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                  <text>Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 9, 1982

Roush given GOP nomination
1

('unltnut•tl from pa ~ t· 1l

M . Ba ll. Jr .. running for his first

Jican s prdcrrNi Paul F. Pfeifer
giving hi111 II:MI whll~ his opponent.
Wall&lt;'r 1-:. ll&lt;,·kjord. rr&lt;·f'i\'f'fl HTI

time in ~f'igs Cou nt y as Republi C'Jn stair rep r esentati ve ca ndida If'
lT'&lt;_·rivC'd 1.7~7 votes.

\'OIP S .

Meigs Count y Democ1 ats on
thPir side of the election ledger
\\'Pnt for the team of William J.
Brown and Charles A. Vanlk for the

Congl't'"" man Clarrncr E. Mil!cr
wa s giw' n 211~11) \ 'O ff' S by local J{ppublic:tn" in !l b bid fur nomination
to r un for lOth dl s trk't rrprf'scnta
ti \ 'f' 111 ( 'ungrc·.... s. SuprrrnC' ('ourt
. Ju &lt;.;~ir t · l'andida!P.'-. and thf'i r \ 'O IP
in c\ udt'(\ .Jo hn\\' ivlt'Corma c. U :..tl.
1\'illt.m t .I :llr·t ·rom· . Il KI: !ll.uu ·ht ·
1\.rupdn 'i k~ ·. ~~~ - and .J o hn B. M L1r
stld II. c a nclid;tt( • fu r t ·ourt o f dppPa h
!'l'&lt;'f' i\'t'&lt; l 1-41'2 vo tf'&lt;.; fror.1 loc .tl

gm·Prn or -liPutrm:mt governor nomi nation . Th(• JXI ir J'('('f'ivrd 656 votPs.
'llll' !Pam of Celeste a nd Sho·
l' rn.tkt •r n'&lt;'l'i\'('(1 536 while the
tt •. tm of Springc'r· KN~ft' rN:'eivf'd
) ;)~I

llt' rt ''s thf' wa~' Mrlgs [)('mocrats

('1' \ \' t'd ~ ()

ca st ballot s for othN posts : for at tornP\' .l{C'nPral, Anthony J . Cclri&gt;t'l'Ue . Jr .. 1(}18; audit or of state.
Thoma s F: . F('rguson. ~: S('('rcl cll'\ of stall', Sherrod Flrown, 411;
Anthon .\ 1.. Ca l,dJJ'f'SP. :181; Dennis
.1. 1-\ucinictl. :240. &lt;-~nd Francis F..
(;aut . lh6; for trf'asurf'r of state,
:vl.tr ~· l·: lll•n 1\'ilhrow, :lii9; Michael
1'. i&lt;PII.I', 21&gt;1 ; Jamt·s R. Williams,
l ~ IK; 1\t•nnl'th H Cox. lhl Ric ha rd
I. Wi!l(·nht--rg , +)h: Timoth~' G.
l.f'mir~ . o2. and l.ee c. FalkP, 34:

&lt;&gt;a k lt ·\· ( ' ( 'o llin ~. fot 'l fatt · " { ' lld ·
from tht • l f th d1 ~ 1 ri ct. rPeriw'{l
'22·U Ht •pulllil'.I JJ \·ott ''- .md l'l.nn·

;.enbaum . 11'&gt;1 : :S:orlx'rl G . Den ·
nPrll. .lr .. 242 : for lOth district

!{t • pubJH ". IIl ~

,. \mon g thtt 't' lOth di... , lt i{'f &lt;·&lt;•ntr; tl
( ' tl!T\Illll!t'l' ,

C'.llldid.IIf'~ .

nldll,

:'Vlf•ig-. ( ' uunt~

J{ppubltcans pre

1-:llswurltl 1-loldt•n gi\'lllg
h1n1 7 1&gt;' \ lilt ''- tnmp.t!Pd to li'...)\1
gl \'f'n In I 'Ptf• r &lt;; &lt;'nulddi " and~
to H1 :1 1\.(•.. , lt •r !.l)( 'dl l {l ·publlt 'dll"
g.t \'t' .l .I!H 'l ,\ ~·; nn . tn 1 t&lt;~l , ·otP o.; for
lOth d i&lt;.,J J it·] &lt;., ]J] I' t'•l mlll i tlPI '
worn.t n .tnt! l.nwrH · C .lohn ..,tt Jil rP
ff' J'l'l'(l

1111

for U. S. s.t•nator. Howard M . Met

representative to Congress, John
M. Buchanan, 479; Ralph Barrell,
336; Chuck Overby, 329; for justice•
of supreme court, A. William Sweeney, unopposed, 875; Ra lph S. Lochar, unopposed. 656; James P.
Celebrezze, 640, opposed by Robert
D. Holmes, 419; district court of app&lt;&gt;als, Lawrence Grey, 899.
For state centra l committeeman, the loca l D~mocrat s preferred William A. Lavelle who
r&lt;'&lt;'eived 614 votes. His opponents
were Donald F. Moyer, 3J7; Dean
R. Kahler, 123, and Edward D. Helvey, 105. For state committee, lOth
district, woman. Mary C. Ga l·
laghcr re&lt;'cived 710 votes while VIr ginia Weiss re&lt;'elved 361.
Mark A. Malong, unopposed for
state sena tor, 17t h district, received 907 votes. Meigs O.•mocrats
preferred Jolynn Boster for state
representative nominee of the 97th
distnct giving her 66.1 votes over 511
r&lt;'&lt;'cived by her opponent, William
R. White.
The fi ve Libertarian candidates,
on the state and nationa l level , received one vo te each in Meigs

County at Tuesday ·, primaries.

Village mayors terminate 20 cases
Fnut UdE •rtddllh furff'1t0.l bond..;
in tllt' E'OUI 1 nt Middlf'ptH! \1,1\ n1
Fn•d lh lflman TuC' "-d.t \ nrg ht
TlH' \' .t n · 1),tl• • Sm dPr. M ;t s ~il!on.
$.'n ~. po ~ ll'&lt;l on ,, {'hJrgt• of dri\·ing
whi!t ' into \H', t!t'(_l : Trmoth.\' :\l'Jl.
\\'p &lt;., f Colum!)i;t , $:)(1 , (•xpin&gt;d li

cen.st ·. Ch.t rlt•s 1·: . ll'il"ln. :vlictctiP
port. S:lll. &lt;t'-'-U rt'&lt;l c h•a r dist anC'f',
and ~Lirlt · nt ' ;\1 . t1hPn ~·. l .. mgo.;\·i llf'.

and co"s, spt:'t.'&lt;iing ; Don Huod, $.'i0
ctnd cos!.,, (hsorcil'rl~ · manner; Bar·
b:tr;l .Jam('{•s. PomProyr, $10 and
co_(.; h, running a stop sign; Arthur

Petrie. Middl!'port. $!lXI and costs,
lr•a,·ing a dog unallended; Larry
Cundiff. MiddiPpot·t. $100 and costs.
disordf'rl)' conduct . Don Lovett,
Middl~port .

wa s r:h·&lt;·n a :10 da~ · s jail

$.')(! I':Oq .J il'l'd li ct · n ~l' .

o;;pnff'nCL ' on
c tlargr.

J.'uwd wt'rt' l { 1c ha 1d I·:. S tont~.
Porn t•J'o\". s~ :JII and ('0Sh . 1hl'l'\'
d&lt;:t\''- I ll J. til. fll i\'lng Whl[t' l niOXi ·

t•ight others

cat~&lt;!. I

;,Ill Th o me~ . MiddlqxH·t . $If;

a

di sordrrl~·

manner

Onf' drft\ndant wa s fmed and
f o rf~ited

bonds in the

court of Po mf'ro~ · Mayor Clar-

Springer attempted to
extend hours at polls
(' 1:\1' 1:\:\,\TI t,\1' &gt;- ,\Hamil
ton ( 'l! u n t ~ · ('omlllon J&gt;Jt •a " j udgf'
turnt'&lt;l down d l"l'&lt;itlt''-1 b ~ · gubf'rn&lt;J
tor i. II c. t nd l(l,t1l• ( ;(•ra lei SpringPr t(l
t•:xli' nri ,·oti ng hours TUP sd~ .\" aftf'r
thP Dl'mO&lt; T dt llPard that flood o;; m
Ha milt on Count )· forT txl an Part ~·
cl o..., ing of m on • thJn 20 \" Otl'r
prf'C'i n('h
'I'IH · f!,t .., h fl ood ~ Wl'rrc aust'CI b\ a
stor Ill !h:tt l'l'l)'-.'-''d tht • c o un1~ dur·
ing ltlt' .tflf'l noon, nocxling J'(JdciS
and ( ", \U '- IIl g 1·u s ll hou r !rdffic
sn,tll '1-:JdrrJ\· prPcin c t workt ·r s \\'('l'f'
C\ IITif'tl o u t tJI lllf' b ;l'&gt;4:'01l'lll of !Ill'
M tHiiSt ln PI;H't' firl'lmu sf' aftf'r wa ·
tf' r poun~l in followin g thr ..; form .
which dumpr'&lt;l two inchp.;; ot watPr
in th&lt;' ar( 'd in ._t fpw h o ur ~ timf'.
PrPcirw t .Judgr DuttiP Schustf' r

said

poll

wnrkc·rs at

E lmdal~

Aw•nuf' in Mou nt Wa shing1on
watchrfi \\'; Jtrr pour in through
cra ck s in the wall s. but thf' votmg
co ntinut '(\ unintPrrupiLxi.

"WI' ;tt' tuallv had 10·12 pcoplr·
c~nd

,·otr dunng thp worst of

it," ' hi' ' Jid

"A c oup l~ ofthems;ud

walk in

thf'ir cars \\'l'n' stallrd in !he traffiC
jam .llld thr.\ couldn't mm·r am'
wa .v, so tilt '\' j us! \\ ' ~lk('&lt;l on O\"f~ r
and \'nl.-.rl •
Spnngrr . aftt•r conCf'&lt;li ng clf'ff'at
in thf' Dt•rnoc ralir pnm,u:: . said
k~~ing

thP polls opt:'n would no!

h&lt;l \'f' ch,JngL'CI thl· outcomf' of the
eiN'tion P\' f•n !hough hf' wd s hoping

gooct rf'sults

111 southrastem Ohio

would can)· him to victory .
"\·Vh cll it came down to was there
wa s no pra c tical way of ordering

thus&lt;' polls to IX' open," said Ti ·
mothv Burke. Springer's HamUton
County aide. "You can 't open a
flooded poll. II d~sn'l do any good.
" We simply determined there
wa s no practical solution to the
problem tonight." he sa id .
Holx'l'l Uth, H.rpublica n deputy
rlin'f'tor of Hamil! on County Board
of Elt't.'tions, said the ballots at the
countv 's 962 prc'f'inct s dtd not get
Wt't lx'&lt; ·ause thry wen? transported
in wa terproof mrtal con ta iner s.
"Ou r main concern is making
surf' lVf' gf't the ballots," Ut h said .

Dt&gt;t&gt;r dit&gt;s in mishap
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
this morning a deer was kiUed on
Ohio 7 nPar Ca lli polis a! II: 45 p.m.
MontJay when it ran into the path of
a northbound vehicle driven by
Ricky L. .lohnson. 34. Rutland.
Johnson's ca1 sufferf'd mode1·ate
d&lt;..~mogf'

in thr accident.

Marriagt' lit't'OSt'
A ma niagP license W&lt;J .&gt; issued in

MPigs Coun ty Probate Cow·t to
Ricky Wayne' Schaefer. 19, M iddleport, and Christine Kay FIV, 20,.

Frc.lflk

j)i l !'t'

~:~ ~,...

11

Ch·l;tnd . . J( •arw!IP Law -

lf'nC'l'. Ben l't •trrl. Carrol l Tmford
.tnd Sco!l \\'1df1 ·. council mrmbf'rs.
(;IL·nn \{in·r. s1n'f •1commis-;!om•r.
( 'harh·~ Sh,tin . chid of po!iC(',

BoiJb\· l(o\'. nwmbl.'r of Board of
Public ,\flairs. ami Margie Wolfe.
c il'rk · t r ea .o. , urer .
pn·..;idl'd

Ma~· or

Pyles

Celeste takes
t

Emergency runs
Three ca lls were answered by local emergency units Tuesday, the
Meigs Count y Emergency Medical
SciVice reports.
Midd leport at 6:03 p.m .. took
Keith McCarty from Sycamore St
to Veterans Memorial Hospital and
later to the Holzer Medical Center.
Syracuse at 10: 25 a.m . took
Mildred Wolfe from Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Tuppers Plains
at 3:24 p.m. took Clifford Cuckler
from Route 7 to St. Joseph Hospital
in Parkersburg, W. Va .

MOPPING THE MESS- Janet Yargen, a precinct
clerk for the Hamilton County Board of El ections in
Ohio, mops up a mess left at the Maddux School voter
precinct. The voting continued at this precinct. but

others weren't so lucky after a storm caused flash
floods that left water four feet deep at some precincts.
Some voters had to lx' rarried out of precincts after the
flood struck. I AP Laserphoto I.

come tax hike contained In both the
Senate and House versions.
The pa nel decided on a 50 percent
increase as app10ved by the House,
bu t provided it would be In effe&lt;'t for
nine months, starting July 1, rather
than 12 months as voted by the
lower chamber.
Members also agreed, at leas t
tacitly, on an $81 m illion,
Republica n-sought reduction In
welfare spending, from the amount
proposed by the House. Howvever,
Democrats hinted they might balk
at the cut later.

~ ~~

c,+'q

By Thl' Associated Press
Syrian helicop ter gunships and
ground forces went on the attack
aga inst Israel's Leba non Invasion
force in the Beirut highlands today,
heightening fears that the two old
Mideast enemies were close to the
brink of all -out war.
The Syrian command sa id Its force• struck advancing Israeli armored units 12 miles east of Beirut
nea r the Damascus highway.
where the Israelis had made a
lightning lhnJst Tuesday a:; the~·
ttied to close their vise on the Leba nese capital and other Pa lestinian
guerrilla strongholds.
A Syrian communique claimed
the adva nce had been halted and 23
Israeli tanks were destroyed.
The Israeli military command in
Tel Aviv sa id its warplanes shot
down a Syrian jet fighter near Bei-

Palestine Liberation Organiza tion chief Yas,ser Arafat appealed
fmm his secret command bunker
in west Beirut for collective ArJb
inte1vention to keep Israel from invading the Lebanese capital.
Despite Prime Minister Mena ·
chem Begin's declaration that the
Israeli s "don't want war with Syria," the mounting clashes threa tened to !urn Israel's ca mpaign
aga inst Palestinian guerrillas in
southern Lebanon into a major con·
fmntation with the large Syrian
force based around Beiru t and In
eas tern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley.
An estimatPrt ~0.000 Syrian
troops are in Lebanon to pollee a
truce that ended the 1975-76 civil
war in Leba non.
AP Correspondent Mic hael
Goldsmith, on the way from Da ·
mascus to Beirut. saw convoys of

rut and a helicopter in a separate

Syrian reinforcements r olling into

clash near Lake Qaraaoun. 20 miles
southeast of Beirut, when the helicopter attac ked Israeli grou nd
forces.
Four Israeli warships. meanwhile, shelled the beaches of southern Beirut's Ouza i neighborhood ,
Lebanon's state radio said. The 10minute bombardment caused no
casualties or damage, It said.

Lebanon Tuesday night.
The Israeli military command
sa id today that Israel had reinforced its troops on the disputed Golan Heights, which it captured from
Syria in 1967 and annexed earlier
this yea r .
The state radio said Isr ael 's
ground forces were in control of
about 25 percent of Leba non's

territory.
Israel sa id it shot down six Syrian
jets on Tuesday, two of them In Israeli airspace, and Syria sa id Its
artillery and helicopter gunships
attacked an Israeli armored column near the Lebanese village of
Aln Dara. five miles west of the Bekaa Valley and 12 miles east of Beirut. One Syrian jet was shot down
Monday.
Although Prime Minister .Menachcm Begin •aid the Israelis "don't
wan! war with Syria, " there were
more frequent clashes between the
two forces Tuesday. Israel said It
shot down six Syrian jets, two of

them in Israeli airspace. and Syria
sa id its artillery and helicopter gunships attacked an Israeli armored
column near the Lebanese village
of Aln Dar a, five miles wes t of the
Bekaa Valley and 12 miles eas t of
Beitlll.

Veterans Memorial
Admilled -- Dwighl Sprague,
Dexter.
Discharged--Tina Stobart, William G. Boggs, Elsie Cross, Fannie
Phillips and Nellie Price.

obviously referring to statutory rP-

quirements for the budget to lx' in
balance by July I, the start of the
new fiscal year .
The measure envis ions alterna -

tive scenarios with r egard to the
income tax hike. It says if state re. venues exceed pi'Oj&lt;'&lt;'llons by $100
million by Jan . !.the surcharge will

go off Jan . :n.
If the tax is not taken off, then In
March, If ta x collections and olhN
sagging 1·evenues have remained
lx'low proj ect ions, the surcharge
can be coll&lt;'&lt;'ted for a lOth month.
I hroughou I April.
The temporary boost was part of
an agreement worked out tx:&gt;twPen

Finan and Rep. William ·E. Hinig,
D-New Philadelphia, the ranking
House negotiator on the panel.
At insistence of th e Senate. the
conference commillt-&gt;t&gt; agr('{'(j to

cut

w~lfare

line item subsidies for

he Daily
Voi.J I ,No .26
Copyrigh ted 1982

The fourth annual UilesAppalachian Celebrity Golf Tournament will be held tomorrow at
the Mason Golf Course. Tonight's
Hillbilly supper will ki ck off the
twt&gt;day event at Royal Oak
Park. See today's special section
for further information.

FORT LAUDERDALE, F la. - A man llnked by pollee to 100
contract murders around the nation was seized along with the
deadly tools of a hit man's trade - automatic pistols, silencers,
brass knuckles and handcuffs.
Bernard Barton Hunwick, being held wit hout bond Wednesday in
Broward County j ail on charges of attempted murder. kidnappin g
and armed robbery, may be teponslble for "about 100" murders
nationwide, sa id Broward County sheriff' s Sgt. Dale Adams.
Hunwlck was jailed aft er the shooting of A lan Chafin . 34. The
vic tim was abducted, shot fi ve limes May 19 and left for dead on a
roadside. He re&lt;'overed from his wounds. Police believe the shooting
was over a drug debt.

Oil, gas project hits r?adblock

COLUMBUS - A tornado touched down In western Ohio late Wed nesday, damaging a house and a barn, and nume1ous thunderstorms rumbled through the state, the Na tional Weather SeiVice
said.
Heavy rains accompanied some of the thunderstorms.
Cincinnati, Dayton, Columbus and M1nsfleld aU reported sever e
thunderstorms, the weather service sa id.
The weather service said a tornado touched down in Hardin
County, causing damage to a house and a barn near MI. Victory.
The Hardin County sheriffs department sa id that no injuries were
r eported.

FOR ALL OCCASIONS

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
Ph. 992-6342
Middleport

FINDLAY, Ohio - Three people were Injured and one woman
was reported missing In a department store fire, officials said early
today.
Two store employees were hospitalized with burns, one In critica l
condition and the other in sa tisfactory condition , hospital officials
said.
A firefighter Injured an ankle and was treated and released.
Store manager Becky Mantlo, who was hospitalized In satisfac tory condition, said another woman employee could not be located
after the fi re.

REPLACEMENT
CUSHIONS

F inan " did till' p1 ,t. ·twt · .!l n ·. td ~ 1s
allowt'&lt; l at track .., 111 h• ·ntu&lt;k \ .1 1H J
I ndian.! w hic·h ('tllllpt'l t· wllh (JhJn
I r ~ll'k "

Tht• (' inci nnat J l. l wm t~ k t •J .... tid
lh&lt; · llt'\\' l ~ lM ' of \\ ,tgt•n ng t·uuld 111
&lt;Tt'il '-1' tlw " t.llf· ·~ J.t f ' lll g ta-.; J, d \ t '
b\' ahuu t :b l. :-1 n ull 1nn .t \ 1':11

entinel
1 Se tl•on\ 11 P(lg e\
1 S Ce n! \
A Mullm1ed•o In( New\pope1

IIEW lli\.~KETBALLCOi\fll at Soullwm High St'l!t•&gt;l. Carl \\t&gt;lff',
ll'ft i~ ,,ictun_•d with Eldon Miller, haskt&gt;thaU l 'naf'h at Ohiu Stat1• l 1 ni\'~·r­

A GOOD GUY award wa.' presented to '""' Ferguson. right, hy Uave
UUes at the annual celehrity dinner h&lt;'id at lwyal Oak Park Wednesday
night. Other recipr•nts of the good guy award were Nt'll Garver. Earl
Bruce and Vir Wertz. See story and rnn n_• photos on pages 3 and 5.

By A,.;odak&gt;d Press
Former Lt. Gov. Richard Celeste
says his upcoming battle against
1-tepublica n Congressman Clar-

IPsle rece ived 43-1.797 votes, or 42
percent, to Ohio Attorney GenPral
William B1own's 381,611, or 37 per·

ence J. Brown for the governor's

man Jerry Springer was third with
210,1o6 votes. or about 21 percent .
On the Republican side, Clarence
Brown received 378,96(1 votes, or :&gt;I
pl'rcenl, to former Cu yahoga

office will be "extremely tough,"
with President Reagan's t'{'Onomic
policies likely sUJiacing as a key
issue.

"He has spent his politica l life in
Washington. while mine has been
primarily here in the stateofOhio, "
Celeste said Wednesda y at a Cleve·
la nd news conference. " He has
been a strong advocate of Reagan
economic policies."
Ca mpaign workers for Celeste.
who lost to Gov. James A. Rhodes
in 1978, sa id his victOJy m Tues day's primary stemmed from his
focusing on issues of the economy
and unemployment.
Based on unofficial resulls, Ce·

cent . Former Cincinnati Council-

Count y Com missioner ~th T~tft' s

153,.114. or 22 pe1cent. State Sen.
Thomas Van Meter had 137,584. or
19 per cent , and state natural rf'-

sources director Robert Teater wa s
a distant foUJ1h with 37,085 votes, or
5 percent.
At a Columbus news conference

Wednesday. Clarence Brown said
li iX'ral reputation would
hkely make for a fat target.
"He is vulnerable, I think , lx'ca use his whole past politica l ca ·
Ce l est~ · s

vo tf'rs, but apparrntly there wersa mr way .

By The Associated Press
Israel blasted PLO targets In

Syria n MiGs and an assault helicopter in eastern Leba non, and upped

on new 12 count or 24 count
Tender Leaf Quart Size Iced Tea Bags
To Rtlllltr: NlbjSto 8unds lfl( w1ll pay the lace value plus 7e tor hane111no charges
pro~1ded you and your customet hhe complied w1th tht terms ot thiS otter any othet
applicatiOn const1\utes lraud lnvo1ces sll0w1ng your purchase ot su!l!c1ent stocl! to
cover all caupons redeemed must be sllown upon requul. Vtud it proh1b1\ed tued Of
restncted Good only •n US A and APO FPO loCitlons Customer must pay any sates
tu Coupon w11! not be honmed 11 presented through outside IOfncles . brokers or
others who are not re1a11 d1stubutors ot our mer~hand1se or spe~ilicalty authonted b~
U$10 presenl coupons lor redemption Redeem on!~ lhtough our representat•ves or by
ma111ng toNabiSCO Brands Inc P0 Bo• 1708. Elm C1ty. North Carol•na27898
To Homt maker: Th1s coupon IS joOd only on the product md1cated Any othet
use constitutes haud LIMIT -ON COUPON PER .PURCHASE
EXPIRATIONDATE September 3D t982

l

Weather forecast
Clearing and cool tonight Lows 50-55. Ten percent chance of rain .
Winds westerly 5-10 mph. Mostly sunny and pleasant Friday. Highs

near !ll.
Extended Ohio Forecast
SaAirday through Monday:
Fair SaAirday and Monday. Chance or sbowera or tbundel'lltonns
Sunday. mgbB I110IUy In tile 7111. Lows to upper 40s and 1101.

-,

liberal than hr seems to have bt.&gt;en
in the primary." the nine-term con gressma n from U rbana said .

When ask1'd if he though!l'Piestl'.
of ( 'l~vcla nd, coul d wage a succes s
lui campaign in appealing mo11•
heavily to northeastern Ohi o.
Bmwn said. "There is no wa y th&lt;.ll
Oh io is goin g to hP an ('('O nomi rall~·
prosperous state If we go about try

ing to build that on a purely paroch·
iai sC'nS('. We hope to run an
administration that is closrly asso-

ciated with ,,,·cry part of the state of
Ohio."
Brown crf'di iC'd his victory to
organizi:l tion .

"We decided to devol&lt;' our allen ·
tion and rf'sources to organiza

lion," Btown sa id , adding thai once
the orga nizing effort began. "it ix'
gan to take on a life of its own."

I:Jctrut, and the official radio of
Yasscr i\rafat' s Palest ine Libera -

Beirut from the sea a nd air toda y

the number of MiGs it claimed it

and dropped leaflets warning that
Israeli forces were about to storm
the Lebanese capital and that
Syrian troops should leave
"within a few hours." President
Reaga n urged Isra el to cease fire

tion Org&lt;..~nization declared: "Wr

shot down Wednesda y from 22to 29.
By I sra eli count this brought the
. number of downed MiGs in four
days to 44 . Syria has admitted 16
MiGs downed and claims 19 Israeli
jets downed.
Despite the bombing run s on Beitllt and neat its airport, there was
no sign the Syrians were leaving

shall fight from house to house.

and w ithdraw from Lebanon .

The Tel Aviv command announced it shot down eight more

Lebanon

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The w,l nnlng number drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 026.
' The lottery reported earnings of $754,951.50 from the wagering on
,-"liS daUy game. The earnings came on sales of $917,963.50, while
holders of winning tickets are entitled to share $163,012, lottery offi'
cials said.

rwr has beC'n somC'what morp

FlL~nkt"&lt;.l b~ · Ohto ( ;( )Jl &lt; 'httirman
Micha('l Collf'.' . Cnlumbu " Ma \"n !
Tnm Mood _\' tHid 1it•ull·ndn1 g mt'!
nor runnmg ma!P .l&lt;tllll-''- 1-) dts.
Hmwn ":11ri !urning pOln h 111 thP
rdf'f' i ncl urlrd IIH ' t ·ndiJr&lt;.; t'mt •n t" of
thf' Frcmklin dncl Lul'a s Coun t_, . Rt&gt;
publican parlif's .nul thP fou r \ \ "&lt;.1\
f'ndor sPmf'nt of !lw ( 'u,·atl og a
County part~ ·. an t•ndor..;pmf'n t T .tft
,..,·as fa vorPd to n'&lt; ·t'i\·f'
Brovm said hr support " ('IJ! It ·\· ;t..,
cha irman of lhP stai P p&lt; trt y and Hnbf'rt Hughrs as d1ai1man of 1hP

Cuyahoga Count\· (;(Jr&gt; . liP adrl"l
tha1 hr intcnrls to ask r{r ~ t g. tn !t)
campaign in Ohio on his bf'hal!
"Thrrr is confirif'nC'• ' 1n I~(Jll,Jld
HPagan as ;1 pf•rsun and rt'sJduc~l
conf idencr m h1 s progr.tm s fnr thf'
rrgrnpra 1ion of 1h&lt;' ('{ ·onomy nf t ht'
n.1tion. ' llt • o.;, ncl

•
•
In
atr,
sea
Israeli forces blast PLO targets

BONN, West Germ any- President Reagan, mixing Middle East
peace-making efforts with NATO summitry, met today with al llanee leaders and worked to halt I srael's massive drive Into Lebanon and prevent a widening war.
Reagan, In his second International summit In a week, joined
leaders of 15 other North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries at
the onMay session. He also plaMed to meet with Saudi Arabia's
foreign minister, Saud ai-Falsal, who was flying' here for hastily
arranged talks In the wake of stepped-up fighting In the Middle East .

en't enough of them that felt !he

playL~d ha.~kt'thall ag-ainst t'at'h ntllf'r whilt•
Carl Wrui at Marietta and E ldon at \\'ith'nhurg during \\t'drwsda)•'s
l)aVf' Ui!t'S llillhilly Supper at lwyal Oak Park. S.••• 'tnrJ and nwn •
llktun:_-s on pag('S 3 and 5.

sity, long time friends who

Celeste sees -tough' battle against Brown

Reagan works to halt Israeli drive

QUALITY FOAM FILLING WITH
DURABLE, EASY CARE COVERS

Mechanic St., Pomeroy

IX&gt;rb.v .

Arrest contract killer in Florida

Western Ohio hit by tornado

RATED
CAKES

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

Anulh~&lt;r Jnwnclnlt'nt ddrkd t&lt;J
th&lt;• pro!XJ &lt;.; .tl i~ a prm isHm lt•ttmg
bt·ttors ;tt Ohiu \ llor"t ' Llt't' track s
wagrr on Ct'l"ldin lf' ]t '\ ' ISPd rd&lt;'l'"
such a s IIH • 1'1 t·aknt •..,s tJ J h•·ntul'k \'

Compared to the sta te average of about 30 percent predicted voter
turnout, Meigs Countlans turned out weU at the polls Tuesday.
A total of 4,833of the 12.300 registered voters in Meigs County voted
Tuesday, 39.6 percent. Of the total voting in Meigs County, one was a
Libertarian; 67 were non-partisan voters; 1,559 were Democrats
and 3,226 were Republicans .

Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. , who on Tu esday won the Democra tic
nomination for the U.S. Senate. said, "Once aga in, Secretary Watt's
efforts to despoil the Ca llfornla coast have been de&lt;'lared illegal by a
feder al court. "

r-.;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;~

*Redwood chaise cushions
*Redwood chair cushions
*Folding chair &amp;
chaise pads

wf'lfarr and £"ducat ion .
AJread~~ in the mPa surr· &lt;-~nd lf'ft
undisturlX'd by thP panf'l \\&lt;.! S a pro
v ision for ano ther I JX'ITPnt . aeros..,
thP -board spf'nding cut m•xt
.Januarv if n•vpnuf's arP _&lt;;; hort of

pnljPCtl O n ~ .

39.6 percent voted in Meigs

coastal communities."

SUMMER
FURNITURE

* 3 seat glider sets
*Chaise lounge sets
*Club chair sets

welfare lx'neflt s by ·I percent. How
evN. lhl• conferE'f's imposed a 10
pr•rcpnt dc&gt;ereasl' in Welfare D&lt;'partment opera tin g funds .
In anot hrr movP deslgrwd to bal
ancp the package, the panel incrf'asC'd from 9 IX'ITPnt to 10
pt:•rcent a spending slash agreed to
eatlirr for all staff' agPncirs PXCPpl

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 10, 1982

LOS ANGELES- The drive by Interior Secretary James Watt to
speed up oil and gas explora ti on on the West Coast has hit anot her
roadblock, wtth a federal judge halting auction of24 oil leases in the
waters off Southern California.
U.S. District Judge Cynthia Holcomb Hall on Wednesday granted
a preliminary injunction against the sale, saying that Watt did not
"adequately consider the economic Impact of the lease sale on the

CunUnut·d frurn p&lt;--~ge 1)

WiU support Brown
In hi s concess ion speech in Cleveland , Taft vowed to ,; upport Clarence Brown.
" I did everything I knew how to
do," Taft said . "We put together a
plan, carried It out, and It wasn't
enough. I intend to work very hard
to help Bud Brown do the job. I will
support hlm very strongly."
Van M e ter conceded in
Columbus.
"We gave It our best shot," Van
Meter said whUe surrounded by
tearful family members. "There
are brighter days ahead. The !:;sues
we stood for are just as valid today
as they were the day before."
The Ashland Republican had
hammered away at Brown for
what he contended was the con·
gressman 's voting record In support of busing for the racial
Integration of schools.

Sen. Richard H. Fina n, RCinclnnatl, sa id the Senate and
House will be set to act on the pack·
age Wednesday If the bill clears the
committee.
"We're under the gu n," he said,

Attack renews fear of all our war

Special Diles Tah

DE

COLUMBUS, Ohio !API Senate-House conferees wil l vote
next Wednesday on a tax hikespending cut measure which a•·
serted l y will wipe out state
government's $1.3 billion budget
deficit.
The six committee members put
the package toge ther Wednesday,
but delayed a formal vote to allow
staff to complete work on some
technical amendments.
Among them was an amendment
that apparently ended three weeks
of bickering over the size of an In-

Three hurt, one injured in fire

Racine
fr11111

Fined $63 and cos ts was Brenda
Graham, Pomeroy, charged with
distu rbing the peace.
Forfeiting were E lwyn E. Ray.
Ray. Ohio, $43, posted on an assured clear distance charge after
his truck sideswiped two carson E.
Main St., Tuesday; Ray Wofford.
Middleport, $46, speeding: Renee
Kazimer. Webster. N. Y .. $50,
speed ing; Mark HaiL Ches ter. $63,
failure to register a motor vehicle:
Emily Manley, Middleport. $43, as·
sured clear distance; Donald
McCune, Syracuse, $45, speed ing;
Kathryn Mayes. Mason, $62, run ning a traffi c signal; Denise Miller.
Portland, $51. speeding.

317 N. 2nd

Pomeroy .

• ('u!illlll !l 'd

t-&gt;nce Andrews Tuesday night .

...

Major tax hike could come June 16

Syria
He;ghts
20
I

0

Sea of
Galee

I

" The enemy is bombi ng our
camps, our women. our ch ildren .

But we shall fi ght. fight. fight ,"
screa mf'd the newscaster of the Pa lest ine Liberation Orga nization's
Voice of Palestine radio.
The Palestinian newscaster also
announced that Arafat had just received an "importa nt message"
from Sov iet President Leonid I.
B1ezhnev. He did not elaborate, but
Arafat appea led to Brezhnev Monday to inter.•ene and curb the Israe li invasion that was launched
Sunday to push Palestinian forces
back from the l s ra~ll border.
PLO communiques said several
residential nelghborhhods In southern Beirut were hammered by the
una bating air assaults th at also hit
areas around the alrpOI t and its
highway. The PLO said its forces
tu rned back Israeli attempt s to
land troops at Beirut airport.
Israel Radio said Reagan sent

tht' Middle Ea .&lt;t Fml.t\' .tnd sll ullll·
bC'tWCf'n .J f'J'U S~lh'lll ttncJ lh!ll,\SCU &lt;.;
sE'C'king a ceasr -firP .
Si ncf' th r l sra('lis OJJ('nPd th! • .11
t.trk Sunday. S~TLln h1nt ·~ \\"!']'( '
clr ~lwn Info lhL\ figh!in g as 1:-.rc~I'IJ
forcf's neanxt &amp;•1rut .rncl!iJt• l)(·k;Jd
Vall~· to the ca st. t1 strongholrl of
S_
v rian forc r s that WPI11 onto Lt•
banon in a pcacckN~pin g rolf' ~ t fl f' r
the 197l-76 Lebanr st~ ci\·iJ war.
Isr ael i Cabinf't S£'&lt;·1f't.u ~ D :w
Meridor in .lerusah1 11l ~aiel H: f'a gan
sent &amp;&gt;gin a lrttPr \\Titten " in ,1
friend!~ · spirit " and replit~l lo 11 .
Whitr House spokrsm nn L._JJn ·
Speakes. tra\'l'ling with l~t'~t g .tn on
his summit trip in Europt' . .s.tid
Reagan sent a mf'ssagf' ttJ HC'gin
Syria 's stai r radio cbJmt'fi Is
raeli jets todd~ ' st r&lt;-~ff'd com·a\·.., of
tra ve lers from Lrbdnon to S~Tia .11
a border checkpoint m northf'rn LP
banon, killing ~7 trd\'f'll'r •, ,tnd
wounding 7~ .

Discuss final school payments

Golan

l~rael

from room to room."

Primf' Ministrr Mendc twm IX ·gii-,
an urgf'nt dPmand f01 a C('. I.'-L' fin •
and tt1at SC'&lt;'n' tar\ of S t ~Jh ' :\IP:x
andPr M . fl ,lig .It . woulcl tr a\ 'Pl !D

Miles

CONFLICT CONTINUES - This map locates the air battle fought
Wednesday between Israeli jets·and Syrian MiGs over Leanon's Bekaa
Valley as weD as the reported lllraell bombing of a housing estate on the
outskirts of Damascus. lllraeU jets attacked Syrian anti-aircraft batteries
and reportedly destroyed the mobile launching pads for Soviet-made
S.UW missiles. Israel clalins to have shot down Z% Syrian jets In the
~· 1be Syrian report of an lsraell raid on Damascus claimed that
elgbt clvfllans were Idled and t7 wounded. ( AP Laserpboto)

Chris Layh, administrator of the
Carleton School, meeting with
Meigs County Commissioners Wednesday discussed final contract
payments for the construction of
the new Carleton School.
It Is hopeful aU payments can be
made within the next 30 days If
state runds are available within
that period of time.
The board received a notice from
SunOhlo that the company intends
to operate a portable system for
deeontamlnatlon-reclamatlon of
tran~former oil in various locations

within the county.

Th~

county wa s

given notice that it is required by

the EPA.
Charles B lakeslee. planning commission director, discussed updating the procedure on land transfers.
The board authorized James Jen!lings, planning consultant , to proceed with preparing a method for
updating the procedure.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
outlined various mad and bridge
projects that his depa11ment is
presently working on.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill ( uun .' trnl

l'unwr .. \ . I thu•

lil4-99t-l J:m
l I~ \ I H t-Jl II t lilt- 1'\TEHL"i T I IF llll· \II· II . ~1\ 1,\ .... 1t\ ,\lit- ,\

Page-2-The D.llily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thur1day, June 10, 1982

On the bench;__-_________J_a_m_es_J_.K_i_lp_at_ri_ck
same way cried harra h.

SA 's rescissi~ was - take a breath

The Hon. Abner is now a judge on
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia . The court is
generally acknowledged to be the

Not Abner Mikva . As a member of
the House, where he was chainnan
of the ultraliberal Democratic Study
Group, he had consistently racked
up a record of passionate support for

- capricious, illogical, inconsistent,
contradoctory . artifi cial, un-

with reasons satisfactory to Judge
Mikva - reasons that were clearly
articulated ~ well, let the agency
try . He gave the agency 30 days to
change his mind ..
In point of fact, the NHTSA did

jLLStified, unreasonable, misdirec-

spell out its reasons for rescission -

reasons that would impress men of

must liberal circuit in the land, and

eve ry form of federal regulation

Mikva ranks among its most libera l
members. He was named to the bench by Jinuny Carter in September
1979 under circumstances that
raised a few constitutiona l
eyebrows. The story is wortil
recalling .
After years of stallmg around.
Congress in 1978 created 152 additional district and circuit
judgeships. These were among 265
JUdicial appointments that fell into
the lap of Mr. Carter; he filled them.
naturally, with 259 Democrats and
six others. Among the Democrats
was Congressman Mikva of Illinois.
The difficulty developed when
critics noted that (a) the salaries of
U.S. circuit judges had been increased while Mikva was in the
House, and (b) the Constitution says
that no representative may be appointed to a civil office which shall
hav e been created " or the
emoluments whereof shall have
been increased during such time."
Sen . Jim McClure of Idaho tried to
make something out of it, but his suit
to block the appointinent was
dismissed and Mikva ascended to
the bench .
On June I, Judge Mikva delivered
a 76-page opinion holding that the
National Htg hway Traffic Safety Admmistratiun had acted improperly
last October in rescinding what was
known. inexactly, as the airbag rule.
Thts was a regulation. 12 years in the
fiddle-faddling . That would have
required the installation of passive

known to man. At the time he
resigned from the House, his
comulative score on the books of the
American Conservative Union was
four out of a possible 100.
The notion that politicians put
aside their partisan prejudices when
they go on the bench is a notion
cherished only by those who believe
in little green men . Mikva believes
in airbags and automatic seatbelts ;
on June 12, 1978, he voted for them.
Now, wearing judicial robes. he had
a glorious opportunity to impose his

ted, absurd , Orwellian and totally
arbitrary . The agency's reasons
were hollow, wholly inadequate and
absolutely irrelevant. Not one iota of
evidence supported the action.

WASHINGTON - The trouble
with Abner Mikva is, he thinks he's
still back in the House of Representatives. The larger trouble is, he
isn't.

ROBERT 1.. Wl"f:ET'T
1',\T WIIITEHF.Ail

11011 HOEFI.II'H
fo1 · rwr ;tll\luna ~·· r

llALE ROTHGEB . .JR .

&lt;\ 1\lt-1\11\1':11 ,.f Tht· ,,, ~ ,,. · mtt · d l' ro'''· lnloullt llutl~
·\ruo·no an ..,, ...., , II&lt;IJW r l'uhlt , hoT' ., ,,.,, .litlinl1 .

l'r ~ '' " '" 'Ui\tton IUMI tht·

It rri-II ." I IF 111'1"111 ... ;,ro· ...,,.J, ••mnl . Tlu-_\ ,!J ,&gt;t~hl ho· lo ·~' thilll ,'JOO...,,,rtb lt&gt;lll! All
lo-uo ·r· an · ' "hJt't I In nllttn l! ;nul lliU !•I lw ' ' i! ut·d 'Ai\h mnrw . addn·,~ il nd h •lt•ptlnnt'
IUII! tlwr '-•• un, tt;:rwtllo·tkr' .,.,jj ho· tJ1.1h lt,ht"d . l .o·tlt·p, 'hoouhl ho· 111 i! •"IIIU. ~ Io•, addrn,l lll!

'''Ill''· l]tll

rwr " ollalll l t''

After the Exocet
Even after the shootmg stops. it may take some time to total losses and
strike the balance to detennine the real loser of the Falklands war.
But a winner is already apparent.

Exocet.
The smart missile the Argentines have used with such spectacular success in their otherwise lo:sing contest with the British task force in the South

Atlantic is suddenly the hottest thing on the world anns market.
The Argentines want more - desperately . They are not alone. Other
countries are also scrambling to buy and bidding is reported to ha ve raised
the pnce tag on a single missile to several times the original $200,000 f.o.b.
LeHavre.
The French. in support of their British European Community allies.
have cut off sales for the duration to the Argentines and also third parties
that might be gun-running for them.
The French can afford the gesture. Already the world's No.3 supplier.
their arms industry stands to ga in considerably from the Falklands fighting .
They can be certain that business, already brisk . will be even more so after
the shooting stops.
And that in the lung run may be worse news than the war itself and its
politically unpleasant consequences. whatever they turn out to be .
Impressed by the Falklands evtdence of what suhpisticated but
relattvely cheap weapons can accomplish against major targets, the world's
smaller countries. must poor and already devoting to arms far more of their
resources than they an afford. can be expected to spend even more.
" More" means billions beyond arms expenditures that already are at
staggering levels in a thriving business in whi ch the United States is already
deeply invol ved and getting in even deeper.
A current study by the Washington-based Center for Defense Information . a non-government and anti-anns traffic resectrch or ~ anization .
notes that total contracted arms sa les to Third World countries in 1981! exceeded $4{) billion .
The fi gure is based on data fr om the Congressional Research Servtce
and other official government sources. It breaks down into $25 billion in
weapons busmess during the year for non-Communist nations and $16 billion
for all Communist nations, including China .
The United States ts the major dealer on the nun-Conununist side - $9.7
billion - while the Soviets alone account for $15 bill ton of the Communist
total. an imbalance that the administration has recently been playing up .
But as the center's study figures 11. the United States has a finn grip on the
No. I position in the long tenn.
"Since 1973, when world arms trade exploded," it observes. "the figures
are $75.2 billion for the U.S. and $55.7 billion for the U.S.S.R."
A significant portion of U.S . anns has gone to key European allies - $5
billion to Britain and $4 .6 billion to West Gennany in the last decade. But
much more goes to the Third World . For the same decade, Saudi Arabia was
the leading cash sale customer at $34 billion . Iran . another bulk customer,
was on the books for $14 billion .
Both, of course, could afford it. Whether the United States could really
afford the business politically , cons1dering the most recent chapters of the

ministration to costly, burdensome

and possibly ineffective fedeal
regulations. Those of us who feel the

·~

"Enough about human desperation and poverty
- which shoes do you think I should wear with
this dress?"

Letter to editor
Dream come true
much in life. We know they will
never go to a prom or grduate from
high school, but last night the people
of Meigs County turned our tears of
sorrow to tears of joy. Now our
children wlll have a chance to learn
and develop to their fullest potential.
May God bless each and every one ol
you.
Rea Roush
Jessie Might

In a fas htonabl e mood - add co lo rful
co ntrast to co mfort a nd va lu e Co lor
a nd de s tgn work tn pe rf ec t harm o ny
'" Hu s h Puppt es' dress sa nd a ls
co mf or tably fa s hi o nab le. co mfo rt ab ly
a ff ordab le

By KATIE CROW
"The nicest lhlng you can do Is
come back every year," Dave Diles
told approximately 300 people a!·
tending the fourth annual Hlllbllty
Celebrl!y dinner held at Roya l Oak
Pa rk kicking off !he annual Diles
Coif Tournamenl .
Diles said some of those part ici·
paling in !he annual golf louma ·
1nent came from Uta h, Georgia.
Florida, Texas. New Jersey, and

to consumers and the burden that
would be laid upon a desperately
depressed automobile industry . In
the agency's view, some of the
statistical evidence in support of the
airbag rule was "uncertain .
None of this mattered to Judge
Mikva . Much of the opinion is
devoted to the kind of legislative
arguments that begin with, " Mr.
Speaker t" But on June 1, Abner
Mikva wasn't on the flour of the
house. He was on a federal circuit
bench .

GEM
W t lilt

of

the

Rea ga n

Also recognized and presenled
plaques were members of the media. l&lt;alie Crow. Bob Hoeflich. Bob
Wingett. Barbara Chapman. Tom
Metiers and Jack Kerr.
George Harris. who has worked
dllllgently for the event. was given
a specia l award.
Captivating the audience was
Spanky McFarland, long-lime sla r
of the famed "Our Gang" comedies. Spanky began playing in !he
Our Ga ng series in 1931 and stayed
wi th the series unlil he was 16 years
old .
"Good Guy" awards went lo Ned

'I

song, of Mason, Ben Ewing, Pomeroy and
football player, Ron McDole.

fom~er

Pay Your Columbia Ga s Bill s AI :

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLE PORT, OHIO

Garve r. former maj or leagur

pll cher; Joe Ferguson. quarterback for !he Buffalo Bltb; Earl
Bruce. head football coach a! Ohio
Stat e and Vic Wertz. former major
Jpague baseball playt&gt;r.
A special recognition award was
presented by DUes to Carl Wolfe.
head basketball coach at Sou!hern
High School, whose team was runtContinued on Page 5)

NOTED HYNOTISTS IN GALliPOliS
TO HELP SMOKERS &amp; THE OVERWEIGHT
The

onstrate the remarkabiP Impact of
Interest rates. which many If not
most economists now believe are
the controUing factor In the nation's
economic health, or lack of It.
Some would say that Interest

tated by today's extraordlnartlly
high rates. which were expected to
fall but dldn'l when Inflation began
to ease.
Under the Impact of those Interest rates. the capital spending plans
of heavy Industry are shrinking too.
and so is the spending plans of
smaller businesses. and some consumers and muni cipa l
governments.
But It is In housing, an area personally familiar to most Ameri-

of 315,000 units, 32.5 percent below
the April 1981 figure .
The National Association or' Realtors reports existing home sales In
April dropped to 1.9 million units,
27.8 percent below a year earlier.
and "one-half of what was typical
prior to the housing depression ."
The quarterly survey of the Morl gage Bakers Association for Janu·
ary through March revealed a
record-high foreclosure rate of 0.53
percent of loans, up from 0.41 percent In the final quartf'rof last year.
The National Association of
Home Builders says If Interest
rates fell just 4 percentage points
from their existing levels, that Is to
around 13 percent, 15,310,000 families would have Incomes .sufficient
for $60,000, 30-year mortgages.
About 9.22 million now qualify.
The association worked out the

figures on the basis of Income. and
assumed that one-third of Income
would comprise the total housing
payment, made up of Interest, prtnclpal, Insurance, taxes, uillltles.
At 17 percent. It calculated. an
annual Income of $38,520 would be
required, meaning only 15.4 percent of families, or a total of
9,216,000, would qualify. At 13 percent, the income needed would drop
to $31,644, and 25.5 percent of families would be able to qualify.
Those figures remain a far cry
from the 8 percent mortgage days,
which may be gone forever. Stlll,
they dld exist, and were they to
reappear It would mean 44.3 percent, or a total of 26,556,&lt;XXl fa mUles
would have the $23,59) needed to
qualify for the $00,&lt;XXl, 30-year
mortgage.

$80 million edgc.ze_______L_o_we_ll_W_in_ge_tt
What is the difference between the
Democrats and Republicans going
into the congressional election to be
held about five months from now?
About $80 million'
That is the edge the Republicans
have on the Democrats. While the
Democrats just last week finished
paying on debts still owed on the 1968
election, the Republicans are in the
green stuff up to their eyebrows.
Here is the way the two budgets
compare : The Democrat National
Committee, $8 million ; Democrats
in the House, $6 million ; Democrats
in the Senate, $3 .5 million;
Republican National Committee, $38
million; Republicans in the House,
$37 million; Republicans in the
Senate, $20 million .
With money like that you would
expect to find Republican candidates and Southern Boll Weevils
full of confidence but most are running scared. Coming back to haunt
them next fall will be that vote they
cast for the tax cut and the 1982
budget. You will remember that
most cast a vote for the 1982 budget
before they had the slighest idea.
what it contained, even before it was

ot

;1 nd

numbe rous

m aga 11nc

ar

f• c lc s a s we ll as tele v •s •on .ap·
pearan ccs,

Mr

Ge nthner

and

h• s s t a ff h."' ve be e n c onducf1ng
th ese se m1n a r !. throughout th e

co untry
tn
a
co n1pr e her1~1ve
and fa sc •nat1nq thr ee h our progwh o c1 tt c nd th e 'ioe m.nar (!)I ·
p e r• e n ce
th e
rela~~; •ng
and

ben e h c 1a l e tt ech of c 1tn1cat hyp·
no s 1s Not only do p eo pl e per
man e nll y lose we1ght and s t op
s mok 1nq .l s a
re s ult o t the
St.' mlnilr . th ey aho report fhdf
th ey •.t ee p bell e r . fee l more
e n e rq Pt1 c , &lt;~nd q e n cr;l ll y e n1 o y
Id e
m ore
than
th ey
had
p rcv 1o u o; ly

Ar e
you
overweog ht or
a
Ct g a r f.' II C s moker ?
Hav e you
tn cd t o lo!&gt;c wc oght or s t o p
s mok1ng , only to fall t1me .and
f1m e aga tn ? If you find yo ur se lf
answen ng " ye s" to e1ther of
these que s t.on s then the Techn1
que !&gt; For Ltvtng Sentuldr , undtor
th e d1rectton of Wad e M . Gen thn e r F _A . I.H . at the Holtday
lnl'l , 4SO P1ke S tr eet. w111 b e th e
place for you to be on Saturday .
June 19 . Techn1que s For L1vmg
wtll be conduc ftng the1r famou s
Lose Wetghf S t op Smok1ng
Se m1nar
wh1ch
ha s
help ed
thousands of people throughout
the United States . Technique s
For
Liv1ng
1s
a
nation a l
organuatoon dedtcated to h e lp·
ing Americans s olve these and
other problems that hav e kept
them from enjoying their lives
to the fullest .

If rates drop more families can afford to buy

It ts figures such as this that dem-

s ubt ect

n ews p.lp Cr

ad-

NEW YORK iAP l- If the Interest on mortgages dropped from
around 17 percent to 13 percent- a
posslblllty but not a likelihood this
year- perhaps 5 million additional
families could afford to buy homes.

(,I'll !' I

Missouri.

manufactured after Sept. 1, 1983.
The rescission reflected the oppos ition

MP)J. I( dn Mull•

nnfh

of
Technique s
For Living

printed. Those two votes, which
were to make heroes of them to
Massa Reagan and the home folks,
will be chalked up against them at
the great American roll call November 2. While many Congressmen in
"safe" districts can survive
anything short of mass axe murders,
most are not al that safe. Those are
the ones who are now praying the
voters will forget their hasty action
in 1981 which has contributed so
much to present conditions.
Figures released by the Labor
Department last week showed
unemployment still rising, up to 9'h
percent. this percentage does not include those who have been unemployed so long they have been dropped from the statistics. Also it
doesn't show which states and cities
have unemployment twice the
national average. With practically
every family in the country in some
way affected adversely by
Reaganomics, small wonder the
Congressmen are worried.
Trying to get on some kind of a
band wagon, the House voted 349-55
favoring a bill to provide $1 billion

for home mortgage subsidies to help
revive the home building industry .
Senator Richard Luger, R.-lnd., introduced a similar bill in the Senate
saying, "This is a vital antirecession device that will put the
maximum number of Americans

back to work in the shortest amount
of time with the least amount of
money." Lugar, who represents a

state hard-hit by unemployment.
had almost half the Senate as c&lt;r
sponsors of the bill. Lugar has been
one of the Reagan stalwarts, voting
with the administration at every opportunity yet the president has announced he will veto the measure if
it is passed by both houses. Whether
Congress will show enough guts to
pass the measure over his veto
remains to be seen.
To the president "subsidy" is a
naughty word, to be ranked with
other n&lt;rno's such as food stamps,
school lunches and welfare. It is
naughty when used to provide jobs
and homes but acceptable when
used to aid such deserving poor as
the dairy farmer with a thousand
cows for Agriculture Secretary John

'PE/IIl. MRS. f¥MiHPOI/J:
LAY CH- THt'Mf {)()N- .
IJHIAT's fNAN IN'rffi761mON,
IT SAY, ~ lDJSE ('DJJ) BE
{JEIIR?

Being parents of a mentally retar. ded child, we would like to say
thanks to all the people of Meigs
County who cared enough to vote yes
on the M. R. Levy. After trying so
hard for so many years to get a
school and operating levy for our
children and adults, Tuesday our
dreams came true. Parents of retarded children shed many tears
because our children miss out on so

300 attend annual Diles dinner

corrunon sense as sound reasons.
Among these reasons were the cost

Sentinei- Page-3

HushPu~
.

Dir ec t or

cans, where the carnage Is most

i

The

re."ilraint devi ces in automobiles

observable. Housing's recession began In November 1978. It Is already
43 month,, old and destined to
continue.
The Commerce Department reports that salC'l of new, singlefamily homes In April plunged 15.3
percent to a record low annual rate

•

There was no evidence at all. Not
even a modicum of reasoned
analysis could be perceived. Indeed,
" it is difficult to find anything
positive to say about the NHTSA's
decision in that case."
Was Judge Mikva merely substituting his own opinion for that of
the agenfy ? Heaven forfend! By no
means was he engaged in any such
thing. If the agency could come up

Ohio

Mr GP nthn Pr ' &lt;&gt; &lt;;, klll on c- hnoc.;al
hypnO SI S Wol\ noted by Dan
Rath e r· o f C B S' " 60 M111ute s"
who rt•lcrred t o h1m •n a na
t1on a ll y t e t cv . ~c d report o1s a
w e ll l r.l on c d
and
h•qhly
ex
pcrw n cc d hypnot1 s t

big budget Imbalance, of government overspending, of a need to resIranian story , is another matter .
train the economy - but what
But the list of customers of the United States and other arms merchants economic factor Isn't cause and
also includes many nations that can't afford 1t but. after the Falklands effect?
lessons and the Exocet, are going to be tempted tn plunge more deeply than
The example was dray,rn from
ever.
housing because housing vies with
Talk about losers.
cars as the Industry most devas-

&lt;

There was no ev idence whatsoever.

1982

ENJOYING TilE EVENING at the annual Dave
Diles Celebrity dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Don Fogle-

rates are merely a symptom -of a

Berry's World

will.
To Judge Mikva (Judges Bazelon
and Edwar!\:j concurring), the NHT-

June 1

\

HaN /5/t;
SPaLING

•)OU5e:
a;AA?

1-.,.\

Block or to pay tobacco allotments
for North Carolina farm ers
represented by Senator Jesse
Helms, Chainnan of the Senate
Agriculture Committee.
Congress has less than five short
months to prove it is an independent
branch of government and not an extension of the White House. This 97th
Congress has not distinguished itself
by independent thought or action.
Except on the 1983 budget which is
presently stalled in the House after
having been passed by the Senate,
they have chosen to act as the
president directed. The result, to use
a good old Reagan tenn, is a mess.
While the president and his henchmen are fond of referring to the
~~mess we inherited," that was
nothing - compared to the mess
they have achieved.
I predict that unless some concrete plan for lower interest rates
and employment is presented to the
American people before election
day, you will see many new faces
when the 98th Congress is eonvened
next January, in spite of their $80
million edge.

JUST' LIKE IT
'ilJIIII)5. /rl!NIJ
IF I teAK
'THIS~

\

DOONESBURV

HEARTHEREDSALL
SEASON LONG ON
CAPTIVATING THE AUDIENCE at the fourth annual Dave DUes
Celebrity dinner was Spanky McFarland, left, long tbne star of the
famed "Our Gang" series.'Shown with Sparky at the annual dinner held
at Royal Oak Park is PhU Roberts. Meigs county engineer.

DILFS AT MIKE - Dave DUes,
ABC sports commentator and
M.elgs County resident is shown
during Wednesday's Hillbilly
Dinner at Royal Oak Park.

Reds sign three rookie draftees
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Cincinnati Reds have signed three
more players from the summer
free agent draft.
Kal Daniels. 18, an outfielder
from Warner Robins. Ga.. was
their first pick in the secondary
phase.
Buddy Pryor, a 20-year-old
catcher from Arizona State University. also signed. Pryor. a fourthround pick In the regular phase,
was the starting catcher at Arizona

State as a junior this year, batting
.298 in 67 games with 13 home runs
and 55 runs batted ln .
The Reds also signed Thomas
Browning, a 22-year-old left ·
handed pitcne r from Billings,
Mont., who was their ninth-round
selection in !he regular phase of the
dra!t.
All three will report to the Reds'
Class A Pioneer League farm club
In Billings, Mont.. on Monday.

WMPO 92 FM

"C itni Cil l
eolS H!'S t w.ly

h y pnO SIS
IS the
th ere os t o s olve

thc ~c proiJh: nn ," Gc nthn e1

"dYS .

" S •mpl y
pul.
II
h e lp s
to
e ltmnlilt e th ese t y p es of pr o blc:om s permanen tl y "
Ge nthn e r says that th e reason
c ltn1 ca 1 hypno s 1s IS s o ~ u ccess tul
IS th at " tt r e m oves the causes of
problem s, not tu s t th e sy mp
tom s . "
For CJO:a mpl e. he e10: pla1n S .
" Peop l e
who
.are
overwe 1ght qo on d1ets . A d1 e t •s
on ly good l or as long as you can
follow 11 . Oncc:o y o u s top th e d1et
you r ega .n th e w e 1ght. Hypnos 1s
perrn a nl'nl
bec a u se
ol
os
f.'ltm 1n a t es
the
causes
of
overe attng . n o t tu s t th e symptom s .' ' Th f.' sa me hold s tru e for
s mok e r s wh f.' r e thc:o need to prevent c rav1ng s tor c og arcttcs or
w e ight ga111 1S tu s t as 1mportant
Both problem s are covered at
the sem •nar , a nd eac h sem1nar
leader I S personally framed by
Mr . G e nthn er . Furt h er onto rmct
tion ca n be obta1ned by ca lhng ,
too fre e, 1· 800 -64S-S4S4 .

NEW IN CHESHIRE

~~VfWAY

MARY'S GIFT SHOP
Old - Glassware - New Candl es
- Candle Rings, artifici,ll floral
arrangements,
figur•n es,
baskets .

•

I SEALER

AGift For All Occasions
• 7 Block off Rt. 7
Behind Baptist Church
Open Daily

l.
(401)

(400)

JUNE SALE

42" Umbrella Table
28 " Tall, White, baked
ename l finish .

Char Droll Gas Grill
Durable, rust proot.
GG919

AT

LANE CEDAR CHESTS

RPQ

16 .94

Driveway Sealer
Sea ls ou t moi s tur e
to protect asphalt .

OFF

30%0FF
AND

12.97

(402)
Our

50%

BAKER FURNITURE
FLEXSTEEL SOFAS

5 Gal.

Our Reg. Price
All
Shrubs, Trees
or
Rose Bushes
In Stock

(403)

3.97

Our
5.87

Trlox Vegetable Klller
I Quart. SAVE

(404)
Decorative Stones
N a tural
ornamental
s tone.

(SELECTED STYLES ONLY)

PLUS
2 'D AY 11 GARAGE SALE"
YES, EVEN STORES COLLECT LOTS OF ITEMS, THEY NO LONGER WANT SUCH
AS KITCHEN CHAIRS, ROCKING CHAIRS, STUDENfS DESK, WHITE CHEST AND
REPLACEMENT CUSHIONS FOR KITCHEN CHAIRS. AND MORE.
(Some are Slightly Damaged)

(406)

4.97

Our

. • 8.43

1.47

(407)
Our
1.88

Lawn food

,Top Soli

20-Hi-5 Covers 5,000 sq. ft.

. Cultivated dressing is

r

2.97

Our
3.97

Lawn Food

' 10-6-4 plus weed control.

�Poge- 4- The Doily Sentinel

Seaver, Bench, Cedenothe ri'i~iiii.;ii;iii;i~~;ii;;;;i~~iiiiii~~~;;;;i~~~;.iiiiiiiiiiii~
4-3 win

Scoreboard ...
f'ln~burj,th

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SAN DIEGO tAP I -At age 37,
victories are fewer a nd farther between for Tom Seaver. But the Cinclnnatl Reds' 16-yea r veteran
right-hander still has the Sa n Diego
Padres under his spell.
Seave r, showing signs of breaklng out after his worst start of his
career. ran his lifetime mat k to 31 -7
against San Diego In a 4-3 Cinclnnatl victory Wednesday night.
"If you're pitching well, you can
beat anybody," expla ined Seaver ,
who combined with relievers J oe
Price a nd Tom Hump for a sixhitter aga inst the free-swinging
Padres .
Seaver. 3-6 a nd a winner in his
last two starts, says the new Padres
"are a much better team now and
definit e ly tougher to beat.
" I used to beat the Padres the
way Sa nd y Koufax used to beat the
New York Me ts. They (the Padres)
ca me Into the leag ue when I was at
the top of my game. I was awfully
good against yo ung clubs with Inexperie nced players. Those were the
times you could rack up the big
numbers."

Ask Johnny Bench to explain
Seaver's m aste ry over the Padres
a nd he'll tell you it' s no mys tery.
"Beca use he's Tom Seaver,"
sa id Bench, whose solo homer
helped Seaver to a :l-0 lead in the
fourth Inning.
Padres Ma nager Dick Williams
agrees.
"He's not the Seaver of a few ye·
ars ago, but he battles you all the
way . He a lways has."
Meantime. Seaver refuses to
crow about his lopsided record
aga inst the long-suffet ing Padres .
"You never say you' ve got
anyone's number ," said Seaver,
who has a 17-3 record at Sa n Diego
Jack Murphy Stadium . II was his
eighth consecuti ve victory over the
Padres thete dating back to April
1979.
Benc h's hom er followed a two-

run blast by cesar Cedeno 1n
fourth Inning.
A throwing en or by Seaver set
up a n unearned run In the sixth as
the Padres pulled to 3-1 on Gene
Richards' sacrifice fl y. But Ron
Oester's run -scoring single In the
seventh gave Seaver a three-runcushion entering the ninth Inning.
Doubles by pinch hitter Joe Lefebvre a nd Templeton das hed
Seaver's bid for his first comple te
game of thE' season. Price a nd
Hume finished up, with Hume get·
ting the fina l out with the tying run
on first for his lOth save.

MASON, Ohio (API - Three hot.
18-, Jli-and 0-1-ho iP scores this vmr
women share the cover of this ye"I'd reall y like to win this one and
a r' s Ladles Professional Golf Asso- ge t the Ha ll of Fa me pressure beciation player guide - JoAnne
hind me."
Ca rn er, Ka thy Whitworth a nd
Cha llengers Include Patty SheeDonna Caponi.
han, who has the best stroke averThose three, the only women to age on the women's tour; Nancy
earn more than $1 million In tour Lopez, who won here In 19'/ll and
prize money, lead a field of 118 play- formerly li ved In a condominium
ers chas ing the $30,lXXl first place adjoining the cout se; a nd Beth Damoney In the $:nl,lXXl LPGA Cha m - niel, who has posted the tou r's low
pionship that began today at the
. J ack Nicklaus Sports Center near r-;;::::::::~~~~::;;;;1
Clnclnna tl.
I
Caponi , a two-t ime winner here,
JUST ARRIVED#
Is the defending champion but she
NEWSHIPMENTOF
is winless this yea r.
Ca rnet, a winner twice this yea r
a nd the most consistent Top 10 fin Isher on the tour, needs one more
ON HAND FOR THE CELEBRITY DINNER were, 1-r, Harold
victory to reach 35- automatic adMcElhaney, atlllettc director at 0. U., Greg Jannl, assistant atllletlc
AND
mlsslon .to the LPGA Hall of Fame.
director at 0. U. and Max Ahl, of Rax Roast Beef, Athens, and
Whitworth, a lso a double winner
Gallipolis.
this year, !ralls only Sally Little on
the 1982 official money list.
OPEN MON. -SAI.
Carner, who won by six shots In
9 : 30-5:00
last week's tour event, says she Is
playing the best golf of her career.
Despite a sore ·neck and a !rip to a
chiropractor, s he s hot a ! -under pa r 71 In Wednesday's pro-a m at
!Continued from Page 31
a nd Archie Griffin .
the 6,298-yard Grizzly Course.
nerup In the state Class A bas ke tVic Wertz presented Diles wllh a
"''m really happy with the way
ball tournament this season.
plaque from the Boys and Girls
I've been playing," Carner sa id . " I
Diles recognized the co-owners of
Clubs of Detroit.
think you'd have to slly I'm one of
Riverside Golf Cout se, Bob a nd
Dinner was prepared and served
the fa vorites, along with two o r
111W . 2nd
Pomeroy,Oh .

kwood
tton

The

•

by
DAD'S DAY SPECIAL
ALL MEN'S DRESS AND CASUAL
SHOES 20% OFF REGULAR PRICE

CARTER'S
UNDERWEAR

The Dai ly Sen tin el
!USPS 145-9601
A Di v i~ion uf Multlmt'diH . In r .

Publ• s llln~

Cmn!)&lt;iny · Multllnt•t!JCI. Inc.
Pm11cruy . Oh10 45769 . 992·2156 &amp;~•·t~nd l'hts."
Mcml.wr Till' Assunah'tl Prt·ss, lrlltllld Dill·
I) Pn·~ Assuna\11m ami th,· Amt•n,·an
N t· w :. pa~r PubiLs llo:r:. 1\.s.'IUl'tHllun, Na t1unal
Ad n• rltslnlt Ht· p rl's t•n t a l lvc . Br&lt;tnha1n
Nt• WSf&gt;a JWr Sail's. 73.1 Th1rd Awnul', Nt'w

Yurk. Nt•v. Yurk 10017

POSTM ASTER Scnd addrt-'SS tu Tht' Dati )
St•nlmd . Ill Cuurl St . Punll'ruy. Oh10 45769

' lnt • Wt ' l ' k

$] 00

Otlt ' Mun\11

$4 .40

Ont· Yt•ar

$52 80

SIN(;Lf: ropy
PRJ&lt;"t~'l

S. ·nluwl una .l fi lit' 12 munlh lmsrs Crt•dlt
wtll lfl · J.! l\' t'tl t·a r nt•r t'al ·h m unth
Nu .~ ubs...-tplllm:-. b) lntHIJ&gt;t'fllll l tt'tl 1n tuwn s
Wllt'rt • htll!ll' I'IIITh 't" St'r\' h 'l' IS HV&lt;II IIIb lt•

MAII.S URSCRIPTIONS
lnsidt' Ohiu

JJ w, ·t·k .~

SH 0-1

26 Wt 'l' k .~

n w. · , · k ~

$27.30
S:il

~8

Louise
Roush. Roush a nd Mary a nd Ga ry
Also recognized were Horace a nd
Dorothy Karr owne rs of Royal Oak
Park.
Amond those Introduced by Diles
were Chuck Stobart, Bob Eva ns .

$1 ~

21

You wouldn't expect leather shoes that look this good
to be this comfortable. But with padded heels ana arches,
and super-flex ible soles, these could be some of the most
comfortable shoes you have ever worn. You'll love them
body and sole.

"" t

OF SHOES

$29 6 ~

S5fi 21

CLEVELAND !API - The
Cleveland India ns selected fi ve
right-handed pitchers, four left ha nded pitchers, two catchers a nd
two Infielders Wednesday as ma jor
leag ue baseball' s thr ee- da y
s umm e r free agent draft
concluded.
During the tht ee da y.s of drafting,
the American League tea m chose
10 rlghl-handf'd pit che rs. seven IPII ha nders, six infie lde rs, eight outfielders and four catcher s.
David McCarth y, 22, a 6-2, 200pound left-handed pitche r from Re·
vere, Mass., was the first person
chosen Wednesda y as the regula r
phase of !he draft resumed with
round 19.
The rest of Cleveland· s picks:
20. Casey Close , 18, right -handed
pitcher, fr1, 185, Worthington, Ohio.
21. Paul Beck, 16, right-ha nded
pitcher, 5-11, 175, Murray , Uta h.
22. Douglas Little, 18, rightha nded pitcher, fr 1, 160, N. Palm
Beach, Fla.
23. Steve Kordis h, 21, righl handed pitcher, 6-3, 195, Newtown,
Conn.
24. Charles Dale, 21, catche r, 6-3,
215, Garner, N.C.
25. William McGuire. 18, ca tcher.
6-3, 210, Omaha, Neb.
26. Joseph Iafe lice, 18, shorts top,
5-10, 167, Euclid, Ohio.
Tl. Robert Cobb, 21, second
baseman-third base man, 6-foot,
178, Hamilton, Ohio.
28. Richard Burkett , 18, left handed pitcher, fr1, 185, Hartsv ille,
S.C .
29. Edward Clark, 18, left- ha nded
pitchet , fr2, 170, Charlottesville,
Va.
30. Michael Connolly, 18, right ·
handed pitcher, 6·2, Jill, East
Bridgewater, Mass.
· 31. Danie l Neal, 20, left- handed
pitcher, frl, 170, Gardnerville, Nev.

OH.

17

'1!1 I '•

I'HII'I.J :'\

· 11

lll 'llldH't, D••lloll . 7

WHY NOT BUY THE BEST FOR LESS MONEY!

WIL.,.m

• II

Dad deserves a genuine

SANDAL SALE
GROUP WOMEN'S DRESS,
CASUAL, AND FLAT SANDALS.

•

/

30%
OFF

Recliner this Father's Day

FOR FATHER'S DAY
GROUP DRESS, CASUALS, AND GOLF SHOES, INCLUDING:
HUSH PUPPIES, DEXTER, GRIZZliES AND PEDWIN.
Show Dod how much you core by giving him
the world's most popular recliner. Come in today
and select a genuine Lo-Z-Boy® choir from our
collection of outstanding sty les togged for specia l
savings! You can't find a more fitting reword!

REG. 1410.00

SALE
NOWTHRU
FATHER'S DAY!

Wins eighth race
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -Nut jammer, ridden by Danlta Harvey,
won the fea tured e ighth race at Scioto Downs Wednesday to pay $9.80,
$3.80 and $3.40.
Second was Novel Laddie, for
$9.40 and $3.80, followed by Jeff's
Slick Andy for $3.40.
The winner we nt the course in
2:05 3-5.
The first race tr!fecta, 3-2-9, paid
$2,517.30.
A crowd of 2,957 bet $250,906.

EVBIYTHING MUST BE OUT BY THEN. THIS IS A WAU TO WAU ClEAR·
ANCE. YOU CAN SAVE NOW UKE NEVER B&amp;OIIE. HURRY! THESE BARGAINS WON'T

NEW RECLINER SALE

$9995
TO

OVER 90 DIFFERENT
MODELS-ON SALE
AND IN STOCK!

. Otl\.~

New 5 pc. wood
dinette

j Reg. $269.96

$}3595

'51
RICE

.SAVE $136

--

I
•

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000, which
can be subtracted from your income before
your taxes are figured each year. If you
have a non-working spouse, you can
contribute up to $2,250. Of course, if you
and your spouse both work, you can each
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
money market interest rates for an
inflation-proof rate of return.
The Chart below illustrates how quickly
your financial future can grow.
You can choose one of two ways
to earn your interest at BANK ONE.
You can choose an
interest rate which
is set for 18 months.
Any new funds
deposited will earn

INDIVIDUAL
RETIREMENT
ACCOUNT

the 18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (For the week of June 8
the 18-month rate is 14.00%*) Or you can
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate in effect for June is 14.00%. *)
Act quiCkly to get
the best tax advantage.
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
for your retirement. To maximize the taxdeferred interest you earn, you should make
your contributions as soon as possible after
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
statements on the status of the Account and
your funds are
AMOUNT insured by an
AGE
You Will Accumulate
When You Open
agency of the
AtAge65"
Your tRA
federal
83,506 government.
$
50

40

$ 298,667

30

$ 966,926

20

$3,042,435

assumes that you m ake a $2 .000 contnOutlon al the beg•nn1ng o l ea c h year at a 12°c 1ntcrc st rate
and tha t you leave funds m your IRA througll your 6Sih year

Named Miami coach

URN~TllRF

854 Second
Gallipolis 446 -9523

OXFORD, Olllo (APl - Dr. Jon
J . Pavllsko, 38, assistant baseball
coa'ch and professor of health and
physical education at Central MichIgan University tor 12 years, has
been named Miami University
baseball coach by Atllletlc Director
Richard G. Shrider.
He helped guide Central Michl·
gan to Mld·Amerlcan Conference
baseball championships In 19TI,
1980 and 1981.

With so many styles and fabrics to choose from, you
ore sure to fsnd the perfectla-Z-Boy® recliner for
Dod. This Reclino-Rocke~ choir has a deep seat,
tufted back and podded arms for man-sized comfort.
Also available as Reel ina-Way® wall recliner.

------FREE DELIVERY------

Lifestyle ~~:::
Corner Third and Olive Streets
Gallipolis,
446-3045

•SWIM -TRUNKS
•CUT OFFS
•POCKET T-SHIRTS
•WESTERN BILLFOLDS

E

I
I

''Th1 s

This is just one
of many handsome
styles for every taste and budget!
Recliners starting as low as
$169.00 -Shop today while
our selection is at Its best I

PERFECT
GIFTS FOR
DAD

r~b~y~th~
e~m~eFire
m~be~r~s~o~f~t~h
e~Prom:
Volunteer
Department
. e r=o=Y-~t:h:ree:o:th:e:r.~p~la~y=er=s~w:h:o~h:a~ve~bee:nl~;;;~~;;;~~u~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~;~~

There 15 a subslanliallnlerest pena lly lor early Wllhdrawal

All new recliners marked way
below r egular retai l price s.

win~ .

Indians draft
more players

heritage house

flubidt·f lhiu

ZfiW o•t·k;..

and ha s two

KIDDIE SHOPP

Comfort
for $3999

Dad~
Suh.~n dwrs nul dt•sl nn ~ tu poy lht• t 'ilfTit't
111(1 ,1 l'l'lllll Ill udvann ditt"\'1 tu Tlw Da il\'

5

300 people attend Dave
Diles celebrity dinner

pusl&lt;H! t' pijld at Punwruy. Oh1u

SU HSfR II"TJON RATE:.t;;

Page

TRAINING PANTS

Publ1 s lwU t'Yt•ry odlt•rnuon . Monduy thruugh
FnJa ~. Ill Court Strt•t•l. by the Ohw Vallt•y

8 ) f'arrit·r ur Mnlur Ruulc'

The Doily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Carner, Whitworth, Caponi lead LPGA field

1.1 1111 ( ',tilluml,l I h. Yt~Jnt , Mllwduk('l'
1'1 \\'llll t' , h: .1 n..,1~ I 'IT\ 1\ C\.11' 1\.iu•. Kd ll

•

' "'' '· ,.,,,,,., ,,lll•l '.li "l

"I

IJ(li 'HU:S

Pomeroy

ThuBdoy, June 10, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Stop by any
BANK ONE office
for details.

"Th•s •s the •ntere stra te and etlect1ve annual y1eld

BANK ONE™. .(Ri

Your headquarters tor:
e Hide-A-Beds
• Recliners·
• Mattresses
• Sectional Sofas
• Dinette Sets

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMEROY•AUTLANO•TUPPEA S PLA IN S

Member FDIC

'

-

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 10, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Calendar
THURSDAY
HOf'K SPH IN\.S \.rangt· . R

r 111

Thur ~ day

DHniel

at tlw hall.

Thorna~ .

SATURDAY

FRIDAY
Mary Shrnlt' :!7,

f&gt;OMEROY - The first m a

and l .ctfaydlt· Shrtnl' 44, Order of
llw Wlnlt' Shruw nf Jcrusalt·n1.
11d l h,nt · Jll:-.pt'dtun at 8 p .m .
Fr11Lt~ ;tl
Purnt·roy Mt:tso mc

St'rll'S of outdoor . Gospel si ngs
w1ll bt• held Saturday at 2 p.m. at
Pt~rm: ro y Riverfront parking lot.

I'OMI-:HIJY

tS

c;,., 1.I.J ,\ -1\11-: u;s

comll tun Jty
Al'!Joll :\ g t ' I W~ will hold Jts fn•t•
t lu tlur w da y for low trH ·urne per!I ;un to 12 noon .
Tht • ; tgt·rJ t '_\' cl othmg bank ts
It\! &lt;tkd 111 till' uld I u gh sc ht)()l
IJuil dJ!l J' 111 f'ht· shll'l'.
F nda~.

wnplif1ers w1ll be permitted .
f' I.ATWOODS - A hymn sing
Will be held at r'latwuods United
M..thod"1 Church. 7:30 p.m .
Satu rday . Resrdents an• invited
to attend wrth their music and
part~t·ipa lt • 111

Till&lt; A;-i'WAI.

p~t·n~t·

the fellows hip .

uf lht'

lkturrt ,ltmathan ML·tgs Chapter
•If tlw !&gt;aJJ l! hkrs of thl' Allll'ril'an
Ht •\' l!l llttun wtll lw at !i p.rn . at f)
p nt Fr ub y at thl' hmnt' uf Mrs

l"tn I. Wt lt·y. Oak St. Nt·w
ll ;t\'t'll , W Va

welcome to attend .

Melllbers an• to

SUNDAY
be ;r specie.~ I sinJ..:er at the Sunda y

tab lt • st•n liT Tlw l llL'at and dnnk
ndl bt · funll sht•d. That will bt·llw
b st H])jlltrtu nr ty to rerww all

POMEROY
Hoger Buckley
w1ll be guest speaker Sunday

rnct).!&lt;tt.rnt·

nwrnrng at tlw Beth\eheJn BaJT

June Sale
Mr. and Mrs. Nease

liSt Ch urch .

Skating party honors birthdays

Astrograph

A birthday skating party was held
recently at Chester Skate-A- Wa y fo r
Jenny Buck, 10, and Lesley Ca rr, 11.
by their mothers, Debbi Buck and
Donna Carr. A Pac-Man theme was
caiTied out in the napk ins and the
cake. baked by Lesley's aunt,
Pauline Mayer. Refreshments were
cake and Kool-aid .
Attending were Rev. a nd Mrs. Bob
McGee. Beth Mayer. Mike Mayer,

June II . 1982
If .\ 1111 I 1; 1\'t • IJt 't ·n (·tmtl'rnplat nrg bccom inJ..: nHII't.' Sl'rtuusly involved in
a :-.pori .\ 11\l.rt · fon d of thr s rs the year to do it. It will prove to be great fun
and tlrt' rt·s ult s wrll plt ·ast• you.
(;E~tl'll

I May 21-.J unt· 20) Look at life philosophically today . If you

do ~o u ' lliH' a\\ rnrrer with \'e ry ill tit• effort, even when dealing with those
\\ lru (';til ht· drff H'Uil I o pleasl'.
C'ANCEII t.lunt· 21-July 221 StiiiH·unc hHs a p1ece of advice for you
that c11uld turn what ll l&lt;JY han· bcl'n a problematil'&lt;.ll issue at home into a
r ~·:-. u lrt tblt • st!U;ttton . Listl'n and act .
1.1':0 Lful~ 23-A ug. 221 Although snlllt' thrn gs nu ght be tough to say,
~~~tr'll f11H l &lt;1 d1plunwtw way to say wha t needs tube sa id . All will be glad
!lit • IJtrrdt·Jl uf prl'st·ntatron Wi::ls yo urs.
\'11{(;(1

WITH

Wendy Swan n. Dee Henderson, Lee

Henderson, M1ssy Woods, Heather
Woods, Terry Fields, David Roush,
Brandon Roush, Mickey Seyler,
Mark Russell, Deanna Haggy, Kim
Ewing, Beth Ewing, Beth Pierce,
Julie Buck, Teresa J ohnson. Lauric

IAug. 2:1-Sept. 221 Don't bt· afraid to g1vc ven t to your larger

;uril Jr ltll /l .'i lot b .\· Yuu possess the ability to bring 1nto being that to which
.\&lt;~ tl :-. 1•[ _\11 1!1' lllliHl

Wayland, Tammy Wright , Jason
Wright, April Tannehill , Kelly Lee,
Kathy Thomas, Amy Blake. Megan
Bartels. Monica Turner, Hank
Cleland. Chase Cleland, Valerie
VanMeter . Chris Smith , Kelly
Smith. Duane Johnson, Shell y Wolfe.
Tara Wolfe, Jenny Newma n, Lisa
Newman, Ronnie Bachtel. Trina
Bachtel, Sha ne Simpson. Keith Mattux. Debbie Downie. Elizabeth
Downie. Carolyn Elam. Na ncy
Baker, Karen Lambert. Brian Johnson, Randy Hawley. Barbie Anderson, Sarah Anderson, John An·
derson. Brad Anderson, Chuckie
Smith. Shelly Stubart , Pauline
Mayer, Marie Hauck. Carr's grand-

SAVINGS TO

IN NEARLY EVERY DEPARTMENT

1ONLY BROWN VELVET LOUNGE CHAIR-high back, Reg. $399
$149
4 BRASS TABLE LAMPS-3 way switch, Reg. $85 .... . ... . ....... $49

I All DREXEL-HERITAGE FURNITURE

GENUINE WICKER-4 Piece Group; Settee, 2 Chairs
and Table. Choice ol natural or white, Reg. $895 .............. $595
1ONLY GREEN VELVET WING CHAIR, last one, Reg. $445 ....... .. . '1"

SM;rn,\HI US tNov. 2:1-Der. 211 You'll ha ve what it takes to usher
drs:-.t·ll lurg partJt •s tn the lll'J..!Oliatlng table today and show everyone how

• Dining Rooms • Tables
• Bedrooms • Chairs

d : JI ' ! t!'l .\ kl\lll.'i I 'OlJJ'I II/' tt'\' tJJilt.' .

S('OHI'IO t Od .

t otla~

20%-50% OFF

•

~4·\lo \ . 221 Dun't be hesitant about maktng chanJ,.!es
rf .\ n u ftTl that \\ htdl you wrsh tu alter will be of ultrmate benefit to
.\ill! I' L11111l .\ . You kno\\ what's lll'l'essary .

mother.

11 1\'1I[ \ ' t ·rr w11ts t11day whrch uff er i: l littl l' f ril'ntlly compet ition. Get

$499

5 SELIG SOFAS
Reg , $895 To $990
Your choice of 5 heavy duty covers .

SAVE NOW
ON QUALITY
FURNITURE!

UBIIA tSt' pt. 2:H kl. 2:11 In nrdt·rto bnng out the best that's in you,
_\'till Ill' I ·d

OFF

CUSTOM DRAPERY
SAVE

10% 30%
To

Through June 19th

FREE INSTALLATION

t 11 :-.1'1 tIt· rna! ll'rs. tJ ghtt-nrn J..: t1cs that bind you to al ready good pals.

SALE ENDS JUNE 27th, SATURDAY

f'!ll'IUC'OIIN Iller . 22-Jan. 19) This could be a red-letter day,
brtr h' lll! ' to ;t pmfrtable conclusiOn soml'thing for which you have worked
lra rd &lt;t!H I Iun~; - It p;_ tys to bl' Pl'rsistent.

p~· FURNITURE

;\Cl lii\IIILS \Jan. 21).Fl'b. 191 The key to gl'lting others to rally to
your IJarHu·r today 1s lu lt'ad by l'Xample . Onct• lhl'y see your way of doing

tlirrr gs wnrk.'i. tlll'.\' 'l l follow.
I'IS!'ES I Ft'11. 21). Marrh 201 Thert• arc twu i111purtant projects 111 wh!'l! y1 1U em· now 111\ tdn·d th ~tl can bL· successfull y finalized today. They
ar·t· .o., lr ! ' 1111 .\ l't ·l;r kd ! t 1 1lll t, ;rnot lrn .

.

Buck

Carr

\oi

GAllERI£S

·. Gallipolis

Interior Desig n
Serv•ce

Hour s
9 00· 5 Datly
9,00·8 :00
Monday and Friday Evening

Corner Second &amp; Grape (block below park)

AHII&lt;S 1,\ J;tJTh !1-.\pri l t9) Oilll'rs will liSten intently and heed what
~ 1111 ;-;;t.\ \ut b ~ Tlr t · ~ 'II k1ruw rnstJndrve \y yo ur juUgmenl-i arc based upon
Litl"llt'S.'i ;null)ct\a ll t'l'

TAl 'lit 'S IApril ZI).May 201 When yo u know tht're are rewards for
lah,w:-.. no JOb \,.,[[ l&gt;t• too Iough fo r you to tackle today . Hard work

Girls' Lee Rider
Straight Leg

_\"II lii'

w1ll J..: l'l ~~ ~u ytmr lll'SJ n •tl results.

Announcements
POMEHOY -

ceremonies

for

the

Holzer Sehoul of Nursing in
Ga llipolis at 8 p.m. on Fnday at
Grace United Methodist Church, 600
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
The past month has been busy for
these students , Including a field trip

Mcintyre Park with faculty nwm-

be cumplekd before thc1r nig ht uf
drove to Cinc innati, wi th all of the
se nior class to spend two day s,
touring the Cincinnati Gr ner&lt;JI
Hospital on May 25, and the

Shnner's Burn Institute on May 26,
ret urning to Ga llipolis that evening.
AI the hospital, the c l&lt;:~ ss div1ded into
groups and viewed Vi::lrious areas of

Vacation
Brlllt• Sr houl 11 t! llw he ILl at Bradford
Cllurd r nf ('hrrst ltwC~ted un the cor·
llt' r nf Stall' Hnute 124 and County
Huatl 5, .lunt' H-18. 9 a.m. to II :30
;un . TIH·t·nu· wrll be " Corm• F'ol\ow
.k:-.us ...

Holzer students the opportuni ty to

ne Lee Hayes. of Zaleski, by Al lt'l'
Pasquale . H.N.. senior in~tructur at
tht• srhoul. un behalf of Southern
Hills, DIStrict 14. Ohio Nursl'S
Assoc raliun . It was a one yei-:11' IIll'/11·
bership 111 the ONA, based un Ha yes

The next day, at the Shrint•r's
Burn Institute, a 30 bed hospital
ca ring for ac utely burned patients,
age~ 20 a nd und er, the sen iors saw a
co mprehensive

prog ram .

They

toured the units, learned about the
occupational and physical thera py

By HELEN BOTI'EL
DEAR HELEN :
We've heard all the " It's Going to
be a Rotten Day When ... " thingies,
as in : " You call the fire department
and they put you on hold ... " etc.
So how about some " It 's Going to
be a Good Day When " remarks'
Here area few:
It's G.oing to be a Good Day When

446·0332

You didn't get another fun eral
parlor brochure in the day's mail.
You binge on utterly deadly peca n
pie and ice erema and next mornmg
the bathroom scales don't remind
you of it.
Your teenage daughter asks your
advice- and takes 1t 1

Unexpected company a rri ves yo ur buss ralls you in the offi ce - to
just when you've cleaned house.
give you a compliment. And you're
You discover the toilet tissue spool so rel ieved you scarcely notice that
is empty before, nut after .
it isn't a raise.
The washing machine not only
Just call me- OPTIMIST
spews forth six pairs of matched
P.S. What's your fa vorill' ").!uotl
socks. but also produces a missing . day," Helen '
argyle - before you've thrown 1ts DEAR OPTIMIST :
We-e-e-11, I know it's J..!Oing t n be a
mate away'
The amount of walls to be covered good da y when the first IP!tt• r I npen
exactly equals ihe amount of is from an optimist like you !
wallpaper purchased.
Thanks for putting a rosy glow on
You finally serve a casserole that a blue Wednesday.- H.
no one in the famil y dissects for
P.S. I've mentioned this before ,
disliked ingredients.
but I also have a theory about traffit'
Your bank account balances.
signals. If I green-light my way
You find one TV program during

the evening that isn't a repeat.
With lay-off rwnors rampant.

downtown, things will go well for mt·
- a nd two gree n turn·a rrows in ad·

dition (those walt-forever flashers!
mean the gods are really on my

A reunion of two brothers, Arnold
Hayes, of Middleport, and Kenneth
Hayes, of Bridger, Mont. . who had
not seen each other for 50 yea rs, took
place in Middleport recently.
Mr.and Mrs. Kenneth Hayes, their
daughter, Hessie Watts, Billings,
Mont. . and their grandda ughter,
Sharon Sider of Laurel, Mont. were
here to visit Arnold and Ne ttie
Hayes of Middleport and their son,
Walter Hayes and his famil y, West
Columbia, W. Va .
Accompanying the Kenneth Hayes
family to Ohio were Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Hays of Grand Rapids, Mich.
While the families were here. Mr .

BARGAIN MMINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S100
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2{)()

lkt·. VJrgll H. Llyn•r told h1 s

Have An Enjoyable
Evening With Friends
5% OZ. TOP BUTT STEAK
BAKED POTATO
SALAD
$495
SOFT DRINK

Surnb .1 .. lurw t:l. ;II !O.:W ;1.nr. Hain

da!t• ts .fun" lO . Tilt· puiJlw

rs

tm·tkd

tu ~ tlll'nd .
IC.Mpan.yeoot fm

~

thor••• ,.., - • ' · ~
·

.U.O.•crvYincwp

I'OMEHOY
A Hymn Sing will
be held at Maplewood Lake Sunday
at '2 p.m. Si ngrng will be by the Royal
Mt·n Quartt.'t. Tlwre is no adm ission
drar ge ;111tl tlrere is plenty of

-~ ~~

THE ·MEIGS INN

10th Wl [ r ' 7: 15 &amp; 9·10 P ."' .
AT&amp; SUN MAT I NEE S 1: 1 &amp; :1

126'2MAINST.

992·3629

POMEROY

parktrr g.

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·'&gt;.

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LADIES'
DRESS SANDALS
21
STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

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Earns degree
WJiila111 Keith Wolfe, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Hubl'rt Wolfe. will be

\

(:llll tmg the g r;-rdu&lt;:~ll's ;.1t the Hocking
Technical College t'OJruncncerne nt

exercises Sunday . He wi ll receive a
degree in wildlife and recrt•ation .

Wolfe graduated from Eastern High
School, class of 1979, and has completed two years at Hocking Tech.

CHILDREN'S
SHORT SLEEVE

T-SHIRTS
3 for ssoo
•2.00 EACH

BAILEY'S SHOES
MI DD LE PO RT Oil

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MEN'S DRESS SHOES

1~\)--·~··------------

A work project at Letart Falls
c~metcry was carried out by the

SHOES BY: WEYENBURG &amp;MORGAN .QUINN
Father's Day Is Sunday, June 20th

MARGUERIT SHOES
"The Middle Shoe •Store In
The Middle
Block! .
. .
.

POMEROY, OHIO

and Mrs. Walter Hayes entertained
with a dinner in observa nce of th e

birthdays of his mother, Nettie, and
Kenneth Hayes.
While here the family from Montana also visited in Point Pleasant
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hamm , a
ru usin of the Hayes brothers.
En ruute home, they planned to
visit in Hanniba l, Mo. to vis it Ken-

neth Hayes, Jr. and his family .
Telephoning Nettie Hayes on her
birthday were her sons, Hubert, of
Texas, and Gene of Pontiac. Ill. and
their families. Dick Hays of Columbus, a nephew, also called.

ALWAYS FRESH

R.~.~.~
.... ~. '.... ._ ' "~-·

DAN'S BOOT SHOP
..
oHIO

-.

·,

Bend 0' the River Garden Club
preceding a rnceting held at the
horne of Mrs. Maxine Wingett.
Fresh flowers were planted in tile
ums and grass was clipped around
the urns and benches. Flowers for
the plantings were donated by
Bob's Market in Mason, Hubbards
in Sy rac use, and Arthur Hill of Apple Grove. Letters of thanks were
sent to each donor.
Mrs. Eilcen Buck gave devotions
st ressing the importa nce of work·
ing toget her. She read a rticles on
togetherness. Mrs. Ruth Barnitz
discussed enviro nment noting the

harm to plant life.
Bernicfl Carpc'ntC'r

wa ~ Jwarcll'd

the traveling gift. Next mr'&lt;'ting will
bP held at lhe i':SJher West IJomt•.
Refrcshmrnt s \\'C' l'C' srrved b.v Mr ~.
Wingrtt from a t&lt;:.~blc centered with

fres h flow&lt;'rs from hPr ga rden .

problem of the multinoral roses.

She also discussed the 17 year lo~
custs, their development and the

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SIMON 1SPICK-A-PAIR

A PAIR

""" . IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

Ward Smith . Gallipulis; Li!-&gt;a Rt•nt•t• Oshuntt', .Jacksun:
Susanne Leslit· Davis. lrontmr ; SIH'rry i\ngl'ia E\·cws.
Pedro. Third rnw: Sha rll'llt' K. Fultz, Oak Hill: Lana
Lee Boncrutter, Ga llipolis Fnry. W.Va.: Diant' Sul'
Ogier. McArthur; .Juanna Lt'l' Hayt's. Zillt'ski: Rubin
Marit' Rider, Srntn\'illt:; Vi( ·ki Lynn St'ott. Ja,·kson .
Nut pictured is Anita Jo Nt'Wso m. Snuthwt'Sll'r.

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Garden group discusses work projea

BOYS' TENNIS SHOES
AND JOGGERS

DRESS AND CASUAL
EFFECTIVE NOW THRU FATHER'S DAY

Fulluwtng tl11· bt'lll'drrtrun b~ HI'\
Jarm•s (' FraZll'l' .Jr , pds tor pf
Grctl'l' Un1tl'd Mdhodts\ Churl'll, ;t
rt'l'l'Jl ll1 1ll v..·rll lw lll'ld 111 tlr L' lo un gt•
at D;wrs ll;tl \. ~14 Frrst /1.\'t' . , the
hullh' of SL' hool uf nursrn g. All class
JJll'lllbl'rs. therr f;rn Hill'S and frH·rHb
an• Ill\' I ted to &lt;ilknd .
Tlw d;-r ss of 1982 rs llw 59th and
frni::ll gradulj lr ng rlirss frurn HM C's
St·hool of :J ursnr).! .

Lund , director of chapla111cy st• r-

CLASS OF '82- Graduating Friday at H p.m. will
be the final class of Holzer Medical Center's Srhuol of
Nursing. Graduates are. left to right, front row : Jana
Sue Stroth, South Webster; Nancy K. Espcnsrhied,
Canton : Juanita Jane Arrington, Gallipolis. Second
row : Deborah Ellen Danner. Middleport; Diam• Lynn

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expressed interest and participatton
in prnfl'ssiunal act ivities whill' a
student in the ho~pttal' s school uf
nursing.
The l'iunax conws tomorrow at 8
p.m. with graduat ion exercises at
Grace Umted Methodist Church . Af·
ter th e mvocation by Rev. Arthur

·'

40% OFF Priced At 55, 57, 510

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tht·

A prcse nlittr un was made tu J u&lt;Jn-

I

REUNION - After 50 years, Arnold Hayes, left, of Middleport, and
Kenneth Hayes of Montana, were reunited this month.

\

fnun

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'·r

J..! Uests

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Brothers reunite after 50 years

53 1 JACKSON PIKE -Rt . 35 WEST
Phone 446- 4524

TONIGHT'S SPECIAL

bcrs of the faculty and other spe&lt;'lal
adrnrni stration

---Helen Help Us---

- H.

,·un ).! l'q !alron th;~t if at tt•nd~ nl'e in
Sunday Sdt11ol 1 any Sunday in Mcty )
rt'i:il'llt•d 80 Ia · would prnwh from tire
rouf of till' dJUrch
Till' CO!l )~ l'l'gatwn rnd hts
dw llt•rrgt· and Rl'\'. Byrer will
pn·;lt'h frt~nr tlH' roof of the t'hun·h

tht· French

huspltHI.

a r c avCJilable only rn
the
metropolitan &lt;Jreas, such as
lll'OilCJtal llltl'llSl\'t' t.'i::lrl' &lt;Jnd
hcrnudieilysis units.

Bowers Family

D&lt;11l~

Ill

Ftve Hundred Room of the hospital,

Intensivt• Ca re Un it at Cinc innati
Gl'ncral. The visit pro vided the

husp1 tal and see special units that

of 1982. ll tl iZl'l' wr ll ;tl :-.u prt''l'lll the
drplurna ~ tD tlrt• I~ ~ ; radu ; t trn ~ fro rn
the IIM (''s Sdwol of 1\urs rrr ...: Tht·
Sl'Jllnr rl;Jss wr ll bt · pn ·~ ~ · rrkd tu
Holter b~ ('lrarlt·.'i I Adkr ns. \'l t'l'
pn•srdt•J rt. prok:-. . . . rwral .'il'r\'lt't'.'i of
tlw liM (' AriiH' W B DW I'l' ". H !\/ ..
tlrn·clur uf rrur slll f.-' t•du ('i-t \ltJll will
lllilkt• \Ill' J&gt;IT.'ielll&lt;Jtll!/1 11f fllll.'i \11 thl'
!'lass
t\w;mh wtll bt• rrradt· ;t\ tlrt ' l'i11W
tlf !hi' t '\)]111/ll'llt'l'llll'lll ]ll'ti)-; J'illll,
wrth tlw n;mu·s uf tlw n·t·rprl·nb a
St'ITI'\ untr l lht• ;wtual lllllt' of
prl·~ cnlatron . Tht ·~ \\ rll bl' fpr th1·
hig llt'st gratll' por n! a\'t· r a ~ l' arrd lhl'
bt.•st a ll ar oU!H.l :-.tudt•nt
Mus11· dun n ~ !ht' t'\Tlllll l' wrl l
fl·cttun· Btlbb~ Cordtlll a -.. :-.nltlr st \nth
Arlllt' F 1s d l t 'l' a .o. , or l.!, anr ~ t ;rnd ~11' ­

H.N.. un behalf of the HNA .
During llw Annual Seninr Break-

the seni or prophecy was .shared with
class llll'!Tlbers and wit h the 111l'111-

.see and expe rience the ge neral atmosphere of a lar).!l' muni cipal

st&lt;Jff.
In addr t ron to ad dr e s~ l/1 !' th1· ( '];_1:-. .. .

event. ca ps and stripes wen.' presenlt.'d tu the se niors by Margr Ehman,

fa st held lhrs morning

M ll .

l-lolZl'l' juirll'd tilt' staff uf till'
Hulzn Ml'tlwal (',·rrtt·r rn 1946 and
Slnt 'l' 1948 ha s St'r\' t'd J S till'
prt'S lllt:nt uf tht• lrusptl&lt;tl 's rrlt'dw;tl

Avt•nue . G"ll1polis. Mrs . Eplmg IS a
graduate of the HMC Sehoul of Nursmg, Class of 1952. Dunng tht• HNA

the hospital. One of the guides was a
former graduate of the hospital' s
school of nursing, Debi Bobst, class
of 1979, who works in the Neonatal

n:union. Ml't gs County F&lt;Jirgrounds,

1'01111-:H&lt; JY

1·: . Hol zer. .Jr .
prt•SJdenl of lht• HM C' sl&lt;tff.

C harlt..~

the sen rurs spent &lt;Hl eveni.ng at the
Mountaineer Thealrl', spo n~o red by
Holzer Clinic Ltd .: a cookout at 0 . 0 .
!Jers, tht•tr ramilie ~ and guests of the
students. cHrd a Regi.stl•red Nurst·s
Assona lron r RNA I covered dr sh tllllrwr hosted by Mr . and Mrs. Mllt·s
EphnJ..: &lt;J t thl'tr home on Frrsl

11

graduation .
The last week of Ma y, pri va te cars

side: I cctn do no wrong. It works!!

12::10 p.n1. Sunday at Huck Springs
Crangt• Hall

used at the Burn Institute.
On the social siUc of graduation ,

Mountaine er

Cincinnati,

cu.:ademir and clinica l activities to

HONORED - Nine area people
were recently Inducted Into Phi Alpha Theta lntematlonal history honorary at Rio Grande College and
Community College. The group
was Inducted at ceremonies In the
Fine and Perfonnlng Arts Center
at the campus. ABOVE: Inducted
were, left to right, front row: Dorothy CostUow, Jackon; Beverly
Mahle, Wellston; and Cannen Manuel, Racine; second row: JeH
Young, Jackson; Robert Pfeifer
(faculty initiate), Jackson; James
Oliphant, Marion; Robert Leigh
(special honorary member);
David Burgess, New Straitsville,
and Michael Gore, Rutland .
RIGIIT: Jean Rltchhari, right,
Fifth Street, Syracuse, recently received an outstanding senior award
In the field of physical education
and health at Rio Grande College
and Community College from department chainnen ,James Batesky. IUtchhart received tbe honor
at the annual senior awards ceremonies In the Fine and Perfonnlng
Arts Center.

vrces at the llosprtal . !!ugh P. Krrkel,
presrdt.·nt or HM C will wt.'lcorne the
familic s and frrend s of the
gradu;,tlt•s . He wrll also rntrudul't' the
fccrtured s pl'CJkt·r of thl· t'\'l'lltng,

programs, heard ctbout the gene ral
care involved with an acutely burnet! child, rmd bec.:amc knuwledgi:iiJle
of tlw primi.lry nursi ng care system

Theatre party, a cookout, the senwr
breHkfast held tlus morni ng and

to

TOPE'S FURNITURE GALLERIES FABULOUS

7 :10 p.m. service at Antiquity
llap\lst Ch urch located one mile
al.,vt• Rac1ne on State Route 338.
Thl' public is mvited to a ttend.

ll ~ts lt · ~s t ·s

graduatio n

IIACINE - Hoger Buck ley will '

takt · a nt\"t•n ·d thsh anJ thl'lr own

su h s ('rrptrons
will bt· Mrs. Wiley,

GALLIPOLIS - Fifteen students
will participate in the final

Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nease
and son, Dan, Minersville; Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Smith and son, Joshua
and Joey Carter, New Matamoras;
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Nease, Portland; Mr. and Mrs. William Nease
and daughter, Sandra and her fiance, Chris Winters, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Nease and children, Matthew,
Kristen and Aaron, Mr. and Mrs.
Brent Elliott and daughter, Laura,
Bellefontaine. Afternoon guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Phillips.
Besides their four children, Mr.
and Mrs. Nease ha ve l2 grandchi ldr e n and eig ht grea t grandchildren.

A family dinner was held Sunday
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Uswin
Nease, a belated observance of the
couple 's 65th wedding anniversary .
Dan Nease gave a family prayer.
An anniversary cake inscribed to
"Mother and Father" was observed
with homemade ire cream following
the dinner.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs . Herbert Davis of Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Davis, Athens; Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Risch and daughters,
Kristen and Amy, Tipp City; Mr .
and Ms. David Nease and son.
Roger, Minersvile; Mr. and Mrs.
Pete Sayre and daughter, Kimberly,

SrnJ,.!Jng groups wis hin g to par·
trcrpa ll' should arr ive earlier. No

Tt ·ntph ·

:--un.-.

The public

HMC class '82 graduates Friday

Dinner held for
Nease's 65th year

Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs . Robert
Craig, Mrs. John Ruse and Mrs.

The

Ohio

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

J

Kenneth MtCuiiOUth, R ..n.
CMrlet Rlflle, R.Ph
Ronlld Hlnlnt. R Ph
MDI'I . IhruSat1 .001mtotpm
SundiY II · JO to n . JO 1nd S tot .m
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH ttHtU
P:r~ly Service
E Main
Pom.roy, 0
O,.n Nlthh till t

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

I

BAHR CLOTHIERS

~=-·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�Sentinel

Thursday, June 10, 1982

Rep. Mottl concedes defeat
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API -Rep
Ronald Mottl, the northern Ohio 01"mocra t whose support for some of
President Reagan s programs became an Issue In his bid for another
term In the House, conceded defeat
Wednesday In his tight race with
Cuyahoga County Commissioner
Edward Felghan
Fetghan, 35 who c haracterized
his opponent as a Republican In
Democratic garb edged him by
only 1 069 votes In a four way race
!01 the nomination In the new 19th
District which circles Cleveland
Complete unofficial return s
showed Felghan with 37,246 votes to
Mottl' s 36 177 Arnold Glelsser and
Melvin Drimmer shared the r e
mainlng 3 500 \Otes
Mottl 48, a foUI term congress
man whose 23rd Dlst rlct Is one of
two Ohto seats ellmlnated m rea
llgnment following 1981 census results had at first talked about a
recount then changed his mind and
conceded
'I talked with Eddie Felghan
congratulated him and suggested
we get together for lunch Mottl
said
Republican Richard Anter the
mayot of FairVIew Park was unop-

posed In the primary for the 19th
District, which a lso lnciu&lt;les Liber
tartan candidate Thomas Pekarek
and Independent Kevin Killeen
Mottl had sided with Reagan last
year ' on procedural votes that
cleared the way for passage of the
Repub lican president's budget
proposals He voted against the
president on final passage but his
ear li er s upp ort Infuriated
Democrats
House Speaker Thomas P "T1p
0 Neill of Massachustetts said the
Mottl defea t was a message to
other Democrats that they cannot
suppori Reaga n's economics and
survive a Democratic primary
Felghan also sa" a message for
the president In his victory
If Rona ld Reaga n does Mt react
to the significance of this election
a nd the voter demand for a redirection of economic policy then
he can abandon any inlet est In reelection Felghan said
Mottl back In Washington Wed
nesday before finally conceding
said he thought that if he had by
passed the Democratic primary
and run Instead as an Independent
he might have had a better chance
for a nother term m ttl&lt;&gt; House

Business Services

But, he added, "I have always
run as a Democrat Possibly that
was my undoing "
Mottl said congressiona l redis
trictlng was a major factor In his
defeat, saving, "They took 170,000
voters away from me "
The congressman also saki he
was hurt by his stand on Reagan's '
economy policy and by orga nized
labor's suppotl for Felghan And he
satd Felghan outspent him $150,000
to $80 000
They spent $100,000 on televi
slon saying I voted against Social
Secunty ' he said "That was a big
!Je I nevet did But if you 'II the people a lie long enough !hey start to
believe It
The 19th District primary had
shaped up as a contest between
Mottl and another congressman
Rep Dennis Eckari, a Democrat
serving hiS first term In the House
from the 22nd District
Three days before the filing dead
line Eckart decided Instead to run
for the 11th District seat being va
ca ted by Republican William Stan
ton of Pa mesvllle who opted
against an 11th term because of Ill
health

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmtsston
PH 992 5682
or 992-7121
3 24 ftc

chure and registration form
The Superinte ndent of Schools Of
flee is loca ted m the former Meigs
Count y Children s Home next to
Veterans Memorial Hospital Mul
berry Hetghts, Pomeroy
The child 's fifth birthday must
taU between Oct 1 and Jan 11nclu
s tve to be considered for early entry
mto ktndergarien For .early entry

into frrst grade the c hild s sixth
btri hday must fall between Oct 1
a nd Jan 1lncluslve An evaluation
wtll be cond ucted to confirm the
chtld's need for early e ntry This
program is a imed a t lde nifylng
those children whose development
ts more tha n a year a nd half before
their chronologica l age and who
would benefit s ubsta ntia ll y by
early entry Into school

Lawrence Thompson

Addison

parked hiS veh tc le on old township
road near county road five and SR 7
at 11 p m Tuesday night

Tornadoes blast through Midwest
By A!tiOCiated Press
Storms blasted throug h the
Midwest with 100 mph winds Wed
nesday firing a broadside of torn a
does and torrents of ram that sent
rivers gushing over the It banks mto
towns and cities
Hundreds fled the floodwaters in
Kansas and Mlssoun as thunder
storms which have pounded the
Plains off and on smce early May
renewed a n assa ult with 8-!nch
rains and hall the size of baseballs
Thousands of homes and bust
nesses lost power in Kansas City
and other towns such as Moberly
Mo, where wmds clocked at 100
mph snapped trees a nd power
lines
Pollee m Rossville Kan used volunteers wtth boats and four wheel
drive vehicles to help evacuate
some of the town s 1,100 residents
includmg about 70 pallents a t a
nursing home

The sheriff's offtce In the nor
theast Kansas town, about 20 rrules
northwest of Topeka sa td Cross
Creek normally a narrow stream
wmdlng through the community,
had spread two mlles wide upstream The water In Rossvllle rose
two feet In 30 minutes, but had re
ceded considerably by late day
The town was cut off as water
pouted over toads Into It
In Kansas City the Coast Guard
closed a 284-mile stretch of the Mls
sour! River fearmg wakes from
boats could weaken already sodden
dikes and levees The river was
closed from Washington to Liberty
Bend
Gov John Carlin declared five
counties In nottheaste rn Kansas

Funeral services for David L
Darst, 28, Pomeroy, who d10wned
Saturday, June 5 in the Colorado
RJver In California wlll be con
dueled at 1 p m Saturday, JWie 13,
at Foglesong Funeral Home, Ma
son Rev George Hoschar wtll off!

Emergency runs
Two calls were answered by local
emergency units Thursday morn
lng, the Meigs Cou nty Emergency
Medical Service reports
At 12 29 a m , the Rutland Unit
took Dan Dotson to Holzer Medical
Center and at 8 12 a m , ilhe Pomeroy Unit took Jim Adams, Union
Ave, to Veterans Memorial Hospl
tal Wednesday at 10 45 p m , the
Middleport Unit took Juanita Ratlltf from a night club below Middleport to Veterans Memorial

Moderate damage
A vehicle driven by Barbara
Chapman, 36, Syracuse, was mod
erately damaged when It colllded
wiilh a deer on Ohio 124 Wednesday
morning
According to the Ga!lla Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol, the
deer ran from ilhe left side of the
road Into ilhe pailh of the Chapman
vehicle, struck It and continued on,
the report said.

numerous nvers a nd streams in
Kansas and Missouri with the Mls
sour! Rtver a lready 2 feet over flood
stage at Boonville Mo , and ex
peeled to crest at 11 feet over flood
stage by Friday
While the South sweltered under
slmmenng hea t approaching 100
degrees In south Georgia, tt was un
seasonably cool In muc h of the
plains Cities recording their cold
est June 9 on record mcluded Sher
tde n Wyo 33, Pocatello, Idaho, 34
and Rapid City, S D, 38

Study shows much rural
drinking water may be unsafe
NEW YORK (AP) -

Nearty 39

Area death
David L. Darst

dtsaster at eas the first step toward
getting federal diSaster a td fm
them
The Na tiOnal Weather Service
posted fl ash flood warmngs a long

I

elate Burial wlll follow In Sayre
Cemetary, Arbuckle
Friends rna] call at ilhe funeral
home from 24 p m and 7 9 p m
Friday
Born Dec 29, 1953, In Columbus,
Mr Darst was the son of ttl&lt;&gt; late
Budd Junior Darst and Pauline M
Snowden, Rutland
In addition to his mother, he ts
survived by his wife, Cynthia Ann
VanMeter Darst, two sons David
Len and Steven Lee, at home, a
daughter, Misty Maxine, at home,
two brothers, Lawrence Dar•t, Ru
tland, and Rex Allen Darst, Pomeroy, and two sisters, Patty Smith
and Ellen McClure, both of
Pomeroy

Veterans Memorial
Admitted Nancy Holsinger, Ra
cine, David Jenkins, Middleport,
Pauline Saunders, Shade, Juanita
Chapman, Clifton, James Sellers,
Sr , Shade, Claude Eblin, Pomeroy, Ronald Wtlson, Racine
Discharged--Bertha Custer, Eva
Shafter, Clarence Gans and Norman Lehew

Marriage license
A marrtage license was issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
RJcky Wayne Schaefer, 19, Middleport, and Christine Kay Fry, 71!,
Pomeroy

million Americans drink water that
might be unsafe , according to a
five year government study, The
New York T1mes reported today
The $5 million study, undertaken
In 1978 and 1979 by Cornell Unlver
slty for the U S Environmental
Protection Agency, was based on
samples of water In 2,654 households the Times said
The study, entitled "National Sta
tistical Assessment of Rural Water
Conditions," showed that 63 percent of Amertcans living In rural
areas were drtnklng water tainted
wiilh various substances Nearly 29
percent of ilhe homes had enough
bacteria In their water to cause a
potential health hazard, according
to the T1mes
One-quarter of ilhe homes were
found to have unsatisfactory levels
of mercury In their water, 17 per
cent had too high a level of lead, 17
percent had too much cadmium
and 14 percent had too much selenlum under federal standards for
community water supplies, the
T1mes said

Joe D Francis, ilhe chief re.
searcher, said that alilhough levels
of some contaminants were higher
ilhan expected, "We did not witness
conrespondlng widespread waterrelated medical problems "
The samples were analyzed by
federal, university and other labora tortes tor 43 substances. VIrtually
none showed detectable radioactivIty or residues of pesticides or herbicides, ilhe report said.
The greatest problems were re.
ported In small water systems servIng two to 14 households.

and
614

To a qood home 9 1no o ld
part border c ol\•e Good
w1fh c hildren 614 949 '2779

a

All Makes

e DISh
ewashers
washers
• Ranges • Refngeral
ors
PARTS and SERVICE

EUGENE LONG

BOTH OF vou
STYLING SALON

Superior Siding Co.
Vinyl &amp; Alumtnum
Complete gutter work,
complete remodeltng,
rooftng of all types
Worked tn home area 20
years
Free esttmates
Call 843 3322

SYRACUSE, OH

Goraqe Sc1lr Sn tu rdrW o n ly
Good c lott1 ,nq t 1res f'IC
GcoHlf' Wt1 1f rrc;• drn cf'
o lrl Rl ))

yce~r
7 to 8 week s old

Reagan, NATO Sec. Gen Lunns, Brltlsh Premler Thatcher; Second row: Italian Foretgn Min. Colombo, U.S
Sec of State Halg, West Gennan Foreign Min. Gerscher and at back, Premter Trudeau. ( AP Wirephoto)

at the U.S Secretary of State Alexander Halg and says
"Ask Mr. Halg" in reply to calls to U.S. President
Reagan about bts message to Israeli Prlmler l}egln. In
the group from left to right, First row: President

The Datly

Sentmel

PHONE 992-2156
Or Wr le Od ly

20% OFF
ALL PERMS

For the Month of June
Open Tues ttru Sat

nfl (lu~ I eel Dl'PI
Pom•oow 0ho,~16t

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L011rl

Custom kitchens and ap
pl1ances,
custom
bathrooms remodeling,
plumb1ng electnc, and
heat1ng

U(lu

,_.lon

iiOO

....

1!00

• ""'" ..., lo w•n
•• fqu ""''" "'I&gt;•

~lht•

PUBLIC NOTICE
A
budget
proposa I
hear•ng wil l be held the 21st

before council
The budg et w ill be 1n the
Clerk Treasurer offi ce two
weeks pr1or to adopt1on of
the budqet on July 5th

(Rober t &amp; E lezabeth Chaney, debtors)

NOTICE

lOth day of Ju ly 1982

Dated th• s 7th
June 1982

day

of

Joan Ann Hiles

161 10 ltc
Real Estate -

General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
George S Hobstetter lr
Br'*er
~

N F W LISTING
Ni CI
11 76 sq II rnnrh hO'llf'
Hn s 3 bedrooms
11,
batllS '} ShOW( r.;, 'l('rlt
pump cnrpr t nq thr-r
mopane w1ndow s ancl
T P
wr.lf r
Own,.rs
m~lY
hrlp
f1nnn c(
Ask1nr1 S49 900

No lunch - bnng your own Terms- cash or check
w/pos1t1ve 10 or letter of credet from your bank day
of Sil le Not re spon s1ble for acctdents
Dav1d L D1llon - Trustee
Auctioneer- B1ll Janes

F1nr
fn'Tlily hornr 1n fhr
country on qood t1nrd
rond 1n Eas tr-rn Schoo l
01Str1 CI 1700 SQ fl l1k f'
nf'w 7 room homr 3
bed roo ns
111 bA th s
qarnqr tor 3 co rs a nd
hen! b 111 s on l y Sl 7 SO by
lcn sc

54

off Rt 7 By pass near
Pomeroy
14 15 acres
m/1 w• th 6 room house
1n need
of
r epa 1r
pnvate $10 000 00

LISTING

BAUM ADDITION Beau tiful 3 bed roo m
bnck home 2 full baths
l arqe
l•v•nq
room
dmtnQ room eq u1pped
k 1tchen
family room
w !lh flrepla cP
n•ce
woodwork s •tu a ted on 1
acre lot Cal l for deta il s

POMEROY
Wel c htown Rd - One
floor plan 2 bedroom
hom e hardwood floor s
ltv eng room w/f1rep lace
d1n1nq
room
full
ba seme nt on b1g corner

tot Askonq $10,000 00
PEACEFUL
COUN
TRY SETTING, yet
c lose to town Lovely
three bedroom home
l1 v1ng
room
d1n 1n g
room k1tc hen a 1r con
d1t1on~d full basement
has family room rec
room,
ut•l•ty
and
garage Over an acre

PRICED REDUCED to
S49 500 00
Velma N1cmsky, Assoc

Phone 742-3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742-3171

s.

'339.95

Chest Freezer
15 cu. ft. 1347.95
25 cu. ft. 1439.95

a 1r co nd•t•oned mobil e
home w•th natura l qas
furnace and levf' l f en cPd
lot 107x 110 plu s Will
tnkrS13 000

Vtnyl &amp; Alumtnum
SIDING

Call

Raat Estate -

Upright Freezer
16 cu. ft. 1379
21 cu. ft. 1439
30 cu. ft. 1520

NEW

Ph 949 2609
949 2234
RACINE, OHIO
5 19 1 mo

Bustness &amp;
bu•ld 1nQ
May
talk
trad e
or
owner f•na nc •nq

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
us Rt 50 East
Guysv1lle, Oheo
Authortzed John Deere

New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dealer

Farm Equtpment
Parts &amp;Servtce
1 3 tfc

PRICE REDUCED - OWner will l and contr nct f ht~
one floor plan three bedroom horne w •th full
basement qaraqe exce ll ent co nd1f1on $25 900

Sue Murphy, Helen and
Bruce Teaford,
All
Realtors
After
Hrs

Announcements

SWEE PER
and sew1ng
mach1ne repa1r pnrts nnd
suppl•es
P1ck up and
del1very
Dav1s Vacuum
Cleaner one half mile up
Georqes Creek Rd
Ca ll
446 0294

1 oz 999 silver Fnthpr s
Day bar
$!0 00 Spr1nq
Valley Trad nq Co Sp r,nq
Valley P laza 446 8025

PH. 992-7201

446 8025
Lottie kool re s t oCe ches t by
lqtoo travelmq refresh

ment ce nter $24 00 Spr nc

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS
Sues from 4 to 6 and all
wood bu•ldmgs 24xl6
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Racme, Oh

Ph 614 843 2591
6 IS ti c

REESE j,Jf
TRENCHING
SERVICE
water Sewer· Eiectnc
Gas Lene Detches
Water Ltne Hook ups
Sept1c Tanks
County Cert1f1ed
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh

Ph 367 7560
1 7 I ti c

Bonqo for Charily Rodney
G r anqe H a ll Every Tue s
&amp; Fn Sponsered by Gall1a

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Trucks
Lo Boy
Trencher
Water
Sewer
Gas Lmes
Sept1c Systems

Garnqe Sdlf' 508 C r c le
Avenue Tues
Wed
&amp;
Thur s 9 4 e~cro ss from
Spr nq Valley Har dwnrc
N o lh1n Q so ld pr1or to snle
5 Fn,n ly Yard Sn lc 3 117
n le s from Gn ll pol1 s on
141
lOth &amp;
1101
Bed
e, prcnds curta1ns new pop
co rn popN l ots of r£ ~1 1 n Cf'
c lothPS 1enns nw;c Rn1n
poc; tpones
Y~1rc1 s~1lr&gt; June 8 9 &amp; 11
Children S
illld
I C!ef 1CS
c lofh11lQ 9 0 CO ICk t il ? 'l
m lcs ou t on 588

35 Gr~lpc St 9AM ? Wf'd
Fr1 Gu ns 1'l qnuqr drnpf'S
lurn1turc
toy s
c lottws
c locks ocfds nnd enets
y Md Sa le June II &amp; 17 9 to
&lt;l Eva ns 478 Hedqrwoocf
Dr
/\Iter 15 year s Wf'
f,n nl l y c le~1ned house Ap
pie butter kettle
bnby
t erns
furndur e
qlas swar c
old
r ec ord s
books
ant1qucs
'nanqlc
1ron prt ca rr1 e r &lt;;hf'IV1nq
curtn1n s

Y~lrd Sale June9 10 &amp; 11 9
The lzaak Walton Club w II
sponser a pnm,t•ve muzzle
1oad1nq taroet shoot Sun
day Jun e 13th C'lf th e1r cl ub
f arm 311 m11es So
of
Chest er on Shade R 'ver R d
Thts 1S str• c tly a pr1mil•ve
s hoot bench off hand Nc
scopes perm1t1ed
Pr1zes
Will be turk eys and bacon

to 4 R dqe Ave 1n R10
Grande
Jean s
lot s of
c lo th f's m sc terns

Me1qs Co F1s h and qe~me
c lub
Due to the bad
weather and postponement
of th e•r ch•cken 8 B Q 11
wil l be held th1 s Sat June
12 Work sessiOn will start
at 1 p 1n Supper at 6 p m
A ll members ur ged to at
tend
And
help
Br1ng
SICk le s and lawn mowers

Yare! Sa le Fr1day 6 11 82
136 lsi Ave Ga ll•pol' s

WANTED Someone to ap
pra1se old pnm•f1ve tools
Ca ll 614 949 2342 around 8

am

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Profess•onal
E lectro l ySIS
Cen ter A M A approved
Doctor referals
by ap
potntment on l y
30-4 675

G1veaway

4

ANY

PERSON who has

anyth1nq to g tve away and
does not offer or a ttempt to
off er a ny other thm g for
sa le may place a n ad m th1 s
co lumn There will be no
c harg e t o th e advert1ser

Gar,1qc Sa le Fr1 11 2m les
from HMC on Rt
160
Rhubarb
b cyc l e
box
spr tnct s &amp; mattress queen
s11e c loth,nq &amp; m sc

1st r qh t off of Bulav•lle Rd
Fr1
&amp;
Sal
c hlldrens
clo thes
t oys
turn ture
Wntch for s1qns
Yard Sale Thursday thru
Sa t
218 end of Ne1qh
borhood Rd Turbme roof
vent
women
c hildren
c loth es
3 Family Fr1 11th 9 4 up
per Rt 7 c lose to bowl,nq
a ll ey Baby 1fems l ad,es &amp;
c hild s c loths hou se hold
1lem s &amp; d1shes
Garaqe Sale Thurs &amp; Fr1
M1tchell Rd 9 00 t o 4 00
Garaqe Sa le
Fa,rflpld
acres Subd1V1S10n
Fn1r
field Centenary Rd Sat &amp;

Sun
Yard Sale June 11
332
LeGrande
Green Acres
Subd •v•ston off 141 Baby
cloth es and m •sc 9 5

Sack of yard sale 1tcms

Call614 388 8449

Large or Small Jobs

PH 992 2478
S 20 1 mo pd

Gnraqr Sa le lll'l Sunset
Or
Ga llipOli S June 11 &amp;
12th Cloth nq adult sm all
s 1es
mens
most S11es
Ch ldren and m1s c

&lt;l tnm ly r hur s Fr• &amp; Sa t
Me~ son Bow l nq l rtnf's 3rd
J1 WI l r y
St
M 1'&gt;011
d1Shf'&lt;; CIO!t1 1nC1
5 / (lTn l y yMCf 5r1 1f
W( d
11 1 Sell¥
Tt 1ur sd,1y
nnrl
Fr day 9 1 3305 Fr~1n kl n
Ave Bf'l l 111 &lt;HI
/&lt;l'lJ
L 1ncoln
Avf
P l1nsn nt Wrctn1 sd~1Y
Tttur sday 9 00 to?

Ma le dog 2 112 yr

old

fema le 1 112 yr old w1th 5

pupp•es Call614 2S6 1945

BEAUTIFUL RIVERFRONT ACREAGE• - Ap
prox tmately 600 of frontage for cam p1ng boa tonn

2 year o ld black spayed

YOUNG'S

ftsh.ng Balance of the 75 acre farrn 1S wooded and
15 ac r es tillabl e T hree bed room hom e new car
pet.ng and bath owner will l and contract $62 000

Housing
Headquarters

MIDDLEPORT - Fantasti C VIC'W of th e RIVer' A
remode led three bedroom horne formal d1n 1nq
room, ut1hty room , basement s 1df' deck, front st t
ttng porch Ask •ng $45,000 Own er wants off er

1sc. Merchand1ce

MIDDLEPORT - A three bedroom modular home

SIDEWALK SALE

three y ea rs old, two baths. W B F P e lectr•c hea t
centra l a•r Large fam•IY room unu sual built .n k 1t

THURS., FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN.
10Til6 P . M.
Something for everyone. Guns, fishing
equipment,
archery
equtpment,
clothing, etc.

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Addons 1nd rtmodlhnJ
-Rooflnllnd ruHer won

1

-toncrt • worl

-PiumblnJind
elec:tnul WOfl

(frH Estrm1los!

chen, separate utd1ty $45,500

V. C. YOUNG Ill

REALTORS
Henry E Cleland, Jr , GR I

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohro
9 30 tfc

Jean Trussell
Dottte Turner

Offrce

992 619!
949 2660
992-5692
992-2259

CANDl£LIGKT INN
Rt I, Chosfuro, Oh
St Rl 7, bttwHft Choshue
&amp; Middleport
Hrs Mon Sun

100PM 230AM
Cor~ Oul Beer
&amp; Wine Aro1l1ble
M011 Ke1 Ntpt
Tuos lodtos ntlhl 111 dnnb
rtduced for the women
Wed % C..tu~ ntpt 9-12, d11H
beer on~ PoolltMnnomont 2 1 m
Thurs
-Old Mtlw1uke Ntp!, 9130,
1
h Centurt .Ntrftt
frt &amp; Sal lito bonds

dlown ucJr ntpl, 10 p m
San PIDI, pitcher btof 11*111
price Also BQ's on Sando! stortin1
June
Month of June, Thurs fn Sot
IIARSHAU
BAND
Stop 1•, brine 1
• w. 1bo
11M fiiPP! Htlor llaot. Sal 4 pOl
6 p.m Utoodlortilod spoclob dt1~
Hope to .. ,...fl_
Phone'99Z 9913
S-H'""'

Tf"Ct:

SPRING VALLEY TRADING CO.
529 Jackson Ptke
Sprrng Valley Plara, Galltpolts
446-8025

j

'

dnnk &amp;

fe male Coll •e cross

H as

had all shots Catt446 0839
c h1fdr ens&amp; adults Ca tl 446

4807
I yr old mat e Old Engt.sh
type Shepard dog, gentle
Ca ii .U6 4656
3 month old female part
Doberman puppy, ha s tall

June 11 and 12 275 1/2
Ja ckson P1ke
9 to 4
Clothe s fu rn. tur e d•shes
e lec tron• c games 4x.!l ac
cessor •es m1sc
-4 Family Yard Sa le BAM
Sa t June 12 Rt 7 Youngs
Mob de Hom es
Ga rage sa le
June 9 11
from
9 4 dally
Mens
womens
c h•ldr ens
c loth1ng toy s Base C B
a nd m1sc
D 104 m•ke
tt e m s
Ro l and
Morr t s
res1dence, Long Hollow Rd
F1rst road to left off -4 l ane
33 N Watch for s1gns

YARD Sell e F r •elrlY on ly 9
3 1 rndr ou t S,l nd hil l Rei on
1('11 Rn n c ilnCf'IS

GARAGE

An t ,qu•
sn lf'
sp nn.nq w twrl nowr&gt;r S(lw
furn1lurt
lr rl 11 r
step &lt;;
n sc Fr ctw ~1lf l Sn tu rclny
9 4 K1 nneth Dur st Rt I 1
11t1IC' fr om tunc t, o n 'l &amp; 87
Leon WV
FIV E f ,lm ly yn r d sn lr
Fr day &amp; S1 t urd ~y 9 7 1
n• le Above Hr n clf rson on
35 WA101 for S qnc,

Garage sa le, 11 fam111 es

Cockspoo, 6 mos old to a
good home, good w1th
ch1 ldren Call446 9357

Yellowbush Rd
Rac1ne
Toys, clothes,
anttques
kn1ck knacks
ce ram1cs
w1cker furntture c urta.ns
records

German

Shepards

June 11 , 9 to S Da le Hart ,

S famdy Thurs and Fn at
Kapps Groc
1n West
Columbta Infants cloth1ng,

6 small pupp&lt;es, S wks old
Call614 992 5864

adults, and large womens,
dtshes, m1sc

Help Wclnfed

T t11
ll)O".l
'&gt; UCC J S&lt;; f ul
U rc'&gt;l t sel l nq r ornpany n
tht w o rl t s look1nq for
pr opl c who w lnl t o •n ~1 k r
qood S$$ /\von
FULL
TIM E&amp;PARTl i ME
Cel li

9 '
FAMILY
y 1rcl
':.l it
Mn so n Bowl nq
Crntrr
3rd
St
9 5
Thur c;rl ny
Fr 1etny
&amp;
Sn tu refny
Jpm l ry ri •S hf' S
PubliC S&lt;1 le
&amp; A uc t1 on

8

R• c k
P(nr so n
Ex
pPriPn rNt AUCTIO N EER
Es tates
nnt,quf' s
far m
tlousrhold L1&lt;;ens1'd 0 1110
WV Buy,nq nnt,que s 304

773 5785 773 9185
Au c t,on every Fr1 n1Qilt n t
the Hartford Commun ty
Center Truckloads o f new
'Tler c handJ SP evPry week
Cons.gments of new and
used mrr c h nnet,sr always
w&lt;&gt;lcom e
R1 C ildrd
Reynolds Auc t1oncer 275

3069
BEDS I RON

BRASS

old

furnlfur e
qold
silver
dollar s wood 1ce boxes
st one tar s ani1Que s et c
Comp l ete
household s
Wnte MD Mlllrr Rt 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 997 7760
Gold
s 1lver
sterl.nq
tewelry r1nqs o le! cons &amp;
c urren cy Ed Burkett Bar
bcr Shop Middleport 992

3476

H qh Sc t10o l G r 1ctun l l' &lt;, &amp;
Sf'n ors vou l drt t 1r 1 OVf r
'1550 00 fH r mo ntt1 wt&gt; It
It nrn n q .-1 v 11Udl11t ".k II
l 1kc rorTlp ut r r rr P~l•rcr
&lt;, hi (I rn1 lr1 1 workt r
01
rc fr qunt •o n Plu&lt;; you w 11
ltnv1 ~l c;r r u rr p~1r 1 ' ' 111 1ob
wll tl til l fun ry Nrtl1 0 l ,ll
G u o rd n tt, r
rc twol,nq
Brn1 I 1'&gt; ncl urt1 1 '1 1 500 00
t nl &lt;, t l1 £ nt
bonuc,
S35 000 0C 1ft
•nsur1nr r
1ncf frf' f' lu ltQn t o ~1 ny
co l leq1 or tr ~1cl e schoo l 1
Wr sl V r q n 11
niN f's t t d
l)f'rSOn":. n 1y r 111 l 304) 675
3950 or nWp&lt;;t v .r q ll1,1 r.1 11
t oll FR EE 1800 M7 36 19

&lt;,ARE

'lAFF

nrf'drcl by 1 proor0c;c; VI
rf'Strfcnl •ll rn r1
f 1c.t ty
Sl' rVI C nq 11rn t n l 1y rc t1r
cff'd nctults w 111 bl'h,lv or 11
d so rdr rs
Pr1 v au.;,
,x
per 1 ncr work nq
w 111
proplt
rrqu1rt rl
Ar
pliC&lt;lnts 1 u st 111 r 111 rqr I I(
r rr ~l t Vf
rn t f'n l cl ll (l lhlf'
to work I 1£ • hlr
It our.;,
$ 10 000 f) r yt 1r Sl l ~lry l or
n &lt;lS hr NOr k w1 k CJ ionq
wilhothrrbtnd.t '-. NIGHT
R ~L I~F
STAFF
l l &lt;:,o
nrrrff'cl
l l
r r&lt;;!!tn l • ll
110 111 "&gt; 11 PM to 9AM S3 'iO
prr tlr 30 to &lt;lO t1r wor k
wrrk
I f nlrr &lt;; l rrt Sin (!
f i"&gt;Ullt toOIIORf'&lt;:,idl nl •l l
Rt 1 IJo:x l
Suv el"&gt; 11c
Mdl Crt r k Dr \ 1 1 pot "&gt;
O il 4563 1

Ju l y 1 19A 7 Con tar t Lorr n
D P hf Ips ~lJf)l r ntrnd1 11
P 0 Bo) l &lt;l Ct1r '-. t11rf' Oh
4)670 (61&lt;11367 0 10?
CA N YOU TRAVf L
L ~lrqr
n~l l iO i l ~ll
CO&lt;l1f)rl ny
ttn s opr n1nq s to r1roll 10
p0op l1 fr o n tile u~111 rol s
Po1n t Pi! ~1s(1nt P01111 r o y
nr c~1
No
( xrf'r 1 nu
n eccled E ~Cf llf'nl f'n rn,nq .;,
on a co 11 111 S"&gt; on bn s s plu'i
bonuc:,r s an ct t r~1nsportn t on
t urn strrd A pply only d you
nrr 18 or o vf'r n1 11 n 11
])IQU&lt;; frN IO lr rlVf'l I IH f n
l 1rf' US on
1 nnriO'll
11 nrrny nncl c.1n "&gt; lclrl .m
1 C'd1alc ly Srr Mr Knt l lt r
Fr1d&lt;1y fr o n 9 30AM r o
12 00 noon ~1 1 thl' Blu1
Fount,, n Mo t t 1 G1 ll not c:,
Ol1 N o pt10n1 c 111'&gt;
WAntf' cf 11 ~1by ':. ll f'r Tur '&gt;
nnd Fr • n qlll 5 30 to 111d
n1qht Gf'or cw s Crt ck ,lrf' 1
C.11 14&lt;l6 3987
SO ITlf on1 to l tv f' 111 nnd cn r L
for 69 y• o l£1 &lt;ll"' IC' ll ~l n
el cnppret ("'l l 4&lt;l6 ?445 or
&lt;l&lt;l6 1309
Srll£&lt;; lwlp llf(cif'rl
Mon 4&lt;l6 33'20

(r1 11

Ful l nnd p ~1r1 t mf 10b op
portun !1 &lt;; now 1va l,lh l f
Aqes 16 111cl up For Clf) pl
c~l ll98 5 4171 or949 2360

IS

6370
to buy Oak or

poplar logs 304 675 S823
RN sLPNs
Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old fur
n•tur e a nd A nt1ques of all
k•nds ca ll Kenneth Swam
eve n•n gs
Buy1ng
Go ld ,
S1lv er
Pl at.num old coms scrap
nngs &amp; silve rwar e Dally
quotes availab l e
Also
co 1ns &amp; co 1n supplies for
sa fe Spreng Valley Trad1ng
Co Spnng Va ll ey Plaza

We pay cas h for late model
c lean used ca rs
Frenchtown Car Co
B 1ll Gene Johnson

446 0069
1 acre or less of land 1n
Gall! a or Mason county ap
prox halt way between

Gallipolis &amp; Huntrngton
Ca ll614 256 1755 after 5 30

NEEDED

NOW to fulfill r1 qu•rrrnen
ts of 1 C F Cr-rld•cat,on
Sa lary cornrnensurnte wlft1
tr a1n1nq and expcnencc
Ex t ens1ve
benef1fs
,n
c lu d•no
pa1d
hospttal zat,on rel•r emcn t
program no pena lt y s c k
l eave 3 week vacat•on to
star t more Con tact Per
sonnet Dnector 304 675 3230
or wnte Lak1n Hosp,tal

Lak 1n WV 25250
$250 00
weekly
( full y
ouaranteed) work1 n q part
or full t1m e at home
Week ly paychecks mailed
d1rectly to you fro m H ome
Off1ce every Wednesday
Start 1mmed,atel y No ex
per1ence
nec essary
Nat1ona l company Details
and app 11 ca t•on mailed
Send your name a nd ad
dress to Ame r• can Ftellty
Company H1nng Dept 77
1040 Lone Star Dr
N ew

Braunfels TX 78130

14 '2 'lcre fnrm good house
1nd bnrns Ca ll 446 2599
H ousP
comme r c•a l
qaraqP on ! 1 1 acre off
bypass
M dd leport
$ 17 500 La nd co ntra ct
99'} 6/67

H ou':.1 4 rooms nnd ba tll
Hrncl1rson
$11500
Ca ll
Or t t y SuP C pi nq 30-1 675
1070 or own\ 1 615 &lt;l 'l03
percen t
/\s&lt;;u nnt1 l1
lo~Hl
&lt;l b1 droom
'l full
l)rlltl&lt;; 11 1 1 le e tr• c 75x 100
ro rn1 r l ot I 304 887 21 19
I r 1clf or c;rl l
1nct om h l it
r o rn r&gt;r
lo t
brf r1 1 w~w
Ow nN w il l ll1

3 tJcd r oom 1
lJrtfhc:, br1 c k
bnscmcnf
30 &lt;l 675 772 3
lp I nnnce

HOU SE Mf' clel owbroc k Ad
ci t on 3 tJrdrooms family
r oom w tt1 flr1 plrt(( ce n
tr 11 n r b,1c;r mr nt phone
301675 l ) &lt;l l
]1

I7

s •z e
Rt 7
Oh
6 14

I ~ACRE S } ll O!Tlf'"&gt; H a rt
to r rt l11ct r n nlr "'r t wn tf'r
&amp; '&gt;f'Wf r twus1 t1olct qood s
30 I AB7 2965

Mobile Homes
I or S,l i C

T R I S l i\IE
MOBILE
HOMF S US E D MOBILE
HOMES CARS TRUCKS

M• scellnneou s

Pr vall P 1A nO tns tr ur t on
Su 111rne r c la ss s stMt nq
For ,nf orm(1 I 10n c ~111 30 &lt;l
675 71&lt;13

GALL POLI S
\ H EC K
OUR PRICE S CALL 446

197 1 Gram I n $90 E lr c tr 1c
llookup
for
l r11 lrr
1n
c lue! nq pair 100 1111p 30 &lt;l

CLEA N USED MOBILE
H OM ES
KESSEL S

7571

675 61JO
18

QUALITY

MOBILE

HOME SALES
4 Ml
WE ST GA LLIPOLIS RT
31 PHONE " 6 3868

Want ed to Do

Lnw n M ow nq no yr1rrt to
b q or sma l l RPI a b lr nnct
df'pf'ndrlblr
For ('&lt;;!lin 11(
cn ll &lt;l&lt;l6 3 159 AI IN 6PM 256

196 7
Tr ~1s l 1 co l lrcllo n &amp; llAul nq
Cnt l H6 &lt;l&lt;l80

Pr c1 n duu el Fo r sale or
rt n t
17~60
'l
bedroom
nob 1c r'om' w ttl ? lots
G l S ll f'~lt
rur 11 wnter
(IOSI tO (l f i t mts (a ll
l 16 1794
19 17
pi1C!

r"

V n tcHlf
w t h lire
&lt;;un roo t l o ts of ex
tns SB ROO I r ll (,-,II 61&lt;l
l.t5 ,',.10 )

W I I do bnby silt nq 1n my
llomf' Cn l l6113889755

I IJdr MH 11rr l u r n nat
q1&lt;; h\ nt o n pr v,l l f' lo t n
G1l l •pol "&gt; Cn l l l&lt;l6 l&lt;l09bc t
Wf'f' ll .t t o !PM

Rcs,cfent nl
Elrc t r .r
&amp;
mb 1nq
1'l year s ex
ppnen u all work qu1rnn
ked Ca ll61&lt;l 256 1748

w~1nlf'cl

10 do IJabys 11 nq
P t1one &lt;l&lt;l6 9550

C n pt ni P work rr pl r or
rcmoetel nq w~ll p,1 nel nq
ce il nq ld p clnd so mf Pcllf1 t
Ccll l 61&lt;l 99'1 '2759
PRIVATE

nu rs

H ou&lt;;f' tr 1•1( r 'l bClr
un
tur n
Cl1 lP
lnau r£ e~ t
R rl wf'll
131n k s SO h 10
Sl a t o n

Or

tr ad1
1/x60 mob1 lt
1101n£ for "!r or t ruck Cal l
116 &lt;l /9'}

fl l..l

30' 675 1367

17:x52
t urn
.n qood co ne!
6 ].j 31:l8 8688

Financ1.:H

pori
C1l l

n

l 'l 60 tr&lt;1t11 r
rx el len!
ro ncf t on C 111 &lt;l46 155 '2
Furn •s hcct n r co ndii•Oned
undrrp nn n q Sf' l up on lot
111 M dcllrport

Show
milk
dr1nker s a
product ft1at mt1y eas ly
ea rn you $80 000 w1th1n th e
ne~t year C~lll Robert Har
per 30&lt;l 675 1293 or 675 5868

Cusl o ll
bu tt
turn
1
bd roo1n rnot1 lr t1o me on
n nt cd r vf'r Ir on ! lot 1n
Ma so n All e lec ce nt AC
w D cp td porches m any
extras S tor ~1 qr bldq W1lh
work bc nc t1 A 1 co nd Mu st
sec t o apprPr•nfc JO&lt;l 773
5680

11

Bu s me ss
Opportun•IY

Bus1ni'SS or ":. for(' r oom
P~1 rk Cenlr&lt;1 1 Hot e l

21

21

Bus mess
Opportun.ty

Money to Loan

R EF INANCE or pur c ha se
your home 30 year fixed
r ,lte wva &amp; OhiO L eader
Mortq~1qe 77 E Stat e St
Athens Oh 6l&lt;l 591 30~1
Profess 1ona l
Serv1ces

1J

C&amp;L Bookkecp.nq
Bookkeep,nq &amp; tax serv ce
for d II 1y pes of ous 1nesses
Ce~ro l N ea l
446 3867
P1nno tun nq and repe~1r
Lane Dan.els Assoc,ate of
Brun,card' s
Ga ll poi1S
and Cunn1nqham s Athen s
742 19S I or 992 1082
Bu s nPsses Pol1l cn l union
made
1mpr,nt c d
ad
veri1S1nq
c;pec•all cs
S!1 ckers s qns mat c hes
Phone 30&lt;l 675 3334 H 0
Snm So merville

Real Blilte
Snlf'S Rf'pr esrn t ,vr
for
(' &lt;; fnbli Siw d I If' and llf'rlltll
,n e, uranc ~"' CO &lt;llpnny L 1v1nq
n or nenr Mf'O of Po ncroy
nnrt M•ddl cport
S~l lary
plus
comm ss 1on
F rs1
yr or e~lrn,nqs up to S20 000
CornpiPlr
trn 1 IH1
proqr~1~n
nnrl
fr l rl!JI
benefits For appo1n l ncnt
ca ll 614 592 '2073 or Sf'nc1
resume to P 0
Box
A th ensO h•o

no

WANTED

School s ln stru ct.on

K ara te t11 c ult .mn ft lfl se lf
df'if nee a l l pr v.1 tr l essons
M e n women B. c t1ddr e n
In str uc t o n lhru b let &lt; k be l l
Also nvn 1,10 P
K1ratL
uniforms pu c ttinq
e~nel
k 1Ck nq b~,q s "!net prot( c
l 1ve rqu, prn cn t
Jf'r r y
Lowe ry
&amp;
A&lt;:&gt;SOCicl t i'S
K ~Ha t r
S l ue! o
l&lt;l3
Burl nq t o n Rrl
Jnck son
Oh Cn ll 61 &lt;l 786 307 1

OLD FURNITURE

beds
1ron brass or wood K 11
chen c ubbards of al l t ypes
T abies round or square
Wood 1ce box es Old desk s
and bookcases W1 ll buy
complete household Gold
sliv er old money pocket
wa tches c ha1ns nnq s and
etc lnd1an Ar t1f acts of all
types Also buy.ng ba se ball
ca rd s Osby Mart•n 992

tn sur.Hlc e

tJ

SA NO Y A ND BEAVER In
sur a nee Co t 1':&gt; off ered
se rv CL'&gt; t or l 1r r 1ne,u ran cr
rov N ilC!l n G,l l l a Coun ty
t or
almost
rl
ce ntury
Fnrm tlom e and persona l
property
co vcraqf's nrr
availdble
t o meet
n
d1v dual
neccf"&gt;
Confcl CI
N ea l ln surn nee Aqcncy
nqe nt Ph one &lt;l&lt;l6 169&lt;l

446 3318

Po&lt;; 1 on "'v 1 1 11111 nd1 pt n
rtrn t
I v 111 1
wo rk r
Ml~ ' un 1 vf' 1'i 1 ll our".
PI r Wf't k (pr1r t 1• l1 work 1
Ou1 ld c(l i •O il&lt;, ll •nt• "&gt;0 ool
(j n lo nn
ln 1r rf "&gt; II (!
lnc l
k nowl t rtqf
111out p1 r&lt;;O n':.
TWO !1 n ly y~1rc! "&gt; 11f' I I tt 1 will
ll(ll l ~ll
rfltr
&amp; I'}Th 10 ? LUWt r I fll l of
d 1t •nn £If v1 top n1 nt1l cl &lt;;
HArlforrt WV wntc 11 for rlh I I f''-.
1 U&lt;; 1 I lVt
(lWil
c:, ,qns
f VI
( 'il
l rrlll""&gt;POdll tO 1
rt 11 rt n r ..,
r 1 qu.r cl
R1 &lt;,f)Oil'-. h l il t!'&gt; t o 1"&gt;':&gt; 1 1
Yf1RD snlr 15 17 Jf' flrr so n
p1 r&lt;;on
to
Pt Pl ens nnt B~lbY wo 1wn t 1nr11C lf) f)f rl
ll(l nt,1 n
nclr p1 nrlr 11
c to01( c:,
sit rt o &amp;
11 '&gt;C
I v.nq
n
ro' nun l y
F r 1rtn y 9 7
(/ '&gt; cfrncf'
llfl
llr1 nll •n
rt co r rf'&gt; Srl l lfY S4 00 plf
8 FAMILY
y1rd
'&gt;~l tl
t r
twr nl y u 111 '-. ( 701 p1 r
Plca Srln l
Vrtltl y
A p ~1 rl
n Ir
t r l vf I
r1 n
Tlf'n l &lt;, FrdrlY June lltll
h\lr SI 'llf'n 1
Av 1 I 111 I Ty

To

good country home 7 yrs
old 614 992 3408

II

YARD s~1 1 0
F r•Cil y &amp;
S~l urrt1y
70 Bu r ell lie Art
clt t1 0n
9 5 Kn1r Kn~lck"&gt;
c lolh •nq &amp; o ttwr
111 ns

446 802S or 446 8026

cropped Ca tt446 4656

2

Eml)loymenT

DIRECT

446 3159 or 2S6 1967 on the
6 garbage bags of cloth1ng

nervous makes me nervous

Homes for Sale

rwo st or y 3 bedroom full
t11 sr mrn l
$40 000 $7 000
down &amp; nss u tne loan of
JJ 000 At 8 1 Enq l1 sh Cour t
JO &lt;l 6/5 3585

Caffeme doesn t make nw ner 6022
vous but wurrytng about
whether C(jffem&lt;' wt ll makt• me

Hld

YARD sn 11
W ed nr sn,w
Thur sday &amp; Sn tur clny 7373
Mt vernon Bnby clo ttws

9

992-36 t 5 or 992-3325

Pt

Vol Emergency Squad

6234

NEW LISTING - Are you look•nq for ten acres of
land w1th a three bedroom one floor plan home?
Part baseme nt bea utiful l andscape' B lended rate
ava1 l able - S35,000

LISTING

or

(free Estimates)

NEW LISTING Th e loca t1on of th1 s three
bedroom two bath hom e wtll mean conven. enc e
for you - Mulberry Ave Ex tens.ve r emode l1nq
eq u1pped k1tchen ba se m en t garaqe assumable
low 1nter est loant $56 900

7

949 2801

-Addons and remodehng
-Roofing and gutter work
-~ncrete work
- Piumbmg and
eleclncal work

PH.992-2259

room ho rnr w1lh qarcten
spaces
Bath
a ll
util tll f'S cmd Ci'lrpor t
Ask1nq $9 800 00 but w ill
take less

sodrn~

free

RANDY'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

tot

for

3 II ti c

On ly $3 400 00
CO UNTRY
Ftne
o lder horne on qood hard
roncJ nra r r es t l1orn e 1n
A One
co nd•hon
3
bedrooms f am ily room
a ttach ed qaraqe and
workshop on lrlrqe lf've l

*limestone
Lrcensed &amp; Bonded

Utility Buildings

No Sunday Calls

General

3

N1qht crawlers $1 00 p er
doz Spr nq Valley TradtnQ
Co
Spr1ng Vnlley Plaza

Sues start from l0x24 "

949 2860

FINANCING

- One acre 1n Rut l a nd
Townshtp Rurrll Wi'l trr
and f' lectr•c nvi'l d nb lf'

Master Charge

~==:5§2~7~1~m~o~p§d§:~~=~~~~~3::=29=tf=c~ Va
ll ey
Trad
Va ll
ey P
l azaong
446Co
8025Spronq

est•mates,

~..~OMEROY LANDMARK
~
614-992 2181

Cali BtU Ward
At Ward's Keyboard
14464372 4 19tlc

;

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

SPECIAL- SPECIAL
20 cu. ft. CHEST FREEZER

Centr;'!l n1r nnd hen!
c1ty Lf il•t, rs basr •nent
st or'11 fix tur f's and n Par
shopp1nq
f or
only

NAYlORS RUN

backhoe
excava tmg
sept1c systems
A water, sewer
&amp; gas lrne s
• dump truck

"Beauttful, Custom
Bu11t Garages '

NF W LI S TIN G
OnC'
floor 'l brdroorn horrH'

OWNF R

•
•
•
•

Open 9 ttll 5
Closed Sun
Mon
PH 742-2081

M1sc Merchand1ce

NEW liSTING - 12x60
Just

3 3 tin

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

New and Used
PARTS

NF W LISTING

$20 000

PHON£ 7411003
NEW LISTING

Will se ll the tollow1ng equ1p tool s etc
D•t ch W•t c h Model B30 w / trall er ser II 328923 5 ft
rotovntor 6 It brush hoq rear mounted blade •n
suln t•n q mac h•ne automa t• c nailer Freeman front
loe~dcr
qenerators a1r compressor rad1a l saw
powe r saws motor saw oil h ea ters lawnmower
level and many o th er hand tools farm wagon
ChdSIS etc

1-(614)-992-3325

N OIICe IS hereby q1ven
that th e unders1gned 1n
tend s to make app l ,caf,on
to
the Common
Pleas
Cour t Probate D•v•s•on -of
Metgs County Oh•o for an
order to c han ge her name
t o Jont Lee Carr1ng t on
Sa 1d appllcafton will be
by pet 1f1on to be fil ed •n
sa •d Court on or a fter the

Phone 949 2293
or 949 2417

Truck, Auto and
HARLEY
DAVIDSON

SUNDAY, JUNE llat I 0 CLOCK PM
1478 Bloommgburg Rd - N ew Holland, Oh10
washmgton Court Hous e Oh10

VIRGIL B SR I~TO~
216 E 2nd Sl
Phone

PubliC Not1ce

Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

FRYE'S

BANKRUPTCY SALE CASE #2 82 00049

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR

Dozer &amp; backhoe ser
v1ce, water, sewer, pon
ds,
toundattons ,
reclamat1on

Yard Sa l e

FLE A Market Open a1r
Chil l cothe M&lt;1ll Shopp1nq
Center Buyer s And Sc ll r r
Wel com e June 11 17 13 N o
c loth nq S&lt;l lcs

5 21 1 mo

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

ESTIMATES

PUBLIC AUCTION

EAFOR

161 10 ltc

'l 26 tf c

8 20 ti c

Real Eatate - General

7

Middleport, Ohio

Ph 992 2174

PH. 992-6011

1982

E lien Rouqht
Clerk Trensurer
Villaqe ot Pomeroy

FREE

Public Sa l e
&amp; Auct1on

WANT ADS

of June 1982 at 7 00 PM

WELL tra1n Pd r eqtstercd
pet
found
1n
Plea sn nt
Vall e y Hospilnl park1nq
lot Tuesde~y am Seek1nq
when'
abouts
Call
Ho sp, tal Lab after 11 p m

276 Sycamore St.

Pomeroy Oh

Pt1onf'

614 992 5932

Call 992-6259

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

C. R. MASit
CONSTRUCTION

..........

.......... .

0

Pub l1 c Not1ce

NEW

o

~o

11 """'"no~"

o &lt; o mfqupm~n

o&lt; Drn

P''""

101- CJ........ .

Elo • I'"" "O

07-oHo&lt;•~&lt;• oo

fQ

- ~

I

I"'.,.,.,,.~ «&gt;

~eoo

1 ( om o no

II'• "'' oYio&lt;
I&lt; e~• """ Bu
"'
ll CD II. .
•oQ&lt;

.."'~ ···~""
.,.

"'' .,....... _,...,_,,
•... ,.. ..
.........
••-c••"
.
,__.
..... .. __
,,,__.,..,c;,_
--.......... ,., c_.,.
........
,,........... .---·
..-... ., ........
, ..-

oh o Po ' ' •

"'""
o " ""'""
u , , ""~~&lt;' •.,.
\OF&amp;Io•O'I-

I

.. '

o I•

...

' """ ,, ,..

1-o"' " ...... M""'"

~"'

Rcld1ator Spec •a l1 st
NATHAN B I GGS
35 Yrs Exper 1ence

lr1 sh se tt er

Lo s t Red
lr, s tl
Se tt er
f emale nbout 5 mo old
Flatswoods nre ~1
Childs
pet Answers to Cocoa !f
found c all 614 99'J 5265 or

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

From
th e Sma ll est
Heater Core to the
L&lt;trgest Rad1ator

3 7 tic

Found
4 20 ti c

COMPlETE
RADIATOR
SERV ICE

Lost and Found

992 2770

folloll!tng te.~pltoll&amp;e uclu"Ku

~ •• '

" "

) "'"'' ... o

ll•~-·

(

H

~t.~Od O f QVP''"

CUut{ied P"//B:I roN!r rJa,.

"',, "

~ ""'

' """"""&lt;&gt;&gt;o Gooo•

PURE Benql e part Beaql£
pup
German
Shcpt1rrd

6

Free Esttmates

For Appomtment
5 28 I mo

Caii742-319S

675 25 11

IRI SH Se tt er qood wat c h
doq 304 675 1897

247 3534

PH 992-3982

For atl your wt nng
needs,
furnaces
repatr servtce and
tnslatlalton.
Res1denttal
&amp; Commerctal

~~nt

III(D&lt;I'I~I

1 Bu• """ Oppo. u~
11M""" Jojl&lt;N~
)l" "''" ""' \.&lt;' . . .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

16 YEARS EXP
• Restdentta t
•Commerctal
•I ndustna 1
Ractne, Ohto

Ht1v e va ca ncy l or e lderly
Board nnd r oon Ancf l nun
dry
Rf'sonaiJie
6111997

Yr~r rl

304

JI

W II C&lt;l r c for 01C' f' ld er ly n
our twme fra,ncd and 1 x
per1rnced 61&lt;l 99'2 731&lt;l

servic~
Sn lr Junf II i'llld t'l
9 n 1n t II du sk Fo r cf r ~1 d 10
1n1rror s 11rf's whf'C Is Sid(
r "! Is stf'p bu,npcr Mnrk &lt;l
n1r cond stlOpvn c Br,qq s
3 hp Mot or Whf' e lbarrow
,nsulntcd
cab l e
t ~lrrn
WrlQOn onk 2~6xl'l s 1'l fl
Se M S I Sll1n q b011t 7 t1p
scnr s outbonr el t f f'tac kr I s
boat onrs
750 H oncla
motor c y cl,.
qo lf
c lub s
v Cff'O
qi'lme .-,
h OO V( r
swef'pPr o th er rn,s c t ools
d• c; l1e s c iOtllf' '&gt; Robu· f H 1l l
6 1&lt;l 9&lt;l9 70 13 Co rner of 511l
.lndE i rn Rac•nPOh o

S•tuat.on s Wanted

N eed m~11c to share tr a lcr
N 1cc pr1va te boat dock and
f1 ShtnQ
N ear
Rurcoon
Cr Lck Ccl l l61&lt;l '256 1763

Off 124 1n Ra c1n f' on Bronc!
way St Tt1ur s and Fr day
Larqc
wonwns
c lottws
rnef1 5 nnd c tlilrfr r n and
!Tli S(

26 or 28 n stokrr co e~l fur
na ce
W1th larq e co m
mer e ta I stok&lt; r fr ee t or
re1novnl
61 &lt;l 985 3979 or

pup 304 895 3885

SUMMER PERM
SPECIAL

~122mo pd

ASK MR. HAIG - Canadian Prime Minister points

O'Brien Electric
Service

t1

--*·"

Jone s
Boys
.n
Beh nd
Pomeroy
Cloth,nq
f or
c hildr en and adult s too l s
lot s of m1 sc 1terns

V1c Brow' s Jun t 10 nnrl II
9 to 4

614 985 9996

• Dryers • Freezers

LAFF A DAY

3 k1tten s 614 949 2786

female
anc1 one
5
ca t s I malr
1 hall 3okd
ld

o ~.o o

gas grille wtlh a 30 pound bottle of
gas had been taken A blue and
while pickup truck was seen at the
residence last week All Incidents
are under mvesttgation
A set of keys on a St Christopher
rmg engraved on the back, to H S
from Rev G J Carclch, were
found on Mam Street near Simons
Ptck A Pair The keys may be
ptcked up at the s heriff's depart
ment

Ph 949 2160 or 949 2322
4 20 tic

843 3171

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

r
~=========~~;::===~~~~====~~=======~
~S~tf~c~i lens
FOR THE

Windshield vandalism investigated
When he returned Wednesday
morning the nght front ttre had
been cut, both wtper blades pulled
off one fog light had been tom off
and the other one damaged Three
people were reporiedly seen run
nlng m the area a t approximately
12 30 a m
Louts Adams Rt 2 Racine re
ported Tuesday everung that when
he returned home from a three
week vacation he discovered that
two lawn c hatrs a love seat and a

TOM HOSKINS

2 ktftens I male black
wh1te 1 fema le Ca i1 CO

e-9

The Dotly Sentmei-Pa

Yard Sale

Half Elkhound 5 mC'II es T o
qood home 614 985 3558

4

lo~•o

John A Jeffers Rt I Miners
vtlle reported Wednesday evenmg
that sometime during the day his
pickup truck whic h was parked
near Memory Gardens has the
windshield ch tpped in five places
and 12 chips on the hood It is be
lleved that rocks somehow dam
aged the vehicle

And Home Mamtenilnce
• Roofmg of all types
e S1dtng
• Remodelmg
• Free est1 m ates
• 20 Y rs expenence

G ev eaway

4

'CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

St Rt !24 Pomeroy, OH

Parents may consider early entry
Meigs County child ren who are
developing raptdly well above
thetr age level may be considered
for early e nt ry Into kindergarten
and the first grade
Parents may obta m Information
by ca!Ung the Metgs County Super
lntendent of Schools office 992 3883
or 992 5592 or by stopping by the
office to ptck up an mformatwn bro-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohto

197 0 G r f'qO ry
1 '2~65
7
;el r oo m
11 r co nd
Iron!
parr h $5 000
Lo t
also
rlVfl l(lblr '!&gt;50 61 &lt;l 99'} 6093
1

2 be(lr oom Scll ulll Mob If'
Homf' n Rac,nc Ca l l 61&lt;l

949 1716
1980 J be! room
l&lt;lx70
mob 1lr 110mt L .1 roc room
addcct w 1ltl woodburncr
$12 BOO Ownrr w I I r ent 2
ncr f' S t o tt1c buyer !hal
ltomf' s s1 tt net on 614 9&lt;l9
1860
Lnrqt
s e l e c t on
of
nr rownrd m ob l c hon1es
Month ot JunP on nil hom es
pr.cect nvr&gt;r $5 000 Your
ell a ce of $500 rebatr or f•e
clown sa ndv nylsk rl1nq n
stn l led A ll hom es o~ un t s
trncl ed n on new homes
"&gt;O ld by th s d en1er sh1p
Nnm e
ancJ
addres s of
prev o us
o wner
upon
re que st K nq sbury 1100 E
Man Sl Po m eroy 61&lt;l 99'2

7034
31

Homes for Sa le

A house on 1/ 'l acrP lot o n
Bulaville Portr&gt;r Rd CCIII
446 4737

ITs GETTIN G LATE but
you c an s till have e1 home of
your own ,f you earn bet
ween $9 000 and $15 000 a
year 2126 house s will be
built .n the state of Oh10 un
der
farm
home rural
hous•ng
proqram
the
rema•nder of 1982 These
homes will be f1nan ced
w1 th no down payment and
payments will be low as
$125 per month See our
model near the P1c Pac
Market on RT
50
W
Athens or ca ll 992 7034 for
mfo
K 1ngsb ur y H omes
1100 E Ma•n St Pomeroy

Oh
3
bd room
house
1n
Pomeroy
v•nyl
S1d 1ng
N 1ce loca t•on
f 1replace
Pr1ced t o se ll $24 000 614

1 '2~60

19 71 StM 2 bedroom
r ro ndii •O nf r por c h &amp; un
cfrrp nn nq
F ur n Sll cd
J\«,k,nq $5 000 61&lt;l 99, 7181
1

USEO MOBIL E
5761711

HOME

MOBIL E HOMES MOVED
Ltcrnscd &amp;
30&lt;l S76 '27 11

nsun d

Cnll

Two
bl'droorn
mob1le
horne 10 x 60 30&lt;l 675 l&lt;l52
198'2 N as t1ua 14 It x 70 It
rnoblle ho'Tle 7 II x 'lO It
Expando
2 bedroom
7
baths f1r ep la ce all elec
fr• c 304 576 2706

1973

VICTOR IAN

\4 x65

furn1shed
underpenned
woodburnmg f1replace ex
tra n1ce ready for 1m
med•ate possess•on
614

446 7336 304 675 4544

992 7446

MOBILE HOME FOR
RENT WIT H OPT ION TO

2 homes on 11h acre
3bd room
1 1 bd room
Cho1ce locafton Rt 33 Har

BUY se ttmg on n• ce lot
hall way between Hun
t1ngton &amp; Pt Pl easan t 304

!lord W Va 304 882 2965

576 2711

33
Farms for Sale
3 bd room br•ck fireplace
ba seme nt, garage,
one
28 ACRE farm 420 lb
acre Kyger Creek h1gh
tobacco a llotm ent, runnmg
sc hool d 1stnct F1rst ttme
1water year round $10 500
offered for sa le To see ca ll

245 9210or614 992 3905

Phone 304 67S 6851

�10- The
33

Sentinel

Far m s for Sa le

rf''l10dlf'CI

k 1I Chen ,

2

E I7WCA 7ION
WILL So:::JN

PAY OFF····

54

"THE 61&amp; COM~IES H.AVE
S!'EN O~~ERIN&amp; ME A

WOW. 1 JUNIOR's

p r 1c(' d t o se ll 304 895 3083

35

54

They'll Do It Every Time

:,o Acrf' lnrm. 3 bedroom
h ouse
W1lh
spac,ous
c.. tockl·d ponds. n1 cc barn.

$ .55,0Xl STAI&lt;TIN@
. . . . . . . 5:4LARY·---·-----.~;:.'j

7

Lo t s &amp; Acreage

Ca ll

Misc . Merchandice

Pla sti c Septi c Tank s. State
and county approved . 1,000
gal . tank, pri ce $340 . Other
si zes in stoc k , haul in your
pickup tru c k . Call 61-4 ·286·

5930, Ja c kson , Oh . RON
EVAN S E NT E RPRI SE S

Pr1 Cf' r f'clucf'cl 2 l ots wilh
rurcl l Wrl fe r c lose to Clfy
lillliiS , i'L450 00

446

197 5 Case 450, do ze r
tra c tor , 1.800 hr s .. ve ry
good cond _, $ 14 ,900 Ca ll

1/94
F-or '&gt;.1 11' orw ,1nd h ,l l l ncrf'S
rnort'
o r
lt•ss,
il P

446 4537 .

prolurll,llcly

RATLIFF 'S

600

II

rood

fronldqt·
on
Corn
CP riiN po,nt Rd ne.1r Cr n

t, •rpoul l

SJ .OOO 00

Phont•

M lllf'llt"·, ) 7) clUt'S
rl c u•&lt;, F-lrll lo l ( ily Sr

to

5

llOOI
Cli&lt;, l r lc I Cll l 61·1 )79 2 196
fW O rl c rP lo t &lt;, ISO II

t ro nt,1q r•.

c l!y

r ond

w,l f r r,

twh1n0 8.\ Lurnht · r c,lll 304
67S 6873 A/'l 3618

~

~

P OO L CE N

T E R Pool s sa le, suppli es &amp;
in stall a tion . 403 2nd _ Av e.,
G allipoli s, Oh
Ca ll 446
6579 . In q r oun d Ablo ve
qround

68/ 694·1

r

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

174 pi eces
b row n un
derpinning f or a mobil e
hom e used ju st I yea r . A
seven &amp; one ha lf f ee t by 58
inch e W1de multr co lor ed ,
braid ed oval ru g Whit e
uniform s {p a nt surt s} thr ee
diff er ent st yl es, s1zes 9 10 .
Call ;~ It e r 4PM , 446 -3065.

lt&lt;' ,lnclU(J
/1. C R
, r look, nq
il [&amp; 0111 ov1
11 Rrverc,
ttl 1
1

, or por,ltcc1 pr1cf· r1•r 1ur ret.
.J\l.J 61 ,; 1711

Hornt •&lt;, l or Rf'nL LP,l'&gt;t' or
Ldnd c on tr d c l 1n town or

Pl ·,-ll l y ,

.l.l6

St r·ou t

(, 111

011

(IVl'( ,

twau ! lf u t v ii'W , pr,v,lcy .
$775 pr'r rno plus clr•po ::, il
(d ll ·14fl 49')'} ,l fl rr 5 30 or
Wt'f'kel~ ' fl"&gt;

7 BNJroom H ou&lt;,t• d t 1/0 ] r-fl
Ave Gos Hf'd l $735 00 rr1o
ptu-. deposll C111 .146 36J3.
The W t'lf'lll i"Hl Aqr·ncy
7 Bcdroon1 Hom f' wt Ol
bcl"&gt;f'lllt•nl on Lower R tvf' r
Ret OvPr d e rt· S/60 mo
C.ll l 4·1fl ]643 Ti lt' W1'1PIT 1 iln
A qt ·nr 'I
I tJt rl IHJlJ &lt;., t• ,n h' 10 (, r &lt;1nrtr·

Ccl l t -1.t0 Ol'i7
P n mt •r o r 'J
IHI roo ·n
rr•r n (l(lt·lvcl
.l()fl
Sprillll
C.trpc l f'fl &lt;-,r·ru r 1! 1 c lr·po~,t
SIOO R•·n t SlY~ ( &lt;~ r l cl ll ••r 6
1J 111 9Y 'J ')'}HH

j

llfl 1011111

E It
ApM i men t N o
5.
c,p c_ oncl fl oor
Renq and
l lr'posr t
Poy your own
uld l l lf''&gt; Ael ults, no pe ts
446 0957

0008

l lULJ&lt;,~ •

I

51

p f'l &lt;; ((Ill 446 393/

H ou\es f or Re n t

( Oun lr y

A partm ent
for R ent

ApM i mrn t . 2 bdr. unl , no

Re nTals
41

44

llO tJ'-&gt; 1

r•· rt o r o r&lt;~ll' c l

ili•W if'y

r &lt;~ rpP I IIl l/

$3110 JWr fl10 1l ll ' '.t ovr· ,tnrl
r ··t r 1q
tur11
1 ,c~rde rwr
turn P..11h d !l rt
l._j,u·,HII'
N H r· lor ,1l1llfl D· pO&lt;-,it F 1rl'
pi,H 1 .II II i f.1111 11 { r·oorn 6 1•1
99 ) ?31'1 7

F urn ,c, hrcl E fli c lf'llCy. $135
607 Seco nd Utd 1! 1eS p d
S1nqle perso n Share ba U1
.146 4416 alt er 7 p m
Fur n,shr&gt; cl Apt, 2 BR. 243
J ,lc k so n
P 1kP
$220
Utliil 1f'S Pel 446 4416 alt er 7
pm

ri l I IH · &gt;J\'I J()Il ' 11•'11 111 1 RrOrld
w,1y
llr
r .1 11
lr·,llorcts
R1•,ll I {
Nr•w llnu ·~ ~ · 11 1 ) yr,H u'&gt;r· . n o
p ,.~c, '!.115 •n n n t h r lu&lt;, dr·p
,tnd r·l'fl ·r1·11r , .•, (d l l 9Q'}
/8.1I

N 1r t' I IJII ro11rn llOU '-&gt;1' 111
M 1rldlt ' PIJ' I
(t11iflr0 n
.-l ll nwt·o ri O IJI'I'. r f' c,onn t·h'
rr ·rll pip '," ' ' ur ,j r cif'p 6 1·1
99) LJ I'-1 ! 'I t. t.t 'N) / 101
I h··(lr(}(JIII 11 01111 ', \V oltl cp
11011 to buy '1.700 mon th rent
$100 &lt;;pru ril y ctepos il . 80/
3rrl Sl Nt 'W H,wf'n . WV
30·1 88 2 1-13·1
FOUR roor11
Conlry. $130
p i U"&gt; Cll'PO'&gt; !I

(r:J mp
rwr mon H1.
304 675 1371 ,

~l OU&lt;;I ',

30J6753BI7

Unlur n,c, twd .-1n t for re nt rn
Crow n C 1l y Ca l l 6 14 ?56
6·195

7

b dr
.1pt
/nd
Ave .
Ca l l rno l r&lt;; N o pe l s Cal l
.146 487 .1

P ~rrt 1 rt l ly
l urn,s h cd
roor-n&lt;; ,1nct IJnth 99? 5908

4

Fur n,c, hf' el .-1pt 5 room s and
IJ .-l tll
No pets
Dcpos d
r cqu ,rrfl
Call n it er 12
noon 61 •I 99? 7937
twefroo• n
,lpar l mpn t
Vt•ry n1rL'
N o c l11l dr f'n
S 1'iO m on tt1 614 997 5880

42

Mob il e Hom es
fo r Re nt

Mli!)l l•· IH11Tl• ' t(tr 1r·n t C.-Il l
·1·16 11(1 1
M o tJil f' HO!l lf' , E urf'krl,
Belr , turn r l vt·rfro nl lot.
re t &amp; depoe, II Adu ~t s, S100
rno I 6-lJ /61l4
M orJP l n 1/:.: 60 . JIJrlr, t ur n
rnobtll·
t10 n 1e
Conv
IO C.-1 11 011 Src ciPP Cl l l elf
ter 5. 446 fi55R
2 bd 1110 1) 111· ~ 1 ornr' below
F ur·d . d !.?(•f &amp; ctcp req
(,1116 1·1 756 i'r/}
Furn ,c, h!•fJ 7 l)(lr m0b1 IC
ho•ne on Boh Mc Co rm 1c k
RcJ. no pete,, S160 pN mo,
SSOtlf'p L11~44636 1 7
N1rf' c lc&gt;an mob il e twme,
n('lt qn s, no pets. adul ts
only Cal l 6 14 367 7438
'}bedroom I C'I II N 1n Ra c 1ne
for rent $ 100 Depo stl . $200
rnon l h
U lil l ti('S no t 1n
eluded 6 14 9.-19 7726
2 bd room lurn ,shccl trn dc r
ott Rt 7, 6 rn ii PS I rom
Pomeroy , t rce7f'r r""tnd ex
tra stor nqe spa ce $ 190
plus u t llrlle s nncl lawn c are.
$ 150 dc po srl 614 985 3949 .

$230. m o nlh. 304 67 5 6730.
Two bedr oo m m obil e hom e
i n N ew H ave n , adult s onl ·~,
no pe ts, 304 -6 75· 1452 aff er 5.
TW O bedroom unfur ni shed
$1 50 p e r
month plu s
deposi t . Ca mp Conl e y, 304 ·

675 1371 ,304 675 381 2.

APART M E N 1
i ll
P l!',lSdnl. 6 14 446 827 1

LAR C- [

Onr beet room apar t rnf'n l ,
p,l rl lcllly lurn, &lt;; ll Pd tn Hen
fl 1·rson Pirone 304 675 1972
A pM t men t s, t ur n1 shed an d
unturn,c;tw cl
Rf' l c r enccs

304 675 1365
ONE
bf'ctroom
un
fur n rc,tw ct, $175 per month ,
pl us ctepos ,t
Ga lli pO li S
F1·rry WV 30 4 675 137 1. 675

38 17

446 0372
30 tn
r,1nqe,
pr ox 5
446 0307

Ge nNil l E lec tri C
qo ld 1n co lor . ap
y r s ol d, $ 125 Ca ll
or 614 756 9367

Go lf! &amp; turqu oise l1vr n q
r oom co u c t1 H a r d rock
map le co ff ee tab le. Ca ll
446 222'}
Whirl poo l Supr em e 70 c op
pe r to ne w asher a nd el ec t ic
drye r . $7 00 f or
b o th
Kf' I VIIl rt t or
p or t
di sh
was her , $75 CC'I I! 446 -7930
or6 14 3792 11 4
M ay t ~1g

aut o w as her and
F rr q1d a 1r e m ulti
te rn
pera tur e dry er _ E ac h A 1
mec ll an,ca lly , $90 eac h
qu.1ra nt eed Cal! 614 256

120 7

FUR NI SHED apa rtm en t.
,l dul ts, r losf' to Hos p1t a l,

304 67 5 7257
Furn1 sh ed Room s

U SE D

FUR

NITUR E L1vinq r oom suite
$65, twin bed s $7 5, che st
$30. oa k br eakfa st se t $65,
elec tr1 c hot wat er heater
$50. qa s r a ng e $75, tan $10 ,
hos pital bed $100 . rock e r

$20 Ca/1614 367 0637 .

SLEE P IN G ROO M S an d
I1 CJhl trousc k ecp rng npt .,
PMk Crn tr a l Ho tel

E lcc tr tc st ov e. 304 882 3434

F lJ rn1s ~wd

22, 500 B ru a ir conditioner.
whrt e elec trr c stov e, qood
co ndrtion 304 -675 -3694 ·

Room
$ 125.
u t 111t1 r' S pa1 d , 919 2nd ave ..
Gal li pOl iS
S1 nq le rna le,
c, ~ lrlrf' bC'I th Co l i &lt;146 441 6 af
IN /PM

B E MCO maftr ess es or box
spr rng s, full or twin, $58 _ 6
P1 ece Naugahyde heavy
2 Iliff' hedr ooms f or r ent wood lrvinq room suite
w d h new bed r oom su1te s. 1 $69ti Pillow arm sofa &amp;
rn, ou t 141 , $25 per wee k , cha 1r $37 5 Roll top desk,
$.-10 wt ltl use ot k1 tc hen. Ca ll dark &amp; tiqht, $189 . Bunk
446 1896
bed s, complete,
include
m a ttr ess, $199 Comp lete
Room s wr th coo k,n q, c abl e, w a ter bed shop with 10
d l r, $40 a w ee k . 304 77 3 bedroom suite s on display,
starting pri c e $299 . up to
5651
$2500 . B1g daddy c oc ktail &amp;
end tabl es $50 . Wa ll -A-Way
46
Spa ce for Rent
recl iners $169 . and up _ La COU NT RY MOBI LE Hom e Z Boy r ec liner s in stock .
Pc1rk , Rou te 33. No rth of
Po nwroy La r qe l ot s Ca ll
997 7&lt;179
Sm n ll
t ra il e r
s p aces
Mnson 30 4 77 3 56 51
47

Wanted to R ent

49

For Lease

U n furn m od ern 2 bdr apt .
for lea se ov erlookin g city
por k $175 permo _ Call 446 -

1819

Household Goods

G OOD

U SE D

AP

PLI A N C ES
washers,
dryer s,
refrigerators,
rang es .
Skagg s
Ap
plian ces, Upper River Rd .,
bes ide Ston e Crest MoteL

446 7398
1h
pri ce , 3 c ubic foot
refrig erator, with separate
fr eez er sec tion . 1 year old .
$175 . Perfect for dorm
room or camper . Call 304·

,,· tr S ! lou nq er w rt h hea ter
&amp; v1 br a tor, a lmost new

&amp; 7 p c. dinett set s, studio

cou ch &amp; c hair, bedroom
suite Hollywood style, bunk
beds, g la ss front book
c ases Flair Furniture &amp;
Design G a lli poli s Ferry,

!S WAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;

-

Misc. Merchandice - · - - - -- -

1. 3" pipe c lothes line posts
with hardware, $50 .00 pr . 2.
Por ch swings with frames
of diff er ent types , $70.00 to

100 .00 m a de of 2" pipe. 3

Fo r Sa le
Spec ral One
Week Only , full used se t of
Ptn g golf cl ub s, 2 ir on thru
pit c hi ng w ed qe , 1 3 4 5
wood s, in c lud es head gea r
&amp; Burton bag s. Inquire a t
Sportabout, 248 Seco n d
A ve, Gallipoli s, 446 0093 .

9x 12 OVAL br a ided rug ,
co l o r e d
TV ,
dt s h
w &lt;'l sher. window arr con
d 1I1 0ner.
w alkrng togging
exe r c , se r
a nd
other
house hold 1fem s Ca ll 304

675 3100
55

Budding Supplie s

Bulld1ng m a terial s b lock,
bn ck . se wer p1pes, wtn
dow s, lintel s, e tc. Claud e
W i nt er s, Ri o G rand e, 0 .

Take ov er pay ment s of
$59.50 per month . 4'x 8'
lla shin q arrows ig n Com
plet e w / new bulb s &amp; le t
ter s Cut! iff si qns . Toll fr ee

PRI CE'S

a bo uf

R E DUC E D

M e tal shee t's flat porc elin
enam el coated , will nail ,
won't ru st Ex . materr a l all
ty pes of bui!dinq 20 24
qaug e 4'x 8' $7 .00, 4'x 10'

$800, 4' x 12' $960 4'x odd
$5 00 Tupper s Pl a in s, Oh io

Ba qs of qood u sed c lo thrn q
&lt;1 nd turr11tur e Ca ll 446 9580

Pet s for Sale

56

Used sof a. to vesea t . cha 1r .
u se d blu e ca r pe t va n ou s
srz es, u se d si de b y s1de
r elr1 gerat or , butlf in qas
o ven, qas coo k top Ca ll
Co rb1n &amp; Snyder F u rn1 1ure.
446 1171
Appro x . 50 f ee t 4 112 If
cha 1n link fe nce, 3 112 It
qat e &amp; hi!rd w ar e, $60 .00
Ca ll446 7554 aft er 6
Carpent er foo ls, saw d r , tl s,
lot s of tool s. 1 Toqq lc bur g
n a nny
q oat
R a bbit s
Caltt ornr a, New Ze land ,
and c h, cken s_ Ant,qu e f u r
nitur e and o ther 1fems to
num erou s to m ent ion Ca ll

614 446 7920

C h ow
puppr es.
CF A
H1m a la y an, Per sran and
Stam PSI' k1tt ens Ca ll 446
3844 alter 4 p . m

HI LLCRES T

KE NN E L

Boa r d inq all br eeds, c lean
tndoor outdoor
fa c llrti es
A lso A K C Reg
Dober
mans C&lt;1 11446 77 95

BRI AR P ATC H KE NN E LS
Boardin q and g rooming
AKC
Go rdon
se tter s,
E n q l, sh Coc k er Spanr els

Ca l/614 388 9790
POOD LE

G ROOMIN G

Call Judy Ta yl or at614 367

I Moped $275, l1k c npw
Cam er as Ca ll446 4668

&lt;1 m apl e bar s tool s w1th ru st
le a th er c usht ons. l1k e new.

$200 Call 446 4595
2 con sol e TV' s b o th need
r eparr $30 e ac h CCI II 614

E le c tr1 c stainl ess
comm er c ra l st ac king
&amp; I grill w ith bottom
Call 614 24 5 -9428

DR AGO NWYND
CA T
TE RY
KE NN E L AKC

s tee l
ov en s
oven
aft e r

5.00PM
Gasoline nnQ heating fu el
Call Ex ce lsior Oil Com

pany 614992 2205.
Harve st go ld G E r efriq
$150 . Kelvinat or
el ec t
range . Harves t qotd . 15 mo

old $375. c all614 882 3168
Ftr e wood
tor
s ale
Deliver ed now or at a later

For appt 614 992 7342 .
POOD LE

pup s ,

AKC

reqi ster ed No Chec k s, 304 -

895 3958
B ea utiful
Al a skian
Mal emut e 304 675 -7649
p1g s .
birds,
c hi cken s, fres h eqgs, 304

895 3486

$30
Kenmor e
automati c
washer
$65 .
Maytag
washer $85 . 614 742 2352

board beds $35, bookcases,
smokers, Hoover spin dry
washer,
wringer
type
washers, hutch, coal &amp;
wood heaters, televisions,
fan s, new tools of a ll kindS,
v ari ety of si l ver stone cook -

ware . Ca ll446·3159.
54

Misc. Merchandice

GAS cook stove, 304·675·
1845.

1974

58

Mu stan g ,

qood

con

dition . 304 576 2305.
BRONZ E

M o nJ e

Carlo , in ex cell ent con
dition, atr c ondittoned ,

$1400.00 304·675· 2997
1978 MERCURY

Bobcal ,

station wagon , V6 engine ,
automati c, pow er steering,
ex cellent condition, $2 500

MF 3 baler , good condition.

304 675 3312 .

$1200 . 3046752377 .
72
HAY e levator, 24', $150 .00 .
Hay conv e yor sy stem , 56 ft .

$600 .00. 304 675 1816.
63

Truck ' s tor Sale

1979 Ford F250 ' • T

HD

Pickup, V ·8, p.s .• p .b .. air ,
automati c. Good condition
446 2 ~ I.

livestock

2 Poll ed Her eford cows
with calves, good stock .

Call after 5:30, 6142459153

1972 Ford
pickup,
P
steering. P . brak es, A(,
r adio, ov erload ed spring s,
c amper special, v ery littl e
ru st , look s r ea l qood
Pri c ed tor quick sale . Call
446 -1052 aft er 5: 00 w ee k
day . Call anytime w ee k en -

ds
Req is tered and grad e hor ·
ses. e xce ll ent 4-H proiect
E ngli sh and western sad
dies
e v e rything
1maginable in hor se equip·
m ent and suppli es, a lso
ridinq les sons and trail
rid es and horse training .
Ruth Reeve s, Hoof Hollow

1977 Datsun Kin g cab run s
qood , and good shape,

$1 ,850 Call614 367 0691

L MEl DOM MIGUEL'"

Younq brown laying hens

614·992 7713 .

1975 Datsun 4 speed, 2 door

hard top , $1 ,275 Call 446
1896
1972 Chevy pickup $300.00 ,
1974 Ford Gran Torino

$500.00 Call304·576 2174 af
fer 5: 30 p _m

Stx y ear old mare, 1100 l b s,
w ell
trained,
good for
beginer . Phone 304 -576 -

Phone 614 992 7206 after 5
pm

old . 1100 lbs . gentle, 304
576 2728

73

CAPTAIN ST EE MER Ca r
pet Cleanin g f eatur ed by
Hclff elt B r os ther s Custom
Carpet s. Fr ee es tim a tes .

73 JEEP Commando, 4
WH. Hi -Lo rg, auto hub s, 6
c yl ,
s td .
M ec h
OK ,

400 ba les str aw, $1.25bale,
Morgan Woodlawn Farm,

71

Ca ll614 388 976 2

Report
News
&amp;I Cl2J Muppet Show
0 ill You Asked For It
ffi Another Ute
(1) ESPN Sports Center
1Il Andy Griffith
(]) 0 (]) Family Feud
CD Laverne and Shirley
CIJ Business Report

0 (]) Tic
CIJ ITI)

7:30

CHRI S TIAN 'S
C ON
STRUCTION .
Con s tr ,
r oofinq , srding , spout in g,
tenci nq , paintinq . r epair s &amp;
c leanin g.
446 2000 , c all
befor e 8 and a ft er 5·30

®

ANNIE

OOLD ON! YOU OON'T HAVE A

R
Paint Ce nt er
C &amp;
Profe ss ro n a l
p a ,nt e r s,
c om m e r c ial and r es iden
tiat. in sured . 41 Court St ..
Galltpo ti s, 446 9458 , no an
sw er 446 17 58.

PLACE TO 5TAY, 00 YOU'?! YOU
FIGURE ON HANGIN6 AR,()(JND
OOTGIDE UNTIL '!OUR 006 IG
TUI?.NED IN, R.IQHT?

GLASS

TINTING

1975 Cutlass Supreme, 2
dr ., a ir , PS, PB, tape deck,
47,000,
good
tires,
ex
ceptiona l car. $2,000. Call

446 0767 after 6.

(1)

Game 11
([)

M1ndy . IAI

CD Penn Zoil

TH' PEACE CONFERENCE
GO OKAY?

1979 Star Craft 15 ft. tri
haul, fish &amp; ski boat, red &amp;
white metallic. 80 HP M er ·
cury with ex tr as. Ex. cond .

1971 Harley Davi son Super

g lide. Ca ll446·9582 .
1977 Honda Go ldwing, full
dress . New : faring, sadd le
bags, lugg age rack, ad iu stab le sissy bar, engine
guards and road pegs . Ex ·
cellent cond. $2,995 firm

Ca ll 614·9922381 9·4 week
1981 Black Suzuki 450L
Good cond . 614·992·2570

Taylor, 446·8692 or 614·245
59

For Sale or Trade

For sa le 79 VW station
wagon, 4 dr., AT, air, ex c.

1978 Kawasaki KZ 400, ex ·

cond . Ca ll446·2300.

ce ll ent s hape, 304· 773·5823.

1976 Trans Am 1 owner,
good cond , $2,950. Ca ll 446 ·

1977 Kawasaki KZ 900 and

7383 .
1981 Horizon, 4 door, auto.,
p.s., p .b ., stereo and more .
Low
mileage.
Accept

trade . 614·992·3798 .
Fore mans Used Cars ·
Langsville
Ohio.
79
MUstang. 76 Elite. 75
Granada. 75 Mercury
Station Wagon. Phone 614·

742·2734.

1970 Nova 4 speed. 304·675·
1577 or 675·2714.
75

It's onl11 a
few blocks!
I can walk

,, y, r oo
c on cre te

itfaster!

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Phon C' 446 -3888 or 446 4477

WINNIE
Excavatmg

WH'f. 5HE WENT OUT

WITH EVERY TOM,

Ga llipolis Diversified Con
st . Co . Cu stom doz er &amp;
backhoe work
Special
farm rate s. Call u s for fr ee
es timates . 4-46 -4440

li'ICK ANI/ HARRY
AROUNC7... WHILE YOU
WERE MISSING ALL.
THOSE YEARS/

For water lin es, sewer
lines, se pti c tank s or leaky
baseme nts ca ll Hayman
The Hoeman . 614-992 ·2618 .

81LL, I
/MF'toNE YOU-·

PON'T ~55 UP THIS
OPFI?RTUNITY TO

Lawren ce
Siden stricker
Ba ckhoe ServiC e. Call 675 ·

ASSU'tiE YOUR RIGHT·
FUL PLACE IN THE
BUSI

5580

~'?to_!~ f~r . Sa.le

1978

Starcraft

Cruiser, cabin sleeps two.
Swim
platform,
new

upholstery, 72 gal. tank.
Excellent cond . Great for
sk iing or camping, $8,800.

614·992 · 2381

9

to

ter 5 week-days.

stock .
197.2 Volkeswagen beetle,
rough runs great, needs
automatic
stick
tran ·
smission work. Joe, 304-

675·6690

or

614·992·2216,

even ings.

CARS $200. TRUCKS $150,
Available at local govern·
ment sales. Call (refundable) 1·714·569·0241 Ext.
1855 tor directory that
shows you how to purchase.
24 hrs,

BARNEY

SEWING . Mach ine repair s,
service . Authorized Stnqcr
Sa les &amp; Servi c e Sharpen
Sc issors . Fabrr c St10p ,
Pomeroy . 992 -2284 .
85

ALL THAT

NO 'COUNT
BROTHER OF
\fOR'N DOES

General Hnuling

15

AN' WHEN
HE AIN'T
EATIN'··

--HE'S
SLEEPII\/'

Hanshaws Used
Lucas
Lane,

Tires .
Point

Pleasant. 304·675·7360.

EAT!!

We'll do it . Call 446·3159 or
61056 · 1967 alter 6.
Now Hautinq limestone fill
dirt -top soii ·Qrave l Free
est im ates.
Ca ll 614 ·367 -

CAR roof top carrier. Beige
vinyl, provides 12 cubic
feel added storage tor
luggage. $30. call 304·675·
2802 after 4.
77 _ ____

Aut~ ~pair

. __

Ouallly Autobody &amp; Paint
work. Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446·1968.

PEANUTS

JIMS Water Service . Ca ll

Jim Lanier, 304·675·7397 .

87

Upholst_ery

'·

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis .

446· 7833 or 446· 1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
675·4154.

I,

WELL, YOU ASKED FOR
IT, AND I DID IT...
I FOUND YOU A
,. BEANBAG CAMP II
'

NIGHTSTANI7
'VRAWER/

Kanawha County On
the Une
ITI) Dollyl
10:30 ffi Sing out America
ITI) Mattars of Ufa &amp;
Death
11 :00 0 ill (l) &amp;I Cl2l News
ill MOVIE: 'Continental
Divide'
ffi Nashville RFD
(1) ESPN Sports Center
(J) All In the Family
Cll News/Sports/Weather
CIJ Dick Cavett
(jJ) H ltchcock
11 :30 0 ill Cll Tonlght Show
Johnny is joined by Dana
Hill and Tonv Bennett. (60

Need something haul ed
iiWay or sornethinq moved?

HAULING-Limestone, qra ·
ve l, sand . Ph. 742· 2505 .

OH ••. MY /fEART/
QUICK... GET ME
THE PILLS IN MY

CIJ

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

··--· - · - -- - - --·· ·

I]) &amp;I &lt;121 Bosom Buddies
(]) Good Neighbors
(fj) Media Probes 'Polrtlcal
Spots .· This program offers a humorous primer to
the techniques used by to day's political med1a mak ers. IClosed Captioned)
9 :00 0
ill ffi Diff' rent
Strokes Arnold prepares
for his first ·real ' date . (R)
!Closed-Captioned)
(]) MOVIE: 'A Fistful of
Dynamite'
ffi 700 Club
(]) &amp;I &lt;121 Barney Miller
Barney and h1s men try to
cope with a man who at tempts suicide so his fa inily
will
collect
the
1nsurance .
0 (]) ®I NBA Basketball
Championship Game #7 :
los Angeles at Philadel phia If the 7th game is not
necessary, alt ernate programm ing w ill be aired . (2
hrs ., 30 min I
(]J To the Manor Born
® Sneak Previews Frlm
hosts Roger Ebert and
Gene Siske l give v1ewer s
of
their
assessm ent s
what's flying and what ' s
flopping at local movre
theatres .
9:30 0 ill Cll Gimme A Break
Julie takes Katie ·s college
entrance exam. (R)
ill On location: Robert
Klein at Yale Robert Klein
returns to his alma mater
with his new nightclub act .
(]) &amp;I ~ Taxi Louie pan·
icks when hi s mother p lans
to remarry . (R)
I]J Up Pompeii
ITI) Last Chance Garage
Host Brad Sears illu strates
the 'economy tune-up' and
reviews the tools involved .
10:00 0
ill (l) Hill Straet
Blues Captain Furillo offers
to quit after a cross exami nation about police corrup tion. IA)I60 min .)
II) TBS Evening News

(]) &amp;I Cl2J 20/20

7101.

HARTS Used Cars, New
76

Electrical
&amp; Refrigerat1on

Inboard -

Outboard 22' 260 h.p. Mere

Call

84

JONES BOYS WATER
&lt;;ERVICE Call614 367 7471
or614 367 0591

Boats and

-4 .weeksdays or 992 ·2509 af -

Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less e)(pensive cars in

hosts Roger Ebert and
Gene Siske l giv e vr ew ers
the1r
asses sment s
of
what' s flymg and what' s
flopping at local movr e
theatres.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

Magnum, P .l.

8 :30

1976 Midget ,special . Ca ll

446 ·4655 .

A. DPA.W!

304 895 3802

2010

®I

tress . IAII60 min I
([l Sneak Previews F1lm

UMPA. TA.LKED ME INTO
GIVI"'G l"UNK 2'-1 HOURS
OF DIPLOMA.TlC JMMUNI ·
TY TO GA.THER UP HIS
BOY'S A.N' GET OUTA. MOO!

I GUESS SQ.,TH' W.HOLE
I HEAAD WHA.T HA.PPENED
"TO OUR ROO&lt; ROLLERS! DID MESS KJNDA. END!OP IN

Water well s. Comm er c ial
and Dom es t 1c. Tes t hole s
Pump s Sal es a nd Se rvi ce

For sale 1974 Honda 750
ferring,
saddle
bag s ,
double bucket seat, tune
up . New· battery, chain
and sprackcts . $1,400 . Call

I])

Magnum fties to S1cily to
rescue a dam sel m di s-

ALLEYOOP

per,e nced m a son. r oofer .
c arp ent e r .
e l ec tr ,c,a n .
qe n era l
r e parr s nn d
rc&gt;mocl elinq Phon e 304 67 5

STARK S Tre e Trirnrninq
and Lawn Servi ce. Shrub s
trimm ed
Phone 304 -576

National

Mark is turned into a dog
just before he is to m arry

RIN GLES'SS ERVI CE ex

1979 Honda CB650, $1,600 .
Call 446·8653.

Democratic

Committee Telethon
(]) &amp;I Cl2J Mork &amp; Mindy

K Tr ee Trt m m,n g,
stump r em ov al 67 5 1331

finq, plumbinq,
w ork . 304 -675 -2'440

1982 NCAA World

Series from Omaha, NE -

&amp;

r e rnod e ling, ca~

days

Strawberri es. Call Harold

HaP CXJT. ,

RO N 'S Te lev i sr on Scrv 1ce
Spec ,al,zinq i n Zf' n i th nnd
Motorola , Qu ~u ar , n nd
hou se c all s Ph one 576 239 8
or 446 2454

shaft drive, full dress, vet ·
ter equipment, 4,000 mil es ,

Auto·

3100 or 446 7122 .

l'lHEKE YOU CAN BUNK -

8:00

Richard Simmons
iTI) All Creatures Great
and Small
li)
(121
Entertainment
Tonight
0 ill Fame The teac her s
go on strike . IAI 160 min I
(]) MOVIE: 'Chu Chu and
the Philly Flash'
(I) National Geographic
Special

BUILDIN G

cyc le. Ca ll61088·8711.

Commercia I· Residentia I.
A lso kits avai l ab le. Energy
Contro l System . Ca ll 446 -

HI, HONEY! OH~ THIS HELLO
IS MY FIANCEE, TE55 THERE
TRIVETT.' 5HE I'K)KKS
IN A LI\BOKATORY
NEARBY!

50 YOU WW AS l'lELL 50i/N05
STAY IN5/Df. MOONE'S HE~E 5W--ER
AT NIGHT, AHD THERE'S A WELL, I'II!{BE
COUCH IN ~y OFFICE
IF I COULD

G e n e's
St ea m
Cnr pf'f
Clenn Sc ot c h Gn ur d F ree
es f1mat es spr 1n q spec rat s
Ge nes m,fh . 99 2 6309

1980 black Suzuk• GS850,
$3,700 Call446 7554 after 6.

Tac Dough
MacNeil -lehrer

®I

Ma sonnr y
work , Loq ue
Co ntr ac t1ng ,
Rl
1.
Ew1n q ton . Ca ll 614 388
9939

1980 Harley Davidson wide
g li de, show room cond Call
446· 7781 evening

1980 Honda odessey and a
1978 XL250 Honda motor ·

Autos tor Sale

(1) All-Star SportsChal lenge
II) Father Knows Best
(]) Muppet Show
0 (]) ®I CBS News
(])Dr, Who
iTI) Ulias, Yoga and You
&amp;I Cl2J ABC News
0 ill P .M. Magazine
(JJ Time
Was. .
the

Cll Happy Days

ADV A N C ED
Se amle ss
G utt er Door s
Off e r1nq
c or'lf,nuou s
gutterinq ,
se amless S1dinq , roof1n g,
q nraq e
door s .
fr ee
es timat es. 614 698 8205

Motorcycles

\NODWISI

J

r

1

Now arrange the Circled leners 10
lorm the surpnse answer. as sug
gested by the above canoon

Print answer here :

"K XI I X1 XX)"
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterdays

Jumbles QUILT

I

YOKE L PAUN CH HAMPE R

Answer What you have to be in order to play the
guitar !n publlc - " PLUCKY"

(]) Green Acres
Cl) Entertainment Tonight

$1600.00, 304 675 ·5501.
74

rx

1

(]) MOVIE : 'Morgan'
ffi Bull's Eye
(!) ESPN Sportsforum

BORN LOSER

2088 or 675 4560 .

Vans&amp;4W.D.

0

0 ill Cll NBC News

C re a tiv e
wood
dec k s,
pr ess uri ze d pin e, ce dar &amp;
rrdwood . Free es t1mat e

F

r

m $50,000 Pyramid

Seventies Tile final seg ment of thi s seri es look s at
the decade of Wat erg ate
and the Bi centennr al

F r enc h
C 1t y
P a tnfin q
r es identi a l &amp; comm erc ial,
,nfer,or , ex terior , pape r
hanqtn Q,
&amp;
t ex tur ed
cC' ilr nq s. Ca ll 614 367 7784
or614 36 7 7160

446 6619 after 5PM .

Hay &amp; G_ra_in

7 :00

Call446 ·2107

83

Strawberries pick
your
own,
bring
container .
Cl aude Winter s, Rio Gran

6 :30

CAME FROM l I'M
t:APTAIN EA!&gt;Y:

Ca ll 614 ·367 ·0394 .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

([) Electric Company
ITI) Over Easy

,. HE HYPNOTIZED ME,
AND SHOWED ME WHO
I WAS AND WHERE I

0

614698 3290

de, 614 245·5121.
Pick
your
own
strawberries , new plan ting, easy pi cking Open
daily 8 a.m .· B p .m . ex ce pt
Sunday, starting May 27 .
Location, 6 mites off Rt. 2
from App l e Grove on
J erry's Run Road . Op posite Wattersons Groc ery .
From Char l eston area, 6
mi le out from Rt . 35 at
Pliny on Plantation Road,

'66

1 Ma sse y F erguson bal er
lor s a Je . Ca II 614 379·2164 .

MUSICal
Instruments

_;:..:,.-1

$100., recliners $80 , maple I
rock ers $49,
bedroom
suites $150, variety of table
lamps, marble top stands
$30 and up, box springs &amp;
mattress
(new)
SlOP,
several utility cabinet s, kitchen cabinets wood &amp;
m etal, baby beds, chests of
drawers $25 to $60, 3-way
rec l iners $100, gas &amp; elec·
tric ranges, refrigerators,
wash stands, bunk beds
complete with bunkies
$170, several dressers, hall
trees, beds, brass head

New and Used Troy -Built
till e r s
for
gard e ning .
Swish er Implement John
D eer e Dealer,
Rt . 1,
Ga llipoli s, 446·0475 .

Pliny 304·675·2275.

For Sal e Spinet -Console
Piano Bargain
Wanted:
Respon sibl e party to fake
over tow mon thl y paymen ·
Is on spinet piano. Can be
seen locally _ Write Credit
Manager. P .O Box 537,
Sl1elbville, IN 46176.

20 gal elec tri c Sear s hot
water tank . 614 949 ·2786

1974 Monte Carlo , qood con
diti on . Ph one 304 -675 5773

64

G UIN E A

For sale · hi de a bed . Good

9927615

Mec hani c al
transplanter
for setting tobacco now on
sal e. Swi sher I mptem ent
John Deere Deat er, Rt _ 1,
Gallipoli s, 4-46 ·0475 .

BUCKSKIN mare, 6 y ears

57

Imperial Frigidair e frost
free refriq . 14ft . $150 . 614-

1977 Chevy Mont e Carlo
Loaded T -top · ·e ry good
cond . $3,500 . See or call
G
ar y Hy se ll . 614 ·992 -5388 .

1973 Ba y Mare with 26
AQHA points, 4 month old
fla shy Bar Flower stud c olt
by side, in foa l to Marshall
Cok er tor January 1983
foal
1980 Bay Filly by
Casssiu s Torino, half si ster
to 1981 Mountain State
Pl easur e Futurity winner .
1978 McQuerry two horse
gooseneck
trailer with
living quarters. Many Ex ·
tras . Exce ll ent condition .
Matching 1978 GMC dooley
pi ckup with new paint .

G roornrn g se rvr ces lor
pet s. Will c lip E nglish
Sheep doqs, poodles &amp;
Sc hnnuz er 's
Reasonabl e.

AU~_!!~!!!_ __

il

78 mode l M .F . 245 di esel, 6
spd . trans ., PS, 250 Hr s.,
same as new, 56 •900 · Be l
saw , mold er cleaner, sam e
as new$
_
_ _
_
900 614 886 5955

Sant a's Pr ofess ional Dog
G roomtn q . Call6l4 388 -8547
and as k tor Son1 a .

date 614 7422056

cond $40 614 992 7352

~q_u~pm~_t

2728

$200 Ca /14464120

News
(JJ Mystery in Dracula' s
Castle Part 2
II) My Threa Sons
(])ABC News

9622 or 614 388 98 57

7220

AK C 4 rnos old York shire
Ter r1er . F1r sr sn ots &amp; war
m ed, pa rtly hou sebrok en,

THROUEiH THE DE~ERT UNTI~

Mar c um
R oo ftn Q
&amp;
Spoutin g
30 ye ar s ex
peri ence, spec iali zin g tn
built up roof . Call 614 388

Reg . Yearling Quarter hor se, Reg . W eaning Quarter
hor se . Call 4-46·3413

614 667 3085.

CAPTAIN EASY
, . AND THE'-! I WAND~RED

9652

W:arr'!!

Unscramble these tour JumtMes,
one lener to each square, to form /rr~mn=l
four ordinary words .

6:oo o ill m o oo ® m Cl2J

PA INTIN G
rnt en or and
ex t e ri or,
plum b in g,
roofin g . so m e r em odelin g
20 yr s. ex p . Ca ll 614-388

61

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
bv Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

EVENING

1182.

I~~=~~~~~~~==r:~~~~~~~~::::;~
- _

11

\9 ~~ ®

I I

6/10/82

STU CC O PL AS TE RIN G

RE POSSES SE D SIGN! NOr
DOWN PAYM E NT! Tak e
ov er p a ym ent s of $59.50 per
mo nth . 4'x 8'
Fla shin g
a rr ow sign . Complete with
new bulb s &amp; lett ers , Cutliff
Stqn s. T oll fr ee 1-800 ·551
3070_As k about R E PO

THURSDAY

Hom e
Improvements

t ex tur ed cei lin gs co m
rne r ci a l and r es id enti a l.
fr ee es t ima t es Ca ll614 ·256

O P E N F riday , Saturday.
Sund a y 1: 00 7 : 30 p .m .
ONLY Sa m Som ervil le' s
W ar ehou se, 7 mites east
Ra venswood , Jun ction In dependan ce Road Rt . 21,
New E ra , Surplu s Rental
C l o thing ,
Army
Ca moufla ge,
Combat
boot s, jungl e boot s, 14 oz .

Ca ll614 245 5121

As k

81

rn'ft

l} fl~~

~

--·~~---

304 67 5 46 77

denim jean s $10 .00 , pa ck s.

•
•
VleWIDg

- -- -

E L EC TRI C golf c art with
ba tt ery charger $195. 400500 New bri cks $35 30
Assortm ent of 8" &amp; 12"
block s $1 5 3 6' Sec tion of
l 'l "
co rruqat ed metal
cu l ve rt with 2 couplin g $50 .

REPO SSESS EDD SIG N'
NO DOWN PAYM E NT•

1800 55 1 3070
REPO

A FlJU./

I

3677

643 2918
19 1nch So ny p or t ab le co lor
TV , l1k e new co n d _, $300
Call 446 7781 cve n1n g

YrJJ COI.JU) C"::J,i'le Me

Television

TRU C K c ampe r , good co n
dition, 304 -675 · 1845.

I K~THiS~D~
'Sil-lt'{, eoT 1» YoJ T!-liNK

M a il box post s made of
pipe, etc. S30 .00. Can be
see n on J eri cho Rd . Pt .
Pl easa nt, ph one 304 -675 ·

The Daily

camping
EqUipment

by Larry Wrlqht 78

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

--

1969 2 ton Ford truc k with
PAWN SHOP 62 O li ve St .,
stock ra ck s. Ca ll 614 ·367 ·
Gallipoli s 3 piece living
7533 .
room suites couch -love
seat -c hair $199, 2 piece
69 VW with Baia kit , creme
living room su ites from
·sl ated rims . Call 61-4 -379 $140 up, love seats from $70 304 5762574
2574 .
up, maple dinet sets from
$99 to $199, wa ll huggers ....._ _ _ _ _ _.;.._ _ _ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

$100 . 304-6756475.
LARGE
s olid
Cherry
dining table , $65 . 304·675·
6114.

450 Case Do zer t i lt &amp; an g le
blad e. $8500 W ill t ro de f or
tru ck or far m tr ac tor 614

USED FURNITURE 5 pc.

WV Open 9·6. Phone 304·
675 1371.

W ant ed to r ent w a rehou se,
stor age building or large
qa r nqe ,n ci t y of Ga llipo li s
Ca ll446 3159

F ederal no 6, 12 ga u ge sho t
gun shell s. f1 el d load s. $4.99
per bo x
Spr i n g V a ll ey
Tr ad1ng Co ., Sprin q V all ey
Plaz a. 446 802 5

388 9926 .

R AY 'S

'C

$250.00 pe r month , 304·576·
2711.

tnr n' s bed s, $27 5. c ompl ete
Bab y beds . $99 _Mattresses
or box spri n gs, full or twin,
$58 , ltrm , $68 and $78 .
Queen se t s, $\95 4 dr
c- hes t s. $42 5 dr _ c hes ts,
$54 Be d fr a m es. $20.and
S25 . 10 qun Gun ca b ine t s,
$350 , d 1ne tt e ch a irs $20 .
and $25 Gas or elec trr c
ronqes,
$3 25 .
Baby
ma tr csscs. $25 &amp; $35. bed
tr nmc s $20, $25. &amp; $30 . U se d
F urn ilu re
book case.
r anqes and TV's 3 m rl es
out Bul av1 ll c Rd Open 9a m
to 7pm, M an thr u Fr1 , 9am
to 5pm, Sa t

PI

675·2802 a ft e r 4.
BEORO ClM
f1 i t
TRIC MOl:! ILL H UMl set
fin g on a n 1ce tot, half w ay
be tween Hunti ngton &amp; Pt.
Plea sant on State Rt . 2,

Sot u. cha 1r , r oc k er . ot
l oma n , 3 tabl es. (ex tr a
he,wy b y F r onti er), $685
Sof a. c ha ir and lovese at,
$?75
Sof as and cha,r s
pr iced trom $28 5. to $795 .
T C'lb les, $3 8 and up to $109
H 1dc a b eds ,$340 , qu ee n
St zc. $380 . Rec li ne r s, $1 75
l o$295, La mps fr om$ 18 . to
$65 5 p c d in e ttes from $79 ..
to S3 85 7 pc., $189. and up .
Wood tabl e wrth 4 chair s.
$2 19 up to $49 5 Desk $110
Hu tches. $300 an d $37 5.,
ma p le or
pi n e fin ish .
Bed r oom su ites
Ba sse tt
Cherr y, $795
Bunk bed
com pl e te w ith mattr es se s,

n" fr1 qcra t or.
F ro s t l rf'e
coppPr tOn(', l 1k c ne w , $600
Call 446 818 1

nlOb i le
11(1 111\'S ,
!l OUses.
PI
P lhl':.rllll ,lnct Gall i pOli S
6 1&lt;1 •1&lt;16 82/1 or 614 245 9484

51
O N E bedroom ,mobi l e
hom e, a •r cond i ti oned, on
pr iva te lot. out skirts Hen
der so n . Ut i liti es furni shed,

LAY NE'S FURNITUR E

/1Pf1P IMFNTS.

45

MOD ERN 7 t)(·c!room. f LJIIy
C,lrJ) I' I (•d
rHJ ilW ,
llf•etr
&lt;;r~lOO I '. &amp; ll i Mki• l 30·1 675
J8 9:J

Household Goods

$250 a nd up to $395 Cap
ups l arrs, 3
bed op t , pr,va te en tr ance
Cll l446 7374 or 446 028 4
Un t urn , c, ~ll'd ,

Ap,lrtnw n tc, 675 5548
Lrl r q1 ll nlJ', , 1111 Hr r• .1rtw.1y
\ I
111 P ,l• 1111' ~'J 'i() JWr
111 &lt;1111 11pi ll'- ; l··j JII ' II I IICIU i lt '

Thursday, June 10, 1982

Ohio

ALL YOll HAVE TO DO
EACH rJAY 15 LIE IN
YOUR 8EANBA6, AND
WATCH TV ...

min.)

ill

MOVIE: ' Birth of the
Beatles'
ffi Another Ufe
(1) Top Rank Boxing from
Loa Vegas
(J) MOVIE: 'Legend of
Alfred Packer'
(]) Bonny Hill Show
D (I) ill News
(I) Captioned ABC News
• (jJ Nlghtllne
1 2:00 ()) Burna &amp; Allen
(I) Nlghtllne

BRIDGE
A lesson learned
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
/liO RTH

West opened the nine of
hearts and the student sit·
ting East, covered dumm y's
queen with h1s king .
South took his ace, cashed
his two high trumps and
went after diamonds . The
ace of diamonds eau~ht
East 's 10. Dummy 's kmg
plucked t .. e jack and a low
diamond a c counted for
East's quee n. South ruffed
and le d a heart to dummy 's
jack.
Now South played on e of
dummy ' s
two
good
diamonds . East ruffed with
his queen trump , but South
was able to get rid of his losing heart. East played a club
and West scored de fen sive
tricks two and three with the
ace and queen . South took
the rest without ceremony .
"If you had played your
three of spades at triek one ,"
said the professor , " South
would never have been abl e
to get to dummy to play a
good diamond and declare r
would have lost one trump ,
one heart, two clubs and
probably his good humor. "
" I thought I was supposed
to

cover an

honor

6-10-82

• 10 7 2
• QJ 4
+K 9752
86

+
WEST

EA ST

+ 5
• 9872
+ 863
+A Q/53

• QJ 9
• K 10 3
• Q J 10
J 10 4 2

+

SOUTH
+AK 864 3
• A 65
+ A4

+K 9

Vulnerabl e: Eas t-Wes t
Deale r : South

,.

We st

North

Eas t

South

Pass
Pass

I NT
4+

Pass
1--'ass

3•
!'ass

Pass

" Not a lw ays," a nswe red
th e professor . "and in pa rti c-

ular not this time, when you
could re tatn th e king to cov -

er any honor in th e sutt

with an

pla yed by dumm y la ter o n ."

honor ," re plied the student

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I Cavil
5 Arrange
10 Redolence
11 Little
12 Tease
13 Literary
musketeer
14 Mellow
15 - Ben
16 Knead
17 Like the king
of beasts
19 OPEC asset
20 Danube
tributary
21 Detonating
device
22 Yield
24 Abhor
25 Chaplin
prop
26 Hair pad
27 Fonnicary
member

I One kind

of snake
2 Italian river
3 Western show
4 Prefix
for shrink
5 Suit
material
6 Greek letter
7 Coach's call 23
8 Put to use
9 Mortar's need
II "- Your
24

Yesterday's Answe r

Board
29 Chinese
Empire
the
Metroline r
offi c e
:IO She 's
Music or
Wagon "
town " ne tted "
25 18th-century millions
15m humor
bonnet
18 Predicament
31 Jjt e rary
21 26 Respond
gia nt
28 Dagwood's 36 Inflame d
Morgana
22Bark
dog
37 Wallaba tree

28 Still
in transit
32 Celtic deity
33 Indian
mulberry
34 Gardner
35 Visigoth
king
37 So be it'
38 Most

curuting

39 Saucy
40 "Blues"
composer
d Poker term

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEIs

Here' s how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A is

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single le tters ,
apostrophes, the length and formahon of the words are all
hints. Each day the eode letters are different.
CRYPT~UOTES

KRQU

EGC
KWUE
Rl
NG

EGC

DVZZ

JUGJZU
NG

DGCZY

RI

PGK
ZVQU

LURPPUKKU

HRF
RI
KWUX

RI
HRF
KG

FRPQVP

Yesterday's Cryptequote: THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
GOSSIP AND NEWS DEPENDS ON WHETHER YOU HEAR IT
OR TElL lT.-ANON

�Page-

Thursday, June 10, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

12- The Doily Sentinel

Democratic treasurer's race outcome still in doubt
COLUMBUS, Ohio iA Pl - The

state representative. with 95.633

Oll team£' oft hr f){&gt;mocra tir r are for

votes.

s ta te trf'asurrr rrma ined in doubt
long aftPr thf' polls c losed as sev£'n
political unknnwn s IJattlC'd for the
nomination.

Thomas V. Brown of Dayton ran
unopposed as the Libertarian
nominee.
The Democrat ic race drew a
crowded slate of candidates after
Incumbent Gertrude W. Donahey,
a Democrat, decided to retlre fol owing disclosure that $1.3 million

!Vbri on ( ·n unt~ · Trf'asurflr Mary

J&lt;ll&lt; •n 1\'ithroll' hl'lrl a V i-16-vote
lt•ad 0\'1'1' l ' .S. Attorn&lt;'.\' .Jamps R.
\\'illiarn:-. ot Ohio's Nort hcrn Distlict in cn mp!t •tr but unoffici&lt;.tl rC'turn -. f m m .1 11 LU! Ml prPcinr ts.
\1r . . . \\'ithrow. :)1. had 1 &amp;-1. ~79

\'otrs to \\'i ll i.uns' Hi1.9:l.1. Sta tP
S.•n 1-:Pnnt•th H Ctlx , :i:l. of llirilPrtun. wa .., ltll' n&lt;•.x t.t·ln..,Ps t cha iiC'ngPr
with 1 U(:!7-l.
&lt; HIH' I'"

wa s missing from the treasurer's
office.

State Hcp. Sherrod Brown. 29, of
MansftPid , won a four-way ra ce for
thP Democra tic nomination for secrcta l)' of state, beating former
Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinich;

l.£&gt;t: C.
F ;tlkP . \2. with K";'.OW \'O!Ps; Mi t·h;H'I Jl 1\t•!l _
, .. : ~.a rf'al Pslatr in\'P&lt;.;I nr. with I :!li,H n: :«l-yf'J r old
Hidla rd \\'it tt&gt;nlM ·r~-; of Toll"'Cio, wit h
H~ l .O:t'"1. ;tnd :\ .. ., hlabula Cou nt~ · nPcordr ·r Ti 11 11 11h_\· t ; . I A ' llli re. 40. with
.1-1,1111
F r .tnkl rn ( 'oun t ~ · Tn •LJ surrr Dana
&lt; ; . I {J ilt ·h,n 1t •.t sil Y" (' apt u n&gt;d t hr RPpuhlit ·.t n nomi nation for statC' trf'a su n ·r Hinl'hilrt , : ~h. I'Pf'f'i\'E'CI .10ti,S6.1
\'Ol t'"· dt • ft \ tli n ~ We hard H . HarTio;;,
:J~I . .t \\'.l lht'an bu sinf'ssman . w ho
rt'&lt; 'l'l \'t"(I\ Hl,.ltd\'OIP!-., and Howa rd
!~nt g l'l t . .·1\ 11f Hi ... ing Su n. an insur .1 nt ·t · umlt ·nnih'r and formPr

:-..t it' o'l •' l\ ,'-,,!!IH-•!.t l .tl I~ l lo•otll

$]1,. $.1 1"''' I
I· ,.,.,j, I ,\ (, •

MEN ' S DENIM JEANS
This sa le in c lu des our ba sic
teans ( boot leg and strai g ht
leg) - stretch ba sics - full er
cut ba sic ieans
Plu s a ll denim fashion iea ns
- slim and full er c ut styl es .
Al l siz es 27 to 42 p lu s ex tr a
larg e siz es 44 to 50 .

l 'n,o· .~ &lt;ll' t '

I ;,,.j ,Hid I

I'

)1,,

i 111 11 t' , ~to

:100

Men 's
Men 's
M en's
M en's

)b~

'-1• • I

~ .tiHI Il iJII-.

.\INI (H Hl~l IIJ\ ~~-~1\

H1JI I' I l iiMI I[, - .oil d Ill' 4 1 Jt1.:_.4 Jll
,'-,I,Jlll l•t • I I''"
llli o lll• -~ III .~H.J _;;,

'.tl l llo · r~

\,,, i t, , , , .., '' '"' ' ' ,olldpi illlo ',-1-AA
l \,ti ol I ,I JI 1 1&lt;1 !~ ,
"P I II 11 ' I I '•II ' :·; ~ ,..!1\.J

.tl• •tr " 11 ' , r ·, •II ,jq ·•. il l• ''' 41MI- ~Jo
I "I ' I 'I ' '[ II( .. '.YI "'' ... ; . ~I .&gt;'I

I ·,,,,

I . I,._ ,, 11,) II[' .J I .r\

I' .,

I l1•

- 100% Solid State chassis
- Automatic fine tuning
- Black matrix picture tube
- 19" diagonal picture
Dependable service alter the
sale!
Reg . $459.00

\rtl)· )'!i)t ) ..'-,
I """I o~ ud 1 lt••t• . , \fiO-~(lr'! !h-.
o4-lJ\ ~MI ,'i ~l [ lt , .J I Jll-4!:! ;5
l·•o•l• r ll• thl\ o(,,.,.J;uultlt.. h • .\()J-;.fMl lh-.
oH-. IIi J(l ._~W-1 \IO i!,, ~ ! :1.1 .Ml
I· ..,.,J, ·t 1\u i\-. .c; ,,. J ,111d l[,,q,, 1 1(11\-:JQO 11 1-.
.o[-Hi Jl) :~W&gt;-Ml l h -. :111 ~\:' ,,11
;-.. [ o~UI lilt· I Hnl h
I l1o·r \.I W~ IIIJ-. 1-t:&gt;-J I g,
I

I· ,, •I• • \to • r-.

17 Jil--1 ,1

I ,tl ll ll ·t~

HIIC I ' liH l.'i
j

flu to I•• r S"" -. 4:\ .&gt;1"'4H
llu1o l r• r

~J

)\,.,,,. \·IIi · .)~

I'l l''

)h

tht· )j,-,.,j

(•han~t·s

lo-:.7

noh'ci

Thr Meigs Cou nt v Hoard of Elec
Wr-dnC'sda ~ ·

ti ons

pletrcl

C'\'C'ning

tht • official

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Reg. $8.00 . . ... Sale $6.39
Reg. $12.00 ... . Sale S9.59
Reg . $19.00
SaleS15.19
Reg . $28.00
Sale S22.39
Reg . $37 .00
Sale $29.59

$17.55
$22.10
$26.65
$33.80
$41.60

FATHER'S DAY SALE!

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

of

Tue slla,\" s primar.\' rlection s.
Th1 •n • \ \ 'C•n· no drastic changC's
from tht • unofficial tallil'S rf'iPa .;;ed
t'ar lit •r IJ ~· tilt ' hoa rd .

Good se lec t ion of s tyl e~ and
co l ors rn S ( 14 J.:tl/ 1 ) , M ( 15 15117). L (16 16 117), X L ( 17
17 117 ) . Full er cut styl es plu s
taper ed mode ls. Some button
down coll ars . Buy shirts tor
your Dad thi s wee kend ci nd
save

S, M. L a nd XL siz es m a
ni ce variety of soli d c olor s
a nd pa tte rn s. Tru e w es tern
st y li ng.
Long and short
slee ve st y les .
Men's $16.95 Western
Men's $18.95 Weslern
Men's $19.95 Western
Men's $21.95 Western

Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts

Men 's $10 .95
Sport Shirts . _.. _. $8 .54
M en's $12.95
' SportShirts . . . .. $10.14
Men's $15 .95
Sport Shirts __ . _. $12.44
Men's $20 .00
Sport Shirts . __ . _ $15.6-4

$13.24
$14.74
$15.54
$17.14

ODDS 'n ENDS SALE!

REG . $7 .00
SALE $5.25
REG . $9.00
SALE $6.75
REG . $12 .00
SALE $9.00
REG. $16 .00 _. _ SALE $12.00

com-

count

Reg . $27.00
Reg. $34.00
Reg. $41.00
'Reg . $52 .00
Reg . $64.00

Little boys' long and short
st y le pa i amas . Litt le girls'
gow ns, babydo l ls , paiama s
and robes .
Ful l rang e of c hildren 's
sizes .

ll o~ll " \1 \ ,11 \d C;t l ho ~1)()-~JO [!,,~

fi ll

I·1Td• r

Wo lt z length gown s, robes and
shor t rompers . Poly /c otton bten·
ds, plisses, terry and kn its.
Stzcs 5 thru XX L

H eW Penc e

SUMMER '
SLEEPWEAR SALE

~. ... ... ,Jii

\,,

t1ol t

Fo•nous rnnkes l tk.f' Joi\n C ur tr s .
Br1lrst1 Lclcly. Bc·fl e r H a ll a nd

CHILDREN'S

Sj •l ill I • I I ''" ' 1\1 tlio · )j, •,,) I .' 1 ~\ -,'\htl
r ,,,, .ot1dr , ,rf •... r·
)l, tl .. l '111 1 t: 'fl~i :!~
\ ,., r.~ I ·1., -1 ' .t il• I I '1 rll•• '11:1 , 4
1\.tl •' ' · ' '' ' ' • fl1 tit• Jl, · ,~o[ , .1.•-7 1
Ill ltw ·
)f &gt;~t ~

WALTZ LENGTH
LINGERIE

l!re s to c k o f qualrty dresses rn

rnlsses SIZeS 4 to 70 a nd
S rH'S 10 1 2 to 24 1 7

s3ggoo

Spec ial

LADIES'

WC'ekend sal e pr• ces on ou r en

MEN'S WESTERN
SHIRTS

G.E. 19"
COLOR
TELEVISION
SPECIAL

\\h o·l\!'&gt; l.nn tm I. ...;ilo·'
Jmt•· '• I !IIi!

,'-, i.iiiJ III• I I •• II " i l l i l l lo '-.
.t lld I it\\o'T ' \~ -4 i ; I

$15 .60
$17-90
$19.50
$23.40

"-------.

LADIES' DRESS SALE

SALE!

fl, ,.,[ I~ .Jii- J :J
llo• ·'"' lt••ll ' "' o~ ll .tl 1.' '''"'" ••II .JJJIIo J .uro l 11 rll
• ••1111111 11 ,tl )-' "'"'" .Jflo •J tlt,tl ol,tlo
II HJ \ \\ rll !11 ·
"ll:n, 111 -.1 l lt n 11 1il I~ .... ),) drro ·d h fr,.tnllk ·
I" II' I '). .t • lor llh ),,,,. Ill • .11 11 f,, tl u ~;tl o

No

Jeans
Jeans
Jeans
Jeans

l • ·l.

'-, , o\\ .._ \I~

.I(~;,H

$19.95
$22.95
$24.95
$29 .95

t' 2!}() h• .100
H~lt , 4tl0lt, , :~ 15J':JII ~ l)rlt ,!)OOI IJ~ ~

.oH ,t J lt •• tor ~ l II" Iii Jll . .);) toW I• • 71Ml l l1.-. 43-~~ 700
l•· RIMI IIJ, \h ~ r .,.\ /l(lll , molu l ot 4 J-J ~ :..O
.
~ ,- , -,[ , I 1\ ul.· I; ,., ~[ .tlld l'l tu)t' 2:J(l(11 300 lh:-.
.II•"''·' .Ill UlU 1&lt;• \ 1~) 1h' ..o ~ :,o_.,;; ~0 ~00 \11 :.00 ) IJ~
,;~,I
~M I I•· tiUl Itt-. Jj ..o/141 f.(llltt• 7()0 !h.~ ~ 3,, oi l .1 ~ 1 I• 111 ~ 1 ,1,~ \ , ~1- .Jii 111 - 1 .md H\ 1'1 46 l(l.

J4

614/992·2133 .

FATHER ' S DAY SALE

IIllO it., .J; l &gt;1 ...n IIIlO ,tt!ol ••, , ., :H ~i.l
~ ' 1 tlo I II&gt; tf,.,' I''""! ollltl I ')tHJt

l'••llt ld

. .TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY.
AND THE PROFESSIONS
-BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

iJ4

.12 ,!11~0/1 !1~1 I • !1-)
:,i-f,.) ~I 4011[11500 ) [)~ :)8.
h; .}01 I " +ti M) Ito.\ J' ~, 'l I ~NI I" 71 Wl :,ti-{)3 J() _ i OII l u

I,,

LEASING
. .EQUIPMENT

A GOOD TIME TO STOCK UP ON SUMMER NEEDS AND BUY GIFTS FOR YOUR DAD ON
HIS DAY, SUNDAY, JUNE 20th.
.

t.t k •·t • ft .. rro 11 .. ' ·''' ,f .lun• ·J 1911:: TH'rllh \ ' o•;rl
•.tho-., (o,llh foo·do ' l o,dll t• $11"$7 hlllit•t ( ' H w ~

fl,,,,,

. .BANK ONE,._

SPECIAL JUNE SALE FRIDAY, JUNE 11th -SATURDAY, JUNE 12th

I lhtn \ ;tlln l.l lt·~ l•wk t "
\1Hr ht Ht·twrt

11.

bus will be the Libertarian
candidate.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Markt'l rt'ports I

'" )) ,.,,[,

Republlcan cand!dateforstateaudit or and Carol R Kender of Colum-

Hllh,• r &lt;t C'f' includf'd M ont -

gnnH·n· { 'o unt\ Prost"f'Utor

t,, "'·'·'

other in the fall for attorney generaL Both ra,n unopposed In Tuesday's primary.
The vacancy for attorney general
was crea ted when incumbent William J _ Brown decided to seek the
Democrati c g ub e rnatorial
nomination .
Democratic sta te Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson also won renomi nation Tuesday in a race contested
only by write-in candida te Dennis
Thompson of Columbus. Fergu son,
53. has served as state auditor since
1975.
Cuyahoga County Commissioner
Vincent C. Campa nella, 39, Is the

former state Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese and Cuyahoga County Treasurer Francis E. GauL
Brown received 304,256 votes, or
34 percent of the totaL KJ.1clnlch
was second with 245,627. Calabrese
had 214,714 and Gaul135,444.
Brown will face former Cuyahoga County Commissioner Virgil
Brown. the Republica n nominee.
and Libertarian Mary Ann Leech of
Cincinnati , both of whom ran
unopposed .
lncumbent Secreta1-y of Sta te An thony J . Celebrezze Jr.. 41, a Democra t. and Republican state Sen .
Charles R Sax be, 38. will face each

SALE!

HOME
FURNISHINGS

MEN'S
.DRESS
BELTS
30

S1zes
to 44 waist . Good
varie ty of styles and c o lors including wester ns,
r eve rsibles and nove lty
style s.

Men's $8.00 Dress Belts . _. _ $6.40
Men's $11.00 Dress Belts _.. $8.80
Men's $12.50 Dress Bells
$10.00
Men's $15.00 Dress Belts . _ $12.00

Odd lots
discontinued
co lors or patterns . Slightly
so il ed .
Curtains ~ sheet s - towe ls draperies ~ a r ea rugs _
Limited quantity _

lf2 Price

Nunwro uno
SA:\

J.' J(Ai'iC JSCO 1A P 1 -

WLJrn·n i{ainlc-n ma ~· bt' thr f\o. 1
bc.t &lt;i('ball fan in thC' country .

11ai rd en, who head '

Porta l-

,\lbfort sen Tran·l Corp . hCI'f'. says
h&lt;' ha :-- '-'1"( ' 11 ga mr•o;; in al l 26 m aj or
lf'agw• hall park ~ and in June will
add thr M in nPSota 1\vins' new

CHILDREN'S

SALE

SWIMWEAR
SALE

Women's Sundresses

Littl e girls one pi ece suit s,
two piece sui t s and cove rup s_
Li ttl e boys' trunk s.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to
6x and 7 to 14.

domed sl:ldium to his collection .

THURSDAY
NIGHT

Reg. $6.00 . .
Sale $4.79
Reg. $9.00 . .
Sale $7.19
Reg. $12.00 . . . Sale $9.59
Reg. $14.00 ... Sale $11.19

EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT IS
.LADIES' NIGHT &amp; '60' NIGHT.

Junior, misses and extra size
sundresses. So lid and prints in
co tton and poly ester .

Reg. s12.00 . . . Sale s9.59
Reg. s11.00
Sale s13.59
REg. s23.00
Sale s18.39
Reg. s32.00
Sale s25.59
Reg. s43.00
Sale s34.39

LADIES DRINKS
t;, PRICE
ROCK AND ROll WITH All
THE HITS FROM THE '60s.
9:30 to 12:00

JUNIOR

DANCING

JEANS SALE

Special Salel

EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
WITH JAY Hill AND
THE HITS FROM 10 UNTil

Quality Wrangl er denim
iea ns in
stra ight leg and e lastic fitted leg styles.
Be lted and e lasti c waists. Plain pockets
and designer ieans .

Men's
Summer Shorts
Includes our entire stock - cut off denims

REG. s18.00
REG. s22.00
REG. s21.00
REg. s35.00 .

HAPPY HOUR
MONDAY-THURSDAY
4:30 -6:30
THE FINEST FOOD
IN TOWN

SALE s12.59
SALE $15.39
SALE s18.89
SALE s24.49

. tennis shorts • dress shorts · knits and
active sportswear shorts. Sizes 28 to 46.
You'll like our selection.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL e~ SATURDAY Tl~ 5·...

MEN'S

SWIM TRUNKS
Sizes 28 to 42 . Good
selection of sty les and
colors.
Men's $8.95
Swim Trunks .. . . 57 .08
Men's $9.95
Swim Trunks . . •. 7. 88
.Men's 510.95
Swim Trunks •• • • 58 •68
Men's $12.95
Swim Trunks ..• 10 •28

s

s

ELBERFELD$ IN POM.ERQY
,_. . . •·

...

'

..

.. .. ......

"'' ' ' - ·· ~· ·· ·- ~ · -· · ··

I
.. ...... .. ·:. ·'·' ·· · ....

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                  <text>Page-

Thursday, June 10, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

12- The Doily Sentinel

Democratic treasurer's race outcome still in doubt
COLUMBUS, Ohio iA Pl - The

state representative. with 95.633

Oll team£' oft hr f){&gt;mocra tir r are for

votes.

s ta te trf'asurrr rrma ined in doubt
long aftPr thf' polls c losed as sev£'n
political unknnwn s IJattlC'd for the
nomination.

Thomas V. Brown of Dayton ran
unopposed as the Libertarian
nominee.
The Democrat ic race drew a
crowded slate of candidates after
Incumbent Gertrude W. Donahey,
a Democrat, decided to retlre fol owing disclosure that $1.3 million

!Vbri on ( ·n unt~ · Trf'asurflr Mary

J&lt;ll&lt; •n 1\'ithroll' hl'lrl a V i-16-vote
lt•ad 0\'1'1' l ' .S. Attorn&lt;'.\' .Jamps R.
\\'illiarn:-. ot Ohio's Nort hcrn Distlict in cn mp!t •tr but unoffici&lt;.tl rC'turn -. f m m .1 11 LU! Ml prPcinr ts.
\1r . . . \\'ithrow. :)1. had 1 &amp;-1. ~79

\'otrs to \\'i ll i.uns' Hi1.9:l.1. Sta tP
S.•n 1-:Pnnt•th H Ctlx , :i:l. of llirilPrtun. wa .., ltll' n&lt;•.x t.t·ln..,Ps t cha iiC'ngPr
with 1 U(:!7-l.
&lt; HIH' I'"

wa s missing from the treasurer's
office.

State Hcp. Sherrod Brown. 29, of
MansftPid , won a four-way ra ce for
thP Democra tic nomination for secrcta l)' of state, beating former
Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinich;

l.£&gt;t: C.
F ;tlkP . \2. with K";'.OW \'O!Ps; Mi t·h;H'I Jl 1\t•!l _
, .. : ~.a rf'al Pslatr in\'P&lt;.;I nr. with I :!li,H n: :«l-yf'J r old
Hidla rd \\'it tt&gt;nlM ·r~-; of Toll"'Cio, wit h
H~ l .O:t'"1. ;tnd :\ .. ., hlabula Cou nt~ · nPcordr ·r Ti 11 11 11h_\· t ; . I A ' llli re. 40. with
.1-1,1111
F r .tnkl rn ( 'oun t ~ · Tn •LJ surrr Dana
&lt; ; . I {J ilt ·h,n 1t •.t sil Y" (' apt u n&gt;d t hr RPpuhlit ·.t n nomi nation for statC' trf'a su n ·r Hinl'hilrt , : ~h. I'Pf'f'i\'E'CI .10ti,S6.1
\'Ol t'"· dt • ft \ tli n ~ We hard H . HarTio;;,
:J~I . .t \\'.l lht'an bu sinf'ssman . w ho
rt'&lt; 'l'l \'t"(I\ Hl,.ltd\'OIP!-., and Howa rd
!~nt g l'l t . .·1\ 11f Hi ... ing Su n. an insur .1 nt ·t · umlt ·nnih'r and formPr

:-..t it' o'l •' l\ ,'-,,!!IH-•!.t l .tl I~ l lo•otll

$]1,. $.1 1"''' I
I· ,.,.,j, I ,\ (, •

MEN ' S DENIM JEANS
This sa le in c lu des our ba sic
teans ( boot leg and strai g ht
leg) - stretch ba sics - full er
cut ba sic ieans
Plu s a ll denim fashion iea ns
- slim and full er c ut styl es .
Al l siz es 27 to 42 p lu s ex tr a
larg e siz es 44 to 50 .

l 'n,o· .~ &lt;ll' t '

I ;,,.j ,Hid I

I'

)1,,

i 111 11 t' , ~to

:100

Men 's
Men 's
M en's
M en's

)b~

'-1• • I

~ .tiHI Il iJII-.

.\INI (H Hl~l IIJ\ ~~-~1\

H1JI I' I l iiMI I[, - .oil d Ill' 4 1 Jt1.:_.4 Jll
,'-,I,Jlll l•t • I I''"
llli o lll• -~ III .~H.J _;;,

'.tl l llo · r~

\,,, i t, , , , .., '' '"' ' ' ,olldpi illlo ',-1-AA
l \,ti ol I ,I JI 1 1&lt;1 !~ ,
"P I II 11 ' I I '•II ' :·; ~ ,..!1\.J

.tl• •tr " 11 ' , r ·, •II ,jq ·•. il l• ''' 41MI- ~Jo
I "I ' I 'I ' '[ II( .. '.YI "'' ... ; . ~I .&gt;'I

I ·,,,,

I . I,._ ,, 11,) II[' .J I .r\

I' .,

I l1•

- 100% Solid State chassis
- Automatic fine tuning
- Black matrix picture tube
- 19" diagonal picture
Dependable service alter the
sale!
Reg . $459.00

\rtl)· )'!i)t ) ..'-,
I """I o~ ud 1 lt••t• . , \fiO-~(lr'! !h-.
o4-lJ\ ~MI ,'i ~l [ lt , .J I Jll-4!:! ;5
l·•o•l• r ll• thl\ o(,,.,.J;uultlt.. h • .\()J-;.fMl lh-.
oH-. IIi J(l ._~W-1 \IO i!,, ~ ! :1.1 .Ml
I· ..,.,J, ·t 1\u i\-. .c; ,,. J ,111d l[,,q,, 1 1(11\-:JQO 11 1-.
.o[-Hi Jl) :~W&gt;-Ml l h -. :111 ~\:' ,,11
;-.. [ o~UI lilt· I Hnl h
I l1o·r \.I W~ IIIJ-. 1-t:&gt;-J I g,
I

I· ,, •I• • \to • r-.

17 Jil--1 ,1

I ,tl ll ll ·t~

HIIC I ' liH l.'i
j

flu to I•• r S"" -. 4:\ .&gt;1"'4H
llu1o l r• r

~J

)\,.,,,. \·IIi · .)~

I'l l''

)h

tht· )j,-,.,j

(•han~t·s

lo-:.7

noh'ci

Thr Meigs Cou nt v Hoard of Elec
Wr-dnC'sda ~ ·

ti ons

pletrcl

C'\'C'ning

tht • official

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

Reg. $8.00 . . ... Sale $6.39
Reg. $12.00 ... . Sale S9.59
Reg . $19.00
SaleS15.19
Reg . $28.00
Sale S22.39
Reg . $37 .00
Sale $29.59

$17.55
$22.10
$26.65
$33.80
$41.60

FATHER'S DAY SALE!

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

of

Tue slla,\" s primar.\' rlection s.
Th1 •n • \ \ 'C•n· no drastic changC's
from tht • unofficial tallil'S rf'iPa .;;ed
t'ar lit •r IJ ~· tilt ' hoa rd .

Good se lec t ion of s tyl e~ and
co l ors rn S ( 14 J.:tl/ 1 ) , M ( 15 15117). L (16 16 117), X L ( 17
17 117 ) . Full er cut styl es plu s
taper ed mode ls. Some button
down coll ars . Buy shirts tor
your Dad thi s wee kend ci nd
save

S, M. L a nd XL siz es m a
ni ce variety of soli d c olor s
a nd pa tte rn s. Tru e w es tern
st y li ng.
Long and short
slee ve st y les .
Men's $16.95 Western
Men's $18.95 Weslern
Men's $19.95 Western
Men's $21.95 Western

Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts

Men 's $10 .95
Sport Shirts . _.. _. $8 .54
M en's $12.95
' SportShirts . . . .. $10.14
Men's $15 .95
Sport Shirts __ . _. $12.44
Men's $20 .00
Sport Shirts . __ . _ $15.6-4

$13.24
$14.74
$15.54
$17.14

ODDS 'n ENDS SALE!

REG . $7 .00
SALE $5.25
REG . $9.00
SALE $6.75
REG . $12 .00
SALE $9.00
REG. $16 .00 _. _ SALE $12.00

com-

count

Reg . $27.00
Reg. $34.00
Reg. $41.00
'Reg . $52 .00
Reg . $64.00

Little boys' long and short
st y le pa i amas . Litt le girls'
gow ns, babydo l ls , paiama s
and robes .
Ful l rang e of c hildren 's
sizes .

ll o~ll " \1 \ ,11 \d C;t l ho ~1)()-~JO [!,,~

fi ll

I·1Td• r

Wo lt z length gown s, robes and
shor t rompers . Poly /c otton bten·
ds, plisses, terry and kn its.
Stzcs 5 thru XX L

H eW Penc e

SUMMER '
SLEEPWEAR SALE

~. ... ... ,Jii

\,,

t1ol t

Fo•nous rnnkes l tk.f' Joi\n C ur tr s .
Br1lrst1 Lclcly. Bc·fl e r H a ll a nd

CHILDREN'S

Sj •l ill I • I I ''" ' 1\1 tlio · )j, •,,) I .' 1 ~\ -,'\htl
r ,,,, .ot1dr , ,rf •... r·
)l, tl .. l '111 1 t: 'fl~i :!~
\ ,., r.~ I ·1., -1 ' .t il• I I '1 rll•• '11:1 , 4
1\.tl •' ' · ' '' ' ' • fl1 tit• Jl, · ,~o[ , .1.•-7 1
Ill ltw ·
)f &gt;~t ~

WALTZ LENGTH
LINGERIE

l!re s to c k o f qualrty dresses rn

rnlsses SIZeS 4 to 70 a nd
S rH'S 10 1 2 to 24 1 7

s3ggoo

Spec ial

LADIES'

WC'ekend sal e pr• ces on ou r en

MEN'S WESTERN
SHIRTS

G.E. 19"
COLOR
TELEVISION
SPECIAL

\\h o·l\!'&gt; l.nn tm I. ...;ilo·'
Jmt•· '• I !IIi!

,'-, i.iiiJ III• I I •• II " i l l i l l lo '-.
.t lld I it\\o'T ' \~ -4 i ; I

$15 .60
$17-90
$19.50
$23.40

"-------.

LADIES' DRESS SALE

SALE!

fl, ,.,[ I~ .Jii- J :J
llo• ·'"' lt••ll ' "' o~ ll .tl 1.' '''"'" ••II .JJJIIo J .uro l 11 rll
• ••1111111 11 ,tl )-' "'"'" .Jflo •J tlt,tl ol,tlo
II HJ \ \\ rll !11 ·
"ll:n, 111 -.1 l lt n 11 1il I~ .... ),) drro ·d h fr,.tnllk ·
I" II' I '). .t • lor llh ),,,,. Ill • .11 11 f,, tl u ~;tl o

No

Jeans
Jeans
Jeans
Jeans

l • ·l.

'-, , o\\ .._ \I~

.I(~;,H

$19.95
$22.95
$24.95
$29 .95

t' 2!}() h• .100
H~lt , 4tl0lt, , :~ 15J':JII ~ l)rlt ,!)OOI IJ~ ~

.oH ,t J lt •• tor ~ l II" Iii Jll . .);) toW I• • 71Ml l l1.-. 43-~~ 700
l•· RIMI IIJ, \h ~ r .,.\ /l(lll , molu l ot 4 J-J ~ :..O
.
~ ,- , -,[ , I 1\ ul.· I; ,., ~[ .tlld l'l tu)t' 2:J(l(11 300 lh:-.
.II•"''·' .Ill UlU 1&lt;• \ 1~) 1h' ..o ~ :,o_.,;; ~0 ~00 \11 :.00 ) IJ~
,;~,I
~M I I•· tiUl Itt-. Jj ..o/141 f.(llltt• 7()0 !h.~ ~ 3,, oi l .1 ~ 1 I• 111 ~ 1 ,1,~ \ , ~1- .Jii 111 - 1 .md H\ 1'1 46 l(l.

J4

614/992·2133 .

FATHER ' S DAY SALE

IIllO it., .J; l &gt;1 ...n IIIlO ,tt!ol ••, , ., :H ~i.l
~ ' 1 tlo I II&gt; tf,.,' I''""! ollltl I ')tHJt

l'••llt ld

. .TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY.
AND THE PROFESSIONS
-BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

iJ4

.12 ,!11~0/1 !1~1 I • !1-)
:,i-f,.) ~I 4011[11500 ) [)~ :)8.
h; .}01 I " +ti M) Ito.\ J' ~, 'l I ~NI I" 71 Wl :,ti-{)3 J() _ i OII l u

I,,

LEASING
. .EQUIPMENT

A GOOD TIME TO STOCK UP ON SUMMER NEEDS AND BUY GIFTS FOR YOUR DAD ON
HIS DAY, SUNDAY, JUNE 20th.
.

t.t k •·t • ft .. rro 11 .. ' ·''' ,f .lun• ·J 1911:: TH'rllh \ ' o•;rl
•.tho-., (o,llh foo·do ' l o,dll t• $11"$7 hlllit•t ( ' H w ~

fl,,,,,

. .BANK ONE,._

SPECIAL JUNE SALE FRIDAY, JUNE 11th -SATURDAY, JUNE 12th

I lhtn \ ;tlln l.l lt·~ l•wk t "
\1Hr ht Ht·twrt

11.

bus will be the Libertarian
candidate.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Markt'l rt'ports I

'" )) ,.,,[,

Republlcan cand!dateforstateaudit or and Carol R Kender of Colum-

Hllh,• r &lt;t C'f' includf'd M ont -

gnnH·n· { 'o unt\ Prost"f'Utor

t,, "'·'·'

other in the fall for attorney generaL Both ra,n unopposed In Tuesday's primary.
The vacancy for attorney general
was crea ted when incumbent William J _ Brown decided to seek the
Democrati c g ub e rnatorial
nomination .
Democratic sta te Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson also won renomi nation Tuesday in a race contested
only by write-in candida te Dennis
Thompson of Columbus. Fergu son,
53. has served as state auditor since
1975.
Cuyahoga County Commissioner
Vincent C. Campa nella, 39, Is the

former state Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese and Cuyahoga County Treasurer Francis E. GauL
Brown received 304,256 votes, or
34 percent of the totaL KJ.1clnlch
was second with 245,627. Calabrese
had 214,714 and Gaul135,444.
Brown will face former Cuyahoga County Commissioner Virgil
Brown. the Republica n nominee.
and Libertarian Mary Ann Leech of
Cincinnati , both of whom ran
unopposed .
lncumbent Secreta1-y of Sta te An thony J . Celebrezze Jr.. 41, a Democra t. and Republican state Sen .
Charles R Sax be, 38. will face each

SALE!

HOME
FURNISHINGS

MEN'S
.DRESS
BELTS
30

S1zes
to 44 waist . Good
varie ty of styles and c o lors including wester ns,
r eve rsibles and nove lty
style s.

Men's $8.00 Dress Belts . _. _ $6.40
Men's $11.00 Dress Belts _.. $8.80
Men's $12.50 Dress Bells
$10.00
Men's $15.00 Dress Belts . _ $12.00

Odd lots
discontinued
co lors or patterns . Slightly
so il ed .
Curtains ~ sheet s - towe ls draperies ~ a r ea rugs _
Limited quantity _

lf2 Price

Nunwro uno
SA:\

J.' J(Ai'iC JSCO 1A P 1 -

WLJrn·n i{ainlc-n ma ~· bt' thr f\o. 1
bc.t &lt;i('ball fan in thC' country .

11ai rd en, who head '

Porta l-

,\lbfort sen Tran·l Corp . hCI'f'. says
h&lt;' ha :-- '-'1"( ' 11 ga mr•o;; in al l 26 m aj or
lf'agw• hall park ~ and in June will
add thr M in nPSota 1\vins' new

CHILDREN'S

SALE

SWIMWEAR
SALE

Women's Sundresses

Littl e girls one pi ece suit s,
two piece sui t s and cove rup s_
Li ttl e boys' trunk s.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to
6x and 7 to 14.

domed sl:ldium to his collection .

THURSDAY
NIGHT

Reg. $6.00 . .
Sale $4.79
Reg. $9.00 . .
Sale $7.19
Reg. $12.00 . . . Sale $9.59
Reg. $14.00 ... Sale $11.19

EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT IS
.LADIES' NIGHT &amp; '60' NIGHT.

Junior, misses and extra size
sundresses. So lid and prints in
co tton and poly ester .

Reg. s12.00 . . . Sale s9.59
Reg. s11.00
Sale s13.59
REg. s23.00
Sale s18.39
Reg. s32.00
Sale s25.59
Reg. s43.00
Sale s34.39

LADIES DRINKS
t;, PRICE
ROCK AND ROll WITH All
THE HITS FROM THE '60s.
9:30 to 12:00

JUNIOR

DANCING

JEANS SALE

Special Salel

EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
WITH JAY Hill AND
THE HITS FROM 10 UNTil

Quality Wrangl er denim
iea ns in
stra ight leg and e lastic fitted leg styles.
Be lted and e lasti c waists. Plain pockets
and designer ieans .

Men's
Summer Shorts
Includes our entire stock - cut off denims

REG. s18.00
REG. s22.00
REG. s21.00
REg. s35.00 .

HAPPY HOUR
MONDAY-THURSDAY
4:30 -6:30
THE FINEST FOOD
IN TOWN

SALE s12.59
SALE $15.39
SALE s18.89
SALE s24.49

. tennis shorts • dress shorts · knits and
active sportswear shorts. Sizes 28 to 46.
You'll like our selection.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL e~ SATURDAY Tl~ 5·...

MEN'S

SWIM TRUNKS
Sizes 28 to 42 . Good
selection of sty les and
colors.
Men's $8.95
Swim Trunks .. . . 57 .08
Men's $9.95
Swim Trunks . . •. 7. 88
.Men's 510.95
Swim Trunks •• • • 58 •68
Men's $12.95
Swim Trunks ..• 10 •28

s

s

ELBERFELD$ IN POM.ERQY
,_. . . •·

...

'

..

.. .. ......

"'' ' ' - ·· ~· ·· ·- ~ · -· · ··

I
.. ...... .. ·:. ·'·' ·· · ....

r

�Pagt' Fiw Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Page Four- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

MASON COUNTY
INSURANCE AGENCY
"THE AGENCY THAT CARES,.
. ART GHEEN
675-4067 LEW WILEY
217 S1xth Street
Point Pleasant

MASON RESCUE
SQUAD

Award presentation will highlight supper

SCOTTISH INN &amp;
BRIAN'S STEAl&lt; HOUSE
"We Salute This Year's Tournament"

675-6276

Rt. 62 North

Point Pleasant

NEW HAVEN SUPERMARKET
&lt;)I

NEW HAVEN

882-2125
"We Appreciate Your Business"

5TH STREET

"THE BEST OF LUCK TO ALL"
MASON, W. VA.

773-5574

MASON

FIRE DEPARTMENT
'PLEASE SUPPORT THIS YEAR'S TOURNAMENf'
773-5574
MASON, W.VA.

BEST WISHES TO DAVE DILES
GOLF CLASSIC
Compliments of

FOGLESONG FUNERAL HOME
773-5561
MASON, W. VA

2ND STREET

AMBURGEY AVIATION, Inc.
MASON COUNTY AIRPORT
675-2354

POINT PLEASANT

MICK WILLIAMS
BARBER &amp;STYLE CENTER
POMEROY, OH.

Pomeroy, Ohio

"Kerm's Korner"

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
PH. 992-2556

POMEROY, OH.

MARK V
GROCERY STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
YOUR TWO IN ONE SHOE STORE

AND
MIDDLEPORT

HERITAGE
HOUSE
FAMILY SHOE STORE

ted th e rec1p1en
· · ts f or the covet e' d
"Good Guy" awa rds _ several of
which a re give n a nnua lly.
T
·
·
roph1es Will be awarded, a lso,
for tow individual gross and tow
net as well as for the low team
'
dI
.
gross an ow team net.
Ernie Shuler a nd George
Morris, who head up the awards
.t
.
d h
.
comm1 tee, announce t ere WI 11
be honored for the longest drive
and closest to the pin. " We'll also
have some
surprises this
, other
.
year, too, sa1d Shuler. "We pla n
to prese nt a coupl e of
d'1st'mgu1s
. hed service
.
a war ds,

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR
"IN THE HEART OF POMEROY"

a nd
so m e
out s t a ndi ng
achievement plaques. One thing
is certain. though - we'll get the
program over in a hurry as we
always do. We want to make sure
our jololfen~ are well rested fen the
tournament the following morning."
(Continued from page 3l
Celebrity l1 St
Hank Auq1rre. Fran klin , Mich.,
Robinson a nd Mark Ruof.
form er DC'I roi l Tiqer a nd
Tee No. l&amp;A
ClrvC'1ilnd 1nd ian lefl hander;
Bob Alha. Columbus. Oh10,
DICK WEBER, Bill Nl'lson.
Oh10 Stale ki cker and backup
Steve Story, J . D. Story and Hoo
quar lerbac k;
Briiln Burke. football coach.
Mcinerney
Oh10 Uni vers ity, Athens;
Tee No. l&amp;B
Earle Bruce. Columbus. fool
CHRIS SCHENKI .E, J im Barball coach, Oh10 Stale;
ton. Paul Spoilrich, Alan Klein
J1mmy Crum, sports dirC'c lor.
WCMH Televis iOn. Colu mbus;
and Joe Wills.
Bob Smtih. w Va. Asstslant
Tee No. l7A
::aqr Coach;
DARRELL HEDRICK, Benny
Dan DC'vine. former Notre
Dilme . former Gref'n Bay Packrr
E wing, Dennis Hutchinson .
coach. now execul1 ve direc tor of
Glenn Cul p and J ay Chancy.

lhC' Sun DC'vtl Foundal1on. TPm
pf' . Ar 1z :
Brad Du se k. l1nrbackrr .
Wac,hlnq ton RC'dSkllls .
Davr DC'Bol. c~&gt;nlrr . Hnrltord
Whalers . Nat1onal HockPY
Leoque. former all Amrr1con i't 1
MIChlqan ;
Bob Eva ns. R1o GrandC' .' Oh10.
founder. Bob Evans Farms ;
R1ck Forzano. former hrod
coocha llhC' Nava i Acodemy,for
mer head coach. Detro11 L1ons.
now ABC Sports commenta tor .
Joe Ferquson, quarterbilck.
Buff
&lt;'I toGarver.
Bdis;
Ned
for mer pil ch1nq
qreat. St. Louis Browns. now il
rf'sidenl of Nf'y, Ohio;
Archlf' Gri ffi n, Co lumbu s.

01110. two 11m!' HP1sman Trophy only I
w1nnN, now r unn111q ));l( k. C111
Hnrolct McE ihanq . 1\ ttll'n'&gt;.
c1nnol1 Bf'ntJol c,.
.l thl1'1•c cllrPc1or . 0 11 10 un1vcr
Dnrrf'll Hf'dr1c . Oxtorct. 0111 0. c,ily
tJaskf' lbc'lll (Ooch , M1Clm1 Un1vN
Ron McDoll'. Wo '&gt; hlnqton. D
sily .
c . tornlf'r oil pro pi.WN ,
KilYC' Kf'S5 IC'r . spor t&lt;, wr1 trr . Wo&lt;,h1nq 1on RC'dSk1n&lt;&gt;
Columbus (I IIH'n Jou rncl l;
Don Nf'hlf'n. Morq(l!l1own, w
Sponky McFarland Fort Wor
va football coar t1. Wf'S t V1rt1 1fl1•1
th. Tf'x. ac tor. prrto;mrr . ml'•n
Unl.vN&lt;;ily .
bN of " Our Gan&lt;t" and " Tiw L1t
Tom Nowil iT kf' . Df'Mhorn .
llrRasca1s";
M1 ch , former &lt;'Ill BIC t l!'n
Ray Milc;uirP . PGA qolf full back at lncll ilni'l . runn111q
profess•onal .
B1rrn1nqham . bark. Detro1l L1ons.
M1 r h .
Danny Nrr. bilskC'IIJi! 11 roM h.
Hoot
Me
1 nC'r ney.
pres
1
dent.
Oh10
versify : Dl'lroil . M1rh ,
Mc1nrrnf'y tnc . Bloomlirld Hil ts.
J1mUn1Northrup.
M1(h ;
for mC' r outfiPtder . DPiro11 1 1qrrs.
Eldon Mil lf'r, b;,skelbil ll coach. mf'mhf'r of 1968 wor lct (hilrn
OhiO Sl,l tf' Unl vrrsily (dlnnrr
(Continued on page 7 )

preciates whatwe're try ing toaccomplish .f~r the Bend area.' '
In add1t1on, the trophy seleclion committee has already selec·

HIDDEN VALLEY COUNTRY CLUB

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

. There'll
.
. be. lots of trophies and no speeches - at the fourth
annua l Dave Diles-Appalachia
golf outing and dinner
,
·
Andtheresa brandncwt rophy
to be added to the list this yea r.
It's the ''Big J ock" award a nd
. ."'
d dt
f h
WI11 = a wa r e o one o t e 1982
guests at the June 9 dinner at
RoyalOa k.
"I , . h
. .. . . , .
t sa .ummo~~ awa rd,, said
Dave D1les,
but 1t s a
meaningful
award,
too. We're
t J.
t"
·
gomg o g1ve I to one of our
guests who's. gone out of his wa y
to be very nice to us and who ap-

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�Page Six- Dave Di~s Tournament Edition
Page Seven-Dave Diles Tournament Edttion

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RNER~
1n.suranoe 8ervtoe.

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Pomeroy, OH.
COMPLIMENTS OF

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MIDDLEPORT, OH.

·

North Second Ave., Middleport
992-6658

Right.

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"SEE US FOR All YOUR HOME FURNISHINGS"
313 Main Street
675-2406
Point Pleasant

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Rt. 2 North, Point Pleasant

675-2702

Complimens of

8-J FLORAL
119 OHIO RIVER ROAD

675-5458

Compliments of

Stevens Funeral Home, Inc.
1300 VIAND

675-4150
POl NT PLEASNT

I)
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
: : :-.=
WILLIAM HUSSELL, AGENT
773-5942
110 South Second Street

Compliments of

Former big league pitcher,
Garver in '82 Diles classic

.

VALLEY DRIVE

675-4340

SAND HILL ROAD

675-5236

•
Ill

(Continuedfrom page5l

pionship team ;
Johnny Pont. Oxford. Oh io. for
rner al l star football player.
Miarn i of Oh io; former coach
ilthletic director at Yale . and
Nor t hwestern, and lndianil ;
Will Perr y, Ann Arbor . M 1ch,
il55 i 5tilnt ilthl etic
dlrf'ctor .
Un1versi t y of Michiqan ;
Dr. Charles P1nQ, pres1de nt.
Oh io Univers1ty, Athens ;
Sonny Randl e. footbal l coilch.
Marsha II Universi ty ;
Edd1e Rosrnber q , Drtroll .
M i ch .. president, F r 1en dship
Bu i lders.
Torn Reed , footba l l coilch,
Miilm i Un iversi ty ;
Ch ris Schenkrl, Lilkr T1p
pecanoe, Ind .• sportscaster . ABC
Sports;
Chuck Stobart. footbilll coilc h,
University of Utah ;
A r t Schli chter. quarterbilck .

Oh10 State Uni vers1ty and No. 1
draft choice of the Balt1 more
Colts;
Steve Snapp, athl et 1c 1n
formati on dep ar t m ent. Oh 10
State University ;
Jim Shewak, Pi ttsburqh, Pi! ,
ilnd Eddyvil le. Ky ., telev1sion
producer. producer of " The
Jitck ie Sherri ll Show";
Bud T ice. chief tril i ner. Bu ffa lo
Bi lls pro football team ;
Bil l Uzel ac. Southf iel d . Mich ..
PGA Pro. P lum Hollow Go lf
Club;
Vic Wertz , f ormer all ·star ou t
fie l der. Cleve land Indi ans and
Detro1t T i qers;
Dick Weber , F lor issan t , M o ..
bow l ing champion and member
of Pro Bowl ers' Hal l of Fa me .
Dilve Diles and Bob Zeffala to,
MilrShilll COilC h

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with St. Louis. Tht• Browns won
just 52 games whill' losing 102
that year which makes him the
only pilcht•r tol'Ver win 20 games
in a season with a team that Just
100 or more games. Garver,
whose nephew, Bruce Bert•nyi
currently pitches for the Cin·
cinnati Reds, was the starting pitchl'r for the American League in
tlw 1951 All-Star gallll'. He was
tlw opening-day hurler in eight of
his 14 major leagut• seasons.

Ned F'. Garwr, Ney, Ohio, a
for111er major league pitdwr with
thl' St. Louis Brown, Dl'lroit
Tigers. Kansas City Athletics and
Los Angt•lt•s Angels will attend
the Fourth Ann ual Dave Diles·
Appalaehia Gulf Tournament.
Garver, a vl'teran of World War
II , spent 14 years in the major
leagues and fou r in the mi nors.
His career highli ghts include a
20-game winning season in 1951

Compliments of

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
POINT PLEASANT

Ned Garver, former AL pitcher

Award

675-5666

319 Viand Street

-992-3106

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

R. CRAIG MATHEWS, D.D.S.
AND STAFF

We Do KENTUCKY FRIED
CIDCKEN
Chicken

I

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POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

992-5130

TEWKSBARY
BARBER SHOP

NAME BRAND CLOTHING
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
PHONE 992-2351

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FOR MORE GREEN!!

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Danny Sayre, Owner
5th Street

882-2525

610 Viand Street

675-2500

·1 415 Main Street

675-6190

�Page Nine- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Royal Crown Bottling Co.
WISHES GREAT SUCCESS
TO THE
DAVE DILES GOLF TOURNEY

IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR AN ALTERNATIVE TO HIGH
UTILITY BILLS.
11

Committee has charge of tourney
A 32-member corrunittee has
handled arrangements for the
1982 Dave Diles Appalachia
Semi-Closed Golf Tournmament
and Hillbilly Supper.
Committee members are as
follows:
FOOD - George Harris, Larry
Powell, Danny Crow and Ralph
Werry.
TROPHIES - Ernie Shulerand
George Morris.
TOURNAMENT - Bill Nelson
and Richard Rupe.
FINANCE - Paul Barnett,
Bob Miller, Ted Reed, Don

Morgan and Don Mills.
Foglesong and Tom Wolfe.
SPECIAL GIFTS - Jay and
SECURITY-MEDICAL
Sheriff James Proffitt and Dr. R. Jim Riepenhoff, Ronnie Smith,
Paul Simon, Bernard Fultz, Paul
R. Pickens.
LODGING - Richard Follrod. Eich and George Hackett.
GOLF - Gary ahd Bob Roush
TRANSPORTATION - Roger
and Bill Childs.
HOSPITALITY - Horace
Spectators in free
Karr, Ben Ewing and Phil Kelly.
There will be no charge for
PUBLICITY - Bob Wingett .
spectators at the Dave Diles Golf
Tournament to be held June 10, at Funds go to charity
Proceeds from the 1982 Dave
Riverside Golf Course, Mason,
Diles
Celebrity Golf Tournament
Bill Nelson announced today.
Spectators will not, however, be and Hillbilly Supper will again go
to various charities in the Meigspermitted to park at the course.
Mason area.

.
GOOD GUY AWARD - Jackie Sherrill, who was Pitt foot·
ball coach now coach and athletic director at Texas A &amp; M, was
recipient of a "Good Guy" award at last year's "Hillbilly': di':
ner kicking off the Diles' Golf Tournament. Shernll 1s
congratulated by Diles.

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• WE DELIVER AND INSTALL •
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675-7514

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PLUMBING &amp;HEATING
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-2036

caps for charity.

Mill St.

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PH. 992-3542

2926

We're

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HOME
106 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2121

THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

Goodyear Dealer!

We Wish The Dave Diles
Celebrity Golf Tournament A Very

GOOD/YEAII
Appalachian Tire Is Your
Headquarters For Good Year Tires
Come To Us For All Your Tire Needs

BfJT. •liES AREN'T ALLWE ARE...WE'RE

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"You Are Invited To Make Our Bank-- Your Bank"

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"Your Full Service Bank"

Dignity and Service Always
426 Viand Street

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

675-3930

Member Federal Reserve System

�Page Eleven- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Miller will attend Hillbilly dinner
Eldon Miller has completed
four years as head basketball
coach at The Ohio State University. Prior to accepting his
present position, he had 15 years
of college coaching experience,
including 14 years as a head
coach.
Untler Miller, the Buckeye
program has shown steady improvement. His first team
finished with a 9-18 record, but
his next three squads posted 1611, 19-12 and 21-8 marks, respectively, as he tirelessly worked to ·
rebuild OSU's basketball fortunes.
The 1980 team fnished second in
the Big Ten, missing the title by
just one game for the second
straight year. The Buckeyes, who
posted a regular season mark of
'}[}.7, were then extended an atlarge berth to the NCAA Tournament.
It was the second consecutive
tournament appearance for Ohio
State, an N.I.T. participant in

Eldon Miller, OSU cage coach

FRANCIS FLORISTS
"Meigs County's Oldest Florist"
PH. 992-2644

Pomeroy, OH.

"Your Dealer On The River"
PH. 992-6614
POMEROY, OH.

Tom Reed, head football coach
at Miami University. will be appearinK at the Diles Appalachia
Golf Tournament.
Reed, 36, became Miami's 28th
head football coach in 1978 and
has guided the Redskins to a
three-year record of lJl victories,
13 defeats and one tie.
A native of Delaware, Ohio,
Reed earned llletters in football ,
baseball and track at Hayes High
School. He earned three varsity
letters as a halfback under Coach
Bo Schembechler and helped
Miami capture two Mid-

American Conference c~rtitl es in
1965 and 1966. He stayed on at
Miami to serve two years as a
graduate assistant in football.
From 1969-72 Reed was the
defensive line coach under Gordon Larson at Akron and helped
compile a record of 28-11 and
three national sma ll college
rankings.
Reed spent one year as defensive backfield coach under .lim
Young at Arizona and received
credit for helping the team gain
an 8-3 record and a Western
Athletic Con fere nce co-

Paul Somerville, Jr.
Agent
675-4030

IUU •AIM

INIUIAN~~

CALL

MDJIJER'S INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
Harry Miller, Agent

Ty Somerville
Agent
675-4035

1400 OHIO STREET- POINT PLEASANT

Mason Aggregates, Inc.

championship.
The next four years for Het•d
were spent as the defensi ve lirw
coach at Michigan under Scht'rnbechler. In addition to compi ling
a record of 38-7, three Big 10 cochampionships and national
ranking, Michigan played in the
Orange Bowl and twice in the
Rose Bowl.
While at Michigan, Reed had
served as the strength and conditioning coach in charge of
developing, rnaintaimng and
testing programs and as the
recruiting coordinator.

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Miami's football mentor will play

1979.
to Tennessee after the 1962
A relentless recruiter, Miller season, Miller, at age 23, was
has signed a nwnber of out- named head coach at Wittenberg.
standing players during his
His first Wittenberg team won
relatively short stay with the 26 and lost two and was runner-up
Buckeyes. Among the more in the NCAA College Division.
notable are all-American and
Miller ·coached eight years at
three time all-Big Ten guard Wittenberg and compiled an exKelvin Ransey; Herb Williams, cellent 142-55 record. His teams
an all-conference pick this year ; won three Ohio Conference
and Clark Kellogg, one of the top Championships and shared two
freshmen in the country in 1980.
others. Seven of his teams led the
Miller was born in 1939 at Ohio Conference in defense and
Gnadenhutten, Oh. He attended all eight Wittenberg squads
Wittenberg University and finished in the top 20 nationally in
graduated in 1961. As an un- the latter category.
dergraduate, he played four
Following a 20 and six season at
years of basketball under Coach Witenberg in 1970, Miller was
Ray Mears. As a senior in 1961, named head coach at Weston
Miller played on the Wittenberg Michigan, where basketball had
team that won the NCAA College enjoyed limited success.
Division Championship and he
was chosen "Most Valuable 40 carts available
Player" on that team.
There will be 40 golf carts
Following graduation, Miller available for golfers and the
remained at Wittenberg for the media at the 1981 Dave Diles
1962 season as an assistant to Celebrity Golf Tournament at
Mears. When the latter left to go Riverside Golf Club at Mason.

Tom Reed, Miami grid coach

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New Haven

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�Pal{e Twelve- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Page Thirteen- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Information given on 18 hole Riverside Course
No. 1 - It's a 380-yard. par 4 oprnmq to the green 1S narrow
ilolr Don ' t yank your tee shot to but a dr1ve and a nine iron or
llu· le ft or your golf ball will be
wedqe should do you s1nce lh1 s
cl,rp\l,nq tr affi c in the Ohio par 4 hol e 1S but 331 yards long.
R1vN M a tter ot f ac t . don't hit
Don' t be lonq wi th your seconti,.
vour sec ond shot left . either. shot. thouqh. Those white sta kes
r t1r-rr ar e t rees on the rig ht and a beh ind the qreen m ea n out of
trap on the ri ght side of the g r een. bound s. Oh. that stuff to the left of
No 1 A lm ost an exac t th e tee is corn - and it's out of
ttupl 1ca te of the first hole. It's a bounds. too.
y,1rn lon qN and pl ays to a par
N o. 4 - T1me to r elax . A par 3
tour Thr r1ver i s left . the tr ees th at m easures 161 yards. The ten
,-,qtl t and the trap thi s t im e is on ·dpncy her e is to underc lub.
That 's the C&amp;O Railroad on the
"'" left s1 de of the green.
N o 3 - You can' t put 11 in to the IPf t side and copperheads love to
l)ll,o R 1ver unless you I ine up sun on the track s. The green is
tlM kwards on the tree. But wr ll tr apped and i t's better to
nwrr·s wa ter
m front of the come 1n from sli ghtly to the righ t .
.,r .. rn A nd behind the qree n. And
No 5 - Bird1e t ime. The f ai r
tn riH' r 1qht of thr qreen. The way 1S w ide on th is 514-yard , par

5 hole. You have to watc h for the
out of bounds on the left (those
r ai lroad tr acks aqai n ) and ther P
are som e trees to contend with on
the riqht . Gener a lly, it' s straight
1n front of you .
No. 6 - Par 5. 498 y ards. Hit
your tee shot to the riqht and
you're in a pond. Hit it Sli ghtly
riqht and short and you ' re in a
qutter . H it i t too far and you' r e on
;mother man's property . Ma.vbe
4 wood over the trees or a 5 iron
to the fai r way opening. Then
;mother iron and a w edqe to the
qreen. The fairway gets a little
narrow. thouqh . Too far left and
you' r e OB . Too f ar right and
you' r e walkinq in a lligator alley.
OnP more thinq - don't hit 11 over

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PH. 992-5432
POMEROY, OH.

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No 15
Pla cemen t of the tee
shot ' s rxt r e mel y 1mportant on
th1 s par 5 A qood tee shot puts
you 1n qood shape to b1 r d1e th is
482 yard hole A qulley r uns
almost the ent 1re length of the
hole alonq the left side. Two tr aps
&lt;tuMd th e qreen.
No. 16
K eep your driver in
the baq The hole 1S but 287 yards
l onq and you have four shots t o
qet i t in the 1n par . Usually a lonq
1ron. or 5 wood shot 1n shape for a
n1ne 1r on for wedqe to the qreen.
Thr open mq 1S narr ow. though,
anci oncr aqa1n you have wa t er
ilncl trees to battle. It's a dogleq
r 1qht
No 17
Doqlrq aqa1n. lh1s

*

FLEXSTEEL RCA
'ADMIRAL FRIGIDAIRE
HOOVER LANE
SPRING AIR HOKY

*

*

*

t1me left On l y 358 yar ds and par
4 If you're st ronq , you ca n dr 1ve
ro 1ust 10 fron t of the qrern by
tak1 nq a shortcu t throuq ll some
~·n il II t rees and thr rouqh
No. 18 - A dandy ftn1 shinq

holr It's your lonq dnveole. not
much troubl e. w1de f airway and
not ex tr aordmar d y l onq for a
pr~r 5. at 494 ya rds Thr qreen 1S
the best (or at leas t 1t1c t r1 Ck 1r~ t J
on the course a nd thrre pu tt1 nq ~ ~
not uncommon .

USA-Japan golf _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Beman of the American group.
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) The event will offer a combined
Matches between eight leading
American PGA players and eight purse of $440,000. The U.S. team
from Japan's PGA will be held at will be made up of the eight
Sobu Country Club in Tokyo, Nov. leaders in money-earnings this
3-7, says Commissioner DeaneR. year through the World Series of
Golf.

COMPLIMENTS OF

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443-C Locust St., Middleport

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VISION EXAMINATIONS
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Examinations by Appt.
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rnNc latel y . The whole affair 1S
tJut 305 yards long and about all
you need do is hit it r easonably
~ rra1qht . Ther e are two traps a t
rtw qreen.
No 11 - a par-3 that i s nothing
but lonq. It' s 220 yards to the pin
tJu t the fairway is wide and If you
11 ~ve tree troui-Ji e to the ri g ht. you
w'r nt out of your way to get it.
No 12 -- Another par-3 but 60
yMdS shorter . Ther e are trees on
thr nqht and the green is l ightl y
11 uarded by traps in front . But it' s
,, rela tively trouble-free h~l e .
No. 13 - No more n1ce guy
~ t u ff This par·4 is a solid test .

stre t c h1nq
436 . yards
a nd
r r qu1rmq two qood shots. Don ' t
be too far to the r 1qht wi th th at
second shot or you ' ll I' nd a pond
behind the trees.
No. 14 - Tak e off your belt and
shoestring s and rid your se lf of all
sharp obj ec ts. There 1s off t imes
a qr eat temptation to comm1t
suicide her e. The par J i s rea ll y
dinky just 94 yar ds away .
Don' t be anywhere ex cept on th e
qreen. It's all ca rr y. a pond in
front. an elevated qreen_ We
f inall y had to r emove razor
bl ades from the pro shop
so
many golfers were rac 1nq thPre
from the 14th tee for som e qui ck
wnst slashmq

~- Middlepert, Ohio

'33995
.

(Continued from page 12)

VAUGHAN'S

882-2005

PHARMACY FOR ALL YOUR PRESCRIPTION NEEDS,

11

Mason, W. Va.

"ServinR The Tri-County Area Since 1970"

STOP BY AND VISIT THE FRIENDLY FOLKS AT HEALTH AID

If

(Continued on page 13)

'

773-5710

"YOUR LOW COST
PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS"

I

rxcept on the green. There's a
crPek running in front of the
qr ee n and if you h i t into the
qul ch, don ' t bother looking for
your ball. In the summer of 1980
alone. we lost 4,817 ball s, two
qoats. one caddy and three eiqht·
whee lers .
No. 10 - It can be the easies t
par 4 hole on the course, or the
most maddening . You see, not
many golf courses offer an out -of
bounds situation WITHIN the
confines of the golf course . River ·
S1de does. If your tee shot strays
left, across the road, you m ay tee
up another ball . There's al so a
swamp to tbe riqht . Don' t hit into
11. We' ve lost so many fri ends

POINT-MASON AUTO GLA-SS

Health Aid Pharmacy
309 Fifth Street

thr qreen or you' ll need scuba
qea r . The ri ver again.
N o. 7 - It' s a dandy little par 3.
1ust 114 yards long . But you have
to hit the green . Too short and
you' r e back in Ga tor Gul ch . Too
far over and you ' r e hitting three.
No. 8 - L eav e the driver in the
baq. Hit a little wood or an iron
and pitch to the g r een, only 313
yar ds from the tee. that thinq in
front of the green is Crocodile
Canyon again . Don 't hit it too far ,
nor too far l eft . ther e's a pond out
ther e and one sma ll trap guards
the qree n.
No . 9 - It's a 179-yard job. It
demands accuracy . It's out of
bounds behind the qreen and out
of your mind almost anywher e

Information given on 18 hole Riverside Course

21 CU. FT .

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30CU. FT_,_

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Gray Seal &amp; Dutch Boy Paint
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Huffy Bicycles
Hoover Sweepers
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POMEROY, OHIO

�Page Fourteen- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Page Fifteen-Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Craig Stadler leads 1982 PGA money earners
Craig Stadler, who last Sunday
captured the Kemper Open
Championship, boosted hi s
money-winning lead on the pro
golf tour to $312,058 and establlshed the wtnning margin of the
year·· seven strokes.
Other big money winners this
season are:
7 Tom Watson
3 Tom Kite
4 Jerry Pale
5 Lanny Wadkins
6 Scott Hoc h
7 Jack Nicklaus
8 Andy Bean
9 Johnny Mi ller

217,646
213.775
209,547
152.582
148.549
147.894
140, 344
125.287

11 8, 532
114,033
111 ,693
111 , 153
110, 194
109,052
107.685
10 1,572
96,821
95,026
85,002
77 ,281
73.501
73.191
72.761
68 ,916
65,071
64,374
63.210
60. 133

10 Ed Sneed
II Bob Gtlder
12 Scot! Stmpson
13 Cur tt s Slranqe
14 Hale lrwtn
15 Danny Edwards
16. Bob ShearN
17 Waynr Lev'
18 Georqe Burns
19 Bobby Cl ampell
20 J•m S•mons
2 1 Bruce Ktetzke
27 Davtd Graham
23. Va nce Heafner
24 Andy North
25 Ed Fiori
26 Tom Weiskopf
27 . Jay Haas
28 Ray Floyd
29 Fuzzy 7nP IIPr

30 Lorry Nelson
3 1 Mtk e Reid
32 Denis Watson
JJ Seve Ball esteros
34 Bil l Rogers
35 D .A . Weibrinq
36. John Mahaf f ey
37. Frank Conner
38. Peter Oosterhut s
39. Brad Bryant
40 . Bobby Wadkins
41 DanPohl
42. Jack Renner
43 Ca lvin Peete
44 . Ron Streck
45 . George Archer
46 . Woody Blackburn
47 . Chip Beck
48 Tom Purtz er
49 . Jim Booras

56.837
55,952
54.518
54,368
54,081
53,568
52.993
50,664
49,462
48,891
47 , 47 5
47 ,358
47.200
46,916
46,27 4
44.750
44,054
42 ,803
42 ,655
42 ,491

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

50. Dan Halldorson
51. Gil Morgan
52 . Bob Eastwood
53 . Tim Stmpson
54 . Rex Ca ldwe ll
55. Lennie Clement s
56. Ben Crenshaw
57 . Huber t Green
58. J C. Snead
59. N ick Fa ldo
60. Jim Dent
61 Morris Hata lsky
62 . Peter ..l,ilcobsen
63 . Tommy Valent ine
64 . Joe Inman
65. D . Eichelberger
66. Roger Maltbie
67 . Fred Couples
68. Steve M eln yk
69 John Cook

42.443
42 .365
42 . 150
50 ,599
39,886
39.319
39.029
38,34 1
38, 182
36,998
35.250
33.20 1
32,806
32.359
31.858
31.692
31.078
30, 444
29, 432
29,054

70. Keith Fergus
71 Lee Trevino
72 Greg Powers
73 Mike Nicolette
74 . Tom Jenkins
75 . Hal Su tton
76 M ike Morley
77 . Forrest Fezler
78 Gary Hallberg
79 Bruce F leisher
80 . L . Thompson
81 . Barry Jaecke l
82 Phi I Hancock
83 . Mark O'Mear a
84 . Gibby Gilbert
85 . Don Pooley
86. Doug Tewell
87 . Mark Hayes
88 . Mike McCu llouqh
89. Payne Stewart

29.046
28,123
27 ,852
27.528
26,271
25.984
23 .303
23.066
22 .780
22.547
22.181
21.747
21 ,559
20,931
20,899
19,353
19, 197
19, 173
19, 132
19,082

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learn in 1974 and 1975.
He was named "Most Valuable
Football Player in the Big Ten"
for two straight years, thereby
becoming only the second athlete
in history to accomplish this feat.
Griffin broke nearly all the
Ohio State rushing recooos. He
set national marks and Big Ten
marks, both for a single season
and for a career.
In four seasons, Griffin rushed
for 5,496 yards, the most in Ohio
State history and in the entire
history of the Big Ten. He ran for
over 100 yards in 31 straight
games, also a national record.
Griffin holds another rare
distinction. He was captain of the

Charles J. Ping, P'"':!sident a nd Advanced Management Program
Professor of Philosophy at Ohio of the Graduate School of
University, Athens, will par- Business Administration of Harticipate in the Fourth Annual vard University.
Diles-Appalachia Tournament.
He has taught philosophy on the
His undergraduate degree in faculties of four institutions and
English literature 1s from South- has served as lecturer or resourwestern at Memphis . His ce person for various seminars
graduate degrees are in theology and institutes for university adand philosophy, with a Ph.D. ministrators.
from Duke University.
After serving as dean of faculty
In addition, he has participated at a liberal arts college and
in a nwnber of executive training provost of a state university, he
programs and is a graduate of the became the 18th President of

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PICKENS

For the seconl straight year,
Archie Griffin, former Big Ten
running great, will participate in
the Diles-Appalachia Golf tournament June 10 at Mason, W. Va.
Griffin, a special teams captain
of the Cincinnati Bengals, and
member of the Ohio State Hall of
Fame, has won virtually all the
top honors that any single
athletic could win in college football.
Griffin is the only double winner of the prestigious Heisman
Trophy, symbolic of " The Outstanding College Football Player
in the Country."
He was a first team selection on
every All-American football

1974 Ohio football team and his
teammates renamed him to captain of the 1975 Buckeyes.
As a professional Archie has
continued his illustrious football
career by ranking among the top
of NFL rushers in yards-percarry average. Griffin, the man,
has more impressive records
than Archie the football player.
Archie is an outstanding civic
leader, capable of reaching
crowds of impressionable youth
as well as groups of businessmen.
Whether it be on the football
field, a classroom, a neighborhood playground or a
businessman's conference, Griffin is an outstanding leader.

OU president will participate

POMEROY, OHIO .

Compliments of

Griffin returns for second time

Amana Appliances

Ohio University in 1975.
His published books and articles reflect his interest in
philosophy, intellectual history
and educational administration.
He has contributed to the
literature of higher education
with articles and speeches on
such d iverse to pi cs as
cducationa I philosophy , institut ional planning , fac ulty
unionization, intercollegiate
athletics and university governance.

e'we
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POMEROY, OHIO

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Member FDIC

�Page Sixteen Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Pa~e Seventeen-

New records assured at .classic
Th e 1982 Dav e Diles- becued chicken. There will be
Appalachia golf fest is assured of bluegrass music served up by the
setting records. The entry list is Dark Hollow Boys and some
~ulging - actually it is overawa rds presentations inflowing - and all that is needed cluding a couple of surprises.
now is a break in the weather to Only those who have officially enassure a record crowd of spec- tered the golf tournament are attending the dinner - and tee-up
tators.
Festivities begin for the fourth time for tilt! 18-hole event at
annual event on Wednesday Ri verside Golf Club in Mason is
evening, June 9, with a gala set for 10 a.m. June 10.
hillbilly dinner at Royal Oak
" We have a record nwnber of
Park. The crowd will gather at celebrities," said Dick Foil rod,
six with dinner served promptly one of the committee members,
"and a record field. We're going
at seven.
The Pomeroy Fire Department to have to play five 'in a group
is serving its specialty, bar- because the tournament has

Buffalo quarterback will tee off

grown so large - but all of us are
excited about the response we've
had. And our prime concern is
what we will be able to do for
charity in the Mason and Meigs
a rea."
Spanky McFarland from the
original "Our Gang" comedy
group headlines a star-studded
celebrity field, along with Buffalo
Bills' quarterback Joe Ferguson,
Bengals' star Archie Griffin,
Coach Earle Bruce and players
Art Schlichter and Bob Atha of
Ohio State.
The c~Khairmen of the finance
{Continued on page 17)

Tlw Daw Dilt•s golf tourna nwnl has le:wklt•d one of pro
football's lop quarterback~.
Jot• FtTgusnn. lhl' ta lt•nlt•d
srgnakal lt'l' f11r tlw-Buffalo Brlls.
will bt• orr hand for both lht• dnlnl'r and ti ll' gol f t'\'t• nt Jurll' 9-10.
Ft'IT USIIII rs a ll lllt'-Yt'&lt;ll'
Nal ron;rl Ftlolball Lt•agut• star
who n rnu· out of thl' Universrty of
Arkcrnsas to NF I. stadium.

New

POINT PLEASANT
675-1812

773-5536

Now you need only
your Motorists agent for

Compliments Of

Point Pleasant

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i - =al{eJIJ:Jil~ .. -j

7322 Jackson
Pomt Pleasa nt

Uzela1 · has bt•t•n lhl' ht'ad
pmft·ssronal crt Plun1Hollow Golf
Club in Southfield, Mrch. SIIH't'
1947. Plum Hollow was the s1h' of
thl' 1947 PGA Nat rona! tnurnanwnl, hosted thl' 1957 Wt•stl'rn
Open and was the srll' of Rydl'r
Cup rnall'ht•s dunng World War
II.
Magui rl' was, for somt• 30
vea rs. the head pro at Brr;ningharn Country Club in Brrmingharn. Mich .. and now is pro
t•meritus at the rlub.

COMPLIMENTS OF

Give Us A Call, No Job Too Big
Or Too Small·

Wha t a Tasty Offer! Stop in between now
a nd Wednesday , June 30th for a dozen
delicious, fresh donuts. You'll get three
more free with coupon below from Mister

MiSter

Two l'l'lt•ran PGA rros wrll bl'
ll'l'lllg rt up for the fourth slrarght
llllll' rn lht• Oal't' Orll'si\ppalal'hla gulf t'Vt•nl June 10.
Bill Uzl'lac and Ray Maguin·
ha vl' bl'l'n on hand for t•ad1of the
J'l iT\' Itl US tournaments and
tlll'y'n• t•nrnl k d as l'l'iebritil's for
tlw 1982 Pvt•nt.
Tht• 18-hnld tournament begrns
at 10 a.m. at Riversidl' Golf Club
111 Mason, W. Va. and will bt•
pn·ceded by a hillbilly dimwr and
t•nlertainml'nl at 6 r.m. on Junl'
9. at Royal Oak Park .

"YOUR COMPLETE EXCAVATING SERVICE"

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placements, they'll be about the
same as they have been - not difficult, but not smack-dab in the
middle of the green, either. In the
previous three years, we haven't
had anyone burn up the course
and I don't think anyone will do it
this time, either."
Par for Ri verside is 70 and it is
a short, but deceptively toug h
lest.
Spectators are invited to attend
the golf tourna ment but are
cautioned that they will not bt•
able to park at the golf course .

PEOPLES BANK

882-2271

?~l~mrnrce

Donut.

New Haven

5th Street

Your Die.
Your
Your car.
Your business.
6 7 5·231 0

eominittee, Paul Barnett, Ted
Reed and Tom Wolfe, say they're
hopeful Ul8t a record amount can
be disbursed to the charities. In
the previous three years, the
tournament has raised more than
$21 ,000.
Bob and Gary R8ush of the host
Riverside club say the golf course
is in excellent condition.
" The golfers will find it a bit
tougher than in the past," said
Gary Roush. " We've narrowed
the fa irways by about ten yards
and we're letting the rough grow
by about an inch. As for the pin

PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP l Torn Weiskopf was explaining
why he intended to control his
temper on a golf course no matter
what.
" I'll never walk off a course in
anger again," he said. " The last
time I did that, a kid came up to
me with tea rs in his eyes and told
me, ' Mr. Weiskopf, you are my
idol. Why did you cfo it?' I told
him I wouldn't do it any more and
that he had better not do it.
either. "

E &amp; R EXCAVATING

all your Insurance.

407 Main Street

Jackson Ave.
22nd Street

Six North
Second Street

Bob Atha

{Continued from page 16 )

Ht· It'll lht· Buffalo Hrlls to tht' IHHwrs at A rka n~as. pia~ t•d 111 tlr1·
1980 AF(' E&lt;ISit'l'll Dl\ ISIOil l'il&lt;llll- Hu la and North-Spulh all ~t ar
Jllllll~hrp. Fl'I'J..!IISon. who t'&lt; llllt'
! (ltl \t'S .
Plll nf Slrn •l't'Jllll'l . l .;r .. has bt•t •n
Foli' liSIIIl rs wl'l l-know11 f~&gt; r h r~
Buff;r lo's n ·r• ular quarkrb;tt·k , h.r rrl\ 11 111 k. look. and lr.rs .,flt•n
~1111 ' 1 ' Ill~ r·nPkH· SI'ClStlll of 1!17:\. Ill
bt't 'll l'ikd f11r hrs o uts l&lt;~nd rrll ' uff1!175. hl' sl'l &lt;1 Brlls' rt't'ord IJ1 tiH·-frt·ld (lt'l'lllllJllrShllH'Ilh . Jk
tlrrPwl ll J..! a s1·orrrl)..! pass rn a wil l lw ;w, ·ornparlll'd ht·n· b~ Ill~
d1lZt'n l'llnS t'!'U[i l'l' )..!i:lllli'S. 11 1fto Sa ndr. and Bud 'I'H 'l' . till'
FI'I')..! IISOn t•anlt'd i\11-i\lllt'rll'an lwad trallll'l' for tlH• Hr lls.

Two pro golfers participating

Keep your cool

Joe Ferguson, quarterback

MASON

Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Sunday........... 12:30 to 4:30 - 6·p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant

STOP BY AND SEE US FOR
ALL YOUR BANKING NEEDS.

All Celebrities

and Golfers
To The
Dave Diles
Celebrity

Golf Tournament

�Page Eighteen- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Page Nineteen Dave Diles Tournament Editiol\_

• •
1982 PGA statiStiCs
Sconng Leaders
1 Tom Ki te 70 .04; 2. Tom Wat
son 70. 15; 3. Curtis Str ange 70.40;
4 Scott Hoch 70.50 ; 5. Jerry Pate
70 .56 ; 6. Johnn y Miller 70.50 ; 7.
Cra,q Stadler 70.66; 8. Jack
N1 cklilUS 70 67 , 9. Scott Sim pson
70 69 ; 10. Steve Melnyk 70.79.
Driving Distance
1 Tateo Ozak i 274 .3; 2. Dan
Pohl 270 .0; 3. Denis Watson 269 9;
4. Bru ce Douglass 269.8; 5. Fuzzy
Zorller 269 .7; 6. Fred Couples
268 3; 7. Tom Weiskopf 268.0; 8.
Tom Pur tze r 267 .3; 9. Jim Thorpe
766 4; 10. Bob Shearer 266.3.
Percentage in Fairway - 1
Calv 1n Peete .814; 2. Mike Re 1d
771; 3 Gene L1 ttler .746; 4. Bill
Roqe r s .744; 5. Tom K 1te .742 ; 6.
John Mahaffey 739; 7. Ray Floyd
727 ; 8 Bud Allin .720 ; 9 l1 e, Bob
Shearer. Curt1s StrangE' and Joe
Inman 719
Greens'" Regula ti on - 1 Jilek
N1 ck lau s .726 ; 2. Bru ce L1elzke
716; 3 Cur tis Strange .7 15; 4.
Cil lv1n Pee te 714 ; 5. Hal Sutton
712; 6 Peter Jil cobsen .7 11 ; 7.
t1 r. Johnny Miller and Andy Bean
707 9 t1 e. Tom Watson ilnd Dan
H il lldor son 704
Putting
1 Cril iQ Stadler 28 63; 2 Ed
F10r1 28 71, 3 Tom K1te 78 77 ; 4
Jerry Pille 28.83 ; 5 Morr1S
HiltiliSky 28.84; 6. l1e, Jerry
Hrnrd and Ben Crenshaw 28.85 ;
8 l1e, Den1s Watson and Bil l Bnt
ton 28 88 ; 10 Bill Caffee 28.91
Per cen t age of Su b-Par Hol es 1 Tom K1te .228; 2. Tom Watson
726; 3 Cr a1g Stadl er .223; 4.
Den1 s Watson 216; 5. Jerr y Pille
214; 6 Andy Bea n .209 ; 7. Johnny
Miller .208 ; 8 Tom Weiskopf .204 ;
9 Wayne Lev1 203; 10. t ie, Tateo
Ozilki , Jilek Nick l aus, Bob Gi lder
and Stocc H ock .202 .

Everyone remembers Mays'
catch off Indians' Wertz

Eagl es
1 l1e, Cr a1g Stad ler, Tom
Weiskopf. N1ck Faldo, Jerry Pate
and Da n Pohl 6; 6. tie, Tom my
Va lentme, Gary H allberg, A ndy
North , Peter Oosterhuis, Geor ge
Arc her. And y Bean and Bobby
Clilmpett 5
B1rdies
1 Tom Ki te 232; 2. Craig
Stad ler 219; 3. Scott H och 209 ; 4.
Andy Bean 206; 5. Bob Gi lder 204;
6 Curtis Str ange 199. 7. Bruce
L1 et zke 197; 8. Bobby Wadkins
195 ; 9 Fuzzy Zoell er 194 ; 10 . tie,
Tom Watson , Jay H aas and
George Burns 192.
Sand-Saves
l. Georqe Archer .655; 2. Jerry
Hea rd 641; 3. Mike Nicolette
.612; 4. l sao Aok1 .606; 5. Roger
Maltb1e 597 ; 6. Ron Com mans
580 ; 7 Hubert Green .578; 8. t 1e,
Ken Green and Bob Eastwood
571 ; 10. TomK11e .570.
Money
1 Cra ,q Stadler $238,493 ; 2.
Tom Watson $2 17,646 ; 3 Tom
K 1tc 2 13,775 ; 4. Jerry Pate
$209.547;
5. Lilnny Wadkins
$ 152 .582; 6. Scott Hock $148,549 ; 7.
Jack N1 c kl a us $147,894 ; 8. Andy
Bcil n $140,344 ; 9. J ohnny Mille r
$125.287; 10. EdSneed$118 ,532.

ALL SMILES- Sheriff Jim Proffitt, Dr. John Ridgway, Archie Griffin, and Dr. R. R. Pickens,
are all smiles after the weather cleared up during last year's Diles Classic.

How many times have you seen
that catch - Willie Mays of the
old New York Giants racing back
and almost miraculously
gathering in, over his shoulder,
that towering rtrive off the bat of
Vic Wertz?
It happened in the 1954 World
Series and it broke the backs of
the Cleveland Indians and the
Giants went on to win the series
convincingly. It's probably the
most-seen catch of baseball's old
rerun family .
Well, the man who hit that ball
is coming to the Dave Diles·
Appalachia Golf Classic, Wertz
had a distinguished career as a
first baseman and outfielder with
the Cleveland Indians and the
Detroit Tigers.
In recent years, he has become
a successful businessman and
community leader in Michigan.
He and the host of the golf outing,
Dave Diles, have been friends for
a lot of years and this will be Wer·
tz's first time to tee it up in the
tournament.
Wertz was born on February 9,
1925 in York, Pa. He began his
baseball career with the Detroit
Tiger Fann Club at Winston·
Salem, N. C., in 1942, at the age of
17.

Wertz was recalled spring of
1943 by the Tigers, and optioned
to Buffalo in June of that year
before going into the Army, July
1943 where he served in the
Pacific theatre until November

Wertz was traded to St. Louis
Browns in August 1952, and transferred with St. Louis franchise
to Baltimore in the spring of 1954.
He was traded to Cleveland on
June 2, 1954.

1945.

Diles familiar face on TV
WXY'lrTV Sports Anchor Dave
Diles is a familiar face to both
Detroiters and Americans coast·
to-coast. Diles covers local sports
for Channel 7's 5 and 11 p.m.
newscasts in addition to his many
duties for ABC Sports.
Diles joined WXYZ in 1961 and
spent nearly 12 years as sports
director for both the television
and radio operations. During that
time, he wrote and produced 39
non-sports docwnentaries and
won seven major awards.
He also handled television playby-play for the Detroit Pistons
and did color corrunentary for the
Detroit Lions' radio network.
Diles left WXYZ in 1972 to concentrate on his expanded sports
duties and to launch a bookwriting career.

He is best known to the national
sports audience as host of ABC's
"College Football Scoreboard"a show he has done for 13 years.
He is also frequently seen as host
of the Indianapolis 500 telecast
and other major auto races; the
Pro Bowlers' Tour, and on other
"Wide World of Sports" assign·
rnents.
An accomplished author, Diles
has written five books.
Before joining WXYZ, he spent
10 years as an Associated Press
sports and news writer/editor in
Louisville, Kentucky; Colwnbus,
Ohio and Detroit.
A graduate of Ohio University,
in 1981 Diles received OU's
Distinguished Alumnus Award.
He spends his spare time on a
fann near Racine.

A SWIMMING POOL•••• IT'S ·A
GOOD IDEAl

Point Pleasant

Rt. 2 Bypass

BEN FRANKLIN
OF NEW HAVEN

MASON COUNTY BANK
"A Good Bank In A

Good Area"

..Heck's Makes The DIHerence"
RT. 2 BYPASS
POINT PLEASANT

AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLY CO.
WHEN THE NAME IS NAPA
THE STANDARD IS QUALITY
233 Main

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675-2218

882-2705

5TH STREET

H&amp;S Sales, Inc.
Rt. 62 North

Point Pleasant
675-4312

NEW HAVEN RESCUE SQUAD
EMERGENCY PHONE NO.
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memberships, lake properties, motor boats or long trips on traffic
congested highways ___ compare those with an Investment In a
permanent family recreation center .. . an lnground swimming
pool. They arr no longer the sole property of an elite few .
In a society laden with pressure. a pool can be a very effective
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THE FASHION SHOPPE
NEW HAVEN

5TH STREET
882-3312

New Haven Fire Department
EMERGENCY PHONE NO.
882-2015
N~W HAVEN, W. VA.

PLEASANT VALLEY POOLS

See Us For All Your
Banking Needs!

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14th &amp; Ohio Streets ·

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5th Street

New Haven

�Page Twenty-One-Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Page Twenty Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Mountaineer coach at
second Diles tournament

"Our Gangs' Spanky
among celebrities

I

_ _ :___]
SnJDIF..S SCORES- Bill Nelsolt) left, goes over scores with Gray and Bob Roush f seated, left to
right), following tbe 1981 Diles Cla1111ic at Rlvenlde In Ma11on, W.Va.

George Robert Phillips MeFarland, commonly known as
··spanky," the long-time star of
the famed "Our Gang" comedies,
will participate in the Dave Diles
Appalachia Semi-Closed Golf '
Tournament and Hillbilly Supper
June 9-10.
Spanky , who's now 53, resides
in Fort Worth, Texas, and is .
district manager of sales for
Magic Chef, Inc.
He and Diles met last year at
Cy Laughter's Brgie Busters Golf
Tournament. Many of the participants in that event come annually to the Diles tournament
here.
"Spanky walked up to me and
told me he'd heard of our tournament and wondered why he
hadn't been invited," said Diles.
"So right there on the spot, 1 not
only invited him, but he accepted.
And we've assured him of a good
time."
The Bogie Busters event draws
more big name celebrities than
any tournament in the world and
each year honors a handful of
celebrities with the famed Red
Jacket award.
The 1982 Bogie Busters will immediately precede the local tournament and coincidentally, both
McFarland Diles will be recipieots of Red Jacket Awards in 1982.

Spanky McFarland joined the
"Our Gang Comedies" at Hal
Roach Studios in Hollywood in
1931 and star~ed in 9S comedies
from then unt1~ 194~ . He also had
feat~re ~oles m mne full-len~th
motiOn p1ctures and starred w1th
~uch noted Hollywood perfonners as Henry ~onda , Fre~
MacMurray, Jackie Cooper,
Wallace Beery, ~oan Crawfo.rd ,
E~ward G. Robmson and B11ly
G1lberl.
He's. also appe~-~ed ~n a ~~ore
of nat10nal telev1s10n shows and
~~ adJiti~~ h~ted 520. s~:m_e.~ts cA
Spanky s Little Rascals. . ~e
frequently tou~s t~ nat10~ s
colleges an~ umve~s1lles hostm~
"An Evemng W1th Spanky
show·
.
.
" I'm lookmg forward to be1~g
at Dave's tou~nament," sa1d
Spanky. "He's g1ven me so many
rotten football scores ~n ~tur­
day afternoons that th1s IS orre
way to get even with him.
Besides, I've already cleaned out
my garage this spring so I didn't
have any schedule conflicts that
day·"
The local tournament has
drawn top-name celebrities in the
previous three · years and has
raised more than $21,000 - all of
it going to charities in the MeigsMason county area.

Another head football coach at
the college level participating in
the Fourth Annual Diles Appalachia Golf Tournament June
10 i.s West Virginia's Don Nehlen.
In two short years, Nehlen has
taken the West Virginia football
program from four consecutive
losing seasons to the Peach Bowl
Championship.
With that success has come the
kind of national attention that has
put Mountaineer football on the
map as a Top 20 team and Don
Nehlen in the spotlight as one of
the nation's premier coaches.
In his initial season at the helm,
Nehlen took a group of young,
inexperienced athletes whose
nwnbers had been trinuned due
to several key injuries and made
drastic improvements im a team
that had recorded four straight
losing seasons.
Along the way to a ~ final
slate, West Virginia posted alandslide win at Colorado State and
back-to-back road wins against
Temple and Rutgers. Nehlen
gave evidence of his coaching
abilities and of a Mountaineer
team about to flex its muscles.
And flex it did in 1981. An upset
victory at Maryland signaled the
start of West Virginia's rise to
national prominence. The year

Remember to•..

ONE STOP AUTO REPAIR

ROAD SERVICE
EMERGENCY

ROAD REPAIR SERVICE
WHEN POSSIBLE

OFFICIAL STATE INSPECTION STATION

2 EXPERT MECHANICS ON DUTY

•

POMEROY
Compliments of

FLAIR FURNITURE &amp; DESIGNS
Spanky McFarland, then, now

trinunings, including slaw and
baked beans, for the June 9th
Hillbilly Supper to be held as part
of the Fourth Annual Dave Diles
Se . 1"1 d G If T
~~~ose
o
o~rnament
acbv1bes. The supper w11l be held
' at Royal Oak Park.

MAJOR &amp; MINOR AUTO
REPAIR SERVICE

THE MEIGS INN
.AND
PIZZA SHACK

MASSIVE GUEST - Pittsburgh Steeler defensive end John Banaszak is nanked by MIUord and
Romaine Frederick during last year's Hlllbtlly Dinner at Royal Oak Park.

The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department will serve a barbecue chicken dinner with all the

RALPH E. THOMAS - Owner

1. Wear comfortable shoes
2. Drink plenty of nuids
3. Guard against heat whenever possible. If you are a fair-skinned
person, rest in the shade or bring along a golf wnbrella. Protect your·
self against the sun.
4. Bring binoculars for better viewing.
5. Pick up a pairing sheet with a map of the course. Also, organize
your day so you have enough time to follow the golfers you would like
to see.
6. Observe proper golf etiquette.

WATERBEDS OUR SPECIALTY.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY

collegiate ranks as backfield
coach at Cincinnati under Chuck
Studley. The next season he
returned to Canton as head coach
at McKinley High School where
the Bulldogs went ~ 1 and finished
second in the !&gt;'late.
Nehlen returned to his alma
mater in 1965 as defensive coordinator under Bob Gipson. His

units yielded only 361 points in 28
games (12.9 average), recorded
six shutouts and finished 1~9.
Nehlen took over the reins at
Bowling Green in 1968, guiding
the Falcons to a 53-3&gt;4 record
and three second-place finishes in
the Mid-America Conference. His
1975 team finished 8-3, Bowling
Green's best record In a decade.
He ranked 24th among active
major college head coaches. His
overall rerord as a college head
coach is 63-44-4. From 1977-79,
Nehlen served under Bo Schembechler at Michigan. His duties
included working with the offensive backs, quarterbacks,
receivers, and overseeing
recruitment efforts. During his
stay at Michigan, the Wolverines
played in two Rose Bowls and a
Gator Bowl.

PT PLEASANT
EXXON

Don Nehlen, WVU football coach

TAKE TIME Otrr - Former heavyweight coateoder Duaae Bobtck, left, Eddie Rosenberg,
George Harris, and Roger Morgan take a break during the lt81 DUes-Appalachia Toomament at
Mason's Riverside Course.

ended with quarterback Oliver
Luck the owner of many Mountaineer career records and the
team owning an 8-3 record and a
Peach Bowl bid.
Thousands of West Virginia
University fans followed their
team to Atlanta, and looked on as
the Nehlen-prepared Mountaineers stunned the nation and
demolished the Florida Gators by
a final count ci :11H;. West
Virginia football had arrived, and
Don Nehlen was leading the way.
Since his days as as quarterback at Bowling Green in 1955,
Nehlen has been associated with
only one losing season.
In 1958 he began his coaching
career as an assistant coach at
Mansfield (Oh.) Senior High
School. A year later, he became
head coach at Canton South High
School where his teams finished a
24-11-2 in four seasons.
In 1963 Nehlen moved to the

675-1371

.. NO MUSS- NO FUSS - DON'T CUSS
CALL US!"

675-2531
2112 JEFFERSON BLVD.·

�Page Twenty-Three Dave Diles Tourruunent Edition

Page Twenty-Two- Dave Diles Tournament Edition

Scenes from 1981 Diles Celebrity Golf event

Scenes from 1981 Diles Celebrity Golf event

ANOTHER GOOD GUY - Former PGA champion Dave
Marr, who was recipient of 1981 "good guy'' award is shown with
Dave Diles, tournament host.

..

TWO DANNIES AND A JO - Danny Nee, basketball coach at OU, with Dan and Jo Devine.
Devine now lives in Phoenix, Ariz. All will be participating in the Diles Golf Tournament once again.
TEES OFF - Marshall University football coach Sonny
Randle tees off during the 1981 Diles Classic at Riverside Golf
Course.

FOUR GOOD GUYS -1981 Good Guy Award winners were, I tor, former AP sports editor Fritz
Howell Coach Jackie Sherrill, Archie Griffin (Bengals) , Dave Marr (former PGA champion, now
ABC Sports, golf commentator).

HEAD BUCKEYE - Ohio State football roach Earle Brurl'
is shown during last year's Diles "Hillbilly'' dinner at Ruyal Oak
Park.

CHOW LINE- Archie Griffin and Mrs. Chuck Stobart (Cincinnati Bengals) going through the food line at last year's
" Hillbilly" dinner held at Karr's Royal Oak Park.

LADY ADMIRERS - Four of the area's lovely ladies surround boxer Duane Bobick during
festivities at the 1981 Diles-Appalachian Hillbilly Dinner at Royal Oak Park, Meigs County.

MEET MARR - Tom and Joan Wolfe greet "good guy" Dave Marr at last year's Dave Diles
Hillbilly Dinner held the night before the celebrity golf tournament.

Schlichter leads· OSU group

Art Schlichter

The Dave Diles-Appalachia
golf tournament may ~appear
somewhat "scarlet and gray"
with the tandem of Buckeye head
coaches Earle Bruce and Eldon
Miller and fonner star players,
Art Schlichter and Bob Atha.
Bruce, who attended the dinner

only last year, will be on hand not be one of the headliners for this
only for dinner June 9 but golf the yea•·'s event.
Atha, an outstanding golfer,
following day. Miller will appear
served
as a backup quarterback
just for the dinner portion of the
to
Schlichter
and kicker. Another
two-day event. Schlichter, the
Ohio
Stater,
Steve Snapp of the
nwnber one draft choice of the
athletic
infonnation
office will
Baltimore Colts and No. II in the
also
tee
off.
entire NFL draft la:s'l month, will

EXTRA PLATE . - Benny
Ewing must be taking an extra
plate for his wife in this photo
taken during the Hillbilly Dinner
at Royal Oak Park last summer.

RARE FORM- The form isn't
quite what we saw from Dave
Marr- but it was lots of fun for
the Pr~Bowler who participated
in the 1981 Diles Golf Classic.

FOOTBALL TALK- Former Notre Dame and Green Bay Coa('h, Dan Devine, left, Is shown with
former roaeh Johnny Pont, renter, and Bill Diles of Athens, who went to Miami of Ohio as did Pont,
discuss football at the 1981 Diles Hillbilly Dinner.

�•

enttne
Vol .31 ,No .l7
Copyrighted 1982

f&gt;cime roy

a

I Section , 12 Pages
1 S Cenh
A Mu lti media Inc . Newspa p er

Middleport, Oh io, Fridoy, Jun e 1 1, 1982

May wholesale prices remain steady
Page Twenty-Four- Dave Diles Tourna ment Edi tion

WELCOME GOLFERS -

THE RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE
Is Proud To Be
The

COMPLIMENTS OF

THE JAYMAR GOLF CLUB
FULLY EQUIPPED PRO SHOP
SNACK BAR
GOLF CAR RENTALS
LOCKER ROOM
MEETING ROOM
CLUB REPAIR
GOLF LESSONS

Course
For The
4th
Annual
Dave Diles Appalachia
Celebrity Golf Tournament.

Thanks Very Much For

RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE
773-9527

PHONE 992-6312
POMEROY, OHIO

The Index ha d risen 0.1 pet cent In April after dec linlng 0.1 percent In March and 0.3 percent In Februa ry,
a calcula tion revised today from the 0.1 percent reported earlier. The measure last fell for two months
running In J anuary and February 1976.
The departme nt, announcing Its Producer Price
Index for finished good, reported these speclflcs for
May:
- Home heating oil prices fell 1.1 percent , after
plummeting 8.8 percent In April a nd 4.8 percent In

Rt. 33

-Capital equipment costs Increased 0.4 percent ,
the sa me as In April. Those costs are for mac hinery
and tra nspm ta tlon equipment used by business and
Industry .
All the increases a re adjusted for norma l seasonal
variations .
In all, the unadjusted Producer Price Index for

fi nished goods stood at 'J:l7.7 In May , mea ning tha t
goods costing $10 at wholesale In 1967 would have cost
$27 77 last month
. department's
.
The
annua l price change calcula tlons are based on more precise monthly figures tha n
those made publlc
.
Price changes tha t show up In the Producer Plice
Index a re a good barometer of how food, energy and
other commodity prices wUI move a t the reta il level,
as measured by the Consumer Price Index . The CP I,
though, checks costs for a broader ra nge of Items,
Including housing a nd medical care. than does the
producer pr ice measure.
'"!'he Consumer Price Index rose a seasonally adjusted 0.2 percent In April afte r a 0.3 percent fall in
Ma rch, the first drop since April1965 and the sharpest
decline since 1953.
Infla tion at the reta il level was up 8.9 percent last
year, In comparison with the 12.4 percent rise of 1980.

Budget
passage
hailed

••• IN THEW
Justice wants strict fines
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Justice Department's antitrust divIsion J;1as petitioned U.S. Dlstrtct Judge Thomas D. Lambros to
demand Immediate payment of fines Imposed this year on supermarket companies and executives for prtce fixing.
'
In a memorandum to Lambros on Wednesday, antitrust lawyers
reported on the financial condition of two of the companies and three
executives for which reports were available to prove !hay each has
assets to satiBfy the court fines.
First· National Supertnarkets Inc., parent pf Plck-n-pay; and
Fisher Foods Inc , which operates Fazio's, were fined SIO),(XX) each
on Feb. 19, and Stop-N-Shop Super Markets was fined $lOO,(XX).
Executives Richard J . Bogomolny, Raymond M. Kot:{ant, John
Fazio and Cha rles A. Rlnl were fined $75,(XX) each.

Pharmacologist questions test
f

Better Than
"PAR SERVICE" at
The Farmers Bank
And Savings Company
Is Always Par
For The Course

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A pharmacologist at Ohto State University Is Q\le&amp;tlonlng a test used to detect aspirin In the blood of
patients suspected of having Jb!ye' s Syrnlrome, a disease ott.e.u .ta~..
to chlldren.
Brian Andresen, associate professor of ph:armacology, says the
Trlnder test for salicylate levels may be giving false results, IndicatIng aspirin levels In patients where no aspirin exists.
" We're saying that hospitals shouldn't base diagnoses only on the
results of the Trtnder test," Andresen said. "TheY should require
more testing."
OSU spokesmen said positive results of the Trtnder test for salleylate levels, coupled with epidemiological studies, have been used to
Imply a direct relationship between aspirin and the onset.of Reye's
Syndrome.
.
Andresen's study, published April 17 In The Lancet, a Brltlsh
medical journal, comes while public Interest groups are asking the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration to require warning labels on
aspirin products.
JERUSALEM - lsraeli forces In Lebanon stopped sllooUng at
noon today, 6 a .m. EDT, following a government decision to order a
cease-fire, the mllltary command said.
lsraeli ordered the truce clalmlng Its Invasion army had "completed Its mission In Its entirety."
In Damascus, Syrlan President Hafez Assad was quoted by the
official SANA news agency as saylng'hls nation accepted a ceasefire, provided lsraell troops withdrew completely from lebanon. The
lsraeli communique made no reference to Withdrawal.

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 949.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 3773.
The lottery reported earnings of $765,58150 on Its dally game. The
earnings came on sales of $961,896, while holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $196,314.50, lottery officials said.

Member FDIC

WINNING FOURSOME - Winning the overall
team low gross at Thursday's Fourth Annual Diles
Celebrtty GoU Tournament were, left to right, Pat

O'Brien, Jim O'Brten, Rick Simmons, and Ernie
Shuler. That quarter enjoyed an excellent day with an
overall 307. Absent was Don Nehlen. See story and
photos on pages 3-4.

TOURNAMENT WIN·
NER - Overall winner of
the Dave Diles Golf Tour·
nament with a natural
Low Gross of 68 was Ty
Roush. Roush is presented
an award from Diles as
Tournament Champ. It
was Roush's third straight
win in the Classic.

Israeli forces get cease-fire order

Winning Ohio lottery number

Farmers
Bank

March. Natural gas prices rose 1.8 percent , less than
the 2.2 percent of April .
-Meat price Increases slowed markedly with
pork prices rising 4.4 percent after soaring 13 '5 percent In the previous month Beef and vea l price~ were
up 0.9 percent a fter cli mbing 3 7 percent In April
P rices also rose for !Is h, fresh vegetables, poult ry and
sugar. Falling prices, however, were recorded for
eggs fresh fruits a nd coffee.
-Prices were up 0.7 percent for passenger cars
after falling 1.3 percent In April . Light trucks prices
rose 4.0 perce nt afte r a sma ll 0.1 percent ga in In April.

ToDAY

Your Support.

JAYMAR GOLF CLUB

fa llen at an a nnua 1 ra te of 27.5 percent.
May's energy price drops ba la nced out a n overall
food price Increase of 0.7 percent , less tha n ha lf of the
1.6 percent of Ap ril a nd below the predictions of severa! private economists.
Today's report said tha t for the 12 months ending In
May, wholesale prices overall rose 3 percent. Some
economists a re predicting tha t, for all of 1982, the ra te
of Infla tion will be as low as 4.5 percent .

Host

Good Luck Golfers, And

BILL CHILDS, MANAGER

WASIDNGTON
In Ma as (AP) - Wholesale ptices he ld
stead
ottsetb the ~th moderate gains In food prices were
y
straight monthly decline In energy
t s, the government said today ·
cosTh
f t~ report means Infla tion for the first five months
0U
y~arbowas a sma ll 0.4 percent, calculated annu~/' a n
lstered economists' predictions that, for
of 1982, the Inflation ra te would be well under the 7
percent of last year a nd the 11.8 percent of 19!ll.
The Improved lnfla tlon picture has been a ttributed
largely to the s tubborn recession a nd the worldwide
oU glut. The surplus of oil, though, has been diminishlng In recent months, a development likely to lead to
higher ene rgy prices In the months a head, a na lysts
say.
Indeed , energy prices, which fell 5.2 percent In
April, were off only 3.1 percent last month. Gasoline
prtces were off 5.9 percent, less than the7.2 percent In
April.
·
So far this yea r, energy prices a ltogether have

· .W eather forecast
Increasing cloudiness and cool tonight. Lows 52-57. Winds llgbt

and variable. Ten percent chance of rain. Mostly cloudy Saturday
with hjghl 73-78. Twenty perceni chance of rain. '
£xMnded .Oido FOI'tlCU&amp;

Your Community Owned Bank

.iluadaJ~Ib Tuelday: .

Flllr rill pleasant tempera&amp;ureslhrough the period. Highs lllOIItly
Ia the tea. Low• In the 1101.
.
.

Youth hurt in two car wreck
A Rt. 2, Pomeroy youth was In·
jured In a two-vehicle accident In
Meigs County early Thursday, the
Gallla-Me lgs Post of the state highway patrol reported this morning.
Ivan B. Carl, 17, was la ter treated
and released from the emergency
room at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens, for cuts to the right
arm and the left eye.
Carl received the Injuries when
his auto traveled off the right side of
U.S. 33 at 1: 15 a.m. and sttuck a
parked vehicle registered to Latonia D. Slsk, Pomeroy.
Slsk's vehicle was severely damaged In the accident. Carl wa s
taken to O'Bleness by priva te
vehicle.
Minor Injury was also reported to
Jay A. Saxton, 19, Gallipolis, when
his vehicle wrecked Thursday
night on Ohio 588.

The patrol said Saxton was west·
bound a t 8: 40p.m. when his vehicle
went lost control on a curve and
overturned Into a creek, causing severe da mage.
Saxton was not trea ted, a nd the
patrol ticketed him for excessive
speed.
Two drivers were cited by the patrolln one accident Thursday afternoon In Meigs County.
According to the report, John E .
Clonch, 16, Pomeroy, was travel·llng on Rutla nd Twp. Rd . 174
(Happy Hollow Road ), two-tenths
of a mile south of County Rd. 3, at 2
p.m . when he came to a bridge and
reportedly fa Ued to yield half of the
road to a northbound vehicle driven
by Dwayne K. McDa niel, 20,
Rutland.
Clonch' s vehicle then struck
McDaniel's auto in the left front,
the report said. Both cars were

slightly da maged . c;lonch was ticketed for failure to yield and McDanie l was c ite d for fi c titious
registra tion.
Another cititlon was Issued as the
result of a three- vehicle accident on
Ohio 7 la ter In the afternoon.
The report said a truck driven by
Scott A. J asper, 25, ZanesvU!e,
fa iled to stop while southbound a t
2: 47 p.m . a nd struck the rear of a
slowed vehicle driven by William
A. Holbrook, 61, Roanoke , Va.
The colllsion forced Holbrook's
vehicle Into the rear of one ahead of
him driven by Carla M. Chapma n,
16, Cheshire, who had slowed to
ma ke a light turn Into a private
driveway.
Holbrook's auto was severely
da maged, while Chapman's received slight damage. Jasper was
cited for assured clear distance.

WASHINGTON i AP J - The
House has fina lly passed a budget
but It will be mont hs before the nation knows whet her this battle royal
has been m uch ado about not hing
- or for something.
Republicans, pred ictably, ha iled
passage of their plan as the start of
a new era of lower deficits and
lower Interest ra tes. But Democrats we re pessim istic as to
whether the savings called for by
the blueprtn t could be lnnplemented
- and whether passage of the
budget would ha ve a ny lnnpact on
Interest rates.
And the two sides differed ovet
. wha t lnnpact passage of the GOPsponsored pla n, with a projected
deficit of $99.3 billion, would have
on the upcoming congressional
elections In Nove m ber. The Republican pla n contains cuts in social
programs such as we lfare, Medicaid , Medicare, food stamps and
nutrition - a nd Democrats quickly
served notice tha t In Novem ber's
e lections, they were going after
moderate Republicans who voted
for the cuts.
" We ... will keep them under a
microscope," said an a ide to House
Speake r Thomas P. O'Neill , DMass.
Accepta nce of the Republican
pla n, which had President Reaga n's backing, came on a 219-206
vote alter the House heeded Reaga n's trans-Atlantic plea to "bury"
a rival Democra tic proposal. The
House rejected the Democra tic
plan on a 225-202 vote and then, In
the key vote, gave tenta tive a pproval to the Republican version by a
220-207 vote.
Reagan, In Bonn , Germ any,
ha lled the victory In a congra tulatory call to House Minori ty Leader
Robert Michel of illinois.
" We pulled It off ," Michel told the
pres ident.
House Republican Whip Trent
Lott of Mississippi told Reagan
" Sorry It took us so long to get It
r ight, " a reference to the House's
rejection two weeks ago of eight rival budget pla ns and of the earlier
colla pse of talks between Reagan
a nd congressional Democra ts.
The victory In some ways was a
repeat of last year's budget ba ttle
b e tw ee n R eaga n a nd th e
De m oc r a tic -co n tr oll e d Hou se .
Once again, Republicans won by
picking up the support of conservative Democrats.
But unlike last year, Reagan
played only a bit part In this drama.
This was the Michei-Lott show and Reagan, In Germany, made
only a few phone c a lis - no more
than haH a dozen, Michel said.
Members on both sides said the
need to do something was far more
Important a consideration tha n
whether they supported either
pla n.

Democratic nominee Celeste supports tax bill

WEA'l11ER roRI!lCA8T- De Nati.J W•illll' 11eniee pndletl
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Democratic gubernatorial candidate
Richard Celeste says he will support legislative plarur fo~ balancing
slate government's budget with a
tax Increase and spending cuts.
· But he also says working Ohioans
shoulder an unfair amount of the
sts~'s tax burden.
A .confere~ committee report
which Is expected to go to the full
Senate and House next week contains a propoied temporary In·
crease In the stat~~liicotne tax. It Is
part Qf a PtiCkaae aimed at oU&amp;et·
ling· a pro)ected $1.3 bUUon ltate

bud&amp;et deficit.

"I believe working people In the
s tate are paying more tha n their
fair share of taxes, " Celeste said at
a news conference Thursday.
But, he satd, " We 'refac~ with a
tremendously difficult problem.
Twenty-five states have already
gone forward .to raise taxes, and I
believe that we cannot cut serVIces
below a certain essential level and I
think that Is the first effort which
the legislature has made."
He was joined at the session by
his lieutenant governor running
mate, state Rl!p. Myri Shoemaker
of Bourneville. .

Celeste, a former Peace Corps director, said the race for governor
wUI be a focal point IJI·the political
struggle for the nation's political
heartland.
Tying Republican gubernatortal
opponent Clarence J. Brown to
President Reagan's economic program, Celeste 'said voters are not
satlsWed.
"The president has offered the
country an alternative that I see as
a march steadily backward," he
said.
"I see the campaign this fall as a
focal point In the struggle for the

•

political heartla nd of this count ry,"
he said.
Celeste captured 42 percent of the
vote In Tuesday's balloUng as he
defeated Attorney General WUUam
Brown and former Cincinnati
Mayor Jerry Sprtnger In the Democratic primary:
He said he expected "active personal Involvement" from both In
his fall campaign.
"Dick Celeste and the Democratic Party need the expertence
and leadership of Bill Brown ... the
new Ideas and the enthusiasm of
Jerry Springer," Celeste said.

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