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                  <text>.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.
·

'.

�Friday. July I5, 1983

Conunentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court St reet
Pomproy, Ohio ..
.
DIE VOTED TO T HE I:'IITEHEST OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

lllb

l!tn~ ~ L--,-ti"'T""'!!!!!c::li~

qjv
ROBERT L. WINGETr
·

Puhll!llher

ITEHEA D
A

BOB HOEFLICH

i .r~h t- r/ Cont ro l lfor

Ge ne r al Ma naaf'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New,o; Editor

·-

.r

On firing George Will
The extraordinary action by the
New York Dally News tn !Iring
George Will causes one, In the
fleeted phrase or the Negro spirit·
ual, to wonder. wonder. What on
earth got into them?
Consider the phrasing of the
dismissal exactly. " In the mean·
. time, we've discovered a violation
of journalistic ethics, by columnist
George- WID - who helped Reagan 's staff prep him for the debate
with Carter and then appeared on
ABC television to comment on the
debate and say what a fine job

Willimn F. Buckley Jr.

Reagan had done without mention· lousy, but forced yourself to say
tng his own role."
·
was good because you liked the
Just who decreed the above to be candidate. George Will didn't do
a "violation" of jOjlrnaDstlc ethics?
that. And anyone who knows
I1 we acknowledge that political . George WD! - and he work~ (or
partisanship by a polltlcaDy parti·
me for two years - would know
san columnist Is not unethical, then
that he Is a man of ferocious
we begin by havtngnoobjectton to a Integrity
could not be brought
columnist coaching a candidate. around to saying the grass was
The violation, we are to assume, green If he was convinced It was
came In subsequently praising the otherwise. So we are left with WUl's
candidate's performance. But not having told the television
surely, a violation would have audience that he. had helped to
consisted tn praising a perfor- coach Reagan.
mance you actually believed to be
There can be two views on ·

who

LE'lTERS OF OPINION are welcomed. 'Jbt.y should he les~o~ lhan 300 word.~;~ long.
AU ~rs are !lllb)ect 10 l'diling and must be s~Kned with name, address and telephone
number. No Ull'&gt;lgned letters wW be pubUshed. U&gt;tters _should he In good taslf, addfe&amp;.
!dna kwes. not peNOnaJitle~.
.

.

-.

A simple question
without an -answer ·

~

E'IHI~ ~ lfEEm, t!Htcs! w~'s TAAr DAM' 006 DtSAPFfARED

ro? E~ICS!. ~,

=: :t~ ~~::r:

~~~ ~

Shaky political ground _ _ _ _Ja_ck_And_e_rs___:.on

are

.~ Supporters of a plan to give Investors a better tax break on capital gatns

'

.haven't let a llttle rejection get them ~own .
: Several times tn the past couple of years, a proposal to shorten the
·.holding period for long-term gains has worked Its way through Congress to
·the threshold of enactment as part of major tax bills.
: Each time, It was dropped tn last-minute legislative maneuvering.
·: Under the plan, an owner of a stock, bond, or other investment could sell
;;It six months after ihe purchase date, and owe tax on the protlts only at the
;.maximum long-term rate of 20 percent, rather than at ordlnary-income:rates of up to 50 percent.
: That was the rule that prevailed from 1942 until197li, when the holding
·period was lengthened in steps to one year.
.: The Idea of shortening It again has bobbed back to the surlace this year,
-:with sponsors that Include Bob Dole of Kansas, the Republican chairman
~ of the Senate Finance Committee, and Howard Baker of Tennessee, the
;;Senate Majority Leader. There are more than HiO names on a slmUarblllln
•; the House. ·
'
:: Despite that backing, however, the proposal apparently faces an uphDI
&gt;road once again to President Reagan's desk. Asked about 11 la te last
·: month, Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said he was "a llttle dubious"
··about prospects for passage this year.
,; Politically, there are several reasons WhY reducing the holding period
;;tooks like an idea whose time has not yet come. With anguish over the
.federal budget deficit running high, many lawmakers are leery of passing
· any new tax cuts.
· · Furthermore, as Jack Lavery, of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &amp;Smlth
: Inc. points out, "a reduced holding period would largely benefit
: upper-tncome Individuals, a group that Is already perceived by some as
. benefiting the most from recent tax law changes."'
'
: Another logical beneficiary would be WaD Street Itself. stnce any law that
:·encouraged more trequent buying and selling of securttles would be a boon
: to brokers' commissions. With the brokers' protlts running at record highs
. In the midst of a booming buD market, they can' t count on much of a
: sympathy vote nowadays.
·
. Under those circumstances, It might appear remarkable that the Idea of
· shortening the holding period Is even under consideration. But Lavery and
:: Its other advocates say It would be a plus for the economy, quite possibly at
: ' no cost to the government in tax revenues.
: · In Britain, Canada and France, they point out, there Is no minimum
·.holding period. In West Germany, lt Is six months- after which capital
: :katns are subject to no tax. Japan and Italy don't tax capital gains at aU.

..

;: Today in history
Today Is Frlday, July 15, the 196th day of1983. There are 1m days left In
: the year.
• Today's highlight In history:
.: On July 15, 1971, President Richard Nixon announced he would visit
· matnland China to seek what he caDed ··a nonnallzatlon of relations."
On thts date:
1n 18l0, Georgia became the last of the Confederate states to be ·
readrilltted to the Union.
_...._-·~-·--· -

------ ·--- -'

•

Acid

raiDS'----------------=L::..::.ow.:.::.=el:...l.:.:.W.::.in~@~ett

Whether we llke It or no(, we are a national problem which was
living smack-dab tn the middle of recognized as serious' decades ago.
the area designated by the EPA as Industries' answer has been higher
the source of acid rain . I know you and higher smokestacks which only
wDI not like it when you learn that moved the pollutants farther from
you may eventually pay more than their own door steps.
'
your fair share ot the bill to reduce
It Is apparent that acid rain is not
the emissions to manageable lev- a problem to he solved loca lly. It IS a
els. But there Is little· you can do national problem and Its solution
about It other than move to Alaska must be funded nationally. Former
where It may eventually find you. studies have shown that 70 percent
Air pollution Is world-wide and acid
of the sulfur-dioxide emissions that
ratn now falls on saint and sinner cause acid rain to come from
allke. We are vtctlms of a . man- • electric generating plants and they
made calamity!
can be controlled by Installing
While the present administration expensive s c rubbe rs on
· has been In power tn Washington, smokestacks.
we have lost almost three years In
The"EPA has pointed Its finger at
the hattie against this pervasive us here in the midwest as responsienemy. UntD Congress was respon- ble for the acid rain In New England
sible for giving former Environ- and Canada giving rise to fears that
mental · Protection Agency Chief we wDl be paying vastly IncreasEd
Anne Burford her walking papers, electric bUis. Here In this section of
air poUu lion and acid ratn did not Ohio and West VIrginia where most
offlclaDy exist.' She followed Presi- of our Income Is tied directly or
dent Reagan's position that air Indirectly to the production of
pollution was not caused by man etectrtc;lty, we feel especlaDy threabut by natural causes such as tened when something affects our'
volcanoes and decaytngvegetatlon. vital Industry. We forget that we
Remember when Ronald Reagan
made a campaign speech In Los
Angeles In 1981 In which he scoffed
at the Idea of man-made air
poUutants? That same evening his
plane was grounded when the pilot
could not see to take ott because of
smog from thousands of car
exhausts and hundreds of smokestacks. Instead of l~arntng from the
experience, he aDowed air poDutlon
and factory wastes to become such
a national disgrace that Congress
was forced to take a hand.
With the appointment of William
Ruckelshaus as EPA chief, the
president has suddenly discovered
that acid 'rain actually exists and
that It Is mainly caused by
emissions from engine exhausts
and smokestacks. Whether Ruckel·
shaus was responsible for the
president's conversion or whether
he could no l~nger Ignore tncontrovertlble facts Is not known but he
has given EPA the green light to
tackle tne prootem. NOW rtUCKelshaus says a three year stUdy Is
necessary to find out just what
smokestacks located are the offenders. That makes a total administration delay of six years tn controlllng
"The recovery

are not the only section of the
country that has power plants that
emit sulfur-dioxide. At this very
moment the effects of acid rain are
found from Florida to New England. Forests are dying, lakes and
streams are contaminated and fish
and wDd life cannot exist In the
acidic surroundings. Since the
problem is world-wide, It won't be
too long before the entire United
States Is In the same boat with the
eastern states.
Scrubbers, Ruckelshaus says,
wUI bring the emissions down to a
manageable level. Then 1 say that
they s~d be Installed on a
suspended . smokestack at once.
Regardless of the purpose for which
the stack is used, whether for
utUities, metal smelters or whatever, the cost, as .all costs are,
would ultimately be paid by the
consumers. But C&lt;Jngress should
legislate that the cost be recovered
NATIONWIDE and not on any ·
partlqilar sectloh of the country the
EPA may designate. By spreading

the cost natlnnwlde, the charge for · ·
each consumer would be fairly
insignificant and no burdeR on
anyone. Since we all breathe the
same air,lt·ls In the best Interests or ·
aU to see that corrective action Ia
taken without further studies or
delays.
I am not so naive as to hellew
that either Congress or the EPA
will take any conclusive acuon until
they are forced by public oplnloA.
The environment, the ftatianal
health and public good an tate a
back seat tb that most basic hlllnUI Impulse - GREED. Untll tile
Industrialists, the conservatives
and the politicians are convinced
that a healthy environment Ud
healthY citizens ~ beneelclal ..,
them financially and politically ·
they will continue to o~ any
change. So It Is up to us COIIIJIIOII
folk who do not breathe the same
rarified air with them to force the
Issue by putting pressure on
CongrHs.

Write your Co~rtwl today!

'

Staub's blast tops Reds
By BEN WALKER
He struck out three and Walked none
AP SpaoU Writer
as Houstonwontortheeighthttmetn
· In 19M, Terry Puhl and the nine games. Montreal has lost 11 of
Houston Astros hit 1tne drives, got 14.
good pllchlng and ftne defense 1n
Braves 8,l'hlllle8 5
winning the National League West.
The game was tied 1·1 after eight
Since then, the Astros have gone tnntngs, hot Bob Horner and his
astray.
.
Atlanta teammates quickly
• But lately, things are looking changed that.
.
brighter for Puhl and his
Horner led ott the top of the ninth
learnmates. ·
with his 15th homer, Chrts Cham!&gt;
On Thurscll\y night, Joe Nlekro · llss followed with a trtple and Glenn
threw a three hitter and Puhl Hubbard, Bruce Benedict and
doubled twice and scored two runs Rafael Ramirez added RBI singles
as Houston stopped the Montreal as the Braves·scored four times.
Expos3-0.
Philadelphia trted to battle back
"Offensively and defensively, Ibis In the botlom of the ninth. With one
Is the best Ibis club's played tn a out, Ivan DeJesus and Greg Gross
couple ot years," Puhl said.
drew walks from reliever Steve
- Also, Atlanta downed PhUadel- Bedrosian, 6-3. Reliever Teny
phla :;.2, New York beat Ctnctnnatl Forster allowed Tony Perez's RBI
7-4, Pittsburgh raUled past Sari · !)Dubie before retiring Peie Rooe
Diego 8-6, Los Angeles clubbed and Gary Matthews for his ninth
Chicago 8-4 and St. Louis overcame save.
San Francisco 6-5.
Atlanta took a 1~ lead on Dale
Houston Is currently lied with SaD MurphY'S 20th homer In the second
tnntng.
Diego for third In the NL East with
Mela7,Kedl4
45-41 record, eight games behind
Rusty. Staub, New York's ptnch
Atlanta. Still, Puhl Is encouraged
bitter deluxe, came through again
about the Astros.
.
with a two-run homer In the sixth
And BW Vlrdon, who managed
Houston the last three, years and Inning to break a 4,-4 tle.
It was his second homer of the
now manages Montreal, Is encour·
aged about Puhl, who hit .282 with 13 se8SOI), both as a pinch hitter. He
was battlngforwlnnlagpltcherTom
. home runs tn 19M.
In striJU!.shortened 1981, Puhl Seaver, 6-9. Seaverwentslxtnntngs,
slumped to .251 with three homers struck out seven and walked tour.
Jesse Oro!co got the save.
and last year he hit .262 with elaht
Keith Hernandez blasted a twohome runs.
Houston went ahead tn the fourth run homer, his seventh, to 11ft the
against Steve Rogers, J.2.4, when Mets tnto the 4-4 tie.
New York and vislttngCtnctnnatl
Omar Moreno tripled and scored on
Puhl's bloop double. Dickie Than combined tor ntne stolen base&amp;. The
thensingledandPuhlscoredonPhD Mets swiped five, Including two
each by Mookle Wilson and Darryl
Gamer's groundout.
Strawberry.
In the sixth, Puhldoubled, went to
Piratellll, Padres 6
thirdonThon'slnfleldhltandscored
Ray, who hit a two-out,
Johnny
another Garner grounder. ·
game-tying
home run In the ntnth
Nlekro, 7·7, retired the' last 14 .
of
We&lt;lnesday's
victory over
tnntng
batters for his first complete game.

a

1an Francisco, continued his heroIcs for Pittsburgh with a two-out,
two-run double to cap a four-run
raDy In the top of the ninth Inning
against San Diego.
The .P irates traDed 6-4, but Dale
Berra and Lee Mazzllll singled.
John Montefusco, S.2, gave up Mlke
Easler's RBI single and a sacrltlce.
Gary Lucas Intentionally walked
Bill Madlack before Ray doubled In
the go-ahead runs.
Pinch hitter Kurt Bevacqua had
given San Diego Its lead In the
seventh with a grand slam.

Canllnala 6, Giants 5
San Francisco tool\ a 2-i lead In the

bottom ot the seventh, St. Louis went
ahead3-2 tn thelopoltheeighthand
then the Giants edged In front 4-3 tn
the bottom of the Inning.
But ptnch hitter Floyd Rayford
belted a two-run homer to cap a
three-run rally lnthetopofthenlnth
tbat lifted the Cardinals.
11le Giants tried to raDy tn the
bottom of the ninth against reliever
Bruce Sutter. Max Venable led ott
with a triple and scored on pinch
hitter Tom O'MaUey's groundout.
San Francisco then putruMerson
first.and second with two outs, but
ChW Davis -whose two-run homer
put theGtantsahead tn the eighthlined out as Sutter got his 10th save.
Dodgers 8, Cuba 4
Los Angeles treated its fans to a
15-hlt attack, keyed by Bill RusseD's
double and three singles and Pedro
Guerrero's triple and two singles.
The loss was Chicago's sixth
str~t.
.
Los Angeles erased a 2-1 Cub lead
tn the tlfth with tour runs on six hits,
Including tlve straight singles.
Steve Sax had a run-scoring bunt
single and Guerrero added an RBI
single during a four-~~n sixth.
Alejandro Pena, 8-4, got !he victory.

Hough's knuckler handcuffs ·Yanks
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporia Wrller
,
Charlle Hough's knuckler was
knuckltng ... and the New York
Yankees were knucltllng under.
"It seems like I always have my
good stuff against them," said the
Texas Ranger pitcher after stopping the Yankees 11-2 with a
tlve-hitter Thursday night.
For the Yankees, It was the ll!th
time that the crafty right-hander
had·beaten them without a loS5. In other American League
games, It was Boston 9, Oakland 4;
Baltlmore5, California 1; Cleveland
4, Kansas City 3 tn 10 Innings;
MUwaukee 5, Minnesota I; Toronto
8, Chicago 0 and Detroit 4, Seattle 2.
Hough, 8-7, struck out eight and
walked three tn his tlfth route-going
performance thts season. He retired
16 consecutlv~ batters at one stage. .
Larry Parrish led the Rangers'
attack by smashlngtwo homerilhat ·
traveled a total of almost .870 teet.
After singling and scoring In the
second, Parrish capped a tour-run
third with his 14th hooter of the
season, a two-run blast that landed
over the Texas buUpen fence tndeep
left field at Yankee Stadium. He
singled and scored again tn • the
eighth and foDowed by smacking
another two-run homer Into the
upper deck In left field tn the ninth .
lledSox8,A's4
In Boston, Dwight Evans belted a
three-run homer, Tony Armas
cracked a two-run blast and Wade
Boggs had a solo shot as the Red Sox
routed Oakland.
Evans' homer gave the Red Sox a
3-11ead after one tnntng. Annas and
Boggs slugged their hOmers in the

third to help the Red Sox take a 6-2 career-high 10 batters and walking
lead at that potnt.
two.
·
John TUdor aDowed 11 hits tn
Brewers 5, Twlnsl ,
seven tnnlngs to improve his record
In MDwaukee, Don Sutton pitched
to7-5.SteveMcCatty,3-4,gaveupall a six-hitter over eight tnntngs and
three homersasOaklapd lostltstlfth Bill Schroeder belted his first major
consecutive game.
league homer, Dftlng the Brewers
Rickey Hendenon scored three of over Minnesota.
the Oakland runs.
Sutton, 7-5, walked none and
Orlalell. An&amp;ela 1 ,
struck out five In winning his 265th
In Jlaltlmore, Angel klller Scott game,_movlng him tnto a tie with
McGregor aUowed seven hits to Jim Palmer and Jim McCormick
pitch the Orioles over Calltornla. for 26th plaoe on the all-time list. AI
McGregor, 10-4, has a 1!&gt;4 lifetime Williams, 5-10, was the loser.
record against California.
McGregor struck out tllree and
didn't 1ssue a walk, auowtng the
Angels' only run on Brian DownIng's sacrifice fly tn the ninth.
. AI Bumbry tripled home a

Baltimoreruntnthethlrdlnntngand
scored on an Infield out, and Jim
Dwyer walloped a three-run homer

~:=~::S. :X'::!:

California's lOngest losing streak of
the season to tour.
lndlano t,lloya!..a

In his
Cleveland.
Alan
Bannister
ltned
fourth home
run leading
off
the bottoin of the loth Inning to boost
the Indians over Kansas City.
Bannister had a 1·1 count against
Royals relleyer Mike ,Armstrong,
4-4, when he drilled the gamewinning shot just Into the left-tleld
seats near the foul pole In Municipal
·
Stadium.
The home run broke a tie created
In the eighth by Amos Otis' sacrifice
Oy.
Rick Sutcllffe. 11-4, went the
distance as Cleveland snapped a
five-game losing streak. Sutcliffe
surrendered ntne hits, striking out a

..

HOMEWARD BOUND - Clnctanall Reds'
lelt(leldef Gary lled110, right, reaches his left leg for
the plate as he tries to beat the cut.off throw by the
New York Meta Thursday night. Waiting for !he tardy

.

"'~···" ~ ·-- ·., ,

throw Is Mills' catcher Junior Ortiz ns ump Fred
Brocklandcr watches the third tnntng taUy lor the
Reds at New York's Shea Stadium. (AP Laserpholo) .

Nelsonville,· Gallipolis teams
advance in LL tournament
SYRACUSE - !'&lt;elsonvllle ga me by Dale DeWeese.
Syracuse plays Rutland tonight
Blackburn and the Gallipolis PaHe fanned 14 and wa lked just. Albany and Middleport meet In
dres and the Galltpolts Padres three while allowing no hits. Mar~ second round play.
scored one-run wins tn second Porter had an equally fine night , ,.-----..:.....;....._ _......._ _
round piHy of the BID Hubbard allowing just three hits, no walks,
Memorial Uttle League Tourna- , and seven strikeouts.
The Daily Sentinel ·
ment here Thursday evening at
Terry Pollock scored the lone run
(USPS 145-900)
Syracuse Municipal Park.
after r e&lt;ichlng on an error and
A DlviHion ol Multimedia , In c .
Two pitching duels highlighted scoring on another miscue hit by
Publls hed every &lt;tftcrnoon , Monda y
fine nights for the winners Including Mike McQuaid. DeWeese, Pollock,
thr ough Fr iday , 111 Cou r t StrE'Ct, by Ihe
the second consecutive no-hitter by and McQuaid each singled for the
Ohio Valley P ublishing Company . Multi media, Inc ., Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769, 992·
Gallipolis' Dale DeWeese. Kelvin winners.
2156. Srro nd c lass pos tage pa id at P oWarren of Nelsonville had another
meroy, Ohi o.
great night himself as hurled a r;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;;:;;;;;;~ Member : The Associa ted Press, In·
one-hitter against Point Pleasant.
l and Dally P ress Assoc laton a nd th e
NelsonvUle rolled to a 4-3 comeA m f'rl ca n Newspa per Publishers Assot·la tlon, Nat ional Ad ve rti s ing Reprefrom-behind wtn tn the last Inning to
scntallvl' , B ranham News pape.· Sa les,
down Point Pleasant C&lt;Jnvenlent
73.1 Thi rd An•nue , New York. New
York 10017
Food Mart. Warren caught the
West VIrginians orr stride, but got
POSTMAST E R : Send a ddress to T he
Dall ySc ntlnc l. l tl Court St. , Pomt'roy,
his back to the door with several
O hio 45769.
costly walks that marred his fine
SUBSCRIPTION MTES
effort. ·
By C1trrle r or Molor Route
Warren fanned 11 and walked
O neWeek ....... ... ....... . .......... ..... $1.00
O n(' Month .................... .. ....... ... $4 .40
eight. Sam HaD suttered the loss for
O ne Year .......................... .. .... $.'12.80
PP. He tanned ntne In a g'ood eUort
SIN GLE COPY
ot his own and walked just three ,
PRICES
Da lly .................. ... ............ 20 Ccnl s
NelsonviUe hillers were Ronnie
Chubb a single, Matt Yinger a
S ubsc riber s not des ir inG to pay the carrier may re m it In adva nce direc t to
single, Warren a single, Robinette a
The Da lly Se nti nel on .1. 6 o r IZ month'
" Now In the A10a"
trtple, and Jason Taggart a single.
bas is . Credit will be g ive n ca rrier eac h
9 Years Experienca
m ont h.
Jim Sayre collected the lone
Special Introductory
Potnt Pleasant hit.
No subscriptions by ma ll pe rmitted In
Rates
One run ln the second Inning
tCJw ns where homt• c a rr ier ser vice Is
"FREE ESTIMAlES"
h vatlnhle.
proved to be all that was needed as
the GaDlpolls Padres sllpt&gt;«!d past
MAIL S UBSC RI PTIONS
ln!!ldc Ohlf'l
Racine 1-0 behind a near perfect
n We('k~t ............ .. ........ .. ......... $11 .04 .

ACCENT
FENCE
Pomeroy. OH .

rr:::;::;::;::;::;::::::~:tr.;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J
,

BLITZKRIEG

HEMLOCK PIPELINE

AT THE

PH. 99:! 6931

Orch'd
1 Room

Pipeline, well sites, reclama·
tion, ponds. utility ·construe·

Friday, July 15
8 p• M•• 11 p•''IU •

Bob Campbell &amp; Don Rose
Racine, OH.
Ph. 949·2224

26 Wr&gt;rks ............. ... ..... , .... ....... $2 7.30·

52 W('eks ................ . ........... ....... S."il.48
Ouhdd e Ohio

13 Wel! ks ................................. Sl !i.2f
26 Wee ks ............ .. ................... 529.64
n2 Wee ks ......................... ........ $56.21

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JULY 13 ·JULY 17
·WED.-SUN.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
..

'

·

whether that.ls proper. But surely,
none !hat suggests that silence
under the drcu1"5taaces Is a
moraDy disqualifying trait ot char· ·
acter. And the reason for thts Is !bat
a highly commendable trait In
highly commendable people Is
self-effacement, one aspect of
which Is gently to deraD a cornpu.
ment. A colUmnist who publicly
advertised that he had had a role Ill'
training a presidential candidate
for a debate would, tn Ibis corner,
be thought of less as someone
constrained to level with hla .C.
audience than as someone straining
to advertise his intimacy with a
powertlll man likely to become
president of the United States.
The New York DaUy News
editorial continued, •'Furtllermore,
Will knew that Reagan's people had
used some material from the
Carter campaign and never reported it." The wrtter speaks as It
WD! had not reported seeing LEe
Harvey Oswald take aim at
President Kennedy's motorcade.
What we know of the pre-debate
hurty-burly leaves us doubting 11 J .
Edgar Hoover would have reported
that some of the stuff lying around
that groaning table of documents
had come In from the equivalent
coaching room of Jimmy Carter.
And. If · It was unethical for a
journalist not to report the exlsl·
ence of the .purloined documents,
what about the ethics of the do2Jen or
more men and women who knew

Once upon a time, a 13-year-old girl told her father that the most
Important thing her country could do would be to control nuclear weapons.
He told the country about It, and the cynics snickered. They said It was
just llke Jtmmy Carter to talk about Amy's Ideas tn the middle of a
climactic, "nat!QnaUy televised campaign debate with Ronald Reagan.
After aD, they said, Carter was president of the United States and this
1•
was not a matter for t~n-agers, It was serious businesS.
·
It still Is, 3%years later. But reactions have changed. Amy's comment to
.
her father was fodder for the stand-up comics of 19!11. There are no
wisecracks about the Soviet journey of Samantha Smith, 11, of
0
•
:!!If a
Manchester, Matne.
· She went at the Invitation of Soviet President Yurl V. Andropov, beartng
a message similar to the one Amy Carter gave her father. .
staff of the White House?
In the campaign debate with Reagan, Carter said he wanted to put the
nuclear question Into perspective. "I ha!l a discussion with my daughter
Amy the other day before I came here, to ask her what the most Important
Issue was, " he said. "She said she thougght nuclear weaponry. The control
of nuclear anns."
Hafez Assad, &lt;!bundant reason to wish for sad has always had to contend with
. :·It was grist for the cartoonists and comics. Not so when Andropovwrote . theWASHINGTONand Syrian Baath parties have long
Syrian
dictator
whose
tniransl- · Assad's ouster or assassination , Samantha.
.
opposition from the country's pre- been at odds, and Baghdad n\atngence has been the matn stumbDng but whether any has the nerve and dominantly Sunnl population,'' the tatns ties. with exUed Syrian
Samantha said she was worried by accounts of the nuclear arms race, so
she sent Andropov a letter, asking why he wanted to conquer the world or block to the pullout of foreign troops the skill to get rid of him Is CIA reports. "To placate the Baathtsts In Beirut and elsl!where.
from Lebanon, Is actively connivthe United States, and whether ''you'regolngtovotetohaveawarornot?" Ing to depose . PLO leader Yaslr debatable. At 53, Assad has ruled Sunnls, he IJt1ilt a team of techni- Alawltes: Even thts minority
Syrta for 12 years; llke his cians and economic planners Moslem sect Is divided Into four
Andropov replied that the Soviet Union Is dotng everything possible "so
Arafat. Yet Assad himself Is In a adversaries Yaslr Arafat and drawn from the educated 'sunni
that tht!l'e will be no war at all on earth ...
. trtbes and four rellgtous subdMvulnerable poSition, according to Jordan's ·King Hussein, he is a · elite, (and gave) many Sunnls
slons; to_ other words Assad Is a
. : "Nobody In our vast and beautiful country - workers or pe~ts, secret Intelligence reports.
survivor.
highly visible and ostensibly Impor- member of a minority w1t111n a
• writers or doctors, children or grown-ups or members of the gove· ent
Assad's enemies within Syria
Here's the Intelligence rundown tant government posts."
-wants war, be it big or small," he wrote. "We want peace. We hav a tot
mlnor1ty. "Dissident ·Aiawltes conInclude senior army officers, the on Assad's opposition:
Although these posts Included the front two cllolces," a State Departto do: grow gratn. buDd, Invent, write books and make space nights."'
majority Sunnl Moslems, elements
- Moslem Brotherhood : This defenSe and foreign rhtnlstrles, ""the ment report explains; they "can
Samantha said the letter made Andropov seem like a grandfather.
of his Baath party supported by radical Islamic group has been Sunnis remain effectively cut off
That's not a description that likely would now frori! President Reagan's
either remain united with Assad
comments on the nuclear fears of American chDdren. "11lemostupsettlng Iraq, the Moslem Brotherhood and Assad's most obvious rival, but from real power and are resentful and fight to the "-st Alawlte, or
even members of his own minority
·letters I receive are from schoolchUdren who write me as a class Alawlte sect. He stays tn power Rlfaat's tank-equipped "defense of the domination ot Assad's smaD (they) could take It upon thern·
assignment," Reagan said tn a speech last Nov. 22. "It's evldenl they've through the naked repression of a 'l!ompanies" decimated the brother- Ala'w tte sect."
selves to clean' out their own
- Baath Party: Assad has com,mimlty."
;discussed the most nightmarish aspectS of a nuclear holocaust tn their 20,00J.man securtty force run by his hood. They began with an attack on
several hunqred of Its members tn stacked the Syrian Baath Party
classrooms. Their letters
often full of terror. Well; this should not be corrupt brother, RJfaat.
Much of the Alawltes' anger
·
Hama In February 1982. Rlfaat's with Alawltes, but ' "some centers on brother Rlfaat, whole'
' So."
Secret CIA and State Department
. AndroPQV Invited Samantha and her parents to the Soviet Union for two reports seen by my associate Dale thugs then went on a two-week members, and doubtless some venal ways offend the devout and
rampage In the city that reportedly military officers as well, would be who Is held responsible for the urn
~ks. at government expense. They went on the highly ad 9x.xrture and
Van Alta assess the threats to left 20,00) dead.
willing to support an Iraqi· murder of a respected Alawite
arrlval .statements and news conferences, and with Samantha asking the Assad's rule from his many
- Sunnls: "'As Sytia's first sponsored couR attempt against leader, Muhammad Urnran.
question tht s grtiSdep making bombs for a war If there's nobody to start
enemies. Any one , group has non-Sunni Moslem president, As- . Assad," the CIA predicts. The Iraqi
·fi?''
It's a simple. sensible question. Her elders have yet to come up with a
simple, sensible answer.

ja n uphill road

Ohio

Puhl, Astros hot again,

A MEMBER of The .&lt;\.'II!Odated ~ Inland Daily Press A!tMClation and the
American Newlipaper Pllbll~hers A.'\tfOCbdkm.
•

tA tax proposal on

P'wni.oy-MiddlePot'f,

Jd:t il!'l'lll l,i\JIIl

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Phologreph Hours

Wed. &amp;liM. 10·1. 2·6
Thin. IIi Fri. 10-1. 2·6:30, 6·8
....,. 1·6: - lunch 1·2

llll1~ll

r;AlliflDIIS

SIMMONS

.OLDS.-CAD.:-.CHEVY, INC.
PH. 992-6614
308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH.

I

�Page--4- The Daily Sentinel

•

Stadler holds lead
in British-Open event
SOUTHPORT, England (API "I wish it was Sunday afternoon."
said Craig Stadler as he headed into
the Sf'COnd round of the British Open
golf championship with a three'
stroke lead.
·
The :J(}year-old golfer from Lake
Ta hoe, Nt&gt;V., thrilled the thousands
at Royal Birkdale by shooting five
succeSJ; ive birdies on his way to a
course record &amp;4, seven strokes
under par.
"Obviously it 's nice to be leading,
but there's a heck of a lot of golf left,
and a beeR of a lot of good golfers on
that leader board, " Stadler said.
For one golden spell In Thursday's
afternoon sun, he played such
perfect ljOif that the fans cou ld
hardly imagine anyone else
winning.
In England's freak heat wave, on
hard fairwayS' and well watered
greens that held the ball, Stadler
rolled in birdle putts from the 12th
hole through the 16th. They were
from five, 25, 30, 30and40feet, in that
order.
As he set out for a second trip
around the 6,968-yard, par 71 course
today, Stadler had two former
British Open champions, Tom
Watson and Bill Rogers, on his heels,
plus the German Bernhard La nger,
all three strokes behind at 67.
Hal Sut ton, British hopeS Nick
Faldo and Sam Torrance and
Australians Mike Ferguson and
VaUghan Somers'were all at 68.
" Tt was one of those things," said
Stadler modestly as he talked about
his string ofbirdies.

Majors
fly ""-"

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4934

Toronto
Daltlmon.&gt;

""'""
Mllwaukel&gt;

Nt""' 'l'urk

Boston ·
Cl{'l.·('!and

Pd. GB

47
47
44

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Chll'!l,l(O
ClillklrrUa
~&lt;ansa!~ C!t~·

Oekland
Mlnfk'MIIa

R.Hendmoo.
sas City, 56.

~
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41

..a88

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4!1

.4..17 9
.4Zl 10~
.Hi t.1Yz

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2

t%

1bun;day',; Games
Boston !1, Oakland 4
Baltlmort&gt; :"!, California 1
C lc~:f'land ~ . ~nsas Cl ry J. 10 IMin2:&gt;

.._hi.

».

Dl'troU 4, S£-attlr 2
~'~tGamDII

Milwa u kfto, 17; Upshaw, Tororno, 17.

Qakland tCodiml.l :'Mil at Eln&lt;oton tHun; t
&amp;Ill. 1n 1

STOLEN BASES: R.ller!O?i b l. QraJt.

land. 50: J.Cruz, Chka,:o. (!; w.wn.on.
Kansas City, ~ R.La"·· OUcqo, 31;
Sampk&gt;, Texas, 28.

Ca lllurnla tJom 7·~1 a 1 Baltlrnm" !Bod·
dldlcr rH I. tn l
Ka~!!M r;'IIY tSpll!1a-rf &amp;..1J . •t Ck&gt;"eland

PrrcHINC 18 decl;sktns~ : R.LJackaQn,
H .lml. 4.~ Kooiman, 011

r F.k'hcl~r

:l-81, 1n1
T!'Xa" 1 H~ut1 11·!'.1 1 al Nt"A' York
t RI~hMtl lfi...l ), 1n 1
M tnreo.o~a i B.Castlllo :",.6) at Milwa ukeE'

cago, 1·2.

tCaldw£111 6.7!, i m

3.81.

TorontO,

at Scan k'

~'8GIImtll

T"':Jias at New York
Oa:k land at Boston

Kansas Clry a t ClevelaJtd. In!
CalltomJ; at Baltlrn&lt;lr'e, 1n1
Millnl'Wla 01 1 Mltwa ukt'e. 101
Detroit a ! SeaTtle, 1n1
NflTIONAL LEAGUE

St .Louis,

~

40

.512 -

Montreal

42

42

.MXJ

1

Ptnsi:Nt;!ll

40
:!1

4J
48

.e
.448

2~

.12

54

.:m

s.mo...,

34
34

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JIM'S; Daw!JOll. Monu~al. liB; Ollvt'r .
Mlntreal, ~ 7hln, Hwston, liJI: Hendr·
ld:. S I.Loul!l, 103: Murphy, Atlanta, ,liB.
DOUBLES: Krii,~Ult, Houstoo, ~ : OliVt'r,

""

3!

,.

Montreal, 24: Buctc:ner, Chk&amp;~:Q, ZJ;
Hmdrick, St.Louis, 22: J .Ray. Plttsbw'Rh.

8

.!123
.113

11 ~

.(J'J

16

8

"·

TRIP~: ~o. Hooton. g; ButlPT".
Atlanta, 8; Ra ines , Monll't'al, 7: DaW!On.
Montreal, 6; 5 art' Hed wlth S.

Pllls bufllh R, San Ole!ifO 6
New York 7, Cklclrinatl 4

hits, just Zerkle
one walk.
two
strikeouts.
sufferedand
the loss
a good effort fai\ning six.
despite
~~~~ing six, and giving up eight
For the winners were
Fields with a triple and
Chase Cleland a · triple,
Wright, J eremy Heck,
Reuter singles, and Kevin
singles . .

HOME R~ : Evans, San F ra ndlco,

21; MW"PttY. AUanta , Z); Gu.&gt;Ill!ro, Lo5
AnReJes, 19: DaW!IOn. Mootnoal. 18;

Atlanta 5, Phlladl'lphla 2

Houston J, Montrrol 0
Los ~ &amp; C'hico.ao 4
St. LoWs 6. San Francl.!lco 5

Schmid. PhlladMphla. 17.
SfOLEN BASE~ : Raines, Montreal, J7;
Wll.Scm. New York, ll; S.Sax, Los AnAl"
les. 31: ~M t ('f", San Fmndaco, 28:
Mormo. Hwstoo, 27.
PITCI-flNG 18 dKisJons J: Ryan, Hous.
ton. 9- t. .!OJ, :l.r&amp;; Falcone, A'llM1ta, 7-l.

FrlclQ'II Gllmf.ll

Monll'('aJ IG uUidtson 7·!11 a t Atlan ta
H'l'lekro Hi I. tn ~
Cincinnati

Eu ·

gt&gt; kos, ~.

l2

,614 .ID'l l i,.J
.~

~141 ;

Ra ines, Montreal. &amp;1; DBWDI. Mont real,
53: WJJson. Ntw Yor-k, 53.
RBI: Daw!ion, Montreal, f8; Mw-phy,
AtlantB , 64: . Hendrick, StLouis, tQ;
Cllambllu, Alllll"'ta, !'6; Gul.&gt;m!ro, Lo&amp;: An ·

~DrvEION

"
'"

.347; Kn.lat\1 , Houtm,

ler, Plttstl.l f'llh , .m Murphy. Atlanta,
..12'!; Maclkldt, Pltt.sburgll . ..121..
RU~: MW'phy, Atlanta. 81; Garwy,
san DK&gt;eo. W: Evans, San F'rancbco. M:

EAST DIVEION
W L Pet.. GB
44 42
.512 -

Atlanta
La An~

'

Ca udill, Seattle, 17; Stanley, Boston. 17:
RDavls, Minnesota , IS; Lopez, Detroit , 12..
NATIONAL .LFAGVE
BA1TING 1210 at bats\: Hendrick,

Tcronto at Chka,IIU 1n t

Cllle~
Ntw York

York.

!nRIKIDLITS; Stk!b, Toronto. UJ:
Blyk&gt;Yerl, Ck&gt;veland 110; Moms. Detroit.
108: Rlghf!ttl. New York. 93; Surcutre,
~and. 91. '
SAVES: Qulsmberry, Kansas CIIY. 71:

t Voon,~~7·9J , ( n t

St. Louis
Philadelphia

UJ5: Righetl l, New

.i!J9, 3.97; Su.tdU(e. Clevrulncl, ll-4 , ,733.

11-51. lnl

H I

.m

10-3, .700, 3.14: Haas, Milwaulw, fH.

Ttxonto iStleb 11·71 at Chif!Uro !Dotson
IBE&gt;I"E!!''~

56; W,Wilson, Kln -

'JTUPI...E'\:
, Deirolt." 7: GWu.
son, Decrolt, 6;
runn, Tcronlo, a ;
K.Ctbton, t:le1rolt, 6;
Trias, 6.
HOME RUNS : ~. lbton, 23; KtttM!o,
Chic~.
Annas, Bolton. 19; Cooper-,

r-;~·

YOI1!. 2
MllwaukK' 5, Mlnnesot:a 1
Toromo K Chk"ago o

Dl•trol t

Ollk

RBI : ~- 80s . &amp;t; Cooper, MU·
WIUi hrr, Iii ; Kltllt&gt; C'hicqu. 6l; UPIIIIW,
Torqato. ~: Wa M1nrle!.;u , ~HTrS.: ~- Boston, U2; WhJtair«,
112;
, a.ton, 106; Ward.
. 103: Cartw, Ctilfotnta. Ull
. .
U!;:
.N.Pill'T'I$)1, Detroit, 27:
lbtm. · Mcftat', Kansas Oty,
rbPII:, M
a, Z; Cooper, M II-

1~

•.5111

~1

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Ml -

.19

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T£'XM ll ,

USFL championship
game slated Sunday

, RUNS: Upahaw. Toronto. 82; Yount
Ml.lwaukfto. Gl : O.Eval'lli, Boltc:rt, fJ:

WE'!i'l DI\1..SION
1't•a(

ISo!o 9-8! a t Phlli!dclphla

IHudliOil. 2-21. tn l
Nl"W Y&amp;rk !l ynch 1&gt;-:\1 at Houston
IKIK'flper 2·~1, In I.
PIHsbu!lih IR.to.k'n (\.lit Ill San Dit1to

.1175, 2.!17; P.Pen.&gt;z, Atlanta, llJ.2, .KII.
2.51: Hooton, Los ~. 8-2, .fill. 3. 34:
Monterusro, San DleRO. 8-2, .8ll, 4.al.
~D&lt;EOUTS: Carlton, Phlladl'lphla,
148; Soto, C1 nctrm.u , 130; McWWianu,

!Thurrmnd 2-0t. (nl
Chica,RO t Ruth\·~ ~7! at Los An~«,~l'!'i.
(Hoo!OI! 8-2) , in\

Plttsbur¢1. lH;

S1. Louis tAriduJar 4 1l t ar San Fran!
clo;oo (Hammakl'r' 10-4 ). tn t
s.turday'a Glllll l!!
St. Louis ., San Francisco
Clnclnna ~ at P hiladelphia, 1n1

ftomos,

&amp; f'E'l1yl , Cincinnati,

Wrah. !IJ.

DENVER (AP) -Regardless of ·
the score in Sunday night's United
States Football League game, there
are a lew scores to be settled.
"I want to be able to show a lew
people that what hapPened was a
mistake," said John Bunting, a .
l.lnebacker with the Philadelphia
Stars. What happened was that
Eagles
after the 1982season,his 11th
BuntlngwascuteythePhlladelphia
In the National Football League.
He may not get a chance to prove
anything against the Michigan

&amp;mer,

.

Veterans Memorial Hoapttal of
Meigs County has twenty-four-hour

031 JACKSON PME - RT. 311 WEST

riiiiiii..
ii....• --:;·::••;;;•:;-;;;:;--,

Squire Parsons

..\

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

~

... .

Richard H. Billman il, O.D.
113 Court StrMt
Pom•roy, Ohio 45769

PH. 992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD-&amp; SOFT
CONTACT LENSES

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MODERN·SUPPI.Y .
992-2164

Pomeroy. Ohio

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The S!Oft W~h "AIIIitds of Slut!'' ,
For - Ptls, Sllbles. lqt &amp; Smlll Animals, lawns &amp; Gardens

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Mon.-Fri. 9:00 to 5:00
Saturda~ 9:00 to 1:00

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1979 FORD FAIRMONT.. .... .'.. ..... : .............. .. .... .. '3495
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fpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj~

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First Twin Rivers
canJP meeting set

-'

88: C&amp;n~aria. Pitt.,

GRAVELY
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Friday, July 15,"1983

Choking victims need quick emergency aid ·

rj~~~~~~~~~i

Panthers. He's hobbled by a pulled
hamstring and may not play.
Jo)m Corker, Bunting's younger
counterpart with the Panthers, also
has a lot to prove - although he's
proven a lot already. Alter three
seasons as a bit-part playerwith the
NFi:s Houston Oilers, he was
released last November ("personality conflicts" he says) and wound up
as "Sac Man," a bonafide defensive
star In the USFL.
Bunting hasn't experienced a
championship game since 19111,
when the Eagles reached the Super
Bowl; only to be demolished bY the
Oakland Raiders. The difference
between that Philadelphia team -

399 W. Main St.

'

Page-S

"I watched the Eagles grow from
being one of the loslngest clubs, from
being in the depths, to being a
contender and then aplayotrteamin
'78 and '79 and finally to a Super
Bowl team," he said.

Montreal, 92;

"Wedon'thavetogooverandover
the little, fine points. We'D have to
reinforce them, but once they see It
once or twice, they'll know It," sad
Costlet.
Coach Forrest Gregg said he
hasn't made a final decision, but be
probably &gt;011 have Coslet cainngthe
plays .

.-

striking.

Coslet will call Bengals' plays
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bruce
Coslet wiD probably be In the press
box calling the plays this fall for the
Cincinnati Bengals but all the
assistants will be helping to fill in for
the departed Lindy Infante.
Infante was fired by the Bengals
and named In a lawsuit after the
offensive coornlnator accepted the
head coaching job with the Jacksonville Bulls of the rival United States
Football League_
Coslet, wbo played lour years lor
the Bengals and who has been tight
end and special teams coach for the
past four years, has been named to
take over the bulk of Infante's work.
"It's going to be a llttle bit more of
a joint effort" with backfl ~ld coach
George Sefcik and line coach Jim
McNally, said Coslet on Thursday.
The title of offensive coordinator
will oot be used thls season.
One advantage, said Coslet, Is the
team Is a veteran club.

The Dail_y Sentinel

By The Bend

for which he stOI hOlds very special
memories - and thls one are

SAVES: Bedro&amp;llf!, A llanta , L1; Rea r·
don, Mon trt'al, lJ: La\·eUe. San . F'rarJ.
cllro. 12; Le.Sml lh. ~ U : Lucas,
San DIC!lO. 10: Slfowfo, Los AriRC&gt;Ies. tO;

Monti'NI at Atl an ta, 101

..

Friday, July 15, 1983

•

AMERICAN LF.AGI.IE
BATTING t:no a t b&amp;l51 : CII"'.'W, Callbr·
nla, .tl2; Boas. lbton, ,llli: Bn!tl, Kansas Clly. .l&amp;t Grl lfE'y, New York, J.l3:
WhJtaker, Drimlt, ~-

. ~-

~'sGamee

triple; . Eric Heck doubled and
tripled; Jason Wright doubled, and
Chuck Mash smacked a double.
For West Columbia Turner
tripled a nd singled ; Johnson
singled and tripled, and Rick Miller
singled twice.
Pomeroy Sears claimed the
championship of the New Haven
Tourney with a no-hit, shut out over
the New Haven Yankees. Jason
Wright went to the mound and
came home perfect, allowing no

•

Leaders

EAST DIVtiiON

ClncJnnp tl

In the New Haven Pee Wee
league tourney, Pomeroy Sears
defeated New Haven's Dodge~s 8-4
as Jason Wright pitched a 10
strikeout, two walk, one-hit game.
Bumgardner and Oliver pitched
for New Haven fanning nine
walking 15, and giving up six hits.
J ason Wright tripled for the
winners and Eric Heck doubled.
Oliver collected the only hit, a single
off Wright.
In second round play, Pomeroy .
Sears kept their streak intact by
beating West Columbia's Reds 13-6.
Robbie Fields and Kevin Taylor
combined for 10 strikeouts, two
walks, and six hits for the winners.
Johnson had blazing speed and 12
strikeouts, but gave up nine walks .
and 14 hits.
For the winners, Robbie Fields
had a home run. trtple, and double;
Terry Reuter had a home run and

•

ChiciiiO'IIl...c» AllllPies, (h )
Plllsburwtl Jt Sal! Dlfao, fn l

AMERICAN Lf'A6UJ::

Hou~too

Pee Wee tournament results

•

NE-w York et lbaston, fill

San Franclsc:o

CLEVELAND (AP) - Art under way, but neither denied that
Schlichter, who was indefinitely contact had been establlsl)ed by
suspended as a Baltimore Colts Intermediaries, the newspaper
quarterback In the National Foot- teported.
ball League, may get a chance to
Schlichter. 23, star quarterback at
play for the Ohio Bulldogs of the new Ohio State, was the No.1draftcholce
International Football League at ofthe Coits inl9&amp;landwas the fourth
Canton, a newspaper reported player selected overall. Schilcter
tOday.
. told The Plain Dealer from his home
The Bulldogs franchise, created In Bloomingburg, near Columbus,
two W€€ks ago as one of 12 charter that he was "under strict guidelines
members of the IFL, Is owned by (by the NFL) not to give any
Guy Cicchini of Canton.
Interviews." He also said, "I have
"We want Schlichter," Ed Capri, not talked to anybody dlri'Ctly
Cicchin i's chief adviser, told the connected with the Bulldogs."
(Cleveland ) Plain Dealer .
Schlichter was suspended May 20
Unt il two weeks ago, the Bulldogs
by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle were a franchise In the minor league
for gambling activities. Schlichter American Football Association.
lost a reported $389,lXXJ through With the IFL, which Is expected to
betting on basketball and football ·play, in the spring and summer
g~es in 1982 and early this year.
beginning next March, Canton is to
Neither Schlichter nor .Cicchinl play Its borne -games In the
would confirm that negotiations are 33,000-seat Akron Rubber BowL

:

L~coreboard ...

"Sometimes, as you stand over a
putt of 30, 40 or 50 feet, you say to
yourself 'Hey, this is going ln.' And
that's how it was."
Stadler had nt&gt;Ver seen the golf
course until this week. Wednesday,
in a practice match with Watsonand
Jack Nicklaus. he played the back
nine In 7-under-par, with two eagles
and three birdies.
Stadler's string of birdies hlghc~ght ed a dr1i1J1atlc day of golf.
Rogers holed from 228 yards with
a one-iron for a double eagle at the
526-yard 17th.
Rodger Davis of Australia aced
the 184-yard 12th with a five-iron.
The narrow fairways, bordered
by deep rough, held no terrors for
most of the golfers In the good
conditions.
Of the 151 competitors, 29 broke
par. At the long 17th hole there were
17 eagles, in addition to Rogers'
double, and 60 birdies.
Most of the leading players stayed
ou t of tbe fearsome rough, but
Watson got caught in It at the 15th
and lost a vital stroke.
The defendlng champion took a
penalty stroke, went back 50 yards
and blasted out He ended up with a
bogey.
In the very minute that Watson
!ailed to make par, Rogers was
shooting his double eagle two holes
fu rther on - and the lead suddenly
changed hands.
Almost 29,lXXJ spectators - a
record for the first day of the
tournament - packed the stands
and the paths beside the fairways.

IFL wants Schlichter

0

.

992-2196

· PAT HILL FORD, INC.
461 S. TfilrCI .VI.
Middleport
·
Phone 992-2196

'

, •'1.,

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•

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••

Campmeetln~ will be held July 1722
on the ln'Olmds of the Grace
Baptist
Church In Point Pl••••n•
"
Sponsored by the church, this oldfashioned tent revival wUI feature
the preachq,g of Evangelist Glenn
Mathews of Cross Lanes and the
sinRIDR ·of Squire Parsons of
Ashevllle, N.C. (Monday 'throogh
Friday)_
Dr. Homer Britton, former
sonRleader lor Evangelist Hyman
Appelman,
will lead the
eDIIJll'eRatlonal singing. The services will be~ln at7:30 nll!lrtly, with
alr-eondltioned nursery provided.
Glenn Mathews, a second
generation -Gospel preacher, is a
~traduate of Tennessee Temple
University In Chattanooga, and the
Soothwestem Baptist Theologiall
Seminary in Fort Worth, Te-. He
ia currently woritilu! on hll doctbrali! from Luther Rice Baptist
Seminary in JacksonviUe, Fla.
8avln.lt pastored chlD'Cbes in Tew
and West VII'Jdriia, he bas been Jti
1)111-tlme evanRelism slllce tm. He
~the Reviftl Cruaade radio
tjroadcast on 10 stations In the
!lni~ slates and tbe Caribbean
qrea:
: Squire Parsons, a native of Roane
!l"""'r, Is a ~raduate of Well
~irldnla Institute of TechnoJo«y.
.e wu a teacher and band dlreclor
4t Harlnan High School In Malon
¢-'1 for Hve years before jolnlniJ
f., G011pel singlnR group, the
llnJIIInen, with whom he traveled
for ftllr years. For the last lour
tears he has been In full-time

service•.
•
""'
sealinR and parking, Coleman says.
For transportation, cal 671&gt;-1921.
The church located lout miles
north of Point Pleasant on Rt. 62 at
the "traffic circle."
18-

emergency physicians cOverage.
However, In many cases there
are lmmedlate steps which may be
taken to provide for the comfort and
safety of the victim. .
Choking Is one situation tn which
another person may be of help until
medical assistance arrtves. ·
Some symptoms which may be
displayed by a choking victim are
dltrlculty in breathing, pale skin,
panic tn expression and action and
eventually, unconsciousness.
U the victim can ipt'Qk, cough or
breathe, do not tntemre In any way
with the victim's efforts to cough
out a swallowed object.
U he cannot breathe, support his
cbest with one hand and give lour
qulck, forceful blows on ·the back
between his shoulder blades.
H blows to the back do not
dislodge· the object, stand behind
the victim with your anns around
his waist· Place ·your"-'t
,., with the
thumb side against the victim's
stomach slightly below the ribs and
b
t bo
H ld
list with
reas
ne. · 0 your
'-"ur other hand and give quiCk
f'o"rceful upward thrusts H ~
have been no resu lts, .:......at all

steps untO medical assistance
arrives.
· U the vlcUm Is unconsdolls 0.
becomes unconscious wblle you are
attempting to help him, try to
restore breathing with mouth-tomouth resuscitation.
Place him on his back Qft a linn
surface and clear his mouth and
airway of foreign matertal. Tilt his
head back, pinch the wsb Us
together, take a deep breath and
place your mouth around the
vlcUm's mouth and give lour quick
breaths. Then blow into his mouth
approximately l2 breaths every
minute. The same procedure may
be followed forlnlantsandchlldren,
except that both the mouth and
nose, ohould be covered with your

Cree and Kelly Sbaw and Paul IIIII
Mar1111 BabCOck, all of Coshocton;
Cart and Kim Babcock. · we~~ ·
Latayette; Bill and Wilma Burke,
Ed Burtte and Rachel, Frank Burke
And Ryan and Christopher, Joe and
Susie Burke and Amanda, Jason
and Willie Burke and Jormy Bulke,
all of CambrldRe; Paul and Gamet
Thomas, Columbus; Jimmy and
Diane Thomas and R.oblirt, !lays
Ranch, Arizona; June and Bud ·
·Coleman, FoStoria; Murray, Karen
and Dan Coleman, Delaware.
Attending locally were Ruby
Elurke, Coolvllle; Mlck and Sue
Burlr.e, Jeff, Jennl, Matt and Ruby,
Pomeroy; Wilbur and Debbie
llur!re, Kenny and Nicholas, PcJme.
ray; Sue Alln Kauft and Bobby,
Lolli Bottom; Jodi Schaekel, l..onJ
Bottcm; Elizabeth and John Hayes,
Chesti!r: Buck and Dorothy Calaway, Tammy, Missy .and Adam,
Coolville.

' Mn. 111111¥ Bryut llld Mn.
l'mny Mlddleswart shopped In

Ravenswood on Saturday.'

The faculty seminar is on Chinese
studies which include lectures and
Middleport, is participating In a field trips In music, history, cuscultural exchallge program In toms and rellglons, economlc develTaipei, Taiwan.
opment and construction , philoSchmoll received her B.S. degree sophy, opera, polltlcal systems and
and Masters degree from Ohio educa tion, agricu ltural developUniVersity and her Doctorate from ment and Sino-American relations.
Indiana University In 1979. She Is
The purpose of the program Is to
presently teaching at Augustana contribute to. a greater cross
College, Sioux Falls, S.D.
cultural understanding between
The exchange ~gram Is spon- Chinese and Americans. To partlclsored by The Mandarin Training ~tea person must be a teacher In
"'"
Center of .the National Taiwan an American university or college
and write a paper on why they
Normal University In Taipei from would like to attend . .
5
J_u_IY_l2_1hro_ug_h_A_ug_._·- - - - - - - - - -- - - - Dr. Janis Schmoll , daughter of

Mrs. Georgla Smith took her
mother, Mrs. Goldie Clendenin, to

Pomeroy on Friday to tiU a doctor's
appointment.
G
Mrs. Bernice Evans, aillpoll&amp;,
spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Evans and family.
Mr and Mrs M V M ter
·
· ac an e •
Pomeroy, spent Sunday with Mrs.
Ada VanMeter.

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On CHIUnt Cntdlt

30 wllta per chennel, minimum rma Into 8 ohms

from 2D-20,ooo Hz, ,with no more than 0.02% THD

/;1///ll//11!\1\ \\\\\~~~~~'

.- .

The annual Babcock l'e\lnlon was
held reCently at the horne of Buck
and Dorothy Calaway, Alfred.
Saturday those attending went
swtmmlng, had a hayride and
watched a flrewtlrks display,
Sunday guestS took part In
Swtrnmlng, borsesboe pitching and
~ther games.
' Attending from out of town were
Dorsal and Grace Babcock, New
Concord; Hope and Randy Buchanaan, Zallesville; Becky Green,
Guemaey; Bryan and Debllle
Babcock, Betsy, Amy and Bryan,
Norwich; David and. Mary June
Babcock, Christy, Qmdy and Brad,
Chark!s and Mary Lou Babcock,

~.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schmoll,

perJOna/J

Babcock reuniori
held at Alfred

Qltdy Evul 1118 acn:ptal em..oymem for !be IUIJIIDtll" at
torJred RuB State PariL
Mr, and Mn. Denver Curtis have
~ blcll to tllelr IIOml II

Thai exchange program
includes local woman

10

; Pastor Ken Coleman and the
feOI)Ie of tbe Grace Baptist Church
l)lvlt~ the public to attend all

I

H stOI unsuccessful, Uft the
victim's lower jaw with one hand.
Slide your fingers .down Into the
throat ID the base of the victim's
tongue and sweep your fingers
along the back of the throat to
dislodge the object. Oo not attempt
to dislodge the foreign object with

any type of Instrument. .
Seek medical treatment for all
chOking victims t&gt;Ven If the object Is
dislodged and breathing Is restored because respiratory tract damage
or other problems may occur.
U there are any doubts as to
treatment contact the Veterans
Memorial Hospital of Meigs County
emergency department at 992-2104 .

r-----------------.:.....__.._. ._______________

~n«eltsm.

Pet"sonals

mouth and :IJl breaths per· minute
should be administered.

-

.. ..

. • •. '. r... ...
•·
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...
~.

•• .~~~
. . .
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'

DUOFONE"' TAD-11 0 by Radio Shack

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makes tt easy to replace anclatore tapes, Call
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Twenty tone controls let you emphasize vocalists or certain instruments, and cut hiss or
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r¥65666-·drO

�•

'"='• .lult_lS, 1983

Simms birth

~

•

(· ..

1'

•"

-

~

I

TURNPIKE RD IS CELEBRATING THE GRAND OPENING
OF OUR NEW DEALERSHIP IN GALLIPOLIS, OHIO, AND · ·
WE WANT TO GIVE YOU A"FREE GIFT" •.• IT COULD MAK-E
YOU ELIGIBLE TO WIN.

"Erin Berhany Simms

Rl.

Ray ·R iggs
Ph. 915~ 4100

I!J

Cheste;

VIRGIL 'B. TEAFORD SR.

s

21• S. Second
Pomeroy
ffl · ll1S

Pomeroy

~

(Due To Federal Law We Are Forbidden To Divulge The
Nature Of This Gift Waiting For You At Turnpike Ford
Or Riverside Motors In Gallipolis, You Must Be lJ
or Older, And One Gift Per Fa mil,, Please.)

Sunday School, 9:lJ a.m., Glen McClung.
&amp;upt.; morning worship 10:.}) a.m.; ewnlng
service 7 p.m.; mid-week service, Wed.n€'S-

~.7p.m.

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - l'lO E.
Mll.n St .. Pomeroy. Sunday sel"'llres Holy
Communion on t~ Rrst Sunday of eactl
lnOI!th, and combined with mcrnl~ prayer on
lhethlrd Sunday. Morning prayer and sennt11
on 1U other Sundays of the month. Church
School and nursery care provided. Calfee
IKlur In t~ Pansh Hall knmediatelyfollowlng

the Sl'IV!ce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Main St., NeU Proudfoot, pastor. Bible school.
9:.JI a.m.: morning worship, lO::IJ a.m.;
.Youth ·meetings. 6: I) p.m.; evening worship,
7: Jl p.m. WednE!Iday night prayer meeting
and Bible study, 7:30p.m.
THE 'SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut

Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In charge.
SUnday holl~ meeting, 10 a.m.; Sunday
School, 10: lJ a.m. SUnday School, YPSM
[lol!e Adams, Ieeder. 7: :tl p.m., salvation
meeting, various speakers a ncl music SJX!'
ctals. Thursday- U::lla.m. to2 p.m.•Lad.les
~ League, members In charge, all
IIU'Ilel1 Invited; 6:45p.m. Thursday, &lt;;orps
Cadtt Class (You~ People-Bible). 7:XI p.m.
'l)lble Study and Prayer meeting, open to the

Limited Time

Offer Prices
In Effect

pultllc.

'

I!I!RLINGTON S01ITIIERN BAPJ"I!rr

CHURCH, Route l . Shade. BlbleSchool7p.m .
'lllursday; worship servtre 8 p.m.

POMEROY WE8TSIOE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, %10 W. Main St .. 992-.52.15. Vocal
music. Sunday worship lO a.m.; Bible study
ll a.m.; worstUp, 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible
st\dy, 1 p.m.
·
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH ...., Clifton Lucas, pastor, Sunday
School9::tl a.m. Mrs. Worley P'rancts, supt.
Preechlna services ftrsl and I hird SUndays
following Sunday School. Youth meeting
..-.ry Sunday, 7::ll p.m.
·
GIIAHAM
UNn'ED
METHODIST,

Through
July 31, 1983

83.V.W. GTI ·

As Low As

$799000

~

9: :1) a.m., first and second
Sundays of each month; third and fourth
&amp;mdays earn month, worshlp~ces at'7: :IJ
p.m. W~y evenings at 7::tl p.m.,
· Prayer and Blbie Study.
1 SEVENTII·DAY

Helgttts Road,

As Low fl

ADVENTIST, Mulberry

Pomeroy. Michael Plan-

kowskl, pastc:r; Rita White, Sabbath School

83 ESCORT

POMEROY - Deem reunion
will be held Sunday at Royal Oak
Park. There wlU be a potluck
dinner at 12: 30 p.m. Friends and
relatives are invited.

Supt. Sabbath School is at 2 p.m. on Saturday
with wcnhip serviCes follow!~ at 3: 15 p.m.
Rtm.AND FIRST BAPI'lST CHURCH -

$5,454°

0

Sister HarrlPtt Warner, Supt. Sunday School.
i :JI a.m.; mornlnll worship, 10:45 a.m.
POMEROY FIRSI' BAPI1ST. David
Mann, mtnillter; William Snouffer. Sunday
School supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. ;
Mornlnll wonhiJ) 10: :JJ .m.
FIRST SOUTIIERN BAPTIST, Pomeroy
Pit.. David Hunt, po.stor; Roger Turner.
!Iunday School Superintendent. Sunday
school. 9:30 a.m.; morning worship, 10::1};
~ wcnhlp, 7: 00 p.m1 Mldweel prayer

Snyder reunion

....,111(1, 7:3l p.m.

83 F-1 00 PICKUP

PORTLAND - The lOth
annual reunion of the children of
Charles A. and Alma Snyder will
be held at Portland Park
Sunday . All relatives are
invited.

83 TEMPO

.

As Low As ·· $6,46400

Biggs reunion

As Low As

$6,,1 8700

MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH . Old
Dexter Rd.. Dexter. Pastor Woody Ca.U, Jr.
Past(r. Sunday SchOOl 10 a.m. Sunday
tvent.ng service, 7 p.m.: Thursday e-vm.l.~
..rvtce,lp.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bailey
Run Road,. Rev. Emmeu Rawson, pastor.
Handley. Dunn, supr. Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Su.nday evenlng service 7;ll p.m.; Bible
teachiRR, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
S\'RACUSE MISSION. Chen)/ St .. Syratu!W'.

Services, 10 a.m. Swxlay, Evening

I8"Vkft. Sunday and Wednesday, 7 p.m.

RAtNCHECK
Due to llmn.d Inventory. If units oro not ovalloblt H advertised we will get them ot 1
lotor dolt.

POMEROY - ~iggs family
reunion will be held Sunday at
the home of Nathan Biggs, SR
1.24. There will be a basket
dinner at noon. Family and
friends are Invited.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRISTIAN UNION, Lawrence Manley.
past:&lt;r, MrA. Russell Youf11i!:, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9: XI a.m. E~ntng
w&lt;l'shlp 7: XI p.m. Wednesday prayer meetinR

7::» p.m .
1\rr. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD. Racine
-a... Jomeo S.Uerlletd. putor. Morntna
wcnMp 9:45a.m.; Sunday SctmllO: 45 a .m .:
.._"""'"'"" 7 p.m. 1\Jeoday, 7::ll p.m..
*hi'I"IIY"'" · Wedneoday, 7:3l p.m.

YPE.

•/ ·

Sayre reunion
KYGER CREEK - The
Herbert L. Sayre family reunion
will be the first Sunday in August
at the Kyger Creek Shelter
House, across from the Kyger
Creek Power Plant.

1982 BRONCO RANGER XLT
Blo&lt;k wllh matching cloth Interior, \1-8 engine,
power steering and brakes. olr &lt;ondll_lonlng, lilt
wheel. trulse control, am.fm stereo cesHtte,
captains choirs, styled steel wheels with raised
while lettered !Ires.

Save--$ave--$ave

Band members

sought

transmission, power steering a'nd brake, air

3295

1

·

5

Spec:ial

*2895

6 cyl, 4 ~ over drive transmission. power

sleMing and brakes, om radio, 8 loot bed, rear
step bumper.

stereo cassette.

1695

4 cyl engine, 4 speed transmission, am radio.
Good !Ires.

*995

FORD F-100 PICKUP

brakes, automatic transmission, am-fm

NOW

1974 VOLKSWAGEN BEmE

condition. om-lm stereo radio, rolley wheels,
raised white lettered !Ires,
WAS
Now·

2 dr., 6 cyl. engine, power steering, power
WAS

USED CARS

Blue with while roof V-8 engine, outomollc

1975 PLYMOUTH SCAMP
1

MIDOLEPQRT FIR81' BAPI'IST, Comer
!llxth and Palmer, the Rev. Mark McClung.
~uNSay ~elmol -t: l5 a.m.; Dan White. Sunday
School ..p.. John RA&gt;Ibel, Sr .. asst. supt.
Momln,g Worship JO: 15 a.m. Youth meet.t.ng
7:~ p .m. Wednaday, lneludinli( wee too,
eqer beavers. junior aatroanuts. and Junior

1976 DIEVROLET MONTE .CARLO

..

995

WAS

5995

1

NOW

-*4995

andiEIIIor high BYF; choir practiceB: XIp.m.

Wednesday; prayer meeting and Bible study.

W - y . 7::ll p.m.
. CHURCH OF CHRIST, Middleport, 5th and
Main, Bob Meltoo, min.biiE!r; AI Hartson,
IIIOdateo mtDllter; Mike Gerlach, Sunday
!k-hool $upetluleiiidt11t. Bible School. 9::1)
a.m.: morning wcntdp, 10::.&gt; a.m.; ewnlna
wonldp 7 p.m. W«Jnelday Bible study and
yooth ll'fAIP mMblp, ? p.m .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE. ~ - - Chari'" Coyle and
Nancy Coylo. Btll Wltlre, s.nd.ly ochool
oupt. 8ulldoy .,hool, 9:30 a.m.: morntna
"'"~ 10:30. a.m.: Sunday .,...U.tlc
I!H!Ittnl. !p.m. Pt-ayer..-tneWedntodayl

a...

PICKUP
ton I loot bed, V-8 engine, power SfeMing ond
brakes, automatic Irons. olr condlllonlng, am
rodlo, rear step bumper.

p.m.

'II&lt;

WAS '

2995

1

'

~' f

Virgil ·Byr.t&gt;r, pastor. Glen McClung, asst.
jiUtOf. Clyde Hendersoq. pasloc emeritus.

NOW

*1995

lJNITED PRESBYTERIAN MJNWJ'RY
OF MEIGS COUNTY, - - Wsnda . - .
dlr«ttr. Horold Joluuoo.
at
ecM!IUOn.
IL\RRISONVILLE
PRESBYTERIAN,
Wonlltp-.9a.m.: Ctturo•Schoot, 10:!:1

"""'"or

.....

MIDDLEPORT
PRESBYTERIAN.
School, t a.m.: ~ wcnhlp.
10:13, Blblo Study ~y. 10 a.m.; Bible
otudy, 11tundoy, 7::1! p.m.
• SYRACUSE FIRS!' UNITED PRESBY·
TEIIlAN 01urct1. CINrdiS&lt;:IIool, 1t1o 15 a .m.:

Otan:tt

!!'0'111111

WG

--

I\ D:m un.: --~
. . . . . . p.m.
011111CH CW GOD, Poola,

.....,

..,...

Ill¥. Jolol llaoloy .. 10 ti.m.:
9u&amp;tly wca 2I; U a.m.; t'HIIcftn'a church.
D Lln.i Sllnday ownlltll .....!"'. 7 p.m.;

.'

.

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbu s, 0 .

.

804

214 E. Main

WAID CROSS
'Groceries-

General Merchandise

L--,...------....----..1
Racine 949-2550

Good, bae:lc mu.tertal has Aone lnto her cnnst.r'UctJon.
HerakJpperlscu.pablc, COW'IIiC9U8Uidcon8dent. She Ia
weU equtppro to handle treacherout~storms.

Wednesday evening young ladles: auxiliary, 6
p.m. Wednesday family worhslp, 7 p.m.

An you prqlared when stonn stgnllbl appear ln your
Ufe?The IUl8Wet' may depend upon your own baste troln·
tng aud experience. If your life has been built on fatlh, a
f'urther IJI.ft will be that extra measure
COut&amp;I[C , , ,
when the gotng gets rough.

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, Near
Long Bottom. Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday
school, 9: 30a.m.: Worship 10: JOa.m.; Prayer
meeting 7:ll p.m. Th\nCiay.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWTLL BAPTIST,

or

Fonunat.dy, our llfe. eM be rebuilt. 1hro1J8h regular
wonhlp we can Rnd 11 new faith that will gutde u8 to that
sak destiny.

Comer Ash and Plum. Leslie Hayman.
pastor. Sunday scOOol 10 a.m.; Morning
Worship, 11 a.m .; Wednesday and Saturday
Evening ..,...,_, 7: 3l p.m.

....._ . . . . . ., Tht ~!Wilt SOQtly

MEIGS
rooi'EIIATI\IE P.UIISH

THird 'fuesday, 7: 30 p.m . Community flrst '
Sunday.
CHI3I'ER - Worship 9 a .m.; Church
SchoollO a .m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m .
UMW, ~Thursday, 1 p.m.; Communion

.

·JOPPA - WOl"!hJp, 9:ll a.m.; Church
School, 10! .It a .m . Bible Study, Wednesday,
7:31p.m.

LONG BOTTOM - Chun:h School. 9:30
a.m.: Worship, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:31p.m.; UMYF, Wednesday, 6 p.m.;
Communion Flrst Sunday.
REEDSVILLE - Church School, 9: :1)

a.m.; Worship 11 a.m.
nJPPEltS PLAINS ST. PAUL - Church

Sctaool, .9a.m.; Worshtp,lOa.m.; BlbleStudy,
~aY. 7;JI p.m.; UMW, Third Tuesday,
7:31p.m .; Communion tln:t SUnday.

---CENTRAL CUJtrrER

a... Stoale&gt;' W. Mentlleld
Rev. Robert£. IU:l

IDII

He¥. Robert Rider, ,Jr.
ASBURY ~Syracuse)- Worship, 11 a .m.;
O.urch School.. 9:45 a.m.; Chaf'&amp;!! Bible
Study, Wednelday, l ::ll p.m.: UMW. llrst
1\iesday, 7::11 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal, Wed·
nesday, 6::1) p.m .; UMW, founh Su.nday, 6::1)
p.m.
ENTERPRISE -Worship 9 a .m .; Church
School, 10 a.m,: Bible Study, Tuesday, 7::1)
p.m.; UMW, Flrsr . Monday, 7:~ p.m .:
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. COOlr rehearsal. 6::tl
p.m. W!dnesda.y.

nA1WOOOS - Church School, 10 a.m.;
Worship, 1 a.m .; Bible Study, Thursday, 7
p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.

FUREST RUN- Worship, 9 a.m.: tburch
School, 10a.m.; Choir Pracllre, Tuesday,6:ll
p.m.; UMW, first Tuesday, 'T::tl p.m.
HEA11f (Ml&lt;Jdleportl - Oiurch School,
9::11 a.m.; Wonlll.p, lO::It a.m.; Sible Study,
Thesday, 10 i .m.: UMW. second Monday,

?::ll p.m.; UMM, third Monday, 7::rl p.m.
MINERSVILLE - Worship Service. 10
a.m.; ChU!"C'tt School, 11 a.m.; UMW, tblrd
WE'dnesday, 1 p.m.; Choir prsedce, Monday,
7:ll p.m.

PEARL CHAPEL - Wtnltlp Sorvlce, 10
a.m.; Chureh School, 11 a.m.; UMW, second
Thesday, 7:30p.m.;

UMYFiastThooday, l ::ll

p.m.
POMEROY - Church School, t:15 a.m.;
Worship ser\11Ce, 10: :1) a.m.; ChOir reheersal,
Wednesday, 7::1) p.m .; UMW, second Th£'5day, 7:ll p.m.; UMW. last Sunday, 7 a.m. ;
UMYF, Suntlay, 6 p.m.

ROCK SPRINGS - Cltun:h School, 9: IS
a.m.; Wonhlp, 10 a.m.; Bible Study,
Wedlleoday, 7::ll p.m.: UMYF tSenlors).
Sunday, 6 p.m.;

(Juniors!.

ever)~

other

Sunday, 6 p.m.

.
Rt.m..AND -Church Schoof, 9: 45a.m.:
Warship. ll a.m.: UMW (Evening Circle),
secoad Wedne!klay, 7::1J p.m.; UMW, second
1'1tunday,l p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Church Scttoot, 10
a.m.; Wcntip. 7 p.m.
SNOWVD.J.E - Worship, t a.m.; Church
Scbooi1D a.m.

lllll!'nlllaH llAJ8I'D
.... , _ Ill. Cloutt

.

........ w.n,r.

lew. 1'1&amp;:aa8mltll
APPLE GROVE- Chwch School, 9a.m.;
Worship, 10 a.m. (ftnt and third Sundays);
UMW, ~ Tuesday, 7::ll p.m.; Prayer

m...tng.

Wednesday,

TIJMde)'

!Kodul
3:i-22

.Matthew

22:1-18

11:18-28

7 p.m.

BETHANY - Worship, 9 a .m.; Church
School., 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday. 10
a .m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship, Wednes·
day, 11 a.m.
CARMEL - Chureh Sclml, 9:.1t a.m.;
Worship, W:i5 a .m.; RCOnd and fourth
SUnda)'!ll; Ft~Jc:MrshJp dlnDer wtth ~non,
third 11ur.sday, 6::1) p.m.
EAST LETART- Church School, 9 a .m.;

Wcnhlp.10 a.m. (Jemnd 1nd tami'ISund.ays;
UMW, lint '1\teoday. 7:30p.m.
.
LETART tAUS - Wonhlp. t a.m.;

Church School, 10 1.m. •

MORNING STAR - Wonhlp, 9::tl a.m.;
&lt;;fturch Sc- 10:30 a.m.: Bible Study,
'l"hunday, 7:.1) p.m.
MORSE CHAPEL - Cttur&lt;• School, 9: :ll
a.m.; Wonhlp, 11 a.m.
PORTI.AND - Church ScOOol, 7 p.m.;
WonNp, 8 p.m.; UMYF, Wednelday, 7::ll

P-~CINE WESLEYAN -Chw-ch!lcltooi,IO

BEARW ~!.LOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Duane Warden. minister. Bible
class, 9:lJ a.m.; mornJng worship, lO:;JJ
a.m.; evening worship, 6: JJ p.m . Wednesday

Bible study. 6:30p.m.
NEW STIVERSVU.LE COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School service, 9:45a.m.; '
Worship service, 10: Il a.m.; Evangellstlc
Service, 7:30 p.m. WedneSday; Praye r
meeting, 7:.}) p. m., Thursday.
ZION ClflJRCH OF ClffilST, PorneroyHan1sonv1lle Rd.; Robert Purtell. minister;
Steve Stanley. Sunday school supt. Sunday
school , 9: lJa.m.; wcrshlp servlct&gt; 10: :lla.m .;
Evening wcrshlp SUnday . 7 p.m . and

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE - Rev. James B. Kittle. pastor.
Shennan CUndtff, superintendent Sunday
School., 9::tl a.m.; Morn!~ Worship 10: :10
a.m.: Evangelistic 9ei"V1ce, 6p.m . Prayer and
praise WedDe!iday, 7 p.m.; youth meeting, 7

.

~~

· EDF.N UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
Elden R. Blake. pastor. Sunday ScOOol 10
a.m.; Robert ReOO, supt.; Morning sermon,
11 a.m.; Sunday night serviCes, Christian
Ende&amp;V[J', 7::l&gt; p.m.; Song servke, 8 p.m.;
Preaching, S: 30 p.m. Mid-week Prayer
meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m., Alvin Reed, Jay
leader.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Roger

.

.......... -.,

HOIIIION CIIRiln'WI \JilliON, WIDtom
lllmday- t:il a.m.:
......... -.7:*1 p.lh. WednM'Il' pnyor
-.7:11p.m.

a-a-. --

CARLETON CHURCH. Kln1&lt;5bury Road.

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH.'I..etart. W.
Va .. Rt. 1. Mark Irwin. pastor. Wors hip
services, 9:lJ a.m.; Sunday School, 11 a.m.;
l"o'enJng wcrshlp, 7: :Kl p.m. Tuesday cottage
prayer meeting arn:l Bible study, 9:30a.m.
Worshlp 'servlce. Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

OUR SAVIOUR LlfrHERAN OlURCH Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood. W. Va .
The Rev. Geurge C. Weirick. pastor. Sunday
School, 9:30a.m.; Sunday Worhslp, ll a.m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHUROi, nlM' located
on Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near
Flatwoods. Rev, Blackwood. pastor. Services
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 7: JO p.m. With
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m . bible study,
Wednesday, 7:JJ p.m.

. FAITH FELWWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST -St. Rt. 338, Antl(lulty. Pastor, Rev.
Franklln Dickens. Sunday morning, JO a.m.

Wednesday.
1UPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST, VIncent C. Waters, lll, minister;
Herman BUck. superintendent. Sunday

Sunday evening service. 7:JJ p.m .; Wednes·
day e'll'entng service, 7::l1 p.m .

School 9::11 a.m.; evenlnjl: serv1ce, 7 p.m .;
Wednesday Bible School, 7 p.m .

CHESTER CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE, Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor. Frank
Rtttle,supt. Sunday School, 9: ~a . m. Wor1hlp
lll'r'Vi(oe, 11 a.m. and 7:.'1) p.m. Prayer

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METIIODIST
CHURCH, Rev. Robert MWer, poatcr, Lloyd

8lll"l'ON - Cbureh Sc-. 9::ll a.m.:
........, - · 10: Ill Lm. llfrlt and third
foDtJnldp with Carmol,
p.m.
Of' CIIRIST, Oliver

Portland-Racine Road. WU!Iam Rous h, pastCf'. Linda Evans, church school. dlrcctCf'.
c hurch school. 9:30 a.m.; mornin~ wqrshlp,
W:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7:30p.m .
BETIILEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shuler, pastor. Wors hip servtce, 9:,'1) a.m.
Sunday school , 10: :J:l a .m. Blbl~ Study and
prayer sen14 ~ Thursday. 7: lJ p.m .

Watson. pastor; Crenson Pratt, Sunday
School supt. Morning worship, 9:~ a.m.;
SUnday .!IChool, 10:I) a.m.: evening ~ce .
7: .l1 p.m.
MT. UNION BAPI'lST. Rev. Tom Dooley;
Joe Sayre, Sunday Srhool SUperintendent.
Sunday !IChOOI, 9!45 a.m.: evening wcnhtp,
7:Jt • p.m Prayer meeting. 7:J) p.m.

BreollfMt.W~.Ia.m.

~~

1:1 ·10

a.m.

.-ma. Wednesday, l ::ll p.m.

WonhJp, 11 a.m.; lJMW. lourth
-y7::llp.m.; Handmaldonloltllel.ord.
lint --.say, 7 p.m.; Mort's Proyor

Ull.tM)'wi&amp;

Fr1dl'f
ITheMalonlan•

Brother Marion WIIUams, pastor. Sunday
SChool, 9:30 B.m. Ralph Carl. supet1ntendent;
evening w~;rsttlp , 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting,
Wednesday, 7:ll p.m .
LONG BO'ITOM CHRlSTIAN, Ken Keifer,
Wednelday, 7 p.m.
pastOl'. Wallace Damewood. Sunday School
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Supt. Worshlp ~rVIce at9a .m. BlbleSchoo110
Grove. The Rev . WilHam Middleswarth,
a.m .
Pastor. Church servia$ 9:.Yl a .m . Sunday
HYSELLRUNHOLINESSCHUR&lt;:;'H,Rev.
School 10:30
Thereon Durham. pastor , Sunday School at
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST, Paul
9::Jl a.m.; Moming worship at 10: 30 a.m.
Pratt, pasroc. Sunday school, 9: l.1 a.m., Larry
Sunday evening service at 7: lJ p.m .;
Haynes, S. S. Supt.; morning worship. lO :lJ
Thursday services at 7: 30p.m .
,
a .m.
FREEOOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
RACINE OIURCH OF THE NAZARE NE,
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
Rev. 'llxlmas H. Collier, pastor, Manha
Lawren~ Glu~ncamp, pastor; Rev. Roger
Wolfe, Chairman of the Board of Christian
WIWord. assistant pastor. Preachinli!: serviLUe. SUnday School, 9:30 a.m.: momlng
ces. Sunday 7:30 p.m. Prayer meetlnR
wiX'Shtp,lO::xta.m .: Sundayevenlngworshlp,
Wednesday, 7:JJ p.m .; Gary Grttl!lh, leader
7::J&gt; p.m. Prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7:30 Youth grou~. Sunday evening. 6::JJ p.m. with
p.m.
Roger and Violet Willford as l(&gt;aders.
RACINE FIRST BAPilSI', Don L. Walker, • Commuruon servkfo flrst Sunday each month.
Paster, Robert Smith. Sunday School supt;
'Nl-QTE'S CHAPEL , Coolville RD. Rev.
Sunday School. 9::K) a.m.; m011ling wcnhip.
Roy Deeter. pastor. Sunday school9: 30a.m.;
10:40 ·a.m.; Sunday PVenlng worshlp, 7: :JJ
wcrshJp service, 10:30 a.m. Bible s tud y and
p.m .: Wednesday evening Bible study, 7: lJ
prayer service Wednesday, 7::1l p.m .
p.m.
RtrrLANO CHURCH OF CHRIST , Dan
Monlw:.. pastor; Blll Nicholson. Sunday
DANVILLE WESLEY AN, Sunday SchooJ,
school supt. Sunday school , 9: -Xt 11..m.:
9:.l1a.m.; momlng worship 10:45 a.m.: youth
morning worship and communion, 10::ll a .m.
service, 6:45 p.m.; even ln ~ worship, 7: 30
RliTLAND BIBLE METHODIST - Amos
p.m.: Wednesday, 1::KJ p.m. Prayt:'r and
TUIIs. pastor; Sonny Hudson. supt. Sunday
Praise.
school., 9: lJ a.m. Morning worship, IO: 30 a.m.
DANVTLLE HOUNFS.'\ CHURCH, lOcated
Sunday f'Vf'lllng service, 7:00. ' Wedn~ay
oo Route 325 between Vinton and Langsville. eVening service 7:00p.m.; WMPO Program.
Rev. Ben Watts. pastor. Sunday ScOOOI, 9: lJ 9:00a.m. each Sunday mornln~.
a.m., Bobby Lambert S. S. Supt.; MornlnR
Worship, 10:30a.m.: Children's Happy Hour
RtJTI..AND CJflJRCH OF THE NAZA ·
6:45 p.m. Prayer It Bible Study, 7:30p.m .
RENE, Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr .. pa.s10r.
Missionary mt.'E!tlng first Wednesday &lt;I each
Sunclay School, 9: :Jl a.m.: worship service •
month, 7:lJ p.m. For informarlon call
10::1) a.m.: yoong people's service. 6 p.m.
Jt!SIW67.
Evangeli'itlc servtce, 6::1) p.m . Wednesday
SU.VER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little, Sl'r'Vicc, 7 p.m.
·
pastor; Steve Urtle, S. s. Supt. Sunday school,
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller St.,
10 a.m.; momtng wet'shlp, 11 a.m. Sunday
Mason, W . Va . Euli(ene L. ConRer, mlnlSter .
evening W(l'shlp, 7: :tl p.m : Prayer meeting
Sunday Bible Study,10 a .m.: Worship 11 a.m.
and Bible study. Thursday. 7:30p.m.: youth
and 7 p 1 m. Wednesday Bible Study, voca l
meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.
music, 7 p.m.
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH, 383
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
N. 2nd Ave., Mlddlepoct. Sunday Sctnol. 10
Lane, Mason, W. Va. Re\• . Ronnie B. Rosc, ~r-,
a.m. Sunday and Wednesday EvenlnA
Pastor; Sunday School 9:45 a.m.: Morning
Services 7::Jl p.m.
Worship 11 a.m. Evenln12: Service 7::ll p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, RA&gt;v. R. E.
Wednesday Women's Ministries 9 a .m.
RDblnson. pastor. Sunday school, 9::fl a .m. ;
(meetfng and prayer). Prayer and B!ble
warship serv1ce, U a.m.; evenlnJO: service. 7
Study 7 p.m.
p.m.; youth service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
HARTFORD OiURCH OF CHRIST IN
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev. William
Campbell, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.;
Robert E. M~. pastor. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; Paul Musser, supt.; morning worship,
James Hughes, sup!.: even in~ot service, 7: :ll
10::1} a .m.; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m. ;
p.m. Wednesday evenlna prayer meeting,
mid-week service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
7::JJ p.m. Youlh prayer serviCE' each 1\JL'S(lay.

a.m.:

.....

•

Wldnnda)'
Mlfthew
11 :20-2&lt;4

n.omaa

ALFRED - ChW'Ch ScOOol 9: ll a.m.;
Worship, ll a.m.; UMYF, 6:30p.m.; UMW,

lint Sunday.

Monda~

a.n.M

UNITED ME'1110DI!II' CHURCH
Fay SaDer, Dftdar
_ _ _ CLIJtrl'ER
J_
NORTIIEA8T
Rev. Richard

Sundly

Wrtaht lllrectoc at C1trttttan EclucatJon.

&amp;lnday School, 9: :ll a .m.; MOI'Itlpg Wonhlp,

10:30 a.m.: Choir Pnlcrlco, Sunday, 6: :ll
p.m.: E-.,Wonltlp. I: :I! p.m. We&lt;lneaday
Prayer and lllble Study, 7:30p.m.
DEXTER CIIURCII OF CIIRilll', ClwB
~lr.,a ....ter, ltlckM
- . • ...._
llul*y IIOI'otlal, t: :1) a.oll.: wnNp """""·
~30 a.m. Bnllolll1ody, ~. T:30 p.m.
REXIR~ I'IJZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER
. DAY !lt.INTs.

.

.

Sunday evening, 7:30p.m. Thursday evening,

7::1J p.m.
STIVERSVU.LE COMMUNITY BAPTIST
CHURCH. Pastor RobeM Byers. Sunday

School 10 a.m.; Worship Servk:e ll a.m.;
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH.
Inc. - Paul St., Middleport. Rev. O'Dell
Manley, po.sioc. Sunday School, 9:Jt a.m.;
MorniJtg worship 10:.)) a .m .; evl!fllng worship, 7:30p.m. Tuesday, 12:30 p.m. Women's
prayer meeting: Prayer and praise service,
Wednesday, 7:Xl p.m.

~:~·:.:;d

Rutland, Ohio 45775
Phone

inJ;". 7:lJ p.m.

SONS STORE

Fire &amp; Safety

J . Wm. " Bjli" Brown, Owner

Attend Church
this Sunday

99'.' 5130 Pomeroy

w. """'"

992·2318 Pomerov

Equipment

Complete
Automot•ve
"'service
Locust &amp; Beech
99.1 - ~921 Middleport

'/

C1rurch ScMol 9: 15 a.m.; worship service
lO:ll a.m. COOlr rehearsal, '1\K&gt;sday 7:00
p.m., unde-r dtrectkln of Allee Nease.
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE. Gomer Unton and Mulberry, Rev.

m

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

TRINrrY CHUROI, Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastor: Debl;lle Buck, Sunday School supt.

BE A WINNER • DRIVE HOME A NEW ·
FORD • VW • AMC • JEEP • RENAULT!

Deem reunion

.

Phone 992· 3480 . , _

Pomer~v

"2·2955

I . 0 . "Mac" McCoy
l:tt. 1, 'R eedsville, On.
985-3944
.
1

~-..:;

Ph .."l-2101 ,

Prescriptions

Homelile Saws

No Purchase Necessary •
No Obligation • And There's
Instant Prize Winners, Tool·

Happenings

.

_

John F. Fultz, Mgr.

~~!.~!

Middleport

,,.

MMA~IdKdlevportsroRr.E .· ,; ; ~McCOY's~~~~:;;:~:E~~~~~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Nl~!e~!RDWAR1

'

I

~ge -~ ·

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

RIDENOUR

That~~ Right • An~ There's

POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club will ilold a picnic at
Thompson's cabin on Monday at
6: 30 p.m. Members are to bring
a covered dlsh.

•

It{)\
• i

MIDDLEPORT
10)1( STORE

KERMIT'S KORNER
Pomero)'. Ohio .

MILL I
DOLLARS

SATIJRDAY

..

and CJaurch
:" MEIGS TIRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.

a.ontiNG tllUSE :l~\

COLUMBIA 1WP. - The
Board of Trustees of Columbia
Township will meet in special
session Friday at 8 p.m. at the
township building.

!'OMEROY - Eastern Hlgh
School students In grades seven12 who are Interested In parllclpaUng in the marclllng band for
the coming year should report at
the high school starting Monday
tor band camp.
All students who have not been
In the marehing band before
should report at 6 p.m. and other
students at 7 p.m. Discussion 1:1
yearly plans wl1l be toiJowed by
a music rehearsal.

••
St.

NEW YORK

FRIDAY

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

;/·

-~--- .
~ -

"Mill St.

Calendar

MONDAY

This
USED CARS, INC.

. Church &amp; Office Supplies
GIFTS

Mr. and Mrs. James R. Simms
Jr .. Pomeroy, announce the birth of
their first child, a daughter, Erin
Bethany, on May 26 at Holzer
Medical Center. The infant weighed
six pounds, 10 ounces and measured
20 inches in length.
•
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harley Fetty, Point
Pleasant. Maternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Fetty, Pl. Pleasant, and
Mrs. E~tyl Clark, New Haven .
Paternal grandi:&gt;~irents are Mr.
and Mrs. James Simms, GaUipolls.
Paternal great-grandparents are
Mrs. Florence Simms, Gallipolis,
and Mrs. Ted Barker, Patriot

SALEM - The fourth annual
toe cream social will be held at
the Salem Township Volunteer
Fire Department Saturday with
serv~ to begin" at noon. In
addition to the Ice cream, pie,
roast beef sandwiches, hot dogs,
cole slaw, potato salad, macaroni salad, and baked beans will
be served. There will be music
and games.

The Daily-~~nel

2

7 fXrERIENCE.. THf JOY Of RELIGION 4!

~

•;;;
t
JJ

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

"

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH. Re\1 . Rober1 Sanders,
pastor; Don WUJ, lay leader. Located In Texas
Community on CR f:rl. Sunday school, 9: I)
a.m.; Morning .w cnhip service, ~0 : 45a . m.;
evl!'ning preaching service second and fourth
Sundays, 7: l ) p.m.; Chrt9tlan Endea\'Ci', ftrst
and thlrd Sundays, 7: XI p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting and Bible study, 7::JJ p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 State Route
124 (One mile·east of Rutland). Sunday, Bible
lecture 9~-Xt a.m.; Watchtower study, 10:20
a .m.; T.u&gt;sday, Bible study, 7~ lJ P. m .;
Thursday, Theocratic School. 7::tl p.m.:
Service Meeting, 8:20p.m.
OfURQf OF GOD OF PROPHECY,
Located on the 0 . J . White RDad off highway
160. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday School JO
a.m. Classes for all ages. Junlor Church ·
11:00; Morning Worship, 11:00; Adull Choir
pracllce 6:00 p. m. Sunday. Young People's,
Children's Church and Adult Bible Study,
Wednesday at 7:JJ p.m .
HOPE BAP'I1ST CHAPEL- !S10Grant St ,
Mlddl~rt; Sunday School, 10 a.m.: morning
wori!Sfp, lJ a.m.; evening worsh.lp, 7 p.m .
Wednesday evening Blblf' s1udy and prayer
meeting, 7 p.ril. AttUiated with SoUthern
, Baptlst Convmtlon.

BRADFORD CI!URCH OF CHRIST State Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
Seevers, minister; Sunday School Supt .. Stcvt&gt;
Pick~ . Sunday schOol, 9::1.1 a.m.; morning
worstup, 10: :W a.m.; ev~nlng wonhlp, 7 p.m.
Wednesday worship, 1 p.m.
JUBlLEE CHRISTIAN CENTER Grorgr-'s Creek Road . Rev. C. J . Lemley,
pu.stor; Paul Poar. Chull'h School Superln·
tendent. Church school, 9:ll a.m.; mornlnli!:
w«Sh.lp, 10:.)) a.m ; evenin,t servlct&gt;, 7 p.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:00p.m . C185Se!l for
au aReS.
ST. PAUL LLITHERAN CHURCH , Corner
c1 SycamOI'E' and Second St.s .. Pomeroy. The
Rev. WIUiam Mlddleswarth, Pastc:r. Sunday
School at 9:45 a.m. and Church Servtct&gt;S 11
p.m.
SACRED HEART. Msllf. Anthony Glannamore, Ph. 992~5898. Saturday eveni ng Mass.
7::rl p.m. : Sunday Mass, 8 a .m. and 10 a .m .
Confessions one-half hour tx&gt;rore each Mass.
CCD Classes. 11 a.m. Sunday.
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St..
Mlddlepon. Jam£'5 E. Keesee, pastor. Sunday
mornlnli!: worshlp, 10 a.m .; evening 5en.ice. 7
p.m.; Wednesday evening worship, 7 p.m.;
VIsitation, Thursday, 6:.tl p.m.

TRINITI CHRISTIAN ASSEMBI.Y. Cool·
vUie - Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday
schoOl, 9:30a.m.; morning scsvlce, 11 a.m.
Sunday evcnin~ service. 7::rl p.m.; mldwe£'k
prayer servi('(' Wednesday, 7:lJ p.m.

MOUNT OUVE OOMMUNJ1Y CHURCH,
Lawrence Bush, pastor; Max Fo1mer, Sr.
Superlniendent. Sunday School and morning
wors hJp, 9: :11 a.m. Sunday even in~ servi('(', 7
p.m .; Yeuth meetlng and Bible study,
Wedncsrtay, 7 p.m.

UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass. · Rev. Robt'r1 Smith, Sr.,
pastor; Rev. Jamf'S Cundiff, as.'ll~tant pastor.
s unday School, 9:30a.m.; morning worship,
10:30 a.m.; evenlnlol worship, 7:30 p.m.

(614)

747

"~777

THE DAILY
SENTiNEL

-

-·

:- \.o·.··

Midd l(' po rt
flf)merov 0

Women·s Fellowship, Tuesdays, 10 a.m.
Wednesday night prayer service. 7: I) p.m.

FAITH BAPI'IST CHURCH. Mason • . - .
at Uni ted Steel Workers Union Hall, Railroad
Street, Mason. Morning worship 9:.1) a.m.
Sunday School 10:30 a.rri . Evening Service, 7
p.m. Rr•yw meeting Wednesday, 7::11 p.m.

Mktweek 81blfl Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPT'lST - Rfw, Nyl~

Borden. pastor. Cornelius Bunch, superin-

tendent . Sunday school !t: :n a.m.; second and
fourth Sundays, worship serv1ce at 2:00p.m.
'MT. MORIAH BAPTIST -

Fourth aDd

Main Sts., Middleport Rev . Calvin Mlnn!&amp;.
pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supt.
Sunday school. 9::.J a .m .: worship service,
10:45 a.m.
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
Cm.JRCH. Route 1. Shadfo. Pastor. Don Black.
AtfUlaled wtth Southern Baptist conventkm.
Sunday school, 1::1l p.m .; Sunday worship,
2::J:l p.m . Thursday ~nln~ Bible study, 1
p.m .
PENTECQgJ'AL ASSEMBLY. Racine,
Route 124. William Hoback, pastc:r. Sunday
schOOl, 10 a.m .. Sunday evPning servtce, 7
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m .
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle.
Supt Sunday Sct\ool 9:ll a.m. Mornlna
Worship. 10:30 a.m. PraycrServ!re,alternate
Sundays.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
Ave., the Rev . Ollrk Baker, pastor. Carl
Nottingham, Sun:lay . ScOOOI Supt. Sunday
SchoollO a.m. -c lass~ for all ali(es. Evenina
servk.-es, 6p.m. Wednesday. Study, 7::tl p.m.
Youth services, 7: :xJ p.m. Frtday.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mill St ..
Mlddlepm. Pastor Is Brorher c huck McPherson. Sunday School at 10 a .m . Servte(&gt;!l
Sunday f&gt;Venlng at 7 p.m . and Wednesday at 7

p.m.

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev. Earl Shuler,
pastor. Sunday school 9:30 a.m.; Church

service, 7 p.m .; youth m eeting, 6 p.m .
Tuesday Bible Study. 7 p.m . .

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTiiOUSE, 3.1)15
HIIMd Road. PomEroy. Tom Kelly, pastor.
Danny Lamoon , Sunday School Superintend-

ent. SundaY Mornln~ serviC'£&gt;, 10:00 a.m.;
Sunday t&gt;VenlnR service 7::l&gt; p.m. Services
Tuesday and Thursday t-venlnRS at7::K) p.m .
WORD OF FA1111, 9.1 Mill St., Middleport;
Richard Stewart. pastor. Sunday mornln~.
10:00; Sunday evening, 7:.J). Tuesday momIn ~ BlblP Study, 10:00; Wednesday evE'fl\nli[.
7: :ll; Thursday mvrnl~ vldro wtth Kenneth
Cope!and, 10: 00; Friday evening video with
Kenneth Cope-land, 7:ll '
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud. pastor. SUnday
School, 9: .)) a.m.; Worship Service, 10: 00
a.m.; Youth Servtcto, Sunday, 6:15 p.m .;
Sunday evening seravlcc, 7:00p.m. Wednes-day Prayer McetinJl: and Bible Stud}l7~00p. m
NEASE SE'ITLEMENT CHURCH. Donald R. Karr. Sr .. pastor. Sunday afternoon
services. 2: 30; Thunday C'Vcnlng service,

7:.JJ
'
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W. Va,
Pasta-, Bill Murphy. SUnday SchOOl, 10 a.m.;
Sunday evenlnK service, 7: :K) p.m.; Prayer
meeting and Bible StUdy Wednesday. 7::11
p.m. Everyon£" welcome.

Sermonette
"! wiU lift up mine eyes unto the hllls from whence cometh my
help."
·
This pasSage ls an old favorite but It has added meaning for me
since living in this h!U country &lt;t Ohio. There ls hardly a place around
here where you can't see a hill from a I least one window of whatever
house you llve ln. The beautiful hills are all around us.
From the ancient days &lt;t our faith history. as recorded in the Old
Testament, hills were sacred places, the places where a person go to
.
talk to God.
In the Old Testament orlginal language, Hebrew, these sacred
places were referred to as "the high places" and of course Important
events of our faith occurred on "lllgh places." Moses encountered
God in a burning bush at the loot of a mountain and on the same
mountain top received the Law. The very early sanctuaries, or
gathering places for worship before the Temple, were at "high
places" and t~e Temple In Jerusalem was on a hill.
Jesus certainly did not limit His actlvltles to I he mountains and
hills, but some very Important things occurred on high·places. Part
of hls Temptation, the Sermon on lhe Mount, the Mount of Olives, his
Crucifixion on Golgotha, and flnaDy lhe Resurrection and many
others. HlUs have special meaning in the Christian faith.
It is reaDy nloe toknowwe.can enounterGod at any place and at
any time and going to a h!U Is rot necessary for us to find God or talk
_ with God. But having the hills all around us ls a constant reminder of
the presence of God with us and for us.
•
So If you need help, l! you need comfort, If you need to know thaI
the Creator of the Universe knows you by name and loves you, lift
your eyes unto the hills because God wUI hear you and help.
By Rev. Wanda G. Johnson, paslor of the Presbylerian
Churches of Meigs County, Ohio.

RlJTI.AND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRISI'. Elder James MJller. Blble
study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Sunday School,
10 a.m. Sunday night service, 7:ao p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS HarrlaonyUle Road. Earl ~. putoc.
Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9: » a.m.; Morning WanhJp 11 a.m.;
Sunday ewruna: service. 7:Xl p.m.; Prayer
-..,_ - y . 7::llp.m.
!IYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GODJoy

Clortl. putor,

Wonhlp ...-vice Sunday,

lD:00 a.m.: Sunday .:t.lol, U a.m.: wcnhlp
aerytce. _T:.!'. fil·m. Weme.ciiY prayer meet·

~

--------·•"

- ·--·--------··,

�•

1983

Sentinel

S&amp;W TV ·
APPLANIAD NCE

SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 98&amp;-4269

It No Answer, Call 985·4382
Oewayne Wllllame

• Scout. Smith
All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls end Shop
Servioe Available

COMPlETE
RADIATOR SERVICE
From tile Smallest Heater
Core to the Larcest Radia-

tor.

envoy Reginald Bartholomew.
The U.S. envoy had been holding

consultations In Washington after
the Greek government announced
that there was "substantial disagreements" between the two sides
on the bases Issue. The United States
maintains !our major Installations
and 20 minor military faciUUes In

be removed after the flvp.year
period satlstles one ot the Socialist
government's most prominent preelection pledges.
· PapandreoiJ said the agreement
wou!d.golntoeftect Dec.31,1983,and '
afterthetennlnationoftheflvp.year
period the Americans would be

·

Redietor Speoialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Elptrienco

JAMBOREE' CLOSES - 'Ibis wu lhe "'*"e a1
th . CloslnJ ceremonies of the 15th World Seoul
Jamboree Ia Alberta, Canada Mom than 1.8,800

scouts attended the ptherlnlllor nine days and II wiill

the first Ume girlS wem allowed to participate. (AP
!Aoerphoto).

nRED OF DRIVING AN

-

&amp;~?·

Chow- Shepher d mixe d.
4•8-9873 or 4•6·

OLD BEAT-UP BALL
OF RUST?

011,.

AUTO BODY AND
VAN CONVERSIONS

aockho••
Dump Trucks
Lo- Boy
Trencher
Water

Beagle type ·pupa. Free to

good llo mo. Coli 814-2465171.

USTOII

- Goo Linea
- Septic Syatemt
LARGE OR SMALL JOS

AR

I pupplea Ya Poodle and YJ
IHgle. Mother full blood
BHgle, lather full bred

949 · 2737
111

7-IS·I mn lid

mQ

given 17 months to remove the
Installations.
Papandreou said the agreement
was Initialed by the two sides early
this morning and that the full text of
the agreement will be made public ·
when the accord is signed Wtthln the
nexttwoweeks.
·
· Describing the moment as " historte," Papandreou said that under
the agreement the Unlted Stat~

undertakes to maintain the strategic balance of power In the region,
and gives Greece the right to revoke
the accord It this balance is upset In
favor of Turkey.
The Socialist government has
repeateadly demanded a guarantee
from Washington that the United
States would provide Greece with
military aid equal to' at least 70
percent of the aid provided to

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,.Inc.

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizts !tom 6'16' Up
· to 24'r36'

Reoina.

Turkey. Both are members of the
NorthAtlanticTreatyOrgimtzatloo.
Papandreou said the Americans
would provide Greece with $!0)
mlllion in military aid 1n 1!114. He
saki that amount represents 70
percent of the ald to 1'\lrkey next
year and would be provided lor Ia a
seperate exchange of letters . .
tween the Greece and the Unlted
States.

Oh.

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

St.

Rt. 124. Pomeroy. ON.

or

puppies.

to

good

home. Call 304·875 · 7474.
KITTENS of 111 colora. Max-

Ine Nibert, 304· B95· 3472 .

Loat and Found

FOUND Yellow bicycle .
Identify to claim 1nd pay for

PH. 992-5682

ad. Coli 446-3758 .

992-7.121
3-24-tfc

l ·l•UC

FREE

6

Also Transmitsion

Duler
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

2·23-tlc

1

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .

Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, .Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment

PH. 992-2280

3 • 6 wHk old bl•ck kitten• .
614-992-68t 8.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

TON

4 Peek-a-poo puppies, tree

to good homo. Cell 9925961 "

BOGGS

$3()00
.
·
A

Mele Collie, mate black and
tin, fem•le apeniel. 6 male
puppie1 . 1st house on top of
Mile hill in Racine.

PARTS ond SEI~VII:E

10·&amp;-ttc

STRIP
..COAL

992-2602.

. All Makes

Pt1:&amp;r~3-H91

2-26·1tcc

6 puppies. Mixed, 4 brown,
1 black . 1 tamale dog good
with kid: , brown . Good
home w ith children. 8 14·

•Weiher: •DI .... w.1Mrs
R•nge•
•Rafrlg.r1tor1
•Oryerw •FrHzera

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
, .1.

992-8274.

985 -3S61

lnsulatd Doc Houses

614 - 388 -

fem•l• border collie. 1 yaar
old. Good with kid a. 814-

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE ·

IZ'K16'

Sizes sllrt from

Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph. 992-2174

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTUR. USE ~'

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

LOST: ~m - Fm etereo head
phone r•dio. Leh on rock by
Recine a.¥Y Wed. morning.
PIIIM coli &amp;14-949-2112 .

The Daily Sentinel

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

PHONE 992-2156

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC AUCTION

No. 7 1970 Cllevv Frame
CE630Pl22109
No 8 1974 Int . Dump
10672 DHA23269
No 9 1972 Int. Pickup ·
8 13105H274090
No. 10 197 1 Ford Flatbed
F70EVL32391
No 1 1 lnt P1ckup ·for Parts
No 12 1963 L1ttleford Steam
Heater
Lot No. 1 T'NO Gallon Dump
Beds
Lm No. 2 Vanous 1tems of
scrap steel and fmscellaneous
merchandl39.
The follow1ng Will be consi dered as mm1mu m re q u ~r e­
ments for th e b1dders,
1 -Each Item w1·11 be sold •
il. With no warrants e•presSed
or 1mphed. There will be no

I

Public Notice

sale.
IN THE
on the 15tll day of August.
2 - The successful bJdders
1983. at wh1ch li me sa1d
COMMON PLEAS
must make payment 1n full to
COURT.
accounts w1ll be cons1dered
The Me1gs County Comm1s~
PROBATE DIVISION
and continued from day to day
s1oners before any 1tem IS
until f•nally d1sposed of
MEIGS COUI'ITY, OHIO
removed. and the removal must
IN THE MATTER OF SEnl.EAny person Interested rriay
be within ten ( 10) days after the
MENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO.sale
BATE COURT . MElGS accounts
to matters perta1
nfile wnnenor e•cep11ons
to sa1d
3 - Items for sale may be
COUNTY, OHIO
1ng
10
the
executiOn
olthe
rrust.
1nspecrep at the M e1gs County
Accounts and vouchers ' of not less than I1Ve days pr1or to
H1ghway Departmen t located at
the follow1ng named f1duc1anes the date set for heanng
the fa1 r grounds .
have been flied 1n the Probate
ROBERT E. BUCK
4 - Auct1oneer lor the sale
Court. Me1gs County, Oh1o. for
886 4J
JUDGE
will be Dan Sm1th of Aac1ne, approva l and sen lement
No 2 1965 lnt Trac tor
COMMON PLEAS
Oh10.
.
COURT,
CASE NO. 22806 F,nal
8863J
5 - lhe Me1gs County Account of Beverly Ste.vart.
PROBATE
No. 3 1973 lnt Dump
DIVISION
CommiSSIOners and The Meigs
Adm1n 1str atnx of th e Estate of
10672CHA20759
MElGS COUNlY, OHlO
County Fngmeer reserve the
Robert J . Ew1 ng. OeceasE!d
171
15. llc
No 4 1959 Ford Truck
r1g ht to accept or reJect any or
CASE NO. 20724 F1rst and
F 75 N 9~29639
'
all b1ds or any part themof
F1nal Account of Margaret 54 Misc. Merchandise
No. 5 197 7 Chevy Car
Mary Hobs tett er. VanCooney. Guardnm of the
1L69L7J334660
Clerk Estate of Donald VanCooney
No. 6 1967 Oodg8 Truck
addi !IOr'IS or subtr aC tiOns on
/
Boa rd of
158172471 4
CASE NO 23955 f,nal
any 1tems before or alter the
Me1gs County
!"ccount of Max1ne Pr1ce. Adm1 CommiSSIOners
n1stratr1x of the Estate of Eth el
-171 B. 15. 2lc
Swan. Deceased
CASE NO. 23761 F'nal
Public Notice
Account of Lula B. HamDton.
E•ecutnx of the Estate of
PROBATE COURT OF
I
I
Zueleha Sm1th. Deceased. ·
MEIGS COUI'ITY. OHIO
CASE NO 23792 F'nal
ESTATE OF GUY W. LEE.
Ac coun t of Dan1el C GillenDECEASED
water. becutor ol tile Estate of
I
I Ceoe No. 2•t24
Gay P, Gillenwater. Deceased .
NOTICE .OF .
Unless except1ons are flied
APPOINTMENT
thereto. sa1d accoums Will be
·oF AOUCIARY
lor heanng before sa1d Court
I
I On Ju
ne 2 1. 1983. 1n the
SERVICE STATION
7 a-;te---:G::-e-n-e-ra-;IMe,gs County Probate Court I--;;R;-e-a-;I-;E:-at
992·9932
Case No . 24 124 . Maufl!a
I Write your own ad and order by ma i l with th iS I Miller. 456 10 M1ller Road.
3. Pomeroy. Oh10
I coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you 9f!t I Route
Real Estate General
45 768, was appOinted Adm1r esults. Money not refundable .
n1stratnx of 1he e:; tate of Guy W.
Lee. deceased, late of Route 2.
FOR SALE
Pomeroy. Oh10 45769 .
EDITH A. HAYMAN resi·
Robert ·E. Bu ck
Phone
I
I
Probate Judge/
dence on Vine Slretl, Ra1·(614) · 992-3325
Clerk
cine,
, Ohio. now offered
(71 1. 8. 15. 3lc
In accordance w•rh Sect•on
307 .12 of The Oh10 Aev1sed
Code. Th e Me•gs County Board
o'f Commtss•oners w•tl sell used
equipment. scrap steel. and
parts by publ1c auctiOn at
10·00 A.M . Saturday, July
23rd. 1983. located at the
Me1gs County .H1ghway Department on the fa1r grounds.
Equ 1pment for sale·
No. 1 1965 lm. Tractor

nRE SALE

LOWEST PRICES
IN AREA

r~----------------~----,

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifleds and
Savelll

I

I

I
I

·I
I
I
I

I

~

1

R

I

I Name

1Address·--------1Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

FLEA MARKET

P'rint one word in each
space below. Each in·
I titial or group of f igures
I counts as a word. Count
1 name ana acldress. or

Sat. &amp; Sun.
July 16 &amp; 17
Chester. OH.
"Spots For Rent"

1 phone number If used. Wo·rd~
get better rosults ----lr-i--i--t--i
I ifYou'll
you describe fully,
For More Information
I give price: The Sentinel To IS
Call:
reserVes
the or
r ight
to ~~~~~~~~~~=~
1I cla
ssify. edit
reiect
·ro 25
992-2744
I anv ad. Your ad will be ·ro lS
put
in
the
proper
~~~::-:-.l!~T.~~~~
I c lassif ication if you'll I check the proper box
Th ese ca sh ra tes
7
Yard Sate
I below.
incl ude discount
I
I

I
1
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&lt; &gt;Announcement

1 1For Rent

I

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I ~I 3
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1I :•5.

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In
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19,
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25.
26.

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31.

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YARD SALE
SATURDAY
JULY 16, 1983
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Antiques
Collectables

Miscellaneous

Dishes, clothes. curtains, metlll Yllldlube,
alii I ii&amp;lll, lamps. lan-

terns, stoneware, pitcher
&amp; bowl . . stands,

fllmes, minors, Wllnut

llble. set of 411111. chairs.
---- -·- - 1 d ..fl. !*lor lillie, North
33 . , _ • .. _ _
1 Wind God Chlir, COli
15.
.• , · 34
______ I
hod, 12'x60' Elconllllll16.
-· -JS .
. ~- ..., - · j
bile home. 1972 Cldlilac
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
I Eltbldo.
The Daily Sentinel
I I mile hst of Harrison·
111 Court St.
I ville on St. Rt. ·143.
12.

I

_ • ---

6.

I 1..
I u
. I 9
I .
I lo .
'II

1
1
I

1 &gt;Wanted
1 JForSale

.. - - ·-

32.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

.

I

1--.----------------------!"'

742-2229

NEW LISTING - 7 rm. brid&lt;
wMl new kitchen and bath, 3
bedrooms, I&amp; dining carpebng
fumac~ porches and basement As~ng $45,000
NEW LISTING - 3 apls.,
rooms lor the 41lt 3 modem
balhs, 3 nice kitchens and I&amp;
kt near Jones Boy~ Want
$45,000.
NEW LISTiNG - Business
building in Middleport wMl
about 6,11Xl sq. ft. of storage.
$25,000.
.

for sile at $20,000.00.
Property appraised at
$25.500.00. THIS IS A
REAL BARGAIN as 111e!e is
a larp lot that goes with
this property. For infor·
llllli011 contact Fred W.

Attorney, Pomeroy,
Ohio, Telephone 9925132 or Ruth Ellis, Col-

Crow,

umbus.

Telephone ,

J&amp;F

district for ooly $6;000.

IIIDDLEPORT -

Near P.O.

has 3 bedrooms, 11! baths,

CONCRETE WORK
BOiliOED &amp;-

GUAUIITEED

1972 A~1ngtoo
l2x60 total elec., 2 8R wilh
central air and heat $7,500.

HOllE OR lAND- 3 bedroom
A-frame that needs finishi"'

111d 2 acres or 6 aaes near
Racine.

58 ACRE FARM -At Momin&amp;

Sllr. 3 bednJorn home, 1&amp;. bank
and other bldp. 20 acres

"lllal

eRepl.:em~~n ';;,'J•odows

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772
6/Zlltfn

37-lfo

YOUNG'S

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Addcn anc1 ........na
work
~ ..... wa.tc

--..and .....
,..,,...and
olomicalwortc

(Froo hthnatoo)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
'

Of

Pomeroy,

Y:!,&lt;•f•l

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built G1ra1es"
Ca II for fret sidiniiStimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.
No Sunday

PH-.992-3006
5·16·1 mo

' ·

John Teaford

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

"Club Repair
. "Fishing

•,

Ch•ster

6_16 _1 mo.

LOST:

675-2017 .

8

Ranges, Refriprators

rediiiOII lf1d hell·
tao - - . We """ alto
add boil and tod aut ...
, dietofs. We iUo IIIPiir
OM Tria.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Middleport. Ohio

HHfe

lOP PRICES

, lb

HOME REPAIR

.

CHAIN LINK FENCING

Roofina • Sidin&amp;
Trouahs,
Down Spouts

NEED~

6-22-1110.·1'11.

~c.'\

•

c.o~t- ·

Windows • Doors
For "All" Your Home
Repairs •••

llldlltors .. ........... 30' lb.
Asst. Glass .. $1.00 hunchd
Mixed lroo .. $1.00 hunchd
Also Plekina Up Auto Bodies

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

"Free Estimates".:.

Call: Geor1e Gum
Ph. 992-5433

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION
882·2276

PH.

THE
TROPHY

TERESA'S
CAKE
DECORATING

KING

Wedding Cakes and
All Occasion Cakes

Trophy
Manufac:tunrs

"Ucet- &amp; In_,led..

ENGRAVING .

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

PlAQUES

320 JERICHO RD.
PT.
W.

STARnNG AT
INSTAUfD
WITH PAD

Extensive

•Insurance Wort
oCustom Pole 8Idgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roolin1 Wort

&lt;Ahlnt.n &amp; Vinyl Sidli!CS
IS Yoon l•perlonc.
" '· 992·7513
or 992·2212

Good Selection Of
GRASS CARPET

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
· ·Lowest Rates
•friendly StiVie
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECJA~TY

742-2328

'Roofinc
'Gutter &amp; Down

~ 2tll mo.

Spouts

'Remodelinl

Kitollen Cabinets - Roafinl - Sidina - Concrete
Patios Sid..alks New Construction - Remodelinl - ~ustom Pole
Barns.

CHARLES SAYRE
·AND SON
Roofirw &amp; SidiJII

eo.

Routt I
Lon&amp; Bottom. OH. 45743
915·4193 or 992·:1017

11-II ·Nt

H. L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
All types of roo1.n.new

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

c-.

11t111r, ,11111ws and
dollnspoub, Jtltlr
01

~ lltd

Plinllrl.

doors ... witlduwa.
All

w.rt

•••INI

"FIW El1i111111"

Call: 949-2263or 'il'tl~.;MW r.

8t4-992-~370.

one helf milt up

Georg•• Creel&lt; Rd.
44e- 2U.
~1lloon1

Colt

for •• occ•llona.

Soy Hoppy Fothor' o Doy,
Hoppy Bl"'hcllly, llovo You,
Got Well, lt'o A boy or lt't •
Girl . Anything you wllhln •
dlftwent w1y:. Delivered to
hoepttel or home for elmolt
""V occulont . Botloono •
Co .. 44e-4313 .

"FREE ESTIMATES"
•

*CHAIN ·UNK

Cor Wllh ond Boko Sole.

FENCING

Pl•c•: The Ele1nor C1r

Installed And

For 5 Years.

Wolh . Dote: Boturody July
18. n-: 10 o 'clock to 4
o'clock. Spon- by tho
Arbuckle Youth O&lt;oup to
Hfld tho Group to Comdon
p•rlc.. Prlcee : C1r w1lh
atunod IMido
•1 .10. or both for only
u .oo. loto of bek~ goode.

u .ao. .,.,

SEPTIC SERVICE
'"Senior Citizens
10%.Dlsc011nt"
PH. 992·7119
Day "' Night

rc::::l. CATALOG

~MERCHANT

Gregg • P11tty Glbba·Ownars

PH . 992-2178

1-S.tlcc

'

1-::~--;:--:-:;:-:--::::;:--:::-:;::Vard Sale Sat. 16t h, 10:00 .
Territoriet IYiileble for new Jeycee's Building. 60 1 BurAVON repreaentltlvee or nett Rd . Proceeda to Local
vou can Mil where you work. Red Crou .
Cal1448-21 66.
1-::----:-:-:-:--:--:::---::
Garege Sale Wed., Thurs. Bt
Exp. beby1lttar , prefer. Fri. 9 til 1· Used wood
mother. Addleon eree. Call windows Indoor , electric
814-367-0606.
bllseboerd huter. pool table, lot s of misc. item:. 141
Salesman of elect ronl c Fourth AvB.. Gallipolis.
equipment. Sand re:ume to
P.O. Bo• 668. Kert. Oh Yard Sale July 16,1"6,, 7.
46643 .
Clothe:, knick kn acks, Para keata, other items . FairviewWan t ed Owner- Ope,etora Evergreen Rd.
with dump trailer. nHded
for 8 to 8 weeka study Carport Sale Saturdly 18th.
work . oall 1 -800-882-6845 204 Kineon Dr .. Gallipolis.
!Ohio only) , 1 -800-321· 9-4. Jr. clothae, sewing
7709 ext. t 65 tWVa onlyJ . machine, camera. more.
Ask for John. Call Friday or
Monday morning.
Yard Sale atero, minkcoat,
clean clothing. odds end
Dau Entry Operator ends. Thuu . -Sat . 8 :00needed. We ere looking for
ao_ R_d_._
good secretarlel ekllla, per· _8:...'0_0_·_8_0_"_2_5_T_e_• _
llcularly typing and CR-r: Largea Yard Sale 14th, 16th,
-entry . Speed 1nd accuracy &amp; 18th. 1 mila weal of
ere the keys to aucce11. Cen1enary on Rt . 141 . Love
Hours are 9 to 6 , M -F. Apply :eat. typewri1er , lamp e,
in peraorl at Robbins a"d diahtl. fruit jeri, and mlac.
Myare .
item•.
MERRI-MAC needo 3 demonatratora in lhil erial Oifte,
toys, home decor items on
PlftY plan. Cer and phone
nece1ury . Highest commie lion. No lnveJtment, dellv·
Carport Solo July 15. 9:00erlng, or collecting. Call
6:00, 462 Lariat Drive, near
814-742-3094. Alto book· Holzer Medical Center . Clo ing partie:.
thing. curt1in1. mice.

Choshlro, Oh 45620.

dealers for Melge and Gellie
Co. Aleo taking· new book·
inga Friendly Home Parties.

Yard Sale Thurday-Friday,
July 14-16. Lincoln Pike in
Centenary, Seveth houae on
rlght. Boys jeana, clothing ,
womena clothing. lots of
misc.

Position avlllable for a person wanting to start a new
carHr 11 e dentll usietant.
Qualifications: Eager to
learn, able to work with the
public, eperkllng personal·
ity, aome dental experience
would be nice . Send resume

to P.O. Bo• 729-H, C· O Tho
Dally

Sentinel,

Pomeroy,

Oh. 457&amp;9.
EXPERIENCED logo! tecre·
tary . Send ruume to Bo•
P-9. In cere of Pt . Plaaunt
Reg ister C~ - · 200 Ma;n St.,
Pt . Plaeaant. WV.
Wanted come one to live in
end help take care of Ill men .
Do houaework also. Call

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUS·

12

Situations
Wanted ·

Wanted To 8uy

We pay ceah for latelnodel
cltan ueed c1rs.
Jim Mink Chev.- Oida Inc .
BHI Gene Jahnaan

W~nted . Junk
any
condition.
Cell IUtoa.
814· 3889303.

W1nted to buy good, fUII:ize
box springs 6 mattreta. Call

Olive St .. Galllpo!lo,

0~ .

BEOS-tRON, BRASS,. old
furniture. gold. allver dol lara, wood ice boxes. :tone
)Ire, antique;, etc ., Com·
plate householdt . Write :

M .D. Miller. Rt. 4. Pomeroy.
Oh. Or 892· 7760.

~~t=i~~;,;~===

592-3051, or 12 to 4PM
1 -800-341 -8554 in Ohio.

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING-LANE OA·
NIELS . Reliable aervlce
since 1986 . Associate of
Brunicardi Music Co . Phone

SANDY ANO BEAVER In·
MJrence Co. has ~ffered
aervicaa for flra insurance
coverage in Gallie County
for elmoat 1 century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are avell1bla to
meat individual needs. Con tact Aay Wedemeyer, agent.

Phone 388-B249.
Arl you paying to much for
your hoepital-hellth inau·
ranee . Call Carroll
Snowden, 446-4290.

kett Berber Shop. 2nd. Avt.

house before overpass. 18th
&amp; 19th, 9-6 . E v~ ryth i ng
cheap .
. Ba ck Yard Sale 4 6 Central
Ave., Gallipolis. Sat . 10to8 .
Jeans &amp; child rena clothes, It
misc. item:.

18 Wanted to Do

For a~le by owner. Farm with
new house &amp; g1rage. 20 A .
lind. near Rio Grande. Conaider all offers. Call 61,4 246-6190 any time or 814-

245-9400 before 9PM.
REAL BARGAIN! 1 yeer old
bi-level , 3 BR, A· 1 cond.,
gerege It basement, brick
front, l1rge lot. city schools .
4 'h: mile: from Glllipoll:.

Groen Twp. $39,500. 446·
B038 .
dleport. Newly remodeled
home with fireplace, ponlble woodburner, do• to
achoola end shopping. Call
8 rm . house with bestment
&amp; lot with • trailer hookup. 2
:tory garage. Loc1ted in
Meige Co . on Rt. 7 , 1 mila
from Pomerot. C1ll Oelllpo-

Expedenct houH painting llo, 446·4483 .
1nd llwn mowerrepelr. Very 1 -----~---­
rHIORIIble rates. Call 441- By owner 3 bdr. modern
seaa.
home, full beeement. cent.
1- - - - - - -: - - - he1t &amp; 1ir, 2 acre~ . Call
Traah hauling, coal or ~ny­ 814-379-2513.

Middloport, oh . 814-992 ·

thing . Will plokup frH junk
te..¥ilion:, weeher, • dry·
era, iron. Call 114-388-

C· 4 Automatlctr•nemlulon

88 1 3.

fo• V-8 1974 Muttang.
30.·671-2814.
Liwn Mowing no y1rd to big
or small. Rell1ble enddepen-

doblo. For ottlmoto cell
4•8-3169between9ond5.
Pelnting-roofl:. houn. carl,

··----F,-(ime-ri:iv-- ---· --·
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
English Shepard puppies.
oak dr811er. victrola, scale,
clothes, household goods.
July 16-16. 9 :00. Chester.

'ize of dozera). gravel

houllng, wUIIoy ohort
gaa • water linn.
JINockhOo work . Freo Ofll·
motet . Phone 30•·2733111 or 30•·273-9B30.

·-· ---Pt.Piiiiiiia·ri·f ....
&amp; Vicin ity
YAAD sale. 107 Locu tt St :. ,.
Henderaon . Thursday. 14- ··
Friday 16 . 9 -?
·
SIX f amily yerd sale. Books; .
baby things, clothing, toys, ·
blcyclee, door, dryer, gleJO·
ware . July 16. 9 -5. 3001
Annleton Drive, Pt . Plea- ··
sent . Canceled if rair'l .
· '

YARD sale, Fridev 8t Saturday. 9 a.m .-4 p .m. beaide
Flowernook . Beby c:lothaa.
jean s, c ar radios. Ra iri.
cancala.
·
YARD sale, 2608 Mt. Ver- .
non Ave. Pt . Pleasant , Friday '
&amp; Saturday. Good clolhing,
hou seh old, misc.

.

'

FOUR famllv garage :ale, , ,
end of Roush Ferrel Rd.
Camp Conley, P.t Plaaaant. •'
P.re-tean girls cloi hing, boy a .
20" bike. Fridav 8t Saturday,

9-5.

&amp; Saturday, 2406 Lincoln ,
Ave., Pt . Pleasant . Starting
9 a.m . Mana walking shorts,
slacka, :hirt1, a few blue . ·
jeans. Ledlea shorta. clacks, ..
pants sulu . dre: ae: .
Sweeper, slide projector.
household arti cleJ. choldrens clothes.
THR EE family yard :ale.
Someth ing for everyo,.e, 1
mile from Shadle Bridge on
Rt . 3 6, acrot s from Siden
Equipment, Hendenon .

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale

6 bedroom. newly re.mo·
deled with fireplace in Middleport. Muet be seen to be
appreciated . Call 992-6709

after 8 PM .

Sohool. $40,000. Cell992·
6143 .

Houae for Sale, 6 RM and

Bath.

:~

.•
...
~

•.

...

1972 Holly Perk 14•65 2
bedroom , step up dining
room 8t ~itchen , excellent
cond it io n . &amp;8 ,600 . Call

446 -1724 or 448-8514.

Buffolo .

WV. Call

1 - 304· 676· 2668or Write:
Bo x 469 , Pt Pleasant, WV

2 bedroom , air conditioner,
patio. Trailer and patio oarpetad. Excellent condition.

Call 446-3647.
Used two bdrm. mobi le
homes, furnished. 8 fown'e
Trailer Park, Minertville, Oh.

614 -992-3324 .

,'

1970 1 2x60 trailer. Partly
fumlthed, woodbumer, C·
A. New carpeting, many
extras. Can be moved or left
on nice .farm 'ot . 16800.

25550.

614-992 -5710 after 5 p.m.

HOUSE, anumable 8"'12 percent loan. 3 bed room. all
ele.c tric, central air, 2 Iota,
well, take trailer trade ln .
Gellipolia Fe.rry, W'W. Call

Mobil Home 8 ,.. 36 . Furnished. nice carpeting, com·
plete with alum . atorm win dows. Good condition and,
clean . Nice little home. Keith
Staneart, Albany, Oh . 898-

aftor 5. 304-675 -8809 .

8745 or 89B-6077.

BY owner, Greenbrier Estalii, 3 bedroom. mid -entry,
3 .6 acres, e75,000 . Cell

after 3; 304-676 -6163 .
FOR sale or rant , 2 Bedroom
trailer in New Heven. already

USED Mobile Home:, 304·

576 -271 i .

1971 12x80 Richardson
with expando , 3 br, 1"12
batha, laundr_y room, carpet,
wood burner. ttorm a,
screen : . awnings. com pletely furniahed . Real good

cond. $7,000. 304-6756662.

1978 1 4•70 Nashua, 2
bedroom, largo bath, vary
SPLIT Foyer home on At. good condition $10.000.
664, Porter vicinity. Three 304-675-6B75 .
bedrooma, 1 3A baths. dining -:-:-:-~:-:-::-=::....--:----:-:­
room. brick basement with 12x60 MOBILE home with ~
4x12 tilt out. complete
g•rege In buement , on 1 kitchen, 3 badrooft'la, bath&amp;·
acre plus lot, beautifully '12, parti•lly furnlehad.
l•ndtcaped. wood deck on
relr. This quality home haa wa t her &amp; dryer. central ~ r.
been reduced for quick sal a. underpanned, 1Ox12 utility
Call us today. 614-446 - building. Jetting on large

1- - - -- : - - - 9 room houM. • Aluminum
aiding, 2 c•rporte. work-

lhop. beoomont, 2 wood
burtnor•. 2 out buHdlngo. •

fruit trHI. E•cetlent condl·
tlon . Priced to Hll . Sytl·

9340. 448-7901 , 614· 258 · rented lot, 304-875-2676 .
6413.

CLEARANCE SALE, SAVE
UP TO '4,000.00 ON NEW •
'B3 MOBlLE HOMES . All on • •
lot. New 14•70 Fairmont ·
&amp;11 ,995.00. 14ft. wide, 3 '
bedroom, 6" outside walls.

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

I- - - - - - - - TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
448-7672.
CLEAN USED MOBIL E
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 Mt. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
R,T 36 . PHONE 446-7274.
19BO BAYVIEW OeluKe,
14x70 2 BR C/ A , fireplaoo,
•14,00.

Coil

1969 1 2•50 2 bdr. total
oloc . u .•oo . 197914x562
bdr .• total elec.. .6.900.

Coil 814-441-0176 .

1---- --:-----:-

Tr1ller an($ lot for rent or eale
on Land Contract. Cell 614-

cuoe. Call 992· 7285 .

268-8840.

3 bedroom houM, 1YI b1th,
att1ched g1rege, compl81ely

1954 Great lake hou se
tr1iler. 8 ' x40 '. Call 614-

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

4 room hou• whh beth-lnd

doul&gt;it cor gongo. About 1

heat, good condhion. Call

$9,70.00. 12•60, 250 .00.
Used 2 bedroom mobile
home. 60' long, $1,600.
Plus m any more to choose
from. AU State M odular
Homes. half way between·
Huntington &amp; Pt. Pleasant

on St . Rt. 2 . 304 -578271 t.
REMODELED 2 bedroom
mobile home, 14600 . Call

304- 875 -2049 anytime,
aak for Raym ond.

Farms for Sale

33

Meiga Co. Ad 18. 88 acrea
1 / 3 pasture. 2 / 3 woo(ted.
all mineral righta. unlimhed
gravity fed springwater.
maturing t imber, fen ced in
paat\lre . 24' by 30 ' p ole
barn , large utility building .
Beautiful 8 ro om home, au
electric. completely inau.
lated . ln clud ea new carpet,
fenced in y8rd, aelt cleening
oven, side by alda refriger•·
tor f reezer, Aehly wood
burning atove. Ideal for kidt
end hones . t68 ,000 . Call

446 -9510 or 992-3506.

t-814-7340 or 441-4482.

8CN lend. Own• moved out

of town. Reooonobly prlco~.
814·354·U80or614 · 3U•
01B•.

fully insulated, 812,600 .00.
12 ;~~ 60,
2 bedroom .

garden tub. appliances, un-

derplnnlnll.
448-821 t .

fumlohod. •4o.ooo. Cell . 245-6144.
114 -949- 2880. Eutern 1- - ...,.-----:--:-lohool dlotllot.
1972 · Holley Pork · mobile
eyateO'a. landaCIP· 1 ~-----:----: home. 2 bdr ., unfurn •• 111

Houu of Uoyd now hlrhlg

at 8 AM .

,,

boota. Call 6,14· 379·
2•12.

gift ond toy demonllrllton,
perty peen. Free kh. no
..t. - I t without
obllgltlon. Phone814-99273~4 or 814·948-3011.

BiQ Yard Sa le I Clot hea, ..
inisc. household itema. 0 1~ '.
Pomeroy Rd. acr oea f rom
Salisbury School. Sa turday

Phone 304-875-4208 .

Newly remodeled 2 story
frame, 1 'h: bath, 3VJ ecrea,
city achoole, riverview.

814-992· 694t .

3471.

18th. 10 1111 6 p.m. 130

SUMMER yard sele, Frld1y . :
6 Family Garage Sale 109
Klneon Or.,Sat. 9·? GlenWire , 8 track tapa s, babymens-women• clothing in cluding .ladiea to X large.

COMPLETELY remodeled
hou se. 4 rooms, bath &amp;
laundry room with large
extra lo t. $32,000 .00

HOUSE FOR SALE in Mid·

3158 between 9 and 6 .

••roe
roncy. TC&gt;fl prlcot. ~d. But·

. Yard Sale on Mill Creek Rd .

set up, coil 304-882-3280 .

between 9 &amp; 6.

holdo. Coli Ooby A . Mortln
114-lt2· 11370.
oolna. rlnga.jewetry. sterling
wert, old coin:,
cur·

B3 ). 1 6-8 miles out Rt. 218 .
8 -4 . Canc&amp;lled if rain.

304-676 -&amp;624 .

Wanted: ' B1byai1ter for 14
month old at my home near

Rutland . Call 742-2581.

Firat ti m e yard sale. Thura·
dey the 14t h thru Sat . t he

Vard Sale S al . only . [7 -16-

HOME LOANS lo•N filt&amp;d
rate. Leader Mangaga, 77 E.
State, Athena, Ohio. 1 -814 -

&amp;14-742-2951 .

Geri'eral Heullng 1nd Trath
removtl Service. Relieble
end dependable . Call 446·

dolly gold, tllvor

Week Long Yard Sale 1Bt h23 r d , 9 -7 St ero . table.
chairs, LP 's, 46's. t apes.
chain saw, t ools, clothes,
misc. Rain cancels, At . .141
t o Uncoln Pike, J ohnson Rd .

Two bedroom. full basement, convenient location,

Room. board •nd cere for an
elderly pereon in mv hon,e.
Reaeonable. Call992- 6022 .

Wenttd to buy. New. used •
Mltlque furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete hOull-

Buying

Yard Sal e 638 · Hilde Dr.,
(Jallipoli s. Sat. , Sun .. Mon.
9- 6 . ·Clothing , f ufn., w ater
heater. drapet. mi te.

22 Money to Loan

446-4372 .

Boll Auctlneor. 304·4288177'.

Fir:t Time Ev ar-Vard / Sale
Friday and Sis turda y, St. Rt.
1 6 0 in Vinton . t hird house
north of Quaker State St at ion. Canning jara , aqu arium, 18inps, r ocking chair,
electric organ, rotot illar ,i ron
be d, dishwa sher. lou of
good clean m en's dreu
clothes . a nd women '•
clothes, odda &amp;. ends galore.

Ranch type Cbrick) . 3 badrooms. fireplace . •ttached
gerage, tdll basement ,
newly shingled roof. walking
distance to Pomeroy Elem.

304-896-3052.

p.m. Mt. .Alto

Th\tn .. Fri. &amp; Sat . Eagle :'
Ridge Rd. 1 mila from Rt . 7 '
at M e m oria l . Gar d en ·
Cemetery .

Wehe Terrace . Pom er oy.

Firat Time Verd Sale 62 Neil
Ave., Gallipolis. Clothing
and misc. cheap . Frid ay.
Saturday. &amp; Monday.

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do buaineu with
people you know, and NOT
to :end money through the
mell until vou have investigated the offering.

lady. tight housework. come
wages, cell for information ,

8

14 ' Slarcraft boat . bicycle,
glen front f ire ecreen, clo thing, (extra nice) agee 4 -18 .
(No prior ••lea). Fred SINon ,
At . 664 . 3.2' m i. west of At .

31 Homos for Sale

night,

Auction ·B1rn. Coneignmenta t1ken ever ' Saturday
1 :00 till sale time. Emma

6:00. 3 Fam ily-First ti me.

J------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~------------------­

PIANO TUNING &amp;5 off plus
discounts to aanior citizens churchea·schools. Call Bill
Ward Ward's · Keyboard ,

Instllllltion

of New System~

lArge Yard Sale Centenery
Townhouse. July 15-16th,
8-8.

SOMEONE to live In with

4

Cleanin1 &amp;

448-8246 or 814 -387 0308 or wt"ite to Gallle
Chrittian School, Rt. 1.

AUCTION every Saturday

Wanted to buy uaad coal 8t
wood he1tera. Sw•in Furniture, 448-3119 . 3rd. &amp;

SWEEPER ond oowing midline rep1lr. pert a. end
auppllea.
Pick up end
delivery. D1vis V1cuum

c ...ner.

01 1 -:----::~:-:--;-:;----:--

614-446-4BB3.

Ctll &amp;1'4-379-2472.

3 Announcements

6·9·1 mo ..

446 -3041

Ooby A . Mortln.

Wented to buy pine timber .

•'

ISears I

JACK'S

f~rnlture .

••e-•637.

Warranted by Sears

Cash&amp;
Cmy

Houaehotda, farm furnish·
inga &amp;: Real eetata. Over 26
.,..,. experience in buying&amp;:
tilling new, ueed &amp; 1ntlque

better. Cell 38B-9906.

7·S·2 mo pel..

,---------;..1.·________11

12-!0.ttc

Auction-. 276-3019 .

Stlnding timber. en
1mount. The bigger the

Call 843·5425

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

30th. Cetl

Yard Sale Ju ly 1 5- te. 9: 00 -

7.

$32.000. Call 448-4222

Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

C. L. Kitchen

Auction ~rf Fri. night at
the H1rtford Community
Canter. Truckloads of neW~~
merchendiee every week .
Conllgmente of na"w •nd
ulld merchandiH alway:
welcome. Richard Reynold:

448-3872

"Siding

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless
Steel
•

Around

WVa .. 304-773- 57B5 or
304· 773-9186.

9

EUGENE LONG
"FENCING PROVIDES PRIVACY PLUS
PROTECTION FOR CHILDREN &amp; PITS"

Rick Pe1r:on Auctioneer
Service. E1tata, F1rm, An tique &amp; liquidation nlea.
Ucensed &amp; bonded in Ohio&amp;:

Llconud • bonded to Mit

S.R. 124-PII. 992·5468
Buyers of gtass, lluminllll
cans, iron, metals.
Copper ............... ,.... 45

······-··-···-----,---········

tJon required . Appliutiont
being ac cepted through July

Part time joba in Pomeroy

Au ~tion

Complete AuctlonHr Service. Alao do •ppraiula.

Riden &amp;Sons
SALVAGE COMPANY

Wo Sill quality used cars.
1-614--4-46-4712
Gill Is

&amp; Vicinity

814-317-7101 .

CON

ERNEST MITCHELL
Route 4. Pomero

--·-· -Giiiifi)oifs...... ·: ·

446 ·17B9. .. ,_ 24.

614-992-2156 .

We """ ntplllr and ..

742-2362

sohodult o

Auction every Tueadey
night. Krodel Park Club
House, Pt. Pleae1nt WV.
Auct. Lonnie Neal . Cell

RADIATOR
SERVICE

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS .

ln

nectelity . epply befora July
22 Gelllpolia P1rka and
Recr eation Departm ent.
518 Second Ave .• Gallipolis.

Contact the
01ily Sentinel.
foryomhs
. Agea12thru18.

&amp;-29·1 mo pd

Washers, Dryers

Public Sale
8t

WORK GUARANTIID
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834
or 949· 2160

PH .992-71 19

Flt•l blllty

614 -742 -3060 .

FI£E ESTIMATES
20 Ye1rs hptrience

Dovid Brickle•

4

ot Krodel ' Taking application: for new

•starra Windows &amp; Doors

Vinyl Sidiop

USED
APPLIANCES

billfold

Park. belonging to Lyman
GrHnl", Reward. Call304-

20

.
RUBBER-BAa&lt; TWEED

'499

$2,700.00 or Best Offer

ARROW FLASHII'jG .
SIGNS
FOR SALE OR RENT
6" la 'l "
Replacement letters

Woods

S. l6·hlt.

GREG ROUSH

Good Selection Of
GOLD SEAL
CONGOLEUM

STUDENTS .... 6 for

Carpeted, bathroo11 with
shower.aas or elect. rtlrig.,
furnace, &amp; lot. Water heater.
ranco. sink, cas. elect.. or
battery lightS, S)ttpS 6, IX·
cellmt conditioo.

erea . C•ll 892-1278 .

AND HOME MAINTENANCE
' Roolin&amp; ot all !JlltS
Rosidtnlial &amp; Comlltrcltl
"Gutters &amp; Downspouts

Naw Homes - EKtensive
Remodelinl
"lnsutance Wo•k
"Custom Pole Bld1s.
&amp; Garaces
"Roofina Work
"Aluminum &amp;

·

a

6 month old tan whitep1rt
Pit bullloat in FletW~~ooda Rd.

Aluminum Call$ . ... .. 20' lb.

Remodelina.

$1295

Golf ltssons Specilt

·-Rooting

.Storm Doors

PHONE Jill CLIFFORD

992-7201

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

-s...... w-.

otr.ulotion

New Homes -

CARPET

18FT. WILD CAT ,
TRAVEL TRAILER .

ADULTS ....... 6Jor $40.00
$30.00
"Golf Trips
!'f':
"Pro Shop
..
"Fittill&amp; Center

VINYL &amp;
ALUIIINUII SIDING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

carpeting paneling and ga11ge.
Asking $25,000.
IRAIL£1 -

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

CONTRACTING

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•
•SEPTIC SYSTEIIS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•POIOS, RECIAIIATION
WORK
•lAND CLEARING,

full basement 3car garage and
lg lot.

aoo

FOR SAL£

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

POIIEROY Good older
hom~ 2 BR, II! balhs, fumace,

3 ACRES Wilh septic
system, T.P. water, cel~r
carport in Southern schoo

rldl

Business senices

SERVICE STATION
OPEN 24 HRS. A DAX

PoMEROY
lANDMARK

3-7-Uc

ClASSIFIED ADS aura to

Public Notice

GENERAL
CONTRACTING, Inc.

For all your wiring :
needs; furnacea re·. '
pair aervice and in·
stallation.
·Residential ,
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

David Brlckleo
Buslneto With

'{ard Sa\es

Aerobic Dance lnatruct or
t rllntt . ia okgrou nd 10
chHrleec.'er. majorette~ or In
d1nce preferred . or atrong
interest in ph,yelc•l titntal.

in l;hllhlro, Ohio . College
degrM In eltmentery educl-

RACIN E

RAFT

PH. £.92-2478

H1lp Wanted

Prlmery Teecher nHded for
Gallla Christian School, •
non-denominationel achool

K

- Sewer

MINE RUN

.

Greece.
The provisiOn that the bases are to

Wlfod heir TOffltr Plrt Do·
ochund end port Collie .
1 yr. old. Coli • "·
2713 oolc for Kenny.

poodle . Cell
9364 .

ree.

the return to Athens of U.S. special

PULLINS
EXCA\IATI NG
-o

7-!S.I mod

,Agreement
·calls for bases
to be removed after 5 years
.
.
ATHENS, Greece (AP) - Premier Andreas Papandreou said
today that Greece and the United
_States have signed anew agreement
on U.S. bases lnGreecethat calls for
their removal after five years.
The premier's announcement
during a news conference came
after nine months of difficult
negotiations, and only ()ne day after

11

r-;:==:~::===~===i1r;:=========:1i=========;-!undor

'83?'
''It could be a keytoworld peace,''
he said.
Higginbotham taught some Austrian boys to play American football
and, In return. they taught him how
to dance a polka.
"You know. 35 years ago we were
fighting with these guys, but here I
can say, 'Hey, Wolfgang, let's play
football .' It makes you feel great to
know your · grandparents fought
with them and you can live with
. them In peace."
Having girl campers, about l ,IIXJ,
was an experiment that organizers
said was a success and would be
repeated at the next world jamboThe presence of girls resulted In
a few International romances.
And many u.s. scouts, whose
troops are not co-ed, said they
thought having girls was a good
Idea.
"America has this thing about the
sexes, and It cannot understand that
guys and girls can go camping
together," said Jinn Stuart, 17, of
Afumtic Beach, Fla.

sroutlng's founder, told the
campers. "The way we speak and
behave Is the only difference."
The jamboree was the first to
Include girlS as participants and had
more countries represented than
any other In the63-year history ofthe
event. About 3,600attended from the
United States.
Campers began packing Thursday and were leaving today and
Saturday. Since J uly 6, this c~m ­
munlty In the wilderness had been
the eighth-largest city In Alberta.
Although they traded fVeryt hlrg
from uniforms to badges, many
swuts said the most rewarding part
of their stay was the exchange of
cultures.
The jamboree "could literally
change the course of the world. "
said Scott Higginbotham, 16. of
Dallas.
"One of these boys could become
leader of Libya and one of our guys
could become president. Then, they
could walk up to each other and say:
'Remember the World Jamboree In

Givuway

Business Senices

World Scout Jamboree ends
KANANASKIS ffiUNTRY, AI·
berta (AP) - Slnging and cheering
teen-agers from 102 countries gathered beneath a Canadian mountain sky and bade farewell to new
friends made during the 15th World
Scout Jamboree.
"The ties between people here,
these bonds of friendship, will stay
with us," Ken Hayashlda,16, of Seal
Beach, Calif.• said as the nine-day
campout ended Thursday nlght.
"No matter what ha ppens In the
world, we will know we had peace
for twc weeks here In Canada."
The 13,564 scouts, some carrying
·nags of their homelands, marched
to the ceremonial grounds at the foot
of the Canadian Rockies. And In the
w id, 'clear night, they sat crosslegged on the ground and pledged to
meet again In 1987 - at the next
world jamboree near Sydney,
Australia.
"You now know that people all
over the world really are the same,
with the same feelings," Lord
Baden-Powell, the grandson of

Ohio

8K40 2 bedroom troller for
tole. tt , 250 . Call 4464•83.

bedroom

•o' ·''""' Chapel
• oHer considered .
Rd.
304 -675· 5B09.

'·

�·"----~--

10-The
36

Lots

&amp;

$entlnel

Acreage

54

'h ton of flag lltona. Call
448-1572 .

Appro x. 33 acret development propeny. 20 minute
on

dry

aink1.

Paul

Conkelt

Antlquee, Tuppert ptalnl.
White's Metal Detector
1982 model 5000 series II.
new cond. conteinerinltructiono . $250 . 304 -882 3426 .

Mr. Lamber1 . Eve11ings 304-

622·9469 .

TWO acres, well; septic
system, electric,. near Naw
Haven. 304-882-3368 .

Hide-A-Way bed, breakf..1
set, 2 table lamps, dryer, end

6 .63 ACRES , Iot 9, Pleaunt

toblos. 814·992· 7761 .

Valley Farm s, Route 2.
Hickory Ch•pel Road, Phone

Black leather motorcycle
jacket. Size-small . t70. Call
992-5961 '

304· 676-4208 .

1981 H &amp; W. 2 horse trailer.
like new, ~1700. Calleven lngo oltor 7 :00. 304·578 ·
2782.

Houses for Rent

lit

44

Apartment
for Rent.

Large house witfl porctt, · ...;..
ideal lor large family, $100 Furnistted apt ., $210, utili·
mo. A-One Real Estates, ties pd .. 1 bdr., 920 4th
Carol Yeager, Realtor. Call A&gt;Je ., Gallipoll1. Call 448304·675·5104 or 304 ·875· 4416 otter 7PM .
7388 .
Furni1flad Apartmenta. 1
For sale or rent. 3 bdr house, and 2 Bf:t. $176 &amp; up.
family room, 2 bath, 1.700 Gallipolis. 446-4418 after7
sq.ft., control air, dis - p. m.
hwasher, carpeting, riverview. &amp;39,900 or rent $360 APARTMENTS (EQUAL
mo . plus dep. Call 446- HOUSING OPPORTUNITY)
8289.
one bedroom rent atarts _,
81 57 par mon~h. two bed·
2 bdr, very nice full bale· room starts at t193. Depment, located at 42 Chilli- osit $200 lno pete) near
cothe Rd .. 8196 mo .. $7&amp; Spring Valley Cinema. Call
dep. Call 446-3870 or 446 - 446-2746 or laave
1340.
masaage.

1----------

5 rm . house 10 Edgemont
Dr. 2 bdr. S. bath, recently
painted, new caf1)et livlngroom &amp; diningroO_m. Gas
heat .. Call 446-1370 aft6r
5PM .

Completely furnished. all
electric, 2 bdr., 468'h Sa·
cond Ave., Gallipolis. Adulta
only, ref .• e226 mo. plua
dep. Coli 448· 2238 or 448·
2581 .

ABOVE average single family dwelling at 8th 8t Viand
St . lease required; upper
bracket . Call 304-6751931.

3 bdr. apartment. 6 Coun
St., Gallipolia. 8260 mo .•
ret. II aec. dap. Call 446·
4926.

1-----------------1 bdr. apt .• new carpeted. no
pets, $16&amp; mo. Call 4462056.

Frank-lin Ave. No pets. Deposit and reference required.
304·676· 1887.

1 bad room Apt.' $196. mo.
including utilltiea. Eq~al
housing opportunity. Con·
tact Village Manor Apta.
614-992·7787.'

MOBILE homo, 1979 Sto·
rling. 14x70, 2 bedroom,
total electric, central air.
excellent condition. Can be
left on rented lot. French Apartments . 304 - 876 City Brokering Servicea. 6548 .
•
•
814· 446· 9340.
1---------------~
APARTMENTS , mobile
1978 SHULT, 14x70, 2 homes, houaea . Pt. Pleasant
bedroom. 2 baths, excellent. and Gallipolis . 614-448condition, total electric, 8221.
cental air. Assumable loan 1 - - - - - - - - - with s 1 ,000. down. Can ONE bedroom apartment.
stay on rented lot. Frftnch 402Y:r 24th. St. Pt. Pleuant.
City ' lhokering Services. phone, 1 ·61 4·992· 6858.
614·446-9340.
ONE bedroom apartment,
LOVELY 3 bedroom home $225 month, all utllitlea
with family room, garage. paid. 304-676-2696 .
On Park Dri&gt;Je . $300.00 per 1 - - - - - - - - - month plussecuritydeposh. TWIN AlVERS TOWER.
Ask fOr Mr. Clark at 304- Ap8rtments nowavallableto
675. 4340.
elderly • di1abled with an
income of leas than
GRANDVIEW Heightl. $12,300. ~entlng for 30
split~level. 3 bedroom. fampercent of adjusted l,..comeily room, central air, large .Pflone 304-676-6G79.
lot, $375 .00, Call 304-6756750 .
FURNISHED efficiency
apartment in Pt Pleasant,
utilitiaa paid . 304-89642 Mobile Homos
3450 .
for Rent
SMALL furnlahed ap1rt·
ment, adults, no petl, refer·
· Eureka: Riverfront lot, furn .. encea, 304-676-1366.
1 bdr., $100 mo., edultsraf.
&amp; deposil . 1 -614-643NICE. 1 bedroom. buitt in
2644 .
kitchen, utilitie1 furniahed .
304· 676·7112 .
Trailer for rent in Mercerville, Ofl . S200 mo . plus
ONE bedroom turnished
deposit . Ca1.161 4 -266-1966 apartment
in Pt. Pleasant,
or 614-266·1606.
utilities paid, aduha only,
deposit &amp; refere'ncll re·
Furnished 2 bdr. trailer. new quired . 614-446-4229.
carpet In Crown city. Call
614· 266· 6620.

1----------

2 bdr. mobile home. Bridgeman St ., Syracuse, Otl . Ret.
S. dap .. no pets. Call 9923904 or 99~ · 7866 .

12JC66 two bedroom traiier,
gas and water paid, $260
mo ., $100 deposit. Call
446·6583 .
2 bdr. mobile home, KerrBethel Rd. Partially fur·
niahed. Call 446-6639 .
1 2x52 2 bedroom trailer.

For rent Sleeping Room•
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call 446-0758.
Sleeping room$ 126 . utlltiea
paid, ainOie male. Share
bath. 919 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Call 446-4416
eltOJ 7PM .

2 bedroom mobile home In
Racine . 614 -367-0288.
12 x 60 2 bedroom mobile
home for rant. Approx. 6
miles from Middleport or
Po~eroy . 992-5858.

2 ·bedroom. Roush Lana.
Cheshire . 1 or 2 children,
nice yard . 1- 304· 7735882 .
TWO bedroom trailer at
Gallipolis Ferry. below
Hitching Po1t. 304-676- ·
9084 . •100. depoait, e150.
a month rent .
FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUY . 14' wide. 2 bed·
room. all electric mobile
home. setting on n_ic~ lot,
ready to move 1nto,
$185 .00. 304·576·271"1 ,

LOU IS XV love seat. perfect

condition. Don 't call it not
1erioualy lntreated in buying.
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 304-875-4302 .
82 Oliva St., Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room·aulte
"(lth 6 Inch flat arms $319,
b'bnk beds complete with
bunklea t199, 2 piece anbedo, 026.
tron livingroom 1uit11 $199. TW
antron recliner• tl9. other • ..... 304· 876·7142.
recliners t80, maple dinette
se.ts e179. love aeata $70, SWIMMING pool, 4'x18'
hldo· t·bod U50. box round. lo1 of extrll with
spring• &amp; mattra .. twin or pool. Contact Ethel Bunls,
full e1 00 sat ragular-flrm 304-875 -8512 or 876·
t120, maple dinette chaira 2486.
t36, waeh atend1 ·f34.
maple rockers $69, 7 piece REPOSSESSED SIGNI No·
chrome dinette sot t149, 5 thing down! Take over paypiece dinette ut t89, und menta t58.00 monthly.
bedroom suites. rlflrgara ~ 4' x8' flaahing euow aign .
tors, rengea, cheat, dreuen, New bulb1, Iettau. Hale
wringer washan. TV ' a, Signs. Call FA EE 1-800dryeres, &amp; shoes. Call 446- 828· 7446, onytlmo.
3169.
GIBSON air conditioner,
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 61000 BTU« good condition.
- waahen, dryera, refrigera- o9o. 304·773·5473.
tor•. rangea. Skagg1 Appliances. Upper RIVer Rd .• LARGE swing set frame
beaide Stone Creat Motel. with two swings and rings,
513 Kethnor, $15.00. 304·
441-7398.
876·6858.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, jeKtra heavy 56 Building Supplies
by Frontier), f685. Sofa.
Chair 1nd IOVIIIIIIt. t276.
So f.. and cheira priced tro.m
Building materials
'285 . to $895. Tobleo, $46 block, brick, aawer pipet.
end up to $126. Hide-a- windows. lintels, etc.
bade, •440. and up to Clluda Wintere. Rio Grande.
•&amp;26. , Recliners. t176. to 0. Coll814·245·6121.
e350 .• Lampa from t28. to
•76. 6 pc. dinettes from
•99 .. to $436.7 pc .. •188. 58 Pots for Sale
and up. Wood table with six
chaira 1426. to t746. Oetk
$110 up to 1226. Hutches, HILLCREST KENNEL •
e6&amp;0. lind up, maple or pine Boarding all breeds. Selling
flnl1h . Bunk bed complete Happy Jack Dog Food. AKC
with manr~t•••· e2&amp;0. and ·.Doberman&amp;: Stud Service.
up to $398. Baby beda, Cell 448· 7795.
e110. MattresiH or box
sprlnga, full or twin, •&amp;a .. ORAOONWYNO CATTERY
firm, eea . and $78. Queen · KENNEL AKC Chow pup·
aeta. •195. 4 dr. chast•.
CFA Himalayan. Per•42. 6 dr. chests. t54. Bed
end Slamaee kittens.
frames. •2o.and e2&amp; .• 10 Coli 448·3844 olte&lt; 4PM'.
gun - Gun cablneta. 1360.,
~inette chaira e20. and •2&amp;.
2 AKC Reg. Cocker Spa·
Gal or electric ranges, $326 nitll. Both males. Mlling for
up to •37&amp;. Babym11tre11ea. breeding purpoaea . CIJII
826 • 035, bedtromeo$20, 448-9372 eftor 6:00PM '
t26. • eJo, kingtr~~meeso .
Good ulectio-n of bedroom. Famala Beagle pupa, 8 wka.
sultat, cedar chuta. old, $25 . Call 614·256·
rocken. metat cabinets, 1866.
1wivel rockefl.
Used Furniture -- bookcase. Pony. Call 448-91569.
ranges. ch1ira, end tables,
waahera. dryers, refrigera- AKC black Lab. puppies. 2
tors and TV's. 3 miles out male, 2 female. 6 wka. old,
Bulavilte Rd. Open 9am to t125. Coll814-258·1379.
8pm. Mon. thru Fri .• 9am to
6pm, Sat.
Lovely grey • black lhau
448-0322
Apso puppias. 8 wkl. old,
y.tormed &amp; 1hou. Regiatered
Brand new White sewing wlth AKC. very good namachine $79 . Slighly paint tured. Females e 1!50, male a
damage, rag . · price t176. coil448 ·0~08 .
0329 .95. Coil collect 814·
386·4636.
2 AKC Regiatered Brittany
Spaniels. Call 114-24628 cu .ft. Hotpoini refrig. 5449 otter 5PM .
aida by aide, large lrHzar,
avocado green t2SO. Cell 2 BHgle1, one male and 1
448-8033 or 448· 8181.
female . Call 814-3670512 .
Early American sofa 88'
long, a.:cellent condition, 2 male CFA registered seal
0300. Coil448· 8867.
pt . Himalayn klnena . Very
good pedigrH. Reaaonably
U1ed Furniture: sofa, swivel priced. 814·992·7138.
rocker, rocker recliner, ra·
frlgerator. tlectric range.
chocolate male toy
Corbin le Snyder Furniture. AKC
oodle. Alao adult female
966 Second Ave., Gallipolia. P
poodle. and cockar •paniela.
Call 441· 1 171.
814-992·2107.

~11-owoy

46 Space for Rent

Business-Downtown. ra1a~
onable. Cali 446·3666.
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
Poineroy. Large Iota. Call
992-7479.

47 Wanted

Knauff Coal &amp; Firewood
Pricea reduced May-July.
Pick up or deHvered. We
honor HEAP Voucher•. Call
614· 266·6246.

to Rent

AKC Reg. Golden Retriever
pup1, 8 w ..kl old with thota
and wormed . 614-7422143 or 814-742·2957 .
BB Parrot, t69.96, Nanday
Panot 166.00, Myna bird
•376.00, Love Birds
t39.9&amp;. hand tamed young
Cockatiels $39 .96, Dwarf
rabbits $6.60. Mini Lop
rabbits •8.60. Fish Tank,
2413 Ja.ckson Ava., Pt.
Pleasant . WV. 304·875·
2063.

Fruit
Vegetables

Farm Equipment

Small an gines rep a ired.
Have your old mower recon ditioned tor 1 fraction of the
cost of
one. We now
fix

Wringer washers. compact
automatic washer. standard Caah Reglater ch•ck out
2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apart· size washer, largo capacity counter. Caii44B·1&amp;43.
mttnta Utiltiea partly furn.. washers, all guaranteed 30
apartments available now. · days. We tpecializa. Call 3, 7800 BTU ltir conditlonJC ....,ny ""IHIIY otfl·
.200 Per mo. A·One Reel _e_1_4_·2_6_8_·_1_z_o_7._____ ....
clanl. Call 441-8474 ...
E1tat11. Carol Ye8(1er, Reel- Heat Waw wood heater. 1---:___..:._:_:.:;.__
tor. Coil 304·875·8104 or
uHd thr• yeare. Haa auto- 2 yr. old block pony.t75, one
30 • -67&amp;-7,3 86.
matic thermonu and llko n - ooddlo . t78, one
1 bedroom apartment for blower. Vary good condi· good cond. - l e 135. Coli
rent . Call 446-0390 .
tlon. Call 247-24711.
114·258-9348:

GENE'S CARPET CLEAN·
lNG SFIIVICE. Recommended for protaaalonal
ateam cleaning. Scotch
Guard-Free E•lmata. Call
Gone lt814·992·8308.

MIXED hoy,
2284.

304-1711·

Hay and Strnw. 304-4181151.

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

71

Autos for Sale

1877 Pontiac Phoenix with
air, 1 owner, good running
cond. t1.300. 742·3051.
1818 442 Oldo. 1987 Cho·
voUo Super Sport. 1980
Dodge Omni, low miiHga.
All good cond. 814-949·
2128 or 814-949· 22S1
evening1.
1978 Vogo 4 cyl .. otondlrd
shift, 0400. ,1 14·887·
0811 .

~

Ford 5000 ditHI tractor.
QOOd cond. t6,600. 814·
992-3840.
NEW • Uood Horwstoro
Structurea. Automated Uveatock feeding-computer
feeders . Call collect 814686·2280. John L. Botto.

JOHN Deere3&amp;0 C dozer, I
way bl1de a winch, 3 years
old, A-1 condition.
$16,000. 814·898·81113.
OLIVE A 60 tractor. overheulod. 1700.00. 304·882·
2532 or 882·2274,
1970 815 - 0iesol Allie
Chalmer 2 bucket backhoe.
89 C&amp;O dump truck, tri &amp;ixle
low boy trailer e7,000 all.
304-676-5580.

model
89 MODEL John 0Hro
40-20 gas tractor, power
st~rlng, hydralic brake, differential lock. extra ct11n.
Sa.. priced at e49H. Sldera
Equipment Co. Hendarson,
304-178-7421.

63

Livestock

Rhode ltland Red • White
laying hans. t1.110 each.
Will moke dool. Coli 448·
8381.
Am•inn Saddle bred yearling 1tud cola. Stud Serivce.
Reglltered Ameicen Saddle
brad stallion, IIKceltent blood
llnoo. Call 814·258·5411
after 6.
One Holateln heifer 1 Y.t yr.
old. One Janey milk cow
vary gentle. Call 114-3782809.
Quail chick•. day old to eight
weeli1. • 1 apiece--one-third
to two-third• oft.
Any
amount from 1 to 600.
9S6·4346. Eggo special ..
reduced from .SO to .40. '
Reg. quarter horae buckakln
mare 11,350. Bl.ck mare
with filly tBIJO. Both mar"
bred back. Alao 2 year mare
$400. 814-992·3140.
Mixed Hereford baby c•lvae.
843·6186 oltet 5 p.m.
SIX year old Palamino mere.

e&amp;oo c 1 11
In
It
·
even ga 1 er
7:00. 304-578·2782 .

1·- - - - - - - - - - COW • celt. ht. coif holler,
holt Holotoin, holt 81ocfc
Angus. 860 lba. Bull calf by
oldo about 2&amp;0 lbo. t5110
both. 304-876·421 0.

71

Autos for Sale

1980 Ford Plrito 1 owner.
lowmlleage,autotrana. waa
f2.796 now f2.198. • rool
buY. John's Auto Sale,
441-4782.
National Chevelle Ownera
Assn. lo doootod to thtt
preNrvatlon and reatoradon
of all1984·1872 Chevolloo
• El Caminoa. Our 2nd
•nnual member convandon
will bo hold Aug. 8·11 In
Huntington. WV. There wRI
be a ahow, activitle4, swap
miet. award• • more. ,Join
todoy. N.C.O.A., P.O. Box
6014. Oratnaboro. NC
27403. 818-272·0888.
t 980 diesel VW Rotibit. Coli
448·0548 .
73 Chevy Malibu, 2 dr.. 350
auto, PS. PB, swivel,
bucketa, conaole. •476. Call
814·246-5144.
1977 Oodgo AlfMin ototlon·
waQon, PS, PI, good cond.,
Coli 448· 7489 or 441·
11501.

1179 red VW Rabbit, auto .•
air cond., AM-FM radio, reat
nlco. $3,195. John ' • Auto
Soles. 441 · 4782. Open
evanlngl.
1978 Dodge Omni, 4 opood,
4 dr.; neW tiret. Cell '4489194.
1982 Thunderbird Ilk• n-.
low miiHge. Don't mill thi1
offer. Corti 814· 258·1482.
Noncy Coldwol.
1878 · Ford LTO f1.10C.
1978 pty. Volelre wagon
t1.1150. 1981 Ford Foir·
mont 4 dr. f3,000. 1177
VW Rabbit 4 dr. t1.800.
1978 Ford Folrmont futuro
cpo t2.260. 1977 Ford
T.bird •1.800. 1&amp;78 Ford
T.bird •1.450, 18'18 Ford
4x4 PU t2,3110. B • 0
Motoro, Hwy 110, 4 mi. N.
of Hoi•or. Coli 441· 7322.

19715 Uncoln Mirk tV, low
miluva. 304·468· 1854.
81 VW Robblt. 304·871·
8153.
74 Chevy Monte Corio, 350
4-barrel dual txhaUat. exc.
cond. t2260. 304· 875 ·
4230 oltor 5. 304·875·
71558.
187S Ford LTD n, 87.000
mil... In good condition
f1900. 304·178-41124 .
71 VW Supw - l o . 73
rebuilt engine, automattc.
f9911. 304·41S·1828.
71 FORO Ptnto,
304·178·1034.

U50.

1974 CHEVROLET Comoro.
t1200. 304·175·3802.

1910 OLOS Omogo, 2 door.
automatic. elr, extras,
11,000 milia, beat offer
over t3300 . 304·8711·
21180.
19119 Dido 9S-fll78. 19111
Falrfono·•378. Both In ••·
cellentcondhion.lnowtkee
lib · L71 15. t50. Coli
992·11420.
1978 Monte Corto. AM·FM
c....ne, air conditioning,
tilt-wheel. crul11 oontrol,
30111wo borrel. Good condl·
tlon and good tlroo. Coli
448-72n-7PM.
1971 FINblrd. t1 ,150. Coli
742-3013.

IL-~....:.-..!!!~~~===:...::...:.::.-...J::.!!J

•

Mini Motor home. 22 ft:.
Mounted on 74 modal
D Algo. Ch01lo cloon. Muot
111 to appreciate. Call 7422718.

I==========
72

Trucka for Sale

1980 Chevy 1 ton. Coli
- " 7.8. 448·3243.
1918 Ford PU . 352 cu.in,
engine. runs good. body
good. PriCed 1660. Call
448·1289.
78 Chov pickup truck. 8 cyl.
automafkl, low mileage,
axe. condition. 304-8752449.

73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1977 Chevrolet 4x4 PS. PB,
full ton, auto tr11n1., new
paint, new wheel ind tlr11.
t3,900. Coll448·8514.
76 CJ5 •• 1 .000. 304·678·
2806.

74

Motorcycles

1---------1978 Hondo CB 150. Price
-otioble: Coli 448·8163 .
1874 Hondo 360, 7.400
actual mllee. $600. Call
114·388·9756.
1978 Hondo troll 80, 2300
mlloo, like now. $325.' Coli
114•218·1 2110.
80 Hondo XR80. good con·
dillon. Asking $3110. Coli
448·8301 .

1---------1978 hondo hawk 400 with
quickollvor folrlnv. f900.
Without fairing t760. In
good condition. Coli 814·
387·7191.
,

.. 1980 Honda haaport In
good condition and low
mlloogo. f350. Call 992·
1981 .
1981 Honda 750 Cuotom
with full fairing. 3500 miles,
f1500. Coli llt4-992·7483

after 6 p.m.
1-980 SulWkl G8 850L rood
bike. Shaft drive. mag
whHII, custom bika. Good
ohepo. 01,100. Colloltor 8
p.m. 814·992·111111 .
HONDA MR 110. t226. Cell
oltor 5. 304·8711·31198.
1971 HONDA 360 otrH1
bike. tKcellent condition,
304·175-3054.
1981 HONDA Cl 800
Cullom, 1haft drive, •howroom condition, •2860.
,304: 175·2851 .

75

71 lUlCK, UOO.OO. 304·
451·1924. 304-.711·1025 .
302 FOliO onglno with
automatic tr~n•mluion.
Yef'Y Dood Condltton. 3041175·2:814.

j t)t;;,..-,.....,..,.._,.._

1977 Olds Cutl111 Supreme. Oood cond. Am-Fm
cauette. air, cruiae,
tt,500. 81,4·892·8239.

71 KAWASAKI 400. 4,000
miles, t700.00, 304·418·
1924••304·175·1026.

aori•s.
blankets,
EIGHT yoor old gelding
walking horse tor aale, Clll
304· 875·6631 or 175·
7277,

Daily Sentinel

Poge-11

IS ~NG ON IN THAT

.t•
••

...
..'
.,
...
•

...
,,

·-.
••

t 1'1-111\!.K THI, MIG tiT .BE A
CASE OF A CHIL.D 6EIN&amp; W\5-EIZ.
THAN ... E~ PARENT~, PETE: .. .

'
.,·

~·

H &amp; S Homelmprovltments.
~--------~--------~ Quality
workmanahlp at low

'wANTED to buy: Onion or
67' Ford 600 &amp;E. good · garlic wheat. phone 304lhope. 72' Chevrolet 30 BE 875·1807.
good. 830' Caaa tractor
good cond. Coli 814·388·
' '
-"
'
9333 alter 6PM.

1 New. Idea hay condttlonar.
1 hay wagon. 1 Arabian
gelding t176. 2 ponies.
814-886-3881'

The

"''·

Solo or trodo tor von. 1977 84 Hay lit Grain
Harley -Oavldton Super 1------~---­
GIIde. Lota of new partli.
f2.800. 814·848-2880.
Cunom Combining: C1ll
814·251·1352.

61

Midd.,..,., Ohio

HI Pretaure Clunlng. AlumlniJm aiding, mobile hornet.
wood. brick. 11ndatone
'•
building and homu. Alao
heavy equipment, Fully in:''•
eured, Free eatlmatM. 814•.
949·2181.
... •,

SWEET corn 11 .00 per
dozen. halt runners •&amp;.00
per buahel-plck your own.
60 cents 1 lb .. 8t the lUnd,
cobbogo 3 tor t1.00-plck
your own, 80 centa uch at
.t:and. Happy Hollow Fruit
Form, 304·571·2021.
·

.......-· ..
--.......
.. .....

wlndowa,

Palntlno Interior • exterior,
wallp11per hanging. lnau.-.d,
FrH eatlmatH. 814·1•9·
2181 .

Phchet whita. pick your
own. •1 0 bu. Bring container. Aaynor'a At. 7.
lower Rlvar Ad. 448-4807.

For Sale or Trade

doora •

quollty worll,.nlhlp. 20
yre. tKP- Free MtlmatM. Call
114· 317·0408 orl14·387·.
0480.
.

1

Apartment
for Rent

. ,,

H • S Homolmp-to.
Aluminum eking, gutters,
~arm

Respectable couple with 1
child who with to rent 1 2
bedroom houae in
Middleport-Pomeroy area.
Can give referencea. Call
992-2117 and ask for Umeatone, Sand, Gravel.
Candy. After • 6 PM call Delivered in Meaon, Meiga,
Galli• or pick up at Richlrda
992·2312.
• Son. Call 448· 77S5.

61 Household Goods
44

61 Household Goods

54 Misc. Merchandise

AdVtts only. Brown's Trailer

Pork. 814-992·3324.

'

llackberrie• for ut. by
order. Coli 114·388·S889.

59

3 bedroom hOuse, 3311

Morcum R - g • lpoul·
lng. 30 yaoro uporlonoo,
up roof.
opoaloll1lng In Coli 114-311-8887.

Rogers drum s-t. Marimba.
oltouc . Coli 814·317·
73711. Fri. • Mon . 8·noon .

58

'-•••r

by Larry Wright

chaira. cupbolrda. pie safe.

paved

Three bedroorn one floor,
frame house. Carport. Garfield Ave.. Gallipolis loca tion. Ca11614-245-6259 or
448·8679.

Mualcel
lnltrumentl

New Oak Furniture. tabl...

;oad, with county water.
$ 16.000. Serious enquires
o nly . DaYs 446-7901 ask for

41

'N' CARLYLE"'

•

ex. cond. Call 441-31.t8.

Watton Rd . Owner financing available. Call44e. S221
after 8 weekdays.

Gallpolis

117

Air condlllonor 18.000 BTU,

3&amp; acre• et Rodney on W .T .

from

Ml1c. Merchandl1e

.

1983

Pomeroy-Micldleport, Ohio

___

.,....

_ _ _ _ _ _ __
1

Boats and
Motors for Sala

12 ft:. aluminum John boat.
814·949-2078.

78

Camping
Equipment

SUDE In camper for long
bed mini truck. good Condition. coil 304·1175·3489.

lOX·---

STUCCO PLASTERING ~-• ~1:".:,;
oommer·

.... ••d ,..,
ootlmotoo.

Ill, -

C.H 114-281·

1 11 2
1._ ..:..:_· - - - - - -

PAINnNG ·•• I n - ond
UIMiur, plumbing, - I I ·
soma remodeling. 20 yn.
up. Cll1114-381·1112.

pricaa. Aluminum aiding.
gutt••· atorm doora • wlnd~wa . • Alao
repair work.
Phone for free eatimatea
387·0409 or · 814·387·
0490: All woril gu6ranteed.
RON'S Te.. vllion Service .
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quaur, and
houH cello. Coli 578-2398
or 441·2454.

... SOT Y0tJ CN
11!\VE WH!\T I'VE
GOT... 'CEPT FOil
GOME DIMES
FOR Tl1' PIIGIIIE-

,,'

... I S'POSE 'IOIJ'IIE
WOMOERIN' WHAT
l'fft DOIM' OUT
HERE &amp;Y lriYSEI.F.
l

SU~E. $UilE-Y'C~IIN&lt;lED

T1! ' COLOR 0' YOUR
HAIR ~~E ALL TH '
ON TM' SAGSIETY

ME OOIN' IT!

F • K Tree Trimming, atump
romovol . Coll875-1331.

'·•
~· -,

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rlenced roofing, Including
hot tar application. carpenter-. electrician. m&amp;~on. Call
304·876·2088 or 875· ·
4580.

.....

Water Walla. Commercial
and Domettic. Tett holea.
Pumpa Salea end Service.
304-888·3802.

,1 -.

Get your c•rpat in ahip

•

shape. Water removal, FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAP,TAI N
STEAMER 614-441-2107.

..."•

E • R Tr.. Service, tully
inaured , free estimates .
Phone 614·387·0838, coli
after 6. '
SEAMLESS GUTTERS, Ono
piece cullom fit your home.
Guaranteed . Advanced Gut·
tOI', (Ooy 114·512-4088,)
(night 814-898·8205.)

Roofing and Carpentry
work, general repairs, caU
Anthony Wllllamaon, 814·
387-0194.
ROOFING le outside paint·
lng, free e1tlmatea. 614·
317·0836.

82

''l

,.

,.
•.
•

·f

..•

'·-.,•
-~- .

-~ .

'
'' j

., 'i'

" '·
'·'

,1-1

'

'

,.'
,,'
,,.."'

...

'·

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Phone 448-3888 or 448·
4477
JIM'II PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG. Fomerly Dewitt'•
Plumblnv. Coli 814·387·
0678.

83

'·
'·
•••
' f,
.,

'

~.

"'"'•:

·~· ·-

~;
:t.

•••
....
....

.. _.•·••.,..
....,.
,,.

Excavating

- ~·
DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna, panda , ditches, .
baeementa, etc. Call 441·
4907 . Carter • Evan a "
Trlnsportation.

Lonnie Bogg1 ExcaVItlng.
Dozer, ~ckhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour "" lob. Coli
448-7903.
Cat 214 hoe, dozera, crane,
loadera. dump truck. Call
61.4·446-1142 between
7:00AM • 6:00PM.

8 :00 • Cillll • Cll liD llliiJi
Nowtr
(I) MOVIE: 'Breekthrough'
CJJ Tk3 T110 Dough
,
Cll I Oro&lt;rm of , . . _
(Il N'owol8portoiW..thor

IIJ_ ...

!lli-nglloi• Wild, Wild WOOl

iiJ@CDNewo

Meiga Excavating. Bulldozer
le backhoe Hrvic•. Bllementt. tooters,land•ctping,
driveway•. fartn pondt.
114-742-2407 or814-742·
2088.

u.. Who

e

-I

lfttlartlllnm.nt TDnfght
Chortio'oCil Tlu TH DoUfh
D MHNeii-Lehrer

Electrical
Refrigeration

R_.

~~pla'tCoun

Appliance Service all makae
&amp; models. Washera-ckyerai-e trig. -ranges-di•hwaaharaair condltlonert. · Blrgeln
lorn. 448-8033 .
SEWING Machine rep1ln,
tervice. Authorized Singer
Sa~ ·• Service Sharpen
Sci11-ora. Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy·. 882-2284.

,95

•

Ov!lr bay Jazz pianist
Georgi Sheering. blind
since bil1h , 1h1rei his mulic, wit and optimistic outlook ' on life. [Ciotld
Captioned)
7:00
(J) PM Magaalna
()) luma • Allen
IIPN llportaContor

Cat 215 Hoe, dozer~, crena.
loader-a. dump truck. 81 4 ·
446·1142 between 7 a.m.
to 6 p.m.

&amp;

~-~~=:.,
eiiJIAICN_.

6:30

Ganeral Hauling

JONEI! BOYSWATERSER·
VICE. Call 114-317·7471
or 114·387·0591.

''

eltorT..k
7,30 e Cil Llo a.-or
Cillnoido lorclng
(l) -Oillio
1D 11831rttioh Open Oolt
Chornoionlhlp:
Sooond
Round from Royal 81ritdlll,
E"liond
(I) Andy OrtHIItt
.
ClleiiJ Fomiiy Feud
CJ:J 8uainlll Report
liD Y.. Aoked For It
liD~-"
•
9
Emanainment
Tonight
8:00 e
Cil (Il , _ ol
. Mlfthew ...r Matthaw
U18S hil 1up~~rnatural pow- .
ersto11ma~tonthe

footbalt team. (RJ (10 min.)
(%) On I ..atlon: Iuddy

Naed something heulad
away or aomething movad7
We'll do It, Coli 448·3159
Mtwe•n 9 and I .

H
Cil MOVII: 'Dinor'

JIMS . WATER IERVICE.
Coli Jim Lenior, 304-875.
7387.

Ill e iiJI Krouo'
pen pal anlvas let the min·
Ilion. IRI JCioood co,.
tionedL
eiiJDO.IIMofH.... rd
ill® W•hl- WHk/
Rl¥lew P•ul 0Uk6 is joined
by top WethingtOn Journallne
analyrlftt
th•

87

. Uphol1tery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 loc. Avo., Gollipollo.
4411·7833 or 448·1833.

..,

iil':V.-:"·--~·

Wall StrMt WMk
Louis Rukeyser an.alyleS
the '80s with a weekly review of economic and investment matters.
1:00 • Cl) Cl) Knight Aider
Michael Knight and K.I.T.T.
try to help a girl escape
from terrorltts. (R) (80
min.)
CI) Wortd Championship
8o1dng: Michael Spinks VI.
Eddie Muetafa Muhammad
()) 700 Club Today·a ,program fea1ures the road to
recovery from drugs and alcohol.
CI).IIJi MOVIE: 'Mo .. do'
Port 4
8 (]) 1]1 Oallu The Ewing
feuds are temporarily put
aside 11 gueltt gather at
Southrork fo~ a wedding .
(A) (60 min.)
(I) Lewmai(era Lawmakers
reports on the weekly eetivitiet of Cong.-.st.
()]) lernlteln/ 8Mthoven
'Mine Solemnis.' Leonerd
Bernstein conducts the
Coneertgebouw Orchestra
of Amstlfdam in the 'M\111
Solemnis' and Maxlmllitn
Schell detcribes Bllthoven 't funer11 . (A) (80 min.)
1:30 Cll En-ioo
10:00 .{])(f) Eiaohled Eiachled
battles an arsonist who 11
• hired to burn down unprof·
itable buainetlel . (A) (80
min.)
(f) MOVIE: 'Moonahlne
County Exprell'
(]) MaDanald'a International Swimming lnvltl·
tiona I
Cl) TB&amp; Evening News
• (() lD FaiOon Cflilt Angeli thre1ten1 to make
Jac:Quellna ply for the Iffair the had with her hus.
band. (RI (80 mln.J
{)) ComputM Programme
Mojo&lt; Looguo loNboil:
PlttlbWVh It Sin Diaao
t0:30 Cil ltor nmo •
([) lnelde lutlniP Todey
(I) (f))

FRIDAY
EvENING

,,

listings-----.;.._-~-----;._--------------:----

Evening television
7/16/83

J.A.R . Conatructlon Co .
Weter linea • . Footere.
Dreina. All kinds of Ditching.
Rutlond, Oh. 614·742·
2903.

84

I'LL PAY HER A
CALL AND T~ll.. HER.
AFTER ALL. SHE'S
PARTIALLY

"'
'.,,

tho

...........
~,30 :;.:-u
.....-,,..,fo~~~•

CI)•aAt .... valentln•

and leUr are ordered to
lttlp to naaDII•• wl'lh reeidentl of a nude oer11p. (A)

Ill (() Police Story 'The
Hunttrl.'
(J) PBS Lata Night
(JJ-AII In the Family
1m (Ill Nightlln•
11:41 Cil MOVIE: 'Rooky ill'
1 2:00 (]) lurn1 • Allan
()) Night Tracka
Cl) Nightline
ID MOVIE: 'Play Miety for
Mo'
t2:30
Cll (1) Loto Night wltn
David LetMrman
(l) MOVIE' 'Cot P-o·
Cl) Jack lenny &amp;how
• (fll ~ualc Magazine
1:00 (]) I Merried Joan
C1J ABC Nlwl One on One

e

.IIJI
N-• Tap TeA
a Amaric1'1

1:30 (]) MOVIE: 'Eecapa FriNR
New York'
(I) My Llttte Margie
I]) 8ett of Midnight .
-iolo
1]1 MOVIE: 'Willard'
9 CNN Haedllne News
2o00
Cil
NBC
Nowo
Overnight
&lt;J) Bachelor Father
lD Nowo/lllen Off
2:30 Cil MOYIE: .,.. Plroto

1

MO'If'il'

Cil Life of IIIIey
00 EIPN -.contor
3,oo eCIJNCIJ7oo Club
3:16 (I) MOVIE: 'lludo: Oreat
M1ater1 of the Martie!
3:30

4:11
4:30
4:4&amp;

'·'

Mo-

'Lttt1e Tough Guy.'
8:00 (f) MOVIE: 'Hanky Panky"
(}) MOVIE: 'Shoot the
Moon'

CD MOVIE: 'The Bullfighter
ond ttto LAdy'
til 2nd Annual Legendary
Pooket 1411erdt Ita,. Thil
1how feature• Willie Molconi VI . Jimmy Csrat. (60
min.).

Cll •
IDi T.J. Hooker
Hook•r findl himMif invol'fld with • major unaolved caae and 1 womeft
from hit pnt. (AI (80 min.)
[Closed Cetllloned) ·
CIJ Diff'rent ltrokM Wlllil

n..... Nelrt """
Cll M - of Moo
liD c
- Country
Tho" ArM&lt;Ing An&gt;

e

mole

8:30 e Cll P-om JIP
10:00 e CillD Monitor
Cil On Loootlon: Tho
Comedy &amp;tore's 11th
AnniYirllry

Cil
MOVIE:
'l,..ltor
Morant'
(]) The Monroe•
Cll Wortd Chomplorrohip
W-ing
,
CD God Hu 'ttta Anewt~r
Cll U....,_ Wortd of
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�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Congressmen admit sexual
activities with teenage pages
WASHINGTON tAP) - Rep.
Gercy Studds, facing HouSI' reprl·
mandfor gay sex with a 17-year-old
page, says he will stay In Congress,
but Rep. Daniel B. Crane has left his
plans unclear after admitting an
affair with a female page.
. The two congressmen on Thursday admitted ethics committee
· charges they had sex with teen-age
pages. Formal' reprimand, lhe
mildest discipline the full House can
mete out, could take only a few
minutes once scheduled, since
neither Is contesting the action.
"Of course," Studds, 46, a

Massachusetts Democrat, told reporters when asked If he would
serve out his term. He took the
House floor, where he proclaimed
his homosexuality and admitted "a
serious error In judgment" in his
relationship with the page 10 years
ago.
Studds said, though, that his
relationship did not involve im ·
proper conduct because it was
voluntacy and there was no preferential treatment or harrassment.
Crane, 47, a Republican from a
Bible Belt district In downstate
Illinois, first sought advice from his

Area deaths
Thomas R. Neal
Thomas Raymond Neal, 35, of
1101 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant, died Wednesday evening In the
Pleasant Valley Hospital after a
long Illness.
He was born Aprll6,1948,1n Point
Pleasant to Otho Neal and Virginia
Faye Mayes Neal of Point Pleasant.
He worked for 18 years for the
Poca Supermarket at Poca, W.Va.
surviving, In addition to his
parents, are one daughter, Angela
Neal of Hurricane; two sons, John
pavld Neal and Tbomas )'leal, both
ol Hurricane; his former wife,
Phyills Jean Phalen of Hurricane;
nine sisters, Diana Whitt of Crown
City, Barbara Cobb of Eleanor, Pat
Cain, Lora Chapman and Teresa
Stanton all of Columbus, Susan
Knight of Pomeroy, Darlene Bagshaw and Debra Georgi both of
Point Pleasant and Dreama Penny
Cook of New Haven; three brothers,
Michael Neal of Letart, Kenneth
Neal of Eleanor, and Joseph
Michael Neal of Point Pleasant.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday morning at 10 a.m. at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home with the
Rev. Herman Jordan officiating.
Burial ·will follow in the Buffalo
Memorial Park at Buffalo, W.Va.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home after 5 p.m. today.

Ann G. Duffy
Anna Gertrude Duffy, 81. of
Syracuse, died Thursday in the
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
,
She was born June 26, 1902, in
Syracuse to the late Tom and Marla
Duffy.
Also preceding her in death were
two brothers, Pete and John Duffy.
Surviving are nieces Mrs. Jean
Duerr, Mrs. Kathleen Franc~ and
Mrs. Beatrice Blake, all of Syracuse, Mrs. Inez Hlll and Mrs.
Gertrude Nelgler both of Racine,
Mrs. BerthaGrtmmofBelpre, Mrs.
Carrie Roush of Letart'Falls, and a
sister-in-law, Mrs. Freda Duffy of
Syracuse.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 1:30p.m. at the Foglesong
FUneral Home In Mason with the
Rev. Wanda Johnsoo. offici~J.ting,
Burial will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetecy, Letart Falls, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral
borne alter 7 p.m. today.

Madge Booth
Memorial services for Mrs. Harcy
(Madge DamewQ!?d) Booth, Stevensville, Mich., will be conducted
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
Jody Holland offlchiting
Mrs. Booth was formerly from the
Chester area. In lieu of flowers
donations may be made to Shrtners
Children Hospital.

Checks accident

Seven calls were answered by
local emergency units Thursd~y .
and one early today the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reported.
At 7:17 a.m. Syracuse was called
to College and Seventh Street for
Holly Robertson who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center; at 10:45
a .m. Rutland was called to Meigs
Mine No. 2 for Harvey O'Dell who
was taken to Holzer Hospital, and at
1:55 p.m. wascalledtoSail'mCenter
for Checyl Clark who was taken to
Veterans Memorial; at 3: 29 p.m.
Mkldleport was called to Park
Street for Ray Clark wbo was taken
to Veterans Memorial; atll: 32a.m.
Pomeroy was called to Powell' s
Super Value for Edith Hubbard who
was taken to Veterans Memorial, at
5: 48 they were called to SR 681 for
Tony Gllkey who was taken to
Veterans Memorial; at 4: 56 p.m.
TUppers Plainst was called to
township road Z76 for Curtis Riffle
who was treated at the scene.
This morning at 4:06a.m. Racine
was called to SR ;!38 for Clair Boso
wbo was taken to Veterans
Memorial.

The Gallla-Melgs post of the state
highway patrol investigated a
two-vehicle wreck on Ohio 338 in
Meigs County Thursday.
According to the patrol, Ken E.
Buckley, 32, Syracuse, was driving
an Ohio Department ofTranspodatlo.n truck northbound at 10:55 a.m.
when the accident occurred.
He attmpted to pass a Jeepdrlvell
by John W. Stobart,36, Rt. 2, Racine.
Stobart turneo left and the vehicles
collided, the patrol reports.
The ODOT truck was slightly
damaged and Stobart's jeep received no damage.

Miller responsible
Jack Crisp, president of the
Leading Creek Conservancy District, said that Rep. Congressman
Clarence Miller, R-Lancaster, was
chiefly responsible for the Leading
Creek water project . ~rovement
loan and grant.

Veterans Memorial
ADMISSIONS---Melvin Cun·
nlngham, Greencove, Fla.; Ray
Clark, Middleport; Kathy Lehew,
Pomeroy:
DISCHARGES.--Tercy Berrett,
Robert Caruthers, Ivocy Bush.

Swbnntingl~nss~
Middleport Pool will be offering
swtmmlng lessons starting July 18
and ending July 29.
From Sa.m. to9a.m. there will be
an advanced beginner class; from 9
a.ll). untll 10 a.m. an adult beginner
class and !rom 10a.m. untlllla.m. a
beginners sw1mmlng course lor
children ages eight and up.
Thelessonsare$12perpersonand
$10 lor each additional lamU,y
·· member.
,
To sliD up call Mary siavtn at
99'l-3710, Pat Kitchen at 992-6212 or
Mlddlepori Pool at 992·9968.

Area ............... ....... D-1
•.... ~ .......... ....... £,;}
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brother, Rep. Philip M. Crane,
R-lll., the 1981 GOP White House
hopeful. Then he flew home to
explain his affair with a 17-year-old
girl pagi? to his wife, Judy, and six
children.
"l know nothing - I'm not
talking," the conservative supporter of school prayer and strict
morals said when asked about the
liaison three year~ ago that began
when the girl lost a six-packofbeer
to him on a basketball bet and ended
with repeated sessions in the
bedroom of his Alexandria, Va .,
apartment.
The talk among Dlinols Republicans was that Crane mlght resign
and that,lfnot, hewouldhaveahard
time getting re-elected after barely
squeaking out a third term last fall.
"If Dan Crane came to me and
asked me If he should resign,"
House GOP Leader Robert H.
Michel of Illinois said in reply to a
question, "Well, I'd like to be as
much of a strength to him as
possible. I'd say . tbe Good Lord
sometimes moves in mysterious
ways."
HouseSpeakerThomasP.O'Nelll
Jr., O-M ass., said the windup of the
investigation by the ethics commlttee, formally the Committee on
Standards of Official Conduct,
yielded findings that were "most
disturbing...
The committee voted 11'1 to
recommend to the full House the
reprimand of the two lawmakers.
Committee special counsel Joseph A. Califano Jr. also said the
panel found that James C. Howarth,
majotity chief page In the House
doorkeeper's office, "engaged in a
sexual relationship with· a ·17-yeill'' "
old female in l!m wbo was at the
·time under his direct supervision
and gave her preferentlal
treatment."
Califano said there was evidence
·that in 1979 and 1!mHowarth, now
chief majority page In the document
room, purchased cocaine In the
Democratic cloakroom where lawmakers mill during House sessions.
Unlike ihe two lawmakers, Howarth did not waive his right to a
public hearing. Califano said he
urged disciplinacy proceedings aagainst Howarth.

Meigs County happenings ..
Emergency runs

'foday's
Times-Senlinel

Sunday reunion
The Snyder reunion wUl be held
Sunday, July 17, at Portland Park. A
basket lunch will be served at noon.

Approve transfer
The board of trustees for the
Chester Township approved a
$14,000 transfer from Its general
fund to the road and bridge fund .

MaiTiages end
A divorce was granted to Almena
Klein and Thomas Klein in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
James Bing, Rt.1, Long Bottom,
and Cynthia Bing, Middleport, filed
for a dissolution.

Edltortal •.•.•. •••.••.••.•.•.•• A·~

••

Acting dog warden

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WITH FLOWERS

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free-agency market

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35 C.nt1

A Multim.dia Inc . NewlfHip•r

thai restructured lhe Ohio Department of ()eo;elopment which Dletulls director. (AP l..a8erphcKo ).

OFFICIALLY IN BUSINESS - Gov. Richard
Celeste shakes hallcla with AI Dietzel Thursday
afternoon following a bill signing in the Statehouse

'

May primary date becomes official
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -In an
attempt to boost the presidential bid
of U.S. Sen. John Glenn, Gov.
Richard Celeste has signed into law
a bill moving the state's primacy
from June to May next"year.
The measure. signed by Celeste
without comment Thursday, takes
effect Oct. 13.
Sponsored · by Sen. William
Bowen, 0-Cinclnnati, It Is aiiited
helping Glenn, D.Ohlo, in his
attempt to capture the Democratic
Party's presidential nomination.
GieM won re-election to the
Senate in 1!m by the largest margin
in Ohio history -1.6mllllon votesdespite Republican gains
nationwide.
Democrats belleve a home state
primacy victory next year would
give Glenn a big boost toward the
nomination, perhaps helping him
gain momentum nationwide.
·
Backers of the primacy change
say it also could increase Ohio's
Importance in · presidential

educatlonmaydisposeofbyprivate
sale;
-Remove the $2,!XXl maximum
limit on group life insurance lor
credit uniOn members;
-Prohibit an insurance can1er
from reducing benefits lor policy- ·
holders because of what thr.Y
receive !rom a supplemental
"dread disease" · pollcy, such as
special cancer or heart disease
insurance;
-Grant certlfled county and
muhiclpal building departments the
autbority to hear appeals on the
State Building Code.

primaries.
They said the Ohio election had
occurred too late in the past. As
candidates, both former President
Carter In 1976and PresldentReagan
in 1980 had their nominations
virtually secured beforeOhlo'sJune
election.
Under current law, Ohio's primary Is held on the first TUesday after
the first Monday in June. It nowwDl
be held on the first TUesday after the
first Monday In May.
Bowen's bill also eliminates the
fourth Tuesday in March as one of
the· dates on which special elections
may beheld.
Existing law provides for special

Thenewlawlstotakeeffectalong
with
measures that will:
-Raise from $200 to $2,!XXJ the
value ol property that boards of

.I ndictments against Lee, Miller stand
GAlliPOLIS -Judge Richard Roderick refused a
defense attorney's motion to dlsmllss a murder
lndlctmeni against Charles Miller on grounds the
Indictment was gained with the help of illegally
, obtained evidence.
• 1)1 a separate case, attorney Hamlin King withdrew
a motlon' to quash the murder Indictment against
Cbarles Lee. •
Roderick held pre-trial hearings lor both motions In
Gallla County Common Pleas Coort Friday.
In the Miller case, King claimed the prosecutor's
ortlce illegally subpoeruled the defendant's medical
records from veterans Memotial Hospital in
Pornetoy.
Mill'!f, 55, ol Patriot, Is charged in the January 1981
shooting death ol Luc~ · Richards. The two

reportedly lived together in a mobile home on Taylor
Road.
Shortly alter the slrotlng, Mlller - wbo was not
arrested at the time - was taken to Veterans
Memorial Holipltal for treatment ol a hand wound.
It was records ol lhls treatment that the
prosecutor's olllce subpoenaed and presented to the
grand jury.
King argued Friday that "anythlngthata.roseoutol
the treatment Is privileged lnlonnatlon" an4 should·
bave not been Presented before the grand jucy.
"A dlsmlssal of the Indictment Is the only measure
the Coort has to remedy this wmng," King stated.
However. Roderick agreed with County Prosecutor
Joseph Cain that themedlcalrecordsartsingfrom the

treatment are not privileged.
Under Ohio law, physicians have a legal duty to
report injuries which may have resUlted from a crime
ol violence, Roderick said.
King had argued that Miller should not be forced to
submit to a blood test because the prosecutor's olllce
received related lnlol'ffia!Dn illegally through the
medical records.
Roderick, though, did not agree and ordered Miller
to submit to a blood test requested by the prosecutor's
·otflce within 14 days.
The judge scheduled Miller's trial for Aug. 1.
In the Lee case, Roderick granted King's request to
withdraw his motion.
King had filed a motion asking that Lee's murder
indictment be set aside because o! changes made on

Rt. 681 East of Dlrwin

"UVE BANDS

l1~~~~~~~~C~irdt;;:::!

Seek opinion on early release.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Eliza- common pleas court. said he will tell
beth Jane Boerger, tbeformerstate the parole board he opposes shock
treasucy cashier convicted of em- parole for Ms. Boerger "due to the
bezzlement, will !let an automatic nature and extent of the harm to the
shock parole hearing in September. public confidence" of her crime.
The Ohio Parole Board has asked
the prosecutor and judge who sent ~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--~
hertoprlsontocommentonwhether
IMMEDIATE OPENING
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -Gov. Ms. Boerger, convicted In the
Social Worker
John Y. Brown Jr. has taken a brief . embezzlement of $1.15 million in
forlOObed
walk to help rebuild his strength state funds, should get out early.
following open heart surgecy and
'
Skilled
Nursing Facility
A form letter inviting those
serious lung complications.
Minimum
Requirements:
comments arrived at Prosecutor
Dr. Edward P. Todd, the attend- Michael Miller's olllce within the
Bachelor's Degree in
Ing physician, said In a Written ·past few days, officials said
clal Work
statement Thursday that the 49- Thursday.
year-old governor was far from
Health C.re Experience
Ms. Boerger's ~efendant, onebeing fully moblle.
Pntlerred
time Springfield bandleader Robert
Brown's "walk" was apparently W. Yeazell Jr., was released from
little more than a slow maneuver prison on shock probation Monday
ONTACT:
around tbe Intensive care unit of the by Franklin County Common Pleas
rectvr of Personnel
University of Kentucky Medical Judge GeorgeTyack.
leasant Valley Hospital
alley Drive
Center.
Yeazellwasconvlctedoffailing to
t. Pleaaant, WV 25~
A major indication of . Brown's
fllestate
income
tax
returns.
PH: 13041 675-43441
improvement was that he breathed
Public
comments
on
Ms
.
for up to an hour at a time Thursday
Boerger's possible release also will
An equal opporlunll
without a respirator, Todd said.
Brown, who was hospitalized
spokesman
forsaid
the Robert
Qhio Departbe considered,
Urban,
June 25, was stU! listed in serious
ment
of
Rehabilitation
and
condition but "his strength Is
Correction.
Improving steadily," Todd said.
Sbock parole Is granted at the
The governor's heart, in which
discretion
of the parole board, while
three clogged arteries were by· .
shock
probation
must be granted by
passed In a 4~-bouroperatlon, was
the
sentencing
judge.
functioning well, as were his kidneys
In March, Judge Craig Wright
and liver. Todd said.
sentenced
Ms. Boerger, 49, of Ft.
Brown has had to rely on •a
two to 10years in prison.
Loramie,
to
respirator for about twoweeksanda
He
has
since
denied her requesltfor
breathing tube was surgically
shock
probation.
implanted through his windpipe
She Isn't ellglble for regular
Wednesday.
parole
until she has served 19
The breathing tubeorlglnallywas
inserted through Brown's nose and
Wright,
whosentence.
is reqWred by law to
months
of her
Into his throat, but It was causing
receive
the
sbock
parole form
Irritation and prevented him from
letters
as
presiding
judge of the
speaking.

,S699
Gas Can

Heavy steel wrth enamel
i i
pour spout.
426·395

STAR
·
SUPPLY CQ;
949-2525

DOVIILEFATAL-ACaahoeiGDwomanlllldl!erS.JI!IIHidd•cMew
were ldlled, 111111 her 1-year.old- was~ In aoae-carcrull,.. U.S.
Boote ~ Ia Melp COOniy. Lora A. Flowen, 22, aad her "eUII+'r,
Amaada, cledF"rrddQ'whenlhequ-Mno.l'lowerswaat~JtW«Matolllhe

Racine

rr-~~~~emgp~lo~ye~r~~g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Backers
of Gov. Richard Celeste say he did

not tcy to mislead the publlc earlier
this week when he traveled to tour
Ohio citieS to trumpet his tax-cut
pWis.
At news conferences In Toledo,
Cle\&lt;eland, YoongstownandDayton
this week, Celeste cited figUres
Indicating an "average family" will

Save now on all summer clothing - men's and boys'
wear - women's and children's. The selections are good
on quality merchandise for you and your family.

NOW
REDUCED

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8-STURDAYS TIL 5

40o/o

J
dc-sl~~

In Point Pleasant, a 240-volt
main servlce IID""!'f line Into a
Jacklon A~~e~~ue bullnels fell oil.
lbe II* Friday ~ apparently due to lliOl'llln&amp; heat.
utU!ty companies, which are
The city pollee aDd !Ire
stnlgllng to keep up with ' departments bloclred traftlc be: demands for water and
hind
Dell lllllll AppaJachJan
electricity.
Power servicemen an1wd to
Locally, a Gailia County Rural
repair the downed .line.
"The preuure between two
Water Alloclatlon spokesman
wires and the heat cause th '
Friday lllued a request for
customen ID cut back on water
wires to lhort out," aald APCO
McMahln.
usaae durin&amp; the CWTellt c1ry spokesman
In Cincinnati, panunedlcs
period.
irea~ four ca. at beat~
' 11le apoke&amp;iiiaD asltEd lndlvtd11811 toCCIIIeii'I!Water"IIIIYW8Y
dowlllown Fr1day.
pootdb!e" - namely, by cutting
Columbus """141111 ~
· '*k 011 watering of lawns and
paned DD ~ ctbelllti'Okeor
extumllfm, Dr. 1'oD)r Jolepb, 8D .
~~
and waahlng of
wblda.
atfelldln&amp; peyllcla at RIYenlde 1
H!llpltAI, speculated tbat the
''Water uaee has been heavy
dan&amp;er period tar tat-matecl
the Jut few
days, thus
illneiE8 II ave: tor IIIOit ptllllle.
cualllllll!l'll at hJihet' elevations
'
'"!be body bectmll c:llmat' are Ull8bll! to obtain wall!r," !be
GCRWA sp ' nm aald.
12led to the beat after tile llrlttew
days," he lllltl.
The o.JIIa-Melp me baa
'-n without rain since July 4.

.r.

w.c.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

M

I'll. 111-IQI tfiltl-5111

-

,.

pay $48 less in taxes this year. But
the actual bill will be $47hlgher, The
Toledo Blade said Friday.
Olficlals o! a citizens' group
attempting to bring about a repeal
vote on the new 90 percent 1nrorne
tax lncreaR IBid Celeste intentiOnally misled lepot le! sand the public.
"He Is absolutely, deliberately
distorting the ligUres and mislead-

From A•sda!ed P,...
T.S !Mall Reporia
A heat wave that has held the
Slate In Its lriP tor nearly a wa!k
.. Is taking Its toll on IQll1l! Ohlo

BAHR QOTHIERS

POIIIEROY
FLOWER -SHOP

..,

~ waa
In
~
~ momlllg
JGaepb
. Parlrenburg, W.VL 'l1le pllirollllld aD three were thrown !rom tile car
whm It rolled.

ing the publlc," said Curt Steiner, a
spokesman for Ohioans to Stop
Excessive Taxation.
•
Paul Costello, the governor's
press JeCretary, said Celeste referred oo1y to the tax rate In ellect
when he took ofllce - and not the
overa111.982 rate.
"I think people may have deduced
that," Costello said ol numerous

Steady heat wave
·. causing probl-ems

ALL. LADIES
SHORTS
AND
SWIMWEAR

30o/o 50o/o OFF·

"*'
lllld CM!Itunled lle\'el'llllln-.ller-. I..any M,- FlowenJr
llllled
fair
4•••
St.
HOI!pllal,

Celeste erred iri tax savings. coiDments

Ir~~~~~=================::::;;

'

Ewlngton.

.

Twyman's body was found Aprll61n a well off Allee
Road by sherllf's deputies. She had been shot twice.

POMEROY - A yoang Coshoc- in Parkersburg, W.Va. The lnlant
ton woman and her J.year-old was Usted in falrcoildltion Saturday
daughter were kll1ed - and a
morning, according to · a hospital
1-year-old son seriously injured -in spOkesperson.
a one-car crash on U.S. Route 33in
Traveling southbound on the
Meigs County Friday afternoon,
highWay - about tllree-mlles north
reports tl:H! Gallla-Melgs Post of the of SR 7 - the car went off the right
Highway Patrol.
side o! the road alld struck a guard
The patrol said Lora A. Flowers, rail .Thevehiclethenwentbackonto
22, and her daughter, Amanda, died the road a nd overturned several
when the car Mrs. Flowers was
times before coming to rest. The
driving went off the road at
patrol said all three were thrown
approximately 12: :ll p.m. and · from the car when it rolled. Neither .
overturned several times .
of the chlldren were using child
restraints even though the car had
Her son, Larcy M. Flowers Jr., ·them .
suffered multiple Injuries and was
The driver was the da ughter of
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi- . Jewell Johns of New Haven, W.Va.
tal In Pomeroy before being · Tl!e bodies are at the Foglesong
transferred to St. Joseph's Hospital
Funeral Home in Mason.

Gov. Brown
takes walk

3rd

the document.
The typed words "A True Bill'' were marked out
and the same words were apparently printed in by the
grand jucy foreman.
King asked the indictment be set aside for this
reason. However, he learned the prosecutor's olllce
for several years has told grand jucy foremen to print
in the information on all indictments.
Friday, King told the court he would not challenge
the Lee indictment.
Lee, a 17-year-oldPolnt Pleasant youth, is charged
with tbe murder of Barbara Twyman, 17, o!

Mother, child
die in Meigs
County ·c rash·

CHICKEN PALACE

elections in February, June, August, November or March. The
Marchdatewaselimlnatedbecause
of the earner primary.
.

lunrr~l ~run11e~nr.
j~1 u ll ur Yi•il

I

·

8 S•ctlonl, 66 Pog*'

Tu Knd

..,..... r ... 4•rr~ NMI ,..,, ...

............... ~

$tory on Pace A-4

unba

•

TO

Bill White wUl serve as acting dog
warden fro!Tl July 18 through July
23, the Meigs County Commissioners announced today. His number to
Callis 992-j):M(),

buur ih•lly

0 0 •• 0 0 0 ••••••• 0 ••

TV.('.omla~

Slol'J 011 Pace A-3

'

Sunday picnic
Feeney Bennett Post 128, American Legion will hold a picnic
Sunday, July 17, at 1 p.m. at the
legion farm on Bailey Run Road. All
members are Invited. Persons are
to bring a covered dish.

Farm ..•........ •......•...•.... £..!
Llfeity.,; .................... a.l-8
J..ocal.......................... ,\.·14
Sports .......
C-1-8

Glenn discusses possible Veep choice
A rare Saturday Senate session

•
•

news reports quoting Celeste as
ccmparlng the 1983 payments with
1982. "He did not Include It in his
statement," Costello insisted.
That remark !net with skepticism
trom the tax ro!pealleaders.
"You mean evecy paper in the
state misquoted him?" Steiner
asked. ''That's a heck of a
coincidence."

HEAT STRESS
'

A cambinallan crl humidity and Mal Cllln bring
you ch ~ c nfort and p D11ible health probl1m1:

'

Air Temperatures
75 80 IS 90 95 100 105 110 , , 5 120
Apparent Temperature*
,;~
1\9 73 78 83 8l
91
95 99 103 107
105 111 116
IOC
65 70 75 80 85 90 95
10

-

ll"

IQ' ..

'0 20'•

E 30'..

66

72

17

67 . l3

7tl
1'...1

"' ~··

68

6Q: ..
.!!!
70" ..

70
7

74
7
76
77

~ .,

71

78

i1

i9

8

tOO "..

72

80

91

%:

•

-I•

'•

69

1
82
86

85

,.

99 105 , , 2 120 130
"' 104 113 123 135 148
110 123 137 t 51
86
t20 135 ISO
88
I
90 100 114 132 119
'"·~ 144
113 135
1~2 122
• OCQff'f'f. In Fat ur-nh• ":
108
Source: National Weather SetVice
62
84

tl.!_

;!P.g

." ,.,.,

DINSI MEA$:
• ~~~ tau F .,... - " " ' 15:30 ~-

..............
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"

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.

AP

DANQ8I ZONE:
. . tNtf0-130 d 0 - RffF ... Mi.IIWhiN.

......

. . . . . . ., .... OWl+' . . .

I• I

t-t esdUUIII811 may
oo and phi I 1cxlhtty.

•

BUT llftiE88 -'1'1111 "h'' ral W.,.._llelwlce hal devellped
llllrCIIIIe .... • 1 EP&amp;*witar;=l -o.mc~~e~~&amp;waver,lbe
sa Ml : I wa..,n.JJ.af: wlil&amp;bii'IDd IJrbrlll
-(Af'lq

z!

I),

Water rate hike
stirs controversy
By ERIC JENNINGS
Far Rutland nllidents, lhe inc-oe
Times-Sentinel Stall
in roleS lor' !he village will mot!ly
RUTI.AND - Controversy has
affect
lh- who ute mont than lhe
erupted in thevillageofRutlandasa
minimum
3,000 gallons, accon:ling
result of notification that water
rates charged by the Leading Creek Councilman Dick Felty. Far the family
Conservancy District wUl Increase of five in ·Rulland, who on average
by 125 percent beginning in July. ....,. approximately 9,000 gallons por
Both sides. however. are accusing monlh, water rates will increaoelrom
the other of being responsible for the
lhe pnnent coot of $20 to $29, he
rate Increase.
said.
Jack Crtsp; president of the
Leading Creek Conservancy District, said his organization has village officials are starting the
experienced a great deal ol dlffl· rumor3.''
Fetty said the councll Is conculty with the well field and fixtures
in the past year, and has spent over cerned about the effect the Increases
'
would have on the people presently
$300,000.
In addition, the conservancy living on fixed incomes.
"Most of the people with fixed
district has gone to the Farmers
Home Administration for money Incomes can probably Uve with this
needed to inStall new pumps and since many of them don't use over
the minimum,:" Fetty said.
wells, he said.
For the family of five In Rutland,
Consequently. "we are !orced to
who
on average uses approximately
Increase the water rates for the
village ol Rutland to $2.25 per 9,000 gallons per month , water rates
thousand gallons. This rate will will increase from thepresentcostof
become effective during meter $W to $29, he said.
"We feel It Is an outlandish rate
reading in July."
Up to now, the disli1c\ has been hike," Fetty said, adding that the
charging the village of Rutland $1 village council felt a public hearing
should have been held to discuss the
per tbousand gallons .
For Rutland residents, the in- rate increase.
Fetty said he was unsure whether
crease in rates for the village will
o.r
not the council wlll be able to
mostjy allect !bose Who )lSI' more
than the minimum 3,000 gallons, continue operating by charging
customers at these rates. '!be
according Councilman Dick Fetty.
Presently, reslden!B ol Rutland preSent rate schedule wlll be in
pay $11.00 for using up to 3,000 effect through Nomvember. and al
gallons. Any excess usage alter lhe that time, the council wUI reevaluate
minimum of 3,000 gallOns costs lhe .the water bill expenses and see If
increases are necessary, he added.
residents $1.50 per l ,&lt;XXl gallons,
Mayor Jolmny Miller has voiced
Feltysald.
.
. However, Fetty said the councll his opposition to the rate Increase to
will attempt toabsorbthewaterrate Crisp; however, he could not be
reached for comment.
Increase by raising the rate It
Fetty said the money coming into .
charges customers from $1.:50 to
vUiage - all of which Is used lor
the
$3.00 for every 1,000 gallons above
the
water system - is necessary to
the minimum usage.
keep
up the outdated water system.
Crisp said he lielleves outlandish
For example, If a consumer uses
rumon are being started within the
the mlnlrnum water allotment he
community of Rutland concerning
(Continued on page AJ)
rate lnert!ases. "I · !eel certain

•'

·..

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