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                  <text>Syracuse U
tournament results

Letters to editor
Page 2

·

.,

e

Voi.32,No. ~

c.p,.........

1913

•

at

Sex tapes missing
Page /2

Page 3

en tine
2 S.Ction1, 12 Page•
20 Cenh
A. Multimedia In c. Newtpoper

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 13, 1983

Celeste praises changes; repeal effort begins
From Associated Press

REPEAL

Sentinel Stall Reports

STOP EXCESSIVE TAXATION
CIRCULATE AND RETURN THIS PETITION
AS RAPIDLY AS POSSIBLE
In order fOf lhe PEOPLE OF OHIO 10 hiVe 1
chanet to VOTE on this Co r~lt i tullonal Amond·
ment. YOUR nalp is needed.
Th la Conalltul lonal Amendment woul&lt;:l :

· ,Repeal tna recent 90 per cent permanent Income
1111 lncti.ISfl and re ·estabti ~ h the Depart ment ot
Tax Equalization.

Fo r more dllllils read the &amp;ummary and te •l on !he

oetlllon.
The purpose ot Initiat ive P.elllion Is to place 1ne

iu ua bn the ballot where t he PI!OPLI can VOlt
ttuu r prerarenc a, The si gners era not daclarirl g
!heir POSition altrus time, Tnt pet 1tlon Ia merely a

tool fo·r THE PEOPLE TO BE HEARD and exerclst
their ConstUuUonal Righls.

FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY
, BEFORE YOU CIRCULATE:
I . FiJSt ~ge of petition ·

3. Please reao !tie summary, so tl'lat you unde r·

a. Fitt in date ol !n

e've Got \t And d
e've Got \t Goo

uance.
!Dale )'OU recei" d.)
D. Fill In your name &amp; llddreu.

2. In the waorapn prtnt ! d In red Write the word
'" NOTHING "' alter the prlnteo woros. e.pect
to receiYe.
NO CIRCULATORS Will BE PAID I!

sta nd wh;ll you are circulating.

~~~ee~t /~sua~

!0!: ,r:JJ.:::,Ur/ · .

e11 pects to rece ive
on Boltt Sidell of petrtion

.AM!t&amp; ~
1

NOW YOU ARE READY TO CIRCUl-ATE lHE PETITION:
1. AnyOne can

~rrculate

a ~I ilion

8. 00 NOT MIX COUNTIES ON A PETITION. You
c an Circulate tor mer&amp; than o ne county but
!hey must b e on separate pet it ions
'9. If signer makfll an error .,. draw a STRAIGHT
tin e thru entire line and have hlmlh&amp;r sign on
tne ne-t line . See Sample.

2. ALL SIGNATURES MUST BE DONE IN INKI !!
3. SIGNERS MUST be r~glstoted to vote and
sign t/1f wa)' they are ragiatered .
4. 11 makes 1'10 dllference as to party alllllallon,
or Plllyatall . They simp!~ must De registered
•oters.
5. Ask them to e}tn tnelr name ancr print the
Ccxlnt~ . City, street adores s and inc luda tnfl
do~te tday of 1igning).

10. Every signatu re is important - get as man~ "
)'Ou can but II yoll hav&amp; not Completed ell
spaces. se no the pet it ron back to th&amp; Mid ·
Quatters. We nave an obligat ion to cou nt
eweryon. who sign s ;~nd e~ercl s ed their Con ·
stltlllional Right.

e. Eaen sifnaturtl 1rne musl be comp lfl te.
1. NO OnTO MAAI&lt;S ALLOWED.

ANY QUESTIONS CALL 814·228·2055

• "ri:itnbN DRIVE UNDERWAY

Pe!e COidadls, Alheas ~

Audllor,onbehalfofSET(stopexce181velaxatlon)~begun~lds

I'OIIIIdllnei&amp;NSoulheulemOhlooountleo.Con!ad!ooaldlhegruup'aalm
WMIII repeal all lax lsolies enaded since January.ofthls year. A secoad
,_,...._belngpullhedforplacementonlheNovembergaMhleleclloa
W Cilia far a IIOpercent maJority of each bl'81Jch of stale gova
be:t before any tax looue Is appl"'Ved.
SErfeelslheatate !olaldiiglnmore looornelhan In previous years, butlla
............ r!oeu %1 percent.

•••oent

Gov. Richard Celeste, who pushed
a sharp Increase Jn state Income
fllxes through the Legislature
earlier this year, says state govern·
ment's new budget offers tax relief
for many residents.
"Duling the past few weeks,
Ohioans ·h ave heard a lot of talk
about large tax increases and unfair
fllx burdens," the governor said
during a stop at Burke Lakefront
Airport In Cleveland, · one of four
cities he visited Tuesday. "The fact
today is that millions of Ohioans wUI
pay lower fllxes In 1983. This Is the
largest Individual tax relief bUI In
the history ofthestate...
However, a representative of Stop
Excesslv'e Taxation (SET) has
begun appearing before various
civic organizations to promote the
fllx repeal petition drive sponsored
by his organization.
One of the two amendments the
group has proposed would repeat all

state tax m easures, prin1arlly
· business and personal Income
taxes, passed since Jan. 1. The
amendment would roll back lllxes,
except the sales fllx, to 1981 levels
and would becomeeffectlveJune30,
1984.
The other constitutional amend·
ment would requirf.&gt; a three-fifths
majority of eacch house of the
General Assembly to approve any
future tax measures.
Only sln\ple majorities are now
required, and the 90 percent
tndivtduallncome tax Increase that
passed the Legislature earlier this
year cleared the Senate by only one
vote.
Copies or the lnltlatlv'e petitions to
place the Issues on the fall ballot are
known to be circulating throughout
Southeastern Ohio.
Pete Coutadls, Athens Auditor,
who spoke at Tuesday monthly
meeting of the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce, charged
the state Is taking In more Income

now than In previous years and that
It' s spending has lncresed by 26
percent. He urged a reaiUgnmentof
priorities before the Chamber. . ..
Celeste said Tuesday his record
$2; billion , two-year spending plan
will provide $654 million In tax relief
for working fam1lles and senior
citizens.
"For a long tln\e we've pena~
the working couple, " Celeste said.
"They've vatd what amounts to a
marriage penalty. They will now
receive t3x relief."
During visits to Youngstown,
Cleveland, Dayton and Toledo,
&lt;leleste said the average working
family In the state, with an annual
Income of nearly $26,000, will pay 8.3
percent less In state Income taxes .
than It paid the year before.
He Sllld his fllx relief package
benefits Ohio' s elderly by doubling
their tax credit and nearlyellmlnat·
lng the estate tax for s urviving
spouses. He said about 83,000 senlm'
citizen~. about one-third of the

senior citizens paying taxes In Ohio,
will pay no Income tax during the
next two years.
· Celeste, who signed the record
two-year budget Into taw last week,
asserted that4.3mlllionOhioans wUI
pay less In taxes under the budget's
provisions than they did In January
when he took office.
"The Celeste budget Increases
personal fllx exemptions for each
family m ember and triples the joint
filer credit for working familles,•' he
satd .
He said business and Industry wUI
pay their " fair share" of taxes. But
In reply to a question, he denied that
higher business fllxes will result In
higher prices for Ohio consumers.
Single people, couples without
dependents and famUies ea rning
more than $:11,000 a year bear the
brunt of the tax Increases. For
example. a single person earning
$2;,000 a year will pay 24 percent
more In state fllxes In 1!ll.'l than 1982.

Coal mining firm will purchase blacktop
Coal mine operator Larry Hunt
Schutts.
Forest Run Coat Mine, has told the
The Olive towqnship trustees
Meigs County commissioners his
agreedtomeetwlthPhllllpRoberts,
companywUipurchasetheblacktop
Meigs County Engineer, to discuss
whlchneedstobeappUedtotheroad
the poslbillty of getting the piping
between the mine and Route 7.
Installed and a catch basin put In the
Arbaugh addition In Tupper Plains.
County Prosecutor Rick Crow will
prepare a clocwnent for Hunt and
The county had p~lousty agreed
the commissioners to sign.
to provide Olive township With the
"The county will furnish the labor piping necessary to correct a
and equlpnient and Hunt wUI drainage program; however An·
purchase the materials, which may drews andSchuttzwereunclearwho
cost ~ anywhere from $.1l,&lt;Xxl to . would be responsible for Installing
$55,000, said Commissioner presl· ' the catch baslri, whlchmustbeput In
dent David Koblentz.
·· Mary Jane Talbott's yard, Andrews
In other business, commissioners said.
heard from Olive Township Trus·
"We never agreed to do anything
tees Frances Andrews and Everett about the catch basin," Roberts

sa id.
Roberts agreed to help the Olive
township trustees In their effort to
obtain a Community Development
Block Grant In order to repair the
sUp on Bigley Ridge Road .
The commissioners also:
-Ustened to Victor Scholls of the
Pitney Bowes Co. Shoals' company
has provided a postage meter and an
electronic scale for the county, paid
for on a leasing agreement. Shoals
wui bring a final cost estimate for
the county to the Commlsslonres'
meeting next Tuesday.
- Were Informed that the Olive
Township Community BuUdlngwUI
be Installed on July 31.

- Agreed to have Roberts look at
the Herb Noll residence concerning
repair of a bridge. Salisbury
township trustees had agreed to
m aintain the road off S.R. 124 If the
county agrees to repair the bridge.
. -Heard from County Welfare
Director Mike Swisher, who said
that In June, 53 applied for benefits
and the total in the caseload was 370.
Met In executive session for
approximately two hours to dlscu'&gt;S
''personnel matters, Involving a
county agency," Commissioner
Rich Jones said. Crow advised the
commissioners to make no further
comment on the matter.

Natural substance may .hold answer for AIDS victims
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) .The body's cancer-fighting "killer
· cells"couldgetaboOst!romanother
body chemical, scientists say, and
the discovery may eventually help
AIDS vlctln\s.
Lab tests on the chemical known
as lnterleukln-2, found In healtby
white blood cells, "significantly
enhanced" the activities of the killer
. eel~. which nonnally destroy
cancercellsandvlrus·lnfectedcells,
according to a study to be published
In this month's Journal of Clinical
Investigation.
"These positive (lab) resuits
suggest that lnterleukln·2 may '

eventually be helpful In the treat·
· Authorsofthestudyi'eported that
ment of patients with AIDS," said
lnterleukln-2 "Increases the
AlalnRookonTuesdayatameetlng · Infection-fighting activity of lm·
of the American Society for VIrology
paired lymphocytes (a kind of white
at Michigan State Unlverslty. But he
blood cell); at least In the test tube."
cautioned: "The results are ex·
"Whether It will help AIDS
tremely prellmlnary."
patlentslsnotyetknown,"theysald.
In patients with AIDS, acquired
"Nevertheless, the research may
Immune deficiency syndrome, the
provide a hint about lhe nature of
activity df the killer cells Is
this disease and how It might be
defective, reducing the victims' · treated. "
Immunity and leaving them wlner·
AIDS had been reported In 1,831
able to other diseases, Including
people In the United States as of
some forms of cancer, according to
Monday, and 634 had died, accord·
Rook, a researcher with the U.S.
log to James Curran of the national
Food and Drug Administration wbo
Centers for Disease Control 1n
worked on the study.

Atlanta.
In another development, a Unl·
verslty of California epidemiology
study reported that the number of
new AIDS cases in San Francisco
nearly doubled in the first three
months of 1983 over the previous
quarter. Forty-six new cases were

reported by March 31, compared to
261n the last three months of1982.
The mostvulnerablegroupshave
been male homosexuals with many
sex partoers, Intravenous drug
users, hemophiliacs and Haitians.
The disease apparently Is spread
sexual contact. contaml·

nated needles a nd blood tra nsfu·
slons, not by casual contact.
Federal otflclals have declared
AIDS their No . 1 health priority.
Rook .said It will be several months
before It Is. determined If
lnterleukln·2 wlll help combat the
disease.

Plant employee found dead
NEW HAVEN - A 34-year old

'iWo. The switch is 240 volts, Gloss
said.
The cause of death Is still under

Plant maaager E .H. Gloss said
Gary Rollins, 34, 2915 Brook Drive,
was discOvered at about 12::11 p.m.
W ealher foreeast
near his work area by a malntence
crew. ThecrewfoundRolllnsonthe
Clear tonight. Low 65-70. Winds
noor and not breathing, Gloss saki, • variable tess than 10 mph. Suiii\Y,
1bey began CPR and continued
wann and more humid Thursday.
untO the New Haven Rescue Squad
High ~93.
arrived. Squad members continued
Extended 0111o Forec881
the CPR, but to no avan, Gloss
Friday Urough SuncJa.v:
stated.
Wannanddrylhroulltlheperlod.

Investigation, and the body has been
taken totheStateMedlca!Examln·
er's Office In Charleston where an
autopsy is scheduled to be per·
formed today.
· Theautopsylsbelngperfonnedofto
detennlne whether Rollins died
natural causes or of accident·
relatedlnjur!es.
Gloss said that It has been five
years and more than four million
man boors since the Phillip Sporn
Plant has had a lost-time accident.
"But that means nothing now
since we have had a fatality, " he

Gloss said Rollins, a malntence
mechanic A • electrical employe,

sa~ the scene In addition to the
rescuesquadwastheMasonCounty

PolntPieasantmanwasfounddead
at the PhUitp Sporn Plant Tuesday

attemoon.

mghs!l1081Jylnlheupper801!1.Lows
maintyllilhe801!1.

had been
replaceIn aStation
limit
switch
on asent
coalto
sampler

Sheriff S~u·.~·
n.n• .-....t·

• •

POPUlAR_ Fishing has become a popniar
activity oot at the Racine Locks and Dams. Here,

severalpeoplecastlnlolhewaler, astheybasklnlhe
hot rays of the July 1110.

L--------------·_;·- -----------------1

C-average proposed for extracurricular school activity
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's pubUc school
IUjJI!rlDielldent says he can find arguments fpr and
arguments against a state Board of Education
· piqJOSal tllat junior and senior high school students
maintain al least a C average to quality for
extniCUn'1cular actMtles, !Deluding IJlOI'IS.
·
"What we'll! doing on tllat Is seeking the opinion of
many Jll!llPie ... to see If tllat would be a aood Idea,"
P'rlll*lln Waller, atall! school superlntelldent, said

'1'..--.

Waltie' said he under8tands tbe IIJ'RWIII!Ilt tllat
Pd II wllo don't set &amp;IJOd padel &amp;bould be deuled
exb UikiJR adiYitlel. But be lll8o said an
UIQIIBI eauld be made that ~
.:tMIIIIII'I! belleflclal eve~ to )lOOr students.

The board directed Walter to Investigate whether It
has theautborltytolmposesucharequlrement,asweU
as one tllat wwld make students Ineligible fdr .
extracUITicular actMtes If they receive an F In any
subject.
· Walter said that If the board does not have the
authority, It oould adopt a policy statement asking the
state's school districts to Impose the requirement
voluntarily.
Board member Jack C. Hunter, atonner mayor of
Youngstown, popt«d theC.averaae policy.
"I realize lids can potentially be a matter of gret
debate," Hwllei: said.
But be added tllat establlshiDg academic
. . . standards
~-

for students is Important, partlcularly because of
recent national reports sharply critical of schools.Hunt.er also proposed tllat any student wbo receives
a falling grade be Ineligible for extracurricular
activities, regardless of overall grade average.
The Ohio High School Athletic Association CU!Telltly
requlresstudentathletestomalntalnpasslnggradesln
at least three of tour major subjects. But It could be
asked to Institute the C-average poUcy, Walter said.
The Ohio proposal Is similar to a poUcy adopted in
November by the Los Angeles Unified School
District's board. That plan, which lleeOiiM:S effective
this fall and Involves students In grades four through
12, bars students !rom Interscholastic sports unless

they maintain at least a C average.
Many high school coaches and some groups In Los
,A.ngeles oppose the requirement. Walter said Ohio
superintendents and other educators will be surveyed
this summer and through September to learn whether
they support ~ proposed policy.
The stale board then will decide whether to pursue
the Idea or drop It, he said. Board member Edwin C.
PrlceJr.ofCinclnnatlagreedwlthHunter'sproposals.
"I'd like to see the empbasls going back to the
classroom," Price said. Ohio has about 870,000
students In junior and senior high schools. The state
E:ducatlon Department does not know how many
participate In extracuiTicular activities.

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Commental'~

Phillies regain lead; Reds win

:

Carter ate update _____

The Daily Sentinel

forever
talking aboutthose who
te
the press, but on the Can rgate
business. or whatever one chooses
to call it . there seems to be an awful
lot of that kind of thing going on.
Consider the maner of Jerry D.
Jennings.
Richard Allen. former na tional
secu rity adY~r to the p f'f!Sident
until he got into trouble on the
ma ner. of -J a panese payola, tells
The New York Tim&lt;'S that he has
a bsolutely no kno-.·iedge of anyone
working for Carter who gave out

Il l fo urt Sf.rt"t'l
f"omf' roy , Oh io

DE\"OTED TO THt: ISTER E.oo.l Of THE

:\IEIG ~-.\~ .\ SO S

-PAT 1\HITEHE.&lt;\0

,\X:E.\

BOB HOEFLICH

\_,...t...,._.n t Puh\i,hf' r ( 'on trolk' r

. Gf' llt"ral ~t :t n OIJ:"t'r

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
'""'"'"Editor
A MEliBER of "The .-\.;;;..,oc.1alc"d P~ . Inland Dab"
Amft1tan s~~ Puhltw-" . \.~· 1-uion.

~

information belonging to Carter or
to the national security people for
by Mr. Rf!agan ancl his people
before the presldenllal debate.
Titen , a few days later, he appears
ont he "Nightllne" .program come
to think o!lt, tl!at Isn't entirely true.
·He does remember one lillY over
with the National Security CouncU
staH wbo furnished matet1a.lforuse
by Reagan -llut that matelal was
' •inocuous.n
Now you know and I know that
)lllbllc appetite is at this point so
whetted that to dismiss a bundle ot

u.e

u_Liam_F_.B_uc_k_le:y..._J_r.

papers sneaked away trom Car·
ter's White House for possible use
by Ronald Reagan as inOOCUOUS
dlrnlnlshes the curiosity as Ill who
did It by a factor 'ot zero, U the
papers sneaked to Reagan had
mly the news that
Columbus bad sailed the ocean
blue/In fourteen lamdred ninety·
two, that would have mattered not
at all. '!be tortfeasor's ·Identity bas
become the question ot the day, not
the nature ot the alleged ton.
So then Mr. Allen, having relused
to divulge the name ot the bad guy

ronlalned

lEITERS Of' OPISIO\' an&gt; ,,.,f'komt'd. "Th.r~ -.hoWd tw '-'-than Dl 'ol o'O(d." ~­
and must Ill' !O"i~ ~ith n:une, ~and tril'-pholw
nwntw.... So~ letlt-D "iU he punu...hed. IA-tte ~!J'IoQI ~in~ ta...,e, addl'f'ii.sln~ MH. me ~idt...
.. ,
All~ aft' !Whj.:-&lt;1 to t'ditin~

Cartergate debate
only show in town

Letters to editor
Oppose mobile home ban
On July 8, the Sentinel carried an
article concerning the possible
bahning of additional mobile homes
In the village of Syracuse.
Council's main concern, It seems,
is the loss of revenue in real estate
taxes. The figures used by council
are somewhat mlsleadlng. The
article stated that only $500 was
received by the village In total from
mobile homes last year while some
residents with houses pay at leal
$500 themselves..The s.tatement did
not mention the fact that only a
small portion altha ttax on homes is
returned to the village. The fact is,
only four mills per $1,(XXl appraised
tax valuation, which would be $50, Is•
returned to the village.
By using figures supplied by
dltferent residents we come up with
a comparison of a modern three·
bedrOOm home with a full basement
and garage returning approxl·

mately m per year to the village
while a two-bedroom mobile home
with two outbuildings returns ap·
proximately $33.
M3st mobile homes In Syracuse
have replaced houses that were no
longer livable. It would have been
financially impossible for most of
these residents to have replaced
these houses with new houses. Tife
same would apply to future loss of
older homes, therefore creating a
real loss of ·revenue. Additionally,
as we see it, a ban on mobile homes
may jeopardize the living standards of many people who cannot
afford the cost of buDding houses at
prevailing costs and interest rates.
- Donald F . Hendticks Sr., Mary E .
Hendricks, Don Hendricks J r .. Wllllam C.
Cundllf, Gton Cundll!. Shennan Cundll!,
EsiUI Moore, Ruth Crouch, Marjorie Man\K"I,

Harold M. SMith, Edna Lavender, Larry
Lavender, Mark Clay. William T . La~ndeor .
Oris Hubbard, Donna Clay, Kenn~h Cundiff,
Mary B. Cundiff and Roger W. Davis.

Workn:ten's compensation sound!
YourJune28editlonwasbrought
to my a ttentlon regarding the front
page headline which eluded thatthe
Ohio Senate approved a "ballout
bill" for Workers' Compensation. It
was distressing to review the article
only to conclude the story had
nothing to do with workers' com·
pensation, but the Associated Press
dispatch was referring to unemployment compensation.
I am sure you realize the gravity
of the situation. Ohio's workers'
"' compensation program is highly
'},.rreognlzed as one of the finest In the
na\lon, ranking In the top ten In

terms of high benefits to disabled
workers, and In the bottom ten In
terms of low costs to employers.
Rest assured, we are as far from
needing a ballout as we ever have
been with our Investment income
increasing 120 percent during the
last five years which has, In part,
allowed premium rates to Ohio
employers to be reduced five of the
last six years . The employers In
your circulation area could have
been seriously misled by ypur ·'
erroneous headllne. - R . George
Lehner, Assistant Director, Pubijc
Affairs.

Today in history
Today is Wednesday, July13, the194thdayof1983. Thereare17ldaysleft
In the year.
Today's highlight In history:
on July 13, 1977, a blackout virtually paralyzed New York City and
resulted In outbreaks of looting.
On this date:
In 1787, Congress enacted an ordinan~ governing the Northwest'
Territory.

- -··

· - '-" -

~ -

over ABC. ~ 10 ll!II llllPU'·
ently more than just one reporter,
sort of ronlldentlally, wbo tblt
fellow was, The Washington Post 10
days ago hears about II, IDvesti·
gates the charge, and decltles 1101 to
run with it. Why? On the grouads
that The Washington Post doelllllt
desire to be manlpulalfd, and tlllt
Is exacUy what Is probably h!IRl M·
lng. 'lbell the Los ,Angeles nme.
runs with the story. Still. The
Washington Post decides not 10 go
with it. But by oow the sloly Is wt,
and The New York Times, the
paper ot record, )lilts It on the front
page.
By coincidence I happen to lalow
Mrc-Jennlngs, so I get through to
him. Already be bas stoutly dellled
that he ever did.any ~h thing. And
the presumption, qUite apart from
his being my friend (as Is Mr.
Allen ), Is that someone who bas
worked for the CIA, for the FBI,
who bas been the principal Intermediary between the NSC and the FBI,
who has been up to his ean In
official secrets most ot his working
Ute is simply not, In mid-career,
going to start wandering about
Washington In the middle · or a
presldenllal campaign with hand
grenades In his pockets.
What Mr. Jennings says Is the
kind of thing one least wishes to
hear about other human beings, but '
what is his alternative? He says,
"The motives and Jlllrposes ot Mr.
Allen are transparent."

&amp;.~5:A_
Economic warfare ________Ja_ck_A_nd_e~_so_n
WASIDNGTON- In an earlier
column, I described the "low-rtsk.
low&lt;OS!, low-profile" offensive that
the Soviet Union is directing against
the United States. There Is a way to
fight back.
The Kremlin is harboring drug
smugglers, subsidizing terrOJists
and training revolutionaries who
are then unleashed against the
West. The purpose is to destabllze
the Western governments, with the
United States as the ultimate
target.
But if the United States Is
vulnerable to drugs and terrorism,
the Soviet Union also has Its ooft
underbelly. The Soviet economy is
foundering; . its Marxist system has
been unable to produce sufficient
food and consume.r goods; and the
ruble. won't buy much these days.
This has already reduced Soviet
inDuence around the world . [)e.
clares a secret CIA report dug up by
my associate Dale Van Alta: "In
the third world, Moscow's hard
currency assistnce to communist

clients has become more might work after au.
restrained.''
By applying economic pressure,
In other words, left-leaning coun· the Western all1ance might con·
1!1es need hard currency - a v1nce the Kremlin to stop supportcommodtty which the Soviets are Ing revolutionartes, terrorists and
running short of. They can't even drug smugglers. An agreement to
afford to keep their allies supplied end this subterranean warfare
with arms.
·
might utilmately lead to disarma·
Here's an excerpt from another ment and detente.
secret report: '"!be USSR wlil be
Here are a few economic squeeze
even Jess willing than before to displays that, In my journalist's
undertake major assistance efforts presumption, .I believe could brlng
similar to those can1ed out In the the Kremlin to tenns:
past for Cuba and VIetnam."
1.-'lbe Western powers could
And still another excerpt: "(The push the Soviets over the edge
Soviet Union) is enrounterlng eronomlcally simply by shutting
growing economic difficulties. · credit. This WOUld reduce the hard
which wlil make It more dltflcult to currency that the Soviets need to
increase Its Imports from the West produce the arms that have had
In the future. 'lbe outlook for most such a destabllzlng et!ect on the
Soviet exports, Including oU, Is not world.
favorable."
2.-The United States has the
The bottom line is this: '!be economic power to break up OPEC
Soviet system Is highly vulnerable and drive down the price of oil. This
to economic warfare. The Soviet would hurt the Soviet Union, wliich
economy is already In distress; It must sen oil for the hard currency It
can be crippled; dollar diplomacy needs.

of!

3.- The Soviets also need to sen
natural gas to Western Europe to
earn more hard currency. By
refusing to buy the gas and to help
with the pipeline, the European
nations could bring Ute Soviets to
th_e bargaining table.
4.-The United States should
continue to seU as much grain to
Russia as the Soviets are wJiling to
buy. This costs the Kremiln precious hard currency that otherwise
could be spent on arms.
5.-The United States could wqe
a covert trade war against the
Kremlin, undercutting Soviet prJ·
ces, raising Soviet bids and dumpIng products to depress Soviet
markets.
These moves would throw the
Soviet economy into a tailspin and
leave the Kremlin with no choice
but to cut back on milltary spending
and aggressive moves. Then Yurt
Andropov might become · more
amenable to fleKOilatlng a reel
detente and might caD off the
terrorists and revolutionaries.

Will Reagan run ?_~_____L_ow_e_ll_W_ing&lt;_e_tt
How fast political . fortunes
change! Just a few. shOrt weeks ago
even I thought that Ronald Reagan •
had the 1984 presidential election by
the tail with a dowhhill pull. All that
has changed. Now I am not even
sure he wlll be a candidate.
Perhaps he will emulate that 19al's
president he admires so much and
wlll not "choose to run". It would be
a graceful way out!
Friday, the Los Angeles Times
released the results of a poll that
showed the president traDing Democratic hopeful, Senator John
Glenn, by ten percentage points, 51
to 41. That was In Reagan's hOme
state of California. What would
have been the result If the poll had
been taken in Ohio, the senator's
home siate? I have always thought
of John Glenn as one ot the least
charismatic of the Democratic
candidates and the poll in Calltornia
comes as a distinct sw:prtse to me.
There has never been any doubt In
my mind that the senator bas been
great as an astronaut, effective as a
senator and is a good, decent man
who might be a great president -If
he could get elected. But I doubted
his abUity to compete with the
charismatic Reagan, wbo has spent
a lifetime learning bow to act
presidential.
The reason for the poll results
must lie with the president himself.
Senator Glenn made the latest start
In the Democratic race of any Or his
five other Democratic competitors
and since has made no significant
•
political moves. His campaign b'
the Democratic nomination bas
been plodding ahead with no special
fanfare while the Reagan administration has ·been busUy digging Its
own grave. In n!cent weeks they
have been hltln the solar plexus by
a series of acts all of their own
making. The political buzzards
have come home to roost!
One especially unwelcome vuJ.
ture to the Republican coop Is the
widespread pu,bllclty that has been
given a stolen Carter brleftng book
and other papers trom the Carter
White House during the I9Ml
presldenllal campaign. While at
flnt he pooh-poohed the brie!lng

book theft as a matter of llttie
importance, President Reagan at
last began to realize the importance
the public was g!Vingthetheftotthe
book and many other confidential
papers found of late lnt eh Reagan
campaign rues. He has Instructed
his staH to gtve tun cooperation to
an FBI Investigation he ordered.
Since his Attorney General Wllllam
French Smith has charge of any
investigation that Is made, it Is
eqUivalent of giVing the left hand
orders to Investigate the right.
I have no intention of boring you
with detalls of the Carter papers
which have been given wide
publicity by the news media. BY
asking the FBI to conduct their own
investigation, the admlnlstrallon
has effectively stopped recrtmlna·
lions and disclosures within Its own
ranks for the present. However, a
Congressional comrnitt"!!! Is hOlding
Its own investlgtion which may end
with the appointment ot a specta1
prosecutor. Some budding Howard
Baker ~Y gain fame by again
asking the famous question, "What
did the president know and wl)en
did he know It"? Republicans and
Democrats with whOm I have

By BEN WALKI':R
AP Sporia Writer
The topsy-turvy National League
Eas't has taken another twist , and
this time the Philadelphia Phillles
are back on top.
The Ph1llies, who led the division
for most of May, regained first place
Tuesday night by sweeping a
twl-nlght doubleheader from the
A-tlanta Braves.
Philadelphia won the opener In
solid fashlon4-1 but then had to rally'
lor three runs In the bottom of the
ninth Inning to take the second game

w
. _

\...-«i:Uion :.ll1d lhP

In summertime Washington. the living is anything but easy for an
adminlstration facing the kind of problem that confronts the White House
over Jimmy Carter's lost. strayed or pilfered debate papers .
Even a hint of scandal can come to dominate the agenda in a sweltering
capital when Congress goes on vacation, and presidents take their
holidays. All of that will happen next month. And the debate Hap could wind
up as the only show In town .
That's the way it worked in the case of Bert Lance, Carter's budget
director, six years ago. He went into the summer doldrums UIY.Ier
investigation for his banking practices in private business. He was out of
the government before fall.
Despite President Reagan's Initial, "much ado about nothing,"
dismissal of the controversy about the Carter debate papers, the president
has ordered a Justice Deparnneni Investigation- and told his staff to
cooperate tully.
"If there's any evidence of wrongdoing, we'll take whatever action
should be taken," including firing people, Reagan said.
Obviously, the outcome will depend on what the investigators find. It
won't go away until they say how the 198J Reagan campaign organlzation
came into possession of the carter papers.
l'lut .the political problem It raises is likely to worsen in the weeks ahead,
as other government business goes on hold for the August holidays, and
attention focuses on the case of the Carter papers. For Jack of competing
events, the controversy is likely to be more prominent in the news media
than mlght otherwise be the case.
Tile Bert Lance case would not have played out differently had it
occurred in a busier Washington season. But it would not have been so
dominant a topic as it was that summer.
Tile same may be true of the debate papers.
Furthermore, while the administration seeks to settle the matter with its
own Investigation, there's a congressional inquirY under DemocratiC
auspiCeS. The hwnan resources subconuniltee of the House Post .Office
and Civil Service Committee doesn' 1get many chances to look into alleged
skulduggery in the highest -echelons of government. That panel and its
chairman, three-term Rep. Donald J. Albostao!Michigan, isn't likely to let
go of the matter any time soon.
A!bosta says he has no target date for public hearings, but won't hesitate
to hold them if necessary. He also said that his would be a careful,
methodical investigation, free of leaks.
H~ later confided that his Investigators had received unconfirmed
hearsay statements from reliable sources suggesting that sexual favors
may have been Involved In the case. "We've got Indications that a sex
scandal could be created out of the testimony," he said.
That was about the only ingredient missing !rom a story that already
included an alleged mote In the Carter White House, and an Intramural
dispute among Reagan aides over who knew what about the debate papers.

The Daily Sentinel-· Page-3

talked concur that anyone with
sufficient Intelligence to be presidential candidate, also has enough
sense to know when unethical
material Is used to prime him for a
debate.
•
The administration was deli·
vered another jolt last week when
the National Women's Political
Caucus met In San Antonio, Texas.
The NOW group not only don't want
the president to be reelected but
they don't want him to even be a
candidate. Their new president,
who incidentally ·Is a Republican,
made that painfully clear In a press
conlerence In the Texas city.
Women make up something like 53
percent ot registered voters and the
ladles are just beginning to throw
their political weight around. They
are generally credited with supply·
ing the muscle that made the House
of Representatives safely Democratic In the 1982 elections. Now
they are outspokm In the qualltles
they want In the president to be
elected next year. They want the
candidate they support to be
pro-women, pro-equal to be elected
next year. They want the candidate
they support to be . pro·wurnen,

pro-equal rtghts and pro-abortion,
policies to which the president bas
always been unalterably opposed
and dOI!sn't shOw any signs of
changing.
In his regular Saturday radio
address to the nation, the president
charged that the administration Is
taking a bum rap by prophets or
"doom and gloom In the natiional
news media." He claimed that his
adminlstraUon had not cut social
spending but had ony cut the rate rA
growth. He faUed to point out that
the rate of need had cUmbed
drastically during his ~ months In
office and that !allure to equate
growth with need was In fact a
drastic cut In help lor the poor and
unemployed. It Is such blind
reasoning that has made allY
Republican candidate, for pres!·
dent or Congres, a sitting duck In
the general elecllon In 1984. The
votes otthepoor, the hungry, the old
and the unemployed are counted
equally With the votes of the rich
and powerful.
·
Will Reagan run again and run
the risk or jolnln&amp; the long list of
defeated one term Presidents~ Not
likely!

7·6.
Catcher Ozzie VIrgil, whose
throwing error had let' Atlanta go
ahead In the eighth inning of the
nightcap, raced home with the
winning run when Braves second
baseman Glenn Hubbard threw
away a potential inning-ending,
double-play relay.
In other NL games, Cincinnati
downed New York 6-2, Houston
.overtook Montreal 7·5, San Diego
topped Chicago 5-3, ·Los Angeles
beat St. Louis 3-1 and Pittsburgh
took San Francisco S:2.
The Philadelphia sweep, coupled
with MOntreal's loss, put the PhWies
one game ahead of the Expos, who
had been in first since mki.June. St.
Louts, which has led the division for
--most oftheseason, Is now two games
back.
Atlanta ~llever Steve Bedrosian,
COVERING 11IE BAG- The Cincinnati Reds' 111'11 bueman Dan
Drlet111e11 (22) Is drawn off the bag Tuesday durlllg the !oulih Inning 1111
the New York Mets' Moolde Wilson keeps an eye on him In New York,
. (AP Laserphoto)

Howsam will study
current Reds' roster
NEW YORK (API -Second-time
General Manager Bob Howsam
says he is withholding all comment
about the Cincinnati Reds until he
finds out more about the team and
what Its owners want.
Howsam, 65, was named Interim
general manager Monday after the
firing of Dick'Wagner. A team vice
president, he had turned the reins
over to Wagner In 1978.
Howsarn, who built the "Big Red
. Machine" of the 19m;, joined the
team here Tuesday night for the
game with the Mets.
•
"What I'm trying to do right now,
basically, Is learn about the ball·
club, the strengths and · the wea·
knesses," said Howsam following a
3'h·hour meeting With JV!anager
Russ Nixon.
"I have a feeling Of what they
would need. Some of the young
players are starting to show some of
the things that we needed ... but I
don't want to make any quick, snap
judgments without talking to aU the
people involved, '' said Howsam.
He sald he will meet Thutsday
with general partners William J.
and James R. WUUams In Phlldel·
phla and with some of the minority
owners.
"I'd like to slt down and see what
their .objectives are as far as the
ballclub is roncerned. i really don't
know what their thinking is," he
said.

Nixon said Howsam Indicated he
was willing .t o act decisively while he
holds the post.
"I told Russ that If I had anything
to say, I was going to move In the
direction that was besi," said
Howsam . .
"We talked about everything,"
said Nixon.

·Six teams
play in
tournament
Satuniay and Sunday at IU:eds·
vllle ballfield six teams In the
Reedsville and surrounding area
donated their time to help raise
money for the little league pro·
gram. Each team was asked to
donate $50 and two new balls. The
event was a double elimination.
Participating were RI!SS€II's of
Coolville, Rob Barber's of Reeds·
vllle, Ernie Barringer of Reeds·
ville, Pete Randolph of ReedsvUie,
Kendall Church of Coolville and
Randy Blake of ReedsvUie. Tro·
phies awarded for first, '!"CCnd and
third place went to Randy Blake,
Russell of CoolvUie, and Kendall
Church of CoolvUie.
The event was organized by lltUe
teague roach Leonard Blake, Jr.

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Bonilla's run-scortng singlc off
5-3, took a 6-4 lead into the ninth Hayes and Bill Scherrer got out of
Inning of the second game ancl got ninth-Inning trouble. Pastore, J.S,
reliever Mtke Proty .
one out before walking Mike stn.ICk out six, walked two and
Erlc Show, 9-5, pit ched a fiveSchmidt., Von Payes sinileil allowedDannyHeep'splnch·homer
hitter for his fourth comple te game.
Schmidt to secoru. and Virgil drove In the elghth,hisfltth homerunofthe
Ron Cey's Uth homer g ave the
In one run will!
·rheck·swlng season and third as a pinch hitter.
Cubs a HI lead In the second.
double,
Dan Driessen's single broke a
Greg Gross was tbenlntentionally scoreless tie In the fourth Inning anq
Dodgers S, cardinals 1
walked, loading the bases . Reserve his three-run hOmer, his siXth of the
Dusty Baker seems to be working
Larry Milbourne then hit a slow ·,season, made it 4.0 In the sixth
his way out of his first-halt
hopper to shoristop Rafael Ra· against Mike Torrez, :&gt;-10.
doldrums. He sing•ed In the tying
mlrez, who Dipped the ball to
Astros 7, Expos 5
run In the fourth Inning and theu
Hubbard as Hayes scored the tying . Phil Garner, Jose Cruz, Ray crashed a two-run homer, hislllh, in
run. But Hubbard's relay to get Knight and George Bjorkman
the sixth to pace Los Angeles.
Milbourne sailed past Chris Chamb- singled In fifth-Inning runs as
Baker was baltii;Jg just .231 at the
liss, allowing Virgil to score.
Houston . bunched six hits to over ·
All-Star break, but has gone9·for-17
In the opener, John Denny, 7·5, take Montreal.
with three homers and nine RBI in
allowed three hits In seven Innings
The Astros traUed 5-3 when Terry
the five games since then.
and Garry Maddox tripled In two Puhlled off the fl1th with a double,
Bob Welch, 7-8, pitched into the
runs. Denny lowered his earned run moved to third on Dickie Than's eighth inning, and Steve Howe
average to 2.17, second In the NL to single 81\d scored on Gamer's hit . A llnlshed up for his lOth save.
San Francisco's Allee Hammaker. wlld pitch advanced the runners and
AI HOlland pitched the final two Cruz singled home '!bon. Knight and
l"'ru«!8 6, Giants 2
Innings, striking out five, for his Bjorkman followed ..with .. RBI
Jason Thompson's two-run doueighth save.
singles.
ble keyed a three-run sixth Inning
Reds6,Mets2
Reliever Vern Ruhle, 2·3, got the
that broke a 1-1 tie. pe had a
Cincinnati Manager Russ Nixon,
win. Dave Smith got the save .
run-scoring grQUndout as Pitts·
while declining to discuss speclflcs,
Padmi 5, Cubs 3
burgh added two Insurance runs in .
said the Reds' game with New York
San Diego managed to score all of
the ninth .
was an Important one for Frank
its runs in the sixth Inning as Sixto
Lee Tunnell, 3-3, allowed five hits
Pastore.
·
Lezcano's three-'l'lln hOmer keyed
In
5 2·3 Innings and Cecuto Guante
The right·hander had not won
the uprising.
went
the rest of the way tor his
since Aprll17 and had a seven:game
Chicago's Dickie Noles, 2·5, was
second save.
losing streak. Nixon did not directly
salling along with a two-hitter and a
Bill Laskey, 10-8, left after
say It, but a bad outing may have
3.0 lead when the Padres went to Thompson's double.
sent Pastore back to the minors.
work. Lezcano's sixth homer came
Pastore responded with eight
after an RBI single by Terry . - - - -- - - - - - - - : - strong Innings and relievers Ben
Kelmedy and was followed by Juan

Syracuse tourney
underway
.

SYRACUSE - Two beautiful
days and excellent baseball action
highlighted first round play of the
"BUI Hubbard Memorlal Ultie
League Tournament sponsored by
the Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department.
First round winners were the
Gallipolis Padres,
Nelsonville
Blackburn, Racine Royals, Syra·
cuse, and Middleport.

On Monday Chester and Gallipolis' Padres opened tournament play
with Gallipolis winning 11-0.
Deweese was the winner with 12
strikeouts and no walks while
pitching a perfect no-hit game.
Chad Sinclair suffered the loss,
fanning seven and walking four.
Padre hitters were M. Dunlap a
single, DeWeese two singles, Pol·
lock a triple and two singles,
McQuaid a single and Peters a
single.
In the second game, NelsonvUle
Bl1;1ckbllm
downed
Mason's
Rahgers 9-0 with pitcher Kelvin
Warren picking up the win. Warren
fanned 11, gave up two walks, and
three hits. Petry suffered the loss
with three strikeouts and two
walks.
Nelsonville hitters were Mickey

Baker two singles and a double,
Warren a home run, Robbie Chubb
a triple, Matt Yinger a single,
Jimmy Monk a double, and Jason
Taggart a single. For Mason Klein,
McDermitt and Kincaid each
singled.
In the closest game of the night
Racine edged Albany's A's 2·1
behind the pitching of Laudermiit
who fanned 14 and gave up just
three hits enroute to the win.
Troxell suffered the loss despite a
fine eflort.
Grindstaff had two singles, Rose
a single, and Jarrell a single for the
winners.

Tuesday night , Syracuse de·
feated Point Pleasant 9-2. Weaver
was the winner and Wamsley the
loser.
Syracuse scored three times In
the llrst and never looked back as
Taylor singled, Lisle walked and
. Weaver hlt a home run.
Syracuse hitters were Taylor
with three singles, Lisle two singles,
Stout a single, Weaver a single and
home run, and Stewart a single.
For Point Pleasant, Wamsley
singled twice, Robinson singled;
and Utty doubled.
In the
finals,
away
from
an 8-6Middleport
lead in the broke
third

then went on to romp Tuppers
Plains, 17·6. Gibbs was the starter
with reUef from Matt Baker.
Caldwell and Fitch pitched for
Tuppers Plains.
For the winners, Baker had three
singles, Scott Nelgler a trlple and
single,, Becker a single, Daniels a
single, Gibbs a single, Southern a
single, Hysell a single, and Shu!ford
a single. For TP Fitch banged three
singles, Caldwell two singles, and
Jordan a single.
Tonight Pomeroy Is scheduled to
play the Albany Merchants at 6:30
p.m . and Racine's Reds play
Gallipolis at 7: 45 p.m.

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Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 13, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Summer.league results given -1.

In Meigs pony- league action,
Middleport started a success!ul
strtng o! wins with a 6-4 win over
Rutland. Cassell was the winning
pitcher with a save from Nick Bush.
They combbted for 11 KO'sand!our
walks.

J. R. Kitchen had a home run for
the winners, Trey Cassell a double
and sbtgle, and lUck Wise a sbtgle
and double. 1\11ke Bartrum, and
Norman each doubled for Rutland,
while Snyder and Nonnan sbtgled.
Norman and Bartrum combbted to
fan ·eight and walk six.
In a great performance at Racine
Trey . casseu hurled a one-hitter
enroute to boost Middleport past
Ractne 1~. He had 14 strikeouts

SALEM cENTEn - Members ot the Salem
Center baseball team were, lront row, left to right:
Candy Hensley, Jeff Jones, Terry McGuire, Randall
Johnston and Malt Haynes. Second row,lelt to right:

Daaoy Lewis, Becky Ockerman, Dennis Edmloton,
Jamie BarreU. Matt Pierce, Shawn Beaver. 'l1drd
row, left to right: Dan Lewlli, Buz;&lt; Moore, Larry
Haynes. Photo by Frank Marlin.

and six walks. Kitchen had a triple
and single, Becker a triple, Gheen a
double, and Wise, Cassell, Epple,
and Justic each a single. Turley and
Evans combined for ll walks and
two strikeouts for Racine with
Turley getting
~one· Racine hit.

Justis with a single and home run,
and Wise a sbtgle. Chapman was
the Alexander pitcher with eight
strikeouts and just one walk. Sayre
had two doubles, whlle Chapman,
Allman. and Barber each sbtgled.
Eastern deleated Syracuse 7-6.
Bryan Durst started on the
mound lor Eastern and picked up
the win with relle! !rom Eddie
C(llllns. Tiley combbted to give up
six hits on live strlkeou1;s and five
bases on balls. Mike ~

Syracuse
walking
two. Toddfanning
Adamseight
and ,...d
John
Rlt!le
each singled for Syracuse,
Middleport blasted Pomeroy 14-1
behind the pitching of Nick Bush
and Rick Wise. Bush fanned 12 and
walked two, while Wise tanned
three and walked two. Justis had
two triples and a sbtgle. Gheen two
dubles and Kitchen and wtse· two
sbtgles.
Pomeroy hitters were Roush a
double , Fields, Kenney each
singles.

Tueker Williams, Andy Grueser, Joey Hensler,
Manhall WoUe, Jeremy NonlBip, Ray Proffitt, Angle
Swleger. Third row, coaches, left to right: Rlek
Friend, Btswa Ganguly, Ray Promtt, Mike Stewart.
Photo by Frank Manbt.

Infante .leaving Bengals for USFL
CINCINNATI (AP) Paul
Brown, Cincinnati Bengals general
. manager, Is furious that offensive
coonlinator Lindy Infante has
agreed to become head coach of the
Tampa Bay Bulls In the United
States Football League.
Brown, clearly ~pset at the move,
said having Infante coach his team
while preparing to take over a team
In the rival USFL next year Is "like
having a fox In the hen house.
"Our inclination is we have no

Brown said Mike Brown, assistant general manager. had told
Infante that hts contract forbade
him frqm negotiating with any other
team until the contract ended.

The [)aily _S11n.~in.el . ·
(USP8 u 1... 1
A Dtvialoe or Molllrnetlla, Joe .

Published evel)"41lemoon. MOOdily.
tbroogh Friday,lllt'.ou.rt Street, by the
Ohlo Valley Publishing Company· Mul·
llmedia. lne .. Pomeroy, Ohio moo. 992·
2156. Second class postag~ paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Press, In·

relleved

Amburgey.

733 Third Avenue, New York. New

Eastern hitters were Royce Bissell
with a triple, Steve Homer, Ed
Collins, Brent Bissell, Kevin Barber
and Jeff Caldwell each a single.
Syracuse hitters were Sean

York 10011.
PDSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally Sentlnei,lll Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S769.
suBSCRII'TION RATES
By Carrier or Molor Route
One Week .. ............................... $1.00
One Month ................................$4.40
one Year ................................ $52.~
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally .................................. 2ll Cents

by

Davie

Grueser with a double, and Ambur·
gey, Adams, Rl!fle and Grueser
each a single.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 :

,

Scoreboard

•

Majon

••

I

started for Syracuse·, but was

..•
•
••

...
•

IMide Ohio

COnAGE CHEESE $1.J9
OHIO COLBY LONGHORN

CHEESE

ENTER THE

..... ~ ...~·... 51.97

l·LB. TEEN QUEEN QUARTERS

FRYING CHICKEN ...................... 79(

MIXED VEGETABLES .. ~.N.s2f$1.09

YOU CAN CHOOSE FROM

15'h OZ. DEL MONTE

ACOMPLETE BEDROOM GROUP OR

•

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only

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only ~J495

STARTING AT

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On Molt Sty'-

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PurQjture ~~igns
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01Utpe11

m-1111
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IIOURI1 ...... ,._.,, ·~ '1'11wa..llt.-la.•.ol,.m.1

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PINEAPPLE .Tl D-BITS .•~~s2f$1.39

. AND WIN!

•
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3 Grand Prizes - All expense paid
trips for a family of four to THE
DARK CONTINENT, BUSCH
GARDENS, Tampa, Florida. Prize
winners will receive seven days end
six nights accommodations at the
BEACHCOMBER RESORT, St.
Petersburg Beach, round-trip airfare,
rental car Including unlimited
mileage and unlimited admissions to
THE DARK CONTINENT, BUSCH
GARDENS and ADVENTURE
ISLAND ... truly the family vacallon
of a lifetime.
5 First Prizes - $100 Dutch
Standard Paint Gift Certificates good
tor any Dutch Standard Products.
100 ~ Prlzel - Dutch
Standard T.Shirts.

•
\

PICKENS HARDWARE

42

.c! -

. ~1

1
'l

PlttsburJ~;h

:II

~l

.'*1

Cbl~

W1

:fl

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52

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4.1

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.!112

~

Stu! Francbro

42

4:\

.&amp;

9\?

,..,...,.'!:n!

..

7

~IQ''II

~~~a_._

Plllsbul'lfh at San Dll'p:o
Clndnnatllll Ntw York. tnl
Atlanta at Phlladl'lpilla. tnl

Monlwal al Howston, 1n 1
Cbk'- ot Los Anaf'k's, 1n1
Sl . Louis tl ~ Franf.'i!j('O. 1n1

Tran811Clion!l
~I.e. .

.

BREWE~Placrd Nl'd
V011t, calcfk'&gt;r, on lhfo l~ay dl.!lilbkod 1111 •
and Rldl: Waits. pl1t~. on !be 21-da,v

MJLWAt,IKEE

d!Miblfd IW . Mttvatro Mark Brwhatd.

outnritrr. ca~ ..,aw !l.cbr'Wdcr. catchrr.
lrori1 V8IK'Oli\W

or

1tr Paclnt' Coul

i.A'a,N('.

"''EW YORK YANKECi-Rrllt'ltvrkd
'Milk' Randolpb. ftOnd ~., and
!'('turned . Bobby Mt&gt;ai'Jwn. lnfWoldrr. to
Coll&amp;mbus of thi' IIIK'!'Mtlooal l.NiiiK'.

~-~
MONTREAL
EXJI'($-fWl'allt'd

Bob
pitdlf'r, rrom Wk'hila ol !hP
AlnC'riC'Mn Assoeiatkln and optklfft Torn

~.

catcht'f. to Wk'lllta . J::lrnppf'd
,JI"fry wtlllf&gt;, outfk'ldl"r. frtm Ill.&gt; :!»-man
Wk&gt;JI:hilu.~

..!
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!

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NEW YORK

ME1'S-.~ £ddko

am". third I:J.a.o;(oman. and

~

,.'

5 OZ. ARMOUR

VIENNA

SAGE.~ ...~~! 2/'1.19

PESCHKE

$ 99
Round Steak......~...
USDA CHOICE BONELESS ·
$ 49
Chuck Roast ...... ~ ...
BUCKEl
.
$ 49
US~A CHOICE

'

.

Wieners ...........

2~ .~~-

¢

18

.

I.

ta

Cube Steak............

.

to

Unlc FallS Of !be Nrw Yorlt·Pmn Ll'3jM'.
I'Uf1DW.L
NadMII ........ I.e_.
HOl.r.mJN OD..ER,"i-SiffW'd nm .lo&amp;lll'l'.

lllll'beck«, and Sl..,... Br.:M·n. «&lt;llll''1Mt'lt.
IJ:t1 ANGEl~ RAMS-Sij:!IIM Er1&lt;' DlckC'r.Kln, n~minif back, 10 a multiVf'lll'l{Jnt!'IK'I.
MIAMI DOLPHJNS-."IIIDE"d Mlkr Cha·

rks, tic!renslve tackko, Jo a

nwlti- .~1'11f'

~k.

oft tho" •·al\'f'f lsi.

U....."'*-Foa&amp;MIInpp
JA~VILLE

BUU...,._N•I'I'IC'd IJnd,\ '

IIOCU\'
~Modi~~

VANCOUVER

romi"'K'' or Stan

~him

CALIFORNIA DRISCOL

CANUCK.~F.1tmdrd

~1.

Strawberries ..... !~·.

to a Jtlz'n&gt;.Yl'ar rontracl .

North Anw!ric-~ ~

SAN OIFXiO !i()(XERS-Nquln"'l Hu~
F\&gt;ro1.. f~·ard: from ttw&lt; Tn!11* Ba~·

¢

'

Rnwd" tor a fl!"!'it·rounctdran C'hokl! and an
fA ca'lll.
(.uLI.F.ol:

'
'
'

undL~·JoM:od ~~~~
~"T.

NuMAID.

IJ')NAVEJ'IiTURI-: -ArnnJrnodl'('lllf!·

natkln of Bob SQSSOF'II', uslstanl ba!;k('tball

roam. C&gt;rtt&gt;Ctt~-·.-. Stpt. 1.

Matgarine........... L~

Leaders
.WIXICAN LFAIIUE
BATilNC. 1195 411 bats! : Ca1'1W. Callfor·
nla, .•
flqQil:~ . Ebtcw1. .JSl: lln'll. Klln·
5.11M C't~ . ; N; Grtaro.:tm NfoA• York. .\'U:
. Alkms. Kansas City. . .
RUNS: Yount. Mllwaulltl'. tit: Up.o;haW,
Toronto. ~; WI!Jan, Kan!ll!l~ City, ~;
F:\·llftS. Bo!\1011. ~: Mlli'TIIy, Balllrmr't',

U~· .

111ere wDI be a sanctioned ASA
IOftbaU tournament at Syracuse,
Ohio July 16 and17. Entry feels SOO ·
and two new Red Dot softballs.
For more bt!onnatton call Keith
Woods, 992.J313 or Greg Gibbs,
!192-2178.

HEMLOCK PIPELINE
Pip 111M, Will sitls. 1tcll•
ponds, utility collstructiln IIIII septic tlnks.
lob Campbell. Don RRacll•. Ott.

..

..

.••

...
..

.

•.

SANDWICH MATE IND.

RAI: RIC'f'. Boston. til: Klllk'. C.ltk'!IJQ.
iil; Coopl'f'. MUwouk«'. tit: W•rC, Min·
~~~. :1'1: P.ai'T18h. Df1roll . M:
Torunlo. · ~.

¢

•.

:~.

'1""141-2224
111,.,,1....
t·

..

Willi·

him

· Plan lOumarnent
'

39
Po.r kl.
$
otn .....~~ ..

I'CJ!il('l'.

•

l
••
•••

..

GWI'W'JI

Plllsbulllh !Candl&gt;laria R.-ti1 al !;an
Francisro IM. J?avill 0.:11
Clndnnatl Wr~ 7-!11 at Nt&gt;w Yorlt
m"mu J,l, , 1n1
A1ljtllta 1Md•1W'1cy 8-51 111 Pllllatltolphla
!Carlton 9-91, IIU
Montwld (lA.&gt;a fi.~ l at Housloo 4Ryoo 8H, 1n1
Cblc~ tRallk'!r' ~71 at San DICRO tLol ·
lar .1-61. 1n I
St . louil&gt; 1Alk&gt;n ~81 at Lo&amp; AnR(b
IRAW6-7 1, tnl

BALTIMORE BLA.'IT-ArtfulrM l'aul
Klt.!Klll. fOrWard. from thl&gt; NI'W York AITlJIPo'S
for .n undl.!IC'Iolr&lt;d ~nl of cash and

I

¢

Plllsi:N!lfh 6, Siin Frilllcblco l

I

••
l

11
74

I~

.ol.lJ

G..-w
Ptlilatrl~a 4-7. Atlanta I~
Clndnna116. New York 2
Houston 7. Montn&gt;al ~
S&amp;in DJtoRo 5. Chlcaao :\
Lll8 An~ :1, ~- Lool" 1

4.75 OZ. UNDERWOOD,.t

CHEERIOS .................. ~.x... $1.79

Fryer·Parts ........L!·••

~

.tll'l

torY.·ard.
OO&lt;D:Il
. . ~ "-t.'ft' ~

'.

oz.

MIXED

-

••

4 ROLL PACK WHITE CLOUD

15

SAT., JULY 16, 1983

13

lnfan!C', hrod coactl .

•

.."

CHUNK CHICKEN ......~~~ 2/$1.49

PRICES EFFECTIVE

I;

!\~

.¥tl

~'tll9

\:1

stt&gt;mrlck,

INSTANT POTATOES ..... !.~G; ...49'
TOILET TISSUE ...... :...... !.K~.. $1.29

umn CW.ntitleo.

-

.!IU

••'

46 OZ. HUNT'S

8 OZ. IDAHOAN

.~

fO

ron1ract
NEW ORLEI\NS MIJ'IITS-Clalrl1ro Cr£'11:

SOAP POWDER.; ............. ..S.~~- 99'
TOMATO JUICE ............. ;.~~.. 99'

:II

~

' 20 OZ. OXYDOL DETERGENT

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

MASON W.VA.

..

$1.99

CUT UP FROZEN

!WATERBEDS
JUST A NEW WATERBED.
WE CARRY
CONDITIONER, Q.EANER, AND PROTECTANT.

•••••••••••

Wo Ro"""'e The Right To

GB

42

Clntlnnatt

I

I

o12

Los An,l!t"'f'!l

I

••••••••••• I •

298 SECOND1ST.
POMEROY, OH.

,,,\01

Monrn&gt;td
Sl. Louts

Son o;,..

••
I

Pt.\.

WtliT DfvtiJOr'll

••

PERCH FILI.E'T'S .

-~

L

AUan4t

;
'

MARGARINE LB. 21'1.19

~,

W

New Y01·k

i

CABBAGE... ...~;. 2/49'

M.

.419 lO!,&lt;,z

von'"'

PllllacE-Iphia

';

NEW GREEN

.~;

~

FAST DIVtiiON

l·
••

ONIONS

47

Toronto .111 Chic~ 1m
Detroit al Seattlf' 1n1
NAnoNAL I..&amp;WUE

I

·

&lt;ll,,

MlMf!501.8 at MllwaukK- 1n\

Phone 7 42-2100

BROUGHTON'S 24 OZ. CTN.

1~

,f(l

7

Texas ••

~

.... :....~~.. 51.19

..

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.!1:..'4

MilWIIUkf'f' IM(('Iure 5-71 at 1\'?uls
! Darwin 1·71 1n1
'11111r•..,y',. G..nm
Clakllllld at Bo6tCJI 1m
Callron.La al Balrtmore tnl
Kansa!l City a/ CIPI.'eland lnt
Ntw

!

318. NEW fELLOW

:1.1

..\ll

39

IGura 1-101 ml

DEPARTMENT
STORE

CHEESE ........ ..1!11!-!-'2.49

'II

:ti

Mon.-Sat 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-1Q PM

.M2 -

Chiei!RO 8, Clrw!and II
NeW York 4, Miro"'l''lota .1
Tcron1o 9, Kansas City fi
Mllwaukl'l' !1. Tf'xu 2
W
J''IIG.....,_
~anif IBe~ottlf&gt; 7·5J al Bo!iton I E~l'nr.·

1

16 OZ. KRAFT IJDGET
IONOHORN NATURAL CHEDDAR

"

i~,&lt;,

.«:!'.! ll

3i
:!!

..,

STORE HOURS

~"':

. ~m

SeaniP .\ BMtoo 'l
Balllntono 3. Oallland 1
Drlrotl !1. C&amp;llfotnlil 4, H !Min~

~

HAM SALAD ................. ~~ $1.59

~1
~

.,

~

!Hoyt 9-9) 1m
. New York tGuldry 1Q.4 1 a1 MlnnNKJa
ISchrom 7&lt;h !n I
Toronro !Clancy M1 011 Kan.o;a.s City

••'

HOMEMADE

:B

-~

.54.1
.~J:t

Oatland tConroy :!·h at Baltlrntlrf- 1G.
DaVIs &amp;.tl lnl
Callftlrnla tKisoo 8-:!1 al ONroll t?folf'\'
7-61 lnl
·
Ck'\'t'laM · H:Uyk&gt;Ym 6-.'1'1 ar CtiiC'oi!'O

I

JUMBO BOLOGNA
.
. .... -~~·~~...~•. $
AGAR
BO.ILED HAM ..................~·$1.97

.17

.fH:I . ~Ni .l

lt&gt;y !i-Gi 1n1

~

I'Hii;IS IIIILIIVI IIIIW .JIJLY 11!. 19BJ

Jli

-14
41

Pt.'t. Gil

L

1\le!ld..,Y~ GMnftl.

••

RUTLAND

l&amp;

&lt;1."1

' "'
~

..........
""'""'"

'••

Scioto results

"'..

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7

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

3J

WIST DIVtiJON

C.llfornla
Oltc...
Kansas City

,.
•

t;==========::::;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;:;
JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

OHice. Hours by Appointment Only

•

. 'l

Trx.lll

••'

,

GENERAL ALLERGIST

w

.......
""""'....

•

••

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) - Nell
Hanover, driven by Dick Richard·
son Jr., went themlleln2:00towln
the sixth race at Scioto Downs
Tuesday night and pay $2.60, $2.60
and $2.40 bt the first leg of the B.F.
Coaltown Trot.
Second was Barb's Addition for
$2.40 and $2.20, folloWed bY Swiss
Lark for $2.60.
In tbe second division, which was
the eighth race, SuccessJoywon Ina
time of 2:032-5, driven by DanAter.

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

St&gt;anll"

13 Weeks ................................. $14.04
26 Weeks .................................. $27.30
52 weeks ................... .............. 151.4.8
Outllde Ohio
13 Weeks ................................. $15.21
26 Weeks .. ....... ,..... ..... ..... ... ..... S29.64
52 Weeks .... .. .. .. ................... $56.21

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

~"~'.­

•

EMT DIVII-

Ntow York
MllwauJ.n:o

No subscriptions by mall pe-rmitted In
towns where home carrier service ls
available.

MAlL SUBSCR1Pl'lONS

I

""""'

Ttit' Dally Senllnei on 3. 6 or 12 montl&gt;

At The Mason
Vol. Fire Dept.
Evely Wednesday
At 7:00P.M.
"4 NUMBER BONUS"
"5 LUCKY BALLS"

•

••

-=.... u:AOVE

o

. ::~~h~r~lt will be gtven carrier each

BINGO

. , , .

•

Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
rter may' remit In advance direct to

PIAy

Middleport remained undefeated
lit 8-0 by defeatbtg Alexander 3-11n
recent pony league play. Trey
Cassell was the winning pitcher
with eight strikeouts and seven
walks. Middleport hitters were

MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL TEAM Members o! tbe minor league team sponsored by
Syracuse Fire department were, Iron! row, left to
right: Andy Fields, Michael McKelvey, Chris
Guinther, David Justice, Eddie Friend, Jared
stewart, Heather MePhall. Second row,lelt to right:

. ..

land Dally Pres&amp; Assoclaton and tM
American Newspaper · Publishers As·
soclallon, National Advertlslns ReJ)resentatlve, Branham Newspaper Sa.les,

the

In another game al Middleport Its
pony league zipped past Syracuse
&amp;-0 as Nick Bush hurled a two hitter
with 12 strikeouts and seven walks.
Middleport hitters were Trey CBssell two singles, Bush a trtple,
Kitchen , and Tim cassen each a
sbtgle.
Mike Chartcey was the pitcher lor

r;==::=========i

W'c.. I f, July 13, 1913

VANCAMP

•.

$
Cheese:
.
Slices.
:.o;.
Pork &amp; Beans._
.
16 oz.

~

¢

1

......

......

...
..

NESTEA

Instant Tea.....!~.!.
PIUSIUIY.AUS

GAlA TOWELS
JUMBO ROLL

2/$1

CAKI·IIU•

4 ROLL
PKG •

.. .. a.s oz.3 J·$.2

•

FLAVORITE SUGAR ·
5 LB.

BAG

$}49

••

• ••

·.

�Wednnday, July 13, 1983

w.dns d .,, July 13, 1983

Ita netO'f Middleport, Ohio

The Daily S.ntinei- Page-7

Calendar
POM EROY -

WEDNESDAY

I..odRe

MIDWPORT - The Ama·
leur Garden Club, Middleport,
Will~at tile home r1 Mrs. c.
E. ~ Wednesday at 8
p.m. Asslstlhg wUJ be Mrs.
Harold Lohse. The program will
IDclude the fnstaUatlon of offtc·
ers
a tour of the Blakeslee

degree. All members Invited.

RACINE - Annual picnic of
Racine Past ort1cers Club will be
held Thursday, July 14, at the

home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson

COME HAVE LUNCH
OR DINNER WITH US
AT 1940 PRICES

COLUMBIA TWP. - The
Board of Trustees of Columbia
Township Will meet tn special
session Friday at 8 p.m. at the
• township building.

ANN'S
Cake Decorating
Supplies
Route 7
Tuppers Plalna, Ohio·

Ph. 61!7-64115

INSTANT CREDIT TERMS
AVAILABLE AT THE TENT!
.$)()()()00 For $4297 A Month

STARTS THURS.,. JULY 1·4th
ENDS SAT. JULY 16th

BY BENEROAL RNANa

2 PC. UVING ROOM
With Antron Nylon \l~~~ 9~"

13"
Color
TV
Only
$289

Kroger Glailly
Welcon14is Your
Federal Food Sta11p1

$39995 5o~'l~~~
3 PC ..... $599 95

AOV!RTIIIO ITEM

~OUCY

( ro , " ,• I '"• ' • o d• •• "••d •'•"'• ' ' 1eqw 1r tld 10 liltl l tltldlly
0 ,.,.o.,hl• 1.,, • •• • '" ooctl !too t•• Ita• • euapt 01
u •• • l , . n, .. o• a d '" '"' ' " a d II ... d o , .., ,., Ovt ol .,.
n d . a •' u•d ·'• "' .., , ,..,11 off• • yo "' ,au • choi( e ol •
'

. •'""110 &lt;0 b l .. •l a m .. h.n Ch Ool oble t O!Itl(!i lll I I&gt;, a 10m•
, 0 , " 0 l _.,, 11 , 0 ,., 1 he tk wh ot h .., d l a,.h i le y oli IO pu rc h010
•~&lt;• oo• • ''" • d ,, • .., ot th• ;:uh e•• · ~•d p ttC e W'l' •th !ft ](I
d 111 , Onl ~ on e , ,..,.,o, l o upo•· wo ll b ,• o n ep ted pol ito"'

..
C.OPYIUGHT ltl3 · THE kltOGU CO .

LIVING ROOM
. SUITES
SUITES
5 Pc. Pine $59995
BEDROOM SUITES
DINING ROOMS ----DI-NIN-G-ROO_M_--1

TOTAl SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
h f' ; t • ll

"9 ,ov b vf atll rotjl et ' ' QuO fOft le • i

ITEMS AND PIICIS GOOD SUNOA'f' , IU ·,

LY .10, THROUGH SATUIDAY; JUlY II ,

fo r 'yO \If fOtel

'"'· IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY

• P' ,tp,, ,..,.., reg ii •CIIf H o l "' Onuforl ~,r re • 11 ,ou Ole n ot
•o• •' f' li ., ,o g•• ,.. ,11 •ep loce t Ou f olem wo lh the \ Oifte
t. · o ·• li •" a , ~!"' DO • ob l e ll • 11 ~d oo oel u,.d you • pu r&lt; h111e

WIIISIIVI THE liGHT TO liMIT .QUAN ·
TITlES. NONIE SOLD TO DIAUIS .

fl ' , L'

7995 25"·-

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

~~~E $7995 ~-----------------------------------FACTORY DIRECT TRUCKLOAD!!
QUitTORAMA

QUILTORAMA

KING SIZE

Reg. S419.90"

:$2099 5

$28995

$47995

FULL SIZE

Reg. SJ19.90"

$15995

Reg.

'

•t
o

I

•

•

' .

'

• I ..

'

c

)

lb.

Recliners From $99.95
Swivel Rockers Sale Priced

lOVING CARE

QUEEN SIZE
Reg. ss19.90* .

lWIN SIZE

PINE TABLE, 4 04AIRS ..................... $229.95
PINE TABLE/LEAF, 6 CHAIRS .... .... .... $399.95
TABlE WITH 6 04AJRS .............. ...... $179.95
TABLE WITH 2 04AJRS ... .........•...... .•. $79.95
Many Other Styles To O!oose mm

....

(
'

Cost Cutter ..,..
Ground Beef

MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM

BUY AT WHOLESALE PRICEs
RIGHT OFF FACTORY TRUCK!!

...,... ..

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

DRESSER - CHESf- HUTCH MIRROR - HEAD &amp; FOOT

QUILTORAMA

SMURF PANS

o

HOT DOGS ........ 20(
R. C. COLA ....... 10(

12" B&amp;W

FRIDAY

3 DAYS ONLY
OPEN 9 TIL 5
THURS., FRI. &amp;SAT.
JULY 14-15-16

THE GOOD OLE DAYS

CONSOLE

RACINE - Annual picnic of
Racine Past Otrtcers Club wUl
be held Thursday at the home or
Mr. and Mrs. WUson Carpenter,
Pomeroy. A covered dish dinner
Will be served at 6 p.m.
·

11-IURSDAY

a.m

New!

Carpenter, Pomeroy. A covered
dish dinner wUl be served at 6
p.m.

164 F &amp;AM wUl hold a
special meeting Wednesday at
7:30p.m. WO!'k In tlle fellowcraft

garden.

25" DIAGONAL COLOR

Pomeroy

SOLD ONL V IN 5-ll. ROllS $4. 9~ EACH

S699.9~·

ALL VARIIliES

per set

per set

per set

per set

'

Mixed
Fryer Parts

MISMATCH SETS

FULL. .. $11995
-$

179 Set

TWIN ... $88 95

QRr FAOORY TRUO&lt;!

5.CVQI
OP'IIQNS

..,....

$~:319.95

~

AM/FM CASSETTE

~..,

~::t

. $349

Jar

Cost Cutter
Pork &amp; Beans

1/2 Price

POI!TABlf

REDWOOD O.RWROUGHT IRON

-

'399.95

IOuantity Umited on 10me hams.
Delivery available at extra charge.

'

COLOR TV

TENT SPEOALS

Letwsweep
You otT Your

Northwestern~

SUMMER RJRNITURE ..

SAVE AS MUCH AS

Get an Economical
Chest Freezer For ·
REG.

Reg. sgg ONLY

...and your
Gibson men
deliver more

c :;;:· ~ . . 69 c
~::' 5. . 99c

$3888

Reg. '369 Set

$144

•OZ.

SET

California
Nectarines ·1b·.

17 Cubic Feet
Refrigerator/Freezer
Frost Free

IN THE DAIRY DEPT .

Kroger
Orange Juice
0

V2-Gal.
Ctnr.

33c

~-

Cost Cuffer
Soft Drinks

·~2oc

Ctnr:

YEllOW

COFFEE TABLE
2 END TABLES
ONiY

C

KROGER

ACCENT TABLES
END TABLES ,

1399.00

.NOW$299 ~~~-

BEAT!

5 0°/o

ottage Cheese c."

~~::O!JIInize~$~89

Bing Cherries

·:;~·

Kroger

KROGER

~79C

u.s .•

8-Ct.
Pkg.

lb. .

95

.
.Prevo
SpagheH1 Sauce

•

Sandwich or
Hot Dog Buns

$9995

DISHWASIIBS
- power . . . twltl

18 LB. HEAVY DUTY

WASHER

SPECIAL BOOM BOXES

2-UV&amp;WASH
STSTIM

Admiral

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE BEEF ,
IONELESS TOP

c

011

-

BUY DIRECT

COST CUTTER

INSPECTED

INDIVIOUALl Y WIAPPEO SLICES
IMITATION

Cost CuHer
Cheese Food

12·o~.99c
Pkg.

.

.....,. ,._au,, with 1oc1c and

- oofoly--.. .

Into your

92 SHEETS PER ROLL

Gl'-t modellltt25'M6

Freezers .
At Low,
Low Prices!

· FROST-FREE
REFRIGERATOR
Only $§9995

-~~~--

~~=--~=.....

.

Bounty
Paper Towels

AM.IANtiS

LAST

10

...
-lb •

ROOM AIR CONDITLONERS ·

to

B.T.U.

----r-.....-""'"':·· - - -- --·- ·- - - - - -

- -

-·-·-·

__ __ _--:--··--.,

:.

REC. '599

_ ______________
_.......

.

---

�3, 1te3

13, 1913

Business Services

PHONE
992-2156
HtDtilySooliool-.....
Ill c-t St .. ' - · .a451H

U:GAL NOTICE
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE # 184211
01amond Sav1ngs &amp; Loan
Farmers Bank &amp; S·avmgs Co

Treasurer of Me1~s County

P1a1nt;ffs
VS
A1chard M Young. Lmda A
You na. Edward A Young. and
Oebb1e DevalL et al

Defendants
.
Pursuant· 10 an order of sale
ISSued bv the Coun of Common

members to walk a mUe lor every peroon lhat
alleneed church ooer the old attendance record otll:l.
There were 93 people In church Swlday. 'lbe
congregation had lo pay oil and walk lhe elghlmlle8.

WALKED EIGHT MIUl! - A portion of the
membel's ol the Racine Nazarme Church paid oil
Sunday by walldng eight miles. The Rev. Thomas
Collier and a five man team chaDenged church

Challenged church members take eight mile walk
Members of the Racine Nazarene
Church paid off Sunday bY walking
eight miles after accepting a
challenge from their mlnlster the
Rev. Thomas Collier.
. Rev. CoOler challenged his con·
gregatlon that If he and a five man
team would . break the old attend·

ance record of 85 would tbey walk a
mile for every person over the 85.
They accepted the challenge.
Sunday there were 93in church. A
p&lt;irtlon of the congregation left
Racine Sunday at 2 p.m. and
walked . to Syacuse (over four
miles) and they walked back to
Racine maki.Dg one mile for each

member in attendance over the 85.
Ealler Collier had stated that the
would preach !rom the roof top or
walk a mile for everyone that
attended over the 85 record. The
congregation !ailed tn • the two
attempts with Collier conilng out oo
top.

'
. I 0 · ".'J ')/" I "' ill

i

l,.)l'/!r'l,

RIDING -The Rev. 'lbomas CoWer, left, and Dennis Pepper rode behind the waldng group In an
air condllloned car.

Area organizations meet.-----Shade Valley
Shade Valley Council of Floral
Arts recently held Its monthly
meeting which Included . tour of
Lang's, Mineral Wells, W. Va.,
where !bey sell concrete lawn
ornaments for landscaping.
This was followed by a tour of
Scott's Nursery, their newest store,
in Parkersburg, W. Va.
Hostess for the evening was
Jenny Machlr who arranged for the
group of 16 members and one guest
to have dinner at Sebastian's in
Parkersburg.
Jackie Frost, president, an·
nounced that the OABC convention
will be held Aug. 2, 3 and 4 at
Otterbein College in Westervme.
The club will receive two awards

this year at the convention and
delegates are asked to be present to
accept the awards.
The next meeting will be at the
home of Jackie Frost. Members are
to bring their bathing suites and a
salad.

Rock Springs
County deputies Mendal and
Elizabeth Jordan conducted the
annual inspection of Rock Springs
Grange on July 7.
They also spoke on so:veral
changes that have been made
recently bY Ohio State Grange. The

Local church gets new members
The Pomeroy First Southern
Baptist Church accepted three new
members Into memlli!rshlp on June
24. They were Mrs. Sharon Bailey,
Keith Ashie;, and Mrs. Emma
Ashley. Mrs. Batley Is presently the
matron of the Meigs County
Infirmary.
Keith and Emma Ashley of Crew

Frecker birth
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Frecker,

ON P.M. MAGAZINE
., '\ Ronald Coals, son of Mr. and
' Mrs. John James Jr., 1519 Nye
Ave., wUI appear on P .M.

Mel d

llfl,

WCMH-TV, Channel

• .. w.........,y, July ta, at 7: 30

Peach Fork Road, Porperoy, an·
nounce the birth of tbelr second
child, a daughter, Amy Marie, born
, July 1 at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight pounds
and Seven ounces and measured 21
inches in \englh.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd King, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Frecker, Pomeroy. Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Carl, Pomeroy, are
maternal great-grandparents.
The couple are al59 the parents of .
a son: Jason Bradley, age three.

p.m. Collla, ... bnpreulonlot, Is
a ITI IJ'Atluate of Melp High
School.

Returns home
of Lake Parll, Flarkla. have
returned home after vllltlna' mo.t
of June with Mr. Roulb'l Dl '&amp;lid
mother at their hOme In Farllt
Run. Mr. and Mrs. Roulb ~ a
week 1n Columbus visiting bla two
sisters and brother. While In OIIJo
they toured West Vlrgtnla llld
Southern Ohio on a motorcycle.

Road . transferred their member·
ship from the Bethlehem Baptist
Church of Great Bend where he has
been serving as trustee. The
Ashleys are active In the church
visitation program.
·
The three new members were
accepted Into fellowship bY the Rev.
David Hunt, pastor. The church has
been experiencing a steady growth
and invites the public to attend Its
services.

-

-~
onct Edwin Court

""' .
H - . o . - s. otot
Delwndonts

Pursuant to an ORDER OF
SALE 1ssued bv the Court ot
Common Pleas 1n the above
styled case. I WJII e)(pose tor sale
at public auctron at the front
door of the Court House of
Me1gs County. Pomeroy. Oh10,
on Saturdav. tl'1e 20th day of.
August 1983. at 10:30 o'cto.ck
AM the follow,n g lands and
tenements to-w1t
The follow1ng real estate.
s•tuated 1n tt1e Tow-nsh1p ot
Sutton, and 1n the V•llage of
Svracuse. 1n the County of·
Me1gs. and State of Oh10. and
further bounded and descnDed
as tollows. lo·wlt:

Pleas 10 the above sryled case. l
w11l exoose lor sale at public
auctiOn on lhe lron1 steps of the
Court House. 1J1e1gs County.
Pomeroy, 'Oh10. oh Saturday.
the 20th day of August. 1983.
at 1015 o'clock AM . the
fo llow1ng lands and lenemen ts
!O·Wit
The follow1ng real eslate
Situated on the Townsh1p ot
Sal1s'bury. County of Me•gs and
Slate of Oh10
Parcel 1· The follow1ng real
estate Situated m Fract1on No.
2. Sahsbury Townshtp. Me•gs
PARCEL NO. 1:
County. Ohto. and descnbed as
The follow1ng real f!State
follows Begmn1ng 1n the center
Situate rn the County ol Me1gs.
of State H1ghway No 33 at the
1n tM St ate of Oh10. and 1n
Northwest corner of what was the Townsh ip · ol Sutton
formerly Ray Brown lot thence and bounded and descnb North 36 deg 28' West 54 8 ed as follows , vtz Begrnfeet along the center of sa1d mng at my Northeast &lt;;Orner of
State Highway No 33 .. thence the East l1ne of the Fred
North 54 deg. E~st 125 5 feet: Strohmeyer lot. and now JOif'ltly
thence North 59 d&lt;:g. 56' East owned by myself and my
82 feet to the west hneof luc1lle brother. Alben E W1lhams. and
Jesse's 1 acre lo •. recorded 1n extend1n g Nonh 'Three 13)
Deed Book 162, ·Page .589 chams and E1ght and one-half
Deed Records of Me1gs County. (8 1/2) links to the Northeast
thence South 36 deg . 28' East corner of the sa1d Freet Stroh68 teet to the Soutneast corner meyer lot. thence Wes t Four 14)
of the sa1d 1 acre lot. th ence charns and E1ghty-!:i1X (8 6) l1nls.
South 59 deg 56. West 28 71
thence South Three (31 cha1ns
feet along the south hne of the and E1ght and one-half (8lhl
sa1d 1 acre lot to the place of l1nks along West l1neof thesa1d
beg•nnmg. conta1n1ng 30 acre. Fred Str ohmeyer lot to my
AJong w1th the easemem for Northwest cor ne1. then ce East
purposes of 1ngress and egress Four (4) chatns and Erghry-s1x
as rs described m deed re- (86) hnks to the place .of
cOrded 1n Vol 194. Page 199
!he same rntend1ng
of the Deeds Records of Mergs
the one-half of the
Cpunrv. Oh1o
satd
Strohmeyer lot. and
Aefemnce Deed Vol 267. all the d1stances here1n named
Page 5 13 Deed Re cords Me1gs be1ng a.s near accura te as 1s
County, Oh10
poss1ble to make an equal
Parcel 2 The followmg des- d1v1S10n of the sa1d lot rnto !'No
cribed real estme Situa ted rn the separate pieces. the same to
Townshrp of Salisbury. County contatn about One and one of Me1gs and Stat e of Oh10. and half { 1'1:~) acres .. sav1ng and
rn FractiOn No 2. Town 2. , excepling the coal and other
Range 13 bf the Oh10 Com- m1nerats. and the ngh to mme
pany's Purchase, bounded and the same wh1ch 1S hereby
descnbed as follows Beg,n- reserved
mng at a stake 1n the m1ddle of
AJso any Interests rn any nght
the paved road leadmg from ot wav to the above descrrbed
Kerr' s Run past the Fa.r Ground prem1ses 1S hereby g1ven to the
and also the corner of what was
sa1d grantee
formerly Ray Brown. then
Be1ng the same real estate
runnmg along what was for- conveyed to Albert E Wrlltams
merly Ray Brown's ltne. N 5 by Dav1d B. W1lhams by deed
deg . 56 m1n. E 208.71 feet
recorded .10 Deed Book 128
thence N 36 deg 28 m1n W
Page 185. Me1gs County Deed
208 7 1 feet. thence S 59 deg
Records
56 m1n . W 208 71 tee t PARCEL NO. 2:
to center of road . thence
Th_, fot1ow1ng real estate.
along th e road S 36 deg . Situate tn rhe County of Me1gs.
28 m1n . E 208 71 feet
1n the State ol Oh10 and 10 the
to tn e Place of be gmn ,ng
Towns htp of Sulto n. a n~ '
contam,ng one acre. more or bounded and descrrbed as
less. exceptmg however that follows. vrz Beg1nn1nQ at a po1nt
pbrt10n ot sa1d real estate as on the East li ne of the Fred
conveyed bv Val E Brown and Strohmeyer lot now owned by
Magg1e Brown to Luc11le Jesse Dav1d B. Will1ams. and at a hall
way POint on the East line of
by deed beanng date of Dec
same. thence West Four (4)
15. 1932. recorded 1n Vol
139. Page 74 of the Deed chams and Erghty-srx (86) links.
Records of Me1gs Counry. thence South along th e West
Oh10, to wh1ch r:.eference rs hne of the sa1d Fred Strohmeyer
made. further exceptrng .30 of lot to the Southwest corner ot
an acre conveyed to George R the same. th ence East to the
Young a!}d M ary Patr1cra Southeast corner of the sa•d
Young. by deeds recorded rn Fred Strohmeyer lot thence
North Three ~ 3~ chams and
Vol 184. Page 485 and Vol
184. Pa ge 657 Deed Records E•ght and one-half (8 1h ) links to
of Me1gs Cou nty. Oh1o. and the pl ace or begrnntng. all of
funher exceptrng the coal and these d1stances berng as near
the nght s along the coat seams accurate as tt IS possible 1n
1n and under sa1d oremrses tn makmg an eQual d1v1S1on or the
accordance With the eKceo· sa1d Fred Strohmeyer lot mto
l1ons 1n a deed to Wtlham · rwo separate lots. the same to
Brown. Leonard Brown and conta1n about one an'd one-half
Brown. from Charles P. (1 'hl acres. savrng and eKcept·
Greenough, Dante! A. Russell 1ng the coat and other mrnerals
and Frank 0 SQutre. Trustees. and the rrght to m1ne the same
dated Jan I lth, 1895. and wh1ch 1S hereby reserved
Be1ng the same rea l estat e
recorded Nov 8th. 1907, 1n
VoL 97. Page 492 of the Deed conveyed to Al bert E. and
Mabel W1lhams by D.B. WrlhRecords of Mergs County
ams to be deed recorded m
Oh10
· Reference Deed· Vol. 264. Deed Book 135 Page 33 1.
Page 2 57 Deed Records M~ugs Me,gs County Deed Recmds
PARCEL NO. 3:
County. Oh10
The followrng descnbed real
The propeny appra1sed at
$38.033 00 and cannot be estate S1tuate 1n the Vrllage of
sold l or less then 2/3rds of the Syracuse. tn the County of
appra1sed pnce
Meogs and Slale ol Ohoo and
Terms . Cash 1n hand on day bounded and descnbed as
of sale.
follows: Begonnong 01 1he Sou·
· JAMES J PROFFIIT theast corner Carleton College
SHERIFF lot : thence So uth seve n
MEIGS COU NTY hundred and f1fty-four feet
(7541 to the Publ•c Road:
(7J 13. 20. 27 . 31C
thence along sa1d road a
Northwesterly course to the
said Carleton College lot
thence East Tvvo Hundred and
Twenty-frve feet (225) to the

place ol begonnmg, conJaon•ng
two !2) acres more or tess
Bemg the same rea l estate
conveyed to Albert E. Wilhams
bv Dav1d B and Albert E.

along the county road to the
place ol begrnntng .
Reference : Volume 25 7
Page 537 M~gs County Deed
'lecords. Mergs Countv. Ohto
Proper t y appra1sed at
S 1 1.350.00.and cannot be
sold for less than 213rds ol the
appra1sed pnce
Terms Cash 1n hand on day
of sate.
James J Proffttt
Sheoff
Mergs County
(71 13. 20. 27 3tc

H. McCoy

Save and e~tcept the cbal and
mher' m1nerals. gas and or I. and
the rtght to m1ne the same 1s
hereby reserved
Be1ng the same real estate
conveyed to Albert E W!ll1ams
from Hannah long. et al. by
deed recorded 1n Deed Book
161 Page 464 Me1gs County
Deed Aecords
The property •s appra1sed at
51 5.000 00 and cannot be
sold for less than 213rds of the
appr a1sed pnce.
Terms. Cash m hand on day
of sate

Public Notice
!.fOAL NOTICE
SHERifF'S SAI.f
COUIITOF
COMMON PlEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE • el'CV-84
Bank One ot
Southeast Oh•o N A
2 S. Court Street
Athens. OH
Plamt1ff
~ 'IS ·

Robert L Hawk and
Nancy F Hawk
Defendants
Pursuant to an Order of Sale
ISSued bv the Cour t ot Common
Pleas 1n the above styled case. I
Wtll offer for sate at public
aucbon at the front door ol th e
Court House. Me1gs County.
Pomeroy. Oh1o. on Saturday.
the 20th day of Augu st 1983. at
10:00 o'clock AM.. the foltowmg lands and tenements t0-w1t:
S1tuated ff1 the County of
Mergs. VIllage of Middleport
and State of Oh1o. and more
partrcularty descrtbed as
follows :
Beg1nn1ng at the southwest
corner of Harry Evans lme and
runnrn g along sa1d ltne to tne
Ohlo R1ver: thence along the
nver fifty feet down nver; thence
runn1ng on a parallel line nonh
10 the county road !now known
as Ratlroad StreeU: thence

64 Misc. Merchandise

Wrlhams
by 154.
Deed Page
recorded
m
Deed Book
140 ol

1he Me•gs Co unty

TIRE SALE

Records.

W. IIIIo ........
0.. T....

pAT. HILL fORD

-

·

$J295

INSTAllED

Willi PAD

Writesel

ROOFING

All types ·a~ roof wort. new
or repair, gutters and
~OWitSpouts, gutter cleanmg and painting, sto1111
doors -and windows.
All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimales"
r Call: 949-226~
or

949-3091•J- 10-tfc

Goad S.llctien Of
GRASS CARPIT

Public hearinas will be held at 7:30p.m. on Mondly, July 25, 191lltld

David Brickleo
Business With

GENERAL
CONTRACTING, Inc.

New Ho1t1ts - htensi•e
Remodeling
"Insurance Work
'Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
"Roofing Work
"Aluminum &amp; ·
Vinyl Sidings
Dovid Briclcle1

'

J&amp;L BLO~
INSULATION

Ph .

446 · 8043

anytime.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Al ..kan Hutky. Spayed .
251 -6417.
.

...... Giiiiipoiis.........

ADULTS ....... 6 for $40.00
STUDENTS .... 6 for $30.00
'Golf Trips
~1.\
"Pro Shop
lf~
'Fittinc Center
' ·:·
'Metal Woods
·
'Club Repair
, · ·
'Fishing
i
John Tulord

Chester

3 1mall Terrier pupa, 2
fem•le, 1 male. Call 446-

2108.

No Sunday Calls

.

Part Oaschund small pup·
ple1 . 7 wkS. ofd. Call 814-

Windows - Doors
For "All" Your Home

•Now Roofing
FREE ESTIMAl;ES

"Free Estimates"...

6/271t1n

6 puppies . Mixed, 4 brown.
1 black. 1 female dog good
with kids, brown . Good
ho"'e with ohildrtn. 614-

992·2602 .

PDmeray, Oh .

Male Collie, mala black end
tan, female 1panial. 6 malt
puppies. 1 1t hou1e on top of
Mile hill in Racine.

Ph. 9'12-2174

4 Peek -a ~ poo puppies, frH
to good home . Call 992·

MINE RUN

Repairs ...

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

Female border collie . 1 year

old. Good with kids. 614·
992·6274 .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

Down Spouts

•Insulation
•Storm Doon
•Storm Wlndo~
•Replacement Wind~•

3972 or 614·992-6606 .

From the Smallest Healer
Core to the largest Radia·
lor.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs . Experience

Roofing - Siding
Trouahs,

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

To good home. Adult male
long haired. gold 8a white
cat. Lovas people . 614-992-

COMPLETE
RADIATOR SERVICE

6 16 1 mo

Call: George Gum
Ph. 992-5433

6961 .

AUTO BODY AND
VAN CONVERSIONS

K

USTOM

AR
RAFT

RACINE

CII1S,

iron, mollls.
TOP PRICES

· Coppar .................... 45'1b.

Aluminum Cans ...... 20' lb.
Ratialors ............. 30' lb.
ASst. Gius .. $l00 hundred
Mixed Iron .. $1.00 hundred
Also Plcltlna Up Auto Bodies
i-22·1 mo.·P&lt;I.

R

ROOFING

AND HOME MAINTENANCE
•Roofin&amp; of all' types
Residentia~ &amp; Com~Mrcill
, ·outllrli &amp; Downspouts
•storm Windows &amp; Doors

Phone
1' (614) -992·3325

NEW UsnNG - 7 rm. bridJ
with new k~hen anJl bath, 3
bed~. lg dining carpeting
fumac~ porches and ~
ment As~n11 $45,000.

FREE ESTIMATES

20 Y••s Experience
WORK GUARANTIIO

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2B34
·or 949-21 80

NEW usnNG - 3 apts.,
rooms for tile 4th. 3 modem
baths. 3 nice kitchens and lg
lot near Jones lloyt Wlftl
$45,000..

Kitchen Cabinata - Roof·
ina - Sidin&amp; - Concratt
P1tios - Sidtwalks Now Construction - Rt·
llodtlin&amp; - Custom Polo
Barns.

SUPUIOR VINYL
SIDING
"Sidin&amp;
"Roofin&amp;

Call 843-5425
H -2 me. pd

•Lowest Rates
Around
•friendly Servie

POMEROY - Good older
horne, 2 BR, Ill baths, furnQ,
full basement 3C8f garage and
lg lot

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

. 3 ACRES - Willi septic
system, TP. we, cet1or and
carport in Southern school
district lor only $6,000..

742-2328
4-21 -ltc

MIDDLEPOIIT - Near P.O.
has 3 bedrooms, I ~ baths,
Ciirpetinr, poneling and iallfll.
As!ing $25,000.

1rVinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel
C. l. Kitchen

to

good

homo. Coli 304-676-7474.

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, ~HIO

HOllE ORlAND- 3bedroGm
A-frame that needs finishilc
and 2 acres or 6 acres ,_
Racine

Authorized John Dser,

IIIII Hcilllllll, Bush 1101
Farm Equipment .

Lost and Found

11

8

MERRI·MAC nHds 3 dam·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SUCRE FARM- AI Momin&amp;
Stir. 3 bedroom horne, lg bank
bam and tther l*lcs. 20 ICnB

l·:J.tfc

II

B~ILDINGS

Auction every Fri. night at
the H•rtford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.
Contlgmenta of new and
uted merchandite always
welcome. Richard Reynold•

P&amp;S Racina,
BUILDINGS
011.
·

Auctioneer. 276·3009.

1'11.'614-@~~~9.1

lHift

1

·

742-2362
ERNEST IIITCHELL
Route 4, Pomero

8177.
9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cuh for lata model
clean u1ad cars.
Jtm Mink Chev.-Oidslnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

condition.
9303.

BEDS-IRON. 8RASS. old

PART&amp; and SERVICE
c

"FENONO PROVIDES PRIVACY PLUS
PROTECTION FOR CIILDREN &amp; PETS"

fumfture. gold. silver dollars, wood ice boxes. atone
jar1, antiques, etc.. Complete household•. Write :
M .D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,

Oh. Or 992· 7760.

614-992·6370.

................
·-·····"'"•·······

_,,

Announcements

Buying dallv gold, silver
coins, ringa, jewelry, 1terling
were. old coins. large curr,eney·. Top price•. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave .

Mlddlopon, oh. 814-992·
3478.

.-. ......

SWEEPER and sewing machine ,.,_ir, parts. and

ouppliH.

Pick up and

delivery,

Davis V1cuum

Ctaaner, one hoi! mite up
OoorgH Croolo Rd. Call
448·0214.

*CHAIN
LINK
'
FENCING

Vicinity

YARD sale , furniture. ·
clothes &amp; books .. Thursday, ;"
203 Locust St .• Henderson.

YARD sale. 107 Locust St ... ·
HendersOn. _Thursday. 14.
THREE family yard oolo,
Crab Creek Road, Gallipolia
Ferry. 1 Mile past Ebert•
Grocery. Thursday .
YARD sale, Anderson St.,
Mason , July 14 &amp;. 15, 10
a.m .-6 p.m .

318&amp; or 304-273-9830.

31 Homes for Sale
6 bedroom, newly ramo·
deled wllh fireplace In Mid·
dleport. Mutt be 1een to be

appreciated . Coli 992 ·6709
after 8 PM .

'

Two bedroom. full basement, convenient loeet~on,

304-676-6624.

21

Business
Opportunity

GOVERNMENT J08S ·

Thou11nda of v•cancles
mutt be filled lmmedletely.
Up to date directory IItts
jobt from • 17,134 to
*60,112;. Call 716- 8428000, including Sunday,
Ext. 4438.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to Hnd money through lhe
mail until you have lnvesti·
gated the offering.

1--------'--LADIESI HOUSE OF '.LOYD
Ia now hiring In yoJr area .

22 Mon§y to Loan .

NO INVESTMENT. Possible
t7. hourly. For more Information In Maaon County
.,... call collect 304-773-

1224 or 773-1111 , otso fM
Melgt &amp;: Athent area 114·
892·8891 &amp; Gallipolis &amp;

HOME LOANS low fixed
rate. Leader MortgaiJI, 77 E.
State, Athen1, Ohio . 1· 614-

692·3061, or 12 to 4PM
1· 800·341·66641n Ohio .

Bidwell area 814-387-

7770.
EXPERIENCED logo! oecro·
P·I. In cere of Pt. Plea1ant

Services

1--- - - - - - - -

Roglstor·co .. 200 Moin St..

PIANO TUNING $6 off plus

Pt. Pleasant. WV.

discounts to senior cltizen•churcheJ ~schools . Call Bill
Werd Ward'• Keyboard,
448 -4372.

12

1 - - - - - -- - - PIANO TUNING-LANE OA ·

NIELS. Reliable service
since 1985. Auociata ol
Brunicerdi Music Co. Phone

Situations
Wanted

1114-742·29&amp;1 .

Houaa for Sale, 6 RM end
Bath. Buffalo, WV. Call
1 -304-876· 2668or write :
So,; 469, Pt Pleasant, WV

25650 .
'
HOUSE. a11umabla 8¥2 percent loan, 3 bedroom, all
electric, central air. 2 lots;
well, take trailer trllde In,
Qaltlpolia Ferry, WV. Call

alter 5, 304-676·6809 .
BY owner, Greenbrier Ett·
•tes, 3 bedroom, mid- entry,

3.6 acres. $76,000. Cell
oftor 3, 304· 676·6163 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI-STATE MOBILE .
HOMES. USEO - CARS,
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL .
448-7672.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALEs:
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 446· 7274. .
1980 BAYVIEW Doluxe,
14x70 2 BR C/A, flroploco,
garden tub. appliance•. underpinning, $14.00. Call

448·6211.
1969 12x60 2 bdr. toto!
eloc. o3.400. 197914xll2
bdr .• total alec..

•e.soo.

'

'"'

11

Treller and lot for rent or Hie
on Land Contract. Call814-

266·6840 .

better. Call 388·9906.

•Walher1 •Dithwteher~
Ranges
•Aefrigeratort
•DI'J8ra •Freezere

3

SEPTIC systems, landscap ing (allsiu of dozers). gravel
&amp; dirt hauling. will lay short
or long gas &amp; water linea,
backhoe work . Free alltlmates. Phone 304- 273 -

Cell 614· 388·

Sllnding limber. any
amount. The bigger the

985-3561
All Makes

PH. (304) 882-2276 ~21!1 rno.

8r.

Wanted . Junk auto•. any

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

4 -~

...... Pt'Piiiiisa.ri¥ .....

Celt 114-440-0176.

Wanted to buy. New, und&amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete house·
holds . Call Oaby A. Martin

"FREE esTIMATES"

1..:...:...:...::.:.::..:.:..:..:_:____

448·3872

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

····-··-···-··················

614·~92·2166.

614·441· 4883.

Washers, Dryers
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

Comp..te Auctioneer Service. Also do appraisals.
Licen1ed &amp; bonded tO aell.
Households. farm furnishIna• &amp; Real estate. Over 26
ye1r1 uperience in buying 6
s~tlng new, used &amp; antique
furniture . 614·992- 6370.
Osby A . Menin .

Thurs., . Fri. &amp; Set. ~agla ·
Ridge Rd . 1 mile from Rt . 7
at Memorial Garden
C:emetery.

Friday 1 &amp; . 9'-7

1114-742·3094. Also book·

W1nted aome one to live In
and htlp take cera of ill man.
Do housework alto. Ctll

.
c.ou'&gt;··· .

Yard Sale July 1 5, 18, 17.
Clothes. knick knacks. para keet., ·other ltem1. Fairview
Evergreen Rd .

Engli1h Shepard puppie•.
oak dre11er, victrola. 1cale.
clothel, household goods.
July 16· 16 . 9 :00, Chester.

ina peniee.

stallation.
Residential
8t Commarcial
Call 742-3196

l-7-llc

Ra!Jies, Refriptators

onatretors in thl1 ereat Giftt,
home decor ttema on
plan. Car and phone
neceuery. Hlgh11t comml•·
lion. No lnveatment. daliv·
erlng, or collecting. Call

tary. Send resume to Bo•

~,

Carport Sale Saturday 16th,
204 Kineon Dr. Gallipolis.
9· 4 . Jr. clothes. sewing
machine. cameras, more.

18 Wanted tQ Do

AUCTION every Saturday
night, 8 p .m . MI . Alto
Auction Barn . Consign For all your wlriog , ment• taken avery Saturday
needs; furnaces re- • : 1 :00 till aale time. Emma
pair aarvica md in- : Ball Auctinaer, 304~428 -

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION
USED
APPLIANCES

WVo. 304· 773· &amp;786 or
304· 773·9186 .

Siz15 from 6'x6' Up
to 24'136'
I nsulatd Dog Houses

r .•.

Help Wanted

a.

Sizes start from 12'xl6'

CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS
..c.'\'

2 miles eaat of Porter on Rt.
664 . Wed ., Thurs. &amp; Fri.
Clothes, jeans , glasses, and
baby items.

3 family carport sale. Fri.,
July 1 5. 1983 et Roger Kerr
residence near Chetter . Fol·
low signs. Warm morning
gas heater. bunk beds with·
out mattraues, 10me antiques. recliner, 2 e•arcise
bicycles, like new. books,
men, woman, children 's clo thing, toya. AMF children's
wagon with racka. much
more . 9 -4 .

~.:::::;::::::::::::;;::1~==:::======+:==========

R lck Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, An- Part time jobs In Pomeroy
tlque
liquidation aalea. · for youths. Ag.. 12 thru 18.
Ucan•ed&amp;bondedinOhio&amp; Contact the Daily Sentinel .

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

6·9·1 mo ..

7.

Carport Sale July 15,9:00- YARD SALE : Monday ,
8:00. 462 Lariat Dr ., near Tuesday and Wednesday.
Holz:ar Medical Center. Clo- Everything reduced. 587
lhing, curtains, misc.
Main Street .

2688 oltor 6 if found.

Auction every Tuesday
night, Krodel Park Club
House. Pt. Pleas8nt WV.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Call

or Best Offer
PH .992 - 3006

UTILITY

Yard Sale Junk, rags, an·
tiques . Fri. &amp; Sat . Rt. 664 in
Porter, signs posted.

mowara old White
•awing machine, lots n:tJore.

motorcycle
on car
1hort
New Haven,keys.
set of
&amp;
leather strap, call 304-882-

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp;PROPERTY

Dnl1r
Form Equlpmanl
Parts &amp; Service

Yard Sale 13th, 14th, &amp;
15th . Household itmes,
tools, jewelery. Just off Rt.
141 It Centenary on Lincoln
Pika. 2nd . trailer on left.

No prior sale. Fred Sisson,
Rt. 564, 3.2 mi. West of Rt.

Lawn

18 FT. WILD CAT
TRAVEL TRAILER

SALES &amp; SERVICE '

TI!AILER - 1972 Arlinp.
12l160 tti.al etec. 2 BR Mil
central air and heat $7,500.

9 :00 to 6:00.

14 ' Starcraft boat, bicycle.

glaaa front fire screen, clo ·
thing I extra nice, ages 4- 18.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

puppies,

LOST: between Mason &amp;

PH: 1-304-773-5634
Mason, W. Va.

BOGGS

a

Yord Solo July 16· 16. 9:00·
6:00 . 3 Family. Firat time.

Yord Solo July 1~ · 16. 49
Garfield Ave. , Gallipolis .

MILLERELECTRIC
SERVICE

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

G•rage' Sale 614 Hilda Dr .•
G•lllpolia. Clothes, furniture
toys. Thur~day &amp;. Friday.

ends . Thura.-Sat .. 8 :00 ·
6 :00 . Box 26 Texas Rd ..
Gallipolis .

FREE

12·20.tfc

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

NEW UsniiG - BusineSs
buiding in Middleport Mil
about 6,000 SQ. ft. ol stJnee.
$25,000..
•

Yard Sale at 1939 Chatham
St. 14th, 16th. &amp; 16th.
Couch &amp; chairs, children's
clothing, dishes, tapes , car
tape player .

Yard Sale Stero , mlnkcoat,

clean clothing, odd a and

·--~-- J:fO·merov
···········

$2,700.00

Route I
Lon&amp; Botto•. OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067

FREE ESTiiiATES

4 Family Yard Sale July
12, 14,15. 6 miles from
Holzer Medical Center on
Rt. 160. Adult clothing, jr.
teena clothing, chl1drens
clothing slzea 14111mto 1 yr.

j•r•.

Garage Sale 303 &amp; 327
LeGrande Blvd ., Thurs .. 9 ,3,

3 part Beagle puppies, 8

Carpeted. bathroom with
shower, aas or elect. rafria;,
lumace. &amp; lot. Water heater.
railp, sink, gas, elect.. or
battttY ll&amp;hts. sleaps 6, ex·
callent condition.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

"Gutter &amp; Down ·spouts
"Remodeling
20 Years Experience
In Home Area

Garage Sale Wed . &amp; Thuu . 9
til 7 u..d wood windows
Inside, electric baseboard
heater. pool table , lots of
miac. itema. 114 Four1h
Ave .. Gallipolis.

Spring Ave .• Pomeroy. Rear
entrance of football field.
July 16 &amp; 16. Everything VJ.

WHks old. 304·675·5702 .

FOR SALE

mo

1-M

Evergreen.

Laroe Yard Sale 14th 15th &amp;
18th. 1 mile welt of Centenary on Fh. 141 . Love eeat,
typewqrlter, lampt, diahea,
fru it
and mi1c. Items.

$3()0° ATON

kittens. 304·896 ·3878.

1-23-tlc

Bu,en ol ps, lluninum

Yarci Saie July 11 thru 14.
Clothea , knick knacks .
clocka. rad ios. 'It mi . out of

July 14• 15. 9-4. Corner of
6th &amp; College, Syracuse ,
Clothe• dryer, Ynoo lawn
mower, children's • adults
clothing, toys; dithes, o dd•
&amp; end• . lots of misc.

STRIP
COAL

5·!6·21M.

S.R. 124-Pit. 992·5468

Vicinity

Yard Sale Thurs. 6 Fri . July
14-15. Uncoln Pike In Cen·
tenary. Seveth houae on
r ight. Boys jeans, clothing,
women clothing, tot1 of
miac . Items ,

Female lriah Satter. spayed,
male Cock -A -Poo , female,
terrier. spayed, four female
part beagle. milll, all spayed,
two black fa mala cats and 3

PH. 992-2280

Riders &amp;Sons
SALVAGE COMPANY

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

&amp;

1 all white cat. 1 gray cat.
Both female . Call 446 - '
3732.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gara1es"
Call for free sidina estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.

HOME REPAIR

EUGENE LONG

'' '

•• a o " ' •••

Help Wantad

13

Insurance

SANOY AND BEAVER ln

.

aurance Co. has offered
MNicea tor fire ln1ur•nce
cov•aue in Gallla County
for almolt • century. Farm.
home end personal pror.rty
coverage• ere avallab • to
mHt: lndhtidual needs , Contllct Ray Wedemeyer, agent.

Phone 388-B249 .

Newty remodeled 2 1tory
frame. 1 'h bath, 3'/J acrea,
city school,, riverview.

032 .000. Colt 448-4222

between 9 &amp;. 5 .

1---------For sale by owner. Ferm wfth
new houl8 &amp;. garage. 20 A.
land, near Rio Orenda. Con·
alder all offer I. Call 814246-6190 anY time or 814~ ·
245·9400 before BPM.

1----:-------;--

1954 Great lake houae
t'aller, 8'x40'. Cell 814246-~144 .

1972 Holley Park mobile
home, 2 bdr., unfum .• g11 ·,
heat, good condition . Can

1-014· 7340 or 448·4482.
UMd two bdrm . mobllt
homas. turni1hed . Brown's
Trailer Park, Mlner8Yille, Oh .

114-992-3324.

Snowdon, 448· 4290.

home wtth 4
3
bdr.• 1Yt bath, lara- kh•ch•••
Ia dining room, bailment
with wood &amp; ~ectrlc heat.
Kyger Creek scholl dlst.

1970 12xl0 trailer. Partly .
furnished, woodbumer, C· :
A. New e~~rpetlng . many
•xtras. Can be moved or left
on nice farm lot . *5800.

'611,000. Coli 114- 317·
7238 .

114- 992- ~710

18 Wanted to Do

Are you paying to much for
your hosphal-health inauranca. Call C•rroll

'
General Hauling .and Trash
removal Service. Aeltabl8
ond dopondoblo. Colt 440·
3119 betwoen 9 and e.
EKpertence houH painting
and lawn mower repair. Very
,...onable rates. Call 448·

118B•

REAL BAROAINI1 yoer old
bl-tovot. 3 BR, A·1 oond ..
garage • bas•ment, brick
front, large lot, city school•.
4 Y.t miles from· Oelllpoll• •

Or. .n Twp. 138,800 . 448·
8038 .

after 5 p .m.

1974 c ·ameron mobile :
home. 3 bedrooma. tOtally .,

olectric. Colt 992-2&amp;611.

··

12•80 $hultz mobile home
and new matching additiOn
on ~ acre lot outside of
Reedsville on SA 124. All
utilities , priced to •ell. •

=~~ ooo .

2

Coli 614-378· :

USED MOBILE HOME .
678-2711 .
USED Mobile Homes, 304~71 - 2711 .

'

Installed And
Wa1ranted by Sears
For 5 Years.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

lat. lima Rlt1l1l ~. klcltena and diling room Pine &amp;Cedar.

St. lt. 124, PoltltroJ, OH.

lftWI.ISIIII- 2 btitllaDniW, lurnished ftiile ~ indtJd.
Ill . . . and dl}er. l.ocalll411 prNIII dril'e. Aslin&amp; $11,000.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•

or 992-2282
·
11-lHic

949-2737

PH .992·7119

VALLEY

Al10 Transmlsslon

I_EW llSTIIIG- 2 bedniomlnillr,l2ltS5,!orSIIeco.-,fur·
nislted .. unfurrtind, including underpinnin1 .Ask on this one.
CALl US 111 lilY 01 iELl
IAIICY JAIPDS - ASSOCIATE
PIIIIH:tll.-1
1r •·ml Tt .._A 1tn111

Villlp o!lllidtlltltGit

SIDING

6

OHIO

l.uok IIIII I1IIM ulllr. Aslq $24.100.

Flld Holf•w• 1lllu

White mouie With some

food .

Real Estate General

NEW LISniiG- II mile out of Racit1e, 3bedroom home on \I acre

RUBBER-lAC&lt; TWEED

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-75U

6-29·1 mu. pel

II£W USIII8- Plioad ltif quidt Slle, 2bedrooms, both, t.ge lo·
in11110111 anti at-in k*hen. Lower 1ewe1 hiS 3rtl blld1110111, laundtY
1111 a1MI tll1n1 room. ClJnmlte fiDer with st.1 at the end of the.
Corheiililllillld FmHA !i•JCic jiOI&amp;iiJ(e.llskin&amp; $27,500. Mike
jlllf ulllr, uwnen 1tiss can be yaur l!lin. l..oCit1ll in Rat:ina
3 ACID II Melli[ - Slneyed flat land, private and peoceful
locatim. Owntr wi(j help finance.
'

OONGOIIUM

Monday, auaust 8, 1983 at tile Villap Council chambers, 237 Race Stnll.
Middleport, Ohio.
Pltrpose of the hllrinas is to1llowforpublic Input rtlnato ~-==
!ll•n 11ppliCition for funds unt1sr propns llllhaliled by the radlr
Jabs Bill. hll.m.tl 1llitllnts n Invited to llllnd.
Writtln CG1II111I1IIs IIIII Stllllllions lillY be tlllde by ldchssl• ,.,..
nplils to lbyor Flld Hoflmln,13Hac:t St., lltldleport, Ohio 45710.

H. L.

Ullf HOllE - Witfltarae add-on building asphalt drMJwoy.
loailed on quill sb'llll IU of hiah wata in Racine. The 1i¥inJ room
is 1!11111 iql. 111ert is a cwnent ~ and larl! IIM!rlid pon:h, o1so
a !Mill lllnlllluildinl Yoo con be in this one in two wee1ts (Or
~ $16,!100.

STARTING AT

'

11·26-tfc

CENTRAL REALTY

SEIMCE STAnON
992-9932

PUBUC NOTICE

992-6215 .. 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

GoH lessons Special

15 Yeort E•perience ·

V. C. YOUNG Ill

RMI Eltlte Oeneral

SERVICE STATION
OPEN 24 HRS. A DAY

~

(Fr11 Estimates)

!======:;~;;~~~~~~~~~~

LOWEST PRICES
·IN AREA
POMEROY
lANDMARK

_._...

1·13-lte

Deed

Yard sa\eS
Call

614-387-7101 .

Ni1ht

. .IIIWL

and lillnOCWilg

. oloctolcat ._...

(7) 1 3. 1rc

992-7119

We _,. ..... end ,.
CON , . . lCW .nd . . .
ter ~ We·_, 11t1o
--r... bal
.....,.
8ftd rod out,.

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SlSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, REClAMATION
WORK
•lAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK
BOIIMD &amp; Mllll IIUARAIIT£ED
PHONE Jill CUFFORO
992·7201
,.,...,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

Now Homes - Extensive
Remodel inc.
•Insurance Wot1J
•Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Gara&amp;es
•Roofin&amp; Work
oAiominton &amp;'Vinyl Sidinas

_r-"LUUii ·WIOI'ic

towns h1p budget for f1sca1 year
1984 A summary of the
enac1ed budget shoW,ng the
Intended uses of Revenue
Shanng Funds and mtormat10n
supportmg the budget actrons
taken by 1he township are
available for . public tnspet:110n
at the Clerk's home from 5.00
~. M until 9:00 P.M .. Monday
through Frrday.
Helen SWartz .
Clerk

....
.

RADIATOR
SIIVIQ

ROUSH
·coNSTRUCTION

-Piu..........

ANNUAL BUDOET
OPEN FOR
INSPECTION'
On July 2. 1983 the Bedford
Townshtp Trustees enacted the

JACK'S
SEPTIC SERVICE

or

--......
1
~·ld
dcdc..
•

Public Notice

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

Day

1363

CARPENTER
SERVICE

The village reserves the nght
to accept or reJect · any or all
b1ds and warve any lnformalrtres 1n brdd1ng
,
Jon Buck.
Clerk -Treasure r
V1llage of Mrdd leport
July 13. 20

... . . _ _ 1.8tt. .

PH.

320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT W.

YOUNG'S

,

81d .~

ARROW FI.ASHING
SIGNS
FOil IALE OR IIINT

Cle1nin1 &amp;
lnstall1tion
of New SysteMs
"Senior Citizens
10% Discount"

Giveaway

388-9930.

PUBLIC NOTICE

Semces

-

PLAQUES
ENGRAVING

6-2J.I roo,

The Vrllage of Middleport w1ll
offer for sale by sealed bids the
lotlowtng Item·
1 - 1965 Chevrolet 30 ·
Serres Panel Truck
A mm 1mum bid of S500rs reqUired For mor·e uiformahon or
to 1nspP.CT the truck cal l F1re
Ch1ef Jeff Darst at 992-7332
0&lt; 992-7368
81ds wil be acf;epted at the
mayor's offrce. 237 Race St.
Middleport. Ohto 45 760 Unlit
2 PM.. AugUst 4. 1983. Envelopes contam1ng b1ds must be
marked on the outside 'iruCk

Business

. . 11111 -'"'
~~~

Manufacturers

PH. 992-3047

1---------

Me1gs County
17113. 20.27 31c

Trophy

"Uceneed 8o lnopected"

1
--p;idjjjjCN'Qti;;;-I
Public

JAMES J PROFFIIT
SHERiff

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

TROPHY
KING

Wedding Cakes and
All Occasion Cakes

992·2196

'

'

The II 1
real estate in
100 acre lot
296. Sunon
Townsh1p, V1llage of Syracuse.
Me1gs County. Oh10. .1 o-w11
Begrnntrig on the West lrne of
100 acre Lot No 291;} at the
Northwest corner of Albert E
W•lliams one and 50/100 acre
lot: thence East 128 leer:
thence North 4 deg 40' E~t
136 feet thence West 139 feet
to the West 1111e ot 100 aCre Lot
No 296; thence South 136 feet
to place of beg1nnmg. contaln mg 42/100 acres. more or
less. and bemg a parCel of land
excepted from a deed to John

'FHE .

TERESA'S
CAKE
·DECORATING

MftW..,.,., Ohio

GOlD SEAL

'

P'ulllic Notice

1-----------1
.......

Good Sellctlou Of

·

Mr. and Mrs. 'lbomal K. Roush

charter was draped tn memory of
Mary Shaeffer.
A contribution was made to Ohio
State Grange for a remodeling
project of the grange building In
Columbus.
Sympathy was extended to Fran·
cis Shaeller and Harold Blackston.
Communications were read from
the Ohio State and National Grange
also, a thank-you note from the
Mary Shaeffer family .
A legislative report was given bY
P at Holter and refreshments were
served bY CWA committee. The
next meeting will be Aug. 4. The
hall will be vacated for the fair.

!.fOAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SAI.f
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
C..# 18,099

Public Notice

4

r-=========:;r;::;::;,:==::::::::=::;1i~========7!-::========:;-i 114-268
.
Giveaway-1381
a puppy.

Or ..

Public Notice

Ohio

PH. 992-5612
or 992-7121

1971

12xl0

Richardson

with expendo. 3 br, 1 '12
baths,· laundry room, carpet,
wood burner. 8torm1 ,
screens, awnings. com·
plately furnished. Real good .

•

cond . 07,000 . 304· 876· '
6~62 .

4'

1981

SCHULTZ,

2 .,.d·

room. excellent condiUon,

rc::::l

304-675·6376 .

CATALOG

~MERCHANT
GriH •

Patty

PH. 992-2178

TWO bedroom trailer at
Gallipolis Ferry. below •

Hitching Post. 304-876·
9084 . 0100. deposit. f160. ·'

Glbbi·Owllll't ·

,.•s..

a month rent .

..
_,

'

..

.,

•

It

�., -------

...

·A

Daily Sentinel

-

Ul.

They'll Do It Every Time
7-ii'~~f-1£-'P STOPA
.;:s: ~~!~

32 Mobile Homes

,, for
1978

Sale

14x70

Nashua,

""""""

bedroom, large beth, very
good condition •10.000.

HOW-.;,IiliT

-.;,BOSTON·{

304-676-6876 ,

33

[

~A~=

2

I~~
' US

LJ.:

,;:;;

:=n.n
I~

UHd Furniture: 1ofa, 1wivel
rocker, rocker recliner, refr'oeratar, elac_tric r~nge .
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture,
' 865 SocondAvo .. Gallipollo. ·

Call446·1171 ,

Meigs Co. Rd 18, 88 acres
1 / 3 paiture. 2/ 3 woode'd.
all mineral rights. unlimited
I
gravity fed springwater. ~
~=~
maturing timber. fenced i n
Pllture. 24' by 30' pole
barn, large utility building. ll:!§~ii;;;~
Beautiful 8 room ~'tome, all
electric. completely insu·
lated . Includes naw carpet,
fenced In· yard, ·self cleaning
oven, aide by side refrigerator freezer, A11hly wood
burning stove. Ideal for kldt
and horses. $68,000. Call

gas,
tank system.
Barn. nptic
3 outbuildings,
pond.

Priced in middle 30's. Call
prl. 423-8935 ,

Ch•ster, 986-3839.' or Bel-

l60 ACRE farm, ·4 bedroom
hou1e, $67.000'a offer considered. Echart Chapel Rd .

304-675-5B09.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
3&amp; acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financ-

~.FCINAU7f,

Ci.

45 Furnished Rooms

for Rent
2 bdr . mobile home fully
furniahed. eir cond., adultiJ.

Furn. etf. apt. in Pt. Pleaaant. utilities paid. 304-

B95-3450.

· Ca11446·41 10.
12x62 2 bedroom trailer,
Adults only. Brown's Trailer

Park. 614-992-3324,

2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine. 814· 367-0288.

ing available. Call446· 8221
after 8 weekdays.

46 Space for Rent

Hi Prooo... Cluning. Alum·

Lts Paul; Gibaon guitar.
cherryburat. ·~oo . C.all

lnum aiding# mobile hotne~.
wood. brick. aandstone
building and hom•. Alao
htiavy equipment. Fully In·
· aurtd. Free eatlmatM. 114·

814-367-7815.

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.

59

Delivered
in Mason,
Meiga.
Gallia
or pick
up at Richards
&amp; Son. Coli 446· 7785,

For Sale or Trade

7 -1;.

Small engine• repaired . Sale or trade for van. 1977
Have your old moJ"er recon ~ Herley · Davidson Super
ditioned for a fraction of the Glide. Lots of new parta.
cost of a naw one. We now *2,800. 614-949-28BO.
ere equipped ~o fix outboard
bo•t motora. Nelton &amp; Sons
In Eureka, Ohio. Call .814~ ~-

71

1980 Ford Pinto 1 owner.
low mileage, auto trans. was
*2 . 795 now •2.&amp;95. a real
buy. John 'a Auto Sale,

276 Gallon Fuel Oil Tank and liii~;;;;;-Ecj;;ij;lie.rt

Equipment

446-4782.

1976 Maverick. A.C ..
48 ,000 mi. Runs good.

67' Ford 800 SE, good
shape. 72' Chevrolet 30 SE
good. 830' C11e tractor
Cash Register check out good cond. Call 814-388·
9333 after &amp;PM.
counter. Call 446-1643.

Ruotod body. .,300. Ph.
448·23B9.
National Chevelle Owners
Aaan. it decated to the
P,.Mrvatlon and reatoration
of all 1114·1972 Chev~~lles
Ia El Camlno1. Our 2nd
annuel member conwentkm
will be held Aug. 1 · 11 in
Huntington, WV. There wHI
be a show, acthlltlea. swap
meet. awards • mof'tl. Join
today. N.C.O.)l.., P.O. Box
5014, Greenaboro, NC

NEW Ia Uaed Harvestore
Call 986-3363.
Structure•. Automated II·
feeding-computer
General Electric air condi· feeders. -,Call collect 814·

tioner. 6000 BTU. 850.00. 585-2260. John L. Botto.
Coli 992-3090.
JOHN Deere 350 C dozer. 6
White ' a Metal Detector way blade • winch, 3 yeara
1982 modtl6000 series II, old , A·1 condition ,
newcond. containerlnstruc- $16,000. 614-198-8613.
tiona
3426.. eao. 304· 8B2· I~.':~Y~R , 60 tractor. ovtr·
~!~!!"· $700.00, 304-8B2Zenith Color TV. Exc. cond. l2,_&amp;3_2_or_8_8_2_·_2_2_7_4_._ _
8200. 614· 992-3139 ,
""
1970 6 1 6 ·Diesel Allis
Black leather motorcycle Chalmer 2 bucket backhoe,
jacket. Size-small. S70. Call 89 ceo dump truck. trl axle
low boy trailer 87,000 Ill.
992-&amp;961 .
304·676-6&amp;80 ,
1981 H &amp; W, 2 hortetrailer.l- - - - - -- - - like new, $1700. Call evenings after 7:00, 304-676· 63
Livestock
27B2 .

•vstem, electric, nur New
Haven, 304-882· 336B.

41

Houses for Rent

4 rmt &amp; bath, located 733
Third Ave •• Gallipolis. 8:166
mo ., •75 dapoalt. Caii448-

3B70 or 446-1340 .
2 bdr, house close to town,
no children or pets. Call

446· 354B.
24x85 Sectional home, 3
bdr .• 2 batht. total electric,

a.

with woodburner
dishwaahar, $300 mo;., f160

dap. Coli 814-367-0262.
Three bedroom one floor,
frame house . Carport, Garfield Ava.. Gallipolit location . Call 614-246-6259 or

446-B579.
Large house with porch.
ideelforlargefamily, $100
mo. A-One Real Estates,
Carol Yeager. Realtor. Call
304-676-5104 or 304-8767386.
For tale or rant. 3 bdr hou.a,

family room, 2 bath, 1, 700
aq .ft . • central air. dis ·
hwa1her. carpeting, river·
view. $39;900 or rent $360
mo. plu1 dep. Call 446·

82B9.
2 bdr. very nice full ban·
ment, located at 42 Chillicothe Rd., $196 mo .. $76
dep . Call 446·3870 or 446-

1340.
5 rm. house 10 Edgem~nt
Or. 2 bdr. &amp; Hth. recently
painted. new carpet llvingroom &amp;. diningroom. Gat
heat•. Call 448-1370 after

&amp;PM.

1 bedroom apartment for
rent. Call 448-0390.
Furniahed apt .. $210. utili·
ties pd., 1 bdr.. 920 4th
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 446-

4416 after 7PM.
Furnished

Apartmenta.

1

ond 2 BR, $175 &amp; up.
Gallipolis. 448-4416 after 7
p.m.
Furnished upstaira apt .• utilities paid, adult•. 94 locust
St. Galllpolia. i190 mo.,

860 deposit. Call446-1340
or 448-37BO.
APARTMENTS (EQUAL
HOUSING OPPORTUNITY)
one bedroom rent atarts at
$167 per month, two bed·
room starts at tl93. Dep·
osit $200 (no petal near
Spring Vallev Cinema . Call
446 · 2746 or leay.. e
message .~

1---'-- - - - - - : -

Partially furnished. suitable
for adults, no pets . Utilitiea
fumlahed . Call448-3733 or
448 -0171 eveninga.
Completely furnlahed, all
electric, 2 bdr., 468Y:a Sa·
cond Ave .. Gallipolis. Adults
only, ref., t22&amp; mo. plu.s

dep . Call446-2236 or 446·
25B1 ,
2· bdr. upatain, unfurn. apt.
Carpeted with washer-dryer
hookup . i19&amp; mo. plus
utilities. $126 dep, 1 . yr.
leaae . Call 446·2927 after

6.

3 bdr. apartment. 6 Court
St., Gallipolis. t250 mo ..
ref. &amp; sec. dep. Call 446-

4926 .

2 bedroom, carpeted. All
new paint. Deposit required.
No inaide peta. ~all 992-

3090 or 992-6039,
For rent: newly remodeled 3
bedroom country home near
Cheater. $200 a month, plus
deposit and references. No
peu or children. Call 986-

4349 ,
ABOVE avarage single fam ily .dwelling at 8th &amp; Viand
St.· Leaae required; upper
br•cket . Call 304-6761931 '
3 bedroom houl8, 3311
Franklin Ave. No pets. Deposit and reference required .

304-675-18B7.
Newly remodeled home in
Pt. Pleasant, large yard.
basement, and carport, appliances included . Deposit
and leate required. 8296 .
mon·th. 304·675· 6586 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
Eureka : Riverfront tot. furn ..
1 bdr .. $100 mo .• adultsraf.
&amp; deposit . 1 - 614 · 643-

2644.
Trailer for rent in Mercer, ville. Oh . $200 mo . plu1
deposit. Call614-266-1608
after 6PM.
2 8R mobile ~ome . PersOnal
ref. &amp; deposit required . Call

446·2637.
3 bdr. mobile home fum ., on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call

446-9669.
2 bedroom trailer, furnished
on river lot in Cheshire . Call

814-367-7&amp;67 .

1 bed room Apt. $196. mo.
including utilities. Equal
housing opportunity. Con tact Village Manor Aots.

614-992-7787 ,
2 bedroom furnished apartment for rent . Call 9926434, 992 -6914 or 304-

B82-2566.

1--------ApartmeniB . 304 - 876 554B.

·

APARTMENTS . mobile'
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614-446·

8221 .

ONE bedroom apartment.
4021A 24th. St. Pt. Pleaunt.

phone, 1-61 4-992-685B,

ONE bedroom apartment.
$226 month, . all utilities
paid. 304-676-2696.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers, df'4,ers, refrigerators, range1. Skaggs Appliance•. Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Creat Motel.
446 7398
TWO Anderson windowa.
·
··
32x38", $200. 304-675·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
6163 after 3 p.m .
Sofa. chelr, rocker, otto· I - - - - - - - - - -man. 3 tables. (extra heavy SET of 'trailer a xle• • 6
by Frontier), •ea&amp;. Sofa. wheels. 76 Vega, 8500.
chair and loveSNt, $276 . 304·678· 2736.
Sof11 and chairs pri~d from
$285. to •as&amp;. Tablea, *45
and up to $125. Hide·•· 66 Building Supplies
bada.•440 . and up to
$625 .. Ractinera. t176. to
•360., Lamps from $28 . to
Building materials
•715 . 5 pc. dinettes from block, brick , sewer pipes,
$99 .. to $435 . 7 pc .. $189 . windows. lintels, etc .
and up. Wood table with alx Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
chalra. 1426. to e746. Desk 0. Call 614-245-5121 .
$110 up to $226. Hutches.
•6&amp;0. end up, maple or pine
fh1iah . Bunk bed complete 56 Pets for Sale
with manreuee. t250. and
up to $396 . Baby bel;is.
•110 . Mattresaea or box HILLCREST KENNEL ·
springs. full or twin. 868., Boarding all breed• ~ Selling
firm, $68. and $78. Queen Happy Jack Dog Food . AKC
nts, S195 . 4 dr. cheata. Oobermana: Stud Service.
e42 . 5 dr. chaau. $64. Bed Call 448-7795 .
frames. t20.and $26 .• 10
gun - Gun cabinata, 1360 .•
CATTERY
dinette chairs t20 . and $26 . .DRAGONWYNO
KENNEL AKC C~ow pup·
Gas or electric ranges , 8326 pies, CFA Himalayan. Per·
up to $376. Baby matreuea,
and Siamese kittens .
12&amp; &amp; 436, .,.d framoo 120. sian
Cail 446-3844 after 4PM .
$25. &amp;. $30, king framet60 .
Good selection of bedroom
suites , cedar chesta . 2 AK C Reg. Cocker Spa.
rockers, metal cabinets, niela. Both malea, selling for
breeding pu rpo sei. Call
swivel rockers.
Uaed Furniture •• bookcase. 446·9372 alter 6:00PM .
ranges. chairs. end tablea,
weshera. dryers, refrigera· Female Beagle pups. 8 wka.
tora and TV's. 3 mllea out old, $26 . Call 614-266Bulavllla Rd. Open Sam to 886&amp; .
8pm. Mon.~ thru Fri .• 9am to
Pony. Cai1446-9669 .
6pm. Sat.
446-0322
AKC black Lab. puppiea. 2
mala,
female . 8 wks. old,
'30' alec . range $96, 40' •125 . 2Call
814-258-1379.
alee . range $76. 40 alec.
range coppertone t95, 30' .Lovely grey &amp; black Lhasa
gas range avacado $66, Apso puppie1. 6 wks. old,
portable Hoover washer wormed • shots. Ragiatered
$96, queen aize box aprlnga with AKC, very good na·
&amp; mattrea $46, 8,000 BTU
tured. Females •150, malta
air conditioner $86. Whirl· *175. coil446-0706 ,
pool refrlg. t9&amp; , GE refrig
t96, dining room table $66.
couch $25. Skagga Applian- 2 AKC Registered Brittany
ces. Upper River Rd, Galli- Sponiela. Coli 614-246 5449 after 5PM .
poli•, 448·7398.
Used Wlllhers • dryera good
selection IMe models. All
guarenteed 30 day, all real
nice . Ca/1614-2&amp;8 -1207.
Maytag weaher • dryer pair·
like new, guaranteed. •275.

Other makea of washers •

d
d
b 'I
rvera,
t. guarentee
$90
andreup.u1Hotpolnt
refrlg.,
Whirlpool refrlg .
1.:..:..:.:...-:-::-=-:--=-:::-::-=::- $130,
t130, GE refrig. real nice
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .' $176
. 1 Reecehitchwilfaell
Apartments now available to
all or part . Cali 446-8033 .
elderly • disabled with an
i ncome of le u
than Bedt. queen. 8200; twin,
e12.300. Renting for 30
8125. Box opring , matpercent of adjusted income- treasas,
frem ... practically
.Phone 304-675-8679 .
new . Wringer waohor, 125.
448· 15B9.
ONE bedroom apartment in
Henderson, 304-876-1972. Brand new White sewing
machine •79. Sllghty painl
FURNISH ED efficiency damage, reg . prica
apartment in Pt Pleasant, $329.96. Coli collact 614utilltiao poid. 304· B96· 385-4535.
3460.
28 cu.ft. Holpolnt refrlg.
tkle by llde, large f,..rer,
45 Furnished Rooms avoc.do green *250. Call
446-8033 or 446-818\.
For rent Sleeping . Rooma
and light house keeping Early American soft 88 '
rooms. Perk Central Hotel . long, excellent condition.
flOO. Coli 448-81187 ,
Coli 446·0756 ,

Autos for Sale

1978 Monte Carlo. good
cond .. •1 .800. Coil 814·
387-0282 .

Air conditioner 18,000 BTU,
ex. cond. Call 446-3648.

well. a8ptic

27403. 819-272-0888.

1977 Plymouth Volaira

good cond.. •1.550. Coli
448-9333.

1975 Uncoln Mark IV, low

mileage, 304-46B·1B&amp;4.

448-4B21 .

81 VW Hobbit, 304-8766163.
.

OUIIil chicks, day old to eight
weeks. •1 epiece-·one·third
to two· thirda off.
Any
amount from 1 to 100.

1------- - - - -

9B5-4.34&amp;. Eggo opoclal-roducod from .BO to .40.

4230 oftar B. 304-87117669 .

74 Chevy Monte Carlo, 310
4-banet dual tKhault. exc.
cond. •22&amp;0. 304-876-

Mixed Hereford baby calvH. 81 VW A•bblt, 4 1pead, real
B43· 51B&amp; after 5 p.m.
good condition. 304·67629&amp;9.
TWO 196ft Ford Multange.
Hardtop $1QOO. Convertible 1978 Ford LTO II, B7.000
•1200 . Call 304-B86 · milee. In good conditk»n
3610. Can be seen on ., 900. 304-8711-4524.
Sandhill Road at Letart.
71 VW Super Bootie, 73
SIX year old Palamlno mare, rebuilt engine, •utomatlc.
$600. Call evenings efter $996 . 304-46B·1926.
7 :00. 304-&amp;78-2782 .
76 FORD Pinto, '460.
1
I·
304-675-1034.
64 Hay 8t Grain
1979 CHEVETTE . good
condition, 304-676·1988.
Hay for sale S1 .&amp;0 • bale or
trade for calvea. Call 446· 19119 Oldo 98-t675, 1986
8381 or 446· 1588 .
Falrlana-•376. Both In ex·
1-,----:--:-:---:-----:--:: cellent condition. Snowtlra
Custom Combining. Cal! liko now-L7B 16. $50. Call
992-&amp;420.
614-266-1362.

I:::::;::::;:=:::;:::;;:;::==
1-----------

1--....,--,--,---::-:::----

Good 'mixed hay. 90 cents a 1978 Monte Carlo. AM· FM
bale out of field . New Rive catMne. air condit6onhlg,
tobacco sticks lflarpen each tilt-wheel. cruiae control.
end. Call 814-379-2145 .
3015 two banal. Good condi·
tion 1nd good tlr•. Call
Hay for sale out of field 448· 7221 after 7 PM.

81 ,00 bole . Call 446-01B3.

1975 Flrobird. $1.200. Call
hoy , 304 -675 - 742-3083.
----~---

Hay and Straw. 304 -468·

1656.

1982 Chevy 810 Durongo.
Black with gold atrlpea.
15,000 mlleo . •6.400. Call
992· 7483 after &amp;PM .

'wANTED to buy: Onion or
garlic wheat. phone 30•- 1171 V.W. BaetJe . Sun·roof
675-1807.
and goodtiret. $2900. Call ·

98&amp;-4201,

~1-,.--,----,---1977 Pontiac Phoonix with

Autos for Sale

air. 1 owner, good running
cond. t1 ,300. 742· 30&amp;1 .

'
Mini Motor home. 22 ft.
Mounted on 74 model
AKC chocolate male toy 1986 Chevrolet Impala, 283 Dodge. Chili• ciHn. Must
poodle. Alto adutt female 2 banell, goqd cond., new ... to appreciate . Cal! 742·
poodle,
cocker spaniels. rubber, best offer, Call 875- _2_1_18_
. ------814
992and
2607
1
.
.
·
~819 between 5-7PM .
1818 442
1917
Che·
veil•
SuperOlda.
Spon
. 1880
Dodge Omni. low mUee~o.
OUA
HO
1
d
d 114 9 1
I
USE
wtth Major
A goo con .
·
•
I wo.. 'LI" t~Ulu?~~
2129 or &amp;14 · 948·2281
I •vu "'~' 0 -~ 1" I
F _.. TL~ ~Y~
oveningo.

'

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~~~r.

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\.rfi r,I\

: ·

1 '.1.
1

ii

~::

i· ··...-"':'
ll } '- - -·~ _,.,
.~·~
'';!,!-"~.::~"::;

~J

~.-.

.,

·:.:.

~

.!J'-'".'! 1~ (i_

~r'--"rr-KY

/

:-:::

#'
4'

fr~

, .\k--c
.. -1,__

~~

,'.\
I

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,.

SIMping room •126, u1ihiet Htlt Wave wood hllater,
paid, aingle male. Shere used three. .,..,., Hn auto·
beth, 919 Second Ave. matte thtrmoatat and
Golllpolio. Call 446-4416 blower. Very good condi·
after 7PM .
lion. Coli 247-247&amp;.

72

Truckt for Sale

1980 Chovy 1 ton. Call
between n8. 448-3243.
1988 .Ford PU 352 C11.ln.
ongm.. runo good, body
good. Priced *850. Call
446-8219.

TACK~iC:L

~~

1 97B 4•4 Dodgo Pickup,
ex c. cond , Batt offer. Call

,'

.(J)I=:~
(J)Dr.11) Cll -

or 441· 2464.

1977 Chevrolet 4•4 PS. P8.
full ton. auto trana., new
paint, new wheel and tlrea.
13.900. Coll446·8&amp;14.

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rlencad· roofing, Including
hot tar application, cerpen.
tar. electrician. mason. Call
304-875 · 2088 or 8754&amp;80.

76 CJ6. 11,000. 304-576·
2806.
Motorcycles

Water WeUs. Commercial
and Domestic . Teat holn.
PumP• Salaa and Service.

1979 Honda CB 860 . Price

Gat your carpet In lhlp
shape. Water removal, FREE

304-895-3802.

negotiable. Coli 446-8853 .
1971 Honda 760. many
extra parti. Call 814·24&amp;-

9238.

a.-

•
.'

n

SEAMLESS GUTTER'S , On1
p•c• cultOm fit your home.
Guaranteed . Advanced Out·
tor. (Day 814-592-4068.1
(night 61 4·69B·B206.)

1978 DATSUN trucll. oKcol·
lont mochllnicelohiiOo. body
r,;~-- 82300. 304-171-

1982 Horlav Roodotar 1100
actual mil••· axe. cond .• Call

after 3 :~ 0PM. 614·367·
7201 .

1978 Hondo troH 90 , 2300
mil11, like new. *3215. Call

din biko. 8360. Cell 742·
2088.
1178 hondo hOwk 400 wnh

quickailver fairing.

•soo.

Without fairing 1760. In
good condition. Call 114·
367-7191.
.. 19BO Hondo Poooport lq
good condition and low

mil-e. UIIO. Coli 9925981.
1977 HARLEY Oovidson.
good condition. lot of
chromo, 304-773-11083.
HONDA MR 50. 12211. Coli
aftw 5, 304-875-31199.
1971 HONDA 350 otroet
bike, IXCIIIIM\t conditkm,
304-875-3054.

76

Boatl and
Motors for Sale

;ooo. Coli 814·

19'!.' FIBREFORM, opon
bow, Marcruilll' 170 HP
stem drive; extra prop., tull
canvaa, renneiiM drive on
vollor, compltto •8495,
CoM 304-1171-1288 oftar
4:30p.m.

76

83

"-'
I
D
at -

'•

'

HEV, HOW! DON'T
GO TAKIH' A l't\IID
LIME WITH N,
CHICKIE! ,,.

morciol • ,_ldontlol. Call
448-3100 .

movie llt8r tCCYitCI of MUr·
der. (RII&amp;O mitt~

Ill _. P..,... T..,;fltt'a
pregriM feltUrM 1 triW.
to Len..., Skutnik. a l.. k at
fono of 'Tho Rocky Horror
Pictwre Show' anfla profi ..
err animal trliMr Ray hr·
tOick, (~) 180 min.)
of the houae after An::hie
findl tome mar=~·· {R)
(J) lfi) Netlonol
raphlc

.
•
'
.'

-........

'

'

7 - IS

It appearthat Mr. ~-liclr.
an' Mr. an' Mrs.
Clipp is inca·
hoots,IM~o~s!

·- ..............

.,..,. ........... Mitmi DeN~ ....,.,, Gl&lt;tn ltiCk·

~l''MOYit:'M

/e.n ot

Born, 448-8033.

197122it. HolldlyRombtor

,

I~
Home
Improvement•

SEWING Machine repaira.
service. Authorized Singer
Saa.a • Service Sharpen
Bcisaors . Fabric Shop ,

Pomeroy . 992-2284.

86

General Hauling

Need something hauled
away or IDmethtng moved?

STUCCO PLASTERING .
teJltudd
oommeralai and
del, free
, call "814·251·
,8

T-.
N•

c

W(
'W
(I),, MOYIE:
,.._'ll:.

'·

-

e"&amp;.il.!ll -

" ,. .

. . . . (J) Tul

BARNEY

'
''\

'

DOC

COULDN'T
FIND NOTHIN'

WRONG WITH
ME, MAW

BETTER
GETA 5ECONT

AMEN

-_-·...
(Ill " .....
(I)

:'

.

-~=~f.ou•

,..lnr...._.,_

'

j

-loflllny'o . - .,. ~~~·

M - oM1 Dr. htlll!ll..

'

l i o l u ......1

&lt;

~ ,.,,.1: ~Ill'

PEANUTS

-,.: 1·,;,-;.c.· .·

, .........

"""

,:1:10

kaa ale
IIIIOVII: 'Lo ~ .....,.
...... AIIIII
TCIIIt llollk ..... ·

wM:
"' LA aT.,I
............

llellk

tO-

Round , ............ """ •

•
'~
,•

loeturltog Bornord Taylor
VI. TIA from Lally-. LA,

'· '

'

riYBr

DOWN

·~
Zl'rtlad(ll.)
J l'reU)' cle&gt;Oe
•tlllal

• All . .ta

Gelllil

IS Adrels

Wrt1b1
M 1, Ill
a._,

I

l8ken (Ill*'.)

SllabbJ

• s.ilar
7 Hldtclt's
fetal
poker l1uld

IS "A~

s111n -"
IIIUPI

Z8 Prospector

odds

29 Mountain

IS Bar habitues
11 Orient
Z2 War horse
ZJ store up
24 Links cry

ilem
II U..D. (abbr.) I HII, 89 a fly
,Ill Nat one
11 Worn out

21 lleinC (Sp.)
22 Jelepy
KWilbbl.-

Yealenlay's Allswer

15 lleWng

I Dllcllralite

11 Wllbocllll

Ill Trimmed

crest

30 Stratum
35"""out
(augment )
36 Mystery
writer

~~-

vlldoha4
• 0 tlrt

.....
Mdle

.

llhallme
(Ill.)

.

(lriJII)

.'

arGrabam

•"-All

l:&gt;

, • ...,. Gill
. . . .lllllne

Nil&amp;

DAILY C&amp;YPTOQUOTI!- Here's

==-

how to work It: .·

A~YDLBAAXa
LONGFII:LLOW

'
II

-..,a,

lllndl 101' onother. In thla ample A II

.... hi' tile tllne L'a, X lor the lwo O's, etc. Single letters:• ,
-

.

till 1ta11J1 and formation of the wordo aro all .
till eot1o letlen ore dllferent.
·

CS i PiVCillai'ES

AIM . . ,...., '

~Aithf~·

'

......
-

I CUtroom

OM Iotter

~~~tory ·~

.,P .a.i t .,Juwr

•I

.

())~

,/)~~)

.;;::::::::;::=====

~,

-

by IIIOMAI 10
N
A(.Aihl*
1 ear,enter's • Belei-1

KLomt

. 1,... ...... ·,

.

61r" ••'(

amfned.
I]) . . . Time

.

'f

.. ''

IIAI!eer
liP I a

u• ;"'£ellllli'et~ .

.. I

(MPSPAPKR IIN'l'ERPRISE ASSN.)

. . . . . , . ..... tolbe

-lllric oniMiool- lo. • ·

-lteryTIIeillaoflllio

OPINION,
PAW

Till .

.-.. In Wilt uwtnlc ·

'!

Wo'll do n. Coli 441-3159
,_be_twe
__•_n_9_•_n_d_&amp;_
. ---:JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lonlor, 304-875·
7387 .

COrt-

·-cr..., •1114te... il not:
oo lie CM tel ~ il lit- ·'

'(OU

;'1-lf ..... IDCI

,I

1Z a.-tt-

,• !~="Jltlt·........ •

.
.;

.. . .

:r.. =~~

~ lVIIni"' of Cll ..........

. fMI

·'

..

J.....,.

hloiMICieotdOMro'

oltlp Sketl"' Eloino Zoy•k.
D•vld Sontao anti Kitty and . '
Cerruthtrl ora umoof the akater'l wM ,..~,.t
a tpeciel ,.,..._anc• te
IMaefrt Tile JimMy , ...... •
chiklren't cam:er retea.rclt
'!!!Ionization. IRl ItO ,.,.,)
. . . ~ P'KA Ful Cooi~-A--c:IIY.
!6.1 cowrlfl of ttto Fiywetgl'n bout featuring Felipe Garcie vt. Jerry J .
CJMke ie preMnted fr~m
Atlen11c City, IU , 110 '"'~-)
(!)lluffolo liH Wondy fo,._
oily HM lilllorltlo man ho

'·

sure

Of course, ~e can always
try the douole club finesse
and be borne unless Weot
EAST
.QI!
holds both the king and
•Ku
"""""· but can be do anytQSTS
thin&amp; to guard against that
unfortunate possibility?
KQII
•n~
Can he force West to lead
tooTH
a club some time along the
.Jlllltl
way? If South thinks tloings
• AJ
out, hi! can probably do just
that. AI trick tbree he leads
+,\JJI
a heart from dummy and
Vobtorftlo: Eut-West
llllcks In his Jack after East
plays low. West wins with
ler:Soutk
the queen and can do no better than to lead another
diamond.
Pass
Now South's play at trick
Pus
three has set up a winning
pooitioo. He ruffs dummy's
Jut diamond, cashes his ace
of hearts. leads a trump to
dummfs
king , ruffs
dummy s last heart and
Opening letd: +J
lends a !rump to throw East
in with the queen,
East gels to lead a club,
Br OtnrUI
but South just r,lays his I 0.
...Jt-Joeaby
West gels one c ub trick, but
DOW must either play a reG
....... ....'t lloolllor to card
to allow a ruff in one
baod and club discard in the
otber or lead a second club
Bo lila ...
•, leads ript around to the ace-jack.

IIAhbV.l.P.
u Dlpaa

,

r

JONES 80YSWATER SER·
VICE. Coli 614-367-7471
or 814-367-0691 .

Life

I '

•

.,

a

Nl ;"f::a.':'r=oy'o P""

.,

air conditionere. Bargain

travel trailw . .Lots of ••traa.
A-t cond. 814-742-21111
before 8 p.m. 814· 742·

",

n

1m (J) iD MOVI!: 'Prtr'M

448-1142 between 7 a.m .

78 Ch"' pickup 1ruOII. I ayl.
autometlo , law mlle•ge. 1 r~n•_.,,.,._ · lnlllrior _and
uc. condition. 304-871· 1oo...
Upholttery
20__.,._ 87
:1448.
oop. C_all v
------18112 Chevy trudt, a-t
TRISTATE
MM:lum "ooftng a lpout·
body good runnlna
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Int. 30 ,..,. ............
81 · - Ado[ ........... Inti .. bull up roof 1183 Sec. AWl.. Oollipollo .
••so. 304-e78-all12.
441-7833 or 448-1833. ·
Con t14-AI-M17.

'i

ap.lel 'The Shorko.' Thll
life plttemt of the 1~rk
era examined. (R) (80 Min.)
[CIOoed CeptioAod)
IIIIOVIf:
'H....,.
•
lcWVtllf
1:10 (J) ""'"" 111N '24
ett r
t
11) ~ M iiie'e
. ........ i-11011 ........
· Hrf Cltefecewittt .. ellll

o~onaoned• 1w11e eew 1 now ltoyfrieMI ,

M•U• Excavating. Bulldozer
• blckhoe aervice. I•••·
menta, footers, land•caping,
drivewsya, farm ponde.

rafrig.-rangea·dishwaahlr~­

79 Motors Home•
&amp; Campara

•'

would be R~o~fus,
Mr. Stick wuz t' le~vt
town b'fo' yo~o~
him
back his
two dolls'!

Rutland , Oh. 814-742· ·
2903 .

&amp; Refrigeration

())ill Arohie - ( ·

Plaoe Billie io ordered OU1

J . A.R . Conatruction Co.
Water Lines. Foatera,
Dreina. All kinds of Ditching.

Appliance Service all makea
&amp; m~del1. Waahtra· dryers-

O:i:n

a stunt wMtan hlllp I

•

loser,

bear! loser and two possible
club looers.

...

MOVIE: 'Heyw!M'
MOVIE: 'Hanky Penky'

.
(J). 1m Fall Qooy Colt ortd

Cat 214 hoe, dozers, crane.
loadera, dump truck. ·call
114-446-1142 between

Electrlcal

I I'"
•

a lUre trump

t A Kl.
+742

In- the U8FL

446-7903.

871.- 3248.

81.

1:00

lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer. beckh.oe. dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call

1--------::-:Metal tool box far wid• bed 84
truck. Mke new •so. 304·

NORTH

T.........

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna. ponds. dltchea,
bliaemant•, ·etc . Call 448·
4907. Carter a. Evans
Transportation.

to 5 p.m.

...,

nitty-gritty before playing
trick lbree. He is looking at

+AIUi

IDY•AMidfath
lfi)F-oiMIMI...•
•
(!J
lwbW~JUINnt

A

Cat 216 Hoe, dozer~, crane,
loaders, dump truck. 814·

Window tinting-auto. com·

_

(J) E - lp o WCwriM
Majoo 1M.- I dd,
Atl8nta at PhRadalph..
(J)
Fanolly ,......

- I lfON'T I1WE · APIICWE?! AilE
YOU 1\IOOING?
AS SOOH AS I
THI6 FUCE DOI'I'T
C'N oET iO

Excavating

Coli 446-9638.

A timely throw-in

Doble 1111111

Plumbing

814-742-2407 Of 814-7422058.

Auto Parts
&amp; AcceaeorJa•

2271 after II.

p..,...
1_,....
Cii
(J)
e (J)
())-"-"

Ceurt
-Trak
1:30
(J) Majer ......,.
llllbtl: ClnoiMatt .,

•

&amp; Heating

Dozer work, ground ciRning • excavating. $26 hour.

Oewald J1100by and ~mes Jacoby

(()

•''

..

BRIDGE

i&amp;~~.::..
{ll)
MlcN.II......,.r

1'

367-0636.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Fomerly Dewitt'a
Plumbing. Call 814-3870578 .

tillinG

(J)

ROOFING &amp; outside paint·
ing, free estimates. 614~

CARTEii•s PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446L3888 or 448·
4477

FUOGE GUESS THWART OBLIGE
ISOI'M - In the garden ca n leave
ono-"BUst!Ell'' ·

What

())O,..,AorH
E_ _, TOftltM

7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM.

1974 17 ft. trt·haul, 126

Evinrudl u
367-0282.

ltJ
UI'N'a Willy.

IT,~IT.

367-0194.

82

~~
I-.:

,~ · ;c~zr-·n•dl .

Roofing and Carpentry
work. general repaira. call
Anthony Williamaon, 814·

814•256-12110.

1979 Bultaco Fronttn.
good condition. Few miles
alne• overh~ul . Real good

"11(1'5 /ISlO~T
'to Mlf:IIT L.l I'E';

ON 1HE VIAlL 1IW ~ f:CJ AIIOTli&amp;F..)
LIIIR'Ill~~ ~~-. w! ~--

\

... IF '«ll CAN AFfOia)

~

~NElL, I~~ ~ 1llE OI.D CAL£11DAR

E &amp; R Tree Service, fUlly
Phono 614-367-0538, call
after 6.

( " ' - 1 .. no,pw)

oublequertt
de,.ooion ,
-•hllworl&lt;tdte ....... .

ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614-446-2107 ,

1974 Hondo 350. 7,400
actual miln. $600. Call
614-388-975&amp;.

Ynten1ay·s

E&amp;ly .kiM AHytan
joint ~om 'Mary Mlrtin
and Jim -Mertz to ditclilt
hllr widOWIIood ..,d tho

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and ... •
~Motorola, Quuar, and
'

F • K Tr" Trimming. nump
removal. Call 871-1331.

-d.

'

t.,,.,. .

guttera, ttorm doort • win- .:,.
' dow•.
Also frea
r••lr
work • ~
..:...
Phone for
ntlmatea

875-807B!

7110. chopper. 12.000. 4·
Honda &amp;60's, from •4QO to
•1.000. Betr Honda Saln,
Uppor Rt. 7. Gollipolio, Oh.
New location acroaa from
Holiday Inn .

Of

71

r

(J) Low Tltlt ...
CD Ploy YourTo411J'O ob- t.-M
·~~l'ltion for
M.u:h ..
PIIIJ.'

houoo collo. Call &amp;76-2398

73 Chovv Malibu. 2 dr.. 350
au1o. PS , PB, awivel ,
bucketa. conaole.-$475. Call
614-245-5144 .

Coli 448-7489 or 448·
6&amp;08.

Young hens for 1ale. Call

good pedigrao. Reeaonobly
priced . 814·992· 7138.

448-0820 aftor 6:00.

Yamaha 710. shaft drive,
t1 .011. 80 Honda 900,
dreaaed, e2,1915. 77 Honda

1977 Dodge Aspen mtionwegon, PS, PB. good cond . ..,

train, t760 . Coli 446-9510
992-3605.

2 male CFA reglatertd seal
pt. Himalayn kittens. Very

I:»G

0410. AH work guarantMd . ...;,:

4 W.O.

1980 dioool VW Rabbit. Coli
448-0648.

2 yr . old Supt;~r Chlx gullding, excellent temperintnt
and conformation. reedy to

I~

...;
.,

H • S Home Improvement•.

191118 Ford Bronco mech
good cond., $600 . Call

74

Mi•i

~·

367-0409 or 814· 387· .,..
Vans &amp;

73

·113taa

...

inaured, free estimates .

73 OLDS 9B. mottolllc blue,
loaded with aptiona, excellent condition. tNtonably
priced. 304-875-2279.

MIXED
2254 ,

.

~

'------------,r----------'1

Hospital bed. Cash· $126 .

acre1,

WEDII(ESOAY

OUIIIIty workmanahlp at low ..-.'
L___________:•~·:!!!~~:;.!!::!,"::;•:;~::;·~·~··:::•:•.J 1 l)f'leea.
Aluminum tiding. ""~

New Oak Furniture, tables, 1 New Idea hay conditioner.
chain, cupboards, pie safe, 1 hay wagon. 1 Arabian
dry einkt. Paul Conkel• gelding 8175. 2 ponlea.
614-9B6·3891.
Antiques. Tuppera Plains.

TWO

.

\

" 11

.~

-------;, --- r
-

r:~~92~~ing .*75 oo. Call 161

Viewing

"'
:J

GENE'S CARPET CLEANING SERVICE. Rocom·
mended for profe11lonal
attam eleenlng . Scotch ......
OUird· FrM Eltlmatea. Cell ~,
Gono ot "14· 892· 8309.

"'

256-1543.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Perk, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479 .

941-2188,

()

II

1elevision

------ -"
Pointing I n - • ...
woll- hllntint. lnoured, ..,
Free eltirna181. 114-149· .:..
2688.
,..

Musical
ln1truments

678-2026.

r~~;:;::;::~~::::::::T~~~~~~~;:~:::
· i

· Home
Improvement•

J.

For sale metal culvert 6 inch
thru 60 inch in stock. State
approved 16 gauge 12 inch 68
Fruit
$6.36 per ft., 24 Inch
8r. Vegetables
$10.10 per ft . 38 · inch
$15 .60 per ft. Also plaltic
culvert in stock. 8 inch thru Sweet corn, half runner
18 inch, 81nch $1 .80 per ft .•
beans. cabbage. Pick your
12 inch 83 .60 per ft . Ron 'own
or already picked.
Evana Enterpriaea. 4 ·mi .
H•ppy
Hollow Fruit Farm,
South of Jackson em ST. RT.
Golllpollo FO&lt;ry. WV, 304·
93. 614-286-5930.

~$

42 Mobile Homes

2143 or 814-742-2P57.

57

81

n. DOily

13, 1983

H. I Homo lrnpnwornenu. 1
Aluminum aiding, g...,.,., :
atorm doort a wlndowa, .,
quality worl&lt;mo-lp, 20 "
yra. ••P· fi'Neatlmat... Call ·~
814·387-0408CM'I14·
317·
0490.
·

.,50. 304-937-3201 .

446-9610 or 992· 3605.

.. ~· w.;.., ·

AKC Reg. Golden RttrleYIIr
pupa, 8 WHkl old with that•
and wormed. 114·742 ~

54 Misc. Merchandise

614-256-6246 .

~

by Larry Wrtghl

AKC registered black Get·

Knauff Coal lk Firewood
Prices reduced May-July.
Pick up or del i"ered. We
honor HEAP Vouchert. Call

Approximately 14 acre farm '
near Chester. 2-story frame
,' house. basement, good conditlon. City water, natural

KIT 'N' CARLVLE"'

l- - - - - m•n Shepherd pupplu.

13'-----._

Farms for Sale

July 13r 1983

Ohio

61 Household Goods' 58 Petl for Sale

#]

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

A

PFD

UWYYRL

MXNFYYC
JC

LZF E

GNBTW

zw

F.

Y F NT Z X· ·

PI - L.o\YXRD
JtAMDWH
..
y ='I~: A IXIIJ.i:GE EDUCATION SHOWS
Aa
HOW UTl'LE OTHER PEOPLE KNOW .
-T.C.HAU.IIIURTON

�l'age

Wedntltkiy, July 13, 1913

~.Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

.Mysterious sex tapes
now reported missing

Violent demonstrations
erupt in Chlle
.
'

'

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - Pollee
and troops patrolled Chile's two
largest dtles today after a teen-age
girl was killed and riot squads
arrested 565 people in violent, noisy
demonstrations against the ].().year.
old mllltary government.
President Gen. Augusto Pinochet
ll1ed to quash the third "Day of
National Protest" In three months
with an 8 p.m-to-rnldnlght cwtew in
San!lago and Concepcion, but his
security forces !alledkeep hUDdreds
ofyoung ailti-governmentrlotersotf
thestreetsofworldngclassdlstricts.
Thenlghttimedisorderscappeda
day of tulbulent protests at four
unlverslties and two courthouses,
organized by&lt;llrlstlan Denttmtlc,
Sociallst and CommuniSt leaders
protesting high unemployment and

a crackdown that hasputPinochet' s
top polltlcaJ and labor foes in Jail.
Mllltary authortttes announced

BEVERLY HILlS, Calif. (AP)- Reagan who died of cancer Aug. at.
Miss Morgan had filed a $10
A lawyer who first claimed to have
"sex tapes" of model VIcki Morgan mllllon "pallmony" lawsuit against
and hlgh govemritent o!flclals, then
Bloomingdale shortly before his
J said they were stolen by a reporter,
death, clabning they had been
should get "out of the press lovers for 1.2 years. Most of the suit
conference and into a court of law," was dlsmlssed.
a prosecutor says.
After decUning comment on the
ln a blzaiTe twist to the tale of the tapes' dlsap(learancefor most of the
elusive videotapes, Beverly Htlls day Tuesday, Steinberg finally
attorney Robert K. Steinberg spoke With a crowd of reporters.
claimed Tuesday that the purported
"Someone from the press corps
STANLEY COOK
tapes were stolen by a reporter he went Into my Ubrary this morning
refused to name. Hours Jater,hewas an(j took those tapes," Steinberg
ordered to produce them In court said.
or face a contempt cltatlonllnlesshe
Steinberg said he would respond
Stanley Cook, who holds a master
explains to a judge's satisfaction to the subpoena and "I hope to bring
of social work· degree from Ohio
what happened to them .
·
them (the tapes)."
· .Chief Deputy Distrtct Attorney
Steinberg said earUer he got the State University, has been named
Jim Bascue, whose office subpo- . tapes !rom a woman he did not know director of outpatient services at
enaed the tapes as posslbleevldence who said they might he useful in Woodland Centers, Inc., formerly
in Miss Morgan's murder, said tliat defending Marvin Pancoast, 33, on the GaUia-Jackson-Melgs Com·
The Gallla-Melgs Post olthe Ohio
apart from Steinberg's statements, chargesol.murderingMlssMorgan. munlty Mental Health Center.
State !Ughway Patrol is conducting
His past experience in Ohio and
there is no evidence they exist.
a seat bl!lt usage SUIVey for the
Pennsylvania Includes work as a
· "I think the threshold question is
month of July. '
social work practitioner, supervithe very existence of the tapes, and
Lt. G. D. Henderson, Post
sor, education and adminlstrator.
secondly the alleged theft of the
Commander, has released tile Ust ,
Free clothing day
He has worked on committees and . ot questions asked by the, patrol
tapes, and I thinkit'sabouttlmethat
task forces on health and correction
we get Mr. Steinberg out o!thepress
officers durtng their normal duties
The
Gallla·Melgs
Community
issues.
Prior
to
coming
to
the
conference and into a courtotiaw to
and the responces received with tile
Action Agency will hold its free trt-county area he was teaching at
talk to a judge about these matters,"
motorists contacted dw1ng the first
Bascue said after a day of confusing clothing day for low income persons the coUege level.
10 days of July.
on Friday, July 15 from 9 a.m. untU
statements about the tapes.
... 1) Do you usually wear your
Seek divorce
Steinberg had claimed Monday noon. The agency's clothing bank is
safety belts? 20 motortsts re- ·
now located in the old high school
that the tapes showed six men sponded with yes . 34 with no.
Karen Kay GUey, Middleport,
including the late mllllonaJre Alfred buDding in Cheshire.
2) Are you in favor ot Ohio's new
filed suit for divorce lnMelgsCounty
,Bloomingdale, a congressrnll!l, two
Common Pleas Court against Rl·
appointed administration olliclais Friday swim party
were reslrlllnt
undecidedJaw? 47yes . 4 no. 3
chard D. GOkey, Middleport.
child
and two prominent hustn""-""'Pn .
3) Would you be In favor of a Jaw
They supposedly were shown in The Southern Local Ban!! Boosters
that required all vehicle occupants
sexactswithfourwomen. Steinherg are sponsortng a swim party
convenes Aug. 8
:~::tybelts?:llyes- 16
claimed Miss Morgan, :ll, who was Frtday, July 15 at 7 p.m. at the
found beaten to death last week, London Pool in Syracuse. The party
The Meigs County Grand Jury
4) U !here was a mandatory
appears on the tapes only with is open to all Southern Local band will convene Aug. · 8, at 9 a.m.
satetyheltlawwouldyouobeyit?u
Bloomingdale, a friend of President members.
according to an entry in Meigs
yes · 4 no · 6 undecided
County CommOn Pleas Court.
5). Do you favor a law requiting

Joins center

the one-nlght curfew at midday. It
was the first anny . attempt to
suppress the two-month-old protest
m~t, the first sustained
poUIIcal challenge toPinochet since
the67-year-old generalseizedpower
a decade ago.
However, troops sent to enforce
the r;urfew lett the burden of
confrontation to police anned with
automatJc weapons, tear-gas, dubs,
pmtecttve helmets and plastic
shlek!s. Oillean press reports based
on pollee and WlOtllclal counts
tallled 565 arrests in Santiago and
other elites.
Thecurtewkeptmoredemonstra·
tors Indoors than qurtng simllar

Seat belt sunrey underway in area

~rn.d~rderlymaruMT.

Forfeiting bonds were Damon J .

I·

~death

Gibbs, Mason, $00, splnnlng tires;
Matt Weaver, Middleport, $50,
making an illegal U tum; Teny G.
EVans, Rutland, $450,. DWI.
Two defendants were tined an(j

two others forfeited bonds In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
FinedwereJettEUiott, Pomeroy,
reckless opemtion, $100 and costs;
WUJ!am Reeves, Pomeroy, open
fiask, SS8 an(j costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Richard
Lewwls, Letart, W.Va., speed, $49;
Gene Congo, Long Bottom, assured

curtew:

•Voi.32,N..64
1913

There will be a dance at the
Rutland Civic Center Frldsy from 8
p.m. to 11 p.m.
Music by . Itomlc Sounds. Proceeds from the dance will he
donated to the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes. Admlsslon ls$2a
single and $3 a couple.

r;:==:m;:;:;;;;;;:===i
CHICKEN PAlACE
Rl 681 EJsl oiiiiiWil

uuvE BANDS

Prolram.

.BIG
BEN,
_., _.,

Blue Denim
Wort&lt; Dungarees
Sizes 32 to 52

64&lt;:

Work ~ng and hard in these 100%
cdton work dungarees backed by a
one-Y"'lr warranty. Althentical~ slyled
with ru~ pocket and hammer loop.

With Fries ...... S1.09

ADOlPH'S

'wASHINGTON (AP) -Speaker

"At The End of the Pomeoor""'- lridp"

Qf the House Thomas P. O'JIIeill Jr.,
~Jiiiici 1111111iUncehlscholcefor

2 5 56

ricileiaridls~tan~ce~,i~- ~;;;;~~~~:;~~~~~Y~OH~.::;:~~~~~~PH~-~~!~~~~~~~,~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Edgar B. Taylor

overseas.

'

SAVE

asc

· He was a~ preceded in death by
two brothers and two sisters.
'
Surviving are his wife, Lucy
McKenzie Taylor, Racine; a daughter, Jocelyn Bailey, Pomeroy; four
grandchildren from Pomeroy,
Chris Baer, Andy Baer, Kelll BaUey,
Jull Bailey; one nfece, Janice Lee,
Racine; one nephew, Dr. Rnnald
GUUJan of Maryland.
Calllng hours will be 2-4 p.m. and
7-9p.m. Thursday a lEwing Funeral
Home. Taylor wW be hurted at 2
p.m. Friday at the GravelsldeMcKenzie Cemetary with Rev. Joe
Stobart presiding.

Emergency runs
Five emergency runs were made
Tuesday and one early today the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reported.
ThePomemyunitwascalledatlO
p.m. to Flatwoods for Howard
Searls, who was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospitat Mlddleportalll: 22
p.m. to North Fourth for Armalta
McCoy who was treated at the
scene; Raclneat12:42a.m .!orJuUa
Hensler who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospltat Syracuse at
7:(fl a.m. for Charlotte Adkins who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center; Rutland at 7: 00 p.m. to
Depot Street for Iva Cremeans who
was taken to Veterans Memorial.
Racihe at 12: 42 a .m . today for
Frances Lulkhart who was taken to
Veterans ME!liXlrial.

question about his vote for
Reagan b\1dgl1t p~

a 1981

' O'NeUI, D-Mass., saki-he intends
to
endo!se one ot the candid!ltes
the presidential noiplnation l'lll"ly
after
heln&amp; formally chosen as a
next year, !lllylleither John Glenn or
deleptetotlleDemocratlcNational
Walter Mondale would he an
Convention In early 19&amp;1. .
mreellent C8J1dlllale.
ElectlooolHouaedelegateswoukl
O'Nelll spoke to reporters atter
·be
held Jan. 18 or at the first caucus
lheOiiloaenator and the former vice
meeting
of the year under procepre!ldent wtiined their Views at a
dures e~ to be adopted by
closedmeetingofHouseDemocrats
·
oo Wedneoday. The other candl· House Democrats today.
The procedures were drawn up to
dates for tbe nomination will speak
fit new Democratic party niles
JulY~ and July 27.
mak1ng 164 members of the House
He said that "both or them did an
excellent Job" and ''would be . delegates to the convention In San
FrallciscO next July.
excellent candidates forourparty."
The rules are part of a mave by the
The speaker said Glenn "gave an .
Democmtic
National Committee to
extremely knowledge8ble demon·
give elected otlleials more of a voice
stratton." Others In thernee!lngsaid
In the selection ol the candidate. ·
Glenn ~ difficulty • fielding a

•

The death of a Phll1p Sporn power
plant employee kllled Tuesday
while working to replace a detective
sWitch m a a coal sampler has been
atlrtbuted to electrocution, accord·
lng to tile- West Vir1inia State

M fi'WEDrrdnel''somce.
'l'he llllqlly, perfom1ed by Chief
Medlc:al Examtner Dr. Irvin
Sopher, reported that Gary Rollins,
34, ot. Point Pleasant, had bum

rtJarks m the back of hia right hand
and oa the palm oltlle same hand
)lilt b!lotlri the tlnunb, Sporn Plant

MaJ1118er E.H. Glolls aald
A ~ CI'I!'!V sent to the area

SAVE2~
~

\.CI"ILJ.

~::..li..:L

..-.

1.11111.......

SGOI!AS"I'+OO

---·IOT-·2··-.
.
Save40t
-..ruosc~

when

buy

SGOi!:UI'tDD
'

wliere Rolllns had been working
~ tile maintenance mecbanic's body at 12:40 p.m.,
Tuesday, Gloss sald.
An investigation into the incident
Indicated that same wort had been

done on the detective coal sampler
switch before Rollins died.
Gloss sald that another man had
attempted to fix the switch on
Monday Just before quitting time.
Gloss said Rollins had been sent the
foJJowlni morning to replace the
broken switch..
Rollins, employed by Appalach·
ian ~"owe' Co., was pronounced
dead m arrival at Pleasant VaUey
Hospital in Point Pleasant.
The plant is jointly operated by
Appalachian Power and Ohio

Ull!!i \0/UJ~lJ:!I -Sen. .John caner,~. talks with House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill on Capitol HID Wednesday prior to giving a
twenty minule speech before tbe House Democratic Caucus. The House
Democrats are asking the candidates for tbelr vlewo on tbe arms race,
lhe economy and how io get elected. (AP Laserphotoj.

.

O'Neill lauded this change and
On the budget question, however.
said It will add "the professional she told reporters: "He said he
voice which has'been lacklngg, to be would get back to me on the exact
perfectly truthful."
vote." Ms. Ferraro, who has not
The cjuestion that some members announced her presidential choice,
said appeared to trip GleM was said she was "a bit disturbed"
asked by Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, because "I think the budget and the
D-N.Y. She said she had cam- tax votes were important. ''
paigned against Republicans for
Rep. John Seiberling, D-Ohlo,
voting against Reagan's tax and
budget cutting proposals, and asked who has endorsed Glenn, said he
how she was S!tpposed to campaign thought bOth the Ohio senator and
for Glenn if 11f! became the nominee, Mondale " handled themselves very
since he also voted for them.
weD" hut Glenn "needs to do a Uttie
Ms. Ferraro said Glenn gave an homework" on the budget question .
accurate answer regarding his tax
Glenn said he was contused
vote, saying he fought to modlty the because Ms. Ferraro referred to the
Reagan bHI but voted for II along bill as "Gramm-Latta" alter Its two
with most other senators to give the House sponsors, while "over in the
president's economic recovery pro- . Senate, weusuallydidn'trefertothe
gram a fair chance.
budget bill in that way."

Buyer beware! . .

'l'he Meigs County Sheriffs Department report two groups of out of
state painters working in the SaUsbury and Chester Township area
are allegedly changing the prtces after they complete paint Jobs.
The painters, who are painting sucn things as roofs and barns,
allegedly quote a certain price per gallon of paint for a job, and raise
the prtce or say they used more paint.
Meigs County Shertft James J. Pmllitt advises that if ~le need
theit root painted, they should tequest local penple.
The sheriff said simllar Incidents have been occurring In other
sections of the state.

Survey shows utility
costs take bigger bite
COLUMBUS, Ollio (AP) - A
Consumers' Counsel survey shows
utllity costs, fueled by higher
natural gas prices, took a bigger bite
ou I of Ohioans' wallets than infiatlon
over the past year.
A sUIVey of the combined costs of
electrtcity, natural gas and telephone costs in ~lght major cities
reflected Increases ranging from
13.5 percent to 22 percent.
Toledo consumers are paying the
highest monthly utUity costs, followed by resklents in Columbus,
Cleveland and Dayton.
Although the monthly bHI Is
smaUer in Akron, Youngstown,
Cincinnati and Canton , the percentage Increases from June 1982 to
June 1983 are in some cases higher.
Results of the survey show
residential "tllity customers In
Toledo, using average amounts of
e lectrtclty, natural gas and basic
telephone service , pay $154.29 a
month. That is up $25.19 a month
from a year ago, an Increase of 19.5
percent.
In Columbus, the combined
monthly bill was pegged at $142.38,

Power~pany.

F'uneraJ Services will be COR·
dueled at 10: :ll a.m., Friday at
Gospel Lighthouae Church in Point
Plealant. Burial will be in Forest
Hills Cemetery. The body Is at
Cmw-HUSiell Funeral Home, Pt.

Pleuant.

Faces four count indictment
WINFIELD -

A tour count
charging leXII8I

and stole $26.

The alleged incidents took place

assault, bn!aklng and mterlng with
intent tosexuaJJy asaaultandanned
robbfty - was returned Wednesday by a ·PUtnam County, W.Va.,
grand jury qalnat Dr. David L.
Carrol Point Pier ant.
Dr. Carr, an OlteapBthic physi·
dan, II ICC.'\II8d at .....,.., In
8l!liUaJ inleraJuriewtth I wtman by
force - and ·emp~oyt~~e a deadly
-IIJIIL He II autber cblupd with
lnllldJ1&amp;111d l!llterlngwith lntelll to
leliUillY _asaault the Wllllllll; and.
with dolne .,_

mJan. S.

ODe count allo cllargl!a hbn with
the with I
llrMnn and ...... M. A •"d
anned
COUIII ID I I lie

I1CCOI'IIIn8 loCOUihecwdl. •
c•• "• pgwpe BONOBEDHe bu coaluned tile aame
111e-...1
12
•lllll ...... a ' den'"'"'
pl!nOII Jlllllld ID lnh lf1llld ..

threatlabtc

rdlbei&gt;

tllrealala! 1

Earlier Wednesday, Pullllm
County Judge James 0 . HoiJlday
si(llled an order dlsmlsllng all
counts of a ~t lndlctml!llt
brou&amp;ht against Carr by a grand
Jury in MarciL
The previouS Indictment inclucled
leXIIaJflSSBUlt and anned_robbe.ty

chargi!L
Cpl. R.E. O'DeU o( the West
Vqtnia . StAie Pouce, WJnaeld
delacbmelll, w (fled before !be
ltsllonl,
grand Jury 1n Jnh pi

july lndlcbiilllll.

I'8C

.n 12

man wltb a llreeml

~·
'

up $25.28 from last year or 21.6
percent.
Consumers' Counsel Wllliam
Spratley told a news conference
Thursday that from May 1982 to
May1983, "lnfiatlonwasgoingup3.5
percent and utlllty b11Js were going
up multiples of that."
He blamed the rising cost of
natural gas for the bulk of the
increases in the combined ut111ty
bills. In Toledo and Colwnhus, tor
example, the yearly increase in
combined rates amounts to about
$DJ, of which gas accounts for $240.
"Where Is the average utllity
dollar going• It's going down the
plpeUne to the Southwestern part of
the United States. It's not staying
here in Ohio," Spratley said .
Canton conswners recorded the
highest percentage boost for their
combined rates of 22 percent while
Cincinnati ratepayers had the
lowest increase at 13.8 percent.
In addition to natural gas costs,
telephone rates went up from 3.6
percent in Cleveland to a six-year
hlgho!22.5percentinToledo,Akron,
Canton and Youngstown.

Leading Creek
•
receives
grant,
loan monies

I

iDdictment -

2 Sec:lioru, 14 Pages
20 C:.nr1
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

income exceeding the state's median income.
The House bill does not include a
means test, which Is strongly
opposed by organized labor.
Sen. John C. Danforth, R ·MO.,
who pushed for the .means test,
argued that it was necessary so that
the program coullj "benefit those in
need, not everyone andhls brother."
' The Senate blil, which substitutes
for an earner version drafted t&gt;Y the
SenatE' Labor Commit~. contains
Medicare changes to achieve savings In that program that would pay
for the new health care program.
Dole had said he would not allow
the bill to the go to the Senate floor
without the financing provisions.
·'Those provisions would repeal the
current llmlt on premiwns for "part
B" or the supplemental ponion of
Medicare, whichpaysforoutpattent
and all non-hospital medical care. It
is estimated that repealing that
limit, now $1.2.20 a month, will raise
$359 million aver three years.

endorse candidate next year

, Electrocution causes ·
I plant employe's death

Rehearsal set
A rehearsal lor Incoming fresh·
man of'the Meigs High School band
will be held Thursday evening from
6to9p.m . Anybandstudentwishing
to go to drum across the Tri-State
must have pay $6 by July 14.

.

O'N~ill will

DAIRY VALLEY

I

Edgar B. Taylor, 76,Rt.3,Racine,
died Wednesday at Veteran'sMem·
orlal Hospital.
Taylor, born Oct. 12, 1!ni, the son
ot the late John an(j Elsie Taylor,
was a mechanic and a member-of
the Reorganlzed Church of Latte(
Day Saints.
· 1n addition, Taylor served in the
53lst Engineers Regiment of the
U.S. Army, spending 43 months

Ohio, Thursday, July 14, 1983

•

WASHINGroN (AP) - Con- controlled House and two in the their dependents lacked any form of
health insurance.
gressappearsde!erminedtoenacta Republican&lt;Ontrolled Senate Congress has been moving ahead
national health insurance program have approved versions of the
f9r the unemployed despite veto · legislation, indicating widespread in the face of repeated signals that
the Reagan administration prefers
sf8nals !rom the White House and Capitol Hill support for the plan.
Last month, theSenatevoled'm-23 thatchangeshemadeinthetaxcode
arguments that· it may become
to prompt employers to continue
another runaway spending to make an Initial $225 mliJlon In
health care benefits fnr the unem, . . health-care coverage for laid-off
The Senate Finance Conunlttee ployed avaUable as 'soon as the workers, whowouldhavetopaythe
premiums.
capped two days of deUherations authorizing legislation is approved.
Sen.
Robert
J.
Dole,
R·Kan.,
David A. Stockman has said, '"The
Wed11esday evening with an 11-4
chalnnan
of
the
Finance
Connmlt·
administration
would lind any new
bipartisan vote approving a $1.8
~.
said
he
wanted
his
panel
to
act
federal
entitlement
program In this
bilJion package of health belietttsfor
before
the
tuU
House
votes
because
area
totaUy
unacceptable."
III18Dployed workers. lncluded in
''we'd like them (the House) to
UndertheSenateplan,$1.8billlon
the legislation are changes in sime
understand lhere's!IOITiesupportfor would he provided over two years as
Medicare premiums and payments
this concept In the Senate."
block grants to the states for health
to physicians to pay tor the
DemocratiC leaders in the House care services for unemployed
program.
have made the program a prtortty workers and their immediate faml ·
The measure now goes to the full
item in the series of recession reUef lies. The pending House bill calls for
Senate, where action is expected In
measures they have been pushing.
$4 bWion over three years.
the next several Weeks.
Jol!n
Heinz,
R
-Pa.,
said
the
· lncluded irl the Senate bill Is a
Sen.
The HIJ!Ise, meanwhile, Ukely will
legislatlonwould"beverymeaningmandate
for states to establish a
Vote next week on a $4 billion
fui
for
up
to
11
mllllon
people"
and
"means
test"
for ellwblllty that
measure that does not include a
show
''we
have
a
conscience."
generaUy
would
prevent people
provision tor financing the plan.
The
Congressional
Budget
Office
from
receiving
benefits
if they or
· So tar. tour congressional comhas
estimated
that
as
of
,February,
their
immediate
!amlly
have an
mittees - two In the Democmt·
10.2 mlllloo Jobless workers and

Men's

HAMBURGER

•

at
e
enttne
Congress pushes health
care plan for jobless ·

-~ansa~

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

Pagp lO

•

•

-

Livestock reports

Page8

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•
,..

Profiles on new
Methodi.IJt ministers

.Page 3

prevented."
r~ln~j~u~ri~e~s~c~o~u~ld~~h~av~e~~b~e~end~~SA~T~
. ~~~~~C~irele~;;~

Mayors finish cases
seven

Lefty Joe Price
defeats Mets, 3-1

Friday dance

motorcyclists to wear safety
helmets? 48 yes • 6 no.
As indicated by the survey, 34.
motortsts out of 54 contacted don't
usually wear their safety belts.
However, of the 54 responces ro
would favor a law requrtng safety
belt usage.
"So far this year the Gallla-Melgs
Post otflcers have investigated 5
fatal accidents With 5 people killed
and 152 personal injury accidents
with 400 persOns injured", Lt.
Henderson said, "11 seat belts had
been worn most ot the deaths and

. Jury

defendants were tined and
three others forfeited bonds In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Ho!!man TuesdaY night.
Fined were Buck Tyree, Middleport, $50 and costs, open container;
Charles Walker, Middleport, and
Kelly stewart, Pomeroy, S42i and
costs each, 10 days, confinEment,
DWI; Richard Herman, Middleport, $00 and costs, disorderly
manner, $100 and costs, criminal
trespass; Dannls Hart, Middleport,
$50 and costs, disorderly manner;
Stanley Starcher, Rutland and Paul
Honaker, Middleport, $25 and costs

protests by bindreds oftoo•Mnclsol
Chileans on May 11 and JUDI! 14. But
the noise they made n-18)' nJehl
by banging pots and tile liD celllqp
of their slum bavels !IOUIIded louder
and was heard In more nellbbor·
hoods, rich and poor. Orurch beiiJ
Joined the protest Ill.!Ulll! Wllrklna
class areas.
As the din persisted for rnqre than
two hours, baJ1ds. of youths erected
fiamlng ban'lcades of old tires at
bridges and hulll;lreds of intersections 1n outlylng areas ctthecapital,
then hurled rocks imd gaRO!ine
bombs at pollee who retaUated with
tear gas and gunfire ,aimEd upwanl.
Pollee sald Isabel Sanbueza, a
1S.year-old stildent, was shot dead
outside her home In southwest
Santiago during the

l'r ..•"'red lar Gllllll " ldlew lAd .....hM!
It lbe UCA eli! ert:A11DI ~ M Ohio
f· .•

Ulllveni&amp;J

Ia Aibena. Shown are, !real, J.r, Kareo
I?J, Tlaa a, Lila Deem, ud Anna Adams.
Baell - Aape lilyee, Lila Pape, JuanKa Frederick,
Rr

.Jill N-, 8111 Kelly

m-.

·~

RtJI'LAND- The Leading Creek
Conservancy District has received a
$100,00J loan and a $225,!XXl grant
from the _Farmers Home Administration, according to dlstrtct Presi·
dent Jack Crtsp.
The money wUI he used to
improve and upgrade the rural
wale. sytem . The water district
serves about 1,100 customers in
Meigs County.
,
With the m oney, "We'll add wells,
update the treatment plant and
possible buDd an extension to Scipio
township in Pageville," Crisp said.
The conservancydlstrtct has been
working out the details for obtaining
funding lor aver slxmonths, he said.
Crtsp said construction on the
project shOUld begin by about the
middle ot September. !! will take30
days before all the paperwork is
completed.
After the :ll days are up, bids on
the project wUI be advertised for
three weeks, he added.
The project will create at least a
clctZn jobs, and possibly two dozen
jobs lor the local area, Crisp said.

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