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NTHROP
11

I~ IT 16 A PERSONALIZED,
CQV.PLlTERIZED H~PE,

TH15 16YOLJR PE;R50NAL
HOR05·co~ F"a&lt; T01)4..Y,
6WNDAY1 \JULY 24, 196'3.

CO'v\PIL.5D R:JR YOLJ AND
YOLJ AL.ONS.

11

b Dick Cavalli

Brett
restrained •••Page

NOTICE Tf.\A.T IT 15 Nor COLJCHED
IN ARCA-NE t=iENEI&lt;ALITIES,BUT
D5A.L5 SPS'C(FICAI.-LY WITH THe
FLJTLIRE AS IT CONCERNS YOLJ.

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Area dealhs ................ Page 10
By tile Bend ................. Page 5
Claultleds .............. Pages 6-7-8
EclllorW ..... ................ Page
Comics-TV .......... :.. ..... Page 9
Sports ....................Pages 34jj

z·

aty

· Voi.32,No.71

60L.FXNI q-3HMDDL.i
ETAOIN 5HRDLU 4?476

II

WYBYLG ' RPR 65KOVJ.
XIN#I&lt;EL.I..JMY

. r THINK 1'HE5S
WHEN

e.nttne

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I Section , 10 Paget '20 C.nt1
A Mullim..:llo Inc. N.wspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 25, 1983

Copyrithtod 1983

WE HAVE FEDYOLJR P~F&lt;60NAL
5TATI5TIC5 IN'l'Z:J OIJR COMPUTER I
AND IT HA6 RE5R::&gt;NDE:D WI TI-l THE
FOLLOWIN~ Pf:R50NAL HOROSCOPE:

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11

·Kicking education•••Page 2
Scout rules ....,.

Today's Sentinel

Progra01 may
not have much
impact locally

THIN$ \NEI&lt;E SE:TTER

5~F&amp;?DY'

Ll6ED,IV BA..T

•

THeN\OL.IrWITH A BAL.\..: Pt?INT PE:N.

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Priscilla's Po
SURPRI'SEl
r M.AOE YOU
. A ?UPER-1/UPER
TRIPLE·PECKER

b Ed Sullivan l
OHHH .. ·I COMPLETE~..!
FORGOT/ BOY, AM I
DUMB.' r 51-0ULPVE
REMEMBEREL/. I

WALDO V'EAR,
I'M ON A 171ET"' I
CANT EAT IT.'

SUNDAE/

t-ON, t-!QW,
OONT BE UFSET.
I'LL EAT IT.

THATlS A MOUNTAIN

1

OF ICE CREAM, HAZEL .

ro-rr

YOU
WANTTO
EAT IT IF YOU'RE
ON A DIET.'

IT'S
,
'SWEETHEART:
'-rOLl~

I

IT"' I'LL EAT
IT.
BUD.DING CONSTRUCfiON UNDERWAY- Construction lor the
new Sean store Is wen Wlderway near the Middleport-POIMniY
corporation llmlls. Remodeling of the lonner IGA building, which wBI

I FEEL AWFUL
THAT !M. MJ:t.J&lt;JNG
YOU RUIN lrOLIR
GOOP EA11NG
HABITS.

. I MAI7E fT FOR

VON . 1 JUST 1.0\IE
THE:. WAY '-rO.IF.
He:AI&lt;l" IS P-LWAY5
IN THE ~IGHT

MY&amp;:7ELF. I THOUGHT
· I..,GU'I/ l&lt;EFU&lt;;E.

·PRINTED IN CANADA

·:.

By Cris Hammond:

SPEEDWALKE
ITS J/LifOST ll/REE
tJ'tlOCK. JIE'tL BE IIEKE
1/NY SECIJ/V[) NOll.

By 'Die A._,.ated Press
Loyalists and Syrtan·backed rebels in Yasser Araflit' s Palestine
Liberation Organization clashed
again· today in Lebanon's Bekaa
Valley, Beirut radio reported, cine
day after PLO leaders called lor an
urgent meeting to repair relations
with Syria.
The state-run radio quoted pollee
as saying the 20-rninuteartUJery and
rocket clash broke out near the town
of Chtaura, :In miles eastofBelrut on
the International highway to
Damascus.
An unidentified police spokesman
was quoted as saying no casualties
were reported in the clash. Pollee
said fighting in four villages around
Chtaura over the weekend left a
total of 12dead and 23woundedfrom
lxlth sides.
On Sunday, the PLO Executive
Committee Issued a conununlque In
1\Jnls, Tunisia, calling for a meeting
."as soon as possible" of the Central
CouncU to seek ways. to repair
"Syrtan and Palestlnlrui relations
for common battle" against Israel.
The council Is the Intermediary
group between the committee and
the Palestinian National CouncU,
the PLO' s parllament.
The appeal for mediation came as

a PLO mU!tary spokesman,
reached by telephone In the north·
ern Lebanese city of Tripoli, said the
rebels launched a surprise attack at
dawn Sunday on loyalist positions In
Taanayel, Chtaura and Arab Sahour In the Syrian-controlled Bekaa
Valley alxlut30mUeseastofBelrut.
He said two guerrtna loyalists
were killed and fQurotherswounded
In a second attack five hours later.
The rebels were backed by
elements from the Libyansupported Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine-General
Command, said the spokesman,
who declined to be identified.
A Lebanese woman and a Syrian
soldier also were killed and "ckr
zens" were wbunded In the assaults,
the state-run Beirut radio reported.
Khalil Wazir, Arafat's mWtary
chief, said the attacks were "an
attempt to undennlne efforts to end
differences" between the PLO and
Syria. Wazir spoke by telephone
from Tripoli, the headquarters of
Arafat loyalists since his expluslon
from Damascus on June 24.
Arafat- whose opponents say he
mismanaged the war with Israel-.
has accused Syria and Libya of
stirring up the mutiny within hls
Fatah faction of the guerrUla

house a new Fnlth Pharmacy is also underway. The projects..., being
clone by the M and T Constnacllon Co., Galllpolls. Local workers are

employed on lhe project.

corporations which provide servi-.
By JEFF GRABMEIER
·
ces
for the mentally retarded will
OVP News Slalf
receive
the money,
Under a new state program, Ohio
However, a local official says the
counties will reeleve impact grants
·- tohelpprovldesetvlcesforretarded April 1 cutoff elate will lessen the
persons who have left Institutions. · legislation's effect In Gallla County
But despite the loss of .clients at the because most GDC clients had left
the Institution before that date.
l';all!polls Developmental Center,
Guiding Hand School and Gallro
the effect In GaiDa County may be
both operated by the
Industries,
minimal .
The Ohio legislature has ear· GaUia Coun)Y mental retardation
marked more than $6mlUion for the board, are already filled to capacity
program, which will be admlnls· with GDC clients released before
tered by the Ohio Department of AprU 1, acconllng to Frank Brown,
Mental Retanlatlon and Develop. director of Gallco.
"It's a Catch-22. We have no room
mental Disabilities.
to
setvemorepeople.
butlfwecould,
The recently approved biennium
we
could
get
more
money."
Brown
budget calls for $1.7 mUllan to be
said.
,
· Issued In fiscal year 1984 and $4.6
Brown said he understands the
mllllon In 1985for the program.
locallxlard
wiU receive $!roforeach
Cqlntles will be reimbursed for
eligible
ellen
t.
each client placed In a community
Dr.
Mlrmie
Jolmson, director of
residential facility from a state
the ODMR, said the program was
d~elopmental center since AprU 1,
begun as part of the department's
1983.
Boards olhtcntai retardation and commitment to move cHents out of
(Continued ·on page 10)
other public or private non·proflt

organizatlon~_rla

denied Involvement and demanded· an apology
from Arafat as a condition for
settling their dispute.
In Jerusalem. the Israeli govern·
ment said Foreign MlnlsterYitzhak
Shamlr · and Defense Minister
Moshe Arens would travel to
Washington today for talks on the
military situation lnLebanon.lsrael
Radio said Arens~ Shamir were
scheduled to meet President Rea·
gan on Tuesday.
Israeli Cabinet Secretary Dan
Meridor sald both Israel and the
United States thought it important to
review events In Lebanon.
Begin, who received a letter from
Reagan early Sunday inviting
Shamir and Arens for talks.
canceled hlsown visit to Washington
thls week for "personal reasons."
Israel last week formally decided
to pull back its forces from aroond
Beirut to southern Lebanon, raising
fears or a permanent partition of the
country, with the Syrians control·
ling the north.
Reagan's letter also Informed
Israel that Robert C. McFarlane
would replace PhUp C. Habib as his
personal envoy to the Middle East.
Merklor promised IsraeU coopera·
lion with the new envoy,

By DEBORAH ZABARENKO
bad fast if It doesn't rain," Putvls said. He said
All8oclated Press Writer
shallow wells may begin to dry out and corn, h3y and
some vegetables are withering.
A sizzling heat wave blamed for 148 deaths
Columbia, S.C., , sweltered In 107-degree heat
nationwide continued to fry Dixie today afti!r
temperatures cHmbed as high as 107 degrees, but
Sunday, !Ying a 1954 record. The heat also continued
thunderstorms cooled the country's midsection like
In Georgia, where highs soared to 103 In Savannah,
tapwater dancing on a hot skillet.
and In Florida, wllere a record high of 98 degrees was
A series of heavy rains hit St. Louis on Sunday,
recorded Sunday at Miami International Airport.
Nevertheless, the high pressure system that has
prompting officials to call a meeting for today to
spawned the long-lasting heat seems to be on its way
decide whether to lift a heat emergency decree.
Temperatures In the area have hovered over the 100 out, National Weather Setvlce forecaster Hugh
mark for five days and the heatemergency has been
Crowther said today.
In effect for six.
''I'm really not In a position to say whether the
A storm packing 53-mph winds downed power lines worst Is over," said Crowther, speaking from the
weather service's Severe Storms Center In Kansas
and flipped five small planes at the Downtown Airport
In Kansas City, Mo.
City, Mo. But the system "does appear to be
"It was. the first real rainfall since July 4," said weakening."
Temperatures In the !Kls were forecast for
·National Weather Setvice forecaster Ralph Wheeler.
"But it missed my lawn, darn lt." .
~entucky, which has had 42 heat-related deaths In the
For Missouri and for most of the Midwest, Great past two weeks and temperatures that have soared
Plains and Northeast, today's weather should bring Into the 90s for the last 15 days.
Four elderly residents of a Chicago nursing home
some relief, with highs In the !Kls forecast from the
Ohio valley to the East Coast.
.
died Saturday after temperatures reached 1ffi on the
ButrnoresuffertngwaslnstorefortheDeepSouth, Ooot where they Hved. after the air conditioning
where temperatures over 100 flirted with ail·time beat system failed. Chicago health comrnlssloner Phillip
records.
Davis ordered the home closed and the 198 other
South Carolina climatologist John Purvis said residents were evacuated to other hospitals.
Sunday the heat wave was the state's worst In 30
The heat wave nationwide Is the worst since 1900,
· years.
·
·
•
when nearly 1,:1Xl deaths were attributed to high
"At the point we're at now, things are going to get temperatures.

:Local talent featured at 1983
Meigs County fair Aug. 16-20

SPEE/J'S INTO AEK08/t
llQNCE

r

Late afternoon and early evening
· musical entertainment featuring
local talent wiD be on tap dally at the
1983 edition of the Meigs County
Fair, TueSday through Saturday,
August 16-:ID.
The program will vary from
country·western and Appalachiuan
favorites to down·home gospel
music. and wiD take place at a new
location - a stage currently under
construction at the fairgrounds at
Rock Springs.
The new stage, a project undertaken this summer by the Meigs
County , Fair Board, Is situated
between the secreiAry's offtce and
the cliff path, up on the hill
overkloklng the race track. Most or
the work Ia being done by fair board
members.
Tentative scheduling has been
done for the u-rs, most of which
will nm dw1ng the 5 to 7 p.m. break
period when the midway Is not
opera~~DC. Tuelday, frorn5to7p.m.
will see Karen MacKay pei 6mulng
country and folk music, acaniJliUI·
ytng her own vocals with banjo,
i l

guitar, and mandolin; the Person
FamUy Gospel Singers wUl appear
Wednesday 5 to 7, with Thursday's
program to be announced.
TexHarrlsonandtheValleyBoys,
a GaWpolls·based country and
bluegrass group which appeared at
the Big Bend Regatta tli June, will
perform beginning at 7 p.m. Friday
on the hill stage. · Saturday, a
program or authentic Appalachian
music will be presented by Roger
and Mary Gllmore, from 5 to 7p.m.
Other groups wiD be performing
earner In the day - aroond noonsuch as the Stylette Twirling Corps
on Wednesday and the Barbara
Lawreilce Dance studio on Thurs·
day. Some time slots are stDl
avaUable for those wlsblng 1Q
appear at the fair. No llnanclal
COilij)EIIS8tlonlaolfered, but anyone
who would like theopportuJJitytoget
some exposure "In the spotllght''
may contact Muriel Bradford, fair
board secretary. tor delaUs.
'Fair Mlmbenblpa
.
Dally gate admlsalon 81111 fn!e
parking tor the entire week o1 the

Meigs County Fair are Included In
the $6 price of a Meigs County Fair
membefshlp ticket.
The tickets provide substantial
savings over the regular general
admission fee of $3 dally. WhUe the
$3 gate fee does Include midway
riding, the membership tickets are
Ideal for frequent !~rs. As an
added lxlnus, 1\olders of the mem·
bershlps may have unllmlted ac·
cess to midway rides for an
additional S2 dAlly,
M!mJbershlp tickets may be
purcbased from any fair board
member, or at the followtng
locatiOns:
Pomeroy - New York Oothing
House, Green Lantern, Sugar Run
Flour Mill, Swtsher·Lohle Pilar·
macy, ·F ive Points Grill,
Gloecknel'' s Restaurant.
Middleport . Department Store
Sports Department, Middleport;
MU1er Brothers' Grocery, Rutland;
Wald Cross Sons, Racine; Hawn
Lumber, Chester; Clay's Shake
Continued on Page 10

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UNDER coNSTBVCl'ION at .&amp;be Melp CowJty
Fairp'oulldo llllillatap!,localed oalhe biD, ...q-a

to &amp;be IM!Ift&amp;ar)"a olllce. The stage wBI be lbe scene
fur munerous performances of local musical talent.
(.)

�•

CODl~entary
I I I.

Page

The Daily Sentinei'-Page-3

2-The Daily Sentinel ';.

~ Middleport. OhiO
~y, July 25; 1983

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

What's it all about _____:___

W_l_·uw..,...·m_F._B_uc_kl_ey_J_r: ·

The Daily .Sentinel

Q. Why did Reagan sei up a

Central American eommisslon?
A You tell me. Why shouldn't he
have set up a Central American

ill Court Strf'ttt·
Pomr-ro}·. OMo
OE\'OTEO 11J THE I~,.EREST OF THE

lllb.

~~

.
r""T"'\....L-.-?""1

UEIG S · ~ .\.SO~

.\RE ,\

commission?

~d·~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlh•ht'•r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
Gt&gt;nera l

AJ'Iiil'&gt;lilnl Puhli:!i.her / ControUer

"' a na~N·

Q. Well, some prople are saying
_ that, after all, it's Reagan's foreign
policy. and he ought to go to
Congress with his policy, and get
support, or lose it. Isn't setting up a
commission to focus on Central
American a democratic evason of

sorts?

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
St&gt;l''" E ditor
..\ \IE~ER CJI The A.'fiOt.ialed r~ . lnbnd Daiy
AmE&gt;ncan s~ ~..,; ,\._'WK"Lation. .

P~ .\..~iation

and lh(-

LETI'ERS OF OPI~lOS are " "ek'Omed. They Yt~ be lest! tban 300 • ·&lt;ll"''b ~­
..W k!U.ers are suhjed w edJltng llnd must be signed ~1th rwnt, address and telt:pbu;w
numhrr. No u~J;DP(I ~rs "'ill he publisbt&gt;d . Uft#n !Jhould he

!Sin« ~

DO(

~nalklet; .

tn fOOd ta.'il.e. addrei-

A. Why? The existence of a
commission doesn't diminish the
authority of Olngress. A president
is entitled to try to drum up support

~--

.

for pollcies he favors tn any way he
wants to, isn't he?
,
Q. Ah ha! You've IndireCtly
confirmed by point. He has his
policy, and he simply wants a
bipartisan commission for the
puJll(lSe of manipulating publlc
opinion. I wouldn'tpayyouasmuch

as an advocate, buster.
A A president sets up a commlt ·
tee composed- of people who have
public constituencies. Sure, he
expects that commission to come
up with recommendations that
make sense to him. But tile reason
he thinks that is that he is confident
his general policies are Intelligently

directed to the amelioration of a
na tiona! problem. He therefore
assumes that the commisSion Is
going to come up with sensible
proposals but that they will be
removed frorn cookie-cutter
partisanship.
Q. What do you mean by '
·:cookie-cutter partisanship?" You
always use such long words, buster.
A. I mean the frame of mind that
assllffies that anythtng that comes
out of that particular oven is going
to look like that particular cookie,
concerning which I have made up
my mind that it's spinach, and the
hell with It The frame of mind that

.

Much-needed lift
to capital spending
As the economic recovery gathers momentum, hopes are rising that It
will give a much-needed lift to capital spending.
To many people, the capital-goods business may be the economic
equivalent of the dark side of the moon. It consists mainly of saleS by one

company to another of produCtion machinery and other "widgets" most
members of the public never see.
But obscure or not, it iS an important part of American business. It
provides many jobs, contributes to productivity, and can give Impetus
economic expansiOn at times when consumer spending nags.
In the recession of the past couple of years, capital spending na;edived.
With many companieS struggling to survive, It was not a time for building
new factorieS, making large purchases of machinery or replacing the
corporate auto fleet with shiny new models.
Even if a company was tn an expansive mood, high Interest rates made it
very costly to act on that impulse.
By tradition, It takes capital spending longer than other areas of the
economy to recover fiwn such a slump. In the early stages of an upswing,
the Industry's customers experience an improvement In their businessbut they are still In a wary, cost-conscious mood.
An old rule of thumb holds that factories and mines across the country
must be operating at 85 percent of their existing capacity before conditions
are ripe for a capital·spending boom. At the bottom of the recession last
year, capacity utillzation, as reported by the Federal Reserve, sank below
70 percent.
.
By June, it had climbed back to 74.5 percent - still well below the 85
percent trigger point, but at least headed In the right direCtion. ·
"Gapaclty utillzatlon Is jumping faster than most people thought it
would," said Frank Prezelskl, an analyst who follows capital-goods
producing companies for the brokerage flim of Sbearson·Amerlcan
Express.
.
At the same time, the Olnference Boanl, a business research
organization, reports that an Index of business confidence it calculates rose
sharply to a record high from the firSt quarter to the second quarter of this
year.
"Although some components of overall capital spending have
UlldOUbtEdly turned up, a wider recovery is only now getting underway,"
said Jack Lavery, chief economist at Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fehner &amp;
~th.
.
Whatever progress comes from here on out Is expected to be uneven as
well. Capital goods for high technology and service businesses enjoy a
relatively rosy outlook. But companies geared to serving· the energy
tndustly, which boomed tn the late 1970s, now are still grappling with the
problems created by the recent decllne of oll prices.

Cost overruns at
the Pentagon
The amount of money the Pentagon wastes on spare parts for its vast
stock of weapons is relatively small, and, ironically , that's a major reasoo
why recent stories about cost overruns have been such an embarrassment
to !he Defense Department.
Over the years, there·have been cost overruns on dozens of weapons
systems, wasting billions of dollars. And, given the nature of defense ·
spending, there are likely to be more.
Most of !hose overruns, however, havestirrednowherenearthereactloo
that has occurred In recent weeks with the revelation that the Navy paid
monopoly suppliers $110 each for some-electronic components it could have
purchased for four cents apiece. II also paid $44 lor a bulb that could have
been had for 17 cents and sheUed out $17.59 for bolts that cost 67 cents each
tn 191l).
The problem Is one of scale. Even though the cost overruns for spare
parts to be used In flight simulators for the Navy's new F-!8jetamountonly
to about S87 ,00&gt;, they stirred such strong owosltlon precisely because of
their size.
"This is sometltlng that is enormously damaging to tile Pentagon," Sen.
Sam Nunn, ~a ., told reporters las\ week.
·
Nunn, one of the most respected mllitary experts in .Olngress, expla!Ded
that the ''Navy problem Is something people can relate .to. When you talk ·
about overruns of $20 million, that's a nurnller that's impossible for most.
. people to comprehend. But when you say they bought a part for $110 when
they could have had It for four cents, the average person can see that's

crazy."

~

'Those comments were echoed by Sen. Aitonse D'Amato, R -N.Y., who
said, "these stories about overruns are just the tip of the Iceberg." If the
Pentagon doesn't act qulcl&lt;ly, "the consensus for higher defense spending
will erode," he said.
The problem Is partiCUlarly painful for the Reagan administration
because it supported a record $18 trllllon defense buUd-up, arguing that the
money is needed to shore up eroded U.S. defenses to meet agrowtngSovlel
threat.
Wlthfederaldef!ctt.sristngandCongresslooklngforwaystotrlmfederal
spending, Congress has longingly eyed the Pentagoo budget.
ButDefenseSecretaryCasparWelnbergerhasrefusedtoprovldellstsof
whatt.ocut,argutngthattheentlrebudgetisneededto"rearmAmerlca."
Weinberger. In trying to justify the bigger i:Judgl!ts, has said time and
again that matiagement reforms Instituted since he came Into office wtU
help halt cost overruns.
Weinberger reacted quickly alter the latest Navy overruns. He called a
news conference to admit "there certainly have been somehormrstorles"
and pnm!sed to "take whatever corrective action is necessary."
Nunn said "some heads just have to rollin this kind of situation," and
Welnbel'ger apparently agreEd.
He announced that a Navy officer would be relleved because of "poor
judgment shown in the purchase of spare parts" and said "aPPJoprlate
action will be taken with respect to a ctvlllan employee."
But he didn't name either person and Navy otllctals said laler they dkln 't
know If the otflcer had been reassigned.
Weinberger said "cost-oonscloilsne;shastobeandlsbetngtnstflledvecy
rapidly In the per.;mne1 who are iiMlM!d in the process."
Pl!ntagon spokesman Hency Catto, however, was notqultesocptimfstlc.
Asked why some of the instances of overpricing had OCCIIITed as recently .
as lhiS year, Catto sald. "the whole C4)E!'atlon Is 110 vast. It's Uke puncldng
an elephant. It takes ~hlle for the patn to be felt."
t

says if Reagan is opposed to food.:
stamps, I'm opposed to his MX •
policies.
Q. But if the commission Is going
to make recommendations satisfactory to Mr. Reagan, isn't It In .
effect an agent of Ronald Reagan?:
A. No. It is precisely not an agent
of President Reagall. It Is a body r:J.
prominent Americans, which Include Republicans, Democrats and
Independents, who wUl therefore
come to conclusions Mr. Reagan
expects to find persuasive. Oln':
sider, for Instance, the membership,
tn that commission of Lane Kirk- :
land. He is a prominent Democrat; •
tnstltution8.1ly opposed to
can domestic pollcles. But be Is also :
an anti-communist. Tile views oi ·
Lane Kirtland In respect of out.
policy In Central America are more .
authentically transmitted tbrougb .
a bipartisan commsslon than ·
. thrOugh his conventional forum as
head of the AFL-CJO. If the head of
the NAACP thought It wise to back
Reagan's policy In Central Amel'·
lea, it would be easter for him to
take that position via a bipartisan
commission on foretgn policy thaJt
at a convention of the NAACP;
which is pre-programmed to de-

.

Republl-::

nounce Reagan.

TOVRNAMENT CHAMPIONS - Nellonvllle
B!adcboun Clllltured the 1983 BBI Hubbard Memorllll
LIWe Leape bMeball chaanploalblp ~ aJPt
followmg a lU vldory over Syracuse. Pldured are:
Flnlt row, left to rlgh&amp; - Bnmt TIQ-Ior, · Kelly
Blacl&lt;well, .Jolm Perry, JUIIIID ....,._ llebbleOtubb, ·

_.
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Whereof he writes ________Ja_ck_A_nd_-_er_so_n ::
WASHINGTON
I stand accused of publlshlng "dislnforma ·
lion" which supposedly com·
pounded the thundering
embarrassments that hedevlled
poor Jimmy Garter during his last,
unhappy year tn the White House.
My accuser should !mow whereof
he writes. He is that veteran press
agent and political skirmisher for
Jimmy carter, Jody Powell, who Is
as talented and winning a dislnforrnatlon specialist as ever played the
game of poUtics.
As a born-again columnist, Powell is now engaged In reviving a
last glimmering hope that the
Garter image for maladroitness
can be transformed and that the
good oi' boys may yet reappear
before the footUghts ,' not as burn·
bUng authors of their own tragedy
but as blameless victims of plots
most foul : U the dlstnlormatlon

ment" fed me dislnformatlon? He
thesis can fly, it wUl gtve the
doesn
' t Identify them. What
carterltes a leg up on resurrection.
"forged Intelligence documents"
Powell opens with this salvo:
were palmed off on me? He doeSit't
"Three years ago, an active
cite any. Who were his sources? He
campaign of dislnformatlon using forged Intelligence docu- doesn't name them. What evidence
does he present? None at all.
ments .and operatives Inside the
Was the distnformation perhaps
government - was conducted to
deceive journalists and to embarinstigated by Ronald r.eagan's
operatives? Powell can't say.
rass President Garter. "
According to PoWell, two of'the "There is no evidence," he con·
cedes, "that such activities were
dislnforrnatlon efforts were lolled,
Instigated or condoned by anyone In
but a third, he reports grimly, was
"a spectacular succeSs." This the Reagan camp." That leaves
possibly the Kremlin as the chief
resulted In a series of columns,
written by me In August 19!ll, suspect.
AU that Powell will say is that the
saying that "President carter had
perpetrators
"will not be !mown, of
ordered an Invasion of Iran to take
course,
untll
all those Involved are
place In mid-October." Now here is
a scandal that should eclipse Identified and questioned under
Watergate! Who directed this oath." But, unhapplly, he falls to
astonishing dislnformation cam· · Identify any .of those he wants
patgn? Powell doesn't say. What hauled in lor questioning under oath
"operatives inside the gpvern· that wUI unmask the grand
conspiracy.

Kicking educ1:1tion
Wlth education sure to become a
political football in the 1984 elec·
lions, the subjecl is attracting
widespread attention. A friend In
Florida has sent me a copy of a
diploma specifically designed for
those youngsters wbo can spend 16
years In school without even
learning to read or write. Elegantly
designed In Old English type, It
reads as follows:
DIPWMA
This is to sertlty that Mary Lou
Funlat has graduwalted from
Shady Oaks . Public High School,
having completed the requlrred
currlckulum.
Alferd Fob, Principle ·
This little phonetics gem came as
the result of a column In which I
mentioned a· young lad)' whO was
gradiiatlni troin high school with·
out be.lng able to.read a book. I, too,
·have been · giving the problem a
great deal of thought. They should
have some sort r:J. negative 1ewgnltlon - those high scbool studenis
who have so vallantly resisted
education. So should their teachers
who have passed them on from .
grade to grade without regard for
their quallf!catlons. Many have
gone on to college on athletic
scholarships, passing their entrance exams by proxy and getting
grades determined by their ~
wesson the athletic field rather
than In the class room. With college
sports so much a big business we
will each year graduate more
seniors with college degrees who
are barely competmt to sign their
own names.
It Is not those who have been
high·jacked by college coaches who
WOrrY me. they wUI lind out soon
enough that Ufe presents more
problems thaJt those 110lved on the
football. field or In the locker 1'001'(1.
Perhaps by the process of osmosis
they wUI have abombed enough
knowledge to make a place for
tbemlelves In society. I worry
about the )ICWIIIter1 who have
spent 16 of the most fonnatlve
yean;_of their Uves In the class room
without acquiring the basic fllllda·
menials r:J. an education. In those 16
~ they have condenmed them-

5elves to a Ufe with a pick and
shovel or as a household drudge.
There is no place In modern life for
an llllterate.
I don't blame the youngsters. I
lmow that the future to them seenns
very far away and somehow wUl
take care of Itself. Grandma used to
say, "You can't put an old head on
young shoulders," and she was
right. It is the old heads - the
parents, the teachers and those who
direCt our educational system who are shirking their responslblll·
ties. Some of the states are finally
awakening to the faet that adequate
education for our youth is Indeed
their responsibllity and are trying
to do something about lt.
I don't inean to imply that the
greater percentage r:J. high school
graduates are llllterate or their
teachers Inefficient and Ineffective.
Far from it! State achievement
tests In those states which have
adopted them show that the great
majority of high school students
rank high In their studies, proving
their teachers are doing. a good job.

Perhaps Powell will volunteer to
be the lead.off witness. He Is, after
all an authority on dislnformatlon.
he could tell how he helped to create
the 1976campalgn hoax that carter
as governor of Georgia had cut the
state government though the
number of state employees had
actually risen, how the Carter
campaign had taken three confllct·
tng positions on abortion, how the
dislnforrnatton technique was used
to woo both the pro- and antiWallace vote at the same time.
When a letter appeared over
Garter's stgna~ praising Wallace, Powell shamelessly disowned
lt. He put out a formal statement
that it "was wrtnen. by a staffer,
never seen by Governor Garter and
did not accurately express his
views." Powell's respdnse con·
cealed that the staffer was Carter's
chief spokesman
Powell,
himself.

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Lowell Wingett ··
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It is only tl\3t the small percentage examinations and reviews for this
of pupUs who are not pulling their is the only way their superiors or .
weight In the class room have been
the boards of education have of ::
getting the lion's share of publicity
weeding out the undesirables. Th&amp; •
all over the country. Every state ideal school should he a three-way· "
legislature in the nation has been partnership between the puplis and ..
viewing their educational systems their parents, the teachers, their ::
with alarm. The resulting publicity superiors and the stale.
••
focuses on the few rather than the
Regardless of what many be- ,
many. The good students and the Ueve, there are no chlldren who :
good teachers are laking the rap for
cannot learn 11 properly Instructed . • ~
their more negligent peers.
Olnslder the retarded chlldren who •
I firmly believe that no teacher were considered unteachable a few - :
should be allowed In a class room years agn. The giant strides that ::
unless they have demonstrated a
schools for the retarded have made '·
sincere calling to their profession. In the last few years prove that no ' ·
They must.&lt;'!ljoy teaching and not
one can be considered beyond belp.
use the profession as a stepping The most common complaint of
stone to a marriage or a hetter teachers is the lack or disctpllneand
paying job. Their c~ should he drugs. They were hired to teach and.
as ·sincere as that of a minister to it enforcing dlsclpilne is necessary . :
the church because they are . to teach, then they should see that!!·
direCting young minds during their is enforced and not passed on to the : :
formative years. Chlldren Instinc- next lecher. Drugs is a disctpllnary
tively spot a phony and when · problem and should he treated as . teachers lose the trust and respect such.
·
of their pupils, they may as well
Let's again make the three R's, ·.
abandon the class room. niase who reading', 'rltin' and 'rlthmetlc, part
expect to make teaching a profes· of the curriCulum!
slon should not resent periodic

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Ctnclnm;U iSoto J.O.!l and Gale J-31 , 2. ll·

fWunlat• GamM

Too:mto 3, Texas 2
Milwaukee 8, Chicago 1
Detroit 7. Ciuromla 2
sea~ 5, Baston o
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b.Jrgb (Rbod!n 7-8), (II) ~
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LouiS (l..aPotnl 7... ), (D)
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New York 4, K.ulsas City 3
MUwallkloe 8, 0\lcago 7
Detrol1 ·~ Callfomla 3. 12 \nnlnp
Balt1more 4., Oakland 3
Boston 6. seattle o
Tl'!'!tl:&amp;l 3. Toron10 0

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Atlanta at New Yrrk. (n)
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CALIFORNL\ ANGEI.B-P1ated 8yrorl
Mct..uplin,_ picher, on !tit' %1-&amp;.y dis·
abted u.t. Reeded ~ Brown, pitcher,
from Edmoftton ot the Plclftc Coast

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KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Cut Q.onld
rumlft8 beck .

Gl"'!''!!l.

RAIDERS-Traeled
Monte Jacluon. «t'enslve bdc, and an
undllct.d future chll: ~ to ttw l.o&amp;
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vln RobPrtlcn. &lt;.VUSbitck, Wid Rkhan:l
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Marvin
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WEST DIVIJION

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se-attle at Detroit, tnr
MUwau~ at Mirueota, (n)
('kowoiand at Kansas Clly, lnf
New York at Texe., tnt
Baltlmc:li'e at Call!urnla. (nl
'lblton at Oakland. {n)
N4TIONAL u:AGUE

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56 · .ru 16
WI!8T DIVIIION
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Weekend sports briefs..•
By The "--aaed l'rell8

.

SYRACUSE - Despite a threatening thuQderstorm and periods of
scatlered showers here Saturday
night, Neisonvllle Blackburn defeated Syracuse, 12·3, to capture the
1983 BID Hubbard · Memorial Utile
League baseball tournament.
In the consolation battle, Pomeroy downed Stewart,1[).1, to capture
third place honors In the Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department spon·
sored event.
Don Dorst hurled a two-hitter,
fanning eight and walking none for
Pomeroy.
Lor! Wllllanns suffered the loss In
relief. Wllllanns and Jbn Goff
combined efforts to fall eight

.

'

Syracuse. Brian Weaver. Todd . - - - - - - - - - - - - Lisle, Chris Stewart and Petie
Hendrix combined efforts to lane 12.
They walked only one batter.
Nelsonville's hitters were Kevin
Warren, a single; Roger Robinette,
a home run and Brent Taylor, a
single. Syracuse made eight costly

batters. They walked two.
Top Pomeroy hitters were Dorst,
a home run and triple; Terry Fields,
a home run; Hank Cleland, double
and Jason Wright and Robbie
Fields, both with singles. For
Stewart, Williams and Chris Bar·
!lett each had a single.
In the championship batile,
Nelsonvllle grabbed a 1-0advantage
In the first Inning, then broke the
game wide open with seVen
markers In the third rung.
Kevin Warren fanned 15 and
walked one for the champiotis. He
allowed only one hit, a fourth Inning
home run by Chris Stout.
Four pitchers wel'e , used by

errors.
The Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department thanked all individuals

who supported this year's
tournament.
Eller· Pickens was named Best
Defensive Player. Don Dorst ·was
selected Best Offensive Player .
Kevin Warren was named the
tournament's Most Valuable
Player.

-

..

AU SEATS 12.00

AO,SSION EVERY TUESLW.\" $2.00

EXCEPTI "RETURN OF THE

Browns' veterans join rookies
Sunday .for pre-season ~lis
MENTOR, Ohio (AP) -Michael veteran on the roster listed ahove:JXI
Stearns gets little argument In his pounds, although his weight can
off-season job as a nightclub vary.
"I'm down around 285 after a
bouncer, but it's a bit tougher for the
rookie 011 the Clevela~~d Browns' workout, but I put a lot hack on
before the next day's practice," he
training tleld.
Stearns, a free-agent offensive said. "The heat and mental part of tt
lineman lrom Mississippi, says that
Physically,
when someone makes a disturbance football.
are what's
toughestlt'snotbad.But
about playing
at the nightclub, he asks them once, there's so much to learn, and It's
very nicely, to leave.
, always so hot."
"But only once. And if they don't
Stearns graduated In 1982 after
go, then I thrOw. Whenyou'reasblg playing 33 straight games for
.
Mississippi.
as me, they usually go when they're
asked. They know I can thrOw them
He spent halt of last season In the
out. I only have to get tough two or Canadian Football League, playing
for Monlreal"unW they cutdownthree times a week," he said.
Stearns knows that in the National they wanted Canadian linemen and
r
Football League, plenty of defensive let me go."
Unernen are large enough to give
He said he had offers from two
him a fight. He got a glimpse at the teams In the United Stales Football
taskSundaywhenBrowns'veterans League, "but the Browns called
joined rookies on the practice lleld first."
.
for the first time this year.
Despite his size, Stearns is a
"But I like football better," he long-shot to make the team. His
said. "The money is a lot better, chances are better In Cleveland than
they might he elsewhere. however,
too.''
'
Stearns Is the only rookie or because the Browns lack depth at

offensive tackle.
Veteran left-side starter Doug
Dleken underwent arthroscopic
surgery on his right knee last
Monday, and two newcomers- Bill
Contz, a fifth-round choice from
Penn State, and Thomas Hopkins, a

'

'•

fill
,..Jl~Ot~h~-roun~~de~r~lro~m:Al:a:bam:~a~A&amp;M:~·J~~~~~~~~~~~~
are the leading candidates to
until he returns.

In

"New Designs"
Fashionable, feminilie, fascinating

'Big-rwok
~iamond Ousters

..

~

~

I Bengals eye adversity

Mlller and Don Genaio averaged
just over :!a! for their combined 12
. BALTIMORE (AP) Russ games Sunday as they maintained
Cochran shot a 3-under·par 67 tow In their lead a!tel' three rounds of the
the $3)() OOl Greater Baltimore $110,00&gt; Showboat Professional
Open ~Y by one stroke over · Bowlers Association Doubles
WJLMINGI'ON,Ohlo(AP)-For
Terry Snodgrass.
Classic.
the second straight summer, the
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- Lauren
Joe Berardi of Brooklyn, N.Y., Cincinnati Bengals have more on
Howe sank a 2!&gt;-toot birdie putt on and Jay Robinson of Yorba Linda, their n\lnds than just football.
Ayearago,theBengalsandother
thel7thbOieSunday,edgtngveteran Calli., were In second place after
Donna Caponi by a stroke to win her three rounds with a 7,652 total, just National Football League players
first professional tournament -the
nine ptns behind.
were preparing for the 1982 season
PXJ.OOl Ladies Professional Golf
BASKETBALL
whUe getting ready for a strike that
Association Mayflower Classic.
arsu, Japan (AP)· Harold . would cutlt short,
'I.'ENNm
Keellngscored19potntstosparkthe
This year, a host of off-season
WASHINGToN (AP)- Jimmy UnlversltyofSantaC!aratoa100.71 problemssprunguptoconfrolltthe
Ar!8s stopped amateur Eric Korlta victory over the Japan National Bengals even before the first day of
7-6, 6-3 and Argentina's Jose-Luis team tn the second game of their training camp - defections to the
Clerc defeated Marlo Martinez of six-game Japan tour Sunday.The United States Football League;
Bolivia 6-3, · 6-2 Sunday tn the Americans won the opener OOQ 1n cocaine purchases by two players,
semifinals of the s:ro.ooo D.C. Tokyo Saturday..
and contract disputes.
· National' Bank Tennis Classic.
Linebacker Reggie Wllllams said
ZURICH. Switzerland (AP) CYCLING
a key to the club's success again
PARIS (AP)· Laurent Flgnon could be how well It manages to
Czechoslavakia won the 1983Feder·
atlon Cup 'women's team tennis won the 70th edition of the Tour de block QUI the distractions.
competition Sunday, heating West FraJK:e cycling classic Sunday In a
"There are always going to he
Germany 2-11n the ftnal.
sprbtt 11n1s1t down the Ciwnps distractions," Wllllanns said. "I
On Saturday, Hana Mandllkova Elysee&amp;.
thltikwe'vehadenoughadversltyat
upset.AndreaJaeaer7-6,5-7,6-3as
f'llnontooktheleadlntheraceon this point that everything else is
the Dlechs surprised the United Monday when Paacal Simon with· going to be minor."
States.
drew with a tractured shoulder
More than ever, theBeogalsneed
HILVERSUM, Netherlands blade.
to start the 1983 season In wlnntng.
(AP)- Tomas Smld defeated Salfonn In onlergettheclub'sattentlon
FENCING
focused on football and put the bad
Taroczy 64, 64 In the ftnaJ of the.
Dutch Grand Prix lntematlqnal
VIENNA (AP) - DoriDa Vacca· newsoutofmlnd, WW!amS said.
tennis tournament Sunday.
roaJ defeated Carola ClccoDettl 8-2
"It's pushed aside If you win,"
Kti'ZBUEHEL, Atlllrla (AP)· Saturday to win the WOOlen's ton WDUarns said. "If you lose, all of a
Gulllemlo . VIlas downed Hem1 title at the World Fencing Cham- sudden It's right back there In the
Leconte7-6, U, 6-4Sunday and woo plmlltlpB blan all-ltaUan ftnaL
headllneli.
the$100,00lHead Cup Volvo Grand
Lu6n Jujle of China came from
"Thai's the challenge for US: If
Prix T1!llnls TOUI1IIIJ)'II!IIt.
bebbld to talte the brolllle medal
JIOWUNG
, from Mandy NlcldaUI of East . we're to overcome that adversity,
we've got to win and win big."
LA1j VEGAs, Nev. (AP) -Jim Germuy9-7.
., ,

GOU'

#I

Chubb, J811011 Wrlptt, Derick McCloud, Blld Kevin
Warren, who WBII the loumamenl's MVP. Rear Eber Pickens, Best Defensive Player; Jbn Goff, Don
Dorst, Best Olfeslve Player, and Terry Fields aDd

Nelsonville captures Syracuse tourney

game, lllnnlrwa

1

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46

t8

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_......

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5141.~2

M1Jwauki!'P

Clf!veland

I'd. GB

~

.........

ALL TOURNAMENT TEAM
SPECIAL
AWARDS- Noted forootalandlng play mthe JJIISBID
Hubbard Memorial Lillie League haoehaD lo111'118menl at Syi'BCWie were, front: Chad Taylor, Robbie

Ro""" Rnblnelte.

PitliWI'IIh 5,
FrancllcO ~
Atlanta 6, ptjladelpbla ~
San DtfaD fo, Olleqo 2
Cincinnati 7, New YCI'k 3
MontA!lll •• lb.aatm ]
l.ol ~ 10, St. Louil 5
....... Gael
P'ttt*lrab 3-5, s.n F'raftcltl'O

IIJ'IIII!A~.... ,.._

Baitlm:n 7, Oakland 3
Nt'w York ~ Kansas City 1

•
•.
'·

Boyer,~

Scoreboard ...

,,

Q. But why should Del'llOCI'8ts ••

lend themselves to such
Indirection?
A. Because they ae not Democrats to the exclusion of all else.
They can come out for sensible
policies In Central America and still
hope to heat Reagan because they
oppose other of his policies.

Mati1'1Dpr, andJuon Tagprt. Second row-Roger
RcblaeUe, Jim Monk, Jbn Steemod. Cbrl&amp; Morris,
Mld&lt;ey Baker, Kev Warren and Billy StbneL Back
ruw - Danny W81Te11, Mel Blackburn and Scott

'69.95

..

seconfl year in row

''

Q '
The adversity Includes the
poten·
tial loss of tight end Dan Ross and
wide reciever Crts Olllinsworth to
the USFL; the federal court
testimOny by defensive end Ross
Browiler lllld fullback Pete Johnson
about their cocaine purchases; and
the contract holdout of AU-Pro
offensive tackle Anthony Munoz.
Ross has signed to play for the
USFL Boston Breakers after this
season. Olllinsworth has agreed to
play for the Tampa Bay Bandits In

1985.

.

NFL CommiSsioner Pete Rozelle
hasn't yet deCided whether to
dlsclpllne Browner and Johnson for
their admitted cocaine purchases.
Browner is In training camp and
played In lllllntrasquad scrlnunage
Sunday. Johnson has not shown up
or COIItacted the club.

'129.95

1149.95

..
'129.95
Ttll her ... ttl I tht world abOut the big feeling

you htve for her ... with a "blg·look" diamond
clutter ring. Vou'lltppreclatt the way our
crafttmtn have found tht tiC tit of mounting

amall dltmonde together to gl.,. tht look of one
big diamond. You'll apareciltte our affordable

·prlcoo, too.

Slylle r11y vory lllihtly.
Enlorlld t shoo aettil.

Ingels Fumiture &amp; Jewelry
'

106 N. SICOND AYI.
MlDDUOIIT, OHIO

,.

"2·2635
' ,1'

MEET ME AT THE MEiGS INN FOR A
DRINK. THEY HAVE A BIG . SCREEN lV,
FRIENDLY PEOPLE, AGREAT ATMOSPHERE
AND REASONABLE ·PRICES.
t---------r-------~--..1

·.

..

.'
·.

�\

Page

4

The Daily Sentinel

• I'OiileiO( .. Middleport,

Ohio

Monday, July 25' 1983

.'

Royals lose controversial 4-3
contest to New York Yankees
By KEN RAPPOPORT

~ City Royals

- Georp

of lbe

to I'EStraiDed by umpire Joe

Brinkman after his bat, held by wnpire 1bn
McClelland, was ruled 1Dep1 beca•,.. of t.be pine tar
beyond the legallhnlt onlbe hancBe. BreU blla borne

nm tb.a wauld bave- lbe pme apiD8t lbe New
Y Dli&lt; Y ankeee So!J!day but h lend WIIS called out, the
wbdnc 4-3. Royall JD111U11er Dick Howser,
left, arJ1MS 011 I* learn's bebalf. (API • e:rpbo&amp;o).

Y....,

Braves humble Phillies, 12-4
By BRUCE LOWllT
AP Sports Wrller
l3ob Homer said the pitches were
right where where he likes 'em: ICM~
aild inside - and then up and over
the fence.
. Horner mashed two such pitches
out of Atllinta·Fulton County Sta·
dlum, two of the four homers hlt by
the Braves, as they pounded
sagging Philadelphia J.2.4 Sunday.
His first shot, oft Tug McGraw In
· the third inning, and hls second of the
game and 17th of the year, ott Porfl
·Altamirano In the ll!th, landed In the
left-field seats. "Both pitches were
down and in," Horner said.- '"!bat's
where I hlt the ball best."
By then, the game was aD but
over. The Braves scored slx runs In
the first inning, one of them on
Horner's single, to chase Marty
Bystrom. Pascual Perez of the
Braves, conversely, went the route.
He scattered seven hits, one of them
' MlkeSchmldt's22ndhomer.
The rout. coupled with Los
Angeles' 3-D whitewashing by Nell
AUen In St. Louis, widened the
Braves' National League East lead
over the Dodgers to 4?2 games .
And the Phlllies' ninth loss In 12
games - they're 2·5 since General
Manager Paul Owens took over for
fired field boss Pat Corrales dropped them Into fourth place, two
games behind the East Division's
· first-plaee Pirates.
Pittsburgh, which split a doubleheader with San Francisco, winning
3-1 then losing the nightcap S.5ln 11
Innings, lead Montreal by one- hall
· game following the Expos' 7·3
triumph over Houston for Steve
Rogers' 13th victory.

Elsewhere, Joe Price and the
Cincinnati ~defeated New York
4-2 and Chuck Rainey and the
Chicago Cubs tripped San Diego 5-2.
Cardinals 3, Dodgers 0
For Los Angeles. the face was
farnWar, the unlfonn and city were
different - but the result was just

AP Sports Writer
Dick HCM~ser got the short end of
the stick again at Yankee Stadium.
1n the l98J AmeriCan Leagu&amp;
playoffS, he was ma.tJaglngtheNew
York Yanlcees when George Brett's
three-run homer oft Goose Gossage
gave the Kansas City Royals the
pennant. ,
On Sunday, with Howser on the
other side of the field managing the
Royals, Brett hlt another homer off
Gossage at the Stadium that could
have been another game-winner.
But Ibis time, the umptres disal·
lowed the two-run soot hecause
Brett had too much pine tar on his
bat.
"For a game to be determined
hecause of that. it's tough to buy,"
said an Incredulous Howser after
the controversial 4-3 loss. " I don't
like i ......
Brett liked it even less. When the
umplres announced their decision,
he charged like a wUd buU oot of the
Royals' · dugout and had to be
restrained by several umplres and
Howser.
"If they want to suspend me, they
can suspend me, and I'll never play
again," said the AU-Star third
baseman. ''If I had any guts, ,1would
retire. It was well past the start of the
game, too. Why couldn't they take
the bat away my first time at bat?"
Elsewhere In the AmeriCan ·
League, Milwaukee edged Chicago
S. 7, Baltimore stopped Oakland 4-3,
Minnesota beat Clevelai\d twice, 7-5
and 5-4, Detroit tripped Calltornla
4-3, Boston defeated Seattle &amp;-0 and

~

'

t

Loser Dick Tidi"ow, 2-3, walked
OgUvie leading off the eighth. One
out -later, Ogllvle took third on a
single by Rick Manning, then scored
011 Gantner's bunt. Winner Pete
!..add, 3-2, gave up a tying single In
the White Sox eighth, but checked
Chicago the rest of the way.

about the same.
Allen, woo shut them out on slx
hits last · May ~ when he was
pitching for New York, blanked
them oosixhltsagaln, tblstimelnSt.
Louis. It was hls third complete
game for them $!nee being dealt to
the Cards. It also was Allen's second
successive shutout.
Lonnie. Smith and Willle McGee
hit mnsecutlve doubles off Jerry
Reuss in a two-run first inning and
St. Louis made It 3-0 In the second
when Ozzle Smith and AUen each
doubled.
Ekpooi 7,
3
Rogers took a 7.0 lead and a
three-hitter Into lbe top ci. the ninth
Inning, when Houston roughed blrn
up for live hits. HestW stuck around
to complete the game and end the
Astros' five-game winning streak
against blrn.

2'18 after a 68.

Scout participation rules for fair announced
Material pertaining lo partlcipa·
th&amp; Mei8s County Falr a privUege and
opportunitY to share their acrompllshments.
tlon of Girl Scout groups In the
interests. and Ideals. All exhibits and displays
annual Meigs County Junior Fair
must show high quality in effort, orlglnaltty,
and Glrl Scout program.
was lnadvertenUy not submitted for neatness.
2. Every reefstered Glrl Scour Individual
·an earlier tabloid edition published
u!Kier ~ and every regl&lt;l.teted Girl Scout troop
In Meigs County Is eligible to enter.
In The DaUy Sentinel as the official
3. Each girl may enter one Item In each of
premium Ust for tJw: 1983 fair. .
the five worlds.
~!dents with Interests In Girl
f.. E.ntry tags must be firmly attached to
Scout aclivitles are asked to cUp the each exhibit. Please exhibit the !ollowlnK
lnt~tlonona3x5card: ll)Ageofgtrl; «2~
following material and tile It with · how
and why made; (3 ) materials used; (41
their copy of the tabloid.
any other Information which might help the

~e ~ ~

mme,

throueh the BCUvltlefl In the arts, in the

Blld 1n the out-of-doors. It Is one
rontlnuoos Pf(lgram open to all ctrJs 6 thra.lab

:xl, tndudlno llroNnle Girl Srouls ( - 1&gt;91,
Jualor Girl Srouls ,..,.. !&gt;121. Cadelle Girl
Smuts ,.,.. 12·151, Senior Girt Scouls ,...,.
15-181 and Campus Gold ,...,. J8.:111 .

Wednesday, v.r.c.A. and Boy Scouts:
'lllunday, GffiL SCQUTI;; Friday, F F.A.:
Salurday, F.H.A.
lll. JudillnK will be &lt;lOne prior to the opening
olthe fair. J11di1111R Is~ on the knowledge

' .
The descendants of the late
. WOllam and Lydia Matlack of Long
Bottom held their annual famlly
reunion at the Lancaster Fairgrounds Sunday, July 17.
Those attending were F1oyd and
Beth Matlack, Parkersburg, W.
Va.; Cheryl (Matlack) Purdy,
Laura, Robert and Margaret·
Purdy, Columbus; Harold and
1retta parker and Tyler CoUins,
Coal Grove; David, EUa
Rachael Parker of Ashland, Ky.;
Jack and Shirley Hasen of Be!Je.
vllle, Mich.; Uly (Arbaugh) Shultz,
Columbus; David, Betty and Germanle Timmers of Cincinnati;
Robert and Madge Loughner of
Cincinnati; Jack Mulligan Jr.,
Jeremiah and Jessica Mulligan,
Cincinnati; Lla Marie Nolan of

'

MONDAY

beginning Tuesday through
Aug. 5, from 9: 30 a.m. untU noon
dally. On Saturday, Aug. 6, for
those wbo attended, there wlll be
a carnival , 'The lbeme is "The
Sonshlne Patch." 'The school is
tor children age two through the
eighth grade.

MIDDLEPORT - Vacatmi
Bible School wlll be held at
Middleport Heath United MetiJo.
dist church Monday through
July 29, from 7 to 9 p.m. nightly.
Classes are for pre-school
through junior high. A program
wUl be held on Friday evening.
Director is the Rev. Robert E ..
Robinson.

"

.

No sub.o~cr !ptlons by ma ll pe-rmitted ll'f
tow ns whE'rl' home carrier service IS.
available.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IR!!Jide Ohio

IJ Weeks .... ........... .. .. ............. . Sl4.04'
26 Weeks ................................. 127.~
52 WE'eks ................................. 151.48
Oubilde Ollilo .
13 Werks ....... ..... ....... ....... .: .. .. . 115.21
26 Weeks .. ........................ ........' 129.64
~2 \\reeks ... ............................. ~ 1156.21

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM wlll meet Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m. Work wlll be in the enlt!red
apprentice d fellowcraft degrees. Refreshments wllJ be
served.

EAST MEIGS - Eastern
Athlellc Boosters will meet
Monday at 8 p.m. at the high
'school.

HARRISONVILLE -A blood
pressure clinic wUl be held
Tuesday from 10 a.m. untll noon
at Han'isonvllle Senior Citizens
BuUdlng at Harrisonville.

RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Club, 6 p.m., picnic wllJ
be at Forest Acres Park.
Members are to take containers
and mater1als for an arranging
workshop.

When you need $50,000,
,,......we answer witfi
a
G......_~

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, wlll
meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
post home.

Rl.J'ILAND - A worksbop on ,

flower arranging In preparation
for exhibiting at the Meigs
County Fair next month wlll be
held by the Rutland Garden Club
Mondayat6p.m. atForestAcres
Park. Members are .to take a
picnic lunch and lbelr own table
senlce as well as material for
arranging.

0

As a homeowner, your expenses
come in big bundles. When you need a
large loan , you need it now- not two weeks·
from now, after a loan committee has met. We give
our answers quickly, 'usually within 24 hours.
And, chances are, our answer will be "YES" to the
money you need. Call us now .

HARRISONVll..LE -

pressure cllnlc.
POMEROY - The Past Ma·

TUESDAY
.

trans Club of Pomeroy Chapter

and ~- Robert C. Bailey Sr.
Included Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
McCrea, DeLand, Flortda, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Mattox and tamlly,
, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. John

Mrs.
Zurcher
Wayne
of Pomeroy
Zurcher and
and Mr.
famlly,
and
West Columbia, W. Va.

andMrsMrsc:==~:.~

Physician &amp; General Surgeon

OFFICE HOURS: Tuesday 2:00 p.m
.. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Office located at 271 N. 2nd, Middleport, OH.
(Behind Villap Pharmacy)

Ph. 992-2255 (Middleport oHice)
If no answer, call:
In Point Pleatant 1-304-675-5267

Sunday evmlng visitors ci. Mr. and

~~~~ RUAell

. L~~ up to U9,600 /lot~

..F;C:r:is

ci. Mrs. BertM

Mr. andMrs.EdwardMclntoshof
502 Second St., 446-4113
One Block Wst of Court House

t""

C. 'THE

WORLD OF TODAY

AND

TOMORROW Includes activities Orat bcuson

GS 7 Outdoor
Camping,
Nature x~~::~~~~~
C

Jects, or an Account of an

C).l1d00r

Experl..,.,..

BROWNIE INDIVIDUAL
CATEGORIES
'lbe \\'orld of Wed Beln&amp;:
GS 11 Cakes.
GS 12 Cookies and Candy.
GS 13 MlsceUaneous Baked Goods.
GS 14 Sewing - Something to wear (dress.
sklrt. blouse, jacket. etc.).
GS 15 Miscellaneous Sewing (pillow, doll
clothes, apron, purse, toys, etc .)
GS 16 Health and Safety !pep shOw.

mlnla[llfC display, dlarama, posters).
Tile Wortd Of ~eople

GS 21 Heritage or International Fdendshlp
(family tree, pen pal, mtnlature display, or
Juliette LoW World Friendship acflvltlesl.
GS 22 Folk Lore (t iE! d)'tng, batik, and other
hand arts) .

,

GS 23 Crewel Embroidery and Swedish
Weaving.
GS 24 HOOked Rugs .
GS ~ Needlecraft.
GS 26 Weaving From a Loom tany Ktndl.
GS 'l7 Knitting and Crocheting.
The. World

ADd

or~

TotlkMIOW

GS 31 Troop Activltlt's - Through
ScrapbOOks. Posters, Displays. Games, Song·
Jnoks, Etc.
GS 32 SmaU Carpentry ProJects (games.
toys, doll houses, serving tray, small knick
knack shelves, etc.) .
GS 33 Photography (pinhole camera11,
posters, scrapOOoks, mounted picture, mlnla·
ture 11lsplay, etc.\.

GS34 Invention Project (games. display, or
notebooks) .

GS 35 Macrame (If used as a planter, must
usc artlflclal plants) . Macrame hangings
cannot exceed 6 feet. ·
The World 01 Tbe AIU
GS 41 Sculpture (clay, sandstone, metal,
Al1 and Wire Ar1.
_:j~~~~~i&lt;. Mobiles. Masales. Strtna:

Flaral City, Flol1da. have beell
vllltlna with Mr. MciDtosh'llilla',
Mrs. Ralph Sjoelt&amp; ci.NyeAYI!IIue,

Pt

etoy.

.

Painting, Paper SculptW'l', or Jewelry.
GS 43 Ceramics.
GS 44 Pr1nts (linoleum block . wocd block,
stencil , relief, pot3 to prtnt, s~nge printing,
rubbings, etc.1.
GS -15 Puppetry, Toys or Gamet
GS 46 PaJntings ~oil or water color) ,
GS 47 Painting and Sketching (acrylic,
cha lk, pastels must be coated on a glass
rramc). Pencu, Ink. Crayor or Uquld
E mbroldfory .

•

,.W..tdOIIho
OuHlf·llooft
GS 51 OutOOors Crafts (Including basketry,
plaster casts or aqlrrlal tracks. seed cartd!E'S,
and terrariufTII&gt;) ,
GS 52 Activities Through Camping (knol
blards, activities at camp, fire exhibits, wtdfo
games, maps of campsites, and car'np health
and safety.
GS 53 Camp Equipment (hand made!.
GS 54 Nature Collections (leaves, Inserts,
s~lls ,

rocks and minerals ).

GS 55 Outdoor Projects (bird tt'eders, bird
hlUSl'S, weather station, something made
with a knltc (SlJCh as a ft1endship sUck, hlldng
slick, doll , or an animal).
GS 56 An Account of an Outdoor Experience
{display, scrapbook, or poster\.
· IUNIOR SOll!l' IHVJSION
(I!-I!H4-t51
GS 111 Cakes.

GS 112 Cookies and Candy.
CADFITE DIVISION
(1!-t:l-14-151
Add two hundred to category number of
Brown!~ .Categories. Except for th~ numbers
lhe ca tegortes are the same. (See ....JunJor
Seoul Dlvls.lon for example).
SENIOR scour D~ION
Add three hundred to category number d.
Brownie Categories. Excepl for the numbers
thelr categor\es are the same. (See Junior
Scout Dlvlsk:m for example).

Middleport BPW·
Barbara Grueser, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Grueser,
Pomeroy, was presented a nurse's
scholarship by Middleport Business
and Professional WOmen at their
July meeting, held at the Middleport
Public Llbrilly.
President Becky ·Mohler conducted the business meeting, and
plans were finalized lor the !'4elgs
County Fair pretty baby and little
miss and mister contests.
Eva Robson won the sllver doUar
drawing, and was also with her
presented her past president's pin.
The next meeting wllJ be a farnlly
picnic at the home of · Alwllda
Werner, August 15 at 6: .'K) p.m.
Becky Mohler will provide meat and
Mrs. Werner wlll provide
ages. AU other members are
requested to bring a covered dish.

bever-

UMW picnic

~~ tf--~~- ~
.'

POMEROY - Plans for a pound
party for thenewpastorweremade
at the Tuesday night plcnlc held by
the United Methodist Women of
Fo~t Run Church.
Precedbig the dinner, whiCh was
held at the church, Evelyn Hollon,
resident and son of the late Sidney Spencer, Is known
IN TRAINING- Don Spencer ud his lwlt-~old
president, gave devotions in the
lmller Counter Top are In tralnlllg allbe RocksprlDgs
for his driving &amp;bUlly and strong finishes In the
fonn of a reading, "Another Day,"
track, In "preparation for hone bame!l8 racing allhe
eqllelltrtan evenl8. .Harness races wll be held al the
followed by prayer.
Meigs Coody Fair. Spencer, a fonner Pomeroy lair this year al 2 p.m. Augustl7, 18, and 19.
' Fifty-seven sick caUs were
reported.
A miscellaneous program was
Included In the evening, with each
member giVIng a reading. Attend·
ln a case of chemical poisoning, it damage til the throat and esopha- breaths.
lngwereAdaNease, LUllanNapper,
is extremely Important to call a
gus. Give water to the victim with
These should be followed by Sandy Hawley, Mae Holter, Naomi
polson control center or the Vetethese products. MUk may be .given approximately 12 breaths per Wyatt, Hllda Yeauger, Kathleen
rans Memorial Hospital of Meigs
to dUute most oilier poisOns . .
minute (twenty breaths 1/"r minute Scott, Betty Blackwood, Faye .
County emergency room. When
Contact your emergency depart- for Infants and children) . Continue HamUton, Edith Sisson, Evelyn
calUng, you wlll need the following
ment or polson control center even this practice untll medical assist- Hollon, Erma Roush, Mary K.
Information: victim's age, name of
If the label of the poisonous
Roush, and guest, Donna Davidson.
ance arrives.
the polson, amount of polson
The victim should be kept on his
substance has an antidote.
antidotes are not always correct, side as much as possible to allow
swallowed. when the polson was
particularly if the container Is old .. the secretions to drain and to
swallowed, whether or not the
hospital with the victim.
victim has vomited
how much
1t the Victim Is not breathing, prevent choking on fluids or vomit.
U the victim is unconscious or
maintain an open aJJway al)d
Seek medical attenUon Imme- having convulsions, loosen aU tight
time 1t will take to get the victim to
restore breathing with mouth-todiately by calling an ambulance or clothing and seek medical attention
Veterans Memorial Hospital of
Meigs County.
•
any other transportation to the Immediately. Do not try to give the
mouth resuscitation. ·
hospital. Take the poison container victim any fluids or Induce
Place the victim on hls back on a
Vomiting should be Induced only
on medical advice, which should be firm surface and clear the mouth and any vomited material to the
sought Immediately. Do not induce and aliway of foreign materlal.
vomiting If the victim. has swal- Gently tUt the vlctlm's head
backward and pinch the nostrils
lowed a strong acid (toilet bowl
cleaner. chlorine bleach) or petro- together using thumb and forefinleum product (kerosene, gasoline, ger. Open your mouth widely and
~6lt Second Phone
fumltur.e polish). Vomiting soould take a deep breath, placing your
Gallipolis
446-9623
not be Induced because these mooth tlghUy around the vletlm's
substances may cause further mouth and giving four quick

Chemical poisoning needs quick action

'I'IH¥

and

'S
ICE

fURNITURE CJ~;!~-~~~rs

186, Order of Eastern Star, wllJ

MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Billie School wlll be held at lbe
Middleport Church of . Christ

~ntvlsitorsatthehomeofMr.

Harr1·

!IOIIVWe Senior Citizens Club wlll
meet Tuesday evening at the
hall. 'There wUI be no blood

meet Tuesday at the home of

Mrs. Hartwell CUrd at 7: 30 p.in.

Wolf Pen eommunity

RIOfARD L. SLAO&lt;, M. D.

crE'atl\' ity, workmanship. anractlve appear·
ance, hOnestv or matl"rlal, and ronstrur tion
durable enoUgh tor thE' designed use arE'
polnrs whJch are considered.
11 . AnY' artlcl(' below exhibit standard and
exhibits submlttf'd incorre&lt;'tly accordin g to
a~e- and class number will be disqualified. If
there Is only one e-xhibit In any OO(: class , the
premium awarded wUI not llE'Ct'SS8.rily bE&gt;
first .
EQUIPPED WITH HOOKS ON HANGERS.
12. Prtomlum awards and rlbb9ns "'111 be
Murals that can be rolled wqJ bcaceep~edand
awarded. Blue «A award) $2.00: Red fB
w1ll be exhibited only if space permits.
8W8rdl $1.75; WhJte j C ilward) $1.50. A trophy
E. THE WORLD OF THE OI!I'.OF·
wiD bf pr~nted at the fair to the outstanding
DOORS includes activities that focus on
troop in the county,
enjoyment and appreciation of the QUt.of·
13, Special Instructions tor COOIQNG
OOors; living and cal;ing for our natural
ENTRIES: all exhtblt.s must have recipes
environment; unc;lerJtandtng and TB~pectlng
attached (bigredlents and dJrectlonsJ. In case
lndopendence of all living things.
of pies, cakes and bread, the whole pie, cake
BROWNIE scour DMSION
or )Oaf of bread should be sent to p-event
(A&amp;eal-7-8-1)
drying out before judging. For cookies, ~andy
BROWNIE GROUP CATEGORIES
or cupcakes, six pieces are to be submitted.
THE WORU&gt; OF WELL BEING
14. Special Instructions for ·SEWING: all
GS 1 Groop project of Sewing: Nutrition
articles of wearing apparel must have a
(lnclutUng recipe boob, or charts on
snapshot attached shOwing the article
nutrition) ; or Health and Safety (Including
modeled.
pep sOOws, minlature displays. dlaramas.
15. Ftdr exhibits should be an outgrowth ot
posters and physkal fitness.
good Girl Scout programs ettiK!r in troop,
THE WORLD OF PEOPLE
camp, or growth of Lndlvtdual gtrlln pursuit of
GS 2 Group ProJects on Heritage or
a hobby.
International Friendship.
A. THE WORLD OF WELL BEINC
GS 3 Group ProJects of Needlework.
Includes activities that focus on physical and
{crewel, needlepoint, hooked rugs, weaving,
emotional health; nutrition and ~lse;
knitting, and crocheting.)
Interpersonal relatlonshtps; the home,
GS &lt;. Troop Aotlvllles and Projec:IS
safety; work and leisure and coMumer
including Scrapt:lodcs, Posters; Displays.
awareness.
Games, Songbooks, Carpentry, Photography,
B. TilE WORLD OF PEOPLE Includes
and Macrame.
actlvttles that fOCUB on developing awareness
THE WORUI OF THE ARTS
of tM vartous cuJtures ln our !IOCI(Ity and .
GS fi F'l.ne Art and Sculpture.
around thP world , and on buUdlng pr1de In
GS 6 Miscellaneous Cratts and Ceramics.
one's berltage whUeappreclatlng and respect·
THE WORLD OF THE
tng that of others.
Our.OF·DOORS

9;_

Calendar

.

Sl!lOOND TIME AROUND - Calvin Peeie, ol Cape Coral, Fla.,
.-u to • daae putt on the elgltlh 8J'OOII durtnsllnaii'OIIIId act1oa o1 the
AnJwo
llulcb Golf C1Ma1c In WilllamlburJ, Va. Sunc~~Q&lt;. Peeie won
the~ S-under-par. (API •s .,.mto).

dLcr;rovmng how and why of the- things;
exploring and experimenting with many
technologies that touch daUy We: dealing with
changes: lOOking to tutW"e events, ~es . and
respomlbll ltles.
D. THE WORLD OF THE ARTS lnotudes
ac!lvltles that focus on Involvement In the
whole range or the arts·vtsual; perlonnlng;
literary. enjoying and exp-esslng one's self
through various art torll'lt; appreciating the
artistic talents and contrtbutiOns c1. otherS .
Single pictures MUST BE MOUNTED AND

Cincinnati; Hardy and Kathleen
(Matlack) I\OOSCh, Marysville;
Foster and Freda Bean, Don and
Virginia Campbell of Guysville;
Marjon and F1o Kim of Marietta;
John and Etiutl (Matlack) Arbaugh
and Carl Matlack of Tuppers
Plains; Charles and Louise Brooks,
Mansfield; Woodrow and MarUyn
Robinson of Woodstock, ·va.;
Jimmy Pooler and Usa Dillon of
Reynoldsburg; VlrgU and Betty
(Matlack) ROush, Jeff and Mike
Roush of Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
()(fleers elected for 1984 were
Charles Brooks, president, and
Betty Roush, secretary. The 1984
reunion is to be held at the
L!mcaster Fairgrounds on Sunday.
July 22.

and

Subscribers not de-siring to pay the cart
r!e r may r emit in advanc e direct to~
The- Daily Sentinel 01;1 3. 6 or 12 mon~
bas is. Credlr will bE&gt; given carrier eacll.
month.

base and conllnued lnlo center field, allowing
Concepcion to go to lhlrd base 00 lhe play. 'The Reds
defeated lhe Mds, (.2. (AP Laserpbo1o).

9. Dtlermt organlt.atlons wtti take turns ln
manning the Jun!Or Fair Bulkllng. The
odtedule Is as follows; Tuosday, 4-H;

and exper1enct&gt; gainf'd by lhe glrior the- troop
and evldenct' of a good troop prc:wam as SE't
forth in the Girl Scout handbook&amp;. Or!Rtnally,

Matlack reunion. at Lancaster

Dall y ................................. 20 Cent~

llftemo&lt;v.• In CinclnDatl. 'The throw was wide olf lhe

evening.

GENI!BAL IIUU!8
l T11e Girl Smuts COnsider participation In

PRIC~

SLIDING ON BY - C1ncinna11 Reds sbolislop
Dave Ceo•qdou sides pa8t New York Meta 9eCOIId
bMemaa Bl1aD Glle8 c1urtas a steal IIUfmpt In the
Ub ""*'~~; of t.be Natioaal leacue game Sunday

may not be removed befOre 4:00 P.M .•
Saturday evening. All booths must ~ taken
down between UXJand 6:00P.M. on Saturday

Girl Scouts ol the U.s.A. Is pan n1 an
lnteroatk&gt;nal movernmt. It 1a linked with the
World Association or Girt Scouts and Girl
Guides 111rough membership In 0\'1.'1" IUiy
countries around the WCI'ld.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

.

8. AU. entries must be in 'place by 6:00
P.M., !,londay, the - k of the fair. ExhlbiiS

Girl Guides.

By Carrier or Motor Roate
,
On(' Week .. .. ..............•. ....•. ...•... $1.00
One Month ................................ h.40
One YPar ................................ $52.80

SINGLE &lt;XIPY

troop.

Today's troop prOIJ'8m ill earned on by
....,.. lllree mUDon girts In the !ltly United
Slateo. In addition, there are the T.O.F .S.
l'l'roo!lo On Foreign SoUl, mere !han :ll;Wlol
our g1rls wOO HYe abroad and often work with

American Newspaper Publh;hers Association , National Advertising Representat!V(', Branham Newspaper Sales, ..
733 Third Avenue, New York, N~
'fork 10017.

Ohio 45769.

~~ ~~. ~

Frlendohlp, and Health IUid Sllely. Tltese are
W(M!'D

or girl;

&lt;61 lroop
nwnber and leader's name: {7) coundl name.
5. 'Ibe person In charge of Girl Scout
exhibits reserves the right to dlsqualUy any
artlde that does not comply with the rules and
R!iUlatlona ol the MelaB Coonty Fair, Junior
Division, and The Glrl Scout Program.
6. All exhibits must be made by the
exhibitor and fJlWII not have been ln any
previous fair.
7. Groupp-ojects shall romlst of the work of
at least three girls In one program lewl. The
exhibit may be one article on which at least
three atril have workal, or n may be a
!1\lnlrnum r:1. tllref- articles made by girls In a
troop or camp proJect. A JPWP p-oject must
have oa the card the number ~ girls 1n the

Management, cttlzenshlp, International

Member: The Assocla!ed Press, Inla nd Dally Prt"ss Assoclaton and the

POSTMA...'\TER: Se-nd address to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,

Judps; til PI"Ofll"am level

GIBL IKXItJill
Glrl SCOuting l9 an tntormal, educational
program, developed around the interests and
needs ~ girts. It lo earned oulln groups 101th
adult leod811dp, Inspiring girls wtth the
highest ldeU of character, conduct, pltrkltl!lm, and service.
,
'n\e foundaUon of the Girl Scout Program !s

meroy, Oh io.

save.

"'Ibm It was my tournament to
win," Peete said. "It wasn't his
tournament any longer. It was my
tournament to win 01' lose .••
He won it, maldng a successtul
defense of the title he won a year ago,
with a 276 total, eight Wider par on
the KlngsmiU Golf Club course.
Norris came on to take serond at

In Oakland, Km Slngletm's
two-run single keyed a three-nm
rally In the !ltth. leading Baltimore
overtheA's. WithBalllmorein!ront
1.0, thanks to an RBI double by
Eddie Murray In the llrst, the
OrioleS scored their winnlDg runs In
the fifth on a rnn-!K'Dring double by
Jim Dwyer and Singleton's Single.
Carney Lansford's eighth homer
of the year, a two-run shot In the
slxth. were the 11rst runs oil Scott
McGregor. Dwayne Murpby's solo
oomer In the ninth Inning, his ninth,
capped thescorlngolltheBaltlmoJ;e
pitcher.
McGregor, 12-4, scattered 10 hits
whUe pitching hls American
League-leadlng lOth complete
game. Steve McCatty, 3-5, took the
loss.
TwDI7·5, lnd!Nw 5-4
1n Cleveland, Minnesota exploded
for tlve !lrst·innlng runs on homers
by Gary Ward and Gary Gaettl and
held on to beat the lndlaDs. Bobby
Cast!Uo, 6-8. was the winner, gjviDg
up four runs on eight hits In 5 1·3
innings. Rick Lysander and Ron
Davis pitched the ftnal three
Innings, with the latter posting hls
17th save.
Tim Laqdner homered, doubled
and scored twice and Randy Bush
added aso!OoornerastheTwinswon
the second game.
11gers4,Angels3
in Anaheim, Lance Parrish led off
the 12th inning with a home run to
boOSt Detroit over the Angels.
Panish, who entered the game as a
plnch·hitter two Innings earlier,
blasted his 12th homer off reliever
Luis Sanchez, S-4.
Aurelio Lopez. 6-4. gained the
victory after blanking the Angels
over the final two Innings.

rlmedla . IlK'., Pomeroy , Ohio 45769, 9922156. Sf&gt;cond class postage paid at Po-

The Pirates railled In the first
game, but they couldn't overcone
Jeff Leonard's grand slam In the
nightcap that broke a 4-4 tie in the top
of the lith and gave the Giants thelr
split.
·
Bed84,Meta2
Joe Price. prtmarly a reliever by
Clnclnnati before Ibis season,
boosted his record to 10.5 and
ICM~ered his earned-run average to
2.58 earned run average with his
six-hitter. "He's probably pitching
as well as any pitcher in the league,"
said Mets Manager Frank

"With that big lead, " said Sutton,
"it seemed everybody else had
everything to win and I had .
everything to lose. Ihad ltln the edge
of the rough all day long. ! just never
was In position to get It close to the
hole.
"I just wasn't hitting the ball well
enough ... tomakeanythlnghappen.
..There's a sense of embarassment Involved. But it W3$_a good
learning experience.
"I'll be In the lead again
· sometime. And maybe I'll be able to
cope with that a little better than I
·
did this tune...
Peete, playing In t(le same group
with SUtton, went In front on the
ninth oole, where he dropped a
)).foot birdie putt and Suttol)
~ed after mlsslng the green,

Page 5

Published every afternoon. Mooday
throu~h Frlday,lll Court Srreet. by t~
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Mul·

Plraiea s-5, Gblnia 1-11 .

I

Mouday, July 25, 1983

Oriolell 4. A'aS

(USPS I e-110.
A Dlwlslon of Mulilmedla, Inc.

.w....

Howard."
CertalniybetterthanTomseaver
(G-10, 3.!5) tagged for three runs In
the botlool of the first inning, two oo
Cesar Cedeno's single.
CubB 5, Padre! 2
Ron ~drove In four runs with a
game-I)'Uig homer In the second
Inning, a two-run double In the
bottom of the sixth and a sacrifice lly
In !her eighth.
Chuck Rainey got within an Inning
of a complete game before Lee
Smith came on and recorded his 14th

By The Bend'

The Daily Sentinel

Peete surprises field,
·claims A-8 golf title
WILLIAMSBURG , Va. (APl : Tim Norris, all but overlooked In the
collapse of Hal Sutton and the
surprise victory of Cal Peete, made
• a quick summary of the Anheuser·
' Busch Golf Classic.
· "It will be remembered as the
• tournament Sutton lost. And that's a
. sharnee, because he's such a good
player." Norris said.
. Peete, who took advantage of
Sutton's collapse and carne fromslx
· shots.off the pace to score his second
trlumph"of the season, agreed.
'' I was not expecting that,'' Peete
said after hls one-shot victory. "You
don 't expect to catch a player of that
caliber. RealistlcaDy, I was · not
thinking about winning.
· "But," he said, "If you catch fire
and your opponent Isn't playing too
: well, anything can happen. "
And It did happen. Peete, starting
the final round slx shots back,
.su~ found hlmself"playingthe
best I have In the eight years I've
"been on the tour." And SUtton -last
season's Rookie of the Year, the
current leading money-winner and
generally considered the finest of
the game's young stars - found
)llrruoelf unable to 'hold it together.

Texas blanked Toronto 3-0.
The YankEes were cUnglng to
their one-run lead In the ninth when
reliever Dale Murray allCMied a
tw(}{)Ut single to U.L. Washington
that brought the hand-throwing
Gossage Into the game.
Brett slugged Gossage's second
pitch Into the seats, giving the
Royals a 5-4 lead. But then Yankee
Manager BUty Martin rushed out of
the dugout to complain about the
pine tar that Brett used on hls bat.
After a confell'IICe among the
umplres, home plate umpire 11m
Me Cleuind dlsaUCM~ed the homer,
ruling that the pine tar substance
was too high on the barrel of the bat,
giving the victory to the Yankees.
Dave Winfield slugged a solo
home run , fqr the Yankees and
knocked lri two runs along with Don
·
Baylor.
"Nobody Is going to remember
what Don and I dld In thls game
offensively, but it's still a win no
matter hC7N · you get It," said
Winfield.
Brewers8, While Sox 7
.l n MUwaukee, Jim Gantner's
suicide-squeeze scored Ben Oglivle
with the tie-breaking run In' the
eighth as the Bnewers beat Chicago
lor their 12th victory In 14 games.

The Daily Sentinel

happe~ings
Russell and Mr and Mrs. Robert
Rualell.
Robert Reeves and Bryan of
Chester were Saturday evening
vlsi!Oil of MrS. Dorothy Reeves,
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff and

SERVICE,
PEACE OF MfiiD

I

MARY C. KEBI FR

"Enrolled to Prattice Before The lnllmal Revenue
Senlce.·
I.

'fRI.COUNTY
BOOKKE'ING SBlVICE

618 Llllin St

·

H&amp;l

lA •lion

;

Pomuor.IJ!I.
,I

r~Melllsa~~~-;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;:;:;~~~~:;;;;;;;;;~il

lETS EAT AT THE MEIGS INN TONIGHT.
THE FOOD IS GREAT AND REASONABLE, TOO.·
OPEN FOR DINNER EVERY EVENING FROM 5
TILL 9 P.M. LOUNGE OPEN TILL 1AM. (CLOSED
SUNDAY)
.

·' ~

$5995
~'a-Pe.
.. &amp;118 Sln!ll\l
SAVE$30

SAVE UO

2 pc.
Uving Room
Suite
Reg. f299.96

SI9995
ftorol - I n
• ... htWy- " -·

...... .

·····!!~-~·····························
· ,
Now 2 Pc

LIV&lt;ng Rm . Suit•.
Reg

sm

$14995

�•
Page

6 The

-

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 25, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-215'
6
Or
Dept.

-= ·-

::=r

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Uto • I I W•ft

II THE

Real Estate General

are, lll'!lt row, lell tAl right - Mike Arnold, Georxe
Dooglas, K_evir. Mace, Nick Beekman and Mike
Mollohan. Rear -Paul Kloes, Mike Beeekman, Dave
England, Lori WWlams, Jim Goff, Dave MoUohan
and Kim Goff.

POMEROY,O.
PRICE REDUCED -On I acre
I~ in fNe Points, $5,000 to
$7,000. Utitibes avaialble.

1- ( 614 )-992-3325

IIEW USTING - POMEROY
- 2·3 bedroom house with
tar~ ded&lt; ares b- summer

NEW USTING - 44 acres in
Lebanon - Township. Small
timber. Come in and sre
$300.00 per acre

enjoyment Kichen equipped

with

d~hash..-,
d~posal. Centrl

NEW LISTING - 2 acres near
Pomeroy Corp. Leveled place
for a house.
Just $2,500.
'- .
NEW LISTING

-~ n~e lots ,
~- .old 5

~""' _.oaleport On~

NEW LISTING - A-frame in
the woods. High on a hilt T.P.
water and L34 acres near 5
Pts. Very attractive for $39,900.

fHt~ 13'"ell~
Big cloth combine_s pineapples
and spider web deSign.
Use elegant round cloth on dining table for a charming decorator touch. Ajoy to crochet and
to own. Pattern 7520: directions
lor cloth 60 • in bedspread cotton; 40 • in No. 30 cotton.
$2.50 for each pattern. Add
501 each pattern lor postage
and handling. Send to:
Met
llroob Dept.
:.l t 7
Nllltllocrlft

The

Daily Sentinel
S.. 163, Otcl Cllthel Sb., NIW

Yort, NY IOIJJ. Print 111!111,
Address, Zip, Plftom Number.

;;._CONSOlATION WINNER- The Pomeroy Tigers
llJdohed third In this year's BW Hubbard Memorial
1_;1111e l.ea!!ue baseballloumament !Jt Syracuse. Flnt
tAl rllflt are- Jason Wrllflt, Robbie Fields,
liaoll. Cleland m, Ron llachtel and KeWt Mattox.

"'*"·left

Second row - John Elliot, Don Dorst, TetTy Flelds
and Jay Humphreys. Rear - Junior Mattox, Hank
Cleland D, Mark Mattox, and JetTy Fields. AbsentSteve FoUrod, Wally llallleld and Jimmy Carpenter.

me your new t983 NEEOLECRAFl
CATALOG. 150 designs, 3 free
patterns. Ontr SL50
AU CRAFT IIOOIS. .$2.00 uch
All Boob llld ~ ldd 5M
uch for fiOIII&amp;t 111 lltndhnt.
135-Dolb I t1alhis On Pnde

TREES AND 1'0110 - Ideal for
children. Has 3 bedrooms,
mod bath, furnace, wood
burner, full basement, IP.
water, Eastern Sch. 9 acres for
$32,500.

NEW USTING -,- MIDDLEPORT - APIOKJO acres, I~
si!JY, 3 bedroom home,
fireplace. front and rear porch,
part basement 2 car garage,
garden spac~ ~her buildings.
Only $26.900.00.

IN THE WOODS - 18 acres
fenced. L&amp; storage 24x65 and
14x70 Hoi~ Par~ Drilled welt,
standby power plant On~
$38,500.

..~ons-su.:~&amp;-s6

NEW usnNG- Rock Springs
c~~e 3 bedroom oome
w~h new carpelin&amp; paneling
lhroughotJt Forced air f-ell,

121-E.....,. PllttM.t Quilb
127-Aflh• 'n' Dollies
125-Pellt Q!rilll
124-Usy G1fts 'n' Dmlmenb
Ill-Stitch 'n' Pile. Quilts
122-Stufl 'n' Pufl Quilts

lOVELY - Mod brick veneer
with 2 I&amp; patios. 211 baths, 2
firepe, Italian tile entrance,
antiQue lights, 2 car garage,
landscapo:llol, central air and
kits of st.ubbery. Offer wanted.

$36,900.00.

LAND, LAND &amp; LAND - I
acre $2,500, three lor
$5,000.00 or 10 lor $1,000m
per acre. All utilrties.

120-Croclltl Your tliirdrobe
ll9-Eay Art ol Flowtr Crochll

11&amp;-Niftr Fiftr Quilts
liS-Ear Art of lipple Crochll .
llJ.Compltte Gift 8olfl '
109-Sew+KnM (Bisic tissue inlll
Ios.tns~~nt c..het
102-lluaom Quilts
101-Quilt Baoi Collection I

WE'RE LOADED WITH PROP·
ERTIES. WE NEED QUALIFIED
BUYERS. CALL 991·3876.

Housing
Headquarters

LAFF-A-DAY

-

54

Misc. Merchandise

FREEZER SALE
CHEST MODELS

-· ~.
"Mildred, with the economy the
-

way il is, we can 't afford to keep

5 Cu.
8 Cu .
15 Cu.
20 Cu.
25 Cu.

you tooki~ like 39 years old!"

Ft .
Ft.
Ft.
Ft.
Ft.

... 1235.95
... 1285.95
... 1355.95
... 1411.95
... 1472.95

SPECIAL
15 Cu. Ft. ... 1325.95

ClAIMS SEOOND PlACE - Syracuse finished
In the 1983 Bill Hubbard Memorial utile
League ba8ebaU tournament. Plclured above, ftrst
left tAl rght are members of Hubbard's
G~ team: Arohle Moore, Todd Lisle, Mark

.Monet
row,

Taylor, Jamie Anderson, Chris WoUe, Kevin Blll'plSS,
Chris Stewart and Pelle Hendrix. Second row Jason llall, Chris Stout, Doug stewart, Brian Weaver,
Brent Slruler, Chad Taylor, Eber Pickens and Brian

POMEROY
LANDMARK

ParfiOIIS. Rear-JoeBobHemsley, PhD Burgess and

614-992·2181

Larry -Taylor, coaches.

Kearse wants more from life than fame
. By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Sports Writer
Mike Kearsewantsmoretrom life
than just being a New York City
piJlyground basketball legend.
~'Il!ere are more great players
out there than anyone can count young kids who are a lot better than
I'Ueverbe. That'snobigdeal,"says
Kearse, who just led his Brooklyn
team to Its third New York City
Mlfrourt championship tn four
ye~.

"What I want Is an education, a
~Job and enough money to take
care of my famlly and myself.
"When I'm 40 years old, I don't
want to look Ill."
'Mike Kearse, a 23-year-old a high
~llocll dropout, enters Creighton
University this fall on a basketball
~P tendered by Coach
Reed, who first spotted him
t)Biee. years ago In the halfcourt

wJluS

.I

tournament sponsored by the New
York Department of Parks and
Mlchelob Beer.
But Kearse Is old enough and wise
enough to know- unlike many ofhls
playground contemporaries - that
a college scholarship is best used as
preparation for Ufe, not for the few
jobs avaUable In the National
Basketball Association.
\

The odyssey 'o f Mike Kearse, from

the desolate streets of Brooklyn's·
Brownsville neighborhood, is the
familiar story of jill Inner-city
basketbaU wizard who dazzled on
the playgrounds but not in the
classroom. Attending Boys High,
which has turned out out the likes of
Slhugo Green, Lenny WUkens,
Connie Hawkins and incoming
Syracuse freshman Dwayne
"Pearl" Washington, hedldn'teven bother to play basketball.
-'(

"You know how It Is," he says.
"First you cut a class, thenyoucuta
day, thenyoujustdropoutlt'shard
to learn there. Nohody's interested
tn anything but smokln ' pot"
On to a succession at menial jobs,
plus six or seven hours a day on the
court. a 1&gt;-foot-3 whirling dervish
with a soft touch from 20 feet A
playgroond legend, like Hawkins,
World B. Free, Fly Williams or
Sidney Green who made It from his
neighborhood to the pros; but also
like Earl Manigault and Herman
"Hellcopter" Knowlngs and dozens
of others, playground legends who
made tt nowhere and died before
their time.

"I was never a thief, never In
trouble, neverondrugs,nothlngllke
that," says Kearse. "But, you know,
probably 20 of my friends are dead,
blown away by guns or drugs.

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO
CARPf r SHOP
ldlljl':d ~f'l 1 111· I

1 ''

CARPET
$1295

,,

loll'•' 1•111

Selection

·oom SE4L

Of

IIIII

POMEROY -

INSTAUED
WITH PAD
Selection

REALTORS

Honty E. Clellnd, Jr.

GRI 992-6191
Jan TIUSSIII 149-2110
Dottie Ttn* 99Z-5692
Jo Hilt98~
Office 992-Z259

CONGOU:UM

RUBBER-BACK TWEED
$399 ~Al:RRY
I lOLL ONLY IN IIOWN

'

-Ooz8re

'

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-La-Boy
-Trencher
-Water

'
•'

rc=::l

CATALOG .
· ~MERCHANT
PH. 992-2178

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

R1di1tor Speciltisl,
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Trs. Experience

C. L. Kitchen

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, l.nc.
Pomer:oy-, Oh.
Ph , 992-2174

11.101

M rdd leport, Oh1o 45 76 0 .
Robert E. Buck
Probale Judge/

II
:I
II

Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for ·II
Classlfleds and II

!

I

I

o~~~d~r!er t

Wrile your
!ail wilh lhls
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you wet
results. Money not refundable .

t

1

•I~

1 Phone---------"""

I

Print one word in each
Circle
space below. Eacn in·
I titial or group of figures
Ad Wanted
I counts as a word. Count
1 name and address or
1 phone number if USI!d. Word!!
I itYou'vou
II gel be tier results
describe- fully,
II reserQive price. The Sentinel · 1r~o~t~St--~~~~~-~
ves the rignt to -:::
1 classify, edit or reject
1•nv ad. Your ad will be --:-t--1--11--t--!
I classification
put in the proper ·~~L-~~~~~~
if you'll I check the proper
box
These cash rates
I below.
include discount

---t--+....;+-'--t--j

I

I
1
I

)Wanted
!For Sale
1Armouncement
/For Rent

I

I
I
I
I

L
2.

'

19,

'n

n

~
5.

24 ,

~-

25 .
__ , _

I

10.

. __ ..

I
I

1I

I

_!

~
I

1
1

.. -

1
I
I

I
.. -- • I
----- I
--- - I

23,

I 1.
I u.
I Y

I
I

I~ ,

w.

3·

-

I

11 _

26.

I

I

I
1

•Storm Wlftdow•
•Aeplec 1 i!MI ,....JindoWS

FREE
EstiMATES
·Raotlntl

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

u,

I

1

19.

1,
1

11.
IJ .

3''-

n.

14.

JJ.

IS
16

J&gt; .

J4 .

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The DaUy Sen,t inel
Ill Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

ter-.w• ..,...,

*-· We 11180 reptlir
GeaTat*a.

Work &amp;u.r1nteed

"FrH Estir111tes"

Call: 949-2263
or 949..:J091l"''

I
I

1
1

I'
I

j
J

I
I

~----~---------~------~J
t
~

(Ft• ltllmatool

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-73 I 4
Pomoroy, Ohio

11·26-tfc

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gar11es"
Call for free sidlnaestilllltesi 949-2801 or
949-28110.
No Sundoy Calls

Golf Lessons SpeJ:ial
ADULTS ....... 6 lor $40.00
SfUDENTS .... 6 lor $3D.OO
'Golf Trips
'Fittinc Center
'Metal Woods

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St Rt 124, Pomeroy, OH .

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

Also Tranami11ion

1-13-t!c

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

'Club Repair

,

Chester

6_16_1111 (1

S&amp;W
TV
. AIID
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester. Ohio

Ph. 9e6-4289

If No Answer, Colt 985-4382
Daweyne Willlems
• Scottie Smith

•

BOGGS

David Brickleo
Buoine11 With

SALES &amp; SERVICE

GENERAL
CONTRACTING. Inc.

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Althorized John Dur,
lllw llolllnd, Bush Hoc
Firm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equip!t11nl
Parts &amp; Service

New Homes - Extensivt
Remodelin1
'Insurance Work
'CusTom Pole Bldp.
&amp; Garaaes
'Roofina Work
·~1uminu11

David Bricillea
PH.992-71 t 9

t.l-!lc

6-29-II'IID. pd

All ll1kts and Models
Antenn1 lnstlllltlon
House C1ll11nd_Shop
• Service Av1il1bte

sink. ps, elset.• or
batlery lialtts. steeps 6. e•·
ctHIIIt conditiort.

$2,700.00 or Best Offer

STRIP
COAL

$3()00 A TON
PH. 992-2280

PH.992-3006
S.l6-l mo.

EUGENE LONG
'Sidin&amp;,
"loolin&amp;

'Guitar &amp; Down Spo~ts
"RttiiOdtlin&amp;
to Years Elperltnce
In Homo Area
FREE miiATES

Call 143-5425
7-5-2 110. pd..

Kftclltrt -C.blntls- Roof·
lq - Slliltl - Concrete

hllos - Sitltwalb ltw Co111n1Ctlon - It·
IIOdtlll&amp; - Ctsto• Polt

111111.

--· CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

lloofia &amp; . . . ~­

Ioiii!
lonJ lti!M, DH. 45743

M5-4lt3 or 912·3067

IU!IIIo

THE

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

TROPHY
KING

Trophy
Manufacturers
PLAQUES
ENGRAVING ,

For all your wiring
neede; furnecq rl· '
pair eervice end in·
etllllatlon.
Reeldential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-31

. J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

•DOZEI
•lACK HOE
•St:PTIC SYSTEMS
•LIIESTOII E
.WATER, GAS and

HEMLOCK
PIPELINE
Pipeline. Will sitls, !Ida.
lillian. ponds. utilityslnTction ll1d SIPiic tanks.

Bob C11111ttll &amp;
Don Rose
IACI~E.OH.

PH. 949-2224
'

1

Bondecl &amp; Insured"
7-U-1 mo.

ROUSH CONSTRUCTION

lltw H-s - Exttnsivt
lltlodtlina.
ollstrlnct WOtt
.Cust• Polt Bldp.
&amp; Gart&amp;H
olooflq Wert
d' I •• &amp; WnJI Sldilp

IS y..,. bpeelellfll
GIIGIOUSH
PH. 992·7583
or 992-2212 11 _11 _"'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Si1~

•LAID CLEARIIIG,
COIICAOE WORK
aOlD I MIMTIIMMTEED
PHOIIE JIM CLIFFORD

VALLEY
. ROOFING
AND HOME IIAIIIT£IIAIICE
•toofinl ot 111 typos

c...,..,;.,

'Grrlllrl &amp; DonaJIIIIIII

'Stor11 llindotll I Doors
FlEE ESTtiATIS
20 ,,.. !l,.ltnco
WOIK OUAIANTIID
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742·2134
Of

lro11 6'x6' Up
to 24'136'
lnsulatd Dt!l HOIStS

P&amp;S Rllcint,
BUILDINGS
Ott.
• -·- 1'11:614..3-~1_91

10-6-llc

3-7-lk

OHIO

t•identill '

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS
SiltS_stlrt from 12'xl6'

SErER LiliES
•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WOAI

2·7201

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

1'10(1

MINE RUN

C.JN!ed, blthroom wKh
se-w, 111 or elect. rtfri1-.
fumace, &amp;1otWatarheattr,

raftll,

&amp;

Vinyl Sidin1s

948-2180

TERESA'S
CAKE
DECORATING
Weddi~ Cakes and

All Occasion Cakes
J • lnlfilll W"

PH. 992-3047
&amp;21-t llll

······Gaiiiiioiii--- ---·-Gorogo Solo Thurodoy July
21. PonO&lt;brook Subdlvltlon. Falrflold Centenary Rd .
•;30 to &amp;;30. Coth only ,

&amp;Vicinity

.

Yard Sole -Bidwell, Oh.
Yard Solo 2018\ol Eottorn
M T W 8 OOAM 1 L
I
' • - :
.
g , uo
A
.., 2Rth 30th 011
men
• womon clot
..... baby
ve., '
· u ·
•
ltomo, • moro. Turn In olliy foront from loll 1111- Nome
batwHn Bldwoll Poet Office brand clothing, Iota of baby

SWEEPER ond towing moChin o repair. pont, ond
tuppltn
Pick up and

delivery, Devil Vacuum
C•-·nor. one half mile up

Cel

• nrvlco otatlon. Cheapl
Solid -

kitten. Caii441-8S32.

2 free 4 month old kinens.
Coli 4411-4472.

ABC -123 NurMry School,
Pre-Rogtotrotlon. Tuoacloy,

Giveaway

ANV PERSON who hat
anything to give away- and
doe• not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for nle
may place en ad in this
column. There wiH be no
cherge to the ldvertiHr.
4 block puppioo, 9 wkt. old,
29 Evano Holghto. Cd 44833711 or 448-43711.
4 pupplot, 8 wko. old. Coli
e 14-317 ·0294.
3 Puppiee. 2 female, one·
mala. Cute, wormed. 268 ·

194&amp;.

JACK'S
SEPTtC 'SERVICE
Clunina &amp;
Installation
of New Systems

"Senior Citizens
10% Discount"
' PH. 992-7119
Day or Night

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest Rates
Around
"Friendly Servle
SI!P'rtC TANKS ·
· A SPECIALTY

742-2328
.. ll·lk

for 8 ...

achool clothee. ,...,,,

men eulta. brought In from
fo
lit
Vlrftlnlo.
roducod
• t•--·qu
•
aele,. mlac. SM to be..,.,

coneldar l•nd contr1ct.
Ploooe no coli oftor 8PM.
1114-24&amp;-8400.
REAL BARGAIN! 1 yHr old
bl.leVot, 3 BR, A·1 cond:.
goroga a. .bMament, brlclo
Iron. t. lorftolot, city tchooto .
•
0 I Ill POII• ·
41-1 mllet from
G'"n Twp, t38,&amp;QO. 4488038 _
(b lckl 3 •-d
Ranch typo
- - •
..._. __r ... anaclled
rooms. ....~ ~b.
t
garage, tu
IItman ·•
newlylhlngledroof,walkiftg
dl ltllnce to llomero Y E'·m
.. ·
School. t•ft
- . 000 · C• II 882 -

11

f::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~;:==1~8~14~3~-~!J~~~::

t280.000. Bingo gamo.
Cherokee. N.C . Leaving 'c::-=:--::-~::-:;;-:-:-Pomeroy Auguot 19. t&amp;&amp;. , W ted T B
tor treneportetion and mo- 9
In
0
uy
tot.Raoarvatlon doodllna Au- 1-:::-----:-:---;-:-~;:-:
guat 15th . The only lutho· We .,.Y 0111h tor lata modal
rlzed co-ordlnatore within clean uHd aara .
50 mlloo. 114·992·3377 or
Jim Mink Chov.·Oido Inc.
814-882 -&amp;007,
8!~~~;:/:hnoon
BIGBINOOChorokH,N.C-.
leave early Saturday morn·
lng, Aug , 8th by QREVHOUNO, return sunday evoning, Au~- 7th, t&amp;O. Call
LUCAS T URS. 304-3487&amp;42.

•

oduldt to llfgor llzot. nlae
d )eane. new winter coata •
malo tong helro
naw - ·· ollllzoa. 3 plei:oo

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

Homet

By Owner 3 bdr. houoo with
8 or 20 OCFN - 8untc.. Lf\.
family room, don. 21-1 botho.
fuM beaement, unMteehM
giiFOtlll with woritopoco. WMI

11

Help Wanted

MODELS Allogoolnclud·
lng children fOf oatalog-typa
aeatgnmenti. WHI be Inter·
vlowlng In PolkO&lt;abura. wv,
tholatt wook of July. For on
appointment. call (412,
• 381·8810.
Wanted to buy UHd coal 1-:::-:::::-=-::=;:::--=:-:,-::
wood hHIIfo. Swain Fuml- HOUSE OF LkOYD nHdl
ture. 448-3119, 3rd. Ia ladlel to ahow toyaand aifta
Olivo St., Oolllpollo. Oh .
now till o-mber 1ot. Froo
ltl
t300 kh, tl. por hour. Call
o1 1 •11 14-992-11&amp;91 for Motgo
Air cond onor 1n
r.pelr or no longer In usa. County, 304-773-5224 for
Ca111114-2&amp;8·11&amp;7.
C
ty 1 814 3117
·
Motonforoun
2770
Oolllo• County.
Standing

omount.
88011 .

timber.

any

Call 1114-38812

Situations
Wanted

BEDS-IRON. BRASS , ot~
furniture, gold, tllvar dol· - - - - - - - - lara, wo~d Ice boxea, ltona
jara, antiquaa, etc., Com- Room, board and cera for an
peraon
In my home.
PIate h auae h o ld a. Wri ta: elderly
Ra ..onable.
Call992-8022.
M.D. Millar. At. 4, Pomeroy.
Oh. Or 882 · 77110.
Wantedtobuy.N.w. uaecl• 13
Insurance
antique furniture. Will buy 1 - - - - - - - - piece or complete hou•~
holdt. Celt Ooby A. Monln SANDY ANO BEAVER In·
_11:-1_4_·9_8_2:--8:-3::-7_0_--:--:--:-- aurance Co . hM offered
aenrice• for flre ln1urence
Buying dally gold. oliver co-ago In Oallla County
calna. ringo,jowotry,otorllng for almoet • century. Farm.
ware, old colna, large cur- home end pereOMI property
rency. Top prloe1. Ed. lur· cover-a•• are ev1llab.. to
kott Borbar Shop, 2nd. Ave. meat Individual needs. Con·
Mlddlopon, oh. 1114-992- teet Ray Wedemeyer, agent.
34711.
Phone 388·8249.
Are you paying to much for
your hoapltal-heelth lnsurence. Cell Carroll
Snowdon, 448-4290.

Give away 6 rftonth old
German Shepherd pup end Territories available for new
one 'female small mixed brH AVON repruantatlves or
dog. Hes had 1hot1. Contect you tt~n Mil where you work.
Kimmy Pierce, Salem Call 448-2118.
Cantor.
- - - - - - - - : - - - , UO- t100 dally commlt10 kttten• to give ewav. l eions po11ible plue monthly
Approximately 8-1 0 weeki 1 bonu1 on npeat ulea. Conold. 114·986·3849. ·
aurqable producta everyone
uaa . Qualify for company
Two. four month old pup· car. tr11vel, lnaurance, retire·
pit•. ana black, one Benjl ment prrogram. Full-part
typo, both fem 0 ta. call 304- time. Call 675-2938 In
876·6203.
'
Moton County, 247·2066
-,---:--:--:--:--:--:-- , Meiga County , or 446·
2 tmolt brood fomalo pup- 1988. •
plot, 1 brown • whlto, 1 ---~-----:­
bllck•whlte, 10waeksold, NNdld lady to - care for
pari Bugle a Benjl type elderly lady for room, board
dogs . Cen be 1een et 221 1 and smell ulary. Cell 448Jockaon Avenue.
31&amp;8 or 1114-2611 -1887.

-::::-::-:::--:-:--:==::-

F -Cozy
bedroom home
3
on7 11c,.moreor••.Melge
Co. Thle fine home haa
laundry room 6 •-lng
roollt to bootlll A• Warren .
038-Central air conditionlng tn lhll like now 3
~..::.'ault~'!:n!, .:.;:
near Rutland . Enjoy the PIP'bl
• foncod back yare!.
.
tll2.000 . Call Zolo. 111~•­
594-31543 H no ana_,

614 ·888-10B2.
'
·Locatod In Syrocuoo-Near
""'
~ehool Ia awlmmiria pool. 3"
bedroom tltuatod on o...,,
third_ aocre
_ lot._ t24.&amp;0Q.
304 7 u 2 8488 .
Tuppero Plolno 10 room,, 4
bedroomt, femlty room witlt
Buck atovo lira plao,.;,
ltained g:lata window. tlv]l6
room whh double

lftllft. . .

fireplace, eet In kitch•.:
aaparata dl n1ng room' ...2
ltory, 1 acre grol.!nd. 1 bet6t
large 60 ft . - front poralo\
lncludrts, drapes. carpet. alP.
tornatlc woohttr • d,Yaf;
12,000 .STU o.c., dMP,
freeze. g11 range. fro1t frw,
rofrlgoretor. 829,000. 1114·
1187-8488.
:-:
large famlr home, beeutltOi
interior. private beck yard. 2cor garage. 814-992·&amp;7011.
after IS p.m.
: ::•
3 bedroom houae. Ranee:
refrlg., kilchenaide. dl•~
hwaaher. wood bumer wt(Jt- '
new chimney. 2000 btu e.o.:;
cunalna and dl'llpal wtlh. ..
1heera. Excellent condltloti'~
Syracuaa. Oh . 814·112'•.
7286.
• ".
r

.

18 Wanted to Do

'Fishing
;:
John Teaford

992-5433

31

'Pro Shop ·

1-1 S-1

U.S. AT. 50 EAST ·

'

Announctrner.ta

4

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

Call: George Gum

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

6/21/ffn

1

28 ,

30.

~eo

cont ~ and hal·

acid boll and-rod out ra-

.StmnD-"

FOR SALE
18 FT. WILD CAT
TRAVEL TRAILER

1 Addrels---------

\

Roofina - Siding
Trouchs,
Down Spouts
Windows - Odors
For "All" Vour Home
Repairs ...
"Free Estimates" .. ,

s.20-1 ""·

We ..., reptlir and

ALUMINUM SIDING

and ...,...IDI

SIDING

HOME REPAIR

RADIATOR
SERVICE ,

1

i Name·----------

•

5-16-1 mo.

------------------------ I

I

~11

Clerk

171 18, 25. 181 I , 3tc

I

doors and windows.

..d
Ill'\ ..

VINYl &amp;

·-~·

Vinyl A Aluminum

downspouts: lUh' clean·
ina and paintirw, sto'l"

Ph.

POinted Exe cutnx of the estate
or John Woodrow Baker. de-

I

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

All types of roof WOik. new
or tepair, &amp;Utters and

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

BakP.r. 5 Marn Street. Mrddleport. Ohro 4576 0. was. ap -

I

- -.. anrl..,cr.rwook
....C.oucll Wllfc
-lluinWng anrl

ROOFING

"FENCING PIOVIDIS PRIVACY PLUS
PROTECTION FOR CHILDREN &amp; PETS"

On July 14. 1983. rn the
Mergs County Probate Court.
Case No. 24168. FlorMce

•

H. L. Writesel

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY
CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

.....

Moyo Orlvo. Now Hoven, I

cOils--· .

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF JOHN . WOODROW BAKER, DECEASED
C.. No. 24188
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCIARY

3

'

July 2&amp;, 10-12 noon. 2054

&amp;.9·1 mo

2-2fi ·lkc

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Gao Uneo
- Septic Syotema
LAROE OR SMALL JOS
PH. l:ll:IO&lt;t-..r;•~~a

I

m

~
1

7-5-tlce

From the Smallest Heater
Colt to 1M Llrpst Radia-

YOUNG'S

-Sewer

· Gregg &amp; Patty Gibba-.Owners

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel

ceas ed. late ot 5 Ma• n Street.

A

I

GRASS CARPET

PULLINS ,
EXCAVATING

•

.

G--rgoa- Cr·~ Rd .
wv
441·0294.

For 5 Years.

Good house,

has U acres ol groond, lull
basement and ~ in good repair.
Only $31,500.00.

1

Of

Installed And
Warranted by Sears

COMPLETE
RADIATOR SERVICE

tor.

SERVICE
•Walhera •Diehwaahera
Reno••
•Rifrl..retora .
•Drven •F,..aen
PARTS end SEIIVTC:E

742-2362

M&amp;}

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
985-3561
All Makes

WE ALSO DO
SERVIC£ CALLS
ERNEST MITCHELL

PH. (304) 882-2276

good neighborhood, good
price_ This 2·3 bedroom home

II

STARnNG AT

Good
Good

·s

"00

also woodburner, n~ utility
room Level Ill acre kt

OWER HOME - Lg_ dining
fireplace, HI baths, 7 rms., 3
bedrOOJS, all utilities, and 2
level tots.

IJO.s.~~~err

'"-hun

...., .,.

Road -

LG. &amp; MODERN - Fami~ rm
with fireplace, dinin~ sun dec~
2\\ baths, 2 car garage,
carpeting and one level acre.
House only a few Y~- old.

134-14 quldlllochioe Quilb
133-F..,.. 1forM Qorillin1
132-QuiH llriJinals

air. Carport

let

BARGAIN - Central air,
carpeting 5 rms., bath, furnace, basement storms an:t
n~e s~e lot Just $15,000,

Yes! I wantto~ more crafts, send

ref., range,

OWNER WMTS ~N OFFEROn this two bedroom furnished
apartment on second floor with
rental income and $280
monthly, will enable you to buy
this duplex and live in ti-e 5
room, 2 bedroom first floor ti
the house. New carpeting nice
kichen, utility, garage on nice

$4,5 ·-

'

l&lt;o . ..

I

50'x100 lot

1\.\:v

w~l)lw""'·

rm

__ ._._...,.,

lO!iMI

U 124-Pit 992-5468 '
Bu,m of JlaSs. lluminirm
cw, -iron. llllblls.
TOP PRICES , lb
Copper -- -- ----------...... 45 .
Aluminum Cans ...... 20' lb.
Rldilllors __ .. .. .. ..... 30' lb•.
~sst Glass -- $1.00 ~
Mixed Iron -- Sl.OO hundred
Also Pitkin&amp; Up Auto Bodies
&amp;-22·1110-·N.

992·2259

Phone

ltl&lt;

Riders &amp;Sons
SALVAGE COMPANY

608

E. Main

IUUOI

17l _ - -

Business
SerVices

\WAifTADSl
~ PlACE F1N1SH - Pepsi Stewart
f!nWwJ lourih In the 1983 BW Hubbard UU1e League
Manorial b-ballloumument at Syracuse Saturday
~- Making the presentation was Paul Kloos, who
- ~esenloed Farmers Bank In Pomeroy. Pldured

tJl .... .....

11- ~-

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING

HI "-"'GI •""

142 II!O!Iond

u, .. ,._.,. o-o,-u..... _ ... '"_....,..__

Real Estate General

"FREE ESTIMATES''

Washers, Dtyer$
Ranges, Refrigerators

l aO ..

IV Jlle•H•••"

.., t:"""'•"'
,._

.,. "' ..._,

4111

JIJ _.....,
Ul lao., J ..lo
til 11.-:o na

11-Mtl II.....

. .......... Mooolioot

EAFORD(H

...,

•• c .....

Jll VOOIOoa
• • llioOt-

111

!Sears I

lllf'

......

tN -

WleD!rto

c ..- .

The Dally Sentinel-Page . 7 ·

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

USED
APPLIANCES

•••lo•l'"""'' o•u ·lum J.f' ' '

..,_e_.,,
111

tAi.:U

7520

·-

••

&amp;l . .......... l l _
U -i..,._ftl J,.. ~~-

Lacy Charm!

f••llo t~ · lnp

11-~(--

u -w.. - ••• ..,
13-U....o..,. ,

t l · 'w•....,...~•-•

7JJ............
7l-W.o&amp;IWO

17-A- ......

It ,...,,1,.,.,,,.,u

U , _ , tar ""''

I I ktl ....

-~,.

11-f rooitt a v ...oololto

34............. ,.;w;.. ~
ll·l oroaAcr Ngo
ll· fi_.E•o~wo .. t•d

wan~.lou8...-

~:l•uifi••ol /tff/( 1"~ , ..,,...r

74-M.et

ll•,..tolar&amp;... I

li ·H""'•'• I ...

7 Vo&lt;il l.lilel.,.... •!,..._.,.,.,

Ollio 45769

11 · A - - I ·

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

.................
u•--.. ,...... .,... ......
...,........ ,"..
~ ~· "'••o-oa.,.,... ,

&amp;tt•h-'111

I

_,
-····--- --·

···~-a-.

Jl-lll o M,ool-

Pom~ro, .

.. • '""

Business
Services
__,;------,r------r-------:----------r -CAW
-II tiE

W1i1t O.llly Stn1intl Clm:itill!d

Il l Court St ..

•

Monday, July 25, 1983

Oenerel Hauling an'd Tr11h
nmovel Service. ReUable
end dependable. Cell 448·
3119 betwoen 8 and &amp;,
Experience houM painting
and lawn mowlf repair. Vary
re11on1ble ratn. Call 448·
8688.
Pelritlng-roofe, hoU••· c•r•. ·
or booto. Call -614· 3792472.

Llwn Mowing no yerd to big
or 1111111. Reliable ond dapoftlble . For eltlmate call
448-3119 botwoon 8 and&amp;.

Pupplao, 304-117&amp;-21171 or RIO GRANDE COLLEGE •
87&amp;·7&amp;21 .
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
INSTRUCTOR , SCHOOL
OF NURSING. Pan-time
6 Lost and Found
Buelneas
tompory Cllnlcot lnotNctor. 21
SuperviM ltudenta on first
Opportunity
LOST Brown celt with white yMr level of program in
face. 2 beby lamba white. nurtlng home and beginning
Lo1t on Homer McClaskey mad-eurg 1attlng: write eva1 NOTICE 1
lid; Vinton, Contact Shirley luatlon of otudento profor· THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
Potto, 1114·388-9300.
mence; 1ttand planning LISHINO CO . recommend•
meetlnga with fecuhy; gred· that you do bueine11 wtth
LOST Fawn fem'Aie Boxer, lng of 1tudent cllncial expa· people you know. and NOT
block mnk. 1 yr. old. rience pepara. Pro-rated fa. to eend moniY, through the
Canten1ry ar... No coll1r. culty Salary Scale. Ohio RN mall unt:ll you have lnvntiColt 4411-00&amp;8 onytlme. Uctnlure· experience for 11. g1ted tM offering. •
Reward I
le11t one full year •• • nurae 1---,----:---::--:-ln a med-uurg •ttlng In I for -. ..... Auto Service
t200 DOLLAR REWARD hoapltel eettlng; BSN per- Centltr, Muon. WV, 3 beye.
For Pl&gt;thlvo Identification of ferred flrat at leeat 11 2 holate, excellent location,
the p8raon who picked up 1 Mmeeter or 20 quarter hrt. euccauful bu1ineu for over
mete Pomerian orange • credlc Coward BSN degrH; 30 yeera, eveilable after
aablo dog. July 7, 1983 lhooo with no crodlt toword Aug, 8, 1883. Colt oftor II
betwoen 7 • 8PM on tho a BNS wHI be conaldllfod. p.m ., 1-304-1176-2982.
600 block of· Second Ave .• Send latter of inta....,, vita.
Oolltpollt . Calt 4411-01 11 .
end other pertinent paper•
to Office of personnel. Box 22 Money to Loan
Loot: Pony, block • white. 868, Rio Orendo Coltogo.
vicinity of Mocodonlo Rd. Rio Orondo, Oh. 46&amp;74.
Calt 288·1 &amp;22 or 448- before eppllcetlon deadline
HOME LOANS Low flxod
34l0of July 28. 1983.
rate . Leeder Mortg41g1.
E.
LOST -4 of cor keyo, 3 Scenic Hill Nunlng Cenltr 11 State. Athono. Ohio. 1-814hoult kay1, end luggage kay now hlrtnv otaff RN't • &amp;92·30&amp;1, or 12 to 4Pfll
on ring wtth C.dillac emb- LPN't application• cen be 1-800-341 -6&amp;84 In Ohio.
..m. Rew1rd for return. abtolnod ot Scenic Hlllt
Finder celt 814-992-&amp;338 . Nurelng Center. Monday
23 Profaeelonal
thru Friday, BAm to 4PM .
Service•
LOST: Famole Wolkor In
A1hton •r... Raw1rdl 304- Owner Operator• with dump
&amp;78-22114.
trelter nHded for IS io 8
week• of ltNcly work. Call
1-800-8112-&amp;84&amp; ohio only.
1-800·321· 7709 wva only.
8
Public Sale
C1ll Mon. or Tutt morning
&amp; Auction
elk for John. Sun . cell
218-e&amp;a-3174 . .
Auction every T uaeday 1-::-Ex-.,-.,.--:-,.-:-,.-odo-:-,-t-o--:d-ove--:'lo::p
night. Krodel P•lk Club ond conduct lnlant·toddlor
Houee, Pt. Plea•ant · WV. movement program. Prllfer
Auct. Lonnie N11l. Calt hoolth relotod oxportonco
1114·3117-7101.
ouch oa shoroptat, nuroo.
Rick Poar- Auctloneor P.E. lnotructor, Apply Oallt·
Service. EltMe, F•rm, An· polla Parte• end Recreation
Dapt., 1118 Socond Ave.
ttquo • liquidation ulto. befoll July 29 .
Uconood • banded In Ohio • I-:--:---:------:--:
WYo . 304-773-&amp;78&amp; or Crafto lnt~ructora Modod
304-773·818&amp;.
for toll and wlntO&lt; dot-.
_..lelly cam huu anita,
A..- ovory Fri. night et paper quilling, knitting .
tho Honford Community Apply Oalllpallt Palka ond
CantO&lt;. Truckload• of now Rocr..tlon Oopt., &amp;18 So·
merchondtoo IVIIry - oanc1 Avo. befare July 28.
Conlfomantt of new end l-:-::-:-:::-:-:-:-:-:-::---:--:---:-uood mon~handloe alwoyo MERRI-MAC noado 3 dam- Now)y rem-od 2 atory
- - - Richard Reynoldo
Olrllora In thlt •-• Olftt, frame, 1 1,&lt;1 beth. 3'h- acrea,
AuatlonHr. 271-3088.
toya, ho- deoor Ttamt on city 1Chool1. riverview.
party plan. Cor ond phone 132,000. Celt 448·4222
Camplota AuctlonHr SarHlghoot commlt- betwoan I • 11: ·
vlco. Alto do oppraloolo. tlon. No lnveotment. dollv·
U-ood • bon- ID toll. .,...g, or callectlnv. Call Madorn Irick Ranch. 3 BR.
Houllholda. form fumloh· 814-742·3084. Aloa book· K_, DR., LIT, 2 belho, 2 cor
gorago, 1.2 plua ocro. city
- · floaT ntlte. Over 21 .....
. ..
,..,. •-""coin buy:lng •
··~-.po::::n:=-'-:'==:::-::-·lc- tch-. Watoon Rd. oft 3&amp;.
HIIinl naw, uood • ......... WANTED-Samoone ta beb- 441· 3388.
funolture. 81 4·192·11370. yolt in my holnl pan tlmofor
Ooby A. Manln.
throe """ r,aal chltdrwn . IHuttfuHy londacopod 3
Mull hiVII .... Coli bdr. homo with - k. On 1
AUCTION ovory Saturday 1114-812-1814.
aconlc acre In Nonhup. City
night, II p.m. MI. Alto
achaoto, 8 mtnUIM from
Auatlon Barn. Conalgntown. flrepiiiCe, htrdwood
mento Ioken ovory Saturday Weltre11 end m1neger ftoort. maintenance ""·
t :00 tTTI 1011 time. Emmo - o d for _ , ond rn- quiet noltlh-ood. AuuBall AuctlnHr. 304-428· tourant, call 304-117&amp;· moble 11-\" mangoge. Coli
8177.
9704.
448-11178 oftO&lt;

~

For ,...._2 ecrea, 7 rOOMel
gerogo, 2 bedroom rentot f!i •
good ahepe. Will tiki mobile
home. car in trade. 3'1~ ,

·&gt;·.

0811.

3 t..ctroom houM. Plum .ai:
Middleport. Central air. nr,.
peted, no manay down. ta"J
over peyments. 441·371G...;
Fa.,.r homo on :~;
,
Ponor vtctnlty. T - ·
bedrooms, 1 '.4 beth1, diniPd.~
room. brick beaemtn' w~
garage In basement, on 1
acre plut lot. beautifully
lendscaped. Wood deck on
rear. This quellty home hM
been reduced for quick Nler
Colt ut today, 814-446 9340. 448-7901. 814-21&amp;,•
11413.
Houn for ule, 6 roonir.;
~=~~avon. Colt 304-BB~::·

-f

-::3:-:2::-:M:-:-o:-br::-.,e-:H;-o-m_e_a_~
:;
for Sale

• ·'

----------;·.,. ,"_,
.~

T R! ·STATE

, ')

M 0 8 I l;i:;•

HOMES. USEO- CARit.·oo
TRUCKS. , OALLIPOLTI~"
CHECK OUR PRICES. CA~~;:
4411-7&amp;72.
.: I

1-

CLEAN USED MOBil;« ~
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAt• :,
ITY MOilLE HOME SALEI:·,
4 MI. WEST, OALLIPOUS.:"
RT 36. PHONE 4411· 7274_-.,'

------:-----."
Treller end tot for rent or...e•

on Lind Controct. Colt 81 \1&gt;;
2&amp;11-81140 .
: :: ;-

--------~--------Trailer for aille or r..t }It t·

ind.:

Morcervlllo, Oh. t200
pluo dopotlt . Call 1114-ZTJe: .,
19&amp;&amp; or 814-2&amp;8-1808. : .;

n

Ht·f !.

1 2•10 mobile home
~~~ntod lol. Call 814-21, : :-·

.

.

a.autlful double wide 14 K&lt;
24. with 3 bedroom• and 2 ·
beths . Mult be moved from
SyracuH . 11&amp;.000 . 1114. ~!..
992·21138 .
,,
11

--rv·

1970 12x80 traitor.
\,
fumiehed, woodbumer.
A. new carpeting, many ··,
e11tree. Can be moved or left 1 '
on nice -form tot. t&amp;,BC!O):
814-B92-7442or814·882- ,.
2717.

7

~~i-~ 7~~bilo Homot, ~0~; __-

s.

• •o

14x70 Schuh, 3 bedrooll'f, ,'
eir condithl'"!d. new floor
covering. Coli 304·871·
20&amp;0. Aftlf I. 304-tTt: .
3491 or87&amp;-11811 .
_,, ~;
h

12xBO SKYLINE moblle :~-­
homa , very riiiOnlbiY •,JJ
prlcod, good condition, 3.~ ; 1
87&amp;-6788,
'

__,.

i
I

&gt; I

�I'
_.,

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Pomeroy-Middleport,

51

They'll Do It Every Time

r~;:;.;;;;--;--:;.~'0:~~-r.:~::JE:tiii:S:;;.JI

1877 Shultz trailer. 12.&amp;0.

central air, 7 "h acres.
•2a .ooo. Phone 304-&amp;7&amp;27&amp;2, Apple Grove, WV.
1 1715 2 bedroom trailer,
furniahed, air condition,
weaher. dryer, porch. meta
building, underpioning .
Phone 304-876-4874. 1

New 1982 Whhe sewing
machinfl $8R, free arm, zig
zag aroc. n Jr h more. Reg.
price $339.96. Demoatretor
price 1&amp;8. Call collect 814·
386-4636 . Free delivery.

1978 Mansion Ettata mobile home, 12x66. good
condition, 17,500 . 3048911-3983 .

MOBILE home, 1979 Stoning. 14x70. 2 bedroom,
total electric, central air,
excellent condition . Can be
left on rented lot. French
City Brokering Services.
814-448-9340 .

119

3 pc . plaid living room
&amp;76 . Call256-6417.

2 bedroom. Roush Lane.
Cheahire. 1 or 2 'children,
nloo yard . 1 - 304 -7736882.

Farms for Sale

farm, 2 hOUMI, 2
blirna, free gaa, 40 acres
tllleble ground. Rett in pas-·
ture • wooda. 1 mile we at of
Autlend off Rt. 124. 814·
248-9436.
IC,..

2 be'droom furnished with
air eond .. clean . New Haven,
W.YA. 304-882-2488 .

chicken houae. large shed.
Excellent large garden. fruit

treea, well water. woods.
pasture, heyland. 1 mile
west of Lenpvllla on SR
124. 614-742-2860 before

&amp;p.m.
Lots

&amp;

Acreage

36 acret at Rodney on W.T.

Watton Rd . Owner financIng evolloble. Coii448-B221
after 8 weekdays.

down, 160 mo. 6 mi . below

Oolllpollo on AI. 1 to Reo·
coon Creek bridge. Follow

1igne.

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

Furnithed lpt .. $210. utili- For Leaie; Modern office
IIH pd .. 1 bdr.. 920 41h building. 21 .Locuot St.
Ave .. Oolllpollo. Coli 448- 448-8221 .
4418 oiler ?PM.

'

I
j

I

H ouaes for Rent

Furniahed Apt. 1196, utili·
tilt pd., 1 bdr. near HMC,
edulto. 448-441 8 altar 7
p.m.

Llrge house With porch ,
Ideal lor Iorge famiiy, $100
mo. A·One .Real Estat'el,
Carol Yngar. Realtor. Call
304·675·61 04 or 304-675·
7386.

APARTMENTS (EQUAL
HOUSING OPPORTUNITY)'
one bedroom rent ttarta et
•167 per month, two bed·
room 1t1rt1 et 1193. Oep·
oalt 1200 (no pett) neer
Spring Vollay Cinema. Cell
448-2746 or loove
me11tge.

Condominu~- 2 bedroom, 2

b.th. completely furnished .
Ocean

front. daily

maid

earvk:e, three paola. tennla
court1. plus 24 hr. MCurlty
guard. Myr11e Beach, SC.

1 bdr . apt., new carpet. no
pato. t1 86 mo. Call 4482065 alter 8.

Phone aflor &amp;PM. 448-3428
or 814-367·0480.

Two bdr. houae in city, full
besemant. carpeted, gas furnance. adultl, no pete. Call
446-0968 .

Smoll lurnlohed olfldenoy
apartment for one profestlonal type gentleman only,
central air. Call446·0338.

r. houM 10 Ectoamont Dr ••

Furnlohed afllclenoy •148.
utilities pd . Alto furnithed 1
bdr. t228, utllltleo pd. 607
2nd. Oolllpollo. 448-4418
after 7 p.m.

2 bdr. &amp; bath, recently
painted. new carpet in LA •
DR. gat heat. Call 446·
1370, oltar 8.
3 ~dr .. 2 bath, double
garage. ltove • refrig. Han·
nan Trace SchOol District.
Option buy ovollable, U60
per mo. Call 448·8080 or
446-7044.

2 new unfurn. 2 bedr . epts.
819 Saoond AYe .. Oolllpollt. C·A. gauge. 1250·
t27&amp;. Coll446-2168.
Completelu furn . all alec., 2
bdr. opt. 488\la 2nd. AVa ..
Gallipolis. Adults only, ref.
*226 plua depoait only. Call
446-2238 or 446-21181 .

6 rooms &amp; bath near Che·

shire. •1 &amp;0 month. No pets.
Referen~ 6 deposit re·
qulred. Cell814-367-7701 .
Unfurnished 4 rooms &amp;
beth, hall baaement. New
~lnt •
carpet. Depoalt
required. No lnaide pets.
614· 992·3090.
3 rooms and bath. PA mile
1 f o
· 614
vyett 88 0
arwm,
·
630
992·5
·
3 bedroom hou 11, 3311
Frenklln Ave. No poto. Dop-

oait and reference required.

304-676· 118?.
Newly remodeled 3 bedroom houae on Lincoln
Avenue, *276 month with
•100 deposit and referencoo, 304 ' 676 ' 2749 '

2 bedroom•. unfurnished,
Camp Conley, 1126 per
month. 304-175-1371 or
7 3812
6 8·
·
Above ever•g• tingle family
dwelling, 8 room•. 2 baths,
batement. corner of 8th &amp;
Viand . Phone 304-876·
1931 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Misc.

81

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding all I;H'eed1. Selling
Happy Jaok Dog Food. AKC
Dobermant : Stud Service .
Call 446 · 7796.

STUCCO PLASTERING •
textured celllnp commercial end rllkl.ntlal, frM
ntlmotH. Coil 614-2681182.
PAl NTING · Interior ond
exterior, plumbing. roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yn.
oxp. Coll814: 388-9662.

American Pit Bull Terrlera
*300 ea. 6 male, born June
17. Coil 814-388· 8180.

Me~um Roofing • Spout·
ing. 30 yare experienoa,
IP8CI"'Izlng In buHt up roof.
Coll814·388·9887.

Unfurn. tpartmant. 1
floor, 4 r. • bath with yard,
centrelly. located. edulte
only, no pett, ref. • tee::.
depoait, require. Call 440·
0444 .
( - - - - -- - - - 1 bed room Apt. *196. mo .
including ulilitiea. Equal
housing opportunity. Con·
tact Villege Manor Aptt.
614·992-7787.
1-::-Fu_r_n-:1,-:-h-ed:-o-n_e_ll::-t-w-o- be_d_·
room opt . Mlddioporl.
adults. no peta. Advance
rant plu1 e100 . security.
614-992-3874.
1-,-.--2-b_e_d-roo_m_l_u_rn-lo_h_o_d
opto . 614·992-6434, 992-

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gollipollo. 8
piece wood living roomauite
with II Inch flat ormo t3~9 .
bunk beda complete with
bunldH t198, 2 pleco ontron llvlngroom tultll •1 99.
entron rectln.,a *99, other
reclinen 180; meple dinette
11t1 I 179, love 11111 170.
hldt·e - bad t260, box
tprlngs • mettreu twin or
full • 1 00 let regultr·flrm
$120. mople dinolte oholro
1315, w11h 1tends 134,
maple rock•ra $68, 7 piece
chrome dinette set 1148. 6
piece din.ne Mt
uaed
bedroom suttea. refirgere·
tors, ranges, chett, dre11era,
wringer . w .. hers, TV' s,
dryoroo. ll ohoeo. Coli 448·
3169 .

•as.

0000 USEO APPLIANCES
· waahera, dryera, refrigerators, renges. Skagga Appliances, Upper River Rd.,
beolde Stone Creot Motel.
446·7398. '

A. K.C . regitter~d . golden
retriever . puppill. Sho;s,
wOfm~. must nil. Price
negotiable. Call &amp;14 ~ 742·
2967 or 814-742·2143.

Wood 1helving Industrial. 4
ft . wide up to 108ft. long, 3
lloro. 4 lioro, 8 tlero high far
11le cheap. A lao 38 •• ahower
stall with all fawcent . Call
doyo 448· 7699. eve. 448·
9639 .
Montgomery Ward trent
axle riding mower, 11 HP.
38" cut, good cond .• aaking
t660. Call 448-6322.
Seara 9 cu.ft. uprfghtfrHzer
~180. BobybedwolnuU60.
20 tpHd Sunbeam blender
o10, Frybaby ee. female
Siemese kitten teO. Call
448-0896.

Steam Jenny. Cell 448·
9333.

AKC Minature Scheunazzer.
6 mot. old, female, all shots
..,d wormed, o128. Coli
446-4472.
Bleckberriet for aele. 268·
1997.
New Oak Furniture, tabl11,
chalra. cupboerdt, pie life,
dry ainka. Paul Conkelt
Andquaa, Tuppeu Plaint.
Oddea1y TV Computer game
whh I cartridge•. New0318 . Will 1811 lor $160.
614-992-7380.
Old fuhloned dining auite
table with &amp; chalrt and
hutch . Cell614·742-2405.
La~y·o

blko, 218 Nonh Pork
Drive, Point Plea.. nt.

Add on wood furnace with
coil to hut water. alto can
be uMd by it1811. New
*400.00: Alao a Kenmore
40 Pinl Dehumidifier llko
new, *126. Call after 7
p.m .. 304-882-2847.
Ceramic molde, 17"~22 "
Kiln, 1 3" kiln. aome glezas
reduced 1 6 percent; all
greenware reduced. phone
304-675-2682.

..... -.......
·.. ··
-····-···

67' Ford 600 SE. good
ohope. 72' Chevrolet 30 SE
good. 830' ca.. tractor
good oond. Coil 614-388·
9333 otter &amp;PM.
JIVIOEN'S FARM
EQUIPMENT
448· 1878
long tractors. VermHr
round baiera, rake-tedders.
It mowera. Complete line
of bale handling • feeding
acce1eorlea. To,bacco &amp;
corn sprayera, wagons.
rotary tillen. rotary cunera
blaMe, Oates cuhlvetor,
plowa. dlac. polt drfvera,
headgalea. plaftic tankt,
woodbumert. And ' " ua
for a complete llnei of pent
Ia aervlcel
USED EQUIP.
IH Hydro 70, Ford 3000.
Ford JubiiH, Mooeey 36,
MatHY 86 w· loeder. Far·
mall C. New Holland round
baler, gravity wegans. NH
grinder mixer. cornpicker, 2
• 3 bonom plowa, R,Oater
auger.
Wa buy uted Equipment.

2188.eatlmetea. 114·949~~~=~~=~==;::::::::::1 -FrH,
---------

~

64

Hey

MIKEO
2254.

hoy, 304-876·

Hoy ond. Strow. 304· 4118· _a_t_4_·_3_8B_·_8_7_51
__
. _ __
1
t886.
Seart alumlnum boat, 9 .6
Evanrude motor • tilt trailer.
Coll614-388·8711.

--· ....... ....
···-··
····· ··~·

71

Autos for Sale

1970 Chevrolet Ceprloe.
oxc. oond. Coli oiler 11:30
ove'o, 814·ZIB·e870.
77
Dether. one owner.
• 63, ooo m 1111, prloo
*2'000' Coli 4411-7003.
1877 Oodge Chorger
looded. T·top. block on
bleok. Coli 814·248·8818 .

vw

1971 Mercury Marqula
good condition, good look·
lng oor. oleon, 68.300 mlleo,
o1 ,600. Coll446·4347.

CIJ Cll
Cll Clla llJ
Nowe
(JJ Tic Tee Dough
~ l .o...n of JH~nle, __ __
&lt;II Newo/Spono/W..Iher
([) ANding llaln-

~

•·
. • I

THIS I~ THE I!I ... TIMEO M0Wo
I!ASY, THE-SE- NeWSPAP":P-7
HAve SPIE-S EVERYWH!R&amp;THI!Y PA'I 81(; MOWEY FOR
STORIE-S. LIK"- THIS.

auto .• tran1, 16,000 ectuel

mlleo. Rune good, body
nHdo work. t800. Coli
448-48311 .

8 row John Deere pun type
corn planter. &amp;14-742·
2466,

1978 Datsun Y.. Ton with
lhell. run1 good, lookt fair.
379-2716.

30 hp. tractor. Mltitkish

1189 Camero. excellent
oondlllon. 304·882· 2232.

1982 Mltoublohl dlooal 4
drive tractor with
Great Bend 20 loader. &amp; ft.
bucket. 1 03 hourt. Uke
new. o8500. 814·949 ·
2739.

8741ntematlonai. Row crop
trtctor. 82 .h.p .. like new.
400 hr. 814·742-2047.

1973 Monte Corlq, 218
North Pork Orlve, Point
Pleeunt.
1978 Ford Folrmonl, 302,
air, automatic, Pl. PI,
AM-FM tope, 30,000 -uol
mlloo. Sell or Trodo. Aoklng
12300.00 Phone 304-876·
4181 .

1982 Chevene Scooter, 4
Uoed Horvootora apeed, 4 oyllnder, excellent
Structur11. Autometad li· condition, 14.300.00 . 304·
vestock feeding-computer 937· 2188.
laedoro. Coli collect 8 14· J-:-:-:~:::::-:::-:---:--:=-:=
585-2260. John L. Betta.
1978 LTD 11 Ford, 87,000
mllea, excellent condition.
01700. 304-678-4824.
63
Livestock
1971 Bulc:k, good ohope,
0700. 304-875-1402.
NEW •

1

1967 YW Compet", pop-up
top, good condition, 1973
englno, •1200. 304-8711·
3686, 29t0 Spruce

1 bedroom Apt. 1 child ,
accepted. No pets, drunks,
or dope. At.7. Cheohlra.
_36_7_·_0_8_1_1_
. -~---­
1
Apartments . 304-676·

Avenue. Point Pleeunt.

....
.. '

'

• ~

I ,
j•

Slide-In cemper, 0378, lor
long mini lruc:k. good
condllon, coli 304-675·
3489.

79

Motora Homes
&amp; Campara

1173 36 Ft. Concord trove!
troller. fully lurnlolled. uc.
cond.. 03,800. Call 614·
3B8· 8747.

0764.

Stercraft tent camper.

..... a.

good candltlon,

•1.100. Cofl441·2271.
1888

73

V•n• •

ow-.

1171 Joop CJ-1. 8 ayl. Well
kept. 1
only $2.000
mi. Clll441-1444.

cr-y

38

-gar

bua . Would make nice
clturah llus o r - aomper.
614-742·2461.
tl19 pop-up Apoche
aamper In good ahape .
••20. Call 111-4341.

We've qo~ them
surrounded!

How did
weqet
up_here.

•

••
, .
• •.
'
.'

...

Melbi!!?

THE

H~ ... I
HADN'T
THOUGHT
Of THAT.

OF

,.

Electric81
&amp; Refrigeration '

.

,

'

I
i

'

'

I

•rvice. Authorized Singer
Selea • Service Sharpen
Scittou . Fabric Shop .
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

@........,.........

:::;;:=::;;:::::;:;::::;:=
''
86

0

87

vln 88ille•er~11111th of....

lN8W11

(f) ([) •

([)

Cll •

I Gutllmub
12:00 ([) ....... .. Allen

Uphol1tery

.

a.c.

s American

·-' ...

climbing

vine

.' .,

t Wing (Lat. I
5Tyke

8 Slalled
7 Inlet

23 Actor
Toomey
24 Ecstatic
Z5 Evening,
inPalenno
!8 Hidalgo's

(Sp.)
8i932Garbo

film
11 Two fins
14 Fortifi·

aunt

cation

18 Different
1t Contrived

30Codename' •.
31 Curtain
' "·
fabric
." .
3Z Correct . •.. •

a text

·•

3'1 Chemistry : • :
SUffill

28 Short

38 John Philip ·,•,

~.

-.·

!8 Port. mooey
.

(jJ

HMy-'S al"
•Glacier

debris

dm~
41 Old dance

.

.

FuM

..

"' 'N'f

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -' Here's
1o

eor-

'

how to work It :- · . ·
AXYDLBAAXR
.·,
•'
LONGFELLOW

.

01)e letter simply stando lor another. In this sample A 11 .' :
used for lhe three L'a, X for lhe two O' s, etc. Single lellero,
·
apostrophes, the lenllh and formotion or lhe warda are all . ..~
hlau. Each doy the code letters are dlllerenl.
: .~

cavnOQVOTES

R YZ

ARY

LDGU
RYJ

·• -··

RATDGDQY
GWY

I

...

''

;

A D 0 0 D Q y- • ·:·.

. gtMSII . . PIUI SimOn
., ,..
-Art Gertut*ll. (80 min .)
J Q0 0 R N F
P R Y
F G R N G
R 1 ·~
(J)
Show
•" •'
e(I)MOVJE,'Maren.t YWLFHRHWN . - UWYNZ
AQNMRY
Frlencla'
·
. .
. ,
(JI ABC N - One an Yeatert!IJ's ~: IT IS A LAW OF NATIJRE THAT • ..::.

""'* ......

e
e......,
'MMY

. OM

'

' ! I

nSprite

5R MOYIE: 'Sirocco'
ijl =~'The 8py With
·.lhe Calli ,._. . .

•

...

....

I Wave top
! Cargo ship

12:30·e Cll CD'. .Divld LadiMn ...,- Dmd' ol DYGWMNDGZ

'I

··....

&amp;Muily

. '( J) P88 .__ Nlllllt
&lt;ll Ali In lhe Fomlly
(JI Nlgtlll'•ie
·

~

8UILVIN65 MA'( CROM8LE,
BOT WISDOM IS ETERNAL

_,

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

Sbippart

([) Saotp
.• ([) Hart ~ Hart

,. I]) PKA
Karno

TAIITAfE
UPHOLSTERY BHOP
1163
Ave., Gollipollo.
441-7833 or 446·1133.

'

make a slam if lhe opponents start that way."

one's way
DOWN

nightclub

([) Cat!lrll

PEANUTS

JIMI WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim Lanier, 304·676·
7387.

.... .

a beginner knows, you can't

4% Find

ACROSS
1 Famed ol

(JJ

General Hauling

JONES BQYSWATER SEA ·
VICE . Coli 814-387-7471
or 814-367-0691 .

-.
...
','"·

French

~·
Ancllher Llflo

I (((

SEWING Machine repairs,

• I"

+· , .

e

J

'"

Oswald: "Most experts
respond ooe diamond rather
than one heart to partner's
opening club bid. We belong
to that group. In fact we

..

:a Japanese
(!) ESPN llparloCemar
statesman
([)Allin lhe~oml
(!) Newo/
Three([)Manly
.
match
lenny HIU Shaw ·
Border'
11:30. (f)(!) Tonight Shaw
Alaska
Johnny' • gueot• •• Lorry
· Gatlin and Con Wayne. (RI
purclluer
!60 min-I
.
. 18 Ccnlonant
([)MOVIE: 'Hanky P-*Y' &gt; D Stupid
([)
MOVIE:
'Nitlonll 40 co~-+•··
Llmpocin ~ o ·Movie Med· ·
......,.,._,~

I ~~~~

HO.ME

•4

By O.wlld Jocaby
and Jam.. Jacoby

o.nce

11:00

_,

tricks to get a spade discard
from his hand. Eventually he
loses a spade trick but
makes the slam."
Oswald : " If
North
responds one heart, he will
play the slam. If East opens
a spade, the defense takes
the first two tricks. As even

~-

eiNNNewo .
10:11 (I) TIS Evening N 10:30 (JJ 8ter Time
(j)) Other Vltlono Other

·-AN' I LEFT
MV SHOOTIN'
IRON AT

''' I •''.

t

' ··

. ..

min.)
il))N-

LOOK AT
THAT BIG
OL' FAT

Opening lead:

'Bridesheed
Redoiled.'
5 Sta
Chenoa and Sebeatlon are in
in Certus
trouble and only the help ol
others can extricate them. . 8 Iranian
(RI (60 min.l JCioMd Cap·
coin
tioned]
Poet
9 :30 Cil MOVIE: 'The Plrllte
Wagnerian
Movie'
heroine
Cil MOVIE: 'Meglllarce'
(!) Auto Racing '83: Off
Golfer
Raod Reclng 11om P.oGary
..,.,.., CA
15His(Fr.)
10:00 • ([) Cll ~ • .....,. . .u Dutch
Mary Belh begino to auffar ·
commune
"the tragic ellecto of bur· 17 Single
·
nout' when her vacatoan Is
U Wasalmotil
ooncolled. (RI (60 min.)
"h«ne"
([) · Meglo of
'The
MGennan
Ebb and the Aow.' Dame
conjunction
Margot Fonteyn e)(ploreJ .
the origin of Ru11ian dan- . UMaltldin
cera coming to the' West to
Gaddess
make their names. (AI ~60 .
(Lat.)

WINNIE

'

0 I

(l) (!) F.,lly TIM When
the KNtona· neighbors spilt
up, Etyae offers a job to the
wile. Sozen,.. ~RI
(!) Unllmltod Hydroplene
Aeclng This show leatures ·
the Missouri/Lake of the
Ozarl&lt; ·s Governor's Cup. ~60

· ([) ilD Grellt Pertonnenceo

BARNEY

Cat 216 Hoe. dozera. crana.
loedera, dump truck. 114·
446-1142 betwesn 7 e.m.
to 6 p .m .

8

min .)

J .A.A. Construction Co .
Water lines , Foottrt,
Drelns. All kinds of Ditching. ·•
Rutland, Oh . 814-742 -- • , .
2903.
' •

84

s•

a([)

MIS&amp;

MOTHER 'MJULP ASK 'AUNTk WORLD
15 FULL

'

he can score four diamond

Benjamin· s mom moves m
with her. ~A)
·
9:00 eCIJI!lMOVIE: 'Deeth of
o Centerfold: The Donllhy
s-.oStoiV'
(JJ 700 Club Today's program features top fashion
model Rene Ruaoo.
(jJ Tucker' • Wheh A
prolessionel
Hollywood
hlirdraasar asks the Tuck·
era lor protection. (RI (60

'.

..

.,.

••

II ([) &lt;ll Prlvlltollenjlomln

I

&lt;'

regular partners have a firm

••

min .)

'

..

-

understanding of how you
handle this Eroblem."
+AQ6 S
· Oswald: 'Today 's hand is
sel up to show lhe advantage
Vulnerable: Both
of the diamond response.
Dealer: South
When South plays in six
West
North East
South
hearts, he can't be beaten:·
1+
Jim: "He starl' by playing
Pass
Pass I
three rounds of trumps.
Pass
Pass
4 NT · Then he goe s aft e r
Pass s+
Pass
diamonds. Since the jack
Pass
Pass
Pass
falls on the second diamond,

Hoed'

'"

...
...

....,.

+ K 10 5

~RI

l

_&amp;&amp;_4_8_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
1
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, housee. Pt.-Pieasent
end Ooillpollo. 814-446·
8221 .

tK3
.AK 72

([) I))) Frontline
e MOVIE: 'A Hole In lhe

1978 Tlton motor home. 28 1 - - - - - - - - - ft. long, double roof, cruiae Meigs E~cavating. Bulldoaer
canlrol. tilt w - . AM-FM ll backhoe oarvlce. Booettereo tape, 7,800 miiM. manta, foottra,landtceplng.
like new, 304-773-1974. driveways, farm ponds.
Will tokelole modeloor on 814-742-2407or814-742trodo.
2088 .

'-:-69--.--14--.--o_r_
3_
04
_ ·-B: -:8_2_·2_5-:8-8-:. :-

SOUTH

nie and Jennifer are suddenly on the outo when :
Vinnie make&amp; eyes at Patty.

14Y.a foot fiber gla11 boat.
Trailer and 30 h.p. motor; OOZEA WORK By Ted
Can be IMn on Hocking Henne, pondt, ditches,
River at 4 mile.
bli11menta. ' ate. Call 448·
~ '.
4107. Certer •
Evans
Tranaponatlon.
.•
78
Auto Parts
lonnie 8oggl Excevallng.
&amp; Acce11ories
Dorer, backhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or lob. Coli
Pono off 1971 Ford LTD . 446·7903.
Also Doberm•n pupo. C o l l i - - - - -- - - - ,
Cet 214 hoe, dozera, crane, '
814-247-4734.
loeder1. dump truck. C•ll
4 Chrome lloto, 4 lug, t3 814-448-1142 between
lnc:h whHio with n- tlrao. _7_
:o_o_A_M_e._s:_o_o_P_M_._ __
304-882-2687 or 882 · 1
2822.
Dozer work, ground clun·
lng &amp; excavating. • 26 hour.
Coli 446·9838.
Camping
Equ_ipment

+

Announced

'

78

+

a([) (JI Squere Pogo Vin·

Tri·Haul Chrysler Sport
Fury, 18ft .• 8&amp; horN motOr.
Zlll-8282.

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

• 87•

([) a

-.~

·. ~ ·-·

Strongly
r ec omm e nd
responding with lhe lowest
four-card suit you can bid at
the one level."
Jim: "Some Californi a ns
go the other way and never
respond one diamond with
either a four- .or five-card
suit if !hey hold a four-card
major. The whole problem is
difficull. but we can offe r
one important rule here.
Make sure that you and your

7·25-83

.QJ93
AQ82
+K8
WEST
EAST
AJ 9 2
• Q 10 6'
• 10 s
• 8' 4
• J7
t96 13
+H43
• 10 7 2

(]) MOVIE: 'Tho Lat
Wagon'
.
(jJ Mejor I..Hgue
au Mil: Teem• to Be

;c

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
1878 Flberfoom boll with
Cor. Fourth end Pine
1980 90 h.p. Mor'iJ'rv mo·
tor. Has power pfop wtth Phone 448-3888 or 446·
1181 trailer. Exc. cond. 4477
Contact Clarene Hill 114·
JIM'9 PLUMBING ll HEAT·
912·2867 oiler 6 p.m.
lNG. Fomerly ' Dewitt' I
18' ftoot boot with 30 h.p. Plumbing . Coil 814·387·
JOhneon motor. 17' Crn- 0678.
tllne with 76 h .p. outbo•rd
Evlnrude. 814-112-8917 or 1·
992-11217.
83 Excavating

NORTH

....'

'

Bidding up the line

e

8:30

...
.....
- '.
.. .

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

pionship.

Boete end
Motora for Sale

.·

BRIDGE

a

•••' .

* 1

"t I I I XXr

, Sel\arday"ol Jurnbleo: TOOTH BOGUS INDUCT TRICKY
Anlwtf; They drank to each other's health so often
!hollhio heppened- BOTH GOT SICK

([) Buolneu Reparl
&lt;ll You Allced For II
())) MOitef'TI.....
illl Enterlltinmenl
Tonight
8:00
Cil (!) Love, Sidney Sid·
ney's efforts to help out a
streetwalker meet with little
'succ:eos. (A)
·
Cil MOVIE: 'Attock Force
Z'
Cil MOVIE: 'Hollywood
J(nlghlo'
(JJ I Spy
(!) lntometlonel Surfing
This show features the
Women' &amp; Master Cham-

J' '

76

.,....

gaated b)' lhe """"" cartoon.

(AniWIM'B tomorrow}

([) A1!ttY Grlfllth
([) II ([) F.,lly Feud

.,., ..

1973 'h ton chovy pickup,

1 979 Ford Fairmont·, 4 dr ., 8
cyl.. ltationwagon, auto ..
PS, PB, reel oharp, U.tll.
John'a Auto Salee. 4414782. Oolllpollo, Oh. Open

Now arrange the circled teners: to
lorrn lhe surprise • - · aa •ug-

Pi'int answer here:

derneath the baaement of an
.E!~~entric inventor
(JJ Doble GUllo
(!) ESPN SporUCenler

' ,' .

1 977 Cant11ro for information ooll 448-4602.

1910 Ford Pinto, euto
t2,696. 1979 Plymouth
Arrow IUtG, U,3911. 1979
Ford Flnto 4 epd •1,4118.
All' good buy1. John' a Auto
Soleo. 448·4782. Oolllpollo,
Oh. Open eve's.

USUALLY ' WOVEN"
F~OM·

[j

I I I

Repart
(JIN• (jJ People'oCourl
es•Trek
7:30 • (f)
Detector
Cil Freagle Rock Visit the
wotld of Fraggle Rock un·

.•

t

[)

ISQUOMEI

u.

'

446-4361.

1980 Kowoeekl 440 LTD.
Uke new. n ,600. 1978
Kowooakl KE175 Llka n t700. 814-992· 2921 or
304-773-6908.

([) a

,.

WHAT 15RIEF~ARE

a ([)

BORN LOSER

1980 KL 600, 01100. 304· E ll A Tree Service, tully
871-3166.
lnaured. free eatlmat11.
1981 Kowoeekl KX 125. Phone 614-38?-0638. coli
••cellent · condition, mu81 lfter 1 ·
1811, 0700. 304·882·2887 I·S::-:E::-:A-:-M-::L-:E::S-:-S-:O-:-U-::TT::E::R:-S:-,-:0-ne
or 882-2822.
piece cullom lit your homo .
1979 Hondo IIOOCK Cu• Ouoronteed. Advonood Oul·
1om Cycle. lull forlng. bool· tor, (Ooy 614-1192-4088.)
lent condition. No reaoono· _~_n_lg_h_t_8_1_4_·8_9_e_-a_zo_6._1_ _
b le 0 ff 1 r ref u 1 d • Roofing and C•rpentry
304· 458·1783.
-rk. gonorel repelro. col.l
Anthony Wlllornoon, 614·
387-0194.

1974 Audi Fox exc. gu
mHeege, rune very well. Call

plc:kor. 614-742-2455 .

wheel

([) Father K.-.ow. Boot
(jJ ABC N D ([) Cll CBS Newo
([)Dr. Who
(j)) Over Eay H.len Forrest,
one of the top voceliai.~_ of
the '40a and ·soa, perlcl!ins
and talks about her career
with co-hosts Mary Martin
and Jim Henz. [Ciooed Cap-tioned]
7:00 G Cil PM M8gulne
(JJ Bumo' • Allen
(!) ESPN' 1 lneldo Beeeball
(])G.....,Aereo
([) Entertainment Tanlght
(!) Chlorlle'o Angelo
Tic Tee Dough
([) liD MeeNeii·Lollrer
'

,
; •
•.
•:
'"

,'

1 1i2 Ford Falcon Funun,
good cond. •1.200. Cell
614-248-6221 .

614· 742·

RON' S Tolavloion 8.,.;,..
Speclollzlng In Zonltll and
Motorola, Quazar. and
1982 Hondo ATC, Hka n-. houoe oello. Coli 676-%398
_•_9_11_o_
. _c._u_3_7_8_-_z_eo_2_•.;__ or 441!1-2464.
1981 Hondo XA 200. A-1 Fa K TrM Trimming, stump
Cond. Motorcycle troller,
remove!. Coll67ll-1331.
IJlC , cond. Call 814-245·
._ _ _ _ _: - ' - RINGLE'S
expo·
1_u_e_4_
19711 Kowoaekl 500 Felrlng r~ced roofing, Including
hot tar application. ClrJ*'·
orosh bero, aeddo bego. ter, electrician. maton. Call
Asking 0700. or belt offer. 304·878-2088 or 871·
614·1182-78t1 .
4680.
1980 OS 710t luzukl.low I-W-o-to_r_W_al_lo-._C_o_m_mer_d_ol
mileege, exc. cond.. fully and Domestic. T..t holel.
equipped. t1,800. 6 1 4 · Pumpo Sol88 . ond Servloe.
99Z· 7403.
304-896·3802.

IROSABBI

e
e

CAPTAIN EASY

()

I I

il))Siudlallee
Wlld. WHd Wm
8 :30
Cil f!) NBC N (JJ Low Thst Bob

- . •I

.' .

•.

a

e:oo •

• .

GENE'S CARPET CLEAN ·
lNG SERVICE. Reoommandfld for profeealonal
steam cl .. nlng. Scotch
Ouerd·FrH Eotlmeteo. Coli
Gene ol 814-912· 8301.

1978 Hondo Howk
only 11,000 mi .. very good
oond. 1974 Hondo 360. Coli
446-4381 .

lour~--

EVENING

· ·
•

1·0-.-,-y-ou_r_oo_r_pet--,-n-oh_l_p
ohope. Wltarr.movol, FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614-446-2107.

2 row pull type M • M corn

Blolon 1982,
2456.

1974 Hondo 360, 7 _400
ootuel mlloo. o&amp;OO. Cell

one-IONcltoquoro, IOiotm

7/25/83

HI Preooura Clunlng. Alumlnum aiding, mobile homH.
wood. brick, eandstone
building and homu. Al.a
hoovy equlpm""l . Fully In·
..red, Free ootlmotH. 614- &gt;
949· 2188.

&amp; Grein

••

Ill--lour~.

Viewing

.

Painting Interior &amp; exterior.
wellpeper hengfng. lnau,_.,

211 11. Areoov ttoiior. e. ..1.
lent condltlon. many otre"•·
Don't ml11 .....,, tlll1 one.
8y owner. 1 • 14'·448 -

.~~-------v

'...

Aluminum lldin:g, guttera.
storm doora • wlndowt,
quollty workmonohlp, 20
yn. ••P· FrH Htlmatn. Call
614-387·0408 or 814·387·
0490.

Trailer for rent or ule in
Mercerville , Oh. •200 mo .
plus depotit. CaH 814· 266·
1955 or 614-258 -1608,

Two bedroom, unfu~nithed ,
Camp Conley, o160 per
month. 304·678'- 1371 or
176· 3112-

Home
Improvement•

'\ • Jl

ORAOONWYND CATTERY
• KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
pies, CFA Hlmeleyen, Per·
alan end Slam•• klnens.
Call 448·3844 oiler 4PM .

Rtgiatered German She·
phlrd pupa. Betwwn 6 &amp; 8
weeko old. 814-9811-3849.
1-:---:::--:---:Party Poodl81, AKC. 6
weeks old, melt tnd female.
For ule
&amp;Inch o126. Phone 304- 876·
thru 60
. State 2749.
approved
21nch
Musical
•&amp;.36 per
inch 67
t10 .10 per
lnoh
Instruments
pleotlo
$16 .60 per 11.
cutverl in stock . 8 inch thru
181nch. 8 inc:h $1 .80 peril .. Gemelnhardt flute &amp;. Bundy
12 inch •3.60 per ft .' Ron trombone; both txc. condi·
Evena Entarprltel, 4 mi. tion. Cell814-268-8707.
South of Jacka on on ST, R1,
93, 614-288-6930.
68
Fruit
1--:-:-----:----:--:o
Umeltone, Sand. Gravel.
&amp;
Vegetables
Delivered In Mason, Meigs.
Gallla or pick up at Richard•
ll Son . Call446-7786 .
Sweet Corn. Pick your own
Caloric microwave electric . 60 dozen. SH Dovld Hill
Farm, Letan. Oh .
n~nge. white. 3 yra. ald. Cell
446-1670.

Coucfl 1"- , .2 , c~lro., -~
candlllon. 0360. Coli 814246-6078.

4 rma Ia bath. located 733
Third Ave .. Oalllpollo. $166
mo .. $66 dopoolt. Call 446·
3870 or 446 -1340.

IS

For rent Sleeping Roome
end light houH keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 446-0768.

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart·
manti Utltiet panty fum. . Want to rent with option to
..,.rtment1 evallable now. buy trn.ll building or hou ..
•200 per mo. A-One Real on main hwy. in GaiUa Co.
Eltetea, Carol Yeager, Reel· Suttable for cerry out. Call
tor. Cal 304-875-6104 or 448·8034.
304-876·7386.
1~;:::=;::::::;====
1 bedroom eponmant lor 49
For Lease
rent . Coli 448·031ij&gt;.
---------

Cempaita Big Foot Parte.,
good boetlng, no money

41

Apartment for rint, adutta
only, 304-876-3000 before
8:30p.m. or after 9 :30a.m.

1 2x60 mobile home in Syracuae. 2 bedroomt. 814 ·
9 92 · 56 87 or 6 14· 99 2. --;:~;:::::;=:;:;:::;;::==
6732 ·
-46 Space for Rent
12~60 mobile homeln.Syracu.e. 2 bedrooma. 61 4·
992· 6687 or 614 -992 - COUNTRY MOBILE Home
6732.
Park, Route 33. North of
Pom.,oy. large lots. Call
982-7478.
44 Apartment
for Rent
47 Wanted to Rent

71 acrea. Good house. ·barn,

36

111ATICAAMBLEOWORO GAIIE
· ~1!/J~~e
by
and BobLaa

by Lorry

H Ia S Homelmprovementt.

54

33

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

Household Goods

Bargain Barn Two miles up
Georgea Creek Rd. Kenmore
copper washer &amp;. dryer pair
real nice •245.00 other
makes wuhers Ia dryers.
stoves &amp; refrigerators, all
gUaranteed: One 30 in.
elect. range *96. Call 446·
8033 or 446-8181 .

;W~~~~~Y=·~J~~;:25:·~1:H:3~--~--------------------------------_!~~~~~~2:~-~--------~------------_2n.~~~~!:~~~ -"j'}IJN}ID~ ~
DICK'TRACY
Television

Monday, July 25, 1983

Ohio

,_

.. _. · EVERY GREAT MAN INEVITABLY RESENTS A PARTNER· .• "
. !;.~

twtrMR. ~, ' INGREATNESS.-MARCUSWCANUS
....... '~···. ~ .. :. . ...~.... ·~· ·~-····-..··1• .. • .• ':' - ~.
. . . ..
•,.
• --· ,., .: ~ .... r· • .. '

~~oo,

�Page

Patrol probes three mishaps

LOcal briefs:
Thunderstorms hit Gallia County
Thunderstorms that swept through neighboring Gallla County
, Saturday helped break a prolonged Ileal wave, but left its usual trail
of downed trees, power outages and property damage.
"It wasn't as serious as other counties," said Andrew Lemley, line
foreman at Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.'s GaUipolls
office. "We worked the crews to death, but that's part of the ball
gaJne. ''
The area was alSo spared a tornado that touched down in southern
·Lawrence County and briefly threatened Huntington, W.Va.
Saturday night.
Gallipolls City Pollee reported the storm was responsible lor
damage to a car. Mark StU!, 15 Vine St.; told pol!ce that a tree had
blown over onto his vehicle. H
u
a . damage occured to the car's
hood, windshield and roof.
.
The Gallla County Sheriff'
partment reported the storm
destroyed a building at 7: 30 p.m. Saturday on Ohio 588 after a tree
.
limb fell onto the bulldlng.
Some trees fell on the 100 block of First Avenue in Gallipolis.
causing it to be blocked to traffic wl!lle city crews and residents
cleaned up broken tree limbs and debris.
Lemley said there were no major outages throughout C &amp; SOE 's
coverage area in the county, but fallen trees and ilghtnlng caused
power Interruption to scattered numbers of the utUity's customers.
"No major circuits went out," Lemley said. "We just got lucky this
time."
· The east Galllpolls weather observation station reported that
despite all the storm activity Satunlay, only .87 of an inch of rain fell
in the area over the weekend.
Hot air that gripped the tri-state Saturday afternoon led to tornado
and severe thunderstorm watches. A tornado In Pike Cqunty, Ky.,
was reported moving toward Scioto County around 4 p.m., according
to the National Weather Service.
The tornado did not strike, but numerous Ohio Power Co.
customers north of Portsmouth were without power after a
thunderstorm swept through later In the day.
No lnjurles were reported when a tornado touched down north of
Chesapeake along Ohio 243 around 8 p.m., downing trees and power
llnes. A tornado watch was Issued for the·lluntlngton area shortly
afterward, but was cancelled after NWS reported the tornado
moving toward Lincoln County, W.Va.

OH KAN Coin Club to meet
The OH KAN Coin Club will conduct Its 250th regular meeting
tonight at the Riverboat Room, Diamond Savings and Loan,
Pomeroy. A social hour will precede the 8 p.m. meeting, with
out-of·tcwn dealers present lor trading and sales. A large coin auction,
special refreshments and $150 In awards to members are included in
activities. Per!llns Interested In coins or paper money are Invited by
president Ed Burkett to attend.

Police probe B &amp; E
The Pomeroy Pollee Department reports the office of Dr. E. S.
V!llenueva was broken into sometime early Sunday morning.
Entry was m@!:le by breaking out glass of a back door. A neighbor
reported the disturbance. and the suspects were apparently
frightened away, according to the pollee.
Nothing was taken or disturbed In the office, and investigation by
the Pomeroy department Is continuing.

Meigs gridders report Thursday
Meigs High School boys Interested In playing football thls!allare.to
be at the high school by 10:00 a.m. Thursday for helmet fitting.
Physical examinations for boys and girls who wUl be playing fall
sports (golf, volleyball, and football) will' be given at 12: 30 p.m.
Thursday.

Squads answer seven calls
Seven ca!ls were answered by local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
Sunday calls Included: Middleport, 12: 28 p.m. to 75 Elm St. for
Jennifer Vining, taken to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy, 2:09p.m.,
to Royal Oak Park for Lois Provine, taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospllal; Tuppers Plains, 5: 41 p.m. to Owl Hollow Road lor Eunice
Notter, taken to St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg; Pomeroy, 6:35
p.m. to Route 7 for Wllliam Grueser, to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport, 8:12 p.in. to 173 Hudson St. lor Martha Slater, taken to
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
Satunlay calls were Syracuse, 12:32 p.m . for Allee Loomis, Rustic
HUis, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and Middleport at 5:19
p.m. to 244 Sycamore St. for Charles Fink, treated on the scene.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial H08PIIal
Saturday Admissions ~ Victoria
Thomas, Pomeroy; Freda Bucha·
Long Bottom; Allee Loomis,
Syracuse; Charles Lewis, Jr.,
Pomeroy; Lisa Blake, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - Esther

nan.

(Continued !rom

Institutions and into least-restrictive Jobnson said.
In the past, she said the departcommunity
environments.
The GaUia·Melgs State Highway
351n GaWa County.
ment
was criticized for moving
The
new
program,
which
will
be
Patrol reported three accidents
Clark was travellng eastbound on
·
retarded
persons Into county pro.
fundedj!yfedera!TitleXXandstate
occured In Gallla County over the
35 and struck a the lnlck traveling
grams
without
financial support
general
revenue
monies,
will
allow
weekend.
westbound that crossed the CE!Iter
!rom
the
state.
financial
support
to
"follow"
state
An accident Involving Gene
line, sirlktng Clark's car In the rear.
About 100 GDC clients were
Warner, 61, Pt. Pleasant, and Eddie
Clark's car had light damage and clients to the community level,
moved
Into the community between
Pullins, Nitro W.Va., oecuredatl: 22
the truck continued on 35 without
July
1982
and July1983as part of the
p.m . Sunday on S.R. 100.
stopping.
.
.
long-range
delnstltutlonallzatlon
Warner's vehicle backed west·
The patrol reported two accidents
and
most
were moved teo early
plan
bound frOm a private drive Into a
occured in Meigs County over the .
to
he
eligible
for the new funds.
Continued !rom Page 1
vehicle owned by Pullins, which was weekend.
The
ODMR
Is not planning to
parked southlxmnd on 100. Pullins'
A tw~ar accident Involving KaU Haven, Cllester, Duncan'sGrocery,
reduce
the
GDC
population fUrther,
vehicle had light damage.
L. Knapp, 19, LangsvDie, and Jack Darwin; Nita Jean Ritchie, Tuppers
The. patrol repartee! an accident R . Miller, 20, Middleport, occured at Plains; llelen Baer, Syracuse, and officials say.
Involving Freddie Phillips, 48, 3:02a.m. Sunday on S.R. 71n Meigs Dorsel Larkins, Long Bottom.
Crown City, and Michael D'Amato, County.
The $6 tlc_kets' are · non25, Crown City, occured Sunday at
Knapp's vehicle was travellng transferrable, .
1: 40 p.m . on County Road 12 in nortbound on 7 and attempted to
Gallia County.
pass Miller's vehicle, which was Finn .invests more than
Phllllp' s vehicle was travellng.._ also travellng northbound. While
$~80,000 in bonds
southbound on 218 when it struclf a attempting to pass, Knapp lost
car owned by D' Amato that was control on t11e wet roadway and
The Allstate Insuratice Group has
turning northbound onto 218 from struck Miller's vehicle.
· lnv€1!ted more than $:00,00lln bonds
County Road 12.
· Knapp's vehicle had moderate In Meigs County, according to
Phllllp's car had moderate dam· damage and Mlller's car had J!ght
George L. Bender, the company's
age and D'Amato's car had heavy d8mage. . Knapp was cited lor regional vice-president for Ohio. ·
damage. D' Amato was charged for !allure to control.
Meigs County Investments are
!allure to yield.
Martha A. BaUey, 40, ReedsvUle,
part of more than $18o1,300,00l in
was drlvlng ·a vehicle that struck a
bonds held by Allstate in 44 counties
A two-vehicle accident involving deer as her car was travellng
In Ohio.
By JAMES GERSI'ENZANG
Dean Clark, 42, KlrkersvUJe, Ol!lo, eastbound at 10:50 p.m. on County
"Local Allstate Investments have
A-wie'ed l're88 Writer
and an unidentifiable pickup truck, Road 43 in Meigs County. Bailey's
helped lflake possible educational
WASHINGTON (AP) - l'relloccured Sunday at 7: 40p.m. on S.R. car had llght damage.
fac!llty expansion and Improvedenl Reapn met today with fonner
ments," said Bender.

.

Secretary

I

I

Area deaths .

Rhoda E. Yeager

Rhoda E. Yeager, 89, Mason, died
Friday In Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born June 2, 1894, In Letart,
daughter of the late Charles S. and
Ida M. Blessing Marr, she was a
postal clerkfor20years In the Mason
post office. She was also a member
of the Oak Grove United Metllodlst
Church and the Senior Citizens
Nutrltion Program.
She was alSo preceded In death by
her husband, Dallas R. Yeager, in
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
James (Ida) Diehl of Pomeroy; a
son, Charles D. of Mason; four
grandchlldren, Mrs. Charlene Rutherford of Lawrenceburg, Ind.,
Mrs. Sally Ross of Mason, Jo Ellen
Diehl of South Charleston, W.Va.,
and Charles "Marty" Yeager of
Mason; five great-grandchlldren,
four great step-grandchildren and .
two nephews.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday In Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, with Rev. Bennie
Stevens officiating. Burial will be in
Graham 'Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 3p.m.
tcd8y.
In lleu of flowers, the farnlly
requests contributions to be made to
either the Oak Grove or Mason
United Methods! churches.

Heber J. James
Heber Joseph James, 66, Hartford, died Saturday in the Holzer
Medical Center.
Born Dec. 10, 1916, in Hartfonl,
son of the late Heber C. and Verna
Bell Weaver James, lle was a coal
miner, veteran and member of
Smith·Capehart Post 1~? of the
American Legion in New Haven. ·
He was preceded In death by a son,
HeberJosephJr.; abrother,George
Barr James; a sister, Mary Ellen
Turnbull and a brother and sister
who died In Infancy.

Voi .32 ,No.72
Copyrighled 1983

several
nieces,of Middleport;
nephewi and
brother, Clifford
cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday In .Rawllngs·
Coats-Blower Funeral Home, with
Rev. Mark McClung ·officiating.
Burial will be In Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
callatthefuneralhomefrom24and
7·9 p.m. Tuesday.

Quality

·-

Boster.

REG. 1219.95

TWIN SIZE
FULL SIZE
$~,00 U.PC.
EA.

lOgoo

REG. 1509.95

QUEEN SIZE
00 SET

$254

Reagan, Celeste gain popularity
FREE
DELIVERY

l~::::::::::::~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~J

CINCINNATI- Ohioans Increasingly support President Reagan
and Gov. Richard Celeste, but Reagan's popularity is growfngfaster
than the governor's, a survey sbows.
The July Ohio Poll by the University of Cincinnati Institute for
Polley Research showed that 55 percent of Ohioans favor Reagan's
performance In office - an increase from 47 percent who favored
him in April.
~new survey showed that for the first time In more than a year,
more than 50 percent of Ohioans favor the Republican president.
Celeste's popularity increased from 32 percent in April to 36
percent in July, but not as rapidly as the president's. More Ohioans
- 42 percent - stlll disapprove ol the Democ,ratlc governor's
perfonnance in office.
The economy and unemployment influenced opinions of both the
president and the governor, according to an analysis of the survey by
the Institute for Polley Research.

Plan stepped-up ground drills

.,

Large capapcily washe! has 2 speeds, 3

water levels, 3 cycles and selfo(INninclint
filter. Large capacity dryer features
automatic Fabric

._ster.

ClapsaMie, Columbia Gll8 of Ohio; Jame~ C. Gahrls,
Ohio Power Co.; back, I to r, David Koblenl2,
Manning Roush, Rklw'd Jones, Meigs Coumy
Commissioners who ~ the !leSSion; Sen.
Oak)ey CoDins; Sheryl Dickey, repn'• '"I've of the
Ohio Department of Developmmt, and Rep. Jolynn

When our euatomen cCMDe in
to .the Farmen Bank, they kaow
they can depend on ua to proo
f•lonlly handle Ill ot their bank·
in1needa. . ·.
The Fumers Bank hu been
aeninc people or Pomeroy and

9

$ 599 p~white'

Mei-'
we

IN

WASHINGTON - As President Reagan ·moves warships into
position off both coasts of Central Arilerica, administration officials
pian stepped·up ground exercises in Hondur'!s using up to 4,00l U.S.
troops.
In a nationally televised news conference tonight at 8 p.m. EDT,
Reagan Is expected to focus on the military aciivlty, which
spokesman David R. Gergen says has been treated wit~ "an awful
lot of hype. "

County Iince 11104. And
the only community owned

bank in town.
And that

State forecast

.

IIi••·our cuatomen

Clear tonight with patches of dense fog In the low areas. Low 60-65.
Winds light and variable. Mostly sunny Wednesday. High 8:&gt;-90.

eYen more confidence to ·bank
with ua. For. 111.1 of your bllnldnc
needt comf to the FUiiiers Bank.

Jean smith, Ruth Daugherty.

Granted licenses

Extended forecast
•

. 63711

E&gt;:lended Ohlcl'Forecast- Thuw;day through Saturday: Fair artd
quite warm. Highs &amp;'i-95. Lows 65-"72.

For 8 a.m. EDT · Rain~
27

•

•••

/

23601

Sn~wf'::·.;]

'

1~.''1

To end maJTiages

..•,

'.•
•

•

•

•

•

~

·~

••

AND
SAL£$ TAX IIDT INCLUDED

'·

Farmers
Bank

.

·Isears I

Southern girls to
meet Wednesday

Authorized Catalog Merchants
Grea &amp; Patty Gibbs

108 W. MAIN ST.. POMEROY, OHIO

All girls of the Southern Local
sChool District, grades nine through
12, Interested In playing volleyball .
this fall forSoulhernHighSchoolare
to meet In the highschool cafeteria 7
p.m. WednesdaY·

PHoftE:

(OIIiol 992·2178
(W. Vi.) 773-9577

I'

~~

••••'

.,•
~

•
"••
•

IIOU~

lon.·Tues.·Wed.·fri. 9:30 to 5

llus. 9:30 to 12

Sit 9:30 to 2

The Community ·Owned Bank ·

1

•

.,

·

Shelly
REG. 1169.95

'•

Ohio Power Co.
James M. Jennings, of James M.
Economic development in Meigs Jennings Associates, Columbus,
County must be a grass roots. consultant for the county and the
operation with total support ·of county's planning commission on a
number of studies and projects,
residents.
This was the gist of comments by served as moderator for the
fourecc110mlc development special- meeting.
In his comments, Ashton said that
Ists from four utUit!es who adfor
years there has been much talk
dressed well over 50 county leaders
locally
but "little fishing.' ' He said
attending a dinner meeting at the
few
people
outside know about
LaSalle Restaurant in Middleport
and "It is up to you to
Meigs
County
Monday night.
market
what
you
have."
Meigs '' County commissioners
Ashton
said
that
selling a comsponsored the session, designed to
munity
to
Industry
Is a highly .
outline assets of the county, and how
residents can begin formulating competitive business which can't be
action to-,sell those assets to done individually.
." It 'takes total commlttment of
indus!Iy.
Speakers Included George T. everyone," he remarked.
He said that communities such as
Ashton, director of development of
Buckeye Power Inc.; Jerry Calla- Pomeroy and Middleport must get
han, Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio together to sell the area. He urged
Electrlc Co. representative; PaulR. leaders to call uponallorganlzatlons
Clapsaddle, economic development in the county to take a role and to get
cpnsultant for Columbia Gas of rid of "power cliques" which, he
Ohio; and Jarrle!i C. Gabrls, said, do only what benefits them. He
economic development manager of suggested that residents organize

By IIOB HOEFLICH
S e•~•N!I Staff Writer

IMPORTANT ROLES - 'llulie ·lndlvlduals played
lmportan&amp; roiEii In Monday nlgbl's meeting on
economic development In Meigs County held at the
LaSaDe Restaurant In Middleport. Ac1'06S the front, I
to r, are speakers for the evening who Included
George T. Ashton, Buckeye Power, Inc.; Jerry
Callahan, Colwnbus aild Southern Ohio Electric Co.; ·
James M. Jennings, Jennings AssociatEs Co.; Paul R.

*Serta

2 Sections , 14 Page•
'20 C.i'th
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Developntent project
must be grass roots
operation specialists

*Extra Finn

Emmett Randall (Barney) Manley, Jr., 59, Akron, died this morning
at the residence of his mother,
Bertha Frasier Manley, 8311 S.
Second Ave., Middleport.
Bam Oct. 19, 1923, atClleshire, he
was also p~ In death by his
father;"Sriwe!t Manley Sr.
·
A veteran ot the U.S. Army In
World War II, he was employed by
Consolidated Freight Ways at West
Richfield. Ohio.
AlsO survMng are a daughter,
Rand! Sue Popp of Akron; two sons,
Todd and Tim, both of Monroe Falls,
Ohio; three grandchildren; four
sisters, Mrs. Midge Abbott aixl Mrs.
Nonnan (AncUI) VanMatre, both of
Middleport, Mrs. Herman (Audrey)
Gaffney of Massllon, and Mrs. JaCk
(Corrine) Ambrose of Pomeroy; a

ertttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 26, 1983

SAVE ON SERTA BEDDING

Emmett Manley Jr.

•

at

of SUie Henry A.

Support
*Quilted
Cover

.A good judge•••Page 2
Ravenswood man· drowns•..Page 10
Race
Eas P
4

•

e

Diane E. Rice, Reedsville, reS&amp;!rviv!ng are a daughter, Sondra CE!Itly graduated !rom Radford
University, Radford, Va., during
Suzanne Berkshire of Columbus;
five sisters, Freda Vlrglnla Turley . spring quarter commencement
and Mrs. Eunice Blanche Hickle, ceremonies. Ms. Rice, daughter of
both of Hartford, Evelyn Mae Stowe Harley E. Rice of 51488 Rice Run
of Syracuse, Mrs. Ruth Mae Lewis Road,recelvedabachelorofsclence
of Letart, and 'Mrs. Ester Marie degree in .home economics
Roach of Mason; three brothers, education.
Paul Lesly of Crooksville, Donald . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Richard of Cll!tcn, W.Va., and
Elmer Leroy of Mason.
Funeral services wiD be held at
10: 30 a.m. Wednesday In Foglesong
Funeral Home with Rev. Dave
Flelds Jr. officiating. Burlal will be
in Graham Cemetery. Friends may
call at the fUneral home from 6-9
p.m. Tuesday.

Bailey, Sellm BJazewtcz, Barbara

Two coupleS have flied for
marriage dls!lllutions recently In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court:
Diana Lynn McDaniel, 909Brow·
nell Ave.. Mlddleport, and Roger
Keith McDaniel, Route 1, GaWpoUs;
and Jeff Allen Morris, Pomeroy,
and Cynthia Lynn Morris, Racine.

By the Bend .. .. ....... Pages :Hi
Editorial ... :..... ........... Page 2
Deaths .. ...... .. .. ..... .. ... Page 10
Cla881fteds ....... .. ... Pages 6-7-8
Comlcs·TV .. .......... ..... Page 9

Kissinger about his new conunJI..
slon on Central America 1111 altle8
debale the wllldom of boootlq the
number of U.S. mllllary advloers.,
E1 Salvador.
Reagan !!IIII1D-..d Klsomger,
who Is cluWman of the IJ.member
blparllsao ptlllel, to the Oval otllce
foraooteDed dlomlllnnaboulpl.for the COI1IIJIIsYm, a White llouae
oflldal said.

Rice graduates

CUT S160 . Kenmore® laundry pair

Stanley.

Two couples have been granted
marriage licenses In the Meigs
County Probate Court. They are
Paul Allen Miller, 21, Rutland, and
Kenda Sue• Mohler, 18, Rutland;
Robert Lee Haning, 40, Pomeroy,
and Faye Odom, 45, Cheshire.

Today's
Sentinel

confer

saara

Sunday Admissions - JimmY
Graham, Hartfonl; Margaret Ellis,
PomeroY; Leota Cooper, Syracuse;
Theodore Fisher, Pomeroy; John
E. Lyons ill, Racine.
Sunday Discharges - Lawrence

Grand
champion bull...
Page6

Local...

Reagan,

1961.

I

Monday, July 25, 1983' ''

Pomero)• Middleport, Ohio

I 0-The Daily Sentinel

NaltOn.al

Wcatht~r

St•,vtt:P

NOAA. U S 01 · )! ol
l'f()Rj•S:

Ct~mlut'l, • ·

Cold ....

W&lt;lllll-

WEATHER FORECAST - The Nadonal Weuber Service
,_,....., wann weadler for Wal ---ay for DIOCit of the 1101•hern
of the ClOWIIry .... Into the Great ....... Cooler ....... Ia
•peeed for the Nottlieillil. 1100w. . 111'8 far wf In the !!nulL rt (AP
I nerplloeo)

_ ...__VI

fir~

and Include people of ability within
the ·group and to set up a time frame
during which some action should
take place.
Callahan also sjressed fierce
competition involved in selling an
area io Industry and the necessity
for grass root organization. He said
there are many assets here, many
times missed by local residents who
don't observe them because they
are used to them. He pointed out that
the county does have 14 Industrial
sites some of which have real
potential.
"Some communities should be
allowed ,to die," Callahan said but
urged Meigs countians to forge
ahead to keep their communities
active.
Clapsaddle also stated that the
county does have assets and he
stressed that the Ohio River is oneof
the most Important.
He pointed out that communities ,
of the county are losing their young
graduates and this fact alone should
(Continued on page 10)

gets bid for street 'projects

By JAYNE HOEFUCH
receive a 25 percent discount .
Senllael Staff Wrker
A bid from the Shelly Co.,
A bid for street resurfaclns: Thornville, for approximately l,OOJ
material was accepted and arrange- tons of asphalt was accepted.
ments for paying television cable Asphalt Is to be used in resurfacing
service bills locally have been made village streets, including Fairlane
by Middleport Village Council.
Drive, South Second Street from
Acconling to plans made during Mill Street to General Hartinger
council's Monday night !fleeting, Parkway, and MUI Street to the
residents wUI . be able to pay their · corporation llmit. The company will
monthy cable television service bills do resurlacing at a cost to thevillage
beginning Monday at Dutton Drug of $31.14 per ton.
Store, 122N. Second A\&gt;e.
Mayor Fred Hoffman suggested
Payment to Cablentertalnrnent Shelly he contracted for 832 tons of
has ·previously been made exclu· asphaltneededtoresurlaceGeneral
s!vely by mail, and the new service Hartinger Parkway, thus completIs expected to accomodate many Ing the revamping of au main
who wish to pay locally.
streets In town with a one-Inch layer
A second reading was given to the of new asphalt.
rate hike request made by Cablen·
terta!nment, the Point Pleasant·
In spite of a letter of support from
based firm wl!lch handles cable· Rep. Jolynn Boster, 0-Galllpolls, a
village request for a $25,00) grant
television in this area.
The request Is for a 21 percent from the Ohio Department of
Increase in monthly payments, Natural Resources was turned
from $7 to $8.50; an increase In down. The money would have been
Installation costs, and an increase used for tree and shrubbery
for a second television set on the landscaping lh both town and park
service. Senior citizens would stDI areas.

A public hearing on applications
for the jobs bill was held In
conjunction with the council meet ing. Hoffman asked councilmen to
come up with Innovative ideas for
grant applications under a program
which has funding totalllng $11
mlllion to $12 million statewide.
Monies for both public service and
economic development projects are
available, but grants are awarded
on a competitive basis.
Hoffman suggested a sidewalk
Improvement program, with work
to be done by union masons and
apprentices; and a building program in a new subdivision, with
village-financed materials to be
used In the building of homes by
union labor and apprentices hired
under the program.
Councllman Dewey Horton proposed that the vWage apply for a
grant for development ofthemarlna
area as recreation space.

·

Another public hearing on projecls to be proposed for program
grants will be held at council's next
meeting.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers answered a council request
for topographical maps of the
marina location, to be used in design
of the proposed retreat!on area
there.
Horton encouraged development
of this land Into park-type space. An
idea exchange meeting with the
recreation commltt€e will be arranged for the near future.
Plans were made to check into
repair and possible replacement of
the steps and flooring of the porch
leading to council chambers at
village hall. Filling of particularly
bad potholes and roadsides with
large limestone or bricks was
planned where running water has
eroded reinforcements.
Councll passed a motion to check
with Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electrtc Co. and arrange for light to
he provided in the poor-vlslbll!ty
area at thelntersect!onof~vervlew
Drive and Park Street A discussion
was held on cutting weeds on several
vacant lots andvWage properties.

Portland facilities will be ready by fall
The park district's ultimate goal
By CHARlENE HOEI:'l.ICH
of
the park district, Quickel exSentinel Staff Writer
plained,
lstodevelopthecountylnto
New boat launching facUltieS and
a complete recreational area.
a park area on the Ohio River at
He introduced Janie Coleman,
Portland, Meigs County's first
will serve as county park
who
phase of a county-wide recreational
director,
and noted thatBrlan Conde
development program. Is expected
has
been
added totheboard.Quickel
to be ready for use this fall.
displayed
a brochure on recrea·
That was the report of BUI
tlonal
facUlties
in another county
Quickel, president of the Meigs
suggested
that sometl!lng
and
County Park District, at Monday's
sim!llar
be
prepou:e&lt;J
for Meigs
meeting of the Meigs County
County
as
a
promotional
tool
todraw
RegiOnal Planning Commission.
in
tourists.
·
Quickel reported the decision togo
James Jennings, county consulto Portland for the first project was
tant,
also spoke at the meeting on
made on the basis of strong support
recreational
development and
there, the lack of nearby launching
fac!IIUes and the avallabllltyofland. .listed, along with the Portland.slte,
He noted that the land Is owned by fUrther development at Forest
AcresParkandtheSclploTownsh!p
the state and said he's been assured
·recreational
center.
that It can be turned over to the
He
also
reported
on the Southeastcounty for development.
em
Ol!lo
Highway
Users
Committee
Once that phase has been com·
brochure
which
Is
scheduled
to be
pletetl - Quickel said he thought It
released
at
Thursday's
meeting
In
would be wltllln the next couple of
Jackson.
He
said
It
shows
high
weeks - the Qo&amp;t ramp along with
some primitive camp sites will get priority routes, one of which Is the
road to the Ravenswood Bridge and
under constnx:tlon .
another,
Uptl'adlngoftheAppalach·
He admitted that funding for the
ian
Highway.
project Is llrnlted, but noted that
A brief Ylslt !rom AI Dietzel,
labor and some materials have been
volunteered Future. development, director of ~ Ohio Department of
depending on what funding can be Eccnomlc Development, was ansecured, will Include additional ~ for3p.m, Aug.ll.
County Enitneer PhU Roberts
campaltes, a playground, some
noted
that he had talked to Rep.
COIICU!Iie walkways, faMscapJq tO
Jolynn
Bosler earlier in the day
aid In heat ·reductlon on the open
about
.the
meeting and she will
area and two shelter houses.

accompany

him here for the was discussed with Jennings, who
Location of the reporled thatasoftcdayflveofthe 17
meeting and the agenda will be · dumps have been cleaned up. He
decided later this week.
said the board plans to submit an
Jennings proposed that the application f!;)r .a larger grant so that
agenda be llrnlted to three or four the work can be continued another
major Items, such as the connector year.
road to Ravenswood to · spur
In response to questions about
Industrial growth and provide keeping dump sites clean once work
market access to the area, Scipio has been completed, .Jennings
Industrial Park developme~t and reported that signs wUI be erected
ways of establishing an effective advising of a $500 fine; that the
link between Meigs County and the sheriff's department, health depart.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Re- ment and game wanlen wUJ patrol
gional Development District with the sites; and that educational
the Ohio Department of programs through the news media
Development.
and In the schools will be carried out.
He also proposed that Dietzel be
Lee McComas advised that the
handed a written program on Initial
economic development proposals audit for the period, April 1, 1981
for the county. A tneetingtoprepare · through Jan. 31. 19&amp;3, has been
the agency was set for 'Thursday at 2 completed and there IVere "no
citations."
p.m.
Grarirappllcatlons for the MiddleSam Crawford, area extension
port
Park Improvement Program ,
agent, spoke to the commission on
$12,100,
for lighting and resurfacing
community development, emphas·
at
the
park,
and the Middleport
lzlng the need for the community to
water
line
renovation
and extension
work with establlshed industries.
to
the
industrial
project,
expected to
Most jobs, he said, come from
create45
new
jobs.
In
the
amount of
existing industries. He had a sllde
presenatlon which suggested regu- $137,00l, was endorsed by the
lar visits to industries by commun- cornmlSslon.
Susan Isaac, director of planning
ity leaders enthused about economic prospects, Industry for BH·HVRDD, talked briefly on
the area-wide act ion program and
appreciation programs, managesolicited the support of members In
ment &amp;emlnars and assistance in
keeping her advised of industrial
efforts to avoid work stoppages.
The.county Jitter control project
(Continued on page 101
l~· hour visit.

(

.

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