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                  <text>What's cooking?
~~

I

1

McEnroe soundly
Potato dishes

beaten by Wilander

..

f' ru.w It&gt;

Page3
~

Pa[(e 10

e
\loi.32,No.l5
Copyrightod 1913

SUGAR RUN

Disagreement forces layoffs

FLOUR MILLS
.
EAST MAIN ST.

SURE WIN AND
tARI\ATION FEEDS
· .FERTH..IZER and SEEDS
SUIT . YOuR NEEDS

TO

PH. 9!12·211!1

APPLIANCE HEADQUARTERS
HOTPOINT APPLIANCES and G.E. TELEVISIONS

Food Freezers

Refrigeratllr~&gt;­

Washers
Dryers

RED BRA.ND WIRE

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STEEL GATES

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·combination Refrigerators-Freezers
And Dishwashers

New Beautiful Appliances

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LIVESTOCK and WATER SOFI'ENER SAi.:I'S

Lube·Job•- OU Ciaanre -'tire•
Home Delivery of Fuel OU and GatoUne

l.ivestoch Medit:ari(lns and P•·evenroti·ves

FEED DIVISION
POULTRY

I&gt;A1RY

om;

"A Feed

ENJOY YOUR FAIR

Fo~

BROILER
RABBIT
SWINE

Try Our New Liquid Nilrogen

POMEROY

MULBERRY AVE.

PHONE 992-2115

"We Finance- Deliver- Service"

ANYONE CAN BUY AT LANDMARK

FREE RIDES

.FB

NEW HAVEN, W.VA. A co~tra ct disagreement with
Appalachian Power has forced the layoH of 50 more workers at the
Foote Mineral Co. plant ln New Haven.
These new layoffs bring the total number of laid-off workers there
to about 100.
"The layoffs were due to our Inability to get a short -term cont ract
with Appalachian Power Co.," said plant manager Cilff Northup .
Northup said that the disa greem ent is over the length of the
c6ntract.
"Appalachian P ower wanted a long-term contract,' ' Northup S&lt;~ id,
" and we can't be sure of our long-term future here."
· Northup declined io comment on deta ils of t~e· eontract.
"We requested more power !c;r a short -term power contract," he
said.
Appalachian Power , said Northup, will not grant the contract
because of legal reasons. Appalachian Power is under the
jutisdlction of the West VIrginia Public Service Commission.
Northup declined to comment on those reasons.
The contract has been ln the negotiating stage for three months .
The holdup hilS. been because APCO lias bl&gt;en unwUUhg to grant a
short-term agreement.
If an agreement is reached, It is possible for some workers to be
recalled, but It is unknown when It will be. ·
"W~ have attempted to get a s hort-term contract lor more power ·
with Appalachian Power ," Northup said. " We were unsuccessful. so
as a result we had to lay some workers off."

Every Need"

Try our Bulk Fertilizer· Saves You MONEY

Ride As Many Times As You Want After
Paying Gate Admission

Repaving contract awarded
The Ohio Department of Transportation has awa rded a contract
totaling $285,921.20 to The Shelly Company of Thornville for
resurlacillg 7.10 1')1lles of routes. 124 and 338 In the villages of Racine
and Syracuse. The state's es tima te was $289,600. There were two
b!Mers for the project.

Two hurt in accident
Two persons were ta ken to Veterans Me morial Hospi tal for
treatment of Injuries received in a two car accident on W. Maill St., at
3:45p.m . Wednesday.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven by Chris D. Ha rrah, Mason, W.
Va., struck in the rear a vehicle driven by Clarinda S. Cooper,Route2,
Raclne. Both cars were headed e ast and both received modera te
damages. Chris and Megan Harris were taken to the hospital by the
Pomeroy Emergency squ ad . They were treated and re leased .

RIDE SCHEDULE

I

Member FDIC

Farmers
Bank

Member Federal Re•erve

- THE STORE OF QUALITY -

Tues .• Wed .• Thurs .• Fri. - 1:00-4:30 and 6:00 -11 :00
Saturday 12:00-5:00 and 6 :00-11 :00
Holden of Membership 4-H Tickets, etc . can ride by paying
$2.00 at Ride Office each day.

''FUN FOR
THE WHOLE FAMILY"

I NEW YOBK

ClOTHIHC HOUS
"KERM'S
KORNER"
.
OVER 100 YEARS IN POMEROY
Dependable Since 1872

POMEROY

PHONE
992-2049
I

Midway Presented By

BATES BROTHERS
AMUSEMENT CO.
R. D. 2
WINTERSVILLE, OHIO 43952
Phone 264-3057

•

at y

enttne
2 Sect i~m . 16 Pages
20 Centl
A Mu/t, media In c. Ne wspape r

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 2, 198~

I

Local briefs

PAGE THIRTY-TWO

•

Ambulance chasers warned
" Ambulance" chasers crea ted problems for m embers of the
Middleport E mergency Squad Wednesday afternoon and suc h
Interference will not be tolerated, P olice Chief J . J . Cremeans wa rns .
George McDaniel had been found in an unconscious state over
the river bank and the emergency unit was called. Emergency
squad me mbers, som e traveling vta private vehicles , could not get
close to the scene because of the large number of residents who had
gone to the riverba nk area .
Laws prohibit the following of fire and emergency units a nd
citations will be issued in the future, the chief warned. McDaniel was
ta ken to Veterans Mem orial Hospital.

Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy 'tonight with a 50 percent chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Low near 60. Winds variable less than 10 mph .
Variable cloudiness Friday with a 50 percent chance of
thunderstorms. High ~Extftlded Ohio Forecast
Salurday throurh Monday:
Chance of showers or thunderstorms Salurd~Q~ and Sunday and
lair Monday. Highs ill the 'llls. Lows from the mld-508 to Jl'lld-608
Saturday momlllg and In the 508 Swlday and Monday.

Radical guerrilla band
vbws to kill advisors
SAN SALVADOR, · E l Salvador
(AP ) - The m ost radical left ist
guerrilla band ln this war-torn
na tion has vowed that a il U.S.
military advisers working with t he
Salvadoran g()verrunent will "return to the United States in cofflns."
The warnlng Wednesday came
from the Popular Liberat ion F or ces, w hich took responsibility las t
week for the murder of Lt. Cmdr.
Albert Schaufe lberger, 33, of San
Diego, Cal if., deputy commander of
American mUitary advisers in E l
Salvador.
Scha ufeiberger, in charge .or
security · for . the mllitary group.
became the first U.S. adviser killed
in E i Salvador when he was gunned
down May 25 whUe waiting in his car
for a. woman fr iend at Cent ra l
American Univer sity.
" Ali the military advisers sent
here will return to the Un ited States
in cofflns," the rebel group said in
leaflets sen t to local radio sta tions.
They sa id .S&lt;; ha u!elberger 's
murder was a warning agaill st " the
bellicose Reagan administra tion so
that it does not continue its
aggression agalnst our people ."
The leaflets S&lt;lld the U.S. adviser s.
now number ing 51, "have ·invaded
our soUand m assacred our compa·
.triots every day ." They sa id the
guerrillas "will be implacable with
them . until it achieves their tota l
withdrawal from our beloved
homeland.''
The F P L, as It Is known by its
initia ls ill Spanish, is the la rgest and
most radical of the live rebel groups
fighting for the past 43 months to
overthrow the U.S.-backed conser·
vatlve governmen t.
With only minor language

.c hanges, thP communique re·
sembled the one thP group Issued
last week whe n it claimed.respons l·
b!Uty for Scha ufelberger 's murder.
The FPL warned then tha t Presl·
dent Reagan's policies w ill bring a
" harvest" of dead Am erica n
soldiers.
Attached to the FPL leaflet wer&lt;'

phot ocopies of pPrsonal documf'nt s
the gunmen apparcnti)' took from
Scha ufl' llx&gt;rgcr - his Ca lifomia

Nm1h A n1l'r icau hom(•s, as was thC'

dr ivf"r 's li rf' OSf', his Navy fD rard

easP w it It .. Sctla ufr•lllf' I'RPI'.··

icy. saying it " w iU only bring
mourning and pain to hundreds of

and an Iden t ifica t ion card issut'Ci l!v
the Salvadoran For&lt;&gt;ii(ll Minish y .
The FPL commun iq ut' urged

H f'agan has said thf' m u rdt•r

or

Sc ha ufl' lbergf'r will no t df'! Pr thf'
Unlt&lt;-d Sta tt's fmrn conti nuing
Am er icans !o op!XJS(' thP RPagan reonomlr and military aid to E l
admini stration's E l Salva dor pol- Sa lvador.

..

ADDfi10NAL KILLING WARNING - E l Su.lvudor's largest leftist guerrilla group, tht• PopubU"
Uber..tlon Forct.'!i, vowed Wednesday It would kr••J&gt;
killing U.S. advisers U11lU they 1U'e all for~-cd to lt•uvt·
the country. The FPL. IL~ It l~ known hy IL• inlt h~s In

Sp•u•l,h, l'ialm"l r&lt; 'SJMmsihllity for liM' Muy :t:;
murd t•r of Lt. Crndr. i\llwort ~dmuf&lt;"IIM• rgt •r 111.
dc1mty

(•nnmuuuiPr

nf tht'

;\ml.'ri&lt; •tul

II•·

n1illt.ary

•ulvl!oory group. II&lt;• W I.L'
first l Ui . a dvl-.•r kill"! In
1':1 Su.lvudor. s~:hu.ufdt)('rg~ · r' !-1 fwKty a h0\"1' W i.L"i
hn••Kht h1u:k II•• l l . ~ . hL't wt,.'ko•nd.

CETA funds paid to ineligible
GALLIPOLIS - Nearly SJJO,OOJ
in federa l job m oney may have been
paid to Gailla Coun ty resident s
employed under tlle CETA program
who were not eligible for the funds, a
preilminary state audit indicates .
An audit conducted in \981 shows
$12,684 was pa id to Ga liia residents
who were lneliglble for fu nds unde r
the fed er al Comprehensive E m ploym ent Tra ining Act, according
to J erry Holton, an officia l wtth the
Ohio Bureau of E mployment Services . An addit ional $4,514 was
overspent by Gailla County. the
audit shows.
He said $194,922 in payments
" were questionable regarding par ·
ttclpant eiigfbiity."
The audit covered payments
m ade between Oct. l . 1976 and Sept.
:ll, 1979. The rounty commission
received a copy of the audit report
Thesday.
In a cover letter accompanying
the report, the rounty was advised
that a response to the findings in the

audit was required wit hin :ll days .
" ln theabsenceofa rcsponse ... wl·
thin a :ll day period." th0 lctt Pr
continues, '' the Office of Man power
Developm ent will proceed to lssur
an in itial determination sole ly on thr•
basis of the informal ion contained in
the a udit repor1 ."
County Commiss ioner Pa ul D.
Nida y S&lt;lid this morning much ofthP
documenta tion. specifically timr
cards for CETA employees. needL:&lt;I
to satisfy the audit werP lost d uring
the Jan. 1981 fi re a t the cpunty
courthou se.
Holton sa id there is presently
" inadequa te doc·ume nt a tlon" to
dete rmine if the$194,922 "wPnt to the'
right place."
Il proper documenta tion ca nnot
be found. he said the fede ral
government will hold the statl•
responsible and Ihe state will go to
the agenc ies and count les which
a dmlnistert'&lt;l the CET fl program.
" The re is great interest from the

govt' I'TlUI" un down fo r work lng this

th ing out,'· llnlt on sa lei.
The CF:TI\ auclil n'vt•a i!'CI an
" a m a z ing ly l ar~f' probl('m .. a cr·os.'\
t h~ s t a t ~ which could result In $1CXl
million In flndln!:!S aga inst count b
and al'(mcirs. aceor&lt;llng to Holton.
Although ail th&lt;' aud its havr not
bcPn subm ltt!'CI to thr st a t~. h&lt;'
r stimat ed thf' findi ng against Gall Ia
Cou nty was in " thr m illd iNa ngr " of
thOse against Ohio count if'S .
"Other coun t Irs and agrnr·lrs
havP much hlghN fi nd ings ," h&lt;'
sa id .
Desp ltf' thP findi ng aga ins t ( :allia
a nd other administrators or thr
CETI\ pru~~·am . Holton said "thf'
problem may not IX' wit h thr
count ies." _
He sa id thr OBES m ay not havr
kept adcqua t~ rr-cords or kept a
close cyr on the program during tho
period covered by IliP a ud it .
Holt on Is heading a Spt'Cial CETA
strlkr fore£' set up hy Gov. Richard
CeiPStt• and the OBES admlnlstru ·

tor in In!(• 1\.pr ll to hPi p f'Ol Hltif·s
wn •stll' w it h J.Jrohll'm s l"I'Vf'a!r{.[ tJy
lhf • audit .
Till' stri ke for&lt;·p w ill wcwk w it h
C a ll i;! and uth1•r &lt;'nu nl iPs to find
rl ()(·um f'rllalion 11f« ln :l 10 d Par up

till ' quPst ionabll' findi ngs. ht·said .
" W p will h0 as a ggn-sslvl' a s we
r a n \\' \t h lhr l.)pparlrnpnf of l.a t~J r
1t hr• fl 'tlf'r:al ~ l gPncy wh l&lt;·h t l dmlnl~ ­
tr n'&lt;l tl• · C'I-:I'A prog ra m ) so th:rt

lhf' fin di ngs s houl d not result In
paym Pnt s hy&lt;·ount ics,' ' hPsa ld.

1\hout 2S sta tP officials a nd
u L11tl1 0rs il n• on I t1e sf r lkf' forct" now.
af'cu rd l n ~ to Holton. This flgu t·r
could intTPasP to 100 l.x!!ore the
pmb lcms arP n •solvPd .
The• audit was co nductr&lt;! by the
Cinclnatti flml Ma ln -Hurdman . He
sa id it was a l'('l.'ll iar re view of the
CV I'A pml',~ ·; un , but It wa s "clearly
off schedule."
Although thr aud it was takep
during the Rhoclt&gt;s a dm inistration.
the sta te l'l'&lt;'!'ivr-d thP rrsul ls only
this Apr·ll .

No agreement reached on business taxee
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Oppone nts of business tliXes in the
House-passed state budget have
taken their objections to the Senate.
where the Senate president says
there is no agreement among
majority Democrats on the taxes.

WEATHER FORECAST - 'The NUional Wealher Service
I~ lllowen for the cenlral ,and DOrihem RodiM fCN" ~­
Sbowet 1 ud 1'11111 are lorecali from the
to the Grell&amp; UkM and
mr rtl'a Cool weMher IB'lorecut 1er rna~~~-. (APr xl!l'photo

Mldw.,.

Map).

'

A House proposal to booot taxes on
corporate profits drew tire from the
Ohio Chamber of Commerce. Steel
company executives called for
reductions ln taxes on equipment ,
machinery and inventories.
They !!'!Stifled WednesdaY before
the Senate Ways and Means
Commlttell, which Is nMewillg
taxation sectiOns of the budget
proposal. The panel has fallen
.behind the timetable for submltllllg
recommendations to the Senate
Finance Conunlttee.
Ways and Means Chalnnan

fi nd mor0 money for ed uca tion .
John Reimers, vice pres ident or
f\e O)tlo Chamber of Commerce.
sJlof'the ma in reason lor the bill 's
proposal to booot business ta xes and
decrease Individua l tliXes appeared
to be based on "Ul·advised political
considerations " instead of sound tax
policy.
" We think this is a very dangerous
num bers game ln which proponents
of business tax increases to achieve
" It's st111 just open . I c an 't really political baiancearegambilng with
say a thing beyotX1 that because Ohio's ecxinomic fu ture a nd the jobs
that's exactly where it is," Meshel • Ohio business provides. " Reimers
said. "There's · no decision been told the comfnittee.
made to keep it exactly the wa y It is
or to change it to another klndo! tax
Steel executives sought reducor to reconsider stW a dltferent kind !Ions in the tanglbie persona l
ot tax altogether."
property t1IX and retention of
Meshei ruled out reinstating ·· previously granted bus iness tax
budget funds cut by the House but credits ai m e d a t s purring
said an attempt was being macte to Investment.

Marcus Roberlo, D-Ravenna, said
the report would not be ready
Monday night as plan ned . He traced
the delay m ainly to the iargP
number of amendment s to be
considered.
Senate President Harry Mes hel,
D- Youngstown , said no consensus
had been reached about poss ible
changes ln t1IX sections of the
budget.

.,

Stephen Pcn yof The Tim ken Co :,
Ca nton, noted tha t the bill as It
passi&gt;d the HouSP does not ca ll for
repeal of credits . But he sa id he
understood the comm itt ee m ig ht
"be inclin t'll to rPCOnslder repea l"
as a methocl of raising additional
revenuC'.
" I beileve tha t t hl' would be .
counter-product lve In the long term :
s ince the repeal of t he crc'&lt;lit as thi s
crttleal time would most certa in ly
be a serious ~ ls lncentlve to job
creating Investments In Ohio,''
Perry said.
.
Gene Dabkows ki or Armco Inc .;
said the steel prOducer recorded : ,
losses or $345 million in 198'i whic h • '•
are continuing into 1983.
"What manu facturers l't'a lll( ;
need at this time IS reduced tn &lt;es 1 • •
not Increased taxes," Da bkowski :
said.
·• •

.

I

....
'

�Thursday, June

Commentary

2, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thuncloy, June 2, 1983

Wil3nder'humiliates McEnroe
••

CIA

The Daily Sentinel
Ill C'nu rl Strt&gt;t•f

Pomt&gt;roy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO Til E tNTI;:R.:ST OF THE

lllb

rtm ~
~v

MEIGS · M~SON

I"'T'\......I.._
~. r"'T""W:!5:

c

ARE,\

•-==:a

ROBERT 1.. WINGETI'
Puhllshu

PAT ~ HI 'I'EHEAD
A!&lt;iJoob.tan l Puhllslwr/ C'flnt ru lh•r

BOB HOEFUCH
Gf'nt.• r al Managt&gt;r

DAI.E ROTHGEB, JR.
New~

f;dltor

i\ MEMHJi;R or The i\AAOC!i!W•d f'rt.'SI&lt;!, Inland Ually P n'S'i !\sMclutio n and the
AtrM'riutn N1•wspape r l'uhlishf•r.; A..'i..'W!:'IIltlon.
Lfo...,...'t~H.~

OF OPINION

IU"'C

wdconwd . 'Tht·y !thouJd he IL"N'j thw1 :100 word!'i

lon ~.

All l1otk'rro ar•• suhjt'c1 tu f'dltlng and mn"" 114:• slgrwd with name. addr PAA o.nd lelepOOrw
number. No un.'illfnC(I lct~~rs will he pu hUo;twd. l .clt••n; Nhould IM· In ,~~:ood task, addressing

M--.

r.JI JH'I"!Iifmalltles.

does

·'

·The arbiter of
community needs
.

'

· President Reagan, champion of old·fashioned American Individualism,
may actually be hastening the trend toward a more dominant federal
government, according to a uthor-professor George C. Lodge.
Lodge, heir to a name that once dominated Rep ublican conservatism ,
notes the Irony In that, but suggests that a srreng1 hened federa l role In
economic planning Is both inevita ble a nd necessary.
"The role of the state Is changing radically," Lodge writes. "For better
or worse, It has becom e the arbiter of community needs. Inevitably, it will
take on unprecedented tasks of coordina tion, priority setting an d plan(ling
In the largest sense."
Lodge, a professor at Harvard Business School, Is the son and grandson
of sena tors from Massach usetts. He wanted to be one himself, but lost to
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy In 196'.1.
His appraisal of the. trend towa rd government planning - the Reagan
revolution notwithstanding - was published In The Journal of the Institute
for Socioeconomic Studies. It is part of a book entitled "The American
Disease," lo be publis hed next year.
"Ironically, Pres iden t Reagan 's breathtaking 1981 economic program to
eut taxes, Increase defense spending, llalance the federal budget, Increase
produc tivity, cut Inflation and attain full employment may well turn out to
mark the beginning of an expllcit recognition thai the U.S. economy
requires goverT\fllent planning -If not a planned economy, '' Lodge writes.
Reagan got the program, but It hasn'l produced on all those fronts unemployment and budge t deficit s worsened.
Nevertheless, Lodge sees Reaganomics as an expllclt, If flawed exercise
In federa l planning , "Our governme nta l leaders from time to time have
found It necessary to plan, " he writes. "But inva ria bly, they have cloaked
their departures from the limited state In the language of the old hymns,
attempting to make their Interve ntions appear pragmatic, Ignoring the
l!leologlcal implica tions.
. "This delays the time when we recognize the planning functions of the
state for what they are and must be."
According to Lodge, the government could be smaller If those functions
were acknowledged and clearly defined. He says bureaucracy has
nourished for lack of focu s, a problem Reagan and his predecessors au
recognized and tried to change.
Lodge sees the trend toward a more dominant government role even In
such conservative measures as the control of social welfare benefits. He
says tha t doeSn't mean a return to survival of the fittest but , more likely, a
new set of rules - " If ybu are able-bodied, you must work; If you cannot
flltd a job, government will provide one and perha ps coerce you to ta ke It
even If that means resettlement."

Into Republican hands
:The political coup went a lmost unnoticed, but the HouS&lt;&gt; of
~presqnta tlvcs the other day passed Into Republican hands. For about 15

mlnutd .
It was oldtimers day and Democra tic SpeakPr Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. of
Massachusetts turned the gavel over ·to ex-mem ber Les Arends, 88, an
Illinois Republican .
O'Neill said he was making the move In the spirit of blpat1 lsanshlp.
; "He a lways had his eye on the speaker's chair," O'Nelll said of Arends,
"but he was nev('l' able to get anything else on it ."
Arends se1ved in the House from 1935 to 1974.
The ex-lawmakers belong to a g roup called the Association of Fonner
Mem bers, crea ted 1:1 years ago - and now boost ing a roster of 600
erstwhile House a nd Sena te members.
"They join the group to keep a live the memories- and to get Blue
Cross," O'Neill joked.
. The speaker greeted the 71 old timers preSPnt In the chamber, ca Ulngout
many by name, and then telling them what It meant to him to live In a
democracy.
" You know. you go Into the foreign count riPs of the world where the
minor ity s it s on one side and the maJorit y sit s on the other side a nd they
never speak to each ot her becauSE' of their dlffererences In phllosphy.
· "But In this t"Ountry, you know, after 5 p.m . or even durtng the course of
the day, a Democra t' s closest friend may be a Republican a nd the
Republican's wife's closest fr iend closest friend will be a Democra tic wife.
"Tha t Is tlje way It Is under a democratic nation," O'Neill said.
Durtng a recent House Banking subcommittee hearing on c redit card
fraud, Rep. Thomas Ridge, R-Pa ., questioned a fanner member qf a
fraudulent credit card ring - identified only as "Mr. Witness" - on the
nenalty for working against the organization.

Letter to the editor
Boster will speak

Art Buchwald

~aneuvers_
· --~~----~--~---

course of which I have attempted to
HEADLINE: "CASEY ASKS
conjugate a !berne. Not a myste:
PANEL: WHO SAID '1lfE C.I.A.
LIES'?" Wllllam Casey, u,e direc- rlous theme, but not one that Is
entirely easy to expound.' It Is this,
tor of the Centrld Intelligence
Agency, can be a very cool cat, but
that the counterespionage disci·
pllne Is sometimes the transaction
occasionally his Irish Is dandered,
not of a law, but rather of an art. I
and theotherday !twas. A member
mean by this that there Is Wl"ltten
of a congressional committee was
anonymously quoted In The New
Into the Inexplicit mandate of an
Intelligence organization an ambl·
York Times as saying, a pparently
valence that simply C3jl't be wrung
with resignation, " The CIA Ues to us
anyway." This drew from Director out by the conventional processes
Casey a communication that Is that go Into the codification of most
scorching by the standards govern· of a free society's laws.
Let us take a hypothetical
lng exchanges between executive
agencies and copgresslonal com· situation. Our CIA agents In
Uganda sm ell something blg. Very
mlttees. What Mr. Casey wrote,
one-hal! gut-anger, one-halt eu - big. An atom bomb. Never mind for
the moment how Ida Amin got an
phem ism , was:
.
"While I have less than com plete atom bomb, but there lt/s, about the
confidence in the accuracy of press size of the Hlroshima !'&lt;&gt;mb. What
he propose
reporting, that comment has of· In the name of God
fended our entire organization a,nd to cio with hit? Well, he Intends,
Impugns the Integrity of our fine exactly three hours from now, to
employees. In obligation to them I dispa tch a plane from his little air
feel that I must pursue ItS accuracy . Ioree and drop the bomb over
The posslbtllty that any com mittee
member harbors the thought that
CIA lies_ to the committee Is so
ap palling that I feel obUged to
determine If any member of the
committee actually feels that way
and, If so, to seek the particulars.
The confidence between the agency
and the committee essential to
make the oversight process work
req uires tha t any such Impression
be addressed."
A few year s ago, George Kennan
was quoted as saying he did not
believe the CIA ought to engage in
any covert operations. Taxed as to
exactly why he thought this, he
answered that It was simply not
possible, In a political democracy,
for an agency to keep secrets, and
that under the circumstances one
had to weigh the valqe of covert
activity over . against the embarrassment of public exposure of that
activity. He concluded that the
latter exceeded the former, and
that therefore there should be no
covert ac tivtty . To which Machia velli might add : There should be no
covert actlvlty If there Is any
reasona bl e possibility that it will be
exposed. That Is to say somethin g a
little bit different from what Mr .
Kennan was saying, but that
difference Is vllal.
In thE' past seven or eight years I
have wrttten five spy novels In the Mlf'\1

Jerusalem, In retaliation against
the lsraells' Entebbe raid. Adl
Amln Is scheduled to go to the air
base personally to wave off the
bomber on a mission that wtli mean
the extennlnatlon of an entire city
and not Inconceivably the heginnlng · of a third world war. The
mission could be aborted by a
sniper who, properly situated, can
end the career of this madman
before his bomber takes off.
But Isn't assassination wrong•
Yes, assassination Is wrong. But
can't one say that assassination Is
wrong, but that there are worse
things than assassinations? Like
death lor a quarter million l""'Pie,
and perhaps a war?
Yes, one can say that.
Question: Is there machinery
that can act on such a moral
calcuJuf,o
ANSWER: Depends. Depends on
the bullt·ln resil iency of the approp·
rlate mecha nisms.

Sir. Are you saying that the CIA Is
entitled to Ue to a congressional
· committee?
No, I am not. I am saying that
there are worse things imaginable
than the CIA lying to a congressional committee.
Do you doubrlthat Mr. Casey Is
telling the truth when ~Insists that
the CIA does not Ue to congressional
committees?
No, l am not saying anything of
the sort.
What then are you saying?
1 am saying that circumstances
hypothetically exist In which the
director of the CIA would need to
choose between 1) lying, or b )
exposing a deed the exposure of
which runs a risk of collapsing a
vttal organ of a tree society, and
that the prudent way of steering
clear of such schematic collision
courses is for both parties to just
cool It; just don't talk about It; just
let It go.
.

'

SENIOR EAGLE'M'ES - Four Seniors led the 1983 Eastem
Eaglette softbal team lncludlntr. left to right, Unda Thoma, Melissa
Thomas, Becky Eichinger and_Rhonda Riebel.

Welch bests Carlton;
Braves dump Pirates
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Wriler
The way Steve Carlton was
pitching, Los Angeles rlght·hander
Bob Welch knew he ll.ad to pitch
better.
"He's a super pitcher," Welch
said of the Philadelphia veteran
after winning a ta'ut 1-0 duel with
Carlton Wednesday night. ''To beat
him when he Is pitching well Is ·a
flin!&lt;!stlc feel ing."
Carlton had struck out seven
batters and was within one of tying
the a!Hime major league strikeout
record when Phlllles Manager Pat
Corrales Hfted him for a pinch-hitter
after seven Innings.
" I was trying to win the
ballgame ," Corrales said. " U he's
going lo break the record, he'sgolng
to do it legitimately . I know he was
throwing great, but we had to get
'somebody on base."
As It was, the Phill,lesdldn't-and
Weich finished with a one-hitter.
In other National Leagueactlon ,lt
was Chicago 3, Houston 2; Atlanta 6,
Pittsburgh 3; St. Louis 8, Cincinnati
3; Montreal 8, San Diego 6 and San
Franclsco4. New York 2.
Carlton boosted his career strl·
keout total to 3,520, one back of
Houston's Nolan Ryan, who Is
currently on the disabled list with an
In jury . Ryan broke Walter Johnson's all-time strikeout record of
3,508earller In the season.
Carlton, 6-5, allowed only three
hits to the Dodgers before leaving.
. Welch, meanwhile struck out eight
and gave up ortly a fourth-Inning
single ·to Von Hayes. The Dodger
pitcher said he learned a lot just
watching the :JS.year.ald Carlton
pitch.
Pedro Guerrero s ingled hbme
Steve Sax from third base In the
fourth liming with the only run that
Welch, 4-4, needed,

A Machiavellian past._____J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n----...,
WASHINGTON- The Indefatigable Investigative reporter Seymou r Hersh has been rummaging
In Henry Kissinger's closet for four
years and has rattled loose som e ·
fascinating skeletons.
Hersh's findings ca n soon be read
In a new book, "The Price of
Power." From an adva nce copy,
here a re some devastating exam ·
pies of Kissinger at work:
NUCLEAR TAMPERING: Rl·
chard Nixon and He nry KlsslngPr
tampered with the sa fety catch on
the nuclear trigger, Hersh alleges .
Their action was cynica l; they did It
In secret; and they Ued about It to
th~ American people.
They began In March I969, by
dropping tons of bombs on ne utral
Ca mbodia, without the advice a nd
consent of Congress. They were
determined to concea l the bombIngs from Congress. the press a nd
th e public. "Kissinger's over whelming concern was secrecy,"
Hersh writes.
Perhaps worse, Kissinger " Insisted that the m~slons had to be
conducted without lbe knowledge of
the Stra tegic Air Command's normal command and control system
... tand) wanted the Cambodia n
bombing arranged so that crew
members aboa rd the B-52s would
not know tl\ey were bombing
Cambodia," Hersh reveals.
So an All' Force colonel, Ray B.
Sitton, worked out a complex
syste m of last-minu te target
changes cond"Olled by radar per.
sonnel on the ground. Although It
was Impossible ,to fool the 8-52

: There have been a series of children and teens. Our m ajor aim
lfleetlngs over the past five months is to show our fine young people that
of .Concerned Citizens lor Youth . we care about them .
I
Many things have been accompWe Invite anyone who has any
lished . But we stlll have many goals · Ideas on how to help to come and
which have not been met. There share · them with us. The next
still needs -to be some place where m eeting Is Monday, J une 6, a t 7:30
Journalism Is becoming a very
our youth can go and enjoy p.m . a t Meigs High Cafeteria .
dangerous profession. In libel suits,
themielves without getting Into · Speaker at this meeting wlll be
lawyers for the plalntlffs are now
trouble. ·
.
State Representative Jolynn Bos- · demanding that newspapermen not
in • county this size there should ·ler. - Linda Stewart .
only turn over all their notebooks to
be tundlng available lor . our
courts, but are alsO demanding that
a reporter and his editors testify as
to what was go.lng on In their minds
when they were producing the
story. Many judges have decided to
• r am a student presently enrolled especially nice td me as she has let the lawyers pry Into the heads of
at Southern Local. I have been . allowed me to accompany our journallsts and editors to try to
InvolVed In the music program at
school choir on the plano. That Is prove there was malice In their
Sout]1ern for two years now and It 's
just one ot the many things Mrs. thinking.
a lot of !un. lgueult wouldn't belt it
Lee i.ee has done for m e as well as
There are reporters who objeci to
wasn't for Mrs. Lee Lee, the vocal the rest of the kids that have had this line of questioning as a threat to
her.
mustc director. Slle Is a very nice
the First Amendment. But I'm not
l)erSOil and she ruu to have an awful
Thank you lor everything, Mrs. one of them. I'd like to confess today
lot ot patience to have put up with
Lee Lee. - Bruce Wolfe, Racine, how. I amve at a column and what
Ohio 45771.
my class. She ' has really been
goes through my mind when I'm

Evil

~en,

Appreciates teacher

crews, they were de briefed after
But Haig went too far, Hersh
to Kissinger for interpretation.
each mission as If they had dropped
Even aft Pr the truth became reports: "Eventually he would
the bombs on South VIetnam.
Indisputable about the Soviet 's accomplish the one thing Kissinger
Concludes Hersh: " Nixon and
pha ntom MIRV, Kissinger and found Intolerable - a separate
Kissinger were casually tampering
Nixon went ahead as 1f the Russians relationship with Richard Nixon with the command a nd control
In fact had such a sophisticated and the two m en would become
system of America's nuclear deterweapon. and Insisted on ma king bitter enemies. And eventually
rent" - the Strategic Air Comthis fa ntasy a matter of U.S. policy. Kissinger would come to realize
ma nd 's B-52s - "a system necesthat Alexander Haig was not
KISS IN GER'S KISSINGER :
sarily under constant hlg h·level
Kissinger's
Kissinger, as the newsHenry Kissinger's dealing with
analysis to prevent accidents or
papers
would
later characterize
Alexander Halg, a young, ambl·
unauthorized nuclear bombings."
him,
but
Halg's
Halg."
tlous colonel wt se In the ways of
In effect, they were writing a
INSIDE CHINA : Kissinger's
Washington, bega n as a masterprtmer for a ny loony general who serva nt relationship. Hersh quotes greatest achievement , 11 seems,
might contrive a "Dr ,Strangelove"
a Kissinger a ide a t the National was also his greatest gamble. He
scena rio.
set up Nixon's l)lstorlc mission to
Security Council as describing It
MIRV MISTAKE : In mld-1969,
this way:
China. according to Hersh, "with·
the Soviets ran a series of missile
"Halg m oved In on Henry and he out a commitment that Mao
tests In the Pacific. The Pentagon · m oved In from the very beginning. · Tse- tung wound receive him ."
conclude'd, wrongly , tha t the Rus·
Hersh reports that "Mao had
First of all, he was Henry's butle r
slans had tested a MIRV - that Is, a
a nd ·his' cha uffeur . Henry never suffered a series of strokes and had
"multlle, Independently targeted
been living- In part out of fear for
knew the kinds of perks that could
re-entry vehicle" - In other words,
his
life - outside of Peking." But
be arranged - private planes for
a m issile whose severa l warheads
the
gamble
paid off.
trips to New York for dinner.
could be steered to separate
" In the original dratt of his
limousines - and he loved It ...
targets.
m.~molrs, Nixon had much more to
When Henry had to wear a white tic
Wha t they had actua lly tested, It a nd tails for his first White House
say about the meeting with Mao,
turned out, was merely a MRV - a dinner, It was Halg who went to
telling how Kissinger had embar·
missile capable only of scaltering
rassed everyone by suddenly and
Henry's house and helped him
Its multiple warheads like a dress.''
gra tuitously making a scathing
shotgun blast In the sam e genera l
reference to Golda Melr, Israel' s
But Kissinger's mili tary aide was
area . But It su ited Kissinger · and
Prime Minister," Hersh reveals.
more than just a dogrobber. He was
Nixon to portray the Soviets as politically astute where Kissinger
" Mao, though he did not com·
bogeymen a nd their MRV as the was, at first, naive. Halg had
ment, was obvtousl)( nonplussed,
more menacing MIRV.
and the President quic kly moved In
military expertise whe re Kissinger
The CIA refused , however, to was essenti a lly disinterested .
to 'savethe m oment .' Nixon deleted
alter Its assessment of the MRV. Hersh reports tha t Halg even
the section from the published
This Integrity was treated by claimed to have gone on a highly
vers ion of his memoirs, but tbe
Kissinger and Nixon as " disloy- secret reconnaissance mission Into
incident, and Nixon 's anger at what
alty ." Their response was to reduce Cambodia though "no record has
he considered Kissinger's boorish
the CIA's Influence and to demand been found that Halg did In fact
behavior , were widely known
that raw Intelligence be turned over participate."
a mong his lmmedl~te staff.:·

Cubs 3, Ast1"9S 2

Keith Moreland hit a home run
and a run-scoring s ingle and Chuck
Rainey scatlered four hits In 8 1-3
Innings to lead Chicago over
Houston.
Rainey, 5-4, won for the fourth
time In his last five declsl~ns with

PARIS (AP)- The last hope fora
French Open singles title by an
American man - something not
actueved In 28 years -Is gone, along
with second·seed John McEnroe.
Only American women remain
with a chance to win a singles title
and the United States Is well
represented with Chris Evert Lloyd
and Andrea Jaeger.

Slam title.
The other men 's semUlnal will be
settled by two Frenchmen when
Y anillck Noah, the No. 6 seed, plays
unseeded Christophe RogerVasselln. The Frenchmen have
never met as professionals.
Uoyd has defeated Jaeger 14
times In their 17 professional
meetings slnee l!Sl, the year Jaeger

Lloyd,title,
favored
fifth
French
was to
to win
play her
Jaeger,
seeded third, today for a place In
Saturday's S'IO,!XXl final in the most
prestigious clay court tournament
in the · world.In today's other
women's semifinal, unseeded Jo
Durie ' of Britain took on Yugosla·
via's Mirna Jausovec, the 1977
champion here, who also Is unseeded this year.
McEnroe, the last of 'J:T American
men who entered this $1.3 million
tournament, was humlllated Wednesday by 1.8-year-old Swede Mats
Wllander, the defending cllamplon.
Wllander posted a 1-6, 6-2, ~. 6-0
quarterfinal upset over McEnroe,
whodropped 23stralght polntslnone
stretchof thernatch.
No. 5 ~--Wllander plays his
semU_Inal match Frtday against
either No. 4 seed Gulllenno Vllas of
Argentina or No. 8 seed Jose
Hlgueras of Spain . The VIlasHlgueras quarterfinal duel was
halted by darkness and rain
Wednesday with Hlgueras leading
6-2,6-7,6-1, 4.j)and2-1,15-0in the final
set. VIlas, the 1977 champion here,
made it to the final last year but lost

became
theasecond
youngest playe_r
ever
to win
pro tournament
at age
14 years and eight months.Jaeger,
who celebrates her 18th birthday
Saturdav, last beat Lloyd In the
semifinals In Paris a year ago before
losing the final against Martina
Navratliova, this year's top seed,
who was eliminated In the fourth
round.
Lloyd is one of the very rare
players who have won titles In all
four Grand Slam tournaments. She
has amassed a total of 14 singles
titles at the French Open, Wim bledon, U.S. Open and AustraUan
Open - the third highest on record .
But Lloydwent lntotoday'smatch
near ly a decadP older than Jaeger .
At 28, Uoyd is the third oldest
womanamongthetop20 1nthe WI'A
ranklngs, after 30-year-old Wendy
Turnbull of AustraUa and 39-year·
o ld Bill ie Jean King.
The tender ages of tennis starlets
did not escape Lloyd 's sense of
humor when she was asked why she
wore a blue and white headband
around her blonde hair during her
quart erfinal match.
"I think I'm a little old now for

damned souls and their blighted
minds .. . We're In a bad .fix In
America when eight evtl old" nnen
and one vain and foolish woman can
speak a verdict on American
Uberties."
Well, this sounded like a good
story. The first thing that went
through my mind Is that President
Jones had been unfair to at least one
justice. William ffetmqulst was the
only one on the court who had votecl
to give the school Its exemption
despite its racial ; ~tltes, so he
shouldn't have been: lilc!uded as one
of the "eight evtf old men" · with
" damned souls and blighted
minds.''
Besides not ~lng evU, he Isn't

tha t old,
The next thing that went through
my head was tha t I know most of
the Supreme Court justices, lnclud·
lng the chief, anil whlle I've
questioned some of their decisions,
r' haven 't noticed any one of them
possessing a "da mned soul" or a
'"blighted mind ." But who am I to
judge? Maybe It takes a fundamen:
tallst preacher to be able to see evil
In silmeone's soul. especially when
he loses a big case to the Supremes.
What ma de the decision an
interesting subject for a column
was that the Reagan Justice
Department, Instead 01 defending
the IRS, decided to come out on the
side of the. Bob Jones University.
.'

youngest man to ever w

Bmves 6, Pirates 3
Terry · Harper hit a three-run
homer as Atlanta scored fou r times
In the third Inning and went on to
de feat Pittsburgh behind Pascual
P erez.
Perez, 6-1, aUowedonlyfourhitsln
7 1-3 Innings before needing relief
he lp. Terry Forster and Gene
Garber finished up, the latter
posting his fourth save. Perez,
traded to Atlanta last June, was
pitching against his former Pirate
teammates for the first time.
Loser John Candelaria, 3-6, pitchIng in Pittsburgh for the first time
since criticizing Pirates' laJIS two
weeks ago, was booed loudly when
he came to bat In the third .
Cardinals 8, Reds 3
John Martlnscatteredflve hits InS
2-3 limings and knocked in three
runs, leading St. Louis over Cinclnnati.Martln, 3-1, making only his
third start of the year and second
mound a ppearance in 19 days,
fanned three and walked none
before leaving with two out In the
nlnt.h.
But It was his hitting as well as his
pitching that helped make the
difference, as the pitcher s ingled
home a run In a five- run fifth and
then doubled home two more In the
e ighth.
Expos8, Padres 6
Tim Wallach continued his
seasoo-long assault on San Diego
pitching with a three- run homer and
a run-scoring single as Montreal
ended a four·game losing streak by
defeating the Padres.
Wallach's seventh homer capped
.a lour·run fifth Inning as the Expos
squandered a 3.{) first -Inning lead,
then came from behind as they
mounted a 1')-hlt attack.
The Montreal third baseman Is
batting .478 against the Padres this
year with three homers and seven
RBI. Bryn Smith, 1·2, the fourth
Montreal hurler , wor ked the final
five Innings lor the victory .

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SPRING

Left -bander Atlee Hammaker
allowed just five hits and two
unearned runs over 7 2-3 Innings to
lead San Francisco over New York.
Hammaker, 6-2, left In the ~tgbth
after a tw(}()Ut error by second
baseman Brad Wellman set up an
RBI single by Geor ge Foster.

,·

A day earlier, top seed Jimmy
Connors fell to Roger-Vasselln .. a .
25-year-old ranked 130th who has ·
never won a professional tournament . Roger-Vassellnand Noah are
attemplng to become · the first
Frenchman to win In Paris since .
Marcel Bernard took the title 37 :
yf.lrs ago In 1946.

Innings.

SOUlS-___
W_ill_ia_m_F_.B_u_c_kl_ey_J_r.

doing It.
•
The other day I read that the
Supreme Court had ruled 8 to 1
against Bob Jones University _In a
tax case. Bob Jones U. apparently
was practicing racial dlscrlrnlna·
tion, and the court said the IRS was
c&lt;iiTect In deciding that the lundamentalist school was not entitled to
a U.S. tax exemption.
Then l read that Bob J ones m,
the president of the university,
commentEd after the ruling, "This
Is the same court who has decided
to murder Innocent babies. and
takes prayers - the word of God out ot our public schoolS. I have pity .
tor the heathens who sit on the
Supreme Court, pity f9r their,.

" I think this suits me much better.''
On Wednesday , Wllanderwon the
23 points in a row after McEnroe
disputed a call in \he third set. The
Swedish teen·ager then allowed the
24·year.ald left -bander to score
points only seven times In the final
set before trouncing him In two
hours and 20 minutes.

~~~Lee~~~[~to~~wu~an~d~e~~w~~ho~bec~~am~~e~lli~ed~~po~n~y~~~n~s,~·~q~u~~~-~t~~-t~~~F~~~~~d~a~~~N~.~~n~d~A~V~E~-~~~~~~~~~~~MID~¥OCE~ro~R~T~, ~O~H~~-

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1-8, tookhisslxthlosslnarowdesplte
allowing ju ~t four hits In seven

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The Daily Sentinel

4

Thursday, June 2, 1983

Pome~Middleport, OJtio

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Chicago · White Sox rookle Ron
Kittle spent the last twoyearsraklnj(
minor league pitching for 90 home
ruuns. This year. he'scontiliuing his
assault on American ~ague
hurlers.
Kittle took over the AL home run
l ead with his 12th of the year
Wednesday night, a two-run blast In
the sixth mning, as the White Sox
went on to beai the Boston Red Sox
fl. :I
" It' s amazing the way the man
hJts a ball ," said White Sox staner
LaMarr Hoyt, 5-6, who was aided by
Kittle's towering shot Into the left
fi eld screen.
Kittle, meanwhile, takes his
success in stride.
'Tm a bigfella andl'mgoingtohit
m y share of homers in this league,"
sa 1d thP 6-foot -4 slugger
In other American League
games, New York blanked California 3-0; Oakland topped Milwaukee
7-5, Baltimore stopped Minnesota
6-3; Texas beat Kansas City 7-4,
Detroit defeated Toronto 3-1: and
Cleveland bounced Seattle S-5.
Kittle's homer - which put him
one ahead of Kansas City's George
Brett and California's Doug DeCin·
ces - gave Chicago a 4- 1 lead and
came off John Tudor, 3-3. He now
has hit in six straight games, during
which lime he has belted four
homers and knocked In seven ru ns.
Kittle's homer pleased neither
Thdor nor Boston Manager Ralph
Houk, whodlsagreeclonwhatkmdof
pitc h It was but agreed on the r esult.
Wade Boggs doubled in a pair of
Boston runs in the sixth to cut the

CINCINNATI ! API - The Unlversltyof Cmcmnat t has anounceda
three-year pact with WLW ·T televl
slon to telecast basketball games
and possibly some football gaJ!les.
Bill Spiegel , WLW-T program
director , said thPslation will carry a

•
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I Jhlo V,rllt•\ Puhll -.hmg C'orn 1-.M ny Mul llmf •d l.i , lUI' Pomt 'HJ\' Oh io 4!l71i1) , 'I'J~
21r1h ~' • oml c \,ts:-. pu&lt;; l ,l '-!t ' pard .t l l'onll' lll \' Ohio
Mr •n rht ' l
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COLUMBUS, Ohio !AP I - Scwto
Joe, driven by Richa rd E lliott , wPnt
the mile in 2: 02 :1-:. to win th e
featured eigh th racP &lt;rt Scioto
Downs Wedn&lt;'sday night and pay
$4o.60, $11 .&amp;:! and $4.00
Second wa s Darn StPvP for $:120
und $2 40, followl'd hy Bold town for
The fifth """" trifr&lt;' ta. 7 I H. pard
$2,218.W
A crowd or :t,:m ilf't $284,7:.2.

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1 end tables
1 coffee table

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---------------.
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New 7 pc . wood
dinette sa~..
REG . '399 .96

$299 95
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New
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REG . '269 .96

$199

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-------------~------------­
' I

I New Hide-A-Way Beds
'12 I With Full Size Mattress
·t · Price I ~~~.9s s2999s :~:

: ·.,~ Lamp

Sale

Buy one lamp at the

l1111~ull1r price and
the metching lamp
'h price.

C!!].!.!]! ~19.95

to S79.95

.,

I
I

TAR:~.ro.s.

(QENER~-~

SERVICE)

Cl'l argea 1or demand metered
cua1ome11 .,., Increased an a'l'erage ol
appro•lmalely 7% (5% lnc1udl11g fuel
In Seclloo .4. Paymanls a customer
charges! The cu atomer cl'ltrga Ia In·
will be charged 110 20 tor lf1Y dishonored
creaaed from $14 .34 to 11!170. and th11
c heck reulvtrd i n paymiJI11 ol a bill
minimum !JI U will contlniHIIIo be equal
renderiKI by ltttr Co mpany , unlen 1ne
to lhe cualomar charge plua the dll·
cuatom ar shows that the ~nk waa In
mand charge per KW limes minimum
11rror. An $ll 25 charge Is maae under
billltfg demand (5 KW)
e.lallng larllfs
Cl"'arges lor no ndemand materl!ld
In Slcll on 13 E11 tenalon o f Au111
cuslomera are Inc reased an average o f
Linea , lhtr ru•al Une mtn1mum c harge
appro•lmatel
y t 7°11 (13-t'o Including luel
per cuflomer unde1 lhl optlonal o1an Ia
cha•gaa) The monthl'1 cu11omer charge
inc reased by
hom 17187 l o
and minimum 1)111 are lncreued from
1112 50 per monlh tor up to 5116 o l 111
110 00 10 112 00.
mile and lrom $28 75 lo us 00 par
Tl'le current and proposed rates In
mon1 h for each addlllonal 118 mila o r
1n1a 111111 attraa f ollows:
traction !hereof The mlnlm u/fl aggreCurrant
gale of suc h c h~rgee iOI each line Is fn.
Demsnct Melerecl Cuslomur
creased from 1230 00 lo $J60 00 per
monlh per line No mlmmum c tlatga
Cuatomrtr c harga p!lr month
ahall be leas lhan 1112 ~per month.
'1.43.4
Demand c harge per KW $3 07
an Inc tease fr om 171 87 The grou an
nual r e~e nue lrom all Cu llome re on 1
Energy c harg e per KWH
line necenary 10 ellmrna Te all mln1
I 0248
Nondemand Wiler~ Cuetom1r
mum chargat undet lhla tartll Is In
cr11ued from :Je,g(J(J TO110,800 pOl milo
CuSJomer c harge per monttl
tn ~c h o n !&lt;I , Tftmporary Service
$1000
Ene1gy Chl rge per KWH
fiCirM IOcJIIIonal wording has been added
to Cllflty cut 1omera ' obligations unde•
$ 0326
Proposed
permanent service. 1n addit ion lhe tl11ed
c hltflll l ot reading In ana read1ng·o ut
Demand Male red Cue Tomar
Cuelomer c harge pe1 mon th
an eJtl&amp;tlng mater Ia Increased from
113 75 to S1 6 50. ai'ICI ttle cttar\)1!1 lor
115 70
Demand charge pe r KW S 3 36
single phase 12012 40 t oll Sl!lrvlcll !rom
permanenl tource up lo TOO llmper4!1
Entrrgy c harge per KWH
capacl h le lncreutrd lrom Sll..t 00 to
s 0259.4
1150 00
NOndemtrnd Mel11red Cuatomat
In Sect ion 15. Location and Main·
moolh
Cualomtrr c harg11
t11nance of Company 1 Equ ipment , Ute
11 2 00
Entrrgy charg11 per KWH
IOlll"'u been r11vlsed to clarity 1111111ng
obllgallonll of the cu11oma1, In regard
I 03602
to recalwlng urvlc:e from The Company,
Thtr provi!ltoo under tnla tariff lor
Atttlethlc Field Ugnung Cu1tomera It
to provide suitiOie IPICa lot meTering
and other lacii!Ual
replaced by a Recreation Lighting pro
rn Secllon 21 , Denial or Olaconf tn
vision IVIIIabte to c ua1ome11 l or
uance 0 1 Service, The raconnac tlon
septtlllll y metered nonptolll ou td oor
charg11 dur~ng normat WOiklng t1ou11 IS
publ ic 1ecreaflon tacUitlel The proposed
lncreuea from 111 30 lo S20 95 and
11111 under this provision are 11
IOIIOWII
~
the c harge oufatde ot ~torm al worlt lng
llourt II ln creaaed from SJT .40 10
Cue tomer charge per mon th $1 5.70
S38 20 The charge tor p1ymen1 o l delln
Energy charge per KWH I 04270
quen11mountato a com pan~ trmployee
The minimum c harge lor weklera, .
on fne cualome• 's pHtrnlsea lo perform
a ray mac hlnaa . etc Ia lncreeaeo lrom
1 dlaconn11c llon Is Increased !rom 1910
$2 22 pe1 KV~ ol lnalalhtd tranalotmer
to 1 11 10
capeclly to 12 .43 lwllnlmum chargee for
CUi tOmera having OIN!r tourc:es or
energ~ supply
are Increased from
TARIFF R.S. (RESIDENTIAL
$29 51 to 132 SO per month IOJ thalltll !5
ELECTRIC SERVICE)
KW 01 traction trn.ot of contriiCT dtmlnd
and lrom 1.4 2• to
par monttl tor
The monltlly cuSTomer chtrga 1nd
.. ch KV( or contract~ CNef 5 KW
minimum bill arelrtereiHdlrom ~ 00 10
s..4 !5~ The number or energy r11e blcx:lta
TARIFF E.H.O. (ELECTRIC
Ia reduced !rom II'UM to two. This la ac:
HEATING Si!RVICE)
complllhtd Oy relalnlng • IIC)Irate block
for thallrtf 800 tlllowatt hour• and c; Om·
This ftrllf rema1nt In proce11 or
blnlng tne e~etstlng blockl ol 801 · 1!'JOO
ellmlnltlon and llmltaa to e•latlng
klrowtlti'IOura end over 1500 ld1owall
cul!omefl The monthly customer
hoo.Hs lnlo 1 single energy b iO&lt;;k encom·
c h~rge ana mtntmum bUI erelncrHMd
Pilling 111 ltUowallhoura ~r 800 Th11
from 11 3.00 to SIQ.n The numb.r ol
o~ere111 ncree11 Is about 2T "lr (14% Inanergy ra tt bloc:ka Ia r.ctuc.ct from two
•
cluding tuel charges).
to one Overtll chargaa 101 thla ta ri ff
The lnc reeH per KWH propoaed
are tncrau.ct epprorrclm1tety 20 5Yt
are a1 lonow1
fll 5% lt\Chldlng ruel chargetl.
For the l lrat 800 KWH used per
The curran! and propoee&lt;i retea In
month from 3 70 cen111 per KWH
lhla tarHI 1r1 aa follow•.
to 4,60.4 cents per KWH, or
Current
aboul 24%
CuetQmer cnarg• pet monTh St l 00
For !he ne•l 700 KWH utad per
Energy Chl!ftll for tht first 1000
monttt lrom 31 1 ctnta per KWH
KWH. per KWH
t 0321
If! 3 oU6 canta per KWH , or
Energy cna1ge for all over 1000
about 10%
KWH, per KWH
t .02211
For all over 1!100 KWH utad j)llf
Demand c harge tot KW In aace11
month ln:wn 2.1!11S centa per KWH
' $2.!!
of lO, Ptr KW
to 3.44e c:en11 per KWH, 01
Pfl)pOHCI
ebouf 20% ,
Cua1omer cl'lerge pet monTh I11.8Q
Wllh lfGird 10 the Lold Menage·
Entrgy charge J* KWH 1 .03334
ment Tt me -ol Oay JHOY IIlon . the
Oltnlnd CP\If'ge tor KW In I ICCMI
cuat omer charge end minimum bil l ' ' '
Ol 30, pet KW
12.88
tncrealld !rom 18 !50 lo 17 OS The
~rau lnetMII J)rop6\ad tor thl 1 prowl
TARifF L.P.
alon Ia 32-A. (17% I11Ciudl11g fuel
Cl\ltQet)
(LAROE POWER)
The rate Cl'llnQee per KWH Pf'OPOM(I
as follows.
The month!, cuatOfl'llf cherge nee
Fo1 allanerll)' uMd du llnG on.paek
bMn f'ICIIICIMI and the demand ana
billing perlode1from 4.77 centa
ohergae t\ave ~ lncrMMCI
Overe f chetgee ,,. lnCtHMd approrrct·
KWH to 0.033 CIRII per
metelv 11% 110 ~ lnclvdlng fuel
KWH, Of an Inert"' ol abowt
charQH).
FOt atlenwgt'IIMd durin! orl-peek
Tfle current and PIC»&gt;OId ralea In
lhll ttrll! 1ft 11 lollowa
billing perlocte, lrom .51 c;enla
per KWJ&lt;1 to 2.21 cente I *
Cr.trr.nt
I&lt;WH , or I dtcrtiH ot about
Cuetomtrctwglpermonth 1115.00
O.mandcl"'ergeperi&lt;VA
17.18
Tht trtnMNII!on and load manao-Enlfgy charge per KWH. J 0014
mtnt credit 11 reduced lrom
1.370 cenla to OUI cents per
Cullomet chlf91'1*ritontl'l sa.OO
Olf-oeek I'(WH
Dttmena o"'-"" I * KYA
11.21
Thl ctwgM In the Optlonel Blrv!Ct
EnervychafOI "'KWH I .OOQ3
lor Allldtnoet Pnmatllv HN.ted tty
Thl T1m1 Ol ContNCI pnwiiO'I II
E!KtrlGity provision ltl 111 l~r. .MQ
c~ to "tend tt.. lnttlit term trom
by ebout20% .
Ofte fo two ,..,., lftd to I'MUoe 11M
The lncre.... per KWH pr~
minimum one ,.., •·•nqoMtt . con.
ere u lollowe·
trectl)lrlod bv eutMUtutlng thl Oui'Ntltty

JC_,..

1 charr

:..;:::;::::

Monl ttly Servlc:a Charge from $12 5Q
lo 11507
Fo• those I&lt;WH uaed durin! tne
mon lh In eiCC:U.I ol .aD tmea
the monuy billing otmand 11om
1 J9 cenfl par l'(WH to 1 B6
cen ts per KWH
For tnoae KWH USed during the
p..lt IOid period
For the llrat ~ KWH !rom .4 JEI
ca nts per KWH to 5 22 ce nta
plll'(WH
For all over 500 I&lt;WH from J 4Q
cents per KWH to 4 18 centa
par KWH ,
For til additional I&lt;WH uaed during
lhe mon 1h hom 1 7.4 can ta per
KWH to 2.08 cents pet KWH
Tne EICper1mental Tlma·o1-0ay PTO·
vlalon ct1argtra are changi!KI thll um11
u thos11 In the Load t,iiaoagam111nt
Time-a t Day pmvlal on

P••

9:3().5:00
Closed Thurs.
4-46-9525
---------- ::: -----7Pc~fou-G1f:·'I\

MATqtlNG CHAIR ..... $159.95

where all·day event S had been
planned )jy P .T .O. parents and
teachers, with Mrs. Sharon Wnght .
n"'.. ' P.T.O. president , C'OOrdinatinP
.,.;-.....

'

'*

....

'"

"

'"""!

..

_

':"

details.

' Ribbons for first , second and

third place were awarded along
wtth participant ribbons for Parh
Student entering the events.
Wall plaques were given for
tUg of-war.

save.
The Orioles snapped a 3-3 tie in the
seventh on Murray's double and
Roenicke's single. Aurelio Rodrt·
guez's sacrt(fce fly Increased the
lead to 5-3 in the eighth and
Roenicke's sacr1t!ce Oy made It &amp;-3
in the ninth.

The two rooms with the fastPst
lime on the Obstacle CoursP ran

against each other as finalist s.

Rangers 7, Royals 4

Those twO teams were Mrs.
Young's third grade and M rs.

HEAR THE REDS AU
SEASON LONG ON '

Billy Sample homered and
singled to key a 13-hlt attack and
Rick ijoneycutt coasted through the
first Si&gt;\'en innings.

Whitt 's third grade.

WMPO 92 FM

Mr5. H ysell's founh grade winning
. thE' upstairs com petition .
ded
.
F trst
place Wlnners inclu
Thrt't'

Lt~tm ~·t·

Rt-..uiL..

C radr' .&amp; - A.n~PI&lt;~ Kl&lt;'ln An).."f' I:J Ilo.d
.rason \\'nJ,!hl Tim WPI!:- Gradf' ·l r..m
Rut'k K 1:1 nda
l odd Sm i th .l f 'l ,,
Wh Jif' r;rad&lt;' fi - H f' athi•! Woxh L t ... rP,
C'.trr : Todd AckPrman DN1nL-. H a m~. Pn m
a rv D .H -Mar'\ G.lrnt"" M.P• Cht~ n P\ 1'oocl
Kf'nncd\ .Ja,.~n Blnrr: ln tr rmf'dwll' 0 11 R\ an Ha' man .Jimm\ Rr,·nolds To n1 Rut -

Kl()('~.

! (&gt;!

Wf'nd\ Cars&lt;"\'

Standtn~ 8road .Jump ~ults

Grdd&lt;' thrff' - Apnl Tan nphill ~11la h
Bunch. Gr ade&gt; l - Ca ndy Anderson. JamJf'"
81~.25. Grad&lt;' 1 - Danl{•lif' C!'0\4 Rrnd

5fl \ "lU'd DW&lt;ih ~u.tt....
h:.Jndc'r.e;3.nm A.M . and p M _

JC'rm~lah

{ .rll~U'. ~rah Anderson : Grade orw•- Brad
-\ndt' tson . DaniC"\.11.' Crew.· Grade 2 - Jam1£'
Hi~. [l(&gt;nlSf' Hys{'&lt;ll , Grad(' !hf{lfl- Micah
Runch . -\prll Tannf&gt;hlll GJadefour - .limmy
1N" \mandu Roush. Grad&lt;' fh 'f&gt; - Mk'k£~;&gt;'
...,.., l«•r. J:)(•an n.1 H a~g:\·: Grack• sL'- .lf'ff
\l ( i:lrO\ , H Palh&lt;'t' Woods, Primary D.H :-. t.u" c.ar n('!&gt;., Jason Blair. l ntermf'dla1t'

oU

- Bron'iOn Laudf&gt;rmil1. Toru Rutter
Frto&gt;hfot&gt; Thrw· Rfsutts
C:r &lt;~dP fow _Sha n(' Phil II~. Gradf' nvf'Rdnd\ Hawlev: Grad(' six - Ric ky Ellis:

DH -

Bronson LaudermTit

Soft hall

ThrO'o\'

DON'T FORGET DAD ON JUNE 19, 1983

Rt-8u.lts

And('!'"OO . kmdc'rgartf'n David F r ll\
~ ~ .1h ·\ndrt '! '-lln f ;, ,tdl' h - Hf'athC't \\ ell)( !"
1{'11 \l r UI'o\ : ·, - IXanna Hd~Jto Rank
f" lt•land (; l adP -l - Am a nda ,Rouo;h, tk• Palnc k (ir.~;.zk ~ . StttC'f'\ Sh.m k Prim;.~n
0 H - Marv G,t r nPS Jf'n"\ R.t•Jimlrf'
Jnt f'rmrotal£&gt; DH - WPnd' C&lt;1Nt'\ nrono;on

{)panna Booth&lt;' Brad
\nrl f'l..., ,n C.r .tdf' t\\ 0 - Da\1d Oars! . Anna
l'ha pm..a n . C.rack' Thf(l{'- BruCE' :vtrCloud ,
IOlh ~ rntlh G r adf' fOur - 1'1mW£'1ls, Aimee
~1 1 t r h . Gr.td&lt;' f t\f' - Kenda KICX'S, Hank
C\('land . l.rad r six - H('athE&gt;r Woodo;; . .Jeff

Laudf'rmi ll

FoJmp1

·

&lt;'""""'

OIN~· k·
R&lt;sull&gt;
Wlnnt't'S

&lt;.r.1 d r&gt;

ont'

~-----..

We Are
I,.

Kindergartrn A.M - Jcrrod
AmiX'r Blar kv.C'll . Klnd[&gt;f'~at1 en
Jerod Hill. Crystal Pridemore.

:'.k,::lro,·
PM -

g-&lt;~nl'n

-

We Are
Your
Father's •
Day

Pnma.r\' D H· - Todd KPnn«l:v. Da r Boscia:

Winner for the da¥ was Mrs .

Kindl •r
C r :tdc&gt; on&lt;&gt;- Mr'!i l'hOm.'l!'i
room. &lt;;tadr:l- :\1t.., Dtf'hl's Room i ~radPJ

lnlt•r m ('d ia lt'
T oni Rultf'r

Whitt'S third grade room for the
downstairs. Upstalrs room com pet ·

- M rs Whln s Room . Grack&gt;4- Mrs Gibbs,
R oom . Gr&lt;Jdf' S - Mrs H_\'~PI I' R oom Gradt•
l'i - M!ss TripletT s Room : D H - M rs

ing were Mrs. Hysell's fifth grade

Sai.·k Rlw.·r ft.t.sult!i
Gradf' on{'- Brad Andt'rson . Sandy Whitt ;
C.t ad £&gt; 1wo - Mrgan Ban£&gt;1s Charles King .

Ca rt er·, Room

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio 1AP 1Tim Belcher attracted no mltjor
college baseball offers as a Htgh
school shortstop. Now the game's
professional scouts have flocked to
the tiny campus of Mount Vernon
Nazarene College to see him
perform.
"It's unbelievable. It' s kind of
happened overnight It' s taken me
and everyone by surpriSe." Belcher
says of all the attentionhe'sdrawing
before the m ajor league free agent
draft M onday.
What the 21-year-old Belcher has
become is a pitcher with a fast ball
clocked in the 95 mph range. In his
college season this spring, the

TINY TECH DAY-CARE
PRE-SCHOOL
SATURDAY, JUNE 4
l P.M. - 3 P.M.
FREE REGISTRATION FOR
PRE-SCHOO~ THIS FALL

LAST WEEK OF OPENING PRICES

oH -

Bmll.'io'n Laudermlll .

UPC 835 So. Jrd

Th e
BEREA , Ohio I AP I
Cleveland Browns this wee~ have
onE' eye on 45 rookles at their
mini-camp and the other eye on
· h t 1os1ng
rebounding from twostra1g
National Football League seasons.
However, their top draft choice,
fum Brown, a world-class sprinter
from Arizona State, m ay set his
sights on compet ing in the 1984
Olympics.

-

Middleport, OH.

a.,.

TARIFF I.P.
(INDUSTRIAL POWER)
Tne cut f o~r cnargn eaaoclated
wltn 11ch, dall~ary ~OIIIQI 18¥411 htve
bMn tlduc ld O.mtnct cf'l~rgtt nave
bMn either 1ncrea1 fld 01 reduced,
depending 011 del iVII)' vOIIIQI , end
energy cherges htve bean Increased In
each c,sa ~ erall the Increases r•nge
from 6% to 2 1"/• (3% to 12"4 Including
lue1 charges~
The currant ent:J propOIIICI ratll rn
fhil fltlfl Ill as IOIIOWl
Curren !
VOIIIQII le~el
2:J.12kv
Cu 1Tomer Cl'ltrl)e $981 00 per month
Dtmend Cherge
S6 95 per tlva
Energy Charge
00520' per kwh
Voltage Ll!l'l'al
23~91tw
Cua1omer Chtrge 12.1'75.00 par mooltt
O.mtnd Charge
58 ~7 per kva
Energy Charge
OO.teO • per lr;wh
\loltage Level
138 kv or higher
Cualomet Charge 54,757 00 per mon1n
Demand Charge
$6 15 per kVa
Ene•gy Charge
00370" PM kwn
Proposed
&gt;Jottaga Le11e1
2 3-12 kv
Cuetomer cnerge
$133 00 par mon1 h
Otmsnd Charge
$7 82 ptrr kve
Energy Charge
00803• per kwh
YOillgl lewel
Cualomer Cherge
Oemend Charge
En•rg., Charge

23$kv

S41000 par mon th
S6 48 per kva
00741• per kwtr

Vol1ageLevel
136 h or higher
Cuatomar Charge $602 00 pt~r mon th
Demand Chatglt
l!r !50 per kva
Energ)' Charge
00720 per kwh
The Term o f Contract pro'l'lalon 11
cttan11ed to reduce the initial farm !rom
a minimum ol lhrllettlart to 1 mlnl'l)um
ol Two retll, ant:J lo rlducalnt minimum
twoyttr aubaequent contract period b'1
rettfntng tht required lwelve monlt'la
priOr nollce ot Intention to cance l, b ut
allowing auch nollUcellon, 1nd aubse
quent contract cancellellon , 10 occur at
111~ lime

TARIFF I.R.P.
(INTERRUPTIBLE POWER)
r ne cuatorner ctrerge ana reactive
demand charge are reduced, and Ute
demand and ener11'1 c hargee lncr•a•ld
The overall ._....,, of chiiOtl 11 11'\elelsed
approa lmaftly 21"1. fl2'fo Inc lud ing l uel
Ch1rg111.
l The curra111 a.nd propoeed rates In
ttl Ia tarltt are as lo llowe
Current
CusTomtrr c harge per month
S4 757 00
Oemal\d cl"'arge per KW
S4 39
Dtm1od c;h.,ge per K V~R In eacess
of 50% of I&lt;W bUIIng demand 1 65
Entrrgy c harg11 per I(WH $ 00370
Proposed
Customer charQI per montn 1e02 00
Demand cnerge pet KW
S4 8.4
DemanG Charge pel' tC.VAR In IIICIISI
·Of !ICI% OII':WDIIIIng Otmand I 50
Energy &lt;;harge pe r KWH J 00720
The Term o f Conltac l prowlaion fl·
talna tha lnltlel c ontract pe riod ol two
year11 , but Is mod ified In reoerd to
aubaeq... nt contract pariOdl IO allow 1
'*luirld twel~e mo11!h1 nouce and
aubtequant ean&lt;:lllatlon, to be made at
any tlmt,tMrlby moc:l!lylnft tM current
raqulr•ment ll'lat cane• al lon Ia~
PIICI, tHtt one ,..ar'a notification, onty
at Ina annl\18raery dale of the contract

TARIFF S.S.
(SCHOOL SERVICE)
11111 tari ff remains In proce11 or
elim\nt!lon end ilmltecl to errclatlna
c:uelomara The cuetomer charge 11 In·
crtand , tncl the energy ralaa era In·
cr1111d, with the dllferentltl bet.-n
liM two ratt blOcks !educed The O'll'efall
Ievei i• !nc1eeMd 21 5"1'1 (tt% Jnct uttlno
tuel~

.

The crment and prl)pOHCI rttea tn
thll tariff ere 11 fo11owa:
Currtnt
CuetotMt c:htrQt I * month 111 80
Flrel 300 KWH per 1000 ,
tt. Of
enciOHd ,,.._ pet KWH
0314
Belance of KWH, pet KWH l .0283

-...

Cuatorn.r c h•rge ptr month 121 .12
Firat 300 KWH per 10IXI IQ. H 01
an(!IOMG .,.., per KWH J .0427'Q
lallnct or KWH, J)8f KWH $.0377'U

TARiff D.L.
(OUTDOOR LIOHTINOI
Monltlty tamp eM,....,,. t..:iuced
and c""'M fat MCOndlry ctrculte 1

..... •till - - wlolna .,. tnCfiiMCI. The O¥eflll IWii ol o"e'8H le

_,.. I"'-"*--

TIM our,.nt end J)I'OOOMd ...... In
tNt llflft a,. aa loUowe:

AND ARE NOT AVAILABLE
FOR NEW INST~LLA.TIONS
Lamp
Cu rrant PrOJXIaed
2.500 lumen
Incandescent
S6 65
S5 70
of,OOO lumen
7 20
&amp; 15
lntandeecenf
For each lamp with lloodllgtltlng
lumlnalre , con1rol led b'1 photoer~tetrlc
relay, where aeNice It supplied !rom an
exlatlng pole and secondary faclll1\ee
of lhe Company
Lamp
Current PrQ90sed
20.000 lumen
mercury lloodllght
$1• 75
11 2M
!ICI,OOO lumen
mercury 11oodllgtlt
22 05
t8 90
22.000 lumen hlgn
preeeure soorum
IIOOCillght
14 70
12 50
50,000 lumen high
PrtiiUfl Sodium
flood i!Ohl
t6.05
13 75
When atrrvlcll cannot be aupplllld
!rom 1n eJCiatlng pole or the Compa ~tJ'
carrying a secondary circuli . the Com·
p1nr will lnatall one pole and/or one
ep1n of secondary circ uli o f not owe r
150 feet for an additional charge ol SJ 58
011 m011Th an Increase from $2 .49
lamp
Current Proposecl
1 000 lumen
mercury 011 12 root
poll top
110 •o
SSIK&gt;
When a cu1tomer requires an
undllrground circ uit longer than 30 feat
lor ooaltop lighting aervlce , he may :
11 Pay to lhe Compeny In advance
1 chtrge o f 56.22 per 1oo1 for
1he lenglh ol underground clrcurt In •-ceu o l 30 !Mtt or
2! Pay a monthly lacllltll!l c harge
of $1 .82 lor each~ leer (or frac·
lion !hereof) o1 underground
ct rcull In eJCCIIIS o f lO IMI , In·
creased hom $4 2Q and S1 .3t
flll!IPttCI IV'ely
,
Cullt Dfl'll!lltl requiring nrvlct where
melt or o1t111r adverse soli condit ions
are en countered will be furnished aer·
~Ice provided the e•ceaa coal of trenc;hlng and bt c:ltfltl!ng tcoal In e•cen of
S2.S61toot o l tne 1olel lrench length! IS
pltd 10 !he COmJ)any by 1he customer.
lncreaaed !rom $2 00/loot

Brown is attending the Browns'
mini-camp, but has not signed wit h
the team, which was 5-11 in 1981 and
4,5 in 1982.
.ano
Browns' Coac h Sam R u tlgl 1
sa id he hopes Brown will sign soon.
"Ron Brown Is the kind of big-play
guy we were looking for. He has a
b t 't '
· h
great opportuntty er e, u I s a
·
h
d
hi
t
deciSion ean
sagen mus t come
to. "
The camp, which runs through
Saturday. also is attended by 46
veter ans. Four of "the veterans wide receiver Dave Logan, defensive backs Clint Burrell and
Lawrence Jotinson, and center Tom

mluiOn or Oftto.

~

.......

2Z,ta) ,.,.,.,. ......

1UI

10.10

UCI

7.31)

.eo

•·•

Pharmacy

Mtn'e or l1CIIt1 '

Gold , Youth Chroma

Quarters

'At Dutton

TRI-FOLD

Drug Co.

$799

COLOGNE

SILKIENCE..
15 "- SHAM POO
OR CONDITIONER

OUI ~RIC£ ..
MU I[IAT(

FATHER'S
DAY

PLAYTEX•

-~~f&amp;9

__.___, OIL

OF

...

OLAV

$399

--1

•

nvo
Big, Ju•~!/
Ribeye Steaa

HI-DRI

TOWELS
Jutnbo Roll

SUAVE

FABERGE

SKIN LOTION

SHAMPOO AND
CONDITIONER

t5 oz Twin Pack

,. .'I

!E!OSOl
!Nll-PERIPIRIN t
Al l Types

NEW '·

..

HOURS

~.~

BRUT-33

GILLETTE

FOAMY

MON.-THURS.

SHIVE CREAM

SPLASH·ON
LOTION

All Types

7 or.

6 a.m. to 11 p.m.

FRI. &amp; SAT.

Thill 'I 1ondero•ll· tealrllouse In tile '-'SAl
Tile Biggest LittleS Steak Dinners inc/udmg

6 a.m. to. 12 Midnight-

, SUNDAY
8 a.m. to 11 p.m.

Breakfast Hours:
Weekdays
6 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.

Sunday
8 a.m. to 11 a.m.

Imagine. Two tasty R~be/ba r. steaming baked potato
I ou-can-eat sa a
an aI ·Y
1/wllhbutter.
·
..-..-andwarmro
L ch
un
l.liilllbe e Stellk
Specialf
lllkr.• Steak
'
511,., S•lad

o ,.~5·'•99

flfor

•

~t.o:r"99

81
' 1

D ,.":"

lncJuiJII!\

s._Dar

of,.,.,,

, •""
,.,.,.,.

' 2 foro~!~'!•5.9~,

$

Bl' Clto,,.

,.lntlt,IOe\11 ·1(1~:-:~bullel

I
J:
.....
'"""' ''"'

•-~·an-~ wrth bUilt!

-

tora~partvwe

VIII......

....~~k II

been

'

2 for •5.99 \
\
,

baJo,ell~at~l)·
:::C:O~~tu$td«rrh
11
Moti J"'"'' \$ 1unot rocl Mpal'
r.:.~~ ('.oopOIIQOOII

Pw~lk: Utilities Com·

oiilkeci ~~ cat'IIIOI Ill us«! With

::~-:'unts ta~not~~
lltiO'trf'IOSt-.llOIISH
lorlt1Yfri'IYWC·

'

~r~~~Otai~SCI,:r!,, '
De u,.cl'(ll'lh Ol.tfJ dlStuktWSM

AI~=~O'IIysln

--

rrd
Cou00"9 -

J:.adl

J/111P

,

'
- - edblet1teak
u s o ~ lntpec1~ 100'4 cnaw

Upper River Rd.

. GALLIPOLIS

J

7,11113

-

~ ~ ~~ I

I Cll'l~ l I

t

19 '
2
'\ '""";;.,,..~~:~~.
,,.,. .,:--·- ...':k '

(Across from the Airport)
OHIO POWER COWPANY
1'1 C.A. H•ller
P'Mek*tt

[WE]

--T---T

J for

JO,DDD lt.NMn
rnen:ury

TIMEX

OLD
SPICE

Olef

Lamp
Cu"""t PfoDoN&lt;I
--.........., ....
1).36

t ,OOO 1\i....., f'IIQ"

KELTON
WATCHES BY

Btirner

NATOft:Y Oft UNRIAIONAILE.

tw the

(

Family

~

The Pra~er ot the .\pptlcauon reQuetlelh&amp; Public Ul ltlllea Commlulon
ol Oh lo to do lh11 follow ing.
111 Frnd that lhe appllcauon and
e•hlblla are Iliad In lccordlt\CI
wlt11 S.Ctton 4V09 18, Ohio
Revleld COde , tnd the rulea of
tne Commission,
tbJ Accepl lh11 tppUctllon end
etllhlblle l or llllnga
ICI Approve !he lorm ollhls noUc:e,
(d) Find lhet !Me presenl ra1e1 are
lnsulllclent lo '1'1eld reaaon
able compen11t1on lor lt'le ..,
'l'lce rendered and ate un1u11
and unreaaooable,
(el Flnct fhal the lnc:rllled llltl
and charg1111 end am•ndecl
lerms and condlllona o f sltf
t lca propoiiiCJ In Ohio Power's
~ppllc atlon 111 1u11 end raaso na bte end appro'l'e tl'te
aamll ,
ill Approve tl'te Ullng ol tM new
lcl'lec:lutn In the form DI'OPOIId
ntraln, and
101 hilt"-• tu&lt;:h new schedules el
lec:ll'tl II aoon 11 lilt pracllcal
and lawful to do to
The propoHd tmended echedut&amp;l
lhal l appl'1 In all •territor!.. turvCKt oy
onto Power.
li la tatlmated !hat lhe repre11n1a
Ullt rtsldenllal cu atomer't Di ll wilt be
l t\Creeaed annuellv , ouad on tl'te
lwel.,•month !*'lod ending September
30, 1883. bJ U % ; I~ repre•entaHve
commarclal cuSTomer'e b ill by 7% tnd
1ha rtpteMnflll\tl lnduetrtal cus tOITIIr' s
bill by 7 14
411 J)ercentagaa preuntld In thla
ootlce are eppro~e l mate and batted on
l'lerage CUI10t'l'llrt. lndiV'Iduel cuatO.
mert tni'11Jperlenca rate adjustments
Clllterenl from lhe • .,.,.agea pre11nted
In thle llOtlce
Hacommendtllona which d iller
!rom the appli cation may be mac:la b)'
lhl IIIII Ol the Public UTiflllel COmmll·
elon or by lnl.,..,.,l"lil pert Il l and may
be ldoDIIId bJ the ComtniiiiOn. The
Compar\, Ia unable to predict what, 11
an,, c hengea, lnciUCIIfiO chanQea In
amount or form mer tlli m.cSe .l rf ttta
Public Utmttee ~miNion of Otilo In
lha PfOpoMcll tarntt, and the&gt; Company
Ia ~able to PI'Micl •htt, If en,, Impact
IUCI'I rnocttrlclalone may h..,. upon
cuetornera' bUIInJta,
"
ANY N:=f1JU!11 1 ~APORATIOH
OA
IATIO" MAY FILE
PUAIUAHT TO SECTION &lt;1808.18 OF
THE OHIO REVISED CODE, AH
OIJECTtON TO THE tNCfiiEASES
PROPOSED BY OHIO POWER, WHICH
MAY ALLEGE THAT THE COMPANY'S
APPLtCAnoN OONT~INI ~l$
THAT AlliE UNJUST AND OtiCftiMI·

n.. torm or tNt notice hM

~ba=c~k.::.in::g~u_::p~l3o:..:..:b_Go:_ll_c_.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

))lnre~s:..

PRAYER

apptO¥IJd

junror was only 54. but hated it. I wanted to play everyday. I
posted a 2.83 earned run average thought I had a fu ture in college
and struck out 93 batters in 661-3 baseball (as ashonstop)," hE' Said.
Belcher did not turn to pitching
lnrungs.
Some believe Belcher has pro- seriously until he played American
gressed so far that he could be the • Legion baseba'll afterhissentorprep
draft's No.1 selection. held by the season. He was 8-1 that summer and
enrolled at the small NAJA college,
Minnesota 'T'wins.
U the 'T'wins bypass him, Belcher at Mount Vernon.
In his first collegE' season, Belcher
likely will draw attention from the
played
third bljSI' and pitched. H1s
Clncmna t i Reds, thE' T exas Rangers
ERA
was
5.59, but hE' struck out 55 in
or thE' New York M ets. Those three
561-3
Innings.
But it was dunng the
teams have the next selections.
The S:foot -3, 21(),pound player hit 1982 Pan-American Games tryouts
.460 as a shortstop tor two straight at Ohio State that hE' began drawing
seasons for Sparta (Ohio) Highland scouts' eyes.
Sam Riggleman, his college
High School.
" I pitched a little in high school. I coach, says only two or three scouts
knew of Belcher before the tryouts.
" There were 12 to 15 scouts there and
1 undE'rstand everylxxly saw him
throw
and immedialely staned
DeLeone
will be generally
asking where this kid had com e
obse.rving because they're recover - ·rrom. Thl?Y never had heard of
ing from injuries The' rest o( the
him," Riggleman said.
players wlll have workouts twice
Belcher says his JUntor sf'ason
daily at Baldwin-Wallace College.
dE'veloped in three stages.
The pool of r ookles includes Bill
"First, I thou ght it would just be
Contz. a&amp;-fool ·5· 260-pou nd offenslve great to be drafted, even It was in the
tackle from Penn State. The Browns
35th round," he said. "Then, In the
hope Contz wlll be able to push middlE' of the season, I noticed that
13-year veteran Doug Dreken -and there would sometimes be 25 or 30
eventually become the filth starting scouts in the stands. I knew then l
left tackl" In the team's 38-year
was well thought of.
history. Contz was a fifth -round
" But It wasn' t until the last lew
draft choice.
weeks when scouts sta ned askmg
The Browns' fourth-round pick,
me how much I'd want that I
Reggie Camp, a 6-4, 264·pound
real ized 1 w as going to be ncar the
defensive end from California, i s top."
part of another effort to Improve the
. Riggleman says Belcher has
team"spass ru sh.
added two or three mph to his fast
Dave Puzzuoli, a 6-3, 260-pound . ball In each of his thre&lt;' mllege
nosetackle and sixth-round pick
seasons. " I thought he m ight have
from Pittsburgh , wlll com pete with
peaked last year. but he just kept
vetera nHenryBradleyfort he jobof improving. It' s kind of amazing . .
nght - ~anded

Gift
Giving
Head-

Your

Browns watching 45 rookies

TINY TECH

requuttd 1IJt'1
no ti ce ol lnl•nt ron
To cancel prlof to tne anniversary date
of rhe conlract, with a six montha prior
not111Caf10fl requiremen t, which c:en be
glvtn 11 1ny lima

Sentinei-Pa~S

.. fifth £radf' and Miss TrtpiNI'!l sbcth
Sarah' Andenon·, Grade six- Jeff McElroy.
Stacey Shank. Gradt tllrt'e- April TaMrD.H. - Oar Boscta, Todd Kif'nnedy
•.lh&lt;;('(l'
'I rdt~ ~ h.rd a run oN tor th!• rhampiomhiP&gt;_, ,_:_~~~~=:!...::~~~:_::::_.:;_:::::::_:._~::;:::_:::::::::::::..::.:::.::.:::.:__:_:::_:_:.:._:..:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:~• '"' ~"' H' s&lt;Irs mrh wade wlnrun•

Belcher attracts big league scouts

minimum of six basketball games in
each of the next three years
There also will be local television
shows with baskj"'ball Coach Tony
Yates and football Coach Watson
Brown, said Mike M cGee, UC
a thietlc director.

se-r.

:211 { I' ll I "

Ill"

Gary Roenlcke, who went 4for4.
including a horner and drove In lour
runs and Eddie Murray, who
doubled twice and singled, were
Baltimore's hitting · stars. Scott
McGregor, &amp;-3, got the win and
Tippy Martinez picked up his sixth

Ron Guidry fired a five-hitter for
his third shu toot of the season whlle
seldom-used Bobby Murcer homered for his first run batted in of
the season. It was New York's sixth
straight victory.
Murcer, playing in only his fifth
game this season, brok~ a scoreless
duel in thesixthlnningwlththe252nd
homer of his career, his first since
last J uly 28. Oscar Gamble added a
two-run homer later In the inning to
pin the loss on Dave Goltz, 1),3.
GuIdry. 7-3, has allowed just 20
hits and four runs ,in his last 33 1·3
innings. He ra~ his lifetime
record to 5-5 versus California,
leaving the Baltimore Orioles as the
only team he does not have a
winning record against.
A's 7, Brewers 3
Oakland banged out a teamrecord seven doubles and Rickey
Henderson singled in the tiebreaking run in the eighth Inning as
the A's broke a six-game losing
streak. Dwayne Murphy had two of
Oakland' s.doubles.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS
OF SERVICE

,·,;w

flhlo

Sta urn .
Students walked to the fie ld

OrloiEB 6, TwDi 3

Yankees 3, Angels 0

ao-

f'( lS'IM N-i i'JoH S.• t MI . nll t n•~' 111 lhr•
ll,t ii \' Sr •n l trwl II' I n urt Si . l'n nWt O\

$3.

..

IDdians s, Mamers 2

Pu11uanl lo the requlrameniS o t
Sec lion ~ 19 ol lt'le Ohio Re~t lud
Coda, Ohio Power Company hereby
glvea nouce I hal on F,tbruary 28, 1983,
II flied wiTh the Pub lic Ullllll" Commie
tlon ot OhiO an appllullon lor author I
zall on To amend and to lncretae subllanuatry allot Ita filed !~tiffs and term s
tna cOndit ione o t service ll •l nG rates
aM chargee lor elec trlclly
~ Copy O( lhe lppllcatlon Ill IVII1ab+e
for lnapecllon 11 lhe ot11ce cl Ohio
Power Coml)llny loctted 11 301 Cleteland
Ave, S W., P.O
400, Can ! on . Ohio ,
tnd al lhe olf1ce.. o1 tha Public Utilities
Comm laalon . 37!1 ~'l!..llh High Street
Columbus Ohio
T"'era are no ra111 changes proposed ,
other than In the rarllla specl llcally
referred loIn fhe following p~ragraphs.
Thesubatance ol Therevlalona pro.
posed In the Company s apptlctllon u
flied on F8bruary 28 1983, illS tollowt

The Daily Sentinel
t\

E

I
Pomeroy
Iementary "-h
.x : 00 ws
held last week at the Meigs Football
dl

Porter, ().2, walked Tony Phillips
and hit Mike Davis with a pitch.

Toby Harrah's first horner orthe
season broke a 2-2 tie In the eighth
inning and Miguel DUone belted a
two-run triple later In the Inning to
lift Cleveland.
Indians starter Bert Blyle\oen
struck out nine and walked none
before running Into trouble in the
eighth. NealHeatoncameonandgot
his fourth vf&lt;;tory in five decisions.
Harrah's homer came off hard·
luck loser Gaylord Perry, 3-7.

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:

Nineteen ladies an ended Jay M ar
Golf Club Ladles Day Tuesday .
: Following a business session lR
)Joles of golf were played . Prizes
went to Margaret F'ollrod and
• • Debbie Sayre lor low team score:
· • Nancy Heed and Margaret F'ollrod
: : who tied for low putts and Nellie
· · · Brown for chipping In on hole on&lt;'.
· · Ladles of the area arc Inv ited to
:participate. L adles day is held on
Tuesday of mch week .

Henderson' s RBI single came off

reliever Tom Tellmann after Chuck

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES

19 golfers participate

: : S(•ioto Downs

margin to 4·3, but Chicago's Vance
Law unloaded a three-run homer in
the eighth to seal the White Sox win.

WLW-Twill broadcast UC games

IJOVIII.ES ./ lt:l v, PlttsburJ.:h 1 ~ Daw
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By BEN WALKER
AP Sports Writer

1n1

PhUadf&gt;lpNa at San Dlflflo ' n 1

By 'JlMo \aodatH ~
WElUfA.~ Lf:Af oL1 :
F.A"T Jll\ll'liJO"\

Kansas

~at AtJam~t

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~~~~,?!. ~!~.~-~-~~ .~~~-~. ,~~~~~~!!~~~e:!:;~~.:·~~~-~~

Slugger Kittle continues assault
St

Thunclay, June 2, 1983

SHOP AND
SAVE

LANACANE

AT

CORRECTOL'

I or Crtml

DUTTON
DRUG CO.

30~1

99

'

"'
'

Dutton Drug Co.
Middleport, Ohio

PfiMM •~um
11
THI fOLI.OWtNQ lAMP&amp;.,ARE IN
PftOCESI OF ELIMINATION

•

�-PIPamjg:~tet--~6-The

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 2, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NBA champions will be onored today
' PHlLADELPHIA (AP) - The
P hiladelphia · 76er's, who arrived
home Wednesday with the National
Basketball Association championship trophy, were to be honored
txlday ln aparadeexpected toattract
hUndreds of thousands of fans .
' ::rtte parade was set to start in
Oe_nter city and proceed to Veterans
!Stadlwn for ceremonies. Mayor
WUllam Green headed the parade,
said he had Invited Pennsylva rila governor Richard Thornburgh.
·-"We're ail golng to celebrate and
have a real slam dunk or a time,"
Green said Wednesday at a news
conference deta iling th!' parade.
· The 76ers swept the defending
~ampion Los Angeles !..a kers ln the
best-of-seven title series, cli_nchlng
the championship ln Los Angeles
'nlesday night. The 76ers' champl(mshlp was the franchise's first
slnce the 1966-67 season.
This was the fourth championship
J)&lt;!rade in Philadelphia In nine
ye ars. Starl ing In 1974, the Philadelphia Flyers won the Nat ional
Hockey L.Mgtie's Stanley Cup. The
Flyers won again In '7o, and the
Philadelphia Phililes were feted in

aoo

l~forwl nnlng theWorldSeries.

millions I!ned
thePollee
streetsestimated
for those celebrations.
This parade wou ld feat ure floats
carcylng the Sixers' team, the
media and ci ty officia ls past the
cheering crowd expected to jam
center city streets a nd into South
Philadelph ia.
The mayor warned that reckless
behavior would not be tolerated .
When the team arrived home
Wednesday, General Ma nager Pat
Williams stepped to the m icrophone
and excla imed, "Weoweyounone."
William s' reference was to the
failure of the 76ers to win the Iitle,
even though they made the NBA
fina ls in three of the last seven
seasons."We owe you one," has
been thei r slogan ever s ince they lost
to Portla nd in 1977.
Pollee estimated 3,500 people
crowded behind a cyclone fence to
welcome home the champions, who
set a record ofloslngonlyone piayoff
game in the 13 it took to win It a ll .
Green headed the city's official
delegation.
Coach Billy Cunningham deciared, " the only th ing I want to say

is that

this team has proven itself

Thursday, June 2, 1983 ·

~ - Meigs

went over the mauntaln ,''

ALL JEWELRY

25% OFF

PRICE

EFFECTJVE THRU MONDAY
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY ONLY

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
KenntthMcC•IIoulft, R. fl'll.

CMrlnRIHit, III ,Ph .

Ron.ld H•nlnt, R. Ph.

M• . nwu Sat. I :MI ,m . tot p.m .

sunoa., IO : JI to 11: •

P~ESCRI"IONS

BOOK - Members of Chester .Junior Glri _Scout Troop 11149 visited

' " ' s rot·"'·

Frleftclly hrfln

E . MJilft

ottef't NIFft till t

• Veterans Memorial Hospital. we.mesday to present books for chlldren

PH.fn·IHS

who are hospltailzed and some for the lobby. Pictured at the
• presentation, are, at front, from left , 1\llcheUe Maholtr-.l, Wendy Taylor,
· Sherry Laude m~Ut; back, from left, Rhonda Dailey, R .N., who
: accepted the books for the hospital; Amy 1\letzger, Lynne 1'-.lylor,
ro-leader of the troop; SheUy Metzger and Crystal Taylor.

POIMf'OWI, 0 .

groups hold recent -meettngs
group singing of the hymn, "The
Family of God," followed by the
opening prayer by the minister .
Several minutes of silent prayer
followed group singing of "Let Us
Love On!' Another. " There was a
reading, "So Swi1t the Way, So Short
the Day," by Mrs. Altona Karr.
Mlidred Gaul presided a t the
business meeting with 21 members ·
answering roUcall Lora Damewood
and Denise Mor a were welcomed as
new mem ber s. A totalofl21slck and
shut in calls were reported. Thomas
reported on the missionary tha t
spoke a I the Alfred Church recently .
Marilyn Spencer and E sther
Mays repo11ed that toys had been
delivered to Veterans Memorial .
Hospital for the pediat ric depart ·
ment. Tha nk you notes were read
from Curtis a nd Linda ~g. and
George a nd Pam Mora.
Refreshments were served by
Esther Mays. Eva Hollon. Clar a
Conroy. and Marilyn Spencer.

"Symbols of Unity_ in the Midst of
Diversity," was · the title of the
program presented cy . Kathryn
Mora and Marilyn Spencer at the
recentrneetingoftheChesterUMW.
It was noted by the program
lE-aders !hal now here does the New
Testament preScribe a particular
form for worship, which gives some
, freedom to expression and persona l
a nd communal experience.
The leader s m entioned, however.
that there is in the history of
Christ ian community, some central
svm bois and rituals such as singing .
praying , prais ing, reading and
hear ing of the scriptures, which
have become universal ln worship.
Som e other symbols whic h have
com e down through the years are
ca ndles , the Bible, a nd the cross , the
leaders noted.
A ptl'iude of organ music by the
Rev. Richard Thomas preceded the

••••

.

Microwave class Friday
OPEN
EVENINGS
AT THE PLAZA
TIL 9 P.M.

SPECIALLY
PRICED
FOR ONLY

• Saves space in your kitchen because it's compact.
Goes almost anywhere- on a wall, on a s helf, in
a. cqrner. .
Perfect lor small kttchens-,,recr.ooms , dorms .
Backed by 20-years ol Litton quality
and cooking performan_ce .

-CLOSE-OUT

AIR
CONDITIONERS
REDUCED

microwave oven to fit Into the
owner's lifestyle. The class would
be beneficial for persons who a re
contemplating the purchase of a
microwave oven, also. as many
fea tu res wUI be discussed. Men,
women a nd chlldren are urged to_
come as gene ra ll y most a ll
members of the family use the
microwave oven.
Persons planning to a tt end the
class are urged to call the Ex tension Office to let us know that you
are coming. Although this is not
essential, it does h&lt;;&gt;ip us know how
many to plan for. P art icipan ts are
as ked to bring a microwaveprepared dish to s hare and their use
·and care manual. Since there will
be a lot of food to taste, part icipants
may want to plan on the tastin g
session to be their lunch.

SAVE UP TO

HOT POINT APPLIANCES

OFF

Washers, Dryers, Refrigerators, Dishwashers

.

Winding Trail Garden
Reports on civic beautification
projects were given at a recent
picnic of the Winding Trail Ga rden
Club, a t the Route 33 roadside park.
Special guests for the picnic were
members of the Meigs County
Marvels 4-H Club, Aprtl and J ohn
Brtckles, Donia and J o E llen Crane.
Barbara and Gary Coleman, Lonnie
LeMaster , and James Sauvage.
Another guest was Mrs. Mary
Colmer.
F lowers were planted by the clu b
mem bers at the Meigs County
lnfinnary and also a t the Pomeroy
fire station. A cleanup of all c lub
plant ings took place In preparation
for the Memoria l Day observance.
It was noted that the 4-H club also
involved In town beautification.
planted flowers a t the monument on
thP c-ourthouse lawn.
New officers elected fo r thf'
1983-84 year wPre Peggy Crane,
president: Bonnie LeMaster, first
virc president : Patty Parker ,
second vlcf' president ; Marga rPt
Parker . trmsurcr: and JackiP
Brickles. secrfi'tary .
Lila Mit ch a nd Ma rt ha Strubir
wUI host the &lt;I unf' m w tlng for their
mother . Wilma Tertl'll , a ('ha rt er
member of thr club.

Leah Martin , R. N., Gall ipolis ,
will be the speaker a t a meeting of
the Pom eroy Chapter, Women's
Aglow F ellowship, to be held Ju ne 9
at Duff' s Smorgasbord at 6:30 p.m .
Mrs. Martin will teU the story of
her bout with multiple sclerosis, of
her divine instruction into propPr
diet and exercise, a nd o( her fa ith
healing. Married to Wyatte M&lt;1rt in .
a school teache r , she has thr&lt;&gt;e
ch ildren, Lisa . a senior a t Ga llia
Chr istian School. Bria n who works
at the Ohio Valley ~ank , and
Ta mmy, who is ma r ri&lt;'d and living
in Georgia.
Mrs . Marlin workf'd at the Holze r
Hospita l before bein[: affl icted with
multiple sclerosis.
No reservations arc need&lt;'CI for
t he dinner or the meeting which wU I
begin at 7:30 p.m. The pu blic is
invited to attend.

Wu..IPOP DRAGON - 'l'hi• cartoon dmmcter will 1M•on the sf n.••l•
of l'omeroy and 1\llddleporl Saturday momb1g passing out lotupopsand
booklets promoting Bible school J1me ll-lU at llradford Chun:h of ChrL..t.
In the event of rain, the dragon w!U be at Middlcporl !look Store. 'l'h••
dragon will also make appear;mce at Sunday School at
Bradfonl
Chun:h this Sunda_v and for the Blblt• school will he appearing ••ach day
with Princess Gwendolyn. '11wme of the Bihlt•schooll' ''.Jesus. l.onl of
PromL&lt;;&lt;,;. " Clas!S.Js wUJ he held from 9-11::10 a.m . for those agt •s 2
through 18. For infonnation on truns portatlon. call 992-51'1'1 or 99'WI79.
The dragon is pictured here wHh with lht• diUreh's nrw P&lt;L•tor, Mark
Seevers.

an

.

II•·

Brand Names Like:
Converse, Pro Keds, Smurfs. Grasshoppers, Greyhounds and
more.

MARGUERITE SHOES
''The Middle Shoe Store in the Middle Block"

POMEROY. OHIO

30"
ELECTRIC

RANGE

$295

II

STARTING
AT

$249

$349
7#NITH

'

1,

25" COLOR
CONSOLE

-·

~Black &amp; White

TELEVISION
Mol Exact!
As Shown

RCA VIDEODISC PlAYERS START
AS LOW AS
"WE RENT VIDEO DISCS' '
CHECK OUR PRICES

DRYER
Whirlpool
Model Ll' 3000XK
• Choice of Heat or Air drying
o Extra-large lint sc reen
o Large 5. 9 cu . ft. drying drum
• Pus h-to-sta rt button
o Automatic door s hut-off
• Bac-Pak t Laundry inform ation
Cente r

.•"

Refrigerators

STARTING
AT

WASHER
Whirlpool
Model LB3000XL Washer
• New 24" Des tgn 2000 Mode
• 2 Automattc Cycles
REGULAAIHEAVY
and SHORT
• New Dou bl e- Duly Super
S URGILATOR ' Agitator
delivers a s horter. fa ste r
stroke lor htgh-lreque ncy
I

washing action

Over

46 Years
Of Service

• 2 washmns e temps bu1l1

FRIDAY thw l'HURSLMY I

THIS WEEKEND ONLY!

FREEZERS

by

l_!AY 27 thru JUNE~

'

• Rh1l1p Morn s Inc 1983

DIXIE LINE

031 JACKSON PIKE · RT. 30 WEST
Phone 446-4524

W omen's Aglow
to meet

c~ncentrate oil how -to u:;e a

s1ggoo

Nobody knows more about
microwave cooking than Litton .

To preregister or for more.
inform a tion, contact the Meigs
County Extension Office at 992 -6696.
The cost of the class is S1 11 you
bring a dish to share and $2 if not:

Hot spots, browning r ays, reheat ·
ing, cooking everything from hot
dogs to pizza , and meal management are .ali part of the microwave
cooking class sponsored by the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service on Friday from !O a. m.
to noon at St. P aul's Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy.
Tile microwave cooking class will

..r

•

Cheste-r UMW

JEWELRY
SALE

MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

The Daily Sentinel Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ClASSIFIED ADS sure to gat mauna

r~re~a~U~y~spec
~~~a~I~-l~t~~~~~a~n~d~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;lf

- -,.

,,

...,,"
,.
'·

tnto the t1me r

New Players Kings.

~ ------

"
•-

••
."

Regular and Menthol

'
''
',•

•

Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
12 mg "tar:' 1.0 mg nicotine av. per cigarette, byFTC tneth od.

..

�\
Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

1hundot. June 2,

-

1913

1hunday, June. 2, 1983

Your libraries
Some exciting things are going to WeDston wW be presenting I!
be happening at yrur Hbrarles tllls children's program on crafts, and
summer. In the near futun!, work ~n June 29, Gwmyth Amok! of
wm begin at the Middleport · Portsmouth will be bringing a
building to lnst811 ramps," making program to the children on
the buUdlng aecesslble to the monsters.
handicapped.
During Regatta weekend, theOn June 21, Liz Walton of Friends of the Library wm · be
hosting a book sale at the Pomeroy
Ubrary. Hopefully at lhls time, the
new boqkmoblle will be available
tor towing. All ol these things will
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley be happening In June, so watch
spent two days With Mr. an(! Mrs. your papers for more Information.
· Brlan Simpson, Baltimore.
During the past few months, Ute
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Sneed and llbrary has had many benefactors.
granddaughter of Letart, W. Va., We want to thank Mr. and Mrs.
who had just retunled from spend· Paul Etch, Mr. al)(i Mrs. Ted Reed,
lng the winter In Florida, visited his Dorothea Fisher, Les Fultz,
sl.ster, Mrs. Meadle Long a day Farmers Bank, Farmers Bank
recently.
employees, the Ladles AUXiliary o1
Eagles 2171, Sylvia Carmen and
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hall of Norma Lee.
•
Due
to
budget
cuts
at
state
level,
Hamilton, Ohio spent the weekend
the library wUI not be able to offer
wtth Mrs. Edna Pickens.
Steve Badgley ol Columbus spent the film s'ervtce for the months of
several days With his parents, Mr. July, August and September. We
stUJ do offer many services for you
and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Mrs. NancyPraterandsonJason to take advantage of such as books;
records, projector loan, toys, cam&amp;:
and daughter Connie Montgomery
·and daughter Lindsay of Hamden,
ras, magni!Y!ng glass for visuallY.
magazines, reference
Impaired,
Ohio visited her mother, Edison
mater1als,
lnterllbrary
loan, story
Johnson on Wednesday.
hours,
programs,
talking
book
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Weaver,
appllcatlons
and
many
more.
Come
Mrs. Pearl Adams, Mrs. Edison
In and see us. I know there Is
Johnson and Mrs. Mabel Brace
something
we can do for you.
visited Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Brewer
at Dennison, Ky.

Racine News notes

DANCE LINE - Perfonnlng to "Mickey" wUJ be,
front row, from left, Rochelle ·.renldns, DoMa
Stewart, Kendra Norris, !VIandy Stewart, Tassi
Cummins, ,Jennifer Lawrence, Nicole Nelson; back

DANCE ROUTINE - Tapping to a medley of
"Singin' in the Rain" and "It's Raining AgWII" will be
Holly Williams, lefl, IUtd Michelle McCoy. They wm

row;

Chri&lt;itina Cummins, Deana Good, Heather ·
Harris, Jamie Ord and Amy Beth Redovlan. The
group wm perfonn at a dance recital Satunlay at
Southern High School under the dlredlon of Barbara
Lawrence.

..
be featured In a dwwe recital to be held at Southern
High School at 7: :II p.m. Satunlay.

By Mrs. Fraacls Morrlo
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wingett
attended the funeral servleeofMrs.
Betty Jean Franklin who was a
daughter of Eller and Dalphlne
Nelgler, former residents of Racine, at Cleveland, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wingett of
Cleveland carne Tuesday evening
and spent over Memorial Day with
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wingett, Other
guests of the Wlngetts were Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Spencer and son Jim
of Anna Marie, F1ortda. They aU
attended the alumni.
Mr. and Mrs. Brtan Simpson and
Mr. and Mrs. Gar Ph!Uips of
Baltimore spent Memo
,. rial Day·
k d w1 h M
wee en
t
r. arid Mrs. Ralph
Badgley. Other guests for dinner on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hill,
locaL
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Sneed of
Massillon and Mrs. Emma BJan.
kenshlp of Wooster spent Memorial
Day weekend with their sl.ster, Mrs.
Meadle Long.
Mr. and Mrs. Crltt Bradford and

Mrs. James Dugan of Worthington
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. c.
Bradford and attended the alumni . .
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Moms of
Atl)ens and Mrs. Marie Chapm~UJ of
Pomeroy visited Mrs. Francis
Morris on Saturday afternoon .
Mr. and Mrs . Max Wolfe and Mr.
and Mrs. Kyle Stump were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle over
Memorlal weekend and attended
the alumni.
Miss Wllnia Sayre of Columbus'
spent Memorial Day weekend here
and attended the alumni.
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris and ·
Mrs. Beulah Bradford vl.slted Mrs.
VIrginia QuUien at Pt. Pleasant, w.
Va. recently.

Sometimes, with
COUNSELING
you can find new answers
to solve old problems.
Insurance .covers most fees.
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HEALTH CENTER
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WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET
704 Grand Central Ave .
Across from Grand
Central Mall
Parkersburg. W. Va.

TIIURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Regular
meetlng, Evangeline Chapter,
OES, Middleport temple, 7:30
p.m. Thursday. There wUI be
Instruction for new members, a
plant exchange and election of a
trustee.
POMEROY - Hysell Run
Holiness Church wUI hold Its
annual Missionary meeting
Thursday at the church at 7: 30
p.m. Speaker will be fhe Rev .
Leland Haley. The publlc Is
Invited.

CHESTER - ' The
meeting to organize
Grange will be held
June 3, at 8 p.m. at
Chester Court House.
Interested In joining
attend.

Chester Grange will be bel(,(
Frlday at 8 p.m. at the old
Chester Court House. Those
Interested are asked to attend.
POMEROY - Meigs County .
Fox Chasers A:ssociation will
meet Friday at 7:30 p.m . at
Eagle Ridge.
POMEROY - There wUI be a
yard sale at the Hunnel residence, Rose HUI, Friday, 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m ., sponsored by Enterprise Youth group for their
camp fund .

second
Chester
Friday,
the old
Anyone
should

POMEROY - A car wash at
Dan's Exxon Station, Main
Street, Pomeroy , 111ll be held
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m .
sponsored by the youth of the
United Pentecostal Church.
Wash Is $4 and wash and
vacuum l.s $6.

POMEROY - Open house lor
MIDDLEPORT Benefit
the new day care school at the
sing will be held at the Ash Street
FreewUI Baptist Church, Mid· . );'entecostal Church will be held
dleport, Frlday at 8 p.m. Fea: · Saturday from noon until 3 p.m.
ANTIQUITY - A songfest
tured wiU be the Unroe Family,
with the United Gospel Singers
Journeys End and Voices of
and the Herdman Family will be
Love. The pubHc Is Invited to
held at Faith Fellowship Cruattend.
sade for Christ at 7:30 p.m .
Saturday.
RUTLAND - A dance will be
held at the Rutland Civic Center
Friday from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Music by ltomic Sounds and
Music Unlimited. Records will
be given away. Admission Is $2 a
POMEROY - The Holter
single and $3 a couple.
reunion wUI be held Sunday at
the home of James Werry; .
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basket dlriner at noon.
Orange Township Trustees wlll
meet Friday at8 p.m.
POMEROY- Vacation Bible
School will be held at the
PAGEVILLE -Scipio Town- Pomeroy Church of Christ Sunship Trustees wUI meet Friday
day through June 9 from 6: 30
at 7 Pcm . at the township building
p.m . to 8:30 p.m . daily. Closing
In Pagevllle.
program will' be held June !Oat 7
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Sall.sbury
Township Trustees will meet
SYRACUSE - The Harvest
Friday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Trio wUI be featured at the
Wanda Eblin, clerk, Laurel Cliff
Syracuse Church of the Naza.
Road. All meetings are open to
rene Sunday at 6 p.m.
the public.
RUTLAND - Skating 2 to 5
CHESTER - The second
p.m . Sunday at Rutland Civic
meeting for organlza tlon of
Center: children, $!; adults, $2.

under the direction of Barbara Lawrence. Ptctured,
from left, are Jacqueline JeweU, Keri CaldweD,
Stacie Reed, Carissa Ash, Cynthia CaldweU and
Camilla Yoacbam.

Ethel Clark was recognized as the
oldest graduate and Howard Hoops
the one who traveled the farthest to
attend the reunion when the
Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni Associ·
atlon held Its annual banquet
Saturday night. Both were presented gUts.
Nearly 100 alumni and guests
attended the affair. Julie Spencer

.

you want it ...
you·ve got it ...

DIE ClASSIH~

treasurer.

bl Cystic Flbrosl.s will sponsor a gift certificates will be given by
ke-a-thon Saturday, June 4, from local merchants. There also wUI be
10 a.m. until 2 p.m. at the Meigs cash prizes. Beverages wUI be·
County Fairgrounds.
provided.
There will also be a toddler
Persons who plan to participate
should be at the fairground~ at 9:30 . division. For more Information call
a.m . Sponsors will pay for laps 992-3289, 992·2213 or 992-6913.
around the track and donations of

Andy of Columbu s. ami Mr. a mi
Mrs. Hoy HowPII , DonniP, Sherrie ,
Eddie and Chad, Comfort, W. Va .
Roy Howdl ca me especially to visit
his grandmother , Mrs. Marga ret
Johnson. who is a surgica l pat ient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

~

/

,..---'

'

.-· ~

\ r;:_;

ORIGINAL
PRICE
ON ALL
SHOES!

•

•

20% OFF ON
ANY MEN'S
SHOES FOR
FATHER'S DAY

.,.

13.24% ~f~AGE
~~

OTY LOAN&amp;. SAVINGS
. a Control Data Comp.1ny
~Lli'OI.lt 358 Second AI'€ 446-1973

10:00 a.m. To 6:00p.m.
Friday 10:00 t.m. To 8:00 p.m.

VANGUARD INTERIOR

VANYL• ITE
DeKor

$995

GALtON

'

YOUR CHOICE
OF OVER 900 COLORS

I

$1295 GALLON

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

•
PH. 992-2811

110 W. MAIN ST.• POMEROY, OH. IMOll -SAT. 8:00 to s:oo

FRI., SAT., SUN.' SALE
"

Th e Saving Pla cp "

Assemble

• or 5 Fl.
Ready to ·
Assemble

29 88
•

OurReg
49.88

49.88

Out Reg
64.88

PICNIC TABLE AND 2 BENCHES

OCTAGON TABLE AND 4 BENCHES

Beautiful whitewood with redwood stain. 6 ft. picmc table and 2
matching benches.

Weather·tough octagon table and 4 benches ol redwood slamed
whitewood.

~

25°/o
OH

'

Fertilizer
In
Stock

Our Reg. 6.97

Our Reg 5.67

Our Reg. 3.67

4.27

Your
Choite
Super K-Gro Grass Sood

4.97

Arnold Power Rake

5 lb. box, Shady, Game Time, or

16" blade de-thatches and gtooms

Our Reg. 3.27

Our Reg. 10.88

Our Reg. 7.97

2.66

7.97

5~97
Plastic
Planter

2.97

~----------41-'tSho~w;;,pl,;,;ac;,;,e.~------+ your lawn. '

50 Ft. Garden Hose

50x 'h" v111yl garden hose.

''·

.

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'&lt;

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..

_,
.
•

The Tholll MeAn Oakwood Collection.
1ut11cr Upper) ••• Super flexible lOla.
MeAn Oakwood Col~ctlon was bUilt tor comfort
and style. With paclded heels and arches to cushion r:very
The Thorn MeAn O!lkwood Collection. Comfortably
at just S39"
·
~

Jobet · Food lplkH

STORE . HOURS :

alcohol abuse. They discussed the
dangers and the alternatives to drug
use .
Also present was a deputy from
the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment whodlsplayeddrugparaphernalia . Emphasis was on helping
parents to identify drugs and drug
related Items. Petitions were circu·
Ia ted for signatures to try and get
toughPr laws on marijuana .

'

That's a lo.ver rate than vve've
been able to offer in some tim&amp;.
But hurry. This rote is only good
ft\rough June 15.
.

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

Loder,

'

DAR ro meet
PQMEROY - Heturn Jona·
than Meigs Chjlpter or the
Dau~hters of t~e American
HevqJutlon wUI meet. 6 p.m.,
June 10, lor a picnic at the home
of Mrs. Dwight Milhoan . Those
atte~dlng are to take a covered
dl.sh pnd table service. It will be
the last m eeting where
mffi1bers can renew subscrlp- '
tions to DAR magaz ines .

'
l

'

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::-.,

All

a step away.

50°/o
OFF

There will be a yard sale a t the
Syracuse First Church of God
Friday and Saturday, June 3 and 4.
The church Is located at the corner
of Second and AppleStreets. ln case
of rain the event will be cancelled.

TUPPERS PLA INS - Thcr0
wUI be a bake sa le Satut~la y,
8:30 ~.m. unt U noon . fi t the Bank
.One In Tuppers P lains. All
pl'OC'efds will go to the Tuppers
Plalnf Ball F&gt;eld Improvement
\ Comrplttee to complete work on
the bell fie ld.

Comfort is only

SHOE SALE

Yard sale

Bake sale Saturday

-l~n~cAn...

I

There
will Fonner
be a potluck
dinner
at
12: :II p.m.
pastors
will be
recognized.
While the church building wa~
"consecrated" on Dec. 5, 1976, by
Bishop Dwight'
no church

caplng and shrubbery . til tng of the ·
basement floor. Installat ion of a ·
public addrrss system both upstairs and downsta irs and th&lt;',
purchase of an or~an
The public is Invited to t h~s pecial
dedication service.

building may be dedicated until all
debts are erased. Between 1976 and
the present time, numerous lm·
provements have been made Including Installation of restroom s, a
well-furniShed kitchen , an attrac·
live outdoor bulletin board, lands-

Ready to

was solol.st and Kermit Walton guest
speaker for the program.
It was decided that the alumni
group wUI coordinate activities with
the Pl'O thl.s summer to raise
money. Officers elected were Ha·
rold Graham, president: Lennie
Jewell, vice president; Joy Clark,
secretary and Gladys Cummings,

Weekend gul'st s
M emorial Wt'(.'kl'nd guPsl s of Mr.
and Mrs. F:dward TPmplrt on.
Pomeroy, WC'rf' Mr. and Mrs. •Jim
Batey . Angi~. ShPrric•, .Jimmir- and

lnterlm minister at the time of the
groundbreaking for the new church
building on May :11, 1976.
The Rev. Richard Thomas, now
completing hl.s seventh year as
pastor for the charge will conduct
the morning service at 10 a .m .

SUNDAY

-----Bikeathon s e r - - - - - -

TINY 'I'O'I'S - 'l'lws.• tln_y lots wUJ he tapping to "Be
My Little Bahy llumhi&lt;"lk"" 111 the dwtce rt&gt;cllal to be
h&lt;!ld 111 7: :al p.m. Saturday at Southern lligh School

A meeting of the Concerned
Citizens for Youth will be held
Monday, 7: :ll p.m., In the Meigs
High School cafeteria.
At the May meeting of the group,
Jon Perrtn, Shawn Eads, and Dan
Thomas, trl-captains of the Fellow·
ship of Chrl.stlan Athletes met with
the group toe~plaln their objectives
and goals In the high school.
Also meeting with the group was
Dr. Jim Lavernler of the Holzer
Medical Center who came to seek
support In this area of the Big
Brother-Big Sl.ster program.
A skit was presented by some of
the students who attended the Ohio
Teenage Institute on drug and

Harrisonville-Scipio
alumni - ~ave banquet

3rd Ave. - 8th St .
Across from the
Civic Center
Huntington, W. Va.

Out i~terest rate on home equity loans
JUst took a turn for the better.

.

The Rev. Benjamin Edwards,
district superintendent for the
Athens District, west Ohio conference of the United Methodist
Church, will be speaker Sunday at 2
p.m. when St. Paul United Methodist Chun'h In Tuppers Plains
dedicates Its church facllltles .
Other partklpants will Include
Fay Sauer, director of the Meigs
Coopera tive Parish of the United
Methodist Church of which St. Paul
Is a part, and the Rev. Arthur L.
Duhl, Athens, who served as

Concerned citiz~ns meet recently

SATIJRDAY

FRIDAY

.The Daily Sentil}ei- Page-9

)

Dedication ceremonies set for Sunday

CALENDAR

Libraries. announce summer hours
By RU'OI.POWERII .
Starting. tllls week the Pomeroy
Ubrary w.lll begin Its new summer
hollrs, which wiU be Monday
through Sat\!l'day 9 a.m.-5 p.m. The
Middleport Ubrary 11ours remain
the saJl!C, Monday noon-8 p .m .,
Tuesday through Friday 10: :ll
a .m .-5 p.m .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

POMfliOYl 125E MoinSt 992·2111

'12.25\pO.o~~~~.~ornucll

......::.

·. ' .

.. -· ~ ~ (7, .... - ~""""' IPIICIIolltrmti Ct lhe iocn Ro!os
il'&lt;ln 1~ r-.ocpptocilb , _ ~ n 2to4 ~

. '""""*"'no"""'"

heritage house

5-ct

Jobes· fruit tree,

e~~erQreen.

shrub spikes.

6 Ft. Wading Pool
Big pool of durable polyethylene.

'

4a97

Handy Garden Tools ·

Barrel

14-Tooth rake, shovel, hoe,

Decorative and lunctional.

Hand Tools -Our R~~ 1.63-97C

OF SHOES
------~----------------~--

I

Our Reg. 5.97-6.97

---

�:

Page

.

1G- The Daily Sentinel

Thursdc!y, June 2, 1983

Pon1eroy- Midclleport, Ohio

What's cookin'?

Myron E. Eirich

By Dale M. StoU
6-8 pota toes. cooked, peeled . a nd
bring food from their homes
'
over potatoes and cook over low
food, or on a platform over the fuod. grate)
cubed
thinking that II wlll be eaten right
Meigs County E&gt;tenslon
heat until eggs are set, st!n1ng
Use the cardboard box/news6eggs
Home Ecooomlc-s
""
1 medium onion (Or morel.
away . Sometimesthefoodwillsltln
paper lctea (without ice) to keep
Fry bacon over ·low heat until constantly. Do not beat eggs before
What's a picnic without potato chopped
a Hot car . or on a picnic table for ' disbes hot, to: Tal(e along some Ice slightly. browned a nd crisp. Drain hand. Serves six.
sa lad, a hamburger without fren ch
3 hard-cooked eggs, c hopped
several hours while everyone waits
For your tree guide to potatoeS,
to use to cool down the leftovers and off all bug 3 tablespoons fat. Add
'4 cup m ayonnaise
for the children's bail game to be
fries, or a steak without a baked
keep them cold until you get home. green pepper, onlon, potatoes, salt" including microwave recipes and
% tea spoon dry mustard or 1'0 over or for the arrival of some
potato?
Potatoes can be a super ingre- and pepper. Cook over medium directions for freezing your ·vn
Potatoes are a vital part of
teaspoons musta rd
special guest. All the time that food
dient In a casserole or quick-fix
heat about five mtnutes, or until french fries, contact me, Dale S...:.ll,
American meals and fortunately
J-1% tablespoons sugar
is out in Ihe warm air, bacteria are dish, Uke this Hearty One-Dlsh potatoes are golden, stirring freat the Meigs County Extension
the pota to is a low-cost and
y. cup c hopped celery or 1 growing and multiplying. Food Meal. .Cut down on preparation quently. Sprinkle cheese over pota- Office, Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
low-calorie as well as good for you .
teaspoon celery seed
poisonl ng can occur if the food is in
time by cooking the potatoes In the
toes and stir. Break eggs into pan or call 992-6696.
A plain baked potato has just 90
'4 teaspoon paprika
a warm place for e nough time.
microwave oven. This Is a n old , - - - - - - - - . . . ; ; _ __ _ _ __ __.._ _ _ _ _ _~
Salt and pepper to tasl€'
Food can spoil at a temperature fa mily recipe. We used to have this
. calories and one- ha il cup of mashed
potato with milk a nd one pat of
Place cubed potatoes . onions a nd
as low as 40 degrees F. At every Sunday night (this was
butter Is only 93 calories. Potatoes
hard-cooked eggs in a large bowl.
temperatures between 40 degrees
Before Pizza J. It's very good.
have a bad reputation in the calorie
Mix remaining ingredients to- F . and 140 degrees F., the risk of
department out this Is unwar·
get her and add to the potatoes. Add
food spoilage Is the greatest.
Hearty One-Dish Meal
Dan't Miss
ranted . It 's the stuff on top of the
salt and pepper to taste.
!! you do not have a cooler, you (One-dish supper) '
Any potato sa lad should be kept
c~n make one from a cardboard
German Fanner's Brealdast
baked pota to or the sauce over the
. potatoes that adds the rea l ca lories .
very cold throughout the picnic or
box and ne wspapers. Line the box
6 slices bacon, cut in small strips
Coming Soon to
· ll you are a calorie-counte r, try
outing. This may mean that the
wit h layers of papers on the bottom
1 small green pepper, diced
salad is kept In a cooler with Ic-e on sides and top. The food can be
2 tablespoons finely c hopped
these toppings for delicious baked
Pomeroy and the
pota toes .
the tri p to the outing . All Jeflovers
placed In the center of the box. Ice onlon.
Toasted sesame seeds
s h 0 u 1d be i m m e d 1a 1 e 1y ca n be placed in a bag or frozen in a
3 large boiled potatoes , peeled
Wh ipped butter a nd poppy se«ts
refrigerated.
pl astic container and placed on top a nd c ubed
See Friday's Paper For Details
A spoonful of stewed tomatoes
Sometimes when large picnics of the food. Cold travels down, so
Salt and pepper
and a bit of gra tPd chbese
....~a~re~'h~e~
l dGa~t~a~ho~m~e~o~r~a~pa~r~kj.peo~p~le~~a!_:lw~a~ys~pl~ac~e:_;t~h~e~lc::e~o~n~to~p~o~f~th~e:__:'h~cu~p~o~f~an~y~gr~at~ed~c~h~ees~e~(y~o~ul~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A mix of fried herbs: pars ley ,
chi ves. basil, dill
Mock sour crPam lrott it ge
cheese a nd le mon juice wh ipped in
ble nder)
Chopped onion with coarsely
grated black pepper
Chive-spiked yogun
Picnics a nd outdoor meals are
grea t times for potato sa lad. When
cooking potatoes for potato sa lad,
cook the potatoes with the skl ns on
until they are fork -tender. Cooking
potatoes with the skins on Is a good
way to conserve. nutrients. Peel the
cooked potatoes with a sharp .knife,
taking as litt le of the skin as
FACTORY
SALE STARTS FRIDAY, JUNE 3RD- ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE
possible. Some of the potato's
AUTHORIZED
nutrients are round close to the skln.
SALE
Cube or slice the potatoes and
DREXEL · HIGHLAND HOUSE - SELIG - HERITAGE - SHERRILL - HENREDON - GILLIAM
proceed with thi s recipe. One pound
of potatoes will serve tbrec people.
Gloria's Potato Salad
Servcs 6

ATTENTION KIDS!

Lollipop Dragon

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

ANNU.AL SPRING HOME FASHIONS SALE
OUR
BIGGEST ·
EVER!

GALLERIES
OUR REPUTATION WAS
BUILT ON QUALITY

·TOPE'S SUPER .

Icenhower
birthday

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INTERIOR DESIGNERS
AVAILABLE TO ASSIST
YOU WITH EVERY
DIFFICULT COLOR DECISION.

ssgg

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OUR TRAINED STAFF
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Gtlham · Fi0&lt;1l Ti ..... Back,
Red &amp; ~luo Co«oo.
IAEG . 1 1172

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Earth·· Tollt Stripe. ~~
REG . '925
SALE

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All Drexel
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20%-50% OFF

SAVE UP TO

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Rev. Lloyd Grimm officiating.

Myron Eugene Eirich, 65, Pomerpy. formerly of Gallia County, died
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
He was born July 23, 1917, a son of
the late Fred W. and Lena Dowler
Eirich. He had been a farmer.
Surviving arl' a sister, Mrs. John
· !'eleanor\ Wlltcblre, New Carlisle;
two brothers. John Poner Eirich,
Nashville, Tenn., and Kenneth
E irich, Dayton, and several nieces
a nd nephews. He was a member of
the First Southern 13aptist Church.
· "Graveside services will be held at
2 p.m . Friday at S..,Ch yrove
Cemetery with the Rev. David Hunt
·officiating. The Ewing Funeral
;Home·ls in charge. There wUI be no
:,calling hours.

~olda

Epple

Mrs. Golda Godby Epple, 68,
Harrisonv ille. died Tuesday evening at Holzer Medlcai Center.
' Mrs. Epple was born Oct. 29, 1914
Cn Duncan Falls, Ohio. daughter of
the late Frank and Blanche Tarbert
Bell.
Shew as a member of the Rutland
Nazarene Church.
-~ She Is survived by her husband.
Michael A. Epple whom she
fuarrled in July 1973: five daugh·
fi"r s, Mrs. Wayne (Gerry) Behrend·
~n . Sandusky; Mrs. Blll (Kit ty )
'J:yo, and Mrs. Robert !Sally\ Allen,
~esv ille; Miss Mary Bell, Day·
!on, and Mrs. Keith (Lori) See,
McConnelsville; fou r sons, Larry
Cooby, Greenville, Pa.: John
,Clodby, Brookville, Oh.; David a nd
fred Godby, Zanesville; 16 grand~ ildren six step-daughters and five
step-sons; one brother, Russell Bell,
~nesville.

' · Funeral services will be held
l;:nday at 11 a. m. at the Hmis
funera l Home , Zanesv ille, wit h the

Two suits for money, a suit to quiet
title. a suit lor garnishment and a n
lnjuct ion were filed In Meigs County
Common ,Pleas Court.
Greg Roush. Roush Construction,
filed suit in the amount of $6,649.46
a~ainst Dane E . and Brenda Mol'fiS,
Pomeroy; G. WIUJam PuUins, dba
Pullins Excavating. Pomeroy, filed
suit In the amount of $3.898.73
against Smith and Associates Coal
Co., Gallipolis and Daniel Smith.
Gallipolis.
An . injunction was !Ucd by
Anthony J . Celebrezze, Jr., Allor·
nev General of Ohio, Columbus .
ag;.inst James E . Diddle, dba J . D.
Drilling Co., Racine.
A garnishment suit was filed by
Buck.eye Federal Savings and Loan
Associa tion, Columbus, against Wllliam Fink, Middleport.
A suit to quiet title was flied by
Harry D . Holter and George C.
Holler, Minersville, against John
Dorst, address unknown, unknown
heirs, et a l.

Burial will ' be in Greenwood
Cemetery, Zanesville. Fnends may
call at the funeral home Thursday
from 2 to4 and 7 to9.

Goldia Belle Wolfe
Mrs. Goldia BeUe Wolfe, 80. Rqute
1. Long Bottom. died Wednesday
evening at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A homemaker. Mrs. Wolf€' was
born in Meigs County on Feb. 15.

~~he was a member oft he Chester
United Methodist Church, the
Daughters of America, the Chester
Alumuni Association, Meigs Coun ty
Senior Citizens and the former
Chester Grange.
Surviving are two sons, Lloyd
Wolfe, Akron, and Howard Wolfe,
Belpre; three daughters, Mrs.
Marlene Thompson, Columbus;
Mrs. Donna VanMeter, Granvllle,
and Mrs. Nara Hartman, Chester ,
tour brothers Erroll Conroy , Long
Bottom; Durward Conroy, Mem phis, Tenn.; Jack Conroy, Colum-,.
bus and Bob Conroy, Miami, F la .,
and a sister , Doris Betz, St. Joseph,
are great·
nine
Mich . Also surviving
grandchildren
and nine
grandchildren. Preceding h!'r In
death on Dec . 14, 1980 was her
huSband, Cunis woue. She was aisO
preceded in death by her parents
and a child who died In Infancy .
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Amos Tillis
officiating . BurtalwUJ be In Chester
·
~ Cemetery. Friends may call a t the.

Emergency runs
Four calls were answered Wednesday by local em ergency unit s,
the Meigs County E m ergency
Medical Service reports.

Township
Chester
meet
Monday,
J une6, Trustees
at7 :30p.mwill
.a t
thechesterTownHau

r;;;;;~;;~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

Meets Tuesday

HAS A

The Pomeroy area Chamber of
Commerce will meet Tuesday, June
7, at noon at the Meigs Inn.

GROUP OF

Devon
Jackets, Skirts,
l?ants and ·
Blouses
at

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--James MqrrisOn. Mid ·
dJepo11; Keith Musser. Racine:
John Mulford. Cheshire: Wilbur
Hanning, Mlddlepon;, Harold Brannon, Re€dsville; FredKinc h.Pomeroy : J ettle Jewell , Dex ter; George
McDaniel, Middleport.
Discharged--James Morriso n,
Anna Lawson. LouL"" Hawkins,

25°/o TO 40°/o

THURSDAy faiDAY , SATURDAY ONLY
'
NOW 75'
ALL BEDDI NG PLANTS, Reg. $1.15 pack ...... ... .... .. ···
OW 50'
4" GERANIUMS, Reg. $1.00 .. ... ............. · ······ · ··· ···· ····· N
10" HANGING BASKETS, Reg. $5.75 to $7.75 ......... ······ NOW $4.00
BEDDING PlANTS. by the flat. Reg. $8.00 ..... .......... ..... NOW $5.00
,
NOW $5 00
SHRUBBERY, Reg. $8.9_5 ..................... ...... ..... ........ :...
·.

OFF

r)II

..
!

ON THE 'T' IN MIDDLEPORT

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Ohio

OPEN DAILY 9 to 5

Ph. 992-5n6

Thank You
For A Great

INGELS ·FURNITURE! AND' JEWELRY

106 No. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
Ph. 992-2635

11

William Hayes. Dexter, forfeited Cathy Robinson, and Brenda Frye,
a
$100
bond posted on a disorderly
allofMldd1epon ,S25androstseach.
took Sarah Congo, Racine, to Holzer
manner
cnarge
and
$125
posted
on
a
all on disorderly manner charges,
Medical Center; MiddJeport,at 1:36.
possesslon
ofmarijuanalnthecoun
and
Chip Brauer, no address
p.m . took George McDaniel , Midot&gt;Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hottman
recorded
, $10 and rosts, laUure to
dleport, from the · river bank to
display
valid
tags.
Wednesday
night
.
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
David Spangler, Rutland, was To end maJTiages
Pomeroy at 3: 22 p.m . took Chris
Harrah and Megan Harrah, Mason, placed on 30 days probation on a
W. Va., from the scene of an dlsorderlymannercharge. Flnedln
the court were Michael E . Morris.
Jospeh ~ - Bartoe, Long Bottom
accident on West Main St. to
Albany , $425and rosts, three days in filed suit for divorce against
Veierans Memorial, and at 7: 25
jaU, driving while Intoxicated. a nd Theresa A. Barioe. MarysvUie.
p.m ., Tuppers P lains, took Goldle
$50 and costs, driving under
According to other e ntries the
WoHe, Chester, to Veterans Memorsuspension: Floyd McClelland, , marriages of Pearlle F . Jewell, Jr.
Ial Hospital.
Middlepart . $!Xl and rosts. disor· a nd Judy Ann JeweU, a~d Merwin
Trustees meeting set
der~y manner and $100 and rosts,
Eugene Smith and Maqone Smith
resisting arrest; Alfred Evans,
we re-dissolved.

r.;A~t~9;:35~a~.m~·;·;th;e~S~y~ra~c~u~se~U~n~it~~W~ll~l:is::A~nt~h~on~y~.;;;;;;;;;;;il
CLOSEOUT SPECIAlS· ·I

runera l home rrom 2 to 9 p.m .
Friday. Services wUI be held by the
Daughters of America a t 7:30 p.m .
Friday.

cJLnniversar9 &amp;ale
_., '*"'

25rH

FAMOUS

ON FINE QUALITY
FURNITURE

Court actions filed

Page

Forfeits.bond on possession charge

Meigs County happenings

Area deaths

Presenting recipes ·on what to do with potatoes

Toja
~URNITURE

The Daily Sentinel

Thursdc!y, June 2, 1983

STIFFLE LAMPS

25 Years!!
JEWELRY DEPT.

1/1 ,.
J

':.\I I' ~-

'

.· r

r~.

REDUCED

20%-30% OFF

TOPfS QUAUFIEO DECORATORS WILLIWRK WITH YOU TO MAKE YOUR ROOM BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALE

SAVE ON .OVER 30 DIFFERENT SlYLES OF SOFAS- ALL TOP QUALITY
LARGE, SPACIOUS

-WALL UNITS

OPEN MONDAY
&amp; FRIDAY
UNTIL 8:00

-

CHOOSE FROM 4 DIFFERENT GROUPS
ALL WOOD - EXTRA DEEP - BEAUTIFUL
Dwight

RUSTIC FAMILY ROOM GROUPS
FORMAL LIVING ROOM GROUPS r·-- --- --\:.,,
OAK - PECAN - ASH
.It
~---

Icenhower

The second birthday of Dwight
Wayne !C€'nhower, son of Rick a nd
Jackie Icenhowe r, was observed
recently with a. party at h l• Pomeroy
home.
:A down c.lke was served with Ice
c(eam, and ·othe r refreshments.
The cake was baked by the honored ·
guest's a unt.
~tt endlng theparty were Donna
McFarland and · Tammy; John
Poweil; Rainey Duff; Mr. a nd Mrs. ·
Robert Hawkins a nd Crissy: J a ne ·
al)d Gabriel . Oldake r; Sharon and
Scottie IcenhoWer; Mr. and Mrs . .
Dim&lt;Jld :Icenhower a nd .Brittany;
Shelly Ohling~r; Leanne Cundiff; ·
Jane, Bec.ky anti E mUy Johnson . · .

D~IXIt

CLOSE OUT - 'h OFF
31" Wide. 16" Deep, 7T" Heitht

OPEN DOOR, Rot. $319 ................... SALE 1199
OODR SHELF, Ro1. 1419 ...... ,........... SALE 1219
DESK DRAWER. ~'I· $569 ............... SALE $339

I
)

.Windjammer ... Maybe the
Heavy Uuty
Oak Bunk
"f.ho Best Built ·
Boys' Bunk In
C•ptivity "
REG. 1575

GUARD RAILS
AND
.LADDER INCLUDED
-------~

ABOVE:

REG. SALE

o3 ~ 24" ~binet
•24" Hutch Top \

$173 $145
173 145
2S4 215
79
79
2t9 m
220 I79

•Studtot O.Sk
oLi&amp;hl Bridle
oOtsk Chair
.C0111« O.Sk
•30'' D001 Chest ,
Ru gged lurniture thallits every need.
Cralted in heavily distressed solid Oak
with a saddle brown linish th at Will only
improve with age. Room y and com tortable. with a special place for all their
mosl prec iou s possessions. Alii his at a
great price!

99
99

Jessica Kimes

S425

day

' QUALITY

1om 200(

GIRL'S BEDROOM
Delicate floral design with warm
cinnamon finish .
'

Introductory Sale
Prices!

·~~
Velvet ina·Chelr

GENUINE
LEATHER ·

"'

Velvet Rocker

CLOSE·OUTS ON
DISCONTINUED STYLES
AND FABRICS. .
REDUCED

2/Vll

I!IVll

U7~UU70

.,opw
~
,..

a'l FURNITURE
GALLERIES

N

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ont BloCk Below City Park

From

7g9

S

Sq. Table - 6 Chairs
Ughted China .. ..... ..... . 1 1299
Pine-6 Chairs ....... ...... 1 449
Maple- 6 Chairs
.... 1 449
Maple- 4 Chairs........
.. 1249
Table- 6 Chairs ............. '199

UVING ROOM SUITES IN
ANTRON NYLON

$349 95

$4500° - $799° 0

FREE
GIFT
WITH
$99.95 PURCHASE

Complete Storewide Sale - Everything Sale Priced - Credit Terms Available

ALL IN STOCK LEATHER SOFAS
AND CHAI AS NOW

SALE

·1/3 OFF

PRICES

711'1171 12ft
~
•

OIAQOiol61

:'$)..-·

Size Box

DIAMOND
SOLITAIRE
$7995

19" COLOR

PORTABLE

GOOD
tnriin""

and Mattress

UNTIL

~~~..-~

JUNE

11TH

$129°° Full Set
S99 95 Twin Set

PRICES ON
AMANA

P.

r
p Qjt C 0
SC ANNERS

--....L------1

Model 20/20 -"- $349 ......
Model 200 - s229
Model BC5- s99

RCA VIDEO DISC
$299 95 WITH ONE

5-CYQE

CALORIC

19" Remote Control
Only
$519 95

SALE
PRICED

Let me Sweep

You off Your
HEAT! "

OPTIONS
2-lEVa WASH

SYSTEM
BUiLT-IN

FREE DISC:

12 DIFFERENT

otSHW ASH EllS .

DINING
ROOM
SUITES
ON
SALE

Witt! power SMI' swildl.

CALORIC

PORTABLE

399.95

RANGES

1

25"

"""""
'
tf9del \l5.SO
~narmtng

ltot&lt;bJOO Ita.

MICROWAVE '

-. - r -

Reg. 1 1299 pine group
with china. oval table.
chairs.

LARGE SELECTION

IN STOCK

a'f'o.'3 PIECE BEDROOM SUITE
Starting At

I

('}.f' .

I ONLY

CHAIRS ON SALE
f'\

•

SEE TOPE'S
NEW "CINNAMON"

30 SUITES

~~~

15 DIFFERENT
BEDROOM
SUITES
ON
SALE

. SALE$495

Jessica NlcoleKimes,daughterol
Mr. and Mrs. Rapdy Kimes,
Chester, celebrated her first birth·
recently with a party at her
home.
The Strawberry Shortcake theme
was carried out in the decora lions.
Atten&lt;ling were Mrs. Robert Delong
and c¥ughiers, Hollie and Held!;
Mn;. VIctor Roush and chlldren. ·
Amanjla and Elijah; Marcella
Casto and sons, Joshua and
Jererqy; Clara Conroy; Gold Ia
WoUe •nd Nara Hartman .
O!Mrs presenting gifts to the
honored 1111e5t were Mr. and Mrs.
Archle Kimes, Susie Karr and
daughters, and Rose and Darlene
Kimes. .
·

f9-tt

Including all special orders!
Order your choice of style and
color. Have in only 60 days .

·Finest bOys' bedroom ever built!
OUR BEST SELLER -· ON SALE!

Kimes birthday .·

Great Savings on Luxury 1
Dining Rooms &amp; Dinettes

•Fine Furniture
.Custom Drapery
etarpet
•Interior Design

Rea- 1529
NOW 1399

'

Hours:
Daily 9::JO.S:ti0

~;;~;;;;;;;;.;b;~;~;;.s·;· ;·$;299;;;;•;q;·;$5;7;9..;...;sH;;9;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~JL..~~:r:n•:r~2n~•:nd~G~:~:!s:t~:•:ts.·....~4~4~6~·:0~3~3~2~·....~-~on~
- ~l~Fr:i.~..J :
9:3().8:00
,t

:106 NORTH ·SECOND

20 C• fl

RIG. '599.95

S499~ 5
8 CU. FT...............'319.95

.........'529.95

s$m

5,000 BTU. Rec. $219.:.............................. SALE
8.000 BTU. Rea. $379 ... .................. ... ··· ···· SALE
10.000 BTU, Rea. $499 ..... .... .. ...... ....... ... ... .. SALE $4 39

CA SH &amp; CARRY
.

.

coloma! Amencan
ca bin i t with · si mulated
giained pine finish . Reliable
One-Knob VHF / UHF flectric.
Video Guard Tuninc,

17 CU. FT.
GIBSON
Frost-Free

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT

992-2635

��...
· i2

,----"o-T_h_eyrll

Mobile Homea
tor Sele

··

~T~~";,~~

ro~ "'''" ''"',... ~
WITHHIM !' ' -

~

It:_
OOT?

1

I ;,_

:·e

6046 .
79 STERLING mobile home,
all electric, 2 bedroom,
cetralair, underpenned, e~~: cellent condition . 304-675 5639 .
1978

LIBERTY

mobi le

home, 3 bedroom. on large

lot. 2 outbuildings. city &amp;
well water, fenced in beck

vard. good location, Gallipolio Forry, S 19 .000 . 304 ·
875 -5j55 .
1974t2x60 BAYVIEW, un derpenrled, ei.r co_n ditiqned.
partially furnished. t.wo bed ·
room. clean rented lot. 304 -

675-66B7 .

33

Farms for Sale

142 acres near Rio Grande,
house
&amp; buildings.
Will sell
eli
'o r' port
. Call 446-2599
alter 6 .
SMALL 32 •ere farm, 6
miles out Sandhill Ad. , 3
bedroom house. $38 ,000 .
304·875 -5335 .

Lots

&amp; Acreage

ti -20 Acres woods, , over·
looking Ohio River. city
school•. 446 -3664 or 1·
5t3 - 423 ~ B92B .

Owner/ Agent .

36 acres at Rodney on W .T.
Wataon Rd. Owner financ ing ovoileble . Caii446-B22 1
after 6 wellthdays.
For Sale : 10.8 acres on
Bulavllle Rd. in Gallipolis
Township . Reduced to
U6.000 . Call 446-4570 .
Approximately 1.4 acres for
No hookups. Road
frontage on Rt . 124 .
$5,900 . !!_t4 · ?42 -2487 .
~ale .

"(.4 acre lot ·in Bradbury .
Good location, trailer hookup. all u1ilities. septic sys·
tom . Coll614-992 -2602 .
FIVE •eras laf'!d. down pay·
ment and take over payments, city waler &amp; electric
on lend . 304-676: 2449 .

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Buying houses and apart ·
menta. Need properties with
favorable price and terms.
. Box 1109 Gallipolis, Oh .
4563t .

.

Meecala
41 . Houses

for Rent

2 bdr. furnished duple~~: , very
nlc8. weter peid, M11in St ..
Cheehire. No inside pets.
Coli 61 4 -246 · 6BtB .
Houae for rent $200 . month.
Call Cleland Realty . 614 992 -2269 .
L1rge home in Syracuse on
nice lot . ·Suitable for family
or 2 or 3 singles 8276 plus
utllltioa. deposit 614-992 ·
8284 or after 5 614-992 ·
6732 . .
.
• THREE bedroom"' house.
ph!)nO 304 -676-1252.
FOUR room houae ot 177
Perk Or. Call Mra. Charles
Lanbom . 304-675-4692.

"'

.;

42

'

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobile home for rent . Call
4,48-0756 .
'

"""'' 12xto 2 bdr. mobile home
oH ~tllltleo paid, except
olec.t rlc. Dep . Req. Coli
448·815158 .

.

FUR.NIBHED or unfur·
nithllld. air cond., beautiful
rivWylew In Kenauga. Faa·
tor'o Troller Pork. 446·
180~.

:

Mobllo Homo opece In Golll·
pOIII, 920 Fourth Avo. HO .
Wotor paid . Call 446-4416
otlor 7 PM .

-FOR RENT Mobile HOme. 2
IIR , furn . w / w corpet. 111 ft.
Lll. 'I"'· goi hoot. olr-cond ..
prlv~o lot. Ph. 441· 14011
,Ito"' 4 to 8 p.m.

=I

.

~

l

··

,_

HiMWHAT

'

·

.I

(~

. i;
.

00~
·~=!;;.....,. ~

:fi '

,..,._;
~:;..::::.

::;.. •

r~~

____ .._..--

P~r
~\ · ~' , ~

r1

~·

1

·;r

·

•

--. ~

~

1

')

·Houlehold Goods

, ·..

VETERANS HOSP17.AL,

.___:r_o_w._,.
_ _ __;

154

_C_()_N-S O
_L
_E_ E_o_rf_y_A_m_or_.-z-._'
nii~ Color l'V, '400; 4 pc.
Queen Sire Early Amer.
bedoom suite, $750. Call
3BB·8,t0.

BREAKFAST booth &amp; table.
living room corpettJ\1,.22
lt.. double gloao picture
window, double medicinl
cabinot,304 -875-1211 .

Living room matching coUch
and choir, two early ameri ·
con end tables. and two
table Iampo. Call 614-246·
after 7PM .
CS,TV, Radio
Equipment

3
months. cost now
$4 ,600
,00 will sallaeparate
or aII toget hor, w1'II t hrow ·1n
speakers, crystals, antenna,
.and romoto controlo with

~~

,,..,

"fo SfA~~
. _/ti_Y,_()O_R,_.,.
'-"1 •

•

~·

~·'~
' . ...

r

I;;=;==;=~===

~

I~

i--

.

\-...

~"'

/r_._--t~~~~"
II ·1
11

~lJ

I

s

KENNEL

(.~ it-

•

6t4-~49-26B6.

~~C&gt;~,.,~.,~~· ~·~·~..,~,~·~r·•~·~·~""~T~==~=~~~~~1

1 8 11 b
'
.
l ana
eachcompleteaet
set. retail $250
each,
Boa r d'n
d • · eAKC
II'•nv
... ..
==========:r;=;==;=======~~
$1 •500
g
reeFoed.
·00 Happy
Jack
Dog
42 Mobile Homes
44
Apartment
each will discuss better priCe Dobermans: Stud Service .
f
if wish to buy all units a1 Call 446 . 7796 .
61 F ·
E
f
S I
A
for Rent
or Rent
once - Call 304-675 -65t7
arm quipment .71
utos or a e
or 675-6971 to see.
DRAGONWYND CATIEfiY
12JC52 2 bedroom trailer. E FF ICIE NCY apartment.
• KENNEL. AKC Chow pup· 1974 backhoe MF 50 dlaael. 1972 ~ontiac Leman a. Runs
Adults only . Brown' s Trailer 304 -675 -3220 .
pleo,. CFA Himalayan. Par· 300 loader 54 hoe, Iouthan good. 61 4 -992·63t6.
5 4 Misc. Merchandi•e
Park. 614-992 -3324 .
•
sian and Siameoa kltteno. 1800houra . aii ..46·070B . t
r _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
45 F
R
Call 446-3844 after 4PM .
,
urnished
ooms
72 Trucks for Sale
2 bedroom t2x80 fur nished. air, washer -dryer . F" r rent Sleopo' ng Rooms KP~auff Cdoal dllo MFirewJoo d Siamese kittens, pure bred . 63 .
Li_v estock
$176 . plus utilities &amp; d~pv
nces re uce
ay· u 1y. Call446-8608 .
1979 Dodge 0 ·60 pi~kup,
osit . No peta. 614 -992- and light house keeping Pick or delivered . We honm
extra extra sharp, $3,495 .
7479 .
c'oao ,m s . ~a r k . central Hotel. HE AP vo u.chers . Call 614 - ~KC registered Poodle, 7
Angus bulls 1 to 3 yrs. old. John's Auto Sales. Call
25 6 62 4 5
11 4 4
6
months old silver, male, excellent blood line, .Slate 446 47B2
2 bedroom in Racine. 614:
$75. Call 304·~76 -4166 Run Farms. Jackson, Oh. J--· - -·- -- - - 367' -0288 .
Sleeping room $125 , utilties For sale metal culvert 6 inch after 6:30 .
Cell614-286 · 5396 or 614 - 1973 FORO PU . Auto., PS.
1- -- - - - - - - -- paid, single male . Share th'ru 60 inch in stock. State
286·1787.
PB. Good cond . 81295 . Call
TWO mobile homes for rent bath, 919 Second Ave. approved 16 gauge 12 inch
•
446·1724 .
on Rt. 2 about 5 minutes Gallipolis . Call 446 -44t6 $5 .35 par ft .. 24 inch 57
Musical
Pigs. Coll614-266·6313 .
from town Cell after 6. after 7PM .
$10 .10 per ft . 36 inch
Instruments
1976 F350 truck. 12 ft .
30'4-675 -6277 .
$15 .60 per ft . Also plastic
t boby .c alf, 1 heifer, t bull
culvert
in
stock.
6
inch
thru
calf
8
months
old.
Phone
steal
bed . heavy duty IUS·
Furnished apt . adu lt s. No
1 ---~-----­
18
inch,
8
inch
$1
.80perft
..
614
·843-6186
after
1
p.m.
peniion
. Good cond . 614 •
Pets.
304-675
-t453
.
Nice mobile home lot water
992·3798 or contact VarW anted : Rasponsible party
12
inch
$3
.60
per
ft
.
Ron
non
Weber.
end sewer furn . 304 -676 Evans Enterprises, 4 mi . to taka over low montly Registered Quarter HorH . ! - - - -- - - - - t076 .
South of Jackson on ST . RT. payments . on spinet piano . 614-992 -6102 .
46 Space for Rent
1o-.a. Datsun pickup . 4
93, 614 -286-5930.
Can be seen locally. Write
;;:~ 63 . 000 miles. new
Trailer. );. mile out Sand Hill
Credit Manager: P.O . . Box · REGSTERED &amp;: grade walk ··
Road , Phone 304 -675 - COUNTRY MOBILE Home
614
Cheap
carpet.
If
you
have
537 Shelbyville. IN 46176. · ing horses. L. E. Keister.
good cond.
·
3834 .
Perk. Route 33. North of
941 3 0 9
. 3()4:678·~17.8 .
~· ' ''" ·
.
Pomeroy. Large lots . C~ll rental property or rent, don't
mind sl-ightly i·rragular
SPH~ET-Conaole Piarfo B&amp;r··
.o. ~l.J'~'
·
992 -7479 .
rriileage,
carpet, you can save money . ga in . Wantad ·. ·Reopons 1'ble SEVE"
•.... ·wee k old pigs. call 7u·
""2 700 truck,
Ph loW304
675
43 Farms for Rent
Price a start $2 .99 sq . yd ., · party to take over ow 304·468·1727 or 304-675one
·
·
992-6173. 10· 5 .
mo,thly payments on spinet 8208 anytime.
·
47 Wanted to Rent
piano . Can be seen lp~;:ally .
Meigs County, Chester
Write Credit Manager: P.O .
For
sale
walnut
logs
.
Call
73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
Township, pasture &amp; tillable
BoK 33, Friedens . PA
1
TFWnapvrcaclue
land for rent reoaonoble. Call Business School Teacher, 1 _4_5_.B_·_
_9_
9 7_ .----~­
1554t .
614 -692 -447t days. 592- bdr. apt . for summer in 1
1977 Chev. V2 ton, V-8. 4x4,
Hammond cord organ . 1 bar
4624 nights .
Gallipolis . Call 446 -4367
71
I.
bed.' good work truck,
~
Autor
f~r
.Sale
tor recreation room S35. 1
ask for Shafon . Willing to . bai fot recreetjpn room S75.
t1.495 ."Call446 -iiGQB.
58
Fruit .
board .
·
1 976 Chevy Caprica Clas·1 stainless ~teol ' 3 pet ion
&amp; Vegetables
44 Apartment
sic, 4 dr . sedan, one own"er. 1979 Jeep, CJ5 Renagade,
resturant sink $35 For rent
for Rent
$2,600. Call 446 -1616 or 23,0000 miles . like "ew
scaffolding for block lay1hg
condition . 304 -675-7217.
or painting S35 per week . Strawberries, Taylor's Berry 446·t244 .
For rent mobile home . Con - Patch, Kerr -Harrisburg Rd. 8
51 Household Goods tact Alfred Arnold. Park AM
-8 PM. Mon. · Sat Call 1978 Fire bird Pontiac, 74
Motorcycles
Central Hotal .
2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apart 446 -8692 or 6t4 - 245 · PS / PB. air, AM / FM radio,
extra sharp, low mila-ge.
ments $200 per mo . or it
9557 .
16' girls bike Strawberry
John's Auto Solos. Call
income is 610,000 or leas
SWAIN
1976 Herley Davison Super
HUD available . A · One Real AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE Shortcake with training STRAWBERRIES for sale. 446-47B2 .
Glide 1200 CC. new tiras.
You pic .·. 75 : we pick Estates. Carol V~ager. Real - 62 Olive St ., Gallipolis . 6 wheels $35, 'ilalf bod witil
tor . Cell 304-675 -5104 or piece wood living room suite box spring &amp; manress $20 . $1 . 26 . Pliny 304 - 937 · t974 PLYMOUTH Duller, 6 good cond . $3,200 negotia ·
cyl. auto. Body a little rusty ble. Call 446 -31B3 .
3279 .
304 -676 -7386 .
with 6 inch flat arms $399 , Call 446-0478 .
but
in excellent mechanical
bunk beds complete with
Small furnished house in bunkies S199, 2 piece an - Dewalt radial arm saw , Vegetable plants. 75c do· cond. Many new parts. Ph. '76 HONDA MR250 Elsnore . Like new . Less than
city , adult&amp; only . Call 446 - tron living room suites $199 , $175 . Call 614 · 256· 6620 .
zen, Irvin Harper, Gallipolis 446-792B . .
2309 mile. 245-9143 .
0338 .
Ferry, WV . 304-675-3056 .
antron recliners $99 , other
1977 OLDSMOBILE Star·
recliners 880. maple dinette New Oak Furniture, tables.
Furnished opt ., 131 % 4th sets $179 , love seats $70. chairs . cupboards, pia STRAWBERRIES. pick your fire . Air con d .. AM / FM. 8 19~.9 Harley Dayidson super
Ave ., Gallipolis . 2 bdr .. hide - a - bed $250, bo~~: Sw,fclas64 ,sconk
own. Monday through Sat- track, PS . PB, new paint, 4 glide, extra crome, exc .
S185 mo ., water paid. Call springs &amp; mattress twin or
urdav. 9 -8, no checks . speed. Excel. cond . 81995. cond ., 83.500 firm . can
614·367·0594 altar 4PM .
446· 4416 after 7PM .
full $100 set ragular -.ti.rm New Oak Furniwre , tables. Happy Hollow Fruit Farm, Call 446- t724 .
GallipoliS Ferry, 304 ·676$120, maple dinette chairs chairs, cupboards, pie safe.
78 Plymouth Volare Premier 1973 Super Glide Harley
Furnished attic apt . $160 . $36. wash stands &amp;34. dry sinks . Paul Conkels 2026 .
4 dr., air cOnd .• one owner. · Davidson . Good cond .
Utilities pd . Men only . maple rockers S69 , 7 piece Antique·s, Tuppers Plains.
Shower bath. 919 2nd Ave . chrome dinette set $149, 5
PICK your own strawber- Call 446 - t6 15 or 446· $3,000 . 614 -992-6072.
Gallipolis . Call 446-441 6 piece dinene set $89. used Grading Blade and chains for riea . Open daily except Man· 1244 .
t976 Hondo Elsinore 250 .
after 7 PM .
bedroom suites, refirgora - Gravely riding tractor. 614 - day &amp; Sunday morning .
Start picking Thursday June 1976 Mercury Marque Exc . cond. 614-742 -3177 .
tors. ranges. chest. dressers. 9B5-4339 .
5t3 THIRD AVENUE . 1 wringer washers , TV ' s,
2nd . Location for pickers in 5B,OOO miles. PS, PB, air
bdr ., $176 plus utilities drveres, &amp; shoes . Call 446- BEEN LOOKING FOR US? Pt . Pleasant &amp; Huntington cond .. 8 track . $1 ,900. Call 1978 Kawasaki KZ650 . new
We ' re Rawleigh , famous for area-6 miles out on Jerrys . 446-4347.
back tire. Kerker header,
includes water . Call 446 - 3t59 .
flavors , spices, seasonings Run Rd . on Rt . 2 Apple
looks and runs good . Must
4222. 9am to 6pm .
1- - - - - - - - - -- GOOD USED APPLIANCES and other fine products . Grove . Charleston area 1972 Chyraler ex. cond .• sell. 5700 . 614 -949 -24BB.
Apartment , one bdr .. nearly · washers, dryers, refrigera - We ' re now looking for relia - pickers location -6 miles off 5496 . Call614· 245· 9570 .
1980 Harley Davidson FLT,
new with stove &amp; rehig ., tors. ranges. Skaggs Ap· ble people who want a good Rt. 36, Pliny · Plantation Rd .
water furni&amp;had , no pels. pliances. Upper River Ad , part-time earning opportun - Good crop, easy picking . 1977 Ford LTD -2. PS. AC. 4 3,000 miles, fully dressed.
dr .. high mileage. exc. cond. chocolate brown in color.
S169 mo .. S50 dep. Call beside Stone Crest Motel . ity . Cell 304 -675 - t090 for Pilone 304 ·576-2574 .
appointment .
Cell 446-06t4.
AM · FM stereo cassette
446 -3617 .
446 -739B .
pl{lyer. asking $5, 400 . Se STRAWBERRIES , pick your
1 ---------~­
10 . percent , off all own, E~~:perimental Farm, Pt . t982 Ford EXP loaded. rious inquiries only, 304 Fwrnished apt ., 2 bdr.·, 243
LAYNE'S FU.R NITURE
Jackson Pike , Gallipoli!l . Sofa, chair, rocker, otto- Greenware -including lots of Pleasant. 8 -12 a.m . Mon- 16.000 mi .. $6.500 or bell 675-6545 .
S226 mo. utilities paid . Coli man, 3 tables, (elltra heavy bowls &amp; pitcher!, cannister day, Wednesday &amp; Friday . offer. Call 446-4t34 after I - - - - - - - - - -4PM .
t9BO ODYSSEY , e•cellent
446 -44t6 oftor 7PM .
by Frontier). $685 . Sofa , sets, and animals. Register Slarting June 3rd .
condition, 8860 .. 304 -675 ch11r ond loveseat, $275: for free Greenware draw ·
1973 Dodge Dart. Ex c. 3773.
2 bdr. apt. overlooking park Sofas and chairs priced from ings . We also fire items at40
running cond . ~ $600 . 1972
front. $176 water paid . Oep . S286 . to $896 . Tables, $45 percent original price if you
Olds. exc . running cond. t981 YAMAHA , 650
&amp; rei . Coll446 ~ 39t9 .
and up to $125 . Hide· e· buy from us &amp;. 50 percent if
IIIUUit
$600. 614 ·949· 2544 .
M8xim. shaft drive. new tire.
bach, $440 . and up to brought in . Colonial Ceram ·
2 helmets, excellent condi ·
Apt . for rent . Half double-2 $526 ., Recliners . $176 . to ics. 2919 Jackson Ave . Pt .
Farm Equipment
1980 Plymouth Horizon . 4 lion, st500 . 304 -BB2 ·
bd.room Apt . Adults pre- $360 .. lamps from $281• to Pleasant. WV 26560 304- 61
speed . $3 ,000 . 6t4-992 · 3331 .
ferred . No pets . 614 -992- S75 . 6 pc. dinettes from 675· 3210 .
2749 .
$99 ., to $435 . 7 pc ., S189 .
Troy Built rototillers new 7447 .
1970 HONDA . motorcycle.
and up . Wood table with siM SUNN Alpha 115 baos
and used . SWISher lmple460cc DOHC mint condi ·
1 bed room Apt S196 . mo. chairs $425 . to $746 . Desk AMP. S350 .00, 304 -675 · m&amp;nt Co .. Sr . Rt . 7 North. 1948 Fleetline Chevrolet, 4
dr. sedan. Good cond . 304tion. 20.000 actual miles.
including utilities Equa l 8110 up to S226 . Hutches. 4193 .
Gallipolio, Oil . 446-0476 .
8B2-338B
one owner. $460.00 firm .
housing opportUnitY . Con - 6650 . and up; m•ple or pine
304·675· 19Bt .
tact Village Manor Apts . finish . Bunk bed complete 30 .06 AUTOMATIC Re - FREEMAN LOADER.
6t4 ·992 -7787 .
with mattresses, S260 . and mington. 41 mag . Ruger Massey-Ferguson 135 to 1981 Plymouth Horizon , 2
door, 2.2 engine, automatic,
up to $395 . Baby beda, Black Hawk pistol &amp;. Pali ·
t50 . 245· 9t43 .
Auto Parts
22.000 miles . nice car. 76
6 room &amp; bath unfurnished $11 0 . Mattresses or bolt mino mare about 1.150 lb .
apt . 6t4 -992-6434 , 614 ~ springs. full or twin . $58 .. Silvertone electric guitar, NEW &amp; Used Harvestore priced right . 614 - 742 ·
&amp; Accessories
992 · 5914 or 304 · B82 · firm , &amp;68 . and 878 . Queen Strad -0 -lin flat top guitar. Structures . Automated li· 2143 :
2666 .
vestock feeding -computer
sets, 8195 . 4 dr. chests. Pilone 304-676 · 27B2 .
feeders . Call collect 614· t973 Dodge Cilarger. Red . HEAVY duty Rease hitch tor
$42 . 6 dr. chests, S64 . Bed
Sharp looking . 81 .000 . Chevy pickup. $250. 304 1 bedroom . 6t4- 992 -5434 . frames , S20 .and $25 .. 10 WHIRLPOOL dishwasher . 585 -2260 . Joiln L. Betts .
61 4 ·949 -3092 .
6t4-992-5914 or 304-882 - gun · Gun cabinels, $350 .. pot scrubber, with butcher
468 -1638 .
2666 ~
dinette chairs S20 . and$ 25 . block top, for $tOO . or boot JOHN Deere 1010 tractor.
Gas or electric ranges. $325 offer. 30" Gas range. 4 plows , disk , bush hog, 1973 Pinto wagon. auto· 1972 FORD truck bod
Five room apt . Pomeroy . up to $375 . Baby matressea, months old , Dixie made by grader blade. 304·676 · matic. runs good . EKe . inte· $150 .00 . Step bumper
Shower . No pets, adults. $26 &amp; $36 , bad frames $20 . Magic Chef . $250 . firm . 4579 .
rior .• Good exterior. 8800. $50.00 . 304 -676- 2199 .
St50 . per month . 614-992 · $25 . 11o $30 . king frame 850 . After 6 . 304 -675 -7688 .
61 4-985 -4349 .
3201 _ New carpet.
MASSEY Ferguson 265 dieGood !!election of bedroom
suites . cedar chests , APF'ROX 14 ton of coal. sel tractor, 600 hours. New 1976 Chrysler Nawport. 78
Camping
1 bedroom aPt . Partially rockers . metal cabinets . Both lump &amp; fine . 304·B95 · Holland 310 baler. like new, Good body, good tires.
Equipment
3Bt9 .
furnished, carpeted. In Mid - swivel rockers.
304-875-4230 . After 6, $BOO . 614-593 ·7390 otter
675 -7659.
dleport . $156 . month, dep- Used Furniture · - bookcase,
4 :30p.m.
1,,
osit, plut u11111iea. 614 -992· ranges, chairs , end tables, LOVE seat, sofa &amp; chair, 2
7177 .
wuhers . dryers, refrigera· end tablet &amp;. coffee tabla. CASE 990 tractor for Vt new 1970 Plym'!uth . Body good , SLIDE IN Road Cruiser
tors and TV ' s. 3 miles out leu than 1 year old . Early cost. like new . including end runo good . Cell ,6t4 -9B6- camper. self contained .
6 room ,apt. for rent . Phone Buleville Ad. Open 9am to American style. SBOO. 304- loader. See at Siders Equip- 3B59 _aJter 4 p .m .
Priced to oall . Cell 256·
620 t after 6pm.
614· 992· 5,434. 614 -992 · 6pm , Mon . thru Fri .• 9am to 882-3168 .
ment , Henderson.
69t4 or 304-882-2586 .
t 978 Chevrolet Malibu
6pm; Set .
I
446 ·0322
Classic statlonwagon . Auto·
Apartments . 304 - 676 OUR BOAfiDING HOUSE
with MaJor Hoclllle I matlc. e.c., p .l ., p.b ., exc . 79 Motors Homes
5648 .
Whirlpool washer $65 . GE
con d. 6~4 · 992 · 7473 .
&amp; Campers
washer $95 , 2 Whirlpool 1~"'1.111~" ;: ~- ll/Y\DI ~ ~/ ~OU'L.l
~ 601
APARTMENTS . mobile washers like new $175 J,-~ · AI WI&gt;.'
1 976 'logo. Good cond.
~ILUN6~"' '""'""'
homes, houses . Pt. Ploesant oath . Kenmoio dryer S95 , l:;:'n ••
(LL ~=~" -~To'~!
I) :..E~~~
~..,~ . $276 . or boot otter. 992- ~amping trai ler 16 ft .. Trot'·
and Gallipoli s. 614-446 - GLdLY~tlL-'-160 , Philco re· I 01~P
J'MI· -~i
~;:iT rw:~~
6B46 o r - et641 W. Mai n wood. Sleapo 6, oolf con ·
B221 :
frlgerator $95. Gibson ••· I;;,..;~;;,
II ~~ J~N
;;fRE ~~R~~~ St . under bridge.
talned fexcept for be ·
frigerator frost tree $96, 1 ·~z \&amp;J
ON\JE."T IW£:
"-l \t.IIT.J t n~~-&lt;
throom), full length awning,
ONE bedroom apartments Ponncreat refrigerator
·~· :;"1,::.:.e 1..,';,!,
:- 6B CAMARO 327, good low towing mileage. ·
for the elderly . All utilities • 160, 6 pc . 6odroom ouito
!&gt; CLUB IN ~
·
•_: :.
:;'~
intlriOf. good tires, 304- cond .. 11 .296. Call 446A HE,t-LTI'I CLUB !
: I~GV".IiPEr: o ..... 'l: 'fr OF
paid . Tenants pay 30 par· &amp;296 , untinioh chaot ol
882· 2483.
8259 even.
1
cent of their adjusted indrawero
$65,
5,000
BTU
.&lt;"
.(
(.t
d
comeln this HUD subsidized conditioner Uti, tO,OOO
.;~·.·
t980 Chevy Citation, be· t9711 Wenobogo ·camper.
apartment building . Twin ~!~ eir conditioner e160,
=?
(/-~
304
·
1176·3929
completely
worked
over,
tween
8-4
.
Rivers Tower, phone 304· I1 ...u ln . electric rapge. 30 in
~
r\1111
.' ~' L after 4 :15, coli 304 · 676- $18,000. wllltlnencediffer876-6679 . Equal opportun- gas range like new 6 nlos. F~'f.... ~
•
~ 1 .,. 71545.
1
once• with t3000 .00 down.
ity housing .
old $t76, box oprlngo 11o 11
l:'t
~~
take over loan. •391 month
mottralo '46, omall kitchen
IllY
-t;t,'.'
11184 CHE'IELLE SS 350; 4 loon balonce on t9.000.00
ONE bedroom apoo:tmanJ. cabinets 30 in . wide by 30 IC..
1_'{0
speed, very nice. mutt tell. new air conditioner w.ith
402'12 24th . St. Pt . Pleooont, ln . high *36. Skoggo Ap - L"::o.,
211'"'304-675·2883 eftor 5 p.m . 4000
oonerotor, naw
phone, 1 -6t4-992-685B .
plioncoo, Upper River Rd
~~~~j
~~
-(.',iy :::&gt;_ 1977 Chevrolet 2 dr. •t. ·ac. tirel. m~H!er ,system com·
Gallipolis. Call 446 ·739B . ' f;
[• ~!..
pletely rewired, big engine
ON E bedroom' epartment,
)
am·fm • ceuette. Excellent with '4 barrel · carbor'tor,
S225 month. all utilities 1983 White fflle flf lll sawing
con d. •1 900. 304·876 · automatic, completely oelf·
paid, 304-876 . 2596.
machine 20 yr. warr1nty,
I
-:
2278.
contained, WIIOr, hot wotar.
used In ator8 demon1tra·
..o 1877 FIAT Spider. - ' w'i th otovo with oven, goo and
1 bedroof11 •p•rtme~t. ni~e tlono, •Oil· price $298 .95
6
,
...,
electric ...It, otoepo 4 odulto
lac1tion, references and demo price • 76 , Coli collect
I'~
red · lntorfor. new top. n - Holly- Coll304·1715· 8971
depoolt required. 304-675- 614·3B6-867B . Free
1 nq~li!(:~••H Pllnt, couotto ployer •. :or 8715-88t7 to oee. \1111
1090:
delivery.
,
W.:J.:._,._"'..!!:"-:.=::.fl-•-3._000_._3_04.:..,_·8_8_2_·2_3_1_&amp;._ ·
tor 90 doyo.

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6 07 5

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air:~~~

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Roofin", ehinglaa, 1pouting
.,.
and aluminum
siding work.
Insure~ Free Ettimatel.

-

H1' Preaaure Cloenl' ng. Alum' -~
inum siding. mobile home,,
wood, brick, undnona
building and homea. Alao
heavy equipment. Fully i~sured. Free eetimates. 614949-26B6.
------~--GENE'S CARPET CLEAN·
lNG SERVICE . Rocom·
mended 1for , P.rofesllionahl
Iteam c ear, mg .
cote
Gua rd-Frea ~·Estimates. Call
Gene at 614 · 992-6309.
Interior-exterior painting .
No job to small. Experienced
on barn roofs . 614·949,.
24BB .
'

'

RON'S Television Servic~.
Speci,lizing in Zenith an·d
Motorola. Quazar. and
house calls. Call 576 -239B
or 446-2454.

8:00

RINGLE'S SERVICE &amp;Kpe·
rience~ roofing l in.cludinQ
hot ~ tar appliCation, carpenter, Etlectrician, inason. Call
304- 676- 2088 or 675 4660 .
Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes .
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-B95-3B02 .
Gat __ y.o ur · carp~t .i!'t ship .
shape. WB!ter remova.I;FR EE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLE .ANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 6t4 -446- 2107.
E &amp; R Trae Service, fully
insured. free estimates.
Phone 614-367-0838. call
after 5 .
SEAMLESS GUTIERS, Ono
piece custom fit your home,
Guaranteed . Advanced Gutter. !Day 61 4 -692-4066,)
(nigh1 61 4-698· 8206 .)
Roofing and Carpentry
work, general repairs, call
Anthony Williamson. 614·
367-0t94.
CALL 304 -675-t293 for
concrete and black top estimates, metal building and
fence erection costs. Also
buying and selling heavv
equipment . Horse &amp;: stoc~
trailer sales. Furniture, electrical 8r electronic supplies
and equipment. Pleasant
Meadows Distributors and
Sales .

P'hdps th'•s account
fer wh~ you isn't
prop'ly equip'!

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3BB8 or 448·
4477

•

Excavating

OOiER WORK By Tod
Hanna. ponds , ditches,
basements , etc . Call 4464907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation .
..
Lonnie Boggs ExcavatinQ.
~ozer , bachhoe . dumptruck.
Work bv hour or job. CB\1
446 -7903 .
,;

J .A .R . Construction Co'".
Water Lines . Footers 1
Drains . All kinds of Ditching.
Rutland , Oh . 6t4-742;
2903 .
•.

..

84
&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

DEPENDABLE WASHER·
DRYER REPAIR . Guaran·
teed work . Call anytim+
6t4-266 -6620 or 614 -256·'
t207 .
.

B.\RNEY

COLD OR NO
DADBURN COLD--

SEWING Machine repairf,'
service . Authorized Singef
Sales &amp; Se~ice Sharpen
Sciasors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy,. 992 · 22B4 .
ED'S ,APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE call City Furnitur•:
304 - 675 - 2608 or 446 .
0631 .
'

========'·
85

General_ Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER·
\/ICE . Call 6t4 -367-7471
or 614.- 367-0591.
Need something .hauled
away 9r something moved?
We'll do it. Cell 446·315?
between 9 and 6.
w,.
JIMS WATER SERVICE
Call Jim Lanier, 304· 675·
7397.
'

87

Upholstery

· TRI STATE
.,.
, UPHOLSTERY SHOP '
1183 Sec . Ave., Gollipolis .
446-7833 or 441· 1B33.
·

PEANUTS
INSTE.AO

Of JUST SfANDIN6

TIIW,WiolV DON'T VOU 6fT
SOMEONE TO I-IEL.I' ME 7

Job offer I

U(])CilCJCil®lll&lt;f2l

rxx
PNCLAGj

12:30 D (]) (2) .Late Night with
David Lattermon David'•
guut lo comedian Robert
Klein. ItO min.)
I]) MOVIE: 'Silent Rage'
(]) Jeok lonny Show

•

®

(]) MoCioud

MOVIE:
Doctor'

'Carry

On

WHEN Hi$ SHI~

FINA LLY C::.AME 11&gt;.1 ,

Now arrange the cirded lette111 to
form the eurprtse answer, as tUQ·
gaoled by lha above cartoon.

Print answer here: (
(AniW'MJ. . . ..i~)

Yesterdays ! Jumble.s: FORUM BISON ITALIC H.\WKER
Al'lswer: He fiddles while his listeners doJhlsA SLOW BURN
Jolft thl Jumble LOIJIM F.n Club lnd ...,.,_lb.lllgtlt·WOfd s..p. J~.,., month.
ForfrM .. fnPI"WI1teto:J~lown f•nCiub.r:Jothtl~ . lo• sz•1. Gt11rd
c.ntral Sl8tlon. N.w 'tart. N. V. 10163. hJ~;:klde your Ml'tMI, tlddrft • 1nd tip code.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

It's too easy
NORTH
+K2

(aJ Feme Bruno fights
for his independence and
Lydia and Coco battle w ith
en exerc1se expert. (R) (60

r'run .) .
(2) MOVIE: 'Deathtrap'
(IJ
MOVIE:
' Casey's
Silo dow'
(1) 1 Spy
(I) Inside tho USFL
Cil lll (j2J Condo Rodriquez
tries to help Kirkridge 's
slumping insuran ce buSIness .
CD Billy Grahom
.
Ill I]) ® Magnum, P:._ .
Magnum tries to find a stolen artifact stolen from a
Samurai warrior . (A) (60
min .)
CID [J) Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gab ler and Jef·
frey Lyons take a look at
what's hap pen 1ng et the
movies .
Q) MOVIE: 'Tho F.B.I.
Story' Part 1
8:30 (I) Top Rank Boxing lrom
Atlantic City, NJ
Cil lll lDI New Odd Couple
Felix comes to help out af·
ter Oscar makes a bet with
a pool player . (R)
(f) Good Neighbors
llll Inside Story H odding
Carter looks · et the performan ce of the press in·
volving one major story.
9 :00 0 (2) aJ Glmme A Break
The Chief is called on to
.._.
donate one of his k idneys
t o save his brother' slifEi. (A)
C1l 700 Club
Cil Ill (f2) Too Close for
Comfort Muriel protests
Henry 's decision to buy a
IIJ!n.JRt
U Cil ® NBA Baoketbell
Cham_pionship
(f) lllJ Mystoryl ' Father
Brown .' Father Brown tries
to solve the mystery about
th·e bl i nding effect of light
on a sun worshipper . (A )
(60 min .) [Closed Captioned]
9 :30 U (2)
Chaars
(]) Ill lUI It Takea Two
10:00 U CD ffi Hill Street Blues
Detective Belker winds up
in th'e middle of .a jewel
heist and Capt. Furill o is
fo rced to consider releas ing a prime murder su spect. (R) (60 min.)
(IJ MOVIE: 'Paredlea'
(IJ MOVIE: 'Littll MiBS
Marker'
Cil lll (j2J 20/20
CD Avengers
llll Newawatch
fJ) INN Newa
t0:30 C1l Star Time
([) TBS Evening News
C{D Tony Brown's Journal
'Is the Atlanta Killer in
Jail I'
fJ) In Search of....
1 t :00 D CD Cil flJ Cil Ol lUI
New1
(I) ESPN SportsCenter
ffi Newa/Sporta/Weethor
(I) Dove Allen at Ul rge
1lll Nlghttlmea: Variety
fJ) Benny Hill Show
1 1:30 D (2) ffi Tonlgilt Show
Johnny's
guests
are
Charles Neloon Reilly. Ri chard Lewis and Cathy
Moriarty . (R) 160 min .)
CD Hooker The world of
prostitution is examined in
this documentary ,
1) Another Life
([I Catllno
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fl) Cil Qulnoy
(I) PBS Lett Night
il1l Ne• (f2) Nlghtllno
• t-~oneymoonoro
1 2:00 (IJ MOVIE: 'Chandler'
([l Burn• llo Allan
(I) World Spo{llman Outdoor
adventuret
from
throughout
the
world
hosted by Curt Gowdy. (60
min.)
I]) MOVIE: •'Man of e
ThouNnd Facoo'
({) Nlghtllno
® All ' In tho Family
•
Morv Hartman. Mary
Hortmon

..,
HE WAS 100 LAZY'
iO DO \H IS.

B

m

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . Fomerly Dewitt's
P:lumbing . Call 614-3670576 .

83

They comes intwo
sizes! Iexpec'll(&gt;u'll
want th' biq one!

Looltl A wonderful

0

I I I

Ton~ht

F S. K Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 675 · 1331 . .

82

TENIL

News
(]) HBO Rock: Ceryl Hall
end ~ohn Oatel Th is rock
duo performs old and new
hits.
(]) ' MOVIE: 'Breaking the
Sound Berrier'
C1l Tic Toe Dough
Clll DrHm of JHnnle
aJ Newa/Sporti/Weather
IJ) II]) Studio $M
1111 Wild, Wild West
B:30 0 (2) C7) NBC News
C1l Love That Bob
&lt;Il Father Knows Boat
Clle!IZ ABC News
Cl ({) ® CBS News
IJ) Dr. Who
llll Over Eeoy
7 :00 U (2) PM Magazine
C1l Burna llo Allen
(I) ESPN'a Sportsforum
CIJ Green Acres
([) Entertainment Tonight
ffi Charlie'a Angela
CJ (]) Tic Toe Dough
IJ) II])
MacNeii-Lehrar
Report
liD News
Ill (f2) People's Court.
01 Star Tre~
' 7:30 U (2) Lla Detector
(;I) HBO Magazine
"(1) Dobie Gillis
(I) ESPN SportaCenter
CIJ Major Laegue Baseball:
St. Loufs at Atlanta
Cil 0 Cll Family Feud
([) Business Report
liD You Asked For It
I]] lest Chance Garage
Ill (f2) Entertainment

Painting interior
eXteri~.
wallpaper hanging. Insured.
Free estimates. 614·949·
2686 .

b)'~AmoldondBobLeo

Unscramble theie lour Jumbloo,
one letter 10 each equara, to form
lour ordinary wordo.

EVENING
8:00

1,!:41 ~~ 41

~

THUR.SDAY
8/2/83

Marcum RoQfing S. Spout ing . 30 years ••perience,
specializing in ~uilt up roof.
Call 614· 3BB-9867 . .

I~

,.L..
~n

r -'

.S
. ale

ORGANIZED CRIME UNIT,
~ SOME LEGWOAK ...•-

PAINTING · Interior end
exterior. plumbing, roofing,
sOme remodeling. 20 yn.
oxp . Coli 6t4·'3 88· 986:Z.

----JJ·

Build home,
your own
can
2 Early
or 3Amerl·
bdr.,
$2 ,995 . Call 1 · 614· 8B6·
7311 . See our model.

ome
Improvement•

' lflJi)~"-ftfj}'il ~THATICRAII8L.EDWORDOAME

Television
Viewing

WE CAN TAP INTO Tl'4£

1182.

~

.._

H

....,

~
·I 1.~1

Ohio

STUCCO P~$TERINO ·
textured ceiling• commer·
cial 1nd re•ident~l. fr"
estimotao. Call 614·256·

~\r~n
. 1~_:_

block.Building
brick. materialo
•ewer IJJPu••·
""'indows , lintelt, "''i"'t c .
ClaudeWintero, RioGrenile.
0 . Coll ·614· 246-5121 .

HILLCREST

8,

I'Ve wA~
•
n"
AC..r'r'"""';ut..

\J.o.o\
liN ,.• .,.,.,.
t:&gt;Vr......,_, I"P"',

June 2r 1983

I~

ACO@i~ lo ~

Building Supplies

56 pet s f or

==::::--bY_LanY
__
w_rlgh...,t

~~,itfi.

.

55

-===='==·

c_~.A-=R·::'-1 v=·1

Misc. MerchendJNK
r ·l _1_
'N'

1 8 8 2 · SEAR 8 ol r •
conditioner. uHd 2 montho.
Orfglnolly t415Q . Wllloall tor
1325. 304· 8715-11894 altar
4

5 Motorola 1 t 0 Wait High
Frequency Radios. in service

- ' t;;
R .7ACALINHIA.
~

June 2r 1983

Ohio

COUNTY APPLIANCES.
Inc. Good used opplloncu.
wuharo, drvero, rotrlu .. TV
oeto. 827'12 3rd. Ave .• Galli·
polio . Coli 446 - t699.

52

11o·•

MARSHAU."TOWN •

51

~221

,

, .( '

I

.C

~~~~J~~b~
' \l__]
"

em'-=

~ r-;- o./

--

oo-r...
~

·: rv •
HeS

&gt;)&gt;

~'

'IHEWA'f
T&lt;UOPSIIIIITSASII!!"'

~ ~

.'J

'"~

'C·

:Jt.~

'"[--·l.:.l:::co~IP,.
'-\t,dl\
"'
:::7:.

!! "

198t FLEETWOOD.14x70.
3 be~room, . 2 bath.s,h adll
e1ectnc . part•a 11 v 1urms e .
t14, 600 . Call 304 -773 -

r
1
~

.

i~~~'I
·

~ "''"
t;oof&lt;'t'DETAIL.S )

-;(

•1975 PEERLESS 14x70
MH w / tilt· olit. E.C .. cent.
air . W I B. new o arpe t
throughout, partially fur niJhed . Outbuilding, under·
pinning . St0,600 . Call6t4246· 5406 or 446 -0212 .

-

••·~ 5 ';.J,f~7
10

FIN~ . /"- ""
• ,../
1/,
!/" ;Lo

WHAT'S
;;
E ;'

,

rural water, gas heat . Has
some furniture. price
t1 2,500 . Or 41oullo mobile
. *14,800 . Call448 -1240 .

US ED MOBILE HOME .
5 76 · 2711 ·

~!t~
~'1ltf:!'!';,_'f

l WAS JUST\
ViSITIN€1 JOe .....-He's
M~"'-UE 11'1
I'UINO

2 Iota &amp; 1 mobile home
12x80, 2 be~room, with

1972 14x66
Mobile
Home~.
Partially
furnished
. lnclud
illg undarpinning and baj:k
porch . Call 6t4-992 -2t56
between 9 &amp; 6 oak tor Time .
Altar 6 call 304 -B82 -3592 .

liE. IVAHTS'IO
u~ &amp;IP fif.WS.

'NPES .. .
N0-!953 .. .

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
'RT 36 .' PHONE 446 ·7274.

·

Do It Every Tim
.·._e__

N(}SPITAL·
VISITO.'&lt;

:rRI - ITATE MOBILE•
!tOMES . USED · CARS ,'
lfRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
441-71572 .

35

..

14-The Daily Sentinel

6-2-!S

.,7

t A 10 4 3
+AK10131

... .
EAST

WEiiT
• ~76 4

tJ8

• Q 76 2

+5

minutes.

"KJ84l

' 10 9 6 3

+QJI874
SOUTH
+AQJ1081!
., A Q 5
t K95

...

~

West

Nortb

East

Soutb

2'

3+

Pass

Pass
Pass

3•
••
6+
Pass

Pa ss
Pa ss

3.,
4t

5\'

Pass

s•

Pass
Pass

i.,

••

Pass

Opening lead:

II just shows that wh en
great experts go wrong, they
make worse mistakes than
ordinary players.
South couldn 't bid two
spades as his first call . Thal
pair wa s playin~ prc-emp·
live jump shifts 1n competi ·
lion, ~o 'two spades would
have shown a wea k hand _

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

••

fail to bid and make it.
Even mosl beginner s m a
friendly home game would ·
get ther e. Now look at the
bidding in th&lt;t box wh)ch
occurred at table two and
whi ch took several agonized

•to

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

North might have shown
strength by a jump to three ·
clubs. but West threw a spit ·
ball at him when he bid two ·.
hearts, so the best North

could do was a mere bid of
thr ee clubs.
South did c ue-bid hearts.
Now North might well have
bid four spades, but only
called three. Soulh' s four
diamonds wa s an expert's
attempt to confuse tbmgs •·
with an obsc ure force , and
North continued the confu·
si on by bidding four hearts,

so South m eandered along
At table one in thal 1977
championship match it took
North and South about Ill·
teen seconds to bid and ten
seconds to make the spade
grand sl am . If dealt in a
local duplicate, it would
take a trifle longer. but 11 is
doubtful if one pair would

with fiv e hearts. North bid
six clubs. He just didn't · ·
know what South was trying
to show him . South bid six
spades.
North thought, thought,
sludied. thought and fmally
passed.
( NEWSPAPE R ENTERPR ISE AS."iN)

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Conscious
3 W ei gh t
comparison
5 Begin
13 wds. 1
10 Over-the-hill 4 Whole
GI
5 Eur opean
I " - Loves

Mambo"

II Old-lime

river
fabric
6 Domain
12 Ne wman
1abbr. I
13 Overthrow
7 W ei gh
14 Marine bird 8 Minima lly
15 Homo sapiens 9 Grow's m olars 22
16 Vietnamese
and such
holiday
II Put up with
17 Valpoli·
15 Flirtatious
23
cella, e .g .
girl
19 Exclamation IS Vinous
20 Ferret oul
21 Swedish
21 - majesty
name
22 Borough
~-r:-"1r..""'T:rofN.Y .C.
24 Flings
25 CalhoW1
11
U Winery
refuse
27 Devilkin
28 Sea thief
· 31 Philippine
peasant
' 32 Destiny
33 Mauna 34 Habituated
36 Alpine
herdsman
37 Strong
36 Levantine
boat
39 Hell

. Y est erda y 's Answ er

Of the
United
KingdQJn

28 Bulls of yarn
29 Type style
30 Pres . 'Reagan

IrOn Curtain

owns one
35 Qlddoan

Indian
Ev;ong,, li'is·i . 36 Opposite ' ·
of NNW

~Engrave

DOWN
1 Docwnent

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II

Here's how

to

'·
work

It :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

i.

One letter oimply stands for another. In this eample
,ll,
uset;l for the three· L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letteftl,
apootrophea, the length and formation of the words are ill
hints. Each day the-code letters are dllferent.

CRYPTOQUOTI!S

B I, U
BIU'L

ABULI'Q

JUFBTISRU
QOU

PSYU

SWDBJQNIQ

WBWUIQL -

.

S-1

J U N P P.J:
IBQ

MIQSP

'.

SQ'L QBB PNQU. - NTNQON FOJSLQ&amp;(J
Vestenlay'• Cryploquote: MAY OUR HOUSE ALWAYS SE
TOO SMALL TO HOW ALL OUR FRIENDS.-MYRTLE
~D

.

. ,

•

�Page

16-The Daily

...

Thunday, June 2, 1913

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Sen tinel

Pomeroy ·Chamber -s ponsors June ·20th
A building doc tor Is coming to
Pomeroy at the requ est of the
pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
The building doctor clinic will be
conducted by two mem bers of the
T echnical P reservation Services
Department of the Ohio H istoric
Preservation Of(lce of the Ohio
Historical Society. The program Is
designed to educa te and assist
property owner s and tenants In the
maintenance and rehabilitation of
older bulldlngs.
The clinic will include an evening
lecture followed by a full day of
schedule site visits to diagno.e and
discuss special problems. A lecture

.

'r

OSU quarterback
faces ineligibility
Page3

UTILE GIRLS'

and two-piece sui1s of Lycra
Spandex. Terry CQVer-ups in·
eluded. Complete range of little girls

Sizes S (28-~. M (32-34), L
(36=38) and XL (4{}-42). - Many
styles and cCJiors in th is selection.

sizes.

Telephone .... ................ .

\

enttne

Voi.32,No.36

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Frida y,

Copyrigh t..::! 198 3

FROM ONLY

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

PRE-TEEN AND

Market reports
M ark~ ~ JIOrt

F'EF.DER ST EERS: c;{)( &gt;n AND C'IfOi f 'F:
'liO I I) .'OJ Ia.. fi.'H 5; .100 to 400 l bs li1 -7:1.f111; 4C:MI
I O f~J i hs . 6.3. ~72 . ~ ; ~XII u fnl lh~ _ fil -71, mn r"n
7tfJ lbs . f:l)-tit ~i l ; ifl) to fO'J 11&gt;!1 . ~ -~iHi2 . :~); IU J

and over 54 -ll l.!l.l.
F'EEDER HF: IFF.RS: ( ;(}00 AND CI!O
ICE 2.'lll to :rn 100. ll2 . ~ ·6R : .))) to ,100 ~ ~ ­
!i7-tl4 . ~11 : 400 IO m lbs. ~~ - 50-fi2 . ~1 ; ~~ IO 10)
1oo ..~7-63; axJ to 711.1 100·. :).IJ-Ii 1.:-AI: 71Xl to tW lhs.
- 52. fi).~.9 - ~J ; EO:&gt;. and nwr ~ l.:ll-rlG . rfl .
FEEDER 13ULI...' i: GOOD AND CJ-10 1&lt;'1·:

fJVf'r ~ 1 - S?.:il.

Hnls te ln S!Cf'r !&gt; and Bull'&gt; U') to f01 Jbs.
:) 1 - ~llt~ii'J .
f] ulls l,flJJ lhs . ;md up 49-fil .
SliiUI.l hl l.'r Cow &lt;; Uti lli iPs 4J -4!J.:i l: CCJ nnPrs
nnd ('utte r.; :tt down.
Vf'al Ca t v .-~ r hnlr1 • and prl n u• 1 ~1 In :n1 ltl&lt;i .

Reg. $20.00 ..... SALE
Reg. $26.00 ..... SALE
Reg. $34.00 ......SALE
Reg. $44.00 ..... SALE

.
~ down: ·

Top HQRS 210 10 1-ll lbs. 4 ~-4.'i . 75
!loars :r.l-33.:11.
Sows 400 lbs . a_nd up JS.JIJ.Zl,.

Marriage liccnl'! cs

Pi gs by the 1-IPad

Six couples were Issued m ar riage
licenses In Meigs County Probate
Court.
Issued Jlcpnscs wPre Jam es
Monroe Harmon, Jr.18, Ra(:!ne, and
L or i Ann Wol!P, 16, Racine; James
K eith Haning, Jr. 23, A lbany, and
Robin R.enae Barrett. 18, Rt. l ,
Rutland; L.aw rt'nce R ussell Lee .
.Jr., 18, Pomeroy, andTrlna Tama ra
Hayman , 19, Pomeroy; Char lr s
Edw and Kennedy, 22, P.pmeroy , and
Anlla Beth Teatond , l R, Chester ;
David Br ian Owens, 25, Rio Grande.
and Vicki Ly nn Hoffman. 25.
Pomeroy .

S pc~kel"!l

Sizes 8 to 18 in a nice
selection of styles you'll like.
Pick your favorite color.

BOYS' $6.95 .
.
SWIM TRUNKS •.•. $5.55
BOYS' $7.95
SWIM TRUNKS ..•• $6.35
BOYS' $8.95
SWIM TRUNKS ...• $7.15

1\tlw•l\'&gt;i IJv~tod1. Sah .."'

i\111J 2'\, 11m3
S lau ~ III Pr
S I :I U~ hl l• r

Slwrs

SALE!

lh-:. 54 .fJ7: ~K}. 71Xl lbs. ~2 - ~..
F'Pf'(l4 •r I·IPifPr!&gt;i : 10 ond and Cholt'C' J :o J-&amp;Kl
~~~ -

•15.RO-G4.:

~:0)- 7f XJ

lbs

~moo

S l a u ~ hu •r

lh!;. 14.c,o.ro .so.
Cows: Ull li!les 41.0044 ;

Ca n nt&gt;r~

(!ncl C ulle r s :fi . 25 - :~J . !fl .
Spl'lnw•r Cows : tBy lhP H••act 1 lS.:l-:00.

• Cow a nd Ca ll pa ir s :

IB_v lhr

Unln

4.1f). ~.:J7 . !"111

W'H L'i' I ChoiC'f' and Prim('! 6l.fl{I-7H ..'i0.

Buhy c~ t ws : !By !hf' HPach .a:l·77
' IJ:J by C:llvr-s : (By !liP Po und ! l.i i-X.l
HOC: PHICF:S:
IIOJ.,'S: I NO. 1, 11arTOVJS a nd C lll s ) :.00-2:ll
lbs 4 :) . 7 :'Hii. ~ .

Butd1cr

Bcw 1~

:ll-i .fJ0-:17.

FC'('&lt;Jcr P igs : t By nw Hl'ad l 9-49.

TWO DAY SALE!

r

LITTLE BOYS'
SWIMWEAR

44 . 75 · ~: 1.

FP(&gt;d.-•r Bulls: !Good an d Cholet" I .' ((1.51))

It" . 51!;;o;

If~;

~ti . 2'VlX.~l

I-IPUf•rs !"l1-5K.

CA'I' t'L E P ~ I CF:S '
F'f'('(lf' r Sl('('rs : !Cood a nd f' hol&lt;"t ' 1 • :0 !-~l

$3.99
$6.39
$'7.99
$9.59

DRESS
SLACKS
·- - __
~
_,__

AND BOOTS

Meets Friday
The M ei gs County Fox Chas&lt;'r s
Associat ion
m eet .Jum' :l , at 7: :!0
p.m. at E agle ~ldgc.

OAN'S BOOT SHOP

will

llremen cut off the burning section of the buDding to

.

CINCINNATI (AP)- A sutvlvorof an Air Canada
j etliner that caught fire In m id-flight, kUling 23, said
today that despite flames and blinding smoke her
fellow passengers remained calm as they tried to get
out alter an em ergency landing.
''There was no panic. There was absolutely nothing .
Nobody scream ed or yelled. Ther e were no cries . II
was j ust dead ciurn," said A udrey Ru ttan. 39, of
M idland, Ont.
Eighteen of the 46 people aboard the DC9 were
Injured . There w ere 41 passenger s and five crew
m ember s.
Sixteen of the Injured remained hospitalized today
at two K entucky hospitals, two In fair condition and 14
In guarded condi tion .
The pilot radioed air controller s with a report of the
fire at 7:06 p.m . Thursday as the plane was flying
from Dallas-Fort Worth to Toronto, Canada. Despite
being b linded by smoke, he made an emergency
landing a't the G reater Cincinnati Interna tional

MEN'S

LIGHTWEIGHT
JACKETS

BASIC
JEANS
Made by Wrangler of pre-washed
no-faun blue denim (14 oz. weigh~ .

Regular and extra large sizes. Some are
lighHy lined. Well known makes. Two
days only . Sale Priced .

STRAIGHT LEG STYLE
27 to 42

MIOOLEPORT

Wa~t (lengths

SALE

30 lo 36).

$1688

BOOT FLARE STYLE
Sizes 29 lo 42 (Lengths 30 to 36)

SALE

$J688

In Sues 32 to 50 waist

.

SALE

The book
HAPPY
.,,..,

I

f'IIUIIr

The quality yarn
SALE! ·Coats and Oark

IIVIftll .......

you CM w1it8 ·~ own hlppf

RED HEART

REG. $8.00 .. .............. SALE 16.39
REG. $9.50 ............. .. SALE $7.59
REG. $13.00 .... .. ....... SALE $10.39
REG. $19.00 ...... .......SALE $15.19
REG. $26.00 .......... .... SALE $20.79

WINTUK. YARN
3\1 ounce skein~ Complete selection of
~td and variegated . colors. ·This
weekend only.

$}39

HANG TEN
SPORTSWEAR

.DRAPERIES
Bnng in your measurements.
Select quality custom-made
drapes f1om our big selection of
patterns and colors.
Sole Ends

SAVE

June 6th

30°/o

SKEIN

MESSES

.A

WRANGLER
SPORTSWEAR

..

shorts and skirts. Misses sizes s
tD XL and 8 to 20.
R£G.
REG.
' R£G.
R£G.

'

FREE
PARKING

$12.00 ..... SALE $9.59
$17.00 .... SAl£ $13.59

$2100 .... SAl£ $18.39
$21.00 .... SAl£ $22.39

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
utUl ty commissioners hav e ordered
a Columbia Gas of Ohio rate
Increase of 51 cents per thou sand
cubic fee~ even though the utility
bad asked for only 25 rent s.
The actlOn by the Public Utllltles
Commtsslon of Ohio surprised
Cqlumbla Gas officials.
The utility had said It collld j ustlty
the5Hent Increase on the basls oflts
cu(l'e!lt gas costs, but bad asked
PUCO for ·only 25 cents now with a
right to recoup the other 26 cents. 11
• necessary, over the next year.

\

-~

OPEN FRIDAY .lli1 .8
SATURDAY TILL 5 ..

----

'

pi'O~rty

m1d, do nrcc-ssary

l'f'p ai i 'S,

if possible.
Council d&lt;&gt;clded to hire l'ar mll
NcigiN to cut lhP weeds on v illa g&lt;'
projX'rty mul d ln&gt;cl IP!Ir r s to

propt:'rty owners who havP wt•r•ds
grow ing on val'ant lots.
La \vn'll'-'f' Manley . Man lcy 's Sanil a lion, met with council and asked
th aI trash pic kup rn tt-.s tx&gt; in crca.srd
from $;, to $6 JX'r month. Council
&lt;.I(Jp i'OW'CiltK• rf'Q Uf'SL

Also rn('('ting \'liit h counci l wa s
Pf'tc Fin k&lt;'. r(• pn·~f'n t a ti \' f' of UH•
N i.l t ional Flooci I nsu l'ltn&lt;'P l •rngr am . F in kf'explain rd ttw p ll1,L(T; m l
no ting that cou ncll rnu.sl p a~ s an
Ol'llinan{'f' for rf.si(\('n ts to pu rd1as!'

I'C'vcn u£' sha ring PXt)('n dilurPs at

U'w t St'!';Sion .
Council ar;t·c•f't l to pl:1cr dust
control at tlu• Pn lra nn• to ttu• tPn nis
t '(llii1 S.

t;l'IH ' lm bollf'n, fi n-. chid , in fotn1t"d counc il t 110.1 I wa lf'r llyct rant s
will bl' vlm ndrd and pal n!C'd and

\\'('f'(IS (·u t around t ht• hydr a nt s.
l ml.xxlcn also l'f'l).l rf.C'fl n ti"f'f' on
Co liC'~!"

lloacl was In nf't'CI of
trimm ing and I hPro;Hi gtJl ng lt l HOSt'
Va lley wns In !l(I('CI of rrpHil'.
l m hocir n disp layr d l hf' fi rr clo·

thi ng rf"('t'nll.v pur d li:IS£'fl fn r thl'
firf'm ('fl .
II W i\S a n nounct'&lt; l 111:11 s~ · v r ral
horm 'S In l il t · v Uiagt· LI I'P not hookrd
into t hi' st '\\':Jg (' s~·.s tl'rn . 11 wa s not f'( l
th a t lilt' S~T; tt ' U SI' l{a(' il\( ' S4:•wagp
D is1r iel w tII I akt • :w tio n on lilt • i.ssup
a t lltt'lr 1\( '.'\ l lllt'l 'fin g .
tCcml inw '1. 1 nn p.tgl ' 1 ~ 1

air:Ji_, rt , sa id a t a news co nfr rc ntf' f'a r ly tod a y I tlal a II

Airport 13 mlnutes later .
Ther e was no Immediate wand from Air Canada
otllclais or federal investigators as to what caused the
fire.
Among the dead was tel evision manufactu rer
Curtis M athes Jr .. a Canadian r esident r eturning
home from a business trip.
Some sutvlvor s said the fire appear ed to ha ve
started In the r ear of the aireraft.
Ms. Ruttan, who w as being treated at St. E lizabeth
Hospital , told ABC-TV that, "You could sm ell the
sm oke, you could see It coming from the back tow ards
the front of the plane. It w as very, very evident. "
She said that once the plane landed, smoke f!Ued the
Ci!bln and she escaped onto a wing.
"I went out on the wing, ou t one of the exits. You
couldn' t see where y ou were going - you cou ld f('f'l
air," she sai d.
Jack Barry . assistant director of oper ations at thl'

I hi' dead pt•r ishcd w llh l n a m in utr af!Pr lancling. l-I t'
credited the five-m ember crew with " getting of f n il
thOSC' pt'&lt;lple who got off. "
Thl' gull ed p lant' wa s towro from !tiP n mway to a
nc&gt;arby han gar ear ly today.
I rene Lewis. spokeswoman for Booth Ml'morla I
Hospi tal where 14 of the survi vors Wl'JL' being ltWti•'CI .
sa id the hos pllal listed a ll of th&lt;' m In gu ard&lt;'Cl
condition and probably would not rf'l('ast· any of l ht•
survivors until ~t least late tonight.
F ive of the passengPrs " wl'r t" ablf' w al k away from
t hP scenf' and w e rt• not lit:' a ted at a ll ,'' M s. J..(lw !s sa id
'1\vo were twatf'd and rf'leased.
Two ot her pmplc wpre In fa ir condition a t St .
P.llzabeth's 1-t ospltal.
Ba rTy saicl l hl' fit'(' qu ickly lncrPasrd In lnt cnsll y
once thq )lanc landC'd. giv ing t hasP a boo rtlll itlt" tlnw
to ge t ou t safely .
·
" In orcl&lt;•r to get out In this kind of a si tuation. you

d o n·! ha vc• ll lo t nf

linlf' -

nl;J.VhP :t rll ill U!('," J1a rtV

~ l id .
.
T he bodies of those who didn ' t m akP It uul wen ·
fnund from th•• mlrtsC'CtiOtt to l ht" front o f lhP pl ane.
Bar ry sa id . AI lt •as l lw u 1&gt;&lt;-tssPtJg t' r :-. so lid ~ mokt • fh ~ l
was notil'N:\ in 11 waghroom by l ht' pi&lt;I IH's Jail.
H.E'S('UC workt •rs found b.•di P~ ... t ra pJ.&gt;~.'CI In SPa ts and
Wf' I'P hu r nt '( \ l)( •ynnct r r-&lt;'ogn \1\on
Othr•rs showf'CI lt•ss fit 't ' clarn;tg t •.
Barry said llw 2:1 JXtSS('fli:£' 1'S p roht~hly d h '( \ .tfh 'l

in thr a is le'S . Som('

l ht" p lane land1'CI.
Th(' las! ~ U IVI vo rs o rr l ht • pla rH' WI ' IT' llw t T l '\\ ' ,

Oa.ny sa id. Ont• o f 1hf' pi lots wa ~ on l'i n ' an d had l o b .
rlous.'CI wltlt foam .
IJarry said lhl' fiv t· c rew nw n1b •rs d id " a vf.'J'"\.:
r ou r agrous job" in Pv ~wua lin ~ passt •n ~o;f' rs , an~\
undouiJtrd ly saw'fl llvl's.
Rarry said !Itt • pilot - w ho Ai r ( ':111 ada of ficials
havf' r-.··fu Sf'{t to ldt•ntlfy - hitd only a ft•w m in ul 1-s to
land tht' ~ ia n~ IJd on• fin • spread thmugh l ite t' raft.

million .
When the B ureau of Labor
Statistics c ombined the ctvlllan
labor force figures with those tor the
approximately 1.66mllllon m llltary
personnel stationed In the United
States. the overall unemployment ·
rate also fell slightly, tram 10.1
per cent to 10.0 percent.
Private economists said In advance of today's report tl\at they
expect clv\llan unemployment to
.declb1e only gradually , but steadily.
as businesses awalt strongerslgnals
of a lasting recovery before hiring In
substantial numbers .
Despite the Increasing signs of
recovery the goverrunent's
composite. Index of Leading Indica tor s rose by a healthy 1.1 percent In
Aprtl - the civilian labor force
actually fell by 37,00J In May . to 110.7
m Ullan.
Economists have warned tha t
unemploymen t cou ld rise, even In
the midst of recovery, If large
num bers of people now considered

" discouraged" workers rP-entc r thP
l abor force before businesses are
ready to rehire on a large scale.
The jobless rate Is based on a
Census Bu reau survey of 50,00J U .S.
households. A separate suiVey of
business payrolls, which plays no
role In the com pllatlon of the job less
r ate, showed that employ m ent
Increased las t month by 375,0':0.

A ba by boy found Monday
wrapped In a l)last lc bag In a car
In M eigs County was not stillborn accondi ng to a pn•llmlnary
autopsy rPport rPCclved by
GaU ia Count y Coroner Dt·. Do·
nalcl R. War ehime ·nmrsday .
The ~· rankl ln County Coroner' s
Offl&lt;'P will conduct fu t1hr r trsl s
before makln g lis fin al report .

Within the var ious popu lation
groups, joblessness amoMg adult
m ales waned last month J,rom 9.R
percent to 9.6 percent . and the r ate
among adult blacks declined
slightly from the post -war high of
20.8 percent to 20.6 percent.
Among the other groups, the
unemploy ment rates were:
-Adult w om en. 8.5 percent, up
from 8.4.
-Teen-agers . 23.0, down from

A ccondlng to 1he office of I ht:'
Meigs County Prosecuting Allor·
ney , an Investigation Is be ing

conduc!C'd Into thP death of the
Infant, but . no del&lt;tlls of thc
Incident wil l be dlsdosed unt il
th&lt;• lnvestlg'allon Is comple!C'.
II was rt'po t1&lt;'li . howPVN, the
ba.by was born i n a car In
Sy racuse and p laced In a plastic
bag bcforr• being taken to !hP
Hol71'r Medical Ccn !PI' M onday
whPre h&lt;' was pronounef'd d&lt;!ad .
'lltc body was tra nspo rtro to tht"
Franklin Coun ty Coroner 's Offlcc for an au topsy to determine
whP!ht'r the ba by was st ill born

or dll'll aftl'r blrt it. 1111' mot her Ls
bf'llf'Vt'ff In havt' t)('('n a 2:t.year
old S_yn1c1'Sf' woma n .
1ltt• pmS('('u tor 's offi t'P and
thc sltr r llf' s cJppartrn c•nl have
IJOtlt dC'l'ilnC'd commPnt on d &lt;'taUs thi s mo111lng.
1\ s po kPsm au fo r lhf• (;a Ilia
Cmtn l y Slt(•r lfl" s Dcparl m •' nl
' s:.~ i&lt;l lutla y it s o nly f·onn('('fio n
with ltlP l 'U-"'l ' was t.h a t lhf' In fa nt
was brou ght lo tlt0 Holzer
MC'dlr al Ccnwr .

23.4.
- Whites, 8.9. unchanged.
- Hispanics, Ll8, down from 14 .5.
-Black teen-agers, 48.2. down
from49.0.

PUCO orders Columbia Gas hike

Pcly gab pants, cotton twill
pants, polo shirts, blouses.

I

Tops, Tanks, Shorts, Pants. Mini Sllir1s.
MidriH Tops, Terry, stripes, solids. Jr. Sizes
5-M-L and 5 to 13.

REG. $13.00 ............... ... SALE $10.39
REG. Sl8.00 .................SALE $14.39
R£G. $24.00 ....... .......... SALE $19.19
R£G. $32.00 ................. SALE $25.59

WASHINGTON (i\P) - America · s civilian unemploym ent rate
edged down to 10.1 percent In May ,
the third consecutive m onthly
decline. as 99,00J people found jobs
In an Improving labor market. the
goverrun ent reported today .
The number of people otflclally
listed as unemploy ed fell by 136,00J,
from ll,328,00J to 11.192,00J, the
Labor Departmen t said.
The ctv lllan jobl~ s rate was 0.1
percentage point below the Aprtl
level and was the best m onthly job
market showing since the nation
registered a 9.9 percent unemploym ent ra te last August.
Since the depth of the 1981-82
r ecess ion , w h en job l ess ness
reached 10.8 pe~;eent and more than
12 million peoplewereoutofwork In
Decem ber, the seasonally adjusted
civilian rate has drOped gradually .
by 0.7 percentage pol~t . Today's
figures show that . over that period of
time, thetotalnwnberofAmerlcans
w it!! jobs has swelled by more than
500,00J, from 99.1 m illion to 99.6

SAVE 30% .
QJSTOM-MADE

Kntts, Plisses, Poly/ Cotton blends.
Terrys and Nylons Sizes Small thru

JUNIOR

•

If you hl¥t

SHORT GOWNS
ROBES &amp;
NITE SHIRTS
XXL

.Willi

$J688

Red Heart

lADIES'

Council also will inVPsl igate t11c
possibll! y of passing a zoning and
build ing code ordin anCP.
M ayor Eber Pickens and council
u rge resident s to clm n up th i('['

Council will nt('f't on .tunc Hi, to
the lssuP. I t wil l also d iscuss

d cc id~

May unemployment rate dips Autopsy says baby wasn't stillborn

FULLER CUT STYLE
SALE

several occas ions .·

fl ood insu r::tnc•r .

23 die, 18 injured In DC 9 fire at Cincinnati

MEN'S $15.95 SLACKS... .. ... $11.96
MEN'S $18.95 SLACKS ........ $14.21
MEN'S $19.95 SLACKS ........$14.96
MEN'S $29.95 SLACKS ... ..... $22.46

MEN'S

GDls, 3.'l)Thlrd Ave., Galllpolls. The blaze was visible
aci'08S the Ohio River to GaJDpolls residents.

Syracuse Vlllage Counc il is giving
ser ious consider ation to ban m obile
hom es w ithin the v illage. Thi s was
the m ajor item ·discusst&gt;d at
Thu rsday' s regu lar counc il sf'SSion.
It w !U bl&gt; nP&lt;X&gt;ssary for council to
draw up an ord lnan('f' banning
m obile homes however , trailers In a
m obile home cou t1 wUI not be
Included ·
M obile homes pJ-es&lt;&gt;ntly tcx·ated
"~ thin the village will not com&lt;'
under the new ordlancr . but wUI be
forced to comply with the ond inanc&lt;'
on m obile hom es such as rem ovi ng
all mobility and having lhr m
underpinned .
I I wa~ notm tht'r r ar c st-vrt·a t
tra iler homes that have• not had thf'
mobility removed nor or thcy
underpinned. Council will, If nc&gt;ces
sar y. take action to s ('(' that th!'
l r"diJer ordi nanct&gt; is no longC'r
abused . Counci l h:l' published thP

ru les and regulalions concerning
t railer s loca ted w ithin lhl'viliageon

•

Big selection of fashion colo1s in light
and dark shades. Plus stripes and neat
patterns. Size 30 to 42 waist
Polyesters, twills, cotton and poly
blends.

Sfi EF.P PH ICES;
F'f '(,.)l •r Lmn bs 4tV lll
Paul and Gall Im boden, College
Road, Syracuse wlll be the speakPrS r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
at the Salv ation Army, T h ursday ,
June 2. at 7::\0 p.m . He w ill lead the
YOUR
m eeting and spm k and shP wlUplay
HEADQUARTERS
the plano.
The roupiP arP leaving theis ar ea
FOR
soon to Pnlcr Nazarr ne Bible
Collegl' In Colorado Sp lrln gs, Colo .
WESTERN WEAR
The public Is Inv ited to aii Pnd.

BLAZE DESTROYS BARN - P oint Pleasant stop It from spreading to a nearby propane gas tank
and unoccupied house and trailer . F,'lremen !ought the
firemen were at the scene of a lire that destroyed a
bam off W.Va. 2 at Gallipolis FelTY wJtD 12: 00 a.m .. blaze with water from anearby creek and Stauffer
Chemical Co. plant. The bam w as owned by J ack
today. The lire w as reported at 9 p.m . Thursday and

MEN'S

Poly-cotton and Lycra trunks. Terry cover-ups.
Sizes 6 months to Size 7.

REG. $5.00 TRUNKS ....... ....... ...... SALE
REG. $8.00 TRUNKS ....... ....... ...... SALE
REG. $10.00 TRUNKS ................ .. SALE
REG. $12.00 TRUNKS .. .......... ...... SALE

Sentinel stall

SWIM
TRUNKS

~ 42 .

B ull' hf'r Sows .17 -:t9.

cho8en

BOYS'

$15.99
REG $i OOO TO $t3800
$20.79
.
. .
.. .
$27.19. SALE . $]99To SJ()39
$35.19 PRICED

2 Sec t iont. , 2 Pag es
20 Ce nh
A Mv lti m ed io In c. Ne w,pap e r

3, 1983

By KATIE CROW

One and two piece Spandex suits in
solids, stripes and prints
Preteen Sizes6/3 tD 14111
Junior Sizes 5 tD 15

and extra sizes in one and
piece swim suits. Prints and
colors.

8'2 !-l) .
11a by C;Ji vr'S :;()-IX!.
Spr inger Callie 278-4((1.
f'ow s 'and Ca lvf'S C o mbi n a t i o n

SWIM
WEAR

MWEAR
SALE

'· -

2'iJ to .i KJ lhs . 6.'H1.50; .'J ll t o 4lll l~. 62-71; tOO
to ::00 IDs . fiO-fiB ; :'OJ to tnl lbs . f.0-65 .50: 00') to
7CXJ lbs . 57·f),1.:i): 7fXJ to FOO lbs . 55-61: f({) a nd

Saturda:y, May 'til , lm\:1

JUNIOR

LADIES'

June

Syracuse council
may ban trailers

Men's $8.95 SWim Trunks ..... $7.15
Men's $9.95 SWim Trunks .. .. . $7.95
Men's $10.95 SWim Trunks :.. $8.75
Men's $11.95 Swim Trunks .. . $9.55
Men's $12.95 Swim Trunks .. $10.35

SALE PRICED

.. .. I would like to attend the evening lecture.
.... I wou ld like to schedule a site v isit to my pr oper ty and have attached
a sy nopsis.

•

e

SWIM
TRUNKS

One

..Zip .... .. ·

Street Addr ess .......... .. .......... .. .. .... ...... ... .. .. . Village ...

_MEN'S

SWIMWEAR
SALE

Organization i ll applicable) .... .. ...... ................................... .... .... .

Uhlo \ ' alh!}' IJ vt!'Sto•·k (.:(),

County Court

Weekly sermonette
Page 7

Name .... ............. .. ......... ............. .............. ............. ....... ....... .. .. ..

·· ·· ···· · ··· ·· ···· · ·

~-

••

,

Columbia wanted to defer the full
Increase because It antlclpa tes the
cost of gas from lts plpellnesuppller ,
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
wi ll decrease significantly by fall.
That would trigger a rollback , Sept .
1, of at least part of the 51-&lt;;ent
Increase now being granted.
" There Is no benefit to the
custom er In lncreaslng r ates now ...
only to reduce rates later ," Columbia Gas otflclals said.
. PUCO members, with onlY Com·
mlsskmer Wlll1am Brooks dl.ssent-.
lng, approved the 51-&lt;:ent Increase,
howeYer, to ensure that customer

,·

prices reflect current gas costs
rather than anticipated costs.
PUCO spokesman Stuart Vosler
said the m ajortty also feared t hat
deferring price Increases would set
a precedent for fu ture deferral of
prtce reducttoru;.
.
Donn Rooks, spokesman for
Columbia, said the actiOn m eans a
$5.37-a- mOI)th Increase for budget
plan customerS with aver age
monthly w;age of U ,(Jl) cubic teet.
The Impact this summer wU1 be
less for thole customers not on the
budget plan since little gas Is used

JK.\D8 TRIP tJP1UVER -

'l'be Delta Queen

here docked In Oalllpollll made one of Ita
-.-1 trtp. .., the Oblo River enroute to i'lttaburp

·~~~~own

durlna thla--. he said.

I

•

,

Tllunday. 'l'be . , _rer llhlp p&amp;Med by Pomeroy

111'01!1111 6: 00 p.m . followmg a
Oalllpolh

'

.

fln~hour layover In

•

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