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Health levy failure
forces reduced services
See letter page 2

Reds top Dodgers, 4-2
Details on page 3

•
WINTHROP
•

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Index
Classifieds . . . . .
. ....... &amp;-8
Comics, TV
... 9
Edi torial
.. . ....... 2
Deaths . . . . . .............. 10
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. 3-4
Society . . . . . . . . .
· · · 5-6

..

bv Dick Cpvalli

I 1VE MADE UP MY MIND
ABCXJT WHAT IM ~INq- TO
eE 'MiEN I: q.R0N UP.

I'M ®INa ·"TZ:) l3e
AN ARa-f ITECT:

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Vol.31 ,No .'2 8
Copyright•d 1982

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Safety basis for hearing at
Southwest Ohio power station

.AND 60\\E a= THEM
DE61cSN ~RI~
SKYBCRAPER6...

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by Ed Sullivan
WAIT A MINUTE, 5T~T

ARE l.rOU GOING

ILL SA.Y-' IM
LOOKING R::RWARI7
10 IT WITH

TONIGHT, 5TUART ;&gt;

BEADED BREATH .

WHAT KIND

THE IA()R[7 15

a= 13REATH 7

STUARr.' lrOJ'RE

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
questlon of the safety of the
Zimmer nuclear power plant being
buUt In southwest Ohio will be debated again at a hea ring Wednes·
day and may be a matter of
concern to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission for a long time.
The hearing was requested by
Cincl.matl Gas &amp; Elect! Jc Co.,
which hopes to show that a new
quality control program Is solvlng
the proble ms at Zimmer. However,
the NRC, whose staff Is expanding
Its lnvestlgation of problems at
Zimmer, opened the hearing to give
crttlcs a chance to present their
posltlons.
Lawyer Thomas Devine, representing a citizens' group, charges
that harassment and lntimldatlon
of tnspector1; continues at Zimmer,
that the quality control program
the NRC Imposed on CG&amp;E earlier
this year Isn't doing the job, and
that evidence of possibly faulty
work Is being hidden.
NRC fined CG&amp;E $200,!XXJ and
imposed the toughe r quality assurance program after an !nvestlga·
Uon turned up several problems,

including fake records, inadequate
control of structural steel welding
and a pattern of lntlmldatlon of
quality control Inspectors.
There have been reports of possibly thousands of faulty steel welds
at the plant.
Devine contends that the full extent of the problem wtll not be
known until responsibility for qualIty control at the $1.5 bllllon plant Is
taken away from CG&amp;E and the
Henry J. Kaiser Co., prime contractor at Zimmer, and put in the hands
of an Impartial third party.
"There Is so much' wrong that If
they conducted even a normal qualIty assurance program, the cost of
repair work would skyrocket and
e rase any previous tlmeta ble for
completion of the plant," Devine
said.
CG&amp;E officials have said they
still hope to start operations by the
end of this year or early nex t year
at Zimmer, which now Is several
years behind schedule.
James G. Keppler, NRC regional
administrator at Chicago, apparently dashed that hope Thursday
when he told a House subcommlt-

FORW.ARD lO IT WITH
BA TEP f5~TH .'

struction for more than a decade

tee hls inves tigation wtll continue at
least Into the early part of 1983 and
that hls staff favors reopening the
licensing hearings for Zimmer.
The underlying Issue a t the
lfouse energy subcommittee hear·
lng was not Zimmer, but confidence In the ability of NRC to
assure thai nuclear plants are built
properly.
Under persistent questioning by
Rep. John F. Seiberling, D·Ohlo,
and Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ark.,
Keppler said he believes the new
control program will assure quality
construction at Zimmer.
But he agreed that his confidence
Is bull! on faith that the utility will
enforce the quality controls and
that, If It doesn't, informers will let
NRC officials know.
The congressmen, members of
the House Interior Committee, sug·
gested that this was a haphazard
way of operating, particularly in
view of reports of harassment and
Intimidation of Inspectors.
Keppler said CG&amp;E was aware
that It was In Its best Interest to
make sure the plant was safe and
that If his Inspectors found a ny ef·
fort to circumvent the control system, NRC would shut the project
down .
The commlttee members noted
that Zimmer had been under con·

when U1e NRC launched its ln vesti·

ga llon, and wondered why it took so
long to do something about the
problems.
Keppler admitted the agency had
l;(OOfed , that the repotts of harass·
ment of Inspectors were taken as
isola ted incidents and not given
enough Importance. But he said the
NRC learned a lesso n from
Zlmmet, has taken corrective ac·
Uon and now Is taking a closer look
a t some other nuclear power plant
construction.
He said the investigation of
Zimmer, which was to ha ve been
completed this summer, will con·
tlnue a nd may be expanded. His
staff favors reopening the licensing

hearings for Zimmer, which were
concluded two months ago, he said .
Devine said he was encouraged
by Kepple r's statement and said he
Is doing the best he ca n with the new
"Quality Confirmation Program
(QCPI" at Zimmer. "But It tQCPi
is Inherently flawed," Devine said.
He sa id the flaw is the "conflict of
inlet est" in CG&amp;E being made responsible for a control program
tha t could mea n massive repai rs.
resulting In high costs a nd further
construction dela ys.

Weekend wrecks
leave five injured
Group protests male ordination
CLEVELAND - A group of about 25 people, including several
nuns, stood outside St. John Cathedral in Cleveland to protest the
male-&lt;Jnly ordination Into the Catholic priesthood.
Nearly Unl people attended the ceremony Saturday at which 12
priests were ordained.
The group displayed a banner that read, "A church that Is whole
needs women priests." Members of the group also distributed litera.
tur·e , prayed and sang songs.
A Vatlcan declaration five years ago, later reiterated, said women
could not be priests.

US.PniH.tOtf

I I&lt;NON WHAT THE
'rOJ'RE ~WAYS
'I.ORD IS.' I WAS
CORRECTlNG ME .1
JL.Y5r 6EING FU:I IC ( YOU ~l'r GIVE
ME CREt71T FOR
ANYTHING .'

Rhodes disappoints northeast area

P~INTfO

Art &amp; Chi

STY CHAPS
ZOV~D5.M~.~OU'~ l'IPICAL.

~RSS ~60V~R~M~tJT
OIRECn'J~ 10 CO~~Rf 10

IN(AI'MD.&amp;

AKRON, Ohio - Northeast Ohioans, struggling with high unemployment and a general economlc decline, have Indicated disappointment In the performance of Gov. James Rhodes, according to
the r-esults·of a recent statewide survey.
Nearly one-third of those surveyed in the northeast - Including
Akron, Cleveland, Youngstown and Canton- rated Rhodes' perfor·
mance as poor, according to a statewide Akron Beacon Journal·
University of Akron survey published Sunday.
Only 2 percent on those In the northeast, a region Rhodes has been
accused of Ignoring in favor of his home base In Columbus and
southern Ohio, rated his performance as excellent; 26percent, good;
43 percent, fair, and 29 percent, poor.

Shooting way to get back at family
WASHINGTON -A prison psychiatrist says John W. Hinckley
Jr. planned the shooting of President Reagan, partly to "get back"
at his famlly.
Defense attorneys today wlll cross-examlne Dr. Sally Johnson,
who bas testified that Hinckley was neither Insane nor In a fantasy
world when he shot Reagan and three other men March :.J, 1981.
"John was never so disturbed or distraught that he was unaware
of what he was doing or why he wa5 doing It," she said Saturday at
Hinckley's trial.
"He had a great deal of control" over his behavior and suffered
only from relatively minor personality disorders, she testified.

Four-month wage freeze set
PARIS- Premier Pierre Mauroy announced a fow·month wage

© 19112 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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2 Sec t1 on\ , I b Page'
A Mvlhm edio lnt Newspap er

Pomeroy-Middle ort, Ohio, Monday, June 14, 198'2

'i

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TO WATCH THE TV
CARTOON sPEOAL

entinel

~

&lt;i
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Priscilla's Po

he Daily

SOME ARCHITSCT5 DC616N
ESRIDQE5 AND QAM6...

8

and price tree7..e Sunday, aimed at reducing France's 13.9 percent
Inflation rate. Mawoy said the tn:eze ivould 'begln July 1.
The announcement came one day after t1nance l)linlsters of the
10-nation European· Common Marltet agreed to devalue the French
ftanc's Euidpean Monetary System parities by 10 percent against
the West German mark and the Dutch gullder.
The major realignment also saw the f:t!anc devlilued by 5. 75 per·
cent In zl!latton to the Belgian and Luxembourg francs, the Irish
pound and the Danish kroner, and lJy.3 percent ap!nst the Italian
lira. '
-~ · ., '

We~ther fo~st

'•

issued In the accident.
'1\vo passengers in a car drl ven
by Joseph E . Ohlinger, 18, of Ma son, claimed injuries from a collis ion on Ohio 7 In Meigs County at
7: 15 p.m . Sunday. the patrol
reported.
Patricia L. Ohlinger. 16. of Mason, was a dmitted to Veterans, a nd
Ca thy Wright. 14, also of Mason,
claimed Injury when the drivPr of
the car struck a pickup truck
driven by Fred Jones, 28. Rt. 3, Gallipolis, in the southbound Jane.
According to repot1S, Joseph Ohlinger struck the rear of Jones'
truck which was stopped in traffic.
Ohlinger was cited with failure to
keep an assured clear distance
ahead. His car received heavy
damage while Jones' truck was
damaged moderately.
The patrol reported a piece of a
tractor-trailer's wheel rlm flew off
and struck a passing car's wind·
shield at about 5: :.J p.m. Sunday on
U.S. 35, but no Injuries were reported In the acclden t.
The driver of the truck, J.P. Phil·
Ups, 45, Dayton, was traveling east
I Continued on page 101

A Rutland man was admitted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital after
his car overturned on Ohio 143 In
Meigs County at 7 p.m. Sunday, according to the Gailla-Melgs Post of
the state highway patrol.
Lee M. Bing, 51, was charged
with reckless operation when his
car, traveling north, ran off the
right side of the road and struck an
embankment, the patrol said.
Bing's car overturned and came
to rest on Its wheels. The car sustained heavy damage.
Clarabelle E. Drummond, 60, Rt.
2, Gallipolis, was u ·eated and released from Holzer Medical Center
for anxiety following a two-car a eel·
dent at the Intersection of Ohio 160
and Gallla County Rd. 46 just after
11 a .m . Sunday, the patrol
reported.
Drummond, traveling south, attempted to pass through the inter·
section onto the county road as a
car driven by Linda L. Donahue, 34,
Rt. 1, Bidwell, attempted to pull
Into the northbound lane.
Donahue's car struck Drum·
mood's, causing moderl)tedamage
to both cars. No cltatlons were

Vandals hit buildings
cern!ng the yellow dirt bike Is asked
to call the sheliff's office or the Mit chell residence at 742·2284.
Meanwhlle, glass was broken out
of a front door at the Pomeroy Elementary School over the weekend,
Pomeroy Pollee report.
A motorist, Clarence Lee, driving past the school Sunday evening
spotted the broken door glass then
reported It to the Pomeroy Pollee
Department.
Pomeroy Pollee also report an
accident on E. Second St., Satur·
day. A vehicle driven by Danny
Will, Pomeroy , backed from
Moore's Store driveway into the
right side of an eastbound car
driven by Jeffrey McKnlghl,
Pomeroy. WUI was cited on an lm·
proper backing charge.

Destruction of approximately :.J
panes of glass at the old Racine
Methodist Church Is· currently
under investigation by the Meigs
County Sheriff's department.
Included in the damage were 12
panes of stained glass believed to
be at least 135 years old. The church
Is being demolished and the stained
glass was to be placed In the steeple
of the new Methodist church on SR

124.
The damage Is thought to have
occurred Thursday.
A dirt bike was reported stolen
Saturday from the home of Mrs.
Linda Mitchell, Rutland.
Mitchell said the cycle was in his
garage Friday evening, but .m iss·
!ng Saturday morning.
Anyone having Information con·

JOIN IN PROTEST- With the United Nations in the background, a
large group of demonstrators lie down in the street surrounded by police
in a disarmement demonstration Monday morning in New York. The

group was in front of the U.S. Mission to the UN, one of several missions
blockaded by demonstrators. I AP La&lt;erphotol .

Anti-nuke protesters
booked in New York
NEW YORK tA P! - Police arrested and dragged away more
than 600 anti-nuclear demonstr ator s today after they attempted to
"stop bus iness as us ual" a t the Uni·
led Nations missions of nuclear
powe rs.
Thousands of black -helmeted .
nightstick-carrying officers were
queued up outs ide the missions.
Many of the protesters, s inging
"We Shall Not Be Moved ," were
ca r r!ed on stretc hers to waiting police buses aftei they went limp in
"non -vio le nt di sa rmament
blockades. "
The arrests came two days aftei
a giant disa rmament rally that
drew 750,!XXJ people to Central Park
for the largest political rally in U.S.
histOi y. There we re no arrests at
Saturday's rall y, timed to coincide
with a special U.N. sess ion on
disarmament.
" U they prevent people from
their right of going to work or walk·
ing on the sidewa lk we'lltake them
in," police spokes man J ohn Clifford had warned before today 's
demonstration.
Three thousand officers we re
mustered as the June 14 Civil Disobedience Campaign la unc hed il s
blockades beginning at 8 a.m. ou tside the missions of the United
States, Soviet Union, China, France
a nd Britain.
In add ition, police dispatched
teams of approxima tely 300 officers each to the missions of South
Africa and Israel, said Deputy Pollee
Robert Burke. He

te rmed th e two nations "hidden nuc lear powers." A group called the
DlrPCI Ar tlon Coa lition announced
plans to blockade thosP missions .
Their ac tions we re not connected
with the planned morning protests,
organizers sa id .

At I he U.S. missio n I his morning,
protes ters we1 r arres tPd five at a
time . with others stepping up 10
ta ke their place as they were
ha uled off for booking.
Dic k Myers. 33. of Philadelphia
sa id he was not afraid the a iTCs ts
would hu1 t the a nti-nuclear weapons ca use

"In the past a nyo ne who took action to change ihe status quo a lienated people," he sa id . "Martin
Luther King a lie nated people .
Gandhi alienated people . The
Kennedys a lienated people."
De m onstrators ut thP Chinese
mission carried flowers a nd sang,
" We sha ll not be moved."
Police a t the Soviet mission
closed a section of Third Avenue to
traffic afte1 more than a tOO demonstrat ors lined up a t barricades.
The civil disobed ience campaign
was coordin a ted by the War Resis!Prs LRague a nd ot her peace, r ellgious and communit y gr oups,
spons01 s sa id . A larger coa lition
made up the June 12 Rally Commit tee th a i organ ized Sa turday' s
activitiC's.

Wai Resis ters League orga nizer
Grace Hedemann sa id toda y was
" th e day busi ness is going on In the
missions. Our purpoS&lt;' is to stop
business as usual."

Girl mistaken for groundhog
WARREN, Ohio (AP) -A 14year-old Tri.rmbull County girl was
accldenially shot and killed by a
farmer who mistook her for a
groundhog, authorities said today.
Sheriffs deputies said Shannon
Markko was lying In a hay field
about 8:00 p.m. Saturday when the
farmer saw her brown hair In, the
weeds 'and mistook her for one of

the groundhogs he had been
shooting.
Reports said the farmer shot the
girl from a distance Of 50 to 60 feet.
She was taken to a Cleveland hospl·
tal, where she died Sunday of the
sho\g\UI wound to the head.
Authorities decllned to release
the name of the fanner.

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------------- -----Monday, June 14, 1982

Commentary

.Kirpatrick comp.L.__l_a_in_s____w_i_lli_am_F._B_uc_kt_er_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel
\Il l uun S in

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614-99t-l l 56
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ROll HOF:FLICH

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lo·ltt·r' a n · 'll h)''' I I• • o·tltltn l.! and mu ~ l ho· ~ ~ ~ n t· d 10.ith llanlt', a ddrr!&gt;~ ant! h·lrphn!W
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Just

water~

please

0n the way to the lates t reports on the Falklands and other contemporary disaste rs. we we re sidetra cked the other da y by a glimpse of the
future und er i:l Ch1 cago date li ne.
It was on an insi de page of the Wall Street Journal, whose colw nns often
ha ve as mu ch to sa y on the bus iness of life as they do on business life. and the
subject was the state of the restaurateur' s a rt as displayed at a convention of
the National Restaurant Association .
The emphasis at the e vl'nl was on the.dfurts of restaurant operators to
keep profits fat 111 a lean cconmn y. frequently by serving less. That 1s not

likl'iy to come as news to anyone ~ i ven to lllU Ch dinin~ out, but some of the innovative wa ys of going a but it may.

The introduction of hi gh tec hnol ogy into kitchens is nn e. Fur example ,
the elel'tnmic dt•v ke complete wlth di g it.&lt;~ I wc i ~ ht readout de v clo~d for at-

tachment to a meat slicer. It is guaranteed to curb a worker's inclination to
bt• t&lt;XJ generous with the portions - a workt'r. wn"'n only say. who can't be
employed in any of the esta blishmenl&lt; we ha ve patronized recently .
More spectacular by far. ho.we ver, IS the computerized bar. The liquor
suppl y 1s out of s1ght. locked awa y in a room " under management key ."
Drink orders - 1,200 possi bilities - arc punched into a keyboard. The computer does all the rest - blt·nding a prec isely 111ee:~sured drink. delivering it
to the customer vi a dispenser tubes and simulwneous ly spitting out the bill.
The manufacturers don 't menti on what effect such lightning-speed service mi ght ha ve 011 customers, but the y guarantee it gives managers total
control of their bar operations. No more on the house, or hea\'Y hands

pouring those that f.l ren't.
And the bartend er '' In till' n•s t~uralcurs ' future . clearl y a job for PacMan .
Th e realmont•y·sa vl!lg focus 1s on what goes into the menu - or in some
cases. what t.l oes n't.
Take the lctte.st 111 fr t·nch fries, cuns tr udt•t..l - amJ that is the wurtJ fron1 potato pellet' to which wa ter 1s added to make a dough that 1s cut in
stnps to be fri ed 111 an autmnatet.J opt:ration with a capacity of 500 servings
an hour.
And what are powto pellets' What result,, the manufacturer explains,
when the nn g mal pt,lal o b taken Hpart aud recons tituted minus " the thin gs
that a ren 't ve ry good ."
'If that answers one Question . it raises a nother . Whv ?
And then there• arc the ailnost-ll1Jl&lt;.'k-c rab sti cks. that do contain 15 percent of the real th1n g. The rest 1s processed fi sh protein of a more plebian
ori gin.

They an~ the LTCatinn of a Japanese concern that also makes imitation
scallops and is working on lobs ter and shrin1p. Ahnost everything, it would
appear, except imiwtion customers, and it could be that they've even got a
good start on that without knowing it.
There's more. but this is more than enough food for a couple of thoughts.
Such as if it's true that we are what we eat. the restaurant of the future could
reall y give us something to worry about.
Or to put the Chicago experierice another way . having been over into the
future,nf footl. we'Vl' l'Oille back hunJ..!ry .

Berry's World
•

"When I grow up, I'm going to get into TV religion an' MAKE A LOT OF MONEY/"

Letter to editor
Reduced services
Please don't get angry with our
The Meigs County Health Department wishes to thank everyone who receptionist, she is only following inworked so hard to get a one-half Mill structions. She may ask you to wait
Levy passed so that we could con- or she may have to put you on a
tinue to offer our present level of waiting list.
The Meigs County Health Departservices.
Since the levy has failed, changes ment will continue to serve county
will be required. We will infonn the residents as best we can with our
public of these changes on or before decreased resources and staff. June 30. We regret that these cuts · Franklin C. Petrie, Jr., R.S. ,
will be made and we ask evervone to Deputy, Health Department.
bear with us in these trying tunes.

The power of The New York Times
is both awesome and sobering.
Walter
Cronkit e,
un chara cteristically arrogant in tone,
was once caught saying that the
evening news was whatever he
determined the evening news should
be . Last Tuesday, fonn er Secretary
of State William P . Roge rs, 1n casual
co nve rsation, expressed surprise at
the attention given to Ambassdaor
J ea ne Kirkpatrick's strictures on
the United Nations. " She's been
saying exactly the same thing for
months ." he observed. " Why all the
publirity now ' " And the following
day . but the time on page 14 of The
Times. Mrs. Kirkpatrick made the
sa me point. " I said nothin g I have
not said 10 times in the past three
11 \Ullths ."

So why did the good gray Times
t'lect to put on the front paJ..!e the
story that, as the headline writer
sunun ed it up, " Mrs. Kirkpatrick
Calls U.S. Impotent in U .N.?" In the
first place. everyone already knows
the United States is irnporl;lnl in the
United Nations except in the
Serurity Council where we ha ve a
veto . In the second place, Kirkpatrick-watchers have. as we have
St'l'll , known for a long time that her
view of U.S. Impotence is a s emphatic as the view of former Ambassador Patrick Moynihan . So
what were The Times' moti ves?
Strcetwisc journalists, to judge
from a quickie canvass, attribute
the attention given to Mrs. Kirkpatrick 's statement as. in effect, an
exte nsion of tht• fe ud she and
Alexamit•r Ha ig art· currently condul'lin g on the matter of our tilt in
lhc Falkland Islands. Mrs . Kirkpatri ck. whose academic and sentimental background is in Latin
Ameri ca . opposed Mr . Haig's
Stakhanovite support of the British.
Arg uin ~ the benefits of a more ambiguous lint• les t Latin Ameri ca be
alit•nated. The friction becomes
111ore piquant in the light of the
epi~tJ&lt;.Ic involving the s witched vote
on H Security Council resolution .

Mrs . Kirkpatri ck, ha vin g voted with
the British, moments later announced that if she had to do it
again , she'd have abstamed . This
m1J&lt;.iification she was pleased to
register inasmuch as it moved the
U.S. position a little closer to her
own position .
But atte nti on was focused
primarily on the COAStipated communications · syslcrn with~n the
foreign servi ce. Why hadn 't Alexa nder Haig telephoned his decision on
the U.N. vote to Mrs. Kirkpatrick '
Old Soldier Haig replied that he did
not communicate with company
commande rs when a corp!:i stood in
between. Mrs. Kirkpatri ck, we are
encouraged to infe r , didn't much
like the notion of being thought of as
a mere L'Umpar1y commander, ami
someone in her entourage reminded
someone at The New York Times
that the ambassador to the United
Nations, while taking instructions

from the secretary of state. has a
sea t in the Cabine t where the ambassador ca n directly appeal to the
pres ident.
Very well then , that is the human
narrati ve , getting most of the attention . This is a pity, because what
should be getting all the attention ,
fo r Pete's sake, is what Mrs. Kirkpatric k actually sa id : whi ch is that
th e United States has never ~ot
a round tb acknowl edging the structural imperfections of the United
Nations. Although her accent the
other day was on the ineptitude of
our foreign policy machine and on
the discontinuity that res ults fron 1
s hort te rms given to ambassadors to
tht• United Nations. Mrs. Kirk·
pa tri ck lt)uched on the basic
wea kness within the United Nations
that would ha ve made Pericles.
Rirhelieu and Disraeli look inept if
they had had to contend with similar
tJ&lt;.Ids. Mrs. Kirkpatrj ck spoke of " ar&gt;-

pl ying ' one man one vote' to an interna tional a ssembl y of terribly
unequal nations. Obvious ly that kind
of principil' c reates a disjunction
betwee n power and responsibility. I
a m told , but have not verified, that
the financial contributions of all 86
nations to the United Natons !that
voted tu derlan• Is rael a racist
s tate 1 dues not equal that of the
Unilt•tl Stalt•s. Now that . I might
,·llnrludt·. is till' basic structural flaw
that occounls for our impntence .
S11. If the problem is that of a
structural flaw, it is other than that
of polic ymakers. Except, of course,
111 the extent U1at they fail to
a cknowledge that flaw and do
something about it.
Do what '
The philosopher and s tratq(ist
James Burnham came up with what
to do about it over 10 years ago. It is
very s imple. The Unite'&lt;! States
s hould never vote in the General
yes.
jl

V1~T?I, ..

"'or ~ow.

CA~'T~OY

SEEl'M

'BAlLlNG?J

Is economy just sitting o~ poised for recovery?
WASHINGTON tAPI - Today's
quiz: Based on the government's
economic Indicators. Is the national
economy "just sitting In the mud"
01 ts It "poised for recovery"?
And ts that recovery "Immine nt "
or would It stUI be "premature to
draw any firm conclusions about
the timing of a business upturn"?
The trouble Is that a pretty good
case can be made for any or all of
those four declarations offe red by
President Reagan and private and
government economists In the past
few weeks.
The most recent government fig·
ures show unemployment at the
highest level tn 40 years, factm les
turning out even fewer goods than
earlier In the recession. builder;
putting up and selling fewer houses

Impotent
I rose early this mormng to hear
President Rona ld Reagan address a
joint session of the English House d
Lords and the Parliament. I might
as well·have stayed in bed!
Except for a portion of his speech
designed as sop to British vanity. the
address wa6 strictly vintag e
Reaganese. It was basically the
same speech he has delivered during
and after the presidential campaign.
It contained the same old warnings
a~ainst communism with nothing
new to cure the evil. It was a classic
example of chauvinism versus
realism. The delivery was excellent
but substance was Jacking. Two
hours sleep lost 1
It seems the government of the
two most powerful nations in the
World, Russia and the United States
are only giving lip service to that
problem that vitally concerns us all,
- the nuclear anru; race. Therefore
we have to rely on that weak reed'
the United Nations, to save our tw~
countries and the world from
nuclear devastation.
The UN has become, by its own
adopted ~rocedures, an impotent
giant. It has been emasculated by its
own rules. Yet it is now the only hope

In Parts last week, that "we believe
and customers ordering fewe r proeconomic recovery Is imminent,'.'
ducts and mate rials for future
ts a bit more cheerful than many·
delivery.
economists would offer . But some·
True, some re tailers say their
say the upturn, though haid to de:
sales are up a bit . But most recent
teet, Is already unde r way.
reports on the economy seem to ftt
And few would disagree very
the sitting-In-the-mud description
strongly with the view of Treasury
given by David Cross. a senior
Secretary Donald T. Regan that
economist with Chase Econome t·
"we are not there yet but we are
rlcs In BaJa Cynwyd, Pa.
poised for recovery."
And the weakness tn orders for
Tying all those statements tothe future is a big reason why Corn·
gether are two things: one more
rnerce Secretary Malcolm Baleconomic indicator - the unglam·
drige says recovery celebratlens
orous category of business Inventoare still premature.
ries - coupled with the approach of
But on the other hand, only the
the big tax-rate cut scheduled for
most pessimistic analysts say
things are likely to keep getting · July 1.
Bypassing the controversy of layworse through the fall and
Ing
blame for the recession, It Is
summer.
clear that the weakness of the past
The president's own statement,

fe w months has been concentrated
In the fact that business officials
facing high interest rates and rela·
tive ly slow sales have sharply cut
their production, Instead supplying
customers out of previously bull!·
up Inventories.
Low production means layoffs.
Layoffs mean fewer Americans
with money to spend. Less money
to spend means even !lower sales.
And on and on.
But government figures show In·
ventorles are coming down, dropping tor tour straight months after
rising every month for six years.
That Isn' t necessarily good news
but It does set the stage tor good
news; It does mean the economy
"Is poised tor recovery" - If sales
pick up.

a_n_t___;_________L_ow_e_ll...:_W~in_g_ett

gt......_.:..._·

of mankind to bring samty to a crazy
world. To do that, the UN and the
World Court, now little more than internationa l debating societies, must
be given authority to enforce their
decisions.
Practically every nation in the
world is a. member of the United
Nations. In the General Assembly
the smallest nation has the same
vote as the great nations. Botswana
and Vanuatu have the same voting
strength as the United States and
Russia with a vastly disproportionate population and political,
economic and military strength. The
United States pays 25 percent of the
operation costs of the UN; Russia 17
percent. Botswana and Vanuatu
two of the world's srnallesi
Republics, pay only token swns. It is
the small, third world countries
which make the General Assembly
of the United Nations so unwieldy as
to be practically powerless. Too, it
can only recommend and its
decisions can be flouted · with impunity.
The other ann of the United
Nations is the Security Council
where no action can be taken
without the approval of all five

members, the United States, Russia,
Britain, France and China . Any action the Security Council takes can
be vetoed by any of the five members. In the area of the cold war, this
requires a degree of cooperation
that is seldom forthcoming in attempts to cope with major world
problems. Thus the veto has crir&gt;pled the Security Council.
That briefly swns up the faults of
the United Nations. Yet it is the only
world-wide organization we have
and we need it. For the past 18 years
efforts have been made to amend the
United Nations Charter. The amendments would provide for a more
uniform voting system based on
population and the member nation's
contribution to the UN budget. It is a .
complicated system and for a
resolution to pass, it would have to
be supported by most of the countries of the world, by most of the
population of the world and by most
of the economic and military
strength of the world. A resolution
passed by the General Assembly
would be binding, not recommendations as at present.
Peacekeeping forces would carry
out ·the mandate and binding

resolutions could be passed not only
on peace and security questions but
alSo on economic and social
problems.
That is only a brief re~wne of efforts to make the resolutions of the
UN more enforceable. The prospect
of World War Ill has led most folk
with the exception of a few mad
souls, to realize that the threat of
nuclear war must be eliminated. If
you would care for more literature
on this subject, write to Center for
War/Peace Studies, 218 E. 18th St.,
New York, N.Y.
At no time has the impotence of
the UN been more vividly demonstrated than in the last few weeks
during the British-Argentina dispute
over the Falklands and the IsraeliPLO struggle in Lebanon. In both
cases, the litigants were ordered by
the UN tv cease combat and in both
cases were ignored. Perhaps some
fonn of financial penalty could be
added to UN enforcement
procedures.
Perhaps countries would rather
spend its young people in wars to
bolster its national ego than spend
mon~y for fines.
.•

D
El

El

N

Many thanks voters
"A Great Big Thanks" to you 2 219
voters who showed you do CARE
about us kids by supporting our .
·
Carleton Schoollevy.
As for you non-supporters, by the
grace of God I hope you never have a
child, grandchild or any relative

Page-2-The Doily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 14, 1982

with a_physical or mental handicap. ·
Agam, I say TIIANK YOU. Each
one of us at Carleton School will
forever be grateful and we love each
and everyone of you. _ Brent
Larkins, Carleton School Student.
!",_

il

a:
a

-....
A

~

The Daily Sentinei -Pa!!e - ~

'Snakebit' Cubs lose another
By Associated Press
Another day, anothe r game
and another loss tor the Chicago
Cubs.
And Cubs Manager Lee Ella has
only one explanation for the strea k
tha t has reached 13 ga m es a nd tied
a club mark set tn 1944.
"We' re snake bit, " he said Sun·
day after the Cubs dropped a 5-3
decision to the Montreal J:;xpos tn 10
Innings.
Montrea l's Tim Wallach provided the telling blow, cracking a
two- run home r with two outs In the
lOth afte r the Cubs had rallied from
a 3.0 deficit.
"We hit the heck out of the ball
today," Elia said, "but It always
seemed to be 1tght a t someone . I'm
proud of the wa y they played today.
"They worked the ir ta ils off. You
can 't do muc h more tha n that. "
In other Na tiona l League action,
Cinc innati bea 1 Los Angeles 4-2 and
San Diego defeated Houston 5-4.
San Fra ncisco and Atlanta split a
doubleheader, the Giants taking
the first game 2·1 and the Braves
the second 5-1.
St.Louis at Ne w York and Plttsbuigh at Philade lphia we re rained
out. The Pittsburgh-Philadelphia
ga me has been re scheduled as part
of a twi -ntght doubleheader Aug. 9,
while no makeup da te has been an·
nounced for St.Louis-Ne w York.
Reliever Woodie Fryman, who
re tired the Cubs in orde r in the lOth,
earned his fourth victory In six deci·

slons. Relie ver Willie He rnandez 24, took the loss.
'
Leon Durham smacked his sixth
home run of the season, a two-run
shot In the fourth to Ue the ga m e a
3-3.
Padres 5, Astros 4
San Diego's Alan Wiggins singled
In the tying 1un In the seventh In·
ning, stole second and scored on
two Houston throwing e rrors.
Tim Flannery opened the seve nth with a single and was sacrl·
!I ce d to second b y John
Montefusco. Wiggins the n lined a
s tngte to lett to drtve tn Flannery.
The victory gave the Padres a
sweep of their four-ga me series .
Monte fusco, 5-4, went 72-3 Innings
to pick up the victory. with Ga~ y
Lucas finishing up for his eighth

save.
Nolan Ryan, 5-8, was tagged with
loss despite striking out nine Pa·
dres In 61-3 innings of work.
Ruppert Jones homered for the
Padres. his ntnth of the year. Ray
Knight belted his fourth home 1 of
the season, a two-run s hot In the
second to give the Astros a 2.0 lead.
GhUlts 2-l, Braves 1-5
The Braves saw two winning
streaks come to an end, but we re
able to make amends against San
FrancL~o.

The Giants, led by Jack Clark's
11 th homer of the season to lead off
the s ixth, won the first game of a
doubleheader to snap Atlanta's
fi ve-ga me winning s treak. It also

• I

'I

4.
Atl a nt a's Ri ck Camp, 4-3. 1egis·
te red his firs t victor y tn fo ur yea rs
as a s tarte r. working 52·3 Innings
a nd a llowing one run. Gene Ga rbe1
finis hed up. re tirin g nine stra ig ht
batte r s before giving up a single to
gain hts llth sa ve of the yea r.
Re nnie Ma rtin , 2·3, w as the
winne r in the opene r , workin g 81-3
innings. Gre-g Minton cam e on in
relief to regls te1 his lOth save.
Atl a nt a opened Ihe scming in the
second on a leadoff horne r by Bob
HOI ne r. his 11th of the yea r. The
home r was the sixth straight hit for
Horne r, who went 5-for-5 Saturday.
The Gia nts tied the ga me off lose r
Ke n Dayley, 2-3, in the founh on
Chill Davis ' one-out sing le, Cla rk 's
wa lk and Da rrell E vans' s tn gte .
Home r wa lked in the fourth. but
his stre ak e nded when he struck out
in the six th. He doubled In the ninth
and, a ft e r striking out in the firs t
inning of the second ga me, reac hed
base three more times with a sing le
a nd two wa lks .

Harvey's "Wallbangers' rip Tigers
By Assoclawd Press
The Milwaukee Brewers have
put the hop back In the ir hitting.
"It was just like the ' Wal·
lbangers' fl.orn the West Coast,"
said Manager Harvey Kuenn Sun·
da y after the Brewe rs walloped 18
hits, five of them home 1uns, to
bu ry the Dell oit Tlge1s 13-5.
Kuenn's club was nicknamed
"Harvey's Wallbange rs." after the
popular d1 Ink, following an explosive offensive show against the
Oakland A's on the West Coast.
The Brewers fe ll into a slump af·
ter returning home last week. But
they've scored 33 runs In the last
four games while winning three of
them . Sunday 's power display In·
eluded two homers by Gorman
Thomas and one each by Don Money, Robin Yount and Ben Ogilvie.
The Brewers are actually playIng their best ball of the season
under Kuenn's management. Since
taking over from Buck Rodgers
June 2, Kuenn had led Milwaukee
to a 7-4 record.
Thomas hit his 11th homer of the
year with Yount on base In the first
Inning and Ogilvie followed with his
12th, giving the Brewe1 s a 3-0 lead.
Money followed Yount's single lri
the third with his ninth homer,
chasing Detroit starter Pat Undei ·
wood, 34. Thomas then greeted reliever Aurelio Lopez with a homer
to give the Brewers a 6-0 lead.
Yount's homer In the seventh, a
three-run shot, capped the Brewe rs ' scortng.
Randy Lerch, 4-5, was the
winner, pitching 62-3 Innings before
getting relief help from Jim Slaton,
who earned his third save.

A's 7, Blue Jays 5
Tony Annas' two·run homer
ke yed a three-run seve nth-Inning
ra lly and flashy Rickey He nderson
stole four bases to pace Oakland
over Toronto. He has a leagueleading 62 steals In 61 games.
Losing 4-3, the A's broke through
for their winning runs In the seve nth following a ratn de la y of one
hour, 29 minutes.
He nderson singled tn the sev·
e nth, stole second and third, and
then scored on a sacrifice fl y by
Dan Meye r. Armas then hit his sev·
enth homer, off r elieve r Roy Lee
Jackson, 2-5.
Tom Underwood, 3-4, was the
winne r wtth 32·3 innings of one-hit
relief pitching. Dave Beard pitched
the final three innings to gain his
fourth sa ve.
Angels 7, White Sox 4
Don Baylor's two-run double
keyed a four-run eighth Inning and
Geoff Zahn hurled a six-hitter as
California beat Chlca~o .
Trailing 3-2 after seven Innings ,
the Angels scored four Urnes In the
eighth to sew up the game. Baylor's
double off reliever Salome Barojas
gave the California a 4·3 lead . Bay·
lor scored from second on a single
by Bobby Grlch after an Inte ntional
walk to Reggie Jackson and Jack·
son then scored on Doug DeCinces'
single off Jerry Koosman.
Zahn, 7·2, had a no-hitter and a 2.0
lead through 52·3 Innings but the
White Sox tied It then on an RBI
triple by Bill Almon and a wild
throw by catcher Bob Boone on a
pickoff play. Chicago went ahead
3·2 In the seventh on Torn Paciorek's RBI single.

Marine rs 7, Royals I
Da ve He nde rson . At Cowe ns and
Jim Ma le r drove in two r un s eac h
a nd Floyd Ba nnis te r recove rl'd
from a ltne dri ve beaning to pitc h
seve n strong innings as Seattle bcal
Ka nsas Cit y.
Bannts te 1. 6-4, was stru ck in t he
head by Willi e Wilson 's line d rive i n
the firs t Inning but recove1ed to
throw him out a nd held Ka nsas Cit v
to fi ve hits before giving way to reliever La r ry Anderse n in the
eighth .
"It hit me In the side of th e nec k
and d ro pped straig ht dow n." Ba n·
niste r sa td . "II was just like coll ege .
A guy hit a line d1 ive bac k a t m e.
and il b roke my wris t. but I pic ked
the ba ll up a nd thre w the guy out.
e ven thou gh I had brokPn m y
arm ."
Afte r Bannister was hit, he te ft
the field for a brief exa mina tio n,
but he said the re was no doubt in his
mind he would continue.
Rangers 10, Twins 4
Rookle Dave Hostetler 's two-run
horner Ignited a seven-run outburst
fm Texas in the first inning and the
Range rs coa sted over Minnesota
with their biggest run production of
the season.
The e ight -hit inning was the big ·
gest offe nsive show this seaso n for
the Rangers as they provided Doc
Medlch, 4-5, with a heft y c ushio n.
Medlch lasted 62-3 innings and
yie lded nine hits and four runs be·
fore re lieve rs Paul Mirabella a nd
Steve Comer mopped up.
The loser was Jack O'Connor. 0·2.
who las ted only two-thirds of an
Inning .
The loss was Minnesota ·s 21s t tn
23 games.

CHESTER PEE WEE TEAM - Members of this
year's version of tht· Chester Pet• Wee league team an•,
front, J-r. Lee Gillilan. Nichola Pickens. Rod Newsornt•.
Paul Erwin, Phillip Woods, Tony Grate, Jason Hysell.
Tim Tom Mirhael. and Dean Mays. Set·und ro\1· -

Alvt· na Van Mett·r. Mikt · Hoffman. J a nlt's MI' Uani t' l.
.Jasun Ridt·nour. Matt Hidt•nou r. Mit·kt·y Baut·r. Matt
Finlaw and Torn Hunlt·r . Bat ·k ~ A ~s i s t;111t ( 'mll'h
Sh'v e Finlaw, Cn:H'h Boh Ba ut'f , &lt;llld Ass ista nt l' u~tt · h
Cilbt•rt Woods.

Meigs summer league results given
In girls ' softball action Pomeroy
Senior shut out Point Pleasa nt
Fruth's by a wide 24-0 margin in fi ve
innings. Barb Hatfield was the win·
ning pitcher , while Ury was the
loser.
Pomeroy had 18 hits led by R.
Smith with two singles, V. J effers a
triple, A. Pratt a single, Mary Moore
two singles, B. Gloeckner two
doubles. and a tripl e.
Angie Ha tfi eld had a smg le. Andrea Ri ggs a hornt! run and s in g le. T.
Pratt a si ngle. B. GruesL' r two
s ingles. Den1se Stegall two singles
and a doub le. H1tte rs for P.P . were
Ury two singles . F'iet.er a single ,
Ne ville t1 sing le , Gren a single. and
Starlin g a doubl e.

Racim• Romps
In lol'a l little leag ue action the
Rac ine Reds r ullcd t u a 14· 1 rmnp
OVL'r tilt' Tuppers Plains Bea rs.
Racine outhit th e VIsitors 17-4
en route to the win .

Shannon Riffl e posted the win for
R&lt;l c111e w1th four wa lks and SIX
strike outs. McDona ld suffe red th e
loss for Tuppers Plains. Ma rk Porter had a good nig ht of three for four.
Brian Diehl and Donnie Riffle had
pe1iect three for three ni ghts including a doubl e each. Kenny Turley
added a double. Snyde r had the lone
extra base hit for T.P . whi ch was "
doubl e.
Bravt•s 4 Powdl's 3
The Middleport Bral't'S t•dged tlw
Pomeroy P owell's Giants d ub 4-:l as
the winrwrs outhit il-; foe seven to
four . Joe y Lov ing was the starting
pitdll'r with gr L•at d f1wt. Ht'
received great r elt l'f help frn111 Jdf
Nt• lson and L'Vt•ntual Wi nner Chucki l'
Pullins .
They cumbwed for nint• strik couh
a nd fuur walks. Don D o r ~ t Wl'nt lhl'
distance for P omeroy with mnt·
strikeouts and eight wa lks.
Scott Hannin g led Middleport's h1t
par{:lde with three si ngl es, Luk l' Bu r-

SJ 1 JAC KSON PIKE Rl J S WEST
~-- Phone 4 4 6 · 4 524
BARG AIN M Arl/1/[f"S 0 /11 SAT i1 SU/11
II! I SE ATS JUST$ ]00
A D M /~ 10/11 [V.~ Y TUESDAY S

SI J:::R'S

HUT

MO\IF..
.,,,.,..

]OlJ

EI

PG

•
•
IIIII\//\\
T/ ftUI ~lUI \1

delle tw o singl es wlll JL' ff Nelson

Blue Gill

a nd Stevt• Cassell a single each .
Scott Pnwel l ha d a s m g lt· a nd duuhlt•
fnr Powell's wh ile Bill Rrnt he rs

fishing derby

doubled
singlt&gt;tl .

&lt;Jild

Bria n

Tannt• ht!!

planned
A blue gi ll fis hmg derby will be
held a t the Eli Denison Post ,
AmL•ri can Le gion, lakl• on Sunday,
June20, frorn9a.m. to4 p.m.
Prizes will be awarded for tht•
largest blue gill , the smallest, and
the person l'atchin g the most. Cost
per pole to participate is $1 and there
is no age limit. Those pa rticipatin g
em: to bring thei r own bucket!; or
stringers. All blue gills caught must
be taken h01ne since none can bL'
returned to the pond .

Transa('tions

PUT ALL
YOUR EGGS
IN ONE
Bl\.SKET.

t: E.'it; KAJ .
l ':-.l iT ED

~"1AI"t:S

Ol.YM I' It"

f "ll:01

I'.IJTIEE -."',mll'(\ Lnu Va lro twad l"fM&lt;"h
of thf' 1'114 l iS 1)\vmpk· lll.x"kP\ h·.. m .
J:W' nd ln~ l in.d J ppruva l b~ the ~ anw~
pw p;~ n•tlom

&lt;""&lt;)mmltl f'l'

Standoff doesn't
help slugish Reds
LOS ANGELES (APJ .. The Ctn·
"I don 't want to say It's crucialctnna t! Reds and Los Angeles that means you're close to panic,''
Dodgers are more accustomed to said Los Angeles left fielder Dusty
being In the thick of the National Baker, "but It Is lmpoi1ant we do
League West race this tlmeofyear, well on thts trip."
but neither team finds Itself in front . The Reds, too, have been having
after the two spent the weekend trouble, more so even than the
splitting a four-game series.
Dodgers.
While the standoff helped neither
La:n)' BUttner, who knocked In
the Dodgers nor the Reds, the two one of the Reds' two first Inning
NL West frontrunners, Atlanta and runs against loser Burt Hooton, 14,
San Diego, continued to win.
remarked, "Our main problem has
The Reds prevailed on Sunday, been an Inability to hit In the clutch.
4-2, as Bruce Bereny! snapped a
We've been unable to get the big hit
personal five-game losing streak all season."
and, In the process, won back some
As the Dodgers go out on a long
trip, the Reds return home Tuesday
confidence.
"I've been having control prob- night to begin a J.3.game home
lems," he said, "and It got to the stand.
point that I'd go out to the mound
"It's Important we do well,"
and the fu·st run or two and I was · BUttner said, echoing Baker.
out of there. It was tough to pitch "We're playing all the teams ahead
of us."
like that.
"But not too long ago I read a
For Hooton, It was another rough
comment by Sandy Koufax, and I start- three Innings, eight hits and
reallzed that after r eadtng It he, too, four runs - and In his five starts
had some wild spells .. . and he since pitching his one win, a onewasn't too bad of a pitcher."
hitter over Philadelphia on Apr1129,
Bereny! pitched Into the eighth he's allowed 23 earned runs in 25 2·3
lnlllng, then received relief help Innings, a 9.31 ERA.
"It's kind of Uke starting aU over
from Tom Hume who posted his
l2th ·save.
again," said Hooton, who was makThe loss closed the Dodgers' Ing his second start after three
home stand against Atlanta and weeks on. the disabled ltst. "! don't
Cincinnati wt\h only two wins In feel I was ~ttlng toughed up, but
I!Ve games, ad! they lost four more when you're going Uke I am everything they hit Is a base hit."
games tn the standings.
Eddie Milner st8l'ted the Reds'
• Tonight the Dodgers· at-e In San
r;&gt;tego to face the surprtstrig Pa- first wtth a double and scored on
dres, winners of. fbur tn a row and Ron Oest.er's lnfleld out. Dave Connine of their last 11. It's lhi! start of a cepcion then doubled and Bllttner
U,game trip In which they'll meet singled him horrie. Clnclnriatl
team In the. NL West ext'ept added two mOre runs on Alex Trevl·
' San Francisco.
no's two-run single In the thh'd.

everY

l'

ma rkect Atla nta's fh st defea t on the
road aga ins t a West Division oppone nt this sea son following 13
straight victories .
In the second game Da le Murphy
hit a two- run horne r to help the
Braves gain a split.
Murph y's horne r, whi c h gave
him a ma jor-league leading 19,
carne tn the first Inning, g iving the
Braves a ll the 1uns they needed off
losing ·pitche r Allee Hamma ke r. 3·

I.

ALL
FISHING LURES

lh

PRICE

RODS, REELS AND
TACKLE BOXES

3Q%oFF

It you're like most folks these days , you have a car Ioa.n .
some med1oa.l bUls, a be.nk credit card or tw o, and th e 11.s t goes
on. That's a lot of bills . . . a lot of "loans."
TD1U' 'bWa couoUda\elll.n our 'baake\ = 0 . . lean.
And one mont.hly ps,yment. One that's probably gotng to be
smaller than the total of payments y ou'r e mak.lng now
enra caah, \oo? We don'\ quibble .
Maybe you're th1n.k.1ng about a maJ o r purch ase Let's pa,y orr
what you owe now and throw 1n that extra you ne ed, too
TD1U' home equi~ •o•• a LO•G way.
How much you need depends on how mu ch you o we. And
your credJt Limit with us depends on you , too For examp le, 1f
you own your home, wec&amp;n 1oa.n you up Into th e thousands
based on your equlty.

•••4

llophoae. The sooner you get a.ll your eggs 1n one bas k.et, the

sooner you can start ,seeing things "sunn,y s ide up"l

Large Homeowner Loans up to

!,ln,oee

~o u.~+

CREDl'l~~·

OF

AMERICA~

· He've /IOt your loan

•
ftext To Mason County Fairground
675·2988
/ Store Hours Mon . thru Sat. 9:30 a.m. 8:00p.m.,
Clo~ed Sun

In Gallipolis:
502 Second Street
Phone 446-4113

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Poge- 4 - The Doily Sentinel

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Geri Walton of Pomeroy has been
appointed to the Gailia-JacksonMeigs Community Mental Health
Center Board announced Board
Chairperson Rev. William Middleswarth.

~

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Cooney returns to gym, a little wiser, lot richer
(~' IT~'

('()() Jl ('~ '

gOI'S IJaC'k tO thC'

lost a unanimous 10-round deci sion

10 Trevm Bcrblck on lhe undet -

gym. o lot r i&lt;'hf'r and a littlf' -; mar

(' ard . Pagf' rf'portC'dly suffered a

aftPr t1 b ga llant bid for l.arr:;

brokr•n righllhum b in losing for Ihe
fiiSt lime afler lR viclories.

!(' !' ,

Holmes' World Boxi ng Council hm
':.·weight c hampionship .
" I l('J IJl('d s uch a lrsson 1
cou ldn ' tiPar n a n.v whrrr r lsr." sa id
Coonf'.\ ', who lost in thf' 13th round
wiH•n train r r \ 'irt nr Vallr jumped
int o tlw 1 ing Frida _\· night to halt
Holm&lt;· s· pummf'ling of his man .
"C1 itiC"s said I couldn 't go thP d is-

Cooney also los t for th e first time,
aftPr 2S v ic tor ics including 22

knock ouiS . Drspil e his Impressive
reco rd. he had been criticized for

inacli vilv. ha ving fought only six
rou nds in Ihe last 30 months. Over
!hell samf' pt"'riod, Holmes had de-

fended

tile hm vywcight crown

lane&lt;•." Coonr.v continuPd . " I n m~ ·
mmcl . I h&lt;·ld bar k so that I could go
IIH' d ista ncP. I lf'al nr'i:l I don ' t ha\'f'
10 hold IJ" ck an vmow I IParned I

S('\'('0 I imPs .

('Quid put mo1 c prf'sSUIT' on .

hC'I pc'd his m an .

" I'm hap[l.\ I l&lt;•arm'&lt;l so man;·
lhings . I'll go bac k lo lhP g;•m and

" II was a good lesson for him because I' m goi ng 10 make Ge t ry

gt'1 ba c k lo w o rk h &lt;-lllh'r !ha n t ' \ 'l' r

Cuunl'y champion of the world

a nd look forlh&lt;' upporlunily lo fighl

som&lt;'&lt;ia y. We're going back 10 Ihe
gy m a nd wm k harder . I' m going 10
1n•a1 him 1oughe r a nd he·s going to
be Ihe nexl heavyweighl cham pion
of Ihe world ."
At .12. i! is uncr rwin how m uch
longe r Holmes will conlinue 10
fighl. Trainer Eddie Fu lch said
h&lt;' d likl' ih&lt;' champion to 1etlre afl&lt;'r one more yPar. But il could be
difficull 10 find suil able opponents.
There seem to be no more c ha llengPs left for Holmes. He has

fo1 tht ·
agam .

h r a \'~' wf'ight

ch;1mpi onship

·· ,\ s Muhammad .&lt;\ li said, ' I shall
"'
( 'r KHH 'Y ;~nd ll olnu ·s t•arnPd $10

rrturn~

ntil!ion apit•('t • in tllP n•rord $:)().
million promoti on hrld in a .12,0CKJ.
..Pal st;rdiurn l 'l'l'&lt;-'lt'd in lhl' ~ark in g
lot at C .t c·sa r " Palacc&gt;. It was th(•
1 ictu)s t fi ght in boxing history.
Drs piu• hi s loss. Coo nr~: CC'rtai nl ~·
rf'mains prominrnl in thf' h('aV)'wPight pictur(', rs (X'('iall~· after
prr\· i o u s J ~ ·· unl:x&gt;atcn Greg PagP

' 'I'd like to gf't morr experience

in and rPgroup now." Cooney sa id .
Va lle sa id lhP Holmes fighl had

beaten

v i rtua l! ~'

eve1y othe r ra nk·

ing heavyweighl excepl for Page

.•·
'.

and Michael Dokes. bot h - like the
c hampion - In promoter Don
King's stable.
He has not fought James "Quick"
Tillis. who beal Earn le Shavers on
the Cooney undercard, but Tillis
was unlmpt esslve in a shol at
World Boxing Association champ
Mike Weaver a nd thai malch
would not ge nerale much excite-

...

:.·

,.

,.

!t.

•
•'

..

men I. A WBC-WBA Iitle unifica tion
bout mighl have mm e appea l had
Holmes not a lread y s toppe d
Weave1.

If Holmes retires. a tournament
wou ld be arranged to crown a suc-

cessor and Cooney certainly would
be a pail of Ihal. So would Berbick.
Dokes and probably Page a nd Tillis
as well .

Floyd takes Memphis Classic
MEMPHIS, Tenn tAP! - Ray
Floyd lacks ne ither cash nor confi de nce this week as he heads for lhe
U.S. Open golf championship r id ing
a tw&lt;Hourna ment wi nning strea k.
The 39-yeal -old vetera n from Mi a mi. F la., collected his second
winner's check- $72.00l- in lhree
weeks Sunday after dominating the
Danny Thomas Memt~hls Classic.
Floyd won with three birdies on the
back nine to rack up a 17·under-par
271. six strokes ahead of young
Mike Holla nd .
The victory made F loyd the sixth
player ever Io surpass $2 million in
Pt ofessional Golfers Associat ion

career earnings.
Floyd, who sa t out the Kemper

Open la sl week after win ning the
Memo• ial Tournament two weeks
ago. slrode lhe Colonial Count ry
Club's 7,249-yard course as if he
were playing by himself. He shared
the first-round lead with Mark Lye,
then led the second and lhird
rou nds by three and fiv e st rokes
res peel ivcly.
He 1 a n his scme to 16 unde r pa r
midway through Sunday's round,
lhen faltered with a pair of bogeys
al 12 and 13 befm e 1ecovet ing with
his birdie siring.
Floyd said he wasn't thinking too
much aboul Pebble Beach, Calif. ,
where the U.S. Open will be played
this week.

aid tries to help him out Sunday in Montreal at the start of the Canadian
Grand Prix. ( AP Lascrphotol .

Tragedy mars victory

Foil rod has been active in basketball , volleyball , band, choir, student
publications, stu&lt;ient government.
drama, pep club, and 4-H at Meigs
High School. She also participated in
the variety show, senior class play ,
and the junior miss pageant.
She is lis ted in Who's Who Among
Students in America and was a part
of the Advance'&lt;! Scholar Program at
Rio Grande last year.
Follnxl plans to major '" Medical
Laboratory Technolog y at Rio Gran&lt;ie.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack FollrDli of Racine.
Dennis Thornton of Me1gs County
High School has been awarded the
Meigs County Honors Scholarship to
attend Rio Grande College and Community College.
Rio Gra nde College offers a

scholarship tu a graduating Sl' llior in
each of the publil' high sd10ols in
Me1gs County each year. The
scholarh.s ip is effecti ve from llh: fall
quarter nf the yeil r nf the awa rd and

ends with llw spnng lJUarlt•r of till'
fnurth year.
Thorn tonl w s bcl'll adt \·en flwlball
and tnwk in htl!h sl'lluol.
He plans tn111aj or 111 an ·ountn1 g at
R\11 Grande. Hl' is lil t• son of Mr and
Mrs. Wtllta/111.. Thomton
Mrs. Ann Julmsnn, pn·s tdl' n l uf the
Middleport Alllllllll AsstwlallU il , announces the~t till' CnH\rfnrd-(;rl'\··
Lewis Svhu\arslup l111s yt·m 1s hclll J-:
awarded to Greg Bu sh.
Bush. son nf Celesta Coa t s, Mtd·

dl cporl , and Charl es l.lusli,
Springfield. is a 1982 graduate of
Meigs High School. He was act1ve in
football, served on the student cowlc it, was cla ss pres ident hi s

so pltomore yea r and attended
Buckeye Hoys Stale . He has been acce plt•d at Ohin University and will
begin classes thi s filii. His interest
l1cs rnlht• f1c ld of rnedi c inc.

Tl 1e

Cra wfu rd -Grey- l. c wi s

Sdwlarsllt p wa s t'Slahilshcd by Rev .

Dr. F.dwanJ W W. Lewis to honor
lle\·. l&gt;r . H1 chard II . Crawford . H.
lluniellt· (;rt'). .Judith Andress
1,t '\VIS . Ins

Mr

w 1ft•;

and Mrs.

(;eor~l' H. I .l' WI S,

Jus pan•nts, and

tlll'

of Mr ctnd Mrs.
mcludin~ Art

mnl' dn!drt'JI

C L'Illl~ l'

II

L1 'WJS

·· Papp } ·· l .l'WIS, dt'{'l't:t SL'Li : HCtrold
B ·ru ff" [.,·wL,, dPcc·ased ; Edward
w W. " PUilk " l,,·wi s. l..o:iwrence L.
"Cuat " LL'WI S , dl'( 'l'as ed : Katlwrine
l.l'WI S
Bunkl·r . i)(lrnthy Lewis
Stt'wart . Margan· t I A.'WIS Brown .
Ht:lt~ Ll'WI S Bubo ami Nurnw Lew1 s

Da\'ls.

MASON, Ohio (API - Jan Stephenson became a recluse during
lhe $200,00l Ladles Professional
Golf Association cha mpionship -a
self-Imposed exile to she lter herself
ft om legal problems and lei her
mind concentrale on golf.
"After everything thai's gone on.
my concentra tion has left me," Ste·
phenson said after posting a twostroke victory Sunday In one of Ihe
year's major events for women
golfers. She is embroiled In a messy
divorce-annulment case a nd last
month was fined $3,00l by the
LPGA for refusing to play In a tourna ment In Atlanta.
"This win means so much to me.
It meant so much that I could stick
it to 'em and go win. But I hate to
think where this money's going to
go."
Stephenson's former husband
has IIied to tie up a il he r assets
pPndlng an August tria l. He con-

te nds he a nd Stephenson are still
married while she conte nds the
marriage was not legal. a nd tha i
she is legall y married to someone
else.
The viclmy mean I a $30,00l firstplace check, a new cat - which
Stephenson gave to her father. who
caddied for her- and endorsement
bonuses worth more than $100,00l.
"Nobody knew whe re l was all
week. I refused to ta lk to my la wyer," Stephenson said . " ! spent
hours on my putting. l didn't even
go out (toea!) - m y mothe r cooked
vegetables fo r me In my room ar
night. l spent every spare moment
working on my game."
The work pa id off, as Stephenson
put together rounds of 69-69-70-71
for 9-under-par 279 to lead all the
way and beat runne rup JoAnne
Carner by two st10kes.
"This was such an Important
tournament, I couldn 't relax," said
Stephenson, a self-described worrier. " ! played games with my
mind all day.
"! kept thinking 'something's goIng to happen; someone will make
a charge, and I'm not going to win
the tourna ment.' It was the longest

LPG~

time.

Carner had a 3-under-par 69 to
finis h at 281, seven strokes under
par, a nd she left this ma jor tournament st ill needing one victory for
a utomatic qualifica tion to the
LPGA Hall of Fame. Alex had a 67
- the best round of the tourna ment
- to go with three even par rounds
and finished at 5-under·par 283, tied
for third wit h Pam Gietzen, who
had four steady rounds but never
cha lle nged for the lead.
Beth Daniel, who shared the first round lead, lost a stroke to Stephe nson each of the next two days a nd
we nt into Sunday's final round tra ilIng by two.
Playing in a threesome with Stephenson, sh~_mainU!Ined tha t margln through the front nine, but then
had foUl consecutive bogeys to
drop out of contention. She finished
with a 75, 3-under-par a nd 285 for
the tournament.

The toumament was played over
the par-72, 6,298-yard Grizzly
Course a t the Jack Nicklaus Sports
Center near Cincinnati.

Revival services will be~in
Tuesday and continue through June
20 at Rutland Church of the
Nazarene with serv ices each
evening at 7 p.m . at t0 :30 a .m. on
Sunday morning.
Rev . and Mrs. Billy D. Crane and
George and Charlotte Dixon will be

j

Rev. Billy D. Crane and George and Charlotte Dixon.

USPS H~!ltOI

A Division of Multim~lM.Inr .

Published t•very aftcrnuun, Mund11y thruu..:h
Frida y. Ill Court Street. by Lhc OhiU V~llt•y
Publ1shm~ Cmnpctny - Multirnedi&lt;l. lnl' ..
Purn~ruy, Ohio 45769. 992-2156. Scl'untl dass
posl&lt;!ge p&lt;tld at Pmnt'ruy, Ohw.

Calendar

Mcrnbt'r : Tht· ~ot· ialt'tl Press, lnlanLI D111 ·

ly Press Assodalwn and the Ame n can
Nt·wspal)l'r Publishers As.sod~:~ti on , Nat wnaJ
Ad\'cr li smg Re presentative, Br~:~nh;un
Nt·w~ p.apcr ~ l l!s, 733 Tiunl Avcnut•. New
York . New York 10017.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans, will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Monday at the Chapter Home on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

POSTMASTER : Send 1:1ddrcss to The Datly
Scntmd , 111 Cuurt St. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
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S29 .64

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lrlf\ .21

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
Northwest team won three of four r--------------------------_1-------- - - - - games to finish first In the 28th AllOhio Baseball Series over the weeke nd at Ohio State University.
The Northeast a nd Southwest
teams were each 2-2, while the Central, East and Southeast team finIshed weekend play at 1-3 .
The Northwest's only loss came
Sunday In a 2-1 defeat a t the hands
.IT'S EASY, QUICK AND PERMANENT
of the Southwest team. Doug RuU!n
IN A PROGRAM SO GOOD IT HAS
of Urbana scored the winning run
A MONEY BACK GUMANTEE.
on a Mike Volkert wild pitch with
WAOE lt. GEfl'"fiE., F.A.I.tt.
two out In the top of the seventh.
In a 3·1 Southwest victory over
the Northeast, Rutan again acDirec tor ot Tecnnoque• for Llvtng , one 01
Arnerlc• "• torerno•l euthorltle• on ttvp·
counted for the game-winning
no••• for w el •ht to• • end •toppln• •"'ok ·
lng . H e n•• eppeerett on the wlillelv •c·
score with a solo home run In the
ctel"'ed caS· TV •tatlon• . In ech~IUon to
lecturing on cllnlc•l hypno•l• throughout
fourth Inning.
tne Unltec;l Sletea end In C•neCIIe, Mr . Gen·
thner •• • fellow of tn• ArneriCen tnatltute
In a game against the C'.entral,
.:.:'.~t!'!.';.d•::n::.~r':.~ euthor of '' H.ypno•l• :
East and Southeast team, the
Northwest WQn a 4-2 decision while
------sPIEC:i~Li
managing only a single hit.
CALL NOW POR PR•• INPORMATION
Joe Walleans of Otsego got the
1-800-. .S-MM (TOLL PR •• )
lone hit on a second-Inning single
$5.000FF
and then scored what proved to be
Remember,
you•rel.u•t
one
phone
c•ll
Limit
On• CU•nt _.r .C:ou..;. .,.
the winning run when Brian Rado•w•v fr'Om IMing fhe person you w•nt to bel
.
novich walked with the bases
loaded.

LOSE WEIGHT
FOR SUMMER

...----------------·-··CUP_IAI f.I_I il!li!_l l l
-

.,,

I

1'

MIDDLEPORT
United
Methodist Women of Heath Church will have a picnic at the home
of Mrs. Betty Fultz Monday at 6
p.m. Members are to take a
covered dish and their own table
service.

June 15, 1982
This coming year should be an interesting one for you, socially.
Before it's over you're likely to develop an exteru;ive nwnber of helpful
contacts with persons from·all walks of life.
GEMINI (May 21-Juue ZO) This should be a rather enjoyable day for
you, and frien&lt;Js wUI welcome your companionship. However, when
visiting with pals, know when to caU it quits.
CANCER (Juue 21-July 2Z) Your possibilities for success in the
workaday world are very good today. Your tactics will succeed, yet these
same methods may fall at home.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2Z) Strive to be polite, witty and to the ~int if you
hope to sway ot(lers to your way of thinking today. A rambling dialogue,
forcefully presented, will have an adverse effect.
VmGO (Aug. 23-Sept; 2Z) Your possibilities for fulfilling your aims
are very good today, but be careful you don't pay too high a price for less
than you expected.
LIBRA (SepL 23-0ct. 23) Your ideas and ways of doing things will be
good todsy, but you might not be able to .rally the support of key people
sbo!lid you fall to tie appreciative of their ihpUt.
SCORPIO (OcL :14-Nov. 2Z) You're capable of handling substantial
responsibilities today. This could be both your blessing and your down·fall . You may stwnble if you take on too heavy a load.
SAGmARI\JS (Nov. 23-Dec. Zl) Without being snooty, be extremely
selective of whom you choose to pal around today. It's best to avoid the
company of anyone with whom you haveq't gotten along lately.
· CAPRICORN (Dee. 2%- Jaa. 18) Try to be as skillful in resolving
domestic problems today as you are in dealing with complications which
affect your work or career.
AQUARWS (Jan. ZO.Feb.ll) You should be rather lucky today competitively, but you may have to i:ontend with someone who is a poor loser.
Handle this person with kid gloves.
, PISCES (Feb. fi.Mareb.ZI) Your financial and material prospects
' look encouraging today. PrOfitable situations could develop for you, but
you mlist sulxllae tendencies to be reckless or careless.
ARJEs (Mardi !J..Aprll U) Not everyone you encounter today wiU
- thlnp u politlvely u you do. Fortunately, you'U.Imow how to deal
with them and tum them around to your way ol thlnl!lnll.
·
(~Prt 1M11J7 You
best tOday If you can work
With
IIUie lnlid\!1&amp;106 ..
Go
doing your own thing
Without CiWng •tfentlnl ~ )'ounelf.
I

Nu .~ ubs•Tiptwns by llla JI j)i'nnith.'tlm tu wns
wtwn• hlmt~• t 'Hrrll'r scrvu·e IS avaihtbh·.

13 Wt•c k.~
26 Wt•t•ks .
52 Wt•t•ks .

-~·-

Foil rod

Bush

Craft show July 2-24
The second a nnual Buckeye Hills
Senior Citize ns Craft Show will be
held July 2-24 at the C. William
O'Neill Senior Center in Manetta .
Senior citizens, age 60 or over, from
Athens, Hocking, Meigs. Monroe,
Morgan , Nob le,
Pe rr y and
Washington Counti es are encouraged to participate in the show .
First, second and third place winners will be selected in each of the
followmg categories : ceramics,
crochetin g, embroider, knitting,
ma crame,
quills,
sc ulp tur e,
weaving, woodworking a nd
miscellaneous. The first place winners will then participate in a
statewide competition to be held at

the Martm Janis Senior Center
during the Ohio State Fair .
A special attracti on th1s year w1ll
be a designated Sale Day to be held
July 24. Craftsperson will be given
the opportunity to sell their craft_-;
from 10 a . m . ~ p.m . The public is invited and no admission wiII be
charged.
Entry forms for the show are
avai lable at any senior center. nursing horne or nutrition si te. Forms
are due to the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development D1strict office by July 8. For

more information, contact Nancy
Berg atlhe agency ai (614 I 374-9436.

Howard K. Parker and !.is wife of
Morgan City, La. , arrived a t is
parents' home recently for a visit
and to attend the Racine Aumni dinner and dance.
Parker is the son of Irene a nd
Herb Parker, Syracuse.
It just wasn't in the cards for
Howard to attend his reunion. He
became ill and was taken to Holzer
Medical Center and from there he
was taken to University Hospital .
At U~ive rsity Hospital he underwent open heart surgery.
Cards may be sent to him in care
of the hospital. He is on the eighth

noor.

Sm ith

T IHlm tltn

Beat of the bend
Meigs bJckgrounds keep Jppearing
You can't bectl tll&lt;Jl gnud Me1gs
County bac':g r uund . It kn·ps

CurpuroJtw n. a dr v1s1lln uf Interlake,
I nc . Hl' has bL'Cil with Globe ~ mce

showing up all of !hi' time .
J ame~ C. Cline, fonnl'r res1dent.
ha ~ been the subject of an art1rle Ill
Adult Ministries, a pubh c£tllon uf the
Church of the Nazarene.
The son of Russe ll ami the lah·
Seva Cline of H.acine, Clint• started
attending the Syrac use Chorch uf
the Nazarene at the age of 16 and

1955
He has rL·p rese ntcd the American

was co nv erted at that tune . HL'

ma rried the former Mar).!a ret Mar-

other mght.

tin of Syracuse in 1952.

demonst ralton on the state house

He served m the United States
Marine Corps. 1952-55 in Korea. He
graduated from the Army Chemical
Warfare School and ea rn ed an

Ia wn showing proper ways to cook
fi sh. Brian is with the department of
wildlife.

i:l~sociate

This will probably be my last
colwn n fur a while. I'll mis'.:i you.
i\ga111. thank you for the ent'OU r&lt;Jge ment. I will be working
probably until Thursday. On Friday ,

deg ree

in

c hemical

technology from Marietta College.
He wa s an instr uctor in chem ical
warfare and aviation operation s.

they have ever had .
The department managed to pay
off the balance due on thei r brush
fire truck and was able to purchase
more turn-out-gear for the new

Mr. and Mrs. Cline have thrl'e
children who a re also dedicated
Christi ans and a n.~ acti ve in the
church.
Their eldest, Jim , 28. is il graduate
nf MVNC with a bachelor 's deg ree in
business, a nd li ves in Cleveland;
Sue, 26, is a grad uate of MVNC with
a bachelor 's deg ree in Christian
Educati on iind an AAS in early
childhood education. She lives with
her family in Lancaster. Darla is 21
and will graduate from MVNC in
May with an a ~s oc iate deg ree in

firemen.

home

The Orange Township Volunteer
F ire Department of Tuppers Plains
extends its thanks to the people of
Orange Township for their support
during the department's annual fund
drive.
The department collected $2,000 .
This was the most successful drive

management .

She

1s

l'AIJIW8'

u

.,_.,I.

•·

-hie.functionabout

It)

,_

in-

t~ re~tcd in m issions work.

Jame.s i.s acti ve in his ch urch
where he is an adult teacher. on the
church board and is chairman of the
finance committee . He is a member
of the MVNC Board of Trustees and
a member of the district advisory
and home missions boards. He is
chief chemist of Globe MeU!llurgical

TAPS - Becld Tillis, left, and Lois Roush, both of Rutland, provided
laps for Memorial Day services conducted by Feeney-Bennett Post128,
American Legion, Middleport. Lois is pas! president of the Junior
Auxiliary.

New Seely, Qulhlld

Top, lnnenpring.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Meigs County Commissioners intend to apply to
the Ohio Department of Economic and Community
Development for funding under the Small Cities Community Development Block Grant program, a federal·
ty funded program administered by the state. The
Co11nty has a S~9,500 formula allocation to which it is
entitled. A public hearing will be held on Thursday,
June 24, at 7:30 in the Court R~m of the County Court
House to provide residents an opportunity to submit
' their views and proposals and to fully explain this proposal. All inferested persons are urged to aHend.

1

Na tlllna l Standards Institute at lnStc:Hlda rds Organization
IIH'l'llngs Ill Norway. Sweden , Germany a nd Hussi a.

tl' rn a t JUn&lt;:~l

Yep - you got it. That was Brian
Simpson, formerly of Racine, that
yuu saw on Chmmel 10 news the

Astrograph

Suhs rnbt·rs not dt•sJring to pay the carril'l'
llli:I Y rcmtt 111 advant't' du-cd tu Tlw Daily
St·ntnwl una 3, 6 ur 12 munth basts . Credit
Will IJ. · ~ IVI'Ill'Hrrit'l' l'l:lt'h JJI Unth .

_____ _

LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP WINNER - Pro Goller Jan Stephenson
watches intently as she tries to coax in a putt on the 15th green of the Jack
Nkklaus Sports Center near Mason, Ohio Sunday during the final round
of the LPGA Championship. The long putt did fall for Stephen.son, and she
went on tO win the $200,000 tournament. The winner'• portion of the prize
J!IOney is ~.ooo. (AP Laserpboto) .

the evangelists. In addition to the
ministry of the Bible, there will be
singing and instrumental music, including the electric Hawaiia n and
standard guitar, the electric violin ,
and piano.
Rev . Uoyd D. Grimm Jr., pastor
of the chu rch, invites the public.

I (

Katie's korner

The Daily Sentinel

day of golf I' ve eve r had."
Ca rner and J a net Alex did make
la te charges, but they ran out of

Diamond Savin~s and Loa n Company in Pomeroy, a member of the
Chamber of Com me rce and
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
She and husband, Scott, have a son,
Sean, age 81&gt; .
The center board ovrgees
operation of the three county Community Mental Health Center with
pro~rams that include counseling
for adults and children, emer~ency
services, hospitalization, speech and
hearing, Senior Friends and prevention and education.

Revival services begin Tuesday
at Rutland Church of Nazarene

MONTREAL tAP I - There was no joy in Nelson Piquet as he
went through lhe victmy ritual afte1 lhe tragic Canadia n Gra nd
Prix.
The 29·yeal -old Brazilian stood on the victor 's platform, sipPed the
\vinner's champagne and smiled a t the compliments from race
officials. But there was no elation a t gai ning his first official victory
of the Formula One season, a feat clouded by the death of IU!llan
driver Riccardo Pa letti.
Paletti who would have been 24 on Tuesday, drove his Osella
racer In!~ the rear of the slalled Fe rrari of polesltter Didier Plronlof
France a l the stat t of Sunday's race on the circuit named for Cana dian driver Gilles Villeneuve. who was killed in May while a ttempting to qualify for Ihe Belgia n Grand Prix.
Pale tti , from Milan a nd s ta rling only his second Grand Ptix, died
about two hours later at a Montreal hospital of massive Internal
'
bleeding.
Three other cars a lso we re involved In the crash at the sta rt that
brought out a red flag stopping Ihe race. But none of the other drivers
were injured and the 70-lap race was restarted more than a n hoUI
la ter.
Piquet, the defending world cha mpion, started foUl th and quickly
sped past Phoni- iq his team's backup car- and the Renaul~ of
Frenchmen Rene Arnoux a nd Alain Prost to gain the lead on the
ninth lap.
He stayed there the resl of lhe way, ctulsing easily through the
second half of lhe race a nd crossing the finish line 13.199 seconds
a head of Brabham teammate Ricca rdo Patrese of Ita!)· .

Stephenson takes $200,000

North takes first
in baseball series

1'

As a board member, Walton is
responsible for representin~ community interests, assisting in mental
health planning and policy development, assuring quality of care and
evaluation of services.
She is the branch manager of

&gt;1''

TRAPPED - Riccardo Paletli of Italy is trapped in his car as firs!

LAS \'E(;AS. \e\·. 1A1'1 -

Renee Smith of Portland has been
awarded the Central Trust Scholarship to attend Rio Grande College
and Community College.
Smith recently ~raduated from
Southern High Sc'&gt;ool where she was
active in softball, basketball and
student publications.
She plans to major in nursing a t
Rio Gra nde. She is the dau~hter of
Mr. an&lt;i Mrs. James J. Smith of Portland .
Kimberly Jo Foil rod of Racine has
been awarded the Racine Home
National Bank Scholars hip to attend
Rio Grande Col lege and Community
College.
The Racine Home National Bank
Scholarship is awarded annually to a
Meigs County High School senior entering the nursing program at Rio
Grande. The award is based on
academic prom ise.

• 11•

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Pomeroy resident appointed to
G-J-M Mental Health Board

\, n k!ll' I"'
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I( P II II0-.•11 ' • I

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Walton

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Area students recipients of scholarships

orn

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The Doily Sentinei-Page-5

Po,neroy-Middleport, Ohio

FIRM

MAnRESSES

Brian was doing a

1ny " j amies" go mto a .suitcase and

I'm Columbus-bound leaving there
for New York on Saturday. So - "
'Till waltz agilm with you." do keep
smiling .

TO THE VOTERS OF
LONG BOTTOM
PRECINCT
I THANK YOU

FRANCIS H.
ANDREW

Pd Po t Ad By Ci!nc1

�Page

6

The Da~ly Sentinel

Pomeroy

Monday, June 14, 1982

Middleport, Oh1o

Monda , June 14, 1982

:_ Meigs County area organizations hold meetings
Shnderella
Julie Hysell and JoAnne Willi
ams wc1 e thr top ~&lt;right lose1 sa l
the Pomerov cla ss or Sllnderella
fhls ~&lt;eek AI the Chesler class
Karen Bakel &amp;&gt;veJi y Sm1th and
Ca ndy Mllhoa n lost the mosl weight
v. lth &amp;?th Ha vmctn a s runner up
Rae Young Jecellrd her 20 pound
ribbon and cr1 tlflca le al the Mason
Tuesda) mo1 mng cla ss with Candv
V&lt;:1n Met PI a nd Katllf't me MJt c hell
I\ m g f 01
1 unner up
Summer

classes" Ill be held on Monda vs a!
Chcslc! and 1 ucsdal s a! Ma son
fhe

Poml'tO\

r lassps \\111

a nd

rPsumr

FlvC' Pmnt s

In thr felll

E1ghr and Forry
lllr Ia mart lu 10 be held In Cm
rmnat r Ju l\ II tnd 12 \\JS dn
nouncC'd at tlw lhlllsda; night

rheetmg of !h( G.!ll!a \oun11 Salon
b12 E1ghl and I 0111 held al lhc

home of M" lnrs Ma!Clll
M1 s Gladys Cummgs pres1drd
dl lhC' m N' Iln g \\htc h OJX'nC'd m n

lualsllc f01 m II \las noled !hal
M1s Malx'l B1011n \\Ill rcpresrnl
the sa ton &lt;J tlhf mnthrasthe rl cl(_

ga le \\llh &amp;&gt;1erl\ Ua1k lobe !he
altunate M1 s 13rown ~J\( thr Ia
s('('teta rrp 1nd &lt;. as" tPn rPports and
al so notf&gt;d th d t thr tx)ok of pi iHC'r

be laken 10 !he ma 1c hc
Erma Smith and Jo \nn &gt;\ oods
we1e named to thr a uditing com
1)1ltlee Nexl me&lt;'l!ng Will be held a•
lVIII

thf'homeofMrs M a1chJon/\ug R

a!5pm andll!l lbdollo\\edbvlhr
mstallai!On of Off!C CJS (OJ !he !983
veat ( ,, acr Pr &lt;J 11 v. Ill tX' the m s tc~l
IJng offiCPI
lhC' mNting \\ ~I s closf'd \\1 th a
rtwmor wl SC'J' ICt for df'('f',!Sf'd
parfn(J S w1th Mrs Mdrdu and
Mr s ( ummg" pd ! ttc tpa!lng
frpshm£ nt s \\t H st 1\t'CI U\

Rr

lhf'

hostrss

Homebuilders
Monlhlv pa!I V of !he Home
budders Sunday Sc hool Cla ss of
Mlddkpoll Chll! ch or Ch11s1 allhe
Alh&lt;ns Ml nlal Hrallh Cenler wa s
held Tuesda \ mg hl f01 51 pallenl s
OVPr fl.)

( .amPs \H 1(' tlC'Id for thr patJrnt s

wllh PfiZI'S or handkl'rr luefs socks
hose JP~&lt;elf) a nd cos metics bemg
awa1ded Rcfleshments or a ba
nan a cup cakl's ICC' cr C'am and po

tat a ch1ps wc1 e served f he group
s;mg hymns with Dee Hartinger at
thP pwno Pr t\C'J \\ci s offered b\
Mar~ Ma111n
O!hr!S allcndmg
fl am

thf' c hurch v.PrC' Doroth y

Roach Flo ( ,1 urse1 and Edna
Eva ns Emplovrs of the Meni al
Hea llh CPnlcr a%Jslmg \\ere F1an
ces Raush and Dod1r B1ookhar1

M1ddleporr
Garden Club
lhf' ClV lC' txoautlfJ ca tJOn project

of a planl!ng on lhr f 1n Middle
port car ned ou t b)- Mrs Doroth ')Roller and M1ss Nel he Zerkle was
di scussed al the Mondav mghl
meelmg or !he Middleport Garden
Club held a! !he home of Mrs W1 l
ham Morn s

Mrs Roller no!ed thai she and
Zerkle had pla ced !he lwo la1 gP
urns on a bnck base prepared by
E;lden Walburn Flowers for !he
urns we1 c provided by Hubbards
G1eenhouse a nd employes or Mark
V assumed th e da lly car&lt;' of the

urns and the ra 1s1ng or a flag pres
enled by Congressman Clarence
Miller Spec ial !ha nks were ex
tended Ia them
Mrs Dame! Thompson presided
all he meetmg In the absence or the
pres1den1 Mrs Arthur Skinner In
response to roll call each member
placed a rose she had broughl mlo
a g l ass bowl c reatmg a gUt an an

gement for the hostess
Mrs Carl Horky 1eported !hal
the club 1s responsible for makmg
three dozen favors as a part of
Me1gs Counly s contribution to !he
Ohio AsSOCiation or Garden Clubs
annual convention lobe held m eo.
lumbus In August She displayed a
sample, a wooden Spoon With corn
husk flowers attached with a calico
l;xlw A workshop to make the fa
wrs was set for 1 30 on June 29 at
the home of Mrs David Bowen
Members sang " Happy Birth
day to Mrs M C Wilson who recently celebra ted he r~th birthday
Arrangement or the evening was
described by the creator Nellie
Zerkle as a riverbank bouquet
Added to the roses which fanned
Ute base of the arrangement were a
variety of flowers found on the rtver
bank mcludlng honeysuckle, red
clover Queen Anne's lace wild
Jlllrsnips and othe. An arrangement on weddings was in a com
pate supported by a cupid figurine
Zerkle also made the table center
piece of pink and white roses from
the garden of Mrs Arthur Strau~s
Members were reminded that
the meeting on July 12 will be held
at the home of Mr and Mrs Bill
Hapton9tall In Pomeroy and an in
Wtatlon was extended for the

membe1 s to enjoy swimming In !he
family pool Mrs French presented
the program A View of the FnJit
Stoul a no-work garden book
Guests were Mr; Henry Null and
Mrs LeWis Sauer Mrs Morris and
Mrs Marion French served salad
a nd sa ndwH..:hes during a conclud

lng social hour

Komon1a Class
A project of selling up a nursery
a 1 Pomeroy Church or Christ was
Ia ken on by !he Koinonia Class at a
1rce n! meellng held at the home or
Ra nd\ and D1ana Jackson
Ro~er Alkire presided a I the
mee!lng altendcd by e lg hl
members Off1ce" reports were
g~ve n and Nell Proudfoot paslor
gave devollons using scripture
from Homans A cook-out was held

follo11 mg the mrellng

Pommeroy
Church of Chnst

by Mrs Hendncks were thank you
notes from Susanna Wtse and Paula
Horton g1rl state delegates They
w11l be leav~ng on June 9 for Ashland
College to attend Buckeye G~rls
State
A report on the Arcad1a parhes
was gtven by Mrs Parsons who
noted that at the last party 54 pat1en
ts attended and Fathers Day was
obser.ed w1th each man rece tvJng $1
m a card Gm ng for that party from
the umt were Mrs W11l Mrs Hen
dr1cks Mrs G1lmore Shelhe Fox
Nettle Hayes Ethel Hawk Mrs
S&lt;lma Parsons Mrs Gerry Parsons
Mrs Caton Mrs Madden Mrs
Tyree and Carolyn Tr1plett
Crafts Da v was announced for
June 15 fl om 10 a m to 2 p m at the
hall Memonal services at the
cemetenes were reported on along
w1th the dmner served at the hall by
the Aux1 hary It was noted that 10
umt members attended the E1ghth
D1str~ct sununer conventiOn held
June 3 at Athens The umt rece1ved
a n award 1n corrun umty serv 1ce,

Mrs Spencer presided at the bus
1nr ss meeung Wllh reporls or ac t1vt
tics for 1he past three months II
was noled !hal !he Adull Class has
mJtlated a fu nd for everyone wish
1ng 10 ronln bule Ia !he fund Ia pa m!
lhr chu1 ch sa nctuary
Duffy gave devo!Jons on pra)er
usmg scrlplure from I fh essa lom

ch!ldren and youth veterans affa1rs
and 1ehab1htatwn Both the semor
and JUniOr uml received goal nbbons
for membership along w1lh a plaque
for bemg among the f1rst 100 umts m
the stale to make goal
Glona Herdman and Wanda Pat
tersnn were welcomed mto membershi p Reported on the s1ck hst
were Ed 1th Spencer Della Stahl,
Marvm Kelly and Frances Lew1s
It w•s noted that dues of $5 for
senwrs $3 for JuniOrs are now
payable and should be sent to Mrs
Tyree at Route 4 Pomeroy
Albert Roush and V~rg11 Parsons
went to Arcad1a and assemb led four
p1cmc tables donated by post and
auXJhary members ll was noted
A ch1cken dmner was served to the

ans

Auxthary

The Adult Golden Rule and Kol
noma Classes or Pomeroy Church
or Chr1s1 ga1 he1ed a! the church re
, en!l y for a meel!ng hosled by !he
/\dull class
Hetty Spencer was song leader

Wllh El!zabelh Duffy pwmsl For
!he p1 ogram Mrs Spencer recited
1he 2Jrd Psalm Ia p1a no accompanl
mont by MISs Duffy The has! class
also sang two songs

Mark

James Matthew and

and

Legwn

members

Joh n
l'wcn!y e1ghl members allended
lh&lt; combmed meellng Refresh
mt nt s were served

precedmg the meetmg A birthday
card was signed for Wa lter Bunce

Women's Fellowshif

Off1cers for the 1982-83 year were

Mem bers of Mei gs Count y
Vv ome n ~ Fellowship or !he
Churches of Christ mel at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center for a
program rece ntl y

Drew Webster
Amer1can
Drew
decled
at aLegwn
recentAux1harv
meetmg of
the
Webster Post 39 Pomeroy held at
th&lt; hall
Elected were Loretta T1 emeyer
president Ellen Jane Rought f1rst
v1ce president Dorothy Wells
second VICe pres1dent Cathenne
Wcbh and Erma Snulh treasurer
and Gern Ham1llon secretary

There was a song service led by
Ru! h Underwood with the praye1
h) mn The Beautiful Garden or
P1 ayer Debbie Mellon had the
A lll t.'lllOrtal serv1rf' was con-prog1 am and !he group sang The
ducted
for deceased members Gem
Church 1n the Wjldwood
rna Casc1 Zana W1throw Clara
Jeanette Thomas spoke on the 1 5
Paulson LllU!se Harbrccht and
m111 levy for Carleton School Brad
Florence Rhodes
ford women presented devotions
A vot ~ of thanks was ~xtcnded to
usmg scnpt ure from Acts 6 read by
Barbara Murray for mak1ng the
F1 ances Hysell and a reading
posters for the poppy wmdow
1 he Sunset Glow by Gerry Light
display over the Memon al Day
fool Elea nor Hoover read Foot
weekend Veda Dav1s JUII!or ac
p1 1n1 s and the Hemlock Grove
l1
V1ly chamnan di"played her
Church women presented a skit
trophy
won at the sta le JUni Or ron
w11h Helen QUJvey Leota Smith
ference for havmg the best all
and Mildred Z1egler laking part It
around program m the state m the
was enl!lled A Basket Case and
Junior aux1harv program
wa s followed by a poem You Tell
It wao noted that dues w1ll be
Me r m Gettmg Old
ra1scd to $10 for the year and are
A special by !he Zion Church was
payable at any l1me The wreath
H1s Eyes 1s On !he Sparrow by
used
1n the Memor~al Day servtce
Pal Arnold and Kay McElroy
was
made
by the JUniors 11 was
lllere was a skit A Hospllal Wall
noted Recogn~zed at the meetmg
mg Room by Marge Purtell and
was Jess1ca Ham1llon the younge"l
An n Lambert and a poem What
JUniOr member
God 1s Like Through the Eyes or a
Next rneelmg w1ll be June 22
Ch1ld by Ida Murphy a nd Plam
No nsence by Kalhryn Johnson
Favorlle songs enjoyed by the
residents of the Health Care Center
Monthly queen for !he TOPS OH
mc luded In !he Garden
The 1456 Club Rutland, was Marcia L
Old Rugged Cross and When We Elliott Ollie Hill was the best loser
1\11 Get lo Heaven The closing
for the week with Sherr! Darst as
hymn was It Jesus Goes with Me
runner up Meetings are held each
and the closing prayer was by Tuesday at the Rutland Civic Cen
Marge Purtell
ter with weight in time from 6 to
Refreshmenls or cookies and koo- 6 ~ p m and meetings from 6 ~
la Jd were served by Bradbury
to 7 p m Information on the club
Chu rc h
may be obtained by calling 742
Next metmg old the Women s 2233
Fellowship will be at Bradford
Church of Christ June 24 7 ~ p m
Bonnie Chrisman from Glouster
well be the guest speaker
Aerobic exercise classes are be
ing held Mondays Tuesdays Wed
nesdays and Thursdays at the
Rutland Civic Center from 10 a m
InstallatiOn of off1cers and the to 11 a m by the Rutland SUm n'
selectiOn of committee chairpersons Trim Information on joining the
h1ghhghted the recent meetmg of group may be obtained by calling
Lad1es AUJahary of Feeney-Bennett 742 2960 or 742 2454
Post 128 Amencan Leg1on held at
the hall
Installed by Gerry Parsons, past
E1ghth D1stnct pres1dent, were Etta
Top losers in the Harrisonville
W11l , prestdent, Martha Hanel, f1rst Slim n' Trim class at the Harrison
VICe president Peggy Caton second v1lle school during the past month
v1ce president, Becky Tyree , have been Gloria Fowler, Ellen
secretary , and Mrs Parsons, Thoma Carol Gheen, Anne Spires
treasurer
Mary Fowler, Santa Parsons, DebComrruttees appomted by the new bie William~. Melanie Simmons,
president are Mrs Martha Hanel, Becky Ward, Mandy Reeves, Ger
memberhs1p, Peggy Caton, rte Parsons, and Carolyn Nichol
Amencarusm, Erma Hendncks, son A new contest for the class
children and youth, veterans affa1rs which meets on Mondays, 6 to 7
and rehab1htahon, Vels1a Roush, p m , will begin this week
Soma Wayland, cornmumty serv1ce,
Becky Tyree, jun1or act1vtt1es, un1t
achv1hes and ClVII defense, Jean
G1lmore, chaplam, Carolyn Triplett,
sergeant at anns, Mary Madden
and Martha Madden and Martha
A workshop on cornhusk flower
Hunnel, color guards Mrs Hunnel, decorations highlighted the recent
legJslahve chatnnan, Soma Par- meeting of Rutland Fnendly Garsons, nahonal secunty, Mrs Par- deners held at the home of Mrs
sons, games chatnnan, and Mrs
BruceDavts
Roush, kttchen
MPmbers used cornhusks soaked
Read at the meeting presided over 1n water to fashion the vanous styles

of blooms Stnps of husk were made
mto loops and then groups of the
.loops were w1red to form a flower
These were dyed m rambow shades
then faste ned to wooden spoon!; 111
clusters w1th a coordmatmg nbbon
bow to accent the decoratiOn
Over s1x dozen were made and will
be used as table favors for the Oh10
Assc!alJUn of Garden Clubs ann ual
conventwn to be held m August m
Colwnbus
Members also arranged red s1lk
roses m contamers tnmmed w1th
black cord to be used as table
decorations for the Rutland Alumm

mfo~mallon

members answered roll ca ll by
nammg the1r favonte hangmg plant
A letter of res1gnahon from mem
bersh1p was read from Margaret

was also d1stnbuted and
the club will take orders for bulbs to
be planted m the fall
The recent planllng at the Rutland
C1v1c Center was discussed Car
per's Nursery planted pyracantha
and laxus shrub m landscapmg the
area around the recently renovated
fonner h1gh school gymnastwn The
proJeCt was financed by both the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners and the
Rutland Garden Club
Margaret B1shop discussed plans
for next year's garden therapy at
Rutland Elementary suggesting that
the kmdergarten class nught be con
SJdered Th1s past year both the f1fth
and s1xth grade classes and the lear
mng dlsablhtJes class were assisted
1n ga rden and nature related p1 OJec
ts by the club It wa&lt; deCided to

Johnson Members vrewed a scrap-

tatr) on the p1 OJed w1th lhe das.sl's

book of letters of thanks from the
th1rd grade students at the Rutland
grade sc hool m apprec1atwn for the
tuhps and spnng flowermg bulbs
planted outs1de the school wmdows
Exhibitors and JUdges schools
were announced for June 23 and 24 m
Col wnbus w1th Janet Bohn and Suzy
Ca rpenter to attend Mrs Carpenter
also gave a report on the recent
Reg1on II meetmg held m Manetta
wh1ch featured the onental flower
destgns of Ch1eko Ar1kawa an ac
cred1ted OAGC JUdge and a shd•
presentatwn by a representative of
RIGO chemicals on how to take bet
ler p1ctures of your plants Bulb sale

to be reg1stered as a JUniO! ga rden
club w1th the OAGC off1ce Tentative
plans were made for hav mg a float
1n the Rutland Fourth of July
pa1 ade
ElectiOn of officers was held The
new officers are Cha• lotte Willford
president Marga 1el B1shop VIl e
president
Ma1 garcl Edwa1 ds
secretary Janet Bohn treasu1 e1
and MarJOrie Dav1s lib1 a11an the
latter to serve Jmmcdlatcly a::;
rt~ placement fm tht..: res1gned m~m
ber Mrs Johnson
Next month s meelmg will be held
at the home of J oanne Felty w1th

banquet DevotiOns "ere g1ven and

members to ar nv e ea rl y f01

LAFF-A-DAY

(

S t

It

I I"

II

h 1 l.&gt;t

b}

Karen

Broadwetler

Theresa

Shaffer Debbie Connoll y and Aud1 a
Hayes Mar~lyn Burke won lht• dum
pme and Elsll Hmes was awarded

II
I 1

uh·

L

1

1c..rrl

11 ft

t"&gt;v !I

Ot n
R n11 n F

f'rotl
( fJ

lhtt lnl t Ht ,~ Si t 1
1 1 Sl u ll t 1 \.\, s h 1 I

K

ct

It

I

na111cd
Becky

11tp

Roger Hysell
Dozers

Backhoes

Dump Trucks

Lo Boy
Wa le&lt;
Sewer
Gas
L•ne
s ms
septiC
syste

th F:rrstlll&lt;-:111

Mr

&lt;illd Mt

s

Manda
Sharon

Dallas and Ma 1JOT 1 ~ Doug let s

r~====:::::::==================================:..,
1 he Dady s~nt utcl

PHONE 992 2156
• ~ o•

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( Ou

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n

f• lluw1ng
IIHIIi.lt:aM

r th1

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11 J,,Jhun' 1 x • hang•"'

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f'CIUp

PomrovOtl o • l iY

( lau1fi d 11-.111-!,1 ~

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PubltC Noftct'

Trencher

R1

00

Pu bli c Not1c e
rrbutlt rear rnd 2 speed
Btds wtlt b~ opt: ned nt the
rf'qular me ett nq on Ju ly
'}net 1982 en I he t1omC' of th e
Clerk
The Srtlt sbury Townshtp
Tr us tees re s~ rve th e r ght
to ret eel (1ny or rtll btds
Wan do L Eb ttn
Cle rk
Sali sbury
Townsh •p Tru stees
16t 14 18 2tc

e DISh

• W a s h er s

(free Eshmaln)

washers

V. C. YOUNG Ill

• Ranges • Relngerat
ors

992 621Sor992 7314

•Dryers eFreezers

Pomeroy Ohro

PARTS and SERVICE

4 5 lfc

I

Large
s mall Jobs
PHor9911478

GARAGE
st Rl 124 Pomeroy OH
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also TransmiSSIOn
PH 992 5682
or 992 7121
3 24 li e

Authomed
John Deere
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Serv1ce
1 3 lie

OHIO VALLEY

TEAFOR

ROOFING
And Home Matntenanc e
• Rootrng of all types
eS1dmg
• Remodeling
• Free esfrmates
e20 Yrs expenence

VIRGIL 8 SR REALTOR
216 E 2nd St
Phone
H614l 992·3325

&lt;.,IAT f OF O HI O
Off'ARlMFNIOF
1 RAN&lt;;;f'OR 1 ArION
Co lumbu s Oht o
Jt nc 4 1981
( ontr.1c t .;;;,1 1c s L cg.11
Co p y No 81 702
UNIT rR ICF
CONTRA( I

LIKF NEW Larqe
tevrl yord lld x 135 ex
ce lt en l •nsu tated home
w•th J bedrooms nt ce
elf• c tent kttc: t1en and
brtr Lo ts of ca rpet 1nq
lltQil est heil t bt ll $117 00

SritiC'd proposrt ls will be
rf'Cf' Vf'd ill II~ C Offt CC Of the
0 r rc tor of th r Oh to OcpM
mcm of Trr~n s portafton
Co lumbu s OhtO unrtl 10 30
AM 0 11 o StnnciMcl Ttm r
Tursdw Junr ?9 19R? lor
mprovf'mrnTs n
Pnrt s 1 10 3 nc l u &lt;; vc rl rf'
ollrrrcl n&lt;&gt; onr cnntrrl CI 1nr1
w II hf' c nn "&gt; &lt;frrrcl on l hr
b&lt;'l '&gt; l '&gt; of l llf' IOirll rl fnOU nl
b tfl
f 'lrf&lt;&gt;l thn 3
Mf'tQS Cou nty Oh o on
Br tdq c No'i ME G 33 (0567
L / R 1 t0R47 L / R 1 t0880
L R 1 nn U S Routr 33 Sf'c
nnsl567tlfl47ti8 ROt by
rrmov nq
tl)f' f'X tSI nq
1sptnlt ov1 rl ;w do•nQ sub
".T ru c turf' r epr1 r "ncl pnl
f htO&lt;I
rlS
r p qu trf' d
ovrr lrty nq t he Clf'r k Wt fh
lrllf'X mod dt ed cnn c rf'Tf'
,1nd oThr r rf'l&lt;'IIN1 work
Pr o 1r c f Lf'nc]ltl
3 13 74
fre t or 0 06 m tl cs
Work Lrnqlh
707 lrrt
or 0 14 mtle
Ttlf' Cli'l l f' 5f' 1 l or CO rTI
plf't on of tht s work s 11~111 br
~5 &lt;;r l tor II
n lllf' h dd nq

$39 500

nronosr~l

HERES A BUY - W1lh
aboul $2 000 00 down

E i'lch htdrlrr sh,llt be
rrqutrf'd 10 Id e wt1t1 h1S b •d
i1
CC rldt f'd
Chf'Ck
Or
crtsh tN s chec k tor NO
rl mount C'Qurtl 10 fi ve per
ce nt of h• s b1d but tn no
Pvrnt more than Idl y
tt1ousr1nd doll ar s or il bond
for ten per cent of ht s b1d
pny"ble to th f' D rec tor
Btdders must rtppty on
Htf' propN
for ms
for
qui'lltft cnfton ill IP.rtst Ten
drws pr1 or to lllf' dil tr set
for opentnQ btd s tn nc
cordanc f' wtth Chrtptrr 5525
Ot:uo Rev• sed Coctc
Plans ilnd spect fl cattons
Me on ftle tn t he Depar t
mcnt of Trilnsportrtrton ond
lhf' off cc of thr Dts tr c r
Deputy D1rcct or
Thf' Dtrcc tor rf'sf'rvcs
Thf' r qht to rctc c t rtny nnd
ntt btds

DAV IDL WEIR
DIRECTOR

RPv8 177J

OWNER

F INAN C ING

TOM HOSKINS
Ph 949 2160 or 949 2322
4 70 lie

fOR THE
BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON

- You can buy th• s 3
bf'droom !l om e H rts il
lilrQC' tot for rt qarden
Porch es
bath
car
pe l! nq
and
qarqe
Asktnq $18 000

SW IMMIN G POO L

SIRACUSE OH
SUMMER PERM SPECIAL
20% OFF
All PERMS
FOR THE MONTH Of JUNE
TUES NIGHT ISMENS NIGHt

~

Ha ve fun •n prtvilte tn
tht s sunk en pool Large
3 or 4 bedroomer l arqe
cnter tatnt ng lt vmg f or
mat dtn tnq J1 7 baths
nat gas furna ce full
basement
n ew car
qarilqe and 2 level lots
nea r sc hool

Open

Beh tnd Jones Boys tn
Pomeroy
Cl olh tn g for
ch tdren and adults too ls
tots of mtsc ttems

Call 992-6259
276 Sycamore Sl .
Middleport, OhiO

Sal

Service

SERVICE
- Addons and 1emodehng
~ Roohng and gutter work
~Concrete w01k
-Plumbmg and
el•ct!lcal work

16 YEARS EXP

•Res•denllal
•Commerc1al
•lndustnal
RaCine, Oh10

(Free Esttmafes&gt;

Ph 949 2609
949 2234
RACINE OHIO

247 JSJ4

Free Est1mates
4 70 tl (

5 19 1 mo

Vmyl &amp; Alum mum
51 DING
BISSELL

co

SID NG
I

PIANO TUNIN
AND REPAIR
Call Bill Ward
At Wa1d's Keyboard
I 446 4372
v.se
Master c ~~;~~

,

Beautiful Custom
But It Garages
Call for free Stdtng
est tmates 949 2801 or

t he sm 11l es t
Hc1tcr Core to th e
lclfQC' SI R:"id !.ltor
R 1d1 ~ t or C.pcctil lt st
N AT H AN I ~ I GC \
3S Yrs F •pe n ence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Po m eroy Oh
P h 992 2114
1 76

lie

You

can pay for tht s one and
en tOY a good garden and
co untry
w tfh
yo u r
chtldren
Even ha s
larqe trees and room for
a pony 3 bed r ooms
T P wa ter bi'lth qarge
and fr es h atr for onl y

C&amp;M

3 II ti c

•

AND

CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; backhoe ser
vtce water sewer pon
ds,
foundations
reclamation

sue Murphy Hel en and
Bruce Tea ford
All
Realtors
After Hrs

992 3615 or 992 3325

Housing
Headquarters

Truck, Auta and
HARLEY
DAVIDSON
New and Used
PARTS

Open 9 till 6
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
PH 742-2081
5 27 1 mo pd

C. R. MASH

EXCAVATING

$19 500

AAAHUAEemeAtS

949 2860

o.,f R vt~,.r

Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

Phone 949 2293
or 949 2417

3 3 tin

CONSTRUCTION
Custom kttchens and ap
pl1ances
custom
bathrooms remodel1ng,
plumbtng electnc and
heattng

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
B 20 lie

CONTRACTING
• backhoe

•e•cavatJng
•sephcsystems
• A water sewer
&amp; gas hnes
•dump truck

ground w tth a ll mtnerals and all fenced Stx room
house w1fh four bedrooms a nuge barn With hay toft
and a garage wtth work shop SSO 000
ASSUME THI S LOAN 11!1 story house 1n
Sy ra cuse wt th three bedrooms huge 1tv1ng room
btq fa mily room
workshop
garage
and a
bea uflfu ll y land sca ped lot Ju s t S3 900 down and
assume payme nts of S358 a month for 28 1 /:~ years at
13% tnterest Reduced toS33 500
PRICE REDUCED - 2 5 Acres of land wtth a ftve
room three bedroom hom e wtth pat1o frUtt trees
garden spo t and hookup for woodburner Now

$26 ()()()

Ong1nal woodwork good

17
18
19

locafton full ba se m e nt and two A C umts are but a
few of the nt ce fea tures of th ts SIX room three
bedroom hom e tn Mtddl oport Now S25 000

20

PRICE REDUCED - Th 1s three yea r old modular

22
23

24
25
26

27
28

$12.95

CARPET STARTING AT
Square Yard W1th Pad Installed
KITCHEN CARPET

33 -- - - - J.I

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM
IN 9 FT. and 12 fT WIDTHS
STARTING AT $4.99 Cash

- ,·.
BACK ,CARPET

NowS42 000
story frame home w1th the charm of a 100 year old
home wtth beaut1ful woodwork nme rooms seven
frreplaces and more SJS 000
th1s tour year old ranch w 1th full basement, three
bedrooms large lot Garage equ 1pped k1tchen and

&amp;Carrv
, _Cash

PRICES •

ltcensed &amp; Bonded

PH. 992-7201

Announce m ents

3

~-~~-

---

SW EEPER
and sewtng
mach1ne r epa.r parts and
supp li es
Ptck up and
deltvery Davts Vac uum
Cleaner one half m il e up
Georges Creek Rd
Ca ll

446 0794

1 oz 999 Sti ver Fathers
Day bar $10 00 Sprtng
Va ll ey Tradtng Co Spn ng

Va lley Plaza 446 8025
N1ghf craw l er s $1 00 per
doz Spnn g Va lley Trad1ng
Co Spnn g Va ll ey Plaza

446 8025

L•ttl e kool r es f tee c hes t by
Igloo
tr ave ltng refresh
ment ce nter $24 00 Spr1ng
Va ll ey Tradtng Co Spnng
Va ll ey Plaza 446 8025
Th e Famtly of John A
Racer w 111 meet Sund ay
June 20 at Krode l Park tn
Pt
Pl easa nt
Bnng a
basket lunch Otnner at

12 00

PERMANENT
HAI R REMOVAL
Professional
E lec trol ys ts
Center A M A approved
Doctor r eferals by ap
potnfment on l y
304 675

6234

~

Utility Buildings
5JZes from 4 to 6 and alf
wood bu•ld•ngs 24x36

Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl 3, Box 54
Ractne,Oh

Ph 614·843·2591

,....

TRE NCHI NG

REAL TORS

Cheshire, Oh
Ph l67 7560

F p twocargarage,a lsoolderhome Now$49900

i Carry
I

Henry E Cleland, Jr, GRI

Jean Trussell
oottte Turner

Ofhce

A

992 6191
949·2660
H2 5692
H2 2259

Everyo n e

welco:e__ - ~-- CARPOOL lormong to Mar
shall morn1n g c lasses 304

Resedentlal

4

does not offer or attempt to

offer any other thong for
sale may place an ad'" th1s
column There w111 be no

wh1le Call614 379 7435

New Homes - e~
tens1ve remodeling

Free Pupp1es J f emale
part... beag le m1 x breed
pups Also w tll g1ve mother
away 446 1764 after 4 p m

Greg Roush
Ph 992 · 7583
or 992 2282
0 I

Roush Lane

I~~=======1=7:1:H:c::_~~

&amp; Middleport
H Molt

s

130·:

100"; M
M
c."' Oui illtl

'Wine , ..,~bl•
lutS..UdJOS n11M oil dnnb
Jttfvce6IO&lt;lht _,.
!ltd 11 C.ntoiJ nlaflt 9-12 d11"
11tor on~ Pool tooJ011ttlftl1o m
Thurs .Old M•lwauke N~hl 91 JO
Mon Kot Nltflt

•, Centu,., H11ht

F11 &amp; S.L Uvt bnd&amp; dnn• &amp;
dlown uch nltfll, 10 p.ot
S.n
Pm pllciltJI!otJ special
price Aho IQ's on S.ndly stllllna

'lnTDBYBOD1V'
Ill Y Ill
'&amp;

olluno Thull Fn S.l
''"'Monlh
IIAIISHAU. T£NNANT IAIID

Shops the

hM 11om Hou1 Moo S.L ~ pm
' , ot tlltldlottlstd S(IIC!ah dla~

StG, 10, briltl

I

WANT AD WAY ·.a...__.;__'•-"__"_~6-t""t;;;"'"'~

1

13

3069
furnitur
e
gold
BEDS IRON
BR ASSsliver
old
dollars wood ce boxes

stone 1ars ant•ques et c
~~7;'~le~e D ~~~::h~:d~
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760
Gold
St iv er
ster l tng
1ewelry n ngs old cotns &amp;
cur rency Ed Burkett Bar

OLD FURNITURE beds
1ron brass or wood Ktt
chen cubbards ot a ll t ypes
T ab ies round or sQuare
Wood tee boxes Old desks
and bookcases Wilt buy
c omplete househol d Gold
sliv er old money pocket
watches c ha tns r.ngs and
etc ln dtan Arttfacts of all
types Also buytng baseball
cards Osby Mar t.n 992

6370
JUNKED ca rs baseball
cards
scra p
metals
alum t num cans
fran
sm1 SS10ns
motors
bat
ter1es r ad1ators stamps
and co tns Offenng tr ash
ptckup servt ce
Harpe r
Hal st ead Sa lvage Co 300
E leve nth Sf Pt Pleasant

304 675 5868

Also

Il ea

marke t
open
Monday
through Frtday l 5 p m
9

w anted To Bu y_

WANTED TO BUY Old fur
n•ture and AnttQUPS of all
ktnd s c a I Kenneth Swatn
446 3159 or 256 1967 tn the
even tn gs

3 vr old fem a le I rtsh set
ter good home tn country
Good w1th children 992

7138
a good

part Beagle
304 576
Shepherd

6 puppies
part

2266

We pay cash for late m ode l
c lea n used cars
Fr ench town Ca r Co
Btl I Gene John son

446 0069
1 acre or less of land '"
Ga l it a or Mason county a p
prox
half way between
Ga ll1poll s &amp; Hunttngton
Cal l614 256 1755after 5 30
Front dnver S1de seat for
1971 Vega vt n yl Ca ll 614

388 8193

tens 304 773 5546
6
Lostand Found
LOST Ladles prescnpllon
near

Rd

to

stay

keep

hou sea nd

cook Call6 14 JBB 8716
R N s L P N s needed now
to tuff II requtrements of
I C F Certtft c atton Salary
co mmensurate
wtlh
tratn ng and expertence
Extenstve bene f1 t s tn
c tud •ng
patd
hosp•tal •za tt on rettrem enl
program no penalty Stck
lettve 3 week vaca t.on to
st art More Contac t Per
so nnel Dtre c tor (304)675
3230 or
wr1t e
Laktn
Ho spt tal
Laktn W VA

15750

Con

strucllon bet.veen Rac10e &amp;
Syracuse Lost Sun mght
304 882 2567 Call collect

se lltng Avo n Call446 3358
Htgh Sc hool Graduates &amp;
Sen tors you ca n ea rn over
S550 00 per month whtle
lea rntng a valuable sktll
ltk e computer repatrer
sheet metal worker
or
refngera t ton Plus you Will

ha ve a secure parlt,me JOb
w1th th e Amry Nattonat
Guard after sc hoottng
Benef1ts 1nctude a Sl 500 00
enltstment
bonus
S35 000 00 l1fe msurance
and free tu1t1on to any
college or trade school tn
West V1rgtnta Interested
3950 or'" West V1rotn•a call

toll FREE 1 800 642l619

Ha1r
dresser
wlfh
managers license only

wanted pari I• me Call «6
7266 or 446 7620 or «6 ol038
Part time secretarral
postfton Resume only w•ll

be accepted

Lost brown mole collie
About yr old Area of Mid
dleporiHIII 6149923704 •
Lost brown plastic glosses
In
case
W1lh
Thomas, Thomas and Clark
on 11 614 992 7165

R N s L P Ns

NEE DED

N OW to fulfill requ1reme n
ts of I C F Cer tlft ca tt on
Sa lary comme nsurate wtth
tratntng and expertence
Ex t ens tve beneftt s •n
c tudtng
patd
hosptlaltLal ton reltremenl
prog ram no penalty s•ck
leave 3 week vacatton to
start more Conta c t Per
:.onnel On ector 304 675 3230
or wnte Laktn Hospttal
Laktn WV 25250

1750 00

weekly

I fully

guaranteed) work ng part
or full t1me at home
Weekly pay chec ks mailed
dtre-ctty to you from Hom e
Offt ce every Wednesday
Sta rt rmmedtalely No ex
perten c e
ne c essary
Na tt ona l company Detatl s
and appltcatton matled
Se nd your name and ad
dress to Amertcan Fteltty
Company H1nn g Dept 77
1040 Lone Star Dr
New
Brau nf el s T X 78130
WANTED
young
non
drtnktng datry farm hetp
mtlk1ng and farm work
Se nd letter and th ree
references to Box C II n
care PI Pleasant Reg1 s ter
Po.nt Pleasant wv 25550

12

H1gh school
graduate, bookkeeping ex
penence,

expertence

tax

W tl t c are tor the eld erly '"
our home Tratned and ex
pcrt enced 614 992 7314
Have vacancy for eld er ly
Boa rd and roon and laun
dry
Resonab l e
614 992

6077
13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
su rance Co has off ered
servtces t or f1re tnsuran ce
cove rage 10 Ga llt a County
lor almost a cent ur y
Farm home and personal
pr operty coverages are
available t o meet 1n
dtvtdual needs
Conta c t
Neal Insurance Agency
age nt Phone 446 1694

15

Schools InstructiOn

Karate the ulhmate tn se lf
def ence a ll pr1vate lessons
Men women &amp; chtldren
ns tructton thru bla ck belt
Also availab l e Kara t e
untforms puchtng and
k1ck tng bags a nd protec
ltve equt pment
Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
Asso c tat es
Karate
S t udto
143
Bur ltn gton Rd
Ja ck so n

18

Wanted to Do

Lawn Mow tng no yard to
b tg or small Reliable and
dependable For es ti mate
ca ll 446 1159 after 6PM 256

Trash co ll ec tt on &amp; haultng

Ca ll446 4480

dscapmg, 861 2nd
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

Ave ,

22

Money to Loan

REFIN A NC E or purchase
your home 30 year ftxed
rate WVa &amp; Oh tO Leader
Mortgage 77 E Stat e St

Athens Oh 614 597 3051
Profe sstonal
Se rv1ce s

C&amp;L Bookkee ptng
Bookkeep ng &amp; t aJ~ serv •ce
for al l type s of bu s tnesses
Carol N ea t
446 3862
P ano luntn g and r epatr
Lane Dantet s A ssoc ate of
Brunt ca rdt s
Ga ll pots
and Cunntngham s Athens

747 7951 or 991 7087
----

cReal EsJa~- -

31

Hom es for Sa l e

142 acre farm qood hou se
and barns Ca ll 446 2599
A hou se on 112 acre tot on
Bula vtlte Porter Rd Ca ll
446 4731

House lor sa le 4 m and
ballt yaraye l / 4 acre ot
qround Ca ll446 0054
For !&gt;ale hom e tn town 4
bedroom hom e futty car
pc ted l arge kllche n l arge
ba&lt;..kyard 3 bloc ks f rom
park and sc hool s natural
qas heat 111 50 s Must see
to appr ec ate Call 446 3137
rtfter 5PM
For sa le or trade 1\4 acre
farm
Ha s hou se barn
pond rurrtl wa ter Celli 614

388 Bl75
ITs GETT IN G LA TE but
you ca n s hit have a home of
your own •I you earn bet
ween $9 000 and $15 000 a
year 2126 nouses wtll be
bu It n the sta te of Oh1o un
der farm
hom e rural
hous tng
pr og ram
the
rematnder of 1982 These
home s wdt be ftllan ced
wllh no down payment and
payments wtll be tow as
$115 per month See our
model near th e Pt e Pac
Market on R T
50 w
Athens or ca ll 992 7034 for
tnto
Ktngsbury Homes
1100 E Man Sl Pomeroy

Oh

J
bd room
house
n
Pomeroy
v tn y l Stdtng
Ntc e toca t• on
f treplace
Pr ced to sell $14 000 614

997 7446
1 homes on I ~ ac re I
I 2 bd room
3bd room
Chotce locatron Rt 33 Har
liard W Va 304 882 2965
3 bd room brt c k ftreplace
basement
garage
one
acre Kyger Creek htgh
sc hool dt stn c t Ftrs t tt me
off ered for sa le To see ca ll

745 91 10 or 614 997 3905

House
commer c a t S1Zc
qarage on 1111 acr e off Rt 7
bypass
M tdd leport
Oh
Sl 2 500 Land con t ract 614

997 6761
TWO story J bedroom full
ba se ment $40 000 S7 000
down &amp; assume loan of
33 000 at 8ll 1 English Court

304 675 3565

Restde nt 1a l E l ec tr tc &amp;
Plumb ng
12 years ex
pe n ence a ll work guaran

leed Call614 256 1748

House .4 room s and bath
Henderson
SII 500
Call
Betty Sue E phnq 304 675
1070 or owner 675 4203

Wtlt do baby s•lttn g tn my

home Ca l16143B8 9755
Carpenter work repatr or
re modelmg wa ll pan eling
ce tl mg ttle and some pat nt

Ca ll61 4 992 7759

nurstng

ca r e

304 675 5367
HOU SE clean1 ng patnttng
garages
basements
at

lies Ca ll 304 675 5208 304
675 6937

Flnanelal
21

Bus m ess
_ ~ortun_!..ty __ _

Show milk dnnkers a
product that may eas il y
ea rn you $80 000 w1thtn the
next year Cali Robert H ar

per 304 675 1293 or 675 5868

MINIATURE
GO LF
COURSES
ProfeSSIOnal
Builders
Outdoors
10
doors Ftnanc•ng ~ 900

up MINI GOLF 702 Br1dge
Jessup PA 184.34 717 489
8623
UNUSUAL
OP
PORTUNITY for local per
son 1n th1s area to sell
custom made lubn ca nts
for a nat1ona11y known all
company
Permanet full
t1me pos1f1on
unusually
htgh commtss•ons
Op
portun1ty
for
ad

forms helpful Must be
reliable and able to work vancement Company pa1d

independently
Send
resume to Kotallc Lan

)w n your ow n sporltng
:Joods bu st ness • Sport s Ctr
cte wtl1 show you the way
Be a ffdt ated
w •lh a
naftonal fr anchtse
ea rn
btg protftt s full or part
t•me• $1900 00 ge ts you
s tarted' Ca t co ll ect to Mr
Jdy a1 717 421 6910 or Sport
C rcle Inc South 9th St
Stroudsbury PA 18360

S1tu.Jttons Wanted

PR I VA T E

1nftafton got you down? Ge t

or s tor e room n
Park Ce ntr al Ho te l

Bu~tn~:ss

23
JOBS Overseas Btg money
fast Job offers grarant eed
I 716 6416000 Ex! 1843

Farm work patnttng ru n
ntng ma c h•n es ru st about
any odd tob Ca ll Teddy
6142561409

up get out Earn good SSS

Bus1ness
Opportun1fy

BIG MON EY IN SPORTS '
E ldery man needs person

1967

persons may call (304) 675

1 mother cat and four k1t

glasses

Som eone to l tve '"and ca r e
for 69 yr old male han
dtca pped Ca ll 446 2445 or
446 13M

Oh Cai i6147B6 3074
Buytng
Go l d
St i ver
Ptat•num old cot ns scrap
nng s &amp; Si l ve r wa r e Da1ty
quotes availab l e
A l so
co1 n s &amp; co1n suppli es f or
sale Sprtng Va ll ey Tradtng
Co Sprtn g Va ll ey Plaza

It

flltnd Wo llso

Hope It ... ,.. Ill-

A uc t1 on eve r y Frt ntght at
the H artf or d Commun .t y
Cen ter Truck loads of new
mer chandtse every week
Constgments of new and
used mer e hand se al ways
we l c o m e
R1 c h ard
Reyno l ds Auc t wneer 275

Free to good hom e .4 ktt
tens 7 wks old Yellow and

CONSTRUCTION

• E lectnc work
•Custom Pole Bldg s
•Rooftng work
14 Years E xpcnence

Rt c k
Pearson
Ex
pertenced AUCTIONEER
Esta tes ant tques farm
hou se hold Ltcensed Ohto
WV Buytng ant tques 304

charge to the adverttser

~~~==========~6~15~H~c~~==~~~~~~==~
~
FEMALE blfd dog Wllh 4
REESE .Jt-lli
Sl !l.~=~;~,,
pups, 304 e95 3935

land w1th a newer ranch house, three bedrooms,
d1ntng room separate utihty room 21f2 baths W B

,scute Call now 537,500

ntght l y

ANY PER SO N who has
anythong to g1ve away and

ROUSH

Stzes start from 30x24

Beglfls 6 30 p m

repatr servtce and
mstallahon

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

11 25

675 4506

&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195

&amp; Auctton
Pub
li c Sa te

8

446 8075 or 446 8026

SERVICE
For all your wtrmg
needs, furnaces

I ~::_:::_:::_:::_:::::=~3~7~9~tt~c~rf~~~~§~~3~7~tf~c~

SERVICE
Water Sewer Electnc
Gas Line-Ditches
WAter Lme Hook ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified

PRICE REDUCED - Approx 22 acres of wooded

$499 .

•limestone

OWNER WILL LAND CONTRACT DR TRADE -

GOOD SELECTION, OF

29

30
31
32

tS on a ntce corner lot 1n Mtddleporf and has central
a 1r sc r ee ned tn porch garden bath tub butlf 1n hut
ch three bedrooms two baths and IS gorgeous

DOUBLE LOT - W1lh lots of shrubbery and a two

$899
INSTAI.L£D

MILLER
ELECTRIC

NEW LISTING - NEAR DEXTER - 45 Acres of

GIANT CARPET SALE

614 747 7843

1- - - - - - - - - - - i ber Shop M1ddleport 997
r
3476

FRYE'S

r rom

PH.992-2259

21

June 17 18 19 Edge of
Rutland Wal ch for Stgns

773 5785 773 9185

No Sunday Calls

COMf' lfT F
RAD I ATOR

and $257 OJ pe r mo for
15 yrs at 16% Just ltk e
r ent but you wtlt have
bath new furn ace and 2
tots near grocer y and
schoo ls Just $21 000
PLUS ~

O'Brien Electric

CARPENTER

For Appomlmenl
5 18 I no

WllNT S ACRES - To
butld your hom e of the
future? Hav e tus t about
any thtn g here Lots of
trees
dug we I and
leve l l and f or a ga rden
Wt lllake S7 950

3 ACRES

Tu~ lhr~

PH 992 3911

POMEROY, OHIO

PRICE REDUC ED -

Wednesday

ntfur e Dachshund puppy

~~=====::===j~========~t=~~~;;;;:::~
G

608 E. MAIN

) For Rent

18911115

creek Pl ant An t1ques 40
dolls diShes clothes fur

&amp; Service

Guysvtlle Ohro

RANDY'S

J&amp;F

) Announcement

Gtganftc Yard Sa l e corner
of ' Bu l avtlle and Clark
Drtve •n Plant s Sub
dt vts ton June 14 thru June

21

w~1nted

Road across from Kyger

TV Repal·r

----------~--::---:-------~
FAIRVIEW
B1ble
Church
Real Estate- General
IL~=========J~=~~~~~===~ wtll
have Bt b le
Sc hool
June

)Wonted
J For Sole

Three Famt l y Yard Sa le a t
th e
hom e of
Phy ll1 s
Mulhotand
Wtlkesvtlle
Oh10
Good cl othtng &amp;
d1shes Thursday &amp; Frtday
June 17 and 18

1st house on L1ttle Kyger

~~=::::::=5=7=01=m=o~p=d=1~========~+~========~t~========~~

B

(61 14 21 2t c

Feeney-Bennett

Wed

5 21 I mo

Reel Estate - General

r~

HARRISON

SA LES &amp; SERVICE
u s Rt so Easl

J U(l I

Llr

All Makes

- Piumbmaand
electnul wor~

BOGGS

EXCAVATING

JI

) I

'Addom and remodehn1
- Roof101 aad (Ultll WOI~
-tonc~ete work

PULLINS

NOIICF 10
CO NTRACTOR'

Dwight M!lhuan M1 ami M1 s T1•
S,JUill s and daughtu s M a1
M1 s Charles S&lt;hulel and falllll f
Mr "'"' M1 s Dwayne Sa iiCJ s ond

Datln

I

1I

a

APPLIANCE

Tuesday

nesday 10 to 5 Ph mtle
from Roush Rd on Rt 554
Clothes boat &amp; car

Sate

Public Nottce

Sw111dtll F'ln!llll&lt; W&lt;ll s C1ndy
( hJJ sllt and Cunlll l.' Sautu s an~
Cht 11 amJ JH\ SctutLI s
S&lt;ll&lt;hng g1fl&lt; we1 eOn !l ie Guida

ami

J

01

SERVICE

500

Monday

Help

II

Yard Sa te June 14 and 15 at
Eno Grocery on 554 9 00 to

~====~============~~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~==============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Yard
'S
16th Thu rs 17th F" 18th

NOTI C t OF
flf f'O INr Mr Nr
OFF t D I CI /\Ry
On M1y n l(j)R ? n 111 1
M
' "'
Lnu l y
P r o iFt ff
( nun
l ,..._,,
No
')37tJ(jl
W t tl =-. n R Bl rnt 11 R t I
R ( IW f II
Otl 0
W l C,
lp
11 0 llh(l F )l ( LJ fOt
ot II 1
'&gt; 11 11 ol En r N Btr l n
II r

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

9 30 lfc

r'ROBATF COURl
OF Mf I G\
COU NTY OH I O
F \TAT F OF r D l I H N

t

CARPENTER

Complete gutter work
complete remodeling
roofmg of all types
Worked In home area 20
years
Free estmtates
Call 843 3322
5- 12 2 mo pd

I mo

Pub lt c Not1ce

Weight classes

Rutland
Friendly Gardeners

a:ru

~

TOPS

Slim 'n Trim

mug

II ntl

&lt;-1 1111 Rt

Allendmg besides those
were Jenm and Ruby BUJ kt
Brodent k Lms I ong Ht.'ll.'ll
Trae) Shaffer Ga) Shaffer
Ea:5lman Gat old1n t: Boyd

Where s the regular

ger?

ltmulall

11

I
1I r
I t1 S I

p11Ze for bemg tht gul' st
marnl'd the Jongt st
Ref! es hments of twn spt:l'Ja l
llllll ls

••

11 /l. RNFTT OF ( FA\t p
C l&lt;;c No 73769

a spel' Jal

dt:u&gt;rated l'a kes punt h
potato l hipS WIll' Sll \ l'd

PATIOS
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING lOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
RICHARD GARFIELD
985 4464

Supenor S1dmg Co.

Yard Sa le

7

FOR FUTURE

f lht

I M a k11 ~ I

u

I 1 -.ull

11

The Datly Senltnei-Page-7

r;::::::::::::::::::~i;::::::::::::::::::~r;::::::::::::::::::~r;:::::;;C~U;T~O~U;;T::::::j
USE
YOUNG 'S
EUGENE LONG
'S
BASEMENTS!
KEN

Honor rolls
II

rt, Oh1o

Business Services

pools1de party
Allendmg bes1des those named
we~ e Marie Btshop Judy Snowden
and a guest Edna G1 een

Bridal shower held for Meigs resident
Vtck1 Sauters brld&lt;'-elecl of Jef
fery I Alng was honored l l.'u ntly
w1t h a bndal .shower at tht ho11a of
Jo) « Saulers
Games wen• conducted b} ,ohostesses Sheila Wa1 ner and
Chnstme Sa uters Pnzes wen: won

Pamero

~ramtng program Must be

fam•llar w1lh heavy equ1p
ent Call tOday 1 &amp;00 527
193

Assu mable 7 " per cent
Joan 4 bedroom 2 full
baths all el ec trt c 75x100
co rner lot I 304 882 2319
114 ACRES 2 homes H art
ford l and co ntr ac t wa fer
&amp; sewe r hou se hold goods

304 887 7965

HOU S.E M eadowb rook Ad
dtlton 3 bedroom s f am il y
room w th fireplace ce n
tral a1r base ment phone

304 675 1547
SIX room hou se 1 baths
tMQE.' sun por c h 50 x70 tot
qnragC'
&amp;
small
ou t
butldtnQ 304 675 4108
Three bedroom one and
one half baths garrtge VA
assumable 10 perce nt loan

of 34 000 $11 000 down 304
675 1487
32

Mobtle Hom es
for Sale

TRI STATE MOBILE
HOME S USED MOBILE
HOMES CARS TR UCKS
GALL IPO LIS
CHECK
OUR PRICES CALL 446
7572

CLEA N USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES 4 Ml
WEST GAL LIPOLI S RT
35 PHONE 446 3868
Pnce reduced For sale or

rent

12x60

2 bedroom

mobtle home wt th 2 lots
Gas heat
rur a l wa ter
Close to c 1ty hmtts Call

446 1294
Or tr ade 12x60 mob1lt
home for car or truc k Call
.446 4292

v

�The
Page- 8-The

Sentinel

MO btk HOm(' \
f o r S .li('

5I

Mobile home 1Lx52,
! urn, rn qood cone!

part
Crl l!

Jqeo W rndsor l 4x70. new
cond Deluxe krf chcn. tnrq e
l rvrnQ room &amp; bath , 1
bcdrm H idden ulll room

R AY'S

t)(l

room .

pore ~ '

17x65.

nrr co nd .

'}

front

Lot
also
rlVrldilblf' $50 6 14 9cr) 6093

Your

( ho rcf' o f $500 r ebrl iC or Ir e
downs nnct vr nyl s krrtrn q rn
•, 1,1ilf&gt;d All llomcs o r unl! s
1r ,ldPd r n on new h omC's
o;o t(l tJy ltw; ctco tc r s h rp

.1nd

prevrnus

,lclclre ss
ownpr

of

upon

rt'QUCS I K rnqsbury 11 00 E
M,1rn S l . Pomr&gt; r oy 6 14 991
/0]4

12x 60 1971 S IM 7 beef room.
,r 1r con dr l! oncr . por c t1 &amp; un
cl,rprnnrnq
Furnrs twd
1\Sklnq'$5.000 614992718 1
1974 Hdtcrf's l , 2 bel roorn
S4500 (Clll61 &lt;l 992 3917

USED MOBILE
176 ]I ll

HOME

MOB ILE HOMES MOVED
Lr(ensed

rnsurccf

&amp;

Celli

304 576 7111
Two
bf'droorn
rnobilrllorm'. 10 x 60.304 675 1457
1982 N rlShUrl 14 II x 70 It
mobile home . 7 It x 70 II
E xpando. 2 bedroom. 2
bn th s. flr c pln cc. nil c lf'C
tri c 304 576 2706
1973 VICTORIAN 14x65.
furnr shecf.
unrl e rp enned.
woodburn rnq flrepl oce. ex
tr r~
nrcc. ready for rm
rne dr ~l t e
posscssron. 6 14
446 7336. 304 67 5 4544
MOBilt::

HOM E:

FUR

RE NT WI TH OPTION TO
BUY. SP it rnq on nrrc lo t
hrlll wny bciWf'E'n Hu n
lr nq ton &amp; P I Plpas~lnt 304
5! 677 11
1 WO bedroom. Pxccll('n t
co nclrtr on. 304 675 4045

33

Fums forSa lc

78 AC RE f arm. 420 lb
tobacco cl ll otmen t . runnrnq
wa ter year roun d. $10,500
PhonC' 304 675 6851
50 Acre t nrm . 3 bedroom
tlOuSC'
wrltl
spac rou s
r rrnod lcd k rl c hcn, 7 ponds .
hMn. pr rcf'd to se ll Se ll or
tr,ld f' f or house rn towr

JOA 89S 3083

J5

Lot s &amp; .A c r e.1 gc

Prr ce recfu c cd 2 lot s w rth
rurnl wa ter c lose to cr ty
l rm rl s. $4.450 00 Cctll &lt;146

1194
For sr~ lc one r~nd t1a lf acres
more
or
less.
rlp
proxrma tc ly 600 It ror~d
tr on t nqc
on
Co r,l
Cf'n lcrpornl Rd ncnr Cen
tcr pornl $3,000 00 Pl1onc
682 6944

F nrmP tt es 3 75 ncr es to s
rl rrC S F l nt lo t . Crty SC I1 00 I
drs trr c l Cr1116 14 379 2196
Tw o or F ou r Bu rr a l Lo ts on
Mound Hrll Ca ll 256 6436
TWO acre lot s 150 II r o~ld
tr ontn qf' ,
c rty
Wel l er .
bc hrnd 84 Lu mb er, ca l l 304

675 6B73, 67S 36 18
TWO nd 1o rn rnq
lot s rn
rcstr rc trd sub cf rvrsron on
Ma so n Co unty Ro atl 7 37
cl crf' S. co rnN lo t $18 .500
2 16 &lt;1rrcs $16,500 _ Ph one
304 824 57 03 alter 5 30 p m

RenJals
41

Hou ses for Rent

Homes for Rent. Lerlse or
La nd co ntra c t rn town or
co untr y
Cn ll
Str ou t
Recl ll y, 446 0008
1 bed house rn R ro G r,lnd e
Ca ll446 0157
5 r oo m t1 ou se. r ef &amp; sec
dcp Call aft er 5, 446 0571.
Large hou se 1n Ce nten ary
Deposi t rcq . No childr en or
pets. 446 9844 .
POmeroy 2
bd r oom ,
remod e led , 408
Spring
Cifrpeted, security deposrt
S100. Rent S195 Ca ll a ft er 6

p m . 992 228B .

1-----------r-----------1
Mob il e Hom es
for R ent
Mnl)r lf' Home. Eurcko.
Bclr. fur n. riverfront lo t.
rl'f &amp; dcposrt Adu lt s, $100
mo 1 643 764 4

47

Modern 12x60 . 3bcfr . fur n
mobrle
l1ome
Conv
l ocn t ron Sec dep Ctlll a t
trr 5. 446 8558
7 bd mob ri C' home below
E urekil Re f &amp; df'p r C'Q
Cn l l6 14 756 1922
N rcc clea n mobile lwmc .
n,1t QrlS, n o pets. ndul ts
only Co ll614 367 7438

992 2319 or 614992 2101
4 rooms and bath . Fu ll
basement . Stove and fridge
in kitchen . No in sid e pet s.

61499).3090 .
3 beQ room home, with op
tion· to buy . S200 month r ent
$100 security deposit, 807
3rd St . New Haven, WV .

304·B82·3434.
FOUR room house, Camp

Conley, $130. per monfh,
plus deposif, 304 ·615 1371.
304-615·3812 .
MODERN 2 bedroom, fully
carpeted

home,

near

schools &amp; market 304·67S·
4892.
---------THREE bedroom house ,
full basemen!, 304·675· 1301.

44

Apartmen t
torRent
LARGE. l urn rst1cd. one
lwcf r oom apartmpnt rn PI
Plf',lSCHr l.
modNn
fur
nrturf'. wnsl•cr ctrycr hoo k
up, no pet s, phonr 30 4 6 75
1]86
TWO bedroom {lpM trnp n l,
Clrll on. ]04 675 1044

PAR liALL Y furn rshcct
rlPrlr l rnen t l or
ren t , 2
lJNiroom
rn Ga ll rpo lr s
&lt;'ifl' i1, 304 675 1458

3567

EVENING

81

t ex tur ed ce il ings com
mercia ! and r eside nti a l,
fr ee es tim ates Ca ll614 256

45

Furn •shed Room s

SL EEPING

ROOM S and

Furn moiJrle 11 ome neor
Cen tenary. adu lt s on l y, no
rnsrde pe ts. prrvn tc lo t. brq
ya rd . Cc1 11446 39 18
T r rlrler for ren t, furn rs twd .
,1 1r fond.
&lt;ldults only.
IJf',lU trl ul rrvC'r vrew rn
K,lnrlUQil 446 1602

np t ..

U SE D

Roome, wrll1 cook 1nq, &lt;. rlhl c.
tH r , $.10 Cl Wf'Ck 3Q4 773
5651

2 bdr MH nrcf" turn . nrll
Cirl S hf' i! l , on pr rve~ te lot rn
G,l llrpo lr s Cr11! 446 1409 be l
Wf'f'n 4 to 7PM
Furn rsh ed mob il e 11omr ]
bd rooms
Washn (1 ncl
dryer Pr rvo te lo t No pets.
clrp rpq 6 14 ':J49 2153

46

TWO bed r oom unfurnrsh ed
$ 150
per
month plus
flf'poc.r t Ca mn Con ley, 304

14 x70.

W,l rH cd to Rent

47

W nntcd to re n t warrllousr.
SIOr rlC/(' burld 1nq or 1 ~1 r q0
qa r r~cw 111 r ily o f Gnl l rp olr s
Ccll l446 3159

49

For L e.1se

Un f urn m odern? bdr ap l
for lc,lSC OVN IOO k rnq Crl y
Prlrk $ 175 pf' r mo C1 l l 446

IBI9

3

BEDROOM AL L ELEC
TRI C MOBILE HOME sc i
trnq on rl n rce l ot , hnlf wny
betw ee n Huntingt on &amp; PI
Plcr~se~ nt on Strl tc Rt
2,
$?50 00 pe r month , 304 576

2711

44

Apartment
for Rent

Apn rtrn ('nt, 2 bdr , unf , rr u
pe ts Call 446 3937
Unfurnr shcct apt f or rent rn
Crown Cily Ca ll 614 256
649 S

2

bdr
rlP t
2nd
Ave .,
Grll l rpolr s No pe ts Ca ll
446 487 4

Unturnr shed 1 bedroom 1/ 2
ctoub le. &lt;l ll utrl itr es pard, rn
G allrpoli s. 011 Coli 446 9760
rllter 4 00
F urnr shed Apartment, 920
401 Ave . 1 B R. adult s $200 .
Wrl l c r &amp; E l ec tri c paid 446
4416Ait er7p m
Furn rs h cd Apar tm en t. 701
4th Ave .. $175
Utilrtie s
pa 1d Adults, share bnth
446 4416 a ft er 7 p m
Bedroom , all utilrtie s
pnrd 3 big rm s. Wil! accept
c hdd r en &amp; pets tn Rio
G rand e a r eo . 446 01 57
2 Bdrm
Apa rtm ent c.t
Vall ey Vi ew. Rio G rande

245 9170 .

Equa l

op

51

Household Goods

304 675 3540
55

Misc . Merchandic e

mobil e

home s .
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Ga ll ipolis.
614-446·822 1 or 614 ·245·9484 .

APARTMENT
in
P leasa nt , 614·446·8221.

Supplies

PRI CE'S

REDUCED .

1975 Case 450, dozer
tr ac tor. 1,800 hr s . very
qood co nd ., $14,900 Ca ll

Metnl shee t 's fl a t por ce lin
enn mel coa ted, will n a il,
won't ru st . Ex . material all
types of building 20·24
gauge 4' x8' $7 .00, 4'x10'

446 4537

$8 00 , 4'x l2' $9 .60 . 4'x odd
614 667 30B5.

Sofa, c hair, rocker, ot
tomnn. 3 tabl es . (ex tra
hea vy by Fronti er}, $685 .
Sof a, c hair and toveseat.
$275 . Sofas and chai r s
priced fr om $285. to $795 .
Tab les, $38 and up to $109 .
Hidc -a -bcds,$340 ., queen
size, $3 80 . Recliner s, $175.
to $295 ., Lamps from $18 . to
$65 . 5 pc din ett es fr om $79 .,

to $385 7 pc.. $1B9 a nd up
Wood table with 4 chairs,

$2 19 up to $495

Des k $110

Hutches, $300 . and $375 ..
maple or
prne fin ish.
Bedroom sui tes
Bassett
Cherry, $795 .
Bunk bed
co mplete with mattresse s,

$250 . and up to $395 Cap
lain 's beds, $275. comp lete.
Baby beds, $99. Mattresses
or box springs . full or twin,
$58 ., firm, $68. and $78.
Queen se ts, $195. 4 dr .
chesrs, $42 . 5 dr. chest s,
$54 . Bed fr ames, $20 .and
$25 ., 10 gun G un cab in et s.
$350 .. dinette c hair s $20 .
and $25 . Gas or electric
rang es,
$325 .
Baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
fram es $20, $2S, &amp; $30. Used
Furniture
book case,
ranges and TV' s. 3 mi les
out Bu l aville Rd. Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon . th ru Fri ., 9am
to 5pm, Sa t

56

Pets for Sa le

DRA GONWYND
CAT
KE NN EL . AKC
TERY
Chow
puppi es,
CFA
Himalayan, Per sian and
Siamese kittens Ca ll 446
3844 a fter 4 p_m .

174 pre ces brown
un
derprnnin g for a m obil e
home used ju st 1 year . A
se ven &amp; one ha lf fee t by 58
i nche wide multi c olored,
br a1dcd ova! rug White
uniform s (pantsui t s) three
diff er ent styl es, sizes 9-10 .
Ca ll af ter 4PM , 446 -3065 .

HILLCRE ST

KENNEL

Boarding a ll breeds, c lean
indoor ou tdoor
fa c iliti es .
A lso AKC Reg . Dober
mans. Call 446· 7795.

BR IARPATCH KE NNEL S

Federal no. 6, 12 ga uge shot
qun she ll s, f ield loads, 14 .99
per box . Spring Valley
T r ad ing Co ., Spr i ng Valley
Plaza, 446 8025

Boarding nnd grooming .
AKC
Go rdon
se tt ers,
Eng li sh Cocke r Spanie ls.

Call6 14 3BB 9190
POODLE

GROOM IN G.

19 i nch So ny portable co lor
TV, lik e new co nd ., $300
Ca ll446 -7781 eveni n g.

Cal l Judy Taylor at 614 ·367 ·

Bags of good use d c lothin g
and furnitur e_ Ca ll 446 -9580

Sonia 's Professional Dog
Groomi ng . Call614 ·388 ·8547
and ~ask tor Sonia.

7220 .

U sed sof a, love seat , c hair,
u sed blue ca rpet various
sizes, used side by sid e
re fri gera tor , built in gas
oven, gas cook top . Call
Corbin &amp; Snyde r Furniture,

2 Pure bred Beagles, 5 mos.
old . Co lor b l ack. white &amp;
tan . Male and female, $75
for both or wi ll trade. Ca ll

4461171.

PINE

s tee l
ovens
oven .
after

RIDGE

AKC

COLLIES

Registered

Collie

pups Cal l 614·256· 1267 or
446 2107

5 OOPM
Juanita's

Spec ia l

Table &amp; 4 chairs, and Early
Ame ri can sofa . Ca ll 614

Grooming

$12 .50,

446·2310.

Also. Dachshund puppy for
sa le, $40 .

388 BlOB

G roomin g services for
pe ts. W ill clip English
Sheep dog s, poodles &amp;
Sc hnauzer 's. Reasonable.

King
wood
s tove ,
refrigerator, double oven
range, 1 bunk size bed w ith
mattress. Ca l l446 -8037 .
Sightly used c hain saw less
than 30 hr. used, 14 in. bar,

POODLE

pup s,

AKC

r eg istered . No Checks, 304 ·

$100. Ca ll 614 245·9398 .

REG I STE RED
B lack
femal e poodle puppy, $75.
Registered

Sil ver female

poodl e, $50. Phone 304·675·
2288 .
AKC registered, so lid black
German Shepherd puppies,
champion bloodlines, have

Yash i ca MG 1 Ca m era w ith
ac cessories. Exce ll en t con·

bofh parents. 304·675·2944,

difion. 256·6349 .

57

Musical
Instruments

446·3417 .d

se ll $650.00.379·2779.

J..-----------1
___ - - - - - - -·

Pf .

A partm ents, furnished and
unfurnished .
References.

304-675· 1365,
ONE
bedroom
un ·
furnished, $175 . per month,
plu s deposit. Gallipoli s

Ferry WV 304·675 1311, 675·
3812 ,
FURNISHED apartment,
adults, close to Hospital,

304·675·2257 '
TWO bedroom aparfmen!,
ca ll 304·675·6753 befween
6 :30p.m . &amp; 9 p.m .

~~~~f;.ij~~~i~~C(iiiii;D'iJJ:V~~~~-;ijf£:]1
1
6ll11 1l;1ll~~~ll~;

BEMCO maffresses or box

Piece

Naug a hyde
living

room

heavy

$695. Pillow arm sofa &amp;
chair $375. Roll fop desk,
dark &amp; lighf, $189. Bunk
beds, comp lete, include
maffress, $199. Complete
wafer bed s hop wifh 10

Phone 304·516·232B or 576·
2606.

614 698 3290.
with

Aufo·

Gran

Torino

good

co ndition ,

$I BOO . 304-7436 .
73

ances 'Monteverdi : Return
of Ulys ses.' Second of 3
parts. Werner Hollweg ap·
pears as Ulysses, Trudeliese Schmidt as Penelope,
with the Zurich Opera Or chestra conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt . (2 hrs .,

30 min .)
8:30 I]) 1982

RINGLES'S SERV IC E ex

13 JEEP Commando, 4
WH, Hi-Lo rg, auto hubs, 6

2088 or 675 4560.

cy l, s fd
Mech .
$1600.00, 304·675·5501.

Water we ll s. Commercial
and Domestic. Te ~! ho les.
Pumps Sa les anu ~ ·J rce .

OK,

1980 black Suzuki GS850,
shaft drive. full dress, vet ·
ter equ ipment. 4.000 miles,

1979 Honda CB650, $1,600.
Ca ii446-B653 .

82

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

in th' cannon wher'

For sa le 1974 Honda 750

'Monty
Cil
MOVIE
Python and the Holy
Grail'
I]) 700 Club
0 (]) ® M•A•s•H The
4077th
grows
restless
w hen no newspapers arrive for severa l weeks. (A)

9:30 0
(]) ® House Calls
Charley's old flame be·
sistant. IRI
1 0:00 ffi TBS Evening News
0 (]) ® Lou Grant Lou

Plumbing
&amp; H~ating

pays

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1976 . Trans Am 1 owner,

and spracke!s. $1,400. Ca ll
446·6619 after SPM.

83

614·446·8214,

'Charleston'

comes Peckler' s new as-

Phone 446 3BBB or 446 4471

1978 XL250 Honda mofor·
cyc le . Ca i1614·3B8·8711.

important bet. (R)
9:00 0
Cil
CZl MOVIE :

Seam less

cond . Ca ll446·2300.

74 Olds Cutlass Supreme
new radial tires, $400 . Ca ll

R~fus, I thouqht yo~'d

1981 Rail fype dunebuggy,
55 HP VW e ngine, a ll black
trimmed

in

chrome

glide . Ca ll
9582.

446 · 701~

or 446·

&amp;

while, sharp, $3,500. Call
614·245·939B,

1979 Honda C B 400 Hawk
Ca ll 446·8015 or 446·3731.

196&lt;1 Ford step van with
hydrolic lift, all a lum . cab.

1977 Honda 750, extras,
6,200 miles. Ca ii446·3B82 .

$3,500. Ca ll614·245·9398.
66 Chevy II Super Spo•f, 6
cy linder, $800.00. 379·2779.

1975 Harley Davidson Spor·
tster'. Exc . cond . Lots of
chrome. S2800. Serious inq .

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

75

Foremans

Used

Cars ·

Granada .

75

79
75

Mercury

Stafion Wagon , Phone 614·
742·2734.

____ -· --~-- · -

L TO

Ford

with

Evanrue tri -hauL new
paint iob, new seats new
astroturf, inboard outboard
motor, new some repair on

~~-c-~~a!_!f!D

WINNIE, HE

Ga llipoli s Diversified Con ·
st . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work. Special
farm rates. Ca ll us for free
estimates. 446-4440.

/S

/1\Y BROTHER.

motor, $700. Call 614·446·
8274,
1979 Star Crall 15 II. fri
haul, fish &amp; ski boat, red &amp;
white metallic, 80 HP Mer-

76

-- - --· ---- ----.-------·--·- -----

Auto Parts
__ _ __!AcC_!S!O~!~---- - ·

radiator
and
some
mechanic work. It will run. : Hanshaws

&lt;--11

20 less expensive cars in

stock.
SURPLUS JEEPS $90,
CARS $89, TRUCKS $100.
Similar bargains available,
Call for vo~r dlrectorv on
how to purchase. 602·998·
0575 Ex!. 7965 Call retun·
dable.

liD Hitchcock
11 :00 D Cil (]) 0 CII ® 1111121
News
Cil MOVIE: 'A Fistful of
Dvnamite'
I]) Nashville RFD
I]) ESPN Sports Center
ffi Woman Watch
(1) News/Sports/Weather
11:30 0 Cil (1) Tonight Show

L awrence Sidenstricker
Backhoe Serv ice . Ca ll 6.75 -

55BO.
BARNEY
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

MAW WANTS
TO KNOW IF
SHE CAN

SEW IN G Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sa les &amp; Service SharPen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

BORRV 'lOUR

SHORE··HELP
YOURSELF,

Johnny is joined by Joan
Rivers, DK:k Van Patten
and Byron Allen. (R) (60
min.)

SNUFFY

GRUBBIN' HOE,
LUKEY.-.-

Hauling

I]) Another Ufe

ffi MOVIE: 'Big Trees'
(]) Bennv Hill Show
0 ([) Quincv Quincy dis·

JONES BOYS WATER
SERV ICE . Ca l161067 ·7471
or 614·361-0591.

covers an
plot against

®

We'll do it. Call 446·3159 or

used

7!::_:::-::_ ~~~..'!~J.r::_::::::
Quality AutobOdv &amp; Paint
work. Pro!!'ssional custom
pain! work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446·1968,
79

61061 ·
PEANUTS

ent times in this comedy

bv Nail Simon.

Tires .

Lucas Lilne,
Point
Pleasant 304·675·7360,

Motor Home
1 Ca!"pers

1976 23' Coachman Motor
Home. New condition. 6U·
256· 1267 or 614·446·2107,

MOVIE: 'The Magus'

12:00 Cil HBO Theater: Plaza
Suite Three couples oc·
cupv Suite 7'19 of New
York's Plaza Hotel at differ·

Now Hauling lim estone·fill
dirt· top so il·gravel. Free

Call

IF I CAN GET OUT OF
THI5 BEANBAG ...

HAULING -Limestone, qra ·

vel, sa nd . Ph . 742·2505.

, ~:~L~i~~r~r30~e;i~~~&lt;nCall
. up§~t:er_y _·
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave,, Gallipolis
446· 7833 or 446· 1833.
'
87

·----- - -

MOWREYS Uph~~!;r; R!
1 Box 124, Pt. P1easant, 304:
154, '
'

(]

FISHEFI'McN

jANSAUE±

r J

I I

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon .

Print answer here:
(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles

,

MADLY WOVEN MARROW OBJECT
,,
Answer: What the bull hated to be-"COWED

Jumbtt Boolr. No. til, containing 110 puzzles, Is available lor $1 .95 postpaid
from Jumbtt, cJo this newapaper, Box 34. Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, 1ddress, zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooks

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Look very closely

,.,·

'

• 93

• 94

tAJ843
• A743

.K

WEST
10 7
•J752

EAST
.QJB54

•s

t95

tKQIO

.KQJR

([) Nlghtllne
([) PBS Late Night
•
. (jJ MOVIE: 'The
Jericho Mile'
12:30 8 (I) (1) Late Night With
David L8tterman David is
joined bV Jessica Savitch.
(R) (60 min,)
Cll Jack Benny Show

a ([) MOVIE: 'Columbo:

I

ay Dewn'a Ellrly Ught'
. 1 :00 (I) I Mllfried .1oM

i
I'

way to collect

.106 52

.9

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

1.

West

Norlb

East

Soutb

Pass
Pass
Pass

2t
4•

Pass
Pass

Pa ss

SIX

trump

tncks against a bad trump
break "
Oswald "He starts his try
for the extra chance by ruff ing a club at trick two . Then
he plays ace and another
spade. East is in and Will
probably lead the king of
diamonds. At least that is his
best defense."
Alan : "Declarer must let
this king hold . Then East
will shift to a trump. South
wins and ruffs his last spade
with dummy's last trump .
Now he ruffs another club
and cashes his last two top
hearts "
Oswald: " Now he leads a

SOLI Til
• A62
•AKQI08l
t762

Pass

Openmg lead: +K
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Alan: "Here is the sort of

diamond to dummy 's ace

hand where at \east nine

and ruffs dummy 's last club
for his lOth trick. West slill
has his jack of trumps, but
will have to use it to ruff his
partner's good diamond."

declarers out of I 0 will
come up one trick short at
their four-heart contract"
Oswald: "Declarer will
count on sit hearts, three
aces and a spade ruff in

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

~'ll'tr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

41 Belgian

1 Food fish
5 Peck film
role
9 Zhivago's

river

DOWN
I Blackthorn
fruit
2 Injury
3 Debate
4 Laraine
or Clarence
5 Vial
6 Pick - in
(criticize I
7 Woman's

love
10 - operandi
12 Bacchanal
13 Nebraska

river
15 Australian
bird
16 Color
17 Thrice
(Lat.)
18 Sins
W Hockey
great
21 Type of bird
23 Fish
24 Campsite
residue
25 Pulpit
topic
26 Czech river
27 "Now it can

name
8 Advice to
a meddler
II Of the
breastbone
14 Courier's
task

Yesterday's Answer

16 Ty Cobb
29 Steeple
had 4,191
feature
19 Four iGer.l 33 Firs t
·rate
21 Commando
22 Bantu spear 34 German
23 French
export
comic mime 36 " A Boy
25 Spanish
Named
painter
27 Hit by
a pitch

37 Stallone's

nickname

"
28 Drop the
bait

29 Caligraphy
embellishment

30 Conceit
31 Contrived
32 Designate
:IS Sultana, e.g,
37 Brogan, e.g.
38 Habituate
39 Demarcation
point
40 - off
(played golf)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

II

it :

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 letters,
apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES

NCAA Wortd

SerfH Flnel Game

([) 8olld Gold

,. I

~

Cll Bum• &amp; Allen

I]) 1 982

dummy for hi s 10 tn cks.
Then when Wes t shows up
with four trumps to the jack
he will shrug hi s shoulders
and blame the fickleness of
fate or bad biorhythms."
Alan: "That lOth declarer
will look for extra chances
before playing to tn ck tw o.
He will consid er and aban don the idea of setting up
dummy's long d1amond s
Then he will try to find a

6-14-82

NORTH

ID IB Nlghtllne

614 ·156·1967 after 6.

est im ates .
7101.

assassination
government

a

officiaL (R) (60 min:)
(I) Captioned ABC News

Need someth inq hiluled
away or someth irl g mov ed?

cury with extras. Ex . cond .

Call6t4·367·0394.

old

profiles Tom McGrath, a
widely -read but little-heard
poet, whose epic poem
'Letter To An Imaginary
Friend' is illustrated (60
min.)

The Hoe man . 614·992 2618

Gen~ral

his

10:15Cil MOVIE: 'Black Marble'
10:30 Cil Case of the Muk kinese
(1) Sing out America
(I) Movie At the End of
the World This ep1sode

For water lines, sewer
lines. septic tanks or leaky
basements ca ll Hayman

85

to

liD Newswatch

EVEN THOUGH
HE SA ID SOME
HORRIBLE
THINGS ABOUT

Pomeroy . 992·22B4 .

Motors for Sale

frade. 614·992·3798.
Langsville
Ohio.
MUsfang . 76 Elite.

Boats and

visit

hometown. IRI (60 min I

Cor . Fourth and Pine

84

a

----

"THEY 5EEM "TO GoO
AWAY FO~ VACA"TION
A~OUi THE SAME liME

in

Cincinnati
Conclusion .
Johnny gets carried away
when he misses out on an

it's dry!

f e rring,
sadd l e
bags,
double bucket seat, tune
up . New· battery, cha in

good cond , $2,950. Ca ll 446·
7383 .

Night Baseball
0
(]) ® WKRP

STA RKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Se rvic e. Shrubs
trimmed . Phon e 304 ·576 ·

Con trol Sysfem
3100 or 446·7122.

Ca ll 446·

Barcelona, Spain

Gutter-Doors.
Offering
continuous
guttering,
seam less siding, roofing,
garag e
door s,
fr ee
es tim ates, 614 ·698 ·8205 .

2010.

Cup

(]) Ul 1121 ABC Monday

304-895·3802 .
ADVANCED

World

Soccer: Opening Games
and Ceremonies from

perienced mason, roof er ,
ca rpe n ter.
e l ec tri cian,
genera l
repairs
a nd
remodeling. Phone 304 675

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

Private

(]) liD Grea1 Perfonn-

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump re moval. 675 1331.

ter5 : 30p.m .

®

(])

Benjamin
Benjamtn
rs
promoted to squad leader
(R)

ALLEYOOP

I

$3,100. Call446·1554 affer 6.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia, Over

Flair Furniture &amp;

Ford

Commercia l · Residential .
A lso kits avai labl e. Energy

Z·Boy recliners in stock .

Design. Ga llipolis Ferry,
wv Open 9·6. Phone 304·
675·1371.

1972 Chevy pi ckup $300.00,
1974

0

RON'S T e levision Service
Specia li zing in Zeni th and
Motorol a, Quazar, and
hou se calls Phone 576 -2398
or 446 -2454 .

$1,B50 . Ca ll 61067-0691.

1980 Harley Davidson wide
glide, show room cond. Ca ll
446·7781 evening.

351 clevland, nice interior,
no oil, cheap. Power saw,
fence charger. 6U·992-j99J.

cases.

West A threatening note is
se nt to Marshal Sam and
the leading suspect rs a
my sterious newcomer to
town .

Ge n e's
Steam
Carpe t
Clea n· Sc otch Ga urd -Free
es timates ·sp ring specia ls
Ge ne Sm ith, 992 6309

Pickup, V -8, p.s., p .b ., air,
automatic Good condi ti on .

ca lf,

Autos for Sale

TINTING

(]) Ill 1121 Best of the

1979 Ford F250 ' '• T. HD

72 JEEP 304-615 6153 .

Transportation

GLASS

the Prairie Charles and

Cal1614367 0490

$500.00 . Call 304-5762174 af'

1

Show· This show feature s
topics of special interest to
anyone concerned about
spending money w isely

James encounter a halfwi ld dog . (R) (60 min I
JCiosed-CaptionedJ
Cil MOVIE : 'Brubaker'
I]) National Geographic
Special
I]) ESPN's Inside Baseball
ffi MOVIE : 'My Man

Home re modelinq, alumin
mum siding. gu tf ers,. win ·
dows, storm doors . 15 yr .
experie n ce, free es tim a te.

Truck's for Sale

$550. Approximafe ly 600 lb.
14
bul L $300 . 304·675·5076.

71

OH, GEE ! TEGG TR.IVETT l'lffiK5
FOR. A LAB'RATORY WHERE
THEY EXPER IMENT ON
ANIMA/..5.' -MOGTLY {)Q(j6!

rJ
IH~1AEI

Godfutv'

30,000 miles $7500. 304 675
3015

speed,

Registered and grade hor
ses, exce ll ent 4·H proiec t .
English and western sad d i es ·
everything
imaginab le in horse equip ·
ment and supplies, a l so
riding lessons and trail
rides and horse training .
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow .

cow

HU&lt;:iHIE- BOT
EVEN ONE MORE
PERSON AT THE LAB THEY'RE AFRAID
TO TESTIFY, TESS"' OF L051N6 THEIR.
JOBS.' TIMES ARE
HIIR.O!

C &amp;
R Paint Center
Profe ssi onal
painter s.
co mm er cia l and residen
t iaL in sur ed . 41 Court St. ,
Ga llipoli s, 446 -9458, no an ·
swer 446 · 1758 .

Corve tt e,
19 75 . T t op,
maroon, w -silver interi or
L · 48,
a1r
conditio n ,
automati c tran s. ps, pb ,

TilEY WllNT TO,

75 CHEVY pi ck up, 6 cyl, 3

Livestock

63

•. IF YOU COULD GET

roofing, sidin g, spou ting ,
fencing, painting, repair s &amp;
c lea ning . 446 ·2000 , ca ll
before 8 and after 5: 30 .

parts,

1977 Datsun King cab run s
good, and good shape,

starling price $299. up to
$2500. Big daddy cocktai l &amp;
end tables $50. Wall -A-Way
recliners $169. and up, La·

suite Hollywood sty le, bunk
beds, glass front book·

for

GEHL grinder &amp; mixer ,
$1,000 . Post hol e diggers,
$250. All is Chalmers B with
cultivators, $1550. Sears
rototi ller, $200 . Gravely
tractor , $350 . 1971 Chevy J;,.
ton truck, new paint. $1200.

1976

bedroom su ites on display,

USED FURNITURE 5 pc.

BEETLE

ANNIE

C HRI ST I A N 'S CO N
Constr .,
STRUCTION

73 PONTIAC Ventura,
phone 304·516·251B.

446 2641.

1977 Chevy Monte carlo,
Loaded T ·top . very good
cond. $3,500, See or call
Gary HyselL 614·992·5388.

suite

&amp; 7 pc. dine!! sefs, studio
couch &amp; cha ir, bedroom

9939 .

!ape, all powe r, $1750. 304·
615·5173 affer 5 p m

only. 614-992-3955.

perature dryer . Each A-1

wood

Masonary work , Logu e
Contra c ting,
Rt
1,
Ewington
Call 614 -388

Co upe

I

I AFMEL

Saturday s

(]) Entertahvnent Tonight
(1) Happy Days
0 (])Tic Tac Dough
Cll liD MacNeil -Lehrer
Report
®News
Ill 1121 Muppet Show
7:30 0 Cil You Asked For It
CI)
Consumer
Reports
'The
Not -For-Kids-Only

Cil MOVIE: 'Rock For
Kampuchea'
I]) Anothe&lt; Ute
I]) ESPN Sports Center
ffi Andy Griffith
(]) 0 (]) Famllv Feud
(1) laverne and Shirley
Cll Business Report
® Richard Simmons
liD Media Probes
Ill 1121 Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 0 Cil (1) Uttle House On

1971 Harley Davison Super

Maytag auto. washer and
Frigidaire multi
t e rn -

springs, full or twin, $58.

CA DILL AC

1208 .

89S 39S8 .

2 Armstrong Surv eyor 78 14 in c h
tir es,
2- f70
Daytona Sport 70 · 14 in ch
tir es; white outlined let
tering . A ll like new with
less than 50 miles. Will se ll
a ll for $150 or $40 eac h. See
at 256 South Fourth Ave ..
Middleport .

-- - -·----

1974

New Holland, Model 450
Mowing Machine . 446·6566 .
Kub Klipper bel l y mower ;
cu ltivator s for 3 point hit
ch . Good condition . 256·

10/JDRRDN.

337B .

2216.

New and U sed Troy · Suitt
till er s
for
gardening.
Swisher Implement John
Deere Deal er , Rt
1,
Ga llipoli s, 446·0475 .

AN ~~~HOJR q..'{
"!HIS 1'5 MQ:DAY.

Ca li6143BB·9762

ce ll en t condition . 304 ·675·

1980 Honda octessey and a

Wurlitzer
Fun maker
Organ,
3
keyboards.
Or i ginal price $1895 . Will

eac h

1978 TOYOTA Ce li ca, ex

72
~-arm ~q_u[p'!l~nt

~K

Creative wood decks.
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
redwood
FrPP es ti mate

engi ne runs g r eat . all for
$450 will part out . 614 ·992 ·
61

'/UP, BUT VJ;

~T

1HIS SUIT
CLEN.leD /&gt;#;/ ~~D."
I'U. PIC-I&lt; IT UP _ ___..

or 614 361 7160 .

=:Farm supplies

For appt. 614-992 7342.

New post hole digger $230,
new 6 ft . blade $135. 3500
Di ese l Ford Loader. Phone

S90

Mileage . 304·882 2BI2 affer
4:00 .

I

French
City
Painting
residential &amp; co mmer ci al.
interior, ex teri or, paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured
ce iling s. Cal l 614 -367 7784

DeVille, exce ll ent co n
· dition, 4 door, A M -FM,

1978 Yamaha 500 . Ex
ce llent co ndition . Low

6143670544 befween 3 &amp;
6PM .

Caii44681B1

me ch a ni ca lly,

Coa l Sf

JERSEY

446 0322
Frost -free refrig era tor,
copperton e, li ke new, $160.

Aluminum boat . 12ft. $150.
1· Remington high speed,
automatic. 22 caliber with
scope. S100. l ·Marlin 39· A.
gold trigger leve r action.
$150 . Can be seen at 123

BORN LOSER

Ca ll446 2101

Bobcaf,

77 CHEVY Chevette, need s
work, $100 . plus take over

72

TER Pool s sa le, suppli es &amp;
in st all a ti on_ 403 2nd . Ave.,
Ga llipol is, O h Ca ll 446
6579
In g r ound Ablove
qround

Elec tri c stainle ss
commer c ia l sta ck in g
&amp; 1 grill with bottom
Co il
614 245 9428

197B MERCURY

sta tion wagon, V6 engine,
automatic, power steer ing,
exce ll ent co ndition, S2500.

payments 304 6751293,304
675·5644,

. ~_o!_ ~a!_!~_T_!"~de

59

Autos for Sale

DCilffi0(])®11l1121
News
Cil MOVIE: 'Wrong Ann
of the law"
ffi Mv Three Sons
(]) ABC News
(]) Electric Company
liD Over Easy
6:30 0 Cil (1) NBC News
I]) $50,000 Pyramid
ffi Father Knows Best
(]) Muppet Show
0 (]) ® CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
liD Utias. Yoga and You
1111121 ABC News
7:00 D Cil P .M. Magazine
I]) Bult's Eye
I]) '79 U.S , Open Golf
Hilites
([) Green Acres

pet Cleaning fea tur ed by
Haff elt Brosthers Custom
Cupe t s. Free es t ima tes

304-675 3312 .

Strawber ries. Call Harold

Ca ll614 245 5121.

guaranfeed . Ca ll 614·256 .__ _ _ _ _...;_ _ _ _
1201 .
r

Apartment s. 675 5548 .

APAR TM E NT S,

Buildi~g

de , 614245·5121.

Building materials block ,
bri ck, sewer pipes. win
dows. lintel s, etc. Claude
W in ter s, Rio Grande, 0 .

LA YN E'S FURNITURE

por tun i ty
E ffi ciency Apar tm en t in
Rio G rand e availabl e now .

Taylor, 446·8692 or 614-245·

U SE D 9x7 garage door, $25

RATLIFF'S POOL CE N

Sm,lll
l r ,lr l l'r
spilff'S
M,v:,on 30 4 773 S65 1

675 1371.304 67S 3B I2
LAR GE

304 67S 4677.

$5 .00 . Tuppers Plains , Ohio

ON E
bf'cfroom
rnob1 i f'
twnw. ~l r r co nd 1t ron.rd. on Wnnt ccl Ia Ren t A srnrl ll
furn rshccf
ll OUSf'
rn
pr rv,lle lo t, ou tskrrls Hf'n
derson Ulrlrlr es lurnr shed , G,lllrpo l rs Mu st be rn QOOd
conclrlr on Cr1 l l Mr s Mary
$230 mo nth 304 675 6730
Ru s k Jam es. 446 ·0728
Two bed r oom mob rl e nome
rn New H r~vf'n. adul ts only.
no pet s. 304 675 145? nit er 5

Strawberri es
pick
your
own. bring
co ntain er .
Claude Winters, Rio Gra n·

K IRB Y vacum clea ne r
with shampooer, good con ·
di t ion. phone 304·895 ·3598 .

Plasti c Se pti c Ta nk s. State
and coun t y approved . 1,000
gal tank , pri ce $340 . Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
p1 ckup tru ck . Call 614 286
5930, Jac k son, Oh
RON

71

battery charger $195 . 400 500 New bri cks $35 . 30
Assortmen t of 8" &amp; 12"
block s $15. 3-6' Sec tion of
12"
co rrugated
metal
culvert with 2 coup ling $50 .

614 446 3375 .

Spa ce for Rent

COU N TRY MOB I LE Horn e
P;1rk. Rou t(' 33. Norlll of
Pomproy Lnrqc lot s Cn ll
997 747 9

Fruit
&amp; ~~9~eti1~1-:s .

58

GREE N draperies for a
pic ture window , c ape cod
curtain s &amp; pi cket fence

AP

TRAN5POIC:TATION.

~==========;:=========~ 9622
or 614 3B8 9BS1 .
CAPTA IN STEEMER Car

ELECTRIC goll ca rt wi th

EVA NS E NT ERPR ISES
? Be(lr oom 17x80 trn rlrr
W rl l accept c l1rldren &amp; pptc,
1n R roGranciC' 446 0 157

Mar c um
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex
pertence , specializing in
built up roof. Ca ll 614 388

or 742 20BS

P Ll AN C E S
wash e r s,
dryers,
r e frigerat o r s,
r a ng es.
Skagg s
Ap
pliances. Upper Riv er Rd.,
beside Stone Cr es t M o tel

54

992 27 17
Zenith bla c k and w hite TV .

446 7398 .
Fu rnr shecl
Room
$ 12 5.
utrl rt rcs pare!. 9 19 2nd ave,
Grl llrp olr s
Sr nql f' rnnl e,
c. !1,1rf' bil th Ca l 1446 4416 of
IN 7PM

9652

WHY, T~E OLD MAN
f!VEN LEFT ME; WITH

DOM MIQUt:L HAS LEFT A LA~TING
"IMPRE~~ION' FOR THE REAL EASY. ..

PAINT I NG
interior and
ex t er i or,
plumbing ,
r ooti ng, so me remodeling .
20 yrS . ex p . Ca ll 614 388

110 volt
e l ec.
dry e r .
Avocoda Exc. cond . 614 ·

Over LOOO ce rami c molds,
kiln s and suppli es 7&lt;12 ·2925

CA PTAIN EASY

II B2

2 singl e mattresses and box
springs . 614 ·992 ·202 1.

seve r a l utility ca bine ts, kit
c hen c ab ine t s wood &amp;
m eta l, baby bed s, ches ts of
drawers $25 to $60, 3-way
r ec lin er s $100 , gas &amp; el ec
tr ic range s, r efr igerators,
wash stands, bunk bed s
co mpl e te with
bunki es
$170, seve ral dressers, ha ll
trees, bed s, bra ss hea d
boa rd beds $35, book cases,
smo k ers, H oover spi n dry
washer,
wrrnger
type
washers, hut ch, coal &amp;
wood heater s, telev ision s,
f ans, new too l s of all kind s,
va ri ety of silv er s tone cook
ware . Ca ll446 3159 .

Hom e
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERIN G

$1 50 614 742 2545 .

Unacrambfe thele four Jumbles,
one letter to each oquare, to form
four ordln.ry worda.

6/14/82

\

LOST : Short legged beegl e
front fee t turned in . A n swe r s to Ja sper . Long
Hollow ar ea. Reward . Ca ll

lfft~N}
~ TMAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~*
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

MONDAY

992 5533 or 992 77B2 .

room suit es cou c h· l ove
sea t-chair $199 , 2 piece
li ving room suit es from
$140 up, lov e sea ts from $70
up, map le din e t se ts from
$99 to $199, wall hu ggers
$ 100 ., r ec l in er s $80, mapl e
ro c ker s $49,
b e droom
suite s $150, varie ty of tabl e
lamps, mar ble top stands
$30 and up, box spring s &amp;
matt ress
{new)
$ 100 ,

GOO D

l rqll l housckeep rnq
Prlrk CP ntral Ho tel

Ca ll68 2 70B3 .
Ni ce 3 bd .room house in
Middleport .
Chi ldr en
allowed- no pet s, r esonable
r en t , p l us security dep . 614 ·

Frrewood f or sa l e. 614 -985·

FUR

4, $1,200 Ca ii61 4245939B .

f"~;~ A Cl&gt;ii\110 ~e. MID
6t6T' "fi-le t-P6i Piece ~?;1M.

SWA IN
N ice Swagge r lov e sea t and
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp; couc h, used 3 y ea rs, good
PAWN SHOP 62 Oli ve SL co nd . $125 or$75 . eac h . 614
Ga ll i poli s. J pi ece livin g 949 2732

L~lrQe
se l f'C ir on
at
nrPownf'd mobrle h omes
Mon th ot June on all homes

NamP

USED

Television
•
•
viewing

campers

1974 Fjeetwood cam per
trail er , lik e new. icc box,
ga s stove &amp; hea ter , sleeps

'tJ.A~e..

MA'fee we SHo.JU&gt;

pany 614-9922205

fj}1t

"'AotOr Hom e

by Larry Wright 19

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

MI SC . MerchillldiC('

Gaso line and hea ting fu e l.
Ca ll Exce lsior O il Com

$20 Cal l 61067 063 7.

'!.5.000

p r rcf'd ovN $5,000

S4

NITURE Living room suit e
$65 , t win beds $75, c hest
$30, oak brea kfa st se t $65,
elec tri c hot water hea ter
$50, gas ran ge $75, f a n $10,
hospita l bed $100, roc k er

31913 10
Grcqory

Hou se hold Goods

22,500 BTU air condition er,
white elec tri c stov e, qood
condition . 304 -675 3694

61 43BBB6BA

19/0

14, 1982

Ohio

vsz

DXI A

KZIWQ,

VSZ

ZFZWJVWZ.

vsz
K ISH,

XI S H

vs z

VXYFZW

vsz
S IQYVS

NZSHZXX

KVXJZU

Yesterday's Cryploquote: SO WNG AS UTI'LE CIDLDREN
ARE ALLOWED TO SUFFER, TIIERE IS NO -TRUE LOVE IN
THIS WORID.-ISAOORA DUNCAN

�.,. ~ ~ -. "' ' fl"' ia- ~,. .. - - - -

· - .. .. ;.. .., ..-,

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

r

... .,. ...

~

•.

,. •

SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMERO Y SENTINEL

Page- l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 14, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

FATHER'S

Reagan ready to leave again
WASHINGTON !API - Aftet
two days of rest following his European journey, President Reagan is
returning to the White House only
bti efly and then hitting the mad on
back -to-back trips to Houston and
New York this week.
Reagan wa s flying home this afternoon after 1 elaxing at the presidential ret rea t at Camp David In
Maryland 's Catoc tin Mountains,
whic h was soa kf'd b~~ rain over the
W('('kt•nd .
There were no appoin tments today on his schedule.
On Tuesday, he flies to Houston
for a fund -r aising dinner for Texas
t ;o\' . William Clements. Some
Whi te House sta ffer s sa id pri va tely
they had hoped theTexa s trip couid
lx' sc ratched because of the gruelin g HI-da y Eu1 upea n jou rney th at
Reaga n completed late F t iday.
Hov.,rf've r . thr Houston overnight
j o ur n r ~· is planned with a r eturn to
Washingt on Wednesda y.
With his bags bareiv unpacked ,
r!Paga n heads out again Thursday.
fl ying to :"--P\\ ' Yor k to addrPss the
United Na ti ons s('('ond s(l('('ial ses-

sian on disarmam ent, which began
last week. This was the conference
Reagan had challenged Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev to address, but ther e was no sign the Soviet leader Intended to make an
appear ance.
The president is due back in Wa·
shington the sam e day.
Reagan was at Camp David
when he learned Sunday of the
death of King Khaled of Saudi
Arabia.
The president said he was deeply
grieved by the m onarch's death. He
pt aised the king as a man who
"ruled his countty with honor, digni ty and wisdom , and whose goodn ess a n d und e r s t a ndin g
commanded the respect of all ."
Secr etary of State Alexander M .
Halg Jt . also mourned the king, but
sa id the smooth transition in which
Crown Prince Fahd assumed the
throne bodes well for impr oved
U.S.-Saudi relations.
Haig sa id he viewed the situation
" as one of steady improvement in
the cl ose relations" between the
United States and Saudi Ara bia.

Weekend accidents
1

Cnn tmued from p.c1gc 1l

and apparPntly applied hts Drn kes
f01 a turning vf'hiclf' w hrn the r i m

flew ott.
Thr pi('('e st ruck !he car windshield of Thurnston J . Sargent, 56,
Colu mbus. causing slight dam age.
Phi lli ps' tt11ck rece ived no da m age, and no cita ti ons wer e issued .

Two cat s collided in a curve on
Pa triot-Cadm us Roa d, j ust west of
Ohio Tl:t at 5: 45p.m. Su nday , result ing in light da mage to bot h ca r s, the
patrol said.
M at·ty 0 . Pinkerman. 21 . of Rt. 2.
Pat1 iot. wa s citro with fa ilure to

_
Yield when thP car collided with a
car dri ven by Robin L. Cr ews, 20,
l ia llipolis.
Bt lan K. Ba iley, 20, Long Bottom , was cit ed with driving left of
centPr on Ohio 248 at 6 p.m. Sunday
after he sides wiped a car dtiven by
Trm sa L. Dailey, 20, of Rt. l, Long
Bott om .
Dam age wa s light to both ca r s.
'1\vo cars were damaged heavily
on U.S. :nat about 1: 15 p.m . when
om• of th(' rars, dri ven by Susa n C.
Sprow , 27, Ga llipolis, attempted to
merge onto sout h U.S. 33 .
Shp struc k a car d1iven by Ber-

nard G. Roth, 48. Lancaster , who

was traveling south on U.S. 33.
Spt ow was cited for failur e to yield
the right of way .
Mark W. Haffeit , 21, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, received minor visible injuries when he lost control of his car
and struck a tree on Gallla County
Rd . I , just north of 7 at 7 p.m .
Sunday.
He was not hospitalized and his
car was damaged moderately.
The patrol cited E laine E. Davis,
06, Westerville, for assured clear
distance Sa turd ay afternoon in a
two-vehicle coitlsion on U.S. 35.
According to the report, Davis
was eastbound at 1: 10 p.m . and was
unable to stop In time for a stopped
vehicle driven by Jacquellne S. Davis, 43, Ri o Gr ande, and collided
with the rea r of Davis's vehicle.
Both ve hicles wer e slightly
damaged .
The patt ol said Janice M .
Adams, 25, Rt. 3, Pom eroy, was
eastbound on Chester Twp. Rd . 356
(Warner HiU Road ! at 5: 40 p.m.
Sa turday when she entered a curve
and collided head -on with a westbound vehicle driven by Margaret
J. Cr ane, 35, Pom eroy.
Crane's vehicle was sllghtly damaged and no cita tions were issued .

Saturda y Adm iss ions-- Pa ul ine
Der cnberget , Pomeroy; Paul Darnell. Pomr t O\' ; Mat1' Bissell , Long
B o tt o m ; H e rb e rt G i l k e y.
Midd lepot t.
Satu rd ay Disc har ges-- Barbara
Sm it h, Da isy Taylor, Louise Burbr idge, Roger Dowell, W. H. Perri n, Ri ley McClelland .
Sun da y Admi ss ions-- M ar v in
McGuire. Pomer oy; Susa n Sprow,
Gallipolis; Lee Bing, Rutland ; Pall ic ia Ohlinger , Mason; Leota
Cooper, Syr acuse.
Sunday Discharges--Carrie Osborne, Her m an Bur t , J am es
Sel iet s. St .

Skating party set
RUT LA ND--- There wiii be a
ska ting part y Tuesday, June 15,
fla m 7: 30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m . at the
Rutland Civic Center.
Admission is $1 for children and
$2 for adults. Persons are to bring
their own skates.

End marriages
M aiTiages dissolved were Cart
Sa ise1 and Edith Ann Sa lser , and
Carl Va nover and Art ietta J . Va n·
ovet . Frank Puckett was granted a
divot ce from Lucy Geneva Puckett
on grounds of gross neglect of duty.

Myrtle Crew Durst, resident of
Arcadia Nursing Home and a resi dent of Syracuse, died Saturday at
Camden Clark Hospital.
Mrs . Durst was born ln Syracuse
Sept. 29, 1901 the daughter of the
late Frank and Samantha Howell
Harri s. She was also preceded In
death by her fi rst husband, John
Cr ew, her second husband , Albert
Durst , one son, Leo (Bud ) Crew,
two sisters, Jessie Cottrill , and
Irene VanMeter; three brother s,
Sylvester Harris, Jack Han is and
WUbur Harris.
She was a member of the Syr aucse First Presbyterian Church
where she served as trustee, deaconess, and elder
She ls survived by one son Frank
Cr ew, Warren, Ohio; one brother,
Waiter (Dick ) Har rls, Syracuse;
one sister , Ethel Rainey of Pinecrest Nursing Center , Gallipolis;
eight grandchildren, two stepg r a nd so n s , a nd 15 g r e at
gr andchildre n.
Funeral services wilt be held
Wednesday at 3 p.m . at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Wanda Johnson officiating. Burial will be in Letart Fails Cemetery . Friends may
call at the funeral home after 7 p.m.
Tuesday.

Emergency runs

Granted judgment
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court the Farmet s Bank and Savings Co., was granted judgment
against Gerald C. E blin and Malva
L. Eblin to recover $15,511.17 plus
eight percent interest.
Mary Jo Pickens, Middleport ,
filed suit for divorce against Francis L. Pickens, Pomeroy.

Marriage licenses
Marriage llcenses granted recently in Meigs County included:
Steven Dewayne Pullins, 19,
Pomeroy, and Ter esa Lynn Rice,
18, Racine; G€orge Zell Stitt,
Pomeroy, and Donna Rae Rowe,
Pomeroy; John Keith West , 21, Ra cine, and Beth Ann Weaver, 20,
Gallipolis.

Skating party set
There wilt be skating at the Ru tland Civic Center Tuesday, June
15, from 7: 30p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Admission Is $1 for children and $2 for
adults . Persons ar e to bring their
own skat es.

Meets Wednesday
The Sou them Local Board of Education will meet Wednesday at 7
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.

Local emer gency units were on
the move over the weekend answering numerous calls.
On Sunday at 12: 33 a. m .. Pomeroy took Tommy Same from an accident at the waterworks to
Veter ans Memorial Hospital ; at
1: 20 p.m ., Pomeroy took Susie
McCreedy to Veterans Memorial
from the scene of an auto accident
at Rock Springs; Tupers Plains at
4: 16p.m., went tD a structural fire
at the Hany Caladay residence in
Alfred; Pomery at 6: 59 p.m . took
Lee Bing from Route 143 to Veterans Memorial; Middleport at 7; 25
p.m . took Cathy Wright and Patty
Ohlinger from the scene of a highwa y accident to Veterans Memorial, and Syracuse at 7:59a .m . took
Leota Cooper from Syracuse to
Veterans Memorial.
On Saturday at 2: 03 a.m ., Syr·acuse took David Clark from the
scene of an accident in Minersville
to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
5: 43 a.m. took Pauline Deren·
berger from Mechanic St., to Veterans Memorial; Rutland at 9:11
a.m. took Wanda Gardner from Sa·
lem St., to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport at 10: 12 a.m. treated
Blanche Wolfe at her home on
Grant St. , and Middleport at 8:50
p.m . took Herbert Gilkey to Veterans Memorial from his home on
Broadway St.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FATHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY
Make Elberfelds your shopping center for gifts for your Dad . - B_ig
Selections - Excellent quality plus - Hallmark Cards and G1ft
wrap- Sale Prices Continue On------

•MEN'S DENIM JEANS
•MEN'S DRESS BELTS
•SPORT SHIRTS

DAY

Sale Starts Today

llood throqll J1nt 20, 1182
While f!Uintltlta l11t.
Q111nt1tr rl&amp;llta rtatntd.
Wt art not rtapoaalblt for
trpo&amp;raphloal trron. Sorrr, •• dtaltra.

TANK DESTROYED- An lsraell soldier shows a
Soviet-built T-'2 Syrian tank to joumallsts Sunday in
the El-Fatar valley where it was destroyed last Wed-

-

•SUMMER SHORTS
•WESTERN SHIRTS
•SWIM TRUNKS

OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY, INCLUDING THURSDAY
9:30 TO 5 P.M. - FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

By The Associated Press
Isr aell forces surrounded Palesti nian guerrillas in Beirut today after
a spectacular tank charge led by
Israel's defense minister . I sr ael's
chief of staff, Lt . Gen. Raphael Ey tan, also rode tD the Lebanese capt·
tal and told Israel radio the PLO's
nerve center was "Isolated, encircled and cut otf."
With Israeli tanks at the presidential palace in suburban Baabda
and the Beirut airport sut rounded
by Israeli guns but not seized, Lebanese Presfdent Ellas Sarkis formed
a six-man committee to try tD cope
with the " grave situation" in his
war-ravaged country.
An airport employee, trapped in
the terminal for five days, told The
Associated Press by phone he could
see no Israeli troops or tanks inside
the airport although l sraell tanks
stood close to the end of the south-

-·

"WE CARRY AFULL LIIIE OF
UYWOODIE, MEDICO, AIID YELLO-BOLE PIPES!y

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

nesday when Israel's armored forces ractd up the
valley In a three-pronged assault agalrurt Syrian army
defenders in eastern Lebanon. (AP Wirephoto).

•Regular
•Automatic Drip

CAR SEAT

r.rJ~M~I ~·;:E~I~ectro - Perk
CHOitC:EIW..A~

~

::iJ

69~

•low Battery
Indicator light

~~~11_!111•

II-

69~

•FM Indicator

•Model - JM47
•Fastback Shope
•Heavy -Duty Multi -Co lor Fiber
0

36"

X

20"

'3''

'1''

NELSON'S REG. 14.n

S Lb.

'1499

CARD SHUFFLER

NELSO~S~E~~7

'

NELSON'S REG .

J
I

$7 .. .

• Oper1tts on 2" C" H11vy
Duty or Alkllint Bltterits

1100011-IUTDOOR

• fB•ntrln not ineludtd)

PORTABLE LAMP

---

NELSON'S REG. $2,25

IMG-b-tOOWI
Portable lamp, injection
molded, adjustable shade,
convenient push button,
individually boxed, con
plete with battery.

•Keeps phone numbers ,
calendar, pen &amp; poper,
clips hondv.
•Model-4179
NELSON'S REG. 56.49
•11" )( 7%"

NELSON'S REG •• 6.99

16-PIECE MOTIVE SUPER
DRIVER SOCKET/SCREWDRIVER

'6''

'4''

•9 Socket bits
•5 screwdri ver bit s

NELSON'S REG. ft.fl

'3''

!

Fam o u s Amity top-grain
leather Body Billfold•® at
a special once·a·year sale
price. Your choi ce of supersoft leath ers in Tri -Fold, Direc tor o r Identifier Body

Biltfoldt!' olyteo. Gift boxed.

NELSON'S REG. 14.99

$ 300

CAR VACUUM CL

GREAT®
SHAKES

•for a neat appearing cor
·~asy

to,. cleon

\1.

•Model - 671C
•15 Foot Cord

you buy

a

multi-purpose

No. 4795
.

Mauoge

massage cushiOn
by

WAHL

'5''

NELSON'S REG. 11.99

Only.

®

,,:,,

Refresh and Invigorate tired , aching
feet . Great for legs , thighs . neck and
shou lders . Slip your fHt Into the pouch
slats, stretch out and relax .

Made

111

USA

Reg. Price . . -. --"'·"
AdPrlce .. . . . .. ns."

l!~ifSP Ti6&amp;S llDP~DPSfi()R

Leu

NELSON'S RIG. tf ...

Mfg. Rebate .. - - - U.OO

Your Cost
After Rebate

S

1299

1
•'

OFFER GOOD
Thru 6-30-82

Romoto Control Diol Selector Switch
features "~·in - 1 " dial setting for Heat
Only. Heat &amp; Massage &amp; Massage

Only.

NEW 1nd oh, so rsl1xing/

The Farmers Bank is strong secure
and growing with Pomeroy and Meigs
County.
The Farmers Bank is also community minded-as the only community
.owned bank in town.
For all of your financial needs,
come to the Farmers Bank.

Re.ular Price .. "'·"
Atl Jirlce , .... , n1."

Leu

Just pre11 on tl"e pillow, or letn
back on II. and 1tturna itself on to deliver 1 gentle, soothing, pul -

Mft,lellate .. . .. U.M
YIIUr Coet

lltlng

After itellate

ma11ag~

"WRITE 011 TIME
LCD PEII WATCH"
Elegantly designed pen with built in 5 !unction LCD readout ol
hours, minutes, seconds , day &amp;
dote.
-year permanent calendar in
memory.
•Lo,na-lile battery included .
•Rr·u•l•ed stainless steel finish .
eok - proof refill inter ·
changeable with Porker refills .
•Attractively gilt boxed .
•Model PN -7

'6''

that reltJCII tight

thouldtr tnd neck muaclts, tchlng calvaa 01 Ured 1111. Operatea
on two "0" Qella, 10 you ctn u11 It
anywhere-It home, In the office.
outdoora, even whi le riding In 1

Farltlers
Bank

$6''

MANUFACTURER'S REBATE
when

•p lugs Into cigarette lighter

The Farnters Bank

20 Lb1.

.,.,

Mtdt for ell ntnd1rd
ctrch

lilt

:I:

~
u.

•

•Includes 2 Decks of
cards , pod &amp; pencil
•Folds up compactly

"Pvsh·lunon" fingertip
control

~
~
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•No . 4&amp;903 ~ 8oxed

• Autom1tiully 5huffln
one or two decks of c1td1

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\

DESK SECRETARY

&gt;

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CARD CADDY SET

•Model · 4891
•12 Volt , swivel head
•9" inch diameter
•Plugs Into cigarette lighter

MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER

v\ \
.!

Our Low Sale Price 16.49
Mali -In Rebote $3 .00

:·:

PLUG IN CAR FAN
I

\

BUTCHER'S
U BLEIID

Purin.1

I

$3 ,49 BAG
AfTU RIIATI

IUTOIITIC CORDLESS

NELSON'S REG . nt.n

EMMOGENE HOLSTEIN

Fs

lOW lORE
IEITY TASTE

Price with Rebate

-11'!"·

would like to express my very sincere
appreciation to all the
people who voted for
me in last Tuesday's
Primary Election.

·Strong ~ Secure
and
Community Minded

Oz. lo"

BRAND DOG MEAL

12 Oz. lo"

THANKS

Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said his army had no
intention of taking Beirut , but Moslems in Wes t Beirut , wher e the Pales tine Libetatlon Organization has
its command centet , feared a
bloody assault .
A PLO-Israel!_ truce collapsed
Sunday just 12 houi-sanertt-took
effect. PLO chief Vasser Arafat appealed to Israel for another truce.
The Israeli advance Into Beirut
was spearheaded by a lightning
tank charge led by 1st aeli Defense
Minister Ariel Sharon into Baabda
overnight to take the town without a
single shot fired .
"We have not come to fight you,"
Sharon told Lebanese military police protecting the pres idential pa-

~2

I'Uillll
HIIIH I'IIOTEII®

IIAND CAT POOD
TUNA, IIIP 01 OOUIMn

•Snooze Alarm

NELSON'S REG . 11.29

'129

TEIDEII YtmES®

cluded)

No Deposi t/ No Return

IIAND 000 SNACK

11 Oz. loK
•Battery Backup ·
(Bott•ry not In-

2 l itre Bottl e

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~Gil;

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The port of Jounleh, north of Bel·
rut, was jammed with hundreds of
r efugees trying to flee. U.N. oHlcials said France sent tow· ships
escorted by two gunboats to evacuate its nationals, but they were
turned back by Israeli gunboats
blocking the Lebanese coast.
But Christians who remained In
Beirut were reported jubilant tD see
the lsraells. Israeli radio described
Lebanese in the Beirut suburb of
Aramoun standing on terraces
waving to the invaders.
A separate truce between Israel
and Syrian went into effect Friday
and generally was holding. War
correspondents repotted that most
Syrian forces had pulled back toward the Syrian border.

lace. "We have come to sa ve the
Lebanese people from the Syrians
and the Palestinians ."
Eytan told Israel radio the guer·
tillas "have suffered very heavy
losses and their leaders - at least
some of them -have fled ." He said
his orders wer-e " to ellminate the
terrorists."
George Habash, leader of the
PLO's mU!tant wing, vowed to tum
Beirut into " a new Stalingrad," a
r eference to the Soviet defense of
Stallngrad against Nazi armies ln
1942-43 that turned into a m ajor defeat for the German forces on the
Russian front.
The Lebanese Christians control
the north, so the Palestinians etfectively have no escape.

FATHER'S DAYI4&gt;T4t!tl'l

FATHER'SDA

\Area deathj Israeli forces surround guerrillas
Myrtle C. Durst

Meigs County happenings
V1•1t•rans Memorial

Reagan also Issued a statement
marking the six-month anniver sary of the mU!tary crackdown in
Poland.
He said the spirit of Pollsh people
" remains unbroken" and that U.S.
sanctions are having a growing impact on the coun!J1''s beleaguered
economy.
The president vowed that the
broad r ange of economic sanctions
imposed against the milltary government last December will remain in place until martial Jaw is
ended, political prisoner s are freed
and a dialogue Is opened with the
Catholic Church and the Solidarity
labor movement.
Reagan said the sanctions have
had "a stt ong impact on the Pollsh
economy, a fact which is acknowledged by Polish o!flclals. "
" With each passing day," he
said , " the impact of these sanctions
grows, particularly in Ught of the
unwillingness of Warsa w's aU!es to
provide substantial assistance."

NELSON'S REG. 19.99

oar, truck , but, 11111'1 or planet

Mtaturlng

12 ~ x

12"x4 " 1hlc:k, the

Automatic: Muuge Pillow 11
ccweNd In_a pluth cloth mtterlll.
avalllble In earthtone colora. Try
It'... Y9U'II Iewe. ltl (Makes a great

.,GM .
. NILIOH'• .1.•, ...
FATHER'S

.

Member FDIC

Eft'S

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