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                  <text>Tennis tournament
winners chosen ...

WINTHROP
WHAT TIME
15 IT,
ONDY:?

ASOLJT A
QUARI E:"t&lt;
TO 51X./FJ.""

I MEAN.

' Voi.32,No .61
Cop righted 1983

1972.

MU5THAVC:
STOPPED...

5
~

"

~

~

. '•

·,

Property transfers

I

at

ent'ine
1 Section, 10 Pag..
20 Cents
14. Multimedia Inc. New•PPP•r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 11, 1983

·J obless health ·benefits
major· Celeste concern

'IT6AY6

MY WATCH

\

PageS

e
ITS· EXACTLY
13 MINUTE6
TO 61X.

,.._.,

Pagl'6

Page4 · ·

EXACTL-Y. ··

\

Fishing derby
winners announced

"'::&gt;
!1

"
~

"

~

Ed Sullivan

Priscilla's Pop
COME

WHAT C::0 l,QU

WHAT PO I.,OU
MEAN \.r.OU t;ON'T
!='EEL LlKE PLAYING?

SWIMMING
WITH US.
JENNY 1-U

MEAN lrOU~VE
- ALREADY P
0
ONE ?ET? THA: 5;
ALL~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste
says congressional legislation to set up a program to
provide health Insurance for the unemployed Is of
great concern to Ohio.
'
One of the top lterqs In the U.S. HOUf! this week Is a
$3.8 bjlllon plan setting up a three-year program to be
run by the states. It Is sponsored by U.S. Rep. Henry
A. Waxman, D-Callf.
The U.S. Senate Finance Committee is to begin
testimony on ltsown,lessexpenslveverslim of the bill.
• Aides to U.S. Sen. Howard Met:zenbaum, D.Ohlo,
says the Senate version is Ukely to resemble a $1.8
bi!Uon plan that passed the Senate Labor and Human .
Resources Committee with Metzenbaum's support.
"As long as unemployment stays up there, I think
there will be a great deal of Interest in this bill," said a
Metzenbaum aide. ·
The Bureau of Labor Statistics set Ohio's June
unemployment rate at 12.8 percent. The Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services says 91,00&gt; Ohioans
exhausted their unemployment benefits In June.
Celeste says passage of the bW Is a top priority.
Celeste aides say the House committee-approved
plan meets the governor's approval. although Celeste
is not pk:ased with a compromise that ellrnlnated

guarantees that everyone qualifying for asslslance
would be covered. .
Gary FaDe, an aide on the governor's Washington
stat!.·said a possible concern Is that the state may not
be able to come up with a 5 percent matching money
required under the Waxman bW.
-·
That won 't be known untu the program Is In place
and unemployed Ohioans begin applying for money,
be said.
,Given the bipartisan support, about the only factor
that appears strong enough to deraU the legislation is
Reagan administration opposition to passing such an
expensive biU without any extrra lax revenue.
Budget DireCtor David Stockman IJ.as said the
White House wUI oppose the plan unless Olngress
finances lt .
Last month, the tax·writlng House Ways and
Committee rejected by voice vote an amendment by
U.S. Rep. WWlam Gradlson, Jr .• R·Cinclnnatl. that
would have lmpqsed new taxes on employer-provided
·
health coverage.
Gradlson's plan would have taxed health premiums
higher than $175 a month for famutes, or $70 a month
for Individuals. That would affect about 19 percent of
working Americans covered by employment-based ·
~
health plans.
.

·2 0 die on Ohio roads
By'lbe ABMiclaled ~
Three muhjple-f~tallty accidents

YO.J'RE OJITTING?
YOJ'VE ONL..Y
PLAYEI/ TWO

oM1.=-s:.'

'-rOll CXXJLO ~ SUMMER RJN,
BUT N05T Cl=' THEM ARE g()RJNG,
E!ORINt=J, 60RIN&amp; .'

NOTHING

PERSONAL"·
I JUST [7()N 'T
FEEL "ON''
TODAY.

SUNDAY

MT. GILEAD- John L. Hale, 51;
Joyce F. Hale, 33, and Naomi M.
Mahoney, 61, all of Mansfield, when
a truck and two·carscoUidedon I·71
In Morrow County.
LEBANON - Michael W. Bow·
man, 14, oi Lebanon, In a ·twomotorcycle collision on a Warren
County road.
DAYTON- VlrgllL. Penix, 57, of
Dayton, when his truckcoUided with
two cars on a Montgomery County

SATURDAY

ASliTABULA- Ignacio S. Pagan,
20, of Geneva, In a one-car accident

on Ohio 5341n Ashtabula County.
COSHocrON - Michael A.
Strickland; 24, or Newcomerstown,
andLWlanD. Huff..23,ofFresno, Ina
two-vehicle accident on U.S. 36 In
Coshocton County.
KEN'ION - Randall J. Clay, 26,
of McGuffey. In a car·motorcycle
accident on a Hardin County road.
TOLEDO - Thomas Rowe, 18,
from Toledo, In a car-bicycle
accident on a city street In Lucas
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT

WARREN- Ruby T. Holes, Tl, of
Niles, In a two-vehicle accident on
OhloJ931n Trumbull County.
WEST UNION -Kelly R. Collins.
18, of Manchester, and Lester D.
Clltford, 37, of Lynx, In a one-car
accident on Ohio 136 In Adams
County.
LANCASTER - Scott McGlln·
cey, 15, of Bexley, In a one-vehicle
accident on a Falrfleld.County road.

·six soliders die in helicopter crash

PRINTED IN CANADA

SPEEDWALKER PRIVATE EYE
SALtY, 1111.5 C!ISE 1.5 &amp;E'!TIHG
111717£!( 'N A TAP Pllf/CB?'S
Bt/NIONS .'!

boosted Ohio's weekend traf!lc
death toll to 20, the Highway Patrol
said. The three aCCidents accounted
for seven of the fatalltles.
Other weekend victims Included
four motorcyclists and two bicycle
riders.
The patrol counted fatalities !rom
6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead:

road.
MAR!ETI'A- John G. Farmer,
25. of Beverly, when his motorcycle
crashed off a Washington County
road.
WEST JEFFERSON - Michael
E. Wheeler, 24, of London, In a
one-car accident In Madison
Olunty.
ASliTABULA- Harold P. Nair
koneczny, 31, of ·Warren, In a
one-vehicle accident on Ohio 45 In
Ashtabula County.
AKRON - Steven Merrill, 22,
Akron, Ina motorcycle accident on a
county road In Summit County.
MASSll.LON- Matthew Norris,
16, from Masslllon, In a·car-bicycle
accident on a county road In Stark
County.
DAYTON - Roger Glauser, 69,
from Union, In a one-car accident on
I-70 In Montgomery County.

·----~--~--~~

I WANT 'IOtJTd KUN !XJWN70Tll£
LIB!t'IIRY IINP TIIKE A GANPER AT
TilE OL!J l¥1/LY TrAGS f'OK Tile 1/(!T
mtm/S OF '52 .. .

Cris Hammond
YOti'RE tOOKlN'rD!f A TALE

EX- Pf/G NAHGP BYKENN, GtJT 1/ll'fSEiF Kr/!JBEP 01/T8'1 IIIJ !fAIN FHII.I.
MIO WAS A f'AN DIINCEK miN ATOlP
'"IIAKPif)NLOVIE'.5'' ON
711£ WATtlfl'fifJNr.

TilE F'RIIIt Gt!T711£ 1/0T $EIIT AT

·a:• BUT 11£/fE'J .Tf.IE SNAG -

TilEY 11/1/) A KIP, .5£E. II CIKL.

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP)
- A U.S. An11y cargo helicopter
with six soldlen; aboard crashed on
a small Island In Lake Michigan,
and all stx crewmen were belteved
killed, military spokesmen said ·
today.
.
''Indications at this time are that
there are oo survivors. We're In the
process of oo~ the next of kin,"
said Maj. BID Mulvey, public alfalrs
omcerfortheAnny'alOlJIAlltome

Dtvtslon at Fort Campbell, Ky.,

tiona I training," Yeoman . Bob
where the helicopter was stationed. Seekins said from the Coast Guard
Identllles of the soldiers and their Air Statton u Traverse City.
U.S. Coast Guard, Army and
hometowns were not lrnn;ledlately·
released, Mulvey said In a telephone Leelanau County rescue teams
lnteJVtew.
reached the crash site early today,
The CH-47 Chin!Jok helicopter Seekins said. An Investigation team
crashed at 11: 57 p.m. Sunday on from the U.S. Army Safety Center at
South Fox Island, about 45 mlles Fort Rucker, Ala., was Investigatnorth of Traverse City, Mulvey saki. Ing the cause of the accident, he
•
The aCCident occurred during added.
"rwllne over-water

DANGEROUS SP111'-As a result of the Ohio
Depaliment of Wghwaya wldealng SR lz.t In the
viUage of SyracW!e, It appears that a hazardous
situation exists. In the upper ead ol Syracll!lll, just
· abovethemtrancei&lt;ISnowballCemetery,theroadhas
been widened and a driveway poured. At the md ollhe

driveway there l~ a dJ:'op off and just beyond a steep
embanlanent. II could prove to very dangerous for
motorists not aware oftbesltuatlon. Since the workluui
been compleled one accident has alreadry occurred

and a driver fll.lured.

Trumka feels exported funds
could provide jobs at home
'

'

RACINE, W.Va. (AP) -Money
that U.S. corporations Invest over·
seas could best be used to provide
jobs at hotpe, says United Mine
Workers 'President Richard

Trumka.
Speaking at a "Miners For Jobs"
rally at Coal River Park In the Boone
County community of Racine,
Trumka said the lndepem)enl union
wUI press Congress to Impose
barriers against exportation of
American technology and the In-.
vestment of U.S. capital abroad.
Trumka spoke to some 200 miner
and their families who gathered at
the SUnday rally, which was
organized 'by UMW officials to
Improve morale In an Industry
plagued by high unemployment. .
The UMW wants Congress to
consider a legislative program •
Intended to keep American money
and technology at borne, Trumka
said. The union has long held that
unfair competition from foreign
nations has hurt U.S.Industcy.
Trumka also told the group that
the UMW 1¥Ul make no concessions
ill upcoming contract talks. The
union's contract with the Bltuml·
nous Coal Operators Association
expires In September 1984, and
Trumka said he expects negotla·
lions to begin In January.
"I've said It and I'll say It again,
the mine workers In the next round

of negotiations will take no back·
ward step," he said.

' for
AFRICA ROAD RECLAMATION PROJECT- Groundbrealdng
lheAJrlcaRoadReclamatlonProjectwillbebefd'11mnday,atlla.m.,at
the project slle In Cbellhlre Township. According to the Ohio Department
of Naturallle8ource~, the project Is bnportant In lenns of a oontlnulng
effort to reclaim strip mined lands. As part of the project, a section ofSR
1154, subject to mine-related Doodlng, will be restored. In addition,
Inadequately reclaimed fores!A!d land will be smoothed out, regraded
and a fertile l'e!OIIIng malerlal applied. Completion of the 11.4 miDlon
project Is !ICheduled for June 1984.

.
Musical sounds will fill arr
at annual Dulcimer Festival

II TtJtJGII tiTTt.E TYKE Wf.l() WI/S
A CtJcST ()f' me STilT!'
'TIL Sill' TOIJnT C:W
711(' l.fll'f&gt;r.

.511!' PtJtLEP TJClWN '7"1~r'\
CIIRTAI!Y', SC£, ANP I
WIINT ro PIN II Tlllt.

licK/ corm·'

'!f&amp; dETTTIIS STRAIGHT.

f'I'ET 1/VKTANP YOU
1lJ (;(} 77J lllf'

ANO 7l1Kf liMO$£?

ti/Jifllf(Y. ..

....

WI h 1 will I W . . . . •
18,, prlle n.IDI
••• 1 lPl' n .S 11111 clll mw' ' .,. led bJ ..,.
lllrabaelel. a •" JNDr lmnrll duldmel' tJiaJer.

The foothills of Appalachia wlll
come alive with magical sounds
during the sixth annual Dulcimer
Fesltval on Saturday and Sunday,
July 23 and 24, at the Bob Evans
Farm near Rio Grande.
The dplclmer· Is a historical
tnslliunent brought to the Appal·
achian mountains by early Scandln·
avian and German settlers. The
stringed Instrument has become a
significant part oftoday's mountain
. folk mutlc.
Alo111 with open concerts !rom 9
a.m. untO noon each day, and
workshops throughout the day,
competition remains ~ im~rtant
part of the Bob Evans Dulcimer
Festival.
'I:radltlonal and pfOII'eUtve dul·
elmer music will be judgal In
'!"Pf'''ale categories Including ao1o

Instrumentals, courting dulcimers, noon of the festival.
hammered dulctmers, and vocals
Fired shots of the black powder
with dulcimers. Contf.'stants must muzzle loading rifles will echo over
register between 9 a.m. and noon the Bob Evans Farm during the
each day 'of the competition. There Primitive Weapons Rendezvous,
Is no registration fee. Each per· July ll and 31. The weekend will be
former will be requtri!d to play full of competitive events lrom 9
three songs of their choice In their · a.m. to 5 p.m. each day, featuring
.
event.
hunting and trapping techniques
The Grand Championship Olm· used when the Ohio Valley was ·
petition will allow first place
considered Indian terrttory. Some
winners from each 1010 event to
events featured Include tomahawk
compete against one another for a
and knife throwing, ntnt and steel
$100 cash prize. A Special Recognt·
fire making and the rifle shoot.
Uon Award will be given to the best
Coonskin caps a_nd other prlml·
dulcimer playing famUy .
tlve hurittng attire depleting the
Lois Hornbostel will be the
period between 1770·ls:&lt;ll are refeatured guest 'at this year's quired for the participants In tbe
Dulcimer Festival. Her Interest In contests. Prtrnltlve camping Is also
International folk music wUI be available throughout the weekenll,.
demonstrated tn workshops open to
Admission and parking are tree
everyollf! each morning and alter· for both events.

�l'omero&lt;f Middleport, Ohio

'

Cotnntenta•·y
~lEIGS-"..,\ SOS

Will &amp; Miss Holbrook______J_am_es_J.-'--Kil_pa_tric_k
r

SCRABBLE, Va. - A couple d
weeks ago my wife ran across the
book that had been her first primer
in the pubUcscboolsofWilson, N.C_,
in · 192ft The book was "The
Hiawatha ~r," wrl«en by
Florence Halbrook, principal of
Forestville School in Chicago, and
}Xlbllshed by Houghton-Mifflin in

AREA

~i ~.._. . . ,..,...,.,.c:l.o=.
~v

ROBERT L . WI:&gt;;GETI
Puhll .. tw-r

PAT \\'HJTEHE.~D

-\ ~~i .. l.t.nt

1898.

BOB HOEFLICH

f'uhti.J! Pr fohtrolk&gt;r

I wrote a rolumn about this tough
and demanding little book, contrasting It with the sappy stllff that

Gt"Mral Maucer

DALE ROTHGEB ..JR .

was tarred upon our own cllildren in
the 1900s. and I remarked that Miss
Holbrook must have been a superlative teacher. The ·c olumn produced
a gratl!ylng mail. including two
letters that penni! me to document
that surmlse.
One Jetter ·romes from Hugh A.
Fogarty of Omaha, Neb., whose
father-in·law. William T. Cotter.
attended the Forestville School in
the 189()s_ The Cotter family
cherished a letter that came one

1-

day to WIIUam's father:
"You son WIUle Is a source of
!llll&lt;lel¥ and annoyance to his
teachers, and I write now to you
hoping that your influence may be
su111clent to bring· him to understand how necessary ol'der, study
and obedience are in school and in
We.
"Unless he improves in his
classroom, Mr. Waggener w1ll not
retain blm as sweeper and be
cannot be retained as one of our

.'\"ev. s Editor

A

.\IE~ffiER uf

'T1w A.OfiOti:ued P~ Inland Dail}
Publi.Wrs :\...;;."iidation.

~

Woorialion iUIII thr

pupils unless he Is obedient. Neither
can he do the wort&lt; of !be grade
withoUt study.
"I trust that you wlll consider this
matter of great Importance, for
when a boy Is in the elgbth grade
and of his age he should have
self·respecl and do right without
ronstant attmtion. Very truly,
Florence M. Holbrook, Prln."
Wlllle shaped up, Fogarty recalls. He kept his atter-schooljobas
janitor and grew up to become a
branch mariager for !be a,.ne Co.
The family kept in touch with Miss
Holbrook to the time of her death In

1932.

;\meril"all -'""''SP:.~Pt'f

A serond letter comeo from Alan
D. Whitney of Winnetka, Ill., who
was graduated from Forestvtlle In
19()6_ He recalls Miss Holbrook as a
small woman, Inclined to be a bit
stout, "but she had fire In ber eyes
and could wilt the worst boy With
her glare and stare."
"Florence Holbrook was born
about 1lltiO. so she was quite young
In 11l89 when the school was built .
She was Its Orst prlnclpal and
remained on the job until a few
years before she died. I learned
more than at htgh school later, and I
recall more of what I learried at
r'Orestville than anywhere else."
The school was situated on a
street of that name that runs from .
Washington Park north to 47th ,
Street. Across the park to the south :
and east Is the campus of the
University of Chicago. In that
scholarly setting, academic excel·
Ience was expected. By the time he ·
·finished the elg\Jth grade, Whitney
recalls, he had racked up a year d
algebra, two years of Latin and fOUl'
years of German_

LE'T'l"ERS OF' OPI,lO~ are .,.ek'Onlt!d. They !ihould bt&gt; ~than- •·ord.ol1onl.
\U k!tk"no art&gt; ~bjt&gt;ct w ~and mus:~ be sipecl ~ilh name, w;1c1reM aad kk: •
nwnhrr. So ~ letkrs ¥ttU bt- pabtished. 1..et1ns should be in tood ~&amp;'JR. lld*ei-

"'"K Hiues. nat ~teo .

Defense spending:
atmnunition fuels
•
• •
growmg opposition
•

Halfway through Ronald Reagan's presidency, his $L6 tlillion plan to
" rearm America" has run into increasing fire from critics who say much
of tht money may be wasted becau.se of poor rnanagemmt in the
Pentagon.
But while earlier criticism tended to come from oppooentsofthedefmse
build-up, recent warnings have rome from different quarters, such as the
General Accounting Office, the Congressional Budget Office, and a panel of
businessmen appointed by the White House to study ways to make
government spending more efficimL
The studies have given more ammunition to Defense [)epartml3tt critics
as the Senate prepares to debate a record Pentagon authorization bill. The
Hou.se has been debating a similar measure on-and-off for several weeks.
'There's no question that they haven't been able to do everything they've
promised in terms of reform, .. Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wls., a frequent critic of
the Defense Department, said recently.
Defenders of Reagan's build-up have reactoo angrily to charges they are
mismanaging tbe record Pentagon budgets.
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger has criticized the press for
focusing on cost overruns and ignoring money he says Is being saved by a
series of management refoiTJl.S.
And Paul Thayer, deputy secretary of defense, has also charged that
"critics of the defense budget can no longer get away with arguing that we
need less defense . " now we are hearing a new argument which Is more
popular anti more seductive ... the argument that we can get more for
less.' '
But Thayer himself has criticized the Pentagon's buying practices. In a
recent speech to defense contractors, he said poor work adds 10 percent to
:ll percent to the cost of new weapons system.
Pentagon critlcs have been given a wide range of ammunition In recent
weeks:
-A White House panel of business executives said the Pentagon could
save at least m b1llion a year through better management.
The Pentagon reacted quickly. Even as the report was being released,
Weinberger said it was "cruelly unfair" to projec.t such large savings.
-Tile General Accounting Office, the congressional watchdog agency,
reported iast month that the Pentagon buys many new weapons beloll'lt
knows If they w1ll work. The weapons aren't properly tested, the GAO said.
Thayer responded by saying, "the U.S. is producing the best equipment
in the world. Tile testing procedures are much better than they are in any
other part of the Free World and froiJI what I know, any phase of the
Russian testing complex with the possible _exception of ICBMs. ''
-Tile GAO, in a separate study, also said that savings lrom multJyear
procurement contracts are much smaller than the Pentagon said they
would be.
-Tile Congressional Budget Office said the Army is buying slx major
new weapons without even being able to accurately forecast how much lt
will cost to run the new hardw;rre.
The COO study warned of a problem that critics of the Reagan buDd-up
have been pointing to for two years- the largedefensebudgetsthatwlllbe
required late in this decade to make final payments on the &lt;:lalals of new
weapons systems that are being started now. along with increased costs for
manpower to run the weapons.
"There's no question we'rogoing to hit some laqie numbers a few years
from now," Aspin said. "We're making the down payments oow and
putting a lot of the rest of the bills off to the future."
·
The recent critical studies have renewed interest in a study by Franklin
-~inney, a Pentagon analyst who reviewed 30 years of Pentagon
purchising and concluded that cost overruns are virtually bunt Into the
gystem because of duplication, and rivalries between services.
Weinberger and other tap Pentagon officials attacked Spinney's analysis
as "historical" and argued that it didn't take into account reforms started
by the Reagan administration.
But, Aspin noted, "what we're seeing now in these reports Is just the.sort
of thing that Spinney was talking about. "

Berry's World

,.FIRE!.'"

Private SeCtOr initiative_____J_ac_k_And_er_so_n
library Wl)Uld rost about $150,00J a
year to operate- insteadofthe$15
milllon·plus apiece the seven existIng libraries cost.
Oddly enough, supporters of the
legislation also rounted on a total of
only 15 presidential libraries over a
100-year period. This could have
worked out If · every president
se!Ved two full tenns, but the only
one to have achieved that distinction since the law was enacted was
the 1955 incumbent Dwight
Eisenhower.
One proposal that would cut down
on the expense to the public would
authorize the government landlord
- GSA - to solicit funds from
private donors to rover maintenance and salary costs. This could
be accompllshed by setting up
endowments for the individual
libraries. While the wealthy donors
would be able to write oH their gUts

.W ASHINGTON - President
Reagan Is a finn believer in
''private sector inlttattve"; the
generostr_y· of wealthy Americans
theoretically w1ll ease the taxpay·
ers' burden for needed programs.
But Reagan's man at the General
Services Administration, Administrator Gerald Carmen, doesn't
think private inlttative should start
with his boss.
The point at Issue Is the ballooning cost of maintaining the sevm
presldentW libraries- Though the
money to bulld the Hbrartes was
raised by private donations. (tax
deductible.), the bill to the taxpayers for upkeep and stat! salaries
now comes to almost $15 million a
year.
'nits ts far more than Congress
mvtSioned when It passed the
Presidential Ubrartes Act In 1955.
Proponents estimated that each

as tax deductions, lt wouldstlllsave
the taxpayers at least $1 mtlllon per
year.
But Carmen is reluctant to go this
route - at least not If tbe proposal
would apply to Reagan. In an
internal study of the plan, the GSA .
argues that endowments to help
pay for operating costs of the
libraries should not apply to past or
present presidents.
·
"Any endowment requirement
should be applied to Presidents
taking office
the Orst time on or
after January 20, 1985," the study
states. It explains that "a change of
rules in the midst of a , difficult
planning process" would not be

tor

"appropriate."
Congressional sources told my
a&amp;SOCiate Donald Goldberg, however, that they suspect Carmen just
doesn't want to ask Reagan's
friends to chip In for his library.

What price ethics?·
NEW YORK (NEAl- President
Reagan was perfectly right, of
rou~. 'fben, at his press conference, he . responded to Godfrey
Sperling's question about the Car·
ter campaign documents ("Do you
see this merely as a highly political
effort bY the Dermcrats?") by
arching his eyebrows and saying in
mock surprtse, "Godfrey, how
could you think there Is anything
political In this?" But Mr. Reagan Is
much too smart a polltlcian himself
to think tllat the whole issue w1ll go
away on that account.
It Is, In fact, a purelY poUtical
attempt - though not so much by
the Democrats as by their faithful
allies In the liberal media - to
capture some moral high ground
from which to pour bolllng oil all
over the Reagall forces. And, as
Sam Donaldson's questions to the
pesldent make clear, they are not
going to be }Xlt df by his a«empt to
focus attention on the queslion of
teclurlcal Iegall(y ("I want the
Justice Department to · find out 1f
anybody did anything that broke
the law"). Suppose whatever happened was not technically illegal
but was nonetheless arguably

Reluctance to apply a rules
change to one's own administration
Is nothing new, of course_ Presldenl
Carter's people fought like tigers to
exempt tbetr boss from the Presidential Records Act of 1978, which
made official presidential papers
public property. They lost that
fight, as weD as the election.
·
In an apparent attempt to delay
the endowment proposal, Carmen admits he has the authority but .
wants a law passed that would force
blm to do it. But II Congress has to .
draft, debate and mact authorization legislation, Reagan might
already be out of ofllce before the
lengthy process Is rompleted.
Footnote: GSA officials deny that
Carmen ts trying to exempt Reagail
from the endowment proposal. they
say he hasn't taken a position on the
plan yet.

William A. Rusher .

do, Mr. Reagan may well have to
We w1ll quite probably find out · Mr. Reagan needn't answer that ·
ronslgn at least one of his hlghsooner or later, iherefore, just who question until we know the precise ;
ranldng aides to the names to save
was the "disgruntled aide" In the dimensions of the misfeasance (If :
himself from serious damage.
Carter White House wbo passed the any) that was Involved; and he can
We are In, then, for a series of
stu!! along to the Reagan cam- adopt at that point any position that
televised hearings - the longer and
paign. and - as Bill Saflre has seems comfortably congruent with ;
more dramatic the better, from tbe
pointed out - the piquant posstbll- lhe mood of public opinion at the
standpoint of the Democrats and
lty that It was a Kennedy loyalist time. Maybe It will be enough to
the media - in which Bill Casey
may account for Tip O'NeUI's "admonish" or , "reprimand"
(who was Reagan's campaign
declared reluctance to look Into the whoever proved responsible, on the
manager) , as well as Baker,
matter very aggressively.
other.fland, maybe nothing ·short~ ;
Gergen, Stockman and perhaps ·
But the media wlll try to keep the a publlc sacking will do. Perhaps,
others are dragged up Capitol Hill
kllegszeroedlnontheReaganstaff. as The. New Yorlt Timeo has
and grilled by House members
Unfortunately for the media, it Isn't suggested, an apology to Mr. Carter
under oath about what they knew
illegal to accept volunteered mate- would be a handsome gesture. But
and when they knew lt. At the
rial, no matter how ronftdentlallt thosewhocareforthepreservation '•
moment, Casey's meroory, or may be, provided It Isn't officially of the president's own personal , .
rather lack o!lt, Is acting asasorto! classified; and that Is probably reputation - not to mention hts· ·
ftrebrake against revelations con- what happened here. But as that re-election will agree that
cerning the original source (or great moralist Sam Donaldson said whatever Is lleCes$8ry to assure ··
sources) of the documents, but it Is to Mr. Reagan: "What do you think these must be done,- and that the ,
unllkely that he can maintain this ,about the ethlcs? Your press departure of Dave Gell!l!n or even •
posture lndeftnltely, or that Presi- spokesman has said that this Is James Baker would be a smaJ1
dent Reagan can save him 1f he nothing new In politics. Would you price to pay.
condone this?"
does.

~;ltl flltl;r'f'«&lt;lrrllm~·f$'.,•..._
&gt;tE~

"unethical?"
It would take a pretty strong

"I'd like to get my hands qn the clown who put
out the story thai Comrade Andropov is really a
good of' boy. "

.....•

stomach towatchoneormoreofthe
president's top aides walk the plank
at the behest or virtuous Uberals in
the media for doing precisely What
uiose selfsame )ournallsts do ~ery
day: i.e., accept and use C()nfldenttal information !rom anonymous
sources in the pemment. U that's
so all·flred "unelhlcal," how come
political . reporters are forever
hanging PUlltter Prizes all over
each other tor doing It?
But Ufe Is not fair, as President
Kennedy oiJIEnoed, and we would
be well advlaed to lii!Ep our eye m
1211! ball U tltls drama unfolda, It
doesll't matter In the sJ18btest
wbether they were actually USEd;
all that matterl Ia how the Reagan
camp ~ them, and whether tbe
ctrcumstances C8D be said to raise
a seJtoua Issue of propriety (not
necessarily Just "lepltty"). If they

•

•

'

----·-----~-- ---r-------------r--

lloulton Altroe. Daryl Strawberry, umpire Dick
ste11o aad
George Bjorkman crowd the plate.
(AP I •·erphoto).

· MEl'S' GILES SCORES - New York Mels'
Botan Giles 8COred !rom second base m Junior Oritz
hit to rlpt field In tbe Sunday game 111alnsl tbe

catcher

Brock, Strawberry provide
winning hits; Phils top-Reds
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Wrler
It hasn't been the easiest of times

breaking run and Marty Bystrom
and two relievers combined on a
seven·hltter to lead Philadelphia
for Greg Brock or Darryl Straw· over Cincinnati.
berry, a couple of heralded rookies_
Bystrom, 34, developed a bUster
But Sunday, they did some good on a finger of his pitching hand,
for themselves, and their teams.
forcing blm to leave the game after
Both In slumps, they got the
fiveinnings.Hescatteredthreehits
proverbial monkey off their backs · 'a nd struck out seven for Iiis season
with game-winning hits- Brock's high. Ron Reed and AI Holland
three RBI leading Los Angeles over preserVed tbe shutout, with the
Pittsburgh 10.3 and Strawberry's latter posting his seventh save.
two-run horner powering New York
over Houston 7-5.
The Phillles scored their first run
Strawberry, meanwhile, was only
in the second inning on Dlaz's RBI
1-for·21 and batting .200 at game
single, then added a run in the ninth
time before providing the Mets with
off Marlo Soto, ~8. on a bases-loaded
walk to Tony Perez.
their winning runs in thE: elgbth.
Elsewhere in the National
League, Montrelll beat Atlanta 7-6,
CardlOaJs 4, Padres 2
Philadelphia stopped Cinclnnati2.0,
Glenn Brurrimer cappeq a fourSt. Louts turned hack San Dlego4-2 run, ninth-Inning rally with a
and San Francisco took a pair from
two-run double as St. Louis carne
Ollcago,l2-8and4-2.
from behind to beat San Diego.
In New York, Strawberr:Y came
Mark Thurmond and reliever
through with hts game-winning
Luis DeLeon had shut down the
homer atterHuble Brooks led off the
Cardinals on four hits until Steve
eighth with a single.
Braun tripled with one out In the
Expos 7, Braves 6
ninth. George Hendrick then socked
Tim Raines scored from third an RBI single, his third hlt of the
base on AI Oliver's forceout
,game, and Gary Lucas, 4-5, relleved
grounder in the eighth Inning, lifting
DeLeon.
Montreal over Atlanla. Raines led
off. tbe eighth with a trtple of!
Lucas surrendered a single to
reliever Donnie Moore, 2-1, and
scored one out later when Oliver Andy VanSlyke, and when Tommy
beat out a potential double-play Herr followed with a single to left
Hendrlck scored the (yingrun when
grounder to the mound.
Padre catcher Terry Kennedy
The Braves rallied from a 6-3 dropped Alan Wlgglns' throw home.
deficit to tie the game in the eighth on
Brummer foilowed , with his
Bob Homer's sacrifice fly.
two-run double that gave the victory
Pblllles 2, Relh 0
toDaveVonOhlm,2-2, thesecondof
Bo Dlaz singled
horne
the
tiethree
Cardinal pitchers.
.,
.

Giants IH, Cubs 8-2
Joel Youngblood drove home the
wtnningrunintheelghthinningwith
his tlttrd hit as San Francisco came
!rom behind to win a slugfest with
Chicago in the first game of their
doubleheader.

PONTIAC. Mich. (AP) - Jtm
Stanley Isn't certain how the
Oakland Invaders became the
barometer for his Michigan Panthers, and he's not complaining. After
the Invaders defeated the Panthers
in the third week of tilt! inaugural
United States Football League
season, Stanley felt the Panthers
were fiilally ready to make a move.
He was right.
The' Panthers went on to win the
Central Division with a 12-6 record
and now, foilowing their 37-21
playoff victory over the Invaders
Suilday, they're on their way to
Denver to meet the Philadelphia
Stars next SUJ1(!ay in the USFL' s
first championship.
"This is a tribute to a group of
young
' men who would not say no,"
Stanley said. "The turning point of
the season was the third game o! the
year against Oakland when Derek
Holloway scored three
touchdowns."
The playof! victory over Oakland
before a USFL-record crowd of
60,237 was as much a tribute to the
patient and steady hand of Stanley
as ' It was to the solid team the
Michigan organization has
assembled.
Twice, on fourth-down situations,
Stanley elected to pass up the easy
field goal and both times It paid off.
With 11 seconds remaining In the
first half, quarterback Bobby He, bert flipped a 1·yard TD pass to
Anthony Carter and with 10 seconds
remaining In the third quarter, Ken
Lacy raced 18 yards for a
touchdown.
"Doing that on fourth down,
normaily, Is not me," Stanley
admitted. "But, It depends on the
type of game. On the Lacy
touchdown, we needed six points
more than a field goal. We felt we
could move the ball, but so could

from John Williams, a J88.yardtteld
goal from Novo Bojovlc and
. Hebert's flip to Carter in the second
quarter to go off wilh a 17-7lead at .
halftime.
Sut linebacker Davtd Shaw .
picked off an Hebert pass and .
returned it 19 yards for a quick
Oakland touchdown on the third
play of the second hal! to narrow the
lead to 17-14.

they, with their great quarterback,
and w~ had to stop him."
Oakland Coach John·Ralston said
the crowd· noise bothered his team,
but refused to use It as an excuse for
the defeat:
."We were prepared bettet fpr this
game than for any we've played all
year, Ralston said. "Michlgn was a
better foot hall team today.'
The Panthers got a 5-yard TD run

'
'· •

OOPS - Oakhwd's Ted Toroslon (left) coughs up the ball after
being hlt by Michigan's Jolm Arnaud during first quarter action of
Sunday's semi-final game. 1be Invaders recovered the ball and scored
several plays later. ( AP Laserphoto).

r-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~------

The
BANK ONE

business

loan
committee
•
•
•
IS
1n
sess10n.

'

Twins top Indians, 6-4
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Minnesota catcher Ray Smith snaps to
when he hear&amp; the charge that he's a
"good defensive catcher."
'lberigbt-handed 27-year-oldsays
he feels there Is a certain handicap to
being called a defensive player and
that It's a label he doesn't deserVe.
"I knOW I'm not Rod Carew or
Reggie JackSon at bat," says Smith.
"Bull can putthe bat on the ball." .
He proved It by going 2-for-4
Sunday In Minnesota's 64 victory
over the Cleveland Indians.
With the Twins traiUng 3-0, !!mith
started a three-run rally In the third
Inning with a lead-of( single.
In the sixth, the Twins closed ·
another pp to make It 4-4. Smith
poked a single to left to score Ron
Washington from second and gave
the Twins the game-winning run.
Smith's plate performance improved his overall avera~ to .2!rl
with seven runs batted in over 36
games.
Smith's succeSs, an AI Wllllams

victory making him 5-9 and Ron
Davis' 14tli save helped guarantee
the Twins' first two-game winning
streak since June 16. On Saturday,
Minnesota's Tom Brunansky
smacked a tie-breaking, two-run
sll)gle to gtve the Twins a3-2vlc\1Jry.
Also leading the Twins Sunday
was Randy Bush, who hit a solo
homer In the sixth, after singling
homearunaspartofthethlrdinning
rally.
Wllllams left with none out In the
eighth inning and a runner on ftrst
and Davts stepped In to finish the
game. Loser Juan Eichelberger,
3-8, worked six innings.
Trailing 4•3, Bush opened the sixth
with his eighth horner of the season.
With two out, Washington singled,
stole second and scored on Smlth'~
single.
The Twins added an Insurance
run off Jamie Easterly In the elgbth
on singles by Gary Gaetti and Tom
Brunansky and Washlnggton's suicide squeeze bunt.

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OFFICE HOURS: Tuesdly 2:00 j).m. to 5:00 Jl.m.
Sltunlly 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Office located It 271 N. 2nd, Middleport. OH.
(Behind Viii. Phlnnlcy)

BANK ONE .
THE BUSINESS BANK
Member FDIC

Ph. 992-2255 (Middleport office)
\

•

•

Panthers-Stars tangle
in USFLchampionship

Monday, Juhr_ 11, 1913

The Daily Sentinel ·
Ill f o urt StreM
Pon.W"ro,·. Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE I~TE;REST OF THE

.. ;

2-h Daily S.llil.t
Pon....,Y ~1
t, Ohio

Plag1

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-J

·--

__________

-=

If no an•-· caD:
In Point Pleautnt 1·3CM 675-5267

,

'"

II

,I

�Pameroy Middlepol1, Ohio

-

'

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

. Moncl!iy, July 11, 1983

Page-S

'TOPS 1466 meets .

0

Rutians TOPS 1466 met recently
wlth Shorty Wright presiding,
The TOPS pledge was given In
unison by those attending: The
weekly best loser was Wright who
received $1 and a ribbon. Judy
EbUn was runner-up.
June monthly queen Best Loser
was Dixie Sayre who received $3
and a ribbon.
A new contest will get underway
July 13 through Aug. 17.

l'

Five Points
class meets
MEN'S SINGLES 'I1Ie serond annual
Middleport July 4 teools tournament sponsored by the
Middleport Recreation Commissloll has been completed. Ftrst place was woo t&gt;v Shawn Baker or

~llddleport while Jim McEacberD It Poial Pleasant,
right, llnisbed secoad. '111e)' IU'e 0M!wd by Dennis
Saelens, sponsor, ol Adolph's Dairy Valley.

In the Monday night Five Points
Exercise Class, · Mazy Newell lost
the most weight and Beverly Smith
was tile runner-up.
,
In tile Tuesday morning Mason
Oass, Janet Bumgarner reached
her goal and was accepted in the
S1.11J1·N·Trlm Class. Lois Ann Relt·
mire lost the most weight and the
runner-up was Bunny Hoffman.
PerSons interested In joining are
welcome and · may can Jo Ann
Newsome at 992:3382 for more
Information.

.. Ra-ood. left, IIDIIbed aeooitd. l'l'ovldlll&amp; llle
pl=qote'i w~ ~Baker, l'l!pi'O" ottac LOcllei"ZJJ,
..... llerllale Blue, .,._s.

WOMEN'S SINGLES -'l'llldDC llnl place bllbe

WOil'Mit'a ccm&amp;Pd••· of die .,.,. • .i wt TlliiDis

1'oanulmea&amp; W88IOJ Jlealley, ltPL s-eC~uopman

Six-inch putt wins tournament
•

MU.WAUKEE (AP) -'lbemost
tmportant putt In Morris Hatalsky's
life was only a slx-lncbe!", aod It
wasn't l'VI'II the prlmaiy cmcem of
tile 31-year-old goHes-.
Hatalslcy calmly sank the putt on
tile secood extra hole SundaY.
defeating George Cadle tri a
sudden-death playoff In the S'ZiO,OOl
Greater Milwaukee Open golf
tournament.
"'lbe last putt &lt;lim't bother me,"
said Hatalsky, whose S«i,OOJ pri2l&gt;
represented only his second victory
In eight years on the tour. "But this Is
easily my biggest moment 011 tile

trK!r.''
"'The pressure was on tile earlier
boles," be said. "Butl felt conlldent
cunlllgln here. I !elttbatlflcouldbe
In the runnJng on tile last day that I
cou1d win.,.
Hatalslcy shOt a !lnal·round 66, six
unde!" par at the 7,010-yaril Tucka·
~ay Country Dub coune.

•

DOUBLES - Shewn Baker end Mike Sayre ol
• Middleport won flr.il place Ia lbe doubles compellllon
·• at lbe recent Middleport Tennis Toumament. Taking
•• 8eCOIId were atfton
. Browning end Rick Pickens ol

Point Pleesant. lbey are shown with Rbonda Kay,
representing sponsor Dele EDis of EDis end S...
Sohio Service.
'
·

..

•

Cadle, seeldng his Drst tour
victory, shot aclo&amp;lng64andsUJl:l!ll
Into a tlewben Hatalsll;ybogeyedhis
!lnal bole In regulation. Cadle and
Hatalslcy both !lnlshed with 2'15.
13-under par for 72 boles.
Hatalslcy set up his winDing putt
with a dllwnhl1l putt of aboot 25 feet.

He reached the green In three
sbots after his ball had landed in the
right rough on his drive.
Hatalsky said be gained confi·
dence after besalvavged a paron his
ninth hole.
"'lbe next thing I knew, I was
playing the best nine boles I've ever
played," he sald. "Whrn the playoff
came, I didn't try to do anything
dl!lerent than I h&amp;d done on any
boles during the tournament. I just
played my game."
"I gave it my best shOt," Cadle
said. "Morris deserved it."
Hatalsky hit the green aboot 25
feet away with his third shOt on the
527-yard, par-5 hole.
He had a doUble break 011 his putt
corning back, but left the ball about
half a loot away.
Cadle had an eight-loot putt for
par, but rolled it two feet past the
bole and had to settle for a bogey. He
had blrdled five of the last six boles
en I'Oilte to a 64.
ned lor third place, one stroke
behind the leaders, were Skeeter
Heath. Payne S~art and 1983
Memphis Open winner Larry Mize.
Richard ZDkol shot a !lnal-round
~ and was at m, along With Dan
POhl and Mark Calcaveccbla.
Don Pooley, wliohe)!laone-stroke

Scoreboard ...
SeaniP l Ballimn' 2. 10 ~
Oakland l. DPtrolt 1

Majon

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«&lt;

DOOR PRIZE WINNERS -'l'lctured IU'e the 20
winners of lhe door prtz,es glveu away atlbe IIIPJPIUSl

MONDAY

.42!

5
..... a..CIIIcago 4. Son FraDdoco 2

1.5~

~

City 3. New YCC"k '2. t2

Del'rtllt

~ O;M1and

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CUSPS 115-IM)
,\ Dlvl11oa ot Mu.ltlmedla., IDe.

CalUor!U"' lbtml

lhrou~~;h Friday, 111 O:lurl Stre.t, by t~
Ohk&gt; Valley Publlshln~ Company . MultlmE'dla. Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohio 45789, 992·

2156. Second claM postage pald ar Pomeroy, Ohio.
Membfor: Thf. Associated Press, In·
land Dally Press Assoclaton and lbP
American Newspaper PubUshers As·
soclallon, National Advertising Re-presentative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third A venUl", New Y ort, New
York 10017. .

Nf'W York

POSTMASTER: Send .address to The

MIDDLEPORT - The Ama·
teur Garden Club, Middleport,
wlll meet at the hOme of Mrs. C.
E. Blakeslee Wednesday at 8
p.m. Assisting wlll be Mrs.
Harold Lohse. The program wlll
Include the Installation of officers and a tour o! the Blakeslee·
garden.

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Atlan&amp;l tF.akvnr 7-11 al Mont.rN1 lBw'·
r11 !.:11. nu
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,.

MIXED DOUBLES - The learn of John and Joy
Bentley of Syracuse look flr.il place in the mixed
doubles competition of lbe Middleport Tennis

Allde•-

Tournament. Finishing secood were Beclly
and Shawn Baker. '111ey are shown wllh trophy
sponsors, Den and Pat Arnold ,. Den's.

., Los AAIIE'ItS
---..
't.Jfnldnt :HI at su" Dlrfro

Sll. 'lDdl lf'tnetl
tVaiellluMaMI, UU

llllc..O

~11

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:o.

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~~ 5-SI. tnl
. Ol(v 111nM XI :t&amp;dfod

fl'lftltlu1rll

1

1-11

. f'rllldloo

•

;..Cannon faces counterfeit conviction
BATON ROUGE , La . (APl ;. Billy Cannon Sr .. the 1959 He ism an
: Trophy wtnner and Louisiana
: football legend, may .have orches·
• trated a multimillion-dollar coun·
· terfeit!ng scheme because he
: needed , money fast , a federal
~ prl:rsecutor speculates.
: "We believe he arranged for tts
•. production and accepted delivery on
· the lull supply," U.S. Attorney
Stanford 0. Bardwell said Sunday.
Bardwell said be expected to
. arrest others within a lew days,
including the person who printed
more than $5 million Jn bogUs $100
bills that was seized Saturday.
The money was found burled at
two locations, Bardwell said. ·
. Cannon a 46-year-old dentist,
· tried topl~adguiltytocounterfetting
. charges at \US aJTalgnment Saturday evening In U.S. District Court.
"I want to make sure this is wllat
you want to do," said U.S. Distrlct
Judge Frank Polozola, who refused
Cannon's guilty plea and ordered
111m toreturnwithhislawyeronJuly

15.

·; Cannon.aLouisianaStateUniver·
:_ sit)' Ali-Amertcan..pal!back and pro

football's first $100,001 player, was
released on $100,0CO personal recognizance bond.. He could not be
reached for comment on Sunday.
If convicted, as charged, o!
conspiring to possess and deal In

countet1elt money, Cannon could

receive a maximum punistunent of
five years' Imprisonment and a

SlO.COJfine. .
Two co-defendants were held on
$2.5 million bond each in llie West
BatOn Rouge Parish Jail at Port
Allen

"

Bardwell sald Charles Whitfield,
44,~ also known as Oscar Olsen of
Ponce de Leon,
Fla., and Tiinothy
Melancon,
41, of Thibodaux,
appar·
ently were buying the counterfeit
bllls !rom Cannon.
Whitfield and Melancon were
arraigned on one charge each of
coullterfeiting and dealing In coon-

Announce tournament
A men's double · elimination
softball tournament wlll be held
July 16-17 at Kera Fields, Ravens·
wood, Vf. Va. Entry fee is $65 and.
two balls. For further information
call 273-5692 or 273-5l.!n.

terfelt currency, carrying a com·
blned maximum penaityof25years'
imprisonment and a $l0,00l line.
,

Leaders

When you want a vacation.
chances are you deserve it! And you
deserve the money to get you where you're
going -and keep you there awhile -in style. So
ihone us. If you've got an itch to travel, we've got
the scratch! Call today.

aG..,._

AU.ta II ,.,.,
lplala, 2, ll·nl
~H .. Ntow Ytrk, In)
~I'NI M tbdtllft. In)
Odc110 at s.n Diftlo, 1n1
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By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Norris were Rev. Tom Norris
o! Rome City, Ind., Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Norris o! Junction City, Ohio,
Mr. and Mrs. Wllbur Gathers,
' Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Hayman ' o! Westerville, and Mrs.
Vera Craig o! Alabama.
Visiting Mrs. Pearl Norris recently were Mrs. Sherry Lorenzo
and daughter Autumn LN
Walker, Mrs. Vera Craig of Cha·
rleston, S. C., Keith Craig and
'"
daughter o! North Carolina, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Kane o! Summervllle,
N.J., Mrs. Elba Warner, Mr. and
Mrs. Woodrow Brown of Ft. Pierce,
Fla., Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Nori'ls,
Joshua Michael Clark
Ryan and Tracy, Wendy Wolfe and
Mr. and Mrs. Herscbel Norris.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Bauer or
Roger and penny Clark, Pome- Leon, W. V,.a.caltedonMr.andMrs.
roy announce the .birth of a son, Herbert Roll.sh, Mr. and Mrs.
Joshua Michael, June 26 , at St. 'I RU&amp;IeU Roush and Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Hospital. The Infant Dorsa Parsons Thursday . .
weighed six polinds and five
Mrs. Linda Jewell and daughter
Barb of Letart, W. Va. spent a
ounces.
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Grandparents are Lawrence and
Hayman .
Barbara EbUn, Middleport, Gene
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
Clark, Pomeroy' and Evelyn Clark, were dinner guests recently ot Mr.
Pomeroy. The couple also has a
and Mrs. Donald. Barnette at
son, Jerrod, age three.

r..nasvme.

JOSEPH P. SALDANHA, M.D.
Orthopedist -

PEACE OF MIND
MARY C. KBfR

Bon-e Specialist

Wishes To Announce The Opening
of His Practice For

"Enralad tD Plldicl Blkn The lnlamll RMnue

.

ORTHOPEDICS AND ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Slntl;

~­

Pinnell S1net, Rijiley, 'fN

By Appo~tbtl6flt

O'Neill Senior Center In Marietta .
The show, which Is sponsored by
Buckeye HU!s-Hocking Valley Re-

Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst o!
Niles, Ohio, Mr. 'and Mrs. Blll
Yurkens of Nlles, Ohio spent a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Par·
sons and attended the Festival at
Bob Evans Farm.
Mrs. Lois Bell and Mrs. Harold
Roush . are patients at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Durst and
three daughters called on Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roash Il.cently.
Mrs. Linda Jewell of Letart, w.
Va., Mr. and -Mrs. Robert Hart o!
Racine visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman Fathei"s Day.

glonal Development DiStrict, gives
senior citizens an opportunity to
display their talents.
Individuals, age 60 and over,
from Athens, Hocking, Meigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and
' Washington counties wUI exhibit
crafts In the following categories:
ceramics, crocheting, · crewel,
cross-stitch, needlepoint, knitting,
macrame, mlscellan€9US,· quilts,
sculpture, weaving, woodworking.
Judges wlll select a first, second
and third place winner In each
category.
First place winners wlll then be
transported to Columbus to partici·
pate ii\ a statewide competition at
the Martin Janis Senior Center
during the Ohio State Falr .
show wlll open with a
reception at 3 p.m. on Thursday,
July 21. Hours lor tile shOw ~ sale
will be 3 p.m.-5 p.m. on Thursday,
July 21, 10a.m. to6p.m. on Friday,
July 22, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
Saturday, July 23.

The

Clark birth

,_,

NATIONAL u:AGVE
DA'MlNG ull'i •• bats\ : Hrndridl.

San

T

.r·s.n

The Third Annual Buckeye Hills
Senior Citizens Craft Show and Sale
wilt be July 21-23 at the C. William

Apple Grove news notes

........ o-- .

~ ~4-ll,fDI

Senior Craft Show scheduled for Marietta

RACINE - Annual picnic of
Racine Past Officers Club will be
held Thunday, July 14, at the
hOme of Mr. .a nd Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, Pomeroy. A covered
dish dinner will be served at 6

p.m.

MofemaJ 7. Adallta i

-·-

LARGI!l!T CATCH - Allhe annual Meigs County Fish and Game
Flslslng Derby James Myel'!l, Pomeroy, In the boys' division, landed the
lel'gest fls!t and eiiJ:ht end lhree-fourlbs pound ~elfish Tara Wood&amp;.
Clnel11er, Ia the girls' dMIIon look lbe honol'!l for lendln!llbe Iarp!lllllsls
end a onne end three-fourths poomd calfloh. CalclslniJ: the tnOI!&amp; fiSh, illlbe
boys' dlvlllon, were Joe Flelds 8IId Chad Sinclair whO tied wllh leveu
each. In the IJ:Irls' ,division Becky Bauer W88 tine wlniser wltb a catch of
2$. Pictured are, 1-r, James Myei'!l and Tare Woods.
.
.

1HURSDAY

Atlanta I. Mllllrrftll
5, J0 "
P\Hilwlltll.
t.a. AJwpll!l
0 -Sl. l.Gub. 12. s.n Dllwl4

New Yort. 7, ~on 5
Ptlllack-lpNa 2. Cindmall 0
San FrMtilro 10-&amp;. ~ &amp;.2
St l..ol.ds 4. ~ lltlt,. 2
Lal AJ9'Its 10, PI~ l

Of the 134,0C0cancer patients who
3. Unusual bleeding or discharge;
will probahly die this year. as many
4. Thickening or lump in breast or
as one-hall o! them could have been
elsewhere;
5. Indigestion or difflcul'" 1n
cured, hnd they pursued earlier
''
diagnosis and prompt treatment,
6. Obvious change ln wart or
says ,&lt;;. Michael, Public Informa· swallowing;
mole;
.
tlon Chalnnan o! .the American
7.
Nagging
cough
or
hoarseness;
Cancer Society o! tbe Meigs County
8. A. fear of cancer that can
Unit.
prevent you !rom detecting cancer
CAtmON Is a word that carries
with It the most Important clues for . at an early stage, a stage when It is
highly curable:
protecting one's sell against
Everyone's afraid of cancer, but
cancer. The seven simple steps one
can follow for early detection are to don't let It scare you to death.lfyou
have any of the signals see your
know and read seven signals of
doctor Immediately.
cancer o! If you don't read the
For a list of cancer's warning
signals you probably bilve the
signals or other free educational
eighth.
1. Change In bowel or bladder Information, contact the Meigs
County Unit on Mulberry Heights In
habits;
Po111eroy, or ca!L992-7531.
2. A sore that does not heal;

WEDNESDAY

Daily Senlinel, lll Court St., Pomeroy
Ohio 45769.
'

4

6. Kansas City

TUESDAY

Early detection, treatment
•
may cure cancer patients

.

POMEROY - Eastern Band
Boosters wlll meet Tuesday at
7: 30 p.m. In the band room at the
high school.

No ~ubscrlpt1ons by mall permilled In

Mltwaukf(o U. Chi&lt;'~ l3
Minnesota 6. C"IPo't'land 4.

WArriNG - One .. llle acenes takett dUrlniJ: lbe annual Meigs
County Flsb and Game Fllllnlng Derby held e1 Shade R.lver, Chesler, on
June :15. 1be Melp County Filii and Game Club extends thanks to the
merdletnls end lndlWhials ,. Pomeroy, Middleport, Racine, and
Cheoler lor lhelr dooetw. and help !or the kids' annual fishing derby.

POMEROY ,;... The directors
of the Pomeroy area Chamber o!
Commerce will meet TUesday,
July 12, at noon at !he Meigs Inn.
Nominations wUI be made to
select a president !or the coming
year .

P\Jbllshed f"Vl'fY afternoon , Monday

basis . Credit wlllbl&gt; given carrier each
month.

1\w'ano 6. Teras &lt;4
BattimJn&gt; 1 St-ank- n

POMEROY - A meeting for
Meigs County Chapter 53 cit the
Disabled Ames-lean Veterans
wlll be Monday, 6: :JJ p.m., at the
chapter home. on Butternut
street, chapter adjtunt M.L.
Kelly announced.
·

·The Daily Sentinel

one WE'E'k

Accepts emt:&gt;loyment

Calendar

r------------

By Carrier •r Motor

Cheoler, on JUM 25. 'lbere were 81 chUdress and 33
adulls In aUePidance.

Flsb and ·Game Flahlng Derby held at Slsade.R.Iver,

MINWSIU l C"'t'Ytiand 2

EMTIJIVIIION
W Ia Pd. GB

Ml:lfmal
SC. Lcl.dl

lead after 54 boles, was at 2'18 with a
final· round 73.
Also at 278 were D.A. Wetlrlng,
Jlm Colbert, Jay Haas and Tze.
Chung Chen.
Haas birdied sixolhls !lrst IDholes
of the day to tie with tlllrd·I'OWICI
leader Pooley early In the final
I'Oilnd. Haas shOt a !lnal·round 67.
Wally Armstrong began the final
round in second place, a stroile
behind Pooley. He !lniShed with a
!lnal·round 75, tied with live othen
at 21ll, including defending cham·
pion Calvin Peete., who fired a
!lnal·round 65.

Efflctiw July 5, 1983

502 Secoacl St., 446-4113 .
One Block Will of Court Ho121e

T1l1p.'lone (31M) 372-2350

'

...

~ ' SBMa

. Ill E. .....

l'llluaJ, Ill.

If you know of an Illegal Dumpsite in
Meigs County, ·please forward ttJe following information·to us Townwship •.•.•......•...•....••.... ~ ....... Rd No..•........•.
Property ()wr)er ••••••••.••••••••••..
Desaiption of Location, Size and Type.
0 •••••• 0 •••••••• 0 ••••• 0 ••••••

0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 I I I I 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0o 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I I 0 I 0 I 0 0 I I 0 0

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

..

································~·······························~······

Mail to: Meigs County.Utter Control Board

Court House
2nd St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"'

·

Senior craftspersons fr;om our
district have been very successful
' In the statewide competition during
the past two years. Over :100
individuals are expected to participate this year.
The O'Neill Senior Center Is
located at 333 Fourth Street in
Marietta.

NEED PERSON WILLING TO

d•monstr•t• Steel Bulkllng.
Ourr program will put one
building In thlo area 11 loctory

coal to rl;ht peraon.
CALL i · 800 • 874-3830.
D

Kenneth Newell, ·. Chester, a
recent graduate of Hocking Technical College, has accepted employment In Lincoln, Neb., with Yankee
Hill Brick Co.
He began his duties June 15,
working In the testing laboratory.
His address Is 712W. Falrfleld St.,
Condo Lincoln Apt. 2, Lincoln, Neb.
68521.

Omitted
MIDDLEPORT - Omitted for
the list of those attending the
father-sm banquet hosted recently
by the Phllathea Woman of Mlddlepoprt Church o! Chrtst were
Kenneth Carson, Harold Carson,
Willard Boyer, Barry Boyer, Allen
Jenkinson, Carl Nelson, Keith Ash,
Wllllam Bailey • Rodney Bailey and
Des! Jeffers.

r-.~li!ijjijj~ti·~

�Pom.oy Middleport, Qhio

----·-

11, 1983

·Discuss alleged extravagapt spending ·
the niayors• CODlerence wu not
ATLANTA (AP) - An Internal
audit by the U.S. Energy Depart·
preti8ed becatlletheJ1'811tm:=
ment accuses the Natlollal Confer·
been given with no ~:trill
l!f
ence of Black Mayors r1 spending and because no
misuse of funds were received.
federal grant money 011 jeweby,
The mayors' group got its tint
leather goods, bath items, travel to
grant in March$, thenaone-year
the Bahamas and a Washington
exll!llslon in September 1981. The
apartment, itwasrepo!UdSunday.
Til!' Energy Depa11rnlllt lOOked Energy Department report, corn·
into the spending of$Zl6,011 given to . pleted In Aprlll!l!2. was designed to
alert tile department's procurethe conference for a project called
ment office that tha-e were prob" FacUltating Small-Town Growth
lems with the way the mayors'
Through Energy Conll!rvatJon,"
conterencewas handling lis lllOitj!)l,
according to Sunday's combined
senior auditor Joe Connor said.
editions of The Atlanta Journal and
The report was kept secret until
The Atlanta Constitution.
the case was closed In January. It
Conference leaders denounced
detaUsabout$40,0001ncostsdeemed
the allegations as "ludicrous" and
"questionable or unallowable"
said auditors jumped tocanclustons
under
Nles of tile federal Office of
alter finding credit -card bills that
Management
and Budget.
included both personal alld confer·
The
report
said $9,001 in grant
ence purchases. The conference,
money
was
spent
for "airline and
based in Atlanta, was reimbursed
lodging
costs
incurred
by the
for all personal items, they saki.
Acconling to recordl obtained grantee for a mayors' board
under the Freedom of ln1'!nnation meeting in Houston, Texas, and a
Act, a passiblecrirninalcaseagainst trlp to the Bahamas. We could tlnd

•

,,

evidence that these trtps were
With the purpose of the
•
said $12.000 In tullds were
uaed for "items which appeared to
be of a pei'!JOIUII nature such as
jeweby, leelher llOQds and bath
Items ... dinners or entertainment ...
and travel to locations other lhan
•
lho6e where the funded project was ••• 1
being cooctucted.
Michelle Kouromna, executive "
director of the mayors group,
tenned tile charges "incredible."
'Ibe auditors, she saki,· "kioked at
'
the (Chllfge-Card) bUl and assumed
_ ,''
that every Item on tile bill was paid
for by government fUnds.: •
She called the 1!182 audit report
"old and erroneous information."
• I
'
George Howell, conference law·
yer, saki Ms. Kourouma has
canceled checks to show shepaldfor
'
personal charges, such as tile ... t
Bahamas trlp, but that ~e auditors •· .. t
did not ask for them.
~
II

t)

.

.

I

'

I

" I.

Survey shows gasoline prices rose
gasoline rose seven-tenths of a cent
In the last two weeks nationwide, oU
industry analyst Dan Lundberg
says.
The Lundberg Letler'l biweekly
survey of17,000station5 showed the
average price at $1.25 a gallon as
pump prices continue a climb that
began witti the Aprll 1 nlckel·a:
gallon federal gas tax increase.

Ohio

•
senr~ces

'

I

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
average price for all grades of

Monday, July 11, 1983

,.
I

TERESA'S
DECORATING

PH. 992-3047
&amp;21-1 mo.

Installed And
Warranted by Sears
For 5 Years.

I

VInyl

&amp;

INJURED IN BUS CRASH - Kansas City
firefighter Curlls O'Rear climbs out of the windshield
of a chartered lour bus thai collided with a ooment
truck at an lntersectln Saturday nlghl. the bus caried

senior citizens who were oo the lint day of a 1fHiay
' trip to Yellowotone Park and Canada. Rescuers
cUmhed lhroqb emerpncy hatches oo the roof and
tlu:ough the windshield to reach the lnjllr(ld. (AI'
I eserphoto ).

PH. 992·2178

992-7201

CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS .
..c.'\'

40 hurt In bus-truck-accident
KANSAS CITY, Mo. !AP) - A
tour bus carl)'ing 40 Senior citizens
rolled onto its side at a downtown
intersection alter colliding with a
cement truck, and nine people
remainE-d hospitalized Sunday.
Both the bus driver' who was
injured, and the truck driver, who
escaped unhurt; claimed the other
had run a ~ light, Kansas City

~:~..~••• ~"•u&lt;lvo...:ol

:.:::¥"':!. .

•· ~eoo.,.dOou""

pollee officer Mark Palmer said
Sunday. No citations were issued in
tile Satunlay evening accident, and ·
the inquicy was COI!Iinuing, he said.
Tile Martanna-TraUways buswas
one of two that had left southeastern
Missouri on Satunlay mornlllgfor a
16-day tour of Yellowstone National
Park and Canada, said Lloyd

Willard, battalion chief for the
Kansas City Fire Department.
All butoneofihepassengerswere
injured, atld 31 people were treated
at area hospitals and released.
Nursing supervisors said five of
those stW hospitalized Sunday were
in satisfactory condition and four
were in fair condition.

2t . . _uo..,O&lt;t .. nllw

.............
_... ...

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1 -PI&gt;IIocl...

,

~

ft:::=~...

nuclear war.
Since her arrival, Samantha and
her parents, Jane and Arthur Smith,
have been ushered about with the
pomp 4suaiiy accorded high·
ranking foreign dignitaries.
The Black Sea excursion marked
Samantha's initiation into the ritu·
ais of the highly organized youth

U
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41 F.,lMM

Cuddly-Soft!

882·2276

James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Elsie Shuler to Lynn E. Shuler,
Hazel Proffitt to Raymond E.
Ernest M. Shuler, Clarence Shuler,
Chester.
Proffitt, J ames J. Proffitt , Dale R.
Glenn Tuttle, Margaret Tuttle to • 24.10 acres, Letart.
Proffitt, Lot 180, Lebanon.
James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Ray E . Justis, Dottie Lou Mays,
William D. Bland to Martha
Jackson M. Mays to City Loan and
Chester.
Bland , Affidavit, Salisbury.
Savings Co., 3 acres, Chester.
Danny R. Cottrell, Vonda L . ' Calvin 0. Pickens to James E.
George J. Korn, Janet K. Kom,
Diddle, Right of Way, Lebanon.
Cottrell to'Charles. L. Penix, Susan
deceased, affidavit, Pomeroy
M. Penix, Parcel. Columbia.
Elson F. Spencer, Dorothy L.
Nell Groce. deceased. Marshall Spencer to James E. Diddle, Right
VUiage.
G. Groce, Affidavit, Olive.
of Way, Sutton.
F1oyd W. Hawk, Mary A. Hawk to
Marshall D. Groce, Kitty Sue
!nez E. Stevens (X her mark) to
Carl E . Smith Petroleum Inc.,
Groce to John R New lu n. Mary A . Mildred Castle, Lot 22, Pomeroy
Right of Way, Orange.
VUiage.
Newlun, Parcels, Olive.
Aryln Foster to Kenneth E. Kiser,
Beverly P. Wilson, Marvin E.
Ronnie Spencer, Marilyn
Loraine Kiser, 4 acres, letart.
Spencer to James E. Diddle, Right Thornberg, Wilbur S. Wilson,
Carl S. Nichols Sr., Rosalie
Wanda 0 . Wilson to Earl WWford,
of Way, Chester.
Nichols to Herald OU and Gas Co.,
Rodney Tuttle, Brenda Tuttle to Clarice WUllord, 9.61 acres, Ollve.
Right of Way, Salisbury.

• I

•
I

f ..l/ ..•·in,: ''''''l'''"'"' ,~,·,·lum/11• '• ..

~~=-.
.,.......... . . _ . _ .

1111..., .,

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

AcCounts and vouchers of
th e follow.ng named hducrarr es
have been ftled tn the Pro bate
Court. M e1gs County: Oh ro. for
approval and senf eme nt
CASE NO 23742 Fonal
Accoun! of George Hobstetter.
Ad miOI Strator of thA Estat e of
Vrrg1e R. Hobstener. OP.ceased.
CASE NO 23977 Fonal
Account of JessrP. A Curtr s.
Executnx o f the Estate of Henry
Ot rs Smnh. Deceased.

Real Estate General

-,

78-Co...... l....,._

e.......
J• v•-

41M
u1

·.:::::_r•

,..

, , . 111 ..

__.

1~

o.....

The

Daily

Sentinel

llu 163, 01• Chohia Sta., Nn
Ytn. NY IOlll. Print. N.... .
lldd1t11, Zip, Pattem NutiiMI.
Yesliwanttosee morecrafts,send
me you1 new 1983 NEEDLECRAFT
CATALOG. ISO designs, 3 free
patterns. Ortly $L50
All. CRAfT IIOOKS. .$2.00 _.
Nl 8Gob 1M Cltalal-add 5M
01eh 11r jiGIIql
hlollil&amp;.
13"* &amp; ClotHs 0. Pllllll
134-14 Quid llochi• Qooilb
13J.fllloioo HloM Qoillinl
132-Qollt OriJinall
131-Aiid I lllloi Qtlilb
129-Qoid 'n' E., Trlllfln
121-EMIIIpt hldlwool Qooilb

aaa

l26-'1111tftr Croll! Rowen
121·1'11ow Shw4tfl

I!KrlciMIIIltll 5qUIIII
II 7-EIIJ All ot Noedltpolnt

114-Cintploto Atattans
I!Hri,. Alpons
·
IIHISJ All of Hoirpin Crtt:lllt
111).16 litl! Rop .
lot-S..+lllll , _ ......

101-1111111 .....

le.llltllt .....
184-1111111 ....,
103-15 Qlrilb fir l.U,

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........ Dill

•••

llocono

l.,..., ,....

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,....,

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1'l

.,..... o,.,_

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ADULTS ....... 6 for $40.00
STUDENTS .... 6 for $30.00
'Golf Trips
;4':

1•2 II"' -

UpiiU_ ..

IJPIIII_..

'F1nal Account of Manor re L,
Hoffner. Guardtan of Th omas
GJP.nn Wolle. a Mrnor.
CASE NO . 23933 Fonal
Ac count of Grace E Campbell.
Admrn1 stratrt11. ol the Es"tatA pi
W oo dr ow E Cam p b el l.
DeceasOO
CASE NO 2 f 6 11 Fourth and
F1nat Acco um of Bernarc! V
Fu ttz. Trustee of the Tru st
created by Item 9 of the W rU of
And erson B Krbble. DecP-a sed
CASE NO 2330 1 Frrst Partrat
Accou nt ot Bernard V. FUltz.
Executor of th e Estate at JamRS
F Arnok1 . D eceas~
Unless excep!lons a n~ frt Ad
thereto. sa•d accounts wil l be
for hearr nQ belen: sard Court
on thP. 9i h day of Aug ust.
1983. at which trme sar d
accounts w 1tt be co nsrd ered
and continu ed fr om day to day
until frnatty dr sposed of
Any person Interested may
lit e wr1tten P.xceptrons to sa1d
accounts or to maners pert am rng to th e ex ecut10n of the Hust.
not less tha n ftve d ays prror to
th e date set tor h ea n n ~

1~11- ·

U l

I

---·- .

Mason,

•

ROUSH · ..
Riders &amp; Sons
SALVAGE COMPANY

S.R. 124-Pit. 992·5468
Bu,m of lllaSi. aluminum
c.!S, .iron, metals.

'I

,-. I

l
t

I

•'

Public Notice

TOP PRICES

Copci« .................... 451 lb .
Akulllnum Calls ...... 20' lb.
fladi•OIS ...... :...... 30' lb.
Aal. Gllss .. $1.00 liundrld
liud iron .. $1.00 hundrld
Also PlctinalltJ Allin Bodies
•
6-22·1 mo..f'lt.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR SERVICE

PUBUC NOTICE

' •

On Jufv 2, 1983 Cotumbra .~ :
Town shrp Trustees enac ted the
town shrp budget lor fi scal
1984 The bud get tS ava tl able
for pubtrc rn sp ectron at the
home of clerk, Gfona Hutton. At.
3. Bo~~. 82 . Albany. Oh 45 7 10
July 2. 1983 through July 16.
t 983

171 11 , t iC

NEW LISTING - 7 rrn. brick
with new kitt:hllll and bath, 3
bedrooms, I~ dinill&amp; carpelin&amp;
lumace, perches and basement Asking $45,000.

(7 ) 1 1. ltc

NEW LiSTING - 3 apts.,
rooms for the 4th. 3 modem
baths, 3 nice kitchens and I&amp;
lot near Jones Boy~ Want

School D1stnc t desrr es to re·
cerve seatP.d br&lt;fs for the
follow1nq.
1 Fleet 1nsurancP.
• 2 Tlfe and tubes
3 Gasohne. 011. and amrlreeze
4 Fuel 01 \
5 Coal - ~u p pfy and /or
hauhng
6 M1lk and darry prod ucts
7 Bread and bakery producl s

$45.000.
NEW LiSTING
Bu~ness
boildin in Middleport with
about
sq. fl. ot storage.

fooo
$25,000.

I'OIEIOY -' Good older
home, 2 BR, I\! baths, furnace,
ful basement 3cargarage and
I~ lot
3 ACRES - Wrth septic
sysiem, T.P. water, cellar and
c~

in Southern school
district for only $6.000.
'

IIOOLEPOIT - Near P.O.

has 3 bed1 ooms, I\! baths,
c.-petin&amp;Jllneling and garage.
Askilg $25,000.

TIAILEI - 1972 Arlingloo

12x60 1tDi eiec , 2 BR with
.centnl air and heat $7,500.
HOlE OR lAND- 3bedroom
A·frlme lhat needs finishing

and 2 IICrtlS 01 6 acres near
Racine.

58 ACRE FAIII -At Morning

Star. 3 bldnlom hOme, IJ bank

and·ott. blcip. 20 ICIII

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board o r th.e Me•gs l ocal

From the Smallest 1te1t1r

Core to the l.arpst Radia·
tor.

.

Redlltor Specialist
NATIIAN BIGGS
35 YrJ. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

Hm.E REPAIR

LOWEST PRICES
IN AREA

Roofln1 • Siding
Trou1hs,
Down Spouts
Windows • Doors
For "All" Your · Home
Repairs ...
"Fr" Estim1tes" ...

SERVICE STATION
OPEN 24 HRS. A DAY

POMEROY
lANDMARK

Call: George Gum

SERVICE STATION
'&amp;
J
-·· 992-9932

: .

. ';;_,. Ill :)tHJ!IH~.t:.;!l:ltl j)l

CARPET

INSTALLED
WITH PAD '

$1295
t-------------~~-------------1
Good Selection Of

Good Selection Of

Gdi.Dsw
CX)NG()LEUM

GRASS CARPET
$499SQ
.
'11),

C.Sh&amp;

$499

CONSTRUCTION

6·9·1 mo

IIIII

17th. 1983. e70. per peraQn
tren 1 porttrtlon &amp;
hotel. CALL LUCAS
lncludea

or 992·2282

992-2196

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIAlTY

Mlddloport, Ohio

742-2328

All !)'IllS of roof wOrt, new
or 111Piir, .&amp;Utte11 1nd

:Gutter &amp; Down Spouts

'Ri11odellna
20 Yam Experience
In Home Ara1
FREE ESTIMATES

"CUT 04T
FOR FUTURI! USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

UTILITY BUILDINGS
. Siz's from

6'~6'

to 24'x36'

lnsul1td Dol

Up

985·3561
All Makes

Houses

•Oa.hwaehtrrt
P&amp;S BUILDINGS · •W•Ih••RongH

R1cino, 011.
Ph:614if!-}~~~

1

•Rofrlgorotoro

·1

•Drvtn •'rHDrl
PARTS ond SERVICE

IO·&amp;tfc

4·5-flc

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

VINYL &amp;

ALUMIIIVM SIDING

• II wond --.llot
_.....,. ond " ' " " -Gct:ue.. WIMII
..-...ond
1fAwA . . .

•lniUlltion
olharm Doon

•ltorm Wln-1

.

•R•I c•n.~t wtndOWI

"'";R~=MATES
JAMES KEESEE

St. Rt. 124,

Pomt~oy,

OH.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

Nam•----------.

IIPhone
Address--------____________

White mou11 with aoma
loqd . Ph. ' 440 · 8843
anytime .
Alookon Huoky . Spoyed .

I
' ,,

.,

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING .

AltO IIQIIIE IIAIIITEIIANCE

L

'· :
I
I

'looflll ot Ill typel
R111derttlal &amp; c-erclel
'tltrttln ' DowttQOUII
'Store l l • s &amp; Ooo11

FBE ESTIIATES
28 filii (_..CO

the

FIVE puppiu &amp; small
mother dog, 304 - 676 ·

4333.
FIVE Beagle pupploo, block
white In color, call 304·
875· 1 890 or 875-8043.

a.

1 1 WHITE Log horn hono a. 2
rootten, 304·937 -2895.

6

Lost and Found

,._,.y,Oht.

kert Berber Shop, 2nd . Ave .
Middleport, oh. 8 14-992·
3478.

WANTED ; old buo. running
condition not necetalry, real
choop, 304-676·2707.
304-876·8836 .

[BJ.'

1 -800 -862 - 6846 fOhlo
only!. or 1-800-321 -7709
(W\fa . only), ••k for John .
Poaltlon Avellabl~ . Territory
Selea of Sawmill end Log ging Equipment In . S.E.
Ohio, Kentucky and Weat
VIrginia, with ettlbllthld
dealer. Mature people ·
oriented lndlvldu•l with min·
lmum of 3 yeara work
eKperlenct In machinery
1ales, aawmllllng or other
Forest lndus1ry related

Full time cook·chef. Expe·
rlence prefered. Middleport

Bellem. . d Church or Sho·

aroo . Coll982·41838 . '

IJICII ond ......, low IIIII

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

fop
flattt-llllttotl
liios. tl(ltt·- ocoqultlillllp•tw.., .t

'*'

"Senior Citizens
10% Discount"

Hind ..... ftomitJn
1111iwaidi ...t -a

PH. 992·7119

RIVERSIDE V.W. INC.

WOII GUAUNTIID

Day or Night

TOM HOSKINS

f.H·IIIIO. ltd.

Ph. 742·2134
or 141·2180

) For Sale
) AnnouncemeDt
)For Renl
I.
2.

10.

3.

n

5.

23.
24 ,

11.

...
6.
7.

-... - - - - ·---

·-

,_-

-~

8.

FOR SALE
18 FT. WILD CAT
TRAVEL TRAILER

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

S3(JJO ATDN

9.

' 10.
I I.

13 .
!'.

fuiiiiCI,IIot. Wltor hlllor,
ll8llo lin'- ,., IIICl, or

IS.

lllltlly flllttl, ........

Cllllll COidltloll.
~.7110.00 or

a..t orr.

PH. 992·2280

..

PH.882-3001

- '

--

t6.

• • -

. . -. -- -

Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, An·

tlquo •

or collecting .

LlcenMd • bonded In Ohio 6

~--

---.--

-. - ---.~

Center. Truckloada of new
merchendl11 every week.
CqnaiQmenta of ntrw end
uHd merchandlae alw•v•
w•loome. Richerd Reynolda

Auotlonoor. 271-30a8.
Complete AuotiOnHr Ser·

E•parlence houM pelntlng

end

Very
rttaa .

44&amp;·

ee88.

pointing. Coli 4•8· 7207.

Traah h1~llng, coal or any . • · .:•
thing . Will pickup free junk •
1elevlalona. w•aher,
dry- ·
en, Iron. Call 814· 388·

8813 .

Will do well p•perlng. paintIng (Interior &amp;: eJtterlor),
house cleaning, elao outlldt
work . Call 448 ·4828 or

33 .
34. t
l5 .

' .•
, ,

44e·9823 .

. ..
' •.

Lawn Mowing no y1rd to big
or tmall. Reliable and dtpendtble . For ettlmate aall
448 · 3169 between 9 •nd I .

....

SEPTIC ayttemt, landtcap·
lng jaQ 1lz1 of dozera). grevel ...
din hauling, will f•y 1hort
or long a•• ·• water lln11.
beck hoe work. FNa eetl- ·

a.

1

motu Phone 304· 273·
3185 or 304· 273-9830 .

I

.,
'

21

.' .
'•

Busineaa
Opportunity

l

.

'

I NOTICE I
.,_. .
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· ·· · .
LISHING CO . recommend•
1hat you do buslnua with
people you know, •nd NOT •
to aend money through the . '•
mall until you have lnvtltl· ... ~,
gated the offering ,
'•

..

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 11% fiKod
rate. Leeder Mortgage, 77 E. '

Stoto, Athono, Ohio, 1 ·•14· '
892-3011. or 12 to 4PM , , ,
1 ·800·34 1·41584 In Ohio.

..

.
• ••

PIANO

TU~tNG

j

..

I&amp; oH pluo

dlacounts to aenlor cltlzenschurch81·1Chools . C~ BHI

since 198&amp;. Ataoclt~te of
Brunlc:erdl ~u•lc Co . Phone

814-742· 2881 .

..

,

HouHholda, farm furnlth·

_ • _ _

"'l

a.

vloa. Also do opprolnlo.
Uconnd • bondod to eoN.

19.
30.

, ,

PIANO TUNING·LANE DA·
NIELS . Rolloblo 10rvlco

Hortford Community

17 ,
18.

ond dopondoblo. Coli 446·
311!1i9 between 9 •nd t5 .

Word Word'o K~oa~d .
448· 4372 .

Auction every Fri. night at

tho

General Hauling and Tr11h
remove\ StrviCe. Ralleblt

CtU

814·742-3084. Aloo book·
ing partlea.

llquldailon ooloo.

25 ,
26.

3L
32!

ering,

WVo . 304· 773· 8785 or
30-·773·9181.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

,.'~----------~"---------~~-~
- · ....,~----·-\

-· .,.

12 .

Carpatld, llllttroo• wl1ll

. _ , . . orellct. nfri&amp;,,

Public Sale
8t Auction

Rick
t7 '
18.
19,

18 Wanted to Do

Services
MERRI·MAC nHdo 3 dem·
O!'ltrator•ln thl1 areirl Glftt,
C&amp; L Bookkeeping
toys, home decor Item• on Broad range of bookkHing
Plrty P!tn. C•r and phone and teX Mrvlcea tVall"ble to
nec, ..ary, Hlghe1t commit· 1ult your bu1lneaa need•.
1lon. No lnveatment, deliv- Corol Nael
448· 3882

)Wanted

·Cieanlnc &amp;
. Insllllation
of New Systems

11r*r IIU&lt;t ltnlti·Ont·WIJ

renee . Call Carroll
Snowden, 446-4290.

weeks of steady work. Call

REWARO, Burgundy Bible,
name Effie Roach. loat ne1r

8

teet Rey Wedemeyer, agent.

Paying thoutanda of dollara Cuaton Combining , Cell
for comic1, buying, aclenc:e 614-2&amp;8-1312 .
fiction pulpt alto peper beck - - - -- - -- book a. 304•676-6239, aak Brick, block, atone &amp; con·
for Cheater.
crete work, alao roofing &amp;

11·21-tfc

JACK'S
SEPTIC SERVICE

In G1llle County

Are vou peylng to much for
your hotpltll · htelth lniU ·

Rood. 304·676·3424.

Two female Walker Coon·
hounds. 1 without collar,
vicinity 8 Mile and Greer

~over•ge

for almoat a century . Farm, •·
home and pereonel pror,orty
coverage• ere avallab 1 to
meet Individual ""da. Con-

BEDS -IRON , BRASS, old

are11. Protected Territory
with salary, oomml..lon, all
trlngea, and profit tharlng.
Submit reaume with refer·
enc:es to: Box 800 In care of
th• GalllpoUe Deily Tribune,
828 Third Avo .. Golllpollo.
Oh •5631 .

Call 448 ·01 1 1.

h~maiH)

Insurance

Phono 388-8248 .

Golden t•n eight week old Office Manager. Scenic Hilla
m•le puppy to a good home. Nurting Center It looking for
Coli 992-2592 or 992· an office manager , Job
8508.
reaponsibllltet Include
modlcoto·modlcold billing.
To good home. Adult male payroll, accountt receivable,
long htlred, gold &amp; white and peraonnel 'eoorda.
c•t. Love• people. 614·992- Tho .. quellfied ahould con3872 or 8t4-992-8601 .
tact the eenter for an Interview ot 446-7160 .
PART Germen ' Shepherd
pupplet, black, good with ' Owner· Operetor wf1h dump
children, 304-876-7247 .
trallera naeda for 6 to 8

ney'o, 304·871 ·4179 .

·It

bigger

2 black male cats to good 11
Help Wanted
home. About 9 montha old.
Coli 992·6069 .
---------

Lost vicinity of city building
mlnature Pomeranian dog .
Brown long hair. Reward .

992·6215 .., 992·73 14

6127/lfn

•

13

bettor. Coli 388-9908.

kitten. Call 949-3070.

Write your own ad and "order. by mail with this
coupon. Cancel yQur ad by phone when you ~ef
results. Money not refundable .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 992-2772

Call

3 yellow meie klttene, 1
black Ia white female kitten,
end 1 atrlped &amp; white female

.

I

(l'rM

8,4 · 388·

------ I Good uoed oolo bod. Phone

Also Transminlon

Call: 949·2263
or

a puppy .

2_&amp;_&amp;_·8_4_t_7_.
-

-----------.
1I Curb Inflation
· Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and .
Savel II
i
1

6 pupplea part Au1trian Blue
Heeler, ready to go. Call
81•·268·8884 onytlmo.

814-258- t38t .

,-----------

I

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

"Fru Estimatn"
I

Sizes sllrt from 12'd6'

Giveaway

Giveeway

doolslt1d windows. .
All Work Gu~r~nteld

7·5·2 mo. pd

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULOINGS

Cell

ANY PERSON who hu lara, wood ice boxes, etone
antiques. etc .. Comanything to give away and jara.
plete houl8hOidt . Write :
doaa not offer or anampt to
M.D. Mlllor. Rt . 4. Pomeroy.
offer any other thing tor aale
may place an ad In thla Oh . Or ~92 · 7780 .
· column. Thert will be no
Wanted to buy. New. uaed S.
charge to the advertlaar.
antique furniture. Will buy 1
4 long haired klttono, 1 piece or complete haute·
mother cat Coli 448-8632 . holdo. Call Ooby A. Martin
814 ·992·6370.
Fem.le haute cat. 8 mot. Buying dally gold, tllver
old. liner trained, decl•wed . coin•. ring•. jewelry, tterllnu
Mutt etey ln1lde . Call 614·
were, old coins, large cur·
387-0314 or 814 - 388 - rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur9648.

Ul·IIC

downspouts, autter cltlnine lnd Plinli~W. st0111t

Call 843·5425

11 -ll ·llc

W1nted . Junk autoa, any

condition .
9~03 .

amount . The

ArGunu

Room, board end cere for en_.darly person In my home .
Re ..oneblt. Call992· &amp;022 .

SANDY AND t!EAVER In·
turence Co. h8a offered
"rv:lc'' fqr tire lnaurance ·

Bill Gene Johnton

448-0089

TOURS, Chorlolton, 304·
348-71542 1Buaorlglneteaet ~..:___ _ _ _ _ __
Po,nt Pt 111 ant.
Standing timber , env

•Friendly Servie

Situationa
Want ad

Frenchtown (:ar Co .

pluo 4 J•ckoot

1'1111 e6o.ooo. July 1&amp;th.·

"Lowes~ Rates

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING

'Roo tina

PH. 992·7583

2·2l·tk.

•

•a.ooo..

gAmea. Final Jackpot cove -

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

PAT HILL FORD

'Sidin•

oAklnillllll &amp; Vinyl Sitiinp
15 Yeart Exp41rlence
GIEG ROUSH

We pay caah for leta model
clean uted can .

North Carofln.-. 20 games,at

I·Hit

llt1d hel·

We Clll't

OM Tanka.

Va.

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

Homes - Extensive
Remodelin1.
•lnsurince Work
•Custom Pole Bld1s.
&amp; GlllltS
•Roolln1 W01k

Auction every Tueaday
night. Krodel Park Club
Houn. Pt . Pteuanl wv.
Auc:t. lonnie Neal. Call

BIQ Bingo tour, Cherokee,

RT . 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

,..

ldd boll lind rod out,..

Cony

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

U.S.

5·16·2 mo.

i!)

STARnNG AT

SALES &amp; SERVICE

lfalltr on Rt . 3&amp; b.-low 78
Stailon tQWerd Rio Grande.

12

comodatlonl at Opryland
Hotel. Nathvllle tour, Grand
Ole Opry. free . Sunday 814 38 1
brook loot, day at Oprylond . I -== ·= 7=·=7= 0 :t
All tlckoll $213. CALL (
LUCAS TOURS 304· 346· 9
Wanted To Buy
71142 .
---------

EUGENE LONG

Nlir

Public Sale
8t Auction

·::.::::::==

...,, 992·5433

RUT! ANO FURNITURE CO S
r:J1HPI f SHOP
ill&lt;!&lt;

tel' -

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174

TIRE SALE

GRANO Ole Opry· Opryland
tour, 2 night, 3 days, Auguat
1 2 · 1•. Price In clude• ec·

BOGGS

I·U·ttc

'

•l

'w.

8

I John• 1 :1 6

17 1 11'111

pd

dlatara. Wa IIIII repelr

C. L. Kitchen

11...... '"_ _

In order to be Consrdered . all
se&lt;;~ f ed b td s shalf be recerved 1n ·
th e TrPasu"rer" s Ollrce. 62 1
South Thud Avenue. Mrddte·
po rt . Ohto on or before 12 :OO
o'cl ock r.toon on Monday, July
lB. 1983
The Board of Education
rt'!serves the nght to accept or
retect any and att brd s
Jane Wa[Jn er. Treasurer
Mor qs Local
Schoof Orstnct
621 Sou th Thrrd Avenue
Mrddteport. Ohro 45 760
16 1 27 . 171 &amp;. 11 3ic

Cllnl

PH: I ·304-773-5634

,

Nd--

cen "'I* and

We

Chester

":!

Public Notice

world to IIV8 alnnert .

949-2737

RADIATOR
SERVICE

John Teaford

.._....,.._to
...
..1c.........
'
.......ll-b.......
,..................
.......,_
1-- - - -.:_--------1 1
.,,.,.
.. - - .
o.,....r,..,,.,,,..,
....o..
............
'-••" .......
'" '* .....' oo oo
''""""-'-'
,.-............
.
Jft """"'

RAFT

furniture , gold. allver dol-

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless .Steel

'Pro Shop
•.
'Fittln1 Center
'Fishina

""""'"
,,, "'•"'
H•n..

PERSONAUZED
POOLS

Golf Lessons Specill

'llelaiWoods
'Club Repair

4 ~ PI , .. _ ,

K

4

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

Yord Solo July 11 . 12 e. t3 .

Ctttlat J111aua came Into th•a:~~~~~~~=::=-+---------r

RACINE

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Do•ld ••lckloo

CO MMON PLEAS 64 Misc. Merchandise
COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO ,' .~---------------­

1-1614) · 992·3325

The so~est bit ol warmth to Ptll
between yoursell and chill days.
Shrug 1ight into a pretty sltoul·
de~ette- it feels so "IY oozy- of
pompadour yarn. Knit litis easil1
all in ooe piece. It's perlect for
anytime. Pattem 1366: 'dire&lt;:·
lions (one size fits 8-16).
$2.50 for each pattern. Add
501 eoch patte~n for poslailf
and handling . Sond to:
Alict....
'! 4 .
Noedlecrlft lltpl
'

~'"'

JUDGE ~ ~~~--~----~~

Phone

t,Aece 'BMa"'

IU Mt ..._,...,

~·

ROBERT E BUCK

7366

t o . .no

..,.., Co61 lo-4

•

PROBATE C0l''1f,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

1

a

Vinyl Sidinas

YARD"''· fairview Road .
Pt . Ptuunt . S•turday ,
Monday II Tue1d1y.

Garage Sale. July 13- 18. 9

.Dealer

PH.992· 7119
,,,,,,1110

'

f ,' ln .• ~ifio • d llft!l' ''' ..,,. .,., lho •

CASE NO 206 77 So&lt;th and

COURT,

l

71·-r..••
~~=:':"'..:""

11

'Aluminum

6-20·1 mo.

Mi~dleport

&amp; Vicinity

4•8·029 • .

DNr.
,_ Holland, Bush Ito&amp;
firm Equipment

'Roollna Work

&amp; Vicinity

...... ..,cimii;c;:; .........

SWEEPER and sewing ma·
chine repair, parta. end
auppUea.
Pick up end
delivery , D1vla Vacuum
ChJaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

Authorl~ed John

&amp; G•raau

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

3- ll·ttc

PHON
E'992-2156
OJ Wrilt o.m, Stfttinel Classified hpt.

Public Notice

Public Notice
IN lliE
COMMON PLEAS

camp, the most prestigious camp of Artek, generally aged between 10
Its kind in the Soviet Union.
and 14, lead regimented lives. They
Soviet Foreign Ministry officials usually move in groups, rarely
kept photographers and reporters at break into a run and are kept busy
a distance from Samantha through· singing songs or chanting in unison
out the boat rtde. But they granted a such phrases as "to all, to all, good
15-minute news conference late evening."
Sunday at which Samantha said
On Sunday, one group wrote
Artek wasn't what she had postcanls to Western leaders carry·'
expected.
ing a message for peace. Tile
"I thought it would be somelhlilg addresses, wrttten in. bot1t CyriWc
like nature camp, in tents and stuff. and Latin scripts lor the cnlldren to
But It's completely different."
copy, included those of Prime
She said she bad spent some time Ministers Margaret Thatcher of
with her new friends talking about Britain and Pierre Elliott Trudeau
peace issues, but that most of her of Canada.
chats focused on Artek, a holiday
But most of thechildren seemed to
home for some 22,000chlldren of the prefer to address their appeals to
Soviet elite.
·
Ronald Reagan.
But Soviet reporters questioning
One Central Asianjlirl, asked why
Samantha concentrated almost she was writing to the American
exclusively on the nuclear issue, president, replied: "because we
although sometimes their meaning don't want a war to begin. "
was not clear to,her.
Asked If she believed Reagan
She was asked, for instance, what wantedwar,shesaid, "Idon'tknow.
she would do "If she were a wizard" We don't want war."
who had everything in her power.
Soviet power
Mystified, Samantha frowned.
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -How
Her father then whispered to her
· did the Soviet state gain so much
and she replied: "Gel rid of the power and its citizens so little?
bombs. Destroy the bombs."
The answer lies in 1,000 years of
Arthur Smith said Sunday that autocratic rule, from Byzantine
Andropov's invitation carne only times through the Mongol Empire,
alter she had writ!en a second letter the "westernization" begun by
to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly
Peter the Great, and the Bolshevik
Dobrynin in Washington.
Revolution, says Brenda Meehan·
Samantha, he said, told the Waters, associate professor of
ambassador that her letter had been history at the University of
published in the Communist dally Rochester.
Pravda but that she had received no
"Peter the Great's 'westernizadirect reply. Days later. a telephone
tion' didn't include individual
call from the Soviet Embassy right.&lt;;, .. she said, noting ~ha the often
i!Itormed the famlly that a reply was took severe measures to ensure thai
en route by regist~red mail.
nobles served the interests of the
To Western eyes, the children at state.

Meigs County propf!rty transfers ...

:~:~·-•~...,_

:~Q=--==·
•• ,. ..... ....,

:tl·....... f • l •

Soviet guest sails Black Sea
YALTA, U.S.S.R. (AP) -Amert·
can schoolgirl Samantha Smith and
her new Soviet friends sailed on the
Black Sea together and tossed out
wine bottles carrying messages of
peace.
.
About lro Young Pioneers fl'om
the Artek youth camp near Yalta
accompanied_ Samantha on the
90-minute ride Sunday in the camp
boat "Artek." On signal, about 45
minutes fromshore,eachglri threw
a bottle into the clear water off the
Crimea.
•'Hopefully we wW ail have peace
for the rest of our lives," read
11-year'{)ld Samantha's message.
Her mother Jane said it was
"Samantha's creation on the spot."
Samantha, dressed -almost-:- in
the camp uniform of white blouse,
turquoise skirt and liat, then sat
down with 1.3-year'{)id Natasha
Kirlshina of Leningrad, who had
read Samantha a welcomingspeech
Satunlay. Samantha did not wear
the red neckerchief that completed
the.other girls' outfits because, her
mother said, the red ciolh denotes
"devotion to the Communist
Party."
Samantha, from Manchester,
Maine, arrived in the Soviet Union
Friday at the invitation of President
Yurt V. Andropov. She had written
to him asking lfheintendedtostarta

lt ·ttaw....... o.H•

Aemodehna
'lnsuranc• Work
•custom Pola Bldas.

...... Pi'Piaiiii&amp;nf .... •·

to 4 . 731 High St., Mlddlo•
port. Ceramic glazea,green ·
....,.,. and blaqua, electrlo
mower, alnk &amp; other ltema.

New Homos - Extensivt
"FENCING PROVIDES PRIVACY PLUS
PROTECTION FOR CHILDREN &amp; PITS"

hou-.hold

GoBno copouloo S. E·Vop
• w a .t e r p lila ' Fruth
Pharmacey.

""'"

GENERAL
CONTRACTING, Inc.

No Sunday Calis

t"i~~~~~~~~~·~~
'E ,------,--l·.~ !
J·CO,..oiTho.,..•lP•"I'""""""""i

..

~ed.

Reduce aafe &amp; fut with

Dovld Brlckteo
Buolneu With

c.ou.. ···

"Beautiful, Custom
BuiH Gara1e~"
Call for fr8Uidini Is··
timltes, 949·2801 or

adult cloth .

YARD SAL E ; M o ndey ,
TuetdeY aod VWedne1d1y.
Everything reduced . &amp;87
Main Street .

AUTO BODY AND
VAN CONVERSIONS
USTOM
AR

IOIIDED I IIQIIl GUMAN!EED
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ill Court St. Po!Mrtl)', Ottio 4S769

•

•PONDS. RECIAIATION
WORk
•lAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

Gregg 8t Patty Gibbe-Ownert

~'\

Announcements

lema.

TIRED OF DRIVING AN
OLD BEAT-UP BALL
OF RUST?

•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS end
SEWER LINES

CATALOG
MERCHANT

949·2860.

The Daily Sentinel

3

•SEPTIC SYSTE IS

SIDING

3 Fomlly Goro~• Solo, &amp;08
Clrele Ave. acroaa from
Spring Vell•v. July 12 , Tuea .
9·1 Lora of children ' • and

'

'

1

•DOZER
•BACKHOE

Aluminum

'

'

Middleport
Vicinity

~

Verd Sale July 1 thru 14 .

Clothea , kniCk kna c ka .
clocka, radloa. Vt mi. out of
Evergre,n .

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

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

·'I

._., _____ _

PlAQUES
ENGRAVING

I

J&amp;F

12·2CHte

'

Manufactu~

1

CONTRACTING

Bems.

Route 1 ·

Trophy

,
,
:

.. ... ·r,.omerov ........ .

&amp; Vicinity
----- --·········-·········-···

Htlt

kitchen Cabinets -Roof.

CHARLES SAY.RE
AND SON

...... aiiiiijii:iiis.........

Call 742·31911

ina ~ Sid!, - C01terete
Pellos id-lb New Constructioe - Re· '
:aoctelinl - Custom Pole

Roofinc &amp; Sidinc eo.

I

For ell your wiring,
nuda; fumac:•• re·
pair aarvlce and In·
stalletlon.
.
Realdential
• Commarolal

*CHAIN LINK
FENCIN'G ·

" UCIIIII8d. li,_.hid"

THE
TROPHY
KING

, I
I

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Wedding Cakes and
All -Occasion Cakes

Lona Bottom, OH. 45743
915-4193 or 992·3067

The average price for all grades pries of $115~ for regular leaded,
has increased 5.16 cents since $1.23 for regular unleaded and $1.33
January, Lundberg said, although for premium unleaded, Lundberg
the federal tax boost plus new gas ·said Sunday.
Dealers are paying 2.25 cents a
taxes impooed by 23 state govern·
ments was 5.94 cents per gallon. gallon more for gas from rellnerles
'!bat means the retail cost of the than they paldinJanuary.Butdueto
gasoline itsell - before taxes - is heavy retaU competition, they are
stm averaging .'18 cents below what not passing that increase on to tile
consumer, Lundberg said.
It was in January, Lundberg said.
In fact, theaveragemarkupatthe
The breakdown at seU·service
pump
is 2.84 cents less than it was in
stations, where 72 percent of all
January,
his survey showed.
Americans buy gas, shows average

Mlu.ER

!Sears I

CAKE

LAFF·A·DAY

Newly remodeled 2 atory

lngo • Aeol o01oto. Over 21
.,..,. aoporloncoln buying &amp;
Mlllng now. uood a. ontltluo
furniture . tl4·882· 41310.
Oaby A. Mortln.

~reme, 1'l.a bath, 3% 1crn,

aoheola. riverview .
132,000 . Colt 448-4222
bot-8.8.

city

EXPEIIIENCEO logo! , .. ro·
t..-y. Stnd reaume to lo•
P·8, In ooro of Pt. Ploooa~t
Rogl01or Co., 200 Moln St..
" · ,.....n•• wv.

AUCTION 'ovory loturdoy

REAL BAI'IGAINI 1 yoor old
bl·ltvll, 3 BR , A· 1 cond.,
gorogo • booomont. brlcll
Wontlld oomo one to tlva In front. largo lot, city ochoolo.
ond hllp tokl oore olltt mon. 4'11 mlloo from Oolllpotlo.
Do houo-ort. oloo. Coli OrMn Twp. 138,800. 441·
4114-448·'113.
8031.

~~~:io.' .':;~. ~!.... ~~~

mento10kon ovory loturday
1;00 1111 oolo time. Emmo
a ;~ .AuotlnHr, 304·428·

8 7

-------·--·-·----·--·-;'------------·-

'

'•

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�~~~~~~~;r~--~--~:-~=-~~=-~---,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r.:?:~~~~---------=~=:==~Mm~-~~~~Y·~~l~l,~l~~~They'll Do It Every Time
r--'N'_C_A_R_L_Y_LE_'_"----~-b-YL_a_rry_w_rlgll_,t
Pag&amp;-8 The Daily Sentinel
31

Pomeooy-Middleport, Ohio

46

Homes for Sale

9 room house. Aluminum

lldlng. 2 carports, workahop, basement, 2 wood

Two bedroom, full basement, convenient location,
304 -875-8624.

Space for Rent

2 mobile home tots on Rt. 7
betide Ro.adaide park. Call

446-4736 or 446-4286.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

cuae_:, Call $92-7285.

I

CAN'T

1

54 Misc. Merchandile

lr-------

burtners. -2 out building&amp;, &amp;
fru it trees. Excellent condi tion . Pric.ed to sell. Syra-

_

Knauff Coal 6

Firewood

Price• reduced May-July.
Pick up or, delivered. We
honor HEAP Vouchen. Call
814-268-8246.

!-loose WAS

(&gt;6

MUc.H

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Galllpollo. 8
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms 8'399,
bunk beds complete with
bunkles $199, 2 piece antronlivingroomsuites$19~.

Home and 2 acres more or

fON fOR Me AS

foR you

·,1

i~

1182.

Porter. 122.000. Call 614388-9063.

r911 WILCOX ,

10PGKA 1 KAfol

TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED- CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
448-7672 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT _ ~5 . PHONE 446-7274.
1980 BAYVIEW Oaluw.e,
14x70 2 BR C/ A, fireplace,
garden tub, appliancaa, un derpinning. $14.00. CBII
446-6211 .

1969 12x50 2 bdr, total
alae. $3.400 . 197914x582
bdr .. total alec .. $6,900.
Call 614-446-0175 .
81 model14x56 All alee ... 2
bdr., washer, AC, $9,90.0 .
Call 446-2506.

Trailer and lot for rent or sale
on Land Contract. Call 614266-6640.
14x65 Champion total
electric, 2 bdr., completely
furn ., includes W &amp; 0 ,
freezer, 62 gal. HW, 1 r. old .
22 ft . LR, storm windows,
redwood deck. air cond .,
underpinning, lot in Quail
Creek. 110,500. Call 614246-9624 otter 6PM.

Used two bdrm. mobile
homes, furnished . Brown's
Trailer Park. Minersville. Oh .
614-992-3324,
·lc1970 1 2x80 troilor. Portly
furnished. woodburner. CA . New carpeting, many
extras . Can be moved or left
on nice farm lol. $6800 .
614-992-6710 after 6 p.m .

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

1970 Hillcrut 12)(60trailer.
New carpeting. new water
heater. room buill on front .
Go9d condition . $4000 .
614-992-6638 .
1974 Cameron mobile
home . 3 bedrooms. totally
electric . Call 992-2566 .
12w.60 Shultz mobile home
and new matching addition
on "'• acre lot outside of
Reedsville on SR · 124. All
. utilities . priced to sell.
814,000. Call 614 -378 6312 .
24"40 double wide, wired
for electricity. 1 bath, can ba
made into nice home . On 1
acre lot. Septic tank in·
eluded. Water ttvailt~~ble .
$8,000. Call 992-3640 .
u'SEO MOBILE
576-2711.

HOME.

USED Mobile Homes. 304576-271 ,_
'(9:71 12x60 Rlchardoon
with e"'pando, 3 br, , Y.z
tleths laundrv room, carpet,
Wood burnef, storms.
~tereens, awnings. com ·
~atelv furnished . Real good
dond . 07 ,000. 304-875 6662.

f~~~~~~~~~~;r=========~
33

Farms lor Sale

house. S57.000' s offer considefed . Echart Chapel Rd.
304 -675-5809 .

35 Lo1s

&amp; Acreage

36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financing available. Call446 - 82~1
after 6 weekdays.
2% acrea to 5 acres, level
lots, city schools, rural water. $3,500 per acre. Call
614-379-2196 .
Approx, '·33 acres -development property. 20. minute
from Gallpolis on pawed
road. with county water.
816,000. Serioua enquires
only. Days446-7901 ask for
Mr. lambert . Evenings 304522-9469 .
1.2 ACRE lot, Gallipolis
Ferry . Behind 84 Lumber,
drilled well or eily water.
$7,500. 304-578-2866.

TWO acres. well. aeptic
system, electric, near New
Haven , 304-882-3368 .

41

Houses for Rent

Meigs Co . Rd 18, 88 acres
( 1 3 pasture. 2 / 3 w~o~ed ,
all mineral rights, unhm1t1d
g'ravity fed springwate.r ,
maturing timber. fenced 1n
pe'lture, 24' by 30' pole
bern. large utility building.
Be•utiful 8 room home. all
electric. COIJ'pletely insu.·
lated . lnalu~es new carpet,
fenced in yard. self cleaning
oven. side by side refrigera ·
tor freezer . Ashlv wood
burning stove. Ideal for kids
and hones. $68.000 . Call
448-9510 or 992· 3605

Mobile Homes

for R-e nt

FOR RENT Mobilo Homo, 2
BR , turn . with carpet. nat .
gas heat, pri\l'ate lot. Ph .
446· ,409 from 4 to 8 p .m.

Eureke : Riverfront lot, turn.,
1 bdr.,$ 100mo .. adultaref.
&amp; deposit . 1 - 614 - 643 ·
2644 .
Trailers for rent. furniahad,
air cond., overlooking Ohio
River in Kanauga, Oh . Fosters Trailer Park. 446-1602.
Wanted a gentleman to
move into a trailer and share
expenses. Retired senior cl·
tizen. Call 446-0366 .
Trailer for rent in Mercer·
ville. Oh . $200 mo . plus
deposit. Call614-256-1 606
after &amp;PM .
44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apartments Utilties partly furn .,
apartments available now.
$200 per mo. A-One Reel
Estates, Carol Yeager, Real tor. Cell 304-675-5104 or
304-875-7386.
1 badroom apartment for
rent. Call 446 · 0390.

4 rms &amp; bath, located 733 Furnished apt .• 8210. uim.
Third Ave .. Gallipolis. $165 ties pd., 1 bdr ., 920 4th
mo ., 875 deposit. Call 446- Ave., Gallipolis. Call 4464416 after 7PM .
3870 01 446-1340.

2 •bdr. house close to town. Furnished Apartments. 1
no children or pets . Call and 2 BR. $175 &amp; up.
Gallipolis, 446·44t6 after 7
446-3548 .
p.m .
24x65 Sectional hom·a, 3
bdr .. 2 baths. total electric, Furnished upstairs apt. , utiliwith woodburner &amp; dis- ties paid. adults, 94 locult
hwasher. $300 mo., $160 St. Gallipolis. $190 mo ..
860 depoSit. Call446- 1 340
dep . Call 614-387-0262.
or 448 -3780.
5 rm . house 928 First Ave. ,
Gelllpolia. Coli 448 -3946 APARTMENTS (EQUAl
HOUSING OPPORTUNITY!
after 6PM .
one bedroom r•nt starts at
Three bedroom one floor, S 167 per month, two bed. frame house. Carport, Gar· room starts at $193 . Depfield Ave., Gallipolis loca- osit $200 (no pets) near
tion . Call 6,4-245-5269 or Spring Valley Cinema. Cell
448 - 2746 or leave
446-8679 .
message.
Large house with porch.
ideal for large family. $100 Partially furnished, suitable
mo . A-One Real Estates. for aduhs. no pets. Utilities
Carol Yeager, Realtor. Call furnished . Call446 -3733 or
304-676-6104 or304-675- 446-0171 evenings.
7386 .
! ---~-:-:--:--:-Apartment 3 r . &amp; bath, turn .
For sale or rent . 3 bdr house, or unfurn .. good location. 1
farT.ily room, 2 bath . 1 . 700 bdr , newly decorated ,
sq.ft .. central air. dis - ground floor . carpeted. utilihwasher, carpeting, river· ties pad, $210 mo . Call
view. $39,900 or rent $360 befOre 2PM weekdaya 448·
mO. plus dep. Call 446- 7482 .
8289 .
.
Completely furnished , all
3 bedroom home, 1 mile electric, 2 bdr .. 458 11.2 Seoutside of Reedsville, Oh. cond Ave .. Gallipolis. Adults
$175 . month and S176. only, ref., $225 mo . plus
dep . Call 446-2236 or 446deposit . 423-5967 .
25B1 .
House end garden in Racine.
Modern 1 bdr. apt .• quiet
614-949 -2 216 .
location near town, $185
2 bedroom. carpeted. All plus utilities . Call 446new paint . Deposit required. 2066 .
No inside pets. Call 992·
1 bed room Apt . S196. mo .
3090 or 992-5039.
including utilities . Equal
housing oppOrtunity. Contact Village Manor Apta.
614-992-7787.

'

Farms for Sale

42

60 ACRE farm, 4 bedroom

TWO bedroom trailer at
Gallipolis Ferry , below
Kitching Post, 304-676 ·
9084. $100. dopooit, 8150.
a month rent.

33

Aluminum aiding, gutlen,
ttorm doOre • window•.
quollty WO&lt;kmonohlp. 20
yra. exp. Free astlmat•. C•ll
114-367-0409 Of 114-34170490.
•

Umaatone. Sa.,d, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs.
Gallla or pick up at Richardt
&amp; son . Coli 446-77B6.
Small engines repeired .

hide-a-bed

1260 .

box ere.cJulppedtofiAoutboard
boat motors. Nelson &amp; Son•

l

8:00

5120.
maple
chairs in
266-1643.
full
$100
setd inette
regular-firm
Eureka. Ohio. Call 814·
$36, w .. h atllnda •34.1-:-:=-::-:::---:-:----:--maple rockers •&amp;9, 7 piece 1983 Niecki aewing ~··
chrome dlnene aot t149 , 5 chine. t100. Demonotroton
piece dinette set $89, used th•t retails for $399. Call
bedr,oom •ultes, rafirgera- collect 614-386· 4636.
tors. ranges, cheat, dreslers,
wringer walhers, TV's,
2 h~rsea
gantla, 16 fl .
dryerea, &amp; shoes. Call 446· trl axle heavy duty trailer.
3159.
Coll614-266-1348 .

"''V

GOOD USED APPLIANCES RCA \l'ideo dlac player,
- washers, dryers. refrigera- S200. Call 614-387-0282.
tors. ranges. Skaggl Appliances, Upper River Rd .. 276 Gallon Fuol Oil Tonk and
beside Slone Crest Motel. stand. Aeklng 875.00. Call
446-739B.
246-9200.

8:30

WHAT PO YoU
THINI&lt; THI!Y'R&amp;
UP TO&lt; ANit IE f

•

t~~:;;;:~;~~~~;~~~~;.~;.~1
61

71

Farm Equipment

NEW &amp; Used Harveotoro
Structures. Automated li·
\l'eatock feeding-computer
feeders. Call collect 81•686-2260. John L. Betts.

Autos for Sale

1978 Monte Carlo. AM -FM
calaene. air conditioning.
tift· wheel. cruiM control,
30&amp; two barrel. Good condition end good tirea. Call
448-7221 olter 7 PM .

JOHN Deere 350'C dozer, 6
•
way blade &amp; wlnch. 3 yeau 1976 Flreblrd. 11,200. CIOII
old, A-1 condition. 742-3083.
.16.000. 814-898-8613.
1 982 Chevy 510 Durango,
Black with gold stripes.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
New Oak Furniture. tables. 1-:~----;-c:--:-:::::-::;:--- 1 6.000 miles. t6.400. Coli
Sofa. chair, rocker. otto- cheirs. cupbo~t rds. pie sale. 63
Livestock
992-7483 olter 6PM .
man. 3 tables. (ew.tra heavy dry alnka. Paul C o n k e l s i - - - - - - - - -by Frontier), esas. Sola. Antiquea. Tuppera Pl•ins.
chair and loveaeat, 8275.
Sofas end chairs.prlced from 7 horsepower riding mower. 2 yr. old Super Chix guildTrucks for Sale
$286. tQ $896. Tables. 845 MTD . Good condition . Call ing. excellent temperment 72
and
conformatiOn.
ready
to
end up to $126 . Hide-e- 992-5896 .
troln, 1750. Colt 448-9610 1980 Chevy 1 _ton . Coli
beds , $440 : and up to
between 7&amp;8. 448-3243.
8525 .. Recliners. 8176. to Hoapilal bed . Caoh-e12S. or 992-3605.
8360 .• lamps from 828 . to Call 986-3363.
Quail chicke, day old to eight 1978 OATS UN truck. excel875. · 6 pc. dlnenea from
899 .. to 8436 . 7 pc., $189. Frigidare air conditioner. weeka. 81 aplece-·one-thlrd lent rnechanlcalahape~ body
Any good, •2300. 304-675and up. Wood table with six 17.000 BTU. 1 Gene11l to two-thirds off.
chairs 8425. to 8746. Deak Electric air conditioner. 600 amount from 1 to 600. 2792.
$110 up to 8226. Hutches, BTU. Call 992-3090 or 981-4341. Eggs opeclal-reduced from .80 to .40.
8 550. and up, maple or pine 992-6039 .
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
finish. Bunk bed complete -:-:-:-:-:-:--:-:-~:-:----::­ JERSEY cow &amp; calf. 1860. 73
with manresHs, $260. and 1981 H • W, 2 horaetr~ller. Holstein cow &amp; calf. *700.
up to 8396. Baby beds. like new, $1700. Call even·
198B . Ford Bronco. mech
8110. Mattranea or box inga after 7 :00. 304-678- 304-576-2173 .
good cond., 8600 . Coli
springs, full or twin, 868 .. 2782.
TWO 1969 Ford Mustangs. 446-0820 ohar 8:00.
firm. &amp;88. and $78. Queen
sets. $196. 4 dr. chests, BIG Horn saddle &amp;. bridle, Hardtop t1 0~0 . Convenlbla 1978 4x4 Dodge Pic~up.
842 . 6 dr. chests, $64 . Bad good shape, 8126 . Cell •1200. Call 304-B96 - axe. cond. Best offer. Call
fremea, 820.and $26., 10 avenlnge after 7:00. 304- 3610. Can &lt; be seen on 675-6078.
Sandhill Road et Lllort.
gun . Gun ·cabinets, 8360., 678-2782 .
dinette chairs t20. and t25. j ~:;::;::;:;:=:;:=:;:= SIX year old Palamino mara. 1977 Chevrolet 4•4 Ps. PB.
Gas or electric ranges, $3261·
ton. auto trana.. new
$600. Call evenings after full
uptoe375 . .Babymotreaaeo. 55 Building Supplies
paint. new wheel and tires.
7
:00.
304-678-2782.
825 &amp; 836, bed frames $ 2 0 . 1 - - - - ' - - - - - - $3.900. Coll448-8614.
$26, &amp; $30, king frame $60.
Good selection of bedroom
Building materials
11uites. ceder chasu. block, brick, sewer pipaa,
76 CJ5, .1.000. 304-676rockers, metal cabinets , windows , lintels, etc .
2806.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Claude Winters, Rio Grenda,
swivel rockers.
Used Furniture -- b~o_k•:~••· l 0. Call614-246-5121 .
ranges,
'"""""· 1
1;;==;~::;~;:~==
H•y for aale 81 .60 a bale or 74 Motorcycles
washers,chairs.
dryers,end
refrigera~
troclo
lor calves. Call 446tors and TV's. 3 miles out 58 Pets for Sale
8381 or 446-158B.
Buleville Rd . Open 9am to
1 979 Honda CB 660. Price
&amp;pm, Mon . thru Fri .. 9am to
Custom Combining. Call negottlable, Call 446-B853.
6pm, Sat.
HILLCREST KENNEL - 814-266-1362.
446-0322
Boarding ell breeds. Selling
W~ter Cooled 1972 GT 7110
30' alec. range e95, 40' Happy Jock Dog Food. AKC Good mixed hay. 90 centa a Suzuki, very good cond .•
elec. range $76. 40 elec. Dobermant: Stud Service. bale out of field . New Rive 11.000 miles . t725. 388Call 448-7796 . .
tobacco atlcka sharpen each 8710.
.
r~nge coppertone $96, 30'
end. Cell614-379-2146,
gas rzmge avacado $86,
1977 h~rley Davidson FLH
portable Hoover washer DAAGONWYND CATTERY
$96, queen size bow. springs - KENNEL. AKC Chow pup- MIXED hay, 304 - 876 - dresser, In good cond .
U.400. Coli 448-4320.
&amp; mattre11 $46 ~ 8 ,000 BTU pies, CFA Himalay•n. Par- 2254.
air conditioner 886, Whirl~ sian end Siamese kittena.
H•y and Strew. 304-458· 1 9BO Yomahe YZ80 dirt
pool refrig. t96. GE relrig Call 446-3B44 alter 4PM.
1658.
bike, boots, pa·nts. chMt
$96, dining room tabla 866,
protector. extra tire, good
couch t26. Skaggs Applian- 2 AKC Reg. Cocker Spacondition. - Cell 614-246ces. Upper River Rd, Galli- niels. Both males. selling for
5021.
polis. 446-7398 .
448-9372
altar
6:00PM
.
breading purposes.
1976 Honda 750. many
U1ed washers &amp; dryers good
extra parts. Call 814- 245selection late modela. All Seal Point Siamese kittens.
Autos for
9239.
guaranteed 30 day. all real ell mole, eso oech . Coli
614-388-.8488.
nice. Coll614-266-1207.
1974 Honda 350. 7 .400
Maytag washer &amp; dryer pair, 8 week old siamese kittens. 1973 · Pontiac Cat;alina, 4 actual .milea. *600. Call
614-3BB-9755.
like new, guaranteed. $276. Call 448-4230.
dr .. hardtop. Ph. 388-B419.
Other make1 of washers &amp;
dryers, rebuilt, guarantud. Doberman puppies for sale. 19BO Chevy Chevotte, 1979 Buheco Fronte~a.
good condition. Few miles
.$90 and up. Hotpoint rafrig . Call 614-247-4734.
1979 F,o rd Fiesta, priced since overhaul. Real good
&amp;1 30, Whirlpool refrig .
right. John's Auto Sales on dirt bike. 1350. Coli 742$130. GE refrig . real niee
Bulaville Rd. Open Eveinga, 2088 .
~ 175. 1 Reece hitch will ~ell
3-o.i:&amp;'75:27;i9: I 448-4782, Gallipolio.
all or part. Call 446-8033.
Honda, 1981 CB 900, CUI1986 Chevrolet Impel•. 283
Beds, queen. 8200; twin, AKC registered black Ger- 2· barren, good cond ;, new tom, t2850 . 304-876t126 . Box spring, mat- man Shept'!erd puppies, rubber, beat offer. Call G76- 2661 .
tresses. frames. practically t160. 304-937-320.1.
8B19 between 6-7PM .
1977 HARLEY Oevidoon,
n·e w. Wringer washer. S26.
good condition. lot of
446-1589 .
1972 Chevrolet Rolly Novo chrome, 304-773-6083.
58
Fruit
V-8. 4 shift, vinyl top, strips.
Heat Wave wood haater,
&amp; Vegetables
maga, good body. naeda 1971 TRAIL 90 Honda,
used three years. Hes autopoint, $996. Coll446-2044 . excellent condition. t460.
matic thermoltat and
304-676-2836.
blower. Very good condi1978, Monte Carlo. good
Peaches white, pick
tion. Call 247-2476.
own. $1 0 bu. Iring con- cond .. 11.800. Coli 814387-0212.
75
Boats ani!
Whirlpool portable dis- tainer, Raynor's, Rt. 7,
Lower
River
Rd.
446-4807.
hWasher and counter-top
Motors for Sale .
bar. Excellent condition.
Sweet corn, half
Coli 992-7839.
beans, cabbage.
14 FOOT fiberglau Vown or
bonom boat. 5.6 motor.
Hoppy Hollow
trailer. 304-876-1474 olter
Golllpollo Forry. WV,
6p.m.
6741-2026 .

Call~~~~~~~!~~~~

HI Preuure CIHning. Alum-~~
inum tiding, mobile hornet,.~
wood, brick, .. nd1tone-· ~·
bullct'ng and homn. AI•O:&gt;~
heavy equipment. Fully
aured. Fr. . e.tlmatee. 11 4 .. ,.•
90·2886 .
-... ~

ln-.-,

GENE 'S CARPET CLEAN-~;
lNG SERVICE. Recommended for profe sak»n•hl •
staem clllfling . 1 cote f"
Guard-Free Eaiimatn. Cell ...,.
Gene 01 614-992-8309.
•

2 BR mobile homa. Personal
ref . &amp;. deposit required . Call
446-2637.
12x62 2 bedroom trailer.
Adults only . Brown' a Trailer
Park. 614-992-3324 .

1974 17 lt. tri-heul, 126
Evlnrudo U.OOO. Coli 814387-0282 .

RIJ!I&amp;II'(6REII6E

WA60H, MltiTEI'i? 1
DU7H'T•• EI!-HUR7'
IT Of! AlfYTHI~~

.BL
Pt.IIY/H'_

WELL, EVEN

IF \1JU

ALL OVER YOOI'itiE'LF (6 YOUfl
IDEE! OF A 6MfE?

YOU'RE Tl'iYIN'
T' 015tiU15E

NH'T TOO GOOD

YOOR5ELF!

~~~~AiiTLY/H~APtE 'fl?

yi COULOI'(T FOOL

!_
-·

Roofing and Car,entry
Anthony Williamaon. 814·
387-0194.
'·

I "'EVER SAW f&gt;NV-

"

ONE CA.1t:H ON SO
QUICk:! OOP'S A
NAIURAL!

ROOFING &amp; outsicle paint- "
In g. " " eltirnet:u.
14- _,
3417-0836.
•

e

Plumbing

llo Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-388B or 4484477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp;·HEATING. Fomerly Dewltt'o •
Plumbing. Call 814·387- - ;
0576.
·,

l also recollec'

·:

ill owes"im

Excavating

--------- ..
-·

.,
_, :
.

&gt;

.
:

lonnie Bogge Excevating. ~'
Dozer, backhoe. dumptruck. ·:
Work by hour or job. Call ..
446-7903.
~--:----------------1

.

Cat 214 hoe. dozers, cr•ne. :
loaders. dump truck. can . .
614-446-1142 botweon
7 :00AM &amp; 6:00PM .

WINNIE
e&gt;IGGEST WOMAN IN THE
ROOM ... THE O~JECT OF EVERY
FAT JOKE 'EVER WRITTEN, ••
_, &amp;YIFr -- S.·Wrr ~

Dozer work, ground clean-

Ing &amp; ew.c.h ating. •25 hour.
Coli 4441-983B .

·,

'

J .A.R. Conatruetion Co. 1:
Water Linea. Fooien, ,
Orolno. All kinds of Ditching; .~'
Rutlond. Oh . 814-742• , ;
2903.
:.nf

::~~-----:--:-:-::-:---

OH, lliRDIE,
I HAD NO

IDIA YOU

WERE 60

,,

MfHgs Excavating . Bulldozer .I
• bac::khoe 11rvice. a.a: ·~
menta, footera.landacepk\g, 1
drlveway1, farm ponds . ·:
114-742-2407 or 114-74220118.
.

BARNEY
IS

IT

GOIN'
TO RAIN
TOOAV,

MAW?

NOPE··MV
816 TOE

DON'T ACI-IE
AT

GOODY!!
'fOU CAN
PLOW TH'
HIGH
FIELD

General Hauling

2nd Annuol Legendary
Pooket lllllarda Stars Thla
1how featur11 Willie Mot·
coni va . Luther lattit~r.
(80 min.)
(I)
MOVIE:
'Fun
In
Aoa;loo'
([)
(JJ Mojof I.Mguo
Baooblll: T•m• to B•
Announcod
•
([) (JJ Square Povo
Lauren's convinced that
ohe and Patty have broken
the p~ularlty barrier. (R)
([) (I}) FrontHne 'Sanctuary.'
• MOVIE: 'lplnout' .
B:30 • ()) l1l Fomlly Tloo Ale•
courts ditltter by tecretly
invettlng · hit lather's mo.
nay in the stock market. (R)
D ([) ()J For Momboro
Only Three young caddltt
at an BKCIUIIVB country
club prove c::onsta nt thorns
in the tide of the pompous
manager.
9:00 D(J)(I) MOVIE: 'Aicatroz:
Tho Whole Shook!"' Story'
Part 2
()) MOVIE: ' Rocky Ill'
()) 700 Club Today'o pro,
gram features actretl Rita
Walter of 'Aa the World
Turn a:
C1J NFL'o Graateot Mo.
monte: 'Big Game Amarica'
G Cll (JJ 1883 Mlu
Unlvoru Pagoonl Bob Borker and Joen. V1n Ark hott
the 1083 Mill Universe
Pageant from tiTe Klol Auditorium, St. Louis, MO. (2
hrs.)
([)(D) G\'111 Porlormoncoo
'Bridesheed
Aeviaited .'
Chari" Ryder returns to
Bridethead C81tle where
he llrot mot Sabootion. (RJ
(2 hro.) [Ciooad Captioned]
10:00 ()) MOVIE: 'Budo: GNat
Meotero ol the Mortlol
Am'
(]) Wortd Sportomon Outdoor
adventure• from
throughout the world are
hooted by Curt Gowdy. (80
min .)
DINNN-•
10:1 &amp; (I) TBI Evonlng Nowo
10:30 ()) Stor Tlma
.
II In S..rah of...,
11:00. &lt;Il IIlD IJJ tiJ ·~
Newt
(J) Stencil"' Room Only:
Dolly In eor-t Dolly Parton performs in London .
CIJ ESPN SportaConter
()) Womon Wotoh
(!) NIW8!8porto/WHthtr
Cll Monty Python
•
II Bonn_!_Hill Show
1 1:30 • ()) CZJ Tonight Show
Johnny's guests are ~len
Aida and David Brenner.
(R) (80 min.)'
,
(J)
MOVIE:
'Breokor
Moroni'
()) Another Ut.
(I) Catllno

min.)
.
([) PBI Ute Night ·
(JJ All In tho Family
• (JJ Nlghtllno
81 Ounomoka
1 Z:OO ()) Burne &amp; Allen
C1J PKA Futl ContaOt
I&lt;Airote
Cll lt'o • Lo"' Woy to
Ootobor
()) Nlghtllne
(JJ MOVIE: 'Windo of

Autumn•

~E't'

WANT YOU TO
6ET LONELY SO YOU'LL
APPRECIATE I-40ME

THIS MUST BE A
600D CAMP... IT'S
WORKING!

TWO bedroom, furnished
trailer, 8186.00, plus utili·
ties. 304-6711-411112.

'

--

..;...

-

.,
----------,.
'j

~-

Now arrange the drcled letters to
surprise answer, as auggoaled by the above cartoon.

torm the

Prln,_.,.,h_: rr I 1
Salurd
ay'e

ON THE

I An..-·

tI

x1

(Ailawertl 111morrow)

Jumblao : GUILT HITCH MORGUE HELMET
Whit the lnwltlble man's wife saw when

· h•r husband gava flla uauallarrle excuseRIGHT THROUGH HIM

··· ·

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A a~ in Analyze
and lotiers, and finally H Is
how can I Jllake or defeat

NORTH
UQ2

1-ll-tl '

Jim:

.A 10

-•

~Jill II

EAST

+Hao

.Q7H3

+A&amp;

j+KJ864

loday's

hand

contract.

WEST

J92

"In

South fillds himself at a
normal, good three no-trump

+AI

. l!+tou

the contract?"

H7

+Q2

SOUTH
+K87
.K86
• Q&amp; 2

+tOU3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Weot

F.ut

SCJalll

INT

Pass

Pau

Pass

Pa..

Pau

Opening lead: 4o6

By O.waltl Jaeoby
udJUDetJaeoby
Jim: "We haven't

He can couut II
top winners eJ&lt;cept for the
unpleuant fact lhat West
bas opened a club, and the
defenae may be able to take
aeveral club tricks before
declarer can set up dummy's
dlamondl. South mU.t try to
make sure that his ol'ponenls can't take four tricks
in that suit."
Oswald: "H clubs are
going to break 4·3, be has no
worry about. the contract.
He only worries if someone
bas fl ve or si:l cards In the
suit."
Jim: "He analyzes the
lead as either fourth best or
top of a doubleton. Then be
decides that it isn't 101Dg to
be anything but a genuine
fourth besl People like to
open short maJor sulls. They
never open a doubleton club
when neither major has been
bid."
Oswald: "The play of the

said

nuach about our acrollY..,
ARCHlatel ." ·
Oawald: Y.It is a help In
both dummy play and
defense. A Is analyze the
lead. R Is review the
bidding. C Is counl winners

•,

ace, tben, is a sure winner. It
would only coat him his
game If West had led small
from five or six to the K-QJ, and with one of thoae
boldlnga the king would
surely have bet:n led."
(NEWSPAPER l!liiTEitPitJ8E ASSN.)

'•

dl&amp;~t~TM¥Jt,.r
llr THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
"1 Hemingway's 1 Turkish
nickname
rice dish

zPlaying

s Very (Fr.)

9 Borodin's
''Prince-''

marble
30utage

BaconsUce

• Scottish

13 Grastt plot

alder
5 Court

1t Part
of a boot

proceedings

UConsumed

I Grazing

11 Loaetbe

I
- - - ---

groimd
ZZ Field
1 Written
Z3 Silk fabric
letter
zt King
8 They could
, Arthur's
cause3Down
burial

marchers

178ped

-18 Productive
10 -for tat
Zl~tlng

2t Made a

bird
sound
:II Thread

31 Anesthetic

11 -May
place
12 Lease holder Z5 Pup11 Gennan song Z1 Solve a
lt Rip
cryptogram

and spelling
ZZ Teener's
CCJIICem

Leafy dish

.,

:II Three
(prefix)

31 Moo goo
-pan

Gennanclty
Caucasian
language

ZTCervine
Zl Rock's

Fleetwood
2t Last Supper

room

Sort
After
Sept.
MOut

(Dutch)

• Reiterated
· Intensive

.Qirrent

Czech river
•
'

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

AXVDLBAAXR
lo

LONGFILLOW

One letter simply otando lor IMiher. In lhio 11mple A Ia
liHd for the three L'a, X for the lwo O's, ett. Single lettera,
aPQIIropbel, the lenllh and· formation of the words ora oil
blals. El&lt;b day lhe code letters are dllerent

CRVPTOQUOTI!S
12:30 • (I) l1l Lat8 Night with
Oovld l.elt8rrnan
()) MOVIE: 'The lloldlol'
EU
SXYSAPN
LBRL
BV
()) J - lonny lhow
' ·
• Cll Columbo •Any Old
QSXE TXLU RAATZVX\.E OBTAB
Port In • Storm: A win•
moklr murcter. hlo younger brother when - he
ELRQLVZ USL
BRMMVX
LU
docld.. tD ull tho lomlly
b~oln ..o. (R) (110 min.)
EUDVWUZN VYEV.- ZUX DRQJ STE"
• aJi AIC Nowa One on
Ono
. Yeola ..y'ICIJp:-: THELUCKOFHAVINGTAbENTIS -,
•
M•ry Hortmon, Mory

H•rtman

-

TO PO THIS. ,

e ([)

1 bedroom . 12w.45 furnished. AC, w•aher &amp; dryer.
8160 plus utilities &amp; deposit. No peto. 992-7479 .

,

~SEll/TED THAT
~ITZY P'OOC:H I'ECAU:5E
HE ALWA~ WANTED

THEY

31 Ulllan
Hort to Hort Tho
or Dorothy
Hartl become ·the targets
• Habituated
of a couple who want their ·
a Silt tree
prize antique car. (R) (80

'•
"'I

JONES BOYS WATER SEA- ';
VICE . Cell 1114-367-7471
or 814-387-0191 ,
- -,

w-

())Soap

SEWING M1chin1 repalra • . ::
"rvice. Authorized Sing..- . ·'
Sates &amp; Service Sh•rpeft ~ ;
Sci11ore . Fabric ShOp. .,
Pomeroy. 982-2284.
•

85 ,

( DMOVIE:'The uotWonl'
(]) Tlo Tao Dough
!Ill o...m of J•nnle
(!) N-'lporta/WMth&lt;lr
([)Studio ...
(J1) AMdtng Aolnbow
• wnd. Wild
• (J) (!) NIC Newo
(]) Lo.. Thot (I) Fo- Knowo liNt
(1). (jJI ABC Newo
• Cll QJ CBI Newo
ill Or. Who
(J1) Ovor Eooy Tho opotlight

CIJ

work. general ~"· c811

DOZER WORK By Tad
Hanna. ponda, ditches ..
beaementa, etc. Call 448·
4907. Carter &amp; Evan I
Trenepiortatlon.
.

tiJ

())I Spy

!;

18 FT. Motor boet &amp; treller, Cat 21'&amp; Hoe. dozers, cr~~ne. ·;
75 HP Mwcury motor. alto · loedars. dump truck. 114included Ia, extre 76 HP 446·11"2. behuaen 7 a.m.
motor. skit, IHe jeckatl &amp; an to 6 p.m.
extr• prop., carpeting.
.,
.1.200. 304-937-2026 .
'
84
Electricel
llo Refrigeration
78 Auto Perts
·'•'
&amp; Accassorlas
Appliance Service aH makea
&amp; models. W•ahers-dryere- ':
Window tinting-auto, com- relrig .-ranoe•-dlahweehere- •1
mercial &amp; realdent .. l. Cell air condl-iOn,re . l•rglin _~
Bom. 441-8033.
• -,'
448-3100.
79 Motors Homes
llo Campers

YOUI!

"
•·

.,

12x85 2 bdr., gas &amp; water
included. furnished . $276
mo ., 8100 dep. Call 446·
6683 .

-I5~EI!-THIS

aher 5 .

83

w•w tiJ •

()) •w

E &amp; R T - Service. fully
inaured. free e11lm•••• · ;
Phone 1114-3417-01341. cell •

82

(J)

.Star

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing. including ~
hot tar application, cer~­
ter, electrician. rn111on. C1ll ~
304-176-208B or 1175- ,.
4680.
•. . ;

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Ont'
p•c• custom fit your herne.
Guaranteed. Advencecl ,Gut~
tor. (Ooy 814-192-4088,)
(night 614-698-82011.)

·

Report

•

Get your carpet In ahip
ehepe. Weterremo.al, FREE
ESTIMATES. FUANITUR!
CLEANING . CAPTAIN ,
STEAMER 614-448-2107. · "'

•

(J)Nowa
• (JJ P-lo·o Court
Trek
7:30 • (J) Lie Doteotor
(J) Frogglo Rook Vio~ the ·
wO&lt;Id of F•eflllle Rook underneath the b11ement of
an eccentric Inventor.
()) Doble Ollllo
C1J EBPN SportoConter
()) And_y_ Grlllttll
Fomlly ~
Cll Buol- R-rt
(JJ You Aekod For It
(J1) Monoymikora
·
Gl (jJI Entertalnmont
Ton!llht
8:00 D (I) C!J Love. Sidney Sidney Is intuited when Leurle
otortl imllltlng him . (R)
(J) On Loaotlon: Campuo
Comedy Joa Plo¢opo hooll
thlo look 11 what mekoo
collove otudenll Iough.
()) MOVIE: 'Kenny Rogoro
•• tho Tho O.mblo(

RON'S Television Service. ~
Speclollzlng In Zonlth ond ~
Motorola. Quuer. and ·~.
house cello. Col 178-2388
or 448·2464.
;:

Water Wells. Commlf'clal i
and Domeatic . Tnt holM.
Pumps Sale1 and Service.
304-811-3802 .

tour ordlnoly -

Is on former host Hugh
Down• who oftars thought·
lui vlewo on aging. [Cio11d
Captlonod]
'
7:00 • &lt;D PM Movozlno
(]) Bumo • Allan
CIJ EIPN'o lnoldo Ba-ll
CIJO..n Aareo
Cll !nt.rtolnmont Tonight
(!) Chllrtle'o Angelo ·
• Cll Tla Tee Dough
([) (J1) MaaNol~uhror

~::

2fB8.

-

tour Jumtllel,
ooch oquaro, to form

EVENING

-P-e-:-ln-t-:-ln-g-:-1-n-te-r:-1.,-:&amp;-ox-:te::-r-;lor::-., .~
wallp..., ·hanging. lneuNd~~·
frH estimates. e1,.·149.. -.~:

Ralph Reynolds 108 acre
farm at Eno. on Rt. 564 and
18 •eras on Whea~on Rd .
Coll614-367-0618 , ·
~pproximately 14 acre farm
ne•r Chester. 2-atory frame
hou•. baeenwnt.. good condriion. City weter. natural
al. ..ptic tank ayJ1am .
em 3 oulbuHdlngo. pond .
Prleod In middle 30'o. Call·
c-or. 811-38311. or Belpre, 423-1931.

'

con
-----:-----:t
H &amp; S Homelmprovementt ... •!

springs &amp; mattress twin or
•

f981 SCHULTZ. 2 bedrOom. excellent condition,
304-676-5376.

.

.

Unocr--10

· ono

7/11/83

'.

PAINTING - lntorlor •net •&lt;
exterior. plumbing. rooflngj )
some remodeling. 20 yra.'""""
oxp. Cltll 114-318 -ltiZ. · 1:

antron recliners $99, other Have your old mower racon·
reclinen $80, maple dinette ditioned for a fr11ction of the
sets $179, love ... ,. 170, coat of 1 new one. We now

~-t;;
s.~OSS..

lal8, 1 Y2 hr. out Rt. 160 ·,_t

to~ Sale

Television
Viewing

------ ~1

-M-ore_u_m_A_oo_fi::-n-a-:•-:1-poo--"ul- ~
lng, 30 .,..., experience• .,
specializing in -.uMt up roof., :
114-388-1817.
•

For sale by owner. Farm with
nevt house &amp; garage. 20 A.
land. near Rio Grande. Conaider all offers. Call 614246-6190 any time or 614246-9400 before 9PM .

32 Mobile Homes

DICK'J'IV.CY

eltlmatn. Call 114-25e\'-'! ·

House for Sale, 5 RM and
Bath . Buffalo, WV . Call
1 -304-675-2658or write:
Box 469. Pt Pleaaant. WV
26660 .

dlepon
Niwly
remodeled
HOUSE. FOR
SALE
in Midhome with fireplace, poni·
ble woodburnar, close to
schools ond shopping. Call
614· 992-6941 .
Brick home wilh 4 acres, 3
bdr., 1 V2 bath, large kitchen
&amp; dining room. basement
with wood &amp; etectric heat.
Kyger Creek scholl . dist.
$55,000. Coli 614 -3877238 .

.. The Doilv

STUCCO PLASTERING - '!
teKturecl ceitlnga commer! 1
clal and residential. fr• ,

1 VMI\ et.eAN i N~

Pomeroy. Large Iota. Cell
992-7479 .

THE TAPE
STARTS..

Home
Improvement•

I

Park , Route 33 , North of

. FIND' WUEF&lt;E

81

1983

-1:00 (I) I Mtrrlld Joo11

:NOr
ENOUGH;
WCX-BERLIOZ
•

MUST AIS&gt; HAVE A TALENT FOR .
,

.

�10-lhe Daily

Sentinel

Israeli army ·begins tria) ·run
·for future troop pullbacks
By'lbe Auociated Press
"llank from Jordan in 1967: a Jewish · -government would implement Its
• 'lbe ~U anny hilS begun a settlement W!IS founded adlacent to March 19111 decision to revive
~''IJ1al run" for future troop pul- the Arab city. But some Jewish · Hebron'sJewlshquarter.
-lbacks In Lebanon, according to
IIOUrees, whlle the Israeli Cabinet
to increase the Jewish
has "-!ded
"""
-ee
in
P·~~ . a trou bled city In the
-·pledW !Bank
es
·
,~w
n.e Cabinet
spent much of its
, meeting Sunday · discussing new

·:::=t~b-Jewish violence
·· Prime Mlnlster Menachem Begin
rejected!lrequestbyJewishSetllers
that they be allowed to form their
· ownrhllltlas,buttheCabinetupheld
the recent dismissal of Hebron's
acting Arab mayor, Mustafa
Natshe, and also decided to proceed
with plans · to restore the Jewish
presence in Hebron.
The previous Jewis)l community
Iii Hebron was dispersed alter
•Arabs massacred 70 Jews there in
1929in what was then Palestine.
After Israel captured the West

militants occupied buildings Inside
the city, heightening tensions with
the Arabs.
Deputy Premier David Levy said
after the Cabinet session that the

AcurlewimposedinHe~atter

Eight emergency runs were
made Saturday by local units, three
Sunday and one early Monday
mornlilg, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reported.
Saturday runs Included the following: Racine at 8:39p.m. was called
to a brush !Ire on county road 28,
Apple Grove; Syracuse at 3: 38 p.m.
to College Road for Anna Duffy who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospllal, at 6: 18 p.m. to Dusky
Street where a car was on fire, and
at 23:51 to Welsh Town Hill lor
Timothy .Kline who was taken to
Veterans '-Memorial; Rutland at
11:09 p.m for Clarence McDaniel
who was taken to Veterans MemorIal; Middleport at 11:44 a.m. to
Pearl Street for Bertha Brickles
who was taken to Veterans MemorIal, at 8:00p.m. and 9:45p.m. for
RJcbard Julian who was treated at
the scene on both occasslons.

A 1983 Chevrolet Chevette will be
given away by tbe PomeroyMiddleport Lions aub as tbe top
prtze In the club's Community
Improvement Project, it was announced today.
Several other cash awards will be
presented In conjunction with the
project .
The car and other prizes will be
given away during an all-you-can·
eat buffet at Royal Qak Park, near
Five Points, on August 13. Persons
not participating 1n the project wlll

Smith said Ms. Darr' s source was
Chuck Crawford, who worked with
Reagan's communications chief,
Robert Keith Gray, whonowownsa
Washington publlc relations firm.
Crawford works at the firm.
Neither Crawford norMs. Darr, a
lawyer In private practice, could be
reached for comment. Repeated
telephone calls · to each went

To end marriages
One divorce was granted and one
dissolu tlon was decreed in Common
Pleas COlll't.
IJecky K Taylor and Brtan Mo.
Taylor werf given a divorce. Judy
A. Gloeckher and Charles W.
Gloeckner were granted a
dissolution.
Roy R. Smith, Rt.l, POrtland, and
Tammy Smith, Rt1 Portland, flled
for dissolution.

Timothy Frazier, Middleport; Anna
Powers, Huntington; Inez Stivers,
Pomeroy; Terry Barrett, Dexter;
Anna Alley .. Racine; Anna Duffy,
Syracu'se; Elvira Barr, Syracuse;
Allen Partlow, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES SATURDAY···
Adam Carter, Tlnta Carter, Edith
Salser, Earl Thoma, Timothy
Frazier, Dorothy Collins, Lee Bing,

JAMBOREE TRADING - Noel Connel, 17, of
· ottawa, Kan., left, and Tom Warren, 15, of Carthage,
Tex., are 8llown lradlng patches at the llith World
Jamboree In Alberta, Canada, on a picnic table.

Patches, piDs, beH bucldee and neckereblefa uelb8
precluct and the Clln'eiiCY Iii the -'d's 0101&amp;
intemailonal Dea IIIBI'Iret. (AP Lase.,hoto).

OVP ltatf

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -Ohio
Sen. John Glenn has cut Into former
Vice President Walter Mondale's
lead in Iowa for the Democratic
presidential nomination, a poll
shows.
The copylight poll In' the Des
Moines Sunday Register shows that
among Iowa Democrats, Glenn cut ·
Into a 38-polnt lead Mondale held In
March.
With Glenn moving up 13 points
and Mondale dropping back 10
points, 1!Je ligures are now Mood ale
45 percent and Glenn .Jl percent. No
one else is close, the poll said.
Among all voters, Glenn shows up
as the only Democrat who bests
President Reagan 1n a head-to-head
race.
The poll shows Glenn recelvtng48
percent of the votes to43 percent for
Reagan and 9 percent undecided
among Iowans ·u the presidential
electlon were held today.
The poll Shows a closer47percent
for Reagan and 45 percent for
Mondale If that were the lineup.

A $42,741.73 lawsuit W!IS fUed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Bank One of Pomeroy against
Appalachian Petroleum Corp. and
,Harvey A. Russell, hoth of Reno,
Ohio.

1n a related subject,thepollsllows approval, 35 percent disapproval
that farmers, who had been
and 12 percent no opinion.
straddling the fence between Rea·
Farmers now say If the election ,
gan and his top . Democratic were held today, they would pick
challengers, are now pitching In to Reagan 2-to-1 over any Democrat.
boost Reagan's statewide job approThelowapollwasconducted!rom
val rating above 50 percent for the June 20 to July 1 and Is based on
firSt time In 18 months.
telephone Interviews With 1,001
The rating is now 53 percent - adult Iowans.

JULY CLEARANCE SALE ·
CONTINUEs·
SAVE ON MEN'S WEAR
WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S AND
BOYS' CLOTHING

refused a request by tbe board to resign.
The board held a special meeting Monday night and
six new members, attending their first &amp;eliSion,
Immediately made their ·presence known In
discussions about tbe hoard's budget and other issues.
New board member Warren Sheets asked that
Plummer's employment be discussed at a special
meelingAug.l. Board ChalnnanJohnRJceagreed to
place It on the agenda.
PlumJner's status has been up 1n the air stnceJan.
24, when the hoard voted 6-5 to request Plwruner's
resignation. The director Immediately refused kJ step
down and tl;le hoard has taken no omc!al action since.
After Monday's meeting, Plummer said she
welcomes a resolution to her employment issue.

SAVE 30o/o TO SO%

Jly ERIC JENNINGS

Sentinel 8lalf

AN EXCELLENT TIME FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL SHOPPING.

Weather forecast

·After months of Inaction, the Gauta.Jackson-Melgs
i4ll hoard Will again consider what to do about Its
executive director, Maxine Plummer. who has

"I've always pushed for a decision," she said.
Plummer came under fire In January from a
state-appointed review group which accused her and
her staff of "extravagant" spending and mismanagement of public funds.
·
The review group was formed 1n October by the
"'ryner state director of mental health as the result of
. a hlghly-charged conflict between Plummer and
Bernard Nlelun, director of Woodland Centers (then
called the Gallia-Jackson-Melgs Community Mental
·
Health Center).
Iii a f1nal report released JanllllfY. 7, the review
group called for the resignations .of both Plummer
and Nlelun.
The Woodland Centers hoard has since voted to
support Nlelun and not seek his resignation.
Although the 648 board has taken no otllcial action
concerning Plummer since January, the makeup of
the 15-member hoard has changed significantly since
July 1.

Clear tonight. Low 65-70. Winds
southwesterly 10-15 mph. Partly
sunny Tuesday. High 85-90.
Exteoded Ohio Forecast
w~ - . p Friday:
Fair w~ through Friday.

IDglwlnthellOB.t-slnthetl()s.

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

Marriage licenses
Two mari'Iage licenses were
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court.
James D. Gaultney, Manchester,
Tenn., and Elaine S. Little; Charles
D. Adams, Reedsvtlle, and Cathy L.
Cowdery, Parkersburg,W.Va.

'lbe Middleport City Connell,
cancludlilg that a rate !ncre115e Is a
. ·necessity for Improved service,
j!ppi'OVed an ordinance Monday
nlgbt on first reading which allows
,Cablentertainment to increase
. rates.
Council bad been approached by
, , Cablen'tertalnment representative
Richard Newell before about a
proposed rate Increase, however,
council hail tabled the motion.
Cablentertalnment has proposed
that lnstalilltion rates on cable
service be ~ased from the
present $22.50 to $:l'i.
1n addition, monthly seJVtce rates
for the basic service wUI be raised
from f/ kl-8.50, Newell said.
, "The basic rate we charge
customers each month has not
changed since 1979,'' he said, adding
that, "We !'rei justified 1n asking for
a rate lncrellse.''
Newell said Cablentertalnment
orlglnally purchased the cable
seJVice In Middleport and Invested
U.1 rnWlon In tbe business. However, since expenses have Increased, the company needs more
revenue to keep up with the "4.4
million plus investment," he added.
Along the Ohio Valley, Cablentertalnment's average rate is $8.49 per
month, he said, adding that overall,

""*

cents jess than the average rates
charged for communities around
the state with a similar population,
acmrdlilg to flgu~ released by the
Ohio Consumer's Counsel In
Columbus.
Columbia Gas is presently chargIng ~rtcustomers$89.65per
month. However, Pomeroy customers are pay!ng $93.14 on a monthly
basis.
"The Consumer Counsel figures

$ 599~~white

the average rate Cablentertain·
men\ charges Its customers
monthly is $9.00
Th@ extra revenue coming In !IS a
result of the propolled rate iqcrease
wlll not Increase the rate of return
for the cable company, he said.
Regardless of whether or not the
rate Increase is approved, the cable
customers Will begin receiving
Cable News Network, lie said.
CNN Is a :If.hour aU-news channel
that II owned by Ted Turner, the
entrepreuner who also owns tbe
Superstatlon out of Atlanta on
Channel4, Newell said.
CNN wUI replace tbe AP news
channel that presently Is on channel
13 for cable customers, he added.
Newell also said that a Disney
channel may be inStalled In the near
futuno .
Newell dlsCus.sed with council the
possibility ot taking WI'VN, Columbus Channel 8, off the system and
replacing It with cable alternatives.
"Since we can't deliver a quality
signal on 6, we have discussed the
posalblllty of putting another sa tel·
Ute st'I"Vic-e ln Its place," he said.
Cablentertainment cannot im·
prove the reception on channel6, he
said. Another channel Gin Bluefield,
W.Va. lnterleres with the Columbus
station's reception, he added. ·
Channel tO out ofColumbusseelns
to be doing better because no other

channel 10' s exist within se-veral
hundred mUes of Middleport, he
said.
"10 is good~ percent of the time,
but In the summertime, customers
complain occasslonally about their
pictures fading.''
Connell member Carl Horky
disagreed with taklilg channel 6 off
the air. Newell said "taklng6offthe
air Is an option, and wewouldpollthe
subscribers before taking any
action."
Council member Alan King said
"the Columbus stations don't care
about us."
However, council member Bob
Gilmore said "we need at least one
Columbus station to know what's
haP!Jen!ng at the state capitaL"
Columbus channel 4 was taken off
the system several years ago.
· By replac1ng6and 10, Newell said
Cabletertalnment can ensure top
qquallty on every channel, Newell
said.
"We need to expand to satisfy the
customers," he added.
"Our main concern is to upgrade
the existl!lg system before we go out
into other areas," Newell said,
refeiTlngtothefactthatCablentern·
talnment has not expanded much 1n
the community.
Newell also said he would see
about finding a local place where
cable bUis could be paid.

Spring rain reduces ·tomato crop
By ERIC JENNINGS
Dally Sentinel Staff
Tomatoes. Those juicy plump
red critters that add Immensely
to salads and other food delights
are a big business In Meigs
County.
As a result of the bad weather
-during the spring, however, the
tomato business Is down substanllally, according to Clifford
Hill, who owns a farm 1n Letart
Falls.
"We've got about one-half the
crop as we had last year," he
said.
HUI said the tomato business
has decreased greatly when
compared to the business li!St
year because of the Inclement
early spring weather that al·
fected the area.
"I'd say we have about is to 20
fuli-Oedge tomato farmers 1n the
Letart Fa Us area," he said.
These farmers load the toma·
toes up 1n trucks and send them
out to various cities Including
Cleveland, Detroit, Clnclnnall
and Pittsburgh, said Perry Hlll,
who also workS on the farm.
However, at this point In the
summer(lt's "too dry right now, .

our gas ratesareconslderably lower
than some communities our size
even thoughwehavefreevlllagegas
In our contract," Middleport Mayor
Fred Hollman said.
Hoffman said the city of Middleport is presently not paying for gas
on any city buUdlng because of an
agreement in the contract with
Colwnbla Gas.'
In otber business at Monday
night's meeting, councU:
-Hired Gerald Bayha of Athens
to a title search at thecourthouseas

part of a prelimloary study to
deterlnine Hudson Street's actual
right-of-way. The title search wlll
and $500.
cost betwen
-Council approved a resolution
to hire the Reiser architect nnn of
Athens for designing the houses on
the proposed subdlvion on vtllage
property off General Hartinger
Parkway.
DiscUssed the posslbUity of ron,
structlon some type of access
improvements .for handicapped In
the down town area .

m

•

Authorized Catalog Merchants
Gregg &amp; Patty Gibbs
'.

Fo

Farmers.
Bank

.an

MemlwrFDIC

I(IYt

Your Community Owned Bank

.•,

.. WASHINGI'ON (AP) -The FBI,
probing possible political espionage
Iii the 198lpresldentlal campaign, is; ·
~ agents to the Hoover
,lnstltutlonatStanfordUnlvenlityto •
make arrangements to see original
carnpalgn documents stored there,
admlnlltratlon official says.
..
__ .._,
... the chalrman 0 f the
' ...........
....,,
Houle subcommittee Investigating
how tbe Reagan campalp received
brleftlll material and !!!her docu·
• nienta prepared by tbeCarterWhlte
, · lfauEialdhehadnotbeeiiUIUI'ed
:111at 1111 panel wculd have acceu to
t1w material at tbe California
campus. But he said he boped
approval wa11t1 be llf8llled today.
Prelitteat Reapn lllroulb Wlllte
:· .· Houle mii!Mj Fred' F. FleJdbla,
· ..daid tile Jultlce lleplrlmel!t to .

Rev·

Donald J. A..,.,a, the

11UboommJttee ebalnnan, ~· ro
I

,,

and we need a rain real bad,"
Hill said.
Although Hill said he was able
to get his tomato seeds planted
at about the same time as last
year -late April and right at the
beginning of May - "we got
behind because It was too wet
and cold," to worl&lt; on the plants.
HIU, who has about l.Jl,OOJ
tomato plants In his crop, said,
"I think everybody e lse around
here Is late along with us."
Meigs County farmers, who
produce a large majority of
tomatoes statewide, must compete with tomatofarrnersfroma
variety of stales - Including
Tennessee, Arkansas. California
and other Eastern-shore states
- in order to sell their crops.
Last year, Hlll said. he and his
helpers started picking tomatoes about July 1.
"Ten days makes quite a
difference In the tomato busl·
ness," he said, adding that some
farmers have not yet begun
picking.
Employees for Hlll have not
been working as many hour.; as
a result of the decrease In the

tomato business.
"We're using about the sa me
amount of people, but they're
working around eight hours a
day, rather than 14 hours like
last year," he said.
The tomato business works on
t.he supply and demand prtncl·
pic, he added.
"Our business depends to a
large extent on the tomatoes"
quality and how many are In the
market," he said.
Hill said he believes the Ohio
tomatoes have a better Oavor
lhan tomatoes from other states
because they're vine ripened
and "we pick them as they start
to turn from green to red.'"
Although Hill said his business
. Involves large truck shipments
to major cities, he sells a tot of
tomatoes locally.
"We've sold all we've picked
so far- 500 baskets- locally."
he said.
In addition, Hill said he sells a
number of tomatoes to to
peddlers, who sell vegetables
along the road. "A lot of prople
are out of work, and they set up
road stands because they got to
make a buck ."

SEORC to review highways
there were 80 playing poslllons and
Highways wUI be the subject done our homework. We are not
asking
lor
the
Impossible.
There
players would be dCII' rmlned on a
when members of the Southeastern
first come first seved basts. Charge
Ohio Regional Council meet at . are at least 17 major highway
Improvement needs along our four
for the all day lournamcnt and
Falrgreens Country Club In Jack·
most Important highways. We seek
dinner meeting Is $2S. Entries and
son County on July 28.
lees should be mailed to the ·
Robert L. "Bob" Evans, pres!· funds to update and advance plans
for six of these 17 projects so that
SEORC, Box 271 , Wellston, Ohio
dent of the SEORC, said the council,
45692. .
through Its highway user commit- the region has some chance of
seeing these Improvements unc,lerTickets for the dinner meeting
tee, chaired by G. Kenner Bush,
way before tbe end of this decade .
are available from Rhod Mills
Athens newspaper publisher, will
Logan Chamber of Commerce:
announce a 17-project plan for · Most of these projects have been
sitting
on
tbe
shelf
for
so
long
that
Nelsonville Board of Trade. Athens
highway Improvement In the area.
If
there
are
any
plans
at
all
plans
Chamber
of Commerce, Bernard
Evans said Ill!! plan formulated Is
-are
completely
out
of
date."
Fultz,
Pomeroy-Middleport,
Galli·
a consensus for area highway needs
Evans
said
a
press
conference
polis
Chamber
of
Commerce,
Lawand addj&gt;d that southestern Ohio
would
be
held
at
5:30
p.m
.
at
rence County Economic Develophas suffered too long and too much
Falrgreens prtor to the dinner
ment Corporation, Portsmouth
from cbronic neglect of its highway
meeting.
\]1amber of Commerce, Howard
~. and that the lesson Is clear;
The Highway meeting will be . Thompson, Jackson Chamber of
there will be no significant Improveheld
In conjunction with the annual Commerce, The Milton Banking
ment In the region's economy untU
SEORC
Golf Tournament. BUI Company, Gene Engle and S. R.
the area's ' b8llc highways are .
Childs;
golf
professional at the
(Tate) Cline. The dinner Is at 6:30
completed.
JayMar
Club
In MeigS County, Is and hospitality begln.~ .at 5:30.
Chairman Bush said, "we have
-·
tournament director. Childs said

.

AND
SALES TAX NOT INCLUDED

•
seJVIces to mental health cll&lt;'nts.
In official a~tlon, the board voiL&lt;I 5 to ~ not to
approve a $2.5 mluton 1~ tax estimate burlgct w'•ich
It Is required to submit to Meigs County. All five
voting against the measure were new mcmbe•·s.
Severall)e'W members said they had not """ tho
budget prior to the meeting and did not feel they could
approve It without a thorough examination. ·
Senior members said the tax estimate budgPt' Is a
fonnallty required by state law and Is not slgnlflcant '-"""
when considering how to spend money.
The more important budget. submitted to the
Department of Mental Health, was approve:lln .June
and will be in effect untU July 1, 19&amp;'i, they said.
However, they were overruled by ncwPr members
and the majority voted to request a 30-day extension
of the state's July '15 deadline for approval of the
budget
The budget will be reconsidered by the board at Its
Aug. 1 meellng.

PICIUNG TOMATOES- Several workers lean down bu8lnes8 Is down thuslar this summer heciWl!C of the
and pick lomaloes from plan&amp;s on a farm owned by bad early-spring w.eMiher.
Clifton! IUD of Letart FaDs. IUD said the tomaiA&gt;

.FBI agents check campaign papers
.

23601 :

Mon.-Tues.-Wed..fri. 9:30 to 5
1htn. 9:30 to 12
Sit 9-.30 to 2

RIRg charged to Columbia

·Gila cusluuas in Middleport are 29

In this day and age, everybody knows money
doesn't grow on trees, but we do have some
answers for you. If you qualify, our low-cost
loans can provide you with alllhe money you
may need ... for whatever _you've got in mind.

1 Sec1lon, 10. Page•
20 Cents
.A Mvhlmedla '"'· Nowopapoo

Six new members were appointed to the board by
state and county officials effective July 1 to flU vacant
positions. A seventh new member was chosen
Monday by the Jackson County commissioners to
replace Lorene Johnston, who resigned.
Six of these new members attended Monday's
meeting and they determined the outcome ol the
major Issue voted upon - the 19&amp;1 tax estimate
budget.
Two new board members were also crit lea I pi the
648 board system and the operation of the
GaUla-Jackson -Melgs board.
Ralph McCormick, a Jackson County appointee,
said there has to be "better accountability than you
apparently have had In the past" at the 648 board.
"There Is a lot of Ill publicity" concer:nlng the board
ln Jackson County, McCormick said .
Sheets, appointed from Gallla County, questioned
whether the 648 board could dissolve Itself.
He said the money spent on administration at the
648 hoard could be better used providing direct

G~ rates less in Middleport village

HOURS:

enttne

Cable TV rate· request
given council approval

63711 .

m-95n

at y

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 12, 1983

BY JEFF GRAIIMEIER

Poll shows Glenn gains on Mondale

Money 11ction ftled

108 W. MAIN ST .. POMEROY. OHIO

•

648. will consider Plummer's ·status

Kenmore®laundry pair

Large capapcity washer has 2 speeds, 3
water levels, 3 cycles and self-cleaning lint
filter. Laige capacity dryer features
automatic Fabric Master.

•

'VII.12,No.62

, Copyriptod 1913

unanswered.
The brteflilg book affair, meanwhile, appears to be attracting
widespread Interest. A Newsweek
poll released Sunday found that 82
percent of those interviewed were
aware of the controversy and 59
percent predicted It would become a
major political issue.
Sixty-one percent of those who
were aware of II belleved at least
some wrongdoing was involved,
according to the poll. Forty-nine
percent of those who were aware of
II believed Reagan and his aides
were cooperating tully with Invest!·
gations.

OnSundayPomeroywascalledat Jason Stewart:
1: 23 p.m. to Union Ave. for Wilma
ADMISSIONS SUNDAY-··!;:dna
Ferrell who was taken to Holzer Deem; Racine; Shirley Justice,
Medical Center; Rutland at 10:59 Middleport; Clifford Kauff, Middlep.m . toLangsvilleforHomerPayne port; Louie Lee, Racine.
who was taken to Veterans MemorDISCHARGES SUNDAY···
Ial; Middleport at 7: 20 for Shirley
Thomas, Wilbur Batley,
Patsy Laudennllt.
Justice who W!IS taken to Veterans Donna
MemoriaL
This morning at 2:21 a.m. Meets tonight
Pomeroy went to Laurel Cliff for
Ray Howell who was taken to Holzer
Meigs High School Band Boosters
Medical Center.
wlll meet this evenlngat7p.m. In the
band room at the high school. All
Vetel'lUl!l Memorial
parentsoftreslunenbandmembers
ADMISSIONS SATURDAY"~ · · are welcome to attend.

CUT $}60

PHoNE:

P11ge6

e

be charged ~ . to attend tbe buffet
event It will be free to participate.
Money raised from tbe project
will be used In a Meigs County
community improvement project,
according to a Lions Club
spokesman.
Details of how to qualify for
ellg!butty for tbe car and cash
prtzes can be gotten by calling
992-008'7, 992·3876, 992·7670 or stopping at any of tbe following
businesses: Teaford Realty, Sim·
mons Olds-Cadutac and Chevrolet
or Brogan-Warner Insurance.

aaars

(Ohio) 992-2178
(W. Va.)
.

P11~3

Lions sponsor community project

Happenings around 'Meigs County
Emergency runs

FCA members .
attend convention

last week's slaying of a Jewish
seminary student and subsequent
J
h
·
ewis rtotlngwasUftedforseveral
hours Sunday to enable Arabs to
shop.

·D ebate paper caper heats up
WASHINGTON (AP) - More
and more of President Reagan's
l!llll campaign aides· are acknowledging that they knew about or had
:access to secret briefing papers
~wrltlen at Jimmy Carter's White
·House to help him prepare to debate
.candfdate Reagan.
Carter's campaign counsel ronceded 'Sunday that he was tipped In
advance that the Reagan campaign
had obtained Carter's debate briefing papers, but ignored the tip
because It sounped too outrageous to
be true,
Timothy G. Smith said he
received the Information a week or
10 days before the Oct 28, 1.9!()
debate between Reagan and then
President Carter. It came from
Carter's assistant campaign counsel, Carol C. Darr, who said she'd
heard It from a friend 1n the Reagan
campaign.

Reds fire Wagner;
Howsam takes over

questiOns and whether they is any
need for addltlonalleglslatlon.
Deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes, an·
oounclng Reagan's decision, said
the subcommittee inVestigators
"will have complete access, they
will have access to all thematertal."
"It Is the president's desire to
allow this Investigation kl proceed,
by the Justice Department, by the

any campaign material the department obtains.
Albosta, 0-Mich., chal,rmanofthe
human resoorces subCOmmittee of
the House Post Olllce and Civil
Service Committee, said be appreelated Reagan'• decision.
Subcommittee sources, who
asked not to be named, said Albosta
would probably vel)' quickly seek
sullpoena power II the panel's
co~loomml~,topro­
Investigators were not granted
ceed
unimpeded," the spokelman
ac:.uu totbecomp1etemeot9rtglnal
.
said.
documents at the Hoove(
Shortly after Reagan's order wu
lnltltutlon.
made
publiC, an admlnlltratlon
They said the·panel's investlga·
tors would not be satiSfied with official. speaking on condition that
he not be further ldentlfted,lald the
lll!l!lng tbe ortatnaiB of the docu·
meats tbe Justice Department Justice Ilepartmellt had directed
wanted. 'bl!aiUie the IUbcommlt·
the FBI to tiEIIdqents to the Hoover
let's JillllllGII! II broider than the IJII!ttutloll to dllcula the departFBI's, lfiiDI beyontlllmpiy poten· - ment'aacceutoCJiiCinaldocuments
t1a1 violations of law to ·ethical In the tiles t11ere'

.

,'i

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