24-Heavy duty clutch
25-Heavy duty brake
and front tow hooks

mount e d ,

DO
50
10
00

Sent1ne1

toot dump body)
5-2 4,000 # GVW

1&gt;-360 c u

Char9e

Mobile Hom• sales •nd Y:.rd ••Itt are.cctpl-.:1 only with c•sll wltll
order :zs cent chuge lor •ds urry1ng Box Number In Care of Ttlt

booster wtth 7" rear brakes

heavter

26-Heavy duty bumper
27-L H. and R. H. sen.or
west coast mirrors

28- 77 amp
heavy duty
29--60 amp
alternator

battery,
or

PUBLIC NOTICE
A summary of the 1961
Budget

3D-Cab grab handles L &amp;
31- Full depth foam ben·
ch seat, heavy duty trim

32- Heavv duty factory
remforce d frame

33-Color- Omaha Oran

ge

The front of the envelope
enclostng the btd must be

marked (Flatbed Truck)
Bidder to furn1sh thetr
own btd farms, listing bid
pnce as 1nd1cated on the
11ne 1tem spectficat1on
sheet as advertised
Deltvery ~ must be made
by the successful btdder 90
days after btds are awar

ded, or b1d 1S voided
The County Com
mtsstoners may accept the
lowest bid, or select the

(7118,252tc

Revenue

Fred Hoffman, Mayor

Village of Middleport
JulylB(lt)
Public Nottce

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids w•ll be rece1ved by
the V1llage of M&lt;ddleport,
Ohio, Meigs County at the
Mayor's Office at the
V&lt;llage Hall, 237 Race
Street, unt1l 3 PM, August
7, 1980 for the following
materials:

425 tons, more or less,
Asphalt« Concrete m place
and rolled.
Streets bemg considered
far
resurfact ng
are

available at the Mayor's
Office, 237 Race Street,
Middleport, Oh10
•
The Village reserves the

nght to re1ect any or all
bidS.
•
Fred Hottman, Mayor
V1llage of Middleport
July 18,25 (21)

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

best b1d tor the mtended
purpose, and reserve the
nghJ' to accept or re1ect
any or all b1ds, and/ or any
part therof
Mary Habstetter, Clerk
Meigs County Board
of Comm1sstoners

and

Sharing Use of the V1llage
of Middleport, Ohio, asap
proved by Village counc11
on July 14, 1980 will be
ava1lable tor publiC m
spection at the Mayor's of
ftce, 237 Race Street, bet·
ween the hours of 8 A.M
and 4 P M
Monday
through Fnday throughout
the month of August. 1980.

larger

R

_,,,. •.

3

, .,,

~.

,~_,,,,.,,.r

Announcements

I PAY. highest pnces
possible for gold and silver
cams, rmgs, 1ewelry, etc

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP

house

2 FAMILY yard sale Z1d·
dtan I F1fe

F 1ve Potnts

Sat 10 6, Sun l 6. Lad1es
clothes 8·18, Men's sports
coats 1 su1ts 48 reg. Lots of
these are new.

WI L L

BUY

ol d

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some grea t gdts as a Sen
tmel route ca rr. 1er . Phone
us nght away and get on
the e ltglbiltty l1st at 992

Wtll

Needed RDor LPN tor 11 to

Ir a n

SmiSSIOnS,
batterieS,
engmes, or scrap metal s,

Help Wanted

Baby

clothes,

SALE four family maybe
more,
somethtng
for
everyone new and used
1tems, ant1que dishes of all
kinds. art glass, cut glass,
depression,
carntval.
stoneware, tron sk1lle1s,

Hull, McCoy , and Rosvdle
pottery. Many other old
items Household l,tems tn

elude dishes,
phances,

small

curtams,

and more

ap·
rugs

Clothing of all

stzes mens, womens, and
childrens We have shtrts,
shoes, pants, tops , 1eans,
we
even have fresh
produce
Everyth 1ng

marked cheap, must sell ,
so came see us this Satur

day and Sunday, l9·20fh, 4
miles north of Chester, tust
below Ea$tern Htgh School

Sa te starts at 9 No sates
before Saturday, for more
tnformatton call985 4396

YARD SALE Middleport
Youth League, M1ddlepor\
Park,Saturday 9· ?, bats,
untforms, equipment

YARD SALE

Lin Hart

Res i Qence,
Vtne
St.,
Ractne Frtday and Satur

day, 9 to 4.
8

Publ•c Sale
&amp; Auction

BRADFORD, Auct1oneer ,
Complete Serv1ce . Phone
949·2487 or 949· 2000. rac1ne,
Oh10, Cntt Bradford.
9

Wanted Ia' Buy

I ran and brass beds, old

turmture,

desks,

gold

rings,
jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc , wood
tee bO)(eS, ant1ques, etc

Complete
households
wnte M o M1ller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992
7760
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Dental gold and gold
ear pins 675·3010

'3"

"TURF "

RUBBER

Sci Yd.
Reg.$5.99

I Price Does Not
tnctude

st.:u1a110nt

In ·

'4"
BACK

Sq.Vd, ,
tash-N-CarrY

~92 - 2259

NEW LISTING OF REMODEL!

baths, on •;, AC RE
REAL
BUY
2
bedroom home, ba th , all

bedroo m s, nt c e
roo m, uftlttv. part
men!, 56 acre, Ml, ig!s l
Sc hool
Dts tr tc f

$12,000
FAMILY - N.ce large 4
bedroo ms, 1'12 baths, hot

$13,500 00
NEW LISTING -

F1ve

Po1nts 2 bedroom
mob1le home an one
beautiful acre wtth
ga r age,
wo r kshop ,
metal storage butl d .n g,
wa s h er,
dry er

$11,500 00
NEW
LISTING

Installed

• __ andup'
w/paddtng

t1cal s 1dmg $21.500 00
NEW
LISTING
THERMOPANE WIN
DOWS! ~ 5 room , 3
bedroom hom e on 1 acre
lot, hardwood floortng,
new panelmg, new wall
and base ca bmets tn k1t
chen, part1ally f1n1 shed
full base ment, l lf2 bath

Really n&lt;ce' $25,000 00
ACREAGE TO DE ·
.W'f!LOP - In Eastern
Dt stn ct I 2'5' acres wood
l and/ homesttes, 4 lots
surveyed f or hames1 tes,
water and elec tr• c to
p r ape rfv
ava ilabl e

$27,500 00
NO GAS

BILLS!

Ap

prox 70 ac r e fa rm Wtth
modern .. bed home,
proer ty has 1ts own
operat1ng gasd well,
new ly remode led budt
1n kttc hen , full base
ment, centra l atr, st oc k
ed pond, horse st able,
cattle
barn,
other
butldmgs Country ltv
mg for your fam tly'
G1ve us a ca ll t o see
thts!
•

HOT SUMMER?

Dial

you r own weather I Cen
tral a •r 1n tht s 3
bedroom r anch on a
large l evel lot, fully
eq u1pped k1tchen F1ve
Potnt s
a r ea
for

DISTRICT

/Henry E Cleland, Jr.
9~2 -6191

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dotfte Turn er

,

Not r es ponstble fdr acctdents or lo~s

Main

742-221i

Ch.rleiiM MJyts, Reauor
Neacll E Caney, Br ·Mgr
orft2 -tiao

HOBSTEIJER
REALTY

MORTAGE

MONEY

s

available, conventional
percent down, VA. no down

payment,FHA low down
payment , FHA 245
graduated
payment
program, FHA 265 subsidy

742·2003

program 2nd mortgages
Cunningham
and
A.ssoctafed, l nc , Mortgage

Bankers Call 992 7000 tor
appamtment

FIRST

AD

carpet, storm doors and
windows, a1um1num Siding,
1 one car garage. Loc.ated on
Brownell Avenue,
Mtd

dleport, PhOne 992 5204
32

a call.
RUTLAND E•tra
well kept 3 bedroom

full ba ths, modern k1l ,

1975 Western ManSion 14 x
70 lhree bedroom . 1971

home
Alumtnum
s•dtng
Home
ts
matntenance free . On

formal dmmg, full base
ment1 nat gas furnace .
1 ac r e

64 two
bedroom , 1971 Liberty, l4 x
65 two bedroom, 1968
Atlant1c,
12 • 60 two
bedroom ,
1968
New
Cameron ,

n&lt;ce lot S36,500 00
RUTLAND - Large 2

13 lots,

story home on Mam
Street Extenstve tnstde
remodeling Tne new
furna ce, blown •n tn ·
sulatton are only a few
ntce things about th1s
home G1ve 1t a look! 1
Pr1ce
reduced
to

uttltttes available Only

$6,500
SPECIAL - ' n&gt;ts and
old houst !:jl\.'11 Jones
Boys $3,5uu
BARGAIN - One story
bUilding 24•80, With
bath fo r flea marke t or
ho m e $11,000
YOU CAN BUY - ThiS

$35,000 00
ATHENA ACRES -

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1977 Schultz mob1le home
and lot 14•70 w1fh three
bedrooms, Jlh baths, at
1041'1' St 2nd Ave, M1d
dleport , Oh•o Call 992· 2457

We have some'' G 1ve us

5

annex

bu1ldmg

14

Mobile Homes
for Rent

TWO

bedroom

trader

fully

Ask1ng •.

Apartment
for Rent

742· 2474
Je.1n rrussell949 -2660

OF:f

up and '12 bath on matn floor , Many extra ntce
f ea tures tn qu•et area Ask1ng $57,500

in• 1'\ small outbu,rd,ng for

storage, on qu1et street ~\o\!J

3 BR, kil, LR , DR &amp;

''.
!'

family roam wtth woodb'urnmg stove on good stze

lot, rqom tor garden, well landscaped . Carport 8.
storage bldg. $37,000

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over 100 ac res,
could be housing development - gas already drill· ·
~ d. on property water lines close. All mineral rights
go w1fh property T1mber ready to be cut Call tor
mare.tnformattOn.

1n clean neighborhood, 3 BR,

NEEDED: Low Cost and Low
Ready Buyers

Pr~ce

reg1stered

HOOF HOLLOW

Horses

boots, etc English and
Western . Ruth Reeves
(614) 698·3290

RENTER' S ass1stance for
Senior Ctt tzens In Village

apartment, ~

bath Call992 5908

1

Homes, Have

992 5007

Also

sleepmg

room

46

Supenor Vinyl Produ~ts

VOLKSWAGON

BEETLE extra clean, runs

good. 985 3912.

57

j~~e.~8~e~r~t~d~a~n~d~ls~e~~J•

:

53

We are Ptcktng up several
repossessed and trade·in
ptanos and organs 1n your
area PriCeS from $250 and

up Call cred1l manager
today. 304 485 2170

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

pay cash or certifted check

tor

ant1ques and collec
or

enttre estates

coin collections Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411
Mtsc. Merchan1se

LADIES' beau)lfUI high
quality si!e 16 dresses.
brands
Dav1d Crystal,
Verona, LillY Pul1tzer One

,.

100%

silk

$10 each

Never been worn 992 3283

~

BIS SE LL
CARPET
SWEEPER, Eureka elec
trtc broom... two wood
foldtng clla lrs, electr.c

sk11iet, bathroom scales,
and d1shes 992 2961
USED

sell·contamed

a~r

conditioner . Can be seen at
Kingsbury Park Sales.

Minersville , Oh S250
55

Butld1ng Supplies

3/ 8 mch rebar- l7c per toot
by 20 tt sect1on only D
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
summ1t Rd., Mtddleport,

Ml=

REGULAR

SALE

PRICE

PRICE
$20,730
$22,780
$5,975
$8,250
$13,595
$15,020
$1,150
$3,695
$5,6$0
$01;550

Trucks for Sale

f~rm

992 7292,992

61

USEDFarm
HAYEquipment
Baler, New
_l-lolland, Model67 . 742·2014
I N" STOCK
MODELS
ONLY
NO
TRADES
RID ING TRATORS 3830
E 30 " Cut Rider, L1st
$1186 95 , Sale $999, l 8122
R 1der 50" Mower 12 h.p ,
L&lt;Sl $3385, Sale $2799 , 2·
8123 12 h p. R1der 50" (hyd .
IIIII. List $3710, Sale $3099,
l 8162T 16 h p Rider TWin
Cyl, SO" mower, L1st $3820,
Sa le $3199 , l 816B 16 h p
R tder Stngle Cyl , 50"
mower, List $3710. Sale

$3099 , 2 8163 T 16 h p R1der
Tw1n Cyl, 50" Mower (hyd
lift). L.st $4155, Sa le $3499,
R1der,
l 8163 B 16 h p
S1ngle Cyl 50" Mower
lhyd l1ft) List $4055, Sale
53199 , 8 8163 T 18 h p. R1der
Twm Cyl , 50" Mower (hyd
L•ftl, L1st $4435, Sate $3699.
WALKING TRACTORS 3
5240 8 h p Hand Start w1th
30" Mower, LISt $1954 25,
Sale $1569 50 ; 2 5260 8 h p.
Elec. start With 30" mower,
L• s f S2139 25, Sale $169'1 50,
1 5660 12 h p Elec Start
w1th 40" Mower , List
$2741 45 , Sa le S2199 50,
Graely Tractor Sales, 210
Condor St , Pomeroy , Ohio

Phone 992 2975
6~2~--~w
~
a~
nt~e~d~t~
o ~B~u~y~-- 1

CHIP WOOO Pole s ma.. l
d1ameter 10" on largest
end $12 per ton Bundled
slab. SlOper lon. Delivered
to Oh&lt;O Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689
ANTIQUES ,

FUR

NITURE, glass, chma,
anythtng •See or ca ll Ruth

Gosney, 'l'''ques, 26 N.
2nd, Middfport, OH 992·
3161
.
OLD COINS, poc ket wat·
ches, class nngs, wedd1ng
bands, d•amonds Gold or

s11ver . Call J A. Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop, Athens, OH 592 ·
6462
GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
RINGS ,
JI;WELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC IT EMS . PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP· TO DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10, OR CALL 992 3476.

1970 Dodge Van 6 cy11nder,
three speed, good fires and
body Motor runs good
Racks on top, new brakes,
all around pnce Sj350 00
Call or see at 742 2263,
Rutland, Main St .• by Stans
Old Bargain Land .
1974 Jeep
J20 pickup,
power
steenng,
power
brakes, a~r cond1t1oning,
111t wheer. am tm stereo,

$6,500
$6,990
$10,150
$4,800
$5,500

$4,500
$5,995
$9,250
$4,350
$4,995 .

JONES Meat Packmg
slaughlering, custom
retatl · meat

Washington Co Rd. 248,
Little Hocking, OH 61&gt;7
6133

SHINNS TRACTOR ,SALES
240 UPPE~ RIVER ROAD
r
GALLI PO.LJS, OHIO
446·l044 ""'~

ONE PONY tor sale. 843
2353'

- - - - - - - -1ranspartatlan
71
1978

- :

Pomeroy, Oh.

Custom

Sh

0p

"We pnnt
anythtng on
anything'"

new or repatr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleantng and pa1ntmg.
All work guaranteed

ALMOST
ALMOST

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS
-DRY WAUING
-ROOFING
-REMODELING
-CONCRETE
Free Esttmates
Ph, (304) 773-5131
or ( 304) 992· 2276
6 30 l mo

estimates

Call

Charless,nclalr, 985 4121
83

6 l3 1 mo

Excavating

Water well dnlllng. Tom

Anne Adams

Stzes
"From 30x30"

Pattern Oepl
The Da1ly Senttnel

Utility Buildings

243 West 17 Sl,

10011. Pnnl NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STlLE NUMBER.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54

Busy women the fastest to-sew
fashions are mour NEW SPRING
SUMMER PATIERN CATALOG '
Dresses. tops rackets pants
Plus $1 lj irl!f pattern coupon
Send Sl for Calaiog
127-Af~ans 'n' Doilies
$1.50
129-QutciiEISJ Toanslen $1.50

Ractne, Oh

Ph. 614·843· 2591
6 15 tfc

130-Sweaters-Stzes 31·56 $1.50

132-Quilt 01icmals

NSTRUCTION
- Back hoe and dump

truck servtce
- Shop and portable
weldmg
- Concrete work
-Commerctal plumbmg
-Underground
fuel
storage •nstallatton
- F•berglass pools

MIDDLEPORT,

Loans, No Down Pay·
525,000;

5°'0 down

on

balance, FHA 265 Subsody Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.

UpiSJulyl4th
"BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ"

OpenM· W· F9 OOtol.OO
By Appomtment
Off1ce 992 7544
Home 992 ·6191

CALL 949-2710

10 7 Sycamore St
Pomeroy, OH

l~::::::::::6:l:B:l:m::o:::_L:::=:=:::::::::::::::.
-

Pul ins
Excavating

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Jl711 Noble Sum1t Rd .
Middleport, Oh&lt;O
I 992·5724
Sales, senltCe and sup·
plies. In ground and
above ground pool s

Expertenced Operators
avatlable for local work
• 2 rubber t1re backhoes
el e:JCcavatot hoe 1114

yd.
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ1pment .

992-2478
7 17 1 mo pd

5 1 ttc

"IW Yorll, NY

Stres from 4x6 to 12x4C

86

$1.50

M. H. Repair

NOW IS THE TIME for
prevent1ve

main

tenance-mobile home roof
coating, labor
and
matertal. 14' W1de, S2 per

foot, 12' wide, $1 75 per
toot, 10' Wide, $1 50 per
foot . See us also tor free

992-7354

The Last~Day to Stgn

esttmates on awntngs, car·

ports and skirting We are

o.

your authorized dealer for
awn~ngs

the best

'
85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL limestone and
grave I AI SO, I1me hau I1ng
and spreading Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742 2455.

on · the

market by Urban
t n·
dustrles K mgsbury Home

Sates, 1100 E. Ma1n St.,
Pomeroy , Oh1a

Call 992·

7034

61~rr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 ServUe
1 Sherlock
5 Famous
Holmes
American
street
lawyer
%Spry
10 Erpeelant
3 Kind
II May
of boom
or Strltc;h
4 Heckler's
1J Silent '
mlsaUe
boblieal
5 In fanner
film classic
days
IS "Boola BooiJl"G Nevada city
boy
7 8111'11We
16 Albee's
hill dfftller

"-story"

'

II AUanla
Stadium

structure
!a Greek

ezplorer

poet

32 Donlzetti '

8 Guard.

17 Datm deity
Iackie or
18 Chlll'&lt;hman
cenler
28 Female
9 Enlertng
friend (Fr 1 12 Early Jewish
%1 Chemistry
ascetic
sulfi.I
14 Fresh air,
!% lrWt verse
inlonnaUy

Z8Vlneent
Price film
31 Engliah

=Predatory
bird
hlnto
medicine
zs Perlonner
%1 Okefenokee
Is ooe

heroine
33 ~rrect

a ten
35 Dormouoe
38 Medlt. Ill.
3!1 Ot:algic
site

~~nw~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==::::::::::~
J&amp;L BLOWN
84

Electrical
&amp; Relrogerallon
SEW 1 NG
MA C H 1 N E
R
epalrs,
servtce,
all
makes
992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop,
Pomeroy
Authonzed Singer Sa les
and Serv1ce
Scissors

Will do remodeling,
rooting, painting I elect.

V.C. YOUNG
9'12 ·6215 or 992-7Jl4
Pomeroy , Oh.

For More lnformat1on

Now 1S the time tor home
1mprovement Beat the bad
weather We Will do any
size rob . barns, roofs.

way. By the way, free
estimates are provided

II ,

Sunday

THE POOL PEOPLE

bad weather thats on Its

•
-Addons and
remOdeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
electncal work
.,..
t Free Esttmates)

ment. Federal HOUSing
Loans, J 0 'o 'down on

Floonng ceiling. paneling,
doors and windows, also

HOME NEEDING pa1n
ted• Gutters in need of
repa~r• Is that roof beg,n
'ning to leak? Call 992·3519,
992 3941, or992 5126and get
things all f1xed up for thai

Farm Buildings

CO

CARPENTER 'S
DANCE
STUDIO

concrete work, basement,
dnveways, etc , etc

reterences. Call 992·5126,
992 3941 or992 3519 .

"YOUNGS

Rear Estate Loans
ll'
,% Interest
30 Yrs .
PARK
FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automat•c

992

houses, etc Wtll provide
free
est1mates
Ex
pertenc~d
and
have

I CALL:
992·632J or 992-6011
7 l l mo

Summer
Enroll ·
ment
For

6309 or 742 2211

pa1nl,ng Call 992 2759

101 each pattern fO&lt; first-class
anmatl and handling. Send to:

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

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

Free

No

IS NOW UNDERWAY

Vtnton

18 \\ 20\1
'
'
$1.75 f01 each pattern. Add 504

Shrubbery

CARPENTER
SERVICEC:"

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

Home

work,

St1tch up each casual top 1n a
mornmg- they re lhat EASY'
Save $$$ on thnfly W1de-w1dlh
cotton blends-slnpes. pnnts or
border tabncs
Pnnted Pattern 4501 MISses
SIZes B. 10 11 14 16 18, 20
Ha lf S11es 10\1 1211 14 \\ 16 1'1

SMALL

New
Drtveways
Gravel or Concrete.
Regrade dnveways (&amp;
repa1r) Stdewalks and
Pattos .
Complete
mob1le home hook-up .
Brush cteanng work.

8-20 IOY2-20Yz

t.,-1/n_ -/1.1-s

• New Homes- extensive remodeling
• Electncal work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph , 992-7583
6 30 l mo

ALL STEEL

Grad.ng-Seedtng

Siding

Improvements

Cemenl Floor Company ,
B1dwell, Ohio, 388 9877 All

SIZES

S ULER

949·2860.
calls.

Cement

l 22 tfc

MPLETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE

Vinyl and Aluminum

2· SMALL 2 wheel tra•lers .

Scotchguard

94• 2862
94~ 2160

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

r~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~r;~~~~~~~~~~~~====~;:;:::~~~~

tall tor Free Stdlng
Est1mate, 94,~2801 dr

rates

Free E st. mates
Reasonable Pr.ces
Call Howard

Ph 614·949·2J58
~vemngs &amp; Weekends
6 16 ttc

2779

81

Most Oates
6 9 1

All types of roof work,

T·shtrt and novelty
sh1rts tor po1tt1C1ans,
ball team~ bus•ness or
tndiYtduals.

1972 Monte Carlo body par

l Reesetruck
trader
pickup
bedhitch
rans.$175,
$40 •
1, 4 wheel , 20 tt tag a long
travel tra1ter, tully equ1p·
ped $3,500 Nate Vanaman,
Rutland, Oh 742 2761

SILVER
DOLlARS
949-2801
No Sunday Calls

ROOFING

'

$75. each, l set of 8 ft

992·3795

H. L WHITESEL

Prl' nt

&amp; Accessones

ts, one hood, two doors, one
trunk lid, assorted front
end parts, rear glass 992·

PRICES FOR

~~=:;=======:;=jfr~~~~~~~4~2*tf~c~~~;=::;;::=:=:s~~~m~o~H

Auto Parts

ELWOOD
REPAIR

we sharpen

BOWERS
Sweepers,

INSULATION '
Vrnyl &amp;

lilBurn
Z7 Present
Z8 Duad
:!!1 Eva!Ullle
38Moniker
34Asianriver

'

35 Moon
vehicle

Alum)num Siding
elnsulatton
• Storm Doors

36 Jamatcan
elport

• Storm Windows

37 SymboUc
embrace
4l&gt;Beaprerequisite
41 From tile
same mold
4% Name before ~:+-1-+-+-1-

• Replacement

toa sters, trans, all small
appltances Lawn mower.

Ne•t to State H1ghway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825

Wmdows
Free Estimate
J ames Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
6 ~5 l mo

Lewis . discount
304 895 on
· 3802
Seasonal
all 1~ I1_~=========-~--------.::_- 43 Interpret
pumps and accessories
Dozer, Endtoader and
d ump truck . Type work 1n
eludes basements, ponds,

lanctcleanlng

and

e•

Discounts

ava•lable through July. Fill
dirt alsO ava•lable Randy
or Roger Butcher Phone
742 2940
Bulldozer ,w ork, small 10bs
a spec1ally Call 742·2753

Autos for Sate
Mustang,

618 E. Matn

good cond1f1on $3,000 00.
Phone Terry L1te at 667
3544
~6

EXTREMELY HIGH

"rnander"

Ltvestock

processing,

Vans&amp;4W.D.

STILL PAYING

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

· · · -·

&amp; Ll"tsteek

63

73

f: avat1ng

USED EQUIPMENT
INT. 464 Gas Tractor
MF 245 Diesel Tractor
MF 1085 Diesel Tractor
MF 165 Diesel Tractor
MF 560 Round Baler

0

-Antiques

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

54

MUSICal

.....

611mopd

Business-Farms-- PartnershiPS
and Corporattons
Payrools, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

1970 CHEVY IMPALA 943·
2353
'

51325
2098.

_

Carl Reed 667·J327
Tom Burrough s 667 6150

7 10 l mo

ShirtS $4.00 Each

1971

1974 CHEVY c 10 PICkUp,

--·~

-

FREE ESTIMATES

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

1978 Flat X 19 four cylin
der, four speed, air con·
d1t1on1ng, runs on regular
gas 30 plus mpg &lt;;all 99'2 ·
5454

7300 eventngs,keep trytng

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy Large rots Call
992 7479

MF40B Backhoe
$26,650
MF50C Backhoe
$28,500
MF230 Gn Tractor
$8,288
MF245 Diesel Tractor
$11,380
· MF275 Diesel Tr01ctor
$17,999
MF285 Diesel Tractor
$19,715
MF Bar Type Hay Kakes $1,375
MF 120 Hay Balers
$4,475
MF 450 Round Hay Balers $7,575
M,F 725 Mower-Conditioner
$5,495

1

good gas mileage. $3500.00.
or best offer. Call 985 3596

radto, excellent condttiOn,

72

Space lor Rent

Right now is the time to MasseY Fergu10t1
cons1der MF because we
have some special factoryL-.-------'
allowances on our full !ine

•

Autos lor Sale
1977 Ponf&lt;ac Sunblrd,
sunroof, automat1c, am fm
71

Instruments

Two room furntshed apart
ment all uttl lttes patd
Work1ng men only Call

-

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

INEWSPAPER ENTERPRtSE ASSN l

ADORABLE
FULL
blooded co111e pupp1es, 7
weeks old. $25 each 992

furnished

4 roams and

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Windows and
, Rooltng

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

take his third spade trick, bul
the etght of spades In dummy
would naw be a winner. South
would get in with dummy's
last trum~ to discard his
queen of daamonds.

new clutch, ttres, exhaust.

PARTIALLY

NEW EQUIPMENT

COULD BE YOUR DREAM HOME - 2 story With
dble garage, home Includes 3 BR's with large bath

alum s1d1ng &amp; storm wtndows . Priced in $30's

AKC

and pontes and nding
lessons
-Evervth1ng
imagmabl e 1n horse equ1p
ment
Blankets, belts,

FARM MACHINERY
CLEARANCE SALE

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

NEW LISTING -

KEN NELS

BEDROOM
Mob1le
Home Adults only 992 2598

and Save!

Phone 742·J092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
""
Phone 742·3171

GOOD STARTER HOME -

Unfor·

Dobermans 614 446 7795.

Buy Now

velma Ntctnsky, Assoc.

TRAILER - 2 BR , on r

Also

OH 992 5724

acres w•th 1 bedroom

Housing
Headquarters

f\

Adults
only
Brawn ' s
Trailer Court Call992 3324

24

eluded with property .
Shown by appt only .
HYSE'LL RUN RD. - 8
dwelling
$21,500 00

4•

Pass

Boardmg , all breeds Clean
tndaor outdoor faciltties

)(

two bedroom , 1967 Buddy,
12 x 50, 2 bedroom
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sales
PI Pleasant, W VA
675 4424

a round or blddln&amp; the101t two
out ol lffO l i n -. Be wu
wrotl( ffhlll "' lAid ba hid to
be aet at 11111 lour-hurt
coatraet.
Will hid opened the kin&amp; of
apadeaand llllllod wthe I Dof
clubl.
SOutll thoulcl bave hopped
rl&amp;ht up with dummy'• ace ol
clubl, fed the 10 of apadeaand
dlocarded his club 1ooer. He
didn't need the elub lineae
nor would be
the dla·
mond llnes5elaler.
Wesl would win that oeeond
spade and probably lead a
club South would ruff and
play two rowu:IJ of trumps,
stopr.lng In dummy Tben he
wou d read dummy's rune of
spades and diSCard dummy's

1:=========-r~=::;::.::~~~==-·

Moon, 12 x 60 w1th expando,

1

heated and atr condt
t1oned. Orcnard has
manv frUit and nut
trees All mmerals m ,

WE WORK FULL TIME
IN SELLING YOUR
HOME , NO
SlOE·
LINES. REAL ESTATE
IS
OUR
ONLY
BUSINESS, SO IF YOU
HAVE A PROBLEM,'
CALL US AT 992 JJ25 or
992· J876.

Pau

Pass

"Well," sa1d South, "I saved

acres wtth a beauttful
home, swtmmtng pool ,

one f I , 3 bedroom home,
all utlltttes , ba t h, flue
for waodburner and 2
lots

1•
Pass

a round of b1ddmg

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

ttbles

FIVE ROOM house, bath,
ullllty room, wall to wall

that ' down home feel
1ng ' Askmg $26,500 00
BUILDING SITES -

bedrooms, 3 ktng stze, 2

So•tb

and Alan Sontag

Nothmg too large Also,
guns. pocket watches and

bedroom home Large
spac1aus rooms g1ve you

water heat, all uttltt1es ,
modern ktt , carpetmg
a nd full ba sement

East

By Otwlld Jacoby

House for rent. Four rooms

4

tor.$34,900 00
S rHE " LITTLE BIT
MORE
THAT
COUN'rS " ' SO WE
' S rRIVE ro DO MORE!
REAL'rOR
,

JULY CARPET SALE
ALL CARPET

lots of storage, 2_ baths,

ott street park ing Sell ·
mg pnce $26,500 00
POMEROY - On Con
dor St Extra n1ce 3

uttltttes, 2 lots for only

FIRST AO -

Remodeled throughout!
5 roo m , 3 , bedroom
home, new paneling,
new carpet1ng , v tnyl tn
k1tchen and bath, t her
mopane wmdows, ver

Comfort •s what
counts' And th1 s 3 bed
ra nch has all the th1ngs
need t o f eel " Right
Hom e ' On a 1 acre

S995
Sq Yd

two
Call

garage, 1 acre lot 992 3454

story home on Unton
Avenue Home has ... 3
bedrooms, gas forced
a1r f urnace Garage for

perttes live tn one and
use t he other two for
wn te off On lied well, 3

North

Houses tor Rent

3 AND 4 RM turn1shed ap
ts . Phone 992 5434

NEW 3 bedroom home for

Only $41 ,000 00
POMEROY - La rge 2

FREE LIVING - 3 pro

·41 ·

SIDING, SOFFIT

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

small d1amond West would

EXcellent locat1on on SR

and fam1ly roam 2 car
garage and s~d. also I!

608
MAIN
POMEROY , O.

Weat

Openmg lead •

nn... '

BURROUGH'S

"*

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer North

6279 after 5 p m

44

sale
Bullt · ln kitchen,
d1n1ng
room,
large
recreat•on room , fireplace,

full baths, d1n1ng room
Phone
1- (614) -992-3325

•a

One acre gorund and lull
basement Phone 61&gt;7 3826

Located on Eagle R1dge
Rd Phone 949 2793

nice
garden
spot
S52.000 00 Phone 667 3288

bedroom home wtth 2

$30,500 00
EASTERN

CARPET

have ~

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - On
Bradbury Rd Lovely 3

675 1490

boys

YARD

85

and butl1 tn kttchen, full
basement w1th woad stove ,
large garage , b 1g lot wtth

Real Estate - General

PHONE

tAQI

Lots &amp; Acreage

Three bedroom br1ck ranch

The mostly densely
populated nation in EuropeIS The Netherlands.

Expertenced front end
alignment and atr con ·
dttion1ng tec hnt c1an Will
pay for expertence Ex
penenced persons only
Two R tvers Ford, Pt
Pleasant, W Va Phone

clothes, stze I 3, playpen,
car seats, etc ,m1sc tt em~

FLEA MARKET

basement.
a1r con

are

-------------------- ·

Someone to help care tar
aged lady wtth arthnhs
Ca ll 992 7226

.QJIOIIII
35

Manor apts Call 992 7787

referen ces Phone 992 5094 '

7 30 s h 1ff Part l1meorfull
t1me Good workmg con
dtt1ons Contact Mr Ztd1an
at the Pomeroy Health
Ca r e Center 992 6606 Man

day through Fnday from 9
5

11

hoUr ,

tQ

HILLCRE ST

baths,

992 7255

do house cleamng,

per

.KJ14

4-2

2

style home w1th l'h bath
$3 00

•10111

fireplace, full
family
room.
t
3

bedrooms,

on approximately
acres Many extras

weather hils By the way ,

2156 or 992 2157

tiOt71

Local SchOOl DIStrict
Phonr614 985 4323

124. Three bedroom home

f 1xed up ,before that bad ~

free
es ftmates
pravtded

tKJI

H~l

BeautifUl large home. Low
utilll1es, bnck ranch style,

Three vear old, f1ve roam
house wtth ce ntral a1r and
heat, carpet throughout, 24
acres w1th fru1t trees

Em ·

Call 992 3519, 992 3941, or.,
992 5126 and get th,ngs all

at Hayward B1ssellresiden

Rutland Street
Middleport, Ohto

C. C. BRADFORD, AUCTIONEER
Sat'e b,y&gt;Bfadtord Auct1011 Co , Racm e, Oh10.

GE T VALUABLE tra1n,ng

IIABT

SOUTH

car
rent,garage
w1th two
In the
baths,
Eastern
two

car garage
~au";' t~~; 1 1 on , Me&lt;gS
4169
aon y. a

Home needing pamted?
Guters 1n need of repatr ? Is . .
that roof begmning to le~k? ,

Help Wanted

$7300 00 Call992 2981

and bath Deposit requ~red
No Inside pets Call 992
3090

Homes for Sate

d 1 tOner,

SitUations Winfed

12

YARO SALE July 17,18,19
from 9 0 on county road 28

OWNERS. CALVIN &amp; MABEL LANE

TERMS CASH

Osby (Oss.el Marlin 992
6370

5 p m on

"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED
iiiiASsffi""P'ET
Bru';.&amp;.Gord
sHAG-

5 Gallon Gas Cans, 1 TV Stand, l Small Gas Heater,
1 Gas Hot Plate, Some Plasl1c Hose, Some Steel
Traps.
l

Gold, silver or fore ,gn
coms or tany gold or sliver
1tems Anttqu e turntture,
glass or chtna, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pr1ces before
selling Also do appra1s1ng

Sale

Maple bar stools,
paint, toys, mise

ce

axle or suitab le or body ( 16

or

Yar~

and 27 9 a m

m1n1mum Cash in .advance

21- 10 00•20 12 ply rear

4-Wheel base lOB cab to

Black

11

THREE tam1ly yard sale
Thurs and Fn ., June 26

In memory, Card of Tt\antl"i and Obituary 6 cents per word. $J 00

nms

'2- Mtntmum
12
ton
SCISSOr type hOISt Installed
under above body
3-Cab lights, 4 corner
lights and 6 reflectors

Lost and Found

7

rate

2D-l0.00•20 12 ply front
t•res, highway tread 7'

PUbliC NOtiCe

Wanted to Buy

Opportuntty

WilT

.AKJII

56
Pets for Sale
POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

3

ployer.

Each word over the minimum 15 words Is 4 cents per word perUy
Adt runnu19 other than consecutive dayt W1ll be ch•r1ed at ttle I d•v

I

-

mal e

I

Equal

Jumbleo PRUNE RAPID WEASEL OUTCRY
Answer The autlior of the play certainly committed
lhlo ' -WORDS TO PAPER

e tc Call245 9188

:·~------+------.....j

----

·-

I
I
I
J

Jdays
6days

I·
I
I
I
I
I

Mail This Coupon with Rem;ttance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Cash

I day
2 days

I:
I,
I
I
I

35 _ _ _ __

LEGAL NOTICE

15 Words or Under

-~---- 1

34., _ _ _ _ __

home

may call992·5040 to eta 1m

Rates and Other Information

----- 1

31 _ _ _ __

Yesterdays

nght on top of Chester H11l

---"-c---~ I1
-----------~.

(Anawtrt tomorrow)

Hollypark trailer fur·
n1shed, atr condlflonmg,
washer,
underptnning.
sma ll metal building

Three bedroom house tor
Jl

Op·

'southeastern Ohio Legal
Serv1ces, 24_ W Unlon,
Athens, Oh&lt;o 45701
An

"t 1 X I XXJ"

Prlntenswer hers:

female cat, one eye
m1ss.ng, area of fatrgroun
ds and gunclub
Owner

14-Eiftfrical
.&amp; Aefrlguation
15--Gener•l Hauling
16-M H Rep•lr
87- Upholstery

4P M Dilly
12 Noon S~turdiJY
lor Monday

good

FOUND LARGE

a:z-Piumblng&amp; ExcaYahng
n--Eilcav•tlnt

Deadlines

gnttd by tilt abow cartoon

Call 742

Real Estate

hou~r week, salary and.
fringl' beneftts negotiable .
Must subm1t ,resume to :

Now 1rr11nge thl cj~l(j lttttrl to
lorm the at.~rprlll antwtr, 11 aug·

9

Mtntatyre

6

eSERVICES

want· Ad Advert1stng

TO

Equal

., ...

1969 Two Bedroom 12•60 •

would ffin one ol lffo
1

tUI
.AQI

T. L

VINYl SIDING

South Wu rllbt on two or
hll atetemontl. lie bad u"cl

·~K7

Upholstery "

v1nyl samples
2852

PARALEGAL POSITION,
Part time paralegal , 2()

Dachshund 992 3340.

81- Home lrnprovemenb

-----1

33 _ _ _ __

I
I
I
I

34-Busineu Buildings
35-Loh &amp; Acreage
36-Aeal Est•tt wanted
37-Realton

I'

32 _ _ _ _ __

I

71---Auto, tor S.lt
n - vans &amp; 4 w D
74-Motercvcles
nAuto Parts
&amp; Accenorits
77-Auto Rell!lir

FREE

An

1-11-10

.10118

Thornville,

l ACRE LOT S Secluded 1n

Rebulldtng , Reflntshing,
Reupholstery, F=atinc and

respon 1

portunity Employer

TWO CALl CO klttens both
female 992 3738 .

eTRANSPORTATION

1980

NORTH

11 entals

marked no later than July

G1veaway

4

U - Seed&amp; Fertillter

Serv•ces

21

11
12
13
14
15
16

eusiness

Opportun•ty
22-Money to Loan
23-Proleuional

) Announcement

10~~----

•1-Farm Equipment
•:z-wuttd to Buy
n-Trucll• tor s•••
U-LIVUIOCk
'-'- M•v &amp; Gnln

"Maggie's

25,

Main St.
Pomeroy - 992-2181

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

Rd10, TV

netghborlng counties Must
diverse

w

I~~~~Ately, I had
looe tffo
f~ ud IO do.... one The
oddl fftl't tllree to one IIIII I

the heart of Pomeroy 992

Dttch dtggtng servtce Call

773·5839 or 773 5788.

!hood of Southeast Oh10, 8
North court St, Athens,
Oh1o 45701 . Must be post·'

POMEROY'
LANDMARK

15--Schoolslnstructlon

in criSIS coun

tncrease to :If.! or full Send
resum e to Planned Paren·

WithAnyUNICO
FREEZER PLUS :
$25 DISCOUNT
Stop in for Details

51-Hounl'lold Goods
51--CB, TV, A•dlo EqUipment
53-Anllql.les
54-Mi~c Mtrchudlse
55-- Bulldlna Supplies
56-Pets lor S.le

SERVICES

ex

Slbllllle,. Half t1me
pos•lion to start; possible

ICE CREAM

e MERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT

16-

I For Rent

8
9

9-WantedtoBuy

lb ,

FREE!
.

Rtmt

• 4t-Equipmentlor

60c

Professional
Servtces

23

w1th

selmg; based In Meigs
County, will1ng to travel to
have

lb Riders Salvage, Rt 4,
St Rt 124, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992 5468.

46--Sp•ce tor Rent
47-Wnted to Rent

13-lnsurance
14-Busineu Tnin1ng

17
18
19
20

5
6
7

45--~Room•

copper

appro•lmately 2500 square
feet Call992 3921 , $20,000

be highly orgamzed. w111

Buy mg

rad1atars 40c ea ; yellow
brass 30c lb , alum mum 15c

torRent

1t_ HI!Ipw.nttd
12- Situated wanted

I Wanted
) For Sale

4

5--HiiPPY Ads
6-Lost .tnd Found

cleiln

44-Apertment tor Rent

7-YardSal@
8-Publlc hit
&amp; AUctiOn

Phone~·~-~--------

2
3

eRENTALS
41 - Houses lor ttent
4:Z- Moblle Homes

perience

Picking up and buy ing junk
autos and bodies

buildmg for shop or storage

degree,

Foolilh flne111ng fatal

cash
sale
Also one
bedroom, but It in bunks,

Rd ,

Quick Tops!

Business Servic·es

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

OH 43076

Level lot on Condor St ,
Pomeroy 129' frontage 72'
deep, has concrete block

Worker

Bachelor's

992 2()82

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

Social

lor Sate
MOBILE home tor sate,
$6500, lan d cont rac t W1fh
SSOO down or will negot1ate

E mptre

Busmess

21

Help wanted

11

BRIDGE

Mobile Homes- -

48xl0 mob1l e home, $2800,
land contract. $300 down
Wnte J Bowland, 15068

IMMEDIATE opemng for.

Lane

Tunmg

and Repair Service smce
1965. If no answer phone

or Write Da)Jy Sentinel Classified Dept,
111 Court St., Pomero.,.., 0., 45769

1-Cardof Th•nks
:Z- In Memor•am
3-:-Announcements
4-Give•wily

Tunmg

Dan1els 742 2951

PHONE 992-2156

Wnte your own ad and order by matl wtth t hts
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundab le

Pr.nt one word in each
space bel ow Each 10
lttal or group of ftgures
cou nts as a word Count
name and address or
phone nurnber •f used
You'll get better r esults
1f you descnbe fully ,
gtve pnce The Sentmel
reserves the r tght to
class•fy, edtt or reJect
any ad. Your ad w1 11 be
put m
th e proper
classlf•catton tf you'll
1check the proper box
below

P1ano

I

I-------------------.-,

Announcements

3

32

AUTOMOBIL·E
SURANCE
been

A family gathering was held Sun· '
day at the home of Bertha Parker.
Mrs. Jeannme Tally and son Mark :
and daughters Tamara 8lld Amanda
of Texas, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire,
Miss Cleo Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Carter, Mrs. Jeraldine
Ferguson and son James of Colum,bus ; Mr. and Mrs. Hennan Karper,
' Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Thoams G,ene
, Parker, local.
if

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
,r-----------------·-·------··"'

Insurance

power

steermg, atr condit10n1ng,

am fm rad io, four speed,
11 ,000 rnlles, e•cellent con·
dil1on tor $3500 00 C ~ ll 992
7&amp;89
"
I,

J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE llscensed and bon

ded,

septic

tank

1n

stallalton, water and gas
lines
Excavat1ng work

and trans1t layout 992 7201

IXMNING CHILDS AGENCY INC.
· INSURANCE
SERVING ·SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

1868

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVE: RAGE?

AXYDLBAAXII
L 0 N ·G F E L L 0

vri

One letter Simply stands for another In thl• sample A II

used f or the thre e L's X for the two O"s, etc Single letten.

apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordp are aU
hints Eat'h day the code letters are dif1'erent

CIIYPTOQUOTES

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US

992:2342 - OOWNINGS-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

VXB

XOLLNBAV•

VXB

LBlAME

VXB

Y M AV

LBlAME

QXM

NA

V'XNEGA

NEVBIBAVNEP
I

VXMDPXVA , - Q
R '.
LXBRLA
Yeoterday'o Crjptoquole: WHERE ALL THINK A!JKE, NO
ONE THINKS VERY Mt1CH.-WALTER LIPPMANN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

C 1910 Kina 'Hturn t.,l'tdlclle, Inc

I

�.- ..

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July 18, 1980

.

Rhodes looks forward to ·fall campaign with broader base
DETROIT (APJ- Gov. James A.
Rhodes and Ohio's delegates to the
Republican National Convention
beaded home today with hopes for a
fall campaign run from a broader
base.
That was what the governor said
Thursday night lis the 77-member
delegation lauded presidential
nominee Ronald Reagan's acceptance speech and predicted a
November victory.
Rhodes, a party· moderate who
tried earlier in the week to launch a
draft movement to name former
President Gerl!ld Ford as Reagan's
-- ·" ··-~----·

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

running mate, brushed aside
suggestions that the conservatives
may assume party leadership in
Ohio. ·
·
" When this is over, everybody
goes home and the work has to be
done at state headquarters and
county headquarters and that's not
going to change. We'll just have a
party with a broader ba!it!," he said.
Some members of the delegation,
which was almost devoid of mem·
hers from the GOP " establishment''
headed by the 7().yearo()ld governor
for decades, agreed with the gover·
nor abOut the broader base. They in·

stown got one of Ohio's votes, as did
U.S. Rep. Guy Vander Jagt of
Michigan. There was one abstention.
The split in Ohio's vote was downplayed by delegation leaders, who
were a ware of phjlosophical dif·
ferences, but got the group through
the week without public debate.
State Reps. Donna Pope of Panna
and David W. Johnson of North Can·
ton and Hamilton County Com·
qrissioner Norman A. Murdock of
Cincinnati were tri-i:hairmen of the
delegation. They always counted
heads on split opinions and an·
nounced the results, but did not per·
mit debate at their daily breakfast
·
meetings.
Most of the delegates, striving to
get under what Rhodes called "one
umbrella," paised the chairmen for
their fairness.
.
Tulley, along with ~tate Reps.
Robert E. Netzley of Laura and
William G. Batehelder of Medina,
and others who wanted Reagan to
pick Kemp for the vice presidential
slot, clearly were in the minority
among Reagan's Ohio backers.

sisted; though, that the state party's
philosophy will be farther to the
right in the future.
As one hard·liner, fanner State
Rep. Joseph P. Tulley·, put it, "under
Gov. Reagan, the Republican
moderates in Ohio will be dragged
kicking and screaming over to our
side."
Tulley and a dozen others in the
delegation withheld their support
from Bush on Thursday night and
cast a protest ·vote for conservative
U.S. Rep. Jack Kemp of New York.
However761 votes went to Bush.
U.S. Rep. John M. Ashbrook of John-

Economy rate decline 9.1 percent
WASmNGTON (AP) - The
nation's economy tumbled at an an·
nual rate of 9.1 percent !rem April
through June, equal to the worst
quarterly decline during the last
recession in 1974-7~, the govenunent
said today.
The steep decline in real grbSS
national product - the inflation·
adjusted output of goods and ser·
vices - proved even greater than
Carter administration economists
initially predicted.
They had expected a drop of bet·
ween 8 percent and 9 percent,
seasonally adjusted.
During the first quarter. of 1980,
the g~oss national product rose 1.2
percent.
Despite the precipitious plunge
last quarter, administration
economists point to new signs the
economy.will begin to recover soon, ·
including a sharp increase in
housing starts, lower interest rates
and easing inflation.
Nevertheless, private and govern-

nient economists now see unem·
ployment reaching abolit 9 percent
and then remaining somewhere
around 8,5 percent through most of
next year. f,.foreover, signs of. in·
dustrial lag continue with produc·

tion at the nation's factories ex·
peeled to continue declining for
several more months.
The Commerce Department
reported thst before a djustment for
inflation, the nation's output from
April through June stood at an ·an·
Dog disease isolated ·· nual rate just exceeding $2.52
trillion, slightly above the first quar·
Parvo, a flu like disease in dogs,
has very recently been been isolated .ter level. ·
However, when adjusted for
according to Dr. George Bear, director of the communicable disease_ . double-digit inflation, the nation's
divison of the Ohio Department of output was at an annual rate of $1.41
trillion.
Health.
An annual rate figure indicates
The disease is not known to affect
humans. Symptoms of the disease what would happen over the COUI'lle
are temperature, violent diarrhea, . of a year if this quarter's economic
sometimes bloody, depression and conditions continued for three more
quarters.
distress.
Inflation, as measured by the SDU left untreated too long an animal
called
implicit price deflator rose
may die of dehydration. Should an
10.4
percent
in the second quarter,
owner suspect their dog has Parvo
compared
witl)
a 9.5 percent in·
disease they are to contact their
crease in the ' first quarter, the
veterinarian as soon as possible.
department said.
There is a vaccine for the disease,
however, at this time there ·are
SERVICES TONIGHT
limited quanities available.
The Reverend and Mrs. James
Burton from Venezuela, will be
. holding the missionary service
Friday, July 18 at 7:30 p.m. at the
United Pentecostal Church, S. Third
Avenue, Middleport. The Burtons
and Emil L. Hoffman, Mason; and
will be telling of their 19 years of
15 grandchildren and 16 great·
being in .that country spreading the
grandchildren.
gospel. They now have a Bible .
Funeral services will be held
$Chool and 82 established churches.
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Foglesong
Everyone is welcome to attend. The
Funeral Home in Mason with the
Reverend William Knittel is pastor.
Rev. Kenneth G. Watkins of.
ficiating. Burial will follow in the
Hoffman Cemetery.
Friends may call at the · funeral
lwme from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. to-:
day.

Area deaths
Dana A. Fell

1

Dana A. Fell,. 69, 1412 Hess Road,
Washington, C. H., died Thursday at
Fayette County Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Fell was born in Meigs County
near Pomeroy; Dec. 7, 1910, the son
of the late Anthony and Ethylinda
Moore Fell. He was also preceded in
death by one daughter and one
sister.
Mr. Fell was a retired fanner, a
member of the New Hollan United
Methodist Church . and United
Methodist Men.
He is survived by his wife, Betty
Davewood Fell; two sons, Harold of
Spencerville and Norman of
Degraff; eight grandchildren; two
sisters, Mrs. Bertha Smith,
P&lt;&gt;meroy, and Mrs. Edna Wolfe,
Carroll, Ohio.
at the Kirkpatrick ·Funeral Hqme,
New Holland, Ohio, with the Rev.
Melvin A1klire officiating. Burial
will be in Highlawn Memory Gar·
dens. Friends may call at the
funeral home Sunday from 3 to 9.

Anna M. Hoffman
Anna M. Hoffman, 91, Clifton,

W.Va., died Thursday at Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
Born Oct. 15, 1888 at White Church
Conununity, Mrs. Hoffman was the
daughter of the late Joseph and
Sarah Fry Rickart. In addition to
her parents she was preceded in
death by her husband, Louis E. lloff·
man, who died in 1964.
Mrs. Hoffman is survived by two
daughters, Mrs. Beatrice M. Thompson, Letart, and Mrs. Gladys M.
Wolfe, Bartlett, Ohio; two sons,
Uoyd E. Hoffman, Pomeroy, Ohio,

· men!, which they have fought for
years."
Most of Ohio's Reagan backers
went home feeling that Republicans
are off to a good start in their bid to
win the White llouse in the taU.
• U.S. Rep. Thomas N. Kindn~ of
hAmilton said Reagan's acceptance
speech laid the groundwork f!ll' victory in the (all, He said the campaign theme is "to get government
off our backs and out of our pocket·
books, put the tiger back into the

cage."

·

The governor remained in Detroit
today to attend his first meeting as a
Republican National Conunittee
member. He succeeds the retiring
Ray C. BliSs of Akron, a former
national Republican chairman.

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services report the
following runs made Thursday by
local units.
Tuppers Plains at 9:19 p.m. went
to the Cecil Caldwell residence for
an infant who ·was taken to Camden
Clark Hospital; Racine at 12:28 a.m.
to Third Street for Pam Roush who
was treated on the scene; Racine at
2:54 p.m. to Letart Falls for Shannon
. Pierce who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hpspital; Middleport at
10:31 a.m. to SR 143 for Merlene Ar·
nett who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutland at 2:02
p.m. for Rodin Wood who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
at 8:32 p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Maude Brooks who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Syracuse at 7:14 p.m. to
John St. , for Nola Damewood· who
was treated on the scene; Tuppers
Plains at 12 :16 a.m. for Michael
Wilson who was taken to St. Joseph
Hospital. ·

VOL. 15 NO. 25.

ON ALL SUMMER CLOTHING
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
AND

SATURDAY TIL 5
SHOP IN AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.'

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Rebuilt Starters &amp; Alternators

JAYCEE NIGIIT ATTRACTION - Tommy Overstreet, major
Elektra Records recording artist, will be the main attractidn at the Gallia
County Junior Fair on Saturday, Aug. 2. Performances are scheduled for
8 and 10 p.m. on Main Stage. Other activities that evening include the an·
nual scholarship presenljttioh by the Gallipolis Area Jaycees, per·
fonnances by Tex Harrison and His Vjllley BOys and a disco dance sponsored by the OOM Park District.

Rebult GM

Starter
Solonid
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E-0
No. 40-1070

No .. 3174 AslowAs

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The World Leader

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Round
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Chevy

POMEROY - The question of who
· has jurisdiction over the police chief
was resolved at a special meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council Friday
night.
'
Fred Crow, village soilicitor, was
asked to render an· opinion on the
powers and duties of the Chief of
Police, mayor and council insofar as
the Pomeroy Police Department is
concerned.
·
Crow infonned council, according
to section 737.10 of the Ohio Revised
Code the Chief of Police is the
executive head of the police depart·
men! " under the mayor." This
means that the chief of police is subject to the orders of the mayor.
Crow further stated the Chief of
Police is appointed by the Mayor
with the advice and consent of the
village council ; the Chief of Police
must be a resident of the Village of
Pomeroy six months after his appointment by the Mayor and con·
firmation by the village council, '
unless said residence requirement is
waived by ordinance.

Spot Mirror

U-Joints
No . 20·1521

Police chief under
mayor's supervision

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Wire Set
$720

Inventory ·is being sold at discount
prices. If you wish to purchase any

old ones do.

item from our inventory or order

Chrome
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any Item we will be gla.d to serve
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$380

date.
•

Far Card of 5

No. 1440

3RD ST~ POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2176

Re'agan share.
Reagan descri~d the unity of the
convention that gave him the
nomination qe's been seeking for the
past dozen years, as "a dream come
true" for a once-bitterly divided
Republican party.
" A gre_at many of us ... over the
years have worried abOut and tried
to ·do something abOut the divisions
that so often have embittered
various segements of the party and
have left us a· little less than ~nited
when it conies to going forth to the
main mi~sion," he added.

But while Reagan was con·
ciliatory toward various !actions in
the Republican party, he ~as
already sharpening his rhetof!cal
knives for the l&gt;-~ttle agamst ·
President Carter's administration.
"He's going to have to run on his
record, and I don't think it's a reco~
I would like to run on," Reagan S8ld
of Carter. He said for the last four
years Democrats have controlled
bOth Congress and the White H~use
while bOth economic and foreign af..
.fairs have deteri!lrated to their wor·
st point in decades.

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

SUNDAY, JULY 20, 1980

35 CENTS

Dra t registration to
proceed as scheduled

.

.autostorca

low As

The Reverend W.H. Perrin,
Pomeroy, received word today of
the death of his nephew attorney Ed
Rollo, 35. Rollo, a former basketball
player at Bethany College in West
Virginia, is known to a number of
local people through his visits with
the Re'v. Perrin.
' He Is survived by his wife, Connie
and three sons, Ed, Jay and Lance.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO., 'INC.

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

"BRAND NAMES YOU CAN T~UST"
As

would resist all attempts to divert ·
the focus of the campaign from Car·
ter to the policy differences between
Bush and Reagan that surfaced
when the two fonner rivals com·
peted for the nomination that
Reagan eventually won.
"Those who want to seek some lit·
Ue difference or remind sumeone of
something out of the past, I'm just
not going to be part of that
anymore," Bush said. lie said he
would attempt to show the " bond,"
the. "comrrion ground" and the
"common purpose" he said he and

•

·Parts Plus

Ed Rollo

th~t

Detroit Friday for a round of thank·
you meetings and receptions with
convention, party and campaign of·
ficials.
With Bush - a GOP. moderate to
balance Reagan's conservative
image - at his side, . Reagan
repeated 'his gospel of party unity
over a nd over.
Republicans can win not only the
presidency, but also the Senate and
·House, for the first time in three
decades, if they remain united,
Reagan said.
Bush, a former CIA director and
envoy to the United Nations, said he

to be followed by their first ra lly of
the general election campaign at a
nearby shopping center.
Mter a frenetic week of morning·
to,night meetings at the Republican
National Convention, Reagan's
three days of California vacationing
will be followed by another three
days of strategy _and planning
sessions with Bush and senior staff
members from both of their carh·
paign organizations.
.Mter the convention closed Thur·
sday with Reagan's acceptance
speech, the 6!f-yearo()ld former
California governor remained in

tmts

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. DETROIT (AP) - With calls for
. party unitJ, Honald Reagan and
Georg'e Bush opened their
Republican campaign for the White
House with a rally Saturday and
then held private sessions later to
map out their strategy.
With the cheers of Republicans
who nominated him .for president
sWI fresh in his memory, Reagan
later headed for California and three
days of relaxation and horseback
riding at his Santa Barbara ranch.
On his way back to California,
: Reagan is to visit vice presidential
running mate Bush's Houston home,

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Darrell Marr
Funeral services for Darrell
Marr, 19, Letart Route 1, who died
late We4nesday at his lwme as a
result of an apparently self-uiructed
gunshot wound to the head, will be
held Saturday at 3 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home in Mason.
The Rev. Bobby Woods will officiate
at the service; burial will follow in
the Union Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2-4
p.m. and 7·9 p.m. today.
Mr. Marr, the son of Gerald and
Helen Marr, Letart Route I, WIIS a
1979 graduate of Wahama High
School.

Cuyahoga County party Chairman
Robert J . Hughes, who was involved .
with Rhodes in the effort to push
Ford for the vice presidency,
showed there was resentment· as
well among party moderates.
Unlike Rhodes, who described
Reagan's acceptance speech . as
"tremendous," Hughes said it was
lacking in specifics.
He said conServatives will resent
efforts by the Reagan staff to
negotiate wih Ford on the vice
presidency.
Hughes said, "They don't like the
attempt to deal with Ford. They may
pout as the weeks Wlfold. They don't
like (former Secretary of State
Henry) Kissinger. To them, he ·
represents the Eastern esljtblish-

Rally opens GOP campaign for White House

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· · The three member of the pAnel
were Chief Judge Joseph S. Lord;
Judge Max Rosen of the U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals for the Third
District; and District Judge Edward
Classified •... ·.. ~ .. .. ......•. , . • . . . . . . • . . . • . . . . . . ll-2-7 N. Cahn.
Farm news .·..........••..'......... ~· .......•..... C+7
The case before them dates back
·'IJfestyle .•. ..... .. . . •.. .• .... .. .... .. . ...•...... B-1-8 .to 1971 when draft-aged men
.I..«al .. , .•.... ...•..• •. ~ ..•...•. .. . ....... . . • .. : A-2-8 challenged the requirement • to
State and national ........•.....•..• , •..•..•••• .•..• . I&gt;-1 register for the draft during the Viet·
SJ)Orts-. ·:• . . . . • . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . '. • . . • . . . . . . . . C·l·S nam War, contending they were har·
T\" guide . • • . • . . . . • . . • . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Insert med by "gender classification ."
The Selective Service System's $8
\•
million draft registration program is
designed to collect the names and
addresses of young men in case they
· Exteoded Forecast- Monday through Wednesday: Continued wann and . are needed in a nationa l emergency.
Here, basically, is the registration
humid Monday and Tuesday. Turning cooler Wednesday with a chance of
plan
:
thunderstorms. Hlgbs in the 90s Monday and Tuesday and in the 80s Wed·
The signup takes place at the
nesday.
_.
·
·nation's
appr6ximately 34,000 post
'
offices, where registration cards
Hazy, warm and humid. High Sunday in the mid 90s. The cha~ce of rain is
Continued on A·2
ro percent.
"' •
.

Inside.today •••

~
Quality

COOLING SYSTEM PARTS TO

Also, according to Crow's report,
section 737.19 of the Ohio Revised
Code gives the police chief authority
over the stationing and transfer of
all deputies, officers and employes
within the police department, under
such general rules as ~he Mayor
prescribes.
The chief of police has the
executive right to suspend any of the
deputies, officers and employes in
the village police department w~o
are under his management and con·
trol for incompetency, gross neglect
of duty, gross immorality, habitual
drunkennes, failure to obey orders
given them by the proper authority
for any other reasonable or jUst
ca use.
Under section 737.17 .I the mayor
has the right to press charges again·
st the police chief on the grounds of
incompetewncy,
inefficiency,
dishonesty, drunkennes, inunoral
conduct, insubOrdination, discourteous treatmeent of the public,
neglect of duty, or any other act of
Continued on A·2

. By JOSEF HEBERT
Associated Press Writer
WASmNGTON (AP) - Supreme
Court Justice William J . Brennan on
Saturday stayed the effect of a
ruling by a thre~j udge panel ,i,n
Philadelphia that the government's
draft registration program is un·
constitutional, a Supreme Court
spokesman said;
The decision means the government's plan to register 4 inillion ·
young mel\ for the draft can proceed
on schedule, beginning Monday.
Registration will be mandatory, said
court spokesman Barrett McGurn.
''This is the relief we were looking
for, " said Justice Department
spokesman Mark Sheehan.
The government began frantic
legal maneuvers Friday, when a
special three-j~dge federal panel in
Philadelphia, considering a If-year·
old draft case, declared the Selec·
live Service Act unconstitutional
because it fails to include women.
ln its plea to Brennan for a stay,
the Justice Department argued that
registration should proceed pending
a review of the Philadelphia court's
ruling by the full Supreme Court,
probably next !ali.
The high court has never ruled on
the issue of discrimination based on
sex in registering for the draft
A Supreme Court spokesman said
the govenunent's request for a stay
and responses from lawye rs for the
plaintiffs in the Philadelphia draft
s ase were forwarded to Brennan on
Saturday. The justice is spending
the weekend at his summer home.on
Nantucket Island, Mass.
Friday's court order was the most
serious blow yet to President Car·
ter's attempt to revive draft
registration. Administration of.
ficials had feared such a ruling and
sought to head it off by requesting
that women as .well as men be
registered. Congress rejected the in- •
elusion of women, however, in appropriating funds to enact
registration.
One Selective Service System
source, who asked not to he quoted
by name, acknowledged that the
·new constitutional questions
surrounding the issue ·will hinder
compliance to registration.
In their 11nanimous !'llling, the
three judges in Philadelphia said
they could not accept the notion that
"women can contribute to the
military only as volunteers and not
as inductees."
'
·
" The compl ete exclusion of
women from the pool of registrants
does not serve 'important govern·
mental objectives' and is not 'substantially related' to any alleged
government intersts," they said in a
43-page opinion. "Thus the military
·Selective Service · Act un·
constitutionally discriminates bet·

..

,

--

DON NAUS, Sports Editor of tl)e Gallipolis Daily
Tribune explains the training and skills needed to

become a journalist. The presentation was all part of
the CETA Career Day, held yesterday at Rio Grande
College. Story and more piC\w:es are on Bl.

Fate of hostages uncertain
By Tbe Associated Press
the start of its investigation . In my
Iranian President AbOlhassan
personal view, however, I don't
Bani-Sadr says it is possible Iran's
think the Parliament will make its
Parliament will take up the fate of decision to coincide with the U.S.
the 52 American hosfages in the near
presidential election. But there is a
future, a Japanese newspaper ~epor·
possibility that we will hastily Iackie
ted Saturday.
the problem."
The independent, massAccording to the newspaper, Bani·
circulation Yomiuri Shim bun, one of
Sadr also said: -After settlement of
the· top newspapers in Japan , said
the hostage issue, "We will be able
Bani.Sadr made the statement in an
to normalize relations with the
exclusive interview Friday in
United States, even on a broader
Tehran with Kazuro Yamamoto,
front, if the United States changes
chief of the paper's foreign news . its foreign policy towards Iran."
deparlr]lent.
- President Carter's election
Asked whether ·there may be an
strategy would have no affect on
early · setUement on the qu·estion of Iran. He expected "little change,
the Americans, who ended their 37th
whether Carter or Reagan becomes
week in captivity today, Yamamoto
president, in America 's Iranian
quoted · the Iranian president as
polict."
saying:
The Japanese report came one
"The decision will be made by the ·day after the Iranian Pa.rliament
. l;'arliament. We will have to wait for
cleared its final organizational hur·

Conventions
PEKING (AP)
The People's
Daily, trying to explain a poUtical
system utterly different from
China's, told its 6.5 million readers
Saturday that American political
conventions are like circuses and
running for president, like climbing
amounlain.
In a dispatch from Detroit by
Wang Fei , the newspaper's
Washington correspondent, it lx·
plained the Republican Party con·
vention which ended Thursday
closed ",amid thunderous applause,
drwns and music."
In democracy of the American
type, such convocations are

ci~cus

shows-People's Daily

bizarre dresses bearing buttons •nd
ribbons in support of Republican
presidential ca ndidate Ronald
Reagan, he said.
"Start a march which will. enable
the U.S. to become great again" was
Reagan's slogan, correspondent
Wang wrote.". apparer.tly a Chinese
translation of.this year's Republic~n
Party slogan : "Together - A New
Beginning."
Some people, he said, calleq the
slogan " half·boast intended to win
.votes and . half-longing for the
'Golden Dollar Empire'. "
"Can they actually realize the
'American dream' when the WQrld
described as ''circus s hows,'' it said.
sitlljltion has undergone such great
The Chinese reporter wrote that. changes? Can this ambitious slogan
the convention auditQfium bOiled
actually be realized•" Wang wrot~,
with thousands of people - orators
Convention speakers attacked thE "'
trying to speak 011er the din ;
"errors, failures, wavering in·
delegates Ialking ~nd laughing; · competence and hunliliation of the
television reporters constantly ' Carter administration," he said. .
squeezing through the crowds.
China is clearly worried abOut a
Delegates wore cowbOy hats and
Reagan presidency lleca• it fears

•

die, eleGting six laymen to the Guardian Council, which will judge all
legislation according to Islamic
precepts. The election removed
another obstacle to a parliamentary
debate on the hostages' fate, ordered
by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
Iran's revolutionary leader.
Khomeini, meanwhile, today ordered Iran's anny conunander to
"wipe out all contamination" from
his forces following last week's announced discovery of a plot against ·
the regime and subsequent arrests
of 500 people, including many
military men.
Bakhtiar, the last prime minister
under the de]iosed sbah, was the
target of an attempted assassination
early Friday at his suburban Paris
apartment. A three-man squad,
posing as journalists, got as far as
Continued on A·2

he wiU try to reestablish some sort of
official ties with Taiwan. But Wang
reported Reagan was coruiidered by
many to be the " hope" of the United
States and of "free people."
He said Republicans wanted to
restore prosperity to the u.s.
economy; America's position as . a
world leader and u.s. military
superiority over the Soviet Union.
He noted that the plank in the .
Republican Party platfonn rescin·
ding support for- the Equal RJghts
Amendment drew the greatest at·
tention and 12,000 persons demon·
strated against it.
·
He also described the confusion
surrounding Reagan's chOice of
George Bush as his running mate
only hours lifter it appeared fanner
President Gerald Ford would get the
l9b: . . .
•
y Reagaq)lettled on Busp, a bitter
political foe, because of political
nec9'1Sity and not personal preferenContin~ on A·2

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