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                  <text>Today'e
Sentinel

Pe~V~uts; .. Page

13

Area deaths ............. .. Page 14
By lhe Bend ......... P a ges 6-7-8
Cla8sllleds ........ Pages 1&amp;-11-12
Comics-TV ........ ........ Page 13

FBI's war on King..•Page 2
Reds . 5-0...Page 3

· Editorial · ........ .. .......... Page 2
Sports ........ ............ Pages 3-4

•

at y

e
VoU2,No.73
Copyri1 htod 1983

••

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport,. Ohio, Wednesday, July 27, 1983

Con1ntission to niake
decision on projects
at spe~ial
meet
Aug.
3
.

Umlt4
Sale Price

3Se

By CHARLENE HOEFUCII
Sentinel Stall Wrller

i
I

Limit 4
. S~le Price

BADGE FOR THE CIUEF- .,...;.!dent IWnald
Reagan with FBI Director William Weboer looklllg
on, shows an FBI badge presented to 111m by the

gge

director Tuesday as he visited the headquarters of the
li'BIIn Washington. Reagan spoke and praised ·work
of the agelicy on Its 75th annlverary. (See story on
page 9) (AP I.aserphoto)

,.~,Gallia-Meigs

Parents will notice ·'very litUe change'' in the Head
Start program from when CM operated It, N!ehm
said. ·
"When we submitted our application for Head Start
we held to the. same kind of format," he said.
Woodland Centers wW receive a $n!,COO grant lor
this school year, virtually the same amount the CM
received, according to Nlehm.
A firm date for the start of school this year has not
been set, he said, whUe the center waits to hear ":hen

Area briefs:
Five hired by Eastem board
The Eastern Local School District Board of Education employed
Dve indMduais for teaching and supervisory positions and awarded
contracts ior lunchroom.products at a special meeting held Tuesday
evening.
Hired were Frances Thomas as a science teacher; Crystal Woltz, as
an EMR instructor; Don Eichinger, assistant football coach; Lynette
Van Reeth, highschool choir director; andJamesHuff, supervisor for
libraries, spedal education, and federal projects.
The board accepted two bids for cafeteria services, one from
Stewart Baking for bakery products, and the other from Valley Bell
formllk and dairy f~. ·
The resignation of Mrs. Lisa Watts, junior· high school EMR
teacher, was accepted.
Another special meeting was scheduled by the board for Monday at
7:00p.m. Personnel matters will be the topic at hand, as the Eastern
Local board Is In the process of hiring a new high school principal.
Negotiations with the Eastern Local Teachers Association and
non-certiDed employees of the Ohio Association of Publlc School
Employees (OAPSE) areinprogressaiso.
Attending the meeting Tuesday were Bill Buckley. board
president; vice president, Jimmy Caldwell; and members Roger
Gaul and Bernard Shrtvers.

84e

Kmart IS A PROUD SPONSOR OF BOTH THE
• WINTER AND SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES ON ABC TV.
"Staf in Motion'' · 1Q80 LA Olympic Com mi tte e ~~: 19111-'BC Inc.

The Saving Place '"

the commissioners' decision on the
projects to be funded wm be held
Wednesday. The list will then be
submitted for state approval.
During a hearing at tlie meeting,
the commissioners gave approval to
the appllcat1on of Abundant Life
Coal Co. to conduct mining operations within 100 feet and no closer
than 50 feet to the existing landflll
road .

No one appeared to protest
approval of the application. Commissioners specified that any
ditches dug at the site must tie in
with existing ditches.
The Aug. 11 vis It of AI Dietzel,
director of the Ohio Department of
Economic Development, was dis·
cussed with final plans to be made as
to where the me&lt;:ting wlll be held
and what wlll be on the agenda to be
made at a 2 p.m. session on
Thursday.
Arrangements were made for
representatives of Shelly &amp; Sands
Contractors, PhD Roberts, county
engineer, Rick Crow, prosecuting
attorney, and James Page, county
Continued on Page 14

Head · Start now under Woodland funding

Students In the Gallla-Meigs Head Start program
will begin school in September as usual, according to
the director of Woodland Centers, the new funding
agency for the program.
Director Bernard Niehm said the center was
recently chosen by the U.S Administration of
Children, Youth and Families to operate Head Start
beginning Aug 1. The center lakes the place of the
('.yo-county Community Action Agency.
Head Start provides educational, medical and other
services for disadvantaged pre-school youth.

Limit 2

Applications for $87,600 in community development block com·
. munlty grant monies allocated to
Meigs County were submitted and
reviewed at Tuesday's meeting of
the Meigs County commissioners.
A decision on the projects to be
funded wW be made at a special
meeting of the oommlss!oners next
Wednesday, Aug. 3. Thedeadllnefor
filing for fundswas'IUesday at noon.
After Frank Davis of Buckeye
' Hills reviewed tbe 15 projects
submitted for consideration, he
advised the commissioners that two
were not ·ellglble Items - the
Chester Township trustees' application for a cinder spreader. cost set at
$2,650, and the Meigs Ubrary
Board's application for $1036.80 for
insulating the celllng of the Pome- ·
roy library,
The other applications to be
considered are as follows:
-Salisbury Township trustees,
$5,545.06, to blacktop Naylors Run
Road, and $9,036.27, to blacktop
Bailey Run Road.

-Tuppers Plains (Orange Township) Fire Department, $13,944, for
construction of a new bay to the fire
department buDding, and $9,COO for
remodeling the fire department
buDding.
,
-Syracuse Vlllage, $32,250 for
replacing a fire truck pumper.
-ChesterTownshlptrustees,$'150 ·
for painting the townhall.
-Chester Fire Department,
$4,775 for installing sidewalks and a
driVeway at the fire station.
-Bashan Fire Department,
$1.126.60, for a siren, and $1,600 for a
septic system at the fire station.
-Qllve Township trustees, $5,COO
tor sUp repair on Township Rd. 261
(Bigley Ridge), and $3,COO for a slip
repair on Township Rd. 313 (BrawleyHill Road) .
-Racine Vlllage,$5,00148, waterline extension and hydrants.
· -Meigs County, $25,COO, replacIng the roof on the Meigs County
Infirmary buDding, Mulberry
Heights.
It was pointed out that ellglbillty
for funding of projects must Include
low-Income criteria. A hearing on

Ohio forecast
Clear tonight. Low In the mid-60s. Winds southerly less than 10
mph. Mostly sunny, warm and humid Thursday. High near 90.

It wW begin to receive operating money.
The center's board of directors wUI name a policy .
councU to oversee the Head Start program. N!ehm
said some members wW likely be named from the
council which worked under the CM.
Head Start Director Christopher Zimmer wW
probably also remain In his position, according to
Nlebm.
'
It was a controversy concerning Zimmer that
prompted the CAA to cut its ties with Head Start in

FCC approves increase in phone bills,
says plan will make it .'easier to swallow'
By NORMAN BlACK
AMoclated ~Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Communications Commlsslon today approved a regulatory
plan It says wW make higher phone
bills easier to swallow. Under the
action, residential phone customers
will see local bills rise an Initial $2 a
month and businesses, $6 a month,
onJan. 1.
In approving the nat-rate
charges, the FCC tossed out a plan It
had adopted last December that
would have set mlnlmwn fees for
teleprone users to be able to place
long-distance calls and substituted
the flat-rate charges.
The new fees Wu1 be Included on

telephone bOis regardless of
whether a customer places any
interstate calls over American
Teleprone &amp; Telegraph's longdistance network or over a competIng service and wW be In addition to
regular local service charges.
The flat-rate "access fees" approved today are designed to shift
more of the expense of operating a
local telephone company to that
company's customers and end the
subsklles that have been prOvided
from . AT&amp;T's long-distance
revmues.
The new fees wW take effect at the
same time AT&amp;T Is broken up Into
seven Independent, r4!glonal
companies.

they are."

...

Tile NM!onal Wealber Service
of the aalioD fer
~. 111Mi11111 are f01'8e118 lor the N~ from the Great
l'I!ID to the upper Great r..luslllld lor the Mdem Gulf Uld Florida.
( AP I
pba1o Map)

W&amp;\TIIER FORECAST -

farecMIII ele8r lllllal and wann wealber for moet

The FCC plan, approved on a 4 toO
vote, wm raise residential access
charges to $3a month In 1985and $4
monthly In 1986. Business rates wW
stay at$6untU 1987. Charges for the
last half of the six-year transition
wUI be sei later.

.

''We are winning," O'Neill said. "It's very close, but It looks
favorable tor us."
O'Neill said sending Navy ships to the area and plans for sen~
troops to eng~ in maneuvers In Honduras has stiffened House
resistance to the aid, which the admlnlstrallin argues Is needed to
halt the flow of arms to leftist guerriJJa.s In El Salvador.
But whatever tbe outcome In the Democrat-ccntrolled House,
' wb5e a vote Is expected TbUl'!lday, OW' •e•ts of tbe aid program
concedetbeRepubllcan-dcmlnatedSenatewouklbeunJikelytocalla
halt IX) ft.
.
1
The ~tlon was dlspstc~ Secretary of State George

competition in the long-distance
business. That competition, In turn,
Is expected to drlve down long·
distance rates.

Taken as a whole, the agency said
long-dlslance rates might not fall as
rapidly under Its new plan as
As part oflts plan to gradually end oliglnaUy had · been hoped, but
the long-distance subsidies, the consumers would gain the benefit of
commission is also requiring AT&amp;T • paying a small, set fee that should
to earmark more of those revenues not prove too burdensome.
for local mmpanles during the
transition.
Under the FCC's original plan,
consumers would have started
The commission has declded such paying a minlmwn $2 monthly fee
subsidies - now estimated to total and businesses, a minimum $4
more than $10.7 bWion In 1984 every month, for access to the AT&amp;T
should be ellrn1nated to spur interstate network.

Cutting ~ff support mistake
WASHINGTON (AP) - House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr.
says administration critics are winning their tight for a House vote
against aid to Nicaraguan rebels, but President Reagan says cutting
off support would be' "a very grave mistake."
''Those who are atttempt!ng to make It Impossible for us to bring
aid down In that area, I think are the ones who are buDding up - If
they have their way - to a giant headache down the road a ways,"
Reagan said In a televised news conference Tuesday night.
"I think It would he a very grave mistake If tbe legislature
!nteltered with what we're trylni to do," tbe president said.
O'Neill said Tuesday that unless the House deroonstrates Its
opposition to undercover aid In Nicaragua by "a strong vote,"
Reagan and his administration "are just going to continue the way

I....., Warm-

February.
The CM board of directors wanted to fire Ziirirner
after he was convicted of public Indecency in
Lancaster Municipal Court November 1982. However, the Head Start policy council would not dismiss
hlnn.
•
Tlie CM dissolved Its association with Head Start
at the end of the ·1982-83 school year.
Woodland Centers was chosen from among several
agencies which applied to operate the Head Start
Program.

Reag~

Shultz and National Securlty Adviser William Clark to brlefseruitors
on Central America today.
Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., told the House, " We are at the
same point today In Central America as we were abnost 20years ago
with the Gull of Tonkin resolution," which opened the way to deeper
U.S. involvement in VIetnam.
Urging a vote for the aid cutoff. Markey posed the question this
way: "Do we slip Into another VIetnam , or do we begin to stop
another VIetnam from occun1ng?"
Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., disagreed. "If they equate Central
America with Vietnam, then they should look at the whole picture. If
we don't do something to interdict the supply lines and stop the
sanctuary we have been allowing the teiTOrlsts in Nicaragua, then
surely the war will expand."
Reagan, at a news conference. said the U.S. rnllltary role in the
region Is not a step toward a Vletnam-Uke war.
But he added that If the leftist government of Nicaragua were to
attack Honduras, "We would have to deal with that problem when It

arose.''
Admlnlstration critiCS said Reagan intensified their concet#i about
his CEntral Amerlcflll policies, particularly his planned military
training-exercises In Honduras and the Caribbean sea.
O'Neill saki more than 100 amendments have been offered to the
measure, which would end the aid this year and substitute $80
mWJon In assistance to friendly Central American governments to

,...toft

halt gun-running.

�.J

Page-·2-The Daily Sentinel '
Pomeroy Middlepart, Ohio
W.dnesday, July 27, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mets beat. Braves .again, 2-1

a

William F. Buckley Jr.

Grim news
•

_The Daily Sentinel

The report of the Center for the
Study of Social Polley in Washing·
ton deserves the , attention of
precisely those least likely to give It
that attention, namely black lead·
ers and white llberalsc What It tells
us Is that natlonal welfare pollcle~
have falied to help the average
American black. No, that's not quite
right. They have done damage to
the average American black.
And that report merely confirms
, that a few people have intuited,
documented In part, and spoken
about, often In whispers over a
period of years. New York Sen.,
Daniel Patrick Moynihan quietly
abandon~ his backing of a guaran·
teed annual wage after studying the
effects of some experiments with
welfare on that scale on family llle

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO Tilt: INTEREST OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA '

~
~v

,.__,._"'T",,........,d.o=,

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Puhllshcr/ Controllcr

General

Mana~er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New" Editor
A MEmsER of The A.s.&lt;!OOiatcd PreAA, Inland Dally Press AssociaOon and lhe
American ~ewspaper Publl&lt;;hers 1\."-'IOCiatlon.
LE'ri'ERS OF OPINJON a.re welcomed. 'lbey Nhould be less than 300 wurdiii long.
AU lette~ are subject to edltlnK and mi.N be siKned with name, IUidreH! H.nd tek!phone
number. Nu unsigned letters wtU be publlshed. Letters should be La good taste, addreM·

sing issues,

mt

pf!t"SSna.lltleq,

in two American communities. 1982, bear In mind - the median
Professor Thomas Sowell of the income for black families was: 56
Hoover Institution has been saying percent. How Is that tor progress?
it. And, most consistently and most From 55 percent to 56 percent 20
methodically, George Gilder has years later.
been saying it.
But look about, as the commls·
The welfare system has been slon did, for correlations, anq
driving apart black fam\lles . Con- quickly you find the relevant one. It
sider the following figures:
has to do With wbether the black
In 1900, median income for black famUy has two parents living at .
families was 55 percent of median home or just one.
In 1900, 21 percent of black
income for white famUies. A huge
disparity. Now If you have a huge famUies with children had only a
calculator, sit down and try to count single parent living at horne.
In 1981, that figure had risen to an
all the programs designed to close
that gap - everything from Head extraordinary 47 percent. SomeStart to anti-discrimination pro- thing during !bose 21 years caused
grams to affirmative action to the black father to leave his famtJy.
Abandoned children . suffer other
increased welfare payments. ·
Twenty-one years go by. In•1981 than economic punishments, but
- and this Is before the recession of . consider, for the moment, just
.,

A handy man
:to
have around
.
::. Henry A. Kissinger can be a handy man to have around, whether you're
O:for him or against him. President Reagan has been both.
::- He now describes the former secretary of state as a distinguished
, 'diplomat, "virtually a legend" in his field. He once described hlm as the
:: next thing to' a disaster for American foreign policy. That's politlcs. One
· season's denunciations can be the next season's praise.
:: After Reagan named Kissinger to head his bipartisan commission on
:: Central America policy, the president was asked why he chose a man he
' once said he would have ousted from the Cabinet.
:: That was in 1976. Gerald R. Ford was president, Kissinger ran State, and
.: Reagan ran - unsuccessfully - lor the Republican nomination.
, Kissinger was his constant target in that campaign; It sometimes
.: sounded as though he were running against Kissinger instead of Foret
: He said Kissinger policies were incoherent and contradictory, to the
: point that rival world powers couldn't take his word seriously.
• "Henry Kissinger's recent stewardship of u.s. foreign policy has
''coincided precisely with the loss of U.S. military supremacy,'' Reagan said
in one 1976 campaign speech. "Under Messrs. Kissinger and Ford this
nation has become No. 2 in military power in a world where It Is dangerous
- If not fatal - to be second best."
In a speech that was a major, upward turning point for his Republican
challenge, Reagan suggested that was not an accident; he said Kissinger
was quoted as saying ''My job as secretary of state Is to negotiate the most
acceptable second-best position available."
Kissinger called that an Irresponsible Invention. The State Department
Issued a 10-page rebuttal to the Reagan speech.
The feud continued, and was bull! into the Republican platform in a
Reagan plank that was a barely-disguised sjap at Kissinger. By that time,
Ford had the nomination in reach, and his managers decided to accept the
Reagan language rather than risk a fight on a side Issue.
Latin America did not rank high on the agenda while Kissinger was at
State, although negotiations.on the Panama Canal treaties were conducted
during his tenure. The treaties were completed whUe Jimmy Carter was
president.
·
The canal was one of Reagan's major foreign policy complaints during
the 1976 campaign, and long afterward. He said the deal was a giveaway.
But It was made, and ratified, befall' he won the Republican nomination
and the White House in 1981.
·
Klssinger's name didn't come up often in that campaign, although the
more ardently conservative of Reagan's supporters got assurances that he
wouldn't be part of a new Republican administration.
All that happened within the framework of elective politics. Reagan is
trying to galn support for a policy now, not a candidacy. The goal of the
Central America commission, as with the panels Reagan name&lt;) to deal
with Social Security and the MX missile, Is to build as broad a consensus as
possible behind the policy of the administration.
In that context, past differences can be an asset to a practical diplomat
and a practical politician.

~~PRW.i\

Responds to Memorial Day feature
as this. And, what of the widow and
children of Jimmy G. Stewart? Was
any thought or consideration given
to how they might feel after reading
this article• I ask Mr. Diles, how he
would feelll he were 17 or 19 years
old (the age of John and Robert,
Jimmy's two sons) thinking of his
father in terms of a hero, then
reading In a newspaper that he was
Illegitimate? I confess I do not
understand the value In that.
Up to this point I have only
written in terms of an extremely
Ill-advised article. However , this
article Is not only Ill-advised, It Is
erroneous. A speclftc case In point Is
the fact that the widow of Jimmy G.
Stewart has never had a daughter. I
could, If necessary, prove this point.
The only children of Jimmy and
Gertraud are Robert and John
Stewart.
Sincerely,
Michael B. Not!
Major
Actlve Army

j

Tlw.nks folks, for caring
The Meigs Couhty Welfare Department · ChUdren Services cur·
rently has two children In residence
at the Gallla County Children's
home.
Through the Meigs County Chlld·
ren' s Service budget, these children
receive quality care and services.
However, recently the agency
was approached by Gallla County
staff regarding the possibility of a
private donation towards the cost af
a trip to Cedar Point and Sea World
scheduled lor June 20 for four days,

for a portion of the cost for the two
Meigs County children. ·
The Meigs County Children Servl·
c~ would like to extend their
thanks to the XI Gamma Mu
Sorority of Meigs County for
donating the needed money and
most Important for . their caring.
Our lllds really will benefit and
enjoy a summer vacation trip, and
all of us are most appreclatlve.
Meigs County
ChUdren ServiCes
Cynthia Mills, Supv.

Today in history
TodaY Is Wednesday, July27, the2Q!thdayof1983. Therearel57daysleft ·
In the year.

--

-- - - -----------

-~-

-

~-----

FBI's war on King _ __;____;____,. _ __,. . .__Ja_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n.

WASHINGTON - .Civll rtghts
leaders are pliumtng to commemorate Dr. Marlin Luther Klng Jr.'s
epoclial 196.'! march on Washington
with another march mt the nation's
capital Aug. '!7 .
Underserving of emulatlon'- but
not easy to forget - was the FBI's
march on the march on Washing·
ton. The late J. Edgar Hoover's
agents dogged the footsteps of King
and his associates, bugged 'tllE&gt;m
and tapped their telephones,
squandering millions of the taxpayers' dollars on this disgraceful
surveillance operation.
.
Now, 20 years later, tens of
thousands of ducuments - perhaps
hundreds of thousands- relating to
the King famUy and other clvU
rights leaders, as well as to the
historic march Itself, are still
locked tight in FBI's files. unavalla·

Letters to the edit9r
Dear Mr. Editor,
I am writing in reference to the
Memorial Day Fea lure in your
May 29, 1831ssue. There Is no doubt
that 'SSG Jimmy G. Stewart was a
bona fide war hero. To many of us,
his family, comrades and friends he
was an Is much more.
On 29 May 1!1!3, SSG Jimmy G.
Stewart's memory was spat upon,
his wlle viciously and wrongfully
attacked and his sons injured. All
this accomplished with an object
much more powerful than the
bullets that killed SSG Stewart ... a
pen! The pen of a man whose
professionalism and maturity
should surely be questloned -Mr.
Dave Diles. The presentation and
timing by Mr. Diles was effective
however dlsingenous. Large pic·
tures of a war hero, combined wtlh
the emotions of a bitter mother
could sell a lot of papers. 'But what
of Mr. Diles sense of responslbUity?
I, as a soldier o.n active duty and a
Vietnam veteran, was astounded
and disgusted to see an article such

The uiures for 1900, comparing
black ~nd white inco!T)e wbere two
parents reside with the children,
are not avallable, but those fQr 1968
are.. And in that year, blackfatnilies
wtth two parents living at home
earned 73 percent as much as white.
fa mUles. By, 1981, that figure )lail
risen slgnlftcantly, to 84 percent. So
that as of this writing, tlie Income of
black families whell' two parents
are at home is almost comparable
to that of white famUes with two
parents. The huge diSCrepancy
occurs because approximately one·
half the black- families have bne
parent only living at borne. The
comparable figure for .white faml·
lies Is: 86 percent have two parents.
So that It Is by averaging the
Incomes of two-parent black !ami·
lies with the incomes of one-parent
black famUles that the total aver·
age is brought down.
"Poverty," George Gilder wrote
In 1978, "Is a state of mind, not of
income. The key ways of overcom·
lng this state of mind are marriage
and work, which are precisely the
actlvltles that welfare virtually
prohibits." And in his widely
Ignored work, "Sexual Suicide,"
Gilder wrote: "Upward mobility
usually comes from regular work
Integrated in ·male psychology. By
preventing this state of mind and
creating an easy-money psycho!·
ogy, welfare actually means ·that
young poor males are likely to
remln poor au their lives." In 1900,
74 percent of black men over 16 had
jobs. In 1981, that figure had
dropped by 19 points to 55 ll"rcent.

.

~---

ble to researchers, historians and
the public.
The existence of the · FBI's
voluminous flies on King was
discovered by Harold Welsburg of
Frederick, Md., an indefatigable
researchet' on American pollllcal
assassinatlons. He obtained a 40olpage partial inventory nl docu·
ments that are stofellln 59 FBI field
offices across the country. A single
entry in the inventory could refer to
one page or a thousand pages of
hidden rna terlal.
The Inventory for the New York
City field afflce Is Instructive. It
gives an indication of the stagger·
lng amount af material on King that
sits under lock and key in FBI Illes.
The inventory takes up 15 pages
of Index, and mentions "100 volumes" of unreleased "documents.
The general estimate of a "vo-

lume" Is 200 pages, though it could
run anywhere from six pages to
several hundred pages.
· The New York listing has 2,610
entries ana single King aide. The
material includes formal and Informal FBI memos, logs aDd rt!pOrts
of physical surveillance, teletypes,
informants' reports, old newspaper
clippings and copies af documents
In the flies of otber !leld offices.
Much of e FBI material Is
classllled and Is still withheld
because of "national security."
This as a favoritf' Nixon-era device
used to hide information that might
embarrass the federal govern·
ment, often when there wasn't the
faintest connection to the national's
security.
Other data Is being wlththeld by
the FBI, even In th face of litigation,
on grounds that It was supplied by

'

conlldenttallnlormants whose Identities must be protected. But after
20 years, the Informants wbo are
stUI alive could be protected easily
by simply deleting their names or
other ldentlfylng hints.
Oddly enough, there's a wbole
raft of King material that would be
freely available at FBI field offices
- but only If someone knew
specifically what to ask for. And
thousands of documents are al·
ready open to Inspection in the FBI
·
reading room.
In fairness to the FBI, employees
spent hours trying to sort out the
facts on the unreleased material for
my associate Les Whitten. But they
admitted that they have no Idea even to the nearest hundred
thousand - how many documents
remain hidden on the most lnfiuentlcal black leader of our tlme.

Organizing PYAFfTS _ __.:_____L_aw_ell_W_inf!-=-e_Jt
A letter from Harvey M. Snyder,
president of Weight · Watchers,
gently chides me for inslnuatlng
that members of his organlzatlon
are suckers. I had no .intention of
being critical of Weight Watchers
but was defending suckers as being
the backbone of the Anlerlcan
economical system. I am sure he
agrees.
For the last several years I have
been closely associated with WW as
a WW husband, a WW father, a WW
uncle and a WW in-law. I have eaten
many strange meals and · even
stranger desserts. I hav.e spent
hours waiting in the car outside
whUe the weekly paying and
weighing ceremony took place. I
have rejoiCed when a pound was
lost and grieved when It was
regained. I have eaten WW oleo, Ice
cream, biscuits, TV dinners, cheese
and any other Item with the WW
blessing the cook at our house
happened to run across at the
grocery. In short, for sever! years
and several hundred dollars I have
been exceedingly loyal to Weight
Watchers. I have done everything
but attend their meetings but they
don't allow us skinny, dour nus·
bands to attend.
I hope Mr. Snyder does think me
so foolhardy as to brand my own
wtfe as a sucker because she spent
several years attending WW ses·
slons. Neither am I brave enough to
tell you what she weighed when she
enrolled and what sbe weighs now. I
will confide to you that she lost 40
pounds during the years she
attended the class at a cost of about
$20 per pound. When she hurl her
knee and could no longer attend, It
took her only a few short ~eeks to
regain all she had lost
a ilttle
more. U we had a sucker at ou6o
house lt was T! I was stronaly in
favor of her enroUment but did not
know she as sllJlll099ll to Jnak• a
Uletlme commitment. In IllY lpor·
ance I thought that once a healthful
plateau was reached It would
somehow be magically maintained.
Not
gentle reader, not so!
My experience with WW and the,

magical pUis, powders and potions
my wife has trledovertheyears has
convinced me that there are no easy
and cheap answers. Only thai there
are' hundreds of Barnums waiting
to convince the yearner for that
slim, svelte figure that they alone
have the answer. They would have
you believe their partlcular pana·
cea stands to make them a healthy
profit Is only a happy concldence
but they are only doing It for you!
Our genes determine whetber we
are to be plump and pleasant or
lean and mean. Plumpness Is
especially appalling to the ladles.
For some reason they want to look
!Ike Twiggy or Brook Shields and
will spend fortunes and undergo
untold misery trying.
In a column "In Defense of
Suckers" I questloned that Weight
Watchers and Cambridge Dieters
could be successful without the
suckers picking up the tab. In
defense of that statement I argue
that each appeals toone of our basic
emottoris, vanity, .at considerable
profit to themselves. I am not too
familiar with the Cambridge Diet
but unde!'Stand It Is a powder from

which a drink Is mixed to take the
place of meals. As an old dieter
watcher, I can assure ou that the
powder scam has been around for a
long time before It was called by Its
present name and hawked to the
American people .•We still have a
can around some place left over
when Mary's sto~ach finally rebelled. It's for sale, cheap'
u you must go on a diet, choose
Weight Watchers. It at least Is no
fly-by-night gimmick like some of
the pills and potlons being advertised these days. My only crltlclsm
of this sales methods Is the fact they
don't level with their prospective
clients. They don't tell them that If
they want to stay trim and kinny
they have to commit themselves o
the WW regime for llle. They will be
told what and how much to eat, how
It Is to be preapred and to come to
class every week to be weighed.
That weighing ceremony Is lmpor·
tant. It arouses the old competltlve
spirit in addltlon to bringing cash
into the WW tlll. You can be sure
you're not going to be poisoned
because you do ~Cl!RW· You
can also be sure you will not be
looking forward to a dinner with

antlclpatlon, either!
As an alternative I have been
considering starting a dieting class
of my own. It wUl consist of your
regular meals and simple exercise.
The Idea Is so novel that It should
bring in scads of money. It will be
called PYAFITS and will sprpail
over the country like the. dew. It
won't take you long to master the
simple exercise which yoo wt11 bone
up on each week when we hold our
weekly weighing and collecting
ceremony. Because you will be ·
· buying no special fOOds you will
scarcely miss the two or three
dollars a .week weighing fee. I had
thought we woold lie able to skip the
$10 erfroUment but then w• would
have to buy our own scales. Our
classes wUl be open toeveryonewith
the price of admission. They will be
open to the fat and skinny, male and ,
female, bald and bearded. A word of
caution. U you are Interested in
organizing a class make sure your
denlllres are glued in before you say
4
'PYAFrfS.''
It means, "PUSH YOURSELF
AWAY FROM THE TABLE,
SUCKER."

(,)\\

and

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- - -- - -- ·---- ---+----·--~-

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By DAVE GOWBERG
AP Sporis Writer
Mookie Wllson, the New York
Mets' center fielder, was certainly
thecenterofattentlon.Inmoreways
than one.
Rarely a l01:g '&gt;all threat, Wilson
hit a lOth·lru:'ng game-winning
homer Tuesday il4 nt .as the Mets
beat the Braves 2·1.
He was also hit by a pitch in the
fifth inning by Braves' starter Rick
Camp, leading to a brawl an inning
later when Mets' pitcher Mike
Torrez hit Camp In the hlp with a
pltchandCampchargedthemound.
Both benches emptied, but calm
was restored without injury and
both pitchers stayed in the game.
It was thesecondstralghtwtnbya,
team with the worst record in the
NatlonalLeagueovertheteamwith
the best. And it marked the first time
since June 23 that New York had
wontwoinarow.
Elsewhere, the Pittsburgh PI·
ratesheldontoflrstplaceintheEast
by beating San Diego 10-5 in the

•

these.

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

CO-CHAMPS-The New Haven Dodgers were C~ampo of the 1983 mg Rend Youth Association Pee Wee
League. The Pee Wee League coDIJisted of If teams and the Dodgers finished their season with a 12-1 record, tied
with Pomeroy Sears. Shown above are, first row left to right, Wesley Bwngarner, IJale Marr, Troy Oldaker,
Tommy Knapp, Chris Oliver and Jimmy GGodnlte; seeood row, Terry GOkey, Heath Hesson, Dale Gerlach,
Shawn Turley, Mlke -Frl~nd, Troy Sigman, Chris Divers, Chris Thomao and Thomas; third row, CoaehesJ&gt;aul
Hesson, Gene Thomas and Tom Knapp.

Gullickson blanks ·Reds, 5-0
.

.

By JOE KAY
and In the eighth, perhaps Gullick·
AP Sports Wrller
son's most importailt moment.
CINCINNATI (AP) - With the
The Expos led just 1·0 going into
Montreal Expos in the middle of a
the bottom of the eighth, courtesy of
late-July pennant race, BUI Gullick·
Tim Wallach's 12th homer of the
son figures It's time to do his best
season in the second Inning off loser
pitching.
Charlie Puleo. Pinch-hitter Duane
The right ·hander put in his best
Walker doubled intotherlght-center
performance of the season Tuesday
field gap with one 1lut, bringing
night, blanking the Cincinnati Redls
Johnny Bench to pinch-hit.
on three hits for a 5-0 victory and his
Gullickson struck Bench out on a
first shutout since 1981.
fa.Stball, then got Milner to bounce
Gullickson's second straight
hack to the mqund to end the Reds'
· complete-game victory left him
final threat.
hoping he's found his form in time to
"That got us over the hump,"
help the Expos in the National
Gullickson said.
League East race.
The Expos made sure of the .
. "It's never too late to put your victory In the ninth, scoring four
game together, I guess," said
tlmes with the help of three Reds
Gullickson, 9-10. "That was deft. errors.
nitely my best game of the season. I
Warren Cromartie started the ·
just made the pitches tonight when I Montreal ninth with a walk from
had to."
reliever Ben Hayes, and Wallach
.. Gu llicksqn pitched out of three doublect him home. Doug Flynn
jams - in the first, when the Reds singled Wallach to third, ending
put runners on second and third with . Hayes' evening and bringing on
one out; In the third, when Eddie rellever Tom Hume. A pair o!
MUner reached secondwlthoneout;
fielding errors by third baseman

Nick Esasky and Humefoilowed, as
the Expos went ahead 3-0. F irst
baseman Dan Driessen then made a .
wild throw to home plate, letting in
two more runs.
"After we scored that second run,
maybe they had a little letdown
because It was such a close game,"
Wallach said.
The game was close until that
point because of Puleo's stingy
pitching,
While Gullickson was shutting
Cincinnati out, Puleo, 4-6, scattered
just four hits over the first seven
innings. One of those hits was
Wallach's homer.
"1bat was the only bad pitch he
threw me all night," Wallach said.
''He had good command of his
pitches, and he was around the plate
all night."
Puleo left after walking a pair of
batters with two out in theelghth. He
struck out six and gave up four hitS
and three walks .
"I think that was the best game
I've pitched in the big leagues, l
really do," Puleo said.

second
a taken
doubleheader
after thegame
Padresofhad
the first
6-1.
The Los AngeleS Dodgers topped
the Chicago Cubs, 5-2 as Fernando
Valenzuela won his lOth game.
St. Louis beat San Franclsco6-5 on
Tommy Herr's two-out ninth inning
single.
Monireal moved ·to within a
hall-game of Pittsburgh as Sill
Gullickson shut out Cinclnnat15'0.
And Joe. Morgan's fourth-Inning
home run off Nolan Ryan gave
PhUadelphia a l.Q win over Houston
on Charlie Hudson and Al Holland's
combined six-hitter. Ryan struck
out six to move back ahead of Steve
Carlton in the all-time strikeout

said "whether It was intentional or
not, I respect Mike. I tlp my cap to

hlm."
·

Dodgers 5, Cubs 2
Ken Landreaux got four hits,
Including a hoine run, and drove in
three runs.
But Landreaux was upset because he was called out for
Interference on what might have
been his fifth hit - a topped ball
down the first-base line.
"I'm happy with four hlts•.but the
fifth one would have helped," he
said.
Valenzuela's win was only his
second in more than a month. He
scattered eight hits, struck out nine
and walked three.
Padres&amp;-~. Plrales 1-10
RuppertJones,whodro:oetnthree
runs in each game for san DiegO,
belted a three-run, second-Inning
-homerunthatputSanDiegoonthe
way to Its first game win . Mark
Thurmond, 4-1, was lhewinnerwith
helpfromLuisDeLeon.
But the Pirates exploded in the

· Clark tennis
_lourney dates
··announced
. The second annual Oark's Je. welry Store 1983. Open Tennis
Tournament will be held Thursday,
Aug. 4throughSunday,Aug.
. Syracuse,
Ohio.
· 7at
·' Events held wUI include singles,
·which will cost each participant $6
plus a can of tennis halls. Doubles
· will be $12 per team plus one can of
halls. The winners take the unused
' can and the losers take the used can
' of balls.
· The deadline for the event Is
Tuesday, Aug. 2 at 5 p.m. Make
checks payable to the Syracuse
Park Fund, John Bentley, Box 198,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
Participants are to report to the
Syracuse courst one-half hour
before the start of their first match.
Starting tlmeswtll beavallableafter
5 p.m . Wednesday, Aug. 3 by calling
992-7511 or 992-2365.
Players will be limited to a 10
mlnutewann-upbeforeeachmatch
. and a 12. point tie-breaker wU be
played at 6 all. All decisions of the
tournament directors, Rick Crow
and John Bentley, will be final.

and on Tuesday ihey signed No.3 on
thelrdepthchart, thlrcl-yearproJim
Jensen.
Joe Robbie, the Dolphins' owner,
said Strock and the team had
reached an Impasse In their
negotiations.
Strock has said he Is talking with
the Oklahoma Outlaws, a United
States Football League expansion
team.
The Los Angeles Raiders added a
seventh quarterback to their roster
Tuesday with the signing of David
Hwnm, who began his speckled pro
career with them as a filth-round
draft cbolceout of Nebraska 1111975.
Hwnm, who signed a ·one-year
contract, willbeattemptingtolanda
thlrcl·strtng role behind Jim Plun·
kelt and Marc Wllson.
The Raiders said last week's
cornerback trade, lnwhlchtheysent
Monte Jackson to the Los Angeles
Rams for Pat Tho.m as. fell through
when Thomas falied the Raiders'
h 1 al bee
f
knee

condition.
In Phlladelphla, Harold Carmi·
chael carne to terms with the
Eagles. The 6-foot-8 wide receiver
signed a pair of one-year contracts.
- Meanwhlle, in Chicago, Ted
Albrecht, a guard and tackle for the
Bears, called It quits for good. The
Bears' No.1 draft choice out of the
University of California in 1m and
one of their Iron men on the llne
announced his retlrerr. 'nt. Hli
missed last season because of a back
injury.
,
Among the players rearninlng out
o! training camp were Gary "Big
Hands" Johnson, a defensive tackle,
one-tlme AU-Pro and four-time Pro
Bowl player for the San Diego
Chargers, and Lawrence Taylor, a
linebacker and Defensive Player of
the Year in each of his first two pro
seasons with the New York Giants.
Each 4s seeking a renegotiated
contract. Each Is beingflned$1,000a
day, the maximum allowable,
during his absence.

r~p~y;s~c~~;:a:u:se:::o~:a~:;~~:;~~:;~::~::~;;~~

PRESTO
PRESSURE COOKERS
AND CANNERs
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113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
•
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992-2342

MICHAEL H. CH NCEY, M. D.
Wishes To Announce the Opening of His
Practice For

PEDIATRICS
Specializing in Childhood and
Adolescent Medicine

PlNNELL STREET, RIPLEY, WV

race.

In the ruckus in New York, It ~s
unclear whether Torrez was a_ctu\
ally throwing at Camp. But Wllson

EHective August 14, 7983
BY APPOINTMENT

TELEPHONE 372-9362

$

UP

BY MAIL

TO

on Paanpers,.
Here's how:
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MAIL:

RECEIVE:

Enough Pampers to coiled

The required cerllficate below along with
ybur 12 Pampers

Your choice of a

12 Pampers Teddy Bear

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s1.00 Refund or

f®l!~

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·Strock "backed into a corner'
ByBRUCEWWITr
AP Sports Wrller
For years, Don Strock has been a
·backup quarterback in Miami. Now
the Dolphins may have him backed
Into a corner.
The Dolphins have been unable to
reach agreement on a contract with
·s trock, a 10-year pro who has been
employed most of thepastfewyears.
by Coach Don Shula as a reliever for
• the younger David Woodley.
• Strock has occasionally ex·
·'pressed his displeasure with that
role. Now they have a new potential
· 'No. 2, rookie Dan Marino of Pitt -

ahead of Montreal In the tightlybunched East. Mike Easler, Mar·
veil Wynne and BUI Madlock all
homered and Johnny Ray had two
doubles and a triple.
Phlllles I, Aslros 0
JOe Morgan, breaking a month·
long slump with a home run, didn't
know what lctnd of pitch he hit. But
Ryan, who lost hiS third straight and
fell to9-4, sure knew .
"It was a hanging curve bail. I've
had problems with mycurvethelast
two or three outings and tonight It
cost me the ball game," he said.

from the Pampers Display at your
favorite store.' .Mall It along with
your 12 Pampers Teddy Bear proof·
of-purchase points and the required
certificate below.

__!~!!.L9!1.L _
Pampen
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• RECEIVE: Your choice of

a $2.00 Refund
or
$4.00 in Pampers coupons
(eight SOC coupons good toward your next eight purchases of 1 Convenience PackNalue Style or 4 ~ny
ot her size).

•If "Refund Doubler"
is unavailable you can get one by writing to:

Refund Doubler
P.O. Boll( 4 , Cincinnati, OH 45299
Doubler Requests must be postmarked by 9/1R!83.

PAMPERS DOUBLE REFUND OFFER CERTIFICATE

Please scna to·

I have purc hased enough Pampers to collec\12 Pampers Tedd~ Be ar
proof-of-purchase points. Enclosed are my 12 Pampers ledttr Bear

' · _ _ _ _ _ __
NAME _ _ _ _ _....J)_

proof·ol-purchaSE points.
I wish to receive the following by mail lcheck one) :

0

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0

$2.00 in Pampers coupo'ns
{lour 51): coupons good toward my
next four purchases of 1 Convenience
Pack/Value Style or 4 any oth er size) .

I have also enclosed the ·Refund Doubler ". I wish to receive·

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0
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$4.00 in Pampers coupons
(eight 5(); coupons goOd toward my
next eioht purchaSiS of 1 ConV9nience

PackNalue Style or 4 any other stze) .

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offer rr()tlts may nat M asSioned or transferred . &lt;4 lrmtt one ret~uut Ptr name or
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PAMPERS RHUNO OFFER CERTIFICATE (CASH REOEMPli ON VALUE 1120'ol tc1

�Page

Pomeroy-Middle~ri. OHio

4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 27, 1983

Wednesday, July 27, 1983

Indians stop Royals, 2-0; Yanks win, 5-0 ~'ClASSIFim ADS sure to get resu11s~
.

. By BRUCE LOWfiT
AP Sports Writer
The Kansas City Rnyals were

'

game."

With two out in the fifth, Steve
Renko gave up consecutive singles
running all around the bases. But so by Mike Fjsch!ln, Mike Hargrove
was Cleveland catcher Ron Hassey and Harrah for the only run
- tagging then) out.
Sorensen needed, then singles by
With nobody out in the bottom of Harrah, Bake McBride and Andre
the fifth inning and Cleveland Thornton loaded the bases In the
clinging to a 1-0 lead Tuesday night, eighth, leading to P at Tabler's
Onix Concepcion and Pat Sheridan· . sacrifice.
singled, putting Royals at the
Yankees 5, Rangers 0
corners. ThenJohnWathandr!lleda
The Yanks waved "Bye, Bye,
shot to third.
Balboni'' again- but for a change It
Toby Harrah snared· it' and fired wasn't Steve Balboni they were
home to Hassey. Concepcion, half- waving at. It was his first majorway down the line, headed back to league grand slam.
third, but the Cleveland catcher
Balboni, who has shuttled becaught and tagged him - then
tween the Yanks and their Columwheeled and headed for second
bus farm club for the past three
base.
seasons, gave Manager Billy MarThere he found Sheridan ~ and tin something to think about. Martin
Wathan, who had gone to second
will have to make a decision when
without realizing Sheridan had
Ken Griffey comes off the disabled
list.
.
stopped there. Hassey tagged
Wathen for the double play that
Said Balboni: "I'll remember this
killed the threat and helped Lary one.;, So will Ray Fontenot, who
Sorensen and the Indians hold on for pitched a six-hitter for his first
a 2-0 victory.
big-league shutout.
· Elsewhere in the American
Rny Smalley singled, Dave Win- .
League, New York blanked Texas field doubled and Lou Pln!ella was
5-0, MinnesotaedgedMllwaukee&amp;-5, Intentionally walked by Frank
Baltimore shaded California 54, Tanana to load the bases before
Detroit shelled Seattle &amp;-3 and, in a Balboni unloaded hJs third homer of
pair of twi-night doubleheaders, the year. The Yanks have won 11 of
Boston split with Oakland, losing 9-2 their last 12 games.
and winning 5-3, while Toronto split
Twlns 6, Brewers 5
with Chicago, winning 6-4 and losing
Minnesota, fresh from an eight4-3.
game losing streak, won its fifth Ina
"If I gb hack to the bag he tags row, and handed the Brewers their
me," Conception reasoned, "so I · sixth loss In eight visits to the
just try to get inarundownandmake Metrodome as John Castli)o broke a
only one out whlle the other guy tie with a two-out, ninth-Inning
(Sheridan) goes to third. But that's single.
·
not the way it worked out. They
"We don't seem to play very well
played it right and they won the here," said ,Milwaukee Manager

Harvey Kuenn. "I wish I knew why
or I would remedy it."
Orioles 5, Angels 4
DenniS Martinez of Baltimore,
taking over for Paul Mirabella at the
start of the fourth inning, pitched six
Innings of three-hit relief and rode

the fifthMurray's
to victorytwcrrun
ov.e r thehomer
Angels.In
Eddie
Murray's homer, on a pitch from
Geoff Zahn, followed a single by Cal
Ripken Jr. AngelBobbyGrich had~
twcrrun stngle in the third.

rt===========:;T-::==========The Dairy Sentinel
(USPS U5-9flt)
A Division of Multimedia, Inc.

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AUanta !McMurtry U.S) at N~ Yock
tTem"ll 24), (n)
san FranClsc&lt;:l tl.askey u -$ 1 at S!.
Louis tMartln 3-11. 1n1

Cl!Jcago (Hoyt U-101 at Toronto li..('al
10.81 , (0)

Los Arlg\'lt'S IWt'ICh 8-91 at Chicago

&amp;&gt;aute tMoore 1·31 at Detroit tWDmx
~11.

Los Angeles

5~

W....s..Ys Games

Wedlalfid$,V'II Gamcfl

iWUllams

::n

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PhUadelphla I, Houstvn 0
51. Louis 6, San Franc!sro !I

Ba!Umore 5, California 4

Milwaukee (Porter :.!·5\ at

New York

Mln~a

.

IJcnklns 3-tll. lnl
Montreal !Bargar HI\ a t Clnclnna!l
I Pastore 4-!11, !nl
San Dlegc tSI'cJW lo.GI a! Piltsburgll
tiJl&gt;l«m 1..0), (n\

•

tn l

Cli.'Vcland (Barker 1·Inl at Kansas City
tF'm'y 3- lll . In!
NPW York (Krough l-51 at Teus
(Hoof&lt;h 8-81 , tn l
Bahllllllfl&gt; !Ramlre.( J.l l at CaUfornJa

PllUadeiphla C/Jmro- ~5) at Houston
(J.Niekro 8-7). (nl
~111GIU1lefi

Pittsburgh at New York, (n)

(Wilt 4-11 . ( n)

Boston !Brown &amp;!&gt;I at Ookland

St. Louis at Mcnn-eaJ, (n )
PhUadelphla at Houston, (nt

t l..a n ~~:·

ford0-4 1. lnl

Only ~~:ames

scheduled

Scott wants to go out on top .
MENTJ)R, Ohio (AP) -In his 13
years with the National Football
League, Cleveland Browns' free
safety Clarence Scott has never had
a serious Injury or any surgery.
His physical endurance doesn't
mean the defensive starter Is shy on
the field. He led the team In tackles
last season and has led the Browns In
Interceptions during eight seasons.
"I don't know how to explain it ,
other than just being lucky and
playing hard," Scott said. "That's
why I worked so hard during the
off-season this year.
"I want to gooutstart!ng. I want to ·
go out being on top as I always have.
Then, at the end of the season, I can
make my evaluation as to whether I
should continue. ''
At 34, Scott shows no signs of
yielding to a younger player, and
Coach Sam Rutigliano apparently Is
happy to stick with his savvy
veteran.
·
"f'or the young kids who come
Into this league, he's the perfect role
model, " Rutigliano said. "He's
clean. He's straight. He's just an
outs landing guy.

"It'shardformetomeasurewhat
he does for this team that we don't
even know about With young
players, he's always out there
poundlngtheposlt!vedrum."
&amp;ott started at cornerback in hJs
first eight seasons with the Browns
after being picked In the first round
of the NFL's 1971 draft. He was
switched to strong safety In 1979and
free safety last season.
''Sam said we should have made
themovemuchearller,andltendto
agree with him," &amp;ott said at the
team's tralningcampatLakeland
Community College.
"Freesafetygivesmethechance
to read and react," Scott said. "At
this stage of my career, I think I'm
much better atreading and reacting
to what the quarterback does than
having to chase some guy all over

th~~e~d~:OOstudyingtobealawyer

~!!'~~~:~~~";;;~::,t~ohn

ag~~ts~e:%ker~~hn~:n:::
running back Dave McLaugh!ln,
left the Cleveland Browns training
camp.

; "I

Roush wins C:~ey Eagle tournament
three way tie between Gary Roush,
Mike Marnhout, and Jason Ingels.
Next event at HVC~ wlll be the
annual Ladies Invitational today.
The course wUI be closed to open
play until 3 p.m.

MASON - Coming from behind
with an excellent closing nine holes,
Ty Roush of Mason , won the
chamlonsh!p In the second annual
Grey Eagle Amateur held this
weekend at Hidden Valley Country
Roush . fired a final day three·
Club.
under 69, going three under on the

~~:,~ ~!~·~:z~~~ ~a~~~~~~:~/~~

~~~~~:r~~~~w~~~:;o~:r::
:~:~ke~~~~t:~n~~~~er:r
tour-under par 68 to win medalist
ho;~~~th place finisher was Rusty
Krodel at two over for the two days,

r

July 28, 29, 30

No s ubscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service Is
avallal_?le.

13
26
52

13
26
52

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......_ _ _ __

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MAIL St,IBSCR IPTIONS
Inside Ohio
We&gt;elts .
. .................... $14 .04
Weeks . ........................... .. $27 .30
Weeks ................................ . $51.48
Outside Ohio
Weeks .............................. ... 515.21
Week s ...........
.. .... ....
$29.64
WC!'k s
....... .... ........... $56.21

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SORRY NO PASS[S ~ NO BMGAJN SHOWS

5th WEfK: 7'00! 9,30 P.M .
AT! SUN &gt;'ATINEES 1'00 &amp; 3·,30

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til

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SMITHFIELD

EAR , NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Office Hours by Appointment Only

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

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THE FOOD IS GREAT AND REASONABLE, TOO.
OPEN FOR DINNER EVERY EVENING FROM 5
TILL9 P.M. LOUNGE OPEN Till! AM. {CLOSED
su
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 30. 1983
1
SUPERIOR

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Parts..:.....;

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Butt Steak......... ;~·...
FRESH PORK

Phone 742-2100

12 OZ. PKG .

.-.·
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BOILED HAM
24 COUNT HEAD

..... n.. $1.79
1 LB. PARKAY

OLEO ............... 8~

LETTUCE ......... f~F.~. 69~

I

CABBAGE ........ : ~L 29'
GOLDEN DELICIOUS

APPLES ..... lA~m~/69'

Tomatoes ..........l~~

·

BUFFET SUPPERS ' 'EACH'' ''' $} ' 99
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T
v DINNERS
9]¢

KRAFT MIRACLE

.·.·--··.·.·.·.·----11

6 STICK LB.

4 PACK 5 OZ. HUNT'S SNACK

SPACK PUDDINGS ......... s1.19
POTATO CHIPS ............. s1.39

5 OZ. ARMOUR

VIENNA SAUSAGE ........... 59¢
~-

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eeeee e ee

Savory Bacon... ~~-.

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HOMEMADE

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WILSONS

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MIXED

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r~an~d:s:in:g~led~,~
Vied~th~a~d~t~w~o~s~ln~g~les~,~~::::::::::::::~~~~ . ...,·..,llll•........~----·····-·•·•· ~~~

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

I

~

RUTLAND

Logan Legion nips Meigs, 8-6
SYRACUSE - After a slow Trucco, a double and single;
beginning, visiting Logan termi- \Vhalen , a single; Farrah, a single;
nated a 12-lnnlng slugfest, &amp;-6; here Boal, a single; and Thompson, a
at Syracuse Municipal Park In single. · ·
AmeriCan Legion baseball action.
In the first round of the legion
The game ended regular season tournament, Lancaster defeated
play for Meigs as the team now Meigs 9-3. Beeglewentthedistance
enters the double elimination sec- against the mighty Lancaster crew
tiona! tournament.
issuing nine strikeouts and six free
Logan took an Initial1.0 lead, but passes. Cottrtll, Spires, and Horn
tumbled to a 3-1 setback In the fourth combined for 13 strikeouts and eight
frame. Meigs went up 5-2 in the walks for tlie winners.
sixth, but a rocky sixth frame plated
The Hatem brothers combined for
four runs for Logan, giving them a . four singles, Posey lined a single,
6-5 edge. In the eiglh round, Meigs Edwards .tripled; Mohler doubled,
· squeezed out a single run to tie the and Horn doubled for the winners.
game, forcing the game Into extra For Meigs, Eastman doubled and
innings.
singled, Riffle doubled and singled,
All was quiet until the top of the Welker doubled, and Gheen singled.
12th frame when Brian Morgan
launched a two-run home run over
the wall, plating the go ahead runs.
Both hurlers posted outstanding
PLAY
efforts, going all twelve Innings of
work. Hood was the winner with six
At The Mason
strikeouts and three walks. Danny
Thomas suffered the loss with seven
sttikeoutsandsixwalks.
Vol. Fire Dept.
Meigs hitters were Thomas with
Every Wednesday
threesingles,Swatzel,twosingles;
At 7:00P.M.
Riffle, a home run; and Beegle,
"4 NUMBER BONUS"
Welker, and Carpenter, each sin"5 LUCKY BALLS"
gles. For Logan, Morgan hom~red

Chuck Roast

"

ADOLPH'S
"At The End of the Pome1&lt;&gt;y-Mason ll&lt;idge "
POMEROY OH.
PH. 992-2556

•

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

,~

With Fries ...... 51.59

...
I'VE GOT IT- Oakland A's second baseman Tony Ph!lllps, right,
and A's short slop Donnie HID collide as Ph!lllps catches a ball hit by
Boston Red Sox deny Remy during the filth Inning Tuesday night In the
first game of a double header at the Oakland Coliseum. It was HID's
"""ond maJor league baseball game. The A's won~2 (AP Laserphoto)

Pli

~.ARK tWill

SPECIAL OF THE

~:d ~t~~~if!~~~~nstx:~~a~h~ . .__ _ _ _....,_ _ _ _...,.N,.E.,W._.•M•A-N•A•G-E•R·--•T•O•M-M_v_c•R•O•P•P•E•R-I

SATURDAY

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JULY 30,1983

Subscriber s not deslrln..: to pay thecarrler may remit In adVance direct to
The Dally Sen tinel on 3. 6 or l2 month
basts. Credit wUI be given ea rr1er each
month .
·

r;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

runner-up Chuck Marshall: Roush ·

limit Quantities.

Dall y ............. , .... .'.............. 20 Ce nts

·"' ,

Montl'l'!ll j, Ctnctnnatl 0
New York 2, Atlanta 1, 10 Innings

6, Mllwauka' 5

8-SJ, tnl

5J
61

AND

We Reserve The Right To

$1.14

l...tJ5 Angeles 5, ctdcago 2
San Dlego 6-5. P!ttsb.ugh 1·10

Clevt'land 2. Kansas City 0
Te.~ta s

47

45

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FISH ·TAIL

~AGIYDflt

OaklMd 9-3. Boston 2·5

N"""'· York 5,

46

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., -- -"'EST DIVIUOI"'l61

1\ie!lday'" Guue~~
Toronto 6-J, Cbll'as:o 44
Of1mlt 8, ~a llle 3
Mln~a

PhiladE'lphla
Chicago

298 SECOND ST.
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�The Daily· Sentinel

By The Bend

Wednesday, July 27, 1983
Page 6-

Family MediCine

Ringing in the ears a fairly common ailment
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Asst. Prof. of FamUy Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
Question: Sometimes I have an
annoying ringing In my ears. What
could
· Answer: RingIng In the ears Is
'known medically
as tinnitus, and it
'· is fairly common.
'"
Tinnitus does not
""" •t
point to any one
specific disease of the ear but Is a
symptom of a number of disturbances and needs to be explored. The

underlying ca1,1se of the ringing is
usually found In the ear, the brain or
the vascular system. However, in
perhaps as many as 50 percent of
tinnitus cases, a definite cause is
never found . Ringing may occur in
both ears, or in just one. Further, it
is less likely that people with
tinnitus in both ears have serious
underlying disease than those who
have the problem In just one ear.
Nearly all of us experi~nce
temporary tinnitus after we hear an
extremely loud noise. Advancing
age also frequently brings an
increase in tinnitus episodes. Occasional ringing In the ears that
occurs when a person is sitting ihn a

quiet room or lying in bed 'usually is
due to noise from the blood flowing
through the vessels around the ear
and noise from the normal action of
muscles that originate near the
inner ear.
Question: What are some other
causes of tinnitus or ringing in the
ear?
ru.swer: Tinnitus can be due to
such problems In the ear canal as
ear wax packed up against the
eardrum, holes In the eardrum or
fluid In the middle ear cavity .. Your
physician will look In the ear with a
special Instrument called an otoscope to check for these types of
problems.

Middlepo~t

woman named
Presbyterian Scholar

Cynthia Lynn Crooks, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crooks of
Middleport, has been named a 1983
National Presbyterian College
·Scholar.
Ms. Crooks was among the 203
national competition winners and
has been awarded a maximum
scholarship of $.1400 to attend
Muskingum College in New
Concord.
All National Presbyterian College Scholars were selected by a
national committee according to
the same criteria of academic and
personal merit. The scholarships
are reviewed annually and are
renewable.
A 1983 graduate of Meigs High
School, Ms. Crooks was a class
honorian, finishing third in her
class. During her high school years,
she was active In the marching,
jazz, and concert bands, the flag
corps and was selected as the most
outstanding sophomore band
member. She was active In basketball and softball for four years and
played In the state tournament on
the 1979 state semi-finalist softball
team. She made second team of the

All-SEOAL her senior year. She
was a varsity cheerleader for two
years and served as captain her
senior year. She belonged to the
Christian Athletes, the computer
club, pep club, student council, and
was on the yearbook staff and
served as faculty assistant her
senior year.
Crooks received the Danforth
Foundation Award for being the
outstanding junior girl and attended Buckeye Girls State. She
was a member of the National
Honor Society for two years and
served as sophomore class president. She was named a homecoming attending her senior year and
was named 1983 Meigs County
Junior Miss, taking part In the
finals of the Ohio State Junior Miss
Program · in February. She received an award from Burger Chef
for being an outstanding female
school-athlete her senior year and
received an award from the United
States Achievement Academy in
basketball. She also received the
senior class science award.
Other scholarships Ms. Crooks
has received are from Muskinm-

;,The Things That Make for
Peace" was the program topic
presented by Pauline Roush at the
recent meeting of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Women at the
church.
Mrs. Roush talked about the
pledges of the UMW and theft use In
promoting peace by helping people
around the world. Emphasis was
made on the plight of the Haitians
along with !stands of the Pacific
where damage has been done
through testing blasts of nuclear
devices.
Martha Hoover had a piano
prelude with Dorothy Downie giving
the devotions.
A report was given on the prayer
group organized last month. It was
noted that the sessions have been
well attended and well received and
will be continued each Tuesday at
9:30a.m.
Reported Ill were Elizabeth
CUtler, Polly Eichinger, and Norma
Goodwin. Forty·nlnesickcallswere
reported during the past month.
Refreshments were served by
Bernice Carpenter and Ruth
Barnitz.

Racine Legion
Auxiliary meets
Laren Wolfe, Buckeye Girls' State
delegate of the Racine American
Legion Auxiliary, Unit 602, gave a
report on her 'experiences at the
seminar, during the July meeting of
the organization.
Miss Wolfe was a member of the
Federalist Party at Girls' State, and
was elected treasurer of her city
school board in the mock election
held at the week-long event at
Ashl~d College. She reported that
Governor Celeste spoke to the
delegates, and that she learned a
great deal about local, state, and
national government.
number
ofan
The

tinnitus?
Answer: The physician might
order a full hearing test to check
your hearing at all different
frequencies. He or she may,
depending on the results of these,
order special x-rays, Including
some of the bony skull that
surrounds the ear.
Question: What should I do if the
doctor can't find a cause for the
ringing In my ears?
Answer: When no physical cause
for the tinnitus is found; treatment
consists of reassuring · the patient
that the condition Is not serious and
helping make him or her more .

Cynthia Crooks
gum College, Susan Park Scholarships, Meigs High School Faculty
Scholarship and the Meigs County
Junior Miss Scholarship.
She is a member of the Middleport First United Presbyterian
Church where she Is assistant
pianist and organist. She Is on the
Christian Education Committee.
Ms. Crooks wlll be joining her
sister, Pam, who will begin her
sophomore year at Musklngum
College this fall.

was discussed during the business
The charter was draped in
meeting, presided over by Prest- · memory of Goldia Wolfe.
dent Julia Morrts. A donation of $15
Initiation was held for one
was sent to help restore the Statue of candidate, Leota Ferrell of Med·
Liberty.
way, Ohio, a twin sister of Leona
A picnic will be held In September Hensley, also sister to Mae McPeek
for the group, and dues will be
and Ada Bissell, all members of the
collected In August at the regular
Chester chapter.
meeting.
Helen Wolfe served as pianist for
Refreshments were served by
the evening. Flag bearers escorted
Shirley Ables.
Dorothy Ritchie to the altar, and
Betty Roush, deputy star councilor,
presented her with a birthday gift.
Refreshments were served by
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met
Leona Hensley, Mae McPeek, Alta
Ballard, and Ada Bissell, to those
recently for a picnic dinner followed
by a regular meeting, with four new
mentioned above and Margaret
members joining the organization.
Tuttle, Mary Showalter, Lora
Tl)e meeting opened with the
Damewood, Esther Smith, Virginia
pledge to the flag and the Lord's
Newlun, Marcia Keller, Ruth
Smith, Penny Smith, Erma Cleland,
Prayer In unison.
The group decided to build a porch
Elizabeth Hayes, Goldie Frederick,
Faye Kirkhart, Zelda Weber, Ethel
roof over the back door of the fire
Orr, Jean Frederick, Opal Hollon,
house, and a new ice cream freezer
Virginia Lee, Octa Ward, Fern
and smocks will be purchased.
Barbara Sarson was appointed
Morris, Doris Grueser, Elva Powell, Eva Robson, Sadie Trussell
ne,w secretary of the auxiliary.
Thanks were extended to those who
and Charlotte Grant.
donated Ice cream, pies, cakes, and
money to the Racine department.
The group made plans to go to
Duffs Smorgasbord, Gallipolis, in
November.
Resident managers, Minnie and
AttendlngthemeetingwereAggie
Paul
Johnson, Stonewood ApartBoggess, Sandra Patterson, Stella
ments,
Middleport, hosted a cookout
Sarson, Barbara Sarson, Thelma
and picnic for the-residents Friday
Walton, Ruth Shain, Mae Cleland,
evening.
Virginia Oller and Boo Autherson.
Cardinal Industries provided part
of the food for the activity with each
resident bringing a covered dish.
Grace was by Walter Bunce, a
Thirty-three members of Chester
army chaplain. Country,
retired
Councll323, Daughters of America,
and religious music was
western,
met Tuesday at the home of
provided
by J unlor White, Peggy,
Councilor Mary K. Holter.
Mary
an-i
Harold Clark.
It was reported that Elizabeth
For
.
those
unable to attend for
Jenkins Is home from the hospital,
health reasons, plate$ were preEmma Ashley Injured her ankle,

Fireman Auxiliary

A new post of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars Is being organized in
Racine.
A minlmWTI of 25 new or
reinstated members is required to
obtain the new charter for Racine
from the VFW National Headquarters in Kansas City. All veterans
who live In the Racine area and
served overseas are asked to phone
614-224-1838 for information on
becoming charter members In the
RaclneVFW.
VFW membership Is made up of
men and women who have served
their country honorably In overseas
engagements for which a campalgn
badge or medal has been authortzed
by the U. S. government. The

membership has a common bond of of country and more meanlngul
experience forged In sacrifice and apprecia lion of the American
danger from when they served the heritage.
.-----------------------nation,
The VFW, through its legislative
activities, seeks to protect the rights
and entitlements of all veterans.
Service to disabled ,and needy
veterans and their dependents on a
nationwide cale by its V~terans
Service Office Is always close by.
Community betterment Is a
keystone In the total VFW structure
through working for the good of all
citizens In the community. Additionally, patriotic sentiments are given
expression through action proBible
grams aimed at stimulation of love

for all who
love God's
word.

Lite stuff

Such sweet satisfaction
...
go that shade of purple before.
By JAYNE HOEFUCH
Needless to say, I dumped him In
Dally Sentinel staff
favor
of an abnormai psychology
Willie Wonka (of the classic fun
major
I met at a confectionery close
film which bears his name) had the
to
campus.
We bought Imported
right idea.
He recognized the true secret of chocolate caramels together and it
life, the key to happiness, vitality, was love at first bite ... but it didn't
and contentment, the nectar of the last. He left me for the first little
French truffle that came along.
gods themselves ...
I've always been told chocolate
He dedlca ted himself to the
perfection and promotion of the Improves your love life. Chocolate
greatest discovery ever made by IS my love life.
I know you can relate.
man--chocolate!
There's
a chocolate bar calllng
All right, I admit it.
your
name
right now, isn't there? '
I'm a chocolate addict.
Or
perhaps
, it's a piece of
You too, huh?
layer
cake.
double-fudge
Well, I can't say that I blame any
Its
siren-song
Is
growing louder,
of us ... nothing can possibly equal
that special, unique flavor, that and your mouth is starting to
smooth, creamy texture of a good water ...
You crave its mellow sweetness
pieceofchocolate.Andwe'relngood
company--statistics ·say nearly 17 over your tongue, you want that
out of every 17 people love chocolate. chocolate, and you want it now,..
'SOme of you will go eat a piece of
Nobody who knows me bothers
chocolate
right this minute.
anymore to asj{ what flavor of
The
rest
of you, who are dieting
anything I want--they all KNOW to
am,
will
drop this paper and
like
I
order chocolate for me--chocolate
crawl
up
the
wall.
ice cream, chocolate candy, chocoI'll see you on the ceiling.
late chicken a Ia king ...
Sometimes, people seem to think ,---...;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--1
I'm extreme.
Take a guy I dated at college last
quarter-we were taking a walk on a
warm, moonlit, spring night, and he
asked, "How about a kiss?" When it
turned out he wasn't taiking about
Hershey's, I was disappointed, and I
told him so. I've never seen anyone

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING
Route 7

Old VFW Hall

Stonewood cookout __________________

D of A council

Golda Krackomberger had eye
surgery, Zana Galner fell at her
home In Hebron, and Barbara
Sargent and Carolyn Holley are Ill.
Thank-you notes were read from
Rebecca Brodrick and Nina Windle.
Golda Krackomberger sent thanks
for her gift while In the hospital.

comfortable by masking the tinni- .
tus. A background noise that Is
close to the fequency of the tinnitus
(which can be determined by the
hearing test) usually blocks out the
ringing noise and allows the person
to sleep or relax. In more serious
cases, a hearing aid which provides
a constant noise at the frequency of
the tinnitus usually masks the
ringing and allows the patient to
carry on normal activities. If you
have any questions about this
condition, contb ~tour family physi·
clan and allow him or her to fully
examine you for all the possible
causes of tinnitus.

VFW organizing post in Racine area

Meigs groups gather for meetings
Pomeroy UMW

Many.times tinnitus is associated
with hearing loss. In such cases, a
physician checks for the cause of
the hearing loss. Often when the
hearing loss Is treated, the tinnitus
also disappears. Ringing in the ears
that occurs with both hearing loss
and severe dtzzlness may signal a
posible ear tumor and should be
immediately checked by your
doctor.
Tinnitus can also be caused by
taking high doses of certain drugs,
Including aspirin. Usually ringing
In the ears abates when the drug
dosage Is decreased.
Question: What tests might the
doctor order to evaluate my

pared and delivered to them.
Eileen
Snyder,were
GladysIva
Sigler,
Alma
Attending
Stewart,
Newlon, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Frazier
and ~ granddaugher, Diana, Inez
Pooler, Mae W~ber, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Christy, Betty Christopherson, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Lane, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Bunce, Bessie
Gilmore, Zelia Taylor, Clifford
Smith, Susie Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Carsey, Cathy and Carried
Branham, Louisa Johnson, ·Bessie
Turley, Christina Kessler, Mary
Lyons.' .

Tuppers Plains

BAKED STEAK, CHOICE Of VEGETABLE,
MASHED POTATO and Gravy
Try Our Daily

LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SPECIALS ........... S2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS ......................... SI.99

:
,
:
,

., !t'~~!.~n

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE,
MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;

lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~

SUNDAY'S LUNCHEON SPECIAL

6 6 7-64 8 5

You will Jovt· th&lt;' NEW Kin)!
.Janws \'(·rslon hen:lUS(' 11
J'alfhfully Jlri'S('JV&lt;'S fiH'
hcauly . inspiralion and
authority of tilt· lloly Bihlt• .
For you or ror SOilll'OrlP you
lovt· .
From $12.95

·CHAPMAN SHOES
BACK TO SCHOOL

8trideRit~
SPECIAl!!
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

SELECT GROUP

20°/o OFF

DINING IIOOM CLOSES AT 7 MONDAY·SATUIIDAY
DINING IIOOM CLOSES AT 4 ON SUNDAY
Cany-Out Window Open Until 10 Mondey·Sund8y

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

\

�Wednelduy, July 27, 1983

..

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Wednelday, July 27, 1983

•

Page 6

.

ging in the ears a fairly common ailment
lldlreck, D.O.
fll l"unU)o Medicine
\JIIIv-*7 College
Medicine

underlying cause of the ·ringing is
usually found in the ear, the brain or
Uie vascular system. However, In
perhaps as many as 50 percent of
tinnitus cases, a definite cause Is
never found . Ringing may occur In
both ears, or In just one. Further, lt
Is less likely that people with
llnawer: Ring- tinnitus In both ears have serious
Ina In the ears Is underlying disease than those who
known medically have the problem In just one ear.
• Unnltus, and It
Nearly aU at us experience
Is lairly common . . temporary tinnitus after we hear an
1lnnttus does not extremely loud noise. Advancing
point to any one age also frequently brings an
at the ear but Is a Increase In tinnitus episodes. Occa·
a numt~rr at dlsturban- slonal ringing In · the ears that
10 be explored. The occurs when a person Is sitting lhn a

.

quiet room or lying In bed usually Is
due to noise from the blood !lowing
through the vesse.Is around the ear
and noise from the normal action of
muscles that originate near the
inner ear,
Question: What are some other
causes of tinnitus or ringing in the

Many limes tlnnltus Is associated tinnitus?
comfortable by masking the tinniwith hearing loss. In such cases, a
Answer: The physician might · tus. A background noise that IS
physician Checks for the cause of . order•a full hearing test to check close to the fequency of the tinnitus
the hearing loss. Often when the your hearing at all different (which can he determined by the
heartng loss Is treated, the tinnitus frequencies . He or she may, hearing test) usually blocks out the
also disappears. Ringing In the ears depending on the results of these, ringing noise and allows the person
that occurs with both hearing loss . order special x-rays, including to sleep or relax. In more serious
and severe dizziness may slgna1 a some of the bony skull that cases, a hearing aid which provide&amp;
poslble ear tumor and should he surrounds the eal". ·
a constant noise at the frequency d
Immediately checked .by your
Question: What should I do If the the tinnitus usually masks the
doctor.
doctor can't find a cause tor the ringing and allows the patient to
Tinnitus can also be caused by ringing In my ears?
carry on normal activities. U you
taking high doses of certain drugs;
Answer: When no physical cause have any questions about this
Including asptnn. Usually ringing for the tinnitus Is found; tre11-tment condition, conta ~~ our famUy physiIn the ears abates when the drug consists of reassuring the patient cian and allow him or her to fully
dosage Is decreased.
that the condition Is not serious and examine you for au the possible
Question: What tests might the helping make him or her more causes of tinnitus.
doctor order to evaluate my

ear?
Answer: Tinnitus can be due to
such problems in the ear canal as
ear wax packed up against the
eardrum, holes In the eardrum or
fluid In the middle ear cavity. Your
physician wiU look In the ear with a
special Instrument called an otoscope to check for these types of
problems.

woman named
Scholar
Crooks, daughter
Edwud Crooks of
bQ 1a!n named a 1983
Pretb,vlenan College

:w~•~among
theand
203
Winners

r.

• maxlmum
to attend
Co U~ In New
Prelbyterlan Col~elected by a
according to
ol academJc and
The liCholarshfps
annually and ·are

were

of Meigs High
was a class
thlrd In her

AU-SEOAL her senior ,year. She
was a varsity cheerleader for two
years and served as captain her
senior year. She belonged to the
Christian Athletes, the computer
clUb, pep club, student councU, and
was ·on the yearbook staff and
served as faculty assistant her
senior year.
. Crooks received the Danforth
Foundation Award for being the
outstanding junior girl and attended Buckeye Girls State. She
was a member of the National
, Honor Society for two years and
served as sophomore class pres!·
dent. She was named a homecomIng attending her senior year and
was named 1983 Meigs County
Junior Mlss, taking part In the
finals of the Ohio State Junior Miss
Program In February. She received an award from Burger Chef
for being an outstanding female
school-athlete her senior year and
received an award from the United
States Achievement Academy In
basketball. She also received the
senior class science award.
Other scholarships Ms. Crooks
has received are from Musklnm-

UMW
That Make for
the 111'0111'am topic

P•ullne Roush at the
of the Pomeroy
Women at the

Fireman Auxiliary
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met
recently for a picnic dinner followed
by a regular meeting, with four new
members joining the organization.
Tl)e meeting opened with the
pledge to the flag and the Lord's
Prayer In unison.
Thegroupdecidedtobutldaporch.
root over the back door of the fire
house, and a new ice
freezer
and smocks will be purchased.
Barbara Sarson was appointed
new secretary of the auxU!ary.
Thanks were extended to those who
donated lee cream, pies, cakes, and
money to the Racine department.
The group made plans to go to
Duffs Smorgasbord, Gallipolis, In
November.
AttendlngthemeetingwereAggie
Boggess, Sandra Patterson, Stella
Sarson, Barbara Sarson, Thelma
Walton, Ruth Shain, Mae Oeland,
Virginia OUer and Boo Autherson.

cream

meers
Racine American
Un11 002, gave a
e~atthe

the JUly meeting of

. A new post of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars Is being organized In
Racine.
·
A mlnlrnum of 25 new or
reinstated members is required to
obtain the new charter for Racine
from the VFW National Headquarters In Kansas City. AU ve)l'rans
who live In the Racine area and
served overseas are asked to phone
614-224-1838 for Information on
becoming charter members in the
RacineVFW.
VFW membership Is made up of
men and women who have served
their country honorably In overseas
engagements for which a campaign
badgeormedal has been au thorlzed
by the U. S. government. The

Cynthia Crooks
gum CoUege, Susan Park Scholarships, Meigs High School Faculty
Scholarship and the Meigs County
Junior Miss Scholarship.
.
She Is a member of the Mkldleport First United Presbyterian
Church where she Is assistant
pianist and organist. She Is cin the
Christian Education' Committee.
Ms. Crooks will he Joining her
sister, Pam, who wt11 begin her
sophomore year at Muskingum
College this fall. _

The charter was draped in
memory of Goldla Wolfe.
Initiation was held for one
candidate, Leota Ferrell of Med·
way, Ohlo, a twin sister or Leona
Hensley, also sister to Mae McPeek
and Ada Bissell, all members of the
Cl)ester chapter.
Helen Wolfe served as pianist for
the evening. Flag bearers escorted
Dorothy Ritchle to the altar, and
Betty Roush, deputy star councUor,
presented her with a birthday gift.
Refreshments were served by
Leona Hensley, Mae McPeek, Alta
Ballard, and Ada Bissell, to those
mentioned above and Margaret
Tuttle, Mary Showalter, Lora
Damewood, Esther Srnlih, VIrginia
Newlun, Marcia Ketler, Ruth
Smith, Penny Smith, Enna Cleland,
Elizabeth Hayes, Goldie Frederick,
Faye Kirkhart, Zelda Weber, Ethel
Orr, Jean Frederick, Opal Hollon •.
Virginia Lee, Octa Ward, Fern
Manis, Doris Grueser, Elva Powell, Eva Robson, Sadie Trussell
and Charlotte Grant.

D of A muncil

membership has a common bond of
experience forged In sacrifice and
danger from when they served the
natloo.
The VFW, through its legislative
activities, seeks to protect the rights
and entitlements of aU veterans.
Service to disabled and needy
veterans and their dependents on a
nationwide cale by Its Veterans
Service Office Is always close by.
Community bettennent Is a
keystone In the total VFW structure
through working for the good of all
citizens In the community. Addition·
ally, patriotic sentiments are given
expression through action programs aimed at stimulation of love

Each performance, with the
exception of e College musical
Theatre, Mil begin at 2: 30 p.m. In
the Fine and Performing- Arts .
Center. The college group will begin
at 8 p.m . on the designate evenings.
The performances are s ponsored
by Rio Grande College with the
support of the Ohio Arts Council.
Zllba's founder and Artistic
Director of Life Dance Theater. In
addition to producing solo dance
concel1s, a ppearing as guest artist
with symphony, opera and ballet
productions, she performs with the
Matteo Ethno American Dance
Theater ~ New York. She is
currently teaching wth the School of
Contemporary Dance In the Unl·
of Toledo's Continuing

ati-28. •

Education Department . A recog- synthesis of musical and visual art
niZed dance specialist with the Ohio that is a challenging ·a nd demandArts Council's Dance Component ing exercise for the artist and a
Series, she Is a member of the chaUenglng and rewarding expeBoard of Trustees of the Associa- rience for the audience.
tion of Ohio Dance Companies.
Mancini is artist-In-residence and
Solo martonettlste, Daniel Llords Associate Professor of Music at the
and his cast of' marionettes. and rod University of Akron where he has
puppets will present a concert . taught since 1967. He has been a
performance of music and ma ri- member o( the Faculty Plano Trto
onettes . for adults. Llords has since Its founding, performing
performed In more than 50 na tions much of the llterature for their
on five concert tours around the ensemble as well as giving many
world. The lavish spectac le solo recitals at the University and
combining music, moveme nts,
throughout the Northeast Ohio
comedy, color and drama - has . area. In addition to performing In
been universally acclaimed at the United States, he has also given
world music and drama festiva ls . solo recitals in Paris, London,
Liard' s International show Is a
Hamburg, Berlin and Vienna.

and Clyde Sayre are announcing the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Kimberly
Ann Sayre, to Thomas Michael
Gillilan, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Lee Roy Gillilan.
The open church wedding will
take place Saturday, July 30, at the
Nazarene Church In Chester. The
Rev. Herbert Grate wtU officiate.
Music will begin at 2 p.m . and a
reception wW be held Immediately
following the wedding.

'

.

Dally Sentinel S&amp;aff

go that shade of purple before.
Needless to say, I dumped him in
favor of an abnonnal psychology
major I met at a confectionery close
to campus. We bought Imported
chocolate caramels together and it
was Jove· at first blte ... but It didn't
last. He left me for the fln;t Uttle ·
French truffle that came along.
I've always been told chocolate
Improves your love life. Chocolate
IS my love life.
I know you can relate.
There's a cbocolate bar calling
your name right now,isn't there?
Or perhaps it's a piece of
doub~fudge layer cake.
Its siren-song Is growing louder,
and your mouth Is starting to
.water...
You crave Its mellow sweetness
over your tqngue, you want that
chocolate, and you want it now ...
'Some of you will go eat a piece of
chocolate right this minute.
The rest of yoU, who are dieting
like I am, wtll drop this paper and
crawl up the wall.
I'll see you on the celllng.

Willie Wonka (of the classic fun
!11m which bears his name) had the
rlghtldea.
He recognized the true secret of
life, the key to happiness, vitality,
and contentment, the nectar of the
gods themselves ...
He dedicated himself to the
perfection and promotion of the
greatest discovery ever made by
man--chocolate!
All right, I admit lt.
I'm a chocolate addict.
You too, huh?
WeU, I can't say that I blame any
of us...nothlng can possibly equal
that special, unique flavor, that
smooth, creamy texture of a good
pleceofchocolate.Andwe'relngood
company--statistics say nearly 17
outofeveryl7peoplelovechocolate.
Nobody who knows .me bothers
aJ)YITIOre to ask what flavor of
anything I want--they all KNOW to
order chocolate for me--chocolate
Ice cream, chocolate candy, chocolate chicken a Ia king ...
Sometimes, people seem to think r-------------1
I'm extreme.
Take a guy I dated at coUege last
quarter-we were taking a walk on a
warm, moonlit, spring night, and he
asked, "How about a kiss?" When it
turned out he wasn't talking about
Hershey's, I was disappointed, and I
told him so. I've never seen anyone

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING
Route 1
Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains

Grueser
birth
•
the Bible
for all who
love God's
Word.

Tr:;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:::;::;::;;:;;:;~~;;~

SUNDAY'S LUNCHEON SPECIAL
BAKED STEAK, CHOICE O'f VEGEtABLE,
MASHED POTATO and Gravy
.Tty Our Daily

.

- LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SPECIALS ........... S2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS ......................... s1.99

JOhilson, Pomeroy.

'

A Bugs Bunny cake made by hiS
aunt, Jill Johnson, was served with
Ice cream, potato chips and Kool-.
Ald. A treat was given to each child
present.
·
Games were played with prizes
going to Rick! Farley, Jeremy
Duckett, Tiffany Miller, and the
door prize was given to AprU MUler.

.

~~:a~~~~~~%:ted~~ .

e lec tric ian , and Mrs. David
(Donna) Keller of Reynoldsburg, an
Instructor for the Nationwide
Beauty Academy.
The couple also has five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Mr. and Mrs. Tyal Sinclair and her husband, Steve Manley, and
J
son. Peach.
~-----------------~------children; M rs. Gla d ys Tay1or, ean
AdecoratedcakebakedbyNancy
and Barbra Crum. Julie ChrlsUp, Manley Inscribed, "Happy BirthAngel McCoy, Jenny Burke, Rich day, Sweet 22, We Love You, " was
Smith, William Smith, Sally Smith, · served with ice cream, potato chips
Amanda WWiams, and Delores and punch.

AdSen~in

Others attending were the Rev.
g
swere
• Odell Manley, Bob Manley, Tracy
Mirna Walker, 'I'errl Curtis, Flor- · Manley, Crystal Manley, Ted Dexence Ruth, Edna Walker, Maryln ter Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Hudson
Durst, Mrs. Ann Fawsmaugh,
•
•
Sand Jl
d J h w ight· Tina Mrs. Sharon Older, Ricky and
y, m , an os
r
•
Dorothy, the Rev. and Mrs. Earl
Hawk.
Fields, Russ, Debbi e and
Thaddeous.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Betty
Manley, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Manley and famUy, the Rev. Steve
Presenting Scott with gifts, be- Tomek, ' and Mrs. Margaret
sides his parents and brother McDaniel.
Jeremy were maternal grandmother, Mamie Stephensqn; paternal grandparents, Mr. and 'Mrs . .
Carl Jolmson; Jill Johnson, Karl,
POMEROY - A father-son
April, and Tiffany Miller, Nancy banquet was held by the Pomeroy
Whltteklnd and sons, Shawn and Church of the Nazarene recently at
Daniel; Sherrie Hall, Shari Black- the home of Rev. and Mrs. Clyde
well and daughters Arlca and .Henderson.
Amber; Paulette Farley and son
Attending were Rev. Clyde HendRick!, Gail Duckett and stmsJoshua erson, Robert Henderson and son
and Jeremy , and Greg
R.E., Columbus; Harold WhltteCunningham.
klnd and son Daniel, Raymond
Walburn, Jinunie and Randy
Snider, Roy Eblin, Jer ry Colmer
and son Bill.
Hostesses for the meal were
and Mrs. Darwyn Enevo1dsen, and Greda Henderson, Mamie Stephen· '
great-grandmother, Mrs. Ernest son, and Carol Henderson,
Columbus.
Enevo.Idsen .
gift

DENTURES

RoblnMurphy

NOW OFFERED AT .

The Dental Center
$1470° And Up
PHONE (304 )-372-3222
3 Pinnell St.

Ripley, W.Va.

D.D.S.

Holds banquet

!--==============--------__:

Cline surprise birthday party
Dee Cline, daughter 1of Mrs.
You will low th&lt;' NI:W King
.Jamc·s \'('rslon ht ~( ·ausc• ,II
f-aithfull y pu•s&lt;•r vc·s !he•
h('auly . inspirallon a nd

'

authoril y of tlw I lui~· liihlt•,
Fur you o r for sonwonc ynu
low .
From $12.95

+!!'~II!.~IHn
i

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
MILL ST.

8trideRit~
SPECIAL!!
FRIDAY, SATURDAY

SELECT GROUP

20% OFF

Amber Blackwell

:Blackwell
.
fnrthday
.

~ Until 10 Monday•.....,

I

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ILIIRfiLDS IN POMEROY

Raymond Canter, observed her
ninth birthday rei:ently with a
surprise party in a Smurf theme. rriiiiiiiiiii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~
'1\vo cakes, both prepared by
Mrs. Canter, were served at the
party. One was a Smurfette, the
other a Smurf boy cake, and Ice
cream and punch rounded out the
refreshments.
Attending the party were Ray·
mond Canter, Raymond •Dana
Canter, Pam, Jon and,Kelly Clark,
Kenney Davis, Nina Miller, Donna
Hill, Lori Hill, Bill and Judi Miller,
Tracey Pickett, Brenda Hunt,
Mandy atld Michael Russell,
Jeremy Roush, Ruth Canter,
grandmother, and Dawn Shuler.
Sending gifts were Mr, and Mrs.
Russell Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
THE "BOSS" SAYS
Michaels and Becky, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Spencer, grandparents, Mr.

.

Personals

: Arnher Danlelle Blackwell cele~ted her sixth birthday recently
\fltha .party.atBurgerChet.Shets
1111! daughter of Steve and Shari
l11ackweU, Ball Run, Pomeroy.
~:Refreshments of an E.T. cake,

Mr. and Mrs.· James Batley of
California vistted recently with
Bailey's cousins, Mrs. Ralph
Spencer and Edward Mcintosh, at
the Spencer home.

ilecet\·edatreat,wlthTiffanyMilier

Mrs. vtrginia GtllsOn vtstted her
son,Mr.andMrs. AUenGtbsonand

::e::!:'!=· :.'c~:ci
tbmlngtbe•
ctoor~.
tit&amp;

• Attending the party and presentAmber with gifts were her .

~:·~+1.=$

ri(.ternal great-grandmother,
mle Stephenson; paternal
ndmother, Ruth Blackwell;
Colmer, Tammy Johnson,
tt and Jeremy, Naucy Whlttelilftd. Shawn and Daniel, Mr. and
·lll'lrs: Stan Duckett, Ja.hua, Jeremy
Nicki, Ann Balwwllt and
an, JW Jollllson, EvelYn JohllVIcld Miller, April, Karl and
11fany, SaDdy Wl1ght IJid Jll"'mm,
Pierce, Brandon Smith. .
:': f!endiDg gttts were Amber's
iftateraal p-eat-t11'811dfatller, Mr.
lllld .Ml'l. J11111e1 Farley, Davy,
.iDnle llld Rlcld, Mr. and Mrs.
Carmlcble~ David and

e

DINING I!OOM CLOSfS AT 1 MONDAY·SA1UI!DAY
DINING ROOM CLOSES AT 4 ON SUNDAY
Carry-Out ¥... _

POMEROY - A party honoring
Scott Johnson on his first birthday
was held recently at the home of his .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David

Deerhaven Drtve, Cincinnati,
. are announcing the birth of their
iecOI1I1 chUdre, an eight pound,
fFee ounce son, Mathew Alexilnder, born July 121n Ctnclnnati.
~ Maternal grandparents are Mr.
4nd Mrs. Arthur Alexander, BerktyHelghts, N.J., and Mr. and Mrs.
wuuarn A. (Dude) Gibbs, Ball Run
koad, near Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs.
tilbbs also have a daughter, Lauren
Elizabeth, 5.

CHAPMAN SHOES
.
BAO&lt; TO SCHOOL

T~URSDAY,

Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy, will
observe their45thweddling anniversary Saturday.
Mr. Hedrick Is a retired electp·
cian . Mr. and Mrs. Hedrick have two
children , WUUam of Athens, also an

johnson birthday celebrated

{~:· ~. Jelrrey .A.;.Glbbs,

667-6485
MIDDLEPORT, O.H.
Altendlng
Stewart,
Eileen
Snyder,were
GladysIva
Sigler,
Alma i~~~::::~==~===~~1~~~~~~~~~~~

Lyons.

Mr. and Mrs. E dward Hedrick,

A SU!llrise birthday celebration
was he1d recently at the home ofMr.
and Mrs. Robert Manley In obser-

JdneS, Taylor have birthdays

: Jon and Angle Grueser, Reeds·
lillie, are announcing the birth of
Judy Jones andBialnTayior, both
Q!e1r first chUd, a daiJihter, Stacy of Tuppers Plains, celebrated their
Starr, born on JUly 10 at St. Joseph 16th and 71st birthdays, respecNosp!talln Parkersburg.
·uvely, on July 11 at the home of
: Thelnf!llltwelghedslxpoundsand Judy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tony
:tU ounces and was ~Inches long.
Jones. Friend'! and relatives were
• Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. .present to share the occasion.
c.harles Grueser, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Owtght (Jackie) eart, Delaware; Tony Jones andWUUe; Mr. andMts.
and Ray Ginther, Portland. Mrs. John Rankin and Don; Mrs. Roslyn
Lester Seaman and Mrs. Ruth Tucker and family; Miss Ann Bobo,
Thomas, Pomeroy, are great- Mrs. Sue Miyashero and !amUy;
jranctmothers; and Mrs. EUa
Quillen, Syracuse, Is a great-great
JI'811dm0ther.

Gibbs birth·

paredanddeiiverecttothem.

Newton, Mr. and Mrs. CecU Frazier
and/ grandd!lugher, Diana, Inez
Pooler, Mae Weber, Mr. and Mrs.
Clllford Christy: Betty Christopherson, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Lane, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Bunce,. Bessie
GUmore, Zelia Taylor, Cllftord
Smith, Susie Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Carsey; Cathy and Carried
Branham, Louisa Johnson, Bessie
Turley, Christina Kessler, Mary

Judy Jones and Blain Taylor

I

Hedricks to celebrate anniver.rary

Manley birthday
Stacy Starr Grueser

performed by Rio Grande College
a nd Community College students
and residents of the surrounding
community under t-he direction of
Ed Roark and . Merlyn Ross.
Personal growth as an artist plays
an importan t part in the selection of
a play or musica1 as well as
audience awareness to qualitative
theater. Roark has been directi ng
campus theater productions since
1969 and has directed over 20
full -scale dramatic works. Ross has
been Associate Professor of Music
since 1965 and has directed music
for many church. college and
community events.
For ad ditional Information, con·
tact Rio Grande.

The E astern Athletic Boosters are plans for the Meigs County Fa ir and ·
agaln setting "m Oub" m ember- on Thursday, Aug .ll,a work session
wUI be held at Eastern High School
ship tickets.
Anyone wishing the same mem- to prepare food fqr the fair.
On Aug. 13, the boosters will be·
bership tickets they had last year
a golf tournament at the
sponsoring
should contact Davlq Weber, 378- ·
Gol.f
Course beginning at 9
Mason
6117; Harold NeWell, 98!&gt;-3351;
Henry Hensley, 843-5441, or Sue a.m. ThOse wishing more lnforma·
tlon on the tournament may call
Malson, 667-6455 by July 29.
There will be a special meeting of Gary Drennel\ 9854138, or Cha r.Ies
the group at 7 p.m .. Friday, to make Weber, 667-6235.

CHESTER -:- Mrs. Carol Smith

~--~----~----------

Such sweet satisfaction
By JAYNE HOEn.JCH

The Harlan Boys Choir, also
known as the Singing Sons of
Appalachia, for4-ned in 1965 In a
small mining community located
deep in the heart of the Appalachian
Mountains of Sout heast Kentucky.
The group has participated in many
choral festivals and contests. In
1972, the Harlan Boys received top ,
ratings ln. the International Youth
Music Festival In Graz, . Au stria,
and in 1982 won the highest awa~
given In the Ottawa International
Festival of Music. They have sung
at the statewide m~tlngs of
religious organizations which include Baptist, Christian, Methodist
and Episcopal assemblies .
A musical production will be

Sayre - Gillilan
to wed Saturday 1 Boosters selling memberships

of country and more meanlngul
appreciation of the American
heritage.

Lire sruff

Stonewood cookout _________

Resident managers, Minnie and
P aul Johnson, Stonewood Apartments, Mlddlepon, hosted a cookout
and picnic for the residents Friday
evening.
Cardinal Industries provided part
of I he food for the activity with each
resident bringing a covered dish.
Grace was by Walter Bunce, a
Thirty-three members of Chester
retired army chaplain. Country,
CoiutcU3Zl, Daughters of America,
western, and religious music was
-met Tuesday at the home of
provided by Junior White, Peggy,
Counctlor Mary K. Holter.
Mary
an_; Harold Clark.
It was reported that Elizabeth
For
those unable to attend for
Jenkins Is home from the hospital,
health
reasons, plates were preEmma Ashley Injured her ankle, .
Golda Krackomberger
surgery,
Zana Gainer fellhadat eye
her
home In Hebron, and Barbara
Sargent and Carolyn Holley are ill.
'Thank-you notes were read from
Rebecca Brodrick and Nina Windle.
Golda Krackomberger sent thanks
tor her gltt while In the hospital.

- 'Foilr groups and the college
m usical theatre have OOen announced as a portion rt the five-par\
Community Artist Series at Rio
Grande College and Community
College.
According to Jean Curtis, Director of the Fine and Performing Arts
Center, concert dance artlsl r,orna
Zllba will oi&gt;en the series September 18. ZUba will be joined In the
series by a concert of music and
rnarlonettes by Llord's International on October 30, pianist Eugene
Maclnl on Feb. 5, the Harlan (Ky.)
j3oys Choir on March 18, and the Rio
Grande College and Community
. College Musical Theatre AprU

VFW organizing post in Racine area

s groups gather for meetings
was discussed during the business·
meeting, presided over by President JuUa Manis. A donation of $15
was sent tohelprestoretheStatueof
Liberty.
A picnic will be held In September
tor the group, and dues wt11 be
collected In August at the regular
meeting.
Refreshments were served by
Shirley Ables.

•

The Daily Senti~l · Page-7

Middleport, Ohio

'Artists ·Series announced at Rio Grande College
·-·

-

-

Portjeroy

Jil!llala

C.
.:.!.~ "

"101111"

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Thursday, Friday &amp;Saturday Only .

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�•

.
. Page-8- The Doily Sentinel

'

· Wednesday, July 27, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

· Calendar

FRIDAY
SHADE RIVER - Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet at 8
p.m., Friday with work In' the
master mason degree; all master masons Invited·
refreshments.
'

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Twin City
Sltrinettes meeting at 6: 30 p.m.
Thursday for a picnic at the home
ofMrs.GuyMorrls,o!fRoute681,
Cold Ridge; take a covered dish
and own 'table service.

.- -

MONDAY

dleport Garden Club will meet
Monday at 6:.llp.m. at !be home
· of Mrs. Jeanne Bowen, Syracuse
for its annual picnic. Hostesses
will be Mrs. Bowen andMrs.J.J.
Fry.

Happenings
P~I

MIDDLEPORT - The Mid-

party, dance

MIDDLEPORT . -

A swim-

rnlng and dance party will be
held at the Middleport Pool
Thursday from 8 p.m. ulntll
mldnigbt. Music Unlimited will
Provide music for dancing on the
basketball court.
· Admission to either dancing or
swimming or both will be $2 for
singles and $3 for couples.
Facilities are available to
change clothes for those wishing
to participate in both actMties.

Season pool passes will not be
honored.
The actMty Is sponsored bY
the Middleport Recreation
Commission.

.

Cooking class

PomeroY Church d.-Christ. This

class Is a cooperative effort d. the

Church of Christ Women's Fellowship and the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service.
Everyone Is invited, and welcome to bring friends , ne!gllbors,
and relatives.

POMEROY - A microwave
cooking class will be held
Thursday at 7:.ll p.m. at the .

I

Wednespay, J"'ly 27, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reagan tells. nation, 'We don't want war' · r,;rhJ&gt;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;;;W.;;;;;;;in;;;;;Jj;.;;;e~M~IAM;;;'TAIJf~.
\Bl !AI
ffil
£:1 \)3 \IYl cr AI IAJ(~ liUJ
By JAMES GE&amp;s'l'ENZANG

statement declaring that "there has
'been entirely too much attention"
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!· paid to the milltary side of his
dent Reagan Is assuring the nation program at the expense• of other
that "we don't want war" in Central elements of his policy.
America , butcl'ltics say a :·massive
The president, responding to a
escalation" of military force is question about whether the troops
increasing the risk of a U.S. combat would defend themselves if fired
role. upon, said: "Wedon'twantwar.But
The presid,:nt, who hoped his Idon't thlnk that you prevent war by
news conference Tuesday night letting your personnel out there
would help clear up questions about become the victims."
Moments after the president
the military maneuvers his admlnlstration has planned for the Navy. concluded his 19th nationally broad·
and up to 4,lXXl combat troops, also cast news conference a Lthe White
insis!ed he saw no comparison with House, Democrats, and at least one
.
·
Vtetnam.
Republican senator, sounded criti·
There have been reports the cal notes.
Pentagon has recommended the
FonnerVicePresidentWalterF.
administra t ion Increase the' Mondale, who _Is seeking the I !lSi
nwnber of advisers in El Salvador Democratic presidential nominabeyond its sell-Imposed llmlt of 55. lion, said "after tonight, I'm more
Reagan sa!dhehas receivednosuch certain than ever that the current
proposal.
administration policy Is leading us
Butheaddedthatlltbenumberls· into war in Central America . The
increased, the United States could president had a duty to carefully
train the Salvadoran army fighting define our puiJXlses, but instead was
leftist guerrillas "a little faster than
we're doing it."
Reagan held out little hope that he
would reversehlscourseof milltary
Vererans Memorial Hospital
activity in the region and said:
"Wouldn't there perhaps be a risk
Admitted: Rutll Fry, Pomery;
if we changed our pattern and EvelynMundy,ReedsvUle; Charles
withdrew? Wouldn't we be sending Beegle, Racine; Judie McNickle,
some kind of a signal that might be Racine; Millie Price, Middleport;
the wrong kind of s!gnalto send Hwe Ellen Stewart, Pomeroy; and Larry
want ·peace in that area?"
Bailey, Pomeroy.
The 34-minute news conference
Discharged: John McDaniel , Vic·
dealt with little but Central Amer- (oria Thomas, Charles Werry, Sr.,
ica·. and -Reagan opened with a Jennie Bearhs, and Ruth Fcy.

Assoclaled Press Wliler

HOS
· pI"ta} news

COPYRIGHT 1"3 · THE kROGU CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY . JULY 24 . THROUGH SATURDAY , JULY

30.

""· IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY STORES.

prtce!

WE IIUIIIVE THE liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO Ot:ALEIIIS .

ADVUTISED ITEM

~DLICV

lath of th'oto ed•ert•••d 1tom1 11 r~wlr.cl tO be rHtflly
o•ollablo for ••I• In _,h Kroger Store . ••copt ••
tpotillrollr notod In rhlt '"' · If wo do fi.UI out of on
wo wUI oHor yo1.1 your lholco ol a
ro'"poroltlo 11om whofl owollab~ . rofl~tlftl tho tOMo
tOwlftll or a ralnchoc~ which .,.111 Oflllllo .,all to p~t~rchoto
tl'lo od¥Orlltod ltom ol tho etdvortlto4 prlco within Ja
doyt Onlr ono 11' 0F1dOr coupon will •• ll([opto4 po• l t pur(hotod

The Daily Sentinei- Page--9

.

vague and defensive and sought to
declare this massive escalation as
routine."
.
Sen. Alan Cranston of California,
another candidate for the Democrat!c presidential nomination, said
the Reagan policies "increase the
risk of American Involvement in a
shooting war."
The news conference 'was sche·
duledastheHouse nearedavoteona
proposal to cut off covert aid to
rebels trying to overthrow' the
Sand Iriista governm.en t In
Nicaragua.

Such a break in funds, Reagan
said, "would be a grave mistake...
The first 23 minutes of the news .
conference dealt entirely with .
Central America. Onothersubjects, ,
Re gan·
~Said he hoped that if the Israelis
carry out the partial withdrawal _
from Lebanon that they have
announced itmighthelptheUn!ted..
'
States persuade the Syrians to pull
their troops back,

Fire damage $10,000
Damages · were estimated at
about $10,000 as the result of a grease
fire which destroyed the kitchen at
the Bobby Porter heme on Salem
St., Rutland, about 7 p.m . Saturday
night. The Rutland Fire Depart·
ment kept the blaze from speading
to the rest of the home, There was
insurance coverage, Jerry Black ,
fire department representative,
reports.

-Defended his record in appGinting women to administration jobs,
and declared "I wlll match our
record against any other admlnls·
!ration that has ever been herewith
regard to what we have accompilshed for women."
-Declared that he Is tempted to
view news reports about political
espionage during the 19&amp;lpres!den•
tial campaign as little more tlian
"summer theater." But he sa id the
FBI must look into tile possibility
that someone broke into the White
House or stole presidential documents to give to the Reagan camp.
The president said in the opening
stat~~ent that the United State.~
was notseeklng'!-largerpresence
m Central Al)'lerlca, and pointed out
that U.S. troops have not been
r~uested by the nations there.
There Is no c~mpanson with
Vietn~ and there s not going I ~~
any thing of that .kind In this,
Reagan said
The president said, however, that
the mllltary role he planned should
"underscore once and for all" the
determination of the democracies of
Central America to reject leftist
revolutions directed by Moscow and
Havana .

Files petition
A petiton for dissolution of their
marriage has been filed in the tyleigs
County Common Pleas Court by J elf
Allen Morris, Pomeroy , and Cynthia Lynn Morris, Racine.

- l~ -

·

·

·

NEXT TO THE POST OFFICE

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS....·
'SAVE UP TO ..

%oFF

EVERYTHING MUST .GO!
BABY BEDS, STROLLERS, TOYS, CLOTHING
LAMPS, ETC. -SAVE LIKE NEVER BEFORE!

udwort l•od Ito,..

U.S.D.A. GRADE A

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers

TOTAl SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
b~o~r ot krov•• it g~o~oro"to.d for ,ovr tofol
1othloctio n ••t••dt.n ol rnofl\lfauuror , tf yo\ol oro fiOt
1otuliod M••t•• wilt roplaco your ltom wllh tho tarno
b r~nd or o (Omporoltlo brand or rof~o~nd ,our pvrd'•••
Pfi&lt;O

h••r'"''"l ro~o~

PINT

RETURNAB~E

Kroger Gladly
Welcomes
YHrfederal
food Stamps

DURING MASON FURNITURE'S
E.O.M. SALE
won't believe your eyes!

BOTTLES.

RC 100,

Diet Rite
or RC Cola

HOLLY FARMS, U.S .D.A. GRADE A

38

8

4 •C

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

5 gc
~::!', Tu~k~'9 gc
~~~~! . .

U.S .D.A. INSPECTED FROZEN.
.C-8-LB. AVG.

Mixed
Fryer
p
arts ... .......... . lb.

'

LIMIT 4 PKGS. PLEASE

;;;~:}:.llJ.S.

GOV'T GRADED CHOICE BEEF

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

48

$

USDA

lb.

r 0.5%

Crisco
Shortening

Lowfat Milk

48

Gal.

CHOICE

REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR

a

Cottonelle
Bath Tissue

88

·lb.
Can

Ctn.

400 SHEETS PEl IOU

.!11 S.48
Pall

I

EMtASSY

Salad
Dressing

Country Club
Ice Milk

Fre.sh
Broccoli

·~-sec
Cost Cuffer
Liquid Bleach

V2·Gal.

Ctn.

Bunch
Gal •

....

SLICED TO ORDER GOURMET, SANDY MAC
VIRGINIA BAKED HAM, GOURMET
NATURAL TURKEY BREAST, ESSKAY
PEPPERED CORN BEEF, MEDIUM RARE
TOP ROUND ROAST BEEF

Shaved Meats

IUMIO

California
. Plums

REO RIPE

Whole

. sec

Waterme
... ...

,,

I.

'

.

,,

'•

(

IJ

•i

�1a-:...The Daily

Sentinel

27,

Ohio

Ohio

,.
I

The ·D aily Se.n tinel

i

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

111 Court St.,

J .... - .

................... ,

u -c• . ·N

.............
·-

•

-·-··
,..c.....,...,_
71-- n l ......,o

U -'ort.alo•l•. .

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41-...... -

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•e....... , ........

,~
~

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
budget of Salisbury Towns h1p
show1ng· the Intended use of
Revenue Shanng Funds and
othe public mon1es IS available
for public •nspectlon at the
off1ce of the cler~ upon requ est.
Salisbury Twp .
Wanda Ebl1n. Cter~

Court House. Me•gs County.
Pomeroy. Oh10. on Saturday.
the 20th day of August. 1983.
at 10 15 o'clock AM . the
follow•ng lands and tenements
tO·WII

The follow•ng real estate
Si t uated on the Townsh•P of
Sahsbury, County of Me•gs and
State of Oh1o:
Parcel 1: The following real
estate Situated 1n Fract•on No.
2. Salisbury Tov...nsh1p Me1gs
Cou nty, Oh10, and descnbed as
follows : B~ginn1ng tn the center
of State H1ghway No. 33 at the
Northwes t corner of what Was
formerly Ray Brown lot; thence

171 27 ltc
· Public Notice

PUB!JC NOTICE
On July 22. 1983. in the
Mei gs County Probate Court,
Case No. 24177 . B1 lly William son, Box 97. Nelson Road.
Rutland. Ohio 45775 was
appo1nted Admm lstrator of the
estate o t Ha rry Joe Den1son.
deceased. late of Bo)( 83.
Rutland. Oh10 45775.
Robe rt E. Buck
Probate Judge/C i e r ~

North 36 deg 2B' West 54 B
feet along the center of sa•d
Sta te Highway No. 33: then ce
North 54 deg East 125.5 feet.
thence North 59 deg. 56' East
82 feet to the west line of Lucille
Jesse's 1 acre lot. recorded 1n
Deed Book 16 2. Page 589
Deed Records of Me1gs County/'
thence South 36 deg. 28' Eas
68 feet to the Southeast corner
of the sa1d 1 acre lot: thence

17 127. 181 3. 10. 3tc

South 59 deg. 56' West 2B. 71
feet along the south l•ne of the

Public Notice
PUBUCNOTICE
On July 22. 1983, in the
Me igs County Probate Court
Case No. 241 58. Homer A
Cole. Tuppers Pla1ns. Oh1 o was
appointed Execut or of the
estate of Nora H. Await. deceased. late of Tuppers Pla1ns.

Ohio.
Is/Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/Clerk

171 27. 181 3. 10. 3tc
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGB COUNlY. OHIO
CASE It 1B421
Diamond Savmgs &amp; Loan
Farmers Bank &amp; Sav1ngs Co.
Treasure r of Meigs County
Plaintiffs

vs.
Richard M . Young. L1nda A.
Young, Edward A Young. and
Debbie Devall. et al
Defendants
Pursuant to an orde r of sale
ISSUed by the Court of Common
Pleas •n 1he above styl ed case. I

sa •d 1 acre lot to the place of
begmr.ung. contai ning .30 acre
Along w 11h th e easement for
purposes of Ingress and egress
as •s desCnbed 1n deed recorded in Vol. 194. Page 199
of the Deeds Re cords of Mei gs

Counrv. Oh1o.
Referenc e Deed : Vol. 267.
Page 5 13 Deed RecOrds Meig s
County. Oh10.
Parce l 2: The follow1ng des·
cr•bed real estate s•tuated in the
Township of Salisbury. County
of Me•gs and State of Ohio. and
m Fraction No. 2. Town 2:
Range 13 at the Oh10 Company's Purchase. bounded and
des cr1bed as- fo1tows: Begmnmg at a sta~ e 1n the middle of
the paved road leadmg from
Kerr's Run past the Fa•r Ground
and also the c"ornef' of what was
formerly Ray Brown. then
runn 1ng along what w's formerly Ray Brown's line. N. 5
deg. 56 m1n. E. 208.7 1 teet
the nce N. 36 deg. 28 m1n . W .
208.7 1 feet thence S. 59 deg.
56 mm . W. 208 71 feet
to ce nter of road ; then ce
along the . road S 36 deg .
28 m1n _ E. 208.71 feet
to the pla ce ...;._
of begm ~

________________ ___

,_

I

·

II
II

I

Curb Inflation
II
.
Pay Cash·for
·II
Classlfleds and
Savelll

!
I
1

I
I

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
•
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
•
c - # 1B.099
IIMirk:eEaton
ll1d ~dwin Couot
Plllntlff '

...

11

Help Wanted

~~i=~~~~~=~

1 2.
ll 5~:

I

I

I
I

II
I
I
I

.

6.
1.

I
1
1

I

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- - . .... -- - - -- . __ - _

8.

__ - -

9.

- - • -·
- - -·-

10.
II .
12
13.

I ;:

..I

_ __ _ _

16.

- - --

- -~-

--

18 .

~4Jl..

•

15 .
16.

- .

·=~ ::-:::

n

CARPET
$J295

I

1
1
I

Good Selection Of
GOLD SEAL
CONGOI.EUM

== I

-· - . ----

-- --

-- -

_ _ _ _ _

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, 011. 45769

Rldlillor Speci11ill
NATHAIIIIGGS

35 Yrt, E"lriiiiCt

LEGAL NOTlcE
BHEAIFF'I BALE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS.
MEIGS COUNTY. 0180
CASE It 113-C\1·84

... '235.95
... 1285.95
... 1355.95
... '418.95
... '472.95

-

'

Bank One of
SOutheast Oh10 NA
2 S. Court Street
Athens. OH
Plaintiff

ARROW m
'
· BIG
FOR IALE

'ti

euaa~·.

HIN

•
R:ENT

·'

Aopla..mont LRt. .

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

Robert L Hawk and
Nancy F. Hawk

"

I

~

Alulinui!C..,... ... 20'1b.ll , ................. 30' lb.
Alit. . . . .. $lOll .........
llilld Iran .. $LOIII!ul*d
Allo Plc*q Up Allo ....
HZ-1-.-N.

!:~=========~·

USED
APPLIANCES
·

Washers, Dryirs

Kitch,en

6·9·t mo

dlalliia.Waa,....
"FINCINO I'IIOVIDES I'IIIVACY PlUS
I'IIOTICTION FOI CHILDREN &amp; PETS"

a . T. . . .
PAT

HILL FORD

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

"2·2196

843.ts425

Middleport, Ohio

7·5·2 1110. pd.

PH. (304) 882-2276

I·IHfc

THE

HEMLOCK
r Plf~~JNE~ ..
... IItts, ......

=

ponds, lllllily con-

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lbi~lil!lkln ~ llflllc tlnb.

TROPHY
KING ..
Trophy

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•lob Cimptell &amp;

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c.ov.,···
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ldd boland nld out . .

'Rimodtlinc
~b Ytlrs Exjl~ience
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FREE ESTifiiAT£5
Call

NEED~

tar-w.e -llao

,

'Gult• &amp; Down Spouts

I

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CHAIN LINK FENCING

E=~

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Don
IACIIE,OH.

PH. 94.. 2224
"lonllld f.&lt; lnsund"

VInyl •

THE

Aluminum

6-201 me.

KOUNTRY KLUB

GoH IA$sons Special

·siDING

ADULTS ....... 6 for W).lll
STUDENTS .... 6 for $30.00

BISSELL
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"Beautiful, Custom
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John Tilford

No Sunday Calls

Chester

J.ll·ttc

"Ucanoad. h1ijWI1tid"

-+0•• Un.-

PH. 992-3047

' PH. ~12-2478
'

1&gt;21-1 ""

7-15·1 IIMI. pd.

j JACK'S
'EPTIC SERVICE
nElS AIID POliO ...;.ldellllr

OiliER WAm All Off£1 On this two bedroom furnished
111111ment on second lblr willt
ra1lll income 111d $2111
rnontlllw. willlfllblt you lo tiJy
this dulllex lt1d 11w in the 5
room. 2 bedroom Mt lblr ~
the house. New Cl/l)llill, nice
kktlen, Wily, 11111111 on nice
let

children. Hits 3 · bedrooms,
mod. ball\ fumlce. waod

burner, ful bltll!lllllll, TJ&gt;..
Wll!!r, EIStern Sc:h: 9 tlaiJS b
$32,5111.

6 16•1 mo

110DDS - 18 1C111
fenced. "' stlnall24165111d
14ll70 llDiy 1'111t.llrilld IIIII.
Ill IME

=.~

~n:r.rr~=
·F.u
o1 ,und. full
blset11enlllld It in.IIOd IIPIIr.
Only $31,lioo.OO.

3

.............ill
a

~

.......

.,...,w.lc

SWEEPER and aowlng mechine rep•lr, peru, •nd
ouppllaa.
Pick ~P ond
delivery, Oevla V•cuum
c1..n.,. one hlllf mil• up
Goorgoa c . - Ad. Coli
441-0294.

elawwk

lllue.W:•and

I,.......

(frw latlmol")

V. C.

YOUNG

Ill

"2·6215 ., 992-731 4

UIO.OOO. Bingo gomo.
Cherokee, N.C . Leaving
Pomeray A~vuat 11.
tor trantport•tlon •nd mo·
lef.AeHrWtion de•dline Augun 5th. The only autho·
rb:ed co·ordln•tou whhin
110 mllaa. 114-992-3377 or
114·992·11007.

POme,.y,

•n.

•WaM•••DW.WIIIherl

PH. 992-7.119

C1ll: Georae Gum

aAefrl.....or.

i "Senior Citizens

. I

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

"Frat Eslimates" ...

!. of

.

' Day

ar

'

Ph. 992-5433

Night

4

FOR SALE

ICiw (:onstructiOII - I•·

18 FT. WILD CAT
TRAVEL TRAILER

$HARL£S SAYRE

......

ilfdtllq - .c.sto• Pole

I

AND SON

Clrpeltd, bltlwoom Witl1
lllfter, ps or tllct. relria..
IU/IIICI, &amp; lot. Wlt•lltltlr.
!Ifill, sink, . .. tltct .. or

:

liMite 1

HltiiY lilfltl, ...... 6. ·cllllftl cOIIIIItion.

laofitll &amp; Sidilll co.
~~

$2,700.00 or Btst orflr

lottoll, OH. 45743

••HIU or ·2·3057
l

•'

PH.I92·30015

12-:tfft

r

lle-

•Dryer8 .,,...,.
PARTS ontl SERVICE
4-S·t!t

.•Ollici---A

MillER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

8 wk. old shan heirecl
pnup p ioa . Call 814·31743

.

fOI' all your wiring .
naada; fum•c:e• rapelr Mrvlce •nd In·
lt811etlon.
•
Raalclentlal
• Commercial
Cell 742-31815
3·7·tfc

_....:.__ _ _ _ _ _, , r--:--:":":::-7"7:"__

GENERAL
CONTRACTING, Inc.
flow Ho•s - EllansiVI
11111111111111
'lnSII'IIICt Wort

•c.st. Pole lldp.
I Gar-.~

'laoflll Work
·~u,lt_itl]!'!! &amp;

3 Puppietl, 2 femele. onemolo. Cuto, WDimt~ . 2511148.
I kitten• need homtt; 2
orang•. 1 eallao. blaek white
• lobby. Call 4e· 71113. Atl&amp;
for Chor.

David Brlokloo
Buoln•• With

.

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who hoa
•nythlng to give •w•y end
doea not offer or attempt to
ofter eny othM thing for Nfe
may pl•ce an ed In this
column. There will be no
cherge to the advertl1er .

915-3561
All Makes

S-11·21!111.

6·29·11!10. pd

' Announcement~

SERVICE

10% Discount"

Cle1nina &amp;
Instillation
New Systlms

Nlios - Sldtwtlks -

"llf~Jr.
Dallier... ....
. Jo . . . . ..

I

HOME REPAIR

llitclllll C.~iDtts - loot·
IH - Si4inl - COICrtll

llfAI.fOIS

10 IVY

CARPENTER

. I

ICIII

•r·

~~

KEN'S
APPUANCE
SERVICE

p.t. ~-

POll- - Good house.

IEDUC£DIIDIILE 111• - Mlillrlt ldd-on buifdina.ll!lhllt
LDCIIed on quiel llltllt out fl hW! Mllll in Rli:ile: The.
=~room is lllntlqa Then is 1 cementWIIkllld~CCMIId
llso I melll siJnp buicfi1l. Alliin&amp; $15,900.
J ACI£5 IN IIACIIIE - Surwyaj flit 111111, pr1vllt ll1d fiiiiCIIul
locltion. Owner will help fin1001..
fllW USTIIIQ- II mieoutofRiclne, 3 bipiklfit home on~~~
lit IMnlllllllll ClrP*I. ltialllld dhin&amp;likli1ll'lne' Cedlr.
rut .. " Ifill . . . .!aline $24,!1111.

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

YOUNG'S

Roofin&amp; - Sidiq
Trouchs,
Down Spouts
Windows • Doors
Fot "All" Your Home
Rtfllirs ...

:

I

WlW USTIIIG - Rock Sprinp
llold- ClA.3bedroom home
wllh new ~ Plflllinc
ttrqwt
llir hell,
a lii!Odbumer, nice ullily
roam. LAMII I" t1cr11 let
$36,900.00.

ih111111.

•.

All Occasion Cakes

I

........lc Sy11em1
LARGE OR BMALL JOS

NlW USTIIIG - MIODl£.
POll - Aproa.IO ac:res. III
SillY. 3 bedroom home.

NlW USllla- 2 bedniamhlllr, )21155, bllleCOII'flllllb

TERESA'S
CAKE .
DECORATING·
Wedel ina Cikes and

POIEIIOY

50'xl00' let

tJr eflic:ieJICJ. Owner S1YS SEll Plice l8duced lo $2S.!iOO.

'

'llpotina

-

-j-Wit.. · i

I•JI!. declt area tJr sumlllef
enWnent Kkhen equipped
willt dBhas~1 ref., r~nae.
disposal Cemn air.' Carport

·

room.

.

'Sidin1 .

-.8-r

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
PIIC£ REDUCED -On lt1cr11
Ids in ftve l'oinls, $5,(XX) lo
$7,(XX). tJIIIies IVIillble.
flEW USTIIIG -

nishld includlna ....., &amp; d!ylr or ll1fumiihed. IQ tJr price&amp;.

\

I
I

l.

FOR ALL YOUR YARD

w.c.n,.... ......

SIDING

- 2-3 bedroom llltJSe willt

QUID SillEr - 2 bedniam home In Racile, llllu!IS indude:
IQI 1111-in kii:IMn, CQelld IMna
chlin link fenced ywd,
ClrPIIf. baanenl wllh slwwllld llu!Py -~~~~~ 1pn b 3rd
bednlom or wlllllmir ymr needs 111, IIIIOdlula CDiil be lllded

l

SUP£1tlclfl VINYL

. PULLINS .
EXCAVATING
-Dozttr1

E.Mal•n....~

CENTRAL REALTY

I

RADIATOR
SERVIa

r

Me•gs County
(7) 13. 20. 27 31c

I

I

Mason, W. Va.
C.

11

Sat.. Thurs. • Fri.
Turn on Uncoln Pike, then
NOftllup Petriot Ad. Big rod
gorogo on right.

O.r1gt1

CUTE collie Puppioa, I wka.
old. Coli 381·14 1 I.
Ono lolgo mole Ndllono dog
ond o'"' mole mlxod puppy. &amp;toto At. t24 to
llocl'"' ._.... lout.,.rn
High School before ocllool
tum right It pond on Ook
l!rovo Ad. 1It houao on
right.
OIW owor..,l month old
~~.! amholor1md ~ ~
- - ,....._
-dot· Heo hod ohoto. Cofttoct
Klmmy Pierce. l~lom
Centor .

1

k - • to ....,. -.,..
Appoolllmotoly ... t 0 old'. 114.eea.JUI. ·
F- pupt to ....,.. homo.
114-112·73...

I.

Loot and Found

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

l:;,~·n:·~.1 !h~~;:n~:·!~~i,

Yord Solo; Fri. July 28th.

Fri. &amp; Sot . July 29-30 .
Dish••· many clothea, etc: .
Second hou1e on left •h•r
going through uutlon light
In B~•dbury . 10-7 .

·------------··· I~G::-a-r_o_g"'o'"':SO.o71o-:--:Bo.u:lo':'v"l:!:l o.':"
women's clothing.

Gorago Sole; antiques, cor Porter Rd. Acroaa from
porta. clothing. Wod .- Sot. Plont• Subdivision. July 28,
9-8. Rotn. Shlno. 2 mi. 29 •. a. 30th.
GOOfgOI CrHk. right.
1-:--:--:--:---:---:----:-GIANT YAAO SALE. Thurs.
YIH"d Solo; 1 at tlmo. July ond Fri. Lata of ohlldNna
28,29,30. 8·6 . o,.. milo oft ondwomonaclothlng, Avon.
Rt. 7 at Raccoon B1ldge . nick nocka. Old Rt. 180.
Bear Run Rd. lota of good Evorgroon.
1--..:;..-------:-:Items. Ch•ap.
LARGE SEVERAL FAMILY
Y•rd Stle. Out 141, l•ft on V•rd S•te. 36 West Apte.,
776. 3 mi. China Cab . H~ 1138 Jockaon Pike . Thura,
pl11tlc pipe 1 3 in . tires, etc. Fri. •nd Set. Acroat from
Coli 114-379-2292 .
Clnomo Theotro.

loot: Pony. block &amp; white,
vicinity of Moctdonlo Rd. · ~----::--:---::-=:-:--:-:
Call 21111· 11522 or 441· Corport Sola. Rt. n11. 24 V
3410.
Stertor, 1148 Remington
automatic, 870 Wlngmat ·
FOUNO: Fomolo .Auatrellen tor, 2 Rib Berrola. Cell
Hoolor. laothorcoller. Owner 614·379· 2892 .
con coli 814·317·0314 ond 1- - - - - - - - - ldtntlfy.
V•rd Sale. Centen•rvTown houu. Friday 29th . Sm•ll
tools, ropes, batkett, crataa,
8
Public Sale
ftowert, clothing, ml1c.
• Auction
Moving S•le. W Main St.,
Cheshire. 081k, c•nning
j•n, depre~tlon gl•••· Avon,
Auctlon every Tuesday books . Thurs.· S•t. 10. 7
night Krodel P•rk Club
Auct. Lonnie N•al. Cell
II
14-3117-7101.
Houle,
Pt. Pl•asant WV.
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service . Estate, Farm, An·
tlqu• &amp; liquidation Hlet.
Uconood &amp; bonded In Ohio &amp;
WYo. 304-773-6786 or
304-773-81B6.

. PH: 1·304-773-5634

l·J.tfc

-+B8Cithoaa '
-Dumpl'rucko
-+L:o-eov
-T....,cher I

Sheriff

1

Firm Equipment
Deal•r
Farm Equipment
Ports &amp; Service

EUGENE LONG

SMALL boy puppy, 304876·8B28.

·······G
--iiifip··0--iii·········
&amp; Vicinity

······pomeroy·········
M"ddf
I

lipOrt

&amp; Vicinity

--·---Pt-iii&amp;aai·r.r ···
· 8t

Vicinity

I g:.~;~~~~

1811. clothing,
I'
itoma. mlac. 28
Burden• Addition, Pt. Pl...
aant. lhurodoy, 28th &amp;
fredly 29th. 8-1 .
MOVING aalo, Y, mila obove
Jr. High, Pt. Pto01ant, 4th
troller to right. ThursdayFrld8y, 9-&amp;.

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

-·-·----------·········· ····-8 family Y•rd 1111. Fri., S1t..
Aug 29-30. In Maton on 4th
Brown St. HouM no 12. 9
a .m .- I. ·
Fridlly Juty 29th 9 AM -4

YAAO aalo. Sot~rday. July
30. Sliver. clothes. hounhold Items, •Porte equip·
m•nt. toola • ml1c. 108
28th . StrMt, Pt. PI.. Mnt.
YAAO aolo. July 29 ond 30.
118 Midw•v Drive N•w
Haven,

9 :00

to

6:00 .

PM . !571 Grant St .. Middle· Cloth••· bookl, toys, hou•eport . Jr. •nd Missy 1ln hold goon. miac.
clothing •nd other item1.
t

---=--------

'~~~;:;;;::::;~==t~~~~~~~~~,~-'ifi~~;;~~i;i;==

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel .

J.i S·l IWO.

James J. Proff itt

1 ROlL ONLY IN laOWN

l

J.S.tfcc

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

..~luii!Hac

Plt.IIH!l-~~91

Gibbo·Ownert

PH. 992-2178

Authorized John 0Hr,

Doc Housu

Patty

I

Real Eltata Oenerel ',

SALVAGE COMPANY

742-2362

$399 rll'm

UJ

1-tl""-4112 ' . .

Real Eltete Oenerel

to the county road (now known
;.
as Ra1lroad Slreel). thence
RIIIIIS, KlflplloiS
along 1he counly road ro the
WE ALSO DO
place of beginmng. ·
Reference: Volume 257 .
SERVICE CALLS
Page 537 Meigs Cou~ Deed
qecords. Meigs County. Oh10.
Property appra1sed at
s11 .35o.oo.and canno1 be
ERNEST MITCHELL ·
sold for less than 2/3rds of the jL.Jt!!!!!.!.~!!!!!~....:._j
appra1sed pnce.
Terms: Cash 1n hend on day
of sale.

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

;n

WI 1111 qii]lly n .. c...

S.R. 124-1'11. 992·5468
8QI1II1 of ..... Hllinlm
- . Iran. 111111111.
101' PIICU ,
CaN~~r .................... 45 lb.

Defendants
PUrsuant to an Order of Sale
issued by the Court of Common
Pleas in the above styled.case, I
will offer for sale at public
au ct•on at the front door of the
Court House. Meigs County.

river f1fty feet down river:thence

Good Selection Of
GRASS CARPeT

' ., I .

Gregg &amp;

U.S. RT. !10 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

'""'"'

I

.. '. I

~CATALOG
~MERCHANT

SAL£S &amp; SERVICE

to 24'131'

; . , 1,

&amp; TRUCK

BOGGS

P.&amp;S
BUILDINGS
',
~~~~iM.... .

PH. 992-2280

Ridlrs &amp; Sons

·VS·

runn1ng on a parallel line norlh

WITH PAD

&amp;

UTILITY BUILDINGS
: SiZ¥ fnl• I'd' Up
•

Polllt/0)', OH.

or 992-7121

$1m lllrt fro• 12'11&amp;'

J-.ulnt

5 Yea~s.

FREE pupploa to good
homo. coli 304-1715-7474.

6

PH. 992-5612

POLE IULD1NGS

•

For

2~3.ttc

Oh10 R1ver; thence along the

INSTALLED

i

EEL

Installed And
Warranted by Sears

Also Tranomlstlo.n ·

949·22~

S

Avlj ,f, ~.

REPAIR

.

TON

Oh.

runn1ng along said line to the

STARTING AT

: ALL

..

w.-.

$3(J)O A.

SMITH NELSON
·MOTORS, Inc.

&amp;..---~ .... ---~..---.~---------~.

,.

I

o-

STRIP
COAL

lor.

follows:
Beg1nning at the southwest
corner of Harry Evans line and

I
llt-------..a..--~-~~-t
I
I

--= I

::::

I

tirep!lce, frmt and rear porch,
Plrt blsetilllll; 2 c. .....
&amp;a'den qJICe, ether 'buidinp.
Only $26,900.111.

_ _ __ _
_ _ • _ __

=~

I

MINERVN

Cort ID.Ihe llrltst flldil-

Public Notice

and iCula
State rlof
part
y Ohio.
descrand
ib edmore
as

I'

=

:: ~:.. ~!
35.

SALE

- . - . -- I

·- -

..'

AUTO

or 949-3091; ,0 "'

1

,I']

U.OU.nda of

St. lt. 124,

lnd

"frH ·fstifiiiiH"

)' COli:

Puppies. 304-875-2671 or
175· 7121 .

GARAGE

dOan - windows.
; All Wort Guar1ntttd
~

~;:k :.-z;~··~o;.~·:~

doga. Con bo aaon ot 2211
Jockaon Avenue.

·

Roaer ttysen

dlllntpoub, ....... delnilt IIIII ~ llonn

'

--=--:--::---::--:--- II From the Smllllst Heller

614-992·2111

ll.---!i:::!:l::;.__.J

__

• - --30.
3
1.

(304) 675-4340.

- - ·- - ---~ ~-=:

I

I ;

(7) 13. 20. 27 3tc

. COMPLITI
IIADI.l TOI SI.VICE

Service

"*won. -

All
or. t)tpll
......of. .autlln

1

10:00 o'clock AM .. 1he follow-

POMEROY
LANDMARK

An F.q•at Opportunity

I

--- -·- - -

u.

~:

Pllone:

SHERIFF

mg lands and tenements tO-Wit
Situated 1n the County of
Meigs. V1Uage of M iddleport

SPECIAL
15 Cu. Ft. ... 1325.95

--+-+-....:..;+-....:..;+--i

19,•
10.
11

64 Misc. Marchandl88

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

These cash rates
include discount

I

J

't :

Meigs County

Pomeroy. Oh10, on Saturday.
the 20th day of August 1983. at

CHEST MODELS

wn,..,~

11 .

follows . viZ: Begmn1ng at a point
on the Eas t line of the Fred

Strohmeyer lot now owned by
Dav1d B. Williams: and at a half
way po1nt on the East hne of
same; thence West Four (4)
Holon G. 'Miiama, ot al
cha1ns and E•gHty-s1x (86) lm~s:
thence South along the West
DolondPursuant to an ORDER OF hne of the sa•d Fred Strohmeyer
SALE •ssued by the Coun of lot to the Sou thwest corner of
Common Pleas m the above th e same; thence East to the
styled case. I Will eXpose for sale Southeast corner of the sa•d
at pu bl iC auct•on at the front Fred Strohmeyer lot; thence
door of the Court House o f North Three 13) cha1ns end
Me1gs County. ~omeroy , Oh1o, E•ght and one-half (8 'h)l1n ks 1o
on Saturday, the 20th day of the place of beg1nning. all of
August 1983. at 10:30 o'clock these dis tances bemg as near
A,M . ihe follow1ng lands and accurate as it is poss1ble •n
tenements to·vM :
mak•ng an equal d•v•s1on ol the
The follow1ng real estate. sa•d Fred Strohmeye'r lot into
Si tuated •n ' the :rownsh•p of 1Wo Separate lots. the same ·to
Sutton. and 1n the V•llage of contc;~•n about one and one-half
Syracuse. 1n the County of (1 'I~) acres. savmg and except Me1gs. and State of Ohto. and •ng the .coal and other m1nerals
further bounded and desc nbed and the nght to m1ne 1he same.

reserves edit
the or
right
to ~ro 25
classify,
reject
1anv ad. Your ad will be ·ro 35
I put in .the proper ~~~l__ _e:~~~~::~

I check the proper bo'IC
I below.
I
!Wanted
I
)
For Sa le
I
&gt;Announcement
I
) For Rent ·
I
I
I '.. _ _ _

PARCEL NO. 2 :
The following real estate.
Situate in the County of Meigs.
•n the State of Oh1o and •n the
Tow nship of Su tton . and
bou nded and described as

FREEZER

you'll -

. j

' I
I

. _
74 2 2328

get better results
I ifYou'll
vou describe fully,
give .Price. The Sentinel ·ro 1S

if

.

'

I

•f

Sidinll

below. Each In·

c lassification

lot:

hund r~

Public Notica

, _,., ... ,.

; ROO.. NG

·I

t;:==::::::;===::-t===~=====:;,-;::====~::::::::;::· ~·
ROUSH
A[ TROMM'S
BLOWN
CONSTRUCTION
BACKHOE
&amp;
SERVICE

eac~

I1

:: :"::.""-

992-7116

SR

2 amoll brood '""'"'" pupptu. 1 brown a. white, 1

*CHAIN Ll NK
fEN Cl NG

&amp; lcottlto Smith

li. L. Writesel

Busm·ess' .Se-,;ces

1 Phon•-------------

I fitial or group of figures
I counts as a word. Count
1 name · and address or
1 pnone number if used.

~:! ~-:::.:-

SiJCCESSFUl
BUSINESS
IS A CINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!

The Daily Sentinel

J A~dress·--------one word in

1n -

money...w,g mcmge.

.

1space
Print

lu ....,_

U1
clullftecl.

.i Name_...__ _......_____
I

=.o....

::

thence So u th seven
•
and fifty-four feet
(754) to the Public Road ;
thence along said road a
conta• nmg one acre. more o r as follows. to-wit:
Northwesterly course to the
tess. excephng however that
PARCEL NO. 1:
sa•d Carleton College lot
portiOn of sa•d real estate as
The followmg real ·estate then&lt;~e East T&gt;NO Hundred and ,
conveyed by Val E. Brown and Si tuate 1n the County of Me•gs. Twenty-t1ve feet ~225) to the
Maggie Brow~ to luCi ll e Jesse In the State of OhiO. and In place of beginning. containing
by deed beanng date of Dec
the To'to(nS hlp of Sutton two (2) acres more or less.
15. 1932. r ecorded •n Vol and bounded and des cnbBe~ng the same real estate
139. Page 74 of the Deed ed as fol lo ws. v •z: Begm - conveyed to Albert E. Will1ams
Aecords of M e1gs County, mng at my Northeast corner of by David B. and Albert E.
That'• rightl When you uaa a column inch or
Oh•o. to wh•ch reference 15 the East hne of the Fred Williams by Deed recorded •n
made. lurther except ~ng 30 of Strohmeyer lot. and now JOintly Deed Book 154. Page 140 of
I"'IInn IIIWipeplr lldvartiling, be it dilpley or
' I
an acre conveyed to George A owned by myself and my
t he Me•gs County Deed
you ..ch
po1111ntial
' I
Young and' Mary Patnc1a brother, Albert 6:. Williams. and Re cords .
Young. by deeds recorded 1n extend ing North Three (3) PARCEL NO. 4:
buyera that Ire l8glt' ·t o raceiw your
.
Vol. 184. Page 485 and Vol
cha1ns and Eight and o ne-half
The follow1ng real estate in
184. Page 657 Deed Records \{ 8 1h ) links to the Northeast 100 acre Lot No. 296. Sutton
ol Me•gs County. Oh10. an d co rn er of 1he sa1d ·Fred Slroh· Township. Village of Syracuse.
further eXcepnng the coa l and meyer lot: thence West Four (4] Me•gs County, Ohio. 10-wit:
'
I
the r1g hts along the coa l seam s chains and Eighw·six (86Jtin lcs; Beg •rming on the West Line of
1n and under sa1d prem•ses 1n thence Sou th Three (3) c hains
100 ac re Lot No. 296 a1 the
accordance With the excf!p- and Eight and one-half (8 1/2) Northvvest corner of Albert ~ ·
11ons 1n a deed to Will1am l•nks along West L•neol thesa•d Wilti ams one and 50/ 100 acre
Brown. Leonard Brown and Fred Strohmeyer lot to m\1 lot thence East 128 feet:
Lew1s Brown. from Char le s P. Northwest corner: th ence East thence North 4 deg . 40' East
Greenough, Dan•el A. Russell Four (4) cha1ns and E1ghty-s1x
and Frank 0 Sqwre. Trustees. {86) 'links to the place of to the West hne of 100 acre lot r
136 feel. 1hence WeS1139 feet ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
dated Jan. 11th. 1895. and beg1nn•ng.~ ~he same 1ntend1ng
recorded Nov_ 8th. 1907. 1n to convey he one-half of the No. 296: thence South 136 feel
to place of beginning. contain·
a • .a
l
'Vol 97. Page 492 of the Deed sa1d Fred S!rohmeyer lot. and 1ng 42/100 acres. more or
;
Records o f Me•gs County. all the dis tan ces here1n named
Oh1o.
be•ng as near accurate as IS excepted from a deed to John
Reference Deed: Vol , 264. poss1ble to make an equal less.
and being a parcel of land
H. McCoy
Page 2 57 Deed Records M e1gs · d iVISIOn qf the sa•d lot mto two
Coun~y. Oh10.
sepa rate pieces. the same to other
Saveandexcept
J&amp;L
minerals. ga$ lhecoaland
and oil. and
•
,
The property appra1sed ar co nta•n about One and one1
the
rig
ht
to
mine
!he
same
•s
INSUlATION
$38.033.00 and cannot be half {1 12) acres. sav•ng and
hereby reserved
~
sold for less then 2/3rds of the j:,~~~·;~g the coal and oth er
Being the seme real estate
flow Hor111 - EllensiYt
VINYl
appra1sed pr1 c.e . Pa rce l One
I and !he righ to m1n e
conveyed
to
Albert
E.
W•lliams
Rtlllodtllna.
ALUMIIIUM
SIDING
appra1 sed at $2 3 .333. and the sa me wh1ch 1S Hereby . from Hannah Lo ng. et at. by
elnsurancl Won
Parce l Two appra1sed at reserved .
.Custom Pole lldiS.
"Lowest Rates
...... tlcil
$14.700.
'
_
Also any •ntere sl s •n any rig hi deed recorded •n Deed Book
oSionn
161
Page
464
Me•gs
County
&amp;
GariPS
Around
. I
Ter m s: Cash 1n hand on day of way to th e above described
doofiOI Work
prem1ses •s hereby g1ven to the (/eed Records.
of sa le.
The property IS appraiSed at
........... &amp; Vinyl
riendly Servie
JAM ES J. PROFFITT said grantee.
$ 15.000.00 and cannot be
SHER IFF
Be~ng the same real estate sold fo r less lhan 2/3rds of the
15 .,._. hponSEPTIC TANKS
MEI GS CO UNTY J::bnveyed to Albert E W1ll1ams
appra~sed pnce.
GIIG
ROUSH
A SPECIALTY
17 1 13. ~0. 27 . 3 tc
by Dav1d B. Williams by deed
Terms: Cash 1n hand on day
PH. "2·7513
recorded 1n Deed Book 128
ol sale.
., 992-2212
Page 1 B5. Me1gs Countv Deed
,
JAMES
J.
PROFFITT
~,.
_
_
_ _ _ _..;.u..;.-t.;.t·•:.:'-' "------__;:::.:;;:=...~
Records
.
1
Public Notice

Write vour own ad and order by . mail with this
coupon.. Cancel vour ad by phone when you vet
results. Monev not refundable .

1

.,. ,.. ,..__,

, 15 ~.:.,

Public Notiqe

will expose for sal e at publ1c
auct•on on the front steps ot the

A summary of th e enacted

..~ --.....

PARCEL NO. 3:
" ' " - . . . . . . _,.
J~ . _ ,
1u ""''"""'
n1 tvtt• ·
The follow1ng described
real
II· ,....,. • ..._.,.
617 C_...olloo
h V
•:~.(, ......,
f-- - - - -- - - - - -- --1! estate s• tuate 1n t e 1llage of
=~~":.":!!.._,.._
1.1•••"-• OM•-- · uoo
Syracu se. m the County at
UIII .H " • •
· u., o
o••-• n.... "'",-•- uoo00
.Me1g s and State of Oh1o and
u .u..--,
~·o nw.:-,~!",.":.,";.'::';.'... 1 "
bounded and described as
follows: Beg1nnmg at the Southeast co rner Carleton College

"'-'·-·

..........

~FREE

~!:~~~ ~:~:~~312
All Mikes lnd Models
Anttnlll lnstlllltion
House Cllll ~d s·~
••1 1 "••

ESTIMATES"
....
, ONE·.

r:n

Bemg the same real estare
conveyed ro Albert E. and
Mabel W1lhams by D.B, WiHiams to be deed recorded 1n
Deed Book 135 Page 331.
Me1gs Counry Deed Records_

If

124 to R•cln• tDW8rdl
S.H.B. B.toro school, turn
right· ot pondbnNd
on Ook
pup.
Grove
Ad. ht. houao on right .

"FREE ESTIMATES 11

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 9811·4289

lltrloOtlillc a 111w HDmiS

wh•ch 1s· hereby reserved.

,..............
.,,_
...... "-'-

11-~o.N.,...,..,.._

•..._ ....

/••1/.,.,·in~t tr •l•· r• ''""'' •·oo·h"" ~''' ..

'""--~

___..,,
,.,.•.
.....,..............
f&lt;_._..,. .,.,..._.

CARPENTRY
•
; S~RVICE

1 larrnalo rod bono dog &amp; 1

S.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

by

,

( .'/m1.1i/io•r/ JHIJ:o·• , .., .,,,. Ou·

. TJ..v.,,a • wo

t:J.Il.,._

,

..

Public Notice

u ,,.,.... ,_ ...._

1 MH.:O ~;,:.._...

45769

::;;~!!~~~;;:=i]r==::;;;~~!;;;:::=~jj::::::::::::~[1l;~ii~JI::::::::::::~~mAio
mOXod
ears'
AIID

11

4

~

S&amp;W TV

E

•
•

"......................
---o-. ., ,_ . . . .

I C-~l- o l,....,ftY.-1

,..._.....,.,
oo...-...
..•-ll_,....,,_...
.._,
....___,
JY_._,

Pomeroy, Ohio

Business Services

't

'

Page

11

Help Wanted ·

Scenic Hill Nuuing Center ia
now hiring 1teff A N'1 8t
LPN•e applictltiona c•n be
obtained at Scenic Hlll1
·Nursing Center, Monday
thru Frld•v. BAm to 4PM .

31 Home• fOr Sale

21

Buaineas
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
Auction every Fri. night •t
THE OHIO VALLEY PUSthe H•rtford Community
C•nter. Trucklo•d• of new P•rt time Secr•t•ri•l poai- LISHING CO . recommends
m•rchendiM every wtek. tlon. R•sume onlv will be that you do bulineaa with
Con•igm•nta of new and .ccepted. High School gr•d- peopl• you know. tnd NOT
uted rnetch•ndin •lw•vs u•te, bookkeeping upe- to Mnd money through tM
W81come. Richard Reynolds rience, experience ••• forms m•il until you hav. inv••tl·
helpful. Muat b8 rtlltblt. l.:.uo_•_•_d_t_ho_o_ft_er_ln_D_·_ __
AuctlonHr. 2711·3089.
•ble to work independently.
Complete Auctioneer Be r- S.ndreeum•: KoteHcl.andt- Own your own
f
p Jeen
ot
vice. Allo do appraiselt. c1plng, 861 Second Spor1awear,ln •nt- r ""·
Uc.nMd 6 bonded to ••U. Avenue. Galllpolll , 0 H Ladle• App•rel, Comblnll!·
Houaeholdl. f•rm torniah- ._4_1_1_3_1_.- - - - - - - tlon, acctllorlts or Quality
Store.
2.. 1
Children•
Inga a. Ae•••••
I - to · Ovof g
I Furniture
dJd
h
v••r•expe"lencelnbuylng&amp; MERRI-MAC nuda 3 dam- Netiont bran a: or ac •·
c 11VIn
18lling new. uted • antique Onltreton In thlt areal Gifts, Chic. lee, Levi,s V•nderbllt,
furniture. 814-992-6370 . toyt, home decor Items on lzod, Gunne
ak,
plan. C•r •nd phone Klein. E1prlt.
Oce•n
0
P"rty
Ooby A. Mort In.
E
PIZen•. H
lth
nece11aFy. Hlgheat commla- P•cific, van cone, N
AUCTION every Seturd•y •ion. No lnve1tment. deliv- Tax, 300 other1. •7.800. to
124.600,
•lrt•r•.
night. 8 p.m. Mt . AI to 01ing. or 3 coll•otlng. C•ll
1 1 I'lnv•ntory,
t
ond
op
k
Auction Barn . Consign - 814-742- 094. Al1o boo - tr• n ng. IX ure1. gr
montl teken everv Saturd•u lng p8rtiea.
•lng etc. Mr. Olckaon(tlo01,
.•
•
BU -&amp;184. 111011 218·
1 :00 till aalo time. Emma GOV'"ANMENT JOBS - 1361 .
Boll AuctlnHr. 304-428•
8177 .
Thou11nd1 of v•c•nclea
must be fill•d immedl•tely. For Ieese, Auto S•rvlce
Up to d1te directory ll1t1 C•nter, M..on. WV, 3 bey I,
jobs from $17.634 to 2 hoi1t1. eJtc8llent location,
9 Wanted To Buy
U0,112 . Call 716· 842- aucce11ful butine11 for over
•
6000,
including Sunday, 30 v•ar1. available aher
We P•v c•ah for late model
Eot . 4438.
Aug. 9, 19.3. Coli oftor I
clean und cer1.
p.m .. 1-304-8711 -2982.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oidl Inc .
The
Meig1
County
H•alth
'Bill G•n• John1on
Dep•rt:ment will be •ccept448·3872 .
lng appllc•t6ona for en AaWanted to buy uaed coal e. ailt•nt Sanitarian po1ltion 22 Money to Loa11
wood he•tera. Swain Furni- from July, 28th till Augult
ture. .441-3168. 3rd. a. 2nd. 1983. Requirements
•re : High School gr8duate HOME LOANS low fl•od
Olivo St., Gallipolis. Oh.
with college credha in envir- rate. Leailer Mortgag•. 77 E.
Standing timber. •nv onment •nd ·or 11nitetion Stole, Athena, Ohio . 1-814•mount . C•ll 814-388 - field. Mu1t be 11tute end 592-30151, or 12 to 4PM
willing to pursue • degree in 1 -B00-34 1 -8&amp;14 in Ohio.
8908.
tho Sonltotlon flold. Solorv
8EOS·IRON, BRASS.- old commen1ur•te with experience •nd •ducetion. M.&amp;l
tumlture~ gold, tilver' dolllrl, wood ita boxes. aton• reaumea to P.O. Box 831 , 23 Profeuional
Pomeroy, Oh. 46719. NO
J•r•. •ntiquea, etc., Com- PHONE
CALLS PLEASE.
Services
plete households. Write:
M.D. Mlllol, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
WANTED-Responsible
Oh. Or 892· 7780 .
party to te•r down old barn . PIANO TUNING $15oft plua
W•nted to buy. New, uHd a 814-949-2888 .
discounts to aenior cltlaent·
•ntlque furnitu!'8, Will buy 1
churchea-achoola. Cell 1111
piece or complet.,. hoult· HOUSE OF LLOYD nooda Ward W•rd's Keyboard,
l•d
..
l to thow toys and glhs
holds. Call Oaby A. Mortin
448-4372.
now till December 111. free·
81 "·992· 11370.
t300 kit, n. por hour. Coli PIANO TUNING-LANE DABuying d•ity gold, silver 1-814-992-1591 lor Molga NIELS . Reliable service
colna. ringa. ,Jewelry, sterling County, 304· 773· 1224 lor since 198!5. Auoc::ia1e of
were, old coln1. large cur- Muon County.1 -814-317- Brunicardi Muaic Co. Phone
814-742-29111 .
rency. Top prlc••· Ed. Bur- 7770 tr,fclar11,a7770
kett Bor\&gt;Or Shop, 2nd . Avo. Weitrlll and manager
Middleport. oh. 114-992- w•nted for tev•rn •nd r••·
uurent , cell 304- 876 3471 .
9704.
WANTED to buy: PPJHS
Aedoklno T-ahlrt, alzo 12. HOUSE OF LLOYO nHd
l•d~l to show toya end gift1
Coli 304·87&amp;·3B09.
now till December 1 at . Free
GOOD sturdy made w•ll 1300 kit. U per hour. Call
tent that ateepa 4 to I. C•ll 1·814·992·81591 for Moiga Newly romodolod 2 story
County. 304-773-&amp;224 for Iremo, 1Y, bath, 3Y, acroa,
304-8715· 32$3.
Meton County •nd 1 ·81 4- city achoola, rlvorvlow.
3117 - 7770 for Gallla 132,000. Call 448·4222
1
County.
between 8 &amp; 11.
.
11

1----------

12

Situations
Wanted

1----------

Territorial •vell•ble for new
AVON repreMnt•tivea or
you e~~n sell where you wortc. Room, bo•rd •nd eere for •n
elderly perton In my home.
Call 448·21118 .
Ao01onoblo. Coii992 -I022 .
•&amp;o-• 1 oo d•ily commit·
alona poaalbla plua monthly
tionu1 on repeet ulea. ConInsurance
sumable product• everyone 13
UHI. QueNfy for company
travel. lnaur•nce, r•tiremont progrom. Full· port SANDY ANO BEAVER lntlmo. Coli 1175-2938 !n lurance Co. hu offered
Maoon County, 247·2056 Hrvlc•• for fir• lnaur•nce
Melia County, or 448· cover1ge In Oelli• County
for 1lmo11 a century. f•rm,
1988 .
and JM~rson•l property
~~~~~~~~~ hom•
A10 ORANOE COLLEGE &amp; coveragn 1re •v•llable to
COMMUNITY COLLEGE me•t lndividu•l n•d•. Con·
INITAUCTOA, SCHOOL teet A•vWedemeyer, •gent.
OF NURSING. Port-tlmo Phone 311 ·8249.
tempory Clinio•l lnlltructor.
1.,.,..,1• ttud8nt• on fir~ Ar• you P•yJng to much for
your holpit•l-h..lth in•u~r level of progr•m 1n
nuNing h . - ond beginning rance . C•._. Carroll
rntd-eurg Httino; ,.,rite ev•· Snowdon. 441-4290.
luetlon of ttudentt preformence; •tt•nd pl•nnlng
mMtlnga wttll tecutty: gr•ding of ttudent clinclel expe18 Wanted to Do
rience pepera. Pra-retlld Flculty lolorv leola. Ohio AN
Ua.~aure' experleftC8 for It
..... OM full y•r 81 I nurM
In e med-uurg aenlng in •
hoopitol aottlng; IBN por·
t.rrod flrot ot loaot 111
........, or 20 quarter hra.
credit , _ 18N deg-:
1hoH with no Gfodlt to~d
1 INB will bo aonold
.
lllltOf of lntornt, vito,
ond other portlnont poporo
to Office of per10nnel. lox WIN do bollyllttlng • houaoIll, Ala OrondO Collatio. cloonlng. Coli 44e· 71101.
Ala O r - . Oh, 41114.
before oppllaotlon d .... lno lllok, Block a. Stano -rk.•
of July 21. 1183:
Coli Tom. 441-7207.

car.

Modo'"
K.. OR .. Brick
LA , 2Ranch.
botha, 32 BR.
cor
garage. 1 .2 pi~• earo. city
ach., Watson Ad . off 35 ·
446-3385 .
lnut"ully londacopod 3
bdr. home with deck. On 1
1cenic ecr• in Northup. City
achoola, I mlnutn from
town. flreplece. h•rdwood
floors. malmenance frl8,
quiet neighborhood. Aaa~·
m•ble 9YJ% mongege. Cell
448-8871 oftor llpm .

Located in SyrKu..·Ne•r "
school a awimmlrtg pool. 3
bedroom •ltu•ted on on•·
thl;d ocre lot. t24.100. , ·
304-112·8486.
Tupper• Pl8ln1 10 rooms. 4
b•drooms, femilv room whh
Buck atove fir• pl•ce ,
atolnod gloaa window. living
room with double m•ntte
flrepiK8. ••t in kitchen.
,.,.,.te dining room, 2
story. 1 •ere ground. 1 bath.
l•tge eo fl. front pqrch,
ln~ludee. drepea, .c•rpet, •utometk weaKer a. dryer,
1 2.000 BTU o.c.. . d fr ..le, 981~ rengl, fro at frH ''
rolrlgerotor. •zt.ooo. 814117-8418.

3 bedroom houN. Range, "
refrlg ., kltchen•lde. dia ·
hw•aher, wood bum•r witt\ ·
new chimn'.y, 2000 btu •.c.,
cunaine •rfil dr•pa with
aheera. Excellent condition . .
Syrocuao, Oh. 114-882728&amp; .
For ••le-2 •cr••· 7 rooms,
u•r•ge. 2 bedroom r•talln .•
good 1hape. Will t8ke mobile
home. car in tr•d•. 3170611 .
•

·&lt;

3 be troom houae. Plum St. ·
Midaleport. Ce.n tr•l•ir, car- ·
pet8d, no money down, t1ke
over p•yme-:eu. 441-3710.

1 8x20 h•nd h.wn c•tMn. ·
Over 1 00 yeers old. To be
removed. •&amp;oo. or best ·
offer. 814-99.2 -2478.
SPLIT foy•r hom• on At. •
&amp;114, Ponor vicinity. Throe •
bedroom•. 1.14 b8tha, dining
room; brick bll1ement whh
g•rege In bulm8nt, on 1
•ere plus lot. be1utifully
landaceped. wood deck on
rNr. Thi1 qu•lity home h8s
bllen r•duc•d for quick 1111.
Coli ~• today. 114-4419340, 441-7.9 01,1114-281·
11413.

'h acre on herd rold, Southlid•. WV. whh old houae,
.12,000. 304-937-2181.
PERFECT SHAPE 10•40 all
.tKtric moduler hom•. aoUd
•• new, 13100. Even ••mall
air conditioner Included.
304-&amp;711· 2711 .
A GOOD HOME FOR
•31500. NICE 10•40, ·
ELECTRIC HEAT, EXCELLENT CONOITION. t700 .
DOWN, 9f,LANCE FlNANCEO, 3"a PAYMENTS
OF 11011.48 A MONTH .
3.0 4·578-2711 .

1-:;:;:::;::;:;:::::;:;:::===
I·
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

'

M 0 Bll E '
HOMES . UIEO· CAliS .
TRUCKS .. GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PAICEI .,CALL • '
448-7572.
.
:

:r A 1- ST A"T E

CLEAN USED MOBILE : ;
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· '
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES . ,
4 Mi. WEST, GALLIPOLIS. ~· •
AT 35. PHONE 448 ·7274 . ;

By Owner 3 bclr. ho~aa whh
8 or 20 ecrn . Sunk• LA.
lomlly room. don. 2'11 botho.
full buemlf'lt, unet,tched Treller for 18le or rent in
a•r•a• with work •p•n. Will MercerviAe. Oh. •200 mo.
conaid8r l•nd contr•ct . plua deposit. CaM 114-2158·
Plooao no call oft• 9PM. 19n or 114-258-1808.
114·241·9400.
1978 8~ddy custom 14•70.
REAL BAAGAINI 1 yur old 3 bdr .. 2 bath1, g•rden tub,
bl-lovol. 3 BA. A· 1 aond .. underpinfled, metal bldg .
gologo • buomont, brick Collll14-317-7858.
lront. Iorge lot. alty ochoola.
4V. miiH lrom Oolllpolla. 12xl0 mobile home tet ·i,Jp
q,.. Twp. •31.100. 441- on ranted lot. Coll814 -268 11224.
B038 .

�12 The Daily Sentinel
32

July 27 1983

Do It Every Time
,.

11.70 12x80 tr811er. Partly
fumiJhad, woodbumar, C ·
A, new C:.rpetlng, many
extr~~•. Can be moved or left
on niCe farm lot. •&amp;.800.

51

Household Goods

Ueed Fumlture: sofa. swivel
rocker. rOcker tec:linar, re·
friperator with ice maker,
electric range, Corbin •

Snydor Furnlturo, 9St Socond Avo., G111ipoll1. Coli
446-117t .

814-992-7442 or614-9922717.
USED Mobit·a Homes. ~04·
671-2711 .

Bargain Bern Two mllea up
Georges Creek Rd. Kenmore
copper washer &amp; ~rver Plir
real nice *246.00 other
makes wuhan
dryers.
stoves &amp; refrigeraton. all
guaranteed. One 30 in .
elect. range e9&amp;. Call 448-

2 · bedroom trailer.

furniahed ,

air condition.

a.

washer, dryer, porch. meta
building , underpinning .

Phone 304-876-4874 .

B033 or 446-B1B1.

1976 Maneion Estate mo-

bile home. 12x66, good
condition, $7 .600. 304 -

54

' N' CARLYLE'"

Mi1c . Merchendill

81

1997.

· I-IIJ1W/, NURSe~
ANOTI\e~ PeT OWNeR.
HAS FAit-neP!

I-::-::-:-..,.,,---:::--:-:--56 Building Supplies
1- - - - - - - - - I

Television
Viewing

by Larry Wright

Blackbeniee for nle. ~&amp;IS•

Home
Improvements . · .•
..,;•

...

WEDNESDAY

STUCCO IP LASTERi'NG -· ~

~

1182.

.

EVENING

•• '

e:oo a rn CIJ a

.

oxp. Call 614-3BB-9662: · :·

CONCRETE BLOCKS .
•bout 100. 25C oocll. Coli
317-0406 oftor t:30 pm.

'

Marcum Roofing • ~eO!-:'i~
lng. 30 yea!rt e,.;penenc:e.specielizing in built up rr&gt;o1.

~I

Pets for Sale

Call 614-388 -9867 .

· •

•
1!1~ IL.L.IAI&lt;JT,
MONS. O'TOOI.E-!
WITH IN ,T!!:UCTIOI&lt;J
l-IKE THI,, E-ASY,
~OU 'LL. EIE ACTIN€r
IN NO TIMe.

Free eoth'\••••· 614 ·94,9-;
2686 .
I
'• ' :
HI Pre11ure b tea,ing. ~wp;.:
ln.u m aiding, mobile hortt.(..
wood . brick , 18ndetpn•
building and homes} ..Altci
heavy equipment. Fultv· tlf..
sured. Free estimates . (14:'
949· 2886 .
.. .. : ..:

8:30

742-2611 bofore 6 p.m. or
614-742-2271 oftar 6.

4 FT. ROUNO

Cha1tnut 1-:----:--:-:-::--:---:--

dining table with pedeatll, 4
oak chairs, •275.
Call

5 mo. old AKC mlni•ture
Schnauzer, all ahote 6

446-2314.

wonnod. 812&amp; . Coli Ut4472 .

Farms for Sale

a

barns, free gat, 40 acres

245-9436.
76 acral . Good houaa, b&amp;rn,
chicken house, large shad.
Excellent large garden, fruh

trees. wall water. wooda.
pasture, hayland. 1 mile
west of Langsville on SR

124. 614-742-2860 boforo
&amp;p.m .
Meigs Co. Rd. 18. 88 acres
1/ 3 pasture, 2/ 3 wooded,
all mineral rightt, unlimited
gravity fed tpringwater,
maturing timber, fe'nced in
pasture, 24' by 30' pole
barn. large utility building.
Beautiful 8 room home, aJI
electric, ·completely insulated . Includes new carpet,
fenced in yard. self cleaning
oven, side by side refrigera·
tor frHzer, Ashly wood
burning stove. Ideal for kids
and horses. $88,000. Call

446-9510 or 992-3605'

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

1 2x60 mobile home In Syracuse. 2 bedroomt. 61 4· ·SMALL furnithed apart ·
992 -55B7 or 614-992- ment, adults, no pels, refer·
5732.
ences. 304-87&amp;'· 1366.
12x60 mobile homa i~ Syracu ... 2 bedrooms. 614-

992- 56B7 or 614-992 5732 .
2 bedroom trailer. Furnished . No pets. Deposit

roquirlld. 614-992-2749.

Wedge Apartments, no
children, no pets, 304-675-

2072 .
2 bedroom apartment in
Henderton, WV, $150 .00

por month, 304-676-1972.

Two bedroom, unfurnished,
Camp Conley, $160 per

month, 304-676-1371 or
676·3B12 .

46
44 ·

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished Rooms

e

Camptite Big Foot Park,
gooC:f boatiRg, no money
down.
mo. 6 mi . below
Gallipolis on At. 7 to Rae·
coon Creek bridge. Follow
signs.

46

Space for Rent

•so

36

Real Estate
Wanted

River frontage . Above flood
level. Between Gallipolia S.
Pomeroy. Call or write Frank
Hamilton , A .D . 3, Box 236.
Peach Qidge Rd. , Atflens.

Oh . 46ill1. 614-592-2625.

41

Houses for Rent

4 rms &amp; bath. located 733
Third Ave .. Gallipolis. $166
mo ., $86 depotit. Call 446·
3~70

or 446-1340 .

Large hous~ with porch,
ideal for large famjly, $100
mo . A -One Real Est~tu,
Carol Yeager. Realtor. Call

304-676 -5104 or 304-6767386 .
Condominum - 2 bedroom, 2
~ bath, complefvly furnished.
Ocean front , daily maid
service, three pools. tennis
courts. plus 24 hr . security
guard. Myrtle Beach. SC .

Phone after 6PM. 44~ - 3426
or 614-367-0480 .
'" Two bdr. house in city, full
basement. carpeted, gas fur n•nce, adulta, no pets. Call

. 446· 0968 .
3 bdr.. 2 bath, double
gilrage. stove &amp; refrig . Hannan Trace School District .
Option buy available. $350
per mo. Call 446-8080 or

446-7044 .
FOUR BOA .. family rm .• 3
baths. basement. garage.
Near Holzer Hotpital, city
schools . Cell446-1299 .
4 rooma · &amp; bat!'l. Unfur·
nithed . fully carpeted, all
new paint. No inaide pets,
deposit required. 614-992-

3090 .
3 bedroom house, 3311
Franklin Ave . No pets. Oep·
otit and reference required.

304-675 -1687.
2 bedroom•. unfurnished,
Camp Conley , $,125 per
month. 304-676-1371 or

676-3812 .
Above average tingle family
dwelling, 8 room a, .2 baths,
basement. corner of 8th
Viand . Phone 304 - 676-

a.

1931 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo

1 bedroom apartment for

992-7479 .

Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

Furnithed apt., $210. utili·
ties pd ., 1 bdr., 920 4th
Ave .. G•llipolis. Call 4484416 after 7PM.
1

bdr .•

t225. Utilltio1 pd .. 920 4th
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 4464416 aher 7PM .
Furnished Apt. $196. utilities pd., 1 bdr. near HMC.
adults. ' 446-4416 after 7
p.m .

446-1062.

47 Wanted to Rent

Knauff Coal • Firewood
Pricea reduced May-July.
Pick up or delivered.
honor HEAP Vouchers. Call

671-1385.

1978 Jeep CJ 6 . Black with
tirown top. 304 VB . Good
condition . $3400 . 843·

64

German Short hlired pointer
pupa with uceUent pedlgrH
for hunting or show, 304:

MIXED
22&amp;4.

Hay

814·266-6246 .

85 .36 !Mr ft., 24 inch
810.10 jMr ft. 36 inch
t16.60 per ft. Also pl01tic
culvert In stock. 8 inch thru
18 inch, 81nch $1.80 per ft ..
12 Inch $3.80 per ft. Ron
Ev•n• Enterprlua, 4 mi.
South of Jacbon on ST. AT.

Musical
lnltrumenta

tlon. Coll614-266-6707.

7378. 9 AM-Noon.

77 VW Da1her, one owner,
t83.000 miles , price

room ltarts at $193. Oep·
osit $200 (no peU) near
Spring Valley Cinema. Call
448 - 2745 or leave
message.

Moving . Some furniture ll
Iota of odds &amp; ends. Make
oHer for entire 8mount July

haul. Call 446-1462.

49

For Lease

For Leese: Modern offit:e
building. 21 Locust St.

446-B221 .

one bedroom rent starts at

$167 par month. two bod-

day• 446-7699, avo. 4489tJ9,

51

Household Goods

New Oak Furniture, tables.
chalra. cupboerda, pie Nfe.
dry sinks. Paul Conkel!)
Anliqu", Tuppeu Plaina.
2 Ethan Allen wingb8ck
chairs. Upholstered tn aolld
desert roM material. t310.
or bast offer . 614-992·

247B.
Riding mower. U1ad one
. year. $600. See LawrenCe

Manley,

690

Laurel

St ..

82.000. Call 448-7003 . ;

197B Honda Howl&lt; 400,
onty

block. Call8t4-246 -6818.

JIVIDEN'S FARM
EQUIPMENT
446-1676
long tractora. Vermeer
round bele,., rake-tedders,
&amp;: mowen. Complete liM
of bale hlndllng • feeding
•cceiiOI'Iee. Tobeceo &amp;.
corn sprayers. wagona.
rolery tillers, rotary cutters
blades. Gates cultivator,
plow1, dlac, pollt drtvere.
headgetee. planic tank•.
woodburners. And ' " Ul
for a complete Una of parts
&amp; ..rvleel

USED EQUIP
IH Hydro 70, Ford 3000.
Ford JubiiM. MatHy 36,
Ma...y 86 w -loader, Farm•ll C, New Holland- round
bller. grevtty wagon e. N H
grinder mixer, cornpicker, 2
81 3 bottom plows. p~ster
uud Equipment.

1953 Ferguson TO 20 tree·
tor. All new. equipment

included . tJOOO. 114-9492749.
For ule·H Farman Tractor ..
Gaod condition. 614-949·

26t8.

2 new unfurn. 2 bedr. apta.
819 Second AVe., Gallipolis . C· A . garage. 8260·

mi ., very good

Ford

Pinto, auto

1979 Plymouth
Arrow outo. 82.3911. 1979
Ford Flooto 4 IPd f1,496.
AII good buy1. John' a Auto
Sal••· 441-4782. Galllpollo.
Oh. 0 - evo'1.

I

.

304-773. 5906 .

.• [)()I'T BUlB

0!1. 1\HttE I'IASI(T

MUCH, DO YOU
LITTLE

ESTIMATES: FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTA-IN
_STEAMER 614·446-2107:

LAOY'?

&amp;fl~ UC~T/VE...

SHE'6 i!WT- EA ~
SHY-- Nlif!N'T V01J. ANNIE!

E &amp; R Tree Service. fully
insured . free estimates~

ER-YES.

Phone 814-367-0836, call

'IOU, M.

TtiANI\

·

KING-

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One

Carpe~\ry

Roofing r nd
work, gen:.-al repairs, call
Anthony Williamson, 61A-

... I GUESS I'M SUPPQSI:D T'FLY
THIS CRII.l'E WI'TI-l MY FEET
WHILE I OiANGE l'H' STUPID
DRUM!

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

19BO XL 600, $600. 304676-3656 . ·
1981 Kaw.aaki KX 126,
e~~tc:ellent

condition.

must

1979 Ford Fairmont, 4 dr .. 6

1oll, 8700 . 304-882-2687

cyl.,

or 882-2822.

...tlonwagon. auto. ,

PS, PB. reel1horp. 83. 19&amp;. 1----~----­
John'l Auto Soles. 446· 1979 Hondo 600CX Cus-

4782. Gallipolis. Oh . . Open
eva's.

tom Cycle. f_ull f•rlng. Ell:cel ·
lent condhlon. No reasona ble offer refused ,

1976 Ootsun 'h Ton whh 304-45B-1763.
thell. runs good. looks fair . 1-:::-:~~::-:-:-::-:-:---::-::
379-2716.
B2 SUZUKI B50 LZ. 6600
miles. excellent condition .
1978 Caprice II . All new shaft drive, 2 tone black
tires, exhault, front brakes. gr1y. Riding gear &amp;: 2
Call 448-8174 eve's .&amp; helmets included . $2450 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING •
AND HEATING
' .;
Cor. Fourth and Pine ;.
Phone 446-3888 or 446~J
4477
' ~ ~

JIM'S PLUI\IUIING

'

e. HEAT-'

lNG. Fom'irly Dewitt'sj
Plumbing. Call 614-367 -;

0676 .

83

\

;

_,

Excavating

a.

304-676-319&amp; .

1978 LTD 11 Ford, 87,000
miles, exceUent condition,
t1700, 304-876-4624.
1977 Ford Granade $600.

Phone onytlma, 304-876·
6208 or 304-468-1727.
Cemaro

ern

WORK By .Tad·:,

Hanna. ponds . ditch,N ~;
basements, etc. Call 448· ;
4907.. Carter- &amp; E\(al)s 1
1981 CR 80 Honda, very Transportation .
"' 1
good condition, call 304· ' -:--:::-::----::--""::~· '
&amp;75-3993 .
Lonni8 Boggs Exc:evating. ~

wookonda.

1982

OOZER

t7.000.

27.000 mll01, 304·882·
24 •u 1 :

l

:~i=~~~~~===
76
Motors for Sale

1 - - - - - - - - -Tri·Haul Chrysler Sport
Fury, 16ft .• 86 horee motor .
268-12 82 ·

Dozer.by
backhoe,
dumptruck
Work
hour or
job . -&lt;:all. 1~

446-7903.
· ' · '
::---:::-:--:-----''- : - - - _ ; _
· .;
Cat 214 hoe.. do1ers, crane, '
loaders. dump truck. 'Call ~

614-446-1142 bot-on ,
:OOA M &amp; 5 :0 OP M .
, · , .'

7

1977 Ford LTD. •lr condl,
tion, power stHring, power

1~---------

tape , cruise control,
83,000 . Sell or Trade, 304-

Johnson motor . 17' Cr••·
tline with 76 h .p. outboard

875-41B1 .

Evlnrude . 614-992-9917 or
992-6217 .

J .A.R . ConstrUction Co .
Water Lines , Footers,
Draine. All kinds of Oit_c:hing .,

12 FT. aluminum johr, boat,
excellent condition. 8:135 .

Rutland.
2903.

brakol. tilt whHI, AM-FM

$275 . Call446-2168 .
Completelu furn . all alec .• 2
bdr. apt. 468 1h 2nd. AVe ..
Gallipolis. Aduht only, ref.
$226 plus deposit only. Call

1 8' floot boatt with 30 h.p.

304-882-2012.

76

448-2236 or 446-26B1 .
Unfurn . apartment, 1at
floor. 4 r . ll bath with yard.
centrally, located, adulta
only. no pets. ref. S. sec.
deposit, requlra. Call 448·

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

NoWI
(I) MOVIE: 'Six Pack'
(f)
MOVIE:
'Yankee
Doodlo Dendy'
(I)
(IZ Dynasty Jeff's

Dozer work, ground clean: .'
ing • excavating. $26 hour ,·

Call 446-9638.

-

a

rage becomes e nightmare
for Falion and Adam con·
fesses his scheme to poison

Oh . 614 ·742- ·

Jeff. [R) (60 min.) [Closed
Caplionodj
.INN Newt!
1 0:15 C1J TBS Evening Newt!
t0:30 Gill Taxi Ale. takes a ~·­

Meig1 Excavating. BulldoZer·
&amp;. backhoe 1ervice. BHa: ·
ments.footert,landtcaping, :
driveways, farm ponds ..
614-742 -2407 or614 -742- ·
206B.
·,:

cond job wortc.ing on Broad-

way . IRI
C1J Star Time
•

11:oo •

Cat 216 Hoe. dozers, crane, '
loadere. dump truck . 814~:
446-1142 between 7 t"-~P!~
to 5 p .m.
~ ..

0444.

..

84

&amp;

Electrical
·, •.
Refrigeration

Johnny' s guests are Carne

6.
1 bed room Apt. e196 . mo.
including utilities . Equal
houaing opportunity . Con tact · Village Manor Apts.

Fisher and Bill Ojala. (60

ME AN'MV
BIG MOUTH

TIME TO FEED
VOU TO TH' FISHES,
FELLERS

Modern 1 BR apt. Cloae to
town. Call 446-20&amp;6 after

min.)

CIJ Another Life
Cll Cotllr&gt;a

614-992-77B7.
· Furnished one &amp; two bed·
room apt. Middleport .
adults, no ~ets. Advant:e
rent plut $100. security.

.

614-992-3874.

'
JONES BOYS WATER $ER::
VICE . Call · 614-367-7471 &lt;

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished

apt1. 61.4-992 -6434. 9925914 or 304· BB2-2666.

or 614 · 367 -0591 .

Slide-in aompor, t376, for
long bed mini truck. good

367 -0611 .

conditon.

1J:r double. 2 bedroom. All
furnished . Adultt preferred .
No pets. Deposit required .
614-992-2749 .
Ap•rtmenu . 304 - 875 ·

664B.
APARTMENTS , mobila

304· &amp;76·

1979 0~ C· 100 'Ia IOn
PU lhort bod. V-8, IUIO, PI,
P8, rool nlco. 12,996.
John's Auto Soloo, 446·
4782, Golllpoll1. Oh. O!Mn

79 Motors Home•
· &amp; ,C ampers

\

PEANUTS

Wa' ll do il. Call 44&amp; -3159
bet_
w een 9 and 6 .

JIMS

WATER

SERVi!=E . .

Call Jim Lanier.- 304-876· '

7397.

18t5 Chevy Truck. stondord
llhlft, 304-17t-1711t.
I

c•U

34B9.

eve's.

ond Gallipolii . 814-44t8221.

'

Need somalhing hauled
away or something moved?

1 bedroom Apt. 1 child
accepted. No pats. drunks,
or dbpe. Rt .7. Cheshire.

CllllD a GZ

e

BARNEY

Call 446-2927 or 1 -304·
273-9746 .

In Soorch of....

mm a

Newa
[J) ESPN SportaCentor
ffi Newa/Sports/Weather
(I) Monty Python
liD P - r s
Benny Hill Show
11:30 D (I) (!)Tonight Show

1:

Kanaugt_. Nice 2 BR with
carpet, stove 8t Refrigerator .
Washer I&amp; Dryer hook-up.
$196 plus electric • gat .

11

iBA TSA i6A
T6A ISA ISA

TO BE ANMOUNCED "

IF AH'r'THIH6 AROUNP i-IERE
IS TO ee ANNOUNCED,
I'LL
READ't'!

(I) Soap
D (I) Police Story
(I) PBS l..ato Night
liD AU In the Family
g (IZ Nlghtllno
•Gunsmoke
1 1 :46 (I) Not Nece11arlly Tho
News This show p;omises
to be everything the current
new&amp; Is not.·
12:00 Cll Bums &amp; 'Allen
[J) 2nd Annual Crockor
Jack Old Timor's BaMball
Ctooalc from Wnhlngton.
D.C .
C1J MOVIE: 'Arizona
Buahwackers'
(I) Nlghtllne
® MOVIE: 'Tho Italian

Bite'

Oswald JacobY and James·Jacoby

. Slam in a 4-4 tit

:ill

26 ft. Arv- troller. Excol•
lontcondhlon. monyutro'1.
TRISTATE
,
Don't ml11 ....... thio ono.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP • ••
By owner . t-114 - 441- 1113 Sec. Aw .. GoHI,da:•
0784.
441-7833
ol46 - 183~. :·.

t AK 9 4
• Q 10 8 7

North went to the no-trump

WEST
• 10 7 4

.QJ . ,

• A 43

• 10 9 7 5

tQI 082
• 53 2

+J4

EAST

game . North thought about
passing, but linally jumped ·
to six clubs.
West opened the ace of
hearts. South thought a long
while about which heart to
drop from dummy at trick
one and finally dropped the
king. West led a second
heart.
Now South went into a
real trance. Part of his
thinking was to ask himself
why he hadn't passed at
three no·trump. The re1t
was to find the best line of
play .

t J53
SOU TH
• AK65
• J82

t 76
+AK96

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: North
North

West

It

Pass • 2+
Pass
Pas.c;
4 NT
Pass
Pass

3.

3+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soul

East

3 NT

6+

All reasonable plays work,
but he didn't know that.
Then with his mind fully
made up. he won in dummy
and played ace, king and a
small spade for dummy to
ruff. Back to his hand With a
trump to the ace. Then he
led his last spade. West
showed out and when West
discarded, South ruffed safely with the 10. Queen of

Opening lead: • A
By Oswald Jacoby
and Jam .. Jaeoby
South responded two clubs
rather than one spade
because be wanted to be
able to show both his suits
without getting to the three
level, assuming that North's

clubs came next. When East
produced

the jack, South

overtook, drew trumps and
claimed .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~:Mo'""*.f
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Editor's

DOWN
1 Strill;e-

mark

breaker

5 Racing horse
10· "wtSupper"

2 Principle
3 Pupil's
ordeal
t Thai landers
5 Praline
ingredient .

in art

11 Filet 1Z Oppo6ed to
13 Hockey

I Gynt's

stalwarts

It Jujube
15 Lambkin's cry
I&amp; Woman
person-

Yesterday's Allswer

mother

7 Make a
noisy

18 Differ
21 Deplape

entrance

Z8 Frilly
item
Z8 Dramatic
segment

22 Least

8 Ennoble

ified

original

17 'Tile Mennaid," 9 Backed out 23 Where
Yerevan is
11 Written
e.g.
2t Crushed
19 Capture
account
diamonds
20 - a one
15 Bare

2t Search
33 Equal
35 - juste
38 Harem room

(none)
Recent
22 - bleu!
zt Uncovered
25 3, in cani'l

26 Ringing

sotmd
27 Soul (Fr.)
Z8 Squalid

30 Law (Lat.)
31 Townsman
3Z Catnip
:It Tooth
substance

36Gaze

In away
37 Traffic
in sacred
things
38 Plunge
39Savor
CO Biblical
city

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
It

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work It:

One letter aimply stands for another. In this oomple A Ia
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers.
apootrophea, the Ienllth and formation of the worda are •II
hinto. Eoch day the code letters 11'&lt;1 different

CRYPTOQUOTES

LUX

HY

M C B '' F

guest&amp; are Sandra Bernhard
and harmonica player Toots

GZCTF

WHQZ

Thielemeno. (60 min.l
(IJ Jack Benny Show
• ()I ABC Newa Ono on

- AZEHTP TCLHBW

H.,.-~

'

.K Q6

c

0...
• MIIY Hll'tmlll, MIIY

'

hand would produce a diamond rebid.
Instead North raised to
three clubs. South rebid
three spades and decided to
bid four no-trump after

7· 27-83

NORTH
• 83

EHFP

fl) (!) Late Night with
Devid IAltonnon David' a

-·

BRIDGE

CormecUon'
12:16(1) MOVIE: 'The Pirate
Movie'
(I) MOVIE: 'l.ovo ot First
12:30 •

_8_7__u_____
1

1""'--IOn """"''
WHENCE FLORID

"ALL·OWEO"

e

367-0194 .

82

MADAM

. Veeterdey I 1 Answer: EverybQdy was In debt but It's permltted-

e.-.

Get your carpet in stijp :
lhape. Watltrremoval, FREE

tor, (Day 614·692·4066,)
(night 614.-89B-8206 .) : 1 .

Jumblea: VALVE

.

[J) ESPN SportaContor
Cll Andy Griffith
(I) D (I) Fomily Feud
(I)
Repot1llD You Aaked For It
liD Facoo of Mlldlclno
g
(IZ
Entertainment
Ton!vht
B:OO 8 Cll (!) R..l People Tonight's progriiiT1 features a
convention of college cheer·
leaders and mascots, a pian·
ist who performs from the
back of hie va11end a look at
a Playboy centerfold photography seasion . (RI (60
m in .)
(I) MOVIE: 'Nolghbon'
(IJ t Spy
[J) Auto Racing ' B3 :
Formula I Brlti•h Grand
Prix Coverage of the For·
mula I Briti Sh Grand PriJI is
. preaei-ned from Silverstone,
England. (90 min.! •
C1J MOVIE: 'Two Rode
Together'
(I)
(jJ Fall Guy Jody is
kidnapped to force Colt to
help spring a swindler from
jail. (R) 160 min.)
11J (I) ()I MOVIE: 'Ordeal
of Dr. Mudd'
Cllllll National G-raphic
Spoc;.i 'Polar Saar Alert.'
Tonight's program shows
how residents in the Arctic
prepare to avoid encounters
wilh the Polar Bear. IRI (60
min .) [Closed Captioned)
• MOVIE: 'Pillow Talk'
9:00 D Ill C!l Fac:ta of Ufo
(IJ 700 Club Today· s program features forr~er Miss
Arizona , lynne Mane Perry.
(I) G
(jJ Homptons
(PREMIEREI
of
(I)
Summar
Judgment: The Watergat•
Hearing• Tonight· s pro·
gramlooksatthe 1973Sen·
ate Watergate hearings
featuring an interview_with
Sam Ervin. former chatrman
of the Senate Select Com·
mittee on Presidential Cam·
paign Activities and Chief
Counsel Sam Dash. 12 hrs .)
9 :30 D Ill (!) Buffalo Bill
[J) PKA · Full Contact
Karate
10:00 8 fl) ffi Nowa io the

&gt;.'
.

1981 Hondo XR 200. A-1

I I

C1J Dubio Gllllsl

304-876-20BB or 676'-•
4560 .
.•

after 5.

TO B! WHEN THEY
'10 HOOK
"THE D INING CA~.

FO ~\SOT

A''[XXXJ'(IIXX)

WMr.

This magical love story
evokes memories of~ better
world.

rienced roofing. includinsr.
hot tar application. carpsn/
ter. electric~an~ mason:· Cjllf

piece custom fit your hOme.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·

Kawasaki KE176 Like new
•100. 814-992·2921 or

'2.691.

Mi. 'SMA!mli:!

O&gt;OQ_O~

cond. 1974 Honda 310. Call
446-4361.
.
Cond. Motorcycle trailer,'
axe. cond. Call 614-246- .

1980

400 hr. 814-742-2047 .

sea aftor 4:00. 304-6754642 . 1211 Viand St.

a.ooo

19BO Kawasaki .440 LTD .
Uko now. ·$1,500 . 1978

phone 992-3306.

SINGER Iewing machine,
Stylist free arm model 664,
with cabinet. $200. Call or

Cell

6294.

674 International. Row crdp
tractor, 82 h .p .• like new.

Furnished efficiency $14&amp;,
utilities pd. A lao furnished 1
bdr. $225. utilities pd . 607
2nd. G111ipolis. 448·4418
aher 7 p.m.

•soo.

Call 814-3B8-871 1.

Condition. 614·446•7221 .

Middlepon, Oh . •&amp;760 or

Small furnished effici8nc:v
apartment for one professional type gentleman only.
central air. Call 446-0338.

7 ,400

ISHIVALj
KJ K

(!) Charlie'• Angol•
Ill Cll Tic Toe Dough
(I) liD MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
®News
8 (IZ Poople'o Court
•smrTrek
7:30 8 (I) U. Ootoctor
(l) HBO Thootro: Camelot

I AMA PIII~A
I'APPA ?1~.

;

304-B95 -3B02 .

Motorcycles

mllae.

tw.lll~ ~

F &amp; K Tree Trimming. stum~

RINGLE'S SERVICE

ICioaed Captioned!
Megazlno
(IJ lluma &amp; Allen
[J) ESPN'a Horao Racing
Wkly.

8 Ill PM

WHAI IT TU~NEt:='

(]) Green Acres
(I) Entertalnmont Tonight

OF '()U!

~

'

-------~~--~,

Seers aluminum boat. 9 .5
Evanrude motor&amp;: lilt trailer.

Martin Acou1tic guitar.
Heavy duty cate. Superior

61

~MBMSE~,
~c.AU~E I

'

74

actual

Roger;• drum set, Marimba 1977 Dodge Charger
Alto Sox . Call 814-387- . lo•ded. T -top, black on

e.

RON'S Television. Service.'
Specializing in Zenith an&lt;('
Motorola. Qu ~ zar , andr

Water Wells. Commertial:
and Domestic. Test holn.•
Pumps Salea and Service:

614-3BB-976&amp;.
Gemelnhardt flute &amp; Bundy
trombone. both axe , condl·

BORN LOSER

614-992-2478.

1974 Honda 360,

Wood ahelving indu1trial, 4
tiers, 4 tieri, 5 tiers high for
sale cheap. Also 36" thower
ttl II with all fawcetta. Call

&amp; 4 W.O.

1987 Ford VM . H"vv duty.
New battery. muffler. Low
mileage : $300 ~ orbestofter.

304 - 676-

Four AKC · silver miniature

67

Vans

5472 .

poodl01. 304-882-3672.

For ule metel c"ulven 8 Inch
thru 80 Inch In ltock. St•te
approved 18 gauge 12 inch

Gene ot 614-992-6309 • •

removal. Coll875-133 l.

8t Grain

hay.

mended for profeu foii•(
steam cleaning . Sco'tc(t
Guard-Free Eetlmates. Celt

or 446·2464.

73

_)

Charles 'Pete· Conrad talks
about the possibility of
space travel for people in
their mid-years and beyond.

7:00

b
I I _

kFORTYS

ern

hou1o calla. Call 676-2398'

TWO y"r old Appalooaa
ttud.. yearling quarter horae
mare. Call after 4 :00. 304-

wook• old. 614-9B6-3849 .

882-3581 .

304·676-

W•l :;--:::::::-::---:--:-:-

Want to rent with option to
buy small building or houae 29 &amp; 30. Call for lnotrucon main hwy. in., Gallia Co. tions, 814·2&amp;6·8244.
Suitable for carry' out. Call 1- - - - - - - - - 448·8034.
Firewood, 1 cord. $215 , you

APARTMENTS jEQUALI ~==~~~==~~===
HOUSING OPPORTUNITY; I:
••
dl

homes, houHI. Pt. Ple•nnt
3 bdr. trailer for rent. Call

coif,

ft . wide up to 108 h . long. 3

tor. Call 304-676 -5104 or
304-676· 7386 .

apt ..

Misc. Merchandise

For rent Sleeping Roomal ,.,-- - - - : - - - - and light' house keeping Umeatone, Sand, Gravel.
rooms. Park Cenlrllil Hotel. Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Call 448-0756.
Gallia or pick up at Richard•
&amp; Son. Caii446 -77B6.

2 bdr. RegenCy Inc. Apartments Utilties partly furn. ,
apartments available now.
8200 per mo . A·One Real
Estates, Carol Yaeger, Real·

Furnished

54

93, 614·2B8·6930.

rant . Call 446-iJ390.
36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financing available. Caii448-B221
aher weekdays.

e.

Oerman She·
pherd pupa. Between 5
8

169 acre farm, 2 houses. 2
tillable ground. Rest in pasture&amp;. woods.1 mile west of
Rutland off Rt . 124. 614-

COW
4437.

I I K X]

e

GENE'S ·cARPET CLE~N'­
ING SERVICE. Recoin-'

hor•. 304-468-1713.

Wlld. Wild Welt
8 Ill (!) NBC Nowa
CIJ Lovo Thft Bob
[J) Play Your Boot Golf
Cll F - Knows Bolt
(I)
(IZ AEIC New1
G (I){}D CBS Newo
(I) Dr. Who
Over Easy Astronaut

...

·~-

rm IIIID

ern stvdlo s..

Painting interior &amp; ax.tar,ior.;
wallpaper hanging. Insured\

Milll goatl, doe kids. Really_ 1973 International 1700
fine Alpines. dlliry racordt, load1tar. 20 ft. enclosed
304-46B-1763.
body. Hydraulic lift on back
end. Good motor, good
Palamino gelding , trail body, good tlra1. Call 614-

Cll

Newt!
(f) MOVIE: 'Jabberwocky'
·C1J Tic Tac Dough
[J) Bill Dance Outdoora
(Ill Drum of Joannlo
(!) Nowo/Sport1/Woathor
(I) Roecllng Rainbow

PAINTING · interior·, Wrd
eJCterior. plumbing. rootJ"~·
some remodeling. 20 .yrs.

0 . Coll614 ·246-6121 .

or_

7/27/83

teKturad cetlinga commer:"'
cial and residential. trait
estimates. Call 614 ~258~

Building materi•l•
b ck. brJck, sewer plp11,
w ndowe. lintels. ate .
Claude Winter~ . Rio Granda,

68

896-3983.

33

3

The

Ohio

J

MobiJa Homes
for Sale

1976

27 1983

GHFFGZ

Yesterday's Cryptoquote:

wrnt mE WEALTI-1

GRAVE. -BENSIBAOJ
~

c

PZGK

UXF

OUBZ L,

GHFFGZ

CF

WNUCB .

THE MAN WHO BillLDS IDS HOME
OF OTHERS BIDLDS IUS OWN

�"

'

\

'

:' pi

l~The Daily Sentinel

Pameroy Middlepl!rf, atio

Commission ... _.::Ol~n~tm::ued~from:::.:P.:!age~t- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Local briefs:
Couple seeks compensation
Garland A. and Sieglinde MWer, 31911) Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy,
have !lied a suit In Metgl; County Common Pleas Court against E. ·
Joyce Mlller and Marlon Crawford, Jacksonvllle, Alabama, for
$10,00&gt; and mineral rights on a property purchaed from E. Joyce
Miller and Crawford 1n 1981.
The plalntlffs C'l!ilm that tenns of the deed, whlch stated that
mineral rights on the land would proceed to !hem if no gas or oil wells
were drWed by June 10, 1982, were violated when the defendents
contract£d to drUI weils after that date. Mr. and Mrs. MWer are
seeking compensation In the amount of $10,000 plus all mineral rights
on the property.

Squads answer seven calls
Seven calls were answered by loca11 units Tuesday and on
Wednesday morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service

reports.

.

.·

Wednesday morning calls included Pomeroy at 2:25 a.m. to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Herman Warner, taken to Veterans

Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 2:40 a.m. to Meigs Mine 1 for
Jackie Wllllams, taken to Holzer Medical Center, anq Pomeroy at
4: 32 a.m. to Meigs Mine 2 for Ray Sorrell, taken to Holzer Mecllcal
Center.
Tuesday calls Included Pomeroy at 4: 35 p.m. to 11 Oak St. for
George Molden, to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 3:36p.m. for
Mamie Manning, to Veterans Memorial; Racine at 5: 06 p.m. to
Antiquity for Pearl Russell, taken to Veterans Memortal, and Racine
at 10: ff/ p.m. to Elm St. for Carey Nease, taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

consultant, to meet at the access speeding on Laurel Cl1ff Road from
road, ruMing from UnlonAvenueto elderly resldentswhomustcross the
Mulbeny Heights, to look over asUp . road to reach their mailboxes, the
which has developed.
county engineer was asked to haVf
Bids for asphalt from lrJth pedestrian signs erected.
Asphalt Materlals 01. of Marietta
Everett Schultz met · with the
and Mar-Zane of ZanesvWe were cornmJsaon1!rs ID discuss reopening
accepted. Slnce both were nearly West Second Street In ReedsvWetor
identical, commissioners decided to . a housing development.
accept both bids and leave the
Schultz said that tnlstees had the
purchasing up to the engineer,
l.ow!!shlp road closed several years
'The board passed a resolution
authorlzlng the Meigs County Utter
Play extended
Control Board to apply for a grant
for litter control In the amount they
The Meigs Cwn,ty Players' presdeem necessary for 1984.
of '"!be Dead of Night", a
entation
· After discussing complaints of
two-act play, and ihree accompanyIng vignettes, written and directed
by Jeff HUieary of Pomeroy, has
been extended to J)I'OYkle area
Vetel'811ll Memorial BOipilal '
residents ~ opportunities to
Admitted- Hattie Rousl!, Pomeview the theatrical entertatnrnent.
roy; Charles Schoonover, Rutland;
Perronnances will begin at 9
Pearl Russell, Racine; Juanita
tonight, 'Thursday, Friday, and
Chapman, Cllfton.
Saturday, at the Pomeroy VIllage
Discharged - aemen Edwards,
HaD auditorium on East Maln
Tanya Julian. Freda Buchanan,
Street. Admission Is $2 for adults,
Dorothy Wright, Lois Olrnell.
for students, and tree tor
children under live years of age.
Auto said stolen

/ Bob Bowen was flllllOlnted alternate to Rouah on the Community
Actkln Board.

Cub Scouts go
camping•••Page 6

..

Hospital news

VoU2,No.74
tonrilh•od 1913

and ots

hallie qroup lo ;urove

Shooting spree leaves one dead

Arrest 8 in alleged conspiracy
---.,

Mud-slinging ln the literal sense will be the main attraction
Thursday, August 18, at 8 p.m., when the Chicago Knockers All-Girl
Mud Wrestllng Team takes to the pit for an exhibition of athletic
prowess at the Meigs County Fair.
Eight women will engage In a battle royal in a pit of mud, governed
by professional and college rules which wW be administered by a
sanctioned referee. 'Three costume changes wW be featured In the
show, lncludln,gtheiropentng appearance -oneofthefew times they
wW be seen without a total coverage of mud.
'The Chicago Knockers is one of a number of grandstand attractions
S&lt;;heculed for the Meigs County Fair.

Stale No.
CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF
Rutland Township Trustees wW
meet at 6: 00 p.m. Thursday at the
Rutland Fire Station. 'The pubUc Is
Invited.

'

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company

· NEW YORK ..:. TaDks, JWllcopters, mlssUes and machine guns
were among $2 bllllon In "terrorist weapons" offered to undercover
agents posing as rwresentatives of the Irlsh Republlcan Arrey and
the Iranian government, authorttles said.
Eight businessmen were charged Wednesday wltl1 conspiracy to
provide the weapons with false documents to disguise the recipients.
The arrests followed an eight-month Investigation by agents of the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
Assistant Treaswy Secretary• Jobn Walker described the two
arms-selllng schemes as "the largest that has been Investigated In
recent times." Ball !or the defendants, setatahearl!lgln U.S. Dlsbict
Court In Muhattan, ranged from $7,500ton.25 mWion.
Neither Iran nor the IRA was involved In the deals, officials said.

=x

\

I

To end marriages

Eight forfeit bonds in court
Eight defendants forfeited bonds In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
'They are Eric Gryszka, Pomeroy, $46; John W. Hlpes, Point
Pleasant, $46; Mary Sorden, Pomeroy, )48; Robert A. Davis,
Pomeroy, $48; Dale A. Clonch, Middleport, $45; John W. Davis, Jr.,
Syracuse. $56, all posted on speeding charges; Charlotte Marcinko,
Lon,g Bottom, $63, failure to register motor vehicle; Gary Altier,
Corning, $375, driving whlle Intoxicated.
Fined 1n the court were Terry E. Hysell, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
tallure to give a reasonable account of himself to a pollee officer. and
Jeannette Thomas, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, disturbing the peace, and
$25 for failure to appear in court at the proper time. 'Theresa Potter,
Potneroy, was placed on six months probation for allowing a dog to
run loose.

'The Meigs County CAJmmonPieas
Court has granted dissolutions o!
marrtage to Dorothy Jane Owens
and 'Thomas Earl Owens, and to
Mary P. HyseUandBruceA.HyseU.

Ice cream available
Homemade Ice cream not sold at
the Ice cream soclaloftheAuxlllary
of Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion. is available at $2 per quart
and $5a gallon and mustbeobtalned
by callln,g 992-3165, 992-2511), 992-5937
and 992-3590.

-C-eleste orders state su~ion

of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close o!
business on June 30th, 1983, a state banking Institution organized and operating
under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Published in accordance with a call made by the State Banking
Authority and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
\ .
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions ......................... :........ $ 2,114,000.00
U. S. Treasury securities .............................................................. 5,224,000.00
Obligations of other U.S.Government agencies and corporations .... 6,494,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
In the United States .................. , .. ........... ................... :...... ...... 3,152,QOO,OO
All other securities, ............................................... , .......................... 30,00&gt;.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreement to resell ................................................................ 2,450,000.00
. Loans, Total (excluding unearned lncome) ........ 15,855,000.00
1
•.•...
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures. and other assets
representing bank premises....................................................... 382,00&gt;.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises ..........'........................... 20,000.00 '
All other assets ........................................................................ .. .... .474,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ............................................... ,., .... ....... , ............ 36,087,000.00
UABILITIES
· Demand deposits of lndlvtduals, partnerships,
and corporations .................................................................... 3, 755,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporat!ons ........ ............. ....... ...... .... ..... .... ........ ............26, 700,00&gt;.00
Deposits of United States Government .............................................. 20,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions in the
United Slates .................... ....................... .............................. 2,096,000.00
All other deposits ............................................................................... 1,00&gt;.00
CertUled and officers' checks ..................................................._....... 160,000.00
Total Deposits ... :.............................................. , .. , ... ..: ................. 32, 732,000.00
Total demand deposits ....................................... 4,481,000.00
Total time arid savings deposits ..........................28,251,00&gt;.00
All other llabllltles ....... .......................................... ....... .................. 527,00&gt;.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES(excludlng subordinated notes
and debentures ..................................................................... 33,259,00&gt;.00
· EQUITY CAPITAL
Common Stock
16,000
No. shares authorized
No. shares outstanding 16,000
(par value) ...... ........................ 400.000.00
Surplus .. , ....................... : ......................................................... ....... 600,.000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves ...................................................... 1,828,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .......................................................... 2,828,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ........................... 36,087,00&gt;.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Time certificates o! deposit ln denominations of
$100,000 or more ........................... , ........,. ................................... 100,00&gt;.00
Average tor 00 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date:
Total deposits ............................. ... ......... .......... ........... , ........... 32,623,00&gt;.00

be required to get approv'l from the Ohio Department of Health
before beginning construction, under an emergency order signed by
Gov. Richard Celeste.
.
The Plain Dealer reported today that Celeste issued the order on
July 21, requiring Certificate of Need bet_o re such a facUlty can be

a
~~tcareandotherwalk-lnbealthcentershadbeenexernptfrom

the law requiring a certl!lcate.
HeldiFlndley,apressaldetothegovernor,saldthemovewasmade
because some health care developers might take advantage o!
loopholes 1n the law before a state moratorium on Malth care
construction was 1m~ this r.ear.
·She sald legislation authortzln,g such a moratorium has been

In~~ been rapid growth of urgent health care centers, which

Crunchy

good taste ••.
compliments
of nature.

--------

25¢

MANur.\CTIJRER'S COUPON
COU-EJIPIRE80CTOB!R31, 1113

SAVE25¢

I '

GENERAL FOODS

\

-

The U .S. carrier Ranger
with seven support ships
off coast of El Salvador
battleship New Jer~y
witn live SUCIPOft sllips due
to arrive from Thailand.

'I1DS map shows where lhe U. S.ls Cllllductmgmllltary maneuvers bt
Cemral America.

ByW, D~NEUION
today .
House Republican Leader Robert
Asooclaled l're88 Writer
Michel of Dllnols defellded the
WASHINGTON (AP) · - Presiadmlnlslratlon pollcy, saying, "It is
dent Reagan's policy of undercover
military aid to Nicaraguan rebels Is ....orklng, if not dramatically. We
can stop the shipment b! arms only
facing Its first test in theHouseashis
with effective pressure."
supporters try to water down a blll to
MeanwhUe, a Nicaraguan detecoutlaw such assislance.
The House began public debate tor told a news conference WednesWednesday on legislation barring day that operations of antiSandlnlsta guerrWas and some
support "directlY or Indirectly, to
mUitary or paramuttary operations actions of the Honduran army have
reduced clandestine shipments of
in Nicaragua by any nation, group,
organization, movement or rums to leftist rebels in El Salvador.
IndividuaL"
Miguel Bolanos, who claims to
Rep. C.W. Young, R-Fia., offered
been a Nicaraguan securlty
have
the first amendment, providing that
officer,
said that when he defected
assistanCe could continue untU
1w&lt;f
months
ago some of the
Nicaragua's leftist government
overland
channels
of arms and
agreed not to support guerrUias 'In
ammunition had been cut by the
other Central American nations.
"We want all of us to play by the antt-Sandlnlsta forces known as
same rules," Young told the House. "contras."
Under the amendment, the Sand!·
ntsta regime In Managua would
However, the Pentagon said
have to permit verlllcatlon that It Wednesday said about a dozen
was no longer helping ship mWtary Soviet-bloc cargo ships are headed
supplles to rebels In El Sblvador or tor Nicaragua In a new surge of
other countries In the region.
arms dellverles, expected to start
A voteontheblllwasexpectedlate arriving Saturday.

Find levels of .Dioxin at Marietta plant

C&amp;SOE will resume consiruction
CONESVILLE -The Columbus &amp;Southern Ohio Electric Co. says
11 soon wW resume construction of a coal-washing facUlty at Its

MARIE'ITA (AP) - Ottlclals are
CIIUtlously optlmlstlc that no publlc
health hazard wW be posed by
traces of the chemical dioxin
cllscovered at a Union Carbide plant
near Marietta.
Ohio Environmental Protection
o!flclals and company representa. lives are expected to meet "within a
matter of days" to discuss cleanup
procedures tor the suspected
cancer-causing agent.
Ohio EPA Director Robert H.
Maynard asked Union Carbide for
· an lmmedlatecleanupofthedloxln,
which Union Carbide reported
Wednesday had been discovered In
two sites at the plant on Ohio 7 five
mUes west of Marietta.
The canpany agreed by tele, phonetotakecorrectlve action, said
Allan Franks, chief spokesman for

Ohio [;:PA. He said It appeared to be
the tlrst discovery of dioxin In Ohio.
Franks said the EPA told the Ohio
Department of Health about the
situation, but he noted that Union
Carbide sald there appears to be no
danger to the Public health.
Marietta Healtl1 Department sanltartan Frank Wetherholt said he
also l!'asn't concerned about any
dioxin reaching the city.
"No, not really, because I think It's
Isola red down there,' be said.
Franks said the largest of the
dioxin !races amounted to about 31
parts per bllllon, about one-tenth the ·
levels found In the Times Beach,
Mo., . area, where famUies were
forced to leave their homes.
Union Carbide's statement said
analYses of samples revealed that
concentrations of up to 31 parts per

'

bUUon were detected In some solid
wastes burled more than 15 years
ago 1n a landfUI on plant property.
'The landfW Is no l9n,ger used, Union
Carbide said.
The whole landfill covers an area
of five to slx acres. The one-to
two-acre area in which dioxin was
found was about 400 feet from the
road and has been fenced in, said
plant Manager Charles Barrett.
A second dioxin concentration, of
23 parts per bllllon, was discovered
in a soU-surfaC!e sample taken from
an inactive iqimutacturlng site that
covers 10 acres at tbe exbemewest
end of Carbide's facUlty.
Access to thesttelsllmlted to plant
personnel, Barrett said, and barrl·
cades have been erected.
He said some employees may
have worked In or walked through
the area before tbedloxln was found,

'The $.'fi mllJ1on project was halted In December 1982 due to the
utWty's financial problems, C&amp;SOE President Ben Ray said

Wednesday.
'
-~-··
However, Ray said, the project Is being resumed based onar.,• ..,.
of available alternatives !or providing a secure supplY o1 coal that will
meet air pollution requirements by June 1984.
The plant wW be able to pl'OI.'eSS 1,000 tons of raw coal per hour,
removlngmuchofthesulfurtromltaDdallowlngtheutWtytocontlnue
burning Ohio-milled ,coal, he said.

State forecast
Clear loolght. Low around 70. Winds southerlY 10 mph or less.
Mostly sunny and humid Friday. High around 92.

Extended forecast
EXtended Ohio Forecut - Saturday through Monday: Very
warm and humid through the period with a sllgRt chance of
atterooon thunderstorms. Highs In thljl upper IDI to the mid-90s.
Early morning lows 1n the upper 60s to' the mid· 'lOs.
Rain

lm1J

but "I think there's probably very
little probabiHty that any oflthas lett
the plant."
Union Carbide reported that soli
samples taken from acllve areas
within the plant grounds show no
evidence of dioxin. Samples taken
from groundwater surrounding the
contaminated landfUI also proved
negative, the company said.
Union Carbide said the dtqxln
apparently was created by the
so-called Raschig process Used at
the plant from 1900-1971 to make
phenol. He said Union Carbide
began testing the Mar1etta site after
learning from another manufacturer that the process could fonn
dioxin.
"The action (sampling and testIng) hasbeengolngonslnceAprilof
this year," Barrett said, but the final
report from outside laboratories
was not received untU last Friday.

EPA orders finn to
remove tqns of coal
ash in Gallia County

ConesvUie generating station.

Snow f}:·.;!

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, o! the above named bank do herebydeclarethat
this report of condition has been prepared In conformance with the Instructions
issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State
Banking Authority and is true to the best of my knowledge and bellet.
Roger W. Hysell
'
We, the undersigned directors, .attest the correctness of this report ~
condition and declare that It has been examined by us and to tile best of ou
knowledge and belle! has been prepared In conformance with the Instructions
Issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State 1
Banking Authority and Is true and correct.
·
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
FERMAN E. MOORE
FRED W. CROW, JR.
-QIRECI'ORS

SGO~B37400

provide an alternative to a family doctor or a hospital emergency
room A recent aeveland Clinic survey showed that more than 50
~t care or ambulatory surgery centers had been bullt or
annoonced In the Cleveland area dur1ngthepast18months.

I.

•

TEGUCIGALPA

Reagan policy
faces initial
test in House

,•

CLEvELAND~ Developers of urgent health care centers wW now ·

t:~s~~~~~~-~~.~~~-~~~-~~-~.~-~~~-~-. ~~-~~~.:::::::::::::::~.~.'.~:~ 15,747,000.~

•

from Medolerranean

SANFRANCISCO-Ailelderlymanwhowasapparentlynurslnga
15-year-old grudRe _was ln critical condition today after shooting
hlmselfattheendofaspreethatkllledaworkeratamachlneshopand
a physiCian at a health cUnlc, otfldals said.
Another doctor at the health cllnlc was woonded.
The gunman was Identified by author1tles as Ivan S. Dunbinsky, 73,
who had been fired by the machine shop 15 years ago. He apj)arently
blaTned one of the vlcthns, machinist John Martin, for the loss of his
Job, pollee sald.
.
CamplatnJng o! chest pains, the elderlYman walked Into the Potrero
HUI Health Center near his home Wednesday and asked Dr. Herbert
Ross for a glass o! water, Hornlclde Inspector Herman Clark said.
When Ross returned with water, the man began shooting with a
.32-callber automatic pistol.
Ross, 40 the center's medical director and a University of
Calltornla-San Francisco faculty member, died after belngshottri the
neck and Jiead, Clark said.

2 S.Ctionl, 12 Page&amp;
20 C.nh
A MultlmMia Inc. Newtpaper

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 28, 1983

U S camm Coral Sea

Mud-wrestling at fair Aug. 18

•

Pomeroy

enttne

n50

Remember the measles. Some people think only kids get them.
Olllege young people know better.
Students at colleges and universities In Ohio, Indiana, Texas and
Louisiana caught measles this year and soine of them got very sick
- just because they missed getting vaccinated for measles.
College students are more likely tn be a victim of measles than
small chlldren. 'These students are urged to check their shot records.
U a shot Is needed, the student should contact the personal
physlclu or the Meigs County Department of Health on Mulberry
.
Heights, Pomeroy.
Immunlzatlons are given every second and fourth Tuesday of the
month from 9 to 11 a.m. and from 1 to 3 p.m.

~.

at y

e

•

•

United States to Hold
Military Exercises in
Central America

Urge students to check records

Ullltt---,

•

'The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency has ordered an
Ashland, Ky. construction firm remove 400,000 tons of coal ash used
to fill a site it owns at the intersection of U.S. 35 and Burnette Road In
Gallla CAJunty.
'The coal ash has caused drainage problems and acid leached tram
the coal has polluted a nearby stream, acccrdlng to the EPA.
Paul Colley Construct~n Co. began removing the ash about a
week ago and ls taking it back to Kyge11 Creek power plant, the
source o! the fill material,
Owner Paul Colley sald the land was a low·lyllJII swamp when he
purchased it 1n 1m and be !Wed it with coal ast;)&amp;bout two years ago
' ,
· .
to make It useable.
Coffey said he has since trled to sell or lease the land but could do
nothing after he "began hassling with the EPA" aver a year ago.
Four or five Investors had expressed interest In buying the 24-acre
site, InCluding at least two oU companies that wanted to put truck
stops there, he said.
Colley said he also co_nsldered developing the property into a
shopping center.
"It 1s an ideal site tor almost anything,'' he added.
It wW cost over $1 mUilon to remove the ash and Coffey said he
does not know If he will refill the property with dbi, :·,
The EPA expects the lUI to be removed by fall; according to
spokeman Pat Morrison.
But a construction company ottlclal said It may take six months to
remove all the coal ash.
,
According to Morrison, the EPA began dlscua81ng the site with tl1e
construction company "some time ago" and company officials .
agreed to remove the fill within the past two weeks.
The stream EPA officials says Is polluted runs through the middle
·
of the property.
The Burnette Road site Is the only property CAJffey owns In Gallla
County, but be said he has used coal ash to flU oth&lt;'r sites with no
problems. A8h makes a desirable !ID because It compacts well and
doeS not settle as much as sand and gravel.
"You could pour COOCiete on It right now," he said.

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