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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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---~---·----------

-II i

'

I

Thursday, July 14, 1983

2-The Daily

~r'

Price continues consistency with 3-1 wiD'

M'dikp I,

n..n.,, July 14, 1913

Turbulent court term ____J_am_es_J_.--=----

The Daily Sentinel
Ill 4 'm1rl !'oitrt•t•l

l'mtl• •rnv. Ohlu
DEVOTI.:U TU 1'Ht-: ISTt:Kt:sT hr THt: ~u:u;s- M 1\SilS :\lit~, \

lllb.

l!tn~ ~L.--,-tn-w.c;jt~

~v

ROBERT L . WINGETT
l'uhli!'Oht•r

WASHINGTON -It turned out to
'"··be a blockbuster ·of a court term
alter all. By the time the Supreme
Court called It quits last week,
having handed down 150 formal
opinions, court obser;ers were left
with ·an unsellllng question to
ponder: How "conservative" is this
putatively conser;atlve cOurt? The

would respect the doctrtnes of
comity. which Imply accornmoda·
lion to the views ot Congress and of
the state courls; and a conservative
would be care(UI never 10 let his
personal prejudices affect his view
of the law.
But in the 1982-83 term of court,
"strtct construction.. came 1n varIous degrees of relaxation, stare
decisis was now Invoked and now
discarded, comity was a sornetllne
thing, and personal convictions
(such as the views of Brennan and
Marshall on capital punishml!nl)
were aU over the place, It Is not easy
to. describe as "conservative" a
court that reaffirms a right to
aoortlon, strikes down 200 federal
statutes in a single swoop. undermines the last few .PWars of

answl'r, as always, dep4?11ds upon

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEF' LII'H

• i\." "i,..anl l'uhli ... ht•r/ ( 'nnlrulh-r

l~t·nt•r;al M a na~t;t•r

DALE UOTHGEB . ,JR.
~· ~·~· "Editor

A Mt: MBEK of n"' 1\s•;odatood Pn-. Inland l)ulb
·~ AmNit1111 Nt"WSpUpt•r Puhtl411•rs .'\ -·iatkln.
.

l~n,..

.\,....wbtiofln ;uld Chi·

OPI:"'ION .an· wt•kvnll&gt;d, 11M·y !dlnuld ht• ~-lhan D word!'&gt; kli~K­
AU liotk•n; an•."illh.)t•ti tH ll'dltlnl{ and mtN ht· ~ 1~-4 with nanw•. addn"!oi&lt;idll U&gt;~t •,m..•
•inunht"r. Ne ull'..i~'d ••lit'"" Mill ht • pum..ht'4. l.J'IIO'I'lloshoukl ht• ln I{OOIIULV. ~

,.

I..F.TI'EK."'i

(Jt'

•"'"• ~Mat.,., not l"or.o.unalijb.

~Tough

public
!relations test·
President Reagan Is facing perhaps his toughest public relations test, in
;the case of the purloined briefing papers.
• He and his aides are being tugged from at least two sides, as they make
:their way through a potential political minefield.
: If they foUow their present course and take a "hands-off' approach to the
;mvestigatlon of how their 198l campaign received briefing papers and
'1lther material prepared bY the Carter Whlte House, they leave themselves
~- qpen to suggestions that they are not trying to gel to the bottom of the case.
; . This approach, however, leaves lhl'm tree of sugg~&gt;Stlons that they are
·.. Interfering with the investigation.
~:;:: If Reagan tries to find out bY himself or through his top aides just what
(·:happened. he risks jeopardizing the Integrity of the lnvestlgallon bY
~ ; ~vlng what one aide caued "White House fingerprints" on theworkofthe
~: -fBI and Justice Department.
~; :; . Reagan does not want to leave the impression that his White House has
:.. ~ sidetracked by the Issue, or even slowed down. And so, he has been,
; : wry pubUcly, meeting with lop aides on a range of Issues.
;;;· ;: He conferred last week with Secretary of State George P. Shultz, just
:. back !iom a trip to Asia and the Middle East. He met Mond&lt;w with Foreign
f. Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher of West Germany. Sessions with Cabinet
·: !Jl&lt;&gt;mbers, a session with Republican congressional leaders, a meeting on
· -sChool prayer, and brief, formal meetings with ambassadors newly
· assigned to Washington were also on the schedule.
On Monday, reporters questlooot Whlte House spokesman Larry
Speakes for 25 minutes about the papers and who.would have access to
original documents- the FBI or a congressional subcommlttee. Speakes
pointed out that he was prepared to discuss at least eight other subjects,
Including fair housing, mlssUes in Europe, and Central America, but had
received no questions on these topics.
He diverted the questiOns to just those areas.
He also told reporters, In response to a question about how the briefing
paper Issue was affecting the president. that he had just come from his
weekly lunch at which Reagan and a number of aides discuss upcoming
Issues, and guess what topic was never raised.
Reagan joined In on a senior staff meeting unannounced, and told his top
aides, according to Speakes: "I want everyone In this room and the White
House to continuetocooperate fuUywlth the FBI and to teU everything they
know about any of these allegations."
Later, a White House aide said the president "wanted to send a mt'SSagl'
to the public that he wants to get to the bottom of this."
At the same time, said the aide, who spoke on condition that he ool be
further Identified, "we've bren careful not togtvehlm progress reports. No
progress reports are coming from Justice. He's nol asking 'how is II
coming, Is there anything new?"'
"Nobody here knows and If they did, they wouldn't teU him," the aide
said,

Profits: better quality
as· well as quantity
If the recenl Improvement In the economy lives up to Its early promise,

profits of Arnerlcan businesses will improve In quality as weU as quantity.
Most casual onlookers- an.d many people in business, for that matterthink of profits as strictly a quantity question. A buck Is a buck, and from
the viewpoint of the company Involved, two bucks Is doubly nice.
But In the recent era of high Inflation, things grew more complicated.
There were dollars, and then there were dollars, and you couldn'tteU the
•
difference just bY looking at the bollom line.
Inflation hurt the quality of profits In a couple of Important ways. For
one, It swelled the nominal value of inventories silting In a company's
warehouse. For another. it often meant that the depreciation the company
was taking l'V&lt;'ry year on its factories, machinery, auto fleet and other
capital goods wasn't enough to cover the eventual replacement cost of
those Items.
Both factors tended to create "illusory" profits, said analysts at the Wall
Street firm of Salomon Brothers Inc. In a recent study of the subject.
Assume. for example, Ihal a department store bought a thousand pairs
of shoes bearing retail price tags of $40 each. By the time It got them onto
the feet of customers, the prtce had gone up to $45.
That put an extra $5,&lt;XXlln the till, which went straight through the
financial statement to the "profit" line because II OCCUrred With no
Increase In costs whalsot'Ver. But this windfall turned out to be ephemeral.
because the store found that It had to pay more to the manufacturer for Its
next order of shoes. ·
At the same time, the store was taking, say, S2,&lt;XXJ.a year as a cost for
depreciation of the furniture and other fixtures in Its ~ department.
When It came time to replace those fixtures, however, the btu was much
larger than had been expected earlier. The understatement of Its
deprecla tlon cost helped to sweU reported profit figures !.'Very year the old
fixtures were In use.
By Salomon Brothers's reckoning, of the $172.9 .billion In corporate
profits recorded in the first quarter of 191Ml, when Inflation was atlts peak,
$72.9 billion stemmed from these artlftclal soorces.
Now, of course. the rate of Inflation has faUen fromdoubledlgltstoaooul
4 percent or 5 percent. So for the moment anyway, says Salomon Brothers,
when you check a typical company's profit figures, "what you see Is what
you get."
Aside from operators of businesses themselves, why should anyone care
a tout all this? Well, It seems that thequalltyofproftts has !lOme Important
effects on what businesses do with those profits - whether they Invest
them in new projects that create additional jobs, how much theydlstrioote
Into the economy through their shareholders in the form of dividends,

how "conser;atlve" Is defined. but
this much Is clear: Saine tunny
things are happening up at the
forum .
To think of a "conservative"
justice is to think in terms of strict
construction of the Constitution. A
ronseJVa11ve would have a decent
respect for the doctrine of "stare
decisis," which Involves adherence
to precedent. A conSer;atlve alsO

federalism, and figuratively invites
every convict who !eels his sent·
ence Is •·xcesslve to go back to a
federal court lor one more try at
freedom.
The ll&gt;rm starti.d slowly. The
court's fir.;l pplnlon came down on
Nov, 15, It wasn't until March 2that
we had anything of much stgnift·
cance to write about; the court then
extended federal discrimination
laws to embrace a retiring game
warden in Wyoming, and In the
process left the states more emas·
culated than they were before.
Another lull set In, to be broken bY
·the case of Bob Jones University on
May24. Theflnalstxweekssawone
startling decision after another. I'U
be retlectlng on some of these cases
as the summer wears on,

-'-,_.
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r A .-·r,t
-..,....__....
~

~)u4I

__
..... ..... , ... - -,--

....
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.,"'__
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....___
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:/...._ ...... ..-.
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,
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..,._-....--..,____

ways:

IBU!l!er.
threl&gt; Uberals
and Blackmun), and
(Powell, White and Stevens).
justices detest this
ldentUicatlon of species,
practice has served the
purposes of prediction and antysll
1n 1!Rl-83. 11 became""'""''"''"'
a mUd upheaval - not an
quake, but rather a series
tremors - has shaken
The conservatives stuck
together, but Rehnqulsl and ...,,....
nor, who disagreed only 14 times
1981-82, disagreed 19 times .111
l!m-83, and some oft hose 19 divided
votes were critical to decision rlthe
case.
The court's two most steadfast
Uberals, Brennan and MarshaO,
also saw their harmony rating faD
In the term just ended. In the 19111-82
term they parted on only six
occasions; this past term they !pitt
on 17. Even so, lbe liberal bloc rl
Brennan, Marshall and Blackmua·
held firm In dissent in 21 cases; by
contrast, the three conservatlvet!
joined In dissent but eight times. :

~.... .
. - - V ..
_.__.,. . . . . . . . . . . . ow

....

Justice Stevens lncreasinglt.
demo_nstrates his Independence. ot;
the 102 opinions bY a divided court:
he was In dissent 43 limes; in 1M.
preceding term he dissented but ~
limes. Marshall was the term'r
champion dissenter, with 49; ~
was on the winning side In only
three of the last 26 cases decided by
the court.

-

......

- ·•r..lflffir.4..I
.

-

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~---r----­
_..,a-...
,~__.,." - "!.:...,.- -- ~J~-­

#---~

,... -A'Jl.-. .,. _ -.__
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- __

- . . , .J_ _ _ _

,... ...... . .. 1·v

The justices split 5-4 In 36 ca~;
their judgments, If not their
opinions, were unanimous In 48.
These figures are about par for

recent terms.

PLO's violent split _ _-,--_ _ _Ja_ck_Ande_rso___;_n
WASHINGTON - The violent
moved the PLO's "temporary"
split In the Palestine Liberation
headquar 'ers to Tunisia.
Organization has the Middle East In
Now the Implacable rivalry
tunnoU. Most upset are the Arab
between Aralat and Assad has
nations, but the Soviet Union also exploded In the world press. What's
views the PLO civil war , with
not generaUy appreciated, though,
serious mlsglvlni!S.
Is the alarm that the PLO eruption
Last Nov. 10, I reported that
has caused among most Arab
Yasir Aralal was once again In
nations, The last thing IIley want is
danger of losing his leadership of
to see the Syrians take over the
the Palestinian exUes, and I
PLO.
Identified Syrian President Halez . The reason Is simple: If the Arab
Assad as the moving force agalnsi
world can be described as a ship
Aralat. Quoilng secret lnteUigence with several skippers, each trying
cables, I reported that Assad was to steer it In a different direction ,
trying "to oust Aralal and replace Syria Is the proverbial loose cannon
him with a tuU-blown radical."
careening around the deck, scartng
Assad sought to take advantage everyone aboard.
of the PLO's defeat in Lebanon. He
Syrta Is Irresponsible enough by
wanted to move the exile group's !\,self to be a danger to Its Arab
headquarters to Damascus, where neighbors; they're afraid Assad
he could control It and eventually would unleash the PLO against
put hls own, extremist puppets in their own regimes, which are
charge. But Ara!at was too clever already In economic and political
to walk intQ a trap like that, and difficulties without Palestinian

subversion.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Azlz
flew to Calm the other day for
meetings with Egyptian officials.
State Department sources told my
associate Lllf'l'tle Lagnado he was
the highest-ranking Iraqi to visit
Egyp\ in years. The main topic of
discussion was Syria's attempt to
sel2e control oil be PLO.
The Saudi Arabian government
has also tried quietly, but Ineffectively, to restrain the Syrian power
play, according to Intelligence
reports. But the Saudis were
unwilling to play their trump card:
a cutoff of the substantial aid they
give the Syrians.
,
Even the Kremlin Is unhappy at
the prospect of Syria taking over
the PLO. Intelligence reports say
the Sovlets sent Arafat three
telegrams of support within a
one--wrek period. And the Soviet
ambassador to Syria has report-

edly been shuttling between Syrian
officials an(l, various PLO factions,
tl)'lft« to prevent a takeover.
.
If Moscow Is concerned that the
Syrtan monster it helped create has
grown too big to handle, the Arab
governments can point to specific
Incidents to justify their fears of a
Syrian-PLO combination: the assassination of PLO moderate
leader Assam Sartawl bY the
extremist factloo bead@~~ by Aoo
Nidal and the MUI'IIer of Lebanon
President-elect Bashir Gemayel.
The Syrians welcomed these kU·
lings, If they didn't plot them.
'
There Is idso the matter o1
prestige. Major Arab goverrtnl&lt;'nts.
like Egypt and Saudi Arabia, resent
Assad's attempt to usurp the
leadership of the Arab world.
So Egypt may try to form a ·
"consensus" of moderate Arab
nations that wtll be sl rang enough to
put down the Syrian upstart .

Secrets of the press.______A_r_tB_uc_h_..:_:wa:.:.::ld
As a newspaperman I am
constantly being asked hy victims
what their rtghts are when II comes
to talking to the media.
I shaD try to address Ibe problem
In question-and-answer form,
though I may lose my journalistic
license for doing so.
Q: When a reporter stops me In
front of my house, or slicks a
microphone In my face, or telephones rne In the middle of night,
what is my obligation to talk to this
person?
A: You have a right to remain
sUent, you have a right to shove t~
mike in the reporter's ear, and you
have the right to hang up the
telephone.
Q: Won't that make me look bad
If the correspondent says on TV thai
night, "Mr. Blue refuses to come
out ot his house to talk to us?" Or the
reporter writes, "E!forls bY this
newspaper to reach Mr. Blue were

stories. so they can spend lime
tngra!lating themselves to you .
They can lead you from your love of
gardening to admlttln~ you know ·
every mob leader In Cleveland. TV
reporters, on the other hand, are
under pressure to get their tape to
the studio, so they ask the tougher
questions, anddependmoreonyour
facial reactions 10 them, than the
answers. Even If you don 'I say ·
anything, they'll still show you on
the air fighting your way to get Into
your automobile, whUe the reporter.; shout questions at you.
Q: H you tillk to the press will
they listen to my side of the story?
A: They'll listen to II, but that
doesn't necessarUy mean It will get
in print, You could say a hundred
things and because of space·

limitations only three· of them
• Q: What If I'm an anonymous
ml~ht appear In the newspaper. But , soorce? ~
It's still better than TV, when rarely
A: You'll be quoted but not seen
more than fJ.l£' of your statemenls
on TV. As far as newspaper people
gets on the alr.lftheTVpeoplegtve are concerned, they'd prefer to use
you 15 seconds to defend you&lt;sell
your name, but they'll always go
you're a lucky person.
' with an anonymous source If they
Q: How can I get more lime?
have to.
A: By a(lmllling your guilt . Then
Q: Suppose a TV station or a
you'll get the full minute.
newspaper or magazine calls me up
Q: Suppose I'm not accused of
and says they're doing a story on
anything. but the media want to
one of my friends, Is It okay to-talk
Interview me about oomebndy who
then?
Is. Should I taik to tbem?
A: 11 depends how much time
A: It depends how. much you
you've gut. The reporter will S('"nd
wan! to get on the evening news or three htJurs with you, and then only
see your name In the paper. use one quote, usually a negative
Obviously you have a beller chance one at that . People writing boolis
of making It If you have something are even worse because they have
negative rather than positive to say
no deadlines .
about the person accused,

un.successtul?"

SAYING SO LONG - The Clnclnnall Red!~' Johnn¥ Bench, left,
, who Is retiring after lids seaeon from baseball, pta a pendant from
fonner teammate and oow a N..., York Met, Tom Seaver, before lbe
game at ·Shea Stadium, Bench did Ill!&amp; play In the pme b.t tile Reds
roUed over tile Mots :1-1 In the seoond pme ol llie (AP
Las&lt;rpholo ).

been usedstrlctly as a starterin1983.
Though his past helped him, he
plans to stay in the starting rotation.
''f was a starter In the minors," he
said. "But, for some reason when I
came to the major.;, they began
using me in relief. I was so good that
they just left me there. n · was a
waste to the team, but It did make

kndw when I was going to R"rllt." •
As the No. 2 pitcher ~hln&lt;l ,
more aggressive and I finally
fastbaUingrlghl-hander MartoSotoi
realized my fasthall."
Price also confessed that II was Prloe has aUowed three runs pr less
easter to prepare himself In his new in 14 of his 16 starts and has pitched
seven or more innings 12 timeS.
role.
·
"He'll certainly save your
"Now I have a five-day time
•
buUpen,"
said Reds Manager RusS
lflllll&lt;'," ne said. "Before I didn't
Nt •.lll. "For Joe. this wasn't
anything unus\Jlll. He's been do1ni:
this aU year. Outstanding, that'saUl
could say. You can't get 8llll
steadier."
;
,'/91, 3.14: Hau, M!lwau.kre, &amp;2, .m,
Price's teammates gave him a 1-6
l."; &lt;1 art• tlfod with :rn.
S11UKfX&gt;llt'S: Stil'b. T.oronto. In:
lead when Eddie MUner led otf thli
Bly lt.....m, ~l'VI'I. . d. JIO; Morr\&amp;, [)tolrol1 ,
game with a triple and oc;ored OJ!
!r'l': Rigtlelll Nf'W · York. 9:'1; ~t. Chi·
cuo. M.
Dave Concepclon'slntleld hit. 'l'heY.
made 11 ~ in the ntth on Milner' a
SAV'ES; Qul:~~.'l'llx&gt;n)o , Kurula11 n~ . 21 :
CaLidiLJ, fli'ot1lt\ 17: SIM!foy, Bailon, 16:
two-run single to center oil Mel
l)avts, Mlnnc1oUt, 1:'1: Lopw. , DMmlt. U.
starter Walt TerreU, 1-4.
:
N.o\110N.U. LF.AGVr.
81\TilNG
11~
11 batS) Ht'fldrk•k,
Said
Met
manager
Frank
H~
Sl~l!l • .l"ll; Knlsl;hl . Howilon, .JM: F.u .
ard: "We're not going to be able to
IN'. PUtsbU!"Rh ••:tn: Mu.rpt'c.l. Atllll'lta .
.:t!T; Ol!vt&gt;r, Montn' lll, .3'l.'l.
compete and win If we can't score
HUn'i·MilrphY, Adanta , In: Cai'W')' .
San Dk'Ao. ~: F;nn.~. Ran Fl'llrldaro, tit ;
runs. One, two or three runs Isn't
llaln£"S. Montn&gt;;~l , li'l.: On.,.,•Jon, Montm~l .
going to do lt. We've got to start
getting at least four runs a game It
RBI ·Daw&amp;On, Moot!X'II.l, 91: MurptQI, AI ·
lanta, 63: HMdl1ck, S!Loull. 8l Cllamt)
we're going to give our pitchers a .
iit;s, Atlanla, ~: GUl'm&gt;JU. Lo11 Ani!CI('t;,
chance. It's very frustrating."
•

me Into a better pltcher. l bbecame

Major le~e leaders
AMERII~ IJ&lt;_jAGlJE
BI\'T"''INC tl~ ut blltst: Cat1w, Callfur
n!a . .¥!'l; llrMt, Kilnllll§ 0~ . .:1&amp;1; 1~ .

'

lb tun, ~'M;' C:rill~· , N! 'Yo' York. .:1.\1: AI
ken s, l&lt;ansns CIT)', 3l1.
HU ~ : U]Xlhaw. Toronto. 00: Yoont ,
Mllwoukw , I'll; F.vans, lbton. ~7; wu .
~n . Kansus City , ,';6; Murra~·. Bulllmon&gt;.
5,'i; H(pk.C'!I , !lalllm:m•, ~.

nBI: rucr, Elostan, n.l: f'IX'Jflf'r, Mil·
wnukt'l'. 61; Kllll{'. C'hieu w . 61 : Ward.
Mlnniosola, "fi; l'arrl~h. [){'trolt, !'14: Up-

shaw, Tornnto. M.
, JilTS: \\'hitnkN', [),' troi !, 110; Ootuls.
I:!Oston. 100: Riff&gt;. Boston, Jill: CarPW,

Cilllfornl a, 1(12; Ward, Mlnnt"mtll, 102.

OOUBI.f~ : . P~ri1qh, Dt&gt;trolt, :ti': ~.
Ml'Ra1•, Kansas C1ty. 2ti:

l'loston, ~ .
1-! rh'~ -

Mlnll(~a.

24;

Ct'lOp(&gt;r,

Mil·

waukt,'(', ".l.l
r 11HP~ Hcmdon, O.•trult, 7: Wll8011,
IA-trolt , ti: Grtnln. Toronto, 6; GttliOn.
~)(~troll , 6; ~ llrt' til'd With~ .
HOME BUNS· Rl&lt;'l'. lbton'. 2.1: Kl tlt(',
Chk'!\RO. '1/: Artnlls. Boston. Ill: CC!Opf'r,
U~haw, To!'un!o, 17.
BAS~-,; · t·h'fldf&gt;riion . Ollklllllcl,

Mltwnukw. 17;
STOLEN
~;
('lty,

Cn.u, (1dl'lq.(O, U: Wilson , Kansa s
~!t,

IU.olw, Chlt•!lS(Ii. 34:

Sllmplc.

TI'XIlS , ~.

Pl'I'C' III NC

!7

dc'o!;h;loru-;t :

KOOilnlim,

ChiC'iijro, H . ,~('/!\, :t.~: ,/1\ckllm. Tormt o.
7·1, .f!75. U'l: H l ~h PUI, Nl'\1' York. 10.~.

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Montn•al. 1(11; Ollwr.

lck, S!Loulll. lnl; Mu.-ph)i, Alllllta, JCJL
DOUBL.ES·Knlaht. Howlnn, :M; 011\lf'r,
Montreal. :at: Burknl'r, Chlr~. %1;
Hendrldl. Sll.ou.Ls. 22; Crw~ Hou.st111. 'll;
JRay, Plfllbur'Jrh, n .
TRIPLES-But~. Atlanta, 8: Mormo,
Hwstoo, R; Raine~, Montwal, 7: Duwam.
Mont~al , 6; !I al1' liM wlth ~.

Meigs Legion team captures twinbill

Today's

Sports World

SYRACUSE -Meigs' American
Legion baseball team recently
swept two games from Glouster,
4-2. and 10-6 to renew Its spirit for
the 19&amp;'1 campaign.
II)' WD1 Gd hf,
Meigs' Tony Riffle went to the
AP Con 4111111
mount and came home the winner
with seven strtkeouls and four
NEW YORK (AP) - Johnny Bench. who will retire at the end of this
walks. Bennelt had three strikeouts
season alter 17 years with the Cincinnati Reds, was presented with a
and two walks for Glouster.
diamond-studded, gold No. 5 pendant t&gt;Y the New York Mets Wednesday
Meigs scored four times In the
night in pre,game ceremonies,
.
· first frame and never looked hack.
Tom Seaver, cun-ent Mets pitcher and fOI'Illl!f teammate of Bench with
Meii!S' hitters were Nick· Riggs a
the Reds, made the presentation, which also featured Arthur Richman,
double, Jackie Welker a single,
special assistant to the Mets General Manager Frank Cashen.
Scolt Gheen a double, Zane Beegle
The ceremony was the first among the 11 National League teams as a trtple, Tony Riffle a single, Trey
Cincinnati makes Us final appearance in each of the cities.
Cassell a single, and Gordon Sp!ete
Bench, who was selected as the league's Most Valuable Player in 19'10and a single.
·
l972and the WorldSertesMVPin 19'16, said: "!feel honoredtobesingledout
Glouster hillers were Bennett,
like this. Seventeen years in the flllllor leagues Is lnflre than any young man
can dream about, and I thank the Reds for the opportunity to have played
basebaU."
Bench, who has an au-time record of 324 home runs as a catcher, singled
ool the four Cincinnati managers for whom he played - Dave Bristol,
Sparky Anderson. John McNamam an(l current manager Russ Nixon.
Besides the glory, there have been the negatives - the aching back,
gnaried fingers, broken feet (left foot sjx timeS, right lOot four). shouiderand
~lhow Injuries, damaged knees - hazards or the worst job in baseball.
As many pro athletes have done, Bench has buUt himself il virtual
qnl!'maJ! conglomerate.
·
.
·
.·
"I never see my paycheck," he said. "It goes directly to my accountant. I
also ·11ave a lawyer and an investment counselor. Taft Merchandising in
Cincinnati handles my commercial endorsements. Main ones involve
!?Ower tools, protectivE: equipment, insmce and banking,"
AnattveofBinger, Okla. (pop. 68)), he is majority stockholder in banks In
WUson, Okia., and Elmore City, Okla., has oil Interests that have brought In
15 .weUs, holds a lease on 6,(0) acres of timberland conserved for
quaU-huntlng and Is president of an Oklalloma City firm that deals in
lns\testrnenls.
He heads John Bench Enterprises In Cinclnnalt and with Pete Rose owns
~o farms of 127 acres, largely devoted now to !IOYbeans. He Is associated
with another baUplayer. fOJT1H'r National League outfielder Carl Warwick,
in commercial real estate in Houston,
"BasebaU Is a great Ufe and agoodsourceoflnconle.:' Bench said, "but the
,camaraderie Is not what it used to be. Guys don't get together after games
any more, They scatter.
.
"Road cities had their own specUtcatlons. Pittsburgh was 'Movie' cityalways a movie after a game. San Diego w~ the 'Go-to-Lunch city,' San
'Francisco the 'Friend' city -couples taking you to dinner- and Clllcagu
the 'Night' city - a lot of fun nightspots."

Adams,. Bing, Jewell, and Farley .
In the second contest, Meigs fell

afte~oneframe,

on
to dominate
a 10-6 victory'
over
behind
2·1
bill went
the tough Athens County club.
All stater Zane Beegle took the
call and hurled a complete game
with eight strikeouts and six walks.
J . Davis hurled for the opposition,
going three Innings with two
strikeouts and one walk. McClain
came oil In relief to fan four and
walk two.
.Jay Carpenter led the winners
with three singles, Tony Riffle two
singles, Beegle a single, and
Welker, Gheen, Don Swatzel, Cassell, and Splete each singles.
Metgs Will play Lancaster at

Meigs High School Saturday at 1
p.m. then Logan on Sunday.

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Tigers, Giants post victories
SYRACUSE ,- In an opening
slu""eslthe ~omeroy Tigers blitzed
"'
Alhany'•
Merchants l!H and Ra ·
cine outi'asted the Pomeroy Giants
s-2 to claim wins in the annual BUI
Hubbard Memorial baseball
·tournament.
·
.,
b ke
1
Whlle tied 1· '\ _meroy ro
open a seven run third inning to
claim an easy 19-4 win over the
Albany Merchants. Fields was the
winning pitcher In relief of starter
Dorst. They combined for 12
strikeouts and one walk. Jarvis
su!fered the loss with seven s!rl·
keouts and 14 walks with relleflrom
Bolin and Jenny Jarvis.
For the winners, Faulkrod had
three singles, Bachtel two singles,
Wright tliree singles, Dorst a single,
Humphreys a double and single,.
Elliot a single, and Robbie Fields a
,
stngle.
Steve Hawk had three hits to lead
Albany's attack,
In the nightcap, Racine's Royals

'

MQntll'al, 1111; Ttoon, Uouston, I~ HH!dr·

broke a 1·1 deadlock' in the third
inning to coast to an 8-2 triumph.
Shawn Diddle was the winning
fro
pitcher with a great save
m "'
reliever HerbY LaudermUt.
Herby LaudermUt, Tndd Grind·
staff, and Jason Quillen were the
lone hitters on the team.
Tonight Pt. Pleasant Convenient
Bla k
Foodmart plays Nei!IOIIvllle
c·
burn and the Racine Reds play the
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EFFECTIVE·THURS., JULY 21st
We Will aose At
12:00 Noon Each Thuriday

Today in history
I.

•

NEW YORK (AP)-Inoneyear,
Joe Price has riSen In stature from
short relief to one of the Cincinnati
Reds' most consistent starters- a
move thafhas llelped'oothPrlce and
the Reds.
"I couldn't be happier," said
Price, who defeated the New York
Mets 3-1 with a three-hitter Wednes·
day night.
Price, 8-5, notched his career high
In victories by allowing singles to
HubleBrooks and ptnch·hltler Dave
Kingman alter yielding George
Foster's 15th homer of the season, a
· solo shot to center field leading off
the fifth inning.
"It was one of few JYllstakes," said
Price. "It was a low fastball. I just
got behind on .the count and had to
get the baU over, Foster'stoogoodof
a hitter.for that."
. In completing his fourth game in
16 starts, the 26-year-old left-hander
walked one, struck out six and
low~red his earned run average to
2.73.
"I didn't feel that good from the
ooUpen,'' he said. "But once I hit the
mound, I was fine. I worked t)\e ball
around real well and hit !lie spots
when I ~?eeded to. That's the trick In
pltching,"
After appearing In 124 games in
relief the last three years, Price has

u,.,.~-

A: Not necessartly. The viewer or
reader migllt cpnclude the reporter
has been negligent by falling to get
you to comment.
Q: What should I be wary rl when
dealing with the media?
A: The liiendly young male'
reporter wjth the hearty hand·
· shake, who cans you by your first
name, and says he's only there to
get your side of the Story, and the
starry-eyed girl reporter wllo remlndsyouotyourdaughter. They'D
murder you In a story, compared to
a grizzly snarling old-timer, w11o
has given up makiJII a name for
t.IRIIell, and has no llllllltlon to
'-come another Weodwanl or
Bernstelll.
Tnday Is Thursday, July 14, thel951hday ofl!£1. There are l'IOdays left
Q: Who are worse to talk to, the
'print
people or TV reporters?
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
.
A: It's hard to say. Pnnt
On July 14, I789, the French RevolutiOn began when citizens of Paris. -reporters have more time ·on their
stonned the Bastille and released Its prisoners.
l!_ands before they write their

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POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thunday, July 14, 1983

••
IN A CLOUD OF DUST - Cleveland Indians'
c!'~Cber Roo Hassey Is upended"" Chicago White SoK'
Lorenzo Gray scores tn a cloud of dust during seventh

inning at Chlcaco Wednesday night. Uinplre Marty
Sprtnglllead watches the play. 1be While SoK won, 5-1.
(AP Laserpholo). .

Races tighten in American League
By llEBSCHEL NJSSENSON
AP Sports Writer
Chicago's LaMarr Hoyt became a
thinking man's pltcher, whlle Detroit's Dan Petry stopped lhiilklng
and started throwing.
As a result, both races In the
American League got even tighter
Wednesday night.
"I had very good concentration,
something that was not there all the
time earlier in tbe year," Hoyt said
after hurling a seven-hitter with no
walks and eight strlkeouts as the
White Sox defeated the Cleveland
Indians 5-I in Chicago for their 15th
triumph In the last 21 games.
Meanwhtle, Petry scattered nine
hits, walking none and strlklng out
five, as the. Tigers whipped the
California Angels 7-1.
•
The White Sox moved past
California Into second place In the
AL West, one-half game behind the
Texa.S Rangers, who lost to the
Mtlwaukee Brewers &amp;-2. The Toronto Blue Jays lost to the Kansas
City Royals 5-4 and saw their lead In
the AI.. East chopped to two games
over Detroit and the Baltimore
OrloJes, who beat the Oakland A's
6-2.
E;Isewhere, the Minnesota Twins

trimmed the New York Yankees 6-1
and the Seattle Mariners defeated
the Boston Red Sox 6-4.
'The . White Sox began their
winning uprlsing off Bert Blyleven
with one out In the seventh. Greg
Walker singled and pinch runner
MlkeSqulreswenttnsecondonGreg
Luzlnskl's single. Harold Baines
then looped an oppostte-flrole to left
that scored Squires. Luztnskt was
Ufted for pinch runner l.Drenzo
Gray, who scored on Vance Law's
sacrifice fly. Chicago added two
runs In the eighth when Rudy Law
singled, Squires trlpled and pinch
hitter Jerry Hairston doubled.
Tigers 7, Anllels.J
.
At Detroit, Caltfornla's Bruce
Ktson had retired nine batters In a
row when Kirk Gibson walked and
Larry Herndon singled to start a
slx-run Detrolt sixth. John Grubb
followed with a tie-breaking single,
Chet Lemon doubled horne the
Inning's second run and a basesloaded walk, Alan Trammell's
sacrl!lce fly and two California
throw1Iig errors chased home three
more runs before pinch hitter John
Wockenfuss capped the uprlsing
with an RBI single.

.
Anderson signs
fo~r year contract'

At Arlington, Bob McClure won
his fifth consecutive game and Ted
Slmmons drove In two runs as
Mtlwaukee handed Texas its sixth
loss In seven games. McOure
scattered eight hits over61-31nnlngs
and theBrewersgotmaJorcontribu·

.
CINCINNATI (AP) -

Quarter·
back Ken Anderson has signed a
nev.r contract with the Cincinnati
Bengats that may carry him
tlmiugh his career In pro football . ·
Anderson, who had two years to
run .on his present contract, has
sign~ a !our-year pact, according
to M;lke Brown, assistant genetal
manager, Wednesday.
Terms of the contract with the
AU-Pro player were not disclosed.
Andl!rson's 1982 salary was more
than: $J)),OOJ, accorrltng to The
Cincinnati Enquirer.
"It's a substantial contract ...
We're both satisfied," Brown said.
Anderson, 34, has sald he hQpes to
play · another four or five years
before becoming a fulltlrne
attorney.

Brewers 6, Rangers 2

lnfonnalional packets
Informational packets are avaUable to any man attending Southern
Hlgh School or Junior high that Is
Interested In playing football this
'fall.
'The packet contains a letter, copy'
of the schedules, Insurance Information and a parental-consent physical
examination form.
Any Interested student who needs
a packet should contactthecoaches.
At the high school, cajl Bill Porter,
949-2009, Darrell Dugan, 949-2'7!i8,
Ron Clark, 949-2481 or Bob Johnson,

949-3023.
At the junior high school, call Bill
Hoback, 949-2422, or Marty Morartty. 949-2450.

Uons from subs Marshall Edwards
(an RBI single) and Bill Schroeder,
whose seventh-Inning RBI trlple
was his first major league hit.
Royal&lt;! 5, lllue Jays 4
At Kansas City, George Brett had
a single, doubleandtrlpleandroolde
Pat Sheridan collected three hits as
the Royals handed the Blue Jays
their first loss In six games since the
AU-Star break. Winner Larljl Gura
went six innings to hike his career
record against Toronto to 11·2. Dim
Quisenberry pitched the final three
Innings for his 21st save, tnps In the
majors.
Brett's leadoff single In the sixth
off Jim Clancy trlggered a three-run
rally that gave the Royals a 5-3 lead.
Oriole~&amp;, A's2
At Baltimore, Cal Rlpken Jr.
blasted a grand slam home run In
the fourth and Benny Ayala hit a solo
homer In theetghth.ltwas the fourth
victoljl In a row for Baltimore and
the fourth straight setback for the
A's.Rlpkenbeltedhissecondcareer
grandslam and his 14thhomeruno!
the season off loser Tim Conroy.
Storm Davis, who allowed eight hits
and two runs ln.slx innings, was the
winner.
Twins 6, Yankees 1
At Minnesota, Ken Schrom scat·
tered 10 hits In 8 2·3 Innings and
out.dueled Ron Guidry, who had
been sidelined since June 22 with
back spasms and suffered hiS third
loss In 16 career·declslons agairu.t
Minnesota. Tom Brunansky, hitting
.199 before the game, had a douband
three singles for the Twins, whlle
John Castlno had three hils and
drove In two runs. Ron Washington
also had two RBis.
Marlneni 6, Red sOx 4
At Boston, JlrnBeattteworkedout
of bases-loaded jams In the fourth
and flfth lrullngs en route to his
fourth consecutive vlctoiy. Beattie
surrendered a two-run homer to
Carl Yastrzemskt In the second
Inning and wM hurt by poor defense
·when the Red Sox scored single runs
In the fourth and fifth. After getting
out of the bases-loaded Jams, he put
down a threat In the sixth when the
Red Sox put runners on first and
third with none out and !alled to
score. RlckYNelsonandSplkeOwen
homered for Seattle, Owen's!lrst In
the~jors.

were:
Susie Thompson, low gross; Joan
Chllds, low net; Garen Schneider,
low putts; Maxine Gasklll, low gross
for nine holes. Barb Shuler was
given a prize for chipping in the hole
on num~r five.

his eighth save.
Natlo!tal League home nm leader
Darren Evans had blasted his 21st
andJackCiarkhlthls14tbtobelpthe
Giants wipe out a ~ de!lcjt.
Plldre8 5, Cub8 4
In San Diego, SteVe Garvey
singled In two runs In the third and
victoljl·starved Tim lDUar won for

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Cincinnati at Phlladelphht (nl
New York at Hauaton (nl
PtttsbuWlat SM 01(110 tn )

!•
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':

PHONE 992-6658
205 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, OH.

tn)

~ Pm:9:
(Bystrom .Ul ~n1 ·

(

Both Doctors Are Now Welcoming New Patients.

~!I)

.\tlanta

••j

OFFICE HOURS WILL BE EXPANDED TO MONDAY THRU
SATURDAY BY APPOINTMENT. .

(nl

CWIIIM!I IPuleO J..t ) at NPW York

''
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WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH HIM IN THE PRACTICE OF

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GET UP TO $30 IN WRANGLER COUPONS
1. Buy 3. 4 or 5 Wrangler jeans .

Ptttsbul1tll tMcWIIIarns S.M at san

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"We're doing what we think we :
have to do to have a compatable ::
coaching staff," Brown said.
•·

r~i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
..

THURSDAY, JULY
14th-SATURDAY, JULY 16th
.

.ll'l ' 15

..,..,.,... GIIDtll

I

evidence
at the
tlme of
trlal." 1983
'The sult
listed
Infante's
salary ~ $!l),OOJ - an amount

the Bengals' top policy diScussions.

invites you to

'

San Dk&gt;Mu 5, Chic~ 4
St. LoWs 6, Los Anaft'S 5

*LARRY D. KENNEDY DDS*·

fired oaenstve coorrllnator Lindy
Infante · on Wednesday aSking
unspecified damages because Jn.
!ante had taken a head coaching Job
In the Untied States Football
League.
'The sult, flled In HamUton County
Coriunon Pleaji Court, alleged that
Infante disrupted the Bengals 1983
traln!ngprogrambycausingthem
to lose his services one week'before
theNatlona!FootballLeagueclub's
summer training camp begins.
"'The monetary amount of the
damages ... cannotbeascertatnedat
this tlme;" the sult satd. "But such
damages as well as all other
damagesresultlngtotheBengalsby
reason of defendant's breach of his
contract... will be established by the

However, Brown said Wednesday
that would be "an Intolerable
situation." He likened it tohavtng"a
fox In the henhouse" - a future
coach of a rlvalleague sitting In on

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

10~

WoW10s'ay'1 0.......
Plttsbl!'Rh 7, San Fr8l'K'ilro 6
Onctnnatl 3, NE'W York 1
Atlanta 5. Phfladl&gt;lphla 2
Hwston 9, Morireal 4

'

IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT

1
1
31h

~

"'., "

..

GB

-

47

.....,.IIIVI!ION

Allanla

STATE ·

General Manager Paul Brown
clearly was not willing to part with
without a battle.
"He's been on the payroll since
last January, then when It's about
time to go to the meat of the work,
he's not here," Brown said.
Assistant general manager Mike
Brown, who ts a lawyer, explained
theclub'sreasonforsulnglnfante.
"I think we've been damaged In
thesensethatwepatdhlrntora
contribution he'snotgolngtobeable
to make because of the breach of
contract," he sald.
Infante revealed Tuesday that he
hadagreedtobecomeheadcoacho!
the USFL expansion team
Jacksonville, F1a., next January.
Buthesaldhewouldremalnwlththe
Bengats through Jan . 31, when his
Bengats contract expires.

nat! Bengals tiled a lawsuit againSt

SAVE -20°/o ON
WRANGLER JEANS

Oakland at Boat~, tnt
CaliJomia at BaltimOre. tnl
Kansa CitY at CICYe!W, 1n1
Texas at New York. tnl
Mlflllt"SSta at Mlllonulw, 1nl
Toronto at~. In!
Detmlt at SPatt'e, tn )
N.\TIONt\1. IBAGVE

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MAIL SUBSCRIPXIONS

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guanl; Sift Getril&gt;. cefUl"r and Stew
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tor an wdk'IOIIecl lB dralt ~.

Decrolt IMOITis "-Hl at Sf-atilt&gt; IAbboU
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No subscrtprtons by man permitted In
towns whei'e home carr-ier service Is
available.

1'(,.

1100,

nwn HJ, tnJ

The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
month.

Phlllles 2

In Phlladelphla, roolde Craig
McMurtiy pitched a six-hitter and
Bob Horner's basi!s-toaded double
sparked a four-run eighth Inning as
Atlanta defeated the Phllltes.
McMurlry, 1().5, whii has more .
victories than any other roolde
pitcher In the majors, struck outlive
and walked three.
Carlton, 9-10, Improved his
career-leading total to 3,58!l with his
seven strlkeouts. The left·hander
also walked one.
A wlld throw by Carlton on a
squeeze play allowed the first
Atlanta run to score In the eighth
before Horner knocked In threeruns
with his double oa reliever AI
Holland to give the Bravesa5'1lead.
Plra&amp;es 7, Glantl\6
In San Francisco, consecutive
tw!Hlllt home runs in the ninth
Inning by Johnny Ray and Mike
Easler lltted Pittsburgh over the
Gtants.The homers carne off reliever Greg Minton, 2-6, with the
Giants leading 6-5 and the Pirates

•.f!W ' 71-!1

42
49

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Tex.as IHqh 7·71 111 New Y&lt;rk tftaw.
)loy a.'!'), tn)
Mtf\Jie5CtA tWUiiams ~91 at MUwa1.1kee
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TOI'1JIIto ILeal 9-al at Cblcqo 1K~·

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New York

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CINCINNATI (AP)"-TheClncln·

CHICAGO BE:.AR.S--Siirne Noo h Jack·

WLPct.GI
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One Week .......... ............ .... ..... ..$1.00
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SEASON LONG ON

' ' dPN.

1\MDM:AN IJIAGUE

l
J

S~n~inel _

The Dail_y

......liM!_

, Byfte,t,

j

Angry Bengals file suit against Infante

/

Rft'aik!d Brad Havml, phchlor, rrun
1«1o d the lnt~~m~aUonal Le~.
POOI'ILU.I.
,..._. Foalbd .......

Majon

POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Daily Sentlnel,lfl ...:Ourt St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4~769.

RillS aood lllu JUt, II

WEEKEND SPECIALS AT
THE MEIGS INN

'.

Member: The Associated Press, Inla nd Dally Press Assoclaton and .the
American Newspaper Publisher!! Association, National Advertising Representative, Branham Newspaper Sal~s,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.

\\llnlmum depooitii.OOO.

River Downs results
'." ·ciNCINNATI (AP) - Captain
Key, ridden by Antonio Costa, hung
on for a two-length vtctoljl Wedneday In the$4,600featured ninth race
at River Downs andpatd$7.40,$3.!rl
and$3.
'The winning tlme for the mile and
70 yards was 1: 462·5.
Lord Magic finished second, $4.60
and $2.80, and the show horse WM
. Red's Way, $3.60.
,
1be tJ1fecta comblnatlonot1-6-2tn
the10thracepald$110.70. Thecrowd
of 3,a53 bet $424,602.

llnlve~ 5,

Manny Sannlento, 3-3, got at! the
hook to gain the VIctory with Kent
Teilulve pltchz e ninth Inning to get

Scoreboard ...

•
•

the !li-st time In more than three
weeks wtth late rel.le! help M the
Padres defeated Ch!caao.

Campatflf on al3.000 ftpollit.

Ladies golf outing
Jay Mar Ladies Day was held on
Tuesday, July 12 at 9 a.m. with 22
ladies attending.
Plans were made for the club's
!nvltatlonal, which will be held on
Aug.2.
Eighteen hole winners for the day

!larn~throwlng best, Nolan J'l,yan
continues to burn up the National
League.
Pitching what he called a sub-par
game, the streaking R,yan won for
the eighth straight time Wednesday
night as the HoustonAst1'06whlpped
the Montreal Expos 94.
"It was !ofh!nate that I had nine
runs to work with," saki Ryan after
Improving his record to 9-1, the best
start o!his~areer. "I had good stuff,
but I did nothing with lt. My fastballs
were In bad areas and they are a
good fastball-hitting team."
Ryan pitched eight 1nnlngs and
struck qut five to boost his career
strlkeout mark to 3,578. It kept him
four behind Phlladelphia's Steve
Carlton, who struck out seven
Wednesday night ·In a 5-2 loss to
Atlimta.
lit other National League games,
it was Pittsburgh 7, SanFranclsco6;
Clnclnnati3,NewYork1; SanDiego
5, Chicago 4 and St. Louts 6, Los
Angeles5.
.
Ryan gave up home runs to Tim
WallacH and Andre Dawson before
getting relief help In the njnth !rom
Bill Dawley.
The Astros won their seventh
game In thelasteightwtththehelpof
roolde catcher George Bjorkman,
who drove In five runs.
Bjorlatw.n, who was playing on
the Astros' Double A aaruate In
Columbus, Ga., a month ago, hlthis
first major-league home run, a
three-run shot In the seventh, and
added two RBis.

dawn to their last out.

The Daily Sentinei.....,.Page-5

...

Ryan wins. despite off night
By •4 -xiew Pft8l
Even When be bn't at his

•

•

,,

..
'•_j

�I

PomenYf

Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

1983 Second An~mal Middleport Pony Tournament
July 14-17 at General Hartinger Park
ALBANY
(6)

SYRACUSE

ST. ILOO

(I )
THURS. 6:00
EASTERN

,RUTLAND

(3)

(8)
SAT. 3:00
BIDWELL

(5)

(9)

I
SAT. 5:00

(4)

I

(II)

CORNING

&lt;2l
THURS. 8•30
RACINE

(7)

SAT. 1:00
NEW HAVEN

6
. (10)
SAT. 7:00
WINNER GAME 8
WINNER GAME

WINNER GAME 10
.,

SUN. 12:00 (13)

WINNER GAME I3
'

WINNER GAME 9

(16)

.

(11)

WINNER GAME 11

SAT. 9:00
WINNER GAME

SUN. 6:00
CHAMPIONSHIP

7
LOSER GAM.E 13

LOSER GAME 10

SUN. 4:00 (15)

SUN . 2:00 (14) .
LOSER GAME 1l

WINNER GAME 14

WINNER GAME 15
LOSER GAME 15

-----------IF lST LOST

Doctor takes center stage at game
ELYRIA, Ohio (AP) - Dr.
Robert McFarland, a coach-turnedphysician who made a success of
both careers, 'takes center stage
Saturday night at the Lorain County
AU-Star High School football game.
The game is dedicated to McFarland, who probably doctored some
or the players, and maybe some of
their parents. It is sponsored by the
American Cancer Society, stalwart
enemy of !he disease that has forced
McFarland to curtaU his practice at
Oberlin Cllnic.
·McFarland, a general prac titioner at Oberlin Clinic, said he wUI
step down next fall as team
physician for Elyrta CathoUc High
SChool, a job he took for free when
his chUdren enroUed there. He has
not worked since cancer surgery In
April but plans toresumepractlceat
the clinic on a reduced scale In
September.
McFarland joined the clinic In
1963 soon after it opened. Six years
earUer he had been Coach McFarland to students at Olentangy High
School in Delaware County, a job he
took after getting a degree In
physical education at Ohio Wesleyan University , McFarland had
starred in footbaU and basketbaU at
Newcomerstown In the early 1940s
and had a standout playing career at
Ohio Wesley'!". He was later named

to its hall of fame.

"As a kid I always wanted to he a
coach," he said. "All the way
through high school and coUege, I
played on good teams, but they were
never undefeated.'' He wanted a
winner.
That came at Olentangy High,
.where teams started winning after
he showed up. In his 4 seasons,
1954-57, the school pOsted II -31·2-1
footbaU record. His 19S6 and 1!157
teamilwereundefeatedandMcFar·
land felt it was time to move on.
"In the back of my mind I was
thinking I'd Uke to try medlclne.
Through my coaching I got to know
several doctors weD and admired
them. If I could have stayed as a
coach I would have been happy, but
society won't let you," he recalled
recently. "People expect you to
advance and I saw that eventuaUy
coaching might turn Into admlnls·
!ration work.''
So in 1956, at the age~ 31 and with
two chUdren, he decided to switch
careers. A year later, after some
makeup work at Ohio Wesleyan,
McFarland moved his farnlly to
Cleveland to attend Western Reserve University.
Five years later, at age36, coach
McFarland became Dr. McFarland, a general practitioner at
Oberlln CUnic. A couple of years

*lADIES' and GIRLS SHORTS

later he worked with another
physician to start a free Oberlln
Cllnlc service supplying doctors to
area high school teams. He also
served as one of the Oberlin team
physic1ans tor 10 years.
McFarland is due to be released
!rom Cleveland C11n1c Saturday In
plenty of time to get to the AU-star
game being played in his honor.

WASHINGI'ON · (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan has awarded the
Presldentlal Citizens Medal posthumously to Kansas City Chiefs
football player Joe Delaney, who
died trying to save three children
from drowning.
Delaney, 24, drowned June 29 at
Monroe, La. The citation praises
him for making "the ultimate
sacrlflce by placing the Uvesofthree
chUdren above regard for his own
safety.''
Delaney plunged Into a pubUc
park pond to save three boys who
were floundering. One of the
chUdren, a 1&gt;-year-old, scrambled to
safety but Delaney and twoll-yearold boys died.
On Wednesday, the White House
said the medal will be presented on
Reagan's behaH by Vice President
George Bush on Friday.
Carolyn Delaney, the widow, and
Eunice Kennon, Delaney's mother,
wUI accept the medal. ·
"It's real nice that they think of
Joe as a hero," said his widow when
contacted about the citation. "I'm
real grateful.''
The medal was established In 1969
by an executive order to recognize
"exemplary deeds of service for the
country or to fellow citizens."
The first recipient of the medal
was Pittsburgh Pirates basebaU
player Roberto Clemente, who died
In a plane crash Dec 31, 1972. It was
presented posthumously by Presl·
dent Richard Nixon In 1973.

•

"Basic Is Seautlful ,'' is the theme
of the Ohio Association or Garden
Clubs' annual convention to be held
August 2, 3 and 4 at Otterbein
Collewe campus, WestelVIlle, Ohio.
Tuesday evening speaker will be
Mrs. Edwin (Jean) Cope of Tlpp
City, Ohio. A horticulturist and
artistic designer, Mrs. Cope's topic
wUI ,be "WUllamsburg and Other
Period Designs.''
Wednesday evening, Wllllam
Hendricks, Vice P resident and
General Manager of Lake Coun ty
Nursery Exchange, a 700 acre
nursery located in Perry, Ohio, wUI

=====:::

~RIST

A party was held recently
honorlng Frank H. Krautter on his
35th birthday, given by his daugh-

'

$} 89

•

Jennifer .Ebersbach
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Ebersbach
are announcing tile birth of their
daughter, Jennifer Lynn, May 29
weJghlng seven pounds seven and
one-half ounces and was
Inches
io~
'
Maternal grandparents are•Mrs.
Betty Imboden and the late Calvin
Imboden of Pomeroy. Paternal
graridparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ell
White of Pomeroy. Paternal greatgraiadparent 1s Mrs. Freda Krautter l'f Pomeroy.

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•ONE GROUP SUMMER TOPS

The visitors were impressed with
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the country side and the !rlendU·
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The group of ladles will he
traveling next to Washington, D.C.,
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CREAM

by ·~1~1\\.cAn..

'I' I\'"I
,,,,,, . . u,,
,
{1'1'11 I" '

more.

•
VISiting the Mar-Pat !ann in
Syr.cuse (formerly the Eller .
Roush fann) Saturday afternoon
we.i ladies from South Amerlca on .
their first visit to the United States.
Mrs. Clella careaga of General
Plco, Argentina, Miss Hebe Mollns
of i3ahla Blanca, Argentina. Mooica ' careaga of Bahia Blanco,
Argentina, Carmen GalarceofVina
de ·· Mar, ChUe, and Nohema
.AstjlbuargO of SantiaiJo, ChUe were
lhe ·guests of Marj6rte Durst, the
present owner of Mar-Pat !ann.
Carmen Gala.Ce is ,a teacher at
Ohio State Unblerslty and Durst is
one of her, students.

'.

84

for Men

VALUE -WARRANTY-PRICE- WE'VE GOT IT ~LL!

S6uth Am~ricaris visit in Meigs~

4 oz.
Reg . *5.16

The descendants or A. M. and
Mary Grady held their reunion July
3 at Portland Park.
Those attend.lng were: Manuel
a nd Hazel Grady of Belpre: Roscoe
and Rachel Knlglit of Elizabeth ,
W.Va.; Richard and Ricky Myers
of New Martinsville, W.Va. ; David,
Suzie, Aaron and Adam Stull of
Parkersburg, W.Va .; Sam, Debby,
Keith, Ryan a nd Shanna Scarberry,
Montrose, W.Va.; Emma Scarberry and ·Rusty of New Haven,
W.Va.; Debbie Reed Plue and
Joshua of La(ayette, Ind.
Betty Reed of Lafayette, Ind.;
Luda, Mark, Jeremy, and Ada m
Arnott of Belpre; UUlan Weese and
Melanie or .Racine; Jean and Don
Kramer of Columbus; Tracy
Weese .Casto of Racine; Joe
Hensley of Racine: Tara Vest of
Columbus; Hamson, Ruth a nd
Penny Smith of Racine; Eugene,
Pam and Toni Smith of Tennessee;
Rtck, Terrl, Ricky , Randy and
Bobby of Rutland; Carroll and
Ire ne Smith of Belpre; Sherry
Smith of Parkersburg, W,Va.; Kim
and Jimmy Cumberledge of Ravenswood, W.Va.; Jim , Eldeana,
Usa and Pam Smith of Ormond
Beach, Fla.: Mary, Tony and
Donna Weedo of Ormond Beach,
Fla.; Cunis, Sandra, Christie, and
Brlan Smith of J ane Lew, W.Va.;
Scottie and Esther Smith _of Chester; Connie and Jennifer Ralston of
Chillicothe, and Shirley Daugherty

Shoes

r~aft~~~~1.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~o~f;P~ar~ke;r;s~bur~g~,W~.V~a~.;;:;;;:;;;:;:;;;:;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;

Ohio University
College of
Education
is offering's a workshop
In
teaching classroom crafts entitled
Educational Materlals and Crafts
for the Classroom. The worl&lt;shop Is
being offered July 18 to 22 and July
25 to 29.
The workshop can help a teacher
gain a certification renewal or get a
' Dfth year pay scale benefit. Anyone
who Is Involved with children will '
Dnd this course benefiCial. Nursery
schools, babysltters, and parents
· wUl find the knowledge gained at
this Workshop extremely useful.
The workshop will consist of:
puzzle making, wood working,
matting and framing, candle making, clay and pottery and much

•

1

Grady reunion held

Crafts for teachers set for OU

••

WHITMAN'S SAMPLER
1 Po~nd
·
$3. 89
Reg. 5.40

Dietz, Jr., 1511 Forestview Dr. ,
Vermlltpn, Ohio 4400, phone (216)
967-6571.

focuses in on such topics as :
Successful Paren.ting, Hospital,
Prayer, Stress, Time Management,
Chemical Dependency and m any
other mini-sessions.
Women Anew Invites all ladles to
attend this year's retreat scheduled
for Oct. 28, 29, 00 at the Hyatt
Regency at Ohio Center, Columbus.
The main speaker wUI he Joyce
Landorf, author, nationally known
speaker, mother and wife of
banker, Richard Landorf. The
musical features wUI be a concert
by recording artists, Mlles and
Webb, along with recording artist
Judy Chenoweth. For more Information contac t Mrs . Goegleln, 145
Franklin Ave., Athens, Ohio 45701,
(614) 592-2295, home, or (614)
592-3051, office.

Eb er·sbach bt·-h

Or

oz. ,__

Mrs. Barbara Goeglein of Athens

hlis accepted the position of Retreat

Representaliv~ for the state of Ohio
for Women Anew Inc.
ter, Amy.
W
An
ns1
f
Attendlngwerehiswlfe,Judy, his
omen
ew co sts o oonfatber, Harry Krautter, his mother, denominational Chrlstlan women
Leona Krautter, his mother-in-law, ~ho m~t one !"eekend a year to
Betty Imboden, Joe Imboden, Mike learn moreoftheLordJesusChrlst,
Hudson, Randy, Earline and Jet'l: , to share with other women wllat
nlfeor Ebersbach, Frances Dickens• Christ has done In their lives, and to
and son, Keith .
.
Introduce 1111[ reality .of Christ to
Also sending birthday greetiJigs those who may be seeking God.
wer,e Nancy Rich and Richie Mrs. Goeglein Is a Branch ManArnold Mike Imboden and Joho ager, a homemaker, and moth~.
Imbod'
·
Her husband, Fred, is a Loan
Officer at Leader Mortgage.
, en.
Shehasbeenappolntedtoapprlse
f I;
Ol!lo women of the spirltual,
emotional, and· social value of a
retreat such as Women Anew.
This retreat is designed to meet
•
the needs of the modern woman and
"-;

RIOPAN PLUS
12

speak on the subject "Cacti and
Succulents From Around the
World."
AI Thursday 's luncheon , Mrs .
Pat Ioeimbach, VermUlon. Ohio, in
a humorous manner will speak on
"Reflections of a Farm Wife."
A flower show entitled, "Basic Is
Beautiful," wUl carry out the
convention there. featuring adult
and junior Al11stlc and Horticulture
exhibit s.
·
Reservations are due by July Lq,
For reservations and further information, contact Mrs. William

Local resident takes state position

Fra_nk Krautter

RIOPAN

Anti-Gas
Fast Relief

j

Garden clubs plan state conventton

won with a four-round total of Z79,
5-under-par.
In 1!161 Arnold Palmer won the
tltlehereandwasrlgh\ onparwlth
284. Palmer, 53, said; "It's not the
golf course it used to be. They have
changed it. It will level up_the

muchdeeper,andthere'sgolngU&gt;be r;com::pe::ti:to:rs:.':'
a lot of trouble for those who hit otf
line. Th1s tournament 1s really wide
Your "Extra Touch"
•
open. "
Florist Since 1957
LeeTrevlno, whowonthe1mtille
atBlrkdale, said, "Theroughlsvery
deep beside some of the fairways,"
Trevino said. "Those who hit three
feet off nne are going to be just as
PH. 992-2644
badly penalized as those who are 50
feetoffllne.Idon'tthlnkll'sfalr."
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
The last time the Brltlsh Open was
Your FTD Florist
played at Blrkdale, Johnny MWer

Delaney
honored

I

I

ButWa!s911saidRoyaiBirkdale1s
a different golf course from the last
tlmehe playedltln1976.
"Theyhaveequallzedit," Watsim
said. "The greensaremorespongy.
The fairways are narrow, as they
always were, but the rough is so

PEANUTS ....... !~?~~ $1 39_

MIDDLEPORT
FRI. 8:30
MASON

SOU'lliPORT, England (AP)As usual, the weather was a major
topicatthestartoftheBrtttshOpen.
This time, however, the 1l!O
golfers were talking about the heat
-the hottest weather in this part of
Englandformorethana100years-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7 · ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Krautter

The deep rough beside the narrow r~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
fairways of the 6,968-yard, par 71
RoyaiBirkdalecoursewasthemost
controverslal factor of the 1l2th
Brltish Open which began today.
· Watson said some of the rough Is
two feet dl!ep, and some-of it is close
to the greens.
Watson and . Seve BaUesteros
were joint f;lvorltes for the $465,txXl
FISHER-DRY ROASTED
· tournament. The pot of gold for the
winner ts SliO,OOJ
The bookies offered odds of 11 tO 2
against Watson and Ballesteros.
Ray Floyd and three-time winner
Jack Nicklaus were at 16 to 1, Ben
Crenshaw 00 to 1, Craig Stadler 22 to
1 and Larry Nelson and Nick Faldo
Antacid
25 tol

GALLIPOLIS
SAT. 9:00
POMEROY

'f!l!mel.y, July 14, 1983

Weather British Open topic
. rather than the cold, wind and rain
which often provides the setting for
this midsummer tournament.
" It' the wind stays quiet like this,
the tournament Is going to be won
with a score of12 or 13 under par,"
said defending champion Tom
Watson, who was trying to win the
title for the fifth time.
'If there is a wind, then pick a
number. Think of aU that rough,
around the gree.IS and the tricks it Is
going to play with fonn.' '

(10)

FRI . 6:00
HARRISONVILLE

Thuncmy, July 14, 1983

tn -car r.oncert hall

••

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SEE OUR
LINE OF
CAR

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•••

�The Daily

By The Bend

-.-

Attendance at all services July 10
at the Free Methodist Church was
103. Pastor MWer has been assigned for another year. All
members Of the church, neighbors ·
anti aU community are etad the
inor-tpp has been Jllld. A celebra·
tlon wUl be held in the near future.
Mrs. Grace Richardson, Athens.
Mrs. Audley Hayes, Shade, visited
recently with Mrs. Della Stahl .
Mrs. N!!llie Cox Is a patient ·in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
. Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Lewis.
Florifla, called on friends recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Michaels,
Galion, Ohio called on Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Shaefer recently .
Roy Rowen, who has been very
w, iS improved.
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry,
Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt
Schaefer, Mt. Vernon, Ohio, John
Stahl, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story and
son, John Story. had a picnic dinner
at the home of the Storys celebrating the· birthday of Mrs. Norman
Schaefer. Mr. Schaefer was also at
the picnic.
·
Mrs. Amber Lohn, Ponieory, was
dinner guest nf Mrs. Emma Fox
recently.
Mark Talley of Texas. grandson
of Mrs. Bertha Parker, received the.
Kellum Scholarship of $!100. The
award is determiDed by academic
achievement. Talley also received
a General Ml!ltary Course Ribbon .

Thursday; July 14, 1983
Page 8

"
"

..

New ministers arrive for service in Meigs County. _
.

F olloWing the West Ohio Annual
COnference of the United Methodist
Church Jive new ministers mm·ed
into service In the Meigs Cooperative P arish. A sixth. J ames Corbitt,
had been assigned ear lier to the
Pomeroy Church to take the place
of the late Raben McGee.
· Don Archer. Non heast Clus ter, is
working toward his Master of
Diviinlty degree. expecting to grad·
uate in May, 19134 from ME ·
THESCO, Delaware.
A na tive of Wood County. W.Va ..
he: graduated from Parkersburg
South High School and Glenville
State College. In his flhh yea r a s a
pastor, his previous appointm ents
have included Auburn, W. Va.
ctiarge and Man ly UM C in
Portsmouth.
_
T he Archers wlli soon be nnoviing

from the present 1\Jppers Plains
parsonage to a new l ohe in the
Chester area.
James C. Corbitt. PomerO)'. has
returned to · Meigs County after
ser.'ing the Stoutsv ille charge for
two years. Having entered the
m iniStry in 1972, he previously
served the Bartlett charge and the
Rock Spr ings. Enterprise. . a nd
F latwoods Churches. He was ordained a deacon by the Annual
Conference in I~ and an elder in
1983.
He brings· many experiences to
the minist ry. He spent three and
one-half years in the U. S. Marine
Corps. being diScharged in 1961.
Following service. among other
jobe he worked in Industry as a
chemical operator a nd as a !Ire and
safety technician .

Calendar
11-IURSDAY
: RACINE - Annual picnic of
Racine PastOfficersOubwUI be
held Thursday, July 14, at the
tiome of Mr: and Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, Pomeroy. A covered
&lt;!Ish dinner will be served at 6
p.m .
: RACINE -:.... Annual picnic of
{!Heine Past Otf!cers Club will
be held Thursday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
Pomeroy. A covered dish dinner
will be served at 6 p.m.

FRIDAY
(:OLUMBIA TWP. - · The
Board of Trustees of Columbia

Township will meet In special
session Friday at 8 p.m . at the
township building.

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Men's
Fellowship organization of the
Meigs County Churches of Christ
will meet at the Pomeroy Church
of ChriSt July 18 at 7:30p.m .

Happenings
Songfest planned

Free clothing day

A songfest will be held July 17 at2
CHESHIRE - The Gaiiia ·
p.m. at the. Rock Springs United
Mei
gs Co mmun ity Action
MethodiSt Church. Performing wUi
be "Harmony," the "Revelators," Agency will hold it s free clothing
day for low income persons on
and "Heaven Bound Four."
Friday from 9 a .m . until noon.
The agency's clothing bank Is
now located In the old high
school
building in Cheshire.
RUTLAND - Dance Friday
at Rutland Civic Center from 8
p.m. to 11 p.m. Music by Itomic
Sounds. Proceeds will go to
The Neville reunion will be held in
Fellowship of Christian Ath· Krodel Park in Pt. Pleasant on July
letes. Admission Is $2 single and 30 at 10 a.m . .Eve~·~ne iS welcome
$3 couple.
and should bring their own food.

Rutland dance set

Neville reunion

Picnic given for new
ministers of churches
Five new ministers ·and one
returning minister and their !ami·
lies were welcomed when the Meigs
United Methodist Cooperative Parish held its annual picnic at Royal
Oak Park Sunday afternoon. Table
grace was by the Rev. Carl Hicks.
During a brief program by Fay
Sauer, director. which followed the
meal, gifts were presented to the
miniSters by Kermit Walton, prestdent of the County Council on
Ministries, governing body or the
Parish.
Honored were Andy and Darcy
Rubenking and month-old daughter, Amy, of the Rutland charge;
Steven Nelson of the Syracuse
charge; Don and Sandy Archer of ·
the Northeast cluster; and Jim and
Kathy Corbitt of the Pomeroy
church.' Unable to be present were
Paul and Brenda McGuire and
three-year-(Jjd son, Alan, of the
Southern Cluster No. 2 and Orville
and Sarah White of the Morning
Star/ Morse Chapel charge.
A program of gospel music was

presented by the new ministers who
were joined by Rev . Hicks. they
were accompanied by Jim Corbitt.
guitarist. Games were played the
remainder of the afternoon.
Registering at the picnic were
Helen Maag, June Sayre, Crystal
Rayburn. Jonathan Rayburn, Rosoe Hailon, Eva Hollon, Frances
Roberts. Lois !hie, Kathy Ihle, J . A.
Smith, •Dorothy E . Smith, Emil G.
Eynon, Pauline Eynon, Anita Gayle
Collins. RebecCa Lea Coiiins, Don
Archer, Sandy Archer. Steve Nei·
son, Andy Rubenking, Darcy Rubenking, Amy Lynn Rubenking,
Donna !hie, Paul !hie, David !hie,
J ohn Rice. Anna Rice, James
Corbin, Kathy Corbitt, Carl E .
Hicks, Maxine Hicks. Pauline
Roush, Jennie Roush, Kermit
Wa lton, Jane Walton. Mildred !hie,
Vernon Nease, Helen Nease, Stan·
ley Nease. Alfred Yeauger, Hilda
Yeauger, David Rice, John W.
Rice. Mark Rice. Melissa Ihle and
F ay Sauer.

Born in 1938, Jim Is a gradu ate ol
Parkersburg High School. Glenville
State College and United Theological Seminary. Dayton.
Paul McGuire. Sout hern Cluster
No. 2. holds a B.S. degree in
E ducation and has taught for eight
years. He plans to enter Seminary
this fa ll. He has m any interests .
These include sports, both active
a nd passive. hunting and fishing.
He is also an EMT and will be
working with the Racine Squad.
McG uire believes that every age
group has its need - particularly
its need of a eating ministry. He
says, "ChriStianity is a way of life.
Theology, to be ·effective. mu st
more and more seek practical
a pplications."

orr.

Damewood, Denise Mora . Guests
attending were Mae Mora, Lucille
Smith, Martha Lee. Leona Machlr.
Usa Gaul, Errol Conroy, Roscoe
Hollon, Gregg Eblin. Richard
Mora. Jennifer and Jason Mora.

about getting started here In the
ministry. both on the charge and in
the cooperative parish. He appreciates the people and the love and
concern they have shown. They a re
"good folks," he said.
Andrew Rubenking , Rutla nd
Charge, calls Ogden. Iowa his
hometown, haviing spent his early
years there, having graduated
from Ogden High School. This year.
he graduated from Simpson College, Indianola , Iowa, a Methodist
institution, with a B.A. In religion.
He will be entering United
Theological SeminB.ry, Dayton, this
fall. He says he is excited about the
practical aspects of the ministry
here In the Cooperative Partsh,

Beaver family reunion held at Royal Oak Park
The Beaver reunion , which 100
attended. was held July 4 at Royal
Oaks Park.
The Rev. Ernest Bush read a
prayer befol"f a .potluck lunch.
PrlzJ's were awarded, and
winners were:
Mattie Hill, oldest lady , 80;
Russell Oine. oldest man, 76; Becky
Cline, youngest baby, nine months;
Rick and Annette Lucas, newest
martiedcouple, three months; Jolm
and Wanora Beaver, longest married couple, 45 years; and Mr. and
Mrs. Hili and fannily, traveling
farthest , Piano, Texas; and Rick
Cline, door prize.
Those alt&lt;ending were:
Charles and Helen Wolfe; Larry,

Linda, Larra and Jason Black;
Mattie Hill. Mike Wolfe Sr.; Joyce.
Paul and Mike Wolfe Jr.; J erry,
Mary , Nancy and Duane Hili; Vicky
Hill; Carl, Betty and Tammy Cline;
Gortne, David, Kathy Donna Cline
and Damian l-ang; Annette and
Rick Lucas; Paula, Richard, Molly
and Rick Cline.
Carol and Seva Cline; Grace,
Junior, Brad, John and Jay Holsln·
ger ; Kelly and Greg McAlamey;
Charles, Lots, Steve and Charles
Cline Jr.; Arnold, lone. Rocky and
Carol Hupp; Ralph and Katherine
Gillilan; Gina and Derek Javins;
Russell and Leona Cline; John and
Carolyn Beaver; Jo Ann, Tabitha
and AilSa Willford; Gloria Manuel,

Ron and BW Spurlock.
Daphne
Cremeans;
Palriciaand
andCrystal
Keith Smith;
Bea
Cline and Tony Forester; Sue,
Ryan, Matthew and Andrew Mar.
tin; Kathy James R .. c~ and
Becky Cline; Wlb McClain ; Mary
and Wlb Glllllan; Daniel F . Long;
Mildred and Jan Wlltlams; Shirley,
Diana and Lori Simpson; Allee
Balser; F1ossie and Ernest Bush;
Jim, Margaret and Darla Cline;
Charles. Nancy, Tina and Mlkkl
Hupp; Wanora and John Beaver:
Dwight Spencer; Tim and Linda
Glllllan ; John and Geneva Cline;
Vicky Gillilan; Philip HolSinger;
Janice and Willie Herdman.

eager to get started with visitation
and hopes to be able to work with llis
pariShioners In bulldlng up the
churches on the charge and strepg- '
thening the bond between U)em . HiS
particular church interests are · ~
church hiStory and evangelism,
and he prefers a semi-formal t}'ll!! ,
worship service. HiS hobbies are ·
painting and woodworking.
,:·
Orville White, Morning Sta:r, ·
Morse Chapel, iS a Pt. Pleasant ··
High School teacher who has been .,.
in the miniStry 10 years. He has ~
served Hickory Ohapel at Pt. ,
Pleasant and the Crown Oty
charge. He regrets that he wasn't ·:
called to the miniStry earlier. He ·
would h~ve gone that way rather
than into teaching. Hls twin ,
brother. Norville. Is a member of "
the- Tennessee Conference. His
outside interests are the outdoOrs ..
and travel.
·

r'ri~!~~~~r,i

The Human Resource council
fair convened at the Multipurpose
Center. Senior Citizens Hail. July 10
from H p.m . The folloWing agen·
cies were represented: Meigs
County Health Department. Amen·
can Cancer Society , Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Woodland Centers (Gallla-Meigs Mental Health
Center/ Speech and Heating), My
Sister's Place, Ohio Bureau of
Employment Setvlces, Senior Citi ·
zens. Humane Society, Salvation
Army, Library and O.V.A.L. , Ex·
tension Otfice, Family Planning,
Gallla Business College - Meigs
County Bmnch, and T.B. Clinic.
The total number of people
present was 82; or those. 23
completed evaluation fortn s (or 28
percent) .
The following is an a nalysis of the
statiStical tabulation of the evaluation forms:
Question No. 1 - What did you
like best: Responses: Blood pressure. 8, 34 percent; VIal of Life, 2, 9
percent; Library. 1. 4.3 percent;
Refreshments, 2, 8.6 percent;
Prizes, 2. 8.6 percent; Heating, 2. 9
percent; Everything, 3, 13 percent;
Extension Of!lce, 6, 26 percent;

Friendliness and willingness to
help, 2, 9 percent; TB test, 1, 4.3
percent; O.B.E .S .. 1, 4.3 percent;
Humane Society, 1, 4.3 percent .
Question No. 2 - What did you
learn? Responses: Library. 1. 4.3
percent; Vial of Life, 1, 4.3 percent;
Septic tank system and sewage
diSposal, 1, 4.3 percent: Clinics, l,
4.3 percent: Meigs County has team
work , 2, 8.6 percent; Watch my
health and take advantage or this
type of health 'fair. 2. 8.6 percent;
Everyone was friendly , 2, 8:6
. percent: Blood pressure, 4, 17
percent; How to check for cancer.
I. 4.3 percent; TB test, 1, 4.3
percent; Can get help when needed,
1, 4.3 percent; O.B.E.S., 1. t3
·percent; Hearing, 3. 13 percent;
Everything, 2, 8.6 pj!rcent ; No
response, 5, 22 percent
Question No. 3 - How old are
you? Responses: Under 18, 1, 4.3
percent; 18-00, 2, 8.6 percent; 30-ffi,
5, 21.7 percent; Over ffi. 15. 6.5.4
percent.
Question No. 4 - How did you
find out about the fair : Responses :
Friend. 6. 26 percent; Newspaper,
13. 57 percent; Other. 4. 17 percent.
Question No. 5 - Suggestions for

Mr. and Mrs. Mort of Chester
visited recently with their daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Creg
Eblin.

IMJWEQ MT&amp; $M
ALt 5e'A1$ 11.00

40M""'W MRr nE.SO.Y 12.00

{EICEPT)"RE11JRN OF THE JEDI"

L JULY 8thru 14_j
FtfiJift .... 1JrUIISDIY' ,

""
,.

..

--

A church choir was started J une
19 with Gertrude· Robinson as
leader. Other members Include
Thelma He nderson. J anice Pullins.
Doris Dillinger, and Nina Robinson .
Audrey Jean Spencer , Colum bus,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Art hur
Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swa rtz
visited Katie Sw~rtz, Athens .

Mr. and Mrs. Randy Koehl~•· and
two children, Morrhead, Ky .. ca lled
on Mr . a nd Mrs. Hobart Swartz.
Rec~nt visitors to the Parker·
Poole home were Edson Parker ,
Aurora, Colo.. Robet1 Schrader,
Fran kfort , Ky., Mr. and Mrs .•
Howard Parker, Mr. and Mrs,
Samu&lt;'l Michael, locaL

Carmel community news
Charles Way ne Bri nker of Carey, 'l'hey attended the Hartis reunion. , ·
William Carelton and daughters,
Ohio visited with reia lives and
Ang-ela
a nd J enny of Racine called'
friends over the weekend .
ho
m~ of E:un lc Brinker on"
a
t
the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Watson a nd
Friday
evening.
family of Kent , Ohio spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Edson
Mr. and Mrs. Att hurJoh nS!lnand ·
· da ug hter Sheryl caili'd at the home · ·
Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Har ris of of Mr. and Mrs . William Carel! on · ·
Springfield spent the weeKend With and fa mily of Racine on Saturday: ·
•
Mrs. Lula Circle and Verna C'lrctc.

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992-6669
•

~·

--

next year: Responses: Have it next
year, 1, 4.3 percent ; Advert_tse
before. 1. 4.3 percent; Include any
new resources, 1, 4.3 percent;
Continuefair,1, 4.3percent; Have a
hostess, 1, 4.3 percent; ~p it the
same for next year, 6, 26.6percent;
Have an eye test, 3, 13.2 percent; No
response, 9, 39.1 percent.
The next Human Resource meet·
tng Is scheduled for Tuesday. Sept . 6
from noon-1 p.m. at the East-West
Dining Room of the Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Lunc~ can be
purchased for $2 at the meeting

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news-----~--

July 4 holiday

jtn.

--·4524

The Daily Sentinei- Pas-9

Visiting for

-:·Mr. and Mrs. WIUlamJacobsand
:Mr. and Mrs. Bnlce Jacobs,
'Columbus, spent the weekend with
Mrs . . Tina Jacobs and other
relatives.
'Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire,
'Columbus and Mrs. Jeraldine
Ferguson and son, James Fergu.
son. visited SUnday with Mrs.
.Bertha Parker.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller,
pastor of the Ftw Methodist
Church, attended the church con·
terence at Mansfield. Also they had
a week's vacation and visited
relatives.

~

of

wolf pen .community news

: -Attendance at all services July 3

&amp;31 JACMSON P!KE·RT.36 WEST

ITOPS meets I Alfred community

Sunday School attendance June
Sandy Miller, the leader
the
26 was 43; church a ttendance. 40.
"Take Off Pounds Sensibly" organ!·
July 3 Sunday School attendance
zation in Rutland, announced that was 28; church attendance, 20.
the weekly best losers for the past
Attendance Sunday rmrning,
Church visitors Included Janice
two
weeks were Sharon Thacker.
June 19, a t tbe Free Methodist
Kestner , Steve Weber and children,
Sherr! D ar st and Ci nd y
Church was 99. Young people's
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost, and
Hartenbach.
choir members present were 15.
Kathy O vinee, Lancaster; Debbie
Runners-up were FranciS Hysell Ross, Parkersburg, W. Va .
The Sunshine Singers were at the
and Nancy Vance. Sharon Thacker
local church on Saturday Pvening
Janice Puiilns, Bible School
was the winner of the contest and director, reported that the Bible
recently.
was awarded $5.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Archer, ,
School expenses were ail paid but
Theclubmeetsevery1\Jesdayat6
Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
there was QO money left for next
p.m. at the Rutland Ovic Center.
year.
·
Richard Gilkey of West Virginia
called on Mr. and Mrs . Norman
Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Faye Countryman,
Greenfield, visited recently with
Mr. andMrs. Howard Thoma and Ea rl Watkins and fa mily of SandyMr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
Mrs. Iva Johnson were recent vilie, Ohio.
· Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Les Frank, Sara h
visited 'relatives recently in
Mrs.
Larry
Barr.
Mlch~Ue and -Beth, wereFourthofJulyvtsitors of
Columbus.
David of Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hanning and
Mrs. Vona Gillenwater, Rutland,
recently visited with Mrs. Della
Mr.
and Mrs.ofTom
Summerfield
·
and
daughters
Medina
returned Ronald.
. Mrs. John
Murphy, Peggy, and
Stahl.
home after spending several days Mrs. Iva Johnson were Fourth of
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell, JulyviSitorsofMr.andMrs. Joseph
Bertha Russell and other relatives. Evans and family of Racine and
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith were enjoyed barbecued chicken while
recent Sunday afternoon callers of · there.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of
Robbie H!il stayed with his
Kanauga .
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
Mr. and Mrs. Les Franlt, Sarah H!il at Racine a week and attended
Smith of Racine for the July 4
Beth, were recent Tuesday visitors Bible School at the local Methodist
holiday . weekend were Eugene,
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning and Church.
·
Pam and Toni Smith of Tennessee;
Ronald.
Mrs. Althea Ellington of Mary·
Rick, Terti, Ricky, Rand)- and
Sandra Sargent; Lots Thompson, land and Mrs. Lora Scarberry of
Robby Smith of Rutland; Carroll
~verly RDush and Janet Quivey Akron spent a week with Mr. and
and Irene Smith ol Ji!elpre; Sherry
spent a few days at Myrtle Beach Mrs. Burhl Wolte.
Smith of Parkersburg, W.Va.: Jim,
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McKinney.
Eldeana, LISII and Pam Smith of · Mr. and Mrs. William Reeves of Blliy and Virg!Iila of Scott Depot.
Ormond Beach, Fla.; Tony, Mary
Florida spent a few days with Mrs. W. Va. were recent dinner guests of
and Donna Weedo of Ormond
Dorothy Reeves and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush.
Beach, Fla.; Kenny, Maxine and Paul Darnell and Jeff .and Melissa.
Mrs. Debbie Wells. and son
Dale Smith of Letart, W. Va.:
Fourth of July visitors of Mrs. Dwight of New Matamoras, Mrs.
Curtis, Sandra, Christie and Brian
Dorothy Reeves were Mr. and Mrs. Rebecca Rogers and son Blake of
Smith of Jane Lew, W.va.: Scottie
Y{illlam Reeves, Mr. and Mrs. Georgia visited their parents, Mr.
and Esther Smith of Chester;
Robert Reeves and children. and and Mrs. Robert Montgomery.
Connie and Jennifer Ralston of Mr. and
Paul Dameii, Jeff and
Mrs . Winnie McKinney is sta ying
Clhllllcothe; Penny Smith of Ra·
Melissa.
with
Mr. and Mrs . Jim Cundiff
cine; Don and Marilyn Spires of
Carl Russeii and a friend of since her husband passed away .
Fremont; Gene and Pelgy Houda·
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. WOllam
shell ol P~eroy: Harold and
Russell, M!nersvllie, were holiday
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith,
Marte Grady of Naples, Fla.;
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mrs . Daniel Worley, Stacy , Daniel,
Debbie Reed Piue and Joshua Plue
Russell and Bertha Russell.
Iva Johnson and Mr. and Mrs.
of Lafayette, Ind.; Betty Reed of ·
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson, Doyle Knapp . Kevin and Charles
Lafayette, ·Inc.; Luda Arnott of Tommy, Tercy, were holiday wee- ,enloyed Pac Man cake and ice
Belpre; Wanda Powell of Racine;
kend visitors or Mr. and Mrs. John cream to celebrate Stacy's seventh
and Tara Vest of Columbus.
Slack and family and Mr. and Mrs. birthday June 25.

.ai: the Ftw Methodist Church was

Human resource fair releases survey

Chester UM picnic given
The annual picnic of the Chester
United MethodiSt Women was held
at the J. M. and Mildred Gaul
residence on July 7.
· There were 18 members and nine
gul!Sts present, reporting '11 sick
and shut·in callS for June. It ws
announced that a welcome dinner
will be held for the Rev. and Mrs.
Don Archer at Royal Oak Park.
6: 30p.m . on Saturday, July 16.
A fun day will be planned for
month of September.
Members attending were Da y·
lene Bahr, Clara Conroy, Mildred
Gaul. Eva Hollon, Altona KaJT,
Ruth Kar, Betty Lue Moore,
Kathryn Mora. Ada Morris, Ethel
Marie Probert, Betly Rows~~.
Bertha 5mlth, Kalllryn Wllldon.

Steven Nelson serves the Syra·
cuse Charge. HiS family lives in
Columbus. He iS the third son and
has a younger sister.
He gmdua ted from Asbury College with a BA in P sychology and a
minor In Christian Education . He
recently graduated from Asbury
Seminary with a major In Pastoral
Counseling and a minor in Christian
Education.
He has a special Interest In youth
ministry and hoi&gt;es to get more
youth Involved .in church-related
activities. HiS hobbies are . back·
packing, bicycling, reading, and
spar'; of a ll kinds. While at college,
he coached a women's Intramural
football team for thnee years.
Ne lson says he is really excited

Pomenly-Micldleport, Ohio

Laura! Cliff hap~~nings

Se~tinel

'

'

Th"'*y, July 14, 1913

Armstrong

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�Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

Thii!Sday, July 14, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

14, 1983

Ohi(jans already waiting in line for lower interest loans
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API- For the second time in
less than three months, Judy Schroer is SJX'nding her
days in a lawnchairoutsidea rearent rance to Buckeye
Federal Savings and Loan .
She and nine others are among a growing number or
Ohioans waiting in line at financial institutions in hopes
of obtaining a state-generated, lower-interest man gage loan.
Lenders will not begin to accept applic;llions for tllP
s ingle&lt;family loans until Wedlnesday.
Application s are taken on a first-come·. first-served
basis. At stake are fixed rate mortgage loans of 10.65
percent instead of the conventional rate of about 13
percent, a difference that cuts monthl.v paym ents
substantia lly.

She and her husband seek a $62,(XX) loan to buUd a
home. They hope to persuade some hiends and
relatives from out oftown to occasionally spell them In
the line.
"BelievPme It's no! exactly relaxingouthere," Mrs.
Schroer said from her lawn chair. "You have a lot of
noise, a lot of garbagP trucks. We don't even have
porta-potties rlght now, but wp'retcyingtoget them."
Gov. Rlchard Celeste and Lt. Gov. Myrl Shoemaker
paid a vlslt Wednesday to the nearly dozen peoplP
walling In line at the Buckeye Federal otflm.
Mrs. Schroer questioned them about a better way to
distrtbute the money than forcing people to CJilllp out
for days at a stretch.
.
"Well, I just t!Unk It could have been handled a lot
better. I don'tknow really bow, buttlltsiSklndofcrazy,

The Ohio Housing Finance Agency made $.lXl
million in loans available to 6.00J to 8.000 borrowers in
May. Another $105 million will be ava ll able In the new

series of loans.
It is the second tim&lt;' arou nd for Mrs. Schroer of
Columbus.
" I was number i2 when I went in the door the first
time and I'm still up for that one. I'm right on the
bubble; I'm then·ext one In line to get it.! thought !was
going to get one yesterday, " s he said.
MJ·s. Schroer, who holds her third place in line while
her husba nd. David, works, began her vigil Tuesday
morning. Her stay could be cut short if a buyer who
obtained a 9.98 percent loan in May is unable. to
complete the deal and a n equal amount of monpy
becomes available.

Business .Senices

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7

· Yard Sale

IU Mo•HIM&lt; ,_,.,.
Ul l u i -

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AND HOME MAINTENANCE

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'Storm Windows &amp; Doors

11 00

Public Notice

FREE ESTIMATES
20 Yoors Eq&gt;orlonce

· Public Notice

.WOIK qiJARANTEEO

We .;ould like to say a

HANDS UP - Nominees lor positions with the
Civil JUghts Commission are sworn In before a
confirmation bearing ol lbe Senate Judiciary
Committee Wednesday on Capitol Hill. From left are

. special "Thank You" to the
TUIII*S Plains Emergency
SqUid, the Slaff and
Doc:tors of Veterans Morial Hospital, Rev. and
Mrs. Carl Hicks. Ewi~
Funeral Home. and all our
wondetful friends and
nei&amp;hbors who helped or
touched our lives in our
time of grief.
Thank You
· Norman Baum Family

linda Chavez Gersten, nominated to be staff director,
and commission nominees Morris Abram, )Wbert
Destro and John Bunzel. (AP Lase'1'hoto).

Steinberg denies Flynt deal
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hustler
magazine publisher Larry Flynt
said he agreed to pay $1 million to
print photos from thP purported
Vicki Morgan "sex tapes, " but said
the lawyer who claimed to have the
tapes reneged on the deal.
F ly nt said be had agreed Wednes·
day with attorney Robert. K
Steinberg that photos of the vldeot.apes- which supposedly show the
late Miss Morgan and high govemmpnt officials ~would be publlsbed
In Hustler, an adult. magazine.
Steinberg, however, t6Id City
News S..rv ice tbat Flynt was a
" liar'' and .that hP never made a
deal.
According to Flynt, the deal was
made Wedlnesday, a full day after

Steinberg reportro the tapes .had
been stolen from hiS Beverly Hills
office by a reportPr hP refused to
name.
"I t.old him if, In fact, the tapes
existed, I would pay him $1 million,
no questions asked, " Flynt said. "He
said, 'Wp've got a deal.' I m ade an
1!; 30 a.m . a ppointment at my house
with him. He never showed up."
Steinberg clainis the tapes
showed Alfred Bloomingdale, thP
late millionaire and confidant of
President fu!agan; Miss Morgan ,
Bloomingdale's onetime mistress;
a congressman; two "ambassadorIal level'' government officials; and
two prominent businessmen .
"I personally don't think they

IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
The AncilloJy Esl8t8 of Rolpl&gt;

·YARD SALE

C. HII,

SATURDAY
JULY 16, 1983
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

To: .

Ira W Hill. 1165 M artha LAe
Avenue. Rocldedqe. Flortda
32955. Elhcn Htll. 191 3 Pecten
Lanf', Rockport TeJCaS 78385;
Clara Pf e1 fer. Box 13. M c intosh.
New . Mex1 co 87032 . Ruth
Flinn. 736 1 FulbnfJhl A\lenuf!.
CMona Pnrk. CA 92877, Ooretha H1H. 1005 2 · Mow~ M esa.
Sprtn fJ Valley. CA 92877; Ann'
W alker, RR. New Srra.rsv11te. OH
43766. P,1 ul Paynter. Route 2.
Box 109.Aibanv. Ohio457 10 :
Kml PayntP.r. 31 45 OeArf1eld
Awnue. N W , No nh LawrAnce.
Oh10 446 66 . GIP.n PaynhH.

clothes, cur·
tains, metal wardrobe, ·
glassware, lamps, lanDishes.

terns. stoneware, pitcher

exist,". Flynt said of the tapes. "I
don 't want to com e off like
Stein berg, I don'twanttocashlnona
myth that doesn't exist. I think the
guy's some sort of kook.''
Later Richard David, a spokesman for Flynt, said the publisher
was now unsure to whom he talked
about buying the tapes. Flynt
thought he was talklng to Steinberg,
David said. but "now he questions

54 Misc. Merchandise

TIRE SALE

LOWEST PRICES
IN AREA
SERVICE STATION
OPEN 24 HRS. A DAY

POMEROY
LANDMARK

it. "
Beverly Hills police said Steinberg told them he obtained the tapes
ove r the weekend from an unldentl·
lied blonde woman who said she
thought they might help the defpnse
of Marvin PanC'oast, charged with
last Thursday's bludgeoning death
of Miss Morgan, 30.

~

-··

&amp; bowl set,

~nds,

flames, mitrors, walnut
table, set of 4wal. chairs,
d..tt parlor table, North
Wind God Chair, coal
hod, 12'x60'" Elcona mobile home, 1972 Cadillac

an:u
II Rl

~

Rubbish causing
clogging problem
Middleport residPnts . are requested not to place tras h, rubbish,
t ree limbs, grass or other related
items In the streets. According to
Mayor F red Hoffman, this is
creating problems by clogging up
storm sewers a long t he streets and
is a lso a violation of village
ordina nces which could result in
court citations.
The mayor also said tha t due to
the Increased costs at the landfill,
persons having Items hauled away
by thP village will be charged $20
per load which covers only the costs
Incurred by tbe vlllage. Residents
a re urged . to use loca l haulers In
having trash a nd other items taken
a way since the village is not in the
trash hauling business a nd does t his
as a servlc~ to residenl s only when
a local hauler cannot be obt ain~.

OSP cites motorist
The Gallia-Meigs post of the state
highway patrol investigated a
s inglevehiclewreck on a sta te route
in Meigs County Tuesday.
According to the patrol, Da ve E.
Moore, 41, Wellsville , Ohio, was
traveling south on Ohio 338 at 11; 30
a.m . when he lost control or his
pickup truck, went off the right side
of the road a nd hit a building.
Troopers cited Moore for failure
to control hiS vehlclP. His truck
s ustained moclerate damage.

Wins settlement
Green-Up ReClamation S..rvice
won a $9,Z74.68 sett!Pment from the
Cardinal Coal Co. The Ohio
Farmers Insurance Co. was
awarded
from Franklin
LadermUt In Meigs Coi.mty Common Pleas Court.
In another enlly. J . Blake was
ordered to pay a settlement to SPars
Roebuck and Co. In the amount of

sm.25

$3,282.41.

'

Emergency runs
Two runs were made by local
units Wedlnesday the Meigs County
Emergency S..rvice reported.
Pomeroy at 5:39p.m. w pnt to 104
Blick St!'eet for Rose Ellen Lee who
was treatl'd at the smne; Middle
port a t 2: 56 p .m . was called to an
accidPnt at the Intersection ofSR124
a nd 7 for Jim King who was taken to
Veterans Memoria l Hospita l.

Band camp announced
All Eastern High School students,
grades seven to 12, interested in
participating in the marching band
for the coming year should report at
t he high school Monday for band
camp.
All studPnts who have not
participatl'd in the marching band
before should report at 6 p.m. and all
other students should report a t 7
p.m. DiScussion of yearly plans will
be followed by a music rehearsal.

Elder not reverend
Officiating a t the funera l services
for Edgar B. Taylor, 76, Rt. 3,
Racine, whodil'd Wedlnesdaywlll be
Elder Joe Stobart not Rev. Joe
Stobart as was reported.

\

Mark~t
OffiO VI\LLEY IJVESTOCK CO.

Saturday, ,July 9, I!KJ
Wa\ calv(.&gt;S steady; feeder ca lves 1-3
hi.'lhl&gt;r; l'OWS }-2.25 higher.
F('('der Steers: ,good and chol~ Z'JO to Dl
lbs. 57-65, :m to 400 lbs. 57~ . 50. 400 to500 lbs.
~.o&gt;ro.so, ~ to 000 lbs. 55-62.1\1, 600 to 100 lbs.
5~1. 700 to s:x&gt; lbs. 5.J.58.75. fill to over
52.~-62. 7!\.
Feeder Heifers: ~ood and choice, 250 to lX)
lbs. 51-60, lXI1o400 lbs. 52. ~58. 400 to500 lbs.
50-57.50. FlOO to .OOJ lbs. 48-58, G:XJ to 700 lbs.
46-55.75, 700 to 8XI lbs. 45-55, 800 to over

47-57.50.

Feeder Bulls: gOOd and cho ice, 2'lO to :lXI
Jbs.. 57-til, :m to 400 lbs. 56-62 . ~. 400 to !100 lbs.
54.50-6t, ~to 000 lbs. 5!-57.1\1, 600 to 100 tbs.
00.55. 100 to *XJ lbs. 48-60, In! to over
46.!il).5.l75.
.
Holstein Steer Bulls J:XJ to IIXllb!i. 46.M-54,

Bulls UXMJ lb&amp;. and up 47.~51 .
Slaughter Cows: ut1Utlt5 40-46.25, canners
and cutters 41-down.

Veal Calves, choice and prime, 199 to 3Xl
lbS. 65-75.
/
'
Baby Cajvf"!! 40-85c, Springer Cattle 27().310,
Cows and Calves ComblnaUon 510 down.

'

Two persons were found guilty In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
of breaking a nd pntertng charges.
Karen WiSe was given a sus·
pended jall sentence of between six
months and five years. She was
placl'd on three ypar's- probation,
. ordPred to served 30 days in the
county jail alljl told to make
restitution.
Lester Wise Jr. pleaded not guilty
to receiving s tolen property. Bond
has been set at $5,000 by Judgp
Charles Knight.
Charles Geary was ordered to
serve 30 days In ·Jail. place on
probation for three years and told to
make restitution. He was also given
a suspended jail sentenm of not less
than six months and not more than
five years.

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New Homes - htensive
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P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Reclnt, 011.

, ,,, Plt: &amp;I4-.H!~I
10·6-tfc

I·Htc

6·2 9·1 mo. po.

ARROW FLASHING
SIGNS
FOR SALE OR RENT
, ... 8"

FOR SALE
18 FT. WILD CAT
TRAVEL TRAILER

CONSTRUCTION

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
.. 992-2282

Il-l Hie

(:ONTRACTING

•DOZER ·

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS end
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING

doors lnd windows.

99Z-7201

1-7-tt

~'\r

I

"FINONG PROVIDIS PRIV ACV fit. US
PROTICTION FOR CHILDREN A PETS"

COMPUTE
RADIATOR SERVICE

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

From lhe ·Smllllst Heater
Core to the Llrpst lladia-

·•

Call: 949·2263 '
or 949-3091'
, J-IO·Ht

2-23- ttc

PH. (304) 882-2276

These cash rates

s.zo.1 mo.

tor.

Redietor Specielist
NATHAN BIGGS

inc lude discount

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

)Wanted

) For Sate
) Announcement

I

.,_

1

10 .
11.

3

n

•ScormDoon
•Storm WiiKkrwa
efteplac• •••• •tw\ndowa

••

13.
14 .

6.

- 15.
16.

1.

5.
7.

6.
Y.
10.
I I.
11.
13 .
14.

48-56: 51)).700 lbs. 52·52.75.

Slaughter 8ulls1 (Over 1,001 lbs. l 49.75-53.
Slaughter Cows: UtUUies 43-45.75; Canners
and Cuuers ;J;.50-f2.ll.
Cow and CaU pairs (By the Unit) 2!J6.Bll.

tCholc:e and Prime&lt; 51-&amp;l.SO.
Baby Calves: tBY the ~ead) 2f.fi6.
Vea~:

IS.
16.

Baby Calves: (By thE.&gt; Pound) 47-tl.

HOG PRICES:

Hogs: (No. 1. BaJTOWs and GUt!) :ll).J)O

lbs. M.51H.'i.:Jl.

1

VINYl &amp;

IY ,

}For Rent

II ,

ALUMINUM SIDING

16.

•-Roolng
FREE EStiMATES

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772
6127/tln

THE KOUNT

KLUB

35 Yrs. Exptrltnce

Golf Lmons Special
ADULTS ....... 6 lor $40.00
STUDENTS .... 6 for $30.00
'Golf Trips
'"'i:~':
'Plo Shop

' ~~

'Fittina Center

'Metal Woods

~·:J
(

'Club Repair
.
·.
'Fishinr
,John Tufonl
Chester 6-161

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

•
•'

Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph. 992-2174

"FREE ESTIMATES"

11 .

28.
29.

VInyl &amp; Aluminum

lO.

SIDING

ll.
32 .

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

]] .

~

]4

Js.
Mail This Coupon with Remittance ·
· The D"aily Sentinel
Ill Court St.
· . PolTieroy, Oh. 45769

•

"luutlful, Custom
Built Blfllts"

I

C.ll far frMsldifiiiS·

1 tilllltta, 94,_ 2101 or
I 94g. 2l&amp;0.
NoSundar c.n.

I

1...----------------------· ..

_ _ _ _..::.::;::;.J
).ll·rtc '

.,

•

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

*CHAIN LINK
-FENCING

mu

-"

3

For 5 Years.

Roofina • Siding

Trouus,

Down Spouts
Windows - Doors
For "All" Your Home
Repairs ...
"FrH fsti . .tH" ...

\

•

••
•
'
.••

Call: Geor11 Gum
Ph. 992-5433
._______~;.:'.:.6';.:"'::-.J ' •

rc:::::l

CATALOG
~MERCHANT
Gregg •

Petty Olbb1-0wn.,..

PH. 892·2178

"

Annauncemenu

p-··

Bet looM tor ott oooollont.

Installed And
Warranted by Sears

HOME REPAIR

2-26-tftt

"s"

loy
HoppyHoppy
llrtlldoy, I Lon Doy,
Vou,
Got Well, tt'o A boy or lt'o o
Girl. Anvt1111111 you with in o
dlfleNnt woy. o.t- to
hoopltoi or ho""' lor tlmoot
MIY oooooiono. ••ono •
Co., 441·4313.
Cor Walh- ltko lale.
Ploaa: The lloonor Coo
w~ . o . .: ~MiyJu~
11. n-: 10 o · - to •
o'olooll. lpon- fry thtl
Arbuokle Vouth Oloup 111
_.. the Group to Cen dan
p•rll. Prlaoo: Coo wo•h
u.oo. ......,.., lntlda
e1 .10. or both for only
.... 00. Loboflrolrad . . ..

MERRI-MAC n"do

3 dam·

onatraton in thia areal Glfta,
toya, home decor itema on
party plen. Car and phone
neceaNry. Hlghaat commla·
alon. No lnvaatmant. daUv~
erlng, or collecting. Call

Houae of Lloyd now hiring

Loruoo Yord Solo t 4th, 151h,
&amp; 18th . 1 · mile weal of
&amp;Vicinity
Centanery On Rt. 141 . Love
aaal, typewriter, lamps.
.......... ---· ---,·- .. -· .... _.- dlthll.
fruit jera. and mlac .
Yord Sola July t1 thru 14. Items.
Clothea. knick knacks .
clocks, radlo1 . 1h mt out of Yard Sale July 16-16, 49
Gorflold Avo .. Getllpotlo .
EVIIrgreen.
Lawn mower~, old Whtt1
Yard Sale Frt.-Sun , 9·5. YJ: •wing mach .. lot1 more.
mile from Porter on
lulavllle -Porter Rd. Tools, Corport Solo Jutv 15, 8 :00clothing, books, antiques, 8 :00, 462 Lariat Drive. near
tlre1, 8 ft . alum. boat i nd Hol1ar Medical Center. Clothing , c~rtaina. mi1c.
motor. CB'a.

F~day,

9 tit 5.

Clipper Mttla. Follow signa,
ewttythlnq cheap .
4 Femlly Yard Sale July

13,14,111. 6 mt1a1 from
M~lc.al Canter on
Rt. t80. Adull ctolhtng , Jr.
...na clothing, children clo·
thing 1lzea 14 1IIm to 1 yr.
Holzer

Yard Sele Junk, raga. antlquta . Fri. &amp; Sat. Rt. 664 in
Porter . Signa poated .

Yord Sola ol 1939 Chelltom
Sl ., Golllpotls. 141h, 16th a.
161h. Couch a. cholro. childrena clothing, dishes. tapas.
car tape player.
Garege Sale Wed .. Thun . a.
F~.

9 tit 1 Uood wood

FOUND Yottow blcyclo .
ldentlfy to claim and pey for
od. CoR 448-3718.

8

Yord S•le July 15,18, 17.

Wanted
Room, ba8rd tnd ure for en
tlderly peraon in my home.

Reosonoble. Colt 992-8022.
Wanted: Babyaltter for 14
montll old 11 my home near

Public Sale
Auction

Ru1tond . Colt 742-21B1 .

a.

13
Insurance
niGht,. Krodol Porll Club - - - - - - - - Auct.
HouH, Lonnie
~. ~aunt
Noal. wv.
Colt SANDY AND BEAVER In·
814-367•7t0t.
ouronce · Co. hM oHered
18rvlcea for fire lnauranca
Rick Pearaon Auctionur cavar~ge In Gallla County
Service. Eltlte, Farm, An· for elmoat 1 century. Farm,
tlqua &amp; liquidation ..111. homo ond pe,.onot property
Ucenoed • bonded In Ohio a. coverag11 are available to
WVo . 304-773-57815 or mHtlndlvlduel naeda. Con ·
tact Ray Wedemeyer, asjant .
304-773-9181.
Phone 388-824B.
Auction. eVery Fri. night 11
the Hartford Community Are you .,.ylng to much for
Canter. Truckloeda of new your hoapttel·hlehh inau·
merchandlae every waelc. ranee . Call C1rroll
Conalgm1nt1 of new tnd Snowdon. 446-4290.
ulld merchandlae elwaya
welcome. Richard Reynolda
AuctlonHr. 275-3019.
18 Wanted to Do
Auction every Tueaday

Complete Auctioneer Service. Alao do appralaala.

Ucanood • bonded 10 alt.

HouMholda, farm fumlah·

Ina• • Rnt eoto11. Over 21

years expertenceln buying a
telling new. ulld • 1ntiqu1

Wanted To Buy

We pey oooh lor toto model

clean uHd cera.

Jim Mink Chov.· Oido Inc.
lilt Gone Johnton
441-3872

Clothea. knick knecka, P~ra ­
kN11, other Items. FaiNiew ~
Evergreen Rd .

Cerport Sale Saturdey 18th,
204 Klneon Dr., Gallipolis.
9·4 . Jr . clothe1, sewing
machine. camera, more.

21

Business
Opportunity
..1 NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommend•
that you do buainaaa wtth
people you know, end NOT
to Hnd money through the
mell until you have lnveltl·
geled the offering ,

Wanted. Junk autos. eny
condition. Coli 814-31189303:
Standing timber, eny
1moun1. The bigger tM
Newly remodeled 2 atory
fteme. 1 'iJ beth. 3Yz ecru.
city achools, riverview.

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old

U2.000. Coli 441-4222
bllwoon 9 • 5.
For Hie by owner. firm wlth

M.D. Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, '- - - - - - - - - Jh. Or 892-7780.
r
Own your own Jean ·
Wonted to buy. Now, uood • Sportawaer, lnfan1·Pre1..n,
antique furniture. Will buy 1 Lodloo Apperot, Combineplace or complete houM· 11on; acceaorlea or Qutltty
hotdo. Cat! Ollry A. Morttn Chttdrano Fumltura Stota.
I 14·982-6370.
No1lonol· brondo:Jordocho,
Chla, LH, Lavl, Vandlrbfh,
Buying_ doily gold, ollvor lzod, Gunnt lex. Calvin
coillo, rlnp, j-otry, ltorilng Klein, Eoprlt, Zono, Ocaon
- · old ooln1, ' - ..,,. Poclflc, Evon Ptcono,
rency. Top .,....o. Ed. lur· Hoolthlu , 300 o1horo .
kelt Be-llhop, 2nd. Aw. '7,100 to t24,000. - Middleport, oh. e 14-182- tory, olrt... tr•Ining, fixturao, grond opontng otc.
'-:=34=7=1=.======= Mr. Dlclloon (1011 8821
1114 or 11011218-1311 .
.

...

.......

. - ' ..
11

Primary Teeaher naedld

now houH • garogo. 20 A.

land, near Rio Grande. Con·
1lder all offtrl. Cell 814241·1 190 any time or 814·

241-9400 before IPM.

Brick homo w~h 4 ocrH, 3
bdr., 1V. bolh, Iorge k~chon
lc dining room, ba1emen1
with wood • electric heat.
Kyger CrMk ocholt dlot.
118,000. Coli 614-3177238.

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

REAL BARGAIN I 1 year old
bl-lovot, 3 BR, A-t cond.,
gorot• • booomMit, brlcll
fronl,lorga tot, ctty ecflooto.
4~ m!IH from Gottlpollo.
OWN 'your own Joon - . Gran Twp. 139,800. 441lportl-. tnfont-Pre!Mn, 8031.
Ladloa Apperot. Combinedon, -oorlao or Quollty HOUSE FOil 8ALE In MldCht-o 'umlturo 81ore. dloport. Newly NmOclotad
Nldonat lrr•do; Jonfooho. homo with lirflllaca, potol·
Chta, Lerr, LoVI. Vondarbllt. blo wooclbut'Mr, clo" to
IIOd, Ounno I••· C - lciloolt •nd ohopplng. Cotl
tclotn, lo!llll. Zono. o- e14-112-1841.
Poollic, llmuonla, E..n PI· 1-:---:----:--:---- · H•. . .•· 300othoro. e nn. hou• with
*7,100 to *24.100, lnvan·
with o trollw - u p. 2
toiY.
tr...... II•· ltary eo,..o. l.oo8Nd In
turao, grand -Ina ate. Mtlgo Co. on Rl. 7, 1 milt
Ko•tocky 101-327- from PorMrOy. CoM GrtiHpolit, 441-4413.

1---------

Help Wanted
tor

Gollle Ch-n . _ , i
non-dtno-lonal sohoot
In C1181hita, Ohio. Coltogo
otogreo in •-=aduoodon requlrad.
lootlont
....,._..._alrJuly
lOth. Coli 441·:1CM 1 or
441 -8241 or 114-3170301 or 10 Gotlta
lohool, Rt. 1.
ClrHhlro, Oh 41120 .

c_..,
·---..,.---

otrt...

Big Yord Solo! Clolhea .
misc. houaehold Items . Old
Yard Sale July 11 lhru 14. Pomeroy Rd. •croaa from ·
Cl o thes . knick knacks, Sallabury School. S•turday ~
clocks. red loa;. lh mile out of ol-8 AM.
Evergreen.
On Union Ave. ebove unem·
Yard Sale Fri. 6 Sat. 9 til 6 . ployment office. Thuraday 8
2Yt mllea S. Rio Grande, p.m .-1 111 day Fri. Sm•ller
ShaltQn Rd . off Rt . 326. children• clothing .
Loti of nice items. Children•
clothes .

------Pffiieai·ar.f·--- -

Firat Time Yard Sale 62 Neil

Ave.. Gotltpollo. Clothing
and misc. cheep . Friday,
Seturdav. • Monday .

&amp;Vicinity

YARD sale. 107 LOculi St.,
Firtt· Time Ever· Yard / Salt Henderson. Thu,..day, 14·
Friday a"d Saturday, St. At. Friday 16. 9-1
180 In Vinton, third house
north of Quaker Stete Sta· YARD oete, F~doy. Saturtion. Canning J•ra. aqua- day. 9 a.m.·4 p.m. beside
rium, lampe, rocking chair, Flowernook. Baby clothee,
electric organ. rototlll~tr. lron jeans. car radloa. Rein
bed, dlahwaaher, Iota of .cancela.
good clean men·, dren
clothes , and women 's YARD oole. 2108 MI. Verclothes, odds a. endt galore. nOn Ave. Pt . r1eaaant, Friday
&amp; Saturday. Good clolhlng , ,
household, mlac .

----··rio-merov·--------

YARD sele, Friday 15th .
Clothea, bicycle. 109 A
Jonaa Street, Pt. Pleu•nt.
THREE family yard aale,
Friday a. Saturday, 9-1 , 2
mllea out Jericho Road, Pt.
Ple11ant. All itema cheep.
womenssile8 -13, chlldrena

size 01 -6x.

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

ond dopenditblo. Colt 441- HOME LOANS Low fixed
rate. leader Mortgage. 77 E.
31 U l!o1woen 9 ond 6.
81011. Athono. Ohio. 1-114Experience houu painting · 592-3061 , or 12 to 4PM
1nd lawn mower repair. Very t -800-341 -8554 In Ohio.
fQIOntbll ratft. Cell 448- ~~:;:::~=;=:::;::=:;::=::
11888.
123 Professional
Brick. block, atone a. con·
Services
crete work. alao roofing &amp; 1- - - - - - - - -polntlng. Colt 441· 7207.
PIANO TUNING t6 oH pluo
Traah hauling. coel or any· dlacounta to senior cltizana· lhlng. Wtll pickup froa junk church..· achoolo. C•tt 8tll
te..vlalona, weaher, a dry- Ward Ward's Keyboard,
"'· Iron. eon 614-38B- 448-4372.
I - -- - - - - B813.
PIANO TUNING-LANE DANIELS. Rattobto aor¥1co
sine• 1915. Auocllte of
Brunicardi Mu1lc Co. Phone
8U-742-2951 .

fumhure. gold. lilver dollara. wood ice bo•aa, atone
jara. ent..,_, etc., Complete houaaholda. Wrha ;

AI. 554, 3 .2 mi . WOlf of AI .

7.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sale atero, mlnlccoet, --·------- --------- .. -·-· ·· ...
clean clothing, odds and Friday . Clothes, tires .
wnda. Thura.-Set . 8:00- we1her. bicycle, ltove top,
1 :00. Bo• 26 Texas Rd .
bowling bella, radio . Five
Potnllaroo. 6t4-992-&amp;344.

General Heullng and Tr11h 1 - - - - - -- - - rwmovel Service. Reliable

bettor . Coil 388-9808.

14 &amp;16 . 9-4 , Corner of
&amp;: College, SyracuM.
Clo&gt;lhoro dryer, Yezoo lawn
mower, c~lldren'a • . ldulta
c'othlng. toy1. diahea, odds
a. enda . lou of mlac.

July 15-18. 9:00. Cho11or.

Fourth Avo ., Gattlpotto.

lost end Found

Middleport
&amp; Vicini1y

Yard Sele 2 miles east of
Yord S•t• Sll. 18th, 10.-00. Porter on At . 664. Wed ., Thura.. Fri. t!o So1. Eogte
Jaycee' a Building, 501 Bur- Thurs. &amp; Fri. Clothes, Jeans, Ridge Rd. 1 mite from At. 7
nett Ad . Proceed a to Local gla11es end baby itema.
I t Memorial Gerden
Red Croaa.
Yord Solo July 16-18, 9:00· Cemetery .
Friday-Clothes all alaet In- 6:00. 3 Family-First time . First time yard aale . Thure·
cluding baby clothes, 1 4 ' Starcra'h . boat, bicycle. day tho 141h thru Sal. the
Gravely tractor, motorcycle, glall front fire ltrean, clo- 161h. Hi 1111 !I p.m. 130
dlshwa•her &amp; mite. itema. thing, (extra nlcalagaa 4· 18 . Wehe Terrace. Pomeroy .
Down At. 1 turn right e1 (No prior aalea). Fred Slaaon,

KITTENS of all coloro, MaxIne Nibert, 304-89&amp;-3472 .

12

·-----.,.iiiiiiiiov·-----·--

3 family carport 1111. Fri.,
July16, 1983atRogeriCtrr
residence near Chetter. Fol·
low tlgns. Warm morning
Sale
Thurdey-Frlday.
Yard
Qll hi111r, bunk bed1 withYord Solo 141h, 161h,181h.
HouMhold goods, tov•. clo· July 14-16. Lincoln Plkoln out mattr•••••· some anthing, eoata, bikes, furnl· Centenary. Seveth houu on tlquet, recliner, 2 ••trclae
lure, redwood porch 111. 2 right. Bova j ..na, clothing, blcyclet, ·like new, booka,
mi. north of Rio Grande, off women• clothing. lots ot men. women . children's clomlac.
thing. toy1. AMF children'•
Rl. 326 . Judy Burdett.
wagon with r_acka, much
Llrga Yard Sell C.a ntenery Yard Sale Friday 9-.t. Hou se· more. 9 -4 .
Townhouae. July 16·1 8th. hold good1, tape player. I:~~~::~~~::~
ciOthlng-·infantJ to adultl. English
8-8.
1oy1, end much more . Rt . oak dreuer.
clothea. hounhold goode.
Yard Solo 24 Chtlllcolho Rd. 1411n Centenary.

windowa Indoor, elec,rlc
baHboerd heater. pool table, Iota of misc. ltam1 . 141

9

PH. 992-2280

814-387-0608.

--· --·Gaiiipoiii---.------

FREE purptoo. to good
homo. Cot 304-875-7474.

COAL

Gou&lt;o···

\

"Free Estiniittl"

PHONE Jll CLIFFORD

..G~'

~II Work Guel'llnteed . \

WOfll(

GUMAIITE£0

CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS

Eacp. babyaitt.er, · prefer
mother. Addlaon area. · call

perty plan. Fr11 kit, no
Under 1 yr. old. Colt 446- lnveatmtnt, dattila . without
2713 a~k for Kenny.
obltgollon. Phone 814-9927324 or 814-849-3091.
Chow · ShaPhtrd mlxtd ,
puppy. 448-9&amp;73 or 448- Taking applications for new
9301 .
dealera for Melga end Gallia
Co. Alao taking new book·
Female border colll1. 1 year lnga Friendly Home Partiea.
otd. Good w~h kldo. 814- et 4-742-3060.
912-1274.
Part time joba in Pomeroy
5 puppiea. Mixed, 4 brown. for youtha. Agea 12 lhru 18.
1 block. 1 fomolo dog good Con1oc1 lhe Ollily Sentinel.
w~h kido, brown . Good 814·992-2161. ·
homo with children . 814· · - - - - - - - - 992-2&amp;02.
LADIES! HOUSE OF LLOYD
Ia now hiring In your arM.
Mille Collie, male black end NO INVESTMENT. Potalbla
tan, famalt apanlel. 5 male •7. hourly . For more lnfor~
p~pplea. 1et hou• On top of mttlon In Ma1on County
Milo hill In Roclno.
araa call collect 304-n3·
6224 or 773-5111. at10 for
4 Peek·a·poo pupplet, free Melga a. Athena area 614·
lo good homo. Colt 992- 992·8591 • Galllpollo •
5911.
Btdwott oree 814-367 7770.
3 -I old block klttono.
614-992-6818 .
EXPE~!ENCED logo! oocro1ary. Sand ffturrte to Box
Fo..,.to t~oh Sll1or, opoyod, P·9, In Clrt of Pt. Pf1111nt
male Cock·A-Poo. famele, Rogllter Co. , 200 Moln St ..
lorrlar, opoyed, four fornoto Pt. Plaaunt, WV.
pert boqlo, ml•. olt opoyed, I -;;.;;;.;-;;,;;;-;;;;t.;ti;;;j~
two bfeck femt .. etta and 3 I ,
1ome one to live in
kittono. 304-891-3878.
help tokocora ofllt men .
housework 1110. C•ll
3 port Boogie pupploo, 8
4-448-4883.
....... old. 304-176-15702.

STRIP

$3(JJO ATON

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

AIIIWIIS of roof wort, MW
or 111pair, autten and .
downspout$, ortbr Clun·
il1 and painti11, s10111t·'

eLANO·CLEARIIIG.
CONCRETE WORK

&amp;·9·1 mo..

Coli 448-2151.

gift end toy dlmon1tra1or1.

AUCTION ovory Soturdoy
night, I p.m. MI. Alto
Auction Bern. Conalgn ·
man1!1 taken every Saturday
1:00 till ooto ttmo . Em..,.
Bell AuctlnNr, 304-4288177.

MINE RUN

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

Terrltorietavallabla for new
AVON repreHn1atiVea or
you can ltllwhereyou work.

Wired hair Tarrier pert D•·
achund and part Collie.

furniture. 814-992-1370.
Ooby A. Martin.

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel

1 S Years E•perlence

J&amp;f

C.rpeted, bltlwoom with
shower, 1• or tltCI. refri&amp;..
lumece, &amp; lot. Wiler hater,
I'llnp, sink. &amp;M. elect., or
battery li&amp;]lts, IIHPI 6. tx·
cellMI condition.
$2,700.00 or Best Offer
PH .992-30011

fle•lbUtty In ochoduto o
nocoutty. apply boloro July
22 Gotltpotlo Porllo tt11d
Recreation Department.
618 Second Avo ., Golilpotta.
448-1788, o•t. 24.

114-742· 3094. Atoo bookIng portln.

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Authorized John DHr,

Aerobic Dance lnatructor·
trainee .. Background ••
chHrleader, mlljoretta, or In
dance preferred, or 1trong
intere11 In phylf~l fltne.a .

Part Daachund email pupplat. 7 wko. old. Colt 814388-9930.

8

BOGGS -

David Brickle•
Buoina11 With

C. L. Kitchen

101111(0 I -

... 1-ll-tk

FOR FUTURE USE"

ERNEST MITCHELL

949-2737

New Homes - Extensive
Remodel inc.
•lnSIIrenct Work
.Custo11, Polt Bldas.
&amp; GII'II&amp;IS
•Aootin&amp; Work
oAI!ni111111 &amp; Vinyl Sidinas

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Phone ________________

Feeder Heifers: (Good and ChoiC('I :m.m

Sla ughter l.ambs 44-47.

PAT HILL fORb

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

ROUSH

11-26-ttc

lbs. 41-55; 500-100 lbs. 44-$2
Feeder Bul~: Good an&lt;l chOice) :m500 lbs.

SHEEP PRICES:

GaT.....

Repl•cement Letter-a

992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomorey, Ohio

Address----------------

nt-

D~~Ne. We con alto
add boll and lOCI out ,.
dlnon. We oloo Iepo!r

St. At. 1Z4, PolltrOJ, Ott

am ell Ttrrler pupe, 2

fomoto, 1 mote. Colt 4482108.

w

~

W~ ~~~ ~uallty used cws
1-lil
112
Gooll' is

Name ____________________

Top Hogs 210 to 230 lbs, 4445.50, Boars 28-l,),
Sows 400 lbs. and up 32.25-35, Pigs by the Head
15-26.
Athens LlveM.ock Salf8
July 9, 1!183
CA'ITLE PRICES:
Feeder Steers tGood and ChoiCe) :m-500
100. 47 - ~7: 500-700100. 46-53.

Butcher Sows 29,5().37,
Butcher Boars 31-32.
Feeder Ptgs: (By the Head) 1·34.

K

Trophy

&amp; ln~peeted"

Giveaway

AllY . PER SON . who hu
anything to give away and
doaa not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for pia
"'-'Y place an ad In this
column. There wtu be no
charge to the edvertlter.

3

c:ore ......... end ....

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

Reminder given

report

We cen replir ond

of atess, tluminum
CMIS, iron, metals.
TOP PRICES
Cop[ler ....................45' lb.
Aluminum C.ns ...... 20' lb.
Rltfillors ............. :10' lb.
Asst. Gloss .. $1.00 huQCII'IId
Mixed Iron .. $1.00 hulllhd
Also Pidtitll Up Auto Bodits
6-22-1 mo.-Pd.

SERVICE CALLS

USTOM

6-21-1 "''-

Write your own ad and order by mail with t his
coupon. Cancel your tid by phone when you ~et
resu lts. Monev not refundable.

The ASCS office Issued a re
minder to all farmers that Frtday,
July 15, Is the deadline for reporllng
crop ac reage or conservation use
acreage to the ASCS office.
Farmers not enrolled In this year's
program are ufged to report to \feep
or establish history for their farm.

t24- PII. 992-5468

Washers, Dl')'II'S
Ranges, Refrigerators
WE ALSO DO

PH. 992-3047

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savel_! I

Two persons
found guilty

S.R.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

B~

AUTO BODY AND
VAN CONVERSIONS

Co -Adm•ntstrator

Maoofacturers
PlAQUES
ENGRAVING

Happenings around Meigs County.•• -----------' ----------.....

Riders &amp; Sons
SALVAGE COMPANY

16130. 171 7. 14. 3tc

Wedding Cakes and
All Occasjon Cakes

auppliea. Davl1
Pick Vacuum
up 1nd
delivery.
Ctoonor, on• hotf milo up
George• Crook Rd . Coli
448-0294.

1 eiJ white cet. 1 gray c:e1:

12-20-tlc

USED
APPLIANCES

Anc•llary

THE
TROPHY
KING

"~sed

PH . 992-7119
Day o.r Night

Tl RED OF DRIVING AN
OLD BEAT-UP BALL
OF RUST?

AR'
'
RAFT

w·eo

TERESA'S
CAKE
DECORATING

742-2229

992-9932

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834
or 949-2180

Route 1, Box 272. Ot1s. Oregon
97368. Thomas Cooper. Anor ·
nev for the Dom1C1IIary Estate
Box 389. lebanon. PA 17042.
W1lli am Allwem. Domtcallary
Co-Adm tn•srator. Lebanon, PA
17042. and Sarah Levertng. 27 ·
lehman Street. lebanon. PA
t 704 2
You will take not1 CP. tha t
Mddrflrt M
Carnahan has
presentfld to the Probate Coun
o f Metgs County. Oh•o. for
allowance to her aqmnst the 1
nnc•ll arv eswt e of Aaiph C. Htll,
deceas (:!(1. ll cert a•n cla•m · of
S68 1 01 and th attheCour t has
ftxed the ttme ·l or hea rcng the
sarn e dn the 2 2nd day of ~uly,
t 983. at
A.M
MILD RED M CARNAHAN

Business Senices

Eldorado.
1 mile East of Harrisonville on St. Rt. 143.

SERVICE STATION

-lid.

Cue No. 24016
NOTICE OF ClAIM
OF ADUCIARY

Antiques
Collectables
Miscellaneous

Aputt I
Lon&amp; Bottom. OH. 45743
985,4193 or 992-3067

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

OHIO
VALLEY
. ROOFING

l-

•
·1

'Sidin&amp;
'Roolina

,,.,,.,,,..,,.,. · · •· ·h~r••,l!'f ·' ...

l ol l · · · - '"""
141

........

_

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

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'lemodtlin&amp;
20 Ynrs Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

ou... -~
c.....

SWEEPER ond uwing mer1pelr. partt. end

chine

4

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

11

Both lomolo. Call 448·
3732.

::.::.::::..._..__ 1-- - - - - - - - - - - --1
II·O.••M.....
u,,.
...· - tloo
u,..,,,,.,_
_ ....
••oo

tl-U....Iodo
U -H.... I C.•n

ot

Cleaninl &amp;
Installation
New Systems

G.lioC-"'
A,.C...I1t

117 ~·

., .......... "..,
•z • - """'*''"'"..,'
~~

~·-·

71-c-.o.. £-

Jt:" -1 hlot. W.nl. .

...............
,,......,s...................
,_. .........
_,,,
......._

1,• /lot~ ·i" "

SEPTIC SERVICE.

"Senior Citizens
10% Discount"

.t-U·tlc

f]fu.•Jfif••l /Ht/1• ·~ non•r t h•·

t ....... lor Sooie

Kitchen C.bintts - Rootin&amp; - Sidina - Concrttt
Potios - Sidtwllks New Construction - Rtmodtlin&amp; - Custom Polt
Berns.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

Ill Court St., P011troy, O.io t57&amp;9

,,

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

'lowest Rates
Around
'FriendlY. Servie

.

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt DliNy Stnti•ll Cllssitit4 Dtpt.

Announcemenh

-========::;itr::::==::::::===::;t=========::;-1
JACK'S

r

you know," she said.
Celeste said, "I think the agency board considered a
number of options Including putting people's names In
a hat and drawing, a Iottl'ry format. My buncb Is the
people whO end up spending the time here will feel It's
worthwhlle. They get the mortg;~geS."
He iS asking Ohio's congressional delegation to
support extension of the federal mortgage revenue
bond program under which the lol!ns are made
avaUable. It Is duP to PXplre tllts year.
Under the program authorized by Ohio voters last
November, the state borrows money by issuing
tax-free bonds and channels the money to
participating banks and savings and loans. They In
tum must makPlt avallable to qualified borrowers at
below-market Interest rates.

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

•lot

b•-

·31 Homes for Sale
By owner 3 bdr. modern
home, full baaement, cent .
hell lc air, 2 ecrH. Call

81 4-379-2613.
9 room house. Aluminum
aiding, 2 carpon1. workshop, beaemtnt, 2 wood
burtnera. 2 out bulldlnga. a.
fruit treaa . Excellent condl·
tion. Priced to 1ell. Syra-

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1980 BAYVIEW Dotu .., ,
14•70 2 BR CI A, flroploce,
gerden tub; appllancea, underpinning . *14,00 . Call
448 -8211'

cuse. Colt 992-7285 .

1969 12•50 2 bdr, lolol
alec. f3 ,400. 197914x68 2
bdr., lolol oleo., t8,900.
Celt 814-446-0175.

3 bedroom house, 1112 bath.
attec~td gerege, completely

Trailer and lot for rent or aele •
on Lind Contract. Calll14·

fumtohod. UO ,OOO. Cell
814- 848 -28SO. Eollorn
School dlatrict.

256-6840.

1964 Great lake hou•
lroller, 8'•40 '. C•lt 81-4-4 room houM with bath end 245-5t 44 .
double car garage. About 1
acre lend. Owner moved out 1972 Holley P•rk mobtlo ·
of town. Ree1onably priced. home, 2 bdr., unfurn .. 11•
614-354-6380 or 874-363· heat. good condition . c.n
1-814-7340 or 441-4482.
0184.
6 bedroom, newly ramo· 8x40 2 bedroom trailer for
deled with fireplace in Mid- oole . t t .260. Coli 448 dleport. Mu .. be tHn to be 4483.

opprocloted . Colt 992-6709
1972 Holly Porll 14•16 2
ofler II PM .
bedroom. lllp up dining
Rench lype (brtckJ. 3 bed- room a kitchen, excellent
rooma, fireplace. attached condtllon . tB,I500. Coil '
garage, fu II buement, 446-1724 or 448 -8114.
newly shingled roof. walking
dilttnce 1o Pomeroy Elem . Uaed two bdrm. ri'loblla
School. *40,000. Cell 992· homea, furnished. Brown·a
Treiler Park, Minersville, Oh .
6143 .
814 -992-3324.
Two bedroom, full basement, convenient locetion, 1970 1 2x80 lroilor. Portly
furniahed, woodbumer. C·
304-8'75-8524.
A. New carpeting. many
Houae for Sele, 5 AM an'd IKtr'lla. Can be moved or lett
Bath. Buffalo, WV. Call on nice farm lot. •&amp;aoo.
1-304-8 7&amp; -2668or wrilo: 814-992-67tO oflerl5 p.m.
8ox 469, Pt Pleaunt, WV
USED MOBILE HOME.
25560 .
678-2711 .
HOUSE. ouumobto BV. percent loan, 3 bedroom, all USED Mobil&amp; Hom11, 304oleclrlc, con1rol olr, 2 toto, 1_5::7::8::·2_7_1:-1:-.-:-::- - : : - - - well, take trailer trade In, I'.
Golllpollo Flfry, WV. Colt 1971. 12xl0 Richardton
w~h oxpendo, 3 br, 1 Y,
oflor 5, 304-876-8809.
betha, laundry room , c.rpat,
BY owner, GrHnbrlir Et1· wood burner , atorm1 ,
acr Jena, awnlnga, com t~~lea. 3 bedroom, mid-entry,
3.5 ocreo, t76,000. Coli pletely furnlahed . Real good
cond . t7,000. 304-&amp;76 •flor 3. 304-176-8183.
1682.
FOR Hie or rani, 2 Bedroom I::::-:--:=:::-::=:--:--trollertnNowHovon, olrHdy 198t SCHULTZ, 2 bod lOt up, con 304-882-3210. room. oxcotlont condlllon
304-1175-6 376.
'
COMPLETELY romodetod
houM, 4 rooms, bath a 1978 14x?'O Nathua, 2
..undry · room whh large b.droom, large beth, very
oxlro lot, t32,000 . 00 flOOd condition 110,000.
Phono 304-176,4208 .
304-8715-8876.
t2•80 MOBILE homo with

4x12 dlt out. complete
kitchen . 3 bedrooms, bath a
lh. partially furnish•d .
wether &amp; dryer, central air,
underpenned. 10x12 utility
MDIILI building, Ml1ing on lerga

32 Mobile H.,mea
for Sale

r

TRI · STATE
HOMES. UIED- CARS, rented tol . 304-6715-26711 .
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLll .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
441-7172.
33
Farms for Sale
CLEAN UIED MOBILE
HOMES KEIIEL'I QUAL- 10 ACRE form. 4 bedroom
ITY MOilLE HOME IALE8, house, a67,000'a offer con4 MI. WElT, GALLIPOLII. olclered . Echort Chopel Rd.
RT 31. PHONE 448-7274. 304-671 -8B09 .
'•

•

�•

12 ' The Daily Sentinel
33

Farms for Sale

Meigs Co . Rd 18 . 88 acres
1 / ~ pasture, 2/ 3 wooded,
all mmeral rights, u nlimited
gravit¥ fed t pringwater.
maluring timber. fen ced in
pasture. 24' by 30' pole
bam. farge utility building .
Beaut_lful 8 room home, all
electnc, completely insulated . 1,-.eludes new carpet,
fenced in yard, self cleaning
oven. t ide by side refrigera·
tor freerer, · Ashly wood
burning stove. Ideal for kids
and horses . $68,000. Coli
446 -9610 or 992- 3 5 05.

54 Misc . Merchandise

They'll Do It Every Time .
?
~-':

v_

;~~~!-'~1

;tNI:&gt; WM!W .OVGGr

7HYll3 lltt/lfQN&amp;Ity:i.'

:.·#

I'Y'V1

IWfY····

••••

I" NOW~T

'I r(OH
YE:S··DMGt.AP
.I THOU~UTOI= fT...

WAS IT 1

IT'S OOWH IN

THE:" CE~-·-

7 ·1•

h J '/t [J

~-

'I

!!.
0'

I!i

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

35 acres

8t Rodney on W.T.

New Oak Furniture. tables.
chairs, cupboards, pie safe,
dry sinks. Paul Conkels
Antiquee . Tuppers Plains.

u

Watson Rd . Owner finam; ·
ing available . Call446-8221
after 6 weekdays.

12 yr. old black pony e75, one
~ike new saddle S76, one
good c&lt;tnd . saddle 836 . Call
614-258-9348 .

Yz ton o'f flag stone. Call
446 ·1572.
'

1

2 1h acres to 6 acres, level
lots, city schools, rural we ·
ttr, $3,600 pier acre. Call
814·379·21 9 6 .

IS

~-==-""'

Approx. ·33 acres develop·

; ;.
1

i:.:

READY TO Finish furnitureCuetom finishing available.
We use ar1d sell Min Wax
Finishing Supplies . Wood
World, 2606 Grand Central
Ave., Vienna, W.Va .

/

r; /

White's Metal

Detector

new
cont•lner
instrucminute~-~~~~~~~::::· ~T:!~~~~~~~J~~~ tions
1982cond.
model
6000 sarles
II,
. $250 . 304 -882 ·

from
Gallpolis. .20
on paved
mant property
road, with county water .
t 1 6,000. Serious enquires
only. Oays 446 -7901 ask for
Mr. Lambert. Eveninga304·
622-9459.

44

Apartment

· for Rent

61---.::::1

I - - - -- - -- - -

LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair. rocker. otto2 bdr. Regency Inc: Apart3
(extra heavy
TWO acres, well. septic ments Utiltias partly furn ., man, ' tables, 6685
· Sofa,
system. alectric, near New apartments available now. by frontier) ,
8200 per mo. A·One Real chair and loveseat. $276 .
Have,n, 304-882 -3368 .
Sofas and chain priced from
Estates. Carol Yeager. Real- 8285 _ to 8896 _Tables. &amp;4'5
8 .63 ACRES , lot 9 , Pleasant tor. Call 304-675-5104 or
304-675-7386 .
and up to 8125. Hide-a ~
Valley Farms, Route 2.
beds , 8440 . end up to
Hickory Chapel Road. Phone
1 bedroom apartment for 8525 .. Recliners. $176. to
304·675·4208 .
1
$ 350 .. Lamps from &amp;28. to
rent . Call 4·4 6-0390 .
S76. 5 pc . dinettes from
$99., to $435 . 7 po .. $189 .
Furnished Apartments. 1 and up. Wood table with six
end 2 BR , $175 &amp; up. chairs $426 . to 8745 . Desk
41 Houses for Rent Gallipolis, 446-4416 after7 S11 0 up to 1225. Hutohao.
p.m.
8550. and up, maple or pine
4 rms &amp; bath, located 733 1- - - - - - - ' - - - - - - finish . Bunk bed complete
Third Ave., Gallipolis. 8155 APARTMENTS (EQUAL with mattresl8s. $260 . and
mo .. 865 deposit. Call446- HOUSING OPPORTUNITY! up to $396 . Baby beds,
3870 or 446-1340 .
one bedroom rent starts at $110. Mattresses or box
$157 per month, two bed-. springs. full or twin. •&amp;B ..
24x86 Sectional home. 3 room start&amp; at $193 . Oep- firm, $68 . and 878 . Queen
bdr., 2 baths, total electric, oait $200 (no pats) near sets, ~196. 4 dr. chaste.
with woodburner &amp;. dis- Spring Valley Cinema. Call $42 . 5 dr. chests, $64. Bed
hw11her; $300 mo., $'60 446 - 2745 or leave frames, S20 .and $26 ., 10
gun · Gun cabinets, •3&amp;0.,
dep. Call 614-367-026~ .
message.
1- - - - - - dinette chairs $20 . and $26 .
Three bedroom one floor 1 Partially furnished . suitable Gas or electric rariges, 8326
frame house. Carport, Gar· for adults, no pets. Utilities up to $375. Babymatreasea.
field Ave.. Gallipolis loca· furnished . Call 446-3733 or &amp;26 • 835. bed frames •20,
446-0171
tion. Call 614
446-8579
. -246-5259 or , _
_ _ _evenings.
_ _ __ _ _ 826, &amp; $30. king frame •so .
Good selection of bedroom
Completely furnished, all suites, ceder chetts ,
Large house with porch, electric, 2 bdr .. 468% Se- rockers, metal cabinets ,
ideal fof&gt; large family, $100 cond Ave ., Gallipolis. Adults swivel rockers .
mo. A-One Raal Estates, only, · ref., $225 mo . plus Uaed Furniture ~ - bookcase,
Carol Yeager, Realtor. Call dep . Ca11446-2236 or 446- rangas , chairs, end tables.
washers, dryers, refrlgera- ·
304-676-5104 or 304-675- 2581 .
tors and TV's. 3 miles out
7386 .
2 bdr. upstairs, unfurn. apt. Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to
For sate or rent. 3 bdr house. Carpeted with washer ~ dryer 6pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am to
family room, 2 bath, 1. 700 hookup. $196 mo. plus 5pm. Sat.
sq .ft ., central air , dis - utilities. $126 dep, 1 yr. 446-0322
hwasher, carpeting. river- lease. Call 446-2927 after
Used Washers&amp;: dryers good
view, $39,900 or rent $350 6 .
mo. plus dep. Call 446 · 1- - - - - - - - - - selection late models . All
8289.
3 bdr . apartment. 6 Court guaranteed 30 day, all real
St .. Gallipolis . $260 mo ., nloa. Call6t4-266-1207.
2 bdr. very nice full base- ref. S. sec . dep . Call 446Mayteg washer 8t dryer pair,
ment. located at 42 Chilli- 4926 .
like new. guaranteed. $275 .
cothe Rd ., $195 mo., $76
dop. Coli 446-3870 or 446- 1 bdr. apt., new carpeted, no Other make• of wa1hers 8t
pats, $165 mo. Call 446 - dryers. rebuilt, guaranteed,
1340.
2055.
$90 and up. Hotpolnt refrig.
S 1 30 , Whirlpool refrig .
6 rm. house 10 Edgemont
Or. 2 bdr. Bt bath, recently 1 bed room Apt . $196. mo. 81 30, GE rafrig. real nice
painted, new carpet livin- including utilities . Equal $176 . 1 Reece hitch will sell
groom 8t diningroom . Gas housing opportunity . Con- all or part. Call 446~8033 .
heat .. Call 446-1370 after tact Village Manor Apts.
614-992-7787 .
Brand new While sewing
5PM .
machine 879 . Slighly paint
For rent: newly remodeled 3 Apartments . 304 - 675 - damage , rag . price
$329.95. Call collect 614 bedroom country home near 5648 .
3B6·4535 .
Chester. $200 a month, piUs
deposit and references. No APARTMENTS , mobilel - - - - - - - - pets or children. Call 986- homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant 26 cu.h . Hotpoint refrig.
and Gallipolis. 614 -446 - side by side, large freezer,
4349 .
8221 ..
avocado green $250. Call
446·8033 or 446-8181 .
ABOVE average single fam ·
ily dwelling at 8th &amp; Viand ONE bedroom apartment.
Sl. Leas~ required; upper 402 Y2 24th. St. Pt. Pleasant, Early American sofa 88 '
long, exceUent condition.
brooket . Coli 304 -875 - phone. 1 -614-992 ·5858 .
$300. Call 446·8657 .
1931.
ONE bedroom apartment, 1- - - - - - - - - 3 bedroom house. 3311 8226 month, all utilities Used Furniture: sofa, swivel
rocker. rocker. recliner, reFranklin Ave. No pets. Dep- paid. 304-676 -2695 .
frigerator, electric range.
osit and reference required .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER . Corbin &amp; Snyder Furni1ure,
304-876 -18B7.
Apanmonts now available to 956 Second Ave .. Gallipolis.
Newly remodeled home in elderly &amp; disabled with an Call446-1171 .
Pt. Pleaaanl. large yard, in c ome of leu than 1 - - - - - - - - -basement, and carport. ap- $12.300 . Renting for 30 Heat Wave wood heater,
pliances included. Deposit percent of adjusted inCOfll&amp;· used three years. Has automatic thermostat and
and kla1e required. 8295 . .Phone 304-675-6679 .
blower. Very good condimonth. 304-615-6686 .
FURNISHEO effi c iency tion . Ca11247-2476.
apartment in Pt Pleasant. 1- - -----::-:==-- utilities paid . :W4-·895 SWAIN
42 Mobile Homes
' 3 450 .
AUCTION • FURNITURE
for Rent
62 Olive St ., Gallipolii. 6
SMALL furniahed apart· piece wood living room suite
Eureka : Riverfront lot, furn ., ment. a~ults, no pets. refer- with 6 inch flat arms 8399,
1 bdr .. $100 mo .. adults ref. ences, 304-675 -1365.
bunk i;)ed11 complete with
&amp; deposit. 1-614-643bunkies $199, 2 piece an2644.
tron livingroom suites 8199,
45 Furnished Rooms antron recliners $99. other
Trailer for rant in Mercerrecliners 880, maple dinette
ville, Oh . $200 mo. plus
sets 8179, love teats $70
For
rent
Sleeping
Rooms
deposit. Call614-256 -1956 and ligh1 house keeping hide - a - bed 8250. bo~
or 614-256-1606 .
rooms. Park Central Hotel, springs &amp; mat1rau twin or
full $100 set regular-firm
Furnished 2 bdr. trailer. new _C_• 1_1_4_46
_-_0_7_5_6_· _ _ __
S 120, maple dinette chairs
1
carpet ln Crown city. Call Sleeping room $126 , utilties $36. wash stands 834,
614-256· 6620 .
paid, single male . Share maple rockers $69; 7 piece
bath, 919 Second Ava. chrome dinette set $149 6
2 bdr. mobile home. Bridge~ Gallipolis . Call 446-4416 piece dinane set 889, us'.d
man St ., Syracuse. Oh . Ref. aher 7PM .
bedroom suites. refirger..-.tors, ranges, chest, dressera
l!o dap., no .pete . Call 992- 1 - - - - - - -- -3904 or 992 ·7866 .
,.
Furn . eff . apt. in Pt . Plea- wrin_gor washers, TV ' s:
dryeres, 8t shoes. Call 4461 2x65 .two bedroom trailer. sant. utilities paid. 304- 3159.
895-3450.
gas
waterdeposit.
paid, $250
mo ., and
$100
Call
446 -6583 .
2 bdr. mobile home, KerrBethel Ad . Partially furnished. Call 446·6839 .
12x62 2 bedroom trailer.
Adults onl.., . Brown' s Trailer
Pork. 614 ·992-3324.
2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine . 614 -367-0288 .
12 x 60 ·2 bedroom mobile
home for rent. ApprOk. 6
miles from Middlepon or
Pomeroy . 992 ·5868 .

2 bedroom. Roush Lane.
Cheshire . 1 or 2 children,
nicft yard . 1 - 304 · 773 5882 .

l :;ij~~~~;;:~~==
46

for Rent

Business-Downtown, reasone'ble. Call 446 -3666 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perk. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lot&amp;. Call
992· 7479 .

4 7 Wanted to Rent
Respectable couple with 1
child who wish to rent e 2
bedroo' m house in
Middleporf-Pomeroyo area.
Can give ;.;ler3ncflla. Call
992 -2117 end Ilk for
Candy. After 5 PM call
992· 2312.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Coal &amp; Firewood
Prices reduced May-July .
Pick up or delivered. We
honor HEAP Vouchers. Call
614-256-6245 .
For sale metal culv.ert 6 inch
thru 60 inch in stock. State
approved 16 gauge 12 inch
$6 .35 per ft .. 24 inch
810 .10 per ft. 38 Inch
$16. 60 per ft . Also plas1ic
culvert in stock . 6 inch thru
18 inch, 81nch $1 .80perh.,
12 inch 83.60 per h . Ron
Evans Entet'prisaa, 4 mi.
South of Jackaon on ST. RT.
93. 614-286-6930.

Ohto

68

•

Thunday, July 14, 1983

3425.
1--- - - - -- - - Zenith Color TV. EJCC, cond .
$200. 614 -992-3139.
Hide-A-Way bed, breakfast
set. 2 tablelampa, dryer, Bnd
I bl
614 992 7751
• es.
·
·
·
Block laothor
i;.·;.;~t
$70. fall
1981 H &amp;. W, 2 horse trailer.
like new, 41700. Call evenIngs olter 7:00, 304 -5762782.
TWO
windows.
32x3B". ·~oo . 304·6768183 altar 3 P - ~ .
SET of trailer axles &amp; 6
whaels. 715 Vega, 8600.
304·576-2738.
LOUIS XV love seat, perfect
condition. Don't call if not
seriously intratted in buying .
304-875 -4302.
~~~

CB antenna, 73 Dodge
;.'!.':: 1 milk cow. hogs.
1.

55 Building
Building materials
block, bric~ .. sewer pipes,
windows. hntels. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grandfll,
0. Call614-246 -6121 .

69

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

For Sali or

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ' "

DICK TRACY

-:"

n•a"

Pfe

)I!(R.

1

"[);~et .

I~

0

•
•

Farm Equipment

67' Ford 800 SE. good
shape. 72' Chevrolet 30 SE
good . 830 ' Case tractor
good cond. Call 8t4-3889333 oltar SPM . .
1 New Idea hay conditioner,
1 hay wagon. 1 ·Arabian
gelding $176. 2 ponies.
614-9B5·3891.

~. 'au "'NE "· " lM RI&gt;f us '"•' • rMOI•

Ford 5000 diesel tractor.
good cond. ,5,500. 614992-3140.

71

NEW a Used HarveatOre
Structures. Automated livestock feeding -computer
feeders. Call collect .614·
685-2260. John L. Botta.

1980 Ford Pinto 1 owner,
low mileage, euto Irena. WIS
$2,796 now •2.1!511 . a real
buy. John'• Auto Sale,
446·4782.

JOHN Deere 350 C dozer, 8
way blade &amp; winch, 3 years
old , A·1 condition.
815,000. 614-698·6513.

Netional C..,_lle Ownel'l
Aun. lo decoted to the
preservation and .-..toration 1962 Chevy truck. good
of all 1914-1972 Chevfllllel body Bnd good running
8t El Camino1. Our 2nd cond. 88 Burdette Add.
annual member convention •660. 304-175-8512.
will be hold Aug. 8-11 In 1--;~===~~:;:;:;::;=
Huntington, WV. There will 1 ~
bl o show, ocilvitloo, swap 73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
meat, awards a. mora. Join
today. N.C.O.A .• P.O . Box !~~~ Ford Bronco mech
6014 , Greensboro. NC guuu cond., 8800. Call
27403. 9t 9-.272-0BBB.
~~~~~·lt~·~r~6~:0~0~-_:_=:

----------1-----------,..----------l

OltVER 80 tractor. over·

hauled. 1700.00. 304·882·
2532 or 882-2274.
1970 615 - 0iaaal Allis
Chalmer 2 bucket backhoe,
69 C60 dump truck, tri a:.le
low boy trailer 47,000 all .
304·676-5580.
JOHN Deere tractor, model
B, 304-882,3236.

63

Livestock

Rhode Island Red 8t White
laying hens. 11 .50 each .
Will make deal. Call 44683B1 .
American Saddle bred yearling stud cola. Stud Serivce,
R!tglaf'ered Ameican Saddle
bred ataiHon. eKcellenl blood
lines. Call 614 ~ 266-6461
after 6.

THURSDAY
7/14/83

'

Painting interior 6 axterior, ·::·
wellpeper hllnginv, l n . -. ~.
FrM eotlmltH. 814·148·
2188.
HI P_ou,.. CINnlng. Alum·
inum 1ldlng, mobile hom•.
wood. brick, tendetone
bulldintl end hoiMtl. AIIO
Jooevy -lpmwtt. Fully In,
lurid. F - eotlmltM. 114·
948-2688.

72

Autos for Sale

Trucks fnr Sale
"
1980 Chevy 1 ton. Coli
between 7&amp;8r 446-3243.

711 Chov pickup truck, 8 cvt:
automatic, lo-.v mileage,
axe. condition _ 304-157152449.

I-----------:

1----------

I

8:00 II C2JCil D CIJ® IIl (f2)
News

-·

C2J Video Jukobox
C2J MOVIE: 'St. Holo~s·

..

®

.. ,

1 I XlXJ I I X)

H • S Homelmprov•ntMtl.
Ouollty -kmenohlp etlow
priooo. Aluminum - .. gun en. 81orm doora • win~ ~~
dowo. Also rapeir wori&lt;.
Phone lor lrM oltimet.O
317-0409 .. 114-3870490. AH wo~ guaranteed.

I

RON'S Tolovillon Service.
SpeciiUzing in Zenith and

Motoroll , Quaur, and
houao callo. Cell 171-2318
or 448· 24&amp;4.

LOSER

·.·,

F 1!o K TrM Trimming. otump
romovel . Coli 675-1331 .

'

'f'IQK)W, ftWIS '0$. MO~E!Z.
~~·r ASt&gt;.D ~... au m."N

BUT A5 FAR- AS I'M

I

•

(.QllffiQIWi '5\l!i CAN

HAD OJR UPS AND OOWIJS,, .

RINGLE'S SERVICE ioxpe&lt; .:·
rienced roofing. l"cludlnjl "'
hot tar •pUcatlon. carpe-, ·:
ter. electrician, mason. c•1
304·876·2088 or 1711· •
41110.

&lt;Gff\'1 OllllERI: AS
L()Jif) As SI-lEO

BRIDGE

Defend with ARCH

Water Welle. Commercial
and Domeltic. Taat holn.
Pump1 Sales apd Serv~ . .,.
304-8911-3802.
Oat your cerpet in thlp •
ahapa. W.t•r removel, FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814-441-2107.

76 CJ5. $1.000. 304-6762808.
'

E &amp; R TrH Sorvlcl, tufty
Insured , free 11tlmatea.
Phone 814 -317-0131. cell
after 6 .

1979 Honda CB 860 . Price
negotiable. Call 448-8863.

•• •

TOO FAR FOR
YOU T' 1¥1/LH,
Tt&lt;IIT'5 FOfl5U~E!
BUT I C'l'l \liVE YOU

Y'CIIN?.1 6EE1
THI/HHS,
Nt5TER!

elfi()E THE~E!

ALt:EY OOP
'THII-T GOES FOR ALL OF
VOU! NOW GOOD LUCK
AND GOOD HUNTING!

SENfl.EMEN,l'HIS MORNING
THERE WILL Bli A COMBINED

EFFOJ&gt;:T 10 DESTROY THE
HUN'S FlYING CIRCUS!

·-

.

-------------------- ·.
w.......

GASOLINE ALLEY

Mr. Bicker,

You
f o:t y mc.nl!o&lt;'ln

mean'R~fus
th i n~s .. .

t'tfi'

WINNIE
~~
I~
TH~I~
NK
~
5~
HE~~~GO~IN~G~l=o~

DO OKAY. 5Hf'5 .REALLY
MOTIVATED THI5 TIM
. l.IANIE.

1
UNDERSTAND.

THE

FEW

FIRST

WEEKS

CAN eE REALLY

ROUGH .

BARNEY

HE
SHORE

I · BET SNUFFY
MARRIED VOU
FOR VOUR COOKIN'

DID

--AN' MY WASHIN' AN' IRONIN'
AN' MOPPIN' AN' WOOD CHOPPIN'
AN'

MENDIN' AN' -·-

..
"l

JONES BOYIWATER SER VICE . Cell 114·367-7471 '--1
or 114-317-0191 .
'

.

PAINTING - lnt.-ior end
ell1erlor. plumbing. roofing.
tome ,.rnodelin1. 20 yra.
••P· Coli 114-381·1112.

1978 DATSUN truak. o•..l· Mercum Roofing a 1-t·
lent mechllnlclllohape. body lng. 30 - · ..............
good, t2300. 304·671· opodellzlng In bolt up roo!.
27112.
.
•
Celll14·381·tl17.

'

Need something hluled
eway or aomethlna movect?
Wo'll do it. Cell 446-3118
betwe'en I ond I .

'
PEANUTS
'
VOO 60T AHOTHER LETTER
FROM MARCIE? IS SHE
STILL LONELV ?

JIMI WATER IERVIC! .
Cell Jim Lonilr. 304·1717387.

87

Uphol•terv

TRI ITATI
UPHOLITERY IHOP ,
11 U - - Ave.• Olillpollo.
448·7133 or 441·11~. ,

•2

~ua•~ellf

Clipps
fer

:.~

1916 Ford PU 352 ou.ln.
engine. runs good, body
good. Prlcld t880. Clil
448-8218.

'-

.K

1----------

I ~~~
~~~~~~~~ ~

'

.J

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One
piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. AdvanOMI Gutter, (Dey 814·192·40ell.t
(night 614· 898-8201.1

One Holstein heifer 1YJ yr.
1974 Hondo 350. 7,400 Roofing and Carpentry
old. One Jersey milk cow 1979 rad VW Rabbit, auto., actual mllet. •100. Call work. general repaire. 0111
Anthony Wllllemoan, 114vory gentle. Coli 614-379- air con d., AM ~ FM radio, real 614-388-9766.
nice', $3,195. John's Auto
367-0194.
2609 .
Sales. 446 · 4782. Opon
77 Yamaha 760, shaft drive,
ROOFING &amp; outllide pelntQuail chicks. d1y old to eight evenings.
81.095 . 80 Hondo 900, ing,
56 Pets for Sale
free eltlmetn, 814·
weeka. $1 epiece~ - one-third
dresse1t,
t2,695.
77
Honda
to two·thlrds off.
Any 19780odge0mni, 4apeed, 760, ohoppar. t2,qoo. 4 - 367-0638.
amount from 1 to 600. 4 dr., new tires. Cell 446- Hondi 560'o. from 1400 to
HILLCREST KENNEL - 985-4346. Eggs sp'ecial · ~ 9694.
81,000. Betz Honda Satea,
Plumbing
Boarding 111 brMds. Selling reduced from .80 to .40.
Upper Rt. 7 , Golllpolll. Oh. 82
73
OLOS
98,
metallic
blue.
Happy Jack Dog food . AKC
lit
Heating
New loCIItion , acro11 from
Oobermana: Stud Service. Rag . quener horie buckskin loaded whh option•. excel- Holiday Inn .
Coli 446· 7795.
mare *1.360 . Black mare lent condition, re1sonably
with filly $860. loth mares priood. 304-675-2279.
1982 Harley Roadster 1100
CARTER'S PLUMBING
DRAOONWYND CATTERY bred back. Alao 2 year mare
AND HEATING
1976 Uncoln Mark IV. low actual miles. axe. con d., Cell
- KENNEL. AKC Chow pup- 8400. 814-992-3640.
otter 3 :30PM. 814-387Cor.
FoUrth and Pine
mila~o
.
304-458
-1864.
pies, CFA Himala..,an, Per7201 .
Phone 448-3888 or 4411·.. ;
sian and Siamese kittena. Mind, Hereford baby Celvea .
'
'
Coli 448-3844 oltor 4PM.
843-51-86 after 5 p.m. • ' 81 VW Robblt . 304-675- 197B Hondo troll 90, 2300 4477
6153.
miles, like new, $325. Call JIM'S PLUM81N.O a HEAT· ;
2 AKC Reg . Cocker Sp•- SIX veer old P.ilamino mare.
614. 258-1250 . '
lNG . Fomerly Oewltt'e. ,
niels. Both males, selling for ·•soo. Call evenings after 74 Chevy Monte Ca . 10, 360
Plumbing. Call 114-317- -·
4
-barrel
d4al
.exhaust,
ew;c.
breeding purposes. Call 7:00, 304-578-2782 .
...•
. con d . 12250. 304-675 - 1 978 honda hawk 400 with 0&amp;78. .
448·9372 oltor 5:00PM.
4230 olter 5. 304-675- quicksilver fairing. 8900.
COW&amp; calf, 1at. calfheifer,
Without fairing $7&amp;0. In
female Buagle pups, B wka _ half Holstein. half Black 7559.
good condition. Call 614- 83
Excavating
old. 825. Coli 614-268- Angus. 860 lbo. 8ull colt by
81 VW Rabbit, 4 speed, real 367-7191 .
6855 .
aide about 260 lba. 8550 good condition. 304-676- 1- - - - - - -- - both. 304-675-4210.
2959.
.. 1980 Honda Passport In OOZER WORK By Ted
Pony. Call 446·9669. ..
good ~ondition and ·low Hanna, pond1. dltcheJ,
THE COWBOY SHOP, Now
mllaogo. t350. Coli 992- b01ament1, Ita. Cell 446AKC block Lllb. puppias, 2 Hoven. WV, 304-882-2350. 1978 Ford LTD II. B7,000 6961.
4907. Carter • Evana'
rnaht. 2 female . 6 wkt. old, Now in stock: Cettle hatter•. mi18s. in good condition
Tr•n.portatlon.
$125 . Call614-266·1379. ahowrtlcks, auppliea, acces~ 81900. 304-675-4524.
1981 Hondo 760 Cuotom
soriaa . sheep halters ,
with full fairing. 3500 miles.
lovely grey a black Lh11a blankets, all hor~e suppliei. 71 VW Super Beetle. 73 11600. Call614-992-7483 ,Lonnie Boaa• Excavating.
Dozer, b8ckhoe. dumptruck.
rebuilt engine. automatic,
Apso puppies . f wka. old,
after 6 p.m.
$996. 304-468-1926.
Work by hour or fob. Cell
wormed &amp; ahota. Aegittered
448-7903.
with AKC, very good na- 64 Hay &amp; ·G rain
76 FORD Pinto. 1450. 1980 Suzuki GS B&amp;OL road
tured. Femalas,150, males
bike . Shaft drive. mag Cat 214 hoe. dozen. crane.
304-676-1034.
8175. call 446-0706 .
wheels, custom bike. Good loadere. dump truck. C.. l
shape. *1.800. Call after 8 614-448 - 1142 between
2 AKC Registered Brittany Ha9 for ule $1 .60 a bale or 19~9 CHEVETTE. good p.m. 614-992-8611 .
trade
.for
calves.
Call
4467:00AM &amp; 1:00PM. ,
condition.
304-676-1969.
Sponiels. Coli 614-2458381 or 446 -1688.
5449 after 6PM.
1973 PINTO wagon, no HONOA MR 60. 1225. Coil Dozer work, ground clun ~
2 male CFA registered seal Custom Combining . Call holes. extra engine availa- olter 5, 304-675-3599.
lng • eKCIIYating. *26 hour.
Call 448-9638 .
ble, needs little work, 304pt. Himalayn kittens. Very _6_1_4_·_2_s_e_
-1:._
,3_6_2_._ _ __
1
·
11171
HONDA
350
otroot
1
good pedigr•. Reasonably Hey tor sale out of field 876-5758 .
bike, excellent condition. J.A.R. Construction Co.
614
992
7138
priced.
"
'
·
81 .00 bolo. Coii446-01B3. 1969 Oldo 98-1675. 1965 304·676-3054.
Water Linea. Footert.
Draine_Alllcinde of Ditching.
Fairlane-1375. Both in ex·
AK C chocolate male toy
Rutland. Oh. 114-742poodle. Also odult famola MIXED hay. 304- 675- cellent condition. Snow tires
Boats and
2903 .
like new·L78 1 5 . •so. Cell 75
poa:dle. and cocker spaniels . 1 _2 _26_4_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Motors for Sale
992-5420.
614-992-2607.
,.
Hay and Straw. 304-458·
Meiga E•cnetlng. l ..tloaer
AKC Reg . Golden Retriever 1 _1 _65_6_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
1978 Monte Corio. IIM·FM
• blckhoe oervlcll. ......
cassette, air conditioning, 1974 17 ft . tri-haul. 125 manta, footers. llndloaplng,
pupa. 6weekeoldwithahots •·
and wormed . 614-742 - WANTED to buy: Onion or tilt-wheel. crulee control. Evinrudo U.OOO. Coll614· drivewaya. f1rm panda. ~·
girlie wheat. phone 304- 306 two barrel. Good condi- 367-0262.
114·742·2407or614·742· _
2143 or 814-742-2957.
675-1807.
·2 088.
\
tion and good tires. Call
448-7221 otter 7 PM.
AKC registered black · GerCat 215 Hoe. dozera. crane,
man Shepherd puppies,
76 Auto Parts
1976 Flrobird . &amp;t .150. Coli
loadert. dump truck. 114·
1160. 304-937-3201 .
&amp;
Accessories
742-3083.
441-1142 bl-.. 7 o.m.
to 5 p.m.
'
71
Autos for Sale
1976 V.W. Beetle. Sun roof
57
Musical
and good tires. t 2900. Cell Window tinting-auto, comI nstrume.n ts
mercial &amp;. residential. Call 84
985·4201 .
Electrlcel
448-3100.
1976 Monte Carlo, good
&amp; Refrigeration
cond .. 11.800. Cell 614- 1977 Pontiac Phoenix with
Las Paul; Gibton guitar, 387-0262-.
air, 1 owner. good running Metal tool box for wide bed
charryburat . •soo. Call
truck, like new -60. 304 ~
oond. 11 .300. 742-3061 .
Appliance Service all mak..
614-367· 7615 .
676-3248.
TWO 1989 Ford Muotongo.
• modelo.
dryeraHardtop •1000. Convertible Mini Motor home. 22 ft .
refrig. ~ r•ngee-dlshwalh..-1·
Rogers drum lfllt, Marimba, •1200 . Call 304 ~ 896~ Mounted on 74 model
air condltionen. Bargein,
altouc . Cell 614 -317 - 3610. Can be sHn on Dodge. Chasis clean . Mutt 79 Motors Homes
Bern. 448-8033.
'
7 3 7 8, Fri . &amp; Mon . 9 ~ n.oon .
&amp; Campers
Sandhill Road 'Bt Letart'.'
aee to appreciate. Call 742l--==========.l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====::..l2718.
SEWINQ Mochlne ropelro,
~
----~---oorvlco. Authorized linger
1988 442 Oldo. 1987 ChaSelo1 &amp; Service 8h1._
velle \Super Sport. 1980 1976 22ft. Holldey Remblor Scitaors . F1brlc Shop,
Dodge Omni, low mileage. travel trailer; Lots ot extras. Pomeroy. 812·2284.
All good cond. 614-949- A-1 cond. 614-742-2511
2129 or 614 · 949-2281
before 6 p.m. 614-742ftV&amp;ninga.
2271 alter 5 .
85 General Hauling

STUCCO PLASTERING te•tu,.d aelllnge commer·
clot lltld -ldentill, lrM
........... C.ll 114·2611182.

r J

.J

1977 Chevrolet 4•4 PS, PB.
full ton. auto trans.. new
paint. new wheel and tires.
13,900. Coli 448-8614.

Motorcycles

.

Rainbow
Ill Wild. Wild Woot
6:30 D C2J Cil NBC News
C2J MOVIE: ' Ruckuo·
(}) love That Bob
Now arrange lhe drclld
to
(I) ESPN'o &amp;portlforum
1otm the aurpr1M .,._, u oug(]) F•ther Know1 Belt
1
go-bylhe.-.,.._,.
Clllll (j}) ABC Now•
Cl IIJ (D CBS NIWI
Cll Dr. Who
Nlswerhere: A [
(j]) Over E01y
7:00 D C2J PM Magazine
~--1
Cll Burn1 &amp; Allen
Jumbles: THINK FENCE GIMLET CRIIVAT
(I) ESPN SportaCentar
Yesllrday·s Answer: oori't expBct someone to talk turkev who 's
Cil GrHn Acree
!his- CHICKEN
Cl) Ent•rtainment Tonight
ClJ Charlie's Angola
D ()) Tlo Tee Dough
,.......look No. ~ cont•lnlng t10 f*UIH, 11 IYII ..Dtt lor $1.15 plw lk potI •
Cl) {)])
MecNoii-Lahrar
Md Nnclllnf !toM J!Mnbll, clo IIIII MWIINiper, BoA M 1 _Norwood, N.J . 07141.
........
I\IIMI,ICI*HI, c:CMt.lndmllk•et.ckl
IDIIION
Report
®N-•
ei)JI Pooplo'a Court
ell Star Trek
7:30 D C2J lie Detector
l
Cll Doble Ollila
(I) 1983 Britlah Open Golf,
Chomplonohlp: Firat Round
from
Royal
Birkdalo.
Englend
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
IE Mejor Looguo Baseball:
Atlanta at Philadelphia
()) Cl ()) Family Feud
(JJ Bulin••• Report
® Vou Asked For It
(fi) This Old HouH
players at the table were
Ill IDi Entertainment
tired experts. When tired,
Ton_lght
·
experts are apt to make misNORTH
7-14-lll
8:00 8 C2J CIJ Feme A retarded
takes thai average players
singer falls for Julie and
·would be ashamed of, and
\'106 3
the students find out that
tKQHI
even beginners would be
teacher David Reardon has
.AQJ6
unhappy with.
posed il'! e magazine. (R)
Experts North and South
EAST
WEST
(60 min .t
bid
too much and reached an
.AQ
107
3
.KB2
Cl) Not Neceaaerily Th•
impossible game. North
\'KQ
\'8
5!2
News Th is show promises
really should have passed at
• 732
t A85
to be everything the cur..
one
no-trump and South
.742
.9
8
3
rent news is not.
might have merely bid just
. C2J MOVIE: 'Yankee Doodle
SOUTH
two no--trump instead of
Dandy'
96 s
three.
CIJ IS~
.
\'AJ97
West opened the deuce of
())Ill (j}) MOVIE : 'Meaada'
tl06
spades, and East made the
Pert 3
10 5
proper play of the queen
CJ ()) ® Magnum, P.l. A
mstad of the ace. He
Vulnerable: Both
woman , who comas to the
returned the three, and
Dealer: North
estate to wr i te~ book on
South's nine forced West's
ornithologists causes probWest Nortb Ea1l
South
king. A third spade went to
lems for Magnum. (Ri (60
It
1•
I NT
East's ace, and without a
min.)
Pass
2•
Pass
3 NT
moment's thought East led a
Cl) (fi) Sneak Previews CoPass
Pass
Pass
fourth spade to set up the
hOsts Neat Gabler a!"d Jeflast spade in his own hand .
·frey Lyons take a look a1 ·
Now South knocked out
what's happening at the
the ace of diamonds, and
movies .
East's fifth spade never
fl) MOVIE: 'Girl Happy'
Opening lead:
came close to scoring a
8:30 C2J lnalda Boxing
tric k.
Cl) Up Pompeii
II East hadn't been too ·
(fi}
View
from
the
By Oswold Jacoby
tired. be would have seen
Stondpl!&gt;o
9:00 II C2J ClJ Gimmo A Brook
aad James Jacoby
that South was sure of the
Nell gets a job as a door-tonine tricks unless West could
door salesman. (R)
The acronym ARCH, par- produce the ace of either red
C2J MOVIE: 'Six Pock'
ticularly the all-important suit. The only way to defeat
(}) 700 Club Today's pro"How can I defeat this declarer would be lor East
gram
features
Maxine
contract?" applies to the to lead his heart king. East
Andrews of the Andrews
would then score the setting
defense.
Sisters.
It was the last round of a trick with the queen.
CJ ()) ® Simon l!o Simon
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A1BN.}
Swiss qua,ifying, and all
A.J . and Rick become in volved with 10 sexv ladies
suspected of murder. (A)
(60 mln .l
·
(l) [D Ther••e Raquin from
Masterpiece
Theatre
Therese and Laurent's
wedding night turns in1o a
horrible nightmara, (Ri(60
min.) [Closed Cap1ioned]
by THOMAS JOSEPH
9:30 II C2J Cil Chura Diane
tries to use a Miss Boston
ACROSS
DOWN
contest to denounce 'seki&amp;t
. 1 Tiff
1 Philatelist's
aotivity .' (Rl
SHOWid
item
10:00 II C2J Cil Hill Stroot Blues
11
Dorothy's
2
Bear
Coffey is a suspect in the
dog
,
3
Ready
death of a prisoner and
1%
SUde
by
to
fight
Joyce is offered a high·
paying job in Washington .
13 Me too
4 Extremely
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14 Luxury
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6 Winged
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17
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Extensive
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tidbits
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18 Be the
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Z4 Windflower
31 Web-footed
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25 Skin
animal
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10:30 (})Star Time
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38 Set of
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fiancee's
long-vanished
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D~ILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
·llll Allin tho Femlly
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IB I)JI Nlghtllnl
II
LONGFELLOW
fll Ounomoke
12:00 Cil Burn• &amp; Allen
One letter limply llanda lor another. In thi1 nmple A 11 •
(I) 1983 Brltlah Open Oolf
used lor the three 1L's, X for the two 0 '&amp;, ete. Single !etten '
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finda himaelf in Manhanan
. FELLOWBYWHATHELAUGHSAT.-WII.SONMIZNER
working on two 'typical
New York' cueo . (Rl

tSHARTH±

1980 diesel VW Rabbit. Coli
446-01548.

74

I DRAIP
I I r I)

ClJ Nowo/Sporii/WIIthor

Cll Studio S..

1978 4x4 Dodge Pickup.
ekc. cond. Best offer. Call
875-8076.

1977 Dodge Aspen station·
wagon, PS, PB, good cond .,
Call i\46-7489 or 446_6:c5:-o_e_._ _ _ _ _ __
--:
80 Honda XRSO. good condition . Asking •360. Call
446-8301 .

(l) Tic Tee Dough
(!) lnoldo thll USFL
(I) I Dr•am af JHnnle

iiD Reading

1977 Plymouth Vololro
good cond .. 81 .5'&amp;0. C1ll
446-9333.

73 Chevy Molibu. 2 dr., 350
auto. Ps : - PB , swivel ,
buckets, console, &amp;476. Call
614·246-5144.

±

EVENING

GENE' S CARP!T CLEANING SERVICE. Recommended for profeealon•l
steam oleanlng. IC)otch
Guard-Free Eatlm,atn. Call
Oono et 614-112-8301.

Umeatone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered In M11on, Meigs,
Gellia or pick up at Richards
l!o Son . Call448· 7786.

TWO bedroom trailer et
GallipOiia Ferry . be"1ow
Hhching Post. 304 ~ 676 ·
9084. 1100. deposit, 1150.
Small
engines
repaired
a month rent .
1 Have vour
old mower
recon -.
51 Household. Goods ditionodlor 1 frootlon of tho
cost of a new one. We now
44 Apartment
are equipped to fiK outboard
for Rent
GOOD USED APPLIANCES bo•t motors. Nelson. Sons
- washe~s. dryers, refrlgera- in Eureka. Ohio . Call 614Furniahed apt .. t2,10, utili· ton, renget. Sk1gge Ap· 256· 1643.
tiel pd.. 1 bdr., 920 4th j:lllances, Upper River Rd··JA;;:;;;;;;d:iti,;:;;;;:i'j[DiiQ~iJ.
~1u,
Ave.. Ooltlpolio. Coli 441- beside Stone Crear Motel . Airconditioner1ti
446· 739B .
• • - cond . Coli 446-3541.
4418 ofter 7PM .

otonn
a - -·
qu.ollty dootl
-.nonllhlp,
20
yrs. ••P· FreentiMat... C..l ,_
614· 31NI408 orl14-3170490.
.•,

'

lfl.lif ~

Sale or trade for van. 1977
Harley Davldton Super
Glide. Lots of naw parts.
82, BOQ. 614·949 · 2880.

Television
Viewing

FIND THAT HARD

H &amp; 8 Homal...........,.ento.
Aluminum lidlng. goltt-

Sef'ate I

61

The ec;;ly SentineJ:.-Page-13

Thuisday, July 14, 1983
by Larry Wright

Cash Register check out 1 --,.---~-----­
counter. Call448· 1543.
BlackMrrlea for ..,, by
Antique furniture for sale. order. Call 314-388-8869.
Call 614-256-1768 .
3, 7500 BTU air condition·
ars. JC Penny energy effi·
ciont . Coli 448-9474.

G,AMEo rowN
llf'llf:, Faf&lt;?

•

'"

I llltNK I'M 60tN6 TO
KICK VOU! AND THEN I
KNOW IT'S 60tN6 TO FEEL
SO 600D, I'M 601N610
KICK YOU A&amp;AIN! -

e

'
••
•

.

"

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----~--

,

. ..

-,

•

�.Pomeror

Middleport, Ohio

Thunday, July 14, 1983 .

.Ex-Ford .executive leads Chrysler
:corporation to successful comeback
DETROIT (AP) - Five years
after being fired byFordMotorCo.,
· Lee Iacocca can take credit tor one
ol the great comebacks In business
history - the rescue of the nearly
bankrupt Chrysler Corp., which
could post a $700 million profit this
year.
,
• The Chrysler. chairman announced Wednesday that the nalJon'sNo. 3 automaker will pay back
..- seven years early the
i:ernalnlng $!lXl million It owes In
federally guaranteed loans.
• At a standing-room-only luncheon
~ Washington, Iacocca told reporiers he was just following his
.father's credo: "When you borrow
iOinelhlng, pay the damn stuff

back."
; "I'd give someone a check right
now," he told the National Press
'tlub audience, adding that the
)lctual payment would not rome for
IDdays because of red tape.
; In describing the fiscal turna:hlund, Iarocca said: "You know as
"1\mericans, we seem to have a
rather peculiar trait, we run better
and laster scared. Adversity brings
us together."
• In 1!179, Chrysler faced bank·
'ruptcy. But Iacocca wrung $15
billion in loan guarantees from the

.

federal government to give the
company an Infusion of cash.
Chrysler then drew down $12 billion
of the cash and combined It with
worker concessions and a snappy
new line oflront-wheel-drive cars to
return to profitability.
From 1979-81, Chrysler lost a total
of $3.27 blllton, but could post a 1983
profit of $700 million, said Maryann
Keller, manager of VIlas Fischer, a
New York City firm that analyzes
the stock market The auto firm
posted a first-quarter record earning of $172J mlllton.
Chrysler's 58-year-old chairman
was once described as "a dramatic
and heroic figure ... the Lancelot of
what Is left of this business," by
writer Gay Talese.
Lido Anthony Iacocca, who first
went to work lor Chrysler for $1 per
year but was paid $375,6761n 1982, Is ,
the son of I !allan Immigrants. He
grew up In Allentown, Pa., went to
college on a scholarship and wound
up at Ford, where he worked on the
successful Mustang.
Henry Ford II named him
president of the company lnl970, but
the two men clashed and Ford fired
Iacocca in 1978. Chrysler wooed and
won Iacocca later that year.
Iarocca has said he didn't realize

at the time how weak Chrysler was.
• In 1979, Chrysler lost $11 billion, the
ttrsi year of an auto lnustry
depression that Is just beginning to
end.
Iacocca's first task was to gain
concessions from unions and arrange the bail-out The Loan
Guarantee Act was passed Dec. 21,
1979.
"He was the most believable
spokesman," said John Morrissey,
a partner in the advertising firm of
Kenyon and Eckhardt, which put
Iacocca In Chrysler's television
commercials.
Nowiacoccasaysthechallenge!s
to maintain rebounding sales.
"We can't go back to the old ways
of getting fat and letting all kinds of
costs creep back in," he said. "Only
by competing hard and fair will we
be able to make It"

· Page.S

Bill Wyman could
pave sold the shirt off his back at the
l!SthWorldScoutJamhoree-about
fhe only thing he had lett as
fOUvenlr-hungry scouts neared the
end oflhelr stay.
~ Wyman, director of the Trading
Post run by Boy Scouts of Canada,
!'5timated revenue !rom thelnterna!;19nal gathering at $700,000.
l)erta (AP) -

.'to end matTiages
; Flllng for divore in Meigs County
Common Pleas COurt was Karen K
C::llkey, Middleport against Richard
D. Gilkey, Middleport
• Granted divorces were Steven K
Call from Rita C. Call; Judy K
0'Nell from Michael P. O'Neil.
: Marriages dissolved were Can·
dace Kay Leffler and Bll]y D.
Lefler; Carol A. Smith and Clifford
R Smith; George Stitt and Donna
Stitt

Marriage ltcenses were granted
to Stephen M. Weber and Janice R
Kestner; Ronald KE&gt;ith Johnson and
Sandra D. Herdman.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy tonight Low near 68. Winds southwesterly less than
10 mph. Partly cloudy, continued hot and more humJd Friday. High

SS-93.
Extended Ohio Forecast

Salurd'l)' through Monday:
Rot and lnunld through the period. Wgtv~ in theupper816 to mid-90s.
lAws In the upper 00s to low 'ltloi.

I Area death I

'

Janet S. Hysell
THUMBS UP FOR CHRYSLER- Lee Jacocca
chalnnan oltbe Chry.aer Corp., gestures to repone,;
following an appearance at the National Preis Club In
Washington Wednesday. lacocca announced that the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 15, 1983

na&amp;lon's No. 3 aulomaker will pay hack Ita remalnlar
$800 mlllloo loan from lhe federal pvermnenl seven
years early. (AP u-pboio).

injured in accident

MEN'S WEAR CLEARANCE
SHORTS
VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS '
SWIM TRUNKS [

KNIT SHIRTS
DRESS SLACKS
'JACKETS

JUNIOR - MISSES - EXTRA SIZES

SHORTS
BLOUSES
DRESSES
·SPORTSWEAR
COORDINATES

KNIT TOPS
SKIRTS
SLACKS
SWIMWEAR
SLEEPWEAR
..."-··-~"~---··~·---"··-

---·-·______ ________, -----BOYS' WEAR QEARANCE
_..,.;,.

SAVE

,

SPORT SHIRTS
SHORTS AND CUT-OFFS
SWIM TRUNKS
·----._...~_._...._.._.

\

KNIT SHIRTS
DRESS SHIRTS
JACKETS

______ ...-- ·- --

Suspended.

~-.-·------·

.._..,

CHILDREN'S,WEAR CLEARANCE
LITTLE GIRLS TOPS
LITTLE GIRLS DRESSES
LITTLE Gl RLS SWI MWEAR
LITTLE BOYS SWIM TRUNKS
LITTLE BOYS TOPS

ON
Bulova Seiko Pul-sar
Caravelle

LITTLE GIRLS SHORTS
LIITLE GIRLS SLACKS
LITTLE GIRLS SLEEPWEAR
UTILE BOYS PAJAMAS
LITTLE BOYS SHORTS

.SHOP FRIDAY TIU 8:00, SATURDAY

•VISA
•MASTER CHARGE
•LAYAWAY

nu 5:00

-

FREE

An employee at the Air India
counter In the terminal said
"several dozen people were covered
with blood."
Passengers at the Tur~ Air·
lines counter were checking In for
1\trldsh Alrllm!s Fllght926, a Boeing

The Meigs Local Scbool Board
approved Its 191M budaet at 'l'hunldey nlght's&amp;pldalmeettng.

- -·~- ~

----

-·---

--

··-

-

.. -·-

-

•... .._

. ....... .

-

~

- _.........., ...
\"

-.......;

...

The hoard hired (lve teachers.
Wllllam Blaine, math; Linda Brock,
· art; Mary Jo · Buckley, EMR;
Lynette Vanreet~. choral and junior

727 due to leave on a non-slop ftlght to
Istanbul with 167 passengers.
An employee at the Turkish
AlrHnes counter at Orly said by
telephOne that the explosion "perhaps was aimed at us, but there are
several other alrllne offices next to

us."'
The south terminal, a huge single
building, houses dozens of lntemattonal airlines although much International traffic haS been rooted to
the newer Charles de Gaulle airport
east of Paris.
An airport spokesman saki he got
to the scene slxlrtly after the
explosion. ''The Injured had been
put on benches and the team of
medical workers !rom the airport
are carina tor them." he said.
The ground ftoor rl the terminal
was evacuated, he said.
The explosion came one day after
a man with a pistol shot and kllled a
. 1\trklshdlplomat in Brussels. Three
Annenlangroupsclalmedresponsibutty for shooting Dursun Aksov ,39,
an attache at the 1\trklsh Embassy
In Belgium as he sat In his car.
The assassination was claimed by
the Secret Anny lor the Uberatton
of Annenl8, the Justice Coolmandol of Annenlan Genocide, and the
Armenian Re\lolutlonary Anny.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Wholesale prices, propelled by the
sharpest energy priCe gains in 11
months, shot up 0.5 percent in June,
the government said today.
It was the second straight overall
gain -followlnglourrnonlhsolllttle
or no change- and meant that, for
the first half of the year, wholesale
prtces feU at·an annual rate of 1.0
percent
· Indeed, economists were far !rom
being upset at today's news. One
. said that further, although&amp;maller,
increases should be registered for
the next lew months. Another said
the new round of priCe hikes was
typical "as a recovery picks up

and Emtly Sprague, high school

busineSS.
.
The board hired three teacherl,

Susan Sprow, elernelltary vocal

$5,902.492 and expendltuml are
projected to be$5,841l,lm 'The board
expecll a balance of $6l.E92 at the
end rll986.
The board allo accepted the
1"'11"'""' tt tine tM lwr L

music; Grace Hawley and Michael
substitute teachen.
In addnton, the board approved a
professional leave for O.W.E. In·
atructar Ron J·qpn who Is attend-

wm.

1111111 o.w.E......... ll!lnblar.

The board &amp;JII1I'OY8d DarTell c. .
Stone
81 • tuition atudent at.
Pone oy Eleml!ntary School.

m

•

high music, and.l'atrlcla Chapman,
11lementary teacher.
In other business, the hoard wUI
make the following repairs to
buildings In the district from money
derived from the recent tax levy.
Improvements Include roofs,
SQI,OOO; new doors at Chester and
1\tppers Plains Elementary, $7,1XD;
kitchen equipment at Chester
Elementary, $2,1XXJ. They have
already spent $~,000 for .text books,
$7,00&gt; for typewriters and $1,500 lor
sewing machines.
This summer under the same
program painting andrepa!rwUI be
done to the outside of the buildings.
The board agreed to have the
student hand book printed for the

coming year.
Following the meeting the hoard
went Into executive session on
personnel matters and negotattons.
The next regular meeting of the
b!,&gt;ard wlll be Aug. 18.

The hoard has vacancies lor a
high school biology and general
science teacher, junior high math
and history teacher, a French and
English teacher and the position of
principaL
Attending were William Buckley,
president, Jimmy Caldwell, vice
president, Dorsel Larkins, Roger
Gaul, and Bernard Shriver. hoard
members, and Richard Roberts,
superintendent.

June wholesale prices go up

The budget'S paeral fUnd will be

KIDII. hllb lchool!one£0l11(111(CS;

~

A budget for 198.lS4 totaling
$2,197,00! was adopted by the
Eastern Board of Education Thursday night
· ItwasnotedthattbehoardwUlask
for an advance wlthdrawllrom the
second half.
The hoard accepted !he resignations of David Janson, high school
principal who Is going to Hamilton
Local, Columoos, Betty Bow, EMR
teacher at Chester, Mike Douglas,
as·assistant football coach. He wlll
remain as a teacher.

Meigs board approves budget

R t ... wee: Mlcb8eiFeJIIIS,
l!llb ICbooiiiOdalstudlel: Bennlta

PARKING

Janson leaves Eastern post

Airport explosion
leaves three dead
PARJS (AP) - A bomb rtpped
through the.south terminal at Orly
Airport today, ldlllng' at least three
people and InJuring about ao, pollee
said.
The explosion appeated to bave
been aimed at the Turkish Alrllnes
counter, and pollee Immediately
speculated that itmayhavebeen the
work of Annentan natlonaJists
seeking retr!Wtlon for a massacre
ofhundl eels rl thOusands ol Armenians between 1894 and 1915.
The blast occurred just after 2
p.m. (8 a.m. EDT) when the
terminal at the airport southwest of
Parts was crowded with summer·
. time travelers.
l'lllkl! said It appeared the bomb
had been placed among ~~~me
baiiRI'I! in the main hall of the
terminal.
Airport pollee said there was
panic In the main hall with people
f)eelng the scene. Airport ottlclals
said the departure of alllllgtlts was

Boster and Larry Mamone, chief of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources' Division of
Reclamation using the shovel; •at left ·Ill Franclll
Farrer, ol Kok08lng ConstnJCtlon Company, and at
right, Robert (Gene) Baker of the Reclamallon
Division of !he ODNR.

GRO\JND BROKEN - People Involved In the
adrnlnlslrallol and COII!Itmcllon of the $1.4 mllllon
Africa Road Reclamallon ProJect In Cheshire
Township gathered lor the groundbreaklng ceremony
'lbull'ldB,y. Among the guests were Slate Rep. Jolynn

ProPer

Long Bottom man

·'

WASHINGTON (AP)- An effort
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
D-Ohlo, to block the Reagan
administration's prOgram for removing federal price celllngs on
natural gas was defeated overwbelmlnglyThursdaybytheSenate
Energy Committee. .
Metzenbaum could get only four
of his eight fellow Democrats In the·
Republican-controlled committee
to support his substitute legislation
to keep controls on "old" gas,
eltmlnate Indefinite prtceescalators
In current contracts and cap prices
on imported gas.
The administration wants to
remove price cell!ilgs on gas
discovered before April 1917 In
exchange for allowing pipeline
companies to break their contracts
for high-cost gas purchased since
then if producers don't agree to
"phase down" their prtces.
The legislation was prompted by
skyrocketing gas rates to cOnsumers acf06S the country despite
lower oU prices and a glut of gas that
bas sent wellhead prices In the
opposite direction the past six
inonths.
The average conswner bills rose
between ~and 40 percent last year,
despite the mildest winter In recent
history, and are expected to rise
another 16 percent by next winter,
according to the latest government
·
predictions.
The 1.3-7 defeat of Metzenbaum's
substitute Thursday cleaTed the
wayfortheSenatepanel to vote next
week on acomprorntsepackage that
would remove the price celllngs on
old gas, now averaging about $125
per 1,OOl cubic feet, over a
three-year period.
The administration orlglnally had
wanted to remove the controls all at
· once In 1985, contending that a free .
market and competition among the
10,000 producers of gas would bring
prices down for ronsurners.
CritiCS contend that allOwing the
price for old gas, now about half the
natiOn's supply, torlseupward to the
$2.75 In $3.50 range found In recent
contracts would cost consumers
bllllons of dollars and provide a $68
hllllon windfall profltforthe largeoU
companies that produce most of the
!ueL
Voting with Metzenbaum were
Republican Sens. John Chafee of
Rhode Island, who earlier had
supported the administration's
package.
by

OVPSIBII

WOMEN'S .WEAR CLEARANCE

--~-

Decontrol .
measure
defeated

Major flooding on a portion of S.R. 554 In Cheshire Township may be a ·
thing of the past \\'hen the $1,4 million Africa Road Reclamation Project Is
rompleted. ·
State Rep. -Iolynn Boster joined Larry. Mamone, chief of the Ohio
Department ofNatural Resources Division of Reclamation, local otflclals
and resident Thursday at the proJect's groundbreaklng.
'The &amp;kosing Construction Company, Inc. of FrederiCktown will begin
working to reclaim a one-half mile section of S.R. 554 next week with
completion date set for next June.
"We're not say!ng the road won't ever flood, 1\a.vever, ftoods will occur
Infrequently," said Dave Buchanon, the Abandoned Mined Lands
coordinator.
The area Is presently subjected to serious flooding problems because of
mining and lnsuftlcient reclamation.
. The work Is being done jointly by ODNR and the Ohio Department of
Traqsportation, and Is being funded by the federal office of surface mining.
In addition to elevating the flooded road area, the ODNR will reclaim 150
acres of abandoned strip mined land In lhreedltferent sections In Cheshire.
Reclamation work will include smoothing out and grading the existing
deeply eroded slope at the site, applying a fertlle reselling material and
establishing a vegetative ground cover. ·
Rock-lined surface channels, bw1ed underdralns and sedimentation
ponds will also be Installed to ensure
drainage !rom the project area.
Boster said the project area was mined at various tlmes under at least ten
mining permits between 1948 and 1968.
Erosion on the project site Is approxlmlately 1,00&gt; times greater than for
mnnal forested land, and severe erosion has rontriooted large volumes of
sediment to nearby stream channels, which causes dangerous flooding.
Damage has occurred towaterquallty, wildlife preservation and land-use
problems since the reclamation projects was originally Inadequate.
Robert Baker, dtrectorofthetheODNR'sreclamationdlvislon, said ''it's
· dltflcult to reconstrUct andrepalrwhathappened20years ago:•
•· The project will utli!Zequitea bit of technological progress, hesaldadding,
that solutions td the toxic mine problems "have not OCCIIl'l'ed overnight."
All the speakers praiSed the local residents for the project.
For I!XliiJiple, 110111e of tbi!Joll soli being used In the project Is owned by
local residents.
' Statewide, "90,00! acres of strip mine areas are In similar shape, and
addBI, ''8,1XDacres of strip mine area need reclamation In Gallla County."
BuchanonsaidflvemorereclamattonprojectSarebelngplannedlnGallla
·C ounty. ''This project lsmtanend unto itself, it'sa beginning of along-term
commitment to reclamation."

Veterans Memorial

STARTING
FRIDAY, JULY 15TH

a

By ERIC JENNINGS

the tecessloo.
"We're asldng the union to sharethe responslblltty to help \IS through
dltflcult financial times that all
other employees have expe.
rlenced, •• be said.

A singlE:-Car wreck on Ohio 7 In
Meigs County Wednesday resulted
In Injuries to a Long Bottom man. .
Jimmie King, 50, was treated at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
released, a hospital spokesperson
said.
King was northhoUjid on Ohio 7,
just southo!Ohlol24, when the hood
llew up on his car, the Ga!lla-Meigs
post of the state highway patrol
reports.
He then lost control of his car,
went off the right side of the road
striking a signPost and going over~
eJ1!bankment
His car sustained moderate
damage In the 2:50p.m. wreck.

2 S.Ctlon1, 1"2 Pag••
20 Ctnts
A Muhlmeclf~ lrtc. N.w•pap:r

Cheshire area
reclamation
project begins

I

•WATCH REPAIR
-.JEWELRY REPAIR
•APPRAISALS

enttne

Vo1.32,No.65

years/' He attriooted the decline to

Maniage license

•

at y

C:pycyhtod 1983

Officials expect nonnal services

''OurmandateattheTradingPost
was to come back with nothing- to
sell out," Wyman said Wednesday,
adding that the store's proceeds will
pay some of the costs of the
jamboree. "We expect to be pretty
much sold out"
Robert Mllks, a Boy Scout
spokesman from Ottawa, said the
nine-day jamlioree, which ends
tonight, will have cost $4 mllllon to$5
million when all bills are ln .
The 13,5&amp;1 boys and girls from 102
countries will leave behind $3
rnllllon to $4 million spent at the
jamboree and in neighboring cities,
prlmarUy Banff in the Canadian
Rocldes to the north, and Calgary to
the east, officials said.

•

e

jcostly .venture

'

.PagP 7

Page 3

~Scout jamboree
; KANANASKIS COUNTRY, AJ.

Weekl~ sennonette

Quick action for
·choking victims

·Baseball roundup

In ail, wholesale prices last month
were LS percent higher than a year
ago. Prices were up a modest 3. 7
percent for aU of 1982.
Wholesale prices had riSen 0.3
percent In May alter falling 0.1
percent In April and 0.2 percent In
March. Revising Its earlier calculatiOn, thedepartrnentsald prices rose
0.2 percent in February; they had
been down U percent
If prlces rose tor 12 months
straight at the June rate, the yearly .
rise In the department's Producer
Price Index for finished goods would
be 5.6 percent In reporting its
ln11at!on ligures, the dePartment

esale Prices--,

steam."
Anticipating the new report,
several analysts stuck by their
earlier predictions that, lor all ol
1983, wholesale prices ,may rise at
their smallest cUp In more than a
decade.
Today' s Labor Department report placed much of !he responsibility forthenewroundofhlgherprices
on energy costs, which rose 3.2
percent. Gasollne prices soared 5.1
percent, also the largest gaiO since
last July, while heating oU costs
climbed 5.3 percent and natural gas
costs rose 0.2 pe1 cent
Energy prices had risen 2.2
pel cent In May after lalllng for the
live prevtoos mooths.
Last month's higher overall
prtcei came despite a 0.6 percent
drop In the cost of food, the steepest
tan since the 1.6 percent decline of '
last July.
Increases of 11.1 percent were
posted for fresh fruits and 5 percent
lor vegetables. Beef and veal prices
!'Ole u percentwhllesharpdecllnes
were reco~ded lor eap, down 1D.4
)ll'lcell~ 8ild tlsh, off 12.3 percent.
1'1111tprlces tumbled 4.5percentand
coffee prices lell2.8 pa celll
Food prices owrall had fallen 0.5
percent.ln May.

PrqdiH:I'f P11u•

lndt·K For
Fn11s1led Goods

290·

1967 : t00

280
275'
270
265
o

-· 1982

R~

Source ·Dept. ol Labor

Ap

WHOLESALE PRICE INDEX - Whole prices, propelled
b)' the llharpe8l energy price
plnl In 11 .monlhs, lllol up 1.5
perooalln June, the &amp;Ovemmenl
.... Friday. ' 1be unadJUIIed
~ Price Index llood at
1111.1 In 1-, llll!lllllnl Ilia&amp;
podt Cft'llnl $10 Ill wt I h•!e In
ltl7 -.Jcl liave COlt lit8.l8 lui
iPOIItiL (AP Lalerphoto ).

I

bases Its compounded, seasonally
adjusted annual rate on a more
precise calculation of monthly
changes than the figure the department makes public.
Today's report gave these other
details on wholesale prtce cha11ges
in June:
-Passenger car prices wereupa
tiny 0.1 percent 'after rising 0.2
percent In May. Prices for light
trucks held steady for the second
month in a row.
-Capital equipment costs, coverIng the machinery used by business,
rose 0.2 percent lor the second
straight month.
All the figures are adjusted for
nonnal seasonal variations.
In aU, the unadjusted Producer
Price Index stood at 211i.O In June,
meaning that goods costing $10 at
wholesale In 1967 would have cost
$28.50 last month.
·
·
The depllrtment's energy price
calculations actually lag a month
behind the other components of the
Index. Energy companies report
their prices too late lor inClusion In
. the most cum!llt monthly measure.
Analysis say energy prices began
climbing around Aprll 1, when the
federal government's nickel-agallon gasollne tax hike took effect
· That Increase Is not rellected In the
wholesale price calculation, but
analysts say producers took advan·
tage of the hike In raise prtces even
higher and widen their profit
margin.
Much of the" hfighter lnllation
picture bas been attriooted to !he
worldwide oU glut, now beginning to
ease, that had ¥d priCes doWn
earUer In the year:

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy, very warrn and
muaY 111111bt· La.v 67-72. Wind
westerly to illl'tliwelterly less than
10mph. Partly cloudy andronttnued
bot Saturday. High near 90.

•I

Accept bid
for elderly
housing units
Low bid for construction of a
46-unlt elderly housing complex on
Mulberry Heights In Pomeroy, to be
funded by HUD, has been awarded
to Northland Park Horne, Columbus, Bill Young, secretary, of the
Meigs Elderly Housing Corporation
repons.
The bid of . Northland totallng
$1,489,00&gt;, was the lowestofsixother
bidders.
·
The new complex, known as "The
Maples," will lncorparate a new
brick structUre with the old children's horne. Each lloor will have a
covered walkway extending from
one building to the other and an
elevator will be Installed in the new
section to entirely eliminate the
necessity lor the elderly and
handlcpped residents to negotiate

stairs.
Plans also Include a covered
walkway between the ·housing
complex and the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center.
Young said work on the project
will get underway In approximately
GO days.
Serving on the Meigs County
Elderly Housing Corp., are Richard
Jones, president, Paul Barnett, vice
president, Eleanor 'nlornas, treasurer, Young, Velma Rue and
MannlngWeblter.
·

'.

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