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                  <text>-- Morris

Board plans no changes
Thjre will be no changes In stu·
dent assignments a t the Salem Center Elementary School for the
1982·&amp;1 school year. Dan C. Morris,
superlnt.endent of the Meigs Local
School District, indicated Tuesday
night.
The announcement that no
changes would be forthcoming at
the Salem Center School for the
next school year came, Supt. Mar·
rls said, In conjunction with a decision by the board of education.
Three representatives from Salem Township attended the regular
meeting of the district's board of
education In Middleport Tuesday
night and Indicated following the
business session that they would
like to be on the agenda. However,
they were not added to the agenda
because they had not requested to
be placed there at the start of the

meeting when additions to the
agenda were approved by the
board.
However, the three were permit·
ted to Inquire about the school.
Board member Larry Powell said
that he would know nothing about
the status of the school untll hereceived a report from Supt. Manis.
Supt. Morris then Indicated there
will be no changes for the next
school year.
Several months ago, Supt. Morris
had recommended that three
grades ol the Salem Center School
be moved to facUlties ln Rutland.
However, no action was taken at
that time.
Residents of the Salem Center
community protested moving the
students at the time of the proposal.
At that time, Supt. Morris had lndl·
cated that there would also have to

be necessary changes ln other
schools of the district and at that
time the board of e(lucatlon took no
action In regard to Salem Center
Indicating that It wanted a full report on changes recommended ln
other schools before any action
would be taken on the Salem Center
Sch90l proposal.
At last night's meeting, the board
heard Gerald Pierron, Portsmouth, architect hired by the board
In April, outline plans for remodel·
lng and redecoration of the present
junior high school ln Middleport so
that It will accommodate all junior
high students and the Central Build·
lng can be abandoned.
Pierron showed the board draw·
lngs of the planned Improvement s
and a copy of these will be on file ln
the superintendent's office for
further stud'r by the board. He said

also that It Is hoped to secure state
approval by the end of the month so
that the project can be advertised
for bids, about a four week procedure. The board has Indicated that
It would like to have the junior high
Improvement made by the beglnnlng of the new schQOI year.
A discussion was held on one bid
received on the construction of a
new high school track facUlty.
Supt. Morris Indicated that the bid
Is higher than anticipated and the
board tablf!d the matter until It decides what action to take. There Is a
posslblllty that the project will be
readvertlsed.
The board changed Its July meet.
lng from July 20 to 7 p.m. on July 13
and set special sessions for 1 p.m.
on June 24 and 25 to Interview applicants for the high school principal·
s hip vacancy created by the

he Daily
Vol.3l,No.30
copyrighted 1982

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The closing of eight Hatfield and
McCoy stores ln Ohio and West Vlrglnla, Including one In Gallipolis, remained a mystery today.
Corporate officials cannot be
reached for comment concerning
the closing and state officials ln
Ohio and West Vlrglnla say they
know little about the situation.
However. a temporary restrain·
lng order was Issued Tuesday ln the
U.S. District Court In Huntington
prohibiting Hatfield and McCoy
from selling or disposing of any
merchandise owned by the WestInghouse Credit Co., which brought
the suit.
Attorney Randall Trautwein,
who represents Westinghouse, said
the restraining order does not stop
the company from doing business.
He would not comment further on
the case.

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company ot'!lces In Huntington and
South Point, Ohio.
llm Huffman, assistant attorney
general tor West VIrginia, said his
office has received several complaints from customers of Hatfield
and McCoy. Some customers have
not been able to .receive mere han·
dise that has a lready been paid for.
Huffman said his office Is check·
lng Into the complaints, but at this
time he does not know what the sl·
tuatlon Is.
"We're In the dark. I don't know
what the status of the company Is,"
Huffman said. "We're trying to find
out what's going on."
A spokesperson for the Ohio At·
torney General's office said she has
not received any complaints
against Hatfield and McCoy yet.
She said consumers who do have
a complaint can call the attorney
general's office. toll-free, at l ·!W282-0515.

NEW POSTMASTER - Margaret Edwards, who
has been clerk at the Rutland Post Office for the past
five years, was named po8tmaster Tuesday morning.
Lou Jordan of the ZanesviUe office, a J1081al systems

examiner, right, was present for the offirial fhanging
of hands. Bruce Taylor, left, in charge of the offirt· since Octobe,r is pictured here handing over the keys to
Mrs. Edwards. Louise Eads is the clerk, and Lee Wood,
the rural route carrier at the office.

2. Replace front

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The Gallipolis store, located In
the Sliver Bridge Plaza, closed Frl·
day. Employees were told It was
closing for "Inventory" and would
reopen Sunday.
It did not reopen, and employees
were then told It would open Tues·
day. However, all five Gallipolis
employees received "pink slips"
Tuesday from Paul Spiers. advertising director for the firm, and the
store has remained closed. A security guard Is the only person at the
store.
'Spiers could not be reached today
for comment. Tuesday, Spiers told
this newspaper chances of the Gallipolis store reopening were
"slim" . J. Michael Hale, president
of ~he firm, and Richard Martz, secretary of the firm, could not be
reached for comment today.
No one answered the phones at

bearings

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•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 16, 1982

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Dennis Eichinger was hirf'd as a
driver f'ducatlon teacher for the
su mmer to be paid at the rate of$50
per student upon the completion of
the course. The board hlrf'd Dorothy Oliver, Mike Wilfong and
Dana Kessinger as tPachers of a
count y-wide summer school being
funded throug h the Meigs County
Juvenile Coun . There Is no cost to
the districts on the school which will
be stressing matht•matics. English
and social studies.
David Pope and EvPrett Hoi·
come were authorized to a ffPnd the
a nnual voca tional agriculture confer ence to be held in Columbus .July
12-14. It was agreed to continue with
the basic services of SF:OVF:C for
the next school year.
The board approved a schf'dule
for the 1982-&amp;1 school year with
IContinued on page 14 1

Hatfield and McCoy
stores reinain closed

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retirement of James Diehl. Supt.
Morris reported that there were 29
applicants. These, he said, were
narrowed to seven and now the list
ot applicants who will be Inter·
viewed by the board has been ~e­
duced to three. At the special
sessions, the board also Is expected
to discuss negotiations, finances
and personnel. During a discussion
on the work ot the Johnson Control
Co. at several schools, Supt. Morris
reported that the company has
found that the entire Meigs High
School could be alr conditioned for
about $12,275.
The board accepted I he resignations of Carol Crow as junior class
advisor; Sharon Rollins, as a
teacher; Ann Webster, teacher who
Is retiring; Wilke Holman, custodian, who Is retiring; Barb Rostad.
glven a one year leave of absence.

Israel honors pledge not to invade

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Told court he w·as "a dead man'
CHARLESTON - A Logan County man and former Gallla
County, Ohio resident who predicted hls death ln testimony during a
murder trial last month Is dead following a one-car accident, state
pollee said today.
.
Russell "Rusty" Greene ..10, of Christian. died Saturday, one
month to the day after he told a Wyoming County court he was "a
dead man" for testifying that he saw Joey Hall, Bidwell, shoot
James Laxton to death during a 1981 drug transaction.
Wyoming County PrOSfCUtlng Attorney Paul R. "Butch" Goode
said foul play Is not suspected In Saturday's accident, but he said he .
has asked state pollee to Inspect Greene's car "from top to bottom"
to make sure.
"It's one hell of a coincidence," Goode said. "It bears looking
Into."
During the Hall trial, Greene testified that he had links to organIzed crime and predicted that he would be killed for testifying. Hall
was convicted of first-degree murder.
State pollee said Greene was kllled about 2:50a.m. when the car he
was driving went out of control, veered Into a ditch and traveled
nearly 50 feet before striking a pole and overturning.
A autopsy performed by Dr. Vasudeo Kshfrsagar determined thal
Greene died of head Injuries, pollee said.
Kshlrsagar said Greene's blood alcohol content was more than .1
percent, which would have made hlm legally Intoxicated.

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Receives temporary reprieve
MANSFIELD - The' Mansfield office of the National Weather
Service, which was scheduled to close this weekend, has won a
temporary reprieve.
Marvin Miller; chief meteorologist at Cleveland, said Tuesday
that the Mansfield otrlce was one of 38 due to be closed on June 20
because of lack of a federal budget. But he sald they will now be kept
open until Oct. 1, the day the federal budget for flscal19&amp;1 goes Into
effect.
GU Baird, chairman of the Save the Mansfield Weather Station
Committee, said this Is the sixth time In 13 years that the Mansfield
otrlce has faced the threat of closing.

Name Cohen keynote speaker
COLUMBUS- WUburCoheli, former secreuiry ot Health, Education and Welfare, wUl be the keynote speaker at the 1982 Governor's
Conference on Aging, scheduled June 23-24.
Cohen Is i'row chairman of "Save Our Security," a coalition which
has proposed a program to deal with problems facing the Social
Security system. He wUl speak on the opening day ot the conference.

By The Associated Press
ldentlflf'd himself as Col. Arnon told
Israel today honored Its pledge Associated Press correspondent
not to Invade Beirut but let Its LebaAlex Efty. "The Christians are
nese Christian allies pick up the fighting by themselves and are
fighting with artillery barrages
planning to take the university and
against Palestinian guerrillas
push the Palestinians northward
trapped In the western part of the
and westward from there.
capital.
. "We are just looking," Arnon
The exploding shells shattered a
said. "We finished our goals acfew hours of relative calm In warcording to our plan. We blocked Beldevastated Beirut, where residents
rut from all parts, we control the
had braced for an Israeli adva nce
(surrpundlng) mountains and
since Tuesday when Syrian and Isthat's about lt."
raeli tanks shattered a four-day-old
Lebanese state television warned
truce.
Tuesday night that although Israeli
Correspondents observed to·
forces have said they will not stonn
day's shooting from dormant IsPalestine Uberatlon Organization
raeli tanks In Baabda near the
enclaves ln predominantly Moslem
hilltop palace of Lebanese Presiwest Beirut, the capital's 1 million
dent Elias Sarkis, where Israel! ar- ' Inhabitants should prepare for an
mored col umns are solid ly
Invasion "because one cannot trust
entrenched.
Israel's assurances to the
The Christian Lebanese guns
contrary."
pounded Palestinian guerrilla
PLO commanders ln Beirut said
strongpolnts at the Lebanese Unl·
guerrmas were hastUy relntorclng
verslty ln the narrow coastal plain
positions to repel an Israeli attack.
along the main airport runway.
Reporters saw bulldozers heaping
Correspondents said the Palestinimounds of dirt onto streets, apparans apparently were not flrlng
ently to stop tanks.
back.
The guerrllla organlza tlon' s chief
"We are not becoming Involved
spokesman, Mahmoud Labadl dertght now," an Israel! officer who
nied Israel! reports that the PLO

Exteaded Oblo For-ecatM - Friday lhrou~ Sunday: Fair Friday.
Chance of showers or thunderstonns Saturday, ending Sunday.
Highs In the 70s. Lows In·the 50s and low ~· .
Showers or thunderSton118llkelY tonight. Slx.ty percent chance of
rain. Lows around 60. Winds Y.nable.less than 10 mpb. Variable
cloudiness '11111rsday with !I 00 percent chance of showers. Highs

75-80.

.• '

;.

•

•fi.

blazf'd away at each other for four
hours around the Lebanes~ capi·
tal's airport. breakin g the truce es·
tablished Fridav b~tween th e
Jewish sta te and It s Syrian foe.
The Tel Aviv military comma nd.
reponing the clash. said Syrian forces and Palestin ian guerrillas born
bardf'd Israeli troops with tank fire
east of the airport and the Israelis
fired back .
Beirut radio stations said the Israelis and Syrians battled aga in as
an Israeli armored column moved
south from the Beirut suburbo!Hadath and drove through the Syrian
held town of Shweifat. four miles
south of Beirut and a mile east of
the airport.
In the Lebanese city of Sidon 19
miles south of the ca pit al. PLO
guerrilla units launched a brief
mortar barrage Tuesday.

Discuss landfill site
Stuart Wilms, engineer for John
David Jones and Assn., met with
the Meigs County Commissioners
Tu~ay to discuss the progress ot
the development ot a new landfill
site.
Additional soU borings have been
made at the site to determine the
amount of fill needed. A report on
the findings has been submitted to
the Environmental Protection
Agency. Wilms plans to meet with

officials of the EPA to review all the
engineering reports.
In other business, County Treasurer George Collins requested an
extension to pay the second halt of
real estate taxes. The board
granted the extension from,June 18
to July 16.
The board appropriated $1,578 to
the Comprehensive Emergency
Service tor Chlldren and $5,446 to
the Juvenile Court program.

Coin dealer robbed
If Meigs County coin dealer was
robbelj early this morning at his

State f~recast

was crippled and its leader. Yasser
Arafat was hiding In the Soviet
Embassy.
Israel! Prime Minister Mena·
chem Begin flew to the Unltf'd
States Tuesday, the lOth day of Israel's Invasion of Lebanon to destroy the PLO and rout Syrian
forces. He is expectf'd to ask Presi·
dent Reagan to deploy U.S. forces
ln southern Lebanon after an Is·
raeli pullout to keep PLO gunners
from shelling northern Israeli
targets.
As dusk tell Tuesday, antl·PLO
Lebanese Christian mlllti"men
who control Beirut's eastern sector
shelled and machine-gunned Palestinian positions on the west side,
dropping flares to direct gunners.
Guerrillas returned the fire in shootouts that tapered off early today.
residents said.
Earlier, Israeli and Syrian tanks

biJslness location In Athens.
Athens City Ponce said that that
Jack Wamsley, Leading Creek
Road, l'yfe!gs County, reported that
two white men had Ylsll.ell his lw:lme
ori Leading Creek Road at about 6
a ..m , Wednesday. They forced
Wamsley Into his own vehlcl,~. a
sliver ·1982 Dotson station wagon,
for the ,drive to the Wamsley coin
· sllop, called the Hocklng Trading

Post on Richland Ave., In Athens.
Once at the shop the two men,
reports state, ,robbed the establishment ot a quanlty ot gold and sUver,
the amount not having been deter·
mined tf1!s morning. Wamsley was
left tied up In the establishment. He
'treed himself and notified poUoe
about 7: 36 a.m.
'
Wamsley was not Injured.
Athens pollci! Were still at the coin
shop late this morning but an all
polnta_bulletln has been Issued for
the Wamsley vehicle.

ANOI'BER DERAILMENT- Nine cars from a Chessle System
train, loaded wltb coal, denDed from the tracks behind the Mabelene
Drive subdlvlsloa 011 J~ Pike In Gallla County at 1: 46 p.m. Tues~. Ooe car Wt!at compWely off the tracks while the other eight
l'eiiUIIJJed on. Aooonllng to die Gallla County Sheriff's Department,
approximately M fee* of tnek· were tom up In the derailment. No
llljurleB were reported Ill lbe lnddl!a&amp;, 1111d railroad Inspectors were
expected to be oa the IICEIIe todaJ to de&amp;ennlne tbe accident cause.
Fwiher co~ from Clleeale offldalll was Wl&amp;vallable this momlng,
(Kel&amp;b Wllloa photo).

�.

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

Wednesday, June 16, 1982

Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 16, 1982

Majors

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Nixon never looks
back at Watergate
Rich&lt;ll d M. Nixon alwa1·s lookro fm wa1 d to history. But while hi story is
pending. h ~·s following lh~ Satchel Paig~ philosophy.
" I ncv~r look back ... ~ ixon said , 10 years from Watergate. " I neve r look
back ...
"Don't look bark . s om~t h i n g ma y be ga ining on you," advisro Paige. the
black pitch,.,. who diro last w""k at the approxi mate age of 75. He never
lookPd back to "a~· how old hf' rea l I~ · \'-'as
To Ni xon. ttw ThUJ sda.\' annivrrsary of thP Wat erga te break -in that
began his political downfall is an unpleasa nt remindet, but not an occasion

rm 1eview . .. ... It &gt;eminds me. of COUI se. of the fa ct that I went through it
10 yra rs agu and 1r livf'd it SC'vcral times since," he said in a CBS-TV
intC'r\'iPw . "As far as I'm concprnf'd. I'vr sa id evPrything I ca n on the

subject: I ha ve nothing to add and I'm looking

Concerning the mess in the Middle
East. a few observatons :
lilt was sa i~ of Mr. Reagan whi le
he was in E urope thai the Israeli
eruption cost him dearl y in the eoin
of prestige. Rea ga n is viewl·t.l ex officio as the leader of the free world.
And this most definitely includes
lsrctel, not only beca use Israel is a
fret• country, but beca use Israel is
fret• tha nks tl&gt;reetly to the Un&gt;ted
Slcltt·.s, whose patronage was, cmd
continues to be, indispt•nsabll' tu the
survival of Israel.

to

thcfulure 1alherthan the

past."

Nixon. 69. sa id h ~ S&lt;'&lt;'s that futur~ "primaril;• in the foreign policy area ...
11 an•li ng at his own exp&lt;'nsP. but with the know ledge of the adminislrallon.
He didn 't ~xpl ai n his foreign pol icv role beyond that, but sa id his ll avels
would be p!'&gt;SOnal !&gt;ips.
Long before WatPrgate and resignat ion. Nixo n felt, and said. that history
would judg~ him mm e favo rablv than man;· of his contempora ries. H~
said th(• p&lt;'rsp!'Cti\·e or history would magnify the ac hievement s of his

barrassingly conspi cuous nwment
of Presitknt Reaga n's lcrm in of·
fwe. II was as &gt;f a bill collector had
t 'OITH' charginl-! into the hold room
on tlw wedding ni ght. There wa s
R.t.•a gan with 700 U.S. journalists
tracking him , plus equi va lent numbers from other t'ountrics. when a
client sta te in effect declared war.
Tht· heSitati on of till' Statt• Departmen t in Washington, w1d the two·
day hesitation of the president, flatly
to request the Israelis to withdraw
reflected both lhe politica l power of
lsral'i and its friends m· the United
States and a latent sympathy with
Israel over continued provocations
by the Palestine Liberal&gt;on
Organization along the LebaneseIsraeli border. When the president
finally spoke out, he did so most
bluntly - and most bluntly was
ignored by IsraeL Cease-fire. yes.
said Beg in : withdrawa l, no.
2 l The Israeli s' scn!:ie of timing
may be undiplomatic, but the
Isradis' senst' of priorities is adrmrable. The decision wa s quite simply th&gt;s , that the eonccntrations of
PLO military , w&gt;th firepower
regularly augmented by Sov1et.
Lrbyan, Iraqi and Syrian suppl iers.
could no lonJ.!er bt• t o l e r::~t cd, part&gt;culari)' inasm uch as the PLO's
stre ng th was ri sin ~ to the point thai
Lebanon, as an independent state,
had become pure fiction . Israel's
determination to move, prescinded
from surrounding political cir-

administt a lion. partic ula t l y' i n foreign policy .

11 onica ll v. I hal concern was a faclor in his undoing. One of the explana tions !01 the White HouS(' ta ping system thatu&gt;corded Watergate evidence
against him was Nixo n' s co nce rn that there be a full , acc urate record of his
pt esidrncy fm futurf' historians.

Even now. Nixon sa id in the CBS inte1v iew. he gets a half-dozen leiters a
wPt'k &lt;JSking wh;· he didn 'l burn the tap&lt;'s. "I I should have lx'Cn done," he
sa id . "Rutthf' main part is, they should neve1 have been stalled ."
ThP achif'VPmrnt s most likf'l:v to S('('Ure Nixon's pla ce in history were

allainrd dUI ing his firslterm as presidenl, before Wale&gt;gate. re-election
and the second te&gt;m cut shor1 by resignat ion.
Among them were the reopening of America n relations with China afler
a generation of host ili ty. the negot iations lhat ended U.S. participation in
the Vietnam wa r. a nd the first strategic arms limita tion agreement wllh
the Sovi C' t Union.

At home. Nixon p1 omoted the prog&gt;am of&gt; evenue-sharing designed to
shale money. and therefore power. wilh state and local govemments. II
was the first step in a p1 ocess President Reaga n still is pursuing. Also, the
Environmental p, otec tion Age nc y was crea ted during Nixon' s
administrati on.

.Decisions, decisions
.

'

TheS(' arl' tough limes for economic forecasters. which is to say the
times demand dec isions. Will the economy bounce. or will il jus Idrag llself
along as it has been doing? Or even fall again?
Billions of dollars conceiva bly could be at stake. If, fm instance. the
economist fO&gt; esees a n improvement, he might lip his company's decision
, in favor of plant ex pansion . He can lip it the other way too.
_ And . you might sur mise. if he makes the wrong decision he could lip
·himself &gt;ight out of a job. The heat 's on. presenting for ecasters with the
toughest job of a ll , which Is to ca ll a turn In the economy.
While man y economists aren't in the forecasting business, those most
often in the public .eye are. and their reputations could be ruined by a bad
ca lL True, the public has a sho&gt;1 memO&gt; y, but corporate managers have
long ones; lhey aren'l inclined to forget faulty advice.
Based on Ihe facls. Murray Weidenbaum. c hairman of the president's
-council of economic advisers. reaches one conclusion. Edward Yardeni.
economist for E. f . Hulton. the securilies film, reaches another.
"Business ha s been reducing inventories at an extremely rapid rate ...
says Weldenbaum . who understandably lakes a positive approach.
"Meanwhile. consumer spending in real terms has Increased slightly."
In a statemenl to the Joir : Economic Commlltee of Congress, the Rea. gan alde expressed his opinion that the Jul y lax cut will expand consumer
: saving and spending.
Two da ys laler Yardeni began his weekly "Economics Alen" with the
opinion "The economy Is fa lling off a cliff again ." No, he sa id, the economy
Is not coming oul of recession. It's going deeper Into II .
Using much Ihe sa me data, along with !avo&gt; lte Indicators of his own,
Yardenl expressed the opinion that "the w01 st of the recession stilllles
ahead."
Generally speaking. no number of internal factors ca n Nmpromlse
: 1 eputations mote than incorrectly calling major turns In the economy.
. Right now the cha llenge keeps many economists awake nights, counting
. sheep and various numbers that spill out of their computers. Declslons,
decisions.

.Today

•

In

history

Today L~ Wednesday, J une 16, the 167th day of 1982. There are 198 days
left In the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On June 16,1963, the first woman space traveler, Valentina Tereshkova,
- was launched Into orbit by the Soviet Union.
On this date:
In 1917, the first All-Russian Congress of the Soviets was convened.
In 1920, the Council of the League of Nations held lts first publlc meeting
. at St. James Palace In London.
In lm, the U.S. Senate voted against a plan calllng t.or total Amertcan
troop withdrawal trom VIetnam by the end of the year.
And In 1976, U.S. Ambassador Francis Meloy and his counselor, Robert
: Waring, were kidnapped and killed In Beirut, Lebanon.
· : : Ten years ago: Wrtter Cl!Hord Irvlng was sentenced to tw,o years In jail,
:and his wUe to two months, In connection with Irving's 75().1housand-dollar
. :s\ale of a bogus Howard Hughes biography to McGraw-Hill. .
- · Five years ago: Communist Party leaders elected Leonid Brezhnev
'President of the Soviet Union.

cxerc&gt;sed in behalf of national interest. If nothing else impinged on
the general situation, Israel could
not be criticized. That of course Isn't
the case. and we must therefore give
thought to those surrounding cirtwnstances, foremost among them .
31 The declining prestige of Israel
in the area, and of the United States
in the area, and the reasons for it.
Time magazine published on May
24 the results of a pull administered
by a highly respected research institute in Tel Aviv. It was of sentiment
among West
Bank
Palestinians, i.e., a poll of men and
women who ha ve 'lcxpericnecd
Israeli rule for 15 years. and who
associate that rule with America n
patronage.
Question : Which country do you
admire rnore , the Sov iet Union or
the United States'
Answer : The Soviet Union , 72 per··ent. The United States, 1.6 percent.
Question : Arc then• any Israelis

you can trust?
Answer : No, 70 percent. Yes , 29

dmninates brings on anti-A1nerican ,

percent .

as ferocious as these figures would
suggest' And if so, isn 't it time for
responsible Israelis to move on the
matter of the Camp David accords?
Nothing would seem clearer than
lhis, that Mr. Begin's government
has no intention of making available
to the Palestinians a homeland in the
West Bank or in Gaza . Given the
temperature of Palestinian hostility,
this may be understandable. But a
rift between moderate Palestinians
and irredentists like Ararat and
Habash has got to be the diplomatic
thrust of the next period, and here
Mr. Reagan needs to be very tough.
The whole Israeli case has rested on
the right of a homeless people to find
a home . That generality has got.to
extend to the Palestinians. And a
huge eampaign needs to be mounted
to persuade the Palestinians that
there really ARE substantive difft•rences between the United States
and the Soviet Union.

If that IS the opinion of
Palestinians who ha ve lived under
the Israelis, supported by the Unitc'tl
States. our diplomatic-psychological
problems are profound . What is it
about the Sovrel Union that has carned the approval of 72 percent of the
Palestinians' Their anti-semitism'
The support the Soviet Union, directly and indirectly, gives to the PLO'
The association of the Soviet Union
as the enemy of that ottler superpower which &gt;s backing the Israel
lhe Palestinian s so ardently
distrust'
41 What will bt· the situation in
southern Lebanon , a few years hen''"· if Israel stays on as an occupying
powt&gt;r? Obviously Israel's mission is
to neutralize at least 25 miles of what
would now be an lsraeli-PLO
demilitarized znne. But does it
follow that that whieh Israel

"" ""
" "'" .m ''•
'
""
".,
"'
,.,'"
,. " "'"'.,.
""
"' "'"

pro-Soviet and anti-Israel sentiment

~'11Gamftl

O!tcago 8. Phlladf&gt;lphla s

PUtsburRh l:l. Nev.· York .1
Sa n Francbro 4. Cincinnati J
~ Louis l, Montreal 2. II lnnlng'l
Atlanla

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ea.etern Dtvilllon

w

supported the Reagan tax cut and
budget last year.
Congressman Mottl was an incwnbent Democrat who had consistently supported all the Reagan
measures. He was a self-styled
" Conservative Democrat" and as
such had joined with a group of
southern Democrats who chose to
ride on the coat tails of a thenpopular president. But the
Democratic party took a dim view of
Matti's party treason. When Matti
filed for reelection in the 19th
District of Ohio, the Cuyahoga County Exe~utive Committee gave their
support to Edward Feighan, a county commissioner who had labor's
support. As a result Motti will spend
his last six months in office as an
avoided lame duck. House Speaker
Thomas (Tip) O'Neill said the defeat
of Mottl proved that Democrats who
vote for the Reagan economic

bt&gt;trou

11

Baltlmorp
MUwauket&gt;
Clf'Vl'land
NPW York
Toronto

31
31
29

L

P ti .

fi/J
614

NATIONAL LEAGUE
I:IATI'ING tl!ll at batsr · J .lllomj)9()n,
Pittsburgh, .112: Ru. JOI'Il'S, San Diego,
.327: Stea rns, Nt&gt;w York. .32.1: Oll vt&gt;r,
Montr1'fli, .322: Ramsey , St.Louis, ..121
RUNS: Murphy, Atlanta . 49: Lo.Smlth.
SI .Lwlli. II: O!!wson. Montn&gt;al. .w.
Ru.Jones, San Diego, 44: Sax , La; An!ll"
les, 39.
ltBI : Murphy, Atlan ta. ~ .
0 Olaz.
Phlladl&gt;lphla. 44: J Thomi!SOO. Pills
bUI'Jm, 'Ll: M~aM. Cllk'ago. 41 , King
man. Nt&gt;w York, 42.
HITS; Knight , Houston. 76: Sax, Los An
gcles. 76; Wllsoa, NPW York, 71. .I Ra y.
Pittsburgh, n : Bucknff, C'h lra~ro. 10.
Raines.
Montreal. 70:
K.ll(•rnandf&gt;';,
St.Lwb, 70: GuPfTt'fO, Los Anltf' IC!I. 7{1
DOUBLES: T.Kennedy. San Oi('gl). 19.
Lo.Smlth. St.Louis, 17: O.Sml!h. St.Loul~.
16: Gamt&gt;r, Houston. 16: Raln('S, Mon
treal.
15; D.Dlaz. Phlltldelphla . t :'i,
Knight, Houston. 15.
ffi!P~: Garnf'r. Houston. 4; ll 1'1M
W1thJ.
HOME RUNS: Murphy, Atlanta, 19,
Klngman , New York. 16; J . Thompson,
Pittsburgh, 14: 6 'f'le.d With 11 .
STOLEN BASES: Mol'('llo, Pittsburgh,
31: Dermer, Phlladelpllla, '!1 ; l..o.Smlrh.
St.Louli, 'Ji: Raines, Montreat. 24. WI~
gin s, San Diego, 22.
PIT C HI NG
!9 Df'rl!.l o ns

GB

-

"
"'" "'
.,,
"' "" ... '
:tl

I
6

.517

6~

OX!

7~

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATITNG 005 at bai!Jt : Harrah. Clf'veland. ..JI5: Bonnell. Toront o, .l'iO; McRae.
Kans as City ..347; W.WUson. Kan ~ City .
.312: Lowf'f'tstf&gt;ln , Ba ltimorl' . .lll.
RUNS: R.HendPrson, Oakland. 58: Ha rra h. Clt'Vt&gt;land, 49; Wathan. Kansas C'tty.
H : Moli tor. MllwaukN&gt;. 44: lllomton.
Clevf'land. 43.
RBI : Me RaP. Kan.-.as Ctty, 56: 111ornton.
Ot&gt;Veland. !'6: HrbPk . Mln ~a . ..S: Lu·
zlnskl, Chicago. 45: Otis, Kansa s City. l l
HITS: Harrah. Clf'Vf'land If&gt;. McRat&gt;,
Ka nsas City. 78; Garc ia. Toront o. 74:
Herndon, [){&gt;troll. 73: Cooper. Mllwaulu&gt;e.

cKAY. CLAW--~ ~T

A?;OCJL. N-lD A. PIECe
cP~-~Got~

tru~•

If'S. &amp;--4 • .m . 159
STRIK !t:OUTS: Ca rlt o n .
l'lllladf'l
phi a,
U2; Solo. CtnC'Inn atl, u:n: Ryan, llwston.
RJ: Rogt&gt;rs. Montrt&gt;a l, 7S: Valenzl.lf'la. Los
Angptrs.

16

n

Poll shows Woody lost magic
NEW YORK (AP) - Most
Ohioans do not want to see Woody
Hayes return as the football coach
at Ohio State University, according
to an Associated Press-NBC News
poll.
Fifty-nine percent said they
would not llke to see Hayes return
as coach of the Buckeye football
team, while 23 percent sald they
would like him to return and 18 percent sald they had no oplnlon.
The poll was conducted June 8
among 2,968 randomly sel~ted voters after they cast thelr prtmary
election ballots at 76 precincts
across the state.
After 28 seasons of coaching at
the Big Ten Conference school,
Hayes was fired after hlttlng a
Clemson University player In the
waning moments of the 1978 Gator
Bowl game.

~~
Unlike Gen . Eitan, however.
Khalaf's opposite number in the
lsraeli-PLO conflict. Gen . Rafael Kha laf is regarded by Western inEitan. the Israeli chief of staff. At lelligence analysts as far more effirst glance. Khalaf's eredentials fective than his boss in promoting
would seem to be no match for the PLO ca use. This, the conEilan's gung-ho militar y fidential profile says, is because
" his greater discipline has equipped
background.
But Khalaf is considered by him for contributing meaningful and
Western intelligence analysts as the precise views of the Palestinian
best tht· PLO has to offer. And. like movement . whereas Ararat might
Israel 's · Eitan , he is considered shoot from the hip."
Khalaf and Ararat have been budwilling to operate in the shadow of
Nwnero Uno. In Eitan's case. the dies since their student days ih
leader he pays obeisance to i:; Cairo. But while Arafat is an inMenachern Begin ; in Khalaf S' case, veterate trimmer, always open to
compromise to protect his political
it is Ararat.
"His style demands that he stay in position, Khalaf is an able and
the shadow of his leader," the con- willing decisionmaker. according to
fidential profile says of Khalaf. "It is the psychological profile.
Where Ararat " hesitates to do
suspected he &gt;s less confortable in
the limelight than Arafat, and anything that ·will disturb his
welcomes the number two spot for congeniality with others, .. Khalaf i:;
blessed - or cursed - with "ol&gt;its ptivacy."
1

JCl'livity and rationality." Though
he is every bit as politically savvy as
Arafat. the profile condudes that
" his more private style makes it less
obvious." There is no question that
Khalaf is totally dedicated to the
Palestinian cause.
He is acutely COftscious or his own
political skilb but applies them
"earefully and deliberately," according to the intelligence analysis.
And though he is overworked and under constant strain, he seems to
welcome this stress as self-

Even so, Hayes ranks as the
wlnnlngest football coach In the
school's history. His ~vlctorles Is
almost triple any other total posted
by an Ohio State football mentor.
Hayes' teams won national
championships In 1954 and 1968. He
turned out 13 Big Ten champions or
co-champions and eight Rose Bowl
squads. At the time of his dismissal,
Hayes' 238 career vlctortes ranked
only behind Alabama's Bear Bryant among tben-actlve coaches.
One of his former assistants, Earle Bruce, replaced Hayes ln January 1979 and was an Immediate
success. Bruce's first squad won all
11 regular-season games. He has a

ennobling.

One o{ Khalaf's stronger traits is
that he is not wrapped into a narrow
politieal ideology.
Just as the hard-charging Gen.
Eitan seems to be the perfect
sidekick for the wrong-willed Begi~.
the able but self-effacing Khalaf
seems to be the ideal cohort for tht

measures 'cannot survive."
The opposition party usually picks
up 20 or 30 seats in the House during
an off-year election. Becaus~ of the
resounding failure of Reaganomics
this year the Democrats can expect
to increase their plurality in the
House by 50 or 60 members. I can't
help feeling sorry for those brighteyed young Democrats whose tenns
will be limited to one. They were
conned by experts but their punishment at the election this fall is
something they will suffer alone.
Sadder but wiser young men, they no
doubt will be better members of the
Democratic party in years to come.
The handwriting on the wall in last
week's primary didn't point
specifically to the Democrats. The
Republican majority in the Sen~te is
also threatened. With only a third of
the Senate facing reelection, It
would be too much to expect that the
Democrats would regain control but
the Republican majority may be cut.
In New Jersey, the appointed
Republican Senator refused to be a
candidate and the Reagan-backed
candidate , Jeffrey Bell, was
defeated decisively by Margaret

F e nwick , a 73 - year old
Congresswoman with a liberal
voting record. Bell, who had served
as a Reagan adviser and publicly
proclaimed during the campaign
that Reagan was acting on his advice when he ramrodded the tax cut
thr9ugh Congress in 1981, .)l'as soundly thrashed by Fenwick, a pipesmoking grandmothe·r. Frank
Lautenburg, a severe and persistent
critic of Reagan and a wealthy computer magnate, will be the
Democratic candidate for New Jersey senator. He said the race will be
" between a staunch supporter or
Reaganomics and a staunch supporter of what's good for New Jersey." Either way the election goes
this fall, the Reagan influence in the
Senate will be weakened.
All in all, the primaries held in ten
states June 8 h~ld no bad newS' for
the Democrats and no good news for
the Republicans. In fact, the whole
week was nothing but bad news for
the Republicans. In spite of a friendly press, the Reagan trip to Europe
was not a glittering success. To
critics at home, the Reagan
speeches seeme~ designed to please
the listeners rather than to promote

1

U.S. policies. In England, ht pt'Ci
the RllllSians hell and in 0Pnn81i1
cooed like a dove. The Vendi*
economic conference ended wlfh Jlf
participants professedly haJlP1 6tlf
all secretly displeased. It was II'Nlff
assuredly not a week for which the
administration woujd be proud. 1'lw
demonstrations by hundreds at
thousands of European protestel't!
were not exactly consoling to the administration.
To make matters worse, the
Israeli anny picked that time to attack the Palestinian Liberation
Organization in Lebanon. With
characteristic thoroughness, they
were approaching Beirut as this is
being written. Secretary of State
Haig is announcing his intention of
going to Israel to "take charge" of
peace negotiations. In view of Haig'~
record as a negotiator, loqk for even
worse fighting to break out between
Israel and Syria. In the Falklands,
another war Haig negotiated,
England i:; actually admitting
losses, a clear sign that the war with
Argentina is rrot going welL
·
More bad news for the administration.

come respondents sald they had,
the more likely they were to say
they would not llke Hayes to come
back.
Among those who said they earn
more than $35,000 a year. for example, 72 percent sald they would not
llke to see Hayes return.
As wlth all sample surveys. the
results of AP-NBC News polls can
vary from the oplnlons of all Ohio
voters because of chance varia!Ions 1n the sample.
For a poll based on about 2,!0l
Interviews, the results are subject
to an error margin of 2 percentage
points either way because of
chance variations. That ts, lf one
could have talked to aU Ohioans
with telephones, there Is only 1
chance 1n 20 that the findings would
vary by more than 2 percentage
points.

WSPSIU-..,1
A Dlvhtlon of Mullimf'dia, lnr.

Publisht!t.l every afternoon, Mondl:ly throo,l!h
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poslll)(e paid at Pomt'roy, Ohio.

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I

•

best season for saves was seven,

achieved last season.
Brewers 6, Orioles 3
Bob McClure didn't give roommate Robin Yount an ultimatum,
but his neddllng about needing
some support certainly helped .
Yount clubbed a two- run homer
in the first lnnlng and put Milwaukee ahead with a two-run trtple In
the eighth following a crucial twoout error by Cal Rlpken Jr. as the
Brewers whipped Balllmore.

FOR FATHER'S DAY

Scioto results

PORTABLE

13"

The BON NARD • N1310PT

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Sweet As Wine, drtven by Bruce
Riegle, took the eighth featured
race In the third leg of the Old Maid
Pacing Series 1\Jesday night at Scioto Downs.

JAMES L. SCHMOLL, 0.0.
Doctor of Optometry

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will bt• ~iven carrier eaL•h tnonth .

:•••••••Ill

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

Two-thirds
of theofmen
three-year
record
29-7.polled said
they would not like to see Hayes
return, while barely half of the
women said they would like to see
him come back to the Buckeyes.
Republicans were more Ukely
than Democrats to say they would
not llke to see Hayes return. And
the more education and higher In- .

The Daily Sentinel

pe.-~on

~loly

St.Lwls. S.'l. JDJ, 3.59: ftoa'prs , Montrt&gt;al ,
7-3..700. Hl4: Sutton. Houston, 7·3. 700.
J.ll Valenz uela. Los AnRf'I{'S, S.5. .Gl5.
2.59: Andujar. St. Lou ts . &amp;-4. 100, 2.:14.
Walk, Atlanta . &amp;4 . .100, 3.:». J NIPltro.
Hwston. 6-4, .600. 2.ll: Wf'IC'h , l..oo; Anltf'"

DOUBLES: Lynn, Ca lifornia. 17: Whll r.
Kansas City, 17: Otis, Kansas Cit y, 17;
McRae. Kan.-.as City. 16; Cowms, Sl'anle,

"Wr knew how strong he was . To eighth .
CLEVELAND (API - Dan
"I'd been gelling on my roomie
me. he's a frank Howard with
The 1\ul'als r&gt;~iJ&lt; ·d ,\1 1\'illiams.
Splllner has a characteristic com- because in Ihe las t fi ve years he had
strengt h," sa id Texas Manager
2 - ~&gt;. for tw o run s in HlP fir st on an
mon to all successful ma jor league never hi I a homer when I pllcltro,"
Don Zimmer. " He hil s the ~all as
RB I singit' b) Willi&lt;' AikPns and a
baseball relief pitchers.
McClu re sa id . "But I lhink he's hit
far as anybody in the game todav ...
run·&gt;&lt;:o rl ng double b;· Hal McRae.
"Nothing bothers the guy," said fi ve In my last fi ve starts."
Sea l lie got solo home runs from
Blut• .lays t, Angel' 0
one of Splllner's teammates on the
Milwaukee' s Gorma n Thomas
.Julio C ruz and AI Cowen s.
D.t vr• l tl'\'('ring JXJkt'&lt;l J two-n.m
Cleveland Indians, Mlke Hargrove. added a home run. his 13th. in the
Royals 7. Twins 4
hom(•r in thP ninth inning to back
"He keeps hls cool when errors are ninth.
Bud Black pus led his first major tht' fi ve-hit pitching of Jim Clancv
made behind him. He has the menEddie Murray hit a solo homer
leagu~ victory and John Wathan
,Is Toront o " nappt'll Cali fornia\
tal makeup of a Gaylord Perry ."
for Baltimore. which lost for only
had two hil s and scored lhrC&lt;' timi'S
thrt'(• -gatn l' winning strf'ak .
Splllner's latest effort was an Im- Ihe second time In it s last !Ogames.
as
Kansas
City
handed
Minnesota
"l'owt hatthct rading dradline is
pressive job in the ninth Inning
Rangers 5, Mariners 2
it
s
2.1rd
d
e
f
~a
l
in
li
s
las
t
25
games
.
gont·.
it' s timP to sta rt playing some
Monday night to preserve a 2-1
Dave Hostetler knockro in three
"It'
s
something
special
and
I'll
IJasPball,
·· said !h'\'Pring. rdf'rring
Cleveland victory over the Detroll
ru ns with a pair of homers, his
always remember il," said Black, to tht• H p.m. F.OT cutoff point for
Tigers.
fourth in the las t fou r ga mes. as
whom the Roya ls reca llro from major [(•;! g-U t' I r;ldt•..., Thr flrst ba sp..
With one out and a runner on first Texas beat Seattle for the first time
Oma
ha of the American Associa- man has tx'f•n pl.i\'('CI for thr('('
base, Splllner struck out Mike !vie
In fi ve gami'S Ihis season. Hosletler
tion
this
week. He surrendered only trams in thfl past 12 months.
and Induced Rich Hebner to fly out.
now has slx homer s since being
fi
ve
hil
s
and one run through seven
('lane~, 7 l
w;tlkt'(l onr and
The performance brought his re- called up by the Rangers from
innings.
Da
n
Quisenberry
pil
chro
st
ru
('
k
out
four
in
pitching his fout1h
cord so far this season to 3-4 wllh
DenvPr on Ma y 2R.
eight saves and a 1.54 earned run
"This is my biggest night In the the fin al 12-3 innings 10 pick up his romp iPt P gamP o f tht• Sl' ason. An ·
league-leadin g 17th save after r&lt;'- gPl s tartPr Mikf• Witt . .'~- 1. los t for
average.
big leagues . Hopefully, I can help
liever
Don Hood gave up a thr('&lt;'· ltH'fir st tinH•sinet•S.:•pt l R, I~Rl. Hf'
In the past, Splllner has been the Ranger s ou t and stay around a
nm
homer
to Jesus V~ga in thP had won six ganH ·s in that span .
used sometimes In relief and somelong lime," Hostetler said .
times as a starter, but In spring
training, Manager Dave Garcia 1 - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - told Spillner to concentra te on shor1
relief.
In his last eight outings, Splllner
has worked 18 scoreless Innings.
yielding only four hits.
He has two wins and fi ve saves in
that span.
Even a more important sta ttst lc,
&gt;rS EASY, QUICK AND PERMANENT
as far as relief pllching Is conIN A PROGRAM SO GOOD IT HAS
cerned, ls that Splllner has yet to
A MONEY BACK GUARANTEE .
give up a homer.
"SpUlner Is something else, ..
Wo\Df Ill. G[NTHNU, f..UH
Garcia said. "He can do an ything.
He has been a good starter for us,
Thtl summer . you c •n b e t he th•n
you w.anl to
be
At lfle Tecflnlque•
For
Lh• &gt;nw
C IHH C.Io l
Hyp n Oitl
Olrec:tor of TechniQues lor Ltvlnv , une u t
won 16 games In 191ll. He has been
Se rn•n•r yo u ' ll st.art to l ose we t9hl qu oc loly ,
.a n d per
America ' s for e rno • t .autl\orltles on h y p
nos i s lor -ei9hf t oss end stoppin9 srnolo
';;:::::::.
t
v
Our fr ee t.aloe fl a m e !.ape pro9r.arn 1oeeps vou thin
solid In long relief.
l ne . H e has appea re (l o n th e wldet y a c
c:lalmed C BS · T\,1 st•tlons . In addition t o
"Now he Is our stopper in the
tec:turln9 on c:linoc•l hypn os os thr o uehout
the United States and In C• nada . Mr Oen ·
bullpen. He has the kind of arm like
thner IS • fell ow o f th e Arnertc:an tnst•tut e
of Hypn o'h and the .author of · · H vp n osis :
a Route Fingers. He never gets
. li.c:rs •nd Answ•• • ··
tired ...
The 30-year-old right-hander began his major league career in 1974
SPECIAL!
CALL NOW FOR FREE INFORMATION
wlth the San Diego Padres, which
1-800-645-MM (TOLL FREE)
PER
traded him to Cleveland ln 1978.
$5.00 OFF CL
I EN'T
His brilliant performance this
Remember, you ' re just one phone c•ll
Limit O n e C li e nt p er Coupon
year ls In marked contrast to his
•w•v from being the person vou want to bel
CLIP' AIID SAW[
4.36 career earned run average
coming into the season. He had won t------------------------------------------56 times while losing 62 times. His

LOSE WEIGHT
FOR SUMMER

I : Fof'S(' h ,

"

"P UA\t ARP ~1%. ...

D
El
El
N
E
!5ii
El

u
v

Jl

Leaders

Bad news for the GOP..._____n-secu_Ls~-:_;i;--'-Aw_rain_::;.ge_!.!

congressmen, mostly southern, who

Boston

71 11
10 ~
We814'm Division
Kansas City
:W 24
.5116
C a lifornia
.'r.
l'l
W
Otlcago
ll 26
.352
Sl'att lc
l2 ll
.~ 1 6
4
Clakland
29 1.1
.46Jl
7
Texas
19 :W
:NI 11'?
Mi nnesota
14 ol9
.'lll 22"'
'fue!ldiQI'!I GamN
Dl'trol t at Ci('Veland ppd.. rain
Mllwa ukf'(' S, Baltlmon&gt; .1
Nt&gt;w YorkS. Boston 4

J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_on

The fate of Congressman Ron Mottl in the Democratic primary in Ohio
last week should put the fear of God,
Tip O'Neill and the Democratic party in the heart of every Boll Weevil
in Congress this faiL The Boll
Weevils were those Democratic

7. Hou..ton 0
l San Dlrgu 0

La&lt;; Angeles

Arafat'S opp
__O_S_i_te_________
WASHINGTON - Sa lah Khalaf,
the 48-year-old , chain-smoking
military chi efta in of the Palestine
Liberation Organization , is "a priest
.conducting his duties with intense
identity w&gt;th his religious beliefs.
but without public acclaim. because
it is enough for hitn to know that acts
and accomplishments speak for
themselves."
This is th!' conclusion of U.S. intelli ge nce experts who have
prepared a psychological profile or
the man whose mission is to
withstand the Israeli attack on PLO
power bases m Lebanon . Yasir
Ararat is the PLO's well-publicized
"front man," while Khalaf is the
group' s nuts-and-bolts military
strategist.
The personality profile, obtained
by my associate Indy Badhwar,
provides a marked contrast to

TRIPLES : Hf'r nd o n .
D t• tr o!t .
8;
W Wilson. Kan.\lls City , 6: Youn t , Mil
waulu&gt;r. S; U~haw, Toronto. S; Rrt•n,
K.an.'W! City . 5: G . Wr1j!ht , Tt'xa~. S
UOME RUNS: Thornton, Ck'veland 18·
HrbPk , Mlnncso!a, 15: ltoenlckf'. 'aairt
mOI't', 14 ; GThoma.s. Mllwaukf'oe. ll: Har
ra h. Clevf'land. l2: Herndon. llf'rmlr. 12:
()j!;llv\t&gt;, Mllwauluort&gt;. 12
STOLEN BASES: R.HPnclt&gt;rsor1. Oak
land. 64 : Lf'flort&gt;, Ollcago, ~: Wathan.
Kansas City. 19: Molitor , MUwauk('(' , 14,
Hayes, Clf'Vt'iand, 13: Lopr&gt;s, Oakland, l:l,
Muq~hy. Oakland. IJ: J .Cnaz. St&gt;alllc. U
PITCHING t9 [)(o(o~loruil · Guidry, Nl'W
Yor k, S.i . .e . l!ll; Vukovk'h . Mil
waukf'oe. S.2, lDJ, 3.52: Zahn , Calllornla,
7-2, .178. 21ll: Caud.ll. Sf'atllf', H. m.
1.88: Hoy t. Ollcago. 10.3, 769. 2.24. 811rk
Pr, Cli:"Veland S.3 . .Tll. H9: Clam-1·. To·
ronto, 7-3.. 700, till: Bums, Chk'lii(O. 7·3.
700. 3.58.
STRIJ&lt;EOLJT'S,; f .BannllitPr, Scart k&gt;, 1!7,
Barkf'f , ClpvPiand. Tl: Gu idry. Nt&gt;w York.
70: Ecker.;k&gt;y, Boston, m: Rlghf&gt;tt!. Nf'w
York. 61

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EMtem DlvWon
w I.
Pt1.
GB
St. Lool~
J7
Montrt-al
Jl
&gt;14
Nf'W York
517
Ph1l adl&gt;lphla
.11
:m
51'!
PIHshuf}!:h
ll
lltkago
23
J7l
"~
Wf.'!Vm DtvWon
Atlant a
Jl
617 Sa nDt~
576
\..a; AnR{'INl
.11 J2
11,
San Franctsco
10
llooston
Clnclnnatl
&lt;11
u

The Daily Sentin&lt;'I- Page-3

Indians pin 2-1 loss on Detroit Tigers

Scoreboard...

The Mideast messo.....z.______W_i_llt_'am_F._B_u_ck_ley_Jr.
The Uuily Sentin el

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

With Fries . • • • .

$1.79

Adolph's ~airy Valley
PH.ft2.2SS6
570 W. Mli~

"l.qcltld at tht End of lhe
PomiiGI-MIIItrBridp."

Pometor. OH.

B&amp;W

$88

Projection TV • SN4545P .

Reg. SJ750

Now$3200

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

i&gt;age-4-The Dally Sentinel

fca ted Cinci nnat i 4·:!.
" There's no doubt I'm back In the
gr oove now," sa id Reuss. who had
los t four of his last five decisions
be fore he resurrec ted his pitch.
The Dodgers scored all their runs
in the seventh Inning to break a
scoreless duel ix'l w('{'n Reuss and
Johri Cur11s. 5-l.
Ron Cry led off t he Inning with a
homer and Dusty Raker 's had a
two-r11 n single.
Braves 7, Astros 0
Bob Walk 's four·hltt er and Allan·
tJ's 14-hil a tt ac k streng1hC'nPd thf'
Braves' cl aim that they ar e for wal
this S(&gt;ason.
" I rea lize things look a little upside down to some people," Walk
sa id of t he NL Wes t standin gs.
" They had bett er get used to lt .
We've always kn own we could wi n.
We just needed a little confidence.
EvPryone knows WC' a re a co ntender now ."
In regis tering his first shutout of
the season. Walk stru ck out fi ve
and walked one in lmproving his
record to 6-4. He threw 32·3 1nnlngs
of no- hit ball before Ray Kni ght
singled to rlght ·cent er .
" We haven't seen Walk very
much," sa id Houston Manager Bill
Vlrdon, "bu t that's the bes t we've
seen of him ."
Bob Horner prov ided most of the
power for the Br aves, driv ing in
three runs on a pair of doubles.
Bob Knepper , 2·8, was tagged
with the loss.

are any Indicat ion.
The defendi ng world champions.
silting 7'•1 games be hi nd th e
Atlanta 13ravcs In th(' Nat ional
IRague West. has·erl't been Se tt ing
thr league on fire this season.
But Reuss . a big 6·foot·o. 22'\pound lrft ·hander. has given other
teams In t hf' lC'aguP r'l?ason to be·
lif'\'f' the Dc:xJgers w ill b(' c ha lle ng -

Ing the Bra\'f'S somPw herr dow n
thP li n!'.
Reuss, coming off a onP-hlller
iigain~t thP Cincin nati Re d s.
stopp&lt;'d San Diego 3·0 Tuesday
night , limiting the Padres to onl;•
rivf' hit!-&gt; whilt• so·iki ng out SPven.
The vic torY. his third shutout of
thf' season. ra ised Rruss' rc&gt;cord to
7·:1. It also was the JJOt h of his
cart "'.'r.
And in both games he used a
pi tch hr des·elop&lt;'d back in high
school to puzzle the hitt er s.
" I can't descri be It, " Reuss said.
" I throw it like a curveball, but It 's
fas ter tha n a curveball. It 's not necessarily a st rik eout pitch, bu l l use
it to set up strikeouts."
E l sew here In th e Na tional
League, Atlanta bea t Houston 7·0,
St.Louis edged Mont rea l 3-2 in 11
Innings. Chicago whipped Philadcl·
phla 8·:1. Pitt sbu rg h t rimmed New
York J3.3 and Sa n Fra ncisco d0

Philadelphia acquired Nordh a·
gen from Toronto In exchange for
Dav Is, then the Ph \Illes traded
Nordhagen to Pittsbu rg h to get the
:l8·year -old Robinson.
Robinson. who learned of the
t rade Tuesday night while 1he PI·
r ates wer e play ing the New York
Mcts, was acquired by Pittsbu rgh
fr om Philadelphia In a 1975 t ra de
for pitcher Wayne Simpson. He was
batti ng .239 with 17 hits in 71times
at·bat, In cluding four home runs
this season.
Nordhagen, 33, played with the
Chicago White Sox from 1977 to 1981
ix'fore being acquired by Toronto.

By The A!tiOCiated Press
Major leag11e baseball 's trading
deadline passed with just two mi·
nor deals completed before Tues·
day's 8 p.m . deadline.
Veteran outfielder · first baseman
Bill Robinson was re·acqulred by
the Philadelphia Phlllles Tuesday
night in a th ree-tea m tra tlt' that

also involved the Pitt sbu rg h Pi·
ra tes and the Toronto Blue Jays.
The swa p, announced by the Pi·
ra tes one minute aft er the 8 p.m .
t rading cutoff, also brought out ·
fi elder Wayne Nordh agcn to Pitts·
bu rgh and sen t outfielder Dick
Davis to Toront o.

CI NC l NNATi tAP1- Threcra in
delays nearl y took l h(' fi ght out of
San Fra ncisco Giants out fi r lder
Chili Davis.
L uckily for the Gia nt s, Davis had
helped build a !cad that cou ld wit h·
stand the worst that the Cincinna ti
Reds and \he weat her could dish
out Tuesday night.
Davis singled twice. drove in a
ru n with a sacr ifice fly and scored
twice in a 4-3 victory tha t took morr
than five hours to complete.
Du ring delays totaling two hours
and 17 minutes. Davis got to think·
ing th at it wasn' t worth the effort to
continue on the soa ked Ast ro turf.
"Just ca ll it. Who cares?" Davis
suggested.
The Reds almost made the most

i t going."
Neither could his teammates.
Giant s start er Bill Laskey, o-4, was
workin g on a three·hit shut out
when a downpour halt ed play with
two out in the seventh.
" We
couldn
't do
thin g with
Las
key,"
M cNam
araany
said.
But the r ookie righl ·hander gave
up a hit to Dave Van Gorder - the
roo kie ca tcher 's first maj or league
hit - when play res umed, and
Giants M anager Frank Robinson
summoned AI Holland from the
bullpen.
"I only wanted him (Lask ey I to
pitch to one hitter 1Van Gorder! .
He was coming out anyway," Robinson said .
The Reds got a run In the eight,
then scor ed twice in the ninth and
had the ty ing run on fi rst base when
Lavelle shut the door.

of the reprieves. scor ing once in the

eighth inning and twice in the nint h
be fore Gary Lavelle ret ired Eddie
Milner on a fielder 's choice to end
the ga me and pick up his four1h

lng the anony mit y of anyone who
chooses nol to revea l ltis or her
identit y.
Thr rewar d money will come
from priva te contributions. The
largest single contributor so far ls
the Miami Va lley Sa fari Club.
which has donated $3,lXXl to TIP.
By fall , TIP plans to have a toll·
free number in operation. Until
then, violations can be r eported to
distr ict wildlife offices.
The group has decided what
crimes it will be concerned with
and what rewa rds will be offered .
For instance. people who help

otficE&gt;rs has incr eased tenfold in I he

las t 35 yea r s. People concerned
about violat ions of wildlife prot(&gt;('·
tion laws have for med an organiza tion ca lled TIP - Turning In a
Poacher.
The group will pay cash to in·

formers who prov ide Informa tion
leading to the arr1'SI and conv iction
of people who br eak wildlife laws.
" I think thi s will be a good m an·
agem cnt toolthat will help wildlife.
People will be less likely to poach
animals," said Curl Jackson. a
Springboro taxidermist who helped
organize the TIP program.
Jackson Is one of 12 people sen ··
ing on It s rf'wa rd committee.

from San Fra ncisco for "cas h consider ations," Giants Gener al Man·
ager Tom HaUer said.
Schatzeder , 27, start ed his maj or
leag11e car eer with M ont rea l in 1977

save.

ager John McNa m ara pointed out .
The Giant s took adva ntage of
start er Tom Seaver , :n. for a :1·0
lead aft er two innings. E ight of the
I I batters th at Seaver facrd in I J..J
innings reac hed basr bv eit her a hit
or a wa lk.
"Tom di dn 't feel r ight ," McNa m ·
ara said. " He could n't get loose.
You have nights when you don't
have it. He sa id he just could n't get

ga me·winnln g hit ."
Van Gorder sa id he won' \ soon
forget his first maj or league ga me.
" I wor.'t have any t rouble remembering it. It wa s long, w asn't
i t?" he said.

WEDN ESDAY

Schatzeder was acquired by the
Giants from the Tigers last winter
along with Mike Chris in exchange
for L arry Herndon.
Schatzeder had a J.4 r ecord and a
7.29 E RA In 13 games with the
Giants. His last start was for Pho·
enlx, the Giant s' Class AAA, and he
was shelled for 10 hit s and six run s
In 32-3 Innings.
Player s must now be waived be·
fore they can be transfer red to
another major leag11 e team .

Calendar

POMEROY - Thc Mcigs Cuun·

B\onUmobile will be a ll he Sen ior

ly Assodatiun of Townshtp
Trustecs "nd Clerks will mcd
Thur~day evening at 7: 30 p.11 1. at
th e gran gc hall, Rock Sprrngs
Fairgrounds. All Meigs Count ;•
lrustces and cl erks as well as all

frurn 1:30to5 :30o.rn .

don Pool , Syracust•, Wedn esday
from Blo 10 p.rn .

or tilt' Ohi P Stall'
Assndalion of Townshtp Tru st ees

Su1'1 dy will hold

a nd CIPrks. r~nrl Sl&lt;:l le

sday &lt;J iltll' Me tgs lnn 7:10p .11 1

t.Jircctur

POM EROY - Th,• Red Cross

Ciiizens Center on WcdncsdH y

The Daily Sl'ntinl'l- PaKt·-:i

H L'p l'l'Sl' ll-

THE ME IGS County Hur uarw
d ll ll' dl ll~

Thur-

lt-:ltivt• Clcure Ball. Refreshr lll' lll s
will bl' scr vcd.

otlwr ekcted officials of llw co un·
ty arc in vited to a\lend . Spcci" l
gucsts wrll b!' Aldin E. Harns,

fHt 'lll t '

:w

COUNTY

Hu11 1&lt;111o ·

St )(' td ~·. 7&lt;m JU n . Thur -;dcty ill

lht • Mct ~s ln11 .

li OCK SI' IUN(;S lk ll o· r lkal t h
Club. l 1~ fUll . 111 tlw llttlllt' llf
M r ~ . Bt'lllt&lt;l ( ; rlw.. , n

Mr . . Fr;nJ1\;nt • lht ·
prct J'I"&lt; t!l • and .\ 1r:. Ht •ll _\ l ·~&gt;n klt· .
I he· c'tt ll lt' s t
t"t' S

MIDDLEPO RT

Cl11ld

('"" .

st•n•altnn Lt'il~ Ut', ct !Hl ual fannly

( ;,w~lt•Jfl

wlll

CO·S T CUTTERS

115 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-2342

COPYR IGHT 1911 · THE t&lt;ROG£R CO ITEMS AND PRICE S
GOOD SUNDA't' JUNE 13 THROUGH SATUROA 't' IUNE

19 19811NGAlliPOli S .JndPOM E ROY .

REVIVAL

WE RESER VE THE RIG HT TO liMIT QUANTITI H
SO lO TO DEAlER S

NO NE

Everyday Low Prices On Over
400 Items At A Savings Of
10°/o To 40°/o Over Other
Brands At Kroger*

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH

'
r

Middleport, OH.
Kroger
Welcomes
Your
Federal
Food
Stamps

JUNE 16-20
TIME: 7:00 P.M.

\

~

QiiP -

1

rnusTaro

'=

EVANGELIST
REV. JEFF STATON
PASTOR
JAMES KEESEE

J

·ror Some Cost Cutter.;, No--._ _ _
Other Brands Are Stocked.
ADVERI IS tOillMf-' ttl tt.,.

11 ern

Dav is sa id the game reminded

:-. Wll lllllt/11 '

SOOPER

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

525 N. Second St.

and

p .1n . at lht· llt•l! l1' 11f
M r s . J anu.! . . . SuulsiJ_\
1\t·\\ ~&gt;f­

fl t't•r:-. tu be lllSl&lt;illt·d

MEIGS

POMEROY - Prudrll 't' and
bulk f u11d ord l' rl'tl lhrough lilt·
Mt• Jgs F'()otl Co-up wi ll b(' at lilt'
St•nior Cilizl· ns Ccnlt-r fo r pl L'k up
Thursday abuut 3: :lOp.m.

potltwk
pct r l~ , (i

PUBUC INVITED

""f' ..,., (( 11 lio••

...t"len it"il dil!) tf'

''"'&gt;&lt;' "'"'

wt"ltCI1 w ollt•"(• TI{) 1 \JU I t• ~)ut (
adYerloSl!(l pr oro&gt; w•111H1 .l) ' 1dv'&gt;

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

' ''

~,-

• +•u • .,,, , ' "'' ,,
tor•q !1'1 1• ..,., •• ,

•• •lit'l.

' ,
•

.
~

•.••'r••.

. ,,. 1. 1: ,

1, .·•,)•,
I 1.-·•• --..~:

· __ ,

'•""

TIO ' J (,t t.t ~ :.·.

'! t

ca tch som eone who Is convic ted uf

a violat ion Involving deer will be
rewa rded be tween $00 and $000.

M em ber s of th e committee meet~;~~~::~~~~::::;;!
perio-di call y to rev iew wildlife
cases and selec t people they con·
slder most deserv ing of rewa rd
CAKE DECORATING
money.
The sta te wildlife division will
SUPPLIES
have no role In TIP other than to tell
the r eward committee about in·
stances w her e tips from people
have helped offi cer s make an
arres t.
Author ities said the informers
will not be required to tes tify in
court . Payo ffs may be negotiated
through a third part y, thu s protect·

Master

MECHANIC

HAND lOOLS

5·7·LB.AVG.
Whole Fresh
lb .
Picnics ..
U.S.GOV'TGRADED CHOICE.
(;;t~Kr Blade Cut
Chuck Steak ..... lb .

,.
,.r •

·,.

I

ANN'S

SUMMER HOURS

TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 to 5
CLOSED SAT., SUN., MON.
EFFECTIVE JUNE 1, 1982

• • • •
Big Red Superior

BOLOGNA

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FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL

~

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59.99

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Homemade

REG. S.R.
$79.98

Lb .
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1 lb . Kraft P,lrl· ,1 y

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10 lb . ld.tho

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"SpeCial
Sa 1111198 ,

MARGARINE 0." ·~ '!":'. ' .h 79' POTATOES . . . . .. 12.19
lb. K r.tft Vc l vcc 1.1
16
Ce ll o r·.1c1
CHEESE .. .. .. '.'".' 11.19 CARROTS . ... ' ':' ~ '.'' .q 29'
11

~

19
lb.

Red Ripe Cut
C
Watermelons ... ..
LARGE 6 SIZE TEXAS HONEYDEW MELONS .. EACH 51.99

8 OL Kraft W htppc d

F r cs h

~ wc&lt;' t

LARGE 8 SIZE
Fresh
Pineapple .·

TOPPING . . ... ! ·~ " 11.09 CORN , . . , . 5r"" F or95'
16 oz. Booth

.Ja

. . . . • ~ $4.95
12
WELCHES GRAPE JUICE . . . . . . • •c.a~ 99'
ROUND BREADED SHRIMP

•

80

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®

4 Roll Pack Charm in

TOILET TISSUE
SWEET PEAS

• • • • • • •
Can s

• • • • • • •

3Pl.OO

Fresh
Asparagus .
FLORAL SPECIAL
Japanese
Aralia

29 oz. Del Mont e

PEACHES

Can
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8 oz. High Point

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Hush
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UPII!. I§
Casuals

THURSDAY

Tlw eighth
SYRACUSE gntdl' class at Sottlhcrn Junior
High will hold a puol party "t L Ull·

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

bCIS('.

him
one in the
NewMets.
York earlier this
ye;u·ofagainst
"We kept hav ing delay aft er delay. We ended up winning th at
ga me," Davis sa id . " I had the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

and was 10·5 with a 2.83 earned run rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
average In his best year, 1979, be·
fore being traded to the Detroit
Tiger s.

Cesar Cedeno reached on an In·
fie ld hit , P aul Householder singled
off r eliever Greg Minton's leg, and
Lar ry Blittner hit a plnch·hlt RBI
single to bring on Lavelle. He surrendered a sacrifice fly to Mike
Vail, then got Milner to force pinch·
runner Al ex Trev ino at second

eighth and the nin th," n.ros Man ·

Seeks info on poachers

He wa s batting .278 this season.
Davis, 28, was batting .279 this
year after hitting .333 In 45 ga mes
last year . He came up in 1977 with
the Brewer s.
In the only other deal, left -handed
pitcher Dan Schatzeder was r eacquired by the Mont real E xpos

Reds drop 4-3 rain-delayed battle

"We had a ru n at it in bot h the

CO L U:v! BUS. Ohio 1AP 1 - The
numix'r of arres ts made by wildlife

Wednesday, Jtu1e 16, 1982

Minor deals completed prior to deadline

Dodgers blank
Padres behind
Reuss' 5-hitter
By MIKE EMBR\'
AP Sports Writer
The Los Angeles Dodger s m ay be
breaking ou t of th eir doldrums If
pltchcr Jcrr) ' Reuss' last two start s

Wednesday, Jtu1e 16, 1982

12·0Z.
Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola
CAN~

78

SLICED TOMACORDER.
SANDY
Deli Style
Boiled Ham.
READY TO EAT.B·PIECES
Wishbone
Fried Chicken .Bu cket

lb .$2 99 99

$3

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

.

Wednesday, June 16, 1982

~!£:~!;;-s .!~~ Christ in Meigs
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Sentinel Staff
Workers Ill yesteryear's bar~
ralstngs have nothing on the
Southern Baptist Convention's "Carpenters for Christ" which this past
week built a church in the Rock
Sprtngs community for the Meigs
County congregation .
A 32-member volunteer cor&gt;structlon crew moved into town a
week ago Friday and when they left
' just a week later, First Southern
Baptist Church of Meigs County had
a new building.
The.walls, siding and windows of
the 103 by 32 foot structure were in
place, the roof was on, the partitions
tn place, the bapltstry and pulpit installed, and the electri ca l work completed" before the ,:ca rpenters for
Chnst boarded thett· buse' to head
back to Blnntngham • Ala ·
All of the labor on the project was
vol unteer - not one person was paid
one cent - and, in fact, each one
paid $100 jusl to come '
The loca l congregation has nol
been without a role, howeve r. as
several members joined the con' tructlon crew for the week while
ot hers helped earlier in the site
preparation . .
The plwnblng and concrete slab
had been poured by the local church
before the workers arrived and all of
the matena ls were furnished by the
membership. Herschel McClure ;,;
th e bu1 ld mg
' committee chairman
for the congregation.
The tools, saws and such, needed
to do the work here was brought in
by the volunteers from the Roebuck
Park Baptist Church in Bir-

•

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church June 6 was 118. A duet was
sung by Mrs. Ida Martin and Mrs
Shirley Frtend.
·
Hev . and Mcs. Ray Heimbach and
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin Valentine of
Circleville visited recently with Rev .
Robert Miller and family .
Mrs . William Perry, Athens,
v1s1led a Sunday with her parenll;,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire and
Mi ss Cleo Parker spent a weekend
with Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Wyatt Schaefer, Mt. Vernon
vis ited recently with his parcnll;:
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
John Story, who attends Bell and
Howell School, Columbus, spent a
weekend with his parenll;, Mr. and
Mrs. Vern Story.

The workers, most of them famil y
men, gave up their vacations, a
week's work, or whatever, just to be
a part of "spreading the gospel of
Jesus Christ by building chur 'h . .
pioneer areas," according to cR~~~~
McElroy who heads up the B· l':.t
Men's D~partment of his ch':.-~h
and organized the project here.
,
Home for the 32 men was the h . '
on Mulberry Ave. whi ch has s 'ous~
as a meeting place for the Sou~~~
Baptist congregation in Meig. C e n
ty for the past several yea rs. s ounJohn Eads, the cook for the crew
was brought along. All of the food
w&amp;s purchased locally. The men
slept on air mattresses, coil; and the
floor, washed under makeshift
showers in the basement, and
worked from 12 to 14 hours a day.
Traveltno~ II.~oht . each man
. came
with two sell; of work clothes - one
to wear while the other was bein'
washed. Women of the local ' h ~
did the laundry
c urc
The Rev. Larry W. Draper . t
of the 1,900-meJ(Iber A la bam'ap~~u~:
ch, was here with the men and
worked with the local congregatin on
evangelism techniques. Re ular
devotional times were held se~eral
times a day for the workers.
The one who kept the project oin
was John Coon, a self-employeJ con~
tra ctor. It was Coon who assigned
work duties to the "Carpent , f
ers or
Christ" crew made up of mechanic.
railroad workers, engineers, cor~:
puler operators, firemen , studenll;
electricians, telephone men and
studenll;.
Their days began at 5 a.n1. and ended at dark. Breakfast and dinner
were served at their quarters in the
Mulberry Ave. house whil e lunch
was brought to the site.
" Free time," quipped McE lroy
was fromabout ~p.m.to5a.m.
'
McElroy explained that the volunteer church construction program
got underwa y in 1976 as "Bold
M1ss1on Thrust" and is now the
fastest

:o~ved a total of 171 g roups which

ent out from the bi g established
churches. This
~ea~, It'." expected that about 90
l hm ches Will be built.
For McElroy and 13 others in the
group here, thiS IS the second time
arou~~. with " Carpenters for
Clmst. All but two of that group
which worked on a church last summer were Ill the crew here. They
r~mamed behmd simply because
t ey couldn 't arrange their work
sc~e_&lt;tules, McE lroy sa id, emph"'~·""~ . :he fanta stle fellowship
a~d s~ttsfadton tn service felt by the

S",~thern . Baptist

parttupan~.

.· l~ter this month and next the inside of the church Will be completed
by two, ~~ore ~roups of Christian
:oluntect,s, one coming from the First
AI Bapttst
d th Church Ill Alberll;vllle·
,"· ·.~" e second from the Grace
Baptist Church Ill Anmston, Ala.
And while the church Isn't completed. the f1rst service was held
there Wednesday night and a
de~~.~a ~ton was held Friday before
the . Carpe~ters for Chnst" left for
their hm.nes. .
.
, Regular services Ill t he new church bwldtng Will begin on . July I.
Meanw~lle, the congregation will
con~tnu~ to meet tn the Mulberry
Ave. location.

2

~1 ..W:KSON PfKE · Rt. 35 WEST

Phone 446· 4524

LARGE
HEAD

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

ALl SEATS JUST S 2 .00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 2.00

~ FRIDAY lhru THURSDAY I

J

JUNE 11 thru 17

'"' ET

'111 ' \1\ti-K-..
IU'III

\tcl\H

'" : . '

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growing ministry of the

0

•

/ 1 Ioiii -..IJ,J 11
ITI

'

yeeeow~

•

111//\J.\

~IVUdtt

o • •

Home Mission Board.
He sa id that last year 40 Ba ptist
churches were built a nd about 30
others were remodeled. This in-

Wkife

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F&amp;vtida Sweet

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CalijliiUCia'&amp;

DONATING THEIH TIME _ Thl' 32 members
from llw Rot·huck Park Baptist Chureh in Bir~l ln glmm.'

99~

Filwt Red Rq,e

STRAWHERRIES

Ala .. nont• professional builde rs, except the

Jooh supo·nutendent. ac tually paid $100 each just for the
pnvllt•J.!t' of spt·nding 12- 14 hours a day on the church

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Featuring The Valianl with
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{~
HELPERS - Hershel ISonny I McClure, third
!rum left, is the building committee chainnan for the
First Southern Baptist Church of Meigs County. He and

Clarification
The Juanita Ralliff , reeenlly transported by the emergency squad to
Veterans Memorial Hospital , is not
the Juanita E. Ratliff who resides on
Union Avenue in Pomeroy and ;,;
employed at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

4-H news
T~ f'Jvc Pomt Star S titcher.~ 4-H Club
t
June 2 .&lt;It the home of Jackie Starcher rh!:e
re
wert six members and one advisor ·
Items of bu.s!ncss discussed included • pHresent.
adl.af
·
""camp
n P . rts or ll p1Z7.n party. Demonstrations
w~re grven by T• •rr1 t' Starehl'r ,, 11" How to G t .
Frrc S~.rh.'ll," b~ Mwh• ·llr· W1bnn on · J~~"rt
~lllllt», ,bYKyle Dav~s 1m S.rfl'ty Through th~
wruner and by Kerth Kar.~ehnik ""d J 1
We
·
ane"
F rry 011 "Saf
. e1Y an d ,~cidenl
Prevention
or recreation, the rnembens took a nature hike
and playethoftball. Refreahment.B ...-ere served
b~ Janet Werry. For the next meeUnl( lhe lub
wrll . have a piua party at the Piu.a Sha kc _
JodltlSc:haekel, News Reporter.
c ·

,

E · S
R
nc pencer, oger Adkins, and John Wilson Jr piclured leftthetoweek
right,
among the for
local
workmg
withwere
the "Carpenters
Christ.,

Ba~llsls

lr::::;;::~;::~==::::::::::::::::;1
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VETERANS MEMQR'IAL HOSPIJAJ

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�June 16, 1982

Property
transfers

SAVE lOW!

FRESH
LEAN

GROUND BEEF

$12!

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Royal Crest®
2% MILK

$1 s9

8
16

PLASTIC
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FINAL TOUCH

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p:z 1-129
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FRUIT DRINKS

$29 9 ORANGE, PUNCH, LEMON

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John Ca rlo, Rebecca A. Cct rlo to

G. Parsons, John Parsons to HL·ra ld

ICE CREAM
HAWTHORNE MELODY

COTTAGE CHEESE~~

HEINER'S CLUSTER PACK

BBQ BUNS

TOOL BOX

~-=-~,$12 8 !
DIGITAL L.C.D.

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WITH 201 PIECES
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Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

WIN A TRIP
FOR TWO ro otl S),OOO

PRICES IN EFFECT THRU JUNE 19, 1982

HAWAII

5%

:, HIJW1lrd . Damron, Georgia R.
J)amron to Fred D. Perry, 2~ acres,
Bedford.
'
. •~ Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
:$teve R. Oltlley, .,Ronda L. Dalley,

CASH

f,,., a lr~&gt;e gctnu•
any flrlrl •e&lt;P&lt;II •n 4 stor p

NO PUR CHA Sl N[ ( f SS A!1 Y
t• ck.e t and collt•cto• (,lfd

o~l

You !Tldy .11 &lt;;0 reCC&gt; Ii(' ,1 hi!(· !JdnlV lll.~CI ,1n{)

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aodrf' S~ed Stdrnped envelope to FdbulOu':&gt; For1U'IP
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S. mply punch Ot ll lh(• twriQ!diC'll '&gt;L'ci&gt;Of1':&gt; or 11W
game hCk et to rt' H~ .tl lour q,t mt• m&lt;ukers IC&gt; pi,Jy

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your collcUor c.url Som(' q,unp l•l 'll'l'&gt; f ontarn &lt;1
marker whrcn state&lt;; YOU OUAl tF Y FOH CrAAN O
PRt7E DRAWING 11 yOu obtarn one ut tncsc
markers you are cttgrbtc to r•n ter 1t1e Grand Pr.le
Dra w rngs and the thane(' 1(1 .,... ,none o ' SH lrrps to r
two to Hawa rr or $J 000 f il S ~' lw o G rand Prr1e
Draw rngs w otl IJC ~l('IU A ll ¥otl•d ''''II es re ccrvcd b~
May ?! 1982 woll bL' (&gt;hoJrbl" lur th p lrr ::,l dril w1 ng on
M,ry 28 l '.!tlt' lnrct G r.tn \1 ~~ ,,,., •.., w oll IJe yrve r1
away at thr•, lrnw All v,1I •O ('11 II •P.'&gt; recr•rvcd w1 th rn 14
days ,tiler gnmc r•ncts w II l_;f' r•lllJ•IJir· tur 111C second
drawmg Three morc Gran&lt;1 PrrJe&lt;; writ be awarded
111 H1e secant! dra wu1g

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TOILET TISSUE
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lEMONADE
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Macaron
5 LB . BAG

$}39 .

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$}79

-FLAVORITE

#4MOS-J+07+30

$} 99

Lim it One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires June 19, 1982

••••
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171

oz

$599

4RoJJ
Pkg .

99¢

•••
•••
·~
•••

.

"1.1069'acres, Sutton.
t

' •• ~ .!611

L1m1t Qn t • lo(kCI J&gt;l'f reQuf''&gt;l une lf'OUC'il PI'! pCI&lt;;.or·

per day r ,l(ll rcuuesl rnu&lt;; l b f' m,ule(l '&gt; eparatelv

Jandlt&gt; Marie Roach. Ke\·in G.

Betzing to Barbara D. Betzing. Lot,
Pomeroy.
Board ol Commissioners ol Meigs
County to Dixie Exploration Company, Righto!Way, Rutland .
James A. Fauber, Hope A. Fauber
to Buckeye Rural Electric, Right or
Way, Colwnbia.
Florence Nelson to John David
Staats, Parcel, Rutland.
Harvietta F. Grueser to William
Don Grueser, Parcels, Pomeroy .
Robert W. Riggs, Mary A. Riggs to
Robert W. Riggs, Mary A. Riggs,
Parcels, Salem.
Inez A. Randolph, deed.. to
Clarence E. Randolph, Sr., Parclc,s
Bedlord.
Carl S. Hysell to Sybil Ebcrsbasch, Parcel. Rutland.
Sybil Ebersbach to Carl S. Hvsell ,
Carl Richard Hysell, P~rcel,
Rutland.
'
Linda S. Newland, Grant A.
Newland to Carl E . Smith
Petrolewn, Inc., Right nl Way,
Orange.
Elton 'Ritchie, Joyce Rithcie to
Carl E. Smith Petroleum, lne.,
Right of Way, Orange.
thelma Jean Roberts, Denny
. -Roberts to Kandy Joe Lee, Crystal
,Lynn Lee, Lot 37, Bosworth's Add.,
llflddleport .
Lelia Clark to Margaret Clark
Menzies, Parcels, Lebanon, Olive,
Chester.
Virgie Hobstetter, deed. to
Margaret Hill Baker, Edison Hobstetter, George Hobstetter, Maratha
Ch11mbers, William Hobstetter,
Cert. of Trans., Salisbury.
· Charley D. Smith, Naomi G. Smith ·
:to ~rley D. Smith, Naomi G.
;5mlth, Parcels, Salisbury.
· John J. Roile, Mary K. Rose to
. .John J. a-, Mary K. Rose, parccels, Chester. .
l'tfartha A. Bailey to Oliver E.
·Bailey, Parcels, Olive.
·.; Herbert.V: Dixon, Agnes Dixon to
llerbert V. Dixon, Agnes Dixon; Par:cels, SaUsbury;

PUMP
PLIERS
8

777
SUN
GLASSES

u.

2 PC. SET

RIVET
TOOL

AM/FM
RADIO

CANE POLE 6" FILLET KNIFE
WITH SHEATH
KIT

$ 00

CRYSTAL BEER MUG

lEI'S
FASHIOI FRAME

9
$19 !

·

JUMBO 22 OZ

G.E.
PORTABLE

GREAT GIFT IDEA!

2
10 FOOT

KRAFT

$58!

MEN'S FANCY

Oil and Gas Co.. Right ol Wa y,
Salisbury.
Marcia Strauss lt&gt; Paul Strauss.
parcels, Rutland .
Harold D. Leach, et al, Edith A.
Leach, Edna Leaeh to Charles W.
Leach, Virginia R Leach, Pareels .
Duane B. Wolle, Diane K. Wt&gt;Jr,. lo
Jerry Maier Raeh, Sheila Kay Rarh,
Parcel , Olive.
Robert Marcinko, Mary Maxin•·
Marcinkt&gt; to Carl E . Smith
Pelrolewn. Jne .. Right t&gt;l Way.
Orange.
Ray Donald Belzing, d&lt;•nl.. lu
Janelle Marie Rt&gt;ach, Kevin G. Bel·
zing, Donald Bryan Belzing. John
Cary Bctzing , Cerl. ol Trans.,
Pomeroy.

$109 VELVEETA
65
$12 7

12
CT.
GIFT IDEA!
2.5 oz

SIIGLE TRAY

to Charles G. Lee, Judith L. Lee, lot.
Syracuse.
John F. Bennett, Ruth L. Bt•nnett
to Columbia Gas Trans. Corp., Right
ol Way , Olive .
Susan E. Pigott to Ct&gt;lumbia Gas
Trans. Corp., Right ol Way, Olive.
Rowena Vaughan, Admin ., E. M.
Harrah, Rurna Harrah, dec.: Ailidavil.
E. M. Harrah (dec . l to Maxim·
Pigt&gt;tt, Marie Watson , Robert H.
Harrah . Ccrt t&gt;l Trans .. Chesler.
Marie H. Watson (dec. l to Harry
Walst&gt;n, Diana Taylor. Bessie Lou
Sylvester, Kathy Ann Williams. AIL
ol Trans., Chesler.
Curtis E. Balthaser lt&gt; Herald Otl
and Gas Co., Right or Way . Sail-IlL
Herald Oil and Gas Ct&gt;., Right or
Way. Bedlm·d.
Beulah L. Bradlord, Andrew C.
Bradlord to Andrew C. Bradrord .
Beulah L. Bradlord, .328 A.. Sulton .
Naney Bobl. . Vernon Bobl .. JoAnn

MEADOW GOLD

19" HEAVY DUTY STEEL

STORE HOURS:

George Cummins, Opal Cummins

HYLAND

ZESTA

ELL

Virginia Hindy to Village or Middleport, Part ol Lot, Middleport
Elmo F. Smith, Virginia D. Smith
to Tuppers Plains - Chesler Wat•·r
Dis!., Parcel, Bedl01·d.
Tuppers Plains - Chesler Walt-r
Dist. to Elmo F. Smith, Virg1111a D.
Smith, Parcel. Bedrortl .
Joseph Smith to Mirhael R.
Harris. Lori 1.. Harris, Parecls,
Lebanon.
Roger Junior Spaun, Sharon Kay
Spaun to Raeine Horne National
Bank, 28.100 A., Raeine.
The United Methodist Chureh to
Rev. Frank Dickens. onc-etghlh
aere, Letart
Diana Taylor d al Donald Taylor.
Robert Sylveslt'r, Bessie Lou
Sylvester. Kathy Ann Williams ,
Elbert Williams to Kennl'lh While,
3'• A., Chester .
Robert H. Harrah to Kenneth
While, 31·• A.. Chester.
Maxine Piggott cl al Henry
Piggott. Harry Watson , Rowena
Vaughan, Leo L. Vaughan lt&gt; Kenneth Whlie, 31 • A., Chesler.
Board ol Rutland Township
Trustees to Dixie Exploration Company, Right ol Way, Rutland.
Dorothy J . Morris, Jesse Murris to
Larry E. Hollman, Teresa K. Hullman. Pareels, Middleport.

'

.

�Page-1~The Dally

State jobless rates soaring
By

~tERRILL

HARTSON
M' Labor Writer
1\ASHINGTON ii\Pi - In 27
st tt rs and tho Dlstnrt of Columbi a
Ap111 s " ISOnallv unadJustf'd JObloss I liPS WOJ( thO highest On IPCOi d fo1 that month lh&lt;' Labor
Dopattm&lt; nt rtpOited J'u&lt;'Sdav
fh( unt mploymt nt r J!Ps m those
..,ta tps \.H 1 c htghu tha n rn any ApliJ

said that tho number or states with
double digit une mploy ment In
Aprll Increased five fold since the
sa me time a year ago At the same
limo the number of states with jobless rates at 6 percent or less of the
tabo1 force fell to seson In April
from loa ve 1r earlier
M1r htga n wllh

li s

heavy concen
manufc~ctur

sincr I h( go' r r nnwnt tx&gt;gan com

tJatJOn of IUtomobiJ C'

pil ing sut h flgulls In

rng onro aga in led tho wa 1 wllh a
JObless r a to of lo o per rent at

1 ~70

the Bu

retu of I llxu St ttt st tr s said
OhJ l ) ~

unt mpl o\ m t:nf r llf' w rs

120 J~lltnt rom pm 'll to q 4 tn
lq7'l but sliglll ls lossot th litho 12 I

though that was dov. n from the sC'a
son 11\v unadjusted figure of 17

JX'l t'C'nt fOJ Ma1 ch

un" f or tht ~",() stIf f's md the na
rr on .., ( rprtal - unhkf' thf' national

Compar t'&lt;i 10 April \981 185 000
frss rt JX'Oplo had JObs m Michigan
tht bureau said md of the JOb
loss&lt; s 110 IIJO ace uned tn Iho rna

jutl[PS" s ta !t ... IKS -

nufactunng sec tm

pc•r ('tnt

Ih

ch

t rt r 111 ~ 11

llun tu s p1 rllmmat-y fi g

to t llu mto

li t

not ld]U S!f'd

such "C'asona.l
\arJJtton.., J s \~f'll h rr a nd school

&lt; Jo..,lngs

ill( uunt

llH st

s t~tf'

b\ stat e fig

un s rbo tr ul th1 n rtton tl f' mplO\
m tn l t (pntt tl\ tbout '\L\ \\f'f'k..,
l ht i tptll1ttlt i"f'd l'lH'Sda\ &lt;l! SO

Naltonal\;
j ust• d

the seasonail\ ad

um mp lov m c nt

rat e for

\pttl " IS 4 4 JX' l ce nt srtt lng a npw
post\~ 11 H'&lt;O id

up slight Is to
hut hgun s

lt f

Tha t rate moved

4 '&gt; perrrnt

not

\L

tn Ma)

t &lt;HaJlablC'on

Racine Social Events
Ry Mro; 1- ranc 1s Morns

M1

1nd Mrs Bud Sunpson of

Sn mow Ind s p~ nt uve 1mght \\-llh
h1 s nwtlll r Mrs Grdta Simpson
dlld \tsJ!td htr mothtJ M1 s Nonct
Wmtbr~nnu tn tht: husp1Wl

Mr and Mrs Edssard Howell of
Flu shtng spt: nt a Vt Cek wtth h1 s

-, Js!l rs Grdta Simpson and Mae
I lil«nd and «!tended the gradua tton
tx t H t.st s uf orlt: of Lhr 1r g ra n&amp;ons
Dorl/ltlt

Ho"t:ll at Comfort W Va

M1 aiHI MIS Ch«rles SpllKer and
s 111 J un of F londa sp..: nt tht:
!wil da ~ WLt ktnd "1th Mr and Mrs
F A Wtn gdt

1 tt ~ nlluJ

the

AlunHH

ttnd aLst \ tstll'd olht.: r 1 t:lattv~s
Crt 01 gt..: Sayre uf Den ve r Colo
spull Mt murtC~l wct.:kl'nd ~Atth Mr

illld MIS Herber I Sa) rc and at
It ndt:d th t.: Alumm

Mr
( 1

IIlli Mrs Bill MrKenzte of

:llllpolts spt nl a Sa lUI tla v v. tth Mr

tnd MIS Ho) Htfflt and Mr and
Mr

SC~rn

Curtis of Luratn vlsltLd

tht Htffle s on Sunda)
M1 and Mr s Cntt Btadford Jr of
Worthlll gton

Wt.:rl'

guests uf Mr and

Mr s ( 11ft Bradfur d Sr and attended
tht Alwnnt banqud
Mr s BunntL Milt s J aLksnn of
P H ktrt ng tun V\ 1s a gut..:st of Mrs

HuU1 Sunp" n tnd 11tended till
Alumrn

MIS F.dtth Wilt 1xen Wolfe If
I, Xl llgt n «nd Mrs (,uJda Cltland
MaghCJ uf Mansfreld sptnt lwu days
wttll Mrs llaztl Carnahan and also
atlendul the Alumm
Mtkl !-Ia\ tn c.m of Gr C!.\ Tum was
rt n u\ l:l nt ght g UL st of hts par t:nts

Mr and Mrs William Ha) man
Mr

c111d Mrs C\ydt Cross of
Columbus wen he rt: for the Al umm
O\ er tht Mt..:mortal v. ceh nd
Mr s Sv h 11 Wolft. spent t wo Wl'e ks
tn Akron wtth Mr .wd Mr s Homer
Rou sh \\h J aLuHnpan tt:d her home

11 a ti t ml th1 Alurnnt

Mr dlld Mrs l ~o n&amp;d Ltwts uf
Ca nton Oln J Vlstlt.tl Mr and Mrs
Crto gt' Nt.: tgle t fut tht werkend and
attendl d tht.: Alullull
Mr and Mr s George Netgler
spent a Sundav afternoon wrth Mr
and Mrs Philtp Mtller and famil y at
Nm thup cclebratmg the sixth btr
thda) of the~r granddaughter Sa rah
Millu
Dunna Btate and Senti P1ggol nf
Wilku W Va spent a Tuesda) wrth
MIS Mabtl Bra ce
M1 and Mrs Charles Mallor1 of
Atlanld C. J spen t a wee k w1th Mr
and Mrs D&lt;Is td Hill and other
r..:lalt vcs
Mr and Mrs K) k Stump of Akron
spe nt lht holida y weektnd Wilh Mr
and M1s Bob Beeglt of Farrbor n
and spent Thur sday and Frrday w1th
tht: BLL glt.:s i:tlld VIsited gn1vcs uf
lhu r dt: p el! ted 1 cia li ves
M1 and Mrs Edwar d Beegle of
Zdlll S\ lil t.: were herl' With 1 dati\ es
«nd fmnds to attend tht Alumnt
M1 and Mrs Sam Curtrs of Loratn
and Mr and Mrs Walter Wells of
Ch illt ro the spent the holtda y
s&lt;cekcnd wtt h thetr panni!; Mr and
Mrs H t~ rt vCurtJ s
Mtss Wrlma Say re 1f Columbus
\\as &lt;Jt he I hullle here fur Mcmunal
weekend and attended the Alumnt
Mr s Ge raldmc Shane and Mr s
Alberta Sa unders of Ga lhpults spent
d
weekend w1th Mr and Mrs
RodCJ ILk Grrmm and attended the
Alumnt
Mr c111J Mr s Btl! Bt:l'glc clnd suns
of Gallipolis spent a Monda) wrth Ius
plltnts Mr antiMrs BnbBecgl..:
M1 and Mrs Lall y Gn mm and
1hildren of Westerville and Mr and
Mt s Don C. nmm of Belpre spent a
Sat urda y wrth Mr and Mrs
HO&lt;luitk Gtu nm

a sta te-oy state basis lor las t
month Before ad justment for sea
sonal variat ions the national un
employment ra to In May was 9 2
percent
The bureau sa id that In 22 sta tes
and the District or Columbia jo
blessness mrreased by two percen
tage pmnt s or mar e from April1981
to lhts pas t April
Unemployment rales also rose m
almost a ll of the rcport mg metropolita n areas over the year endmg
In April with 204 of the 222 areas
regrsler mg JOb losses Among met
ropollta n areas Flint M\ch had
the highes t seasonally unadjusted
unemployment rate m April - 23 2
per cent Ander son fnd Modes to
Ca ltf and Youngstow n Warren
Ohio also h 1d ratrs above 19
per rent
Hu' ar o the 1PCOJ d setting April
1q82 unomploymonl ra tes for 27
sta les and tho Dtsllict of Columbia
rom pa r od 10 thP Ap rtl peaks m pre\ IOUS \ ('3 f S

Reedsville
News Notes
Mr and Mrs Ieny Smrtlr and
daughter Bar bar a of Charleston
W Va vtsrted w1th lm parents Mr
and Mrs Grant Sm1th and other
relatives

Mrs Pat Marttn has returned
home after betng a surgrcal patient
at Camden Clark Hospita l Parker
sburg W Va
Mr and Mrs Warren Prckens ac
r ompamed Mr and Mrs Brll
Meredtth of Beverly to Crrclevtlle to
vrs1 t wtth Charles Meredrth
Mr and Mr s Don Coleman and
farmly of Colwnbus and Mr and
Mrs Mrlton Tuttle vrstted recently
wtth Mrs Helen Archer
Mr and Mrs Jun Ward of Punta
Gorda Fla vtstted wtth Mrs Gladys
W,Jirams and Mrs Ruth Anne
V1sttrng at the horne of Mr and
Mrs Ernest Whitehead were Mr
and Mrs Ed Hensch of Cuyahoga
Falls Mr and Mrs \\ alt Hensch of
Crrrlevtlle and Sa rah Fr ydman of
Hyland Park Ill
Carrel Chl valte r of Mansfi eld
spent seve rat da) s wtlh hts mothtr
Mrs Lona Cheva lier
Mr and Mrs Ernest Whitehead
1eccntly ,e ntcr tat ned the Comrnumty
But J.n,rs Club at thetr home A
d1 sc uss wn wa s held conccimng the

proJeCt aro und the ma rker at the
Reedsv il le Bellevil le Dam park
ana Plans we r ~ made to have a
cookout a\ Forked Run State park
fur the next mcct1ng Refr~::shme n l!l
were se rved to Mr and Mrs Harliss
Frank Mr and M1s Ronald Osbor
ne Mr and Mrs Roy Hannum Mr
and Mrs Dona ld Myers Mr and
Mrs Warren Ptckens Mr and Mrs
Denver Weber and Mrs Lyle
Balderson
Mrs Chester Buckley vtsrted wrth

Meigs 4-H News

at Athens recently
Mr and Mrs Carl Barnhart and
Gary of Great Falls Mont vtsrted
w1th Mr and Mrs Frank Jones and
family and other fll ends and
relatives

lit Merry Mak ~:r.; + Vmt!M y8a dMay22
Itt f rst t d in).( ws held ul the Ptller hun e wtlh
thre ildVLs r ~ 1111 10 1 t:l bcr.; prc~t nl A
doL u Jstrat n Wll s K \ t by Se~na WI te m
hta1U Cl r s Sp~: ntc r gavt a t.n1k on safety A
H all Report was KIVt: l u F trsl At! For
St vert! Blnd OK and a Sa fet y Report was gtven
n Sttfcl) w II Ch 1 &amp; w ~ Spud belli ~a nc~
were pla}ed for rcc1cal 111 - Scott Trussell
Hc])t rtcr

11w F llltW Ills F'hns 11 d May l!J at U ~.: ht ml'

of Mrs Curtis w lh t It advisor and 10 members
present Itt In'&gt; of busmess mduded Tile Grea t
HaZH d Hunt by members m whtch they were
askt&gt;d to hunt fur hazards tn lhetr own homes
PrtlJet I books were ~tven out and thSt ussed
Htdt and Set!k w~s played fur n.&gt;ereatlon Donna
Curtis and St.aq Yankens senretl refreshment:&gt;
Sutannc Clay Reporter

F latwuods F'hers I t'lll a n eel n~ Jw t 2 at
Slttla Curt ~ I r t w1lh unt advtsor 1:1nd c1ght
r t n btrs allen I II&lt;! It was luted when amp
w ultl bt&gt; Hr I thai th~ Sctft't} S~ akm g Contest
w ull IJt Ju c 14 Our ur Curl s Alban Curt s
a I Sl.&lt;l y Y mlu s ~ewe demunstrattons on ar
t h e~l rt sp ratwn and f rsl a d f r blleth'lg
wounds an I brukt 1 bur cs The ga n t Encrn}
wsa pl11 y 'tl f r rc n atwn G nH Gtbbs and

Mil ht:lle

Ca t~ hart

strvetl nfrchhn cnl.:i lht'

ltX I r ct l ~~ w lllx June Z2 at p 11 All pnson.s
ha\ 11 K en 1\t vc ut s ltft I d a den onstratwn
~nd Tru) Y tnkl fl'i IS tu du a report un b yd~
S&lt;lft I) - SuZBnnc CIHy Report r

Till. F'1 vt PoULt Star Stl lt~rs mel at the hotnt'
of Jatk e Stan her un May 26 with one adv sur
t~nd seve n members pre::~t! nl DIS{usswn.s at the
llll&gt;t: l m~ mduded payment of 4-H books to ~
made from the club lrel:lsury dale of J L
ml~lm gs and 4-H camp F'or the club prjet:t
wh1ch IS f r!ll a1d a haUird hunt was conducted
by Kyle Davis Reports were g1ven by the
followm~ people Janet Werry 4-H camp Teme
Sta rcher 4 H proJeclli Michelle Wilson Picklll!(
a 4-H proJect
~ea ton was led by Scott Sta rcher which Illeluded k1ck belli and softball Ke1th Karschnik
.erved fl&gt;frestunenbl - Judie Schaekel Repor

"'nw

Hil(h Flyef1 held two mt&gt;etin ~ recently at
thr &lt;hster Community Bwldmg The fint
nlltldUltl: wa.~~ oo April 3 at 6 p m with four adVUIIUf'l, 10 member~~ and one vuutor ff{ed.h Hunt )
~ DemonrtratiOI\5 were given by mem
"""" :n.. """' fllllllly and L&lt;e fllllllly ,.rved
Mt~ At the next meeting members
11huukl triac up any quellionl they hive con"'""01! Jl"lloc1n.. modlnC wu held April :II 11 8 311
p m ~ Uf Jtldo.dl,... diJcuaod olio the C!uia
Clover Gar1ouec.r..&amp;Nl and tbe club • members
tlt~ldo&lt;l •• t• w the Yobric Shop Demon-

Tht Country Cousms met May 20 at Amy ant.!
Ahtt H t:htcs hon t Two adv1sors and mnt&gt;
m~:mber~ w~:rt' tn atlcndll n(._'1.'
Dunnt: the
busmcss medm ~ t was dtscus::lt!d about sellm~
Sllu Ic y producl'&gt; Ow onstrat1ons and reports
were ~ ven by Pam Rtcbt-1 Ailee Rttchte
M I !'..~ &amp;a rbrou tl h ll td Am Ouldle The subJet I of th~: deli onstrat1u1 wa ~ on table ~ettmt:
For nt:rcallun Truth or l&gt;dre was played
Rcfreshmenl!i were servctl by iiLrls with cuok ln~
proJcCl!i - Lon Burke Rq&gt;urtcr
The Hoof Hollow Band1ls met May 17 at Ruth
Rl"l:ves home wtth one advtsnr and 10 m~:mbers
Men bers took tu rns nthnii and prad!t:lllg
positions and handhnii the1r horse!! After the
rnee lm~ a w1cner roast was held wtth all mem
bers dORl!tlng $0mcthml( to cal - l..ell(h
Estndge Reporter
Metl(s County Sw1ne Club met on May 17 and
May 25 The ft rst meetmg wa s held at Altce and
Amy Rtlchte:~ home wtth one adviSOr and ft ve
mcmbe111 present Items of busmess mcluded
eled!Otl of orncers deciding 00 dues and
dtscus::ilng camp Breeding projects were also
diSCUSSt!ll Card games were
for
rt.-creatlon I.Jz Upton and Carolyn
ser
ved cake and Kooi-Atd for refrestunents
The 11econd meehng was held at the home of
Tom Everett with two advtSOrS and four members aUendmg: A hayrtde was discussed at the
meeting and dues were set at U. Different fa •n
were also discus:ted Mrs Everett served Kool
Aid and cookie!! for refreshments
Plans for a f1eld trip were diSCussed at a recent
meeting of the Eight IIJ En ~ h 4-H Club held at
the IICOUt hall tn Chester
Members commented on what they had
prepared from their cookbooka and a demoostraUon was given by Healber Ftnlaw Each
member brought ln a picture Games were
played and Angle ONopman lnd JennUer Bud&lt;
served refruhmenta Mhqbers wert reminded
to take pop carw to the next meetlng

Mr and Mrs Walter Brown at
tended the graduatron of their son
David from Ohr o State Unr verstty
Col wnbus
Mr and Mrs Vaughan Taylor of
Dayton spent a weekend wtth Mr
and Mrs Dave Weber
Mrs Roy Ftck of Colwnbus vtsited
wrth Mrs I yle Balderson and
famrly
- Mrs L Balderson

Harrisonville
Social News
Mr and Mrs Bobe Whaley
Columbus were ~eekend guests of
Mrs Lola Clark
Miss Barbara S1eple of lnd1ana
Mr and Mrs Harold Ball of Colum
bus were weekend guest!; of Mrs
Frances Young
Mr and Mrs Doug Brshop went to
Kentucky to Vlstt relattves over
weekend

Sgt and Mrs Harold Graham and
family of North Carolina are visitrng
hts mother Bessre Graham
Mrs Leatha Cowen has returned
to her home after spendrng the wtn
ter tn Flonda wrth Mr and Mrs
TheoHtnds
Mrs Wtll~e Collins Mansfreld
spent a week wtth her parents, Mr
and Mrs K C Welsh Mrs Welsh
had been rn hsop1tal and strll on stck
list
Mr and Mrs Howard Gilkey
Columbus, and Mrs and Mrs Tlba
M1dktff Pomeroy called on Mr and
Mrs Bob Alkire Sunday evenmg
Mrs Eva Waggoner and son of
Columbus spent weekend w1th Mrs
Clatr Waggoner

Pretty seedy
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
computer here contains Information on some 50,00) varieties of
seeds

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 16, 1982

Carpenter Personals _________
Mrs Jewell Jones spent a few
days at her home here followmg
surgery at St Anthony Hosprtal
Columbus before returnmg there
for obsers atton and treatment
A R (Ben I Caster and daughter
Fontella Spencer Charleston W
Va spent a weekend here They
spent the nrghts here wrth hts
brother mlaw and srster Mr and
Mrs Ea rl Starkey On Saturday
they were JOined by Eugene Hollrday
and the group vrstled Mrs Elma
Vernon New Lexrngton stste r ol
Mr Caster and Mrs Starkey I and
abo went to the cemetery at
Shawnee
Dale Dye and Murl Calaway ac
companred Mr and Mrs Chester
Baumgardner of Coshocton to South
western Hrgh Sehoul for graduatwn
exe rcise::; Kent Walkl'I

son uf

fonner restdenU; who have also
lived near New Bo•ton Ill for some
Errol Prckett Ft Lauderdale
Fla spent from Wednesday untrl
Sunday here as a guest of Ins
mother Laura Krebs He came
especially at this ttme for the
graduatton exerrrses at Albany
Elementary School for the etghth
grade His daughter Rona wa s a
member of the class
Guldre Bubo Chrllicothe spent the
weekend at her fann home near

ford) called on relatrves tn the area
a recent Sunday

here

Mr and Mrs Dennrs Devtne
Columbus and Ralph Jordan
Nelsonvt lle were weekend guests of
thetr parent!; Mr and Mrs Dorsey
Jordan
Mr and Mrs Glen Gassaway
Powell vtstted their son tn law and
daughter Mr and Mrs Wtlliam
Mtller and farmly They attended

Clytie

commencement

exe rct::;es

at

Alexander H1gh School where their
granddaughter Laurre Mrller was a
member of the graduatron class
Mr a nd Mrs Cectl J ewell Colum
bus Mr and Mrs Davrd Wrseman
and famrly Rutland and Mabel
Pauley Middleport were recent
guests of Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey
Mr and Mrs Tom Cassell and
Chnstme Ada Ohro were weekend
guests of Mrs Cassell s parent!; Mr
and Mrs Clay Jordan
Vtna Rutherford Columbus ac
companred by her son-tn-law and
daughter Mr and Mrs Bruce
K1ssell (the former Sarah Ruther

O'Brien Electri{
Service
16 YEARS EXP

•Resrdentral
•Commercral
•lndustnal
Racine Ohro
247 3534
Free Est1mates
4 20 li e

TEAFOR
VIRGIL 8 SR I!AllOR
216 E 2nd St
Phone
1 (614) 992 3325
LIK E

NEW Large
leve l ya rd 114x l 35 ex
cell ent tn sulated h om e
w th 3 b ed ro0m s nt cc
eff c en t k tch en a nd
bar L ots of c arpe ft ng
t11ghes t hea t btl I $127 00

S39

Datly Senttnel

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u s Rt so East
Guysv1lle Oh1o
Authonzed John Deere

FINANCING

You can buy th 1S 3
b edroom hom e H as a
l arge lo t for a garden
Por c h es
bath
ca r
petm g
and
Qarqe
Askt n g S28 000

New Holland

w

o

1~

0.1 ,

Cov

nf't Clu
H Otp
Pom~n, Dh oHJtt

S

SWIMMING POOL

I l.u1/if'd fMift!l

NJVf!r

tlu&gt;

f•lluwtnu lt&gt;l1plwtw t&gt;xrlu"'ff!"

..
. .-. . ···..
.
.
--·-l......... . . .- ............,. -•-..-. o.-...
-. ..-_.

RN I ESYll'

M

..

""

..._

..

..

10

......_

,.

G~

•

"'

$12.95

Square Yard Wrth Pad Installed
INSTALLED

GOOD SELECTION OF
GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM
IN 9FT and 12FT WIOTHS

STARTING AT 14.99 Cash &amp;Carry

CARPET$4~!h&amp;ca"'

CARPET AT LAST YEAR'S PRICES

ORI'JE ALITTLE SAVE ALOT

Rutland Furniture
Class1f1ed Ads
bring you
extra cash

n~

... ..

...••

a ... "

A ... _

-

..,,..

'

k nr

.

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Truck s
lo Boy
Trencher
Water
Sewer
Gas Lmes
Sept1c Systems

WANTS ACRES - To
build your hom e ot the
future ' Ha ve JU St about
anythtng here Lots of
trees
di.Jg we ll
and
leve l land tor a garden

Larg e or Small Jobs

The
tollowtn g
were
r ece tved / prepa r ed by The
Ohto
Env r o nm ent a t
Protectton
Age n cy

Ef ·

fecttve dates of fmal ac
t on s an d tssuance d a tes o f
proposed
acttons
ar e
stated Ftnal ac t1 ons may
be appealed tn w r1f1ng
w th •n 30 day s of th e date of
th1 s not• ce
to The En
v1 ronm ent a 1 B oa rd of
Revtew Rm 101 250 E

shall be fil ed w 1th the d1rec
tor wtth•n 3 day s Proposed
act1ons wil l becom e ftnal
unless a wntten a d
JUdtcatton h ea rm ~ reques t
1S subm tted w tthtn 30 day s
of the tssuance date or t he
d1rec tor r ev tseslw Jthdr aws
the proposed ac t•on Any
person may submtt com
ments and/ or reques t a
meetmg
r e ~ardtng
any
non f anal ac ttan wifhtn 30
days of th e date tnd 1ca ted
Acttan
as used abov e
doe s not mclude recetpt o f
a venfted complatnf . I f
stgnlft ca nt public •nter est
ex tst s a publi c m ee tmg
may be held A s to any ac
tton m c lud•ng r ece1pt of
vert ft ed comp1a1nts any
person may obta •n not1 ce o f
further act tons and ad
d t1ona l
1nformatton
Unless otherw1se prov1ded
tn nottees of parttcular ac
ttons all communtcattons
shall be sent to Heanng

CANDLELIGHT INN
~I 1 Chesl!11e Oh

St Rt 7 between Chtsh1re

Clerk OEPA P 0 Box
1049 Cotumbu~" OH 43216
Ph 1614) 466 ou37 Consult
ORC Chap 3745 and OAC
Chaps 3745 47 and 3746 5
for requtrements
Issuance of prellmmary

staff determlnalton
Columbia Gas Tran
sm tsslon Corp
Twp Rd 102 1/ 10 Mile S
of St Rt 124
Rutland OH
Facl\tly desert piton Atr
Appllcalion No 06 877
Comments to Ohio EPA
SEDO Atr, 2195 Front St,
Logan OH 43138 225 HP
Natural Gas Engine
(6) 16 lie

can pay for th ts on e and
en10Y a good garde n and
cou ntr y
w th
y o ur
c h•ld ren
Ev e n
h as
l arge tr ees and room for
a pony
3 bedrooms
T P water bath ga rg e
and fre sh a r for on ly
Sue Murphy H elen a nd
Bruc e T ea ford
All
Realtor s
A ft er
Hrs

~onth

ol June Thurs f11

MA~SHAU

Ph 949 21 60 or 949 2322
4 20 tf c

General

812212 H P w/50" mower
8123 12 H P w/hyd 50" mower
8179 KT Profess1onal Model60" mower
88199 KT Professronal Model60" mower

PRICE REDUCED - Th1s three year old modular
ts on a n~ ce corner lot m M1ddl eport and has central
atr screened tn por c h garden bath tub bu1lt •n hut
ch three bedroom s two baths and ts gorgeous

Now $42 000
DOUBLE LOT - Wtth lots of shrubbery and a two

•

BASEMENTS!
PATIOS
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
RICHARD GARFIELD
985 4464
6 l d I m0

FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON

APPLIANCE

D

All Makes

washers
e Ranges

20% OFF
ALL PERMS
FO~

rHE MONTH Of IUNE
lUES NIGHT IS MEN SNIGHT
Open Tues thru Sit

PH 992 3982
for Appotnlment

• Dtsh

• Retng erat

ors
e Dry ers e Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4 5 lie

Vrnyl &amp; Alumrnum
SIDING
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Beautiful Custom
Butft Garages
Call for free Sidmg
estamates
949 2801 or

949 2860

No Sunday Ca ll s

3 II li e

S 28 I mo

MILLER

C. R. MASH

ELECTRIC

CONSTRUCTION

SERVICE
For all your wtnng
needs,
furnaces
repair serv1ce and
rnstallatron
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742 3195

Truck, Auto and
HARLEY
DAVIDSON
New and Usad
PARTS
Open 9 till 6
Cloeed Sun &amp; Mon
PH 742-2081

Custom kttchens and appliances
custom
bathrooms remodeling
plumbtng electnc and
heattng

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
8

20 ti c

story frame hom e w ttt'\ the c harm of a 100 year old
hom e wtth beauttfU I woodwork n1ne rooms seven
firep laces and more $35 000

PRICE REDUCED - Approx 22 acres of wooded
SALE
$3,000

$3370
$4695
$4995

land w1th a newer ranc h hO'-!Se three bedrooms
d1n1ng room separate utility room 2'h baths W B

F P two car garage also older home Now $49 900

REAL TORS
Henry E Cleland Jr GR l
Jean Tru..selt

446 8025
L t il e kool res t •ce- c hes t by
I gloo
tr avel n g refr esh
m ent ce nter $24 00 5pr n g
Vn ll ey Trnd ng Co 5pr ng
Va ll ey Pl aza 446 8025
Th e Fam ly o f John A
Ra c er w II meet Sunday
June 20 a t Krodel Park n
PI
Pleasan t
Br ng
a
baske t lun c h 0 nner a t

12 00
PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Prof ess wnal
E lec tr ol ys 1s
Cen ter A M A approved
Doc tor r eferal s by ap
po1ntmen t onl y
JQ,j 675

6234
FA IR V I EW B bl e Chur c h
w II have 81ble School June
21 25 Beg ns 6 30 p m
n g hfly
Everyone
w el come
G•veaway

4

2 wh te k ft ens 1 blue
t ger and 1 wh te moth er
ca t Call 446 3732
9 pupp es Shepard/ Co li e &amp;
P tbutl mt x Call 614 379

2l39
,j 7 week old pupp1 es

part
B eag le &amp; Terr er 2 female
a nd 2 mal e 2 112 yr old
m a l e Ter r1 er Call 614 256

992 6191

949 2660
992 5692
992 2259

HARRISON'S

TV Repair
&amp;Service
Call 992-6259

'•

Pomeroy, Oli
Ph "2 2174
2 26 lfc

Gold
s tl v cr
S IN
tcwclry r ng s ol e! co
cu rr ency Ed Burkf'tl
ber Shop M ctctl c port

3476

17 18 &amp; 194m lcs ou l L n
coi n P k e to Jol nson Rd
Seco nd house on
e ft
ClOth es 'l l S 7C S TV t&lt;"pC S
r ecords
'tn l cnnn
Ra n
c ;~nee Is m sc

9

Yard Sal e Thur s &amp; Fr 9
5 Dra pes b l ank c l s
Qu l&amp; s old Qla ssworl' some
F en lon &amp; earn val ( r ed )
ba by c tolhiS H qh c ha r
!ems 10 numerous to nen
t on
Lowe r
G t1rf eld
Ga ll poi1S l / 4 mtlf' bel ow
c l y 1m ts oft RT 7 Rn n
cance ls
Garage Sale 7 m out 141
Fr day June 18 Thursday
cvc n ng c il ll er s wel c ome
Garage Sa le
a ll w ee k
Woods M II Rd off 325 Ra n
or sh ne Every th ng 614

388 9791

Wanted To Buy

Buy nq
Gol d
S lvf r
Plaltnum old co n&lt;:, scr'l p
r nqs &amp; '&gt; lvcrwr.rf' Da ly
Quo t es
w 1 tab lf'
A l so
co ns &amp; co tn suppl f'S ur
sale Spr nq V 'llley Tr 'lcl nq
Co
Spr nq V all e y PI 11 1
446 8025 or 446 8076
We pay c lSil tor I 11 1 mo(l
c lean used c or s
Frenchtown C lr Co
B II Gene J ohn son

446 0069

Yard S'l le 112 m le out
Bulav li e Rd
Thursday
Fr day &amp; Sa turdw Lo ts of
everyth nq
Yard 5alc We rc M ov nq &amp;
mu st se ll cve ryth nq A r
cond
color TV k ! c hen
table lamps d shes crock
po l c lothes bedsp r eads &amp;
Toy s
kn c k
c urta ns
3nd many ot her
na c k s
terns June 18t h and 19th
9 00 5 00
JOO Sa n de r ~
Or ve Gal llpol ts
16 17 and 18 n Bil~hr.n n l
G len B ssc l s Cou c h and
char $1 5 Table and 6
cha rs $25 k ! c he n sl ove
S25 all qood cond M sc
c heap
Jun e 16 1718 104 S R 124
4
m
oft Rt 7 bypass
Cloth nq coa l s TV s t :~nd
m sc Wa tc h for s gns
Yard sale
qlassware
croc h e t and
m ac ram e
tern s
TV s
baby and
hou se hold turn lure Spe n
cers corner o f Broadway
and Ma1n Sl Ra c .ne Frt
June 18 9 a m ftll dark

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 62\Sor992 73 14
Pomeroy Oh1o

9 30 tf c

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St Rt 124 Pomeroy OH

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also TransmiSSion
PH 992 5682
or 992 7121
3 24 tfc

J&amp;F

2 lam l y
Le tart

Old
r ed
I rt sh
Se tt e r
F e mal e
ge ntl e
w th
c htl dren 614 992 5265
2 puppy s tog tveaway 614

992 5864

6

puppte s

part

part

Shepherd

Beagl e

304 576

2266
1 mother ca t and tour k1t
tens 304 773 5546
3 s ma II puppte s

9 weeks

old 304 675 2826

Bu c k town
Oh o Thur s

Rd
and

Frt
Huge Yard 5al e Thur s 17
Fn
18 Sa t 19 9 6 778
Oli ve r
51
M ddleport
Glass door
ftr esc r een
lt vt ng r oom c hatr s stereo
rugs bedspr ea ds c urt a n s
wtnte r coats l arge &amp; small
c lot h1ng g lasswa r e n ck
nac ks odds &amp; ends Lot s
more
Thursday On ly 1665 L n
Pom eroy
co i n He ghts
Cloth ng m sc terns 9 3
Ra nor sh ne
YARD sa le on Kapp R dg e
r oa d oft 87 on e tenth m le

17th 19th 9 6
PART Co lli e part German

Shepherd pupp1es 304 675

8

1761

SMALL female dog Half

Rtck
Pear so n
Ex
penenced A U CTIONEER
Esta tes anttques f arm
household Ltcensed Oh o
wv Bu y .ng a nttques 304

773 5785 773 9185

Spnng er Spa n tel Call after

6 30 p m 304 458 1526

CONTRACT! NG

THREE pups 2 male l

• backhoe

f em a le Cat &amp; 2 ktttens 304

•excavatmg
• septic systems
• A water sewer
&amp; gas hnes

675 1557

6

tlimestone

Licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992 7201
3 29 tfc

Los1 and Found
---

LOST dog n v tc Jntty of N

2nd '" Mtdd port Black &amp;
tan Doberman

5 yrs old

614 992 2886 or 614 992 6302
Reward

ALL STEEL

lamps out of my house Will
return them set them on

the porc!T I wtll say no
more Myrtle

, BUILDINGS
51zes start from 30x24'

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to • and all
wood bulldlngJ 24x36
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Rac1nt, Oh
Ph 614 143 2591
6 15 lfc

LOST Two fox hounds
One white wtlh lemon
spots black while and tan
Ca,ll 614 843 3443 or 614 843
2963

Rtchard

Contact

Harry

A uc tton every Frt nt ght at
the Hartford Co mmuntty
Center Tru ck loa d s of new
m er chandt se eve ry week
Constgments of new and
used m er c handt Se always
welcome
Rtchard
Reynolds Auct1oneer 275

3069
YARD SA LE 307 7th St
New Haven June 15 18th

BEOS IRON

BRASS old

turn1ture
gold
Silver
dollars wood 1ce boxes
stone tars anttQues etc

Complete
households
Wnte MD Mtller Rt 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760
OLD FURNITURE beds
Iron

brass or wood

K tt

chen cubbards of all types
T O'bles

u 1 l or 11"&gt;

puc t r q

lno

k r k nt..J bilQ'&gt;
t lcJ pr oh (
I vr
f'QU p 1lf n t
JP rr y
LO w r y
&amp;
A
oc Ol '&gt;
K H 1!1
St uct o
14 3

Ou r l nq ton R rt
J K k son
Oh Cnll61 4 786 301 4

18

W wt cd l o Do

L 'l w n M ow nq no yar e! t o
I) q or "&gt; nnt
R( I 1b f' l nd

967
Tr 1sh co l r et o n &amp; t rl ul nq
Ca ll446 4480

-~
--

RP S ctent al
E I&lt; Cl r c &amp;
P l umb ng
12 yr ar &lt;:. e x
per •(' ncc all w ork qun ra n
trf'd Cali614 756 1748

Help Wanted

ln flat on qot you d own' G rt
up qet out Earn QOOd S$$
sell ng Avon Call 446 33 58
Exper cn ccd hf'IP w'ln ! cc!
f or
ocal c,upcrmMk e t
5end resume l o box 60 1
Gall pols Ol l y Tr l)un e
82 5 Jrd Ave Gall pot s Oh

4S631

W II cl o baby &lt;:. tl nq n ny
I o nr C 111614 388 97 55
C 1rp1 nter w orK r pa r or
r ( rn odf' l nq Wll p"!n cl nc
cr nq t tr 'ln d &lt;:.O m f' pr~ n
( "!l 6 !4 9972759
W t do bnby s 11 n 1 n my
hon t SprnqVolr&gt;y r c1
( 'I l l &lt;146 6574

N e-cr1f"ri
riHr
br a tcr
opera tor Apply n pcr '&gt;o n
Bob Evr~ns S T er~k. H o u s~
Appl c at on be nq I 'I ken f or
conc ess on work Apply n
person at th e Co lo n y
T hea tr c

DIREC T CARE STAFF
needed by il pr oqr ess vP
res dent &lt;II c are !n c I ly
serv c nq mentillly r c t 'l r
ded adultS W th be t1CW OUll
d so rd ers
Prev ou s (' X
per ence work nq w t h
peop e
r cqu red
Ap
pt e nni s mus l
be
en
terqe t c c r ea l ve pnt cn t
and able to w ork fl ex ble
hours
SIO 000 pe r year
sa lary for a 45 t1r wor k
week
alonq w lh other
ben f I s NIG HT R E Fl E F
STAFF also needect al
res td enltal hom es II PM 10
9AM $3 50 pf'r hr 30 IO 40
hr
work week
If
n
ter es tc d send resume to
Ohto Res dent al Scrv ces
Inc Rt 1 Box 7 M II Cr ee k

Rd Ga ll pols Oh 45631

Bus 1 n es~

11

Opport un ty
Bu stn ess or "&gt; l ore room
P 'l rk Cenlr ol H o l e-

n

5how m lk
ctr nk er &lt;, n
pr oduc t lhr~l m ay (a s ly
1 'lrn y ou SRO 000 w lh n thr
n cx ly r:-~ r ( l l RoberiHlr
per 30&lt;l 675 1793 or 675 5868

UNU SUA L

OP

PORTU N TY lor oca per

son n th s area to set I
c u stom made lubr ca nt s
for a n11 ona ll y known o 1
c ompany
Pcrmanet fu 1
I me pas t on
unusull y
h qh
co mm ss ons
Op
p o rlun l y
l or
od
v an crm c nt Comp,my Pi'l d
Iran nc1 pr oqr a m Mu __, t be
fillll ltM W l h h('aV y C'QU p
m r nt Cr.ll tod w 1 BOO 57 7

1193

BI G MON EY IN SPORTS

R N s L P N s needed now
to fulf 11 requ rement s of
l C F Cerl f ca t on Sal :~ry
co mmen s urat e
w th
Ira n ng and ex per cn c e
Ex t ens ve ben e t I s
n
c udng
pad
hasp ta l za t on r e t r eme n t
program no penalty s c k
leave 3 week vacat on l o
star t M or e Con ta c t Per
son n el 0 r ec tor (30 4)675
3230
or
wr te
Lak n
Ho s p t al
Lak n W VA

25250
L PN needed for Dr oft c e
Par t 1 me hours
Work
Man t hru 5a t Ca ll 614 992

Ow n your own s port ng
qood s bu s ness Sports c r
Cle W I SI10W yOU Lhe way
Bf'
all I il l ed
w th
a
nat ana
!ran ch se
eilrn
b q protl ts fu I or pari
t me
$1900 00 qe ts you
s t r~r t cd Call co l ec t to Mr
J w al 717 421 6910 or Spo rt
C r c le Inc So uth 9th 51
St roudsbury PA 18360

21

Money t o loan

R E FI N ANCE or purchase
you r home 30 year I xed
r ate WVii &amp; Oh o Leader
Mor tqaqe 77 E Stale 51
At hens Oh 614 597 3051

6633

23

R N s LP N s NEE DED

C&amp;L Bookkeep ng
Bookkeep ng &amp; lax serv ce
for Cllltypcs of bus nesse s
446 3862
Ca r ol Nea l

NOW to full II requ r eme n
ts of I C F Cer t I ca t on
Sa lary commensura te w tn
tra n ng and ex per ence
Ex t ens ve ben e t t s
n
c t ud ng
pad
hasp ta l zat on r et r emcn t
program no pena lt y s c k
leav e 3 week vaca l on to
start more Conta c t P er
sonnel Or1 ec tor 304 675 3230
or w r te La k n H osp t at

$250 00

wee kly

t lu lly

guaran teed) work ng par t
or full t me at hom e
Weekly paychec k s ma led
d rec tl y to you f rom Home
Offtce every Wednesday
St ar t mmedtatel y No ex
perten ce
n ecessa ry
Na t ana l co mpany Del a Is
and appl ca t on rna l ed
Se nd your name and ad
dress to A mer ca n F te l t y
Company H r ng Dep t 77

1040 Lone Star Dr
Braunfels TX 78130

New

WANTED
yo ung
non
drmktng datry farm help
mtlktng and farm work
Se nd le tter and threE
r efer ences to Box C 11 tr
care Pt Pl easa nt Regt st er
Pomt Pl easa nt WV 25550
Needed hones t and reliabl e
lady to work and help run
part ttm e
bu s 1n ess
Tramtng will be r equ red
Wnte P 15 tn care off Pt
P l easant Regtster
200

Mam St
25550

Pt

PI

W Va

round or square

Wood 1ce boxes Old desks
and bookcases

K 1n t lh e ut1n t
n s(
d! I f' c n l pr v n tr f'Sso ns
M! n w om f' n &amp;
h tctr n
1\ tr ur f on I! r u bl Kk h 11
f\l&lt;.,O
1v n la l11!
K H il t

ProfeSsiO na l
Se r v 1ces

P ana tun ng and repa r
L ane Dan els Assuc a te of
Brun Cii rd s
Ga ll pols
and Cu nn ngham s Athens

741 295 1or 991 2082

Lak n WV 25250

Public Sa l e
&amp; Auctton

-----Part S1amese part

F r on l d r ver s dt Se l l f or
1971 Vega v nyl ('lit 614

11

Sc hoo l s ln struc11on

ctc p e ldablc For PS I m1tr
C 'I I 446 3159 ltlf'r 6PM 256

-- ~

ma le k tten 6149926505
Me tgs Co Humane 5octe f y

A H ll y

1694

3888193

Mov tng Sa le 139 Lowe- r
Ga rft eld Gal l polls l ns tde
Out s de 5a te
Thur sday
9AM thru Sa tu r dny 5PM
Some !ur n tur e some ap
pi cm ces m tsc odd s &amp; en
ds Also house 'lnrl land
qoe s f or $6 000 plus all legal
fees

In su ran ce

bread Sf\ NOY A ND BE AVE R tn
suranc f' Co ha s ollf r{d
St r v ceo;, lor f n nsur '\nf
cov l new 1 Ga l l a Cou nl v
tor
alm ost
1 cen tur y
F Hm horn e and pcr &lt;:.on 1 1
l nq
HI
ns &amp; pr opf' rl y cov f ra qcs
1wc t
n
8 'lr ttv 1 l lb lf' l o
(Ol f~ c f
99 7 d vd ul t nrcl 'i

WANTED TO BUY 0 d lur
n lur e an d An t quf'~ n t 1
k nds c all Kenne th Sw'l n
446 3159 o 756 1967 n 1h
cvC'n nq s

Gnr age 5a te Thurs &amp; Fr
636 Dee n e Dr Gall pol s
q 00 IO 4 00

Sa t Jun e 19th 9 5 606 Ma n
St Ca rr oll Teatord s

If the person that stole 2 ott

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Pub lt c S 1lc
&amp; Auc lt on

8

n l ure dDa
chshund
puppy
dolls
shes
c lathes
fur

M xed breed pupp1 es Al so
d e c l awed gray and wh 1te

Mrsc

Radrator Speclallst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yn Exper1ence

Yar d Sa te Wednesday
16th Thur s 17Th F n 18Th
l si hou se on L ttl e K y Qer
Road across from Kyger
Cr ee k Plant An t ques 40

2 6 wks old k ttens I mal e
and 1 f ern a e Ca ll446 9542

•dump lruc-

5 21 1 mo

you taste her garlic
crumbs

CARPENTER
SERVICE
elednuf wori
(free Estimates)

-

Ah - shes my ravo nl e wat t II 13

t/2yr old Ca ll4463101

k1ften

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater core to the
Largest Radiator

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES and SERVICE
POMER

s 19 1 mo

276 Sycamore Sl
Middleport, Ohio

$3400
S1000
S1125
S1300

WE SELL &amp; SERVICE WEE~EATER, STIHL &amp; TANAKA
BRUSH CUnERS FROM •H.95 TO '359.95

•

Nt g hl crawlers $1 00 per
doz Sprtng Va ll ey Tradtng
Co
Spr ng Va lley Plaza

Burmese 304 675 6145

54

Manning Roush- Owner

I oz
999 s lver Father s
Da( bar $10 00 5pr ng
Valley Trad ng Co Spr ng
Va ll e y Plaza 446 8025

th1s four year old ran ch w1th full basement three
bedrooms large lot Garage eqUipped kttchen and

'81 MODELS
$1466

5WE E PER
and sew ng
mach ne r epa r parts and
suppl es
P c k up and
del very
Dav s Vacuum
Cleane r one ha lf m le up
Geo r ges Creek Rd
Ca ll

9 WEEK old female black

Office
$4625
$1145
$1285

An nounceme nt s

OWNER WILL LAND CONTRACT OR TRADE -

Dott1e Turner

1- Snapper 16 HP 48" mower, hydrostatiC
1-Snapper R 1der 8 H P 30" cut hand start
2-Snapper R 1ders 8 H P 30" cut elec start
1-Snapper R1der 11 HP 33" cut, H1 Vac elec start

J

4 kt tt en s to good nom e 614
992 7176

-Addons and remodeltna
-Roofrna and au«er work
-Concrete work
-P\umbrngand
electnul work
(Free Estimates)
Ph 949 2609
949 2234
RACINE OHIO

M ow l awn s do od
ol ..,
PomNoy M dcllcpon r
614 997 7588 Ask tor J tt
AI r 7

clo th ng &amp;
d shes Thursday &amp; Fr dey
June 17 and 18

YOUNG'S

'~ddons and remodehn1
-Rooftn,and rutter won
-(.onere 1 wort
-PiumbtnJand

Chr 51 :tn malf' 78 df ~
..,
lonq l erm I v( on I r n 1
ploymen t
P 0
[h x 8H
Galt pol s Oh St&gt;rl
med a te y

W lk esv li e

Jun e 18 and 19 a t James
Swa ns on C R 28 above
Eas tern H g t1 Sc hool An
I que ceda r c hest t re s
and m sc
6 14 949 2603
Ran ca nce ls

5 27 1 rna pd

RANDY'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Good

446 0294

KEN'S

e washers

Mulholand

Oh o

I II

Phone 949 2293
3 3lfn

Jlt~l
•

Three Fam il y Yard Sa le a t
th e h ome
ot
Ph y ll1 s

Mas ter Charg e

tscute Call now S37 500

'82 MODELS
LIST
$3915
$4270
$5915
$6215

woodwork good

be&lt;jroom home tn Mtdd l• port Now S25 000

SALE $2,200"

Ltst $2863 00

Ortgtn~l

locat•on full baseme nt and two A C un•ts are but a
few of the nt ce f ea tures of th iS s1x room three

• 2-5645 GRAVELY w/mower 30" or 40" hand start, 12 h p 4 spd

v 1sa

Dour &amp; backhoe ser
vtce water sewer pon
ds
foundafton s
reclamafton

room three be droom home w1th patto fru•t trees
garden spot and nookup for wOOdburner Now

SALE '202500

AI Wards Keyboard
1 446 4372 4 1q 1tc

Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

FRYE'S

PRICE REDUCED - 2 5 Ac res of land wtth a f1ve

LISt 30" $2537 00, 40" $2740 00

A~~8~1E:.~}R

While Ge rm an Shep hard 2

ASSUME THI S L.OAN 1 11 story house tn
Syracuse w tth three bedrooms huge ltvtng room
b•9 famt i Y room
works hop
garage
and a
beauttfully land sca p ed lot Ju st S3 900 down and
assume payment s of $358 a month tor 28 111 years at

e1-5260 GRAVELY w / mower 30" or40 'elec start, 4 sp

PIANO TUNING

1945

NEW LISTING - NEAR DEXTER - 45 Acres of

SALE '1799"

I 7 I tfc

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

or 949 2417

500

12

SERVICE
Water Sewer Electnc
Gas Llne Dttch es
w ate r L•ne Hook ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush lane
Cheshtre Oh
Ph 367 7S60

TOM HOSKINS

~I

13% tnterest Reduced to S33 500

LISt 30" $2337 00, 40" $2540 00

SNAPPERS BRAND NEW

And Home Ma1nten an ce
• Roofmg of all types
1 S1dmg
• Remodelmg
1 Free est1mates
120 Yrs expenence

TENNANT BAND

ground wtth a ll mtnec.at s and all fenced S•x room
hou se wtth four b edrOOm s a huge barn wtth hay loft
and a garage wtth workshop SSO 000

• 2-5240 GRAVELY w/ mower 30" or 40" 4 sp , hand start

PH.

June

$26 000

ALL

Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583
or 992 2282

SUMMER PERM SPECIAL

Moo keg Ntght
lues Ud1es ntght all dunks
reduced for the women
W!d 1/, Century nt(ht 9 12 draft
beer only PIOI toornamenl 2 am
Thm Old Mtlwauke Ntghl g 2 30
Centu1r Nurhl
fn &amp; ~I lire bands dnRk &amp;
dtown each mcht 10 p m
Sun Ptu.a pttcher beer speml
pme llso BQ s on Sunday startm1

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

SALE '1549"

W

TRENCHING

SYRACUSE Ott

C.lly Out S..J
&amp; Wtne Avatlable

s 19 500

PRICE REDUCED -

REESE

ROOFING

3 7 tfc

The Daily Sentinel

Lrst 30" $2067,00, 40" $2270 00

210 CONDOR ST

lOOPM 230AM

Real Estate -

• 2-5200 GRAVELY w/mower 30" or 40" 2 sp hand start

3121-

&amp; Middleport
Hrs Mon Sun

6-ll,..

That s rrght• When you use a column
rnch or more rn newspaper advertrsmg
be rt drsplay or classllred you reach
thousands of potentral buyers that are
eager to recerve your money savmg

4 WHEEL RIDERS -

•Eiectnc work
•Cu st om Pole Bldg s
•Ro ofing work
14 Years Expe n en cc

Plwrlo 9929913

2 WHEEL WALKING TRACTORS- All '82 MODELS

Town St Columbus OH
43215 Not tee of any appea l

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex
tensrve remodelrng

PH 992 2478
5 20 1 mo pd

Stop tn bnnr a tnend We also
ho10 Happy Hou1 Mon S.t 4 pm
6 p m Unadvertised spectals dtaly
Hope to,.. roo oil....,

(NO TRADES)
GRAVELEY'S

CO UNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTI CE

Call 843 3322
!&gt; lllmoiid

OHIO VALLEY

CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE

EXCAVATING

Housing
Headquarters

BUSINESS'
lS A.CINCH
IF YOU USE
THE LNCH!

Free estrmates

PULLINS

992 361 s or 992 3325

FATHER'S DAY
SPECIALS

Public NotiCe

IOEPAI la st week

~ ~­

" 1-- l .. .
01
..... ..

.......

mes c;;.:. nP

Rullanll Ohio

PH . 742 2211

I

~ suCCESSFUL

GIANT CARPET SALE

RUBBER BACK

.. y

- ~--

0.

"•• D

..

KITCHEN CARPET

•n-~-··
c-•

( ...... .

)

..

&amp;L1Y61HI

CARPET STARTING AT

..... (_

- - (·

OWft

M _.._

yell$

•

H ave fun 1n pn va te n
tht s sunk en pool Large
3 or 4 bedr oo m er l ar ge
en terfatn ng I v mg f or
mal dtn ng 1 1 ba ths
nat gas furna ce full
basem e nt
n ew ca r
gar age and 2 leve l l ot s
ne ar schoo l

3 ACRES PLUS - You
FlftiiMlill

Hog

Farm Equ1pment
Parts &amp; Servtce
1 3 tfc

a nd $257 03 per mo for
15 yrs a t 16% Ju st I k e
rent but you w ill ha ve
b ath new furn ace and 2
lots near groce ry and
schoo ls Ju st $21 000

~tn t

B~sh

Farm Equ1pment
Dealer

HER E 5 A BUY - W1lh
about $2 000 00 down

PHONE 992 2156

Vinyt &amp; Awmrnum
Complete 1utter work
complete remodehn&amp;
rooftng of all types
Worted 1n home area 20

ROUSH

Wtll take $7 950

The

Yard S't le Ju ne 14 and 15 at
Eno Grocery on 55 4 9 00 to

III~;::=========:::;-tr===::::======::;-lr==========j-;==~~:;:;;:;;;;;:;:;:;~::::=J

500

OWN ER

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

LAFF A DAY

Y Hd Sa l e

t:==========:1-;:==========il::=========:::;r;======;===::::;-l

Rev and Mrs Arthur Crabtree
and Mrs Walter Jordan attended
the Unrted Methodist Church Conference at Lakeside Mrs Jordan
was delegate from the Albany
charge
Young people from the communrty
who were m the etghth grade exerCises at Albany Elementary School
mcluded Curtrs Johnson, Stephanre
Lowther Roger Powell Jr George
Stout Ltsa Bolen Kevm Crabtree
Rona Edwards and Chad Sayre
Mr and Mrs Dwatne Jordan
Kerth and Sarah accompanred by
Mrs Jordan s aunts Goldte Whrte
Columbus Alkre Fraley Ashland,
Ky Bert1e Tackett Flatwoods, Ky
and Emmaline Baldndge PorU;mouth returned on Sunday from a
10-day tnp by motor home They
were overmght guest!; of Mrs Jor
dans brother tn law and stster Mr
and Mrs Alfred Rrce a t Perry
Georgra and then went on to Satsuma Florrda where they spent
some trme wrth Mrs Jordan's
parents Mr and Mrs Wtlham
Culwell and other relatives m that
area S1de tnps rncluded were to
Srlver Spnngs Daytona Beach and
other pornts of rnterest
The all A" dean's list at Hoe~­
Terhnrcal College for second quarter of year mcluded the name of
Bryan Jordan son of Mr and Mrs
Dwame Jordan Albany Route 3

The Daily Sentmei-Pagt'- 11

Business Services

tune

and Dawn Dye Walker was " mem
ber of the graduatron class
Victor Perry ts Ill Uruvers1ty
Hosprtal where tests a re bemg
taken
Mr and Mrs Ca rl Crabtree were
m New Boston Illinots where they
attended the 25th weddmg an
nr ve rsary celebr alton for Mr and
Mrs John Dunham Mrs Dunham
"as the former Janel Jdfers
daughter of Reed Jcffer s local and
the couple lived tn thts conununrty
until recent years They are parent!;
of four chtldren Connre Yvonne
John Carl and Rtchard Among
others attendtng the celebratton
were her brothers fam1ly Mr and
Mrs Rtchard Jeffers and children

Baldt: l :son Tut: sda y afte r noon

her mother Mrs Ma1gar et Ne wnan

Th~

Wednesday, June 16, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SenUnel

W i ll buy

complete household Gold
Silver old money pocket

7
Yard Sale
watches chams nngs and
lndtan Artifacts of all
Appatachtan Arts &amp; Craft etc
types Also buymg baseball
82 Chillicothe Mall Shop cards
Osby Marlin 992
16370
ping Center Jone 18 1920

Dependable woman to ca re
for elderly lady 10 my
home Salary neg1otable

wtth bonus 304 675 1209
PERSON to work part ttme
ca re

for elderly

lady &amp;

home Phone 304 675 5365

31

Home s for Sate

142 rlcrf' larm qood house
.1nd barn s Call 446 2599
For so le or trade 114 .1cre
far m
H r15 housE: bMn
pond rur iil water Call 6 14

388 8525

IT s GETT IN G LATE but
you ca n st II hav e a hom e of
your own f you earn bet
w een $Y 000 and $15 000 a
y ear 2126 hou ses will be
bu If n th e st a t e of Oh o un
der l arm home rural
hou s ng
program
th e
r em a nder of 1987 These
ho mes wtl l be fina nced
W1th no down p aymen t and
p aymen t s w I I be low as
$125 per mon th See our
model near the Pte Pa c
Marke t on RT
50
w
A thens or ca ll 992 7034 tor
tnf o
K ngsbur y Homes
1100 E Ma tn Sf Pomeroy

Oh

3 bd room bnck f repla ce
basem ent
garage
one
acre Kyger Cr eek htgh
sc hoo l dtstn ct F rst t me
offered tor sa te To see ca ll

245 9210 or 614 992 3905

House
commerctal s ze
garage on 1111 acre off R t 7
Middleport
Oh
b ypass

$12 500 Land cont ract 614
992 6762

�P.age-12-The Daily Sentinel
Jl

They'll Do It Every Time

Homes for Sa le

SI

TWO s tory . 3 bedroom . full

basement. S40,000 S7 .000
down &amp; assume loan of
33,000

ell 8 1 1

E nq!i sn Cou rL

304 675 3585
Ass umable 7 1 ~
per ce nt
loa n. 4 bectroom. 7 full
b&lt;'l lh s . &lt;'I ll c lec lr1 c 75x l00
c orner lot 1 30 4 887 1319
H OUSE" M eildowbrook Ad

d, t,on . 3 bf'clrooms. fa mil y
room w1lh fir eplace. ccn
tral a tr . bt1 scment , phone
304 675 1547
Threr bedroom . one and
onf' h alf baths . ga rage , VA
''ssum&lt;'l b le 10 per ce nt loan
o f 34 .000 $1 7.000 clown . 30 4

675 1487

br1 c k

7 c; t o r· y

r ooms.
ha l '1 ,
t) d ". C'rncnt
nnd
llrt'p lill f', 171 1 Mr1 1n S t 30 -l
6

6/'l 7JB I

TH RCF IJ!'clroom tlOU"&gt;f' . 1 ;
tJa "&gt;f'tll l'n l ,
1 1
acre s
qroun&lt;1 3 0 &lt;~ 675 3779

1-----------,....----------i
JS

B RI C K l lQmP . Mt

f\.vr&gt; .

3
'1 1 .• bat11,, 304

u• n tr ~11

r~ 1 · ct roo m &lt;:. .

Ver n on
i11r .

6 7S U ?J &lt;onwr lot
n

Mob d c Hom es
lor S.1 1c

'R IS t t.J r

M O OI LE

&gt;l OM e '
HOME '

USED MOOILE
CAR &gt; IRUCK S
L i\L L I P OLI'-1
CH ECK
OUR PRI CES CALL 446

Lots &amp; Acreage

Pr, ce redu ced 1 lots w1f11
rurn l wa ter c lose to c d y
ll rTlll'l . $4,450 00 Crlll 446
1/ 9.j
F or Scl l f' onP i!lld hall ilCrcs
mo rf'
or
lf'S S, ,,p
pr ox ,matPiy 600 It r o(1d
t r o nt~qf '
on
Co r.=~
CPn trr po1n ! Ret ncM Cf'n
tcrp o.n t S3 000 00 Pt1 onr
68? 69 4d

1 ) !7

Pr1U' re clu cf' ct For salr or
r r nt
17x60 7 bf'dr oo m
rnol)il f' hOmt' wilh 7 l o t ~
(.n&lt;, tl(' f'l l . rurnl wnter
( IO'lt' to r •tv hrn •l s Cnll
446 I ]9.1
Mobil(' tlonlf' 1:ZX57 . pnrt
t urn . 1n qooct cond Cr"'il!
o 14 3AS 8688
1980 Wul cl&lt;,o r 14x70. new
oncl Df' luxr kil cflcn . lnrqc
I•VIfK I
room &amp; br1 n1. 7
bed r m H•d ck n u ti! r oom
379 1310
t

1969 Bu ctcly mobilf' t1orne
wilh l 1p out. ex cond Coli
.j 4fl 7490 rl lh•r s or clll dny
tnurs
~ NW OO CI

Pk MH 7 bdr ,
/I..C. undrrpu1n•m1. '!.5.000
C;~ll dd6 71 74 ~111 rr h
1970

Gn 'C!Ory
17x65 . 7
a1r cond . front
por c 11 $5.000
Lo t also
i'I V•" lnblc $50 614 997 6093

t) CI room .

L(l rO L'
sc l ec t•on
of
prf'own ed mob1l e lwm es
M onth ot June on all home s
pr1 Cf'd over $5,000 Your
r ho•rr ot $500 re bate or til'
(iQ W/l S rl rld Vlll'(l Sk1r l 1nq Ill
stnlled A ll 11omcs or unils
1r adcd 'n on new home~
sold b y lll• s de.=~lersll•P
Nam e and rlCidress ol
p rf' v1o us
own er
upor
reques t K 1ngsbur y 1100 E
Ma1n 5 1, Pom er oy 614 997
7034
17x60 19 71 Star 1 bed room .
n1 r condil10ner, por ch &amp; un
derp1nn1ng
Furn1 shed
As king $5,000 . 614 997 7181
196A 17x50 R1 c hardson
Mobile Home E xc cond
Furnished. underpinning &amp;
f uel oi l l &lt;'lnk $4,000 99'1
5776
USED MOBIL E
576 ?Ill

HOME

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO
L1 ce n sed &amp; insured Call
304 576 27 11
Two
bedroom
mobile
home . 10 x 60, 304 675 145'1
1973 VICTORIAN 14&lt;6S,
furn1 shed , underpenned ,
woodburning firepla ce, ex
tra nice. ready for 1m
media te posses s,on. 614
446 7336, 304 675 4544
MOBI LE
HOM E FOR
RENT WITH OPTION TO
BUY , setf,ng on nice lot
hal f way between Hun
tington &amp; Pt Pl eas ant 304
576 2711.
72 . 3 bedr oom mobile
home. Crown Ha ven , 14x70
Sx 10 expando. $7300. Call
304 675 5767
33

Farm s tor Sa le

28 ACRE farm , 420 lb .
tobacco allo tm en t, running
wa ter year round , $10,500 .
Phone 304 675 6851
50 Acre farm, 3 bedroom
110use
wit h
spac 1o u s
remod led kit chen. 2 ponds,
bam. priced to se ll. Se ll or
trade tor hou se in tow n .
304 895·3083 ,

41

Hous es for Rent

Homes tor Rent , Lease or
Lond contra ct 1n town or
Call
Strout
count r y
Really , d46 0008
S frn housf' 1 rndf' from R•O
Grnnclf' Dcp &amp; Ret rcq
Call61.j 245 5319

HOU'lf' 6 rrn &amp; ba th I nqu1r e
918 Se cond Ave. Ga ll ,pol' s
3 bdr twuse good locaf,on ,
7 IJdr apt. HUD exce pt ed
A One Real Es tates. Carol
Yeaqcr Rea lt or . CCII I 304
675 5 104 or 675 5386
3 bdr home ,n C1fy , no pets.
rplercn ce Ca ll 4d6 1158
P ome r o y 1
bd r oom.
rf'modeled . 408 Spr 1ng
Car pPted . secu r ,ty deposd
SlOG R en t $195 Call alter 6
p m 997 77 88
4 roo ms

ONE
bedroom mobile
home . a1r condi t 1oned , on
pr,vatc lol . ou l skf't- ts Hen
der son Utilll1eS furn1shed .
S730 month 304 675 6730
Two bedroom mobile hom e
1n New Haven. adults only ,
no pf'ls, 304 675 1457 a Her 5

lots &amp; ~creage ~ ~

--- - - -

Apartment
for Rent

Apartment, 2 bdr ., unf , no
pel s Call 446 3937
1 bdr
apt
2nd . Ave .,
Ga llipOliS No pets Call
446 d8 74

'
Unfurntshed

1 bedroom 117
doub le, all util111es pa1d, tn
Gnll,pOIIS, Oh Call 446 9760
.=~f t c r 4 00.
Eft1c•ency Apartment in
Rto Gr;~ ndP .=~v.=~ili!ble now
Call 682 7083
In M1ddleport 1 bd .room
effl c ,enc y apt
1 304 887
2S66
Apar tm en ts 675 5548
APARTME NT S. mobile
h o m es.
houses.
Pt
Pl easa nl and GallipoliS
61d 446 8721 or 614'145 9484
APARTME N T
1n
Pl easant. 614 446 877 1

PI

Apa rtments , furn ished and
unfur ni shed . References .
304 675 1365

3 bedroom I bath . family
room. ba seme nt . 7 plus
acres.
t ru ll tr ees. ,n
Pomeroy $750 . per montt1
614 99'2 7731 or 614 997 5228

ONE
bedroom
un
furni shed. $175 . per mon th ,
plus deposit . Gal lipoli os
Ferry WV 304 675 1371. 675
38 12

FOUR room hou se. Ca mp
Conley. $130 per m onth ,
plus depos,f. 304 675 1371 .
304 67S 38 12

FURNISHED apartment,
adult s. close to Hospital,
304 675 2257

3 bedroom house. Gall,pohs
Ferry ,
wa she r d r yer ,
r ef r1g erator and stove.
S375 M 1gh t cons1der l and
contrac t sale .d 576 9077
As k tor Peqgy
42

Mobil e H om es
lor Rent

Mob i le Home. EurckCl .
Bdr , turn ., riverfront lot ,
r ef &amp; deposit Ad ult s, $100
mo 1 643 '164 4
N1 cP c lean mobil e hom e.
nat gas, no pets, adu lt s
only Call614 367 7438
Trader for rent. fu r n1 shed.
a1r cond ., adults on l y,
beautiful river v iew in
Kanaugi'l . 446 1607
7 Bedroom 12x80 tr a1 1er .
Will accept childr en &amp; pets
in R10Grund c. 446 0157
1 bdr . MH nice f urn ., nat .
gas heat. on private lot in
Ga llip oli s. Call446 1409 bet·
ween 4 to 7PM
1 bdr . mobile home $160 .
mo ., $50 dep . wa ter in
eluded . Call446 36 17

Clean 1'1x60, 1 bdr . mobile
home . Furn ., conve ni ent,
good
neighborhood,
air
cond ., sec. dep . req . Cal l af ·
ter 5. 446 8558.
Furnished mobi le home . 3
bd .r ooms . Washer a nd
dryer . Pri vate l ot . No pets,
dep. r eq. 614-949·2253 .

LA RG E, furnished , on£
bedroom apa rt ment in P t
Pleasant , modern fur
niture, washer -dryer hook
up, no pets, phone 304 675
1386 .
TWO bedroom apa rt ment.
call 304 675·6753 between
630pm&amp;9p .m
45

Furni shed Room s

SLEE PING ROOMS and
light hou sekee ping apt .,
Park Cen tr a l Hotel .
Furnishe d Room . $125,
utilities paid, 919 2nd ave .,
Ga llipOliS . Si ng le male,
share bath . Call446 4416 a f
ter 7PM .
Rooms with cooking, cab l e,
air. $40 a week . 304 -773
565 1.
46

Space for Rent

Large private lot 1 mile
f ro m St . Rt . 141 &amp; Rt . 775.
Ca ll4464053.
CO UNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pom eroy. Large lots. Ca ll
992-7479 ,
Sma ll
trailer
sp aces.
Mason . 304·773 5651.

--·- -·== ==
Wanted to Rent

47

Wanted to rent warehouse,
storage building or large
garage in ci t y of Gallipolis.
Cal l446·3159.
49

2 bd .room f urnished tr ai ler
off Rt .7, 6 mi . fr om
Pomeroy, fr eezer and ex ·
Ir a st or age space $190 .
plu s utilities and l aw n care
$150. deposit 614-985·3949 .

-

Hou se hold Goods

SWAI N
AUCT ION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .,
Ga llipoli s. 3 piece living
room suites co uc h·love
sea t ·chair $199, 2 pi ece
li ving room suites from
$140 up, love sea ts from $70
up, m ap le dinet se ts from
$99 to $199, wall huggers
$100 ., re c liners sao, mapl e
ro cke rs $49,
bedroom
suites $150, va ri et y of tabl e
l amps, marble top stand s
$30 and up, box springs &amp;
mattr ess
{new)
$ 100 ,
severa l utility ca binet s, kit
c hen cabine ts wood &amp;
me tal. baby beds, c:; hests of
drawer s $25 to $60, 3-way
rec liners $100, gas &amp; elec tri c ranges. r efr igerators,
wash stands , bunk beds
comp l e te wi th bu nk ies
$170, several dressers, hall
t rees, beds, brass head
board beds S35. bookcases,
smokers, Hoover spin d ry
washer.
wringer
t ype
washer s. hut c h, coa l &amp;
wood heat ers. televisions,
f ans, new tool s of a ll kinds,
var1ety ot sllve r stone coo k
ware Call446 3159 .

54

For Lease

- - ' - " ''-==-=-

Unfurn . modern 2 bdr. apt.
f or l ease overlooking city
park . $175 per mo. Ca ll 446·
1819 .

GOOD
USED
AP
PLlANCE S
washers,
dryer s,
refr1gerators ,
ran c;;es
Skaggs
Ap
pl 1ances. Upper R1vcr Rd .,
besid e Stone Cres t Motel.
446 7398
LAY N E'S FURNITURE
Sofa , c ha1r , roc ker , at
taman . 3 tabl es, (extra
heavy by Fron t ier), $685.
Sof a. c hair a nd lovesea t,
$175 . So f as a nd chairs
pri ced fr orn $285 . to $795 .
Tab les. $38 and up to $109 .
Hirle a ·bed s,$ 340 ., qu ee n
sJZe, $380. Rec liners, S\ 75.
to$295., Lampsfrom$18. to
$65 . 5 pc. dinet tes from $79.,
to $385 . 7 pc.. $189 . and up .
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$2 19 up to $495. Desk $110
Hutches, $300. and $375 .,
map l e or pine fini sh .
Bedroom su i tes
Basse tt
Cherry , $795.
Bunk bed
comple te with mattresses.
$250. and up to $395. Cap·
lain's bed s. $175 . com pl ete.
Br~by beds, $99. Mattresses
or box springs, full or twin,
$58., firm, $68 . and $78 .
Queen se t s, $195. 4 dr .
ches ts, $42. 5 dr . chests,
$54 . Bed fr am es, S20.and
$25., 10 gu n Gun cab inets,
$350 .. dine tte chair s $20.
and $25 . Gas or electric
ranges.
SJ25 .
Baby
matresses. $25 &amp; $35, bed
lram es $20,$25 , &amp; $30 Used
F urn 1tur e
bookcase ,
ranges and TV 's. 3 miles
ou t Bulavll le Rd Open 9am
to 7pm, Man thru Fri ., 9am
to 5pm , Sa t
446 0322
1 Frost fr ee refrige r ator
l1ke new. $150. 1 Norge
au to. washe r la te model, AI cond, Sil O. Call4468181.
Maytag auto . washer and
Frigidaire multi tem ·
perilture drye r . Each A · l
mechan ica ll y,
$90 eac h
guaran teed Ca ll 614·'156·
1207 .
RAY 'S
USE D
FUR
NITURE L1ving room suite
S65, twin beds $75, chest
$30, oak breakfast sel $65,
electri c hot wa ter heate r
$50, gas r ange $75, fan $10,
hospital bed $100, r ocke r
$20 . Ca ll 614 367-0637 .

· 'N' CARLYLE "'

Misc . Merchandice

by Larry Wright

~isc. Merc~a~ndice

Plasti c Septi c Tanks . Sta te
and county approved. 1,000
ga l. tan k , price $340 . Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pi ckup tru ck . Cal l 614·286 5930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVA N S ENTERPRISES
1975 Case 450, dozer ·
tra c tor, 1,800 hrs ., very
good con d .. $14,900. Ca ll
446 4537 .

Electric stainl ess
co mm er c ial stac king
&amp; 1 gri ll with bottom
Call 614 ·245·9428
5:00PM ,

174 pi eces brown un derpinning f or a mobile
home used ju st 1 year . A
seven &amp; one half feet by 58
inc he wid e multi colored,
braided oval rug . White
uniform s (pantsuits) three
differe nt styl es, siz es 9-10.
Ca ll after 4PM, 446·3065.
Federal no. 6, 12 gaug e shot
gun shell s, fi eld loads, $4.99
per box. Spring Va lley
Trading Co., Spring Va ll ey
Plaza, 446·8025.
Used sofa ; lov eseat; chair ;
used bfue carpet various
sizes; used side by side
refrigerator , exc. cond.;
built in gas oven ; gas cook
top ; 20 cu . fl . Hotpoi nt
chest freezer , ex c. cond. ;
rec lin er . Ca ll Corbin &amp;
Snyder Furnitur e, 446·1171.

st ee l
ovens
oven .
after

51

BEMCO mattresses or box
spri ng s, full or twin , S58 . 6
Pi ece Naugahyde heavy
wood living room suite
$695. Pillow arm sofa &amp;
chair $375. Roll top desk,
dark &amp; light, $189. Bunk
beds, complete, include
mattress, $199. Complete
wa t er bed shop wi th 10
bedroom suites on display,
st arti ng price $299. up to
$2500. Big daddy cocktail &amp;
end lables $50. Wall · A·Way
r ec liners $169. and up. La·
Z· Boy recliners in
USED FURNITURE
&amp; 7 pc. dinett sets, ''"'"'··· •
couch &amp; chair, bedroom
suite Hollywood style, bunk
beds, glass front book·
cases. Flair Furniture &amp;
Design. Gallipolis Ferry,
WV Open 9·6. Phone 30~ ·
675·1371 .

Yas h ica M G 1 Camera with
accessories. Exce llent con ·
dition . 256·6349 .
18,000 BTU Emerson ai r
co ndition er, $300. Ca ll 614 ·
379·270 1 eve ning s.
Gasoline and he atin g fuel
pany
614-992·2205.Oil
Ca ll . Excelsior

--

-·-·

Over 1.000 ce r a mi c m olds,
kilns and suppli es. 742·2925
or 742 2085.

11 h.p. Massey F erguson
garden tractor . Hydro
speed 42 " mower . 614·992·
3382 ,
ELECTRIC golf ca rt with
battery charger $195. 400·
500 New bricks $35. 30
Assortme nt of 8" &amp; 12"
blocks $15. 3-6' Section of
12 "
corrugated m e t al
culver t with 2 coupling S50 .
304-675·4677 .
Sears automatic washer
and dryer, per fec t working
condition $60. both or se ll
sepa rate . 304·675· 1504 .
A LMO ST new gasoline
weed eater, S75. Nearly
new wrought iron light fi x ·
lure SJO. 3 Pontoons 20x 12,
$200. Call304·576·2585 .
TWO twin beds, white bam·
boo and ca ne, mattress and
spr ing s and accessories.
1350.00 Phone 304-675·3445.
~u_i1~ng

Supplies

Building materials bl ock,
bri ck, sewer pipes, win ·
dows , lintel s, etc . Claude
Wi nter s, Rio Gra nde, 0 .
Ca ll614 245 512l.
Used materia ls. Buildings I
&amp; R at GDC. Stee l bea m s,
wood &amp;
Giles.

stone. See

0 -~....._.

Jim

56

Pets for Sale

71

AUSTRALIAN
Shephard
puppies .
Doubl e
registered,
r ed merl e,
phone 614·992-7206 after 5 or
304· 773· 5332 .
57

·BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Span ie ls.
Ca ll61088·9790.
POODLE GROOM IN G .
Cijj_L,I,udy Taylor at 61067·

.. .

Sonia's Professional Dog
Groomi ng , Call61088 · 854~
and ask for Sonia .
PINE RIDc&gt;E COL LIES
AKC
Registered Collie
pups. Call' 614·256· 1267 or
446· 2107 ,
Juanita's Grooming Special $12.50, 446·2310.
Also. Dachshund puppy for
sale, $40.
Big white rabbit and a little
white rabbit . Call 614·379·
2139,
Reg . quarter .. ma{e. 3 yrs ,
old. Broke, Big s~pw pony,
gentle. 61H49·2&lt;1fi.

Co r ve tt e,
1975 . T · t o p ,
m a r oon, w ·sitver interior
L - 48 ,
air
co ndit ion,
automa ti c tran s. ps, pb,
30,000 miles. $7500. 304-675
301 5.

Strawberries
pick your
own, bring
contain e r .
Claude Winters , Rio Gran·
de. 614-245·5121 .

1979 Malibu Classic station
wagon, air condition ed,
AM · FM, 304·675·2533.

1978 YamaHa 500 . E x ·
ce ll ent co ndition . Low
Mileage. 304-882· 2812 after
4:00.

--~-

61 _~~rm

Equipment

New and Used Troy · Built
fill e r s for
gardening .
Swishe r Implement John
Deer e Dealer,
Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, 446·0475 .

RON 'S Television Servi ce.
Spec ializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
hou se ca lls. Ph one 576·2398
or 446·2454 .

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

63 ____L_i_
ve_s_t~~- - _

72 JEEP 304·675-6 153.

-;A.,-u"'to
=-s=--t;-:o:::r-.S"'a"'le::--

GLASS TINTING Auto·
Commercial · Residential .
Also kits available. Energy
Control System. Call 446·
3100 or 446·7122 .
74 Dlds Cutlass Supreme
new radial tires , S-400. Call
614-446·827 4,
66 Chevy 11 Super. Sport, 6
cy linder , $800.00. 379·2779 .

exc.

For Sale, 1979 Pontiac
Grand Le Mans, 2 dr .. ap·
prox. 52.000 miles, AT, AC,
tilt wheel, cruise, AM·FM
stero, c loth interior, Cali
614-675· 1551.

-DID

'JA

GIVE THAT TROUBLEMAK.I N' MUTT WATER.,
"BULL"~

NAH! I AIN'T
fOIN' OUT TIERE
'TIL DAYLIGHT!

THEM BU65 IS
FIEI?.CE AT NIGHT!

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex ·
perienced ma son, r oofer ,
ca rpenter ,
e lectrician,
genera l repairs
and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560 .
Water wells . Commercial
and Domestic. Test hol es.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895·3802 .

~~~orcycles

1980 Harley Davidson wide
glide, show room cond . Ca ll
446·7781 evening .
1980 Honda odessey and a
1978 X L250 Honda motor·
cyc le. Ca ii61088·871L
1981 Harley Davison wide
g lide. Ca ll446·7615.

- - -- - STARKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Service. Shrubs
trimmed . Phone 304·576·
2010,

1975 Harley Davidson Spar·
tster . Exc . cond . Lots of
c hrome . $2800. Serious inq .
only , 614·992·3955.

You bouqht- it
just because
I was

BUILD ING ,
remode ling,
ca rpentry,
roofing ,plum ·
bing, concrete work. 304·
675·2440.

1976 Honda 125. 3,356 miles .
$500, 614·992·7663,
78 Kawasaki KZ 650, 3,600
mil es. 304·675-6363 after 5.

82

Lucky buyr She filled

an inside
straiqhtr

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

1981 YAMAHA 650 Maxim,
exce ll ent condi tion , $2,100.
304·982·3331 '
7S

Gallipolis
~,t. Co, Custom dozer &amp;
6ackhoe work . Special
farm rates . Call us for free
~estimates . 446·4440.

HE'S SOMETHING OF
A HYPOCHONDRIAC.
Y.OU KNOW.

614: •146 ·~

'.For water lines, sewer
lines, septic tanks or. leaky
basements call Hayman
The Hoeman. 614·992·2618.

YOU MEAN
HE'S NOT A5
ILL A5 HE

TELLS ME? HE'S

MR. WRIGHT, YOUR BROTHER
15 REACHING O UT TO YO U
THE ONLY WAY HE KNOWS
HOW. MEET HIM

NOT GOING TO

15 1/2 ft . tri ·haul s~l
gas tanks, 4 sets
life facket aod ski
MFG 60 HP, Chlrvslor . :1 JAR construction
Olt·
$1,150. Call 6
cher, backhoe, and dozer,
ter4 : 30.
Footers, gas lines, water
lines, Rutland, Ohio. 614·
12 ft . SEARS john boat, 742·2903,
$175. 304-675·41-\8 after 5.

DIE SOON?

to.

BARNEY

POODLE
pups,
AKC
registered . No Checks, 304·
895·3958 ,

WHEW!! I BEEN
CHOPPIN' WOOD .TH'
WHOLE BLESSET DAY
79

Motor Home
1 cameers

1978 TOYOTA Celica, 'Ox·
cellent condition, 304-675·
3378.

72 , BEETLE tor parts,
engine runs great; all .t or
$.150. will part out .. 61H92·
2216.
'

Need something haul ed
away or something moved?
We' ll do it, Call 446·3159 or
614·256· 1967 after6,
Now Haul1ng ilmestone·till
d~rt· top sorl ·graveL Free
I est1mates . Calf 614·367·
7101.

1~r":::Jiilr~bua,
made
t
·L ~. · .
car:pet &amp;

HAULING· Limestone, gra·
vel, sand. Ph, 742·2505.

--~ - - -.--.---- ­

.H MS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 30.4-675' 7397.

PEANUTS

I'M REALLY LOOKit-16
FORWARD TO OUR
6AME TODA'i'...

------------87
· Uflholstery _ _. - ·

197~.

CA01 LLAC Coupe
DeVIlle, excellent con·
dillon, ~ door, AM·FM,
tape, all power, S1750. 30~·
675-5173 alter 5 p.m.

WHACKO

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call614·367·747l
or 614·367·0591.

Scamp Travel Trailer and
new
5th
wheeL
All
fiberglass, light weight
Factory direct. Call toli
tree 1 ·800·3-4&lt;1·~962 for tree
color brochure, SAVE BIG
BUCKS!

cutlains, good condition.
Call-146·3666 alter 6:00PM,

ENOUGH TO
DRIVE A GAL

~1

. · Home
Improvements

s'T UCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial anll residential,
tree estimates. Caii6U·256·
1182.
'

'.

. , ·TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
~·7833 or -146·1833.
MOWREYS'Upholstery Rt .
1 Box 12~. Pt. Pleasant, 30~·
675-415~ ,

•

•

byHenrfAmoldondBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to form
four ordinary words .

I GOUBS I [j
I···-·-I I
RIPEV

m

®J
~
News
ffi My Three Sons
I]) ABC News
(() Electric Company
® Over Easy
6 :30 0 CIJ ffi NBC News
CIJ MOVIE : ' Heidi '
Cil $50,000 Pyramid
(!) ESPN Sportsforum
(I) Father Knows Best
I]) Muppet Show
0 I]) ® CBS News
Ill Dr. Who
CID Lilias, Yoga and You
Ill {].2) ABC News
7 :00 0 CIJ P.M . M agazine
(]) Bull' s Eye
(!) '81 U.S. Open Golf
Hi lites
(I) Green A cres
(]) Entertainment Tonight
ffi Happy Days
0 Ill Tic Tac Dough
(I) (]1) Mac Neil -l ehrer
Report
®I News
Ill {].2) Muppet Show
7 :30 0 CIJ You A sked For It
CIJ MOVIE : 'Wrong Arm
of the law'
(]) Another Lite
(!) ESPN Sports Center
® Andy Griffith
Ill 0 Ill Family Feud
CD Laverne and Shirley
(I) Business Report
®l Richard Simmons
® Victory Garden
G)
(W
Entertainm ent
Tonight
8 :00 0 CIJ CD Real People To ·
n1ght ·s show fea1ure s a
doctor·hypnO!IST
who
cla1ms she has been 1n
practiCe for 10 ,000 years ,
a fashton show for frogs
and a vts1t to the 'most ISolated woman 1n Amer1 ca ·
IAI 160 m1n I
CIJ MOVIE : 'S tripes'
(I) National Geographic
Special
(!) Auto Rac ing '82 :
CART Rex Mays 150
from Milwaukee. WI
(1) All In the Family
Ill Ill CW Greatest
American Hero A mme
booby -trapped w11h gold
and murderous men !ransform Ralph 's f1eld tnp tnto
a brush w1th death !RJ (60
m1n)
0 Ill ®I last Round ·Up
of the Elephants Th1 s special examtnes the largest ol
land ammals !60 m1n )
Ill ® Kennedy Center
Tonight ' An Opera Gala
Sa lut e to George Lond on ·
F1heen opera star s JOin
Beverl~ Si ll s m a rewal to
stn g to and talk about the~r
ment or and colleague (2
hr s.)
8:30
Major league Base ball: Atlanta at Houston
9 :00 0 ffi CIJ Facts of lite
Natalte's annoyance w11h
her grandmo ther change s
to adm1ratton (R)
CIJ MOVIE : ' final Count ·
down'
(]) 700 Club
Ill Ill {].2) The Fall Guy
Colt IS left 10 prevent !he
assass1nat1on of a VISI!Ing
fore1gn pres1dent when Ry·
ker IS killed . (R) (60 m1n I
0 ill ® MOVIE : 'To
Find My Son '
9 :30 0 CIJ CD love, Sidney
Sidney meets h1 s mov1e
queen idol.
10:00 0 CIJ ffi Quincy OUincy
trie s to
preve nt
tox1c
waste from harmmg the
health of nea rby res1dents
(R)(60 m1n I
CIJ MOVIE : ' Zorro The
Gay Blade '
(!) ESPN Special : 1982
U .S. Open Golf Preview
I]) Ill ~ Dynasty A
strange drea m becomes
real-life for Krystle and
Blak e, Stephe n ent ers a
danyerous car race to w1n
Sammy Jo's affections.
and Alexis se1zes a power ful new w eapon to win
back Slak e. (A) (60 m1n I
Ill Paper Chase
® Newswatch
10:30 (]) Sing out America
®Hitchcock
11 :00 0 CIJ Ill 0 IIJ ® Ill ~
News
CIJ MOVIE : 'Pardon Mon
Affaire'
(]) Naohville RFD
(!) ESPN Sports Center
ffi News/ Sports/ Weather
(J) Dick Cavett Guest IS
Julia Child .
11:30 0 CIJ ffi Tonight Show
Johnny is joined by guitarist liona Boyd. (60 min )
CIJ MOVIE : ' Laot Metro'
(]) Another life
Ill Benny Hill Show
0
I]) MOVIE: 'The
Paradise CQnnection'
Ill Captioned ABC News
®I MOVIE : 'War Italian
Style'
GllDI Nightline
11 :45 ffi TBS Evening News
12:00 Cll Bums &amp; Allen
(!) All-Star SportsChal·
lenge
I]) Nightline
Ill PBS Late Night
Ill ~ The love Boat A
judge falls for a man she
put on probation, the Captain falls for a beautiful
woman and Doc 's love life
suffers. Guest starring Pat
Crowley, George Gobel and
Murphy Cross. (R) (60
min .)
12:30 0 CIJ (!) Late Night with
David Lettarman David is
joined by sex therapist Dr.
Ruth Westheimer, pitcher
Tug McGraw and comedian
Gary Muldeer. (R) (60 min .)
Cll Jack Benny Show
(!)
1981
Wimbledon
Highlights
I]) MOVIE: 'Mozambique'

--------

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

rn

ADVANCED
Sea ml ess
Gutter ·Doors . Offerin g
continuous
guttering ,
seamless siding, roofing ,
garage
doors ,
free
estimates, 614·698·8205.

1980 Pontiac Sunblrd auto.
trans ., power steering, AM·
FM radio, excellent cond.
Call446·4782.

1978 MERCURY Bobcat,
station wagon, V6 englne,
automatic, power steering,
excellent condition, $2500.
304·675·3312 ,

'"i•ii~~~

)i:i!EAN~HILE ·-

F &amp; K Tr ee Trimming,
stump removal. 675· 133 1.

1980 V W Vanagon, AM ·FM,
automatic, 7 passenger,
low mile s, 304·675·2533 .

1973 Olds Cutlass runs
good, good interior. Call
.u6·7490 after 5 or all day
thurs .
1980 Toyota Celica
cond . Call675·7438.

i

Lll__l~~~=t~L---~ ~ ~·-··~-----===~--~~~~

Ai rl ess spra y pai ntin g
comm erc ia l &amp; resi den t ia l,
interior &amp; exterior , in sured
&amp; bonded . Free es timates,
r easonabl e rates . B &amp; B
Pa inting , 614 256· 1596.

75 CHEVY pi c k up, 6 cy l. 3
goo d condition,
speed,
SIBOO . 304·675·7436 .

73 JEEP Commando, 4
WH , Hi · Lo rg, auto hubs, 6
cy l , std . M ech . OK ,
$1600 .00, 304-675·5501.

-

;

Truck
s tor
- - '- -Sale
---

Kub K lipper belly mower,
culti va tor s for 3 point hit·
ch . Good condi tion . 256·
1208.

7"1-

I CAfJOOT ABID~ ~8 I.WO
{.[)1./f, CALU~ ctiRI~6 m~ DI~N~R
11~ !

Home remodeling, alumin·
mum si ding , gutters, win·
dows, storm doors. 15 yr .
ex perience, free e~timate .
Call61067·0490.

Gene's Steam
Carpe1
Clea n-Scotch Gaurd· Fr ee
es timates -spring specia ls·
Gene Smith, 992·6309 .

74

HOOA6!

- r - ---,

i

1972 Chevy pi c kup $300 .00,
1974 Ford Gran Torino
$500.00. Cal l 304-576·2174 at ·
ter 5 : 30pm

73

wooos·:,.

WHAT'S A

C &amp;
R Paint Ce nt er
Professiona l
paint e r s,
commer c ial and residen ·
tial , insu r ed. 41 Cour t St .,
Ga llipoli s, 446·9458, no an·
swe r 446·1758 .

1973 PO!:ITIAC Lemans, a ir
co ndition e d .
p owe r
steering , 350 engine, $700.
or best offer over $600. by 6·
23·82 . 2511 Jeff er son Ave .
Pt . Pl easant, WV .
72

WISCONSIN

YA KNOW, THAT MIGHT
NOT ~E S UCH A BAD
IDEA, WE COULD USE'
THE EXPOSURE IN
THAT PART OF
THE COUNTRY

- - - -- - - - - -

-~ ------- --­

- - - - -- - - - - s9 For Sale or Trade

IN THE LIMELIGHT,

C HRI ST I A N 'S
CO N ·
STRUCTION .
Co nstr ,
roofing, si ding, spouting,
fenci ng, paint ing, repairs &amp;
c lea ning . 446 -2000, ca ll
before 8 and after 5: 30.

79 Chevro let C10, 6 cyl.
27,000 miles. c-aut omati c
transmission, ps, pb, $3900.
304-675·6363 after 5 p.m .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables_

S8

Registered and grade hor·
ses, excel lent 4-H proj ec t .
PRICE 'S
REDUCED . English and western sad everything
Metal shee t 's fl at porcelin dle s ·
enamel coated, wi ll nail. imaginabl e in horse equip won't rust . E x . material a ll ment and supplies, a lso
types of bui Iding 20· 24· riding lessons and trail
gauge 4'x 8' $7 .00, 4' x 10' rides and horse training .
$8.00, 4'x 12' $9 .60. 4'x odd Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow.
$5 .00 . Tupper s Plain s, Ohio 614-698·3290 .
614·667·3085 .
4 year old registered quar ter horse stallion . 614·742·
56
Pets for Sale
2274 ,
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TE RY
KENNEL AKC
Hay&amp;~~ ­
Chow
puppi es,
CFA 64
Himalayan, Persian and HAY tor sa le. 304·458· 1854
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
3844 after 4 p .m .
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding a ll breeds, c lean
indoor -outdoor facilities .
A i so AKC Reg . Dober ·
mans . Ca ll446·7795.

Autos for Sale

1974 Linc oln , 1971 ca mper
van, 1966 Corvarre. Ca ll
304-882·2043 betweenJ p .m .
and6p.m .

KEEP EASY'S NAME

iTS ONLY A MYTH.....IIIIII
i!&gt;UT THINK OF THE
PUBLICITY IF EA&lt;SY
60E'G AFTER
O NE.

Masonary work,
Log ue
Co ntra cting,
Rt .
1,
Ewington . Ca ll 614·388·
9939 .

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

Musical
Instruments
---- --- -- Wurlitz e r
Funmak e r
Organ,
3
keyboards .
Origina l pri ce $1895 . Will
se ll $650.00 . 379 -2779.

OF THI G STUNT TO

11 CATCH A
HODA6 I~ THE

Creative wood d ec k s,
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
redwood . Free es tim ate.
Call614388·976 2.

Co m · I1':==========;::==========~

Ze n i th bl ac k and white TV .
$150. 614-742·2545,

55

.1.

... GO I THOU(;HT

o rn m o m

1}fli}N} ID'il

~ ~ ~~ ~

.. ,., ,,_c-.-, ..... ... -

EVENING

\APTA I N EASY
French Cit y
P a int ing
r esi dential &amp; comme r cial.
in terior , ex terior , paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured
cei lings. Call 61067·7784
or 61067 ·7160.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock,

I'

6/16/82
6 :oo

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

Household Goods

WEDNESDAY

Mar c vm
Roofing
&amp;.
Spouting . 30 years ex·
per ience, specializing in
built up root. Cal l 61088·
9622 or 61088·9857 .

Merehandlse
2 bedroom trai ler close to
school,
park ,
st ores .
Deposit r eq ui red . Mid
d lepor t . 614-992 59 14.

Television
•
•
vtewtng

PAINTING · in terior and
ex t e ri or,
plumbing ,
roofing , some remodeling .
20 yrs . ex p . Ca ll 61088·
. 9652.

CA PT A IN STEEMER Ca r ·
pet Cl ea ning fea tur ed by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Ca rpets. Free estimates.
Ca ll446 2107.

i22tf."'.......

RATLIFF 'S POOL CEN ·
T ER Pools sa le, suppli es &amp;
install ati on. 403 2nd. Ave .,
Ga l lipoli s, Oh. Ca ll 4466579 . In ground ·Ablove
ground .

Hom e

81

19 inch Sony portabl e co lor
TV , like new cond., $300.
Ca ll 4.46·7781 eve ning .

1 ranspurtatlen
54

The

Improvements

-~-----

and ba th Full
ba ~e ment Stove and fr1dge
1n k1tchen No 1ns1de pets
6" 992 3090

2 bedroom traol er in Mid·
dl eport . $150 . month plus
Farmettes 3.75 acres to 5 deposit &amp; references . 614·
acres. Flat lot, city sc hool 992·7841 or 614·992·6510.
district. Cal 161079·2196 .
2 bedroom trail er . Rea l
TWO acre lot s·150 ft . road ni ce, adults only . Brown 's
fr o nt age,
ci ty
water, Trailer Park , Minersville.
behind 84 Lumber , ca ll304· 614·992·3324,
675-6873, 675·3618,
TWO bedroom unfurni shed
TWO adjoi ning lot s in $150 per month plu s
r es tricted subdivis ion on deposit. Camp Conley , 304·
Mason Coun ty Road . 2.37 675·1371 ' 304-675·3812.
acres, corner lot $18,500·
2.16 acres $16,500. Phone
LARGE
14x70 ,
3
304-824·5703 after 5:30p.m .
BEDROOM ALL ELEC·
TRIC MOBILE HOME set·
ting on a ni ce lot, half way
1 acre, drilled well , septic
between Huntington &amp; Pt.
tank 25x25 unfinished block
Pleasant on State Rt. 2,
building $6,500 . one· halt
$250.00 per month, 304·576·
mile ott end Greer Road ,
2711 .
304-675·2949,
35

Mobi l ~ Hom es
lor Rent

42

44

CLEA N USED MOBIL E
HOM ES
KESSEL ' S
QUALll Y
MOBI LE
HOM E SALE S, 4 Ml
WE ST GALLIPOLI S, RT
35 PHONE 446 3868

June 16, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

rJ

[J

1

I

UPGALE

IF

YOU OON'I GEl

I'TI'&gt;rJ/J.Y'GA~WER R16Hi

~V~~~~~--v~-.::1~ AWAY, JUST MAKE UP

I

"' ,:1

t::, ,:1

.

\REMM01
[) (

'!'OU~ MIND TO WORK
1i AL.L. OUi AISAI N.

Now arrange !he Circled leners to
form the surprise answer. as sug
gested by the above canaan

Printanswerhere :

"IT]-(

I I XX)"
(Answers !omorrow)

1 Jcmbles TAKEN CLOAK JACKET IRON IC
Answer What you have to have In order to make
money - THE KNACK FOR JACK

I

Yesterdays

Jumb~

Book No. 19, containing 1tO puules . ls ava ilable l or $1 .95 pottp.lld
!rom Jumble, clo this newspaper, Bo11 34. NorwOOd, N.J. 07648. 1nclude your
name, address, zip code and make checks payable l o Newspa~s .

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Kay shows the way

NO RTH

6· 16·82

+A
• J 763

+KQJ6 2

+7 42
WEST

EAST

+KQ J874

+10 9651
• A 10 4 2

··-

+A

• g7 4

+~

+ 9 6 :r

10 H 5

SOli T11

+ 3
.K Q985
tJ 0853
+ AKQ
V uln erable Both
Dea l er South

West

No rlh

1-:ast

2+

4•

4+

Pass

Pass

Pa s!o&gt;

,s.•

South

+K

Upenrng lead

By Oswald Jaeob y
and Alan Sonlag
H ere is a hand from a
1970 New York tournam ent
in which practica ll y every
declarer played '" hearts
and usually at the fiv e l evel.
The play would start with
a king of spades lead .

Dumm y 's ace would win and
a low trump lead to So uth 's
queen wou ld di sclose the bad
trump break
Declarer 's
next play would be a trump
to dumm y 's jack and East's
ace. Now Eas t would cash
hr s ace of dramonds and lead
a club.
Dec l ar er would have no
way to get to dummy to prck
up East's lO of trumps and
would be held to 10 tncks .
The one success ful declar er was Norma n Kay of Phil ·
ade lphi a, th en and now one
of our gr ea test players
When West showed out of
hear ts, Norman stopped to
study poss ibilities
East probably held frve
spades He was known to
hold four hearts and the brd·
ding marked him wrth the
ace of diamonds Ma ybe that
ace of diamonds would be a
sin gl eton
Norman led out his ace ol
cl ubs West. an obligrng
fe ll ow, dropped the erght as
t he apparent start of an ec ho
to show an eve n number. So
Norman cashed his other
cl ub s before l ead ing to
dummy's )ack of hearts.
East had no way to throw
Norman in his own hand and
he neve r got to sco re his l 0
of hearts.
!NEWSPAPER 1-.:NTERPRISE ASSN )

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
1 .. Arrivederci 41 H olm
42 Tailor,
at times
5 Disma y
43 Abound
tO Synan c rty

DOWN

II Lag
13 Endure
14 Ca lif. ci ty

I F anatr ca l
2 Popeye's love

15 Common

3 Rol e f or

contraction
16 Good !Fr. I
t1 " Childre n of
a Lesse r - "
18 Earl y
Bogart film
20 Actress Scala
21 Inlet iSp . I
22 Famous
Quaker

Ca lla s
4 Imitate
5 Hamburg's
port
6 Restrain ed
7 Troubl e
8 Totter
9 Brave one
12 Insec t
!6So -

Yest erday's Answer

6 16

19 Colorless

28 " Mouse"

22 Youn g
sa lmon
23 Writer
24 - serve r
25 Marked
with lines

30
31
32
33

26 Codger

39 Wee bird

Struck
Ta ntalize
Banish
Biblical
juniper
38 Crow's cr y

23 Part of a
chair back
26 Proofreading
mark
27 Manger
28 Spanish
compose r
29 Hockey' s
Duguay
30 Less prolix
34 Diamonds
I sl. I
35 With (Ger. I
36 English
river
:17 Boston
street
Marsupial
Country
place

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how to work

it:

A X Y D I. B A A X R
Ia

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands (or anoth er . In thi s sample A i1
u sed for the three L' s. X ror th (' twn 0 ':-., t'lc Si ngle l etters,
apostrophes, the length and (ormation or th e words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differt&gt;nt
CRYPTOQUOTES

K

XZYSIC

AQZYBVY C N,

p N p
KHH

YRHYAKCI'V

K

XUKAL

PNP

CBB
OQAI
VBQ ZAP
QRLRBJR
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I WISH MY DEADLY FOE NO
WORSE THAN WANT OF FRIENDS AND EMPTY
PURSE. - NICKOI.AS BRITON

e&gt; 1982

Ktng Features Syndrcate. Inc

�Wednesday, June 16, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Four people fined )J()(lJ'ci ••• __________________________~-~~C~o~n~ti~nu=e=d~fr~o~m~~~g~e~1l________________
Four people were fined and six
other s forfeited bonds In the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Clar ence Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined wer e Jim Will. Pomeroy,
$213 and costs, pu!1JOse to defraud;
Richard Icenhower, Mason, W.
Va .. $363 and costs. driving while
Intox ica ted: Danny Will. Pom eroy.
$43 and costs, Improper backing;
and Heinz Coa tes, Pomeroy, $63
and costs. no oper ator s license and
$43 and cos ts, !allu re to y ield the
right of wa y .
Constance Bullock, Clar endon,
Pa . fotieited a $43 bond on a charf:e
of !allu re to y ield the right of way.
For feiting bo nds on speeding
c har g es w e r e Ted G ree n.
Som erset, $47: John R&lt;X', New
Haven, $48: Robert Knapp, RockbridgP, $46: Meli ssa Hubbard, Sy rac use. $48: St&lt;•vt• Pec kh a m.
Middleport , $46: and Jackie Shepherd. Ga llipolis, $47 .

Bonds forfeited
("L ()."'.E U '! - .\ -. iJ.r., n infurmin g t · u ~u n lt' rs tltt' Hatfield and MeCoy
a ppl huw' ' a nd {"; U' IH'I ing outll'l a t t ht• ~ i h t•r 1\rid~t · Pl aza in Gallipoli.'i is
d o~t '&lt;l fnr im t·n tm)· ha... ht ·t·n h ;w gin ~ in t ht • ... tor(·fr ont window sin &lt;:t'
Fri day . l{t ' pU!i ~ ha \ t ' twt'll t·in·ulat in g t ht • ninl'· ..;t u rt· (' ha.in will dost· fur
goud , and fi\ t ' lt H"al " ton · t'lllplo.\ ' 't'"' ha \ ,. n ·n·i \ t•d I hl'ir b.t~· off notkes.

Ar~a

deaths
~ Ut "\"i\" ill ).! is ;~ da ug h!Pr , Mrs.

\ ao m i Hm.. ·ll

n i.lud.\ "1 :\1il lrr of Cockrys·
'-Ji lt ·. \ ld : two .l.'Ta ndchildrr n: two
" l"h'l"'-, :'\.1r '-.. J u d ~o n t HPlf'n t Whit r
1d ~ l l ddl t ' pO rt a nd M r s. CPOr ge
, ]{.whd 1 C h r i s t~ · of Columbus: and
"' '\ t'r,tln lt'&lt;'t''- .1 nd nrphf'\-l.·s.
l'nu '-l" lt' l" " al so p!'('{'f'ded in
dt .t1h
1-"u nt ·r.d '-{'!'\" iCC'S wi ll lx' held at
111 .1 111 S, t !urd a~ · in thC' M cCoy\\l ·t llt·riliJ ]t :\J,,on • Fu nf'ral !-l ome.
r .. Jl ttpo lb . wi ltl !he I{C'\". Grorge
\\ "1dtfllr;mdt offi ci :tl in g. f1 urial \Vill
!11 · 111 \ TiltH., C"t •nWIC' r:-,·. R utl and.
J·· Jit· tl ds rn tt\" c;lll a t thr funrral
l111 1llt ' l n m 1 7 ~ ~ p . m . Frida y .
I n li r•u of fluv.vrs. cn nt r ibut ion s
n t. t\. be rn.H II• to !tlr b uilding fu nds
.lr

\ ";ulm i ( 'ha:-.t • 1\oHdl. ~l. t t !l-~ l. u
cu., tSt . r ;,JIItpnli:-.,dtdldl·: ~r.t rn

tt KI,t\" , 11

hPJ 1"1 ''-l dPll t 'f •

Horn \o\ ~~ - Jl+t J";. in .\llddl t 'IH111.
!lw l.til ' \\"i llt. llll .~nd
1-" nHll.l Sn\ dt· t (h\t 'll'- • ...,111· \\,,, , ,
\~! l-1 gr. u lu.tt t · 11 f t ilt· ll t~lh·r ~ llu,,l

do~ ug tltt •r o f

n f ~ U f" '- lll g. \\", 1'- ! h i · \ Tt'l l'' I .•Hl ll l\

hr•: tl th

'-1'\ t ·J,tl \1',!1' t!HI
,Ji ..; o '-1'1" \" t' d .J :-. ...,cl l!lld 11\ II ..,,. Itt ! I :u
1\ UI"'-.1 ' frJ t

tl&lt;tnd T wp
\\'i thlwt fir . . t llu ...,·J.rlld . Cl.rr r ·tlf" t'
M. ( "l1a.'- t ', w lw . d :-.' J prr ·n ·dr •d 111' 1 Ill
dr•ttth in l ~ l :t~ l . tilt '\ prfl\ id t·d tu llt' l .tl
'-I T \ -It 'C Ill

rwarl~

Ill

lil t"

}{u l i.t !l d

.1 )"(',1

f.,l

~h t ·

m. HTtt'&lt; l tl h·
'-f'f'O n d t i m• · tn .lt! h ll \\. l lm\·i·ll on
\ u\· ";'. l ~li i.l .1nd ti t· .11'-P Jllti"j ·, kd
hl'f" in dl '. l th 111 ( )(_- tt ti)l 'l J'l(";"
\ t ', t l" '-

·1

&lt;'llhl 'l ( :r;tl'P l' ni! Pd :vlcthodist
Cllutr h ur J{ut la nd L'nitPd MC' thooo(

dl'-1 ( "hu rt" ll

Middleport r~c~ ipts total
$72.,999. 79., rep()rt s"ys
tll sbur st' lllt'll t s.
$I I_.I-I-1. 2i. f ll"l ' huUSI'. IHl r eceipts, no
di . . IJUrSt ' ll H'Il ! S. $14. 107.05 : pla nning
Cfl lli!I Jl SS l fJ II .
Ill!
fl'l"l! lplS, $5. 04 ,
$ ! : ~! ! J j : Silll Jt; u·.\" St'Wl'/' l'S("I"llW, 110
1t' l"l't pl s.
ttu
di s bu rs ement s.

Th e tutal nf ;til .\ 11tld lt•ptrrl \ 'r!LJL:t'

r

Jllt ll lll'S i-il!l 1JU I1 1t·d [t l $~ ~ . / lifi .i !l . t t.'MCJ y :n. ("i(" ("(lrdtll l'_ !It th t· ll\llll tlr h

uf

S!&lt;ik ll lt'/1(

f!! ( 'lt •r k ·l l"t'ii SUI" I' I" ,l1o11

Buck.
Hl·r·t•tpt s . d!.'- IJUI" '&gt; t"JIJ( 'Jih fn t tilt'
rnont lt an d tilt • IJi! l; trll 1· til t'.td~ f111Jd
a S r1f l ht • t'IHi tlf .\1.t\ !IH JudnJ
gl'ill' r al . $J:l.O~~j Cii. $:!:)Jib ·I I.
$1J.8i2 .0fi: s!n ·d H l, ll ll klt;tllt "t·.
$10.3!&gt;1 .2:!. $6 .0·111 01. ~1. 1 11·1 !iH tkft t 1\.
HUD. $2fi .OOO . $!·1.;11;', 111. &gt;·1.;1:\ ill.
r evenUL' s h , trtr h ~. nn n ·n·1ph.
S:J. J04 .48 . $-l,lfi!J.!)!I. '&gt; ll"l'l't l l)'h t. lln
l'l't'l' lpts. $1. 207:\7. $~. ~ 1!1fL~ 1 2: s(rt'l' l

Polict&gt;

t 'q UI Jlll lt'rlt.

tlt •fll· ll :

$-1 .2;J ~.

tu n per CJ te v~ hJ c le , crimi na l
trl'spass tn g, dri vtll L! undl'r suspen-; tun . dl'stru ct ion uf pro pert y ami

S!l ll

hara ss rm·n t .

Cru lst· r s were dri ven 1,123 miles
dun n!-! the mont h and parking meter

Cr el tteans.
Of thr tota l ;nTt•sb, t'H-' ht Wt'rt•
nw de on d l st m ll' rl~ I H&lt;t lll lt ' t" dt;lrt ' •"!'..
and SIX on d1 a n ~ es of drl\ 111e \\I nk
Tht ·rt· \ \ l' l"l' fu ur

,.o)it'd tolls totaled $759.37 . There
\H' rt'

oper ators

license;

George

orderly m anner .

H

I

ospita news

Veterans M emorial Hospital
Admit ted : Helen Engel. Pomerov; Mary J ane F r ancis. Long Bot t u m ; V e lm a W in e bre nn er.
Pomeroy .
Discharged : Mary Bissell , Oscar
Imboden. Harl ey Rober ts, Kathy
S~· t1J S , Elizabeth Bart ee, Par is
Hess and Susan Strow .

Answer 70 call s
during past month
The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 70 calls during
the month of May. accordin g to the
report of Fire Chief Jeff Darsl. Of
the total calls 21 wer e fire runs and
49 emer gency runs. All vehicles
were driven a total of I ,909 mile:;
during the month.

Answers two calls
Two calls were answered by unit s of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Tuesday . At 2: 11
p.m . Charles White was taken by
th e Middleport unit from his residence In Middleport to the Holzer
Medical Center , and at 4:05p.m.
Velma Winebrenner was transferred from the Pomeroy Health
Care Center to Veter ans Memorial
Hospital.

\" l'St tgil ll•d 13 accidents.

assault c h; t r g t·~ ~ tnt! t ll rt 't' t·; w h fur
.spet:'ding. r e("k ll' ss npl'rat1un ; ttHl
fai lur e to pay park1 11~ t w kt ·t T ill' l'l'
were t wo eo cll fur !' t 'Sl S I!Il ~ &lt;-IIT t'S l
and use of o ffen St\ t ' l;t n g u t:l .~~ ~· TIH"n'
was olll' a tT t 'SI t' &lt;-11 li f ur f lt-t• tll l-! a
poli cP nffH "l'r . t•xn· s st \·· · s pt '\'d.
destruct iun tJf j ~t d pi 111Wrt_, , r·I•Il sunung un slrt'l'l . htgl1 ln111qwr
v i ola t ion . pl'rt lll llll l ~ unllr ·•·IL'-t'd pt•r-

Truck

:\H pi-Irki ng meter violation

twkl'!s wn tt en. The departm ent in-

1111

no

McDaniel. Middleport , 30 days in
j ail . disorderly m anner ; and Mike
Sa lser and Ri ck Cremea ns. both of
Middleport , 15 days probation, dis-

JHJ

42 during May

Fort y-two a tT l' S h Wl' l"t ' lll ~t dt · ll~
th e Mi ddlt&gt;pt trt P t l iH T Dl' Jl&lt;trt tllt 'nt
dunng M ay . &lt; H T r JJ"d J n ~ to tht • n tu!lthly rt'port nf Pni H't ' Clt td .I . .J

llllOXll'alt: d .

\\tllt·r lank . $1,000.

1 ,., .,·l pl s.
$1J7.:W9 .82:
wate r ,
.\!lllj 4 I H. $10.185.14 . $37.805.91 :
&gt;: II H I;u ·~ sewer . $6.975.35. $7 .263.99.
$1i.n:m:t"l: swll nJJ Hng pool , no recei pts. $!JH!i.70, $268.13 defictt : cemetery.
$1.4:\t;_lli. $1.290.12. $238 .06 deficit :
wa lt' r ll ll'll'r tru sl'i . $105. $120,
$11.5·11 01
HtTt'lpts fur thl· month tu·· aled
S/). ~19! 1 7 9
t'utnpanx l t o disbur·" ' ' I I lt' lllS flf $81 , J:l7 .97.

f tn · tr uf"k . 111 1

a rre ~ t

1111

Sl l ~.HO~ :!~ 1:

\t vy . IIU l"l't "l' lJitS. !I H d t ~ IJLi f" ~ i' l l lt' ll L'&gt; ,

$175 .59; f lrt '
$555.25, $110 .80

!'( "t' lp t s.

Six r har g&lt;'S of dr i,·Ing while intoxicated were handled in the court
of Mavor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
night.
Forteit ing bonds of $375 on the
charge were Charles Durst. Cotlagrv ille. W. Va.: Corbitt E . Ratliff.
Shade: and Eric B. Schmucker.
Long Bottom .
Fined $250 and cos ts and given
three days in jail wer e William F .
Russell. New Haven. W . Va.; Gr egory A. Ta y lor, Pomer oy; and Tina
Butcher. CIUton, W. Va.
Patr ick Owens. Pomer oy , forfeited a $40 bond on a speeding
charge. Others fined wer e Geor ge
J. Ra t lUI. Reedsv Uie, $16 and costs.
speed ing. and $100 and costs. driving under suspension; Debra Ann
Jar rett . M iddleport. $25 and costs,

Fund,., distributed
St " te Aud tt or Thom as E.
Ft' rgusnn report ed the June
dtstributton of $11 ,036.320.53 in local
gm T r nnH.: nt fund money to Ohio 's 88

CJ nd 44 2 ct ti es and villa ges
ll' \"Yl ll g loca l inco me t.o. xes. Of the
Lola I. Metgs County received $18.750.

t "rJUllti es

Marriage licenses
Marriage Licenses Issued In
Meigs County Court were recently
issued to Donald Barnett Jr., 23,
Langsville, and VIckie L . Rowe, 17,
Rutland; John W. Smith, 20, Middleport , and Anit a K. Riffle, 17,
Syra cuse.

ro ll~

Bob,
You Keep Smiling

down hill
An una tt Pndf -d l {uyal ( 1n\\·n 11o ttling Com pan_\' t r uck parkt '&lt; I on
County Road ;l in MC'igs Count .\·
rolled backw ard down a hill and
st ru ck an C'mbanknlC'n l . th t'( ;a lti a M cigs post of t hC' Ohi o H i g tlw a~' I ,a ·
tro l rt 'JJt Jr tf'd .
Th {' acci dent. w hi ch occ urTt'd at
ahou t 7 p.m . Tur s d a~· . !"P!-. Uitecl

wltpn th&lt;• lt'UCk appar l' ntl ~ ro lled
0\"(' 1" a b loc k of w ood tha t \\'as
chocki ng a wit('(' I.
A mol orc~·c l ist lost cont ro l of his
vehicle on a curve on '1\ l'p. Hoad 7X
in Meigs County . but no inju r ies
wer e repor ted. the patrol said.
Mark A. Casto. 20. Pomer oy. was
traveling nor th at about 5:30 p.m .
Tu esday when ht' lost cont ro l in
gravel. causing his motorcycle to
overturn . T he motorcycle received
moder ate dam age. Casto was cited
for having no motorcycle license
and f allin g to di spl ay va lid
regis t ra tlon .
A car driven by Mary P. Myers,
50, Patr iot, received light damage
when she struck a bridge guardra il
and reflector signs on Ohio 775 just
south of County Road 42, the patrol
reported. M yers ap~rently r an off
the right side of Ohio TI5, but was
not Injured or cited in the accident.

teacher s of the distric t to meet on
Aug. 25 and student s to att end
classes for the first time on Aug. 26.
Christmas vaca tion wUI begin on
F riday , Dec. 24 and cl asses resumIng on Jun. 3, 1983. Ther e Is a spring
break beginning on M ar ch 28 for

Holliday, Carolyn Collins. Paige
Cleek. Kar en Sloan and Tony a Da·
vis; substitut e bus driver s, Rufu s
Browning, Bobby Arnold, Diana
Crosby. Jonathan Well, Mitchell
Stanley, Prentice Hess, ShlrleyWII·
son , Evelyn Hobbs, Dano Kin g,

one week w ith cl asses to resume on

La ura

April 4. Supt. Mortis Indica ted that
the spring break will give the dlsttic t some time to work with in cas e
the calamity day s run over the fi ve
permitted by the sta te without rn a·
keup tim e during the w int er. According to the new calendar the last
day of school wUI be on Frid ay.
May 27.
The board employed subs titut e
aides for the next year Including
Martha Kin g, Gloria Riggs. Vera

Terry Powell; subs titute cooks,
Belva Glaze, Audrey Wood , Llda
Jones, Helen Milhoan, Ruby RUe,
Sandra Sar gent. Shar on B lack.
.Joanne Edwards . Mer ium Hoffman, Dorot hy Clatwor thy, Josie
Browning. Debbie Ki ng. Dorothy
Roach. Bett y Longstreth , M arlene
Barrett. Bernice Garnes; substitut e custodians includlng Betty
Wy ne. Marvin Oidrill , Daniel Nor ·
ma n, Ralph C. Ca lvert , .Jr. . Dar re ll

Harrison, Virgil By rer,

SALE PRICES FATHER'S DAY GIFTS

O ur e nti re stoc k
of
d e nim jea ns 1nc lud e s fa s hi o n
b as i c styl es
jea ns
str et c h d e nim s .
Full e r c ut jea n s, b as i c
f as hi o n .
Goo d
a nd
s e lec ti o n of s i zes a n d
s tyl es .

High wi nds. accompanied ill·

f~~\Mn;iu..

enforcement official ra iled a "mi ld
tornado" to blow t hrough Meigs
and Mason counties Wednpsda"'·
IC'a v lng at lras t one person injun'CI
and undetermined proJ)('rt y damage t hroug hout the Bend ar ea .
Am ong rt'por ts fllro wit h t hP
M eigs Count y Sheriff' s Depar t·
m en! . L eonard Quisr nbetT)', Rt. :!.
A lbany . informed deputies ihat
around 3 p.m . he was sitt ing in his
pickup tru ck . approximat ely 30 feet
below his I railer in Colu m bia Town ship, when he obsen•ed a bad storm
approac hing.
Quisenber ry then ra n to his cellar
house. His mobile home. which

SALE!
SPORT SHIRTS
Al l s /C' S 1n ..1 b1q se lec t io n

ot c.,o t1d colors

ne a l pal

INns a nct pi &lt;'lid s Ca mpus
V,1n
H (' USC"' n
a nd
W rc'lnQIN Wester n sh irt s
1nc turl f' d

1n thi s Fa t he r 's

Dnv Sal f'

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

Men's Summer Shorts

DRESS BELTS
Hi c k ok dres b e lt s in a ll th e p o pul a r
width s a nd c olors - W es t e rn b e lt ~
in c lud ed .

SALE PRICES

D en i m s ac ti ve shorts - te nni s shorts
a nd b e rm uda s . All s izes .

SALE PRICES

SA[£ PRICES- SWIM TRUNKS

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

THE
FINANCIAL
CENTER
OFFERS A
NEW MONEY
MARKET
ACCOUNT
WITH
MA TURITI·ES
OF ONE TO

ment " a new form of Palestinian
presence in Lebanon."
The PLO leadership denied reports it was prepared to lay down
Its arms, but It engaged in a flurry
of secr et diplomatic ac ti vity involvIng U.S. pres idential envoy Philip
C. Habib and Lebanese Pres ident
Elias Sarkls.
The Tel Aviv command said Pa-

mm.1N·THE W
EPA seeks legal action

COLUMBUS, Ohfo !AP I - The Ohio Environmenta l Protec tion
Agency has asked the Ohio Attorney Gener al to take legal action
against an Akron company accused of violating the state's hazard ou s wast e laws.

The EPA said the Summit Count y Sheriff's Department repot1ed
May 17 that chemicals were being dumped behind the Admiral
Equipment Co. plant. Investigations revealed that the m aterial solvents and compounds used in the manufactu re of plas tics - was
hazardous and not disposed of according to stale regulations, Ute
EPA said.

State auditor cites suburb
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API - The state auditor has cited the Cleveland suburb of Bedford Height s for a number of practices. according
to the state auditor' s office.
Examiners tor Ohio Auditor Thomas Ferguson sa id expenditu res
In Jive city funds wer e made without appropriations, that expendi tures exceeded appropriations in nine funds, Uta! expenditures ex·
ceeded estimated revenue In three funds, and that three funds had
deficit balances of $216,449.71 as of Dec. 31. 1980.
The audit report recommended that the city clerk stop cashing
employee checks with mayor's account collections, that a ll ~t of
bonds that have been posted for the municipal court be prepared
monthly and tha.t the clerk not be responsible for both the cashier
and bookkeeping functions.

Records incomplete, auditor charges
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP 1 - Internal controls over r eeeipts and
dlsbursemenls of the Trumbull County Agriculture Society were .
''nearly non-existent " between October 1979 and September 1981, the
state auditor says.
Exa~lners for Ohio Auditor Thomas F erguson said not all records were made avaUable for audit, while records that were made
available were "Incomplete and poorly maintained."
The ~xamlners said receipts weren't Issued for all money re·
celved, bank deposits were made with .revenue of unknown origin,
and nearly 25 percent of the expenditures were made In cash.
Examiners recommended that the Agriculture Society use cheeks
rather than cash tor all expenditures, J$sue receipts tor all money
received, require the detailed accounting of sources tor all expend!·
tures and receipts and clearly establish job descriptions for 11\e
secretary .and treasurer.

CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
THE FINANCIAL CENTER

Siate ~eather, extende«l forecast
Partly' cloudy tonight. Lows 55-00. Winds Ught and variable. Ten
percent chance of rail).- Varlable·cloudlrless Friday wl!b a 30 percent

chance of afternoon showers. Highs around Bll.

Membe·r FDIC

E~ Ohio Forecaaa -Saturday through Mon&lt;lay: Fair Satur-

&lt;lay .-Chance of showers.Sunday and Monday. Highs In tbe 70s. Lows

,

ln the 50s.
•"

-.4J y ,

·~ ·-.

...

u p roo tPd on

Wf' rt '

Oak

:\t'aSf' Hollow , d!HI
Md~ l'rl! if' R idgl' H.oad s. R oa d s in
I hP ;u ·t\ 1 WI'I"P blor kc•d b.\ " f ~iiiPn
I J't'( ''-. ;t ('t'O J"din g to thP sht•r iff' . .,
dt1 ptlrfm(•nt .
It W tt ~ al so rPJ-&gt;urfPd th;ll thr·
po rch roof to th r trJilt ·r ho m t · uf
!1. od ra· ~ · Holman wa s rPmm· t'&lt;l b_
\·
tht• strong wi nd and orH' t' nd of "
largr h&lt;irn on t ht• llolman farm wa .'&gt;
na ~ hdn .

ck s tro~· f'd .

La nding nea r RacinC' wr rc dr s-

whi ch an chor('(] t hr t ra i h' r to tht ·

ltl(' t"OIIll'll!.'&gt; IO IP; d.;

troyed or hrav Uy damaged b\'
st rong w inds.

g rou nd. a nd dPmo l i shPd t hP
structun.' .
Sta nton w a s takf'n 10 JI M (' b~ · 1hf'
;\t•w I b \"f• n RPSl'UP Squad , wht·n ·

n'st

under the t r ailrr .

Severa l m obile homPs at Roush's

Report new fighting.,
airport under attack

-

•

Roush r esidence was extensively damaged also by

Tt"L't''( ;rm ·t·,

" tlt • W.t " la! t •r tn ·.tlt'&lt; l ,tnd Jt'l t •.t "t '&lt; l
I&lt; n· mu ltiplP r r.tu rn .t. ;w con lm g to a
ho, p l! ,II ' Vi •kt '' lll:in
IJ.t •ck t' l! '-did lht• wind o~ pp ~ t rPntl _\
&lt;-. tm t· .1 n o"' Sltdi ng Hill &lt; ' rt-f' k
Ho.u\ .. ttTo...,..., l ' nion &lt; ', tmp ( ; rnund
Ht•.ul .uul t•\·t·r .t hrll o nt1 • B ro.~ d
Hun l&lt; o. HI ll 1• .... ti d thl' \\"Jnd ~
" t ', tl1\ t ' pn ·lt .\ quwk " .tnd no funnl'!
tJI ' lw L
...r t·r (' hlu d wa s "t'i'll
T ht· ... ra te t rt)( J(Jt 'I indica tt'&lt; l the
h:tr d r.tin nb:-.cu n 'd \'L, ihilil\', H'hi r ll
ma.\· ha\· t· ~H ·co un l Pd ft•r nu nvort....
o f . 1 funnt'l clou d

Acco rding to rPpo rt s. thP win d
li fl ('t1 hr r trail r r o ff thl' gr ound.
brokr .'-'Pvrral fou l wra ther lin t·~

f('{&gt;t , was mov t'{l

off it s fou nda tion and destroved .
His truck was mo\'('(1 uphil l appmx imately 30 feet and cume to

the high wind. The Knapps were in the trailer at tht•
time but wer e uninjured. Racine Emergency StJUlul
m embers wer e at the site.

'&gt; l ru c·k t tlt·ir t railf'r . Tht'\
wpn • rwt inju n •ci.

,,·ind

Tht' wi nd .tl~u .d ft •t 'li&gt;d X 10 o thc·r
f\pw !Lt \'('11 tT•, idl' nh . brc~tkin g
\\·inclow ..., and tc•aring ..., hing lt ·~ ~t nd
.'- iclin g off huu"l'~ :\ block s tor~gr•
building on Slid ing II ill C'n'!'k Road
\ \· a~ al so rt•por trd to hd\"{ ' t'u ll ~qbPd
d uring thr _.. , lor m .
( ;rf&gt;g 1\: a ~· J o r . \"1 '\\ Han•n Fi n •
l )(•p;u·tmf' nl ch·pu t.\ ch tPf. ~&lt;lid thP
&lt;.; tOJTTl, whir·h \\"t'lll tJ\"P!" ..\ nwr ican
1-:lP&lt;: tri&lt;" Power Co·..., :\1l•U nta in t't 'l"
pla nt a t :"J pw Jl d\' Pil . ca u~.'d a ~2~­
]XJU ncl chlorinf' tank t o t ip tJ\ "t'l ;~nU

mea~ u red 1 2- b ~~ - w

strewn abnut the area. Another simUar tmUcr owned
by Mr. and Mrs. OUn Knapp and located abnvc tht•

ToDAY

Presenting Central Trust' s imp10ved Money Market Account Now you can
invest as little as $2,500 for as little as one day and earn high money markel
rates. You can take your money out (part of it or all of it) wheneve( you'd
like with no penalty. All with the comfort of knowing your money is 100%
secured by an obligation of the U.S. Government or its Agencies. So if you 're
looking for a short-term investment that's long on returns, look to our Money
Market Account. You don 't need to open any other kind of account to take
advantage of this high rate. For complete delails, stop by any Central Trusl
office today. It's the kind of innovative,
new service you've come to expect
from the bank that's working to be
your total financial center.
Thrs account not msured by FDIC '

STORM DAMAGE- This ~foot traUer owne'd by
Bob and Phoebe Roberts of Racine was demolished
as tomado Hke winds hit near Roush's Landing below
Racine early Wednesday evening. Contents of the
traUer used as a camping site by the Roberts were

By The Associated Press
Beirut airport cam e under hea vy
shelling today and Israeli armored
columns moved against Yasser
Arafat ' ~ guerrlllas eas t of Lebanon' s.capltal.
The new fighting came amid r elt·
able reports that the Palestin e Liberation Organization had offered to
discuss with the Lebanese govern-

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::::::::::~

PINNEU STREET, RIPLEY, W. VA.
EFFECTIVE JULY 12, 1982
By Appointment
PHONE (304) 372-9362

"Mild tornadoiJ
causes damage
•
In Bend area
d r iv in g winds, ca uSC'd w hat one I &lt;J\~·

t

08/GYN
WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF
HER PRACTICE OF
.
OBSTETRICS and GYNECOLOGY

·-· ;f\1
..

CompUed From Stall Reports

JEANS SALE!

I St&gt;t ·tiun , I t l'aK t'!'o
15 Ct•nt s
A :\lult im t•dl a lnt ·. "t'WSJH1 1H'r

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thurs da , June 17, 19R2

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

89 DAYS.
LYDIA S. ZAPANTA, M.D.

entin.e l

Gene J ~ nkln s. Philip M . Ohlinger.
Roy R. Peck, Donald Ray Rich·
mond, David Sheets; substitut e secr etaries, M artha King, Ver a
Holliday, Carolyn Collins. Paige
Cleek, Karen Sloan, Tonya Davis
and substitute teacher s Including
Deborah Arnold, Clotlne Black·
wood, Bonnie Sue Cantrell, Mary
Durst, Kar en F acem yer, M ary
Gr im , Fern Grimm, Jeff Holter,
Mike Howard, Rose Ann Jenkins,
.Jeffrey Jones, Jackson Kaylor,
Farle Kennedy . Mary Kessler.
Charlsse Knight. Margar et Lewis.
Sandy Luckeydoo, Andrew L yles,
Helen Maag, Rober ta Maidens.
Mar garet Parsons, M ar y Powell,
William Robinett e, Jill Warga, and
Roberta Wilson.

Mr. and Mr s. Olin Knapp\\"C'I"f' in
thri r tra ilf&gt;r d u rin g thr storm whl'n

Corp. K .R. fh·krll of lite \\' est
V iq :.r, inia Stal l' Policr unit J! PuinP
Plf'a sant sa id a "' mild tornad o"
to urh('(! dow n at r'\C'w H a,·r n a t .t 2~
p.m . T r a\·elling i n an eastOOund eli
r ('('tion, thr w inds dC's tro~ · t'd onP
trai lrr a nd srnt i t s trn ant. \ ' iolt•t

Stanton . ti~l . Rt . I. Letart , to ll oiJ.N
M r d ical CC'n tr r fo r t rC'at nw nl o f
C'U I_.. , t.~nd bru L-;r s.

l~ &lt; l .v lo r ~aiel l hl' plc~nt tnfrJrnwd
! IH• Lh-partnw nt Df lh(' lt •ak . which
· \\": 1'- f' lt';tnt 'tl up b\ :vt r1U1.tlllt 't 'r ·...,
rn ;nn tP n;nw t' '-l &lt;~f f

Jurors hear closing arguments
•
Ill trial of John Hinckley

lestinian guer r illas bomba r ded Israeli troops around the airpo rt .
dam aging three par ked airliner s. It
said Israeli for ces cast of Beiru t
also came under a barrage of the
rockets and I sraeli t roops fi red
back.
But Salim Salam , the managing
director of Lebanon' s Middle Eas l
Airlin es. told repor ter s that Israeli
gu nboats shelled the airport and
"two Boeing-720s bel onging 10
M .E. A. wer e wrecked and the air lin ~· s building sustained several di·
reel hit s,"
Sal am appea led for neut ralization of the air port compound. saying further dam age would be a
" national disaster ."
The airport. closed sincP the Israelis Invaded 12 days ago to sta mp
out the guerrillas , has been in the
center of bitter fightin g as the Israelis and their Lebanese christian
allies close in on Pales tinian strongpoint s located nearby .

By LARHV MAHGi\SA K
As.wciated Press WritL•r
WASHI NGTON tAPt - Mtl'l'
wwks of testimony . j uror ~ a rf'
h0aring for the la' t tim0 thP r onm eti ng v iews on w hrt hcr John W

Hinck le_\' J r. was a man drivr n in-

sa ne by his " inner dirtat&lt;'S" or a
criminal seeking a " high-publ icit .\'
cnme.
Th e&gt; j uror s, \Vho m u st wri gh
t hose comm pnt s offPrrd Parlir r b~ ·

opposing psychiatrists, were hea r·
ing closing arguments loda)' fr om
prosecutor Roger M . Adelma n and
chief defensP counsel Vi ncent .1.
F uller.
Th e lawyer s tw ailro th e test im·
ony of :15 government and l b clef(' ns£' w it nesSf's . \.\'hO ha vr ta k l'n
the witness stand in th0 tri al of the
man w ho shot Pres ident Reaga n
Jurors have also seen 300 ex hibit s
that include the defend ant 's poems.
expressing his inner thought s.
" I think ther e's enough ther e to

Leban ese sta te radio sa id Wed·

nesday the Israelis a nd their r ight ·
ist Lebanese Christ ian allies seized
I ('u llllJl Ut 'd Ul\ jl(l L: t ' J2J

&lt;' itht•r guidt• thl' j ur:; o r to cun f u.'-J'

t itl' j un ," l ' .S. Di stril'l .l udge 1\;tl'·
rin gton D. PLirkPr said \Vrdnpsd a~· .
a f! C' r ii'tin g !hf' do&lt;'ll ti'S w hn trs ti fied for the ci ('fpnst' . F ourlf&gt;t'n doc
t or s wf'rC' on th f' w itnr ss sta nd .
Frida.\ ·. r orkPr w ill f'x plai n IlK'
PlC'm f' nts of thC' 1.'~ count s ag Jinsl

Hinr kJ C\· and tell I he ju tY of sr ,·rn
w omrn and fi ve' mr n thr lf'g aJt pst
for i n sa ni t ~·. Dd ibf'rat ions ma_,.
Jx&gt;g-i n lhat aftrrnoon .
T h(' i nsa n it ~· in st r uc ti on b

thf'

m os t cr uc ial to a ju ry th at ~1 l rf'ad.\"

has ix'&lt;.'n told Hi ncklev arlm its thr
c rim r. bul contf'nds hr i ~ Lnn ocrnt
tX'C'aUSl:' hP wa s insa nf' .
If t he insa nit_
\ · d rff'nst' is s Ul 'C' l '~s

ful. Hinckil') would ix' sent to a
mPnl al hospit a l instPad of a p rison.
Thf'l'f' arr two pari s to thP insan it y tt&gt;st: first. thr d r t C'I' mina lion

whether the 27- \'m r -old ddendant
su fff'red fr om

J

m r n ta l disP&lt;J sr or

def0ct on March

:10. 1981.

lh0 dav

RPaga n and thr('(' other mrn Wl'n'

1ht' \\" .1.'-lllngton
ll ilt nn lh Jh'l.
If 111P a nswf•r b \ \''-. jurnr" co n

\\ "flU IHI\ '( 1 t JUhld t '

~ ici er

pitr1 tv.:o : wht ·th• ·l , ,~ ...,

.t

n -s ult

of th r clt s P tt ~(' , llt nckl c.\ · "" l;_
l('kt'Cl
subst.:1ntbl capa citv " to l 'O nfu rm
his C'Onclu C'I to !"{'l{Uin •nw n ts of thC'
law or· to ;~ pp r('(' i&lt;lt(' llw \\Ttmg-ful n P ~ s t Jf hi ~ co nduct .
For H in c k It'.' . 'h t&gt; f' ight \\'t't' k." hc ·
S{Jt •nt tn a ft 'Cif' r.tl t ·, JU rt room hJ. \ "('
app('aJ'('(I to wt'ar on hi m .
H(' ac know lf'd gt'll to tht• j ud gt'
tha t som r lt· ~t i mon .' tn.Jlk him
Pd ~ · . and fi\"1' tirllf'!&lt;.. ht• .lskt'&lt;l to bt•
t•xcusrd from thP c o urltu .J m . T hPn.
hr• wat d H•cl protTt'din g!-. una &lt;'los!'Cl
c·ircu it tf' IPvbinn ." I'! up fm m" hold
in g l'f 'll .
1-! i n c klt· .v ·~

JTI(I:--. 1

a n x i ou ~

m u-

nwnt.o.; c;tnw TuP:-.cla.' \\"hl'n Dr
Sa ll y .Johnson. a wun wn ht• C' J ll t&gt;d
in a j}(&gt;l'' m ta.-; t ~ t ' dr ·· J\ih · fa\ ·oritt•
prrgnJ nl 1-&gt; ~ ~ · chi ~ l t r is t ." tt •s tifi('Ci h('
did not shoot l {t.•ag an 10 v;in t hP IO\"t'
of tt"'f'n-agf' ac tn ·s~ .Jod i{' F o.'&gt; IC'r.

Van Meter pledges support for Brown
By THOMAS RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP I - Slate
Sen. Thomas Van M eter finished
third in a bitter four-wa y ra ce for

Resources Direc tor Robert Teat&lt;' r.
wh o finished fourth . was out of state
and sent his wife to r epresent him .
Taft spoke first. Aft er his brief

the gubernatorial nomination, but

Repuhlican Chairman Michael Col·
ley and Gov. James Rhodrs 10
shake Brown' s hand in a dlspla)' of
party unity.
Then it was Van Meter ' s tum .
" I offer m y personal support to
this ~rt y's nominee for governor ,"

re ma rks, he reached across sta rr

he stole the spotlight during theRepublican Party 's unity lunchcon.
Prior to Wedn esday's affair. designed to rally the part y faithfu l be·
hind the chosen gubernatorial slate
of U.S. Rep. Clar ence Brow n and
Bet-ts . no one was ct?rtain

Va n Meter told the crowd , omitting

whether Van Meter 's ca m~ign
scars had healed sufficiently. Some
wer en't even sure if he would
bother to show up.
He did. Unsmiling, the Ashland
Republican strode to the head ta·
ble, took his seat on theother slde of
the podium from Brown and
former Cuyahoga Count y Commissioner Seth Taft, who finished second In the race. State Natural

Brown' s name. "And l will do w hat
is right In t rying to conv ince the
130,000-some people who supported
m y candidacy to now suppor t the
entire ticket. "
As if issuing a warning, Van M eter added: " 1982 will not be the year
Tom V an Meter leads the part y to
victory . But that year is coming. "
Sever al of those llsteningcharac·
terized Van Meter' s endorsem ent

James

of thC' Brown -Bf.t t_.. , tic kf' t a s !u kP
warm. J t bPst.

Unlike TJft . Van Meter did not
OffPr his hand In Bmwn. But whr n
thr senatC' prrs idC'nt pro tr mpo n ·
sta r tf'Ci to rfl turn to his Sf'at, B r own
hurried O\'Cl' behind him. tu m('(!
him

arou nd

a nd

inil iatC'd

J

hJ ndshake.
Coll0v. pt·ior IQ t he lunchro n.
! tied to derail any La lk of disunit\'
among Republicans.
" i\ftr r the p r im ar~· . people ha\'e
two choices In the fall : the Rrpu bl i·
can ca ndidate or th e Democratic
candidate." he sa id . " ! can't co n
ccive that Republican vot er s would
back the Democr at candida1e."
Colley sa id hr was co nfident tha i

those who supported Va n M eter.
Taft and Teater will unite behind
Bmwn in the fall election .
Rhodes. who huddled out side t hr

ball ro"m w ith h1 s possJbJt• -.; ucc f'!'..
sor for a short wh1 tr . did not bf'liP\"f'
a n.v prim at:-,· campJ ign wound .. ., rf'·
qu in '(! hf'a li ng .

" No, I think lit is diX•s tl ngh t
hrrr." hr said. wa,·ing a hand tow&lt;~ r d til(' gathr rin g. " Th b ~ ' ! ! It ~ it
ri ght hPrP ...
J o hn M c F:Iro.\ ·, v.·hu oncp ... , . ··ed
a.'- J{ htxlt•s P X (' C ut i\ " t ' . l ~ s !S t a nt . •tlso
d o wnp l J ~ · ('(j an_
, . po s s ibil it~ of an
idcologir J I split in t lte par tY.
" I wa s \' {'r~ · ph '.:ls Pd . fo r P x am ple. to S('(' Tom \ 'an :vi PIN . .. said
M c Ei ro~ · . tht · pa rt~ ··_..., lf•gal cuunsPI
w ho is a lso ca ndida It' for s tatP r f'p r c sr ntali \"P f r om F r :tnklin
Count.v . " It ga\"(' him an npportun i t ~' to unbu rdr n him st'lf and dbc uss
thl' dirf'(.' tion hP thin ks Th in gs
should go.
" It Ct lsu g;l \'t' hi m ;-t chann' to
plrogr his suppnrt for th1· Ltll
P l('{'t ion.··

Reagan would keep control of weapons
WASHINGTON (API - The
Reagan administration is ImprovIng a plan that would thwar t any
Soviet attempt to cut off the president's communications with lhe
U.S. weapons arsenal during a crl·
sis, a staff member of the National
Security Council says.
"There should be no doubt In the
minds of Soviet planners that any
attempts to dlsronnect the hatlonal
command authorities !tom control
of American weapons In time of crl·
sis will fall," said Thomas C. Reed,
a consultant to the NSC wbo Is ex·
peeled to be officially named today
as a special assistant to . tbe

p~ld,ent;:.!
•

.J,.

I

•

White House officials have said
privately that the admlulst ra tion Is
undertaking an effort to correct deficiencies In the system for respondIng to an attack.
The former head of the White
House military office, BUI Gulley,
asserted In a book entitled, "Break·
lng Cover," that the president's
abUity to respond to an attack and
give orders to tbe U.S. military was
questionable because of communications and other defects.
For Instance, Gulley raised tbe
posslbUity that the president- havIng received word that an attack
was under way - could ~ on a

~-

"r,

.

'

\'

helicopter heading for his airborne
strategic command post and find
himself unable to give order s if
Whit e House communica tions fac ti·
ltles were wiped out.
Reed, In a speech to the Atmed
Forces Communications and Electronics Associ at Ion, maintained
that Reagan had given "the highes t
ptiotity" to creating a plan for a

handlr a .' t ('~ td _\ · fl ow of inher ent!\·
ambiguou.s da l,il .
·
" The pres ident also nt'&lt;'ds a com m and post stru(' turc that will sort

out this sttl'a m of information , provide options and prov ide the m eans
to sett le on a plan of ac tion."
The maximum r esponse time
Reagan would have to a Sov iet at-

survivable communications link

tack with an intercontinental ballis·

during a crisis.
Reed gave a hint of what the plan
would cover by spelling out what
functions need to be assured.
"The president needs warning, "
he said. "The warning system must
be survivable and It must be able to

ti c missile would be 30 minutes
because that Is the length of time It
would take the I CBM to reach the
United States.
However, submarine- l aunched
missiles could reach the United
States In 10 to 15 minutes.

••

~.

·'

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