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                  <text>Retail Sales - - -

Stobart roast
highly successful
Page 4

•

Will tax cut
revive economy?
Page 6

u

"

.•, •

·~

.I

bv Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
I KAVE TWO REA60N5 FOR.

Nor WANTIN&lt;:f 10 ...JOIN
THE F~IEND5HIP CLUB.

l'H;: F;IR51

aily

I'D INVITE 'lOLl "TV #:1

CNE 15

THAT IF ! &lt;JOIN,
WE. MlqHf f3E':Cl)\AE

HOL16C: AND')OLJ'DMEET
MYei61ER,J~NNIE .

CL...0eE FRIENDS.

Voi.31,No.38
C o~yrlghted

Frog jump goes on
despite heavy shower
Page 10

•

enttne
I St•(·tiun, IU l'agt•s
15 Ct&gt;nts
_A Mulllnwdia lnl' . Nt•wspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 28, 1982

118!

Space
shuttle
•
soartng

,,'I

I

I

'

.,'
,

I

ri

AND YOU MIE:i-HT MA-L.L I~
LOVE WITI-I &amp;'0-1 OTHER,
AND crET M-\RRIED ...

AND IHA.~ THE SECOND

AND I OONT W.ANT'iOU

CAPE CAI\AVERAI.. Fla . 1AP1
Th~ s pac~ shut liP soared 1hrough
lh~ firs! full dav of Mission 41oday,
ils as I ronauls plunging inlo a flurry
of l~sl s after exc hanging ~oded
messages about a Pentagon payload 1hal S)' mboliz~s a marrtage of
I he civili an space program wil h Ihe
military .

1

-

' il

RS\e.ON WHY r'VJ::Nr UOIN
"THE FRIEND6HIP CLUB.

R:lR A 8ROTHER-IN -:- LAW.,
6ECAU5E r t;CNT UKE 'ICU ...

the detaUs &lt;i
caused a

Colum bia. launched so brUiiantly
Su nday, hummed a long with no
major problem&lt;;. On its l ast test

fiighl, astronauts Ken Malt lngly
a nd Henry Harl sfleld were qualifying th e crafl as a n operat ional
HUGE TROPHY PRESENTED - Chuck Stobart,
University ol Utah lootbali coach, left, received a large
trophy from Ted Reed and Harold Hubbard, represen·
ling the Pomeroy and Middleport Chambers of Com·

'

merce during Sunday's roast at Royal Oak Park. The
trophy was given in recognition of his coaching accomplishments. Others shown are Joe Struble, emcee,
Fred Crow, in background and Gallipolis Judge
Richard C. Roderick, seated, a roaster.

It

I'

b Ed Sullivan

Priscilla's Po
I'VE NEVER SEEN
ANYT1-IING UKE IT. lADY·'

HE TRIED 10 CHANGE
A WA?HER ON THE FAUCET.

I
I

j

WHAT 17117 '-rOUR
HUSBAND

!

ro?

YOU'RE

I W15H I WERE.

KII7DING.

HE. WAS KINC7 OF
DI%U$TED HIM~ . '

Bechtel Group, Inc., a giant enitneerlng
WUl retunl to caJifornla thi~ week

Derby, antique cars
highlight weekend
'Winne r ' was the word of the day
Saturday and Sunday a t the 18th
Annua l Big Bend Regalia as frogs
and people allke parlicipaled In num erous events stated over the
weekend.
Hundreds of unlookers waited expectantly Sunday afternoon· to
watch the eighlth a nnual frog
derby a! Royal Oak Park.
Grand croaker for the event was
Terry Spencer asslsted by grand
croaker In charge of vice, Dave
Jenkins.
Champion hopper in the gra nd
national hopp-ot!, the las! even!.
was Overdraft (Centra l Trust) who
outdistanced three compelitors. Second place wen! lo Hoffman's
Hopper (City Loan and Savlngs);
third, Sew and Save (The Fabric
Shop); fourth, Parts Plus, (G&amp;J
Auto Parts).
The race was held among the
four fastest frogs ln the derby.

Winner s in the other heaps were

as follows:
Race one, Carpelbagger il ngles
F urnitu re) ; race two, GallsiOney
(Veterans Memortal Hospital! ;
race lhree, J ack Jumper ( Pomeroy Bowling Lanes); race four,
Meigs Specia l 1Meigs Inn 1; race
five, Hoffman Hopper; race six,
Paris P lus, race seven, Spectacular Hopper (Powell' s Super Value;
race eighl , Sew and Save, race
nine, Thumper (WMPO 1 and race
len, Overdraft .
Honorary grand croakers were
Chuck Slobart. John Ha lliday, Mac
McElhaney, Richard Roderick,
George Still . Dr. David Krawsczyn, Tom Reed, Buzz Ball, Jim
Schlzlnskl, Darlene Gra ham, and
Bob Wren.
On Salurday, 47 a ntique car
ow ners flocked to 1he second annua l a ntique car show. Trop hies
were awarded lo:

Rate reform bill
provides incentives
by Art &amp; Ctlip Sansom

·DUSTY CHAPS
-mJPI.~ Ml&lt;Wr G£T lH6 ~I~~ '/00
111"Nt:'l~ AROU~D, RUtJtJttJ(o ERRANDS" FOR M'6.

~~~~rD~iT');:~~~=

,,I MERa.-'1 ~D 'IOU~ PResalC6 cx:.£.ASiotJm'{ 10 Kf.6P ~ HAOOS AtJD ~
I~ Ll~. BUT IF.POOPL~
~SPE:Cr '{00'~ ClJ 1}{{;.

ROL.L..--

----~~

,MA~ ...'IOU JAA.'I 'IMl&gt;M'/sUlT
a=F AT lHE
.
..

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - A
new rate reform bill under cons ideration In the Legislature would
provide utilities with needed lncen·
tives to keep cost overruns down,
says Ohio Consumers' Counsel William A. Spratley.
The measure, which Ls to have Its
first hearing Wednesday ln the
House Public Utilities Commiltee,
would make II tougher to pass along
power plant construclion costs to
customers.
Interest ln the measul"(' - deal·
lng with construction work ln progress, or CWIP - was sparked by
delays surrounding the $1.5 billion
Zlmmer nuclear power facUlty on
the Ohlo River In Clermont County.
"Our feeling Is that CWIP should
be used only In very limited circumstances," Spratley said. "It just
passes the cost through. II shifts the
risk to the consumer, away from
the stockholder."
Committee Chairman Ronald H.
James, R-ProctoiVille, agreed that
the pass-throUgh allowance needs
to be revamped to protect
consumers.
"Electric companies have been
passing through costs of the
Zimmer plant for two-and·a·half
years," James said.
"The allowances of construction
work In progre;s must now be tight·
ened so that consumers will not
have to again pay mllllons ot dol·
Iars for such delays and poor
constnlctlon."
James' panel Is one of a handful
of committeeS meettog during the

General Assembly's summer receta to continue work on pending
leplatliln.

Allo set are hearings on

bUis to

s trengthen pena lties for drunken
drlvlng and protect farm ers from
grain e levalor bankruptcies.
The federal Atomic Safety and
Licenslng Board last week refused
to Issue an operatlng license for the
Zimmer plant, citing Inadequate
emergency evacuation plans.
Besides tightening restrictions
for construction work ln progress,
the bill would provide for utility refunds lo customers and llmll the
amount which a utUity could recover for advertlslng and charllable
contributions through the r a te
base.
A House subcommittee headed
by Rep. Terry M. Tranter, DCincinnatl, holds Its second hearlng
Wednesday on a Senate-passed bill
that would put more teeth lnto
Ohio's drunken-driving laws.
The measure generally leaves In·
tact most of the current penalties
for people who drive while under
the lnfiuence of alcohol or drugs.
But It tries to crack down on motorIsts who drive while their llcenses
are under suspension or
revocation.
Tranter, who has raised ques·
lions about the constltutlonallty of
two sections of the proposal, ex·
peels that It will wind up In a confer·
ence committee later this year.
A subpanel of the Senate Agrlcul·
ture, Commerce and Labor Com·
mlttee Is to meet Tuesday. It Is to
review proposed changes In a
House bill to help farmers wbo lose
money when elevators In · which
they store their grain for later sale
are hit by financial fallure.
U enacted, It would establish a $4
mDllon fund from which farmers
could seek reimbursement.

Best open classic lhrough 1927.
Ted Reed; beSI closed classic
lhrough 1927, Roy Miller; besl
closed classic 1928-42, firsl place
Dic k McDonald, firs!. second
place. Hank Cleland; a nd best pmducllon 1946-54 Lloyd Roth.
Bcsl producllon, 195&amp;67 firs!
place, Russ Day; second place,
Dav id McCoy; best production performance, firs! place, Don Berry;
second, John Dunfee; besl s1ree1
rod, flrsl place, Kim Nea l; second
place. Sheldon Gerlac h.
Best com merical vehicle, flrsl
place. Bill Jarrell, second . Tom
Todd
Besl of s how was awarded lo
Dick McDonald of Nelsonville for
his 1938 Chevrolel. The car wilh I he
most room for improvement was a
1958 Edsel ow ned by Bill Cogar of
Pomeroy.
This year's show also included
a nllque power engines owned by
Rober! Holliday of Dexler, Ken Wilcox of Middleport and Ray Mel nlyl"(' of Coll agev ille, W.Va.

spacp vPhicle.

"All I he lhings prop!~ have said
about I his mac hine are I rue," Malting!~·

said in

pra i~e

of Columbia's

perform;mce on Sund ay.
Th~re wrre some troubles. The
boosl~r rockets lhal were to have
been recoven:'Ci for reuse sank in
lhl' Allanlic Ocean. a $36 million
loss. The spacecrafl a lso developed
a sleering jet leak and a high
temperature reading on a fuel cell,
bul officials said lhese were mlnor
and would nol affecl the m ission. A
Sludrnl exp~r im enl fa iled to
function.

Onr of thr top-secrel Defense Derxperimenls might not
h a v ~ wo rked . AI leas I Ihat was Ihe
inference when Matt ingly reporled, in a code-worded exchange,
" no joy on step No. :l."
The astronau ls fell so far behlnd
In their roul ine Ihal Ihey didn'l gel
lobed until nearly lJ : 30 p.m. - almos l thrl'(' hours laler than scheduled. But after five hours sleep
Ihey werr ready for a bu;-y day.
partm~nr

Mission Conlrol wakened lhem
wil h a recording of "Up, Up and
Away," and commander Matt lngly
ack now ledged: "My compliments
to your tas t(' in music. We're ready

10 go lo work."
" We'!"(' glad 10 hear I hal ; Ihere's
lois for you 10 do toda y," said cap-

su iC' comm uni cator Brews ter
Shaw.
" I n~ ver would have guessed,"
rep lied Malt lngly.
Shaw lold lhem !heir spaceship
was in "good shape. and we'!"(' glad
you'!"(' bolh in good spirits."

ANTIQUE CARS GALORE · Antique cars of all kinds graced tbe

second IUIJIWI1 antique-classic auto show held Saturdll)' on the Slmmona
Oldsmobile lot In conjunction with the Big Bend Regatta.

.

..

�Monday, June 28, 1982

Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sent\l"el
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Monday, June 28, 1982

I II t uu rt ... I ro, ·I
l'nnwrn1 . I ttu ..
til~ - !19!- ! 1:.6

IW\nTHI rtl IIH 1\THH."l OF Till· \lllt ,.._.. \1\'•t" \IH \

Flashback. July 15, 1971. The
living room of the governor of
California, whose wife and four
guests are sprawled about to hear
President Nixon's announcement,

billed as of historic consc'q uence.
Nixon comes on, annuuncs he will go

to China. But , in obvious reference
to T&lt;tiwan, reaffirms his ties to our
"a lies ." Damn well should. said the

HOBERT 1.. WI'\ICI·TI'
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB Hm-:1-'1.1n1

DALE ROTHf;En . .I H.

guvernor of California, as his guests
11HJved in for dinner.

Od. 11, 1971. The governor of
Cal ifornia is in Taipei, before going
on to Singapore, Bangkok, Saigon,
St•tiul and Tokyo. Before a large
audience. he publicly commits the
Unitetl Stales to continue military
comm itment to Nationalist Chinese

1.1· '1"11· 1 \.' 11~· 111'1 .\ /11'\ ;tro· 'olo ·l• umt·• l l"ho ·~ • hoottltllw ''"' ' than .'100 'oloor1J, It on~ . ,\II
kiLo·r ' an· ' llhJo'd In • ·thltll~ and mu'l lw 'II!IWII 'lli\h ll:tnw . &lt;HIIIn·' ·' lind klo·ph&lt;•th·
nuntl10·r \u UU,Ij!ill'tl h ·tkr:o. "'•II 0.· JIUhJt ,ht·ol. l .o·tl+ 'f'• • ht~lllillw · 111 ~ '""' lol ~ lo · . :uhfr 1 ·,, IIIJ.:
nutrwr"•nHitllo·'

''"u'·' ·

More of the same
For a moment there it looked promising .

Mex1co City was makmg an offer - its good offices - that Washin~ton
could not diplomatically refuse and it appeared that serious discussions
were about to replace l~ exchange of mutual recriminations with Hava na
and Managua .
But that was early in the year, and the promise is now a casualty of later
and more dramalll' events. The Falklands war for one. which preoccupies
Washington and most other hemisphenr capitals. The huge voter turnout in
the Salvadoran eledion.s fur tinother, which Wushingtnn reads as vindication
of i~ Latin American hard line and justification uf it.s di.sindinatiun to
nl•gotiale with the oppos ition .

This may be no especially big deal as far as Cuba is concerned .
Wa.shington. through a succcs.sion of administnrtiuns, and Havana have
been un the nut.s for almost a quarter uf a ce ntury . Mutually antagon isti&lt;"

pusilions are fixed and clearly defined, and will bt·murh the same whcnt•ver
the adversaries eventually dcc1dc to ta lk .
Nicaragua ir another matter. It is still in flux and its relationship with Uw
United States b ::; till subject tu shaping.
The post·revolutionary rebuildin g of Nica.raguc.1 has not been gu\llg well.

The predominantly youthful Sandmisla leadership has found the practical
running of a country a more cumplt•x rnatter than their thenrizing an-

licipaletl.
The economy suffers with the rest uf Cent ral Amcnca from the depressed
world market fur the region 's agricultur&lt;Jiexpt)rlS, a weakneS!l aggravated
by the M&lt;Jrxist.uriented leadership' s f&lt;Jlhng out with unetirne anti..Surnoza

allies in the business establishment.
A continuing military buildup is an econornic drain , &lt;Jiarrns neighbors and
provides ammunition for critics in Washington and elsewhere.

The Sandimstas' opposition to early clcclinns. running feud with the independent newspaper "La Prensa" and ci&lt;Jshes with autonomy-minded
'Miskito Indians along the sensitive Honduran bonier exacerbate internal

dissension and promote a bad pre" abroad.
There have been defections from the revolutionary leadership and the
inevitable erosion of popular support as the revolution fai Is to produce ail the
benefits anticipated by al l its adherents .
Sandinista Nicaragua needs help, and ib communist fri ends abroad are a

long way from being capable of supplying it. The Sov iet Union lacks the
means, if it has the desire, to takl' on another Cuba , esli111atcd to represent a
$3 billion annual aid burden. The Cubans themsel ves may suppl y teachers,

technicians and advisers, but they cannot provide the aid in cash and kind
that Nicaragua most desperately needs.
We all know who can.
There is no chance that the Sandinistas would fall into American arms
with glad cries of gratitude and vows of loyally should Washington decide to
rcswne and expand the aid program that was canceled in the early days uf
the Reagan administration. Their ideulogical commitment I!; too finn and

distrust of the United States - as the periodic intervenor in Nicaragua and
the installer of protector of the Smoza dynasty - is luo deep-seated for that.
But they are pragmatic enough to recognize that the arrangement would
have to be one of a mutually acceptable quid pro quo. Washington would
regain some influence in the constructive shaping of Nicaraguan conduct

and development. The policies of the last year and a half ha ve had an entirely negative influence, pushing Nicaragua into greater reliance on the
Soviets and Cubans.
Nothing of the sort seems likely to bt· forthcoming soon, however.
Managua indicates it is still interested in talking, but wants the setting to be
a formal conferenc ein Mexico City.
Washington, never enthusiastic about the Mexican intiativc. wants to
downplay exchanges to the ambassadorial level. Within recent weeks. the
State Department issued a summary of U.S.-Niearaguan relations that
cataloged the usual U.S. complaints against the Sandimsta regime - no
elections, suppression of oppusition, support of the Salvadoran rebels - and
noted that it was awaiting response to an e1ght-point proposal tabled by the
American ambassador in Managua.
The Mexicans are reported to have decided to give up the effort to be help-lui.
They can harly be blamed.

independence ___ " in full force ." In
making this pledge, the governor is
ca rryi ng out instructions of the
president of the United States, Mr.
Nixon, whti supplied the airplane,
the staff and the mandate _
Ol'l . 25. 1971. The governor til
California makes several telephone
ca lls to friends. He expresses his
tiUlrage. On that day, the United

Henry Kissmger was m Peking,
preparing for the president's visit?
Was Mr. Nixon dealing duplicitously
with his allies, sending the governor
of California out to reassure them,
while permitting the subversion of
their pusition in New York? Or was
it simply a matter of things having
got out of hand, and the steam rolling
of George Bush? It was the latter.
said George Bush on television, a
week or so later, to the person the
governor of Califomia had called
late that night in such distress.
Flashforward . What still
"Shanghai II" proclaimed? What is
"Shanghai II"? It is a document,
shuttling al this period rhighiy infunned sources sayJ between the
State Department, inhabited by

Henry Kissinger's form er aide, and
the White House, inhabited by
President Nixon's emissary to the
F'ar East, fonnerly governor of
California, which domenl reflects if
not the recmrunenations, in any
event the findings, of the vice
president of the United States, formerly ambassador to the United
Nations when Taiwan was expelled.
One draft of Shanghai II - the
designation intended to recall
Shanghai I. which was proclaimed
by President Richrd Nixon on Feb.
'J:/, 1972, and acknowledged that
Taiwan and mainland China were a
single country, and that disputes
between the two governments were
therefore internal matters - goes
one drastic step further than

Shanghai I. It says that Taiwan, as a
mere province of mainland China, is
logically subordinate to mainland
China and that the United States
recognizes this geopolitical reality,
and that therefore although no date
is specified, at some time in the
future, the sale of United States ar·
ms to the government of Taiwan
must cease, and the Taiwan
Relations Act accodingly be
modified
This draft is hown to Pre~i~fllll
Nixon's former emissary,
president, who shoots it baclt tJjd
says make this less harsh q11
Taiwan. How, exactly? Well, that li
a problem. We promised recently to
sell some figher planes to Taiwan,
but not those planes Taiwan
rL'quesled

IJit

I

'I

I
1:

'

!,

,I

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~~

I

f. II
''

Nations had admitted Communist

II

Chula to the permanent seat in the
Security Council - and voted to oust
the Chinese Nalitina lisl government
from its scat in the General Assembly. How , the governor asks, can the
cn•dibility of the United States sur·

'

,·ive such ci rcumsta nces? Only a
week earlier, he stresses, he was in
Taiwan stressing that no such

lhl'

ern·

barrassmenl he could cause by
testifying about just two episodes at
a publil'lrial :
I. - Wilson wa' on the CIA's
payroll - and doing the agency's
bidding - all the time he was empl oyed by the largest labor union in
tlw United States as its inernational
rcprcsenl.dtive in E urope.
2. - He ser ved C:J S an adv&lt;Jnn· man

for Hubert Humphrey in the 1964
campaign - thus playing an active
role in partisan politics - while still
working for the CIA.
These confessions were made by

Wilson on tape before he left Libya
and was ensnared by the Justice

Department. I -arranged for him to
tape more than three hours of candid, wide-ranging reminiscences of

his days as an undercover agent lor
the CIA and naval intelligence. The
tapes were made in Tripoli by
Richard Bast. a private detective
who specializes in intrigue and ser·

seven innings.

The Angels scored all the runs
they needed with four run.s in the
first inning. two on Benlquez's homer, against rookle Bud Black. t -t.
Orioles 13, Tigers I
Cal Ripken Jr. and Eddie Murray drove In three runs apiece and
Jim Palmer won the 2541h came of
his career as Baltimore dealt Detroit its 13th loss In 14 games.
Ripken and Joe Nolan had tworun doubles in the first inning and
Murray hit a two-run homer in the
third, his lOth, when the Orioles
chased Jack Morris, 8-9. Morris has
lost his last lour starts. yielding 27
hils and 22 runs In 111-3 innings.
Palmer. 6-3, allowed two hil s in
four different innings before being
relieved In the eighth by GeorgP
"Storm" Davis.

part in a tribute to his former Ohio
State coach. Woody Hayes.
Griffin, thPonly player to win Ihe
Heisman Trophy twice. was a
three -time All -America tea m
member under Hayes from 1~72to
1975.
He carried the ball 47 limes lor
163 yards in 1~81 as the Ben gals fini ahsed with a 12·4 regular ·season record and won the American
Football Conference title before losing Super Bowl XVl to the Sa n
Francisco 49ers 26-21.

"Hey, halfbacks are not even in

the game in Cincinnati. (the Benga ls ! use the one-running back oflens~ so much, " Griffin .said during
a stop in Cleveland. where he took

Wilson and the CIA _____. : . :.:la,; _;_ck~An.:. :. :. .de: . :. .:.rs.:. . .:. on
Consider

mer. Doug DeCinces, Don Baylor
and Brian Downing added solo
shot s and Dave Goltz earned a victory In his first AL start since 1~7!1
as Callfomia beat Kansas City.
Goltz, 1-1, following five relief appearances since he was picked up
by California In May after his release by the Los Angeles Dodgers.
held the Royah to three hits In

CLEVELAND tAPt - Archie
Griffin says he still wants to be
traded by the Cincinnati Bengals of
the National Football League.
"I'm not mad at anybody and
there's nothing personal about the
wa y f feel. It Is just that the Bengals' offense is not halfbackorien ted .

ve ry moment of hl' vote, chid
pn·sidPntial fnreign policy adviser

te~timony .

By Associated Press
With a total of 18 runs In the last
three games. the Boston Red Sox
have been hitting the ball at a
pretty good clip lately .
And they'd be doing all right except that the Milwaukee Brewers
have been hitting even better.
Ben Oglivle, red-hot with seven
homers In seven games. also
slugged one as the Brewers won
their third straight game from their
chief rivals In the American
League East race. The Brewers
have scored 27 runs on 41 hits so far
in their series In Boston.
Ogilvie led off the sixth inning
with his homer. Thomas then fol lowed with his 16th homer, marking
the 11th time Milwaukee sluggers
ha ve hit consecutive homers this
season. The major l ea~e record
for back-to-back homers is 16 by
Boston in 1977. The National
League record is 12 by Cincinnat i in
1956.
Thomas added his 17th homer
against Boston reliever Tom Burgmeier in the eighth inning lor Milwaukee's seventh run. II was the
Brewers' 20t h homer in their last
nine games and 991h of the season.
Angels 9, !Wyals I
.Juan Benlquez hit a two-mn ho-

\'L-d

as the intermediary .

Wilson tillered to take a lit'
deteeltir test as evidence that he was
telling the truth. The test was being
arranged by my assol'iales Dale Van
Alta and Indy Badhwar when Wilson
was lured from his Libyan sanetuary, raptured in the Dominican
Republic and hustled off ltilhe siam""'r in the United States.
F'or years the conununist press

has accused practically every
American working abroad of being a
CIA hireling. Most of the lime. lht•
eharges have been pure borseht. But
in Wilson's case, there was a CIA
connection. Here's his account.

Wilson " was able to wangle a job
from the CIA,'' as he put it, after the
Ktirean War. His first assignment
was to provide security for the CIA's
super-secret U-2 spy plane in
California. He accompanied the U-2
to England, Germany and finally
Turkey, where he served until the
Russians shot down Francis Gary
Powers and the whole project with
him. Wilson was then transferred Jo
the
CIA's
international

organizations division.
·· on I his assignment, I wa:; able to

find a job on my own , without any
help from the agency, with the
Seafarers International Union in
New Yurk," he recalled. The union's
leadership was never told hl' was
with the CIA, as far as Wilson in
knows.

"Our rolt• was li' usc rthe union I as
a vehicle to arrivl' overseas where

ytiu could be effective in work against communists," he said.
As the union's international

representative in Europe, Wilson
was able to infonn the CIA "abtJUl
smuggling of anns and ammunition
by seamen in Cuba and into South
Ameriea." He could also stir up
trouble for European unions that
"were kind of getting along with the
t•ommunists," he said.

"We kind of helped foment a strike
by lht• communists," he explained,
"which kind of positioned them, got
them out front, and the governments
took certain actions against them. It
wasd quite effective, I thought, to

or

lessen the influence
the corn·
lllunist junions in Europe. "

We didn't wallow

After two yeas of this activity,
got a little too hot lor Wilson.
His wife and children were arrested
by the Belgian police at one puinl.
The Seafarers, still ignorant of his
CIA status, brought him home and
assigned him to AFL-CJO headquarters. "George Meany at the time
wanted someone to work for him in
international activities in the Far
East," Wilson- or four-month tour of
Ihe Far East."
His union work in Washington
opened the way for him to work with
the late Hubert Hwnprhey's vicepresidential campaign. He made
contacts in Congress and elsewhere
in Washington that were to prove inva luable.
Footnote: A series of colwnns,
beginning Oct. 20, 1980, focused on
Frank Terpil and Edwin Wilson,
both ex-CIA agents, who were
training and equipping a lleged
assassination squads for Libya's
radical ruler, Muatrunar Qaddafi.
Eight months later, The New York
Times began a series of front-page
thin~s

out to an expensive

ni~htclub

and

put on funny hats and throw confetti
in the air, as many of our friends
were doing.
We wanted to be with each other
as we were on that fateful morning
when five men were arrested for
illegally entering the Democratic
National Headquarters' offices on
the sixth floor of the Wategate officeapartment complex.
Like so many Americans, I
remember the exact moment when I
heard the news. It was seven o'clock
on Saturday morning, and as I turned on the radio the announcer at the
end of his newsbroadcast, made
mention of the break-in.
"My God," I said, sitting up in
bed. "They broke into the
Watergate."
My wife opened her eyes, startled

DOONESBURV

Rangers 10, A's 4
Rookle Dave Hostetler knocked
in lour runs and had four hit s. including a club record 11th homer
lor the month of June. to power
Texas over Oakland .

Hostetler. brought up from the
Rangers' Ciass-AAA !arm team in
Denver on May 28, singled across
runs in the first and third innings,
homered in a three-run fifth and hit
a sacrifice fly in the eighth. He also
doubled in the seventh to go 4-for-4
and then scored on a si ngle by Mike
Richardt.
Jeff Burroughs held the previous
club record for a month with 10 in
July 1973.

by my reaction. "Why are you getting so excited about a victimless

HARRISON, N.Y. tAP! - The
record eluded him. but Bob Gilder
achieved his No.I objective - a se-

'
I

and the lowest score on the Tour
since Johnny Miller won the 1975
Phoenix Open with a 260 totaL
And, lor a brief period, It seemed
Glider ma y have a shot at the
Tour's all-time scoring record, 257
set by Mike Souchak In the 1955
Texas Open.
Gilder had played the first three
rounds In 64, 63 and 65. the last one
highlighted by a dramatic. double
eagle on the 18th hole of Saturday's
round.
"That's a hard act to follow." he
said.
But, when he birdied Ihree in a
row, starting on the fifth. in Sunday's final round, he got to 21 under
par and was within sight of the
Tour's all-time scoring record. He
needed to shave two more shots off
par to tie the mark. three to break
it.

co nd v ictory of the season.

"I felt I could win again. And this
was a fun way to win,leadingevery
round," Glider said Sunday after
he'd conquered the 6,329 yards of
hills and vales that make up the
Westchester Country Club course
with a 261 total, the lowest score on
the PGA Tour In seven years.
''I'm just fortunate that I was
playing this well, that I was able to
score as well as I did. I just got hot. I
made a lot of putts. I hit the bali as
well as I can.
"That's as good as I can play."
It was good enough to produce a
five-stroke victory In the Manufacturers Hanover-Westchester Classic - he led by 7-9 shots most of the
las t round - a 19-under-par
total
,,

stories covering the same material.

.~

;

Art Buchwald

erime?" she asked. "There is more

to the news item than meets the eye.
This thing could lead to the Oval 01fit'e of the While House."
"How do you know?" she asked
me as I started doing my daily 50
pushups.
"I don't know for certain. But
something smells about this whole
thing. Why would five men risk
everything Jo break into Democratic
National Headquarters unless they
were part of a much larger con·
spiracy that could involve the
highest officials of this land?"
"But why the Watergate?" she
asked.
"Why not the Watergate?" I
replied, jogging in place for three
miles. "This looks like something
that nut, Gordon Liddy, would think
up as part of a Plwnbers' plan in the
White House."
"What are pliunbers doing in the
White House?"
I lifted two 100-pound barbells. "I
can't get a direct . answer from

anyone, but I think they're involved
in wiretapping, break-ins and dirty
tricks. Somehow they're connected
with the Committee to Re-elect the
President and John Mitchell."
"But,'' she said, "how will this involve Nixon?"

Haldeman, Ehrlichman and Colson,
they'll have no choice but to vote for
impeachment. It could be one of the
darkest periods in American
history, but it will prove the system
works, thanks to a vigilant press,
and a judge who stuck to his guns."

"It doesn't involve him at this

"I can't believe you," my wife

moment. But if I know the
President, as soon as he hears about
it, he will call in his legal counsel,
John Dean, and try to cover the
whole thing up."
"That would be obstruction of
justice and lead to impeachment or
resignation," she said.
"Exactly. When the heal is on,
Haldeman and Ehrlichman and
Colson will try to sacrifice Dean, and
at that point he'll start singing better
than Beverly Sills."
"But," my wife said as she watched me on the chinning bar, "where'
is the smokinggun?"
"The tapes. Nixon records
everything in his office on a voiceactivated machine. When Congress
hears the conversations the
President had with Dean,

said. "You can gel all of that out of
nne teeny news item on the radio
about a third-rate burglary."
"That's what I'm paid for," I said
modestly. "You never accept a news
item on face value. You have to
figure out what is behind the story."
"What are you going to do about

" I can't knock the offense that
!Coach! Forrest rGreggJ installed
beca use it worked for us. it got us to

the Super Bowl. But lor me personally, l'd like to go somewhere else."
he said.
"I'd like to play for anybod y
who'd utilize me," added Griffin.
who had said in February that he
wanted to be traded.
"Forrest hasn't sa id an ything
one way or another. and it doesn't

look like I will get traded . Bull still
want to, though my relallonship
with Forrest is good," he sa id .

Gilder takes second win of season

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

As many of you may have noticed,
last week the country celebrated the
lOth Anniverary of the Watergate
break-in. Unlike many people, my
wife and I did not wallow in it. We
decided to have a quiet dinner at
home and watch TV, rather than go

lndlwtS 4, Y Mkees 3

Andre Thornton opened the
eighth with a double and scored the
tie-breaking run on Rick Manning's
single and Jerry Dybzinskl singled
home the eventua l winning run as
Cleveland defeated New York.
Rick Sutcliffe balled s tarter Lary
Sorensen. 7-6, out or a jam In the
bottom of the eighth to earn his first
AL save.
New York' s Roger Erickson. 4-7.
suffered his fourth setbac k in as
many decisions since he was acquired from Minnesota on May 12.

Griffin still wants Bengals trade

de velopment wou ld take place' And
hen• he has barely land ed on the
presidential jet back to Ca liftirnia and it has taken place .
Was it dupli city on tht• part til our
a111bassador to the United Natitins,
(;enrgc Bush? Did what happen 10
New York reflect a psy chological
capitulation, as witness that at the

WASHINGTON - Ed Wilson , the
renegade CIA agent wlltJ was lured
into a trap by the Justice Department, has an ace in the hole : his

The D.aily Sentinei-Page-3

Rampaging Brewers
defeat Boston again

Shanghai II _________W_t_'lli_am_F._B_uc_k_ley::.....J_r.
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

But he missed a s ix -loot birdiP
putt on the ninth and , realistica lly,
his chances at the rc•cord were
gum:•.

"That back nine is tough. It gives
me a lot of trouble. After I missed
that putt on the ninth . f was just
Irying to survive." Gilder sa id . To
tie the record, he needed to play the
back in 33. But he required ~7 and
finished with a 69.
But he !ound more than adequate
consolation in the $72,000 first prize
and, as a two-time winner thi s sea -

son, a spot in the World Series of
Golf. Gilder won the Byron Nelson
Classic earlier thi' season and
joined Tom Watson. Craig Stadler.
Lanny Wadkins and Ray Floyd as
the Tour' s only multiple winners
this year.
Gilder had a six-shot lead when
the day's play started and. aft er the
three early birdies, had it won. Only
the quest for the record, and a fight
for second place. remained .
The record stood, and Tom Kite
and Peter Jacobsen tied for the
No.2 spot, Kite gaining a share of it
with a last-hole birdie.

CEDENO HEATED - Cincinnati Reds player
Cesar Cedeno, at right, is restrained by roach Jor
Amalfitano as he shouts at umpires after being thrown
out of a game against the Atlanta Braves, Sunday in
Cincinnati. Cedeno was thrown nut fur questiuninJ! a

strikt• call by hnnw plate umpire Charlie Williams .
When ht• was dirt·t'lt'd to It-ave tht• dugout hy third bast•
umpire Satt·h Davidson, Ccdt·no thrt·w lwlnlt'nts unto
thl' field and bl•gan shnuling. I AP L.asl'rphotn 1

Non-existent offense costs
Reds another division loss
CINC INI\ATI &lt;AP I - Su nda _v· s
14-inning duel with the Cinci nnati
Red'\ W&lt;JS more like war than ba sf'ball. at least to Atlanta third bas&lt;•
man Bob Hornrr .
" It WdS a long. hanJ·fought g ~tnll'
- likC' puttin g on _'tou r battiP gPar
a nd going to war," llornf'r '\a id . " It
was hot and sli ck.'• ... ju s t a good
gamC' to gf' l ow •r and gf't out of

here."
Chris Chambliss

and

Hornf' r

I'm a clut ch hitti'J', that I ran hit
whrn1t' ,; important. Butt didn'IIJ'
to pull the ball too much: I ,,.a,.
thinking 'up lh~ middl~ ....
Humr. 1·:\. was lhf' lo~f'r . Crrw
Carbrr, l:l-.1, got th e victor:;. and :\1

Hrabosky lOOk over in the l&lt;th 10
t'arn hi.-; fourth

s&lt;Jv~

through the whole game."

Cincinnali rC'lirvrr Tom Humf' in

Atlanta took thf' Rf'ds out of "iP\' ·
c•r;d apport unit ics by' cu mplet ing
&lt;I'VCn double plays to tic a major

I3ra VPS, WhO COnlinU(' 10 if'Jci thf'

Nat lanai League West.
"It's a sign of a winner to win the

close gam&lt;'S," &gt;'a id Chambliss. who
drovp in C1audf'll WJ " hing1on to

break a scoreless deadlock .
"We kept getting out of I rou iJIP.
doing the things we had to do." said
At lanta ManagPr j ()(\ T orn-:-. " ThP

Bra\'i' '- ;nHI ;tll nw t•d l ht!'f ' lllh. It
wa s I hi • "t'\·t•nth t i nH · th t·- '-.1'.1-u n
Sol o ha .... ·· 11 1H'k cJ ut .1 1 lt ·.t '- 1 Jn 1),11
u ·r~

111 ;1 g, l!llt '

" It' s disgusting. I'm 1•xa sprr ·
alrd, " sa id Cinc innati Managf'r
John McNarn&lt;Jra. " It' s a fru st rat ·
in g thing to have the apport unit if's
and not takP adva ntagP of onf'

singlf'd in lhP game's onl_v ru ns off
the 14th to gra b a 2-0victorv lor tht•

. . tril\t· uut . t rl l-.1 \\ ' till U\ ldt tht •
g anH' 111 tht • lOt h i nntn g lt lr .1 pin('h
hitt r r a nd wa :-. lltll tll\,d \' t·d tn tht ·
dl•t 'i.. , it•n. ;1\thrlu glt tw . ., tn wk out \II

'''"~"'" r&lt;•curd shared bv the l~-12
Nrw York YankE'C's and the J9h9
Houston A s! ros.
Thr Rra\'C'" blrw a chancf' for ~~
t tipiP play· in thP ninth innin g.

~3 1

JACKSON PtKE R1 35 WEST
Pnone 44 6 4 5N

IJAR GA IN MAI/Nf[S O N SA l ,i
AU S E AlS JU~r S JOO
~ MISS ION

~

Molli&amp; .--.

Pit cher Steve Bedrosian fielded a
pop bunt by Duan~ Walker and
doubled off Dan Dri pssen at Sf' cond , but Ramirez lhrrw \·Vide of
first base. giving Johnn y Bench

coming up. I knew somf't hing wa s

tim~

going to happen ."

Cin cinna l i lost it s top run producer in the S£&gt;vrnth inning
whC'n Cesar Cedeno was I hrown ou t
of 1hr ga mP for arguing a ca llc•d

strJRE:n
:!~a·s

strike with
Williams.

3 d WEE K
00~
or
SAT &amp; SUN 1'1/lll/ll l ":. I L1J &amp; J

had held At lanta to four sca ttered
hit s. Wa&gt;' hington. Rafael Ramirez
and Chambliss pounded successive
singll?'i off Hume. and one out later.
Horner gave the I3ravcs a n insu·
ranee run .
" Hum(' throws a sinking fastball .
and it 's importa nt notlo try to pull
him . I've made that mistake belore. " Chambliss said. "I feel like

to get back to the bag.

plat~

umpirP Charlie

M0\1E.&gt;~•• •tb

PG

..

fT.
•

•

/Ill f.\TRA

n HHfSTHIAI

v

Cedeno is challenging fort he 'I ationa! Leagu~ batting title with a
Jl6 average. but the earlv ejection
cos t him a chance to continue his

1:\-ga me hitting streak. the longest
by a Reds player this season.
Soto_ the major leagues' top

''fH£Y SAY W£ CAN 80l~OIAJ UP -ro

$30,000 OR. /"10~£ ON OUK HOUSE! • .

~

it? I t

"Nothing. At least nothing until
the Saturday night massacre."
"Is there going to be a Saturilay
night massacre?"
''There always is when a president
tries to obstruct justice."
"I feel so helpless," my wife
crd. "Shouldn't we at least warn

If you own your home,
you could get a large loan, too.

Nixon?"

"No way. His people got him into
Watergate - let them try and get
him out."

HOW DO YOU APPLV?

by Garry Trudeau

.-NeW Sealy, QuiltedTop, Innerspring. FJRM .

Just phone. When you see for yourself how fast we say
"yes," you11 wonder why you waited so longl Call to find
out how low your monthly payment could be.

TWIN

(

-

~~

hig ~vs we re going thrrr-up.
three-down. But w h~n th ~y kepi on

Finally, aftf'r Cincinnati sta rter
Mario Soto and reliever .Jim Kern

li]

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY

[!iUNE
-- 25 thru JULY I

MAITRESSES

"/ fBBI worthless as s person, too. But Is thst
enough on which to build s mesnlngful relstlonshlp?"

SU:J

fV Ff!! I I)~ SOAY S.&gt;ou

WESTCHESTER WINNER- Bob GDder raciB !o tbe pllery 011 tbe
18tb p'ee11, SIUiday, lifter sJUIDg bla fllllll put !o will flnt place In tbe ·
Westchester Claeelc. GOder shot a flnaii'OUIIII of • ud bad a ecore ofltundei'-Zfl at tbe Westchester Country Club. (AP Laserpbota)

"

In Gallipolis:
502 Second Street
Phone 446-4113

�Pomeroy~Middleport,

~onday,

Ohio

June 28, 1982

~
I
'

Scoreboard...
PIUSbUfl!h

Majors

NN ' York

Chi{'!IXO

B)' 'f1Mo ~Utc&gt;d

rr.-

AAIERif.AN LEAGl iE
F.utf'm DtvWon

\\'

Hos lun
Mllwaukf't'

I.

t'1i.

(;8

~~

~

lit U

.ao

:w1

m

:01

.I\

'f1 ]

,P 1

:~

:r1

'12'•

"'

l.'l

&lt;&amp;9.1

.1.1

. ~'i

~

7 1-1
II

..

]II

~.,

,..

tnt

:w

NN' Ynrk
Tomnlu

:n

•u .,

\lof'!&gt;ill·m IMvWon

l 'alltur ma
Kan_,a.~

n.-..

.JII
~

Chlt'iij,::U
S!•atl lt•
O;•kla.nd

II
16

"67

..
'II

44

U1

n

Tt•.~a.~

·m

'l)

""' ....

"«!&lt;1'~1-1\"11!&gt;~~

m

I J I~

~&gt;t&gt;

{;IUnt.,.

OLD FRIENU T,\I .KS - Elson Spt'IH'I'r, who

Sl'rVt~l

.
'""~
&gt;
~tl!
STORART ROASTED AND TOASTED- Chuck

recen·
tly took the head football coaching job at the University of Utah, was
presented a special plaque by Richared C. Roderick of Gallipolis, a mem·
ber of Stobart's championship team in 1960 at Gallipolis. The plaque was
given lor the game ball Stobart ne1•er received .

as one of the

man y roa s h•rs at lht· {'hu('k Stubart roast and rct"og nitiun banquet, is

shown gi\·ing a trw quips Sunday at the Stohart roast at Royal Oak Park.
Stobart and Gallipolis' Richard Roderirk carh rercive a laugh from his
words of wisdom.

.606
.571

ID'i Angt&gt;\f'S

ll

.15

.~

12
Jl
:r1

H&lt; JU ~ tun

4.12

&lt;&amp;1

41

.m

1:1'1

Sl LLJUl\ 4-2, (' hlcago 1·1
l,ao; An~f'll t liouston 1
S.m Dit&gt;jzo 7. San f'ranchro ti. 15 ln

"""'

l'h\lad;&gt;lphla 4 7. Nt&gt;w York J.4
t'l nc mnall '2, AUanta 1
Pltt ~ burJlh 14. MonU't"al 5
SUnda,y'1G~

l'hlladt'lphla R NPW Yo rk :J
Montrl'al !'i. Plttsbur'l{h 2
,\tldnlll '2. Clnclnnall 0. 14 lnnlnJl&gt;
t 'hl&lt;'aR:o t Sf _ Louls2
Sa n 0\t&gt;j{o ~ . San F'ranci'i('(l :l
La• ,\n~ll'!. 7. Hou ~ton .1
~'!IGIUl18

!Sarmlenlo 'l·lt at l'hlri!.RU

C tlllorrUa 6. Kan.o;a.• l'Ut ''- 1! llln lnl!•
( 'hil·a~n 1:1. S.·.&lt;!!ll' .' 1
Su..ta)''" (ium~.,;
Toronto :1, Mln llf"''iit 2
riL 'VI'Iand ~ - ('..pw York .I

ll tJU~ t on 1Ryan ~~ a r Atlanta IMahlf'f
7 ~ I . 101
Sl LouL~ 1Mura ~71 at Phlladi'lphla
IC'IIrllon !HI. 1n1
.'•,an Olf'RO 1 Wf'lsh ~ \1 at 1--06 AnJ!;''h'S
o\ 'dll'fllUI'Ia '1-61 . rn 1
ClnclnnM! 1U&gt;ttx·andl 111 al San F'ran
L'i -;('(1 ~ Martin :l-41, rn1
I )flly ~afl'W"\ o;chroulrd
l'lwlld!Q''II G&amp;ITM'tl
l-'lll.~ burflh at Chlr3,1{o
;-..~......,. York ar Montwal. ' " '
S• Louis a1 Phlladl'lphla. 1n 1
Houslon at AUanta. tnl
San Dk&gt;jzo dl ~ Anl;'f'(t&gt;s , m 1
Clnclnnall at San Fra nclowu. ~ n 1

Milt~'.iUkt~ · j, \JIJ~o;t o n ~

l l I fil •lroit 1
I

MIIwaukf"' •\ 'U('kO\'\dl 4 2• .t l ll(l,h&gt;fl
oHalnl'\' I 21 . on t
( l11kland , t .•m¢ord 'l "' ,t l t-.:,10..," t ''"

IL. t m.~

1""· •nl

()I'll\ J&lt;lllllf"'

'I

i

fian M.,.

NA'nONAL. L.EAGliF.
llATnNG 1ll"l a! Oat ~!
Mrl:~ .
" 'Lou!,, ." l11 , J _Thompson. P1tl sburW'!.
'Uti: T Pl'na. Pllt.~burW'! . .3'21. FrancoM,
Mon~r{'a !, .121. Landrt"aux. Los 1\niitl'if'S.

Toronlo. on 1

t'lf"\'l•lanrl a t 1-laltlmon•. on 1
Milvoaukl"'' al N('\1· Ymk. 1n1
(',tlllornla at T{')(a.~. 101
Oakland at !-.:an sa~ l'lt~ 1 n 1
f'hlcaJ;:o af MlnfK"'o(}t,t, •n•
Boslon at Ol'tmlt. 1 n 1

11 6

NATIONAl. U : t\fa •t;
........ 1&gt;1 ......
W
I.
l'1i .
I'J

Munm•al
Phlladl'lphia

·'

Leaders

~lwduh&gt;d

1'\w!ld!Q' ' ~

S..altlf' at

II!

12 1' 1

TP,.1.~ ~.Oakland ~

Ho~ltlrn"IT'

I

121,&lt;j

-&amp;.11

4:1

"

Meigs' Heritage Sunday

1~

!'i 17

SM&amp;urday'11 Ganlftl

l'lll ~ burfi(h

mnln~"

Sfo.tll lf' h. Chlcal('o.,
.\olondity'" GIUl-

- · .·

.:ll

l f'll{'l' t) ~~

l'il llfOT nld ~. t\ a n ~~ t "It\

-

P•1

-

28

o1 .1

U

41!1

:r.~

Mlnrw··•ol&lt;t t Tororn o 'I
MJi w.w kf'f' I L lloslon HI
ll.al!lmon• t. {){'l~ull 1
Ni'\1' York t ('lfo-.·f'l &lt;t.nil l 17

.,.-~·~

:! 1·1

'1 1~

MinnMOI .I
Salurdlly'&gt;(

-

14

...,
40

....

liR

-

'iii

HUNS L.Smllh. St Louis. ~. Dawson.
Mont rm l. ~ :
Murphy. Atla nt11. !'i.'l.
ruon{'!oo, San ~o. 48: Schmid!. Phlla
drlphla. &lt;ib: J .Thomll"Qn. P1Usbur¢1. -16 .
Sax . I.LK Angpk's, 4ti.

II E IUTA!;E SUNDAY- Herltagt• Sunday at Meigs Museum yes-

,'1.1urph~·.

RBI ·

lrl'&lt;JI.

l:l:

Allanl;a. !\A: Ollvf'r. Mnn
B Dlaz.
Phlladt&gt;lphla , 49:

.! Thompson. PUt~ IAir¢1. .
I .a&lt; Angt"k&gt;s. 411..

411:

lt•rda~·

I

·I

Takes annual derby
Don Stouder. representing Central Trust Company, won first
place honors in Sunday's eighth an·
nual frog derby at Royal Oak Park.
Stouder jockeyed Overdraft In
the Grand National Grog Derby
"hop off", the race featuring the
four fill:ite;t winner &lt;; of 10 prev ious
races .

Central Trust's entry took the
$100 cash award plus a trophy.

Boxing fans robbed

DERRY WINNER - Don Stouder, right. representing Central Trust
Company jockeyed their frog, Overdraft, to the championship of the
Eighth Annual Frog Derby Sunday at Royal Oak Park . He was presented
a plaque by Davt· Jenkins of the Meigs County .Jaycees.

Chu('k Stobart durin~ Sunday's ruast at Royal Oak Park. At nght IS Jue
Stmhit' who st•rvt·d as master of c·t•rt•monit•s .

Stohart roasted, recognized at banquet
il·k of ( ; ~illipo li s. a former pl ayer on

1\y IIALE IUYI'JI( ; ER .. lr.
0\'1' :\rws Editor

Stul&gt;;u·J·, 191'/) SI-:01\ L champion·

('h,lrlf'. . "Chuck" Stuharl. :1 :\l id
d lPvo rl grLtdu.li P b ~ · \ \' a~ · of Antiq
uit ~ · . who h a~ go nP on to makl' .1
nam&lt;' for him ~P lf in loo!bal! co: tch
in ~ rank..., , wa ~ ! hr rPcipiPn! uf
man \ !)arbs. Sf'\'Pral accobdC'" :md
p l aq ul· ~; rlu1·ing a rua :-.1 Sundd _\'

night al ltoval Oak Park .
S0r\'ing a" roaster.'- Wf'tT' Midd lt ·-

purl

Mayo r Fred

Hoffman.

a

form{'r t f'amm&lt;.~ tC' &lt;.~nd high se houl
bu dd~·: Elson SpcnrPr . a hunting
com panion: Rill Child s. forml'r
tf'amma tP on the Twin" City· f'ntry
in th&lt;' Ohio \ 'all£·.' · R&lt;i sl'ball A s:-.cx· i·

" hip tf'a m at Calli polis, a nd Char lie
( 'h; Hl CP~ '. Mrigo.; foo t ball coac h w ho
··t't'\' t'(\ with Stohart on the Mar" hdll l' ni\'l'rsi ty· coac hing staff in
\ ~1 1-{1
()I IH ·r

n•marks wP n ' given by his
aun t . l&gt;:trlPnP (;ruham. and an old
linw frit ·nd. ,lu &lt;1 nita Bacht el.
Co~w h l,.CJ I'I'SI HJ.chtp)':-: widow .
lnt roduc( •rl by (•mct'f' JOf' Stru IJII', :1-liddh •IXJrt Ma ~o r Hoffman r&lt;&gt;rnini...,cC&lt;.I about his rrlationship
wi th Stohar t as freshmen entering
"""t.lf'idl loll

wi th thf' la tP Coach

ll.whlrl.
In do~i n g his rP marks. Hoffman
pn'"('n ted Stobar t with a n:-solution

Sundil .' ' mornin g: Frank Morg&lt;.m.
" I.X lll ~ informa tion din.'Ctor at Ohio

in n'&lt;'Og-nition of hi o.; coaching ft'·
curd a nd in honor of Sunda y's
ot(\ tsinn .

apprc"·" l IJv· Middleport's council

Weekend sports
TRACK ANO FIELD

UlJRHI\M, N.C. 11\Pi - lla v·p
Mc~C'nziC' set an American f('('Onl
in thP ha mmer throw w hiiP .Jao.;on

(;rimes had a near-r!'&lt;'ord pcrfor·
mance in the long jump blown
awa _
v as the U.S. !Pa m clai m ed v ictory in the Lite Summer Games i n·

ternational track and field m('('f "'
Duke Un iversity.
On Sa turday, Dave \ 'olz, a junior
al Indiana Universit y. established
an America n record in the pole
vault when he clea red lR- Ieel. ~P'r
inches. topping the mark of 18- ~P..1
sel jointly one week ago by Dan Ri·
pley and Bi lly Olson in a meet at
Nashville. Tenn .
OSLO, N01way !APt - Steve
Scott of the United Sta les, one of
three runners to record mile times
In the all·tlme top 10 Saturday,
equalled the third fastest mile ever
in winning the "Dream Mile" at the
annual Bislett Games in 3 minutes,
48.53 seconds.
Scott also shaved more than a second off his own American best or
3:49.68. He set that mark when he
finished third behind Steve Ovett of
Britain and Spain's Jose Luis Gonzalez in last year's "Dream Mile,"
bettering Jim Ryun's 1968 time of
3:51.1.
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - MIchael Musyokl burst ahead of Jon
Sinclair 50 meters from the finish
and won tbe $50,001 15-kllometer

hunting feats. baseba ll a nd golf accompiLshmenl s or lack of them.
Morgan said, "Chuck . a former
Bobcat quarterback. is a great
coach, but. I'm glad we don'lllavc•
to play him again unless it' s in
some kind o f bowl gamr

:1-llflclll'purl High School and their

alion : 1\ogN Dill ard. another :1-l id
diPpurl high 'chool chu m \\'hu
pla ved a rou nd of golf " 'i lh S!obaJ'I
l 'ni v·Nsll v: .Judge Richard Roder·

Spencer. Childs. a nd Dillard all
discussed their va rious at hJC' tir
co ntacts with Stobart inc luding his

( 'a ..;{'~ tdt ' l {un Off road racf'.

I

S()('CER
:-.I I&lt;\\' YOHK tAP I - 11w North
Amf'r ir an Soccer L eague an nou nn'CI that it has agreed to enter
into discussions regarding interlpaguf' pia.\' w ith lhf' Major Indoor
Soccrr I .C'aguC'.

somewhere. "

S!obarlt hcn tha nked Fr('d Crow.
who ar rang&lt;'d the roast a long with

CLEVELAND tAP! - Friends
or heavyweight boxing champion
Larry Holmes were robbed of
about $5,300 in cash and belongings
while they sta yed in a hotel here.
police say.
The robbery occurred downtown
Friday night when David K. Kleve n
and VIrginia Rodgers lefl their
rooms at Stouffer's Inn on the
Square lo go to dinner with Holmes,
who also was staying at the hote l.
police reported . The three were in
town for World Boxing Council junior welterweight and crul~erwe lght
championship fights .

The Daily Sentinel
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nitf'ly a grea t influence on m e along
with his wi.fC', Juanita ."

tikt~

U ni ver sity fres hman football and

th&lt;·ir ctttl'ndancf• and earlier assist-

to lose," Roderick said of his
former coach.
Roderick also presented Stobarl
with a plaque in recogn ition of his
championship at Ga llia Acadcm)'
High School. which replaces lh&lt;'
game ball he never received.
Chancey, who is a cousin of Stobart's wife. June. sa id it was an honor to coach with S!obart al
Marshall University . He said he
really knew Stobart was just the

hPad baseball coach, and Kermit
Glosser. former OU assistant foot ball coach.
Stobart also paid tribute to his old
t·ollcge coach. the late Bill Hess.
On behalf of the MiddleportPomeroy Chambers of Commerce,
the honoree was presented a large
footballlrophy In recognit ion of his
accomplishment s by Harold Hubbard and Ted R.eed: a distinguished
plaque by Jim Frecker: and certifi-

assis tant coach at his new assig n-

ca te&lt;; of commendation from Sen.

ment the University of Utah.
" Actually his wife. my cousin,
.June. Ls the head coach." Cha ncey
emphasized.
Responding, Stobart. who posted
a 1~ - 1 record In Ills first two seasons
as a high school football coach, said
"everyone who roasted me today

Oakley C. Collins, R.ep. Claire
"Buzz" Ball Jr. and Gov . James
Rhodes.
Lee McComas , retired superln·
lendent of Middleport Schools,
presented the invocation and benediction while special music wa.s
played by Armand Turley at the
organ.

The June m('('ling of the Star
Ga rden Club wa s highlight('(! by a
program on roses and rC'port s of

CHAINED!
A family gets a healthy, playful puppy, and it soon
grows into a large, active dog . The children lose
interest, and the parents can't be bothered . The dog
ends up on a 4 -foot chain in the backyard .
The dog is fed table scraps when anyone remembers .
In summer, no one thinks to give it water, and it has
no shade . In bad weather, it has no shelter . Sometimes, it's left for days at a time .

Tht' Pmneruv E!t-tllt'nlarv Sl'ht&gt;tll honor rull fur
thl' f1nal stx w·t&gt;cks ~ra din~ pt•rux.l has bt·en annoutll't'll . Makrng a Kradt· of n ur al&gt;ti VI' rn all
th~rr subjeels tube nHuled to I he rull were
Grade urw - Dt·bbtc Alkrre · x, l .o~.·a mw Cundiff
- x, Kcvm Lambert . x, Mel1ssa Maynard - x,
An~da Abbott , Kandi Bw: htl'L Chnstin Bu:u.anl.
David Darst. Charllt' Krng. Sh'phame Prwt'.
Tarnmy Queen , Brandon Housh, Gary Snuufftor .
Palrll'k Steele. Katrina Turner, Anna Chapman ·
x, Serena Da\•i.s · x. Dcms t• Hyse ll - x, Bt'lh
Roush - x. Rusty Triplett - x. Vickt Warner - x,
Jenmft•r Barnhart , Mc~i:ln B&lt;~rtl'l s. Christopht&gt;r
Knight, Teresa May, Cun .ssa Mulford, Lynelte
Neet•e, An K elaSwr ~e r .
Gradt' twu - Barbie AnJersun- x, Juli Buck :c R&lt;tdllu&gt;l Ruush - x. Mu:tl h Bunch , Jeremy
rk~:~n. Mit-key Gut~tl e , Sh&lt;1wn Hawley, J t•n •rny
Het·k. C'mdv Pl'tttl. Apnl Ta nnehill , Lanny
Tyrt't', Jnt')' ·Mt'Eiroy - x, Juhn Harnsun - x, Kun
Burtun. Shell y C.u.sto, Janue Chapmun , .Jenny
Sklkh, Stephame Hagl(y. Ta mmy Klcrn .
Mil·hdlc Lt·e. Mtssy Neutzhnl{ . Kt'llh Smith .
Josht1a Bruwn, Jason Dowell, E n,· Neal . Mt•hnda Dailey .
Grddt• thret' - Kim Ew in ~. RtlblHc F'it•lds.
J enni Wt•rry. St•u n ulhm , En c Hec k, Jasun
Wn)!hl, Brian Kov&lt;tkhik .
Gr1:1dc four - N~:~ney Bl:lkt•r - x, Jenmfer
Newman- x, Chn.s Alkire. John Amlt'rson, K~:~rcn
L.&lt;~mbcrt, Di:lrlcnc St&gt;e, TOOd Smith, Tara Wolfe
Grade fi ve - Cary Bcl:ting • x, Dennis Bouthe,
Hank Clt&gt;land. Beeky Pearson, Grella Hifnc,
Jut'y Roush, Shelly Tnplt•U, Penni Jeffers, Jeff
McElro)', Todd Powell, Luurie Wuyhmd, M1ssy
Woods. Lesley Curr - x, Nicoll' Bunch, Beth
Ewin~. Terry Fields, Steve foulkrOO, Beth Pier~
ee Sha ne Sirnpstl/1, Sonja Slt.oele, Monica Tumcr.
Gradt• six - Ter~ Johnson - x. Julie Baity,
Dreama lkntl, Dct!Hnna Henderson, Wendi
Klues. Dl'na Manley, Chns Smith . M&lt;1yrcne
Thomas. Kim C~~t l ve rt , Lisa Newman, Shl'lly
Stt&gt;bart.
x - Denotes 1:111 A'.s.

The meeting, held at 1he home of

Club's conventio~n in Augu sts we re
made.
Mrs. Sharon Jewell resigned a'

The dog is never"walked, never exercised. Eventually,
it's never even noticed .

Calendar
MONDAY
Eastern Athletic Boosters,
special meeting, 8 p.m. at the
high school; purpose - to make
July 4 plans.

TUESDAY

This 'kind of pet ownership is ~rue I and irresponsible .
Make your pet a part of your family-for everyone's
sake .

RUTLAND - Skating Tuesday
7:30p.m. to 10:30 p.m. at Rutland
Civic Center. Admission $1 for
children and $2 for adults. Bring
your own skates.

If your neighbor's dog Is chained and is suffering or
creating a nuisance, call us and we'll try to do some·
thing about It . Your anonymity Is guaranteed .

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
meet Tuesday at Rock Springs
Qrange Hall. A potluck supper
will be held at 7 p.m. followed by
the meeting at 8 p.m. Athens
County Grange will attend. All
members are urged to bring a
covered dish and own table service.

d~E.i;Jj, Count!} dfum.am: .::Socid!J
r:P. tD. !Box 6S2

(Pomc.wy, r!)l'zio 4!5'1 69
Prepared by The Humane Society of the United States for animal wtUart
groaptend animal control -.me ....

-----4~

.-

l-

re-

I

Tilt' ftmtl :. IX Wt't'kl&gt; t.:ratlllll! Jil 'rTot.l h"ll••r n•ll of
lilt' Hanm· F: ll'ltlt'tliH r\' St. ·hll,.f \1.1.~ h1't'll ,~,~~.
th!Uih't'J . Maklll ~ a gr;~~ k of H ''' al x111' 111 a ll
tllt' tr s ubjt•t'b \o lw ltsletl "il lllt' r11ll

Sally•Ulnr llollzl

WARNING

Mrs. Alegria Will, program

month.

second v ice- president a nd was

"""
,f

latC'r.

other club ac tiv·i fies ovw ll1e past

for the Ohio Assoc iati on of Ga rden

Middleport Child Conserva lion
League held Its annua l family picnic recently. Prizes were won by

watd1 artists at work. Helen Foster
and her daughter (left), of Point
l'lt·•.-ant , W. Va. , carcfuUy hlllldpaintt•d l'knUlian Pggs. (Photos by

hi bit and visit it s flow('r show in Au·

opened with a Fat her's Day 1)(J{'m
by Anna Ogdin and dev·otions on
" Beauty Aids" from the dail y devo·
tiona! by Stella Atki ns. She also
read an arllcle on Flag Da .v. Huby
Deihl read " I Know You i\re
There."
The roll ca ll was the name of a
song with " rose" the title. P lans for
the commillec to m~el with the RuUand Garden Club members at
Mrs. Dinda Die hl 's lo make favors

CCL

vif'w lo&lt;·al m emorabilia (above) or

gust. The dal e will be a nnounced

Davidson a nd Betty Spencer. Janel
Venoy reported on the fl ower fund
and Eileen Bowers on the motherdaughter fund . Ca rds to the ill were
signed by all present.
A decision was made to donate to
the church paint fund . Belly Spence
gave a study on Kentucky Christian
Coll ege. Re fr es hme nt s we re
served by Trudy Andrew,.
Next meeting will be a t the home
of Evelyn Smith, Gallipolis.

And the next day , the children start begging for
a puppy .

At right Ia Fred Crow wbo &amp;ITIIDged tbe event as part of
tbe Big Bead Regatta festivities.

Star Garden Club

Stella A tkins and Hub)' OiC~ hl. wa s

Alone day after day, the dog becomes bored and
frustrated . It barks, and neighbors complain . Passing
children tease and annoy It . Because it has nothing
to do, it becomes listless ... and then aggressive .
Finally, it has to be destroyed .

PART OF RECOGNmON TEAM- Mn. Juanlla
Bachtel, left, aod Darlene Graham flaok Coach
Charles Stohart at Suoday's roast at Royal Oak Park.

H &lt;:.~nis .

Honor rolls

" If 's great to be homc. l'm proud
to bc from the &amp;'nd urea and consider myself a lu cky guy," Slobart
said. " I had great coaching under
Forc&gt;sl Bachtel a nd he was deli·

ance were Harry Lackey, former
head football coach at Athens High
School: Bob Wren. formner Ohio

Pixie award went to Mrs . I(C'nnPth

21

Othe" twognized by Stobart for

were very meek .''

I

I

musk while visitors inside could

placed by Mi ss Diehl. The OAGC
commillff discussed bulb orders
and Mrs. Neva Nicholson was put
in charge of those orders. The presi·
dent announced an incitation from
the Wilkesville Garden Club to ex·

Stephanie Temple. AIhens. The

Danna Clark, Janet VPnoy, A nna

all sponsors.

Roderick explain('(! how Stobarl
took over the Blue Devil team during his senior yea r and guided il lo
the league championship. " He's always bc&gt;en a winner and dOC'sn't

,.

Mdgs
view-

(ahoVl' left photo) provided entertainnwnt with Appalachian style

Meigs County area meeting notes
Pomeroy Church of Christ Evangeline Missionary Soc iety held its
June meeting at the home of Trudy
Andrews. President Cha rlde ne Alkire presided.
Roll call was on love and mar·
rlage. Devotions were given by La-

Metnbt•r Tht· As.suc_· i &lt;~letl Prt's.s. lni&lt;Hltl Oal ·
ly Prt&gt;ss AssUt' lalwn uelll thc Amcnn•n

st•veral

out-of~towners

ing the numerous exhibits on dis- ·
IJiay. Hoger :uJd Mary GUmore

Evangeline
Missionary Society

Pubhshctl t'Vt'ry aftt&gt;m~m. Monda y th rou~-:h
F'rtdil y, 111 Court Strt't'l , by lht&gt; Ohru V~ttllt ·y
Pubhs hrn~ Cump..tny - Multitnt'Jtllt , lnt'.
Pnnll'roy . OhiO 4~769 , 992-2156 . &amp;.•t•untl dus.-;
p&lt;IS~~t' JlilU.J &lt;II PUin~roy, Ohio.

saw

( 'ountian!'i and

f'.tll'tWT'O,

I

MEETS COACH STORART - Max Rlakt•, a sport' t•nthusiast from
Middkport, was all smilt•s aftt•r nH't'ling and talking briefly ~ith ~oach

The Daily Sentinel-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 28, 1982

6'-'J

.3711

Atlanta
San Dk&gt;Ro

('!nC' Inn;~tl

Dt&gt;t rnU

.l"l

.41':1

S.. u Fr;u•c·\&gt;;('(J

-

llaHimon•
Clf"\·~· lanrl

" ... "" '
"
WeMem INvWoa
.1.3

~

I

wt'f't ·

Grad•· um· - Mt' l.!ilf W11lf~· . 1\ ••t'L Wh 1lak1 ·r
Midll'lk Stui~&lt;Jrl. Hus l} S1,1har\. Jo: ddlt' Sit I'. .1t·r:..
Ntkk1 lhk. Jullt' Hill. lkalht ·r !lil l. Mt sl_l
Jli:t Y IIi illl

l;t'iitlt• tw o - Midh' lk Bro l'.\1 , 1\t•ll~t• E rvt n.
And y Hill. .larlll '\' l-l ullt·r . V•·h· .,~&lt; t llunndl ,
D&lt;w.HI thh· . Tra v11i· Pl'!r ·I. lk td~ Snu lt ·r. ,lt-m\.1
Varnt.'\1 , All i.! I'IH r.~~~~~~·
Graje four - At i11 Harrt :o-&lt;'1\, Kalh1 1hk .
All!.!tl' Manuel . Allll\'1' W,tit•, Tnna Wulft:. lht 'lldd Ztrklc

r;radl' ft t'l'
Shaw11 D11111 11·. I ~·slw Dudtlnl!.!.
Bill\ J u Jlt'~. M,u'k Pur\1·t . 1-:ht.abclh S111 1l h.
Mda ntt' VHnMt'lt·r
(; radt• SIX - !&gt;mum• H1ffh ·. \ka t\ h'r Shul!•r.
P&lt;tll l Ash

chairman. gav&lt;' a progra m on
roses-- preparing them for show
a nd disease control . Sh C' was ~ ubs ti ·

The Meigs County
Humane Society is
being misrepresented
by
unknown
per·
son(s).
Please be notified
that only one humane
agent exists. Contact
the Humane Society
at: 992·6505 .

luling for Mrs. Bessie Stout. who is
iII.
She said the roses should be cut
long , put into water a nd refriger·
a led until time for the show. Usc
whart tools and remove SC'vcral

buds from the large blooms. l.Ravr
two !raves bf&gt;twcen the cut anclthe
plant.
The club held a home flower
show recently with 10 arra nge·
ments, consisting of roses , ciC'ma tis, poppies, hydra ng ia, peonies,

iris. Sweet William. and different
va rieties of foliage . Others had
specimens of rose and iris. Ruby
Die hl had a special exhibit of chia.
Refreshments were served and
Mrs. Pauline Aikins won the hos·
tess' g ift . Others present were Vir·
ginia Nelson and Sheryl J ewell.
The .July meeting w ilh be with Mrs.
Aikins and Mrs. Ruby Halliday.

Grace ECW
Grace Episcopal Churchwomen
recentl y held their final meeting
with a picnic at the home of Norma
Custer .
CaroiLayh spoke on behalf of the
levy for the Carleton school and the

e rates ~n

CheCk th':~e pepOSitS• ••

15•

I ,. ... , P \1

.

.

'tl\'•··•'"

11

,,,.,,•N 11

co•'"" '" '
I'· '

)

group gave' il s unanimous appro·

val. The club earlier e nt ertained
the staff and student s of the school
with a n Easter party .

Astrograph
June 29, 1982
This coming year you are likely to be luckier than usual, both in
romance and in your social life. Others will be drawn to you and your
popularity will be heightened .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Try to bring some balance into your life
life today by not making il all work and no play. A recreation break will
do you a world of good .
LEO (July z:I.Aug. 22) Your initial ellort.s may only be partially successful today, but don 'I use this as an excuse for quitting. A second try
will prove more fortunate .
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do not think in petty terms today. II you put
your mind to it, you could take something from which you've already
benefited and expand it even further.
LIBRA (Sept. z:I.Oct. 23) Put your splendid imagination to work for
you today in areas which could offer material rewards. Your chances lor
developing a winner are better than usual.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Any ventures or enterprises that you
originate or over which you have direct control should turn out very lucky
for you today. Delegate as little as possible.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. z:I.Dec. 21) Something is going on now behind
the scenes that a reliable pal is masterminding on your behalf. He'll tell
you about it if he can pull it off.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Thlngs appear pretty good lor you
today careerwise. More importantly, something else which you have
been hoping will happen looks like it will.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If you feel your plans for advancing
your status or career are well formulated, this is the day to put them into
action.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Faith can work wonders for you today,
even regarding things whlch you feel cannot be changed. Put it to work.
Don't falter and then expect positive results.
.
AiUES (March 21·Aprll19) In commercial dealings today witb persons whose ideals and standards are on par with yours, botb of you should
profit rather handsomely.
·
TAURUS (April20-May 20) Because your inclinations today will be to
do more for others !ban you expect from them, something good will come
back to you althouglu~erhaps not immediately.
GEMINI (May %1-June ~) Sometimes it is necessary to take a
calculated risk in order to better ypur lot in life. Today a gamble may be
in order if !be odds are tilted in your favor.

Mof\da'/ 715
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• More than the 6-month rate at any Ohio bank
or federally-chartered savings and loan.
• Minimum deposit only $5,000 ••• not $10,000
as with most financial Institutions.
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• Interest mailed monthly or quarterly. Or
let It compound.
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passbook ava•labtltly
Cap•Jal Sav•ngs &amp; Loan . a Benel•etal Ftnance System aHtltaled
co mpany has been accept1ng depostts •n Oh10 s1nce 1892
Ph one or vtSII you r local Benef1C1al oH•ce today lor furth er
1nformaJ•on as 10 how you can start earn tng Jh•s htgh rale ol
1nteres1 on a 6-monlh T1me Depos•J. Come 1n now and ptck up
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West Beneficial Finance, Inc.
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.(614) 992-2 111
.. (614) 446-2765
. (614) 593-3372

Rate at hme ot purchase 1S guaran!eed lor lhe enttre Stlt-month peood Subslanttal pen~:~lty lor early
Withdrawal ot ttme a ccounts Depos•ls a cce pted m ty !rom Oh•o residents Rates and terms SubJ8CI to
change

�. Page-6-The Daily Senti•wl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I Will tax cut revive faltering economy?

Area deaths
Sarah E. Matson

Elvin E. Thompson

Sarah Ellzabelh Mal son was slil
!born Sunday al Holzer M&lt;'&lt;l il'al
Center.
She Is survived by hf'l' paron".
John M ark and Sharon F: lai m• II ill
Mat son; brolher .. John Ma i &lt;;On al
hom e; pa t e rn a l gra ndmnt ht&gt;r
E lol~ e Ma tso n, P in r Cron• and
mater anl gr andpi.lrrnts . l .f'O ,tnd
Helen Hill . Racinr .
Funeral SC'I"YICC"&gt; W(' l"f' hl'ld !Pd.!\
at M eigs Memory ( ;ardens \\'it h t ht ·
Rev. Ca r l Hicks officialing.

F une r a l o;(' r \·irrs for El v in E.
Thompson. liO. Rutland , who died
J.'ridar. 1\'l'J'l' held a! 2 p.m. loday In
!hr J(ul land Church of Chris!. wllh
t lw Ht~\' . ( ;f'nr U nd e rw oo d
IJffi&lt;:L tti ng
lhnial wa . ., i n Mf'igs Me m o ry
&lt;;.1 n!Pn ....
Anw ng tlw ~ un · i v i.n g mf'm bf:r s
(If hi" f. m li l.\' I'- h i ~ mothf'r. E dd a

BIRTIL~

Mr. and :Ylrs. Willi am Jl a&lt;; h,

'-.(Ill,

Bldwr ll ; Mr. and Mrs. D:l\·id ' '·'"' '·
daughl r r . Hamden.

,I lll" E :!6
CC'C il A dk i n s. Arthur Brook :,_
Mrs. StPphPn C h ctnr~ · and "tlll.
C hr~· s tal Clar~· .

ll tirP Cn•mt&gt;t 'Ti'- ,
Perry Dol \' Sr .. Elija h F:.slt'Jl Sr
Hazr l F'ortnr r . .J m· F n•pJ11 ,1ll .
Franklin 1-fughPS . .J uct~ · .l.uYI" .
Mrs. Dan Lockar d and ~o n. :\11 , 1\
Markins. Howa rd Mc ll enn. l l.trl
Miller . Mrs. Kick Hall iff .trHI
daughl er. Mrs. M allhew Hou , JJ
and son . 13radJp~ · Sheppard. 1\1'11\

NEW YORK tAP! - Taxes go
down and Social Security benefit s
go up !his week. Whal Americans
do with the extra money maydetermlne whether !he worst recession
slnce World War II ends soon.
A year ago the Reagan admlnlslrallon and Its supply-side supporl ers fou ghl for Income tax cu ts by
arguing !hey would Increase lncent i v f' ~ 10 save and Invest. But now
!he admlnisl ratlon is counting on
prople 10 spend Instead of save.
AdminiSira lion official s, and
m any pr lvale economls!S, thlnk !he
S1 imu lus of all !hal money- nearly
$1 billion a week In extra funds w ill produce an economic recovecy
!hal will slem the rise in unemploy m enl and stop !he slide In corporate
profit s.
13ul olher economists disagree.
T lw y predicl lnlerest ra l es w UJ go
e\·cn higher. !hanks ln part to !he
gm-rrnmen!' s need to finance the
l ax cui by borrowln g billions. and
!hal lhr high inler esl rates will
choke off any recovecy . Some even
s('(' 1hP rPCession growing m u ch

\\ !1 -.on Thn mp, un .

I

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CE:-ITEI(
DISCIIARGES JU:&gt;.'E 2.1
Vickie Adkin s. J.aj ean Arm
slrong , Vl r k ~· Aikins. AnlhOil\
Bank.•. Wand a Black. [)enzPI H\'l'r .
Thor Ca r se~. Florence Clark. Eilts
Cook. William Cibb:;, ~1 arY t :iJ
m orr . Willi am H aw k ins . ~.11tl n n
Hughes. Jea n .Jl'ffr irs. \(u,"·ll
Keairns. M f' l od~ · L&lt;mTf'nn·. l "tu
r l0i Marshal l. Lorrai na ~ld ;unt ·.
Ka lh~· Molden. Will e~· Phelps. :\1'1
lie Risl. Bell y Kobinson. Sil'phanH·
Ross. John Sharp. MPITY St m
m on s. Fk'rt ha Stout . Ro bi n \ 'ipi! Dt'.
Chari &lt;'&gt;' Whii P.

Stnt th. S,tn dr.t s ., ·n ts . !'\rll a Taylo r .
\lt·li." ·' Ttl It·\. Wr all Wh et:'ler .
Ht . H il t '~ \\'hili•. r\ ll lcP Wi sf'm a n,

J-:,·.t /.i nn .
;\11

IIIKI'IIS
,t nd Mr ... . For('"! r\nthun v_.

d.IIIJ,.:hh•t ,

J{Jplt •\. \\". \"i.J .

.JI ':'\ E :;.
.lw.q JIJ H.tird. Fr&lt;.~ nki P Clar k.
\\"Jtlt. trll !) , lilt'~ · . M t'rl ir [){&gt; Wffs.
S.Jki n.t D1x ·tor. \'prnon E ldridge.
H,t\·rnuJHI

l·'u lt ;, l{amnna .J(ma&lt;;.

Cow, deer struck
Tit&lt;•! :,!Il ia Ml'igs posl of lhr Ohio
!l ighwa.\· P atro l rr JX)rted a La ngs\' illt' man ..; truck a cow on Ohio 32~
Sunda..1· juS! nor! It ofTwp. Road 190.
H.llplt K . Oill'l' ..10. was !raveling
norlh in his pic k-up tru ck when he
. . rruck tht• &lt;.~nirna l ownrd by J ohn
&lt;'uhu ·ll. Ht 1. \ 'inion. the pa trol
. . . nd

\u lll)UI"I t '" \\'l'H' rPpo rl l&gt;d or rit , t IJOJl&lt;., l'-"lH '&lt;I

.\llH'(It't ' Ll'ldm'. :J!. HL .t. Pom e"'1"\Jt ·k , I dt'Pt at Ill : .'10 p.m . Sa t tm.Lt .\ IJ/l &lt; )llio 1-IJ . \"o in j ur ies w f' r f'
t II\.

1 t'JHH

Monday, June 28, 1982

lt"&lt; l ,mel no cita ti ons i s~ ued .

1J.~nJ:tg t · tu I .t'l PbrP 's car wa s light.

\\' O r Sf' .

The slakes arr high, both polil ica lly and economically. Many busi n C'SSPS ct rr in trouble factorieo;;
a rf' opPra tin g a t their lowE'st level
in sf'v C'n years - and a new rou nd
of layoffs and bankruptcies could
follow if !he economy doe&gt;; nol rebound . Polillclan s of both parlies
fear whal voters will do in No\' Cmber if !he r ecession worsens.
There are some tentative signs
!hal consumer s are leadingtheway
10 recovecy . Retail sales rose in
Ap r il and May, and car sales in
May were up from las! year' s deprrss&lt;'d levels, although they have
slnce fallen. The Com merce De·
parlmr nl eSiimates the economy
has gr own sllghlly in the quarter
now C'ndin g, ctft C'r s hrinking for t wo
quartrr s.
The 10 percenl cut In tax ral es
will pu t an addillonal $8JO million a

week Into consumer s' pockets, and
the 7.4 percent raise In Social Securlly benefi ts wUJ add $150 mUllan a
week, calculates Lacy Hunt, the
chief economlsl of Philadelphia's
Fidelity Bank.
If most of !hal Ls spent , as Hunt
and many other economists expect ,
the result could be an end to the
recession. If consumers flock to
stores, the decision will shift to wholesalers and manufacturers.
If they see the sale&lt;; as a sign of
recovecy, and place new orders and
rehire worker s, economic growth
cou ld spread . The Increased profits
cou ld ease the strain businesses are
feeling and reduce !he pressure on
inleresl rates, which have been
held up ln part by bu siness borrowIng to pay bills.
"Uncle Sam Is borrowlng money
and directin g II to c onsumers,"
say s Maucy Harris, an economist
for Paine Webber Inc. "They will
turn around and spend the money,
whi ch w ill in cr ease corporate
profil s."
But !her e is a lol of doubt !hat w ill
happen.
Jack La vecy. chief economist at
Merrill Ly nch &amp; Co.. predicts
spending will be held back by fear
1ha 1 jobs will be loS! and by recent
declines in housing prices. which
make a lot of homeowners feel less
prosperous !han before. He also
noles high interest rates make saving more attrac tive.
And !he benefit from any Increase In consumer spending could
be offset by weaknes ses In ot her
parts of !he economy. Businesses
have cut back on capilal spending
a nd !he housing indust cy appears
unlikely lo recover until interest
ral es come down . somelhing few
ex pect !his year .
"This lime !he consumer may
not have the ~ tre ngth or st ay ing
power lo pull !he economic wagon
up !he mounl ain," warns Edward
Yardeni. chief economist at E.F .

Hutton &amp; Co. "If he stumbles, the
wagon could roll farther down the
valley and drag the • consumer
along ln the dust."
Varden! thinks there may be a
new round of layoffs, which have
declined slightly in recen t weeks,
throwing more fear lnto consum ers. Unlike m ost economists. he
thlnks the recession Is likely to continue. causlng more busines s fall - ~
ures - which al ready are at the
highes t level slnce the Depression.
Commerce Secretacy Malcolm
Baldrige says he wou ld not be surprised If businesses cui capilal
spending even further. but he adds
that he still sees "consumer confi dence brightening" and thinks the
recession Is nearlng an end . The ad·
mlnlstratlon estim ates consumers

wlll save aboul half the l ax cut and
spend the rest.
One reac:;on that consumer s arr in
a position to spend money Is that It
has not been a bad recession for
prople with jobs, simply becausr
wages have been r ising faster th an
prices. Tha t trend Is partly countered by increases In state taxes
and by the hike In Social Security
!axes that took effec t J an. I.

Monday, June 28, 1982

~
I
'

Business Services
PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-

If 1here Is a recovecy. ther e Is
almos t total agreemen\ among
economists thai It will be a weak
one. with !he economy growing In
!he second half of 1982 at an annual
rate of 5 percent or Jes s, compared
Ia an average of 7 percent for the
first six monlhs after prev ious posl -

war

•aa

Figures Seasonaly Adjusted

Free estimates

Call 843-3322

I

87
-

5-12-2 mo. pd

•

1981

1982

Sc:uce: Comnerce DepMment
REVIVING A FALTERING ECONOMY - This chart compares
retail sales for 1981 and 1982, aecording to the Cnmmerre Department.
tAP Laserphoto I

SERVICE

II

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs . E x perience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Sites start from JOx24 "

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and a 11
wood buildings 24x36.
Insulated Dog Hou ses

Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-lfc

SI
5'1
53
54

?'] Monpy fo Lonn

73

Pro l f' ~S10n .1 1

Sf' rV IC CS

55
56
57
58

J I H o me s t or Sa le
J7 Moh de H omes f o r Sal£&gt;

59

JJ F nrm s for Sa te
34 Bu s 1nc ss B u ild1nQ s
35 Lo t s &amp; Acrca qe

-=-EMIH!!VIIH9J£
--- --

]6 RNII E 5la le Want ed

Sl!t'/lces

.;;= = =

4 1 H ouses t o r Rent

1&lt;l Bu s 1ness Trc'n n 1nq

15 Sc h oo ls 1ns tr u c i10 n
16 R ad10 . TV &amp; CB R• •p&lt;11r
17 M1scetlancous
18 Wi! n f cd 1 o do

An fi QUCS

73 Van s &amp; 4 WD
74 Motor c yc les
75 Boa ts &amp; Motors
76 Au to Part s &amp; A ccessories
77 A uto Repa i r
78 Camping Eq uipm en t

M1 sc M er c hand •se
Budd i ng Suppl• es
Pets for Sa l e
Mu sc ia f Ins trument s
Fru1 ts &amp; Vege tab les
For Sale or Trad e

6 1 Farm Equ,pment
6'1 Wan t ed to buy
63 lives toc k
64 Ha y &amp; G rain
65 Seed &amp; Fe rtil i zer

4/ Mob il e Hom es l or Rent
43 Fnr m s f or Re nt
.-14 Apnr t me nl for R e nt
.t"J Fu r n1 st1 cd Room s
46 Spi'l cl' for r ent
&lt;tl Wc1n tcd to Rent
&lt;HI Equ1pment for Rent
-19 F or Lease

13 In sur ance

71 Autos f or Sa le
7'1 Tru ck s f or Sa fe

Farm Supplies
&amp; LIVI!SIQEII

-=-=---=
~
-

1\ H e lp Wonl f'd
17 SIIU tl ii On W an !Pd

Hou se hold Goods
~ ad• o Equ1pm ent

CB. TV &amp;

New Waist Focus
l'rinlt•d l'atlnn

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd 51.
Phone
1-(614)·992· 3325

S75,000
L £'V el yard
li!r ge enough f or a gar
den . 3 or 4 bedroom s. 8
in aiL nea t and ni ce
MOD ER N -

want $31.500
CAR WASH -

Smal l

down and you ar e 1n
bu siness. Open in mor
ning , c oll ec t c ash a 1

dusk . Jus!Sl5,000 .
4 BEDROOMS -

2 lull

baths, f ami ly rm ., patio ,
garage
and
fa c t s :

Asking $47 ,000.
10 ACRE S - More or
LESS of cou ntr y from
low to high on a hill.
wat e r
and
e lec t r i c

available . Only $10,000.
FREE PARKING!
Sue Murphy, Helen and

Bruce

Teaford,

Rea,tors .

After

All
Hrs.

992·3615 or 992·3325.

'

.

ousmg
H eadquarters

In M cmonam

IN MEMORY OF
BERTHA ELLEN
BATEY
We do n ot forg e t her ,
we l ove her too dc ~1rly
For h er m emory to
l.tde from our l1 ve s lik e
ctdr eam;
Our lip s nee d not
sp eak wh en our heart s
mourn smcere fy,
For gri ef ofte n dw ell s
wh er e •I se ldom
1S
se en .
T he Be n Batey Fam il y

PUB LI C NOTICE
Co.t l Pow er Inc wd l be
co n d u c t .ng
bta s. t.nq
opcr ., , 10ns
be twee n
th e
cfil l cs. of Jul y 1. 1982 and
Sl' pl
30 . 1982 1n the
foll ow .n g pla c es in th e
fOIIOWIOQ mann er .
1 Be tw een the t10ur s of 9
A .M . nnd 12 Noon and 1
P .M i!nd 5 P . M . Gn Monday
t11rouqh Sa turd ay c xc co t 1n
e mer"g e n c y
s itu a tion s
Liqhtninq and oth er at
m os pt1eri c conditon s or d
publi c sa fety is involved .
When su ch situations arise
de tonation will t a k e pla ce
it S soo n as the b l ast area is
r iPiH

dur in g

28 lie

367- Cheshire
388-Vinton
24s-Rio Grande

9e5-Chester
343-- Portland

256----Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Dist.
379- Walnut

742-Rulland

67 s--Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason

Pomeroy

247- Letart Falls
949-Racine

Up to 15 word s .. One day
Up

to 15 woras .. Three day

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

REESE j,Jf
TRENCHING
SERVICE

882- New Haven

895--le-ta rt
937- Buffalo

inse n1on ..... ....... $3 .00
insertion ........... $4 .00
inse rtion ··- ·· ... . .. $7 .00

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

(

/

I:I

I

Open 9 till6
Closed Sun. 8t Mon.
PH . 742-2081

8·20·1fc

vice,

CHECK OUT OUR
BIBLE SCHOOL

water, sewer, pon·

foundations.

reclamatioft.

..
Bonded

SUPPLIES
Pac·Man Party Packs
and Cake Available

Licensed &amp;
Phone 949·2293
or 949·2417
3-J·Ifn

~t. t, Chosllir~.'Q:.
St. 1!1. 7, \illwlttl Chosllirt
&amp; Middltport
Hrs.: llort.-S.n.

QUAIL

CARPENTER
SERVICE

LaBONTE'S
Quail of all ages
available up toe Weeks
In any quantity
. Eggs Also Available

:::':I:::A'lltr worl
-Piumbln&amp;ond
oloctriCII worl
(frH Estlmlllsl

V. C. YOUNG Ill
99H215or"N314
Pomiroy, Ohio
9·30-lfc

Clell LaBonte
l606l Bashan Rd.
Long Bo"om, OH .
4S343
614-915-4345
612-411 mo ...

~

-~~.·:
.--.:-~
rJII
'"'I'S

((ClAB&amp;IFIID
AD&amp; sure to gat naunaj)
.
.,
i,

Sometimes the simplest dress
is also the most dramatic. It
hapoens when you wp and

ft1/ (// ·1,/:i.l(.

j . ( ,' ; ') ./'.!1/

'1

1/.lJ 1~1/JJ

WE POOL

~-

· j\,

cornt~:fr.f
· ~~~~_2.nd
·~~.~~~-i Mi
llliiii_&amp;T(IIdl
.ofr•

·.

TOG(I'HER '

/

~a~es

_PER=IZED

Opltlh~t.-' p.m.
•llla.IIIII.SII. ·

•

PH. 'm·77~1
.
)IC.. ~n 6-21-'

. , n.i-iliiill

• Stainless Steel
• Flbetglass
·
_.Vinyl Liners

I n&gt;O·

1·304-773·564
c. L . Kitchen
Mason, w . va.
6·20-1 mo.
..:..

I
I
I
I
I

&amp; W\111 Al'lll1ble

Tua.-Udlts • nipt 1\1

drinb

"""ced for tilt lhd."A Cenlll~ lliflll 9-12, dqft

lloor !'Ill· Pool loo-t 2 LOI.
lh•ri.()ld-ililirou-ellitfll. 9-i:lo
II CenturY.IIirllt.
·
Fri. &amp; Sol · U.O ill.. · driol &amp;
.... uch lllaflt. 10 p.11.
' :
S.n. · Plm, Jlklior lloor l9ldll
~~· Alot IQ'IOI S.nU, sllrlitlt .

r
1

.

I
I

llon.·Kec Nip!

--~--~-----+--------------1r: ~~lh;flulll,~
'

below .

1:00 P.M.-2:30A.M.
C.r~ Out iiHf

QUAIL FARM

'Addorls IOd rtroodtlln&amp;

j54.0lls

6·21 · 1 mo.

,

-~i.-~~

!"ffl'"~=;;:j, ·~ 1
~·wSFN"Q
-· C:.llllll Wi,.
wenra K.,IIM,.
44H172

I VIM

Mlatw c.

~.

5.

2~.

I.
2.
3.

6.
7.

'·

~

12.
13.

15.----- - -

u.

33.
34.

16.------

35. - - - - - - -

Mill This Coupon with RtmiHinct
Ttlt Dally sentinel ·
111 Court St.

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

9· 5.

left .

6370

b aby

Will do c u stom sew1ng
baby sitting, and •vpm g in
home . Ca ll 614 -388 8742 to
further in f orma ti on

-

Business

Bu s1 ness or store room 1n
Park Central Hotel
Money to Loan

11

REFINANCE or purcha se
your home . 30 y ear fi xed
ra Te wva . &amp; Ohio . Lead er
Mortgage, 77 E . State St
Athen s. Oh . 614 592 305 1
13

JUNKED c ar s, ba se ball
c ards ,
s c rap
m e tal s,
aluminum
c an s.
f ran
smis ston s,
mot or s,
bat
teri es, rad1ator s. stc1mps
and coi ns Off er 1ng tr as h
ptckup se r vi ce . Harper
Hal stead Sa l v ag e Co. 300
Eleventh St , Pt Pl easa nt.

304 675 5868

Al so

fl ea

ma r k e t
o p e n M o nday
t hrouqh Fr1day , 1 S p m

_,-· ~ =-·

Become a professional in
suran ce agen t , 3 opening s.
Will train . Ca ll in con
f idence Rumley In surance

Agency, 446·3320.

Need exper ien ced man to
do body work and c lea n up
Apply H yse lls U sed Cars in
Rutland , Ohio .
L PN Needed f or doc Tor 's
office. Part -tim e hour s.

Professional
Serv ic es

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; ta x serv1 ce .
l or i!lllype s of bu s1nesses
Ca r ol Neal
446 3861

Hom es for Sa te

Jl

142 ac r e farm good hou se
and b arns Call 446 '1 599
New 3 bdr house , 2 car
qarage , will exc ept o ther
r eal es tate on a trade and
help
finan c e
at
a
r easonable rat e of i nteres t

Ca ll 446 36 17.
A llr ac tive 4 bedroom bi
le vel, walking d1stan ce to
Holz er Hospital F i r s111me
off ered . Call 446 0025
J bedroom bri ck , 16 year
o l d home . 11J baths ,
f 1r c plac e,
garag e,
ba sement . One ac re . F i r st
sale .
tim e offered for
Bulavdle Road. Call 614

245-9210 or 6 I 4-992 3905
5 rooms and Oath , utility
r oom , large pal•o, garage
work shoo . Totr~l elec
tr ic. we ll insulated and
easy to heat . Comp letly
r~nd

remod led . $39,500. 61042 ·
22 11 or aft er 5, 614 ·74'1 -2'10 1.
Close
to
schoo l
Good
location .

i te m s

&amp;

JOB 5 Overseas. Bi g money
fast. Job offer s guar an

1 716·842-6000. Ex!.

5 rooms &amp; bath &amp; shower
M1ddleport,
Ohto
Rea sonab le pr1 ce . 614 992·

7244

2 bedroom
Harrisonville

928 4417
A ss umable 71 4 percent
lor~n .
4 bedr oom . '1 full
ba th s. all etec tr •c 75 x 100
c orner l ot I 304 -88'1 '1319 .
HOU SE Meadowbrook Ad
d tt•on . 3 bedrooms, fam il y
room w tth fireplace . ce n tral a~r , ba sement , phone

675·3279 .
5

Someone to give fr ee
estimate
to
install
aluminum siding on 4 room

room

f~r ep l ace

position of hea lth service
director tor pre-shcool
program i n Cabell &amp; Mason

.

house
bath,
in Pt Pl easa nt

$13 ,000 . 304 67S·5652
31

Mobile Hom es
for Sale

Nea r Ches ter . 2 c hoi ce
acres and 1980 3 bd .room
14x70 mobile hom e. $21,000.

Counties. Please apply by
July 1, Child &amp; Family

Call6,4 949·2639.

Development Program ,
Southwestern Community
Action Council Inc., 5-'0Sth .
Ave . Huntington, WV .

USE D MOBILE
576·27 11

phone30~ · 525 · 5151.

E. 0 . E.

EMMA Bell Auction Ser·

I
I
I
I

""--·-·-····- ---------------·

vice. Sole each Tuesday, 7
p.m. MI. Allo, occ~pllng
~onslgnments Tuesdoy 10
o.m . until sole lime.
Buying ond selling estotes.
Free estole opprolsal, 304·
&lt;128·8177.

Wanted cook Pliny Truck
Stop; 30~ · 937 · 2569 or 304·
757·8357 .

1} - ·-sitUi.fion!..~~nted

=

Room, board and loundry
for elderly . Reosonoble.
614·992·6748 or 992·6022.
Will do babysitting in my
home. 6\4-992·5801.

HOME .

MOBILE HOME S MOVED
Li censed &amp;

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

house
1n
$6,500 614 ·

Three bedroom hou se, one half ba sement. one and
one· third acre ground . 304

Yard Sale. Thurs., June 29,
9-? . Bradbury Rd .. Mid
dleport. Numerous items .

9a .m. to 7

Dial614 378 6221

Wanted so m eone to work in
co in -op and dry c leani ng
s hop .
Apply
Duke
Cleaners, 2419 Ja ckson
Ave. Point Pl easa nt, W .Va .

REGISTER'E D NUR SE l or

miscellaneous items, Thur ·
sday, Friday and Saturday.

Il l health . Mus1 sell . 4
hou ses ( I is a doub le w ide )
all rented , p lu s 5 lots, a ll tn
one block on Ohio. River in
Reedsv i ll e
Wa fer . c ity
g as _ Fir st $36.000 . tilkes a ll

304 67S I S42 .

house . phone 304-882·2810.

Gall. Ferry , clothes and

614 949 2428

28~3 .

8:00a .m. !o4 :00p.m.

McDermitt's Trailer Court ,

In Ru tl and suburb s, 1 acre
'1 slory farm house , $9 ,500

Phone '192 6633 .

teed .

Moving Sa le, Wednesday.
June 30, 1982. One mile out
Neighborhood Rd. , from
Rt . 141. For sale, wood bur ·
ner, electric lawn mower,
&amp; other household items.

25.
26.-----27. - - - - - - 28.
29.
30.
31 .
32.

B.

Fri .

Garage Sa l e Mon . &amp; Tue. 28
th &amp; 29th . 9·S, Mi sc . Fair ·
field -Centenary Rd ., Fair·
f ie ld acres, third house on

Clothing,
mi sc.

17. - - - - - - - - 18.
19,
20.
21.
22.
23.

11 .

lloolltoltioM .,.... 4lllr.

REPAIR

)Wonted
)For Sale
I Announcement
I For Rent

10.

1

~ p.m:

I
(
(
(

&amp;

Mi sce ll aneou s item s.

Yard Sa le Jul y 1. 9AM
5PM. Jet. 160 &amp; 554. Porter .

include discount

9.

WD.

~ '"· brine ~..''! olol
!'!'_ltaHr Hosrr .loo.·Sol. 4 poo.·
IIU!IW.l T£1iuT

Yard Sale

Por ch Sa l e 708 2nd . Ave,
Ga llipoli s. Jul y 1st &amp; 2nd .

If you describe fully,
give pr\~e . The Sentinel To IS
7.01
reserves the right to ---t--t~::+~-:-::t--"1
classify, edit or reject_T_o,--125,__+\'_77. -+00~-'"-·oot--!
ony od. Your od wil l be
put In the proper To35
jS9.00IS1o""'·llltP"'""'· •uvo
classificotlon If you' ll --...1..-'-...1..-__._ _.._-;-·1
check the proper box
These cosh roles

OLD FURNITURE , bed s.
iron, brass . or wood . K i t
chen c ubbard s of all types
Tab les, round or square .
Wood 1ce boxe s. Old desk s
and bookca ses Wi ll buy
comp le te hou seho ld . Gold ,
si l ver , old money , poc ket
watches , cha1n s, r1ng s, and
etc. I ndian Artifa c ts of all
type s. Also buying ba seball
c ards Osby Martin 99'1

E O.E

Thurs .

9499

21

675·2t04 or 675·4080 .

counts as a word . Count
name and address or w ....,.,

---1f--1'f""..:....''r-'-+'---·-·i

Tr as h co ll ec t ion &amp; haut .ng

Ca ll 446 «80

Gold,
Sliv e r , ste rlin g,
jewelry , ring s, old co ins &amp;
curre n c y Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, Middleporf . 992

Found · young fema le, part
beag le, white w ith brown
spots, c lose to J erich o
Road, Hart z dog col lar , 304

7

You' ll get better resu lts

call 446 31 59 after 6PM 2S6
1967 .

ween 9 and 12.

lltiol or group of figures
1
6
phone number If used. •••••. doyl • .:v. dlyold•••

furnitur e,
gold , sil ve r
dollars. wood 1ce b oxes,
stone jar s. antiques. etc .
Complet e
h ou se hold s.
Wnte · M . D . Miller, Rf. 4 .
Pomeroy , Oh Or 991 7760 .

Ap pl ica tion wi ll be ac
c epted
for
ap pr ent i c e
pl umbers and pipe fif1ers .
App l ica t ions.
may
be
picked up a t Ohio State
Employment Offi ce or at
1 134 Ga ll ia
St . . Par
tsmou th . A ppli cants must
be 18 to 25 yrs of age

. Print one word In e a c h ; space below . Each In·

PH. 992·2063

Dozer &amp; backhoe ser·
ds,

Phone-----------------

Pomeroy, OH.

Wan t ed to Do

Lawn Mow1ng no yard to
big or small Re l iable and
dependab le . For es t im a te

1ns1de &amp; out s1de pa .n t ing
fr ee es t1mate s. Call 446

61H2J.B133 June 29 th , bel ·

Faun~

LOST Zebco Cardina l 4
spinning reel &amp; brown r od .
Pond 9 TNT ar Pa 304 ·937
3451 . Reward .

Address---------

18

BED S IRON , BR ASS, old

Emplaynrent _

1 key rings with k eys . Long
10 1n . lilac macrame i n the
vi ci n i ty of Vaughan's Car dinal in Middleport . If
found mai l to Middleport
Pol ice Dept .

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

DABBLE
SHOP

Lo st and

Karate the ult i mate in se lf
def en ce all private lessons ,
Men , women , &amp; ch i ldren .
Instruc tion t hru bla ck belt .
A l so avililabl e Karate
uniforms pu c hing and
ki c k 1ng bags, and pro tec
fi ve equipm ent . J e rry
Lower y
&amp;
A ss oc iat e s
Karat e
S tudi o,
143
Burlingt on Rd ., J ac kson ,

Wdl do bab y s•fl •ng •n m y
home Call614 388 9755 .

any thin g t o give away and
does not off er or a tt empt to
Help Wanted
ott er any other thing for II
sa le m ay p l ace an ad in thi s
Li ght delivery work tn
co l umn . There will be no
Ga Hi a, Meig s and Ma son
charge to the advertise r .
County . I f you have '1 or 3
hours in the af tPrnoon you
K ittens to good home . Ca ll can net a good income
446·4173 .
Must be dependable and
have reliable vehic le. For
Three ki tt ens to good intormat 1on send name, ad
dress. phone number and
home . Phone 304·675 7677 .
yea r &amp; make o f vehi c le to
box 602 , Ga ll ipoli s Dally
FEMALE silver black kit Tribune , 825 3rd
A ve .
ten, 12 week s old , par t Ga llipoli s, Oh 45631.
Si ame se,part
Burmese ,
housebroke n, 304 ·675 ·6145.
Around Oh10 Magaz •ne 1S
looking
for a mediate
WHITE Germ an Shepherd, r ep r es-entative to help sell
fema le, regis ter ed. two advertising and coordi na te
yea r s old, to a good home, edi tor ia ls for Ga lli a Coun·
c all agter 3: 00 675· 1611 or ty . Pl ease write Around
675·3750 .
Ohio Magazine, Atten Lin
da Zimmer, P .O. Box 914,
Coshocton,Oh 43812 . or ca ll

6

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon . Cance l your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not refundable .

5 -27 - 1 m o . pd

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND ~
CONSTRUCTION

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

fl

PARTS

Jumbo Bob White

YOUNG'S

The Daily Sentinel

New and Used

PH. 992-6011

I

message.

HARLEY
DAVIDSON

FREE
ESTIMATES

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and J
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
•
Call 742·3195
3·7-lfc

That's right! When you use a column
inch or more in newspaper advertising
be it display or classified you reach
thousands of potential buyers that are
eager to receive your money -sa ving

Truck, Auto and

pliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560
1·7-1 lfc

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

FRYE'S

Custom kitchens and ap-

Water· Sewer· Eiectric
Gas Line--Ditches
Water Line Hook -ups

SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS
IS ACINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!
I

IEALTUR

...±.U!.S.

L---~..~--~------~l

Prrnted Pattern 4538 : Misses
S11es 8. 10. 12. 14. 16. 18, 20.
S11e 12 (bu s\ 34) dress 3~ yds.
45-rn ch. cummerbund ~ .
$2.25 lew e.ach pattern. Add 1M
few each patlem for posbge
and handling. Send to:
Anne Adams
·~
1 J 1
Pattern Dept

• Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

-

Schoo l s InsTruction

446 0069

Giveaway

AN Y PERSON who has

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

day li gh t

hour s.
2. Th e areas in which
bl as ting w ill tak e place ar e
as follows : The nor thwest
quarter of sec ti on two (2)
Sutton T ow nsh ip, M eigs
Coun ty , Ohio.
3. The blasting area w il
be guarded and flagged .
4. Ten ( 10) minutes prior
to blasting (3) one second
audib le sig n a l s wi ll in·
di ca te blast warnings. 3
one half second audible
sign als will in d ica t e all
clear.
5. Ten minutes prior to
eac h blast a ll access to
blast
area
w ill
be
r egulat ed. Access to the
area
w i ll
be
opened
f o llowing
th e
blast ,
prov ided no unusual cir ·
c um stances exis t .
(~)

992- Middleporl

wich the wa1st w1th a contrastIng cum merbund. Nowa1st seam!

243 West 17 Sl, New York, NY
10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYL£ NUMBER.
Savings Breakthrough' Send
now lor NEW SPRING-SUMMER
PATIERN CATALOG. Sew and get
marvelous clothes for much less.
Fr.. PaMern Coupon - choose
from over 100 styles. $1.50
ALL CRAFT BOOKS . . $2.00 e.ac:h
121-Pillow Show-oils
124-Eay Gifts 'n' Ornamenb
12S.Pelll ~ilb
126-lluifly Crafty Flowers
Books and Catalog - ·add 501
each for postage and handling.

Pub li c Notice
1

446--Gallipolis

667- Coolville

The Daily Sentinel

LOOKS LIKE NEW -

1.8 ACRE S - Ju st nqh l
tor
thl'
f il m, ly
J
bedroom s, r an qf' .n k ll
c hen, c arpe l 1nQ .1 nd
ba se m ent w•th QrHa qe

81 Home I mprovement s
82 P lumbing &amp; H ea lin g
83 Ex c ava tin g
'84 ·E iecri c a l &amp; Refriqeration
85 Genera l H au lin g
86 M .H Repair
R7 Uphol ster y

Area Code 304

Area Code 614

6234

[H

ors

e Dryers

Professional
Elec tro l ysi s
Cen ter . A .M .A . approved .
Doctor r efera ls, by ap
poi n tment onl y . 304 -675

. .. 992-6191
. . 992· 5692
.. . 949· 2660
. . 992· 2259

Henry E. Cleland. Jr ., GR I
Dotti e Turner .
J ea n Tru sse ll
Office . .. . ...... . .

All Makes

TOM HOSKINS

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL

REALTORS

• washers
• Dish washers
e Ranges • Refrigerat·

Ph. 949·2160 or 949·2322
4-2Q-Ifc

PH. 991-3981
For Appointment
1·18·1 mo

(Average 4 words per line)

TEAFORD

S45.000

ser-_,lces

Meigs County

Upto l S Words .. Six da y

Real Estate - General

Aqe 5, hil s '1 oc r es. wrH
drained .1nd c arC'd for 7
b e dr oo m
1n s u lo i C'd
home, bil SP m en t wdh
qaraqe i!nd 7 por cllf''&gt;

Galtia County
Area Code 614

FOR THE MONTH Of JUNE
TUES. NIGHT IS MEN'S NIGHT
Open Tues. lhru Sot.

Mason Co., wv

D

• ~emodeling
• Free estimates
e20 Yrs. experience

ALL PERMS

Friendly Home Par ti es
For having a party in June
or July, 25 percent free in
mer chand i se . Ca ll Marilyn
Powe ll a t 6 14 9916525

MINERSVILLE - N ice three bedroom home w ith
full basement and riverview . $5.700 down, balanc e
of $'19,800 at 13°'o inter est. app x . 29 years t erm
remaining, $330 .20/ month .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

• Roofing of all types
e5iding

Bailey 's Shoe s, Middleport ,
Ohio wi ll be c losed Ju l y 4th
thru 8th for va c a ti on .

4

IS

Ope_ortu~ity

446·0294 .

RUTLAND AREA - A ssum e roan . $5.700 down , in
etudes assump ti on expense s, balanc e of $26 ,960 .47
at 12% inter es t . appx . 28 y ear term remaining
S278 .'14/ month . Nic e hom e on appx . l'h ac res with
storage building , e tc.

"C UT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE "

And Home Maintenance

20% OFF

following telephone exchanges. ..

3- ll · tfc

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

SUMMER PERM. SPECIAL

Classified pages cover the

No Sunday Calls

Racine, Oh.

Ph . 614·843·2591
6·15·Hc

We pay cash for lat e model
c lean u sed c ar s.
Fr encht ow n Car Co
Bdl Gene Johnso n

3476 .

Announcements

SWEE PER
and sewi n g
mac h ine repair , par ts, and
suppli es.
Pick up and
delivery , Davi s Vacu um
Clea ner , one h alf mile up
Geor ges Creek Rd . Ca ll

RACINE - Sell er finan cing , nice three bedroom
home on a good str ee t - wan t s $29 ,900 , $7 ,500 down ,
12% in t er est. 20 yea r s to pay balance of $22 .400 . tl f
$246 .64/ m onth w i ll nego i a te - or $10,000 down, 1 ~o
1nter est. $19,900 balance 20 yea r s a t S 197.04/ month .

949·2860.

Rl. 3, Box S4

3

CHESTEJ(' AR E A - Ten ac r e mini farm , thr ee
bedroom home wan ts $35,000 - $7,000 down, balan
ce at 14 .5q.-o i nteres t , '10 y ear term , $364 .80&amp; month .

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garag es"
Call for free siding
es timates, 949 ·2801 or ·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

SYRACUSE, 011.

1ranspertatlen

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

In Memoriam

" IN Memory of Char les W .
Frid ley who l ett us 16 years
ago June 28 . Sad ly missed
but not forgotten by th e
family. "

MIDDLEPORT - Beau t iful older coloni al wi th a ll
modern f ea tur es inc lu ding a new swimm in g pool,
WB FP, ce ntr a l ai r , etc., etc., S11,900dow n, balan ce
at 14% int er est. 20 year term, $59 1.91 / month .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

'

2

POMEROY - Ntc e ty remodeled 3-4 bedroo m home,
leve l tot. exc elle nt neighborhood - want $27 ,500 ,
$5 ,500 down, bala n ce at 13% in terest , 20 Years ,
$257 .75/ mon th .

3·29·1fc

'

I RF.ALU

INT ERES T RATE FEATURES

PH. 992·7201

Ph. 992·2174
2·26 lf c

To my many fn end s and
we ll wi sher s, thank s for the
c ards , the per sonal notes of
encouragem ent , and the
telephone ca ll s. They wer e
all apprect ated very much .
Elizabet h Da vi s

_I . . •

suran ce Co . has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Ga lli a Count y
for
a l most
a century .
Farm, home and persona l
proper t y cove ra ges are
ava il ab l e to meet in ·
div idu a l needs
Con t act
Neal I nsuran ce Agen c y ,
ag ent . Phone 446 1694.

Oh Call614286 3074
Buying
Gold,
Silver ,
Platinum, old coin s, scrap
rings &amp; silverware . Daily
quotes availab l e. Al so
co in s &amp; co •n suppli es for
sa le. Spring Va ll ey Tr ading
Co ., Spr1ng Vall ey Pl aza .

446 8025 or 446 8026

New LI STING - Near Pomeroy E lemen t ary , 3·4
bedrooms . hug e fami ly room , full basemen t , ni ce
leve l lo t . Good buy at S3 1,900 .

licensed &amp; Bonded

Pomeroy , Oh .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

PHONE 992-2156

backhoe
excavating
septic systems
A water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
• dump truck
•limestone

. niture and Antiques of at!
kinds, cal l Ke nneth Swain ,
4-46-3159 or 256 - 1967 in the
evenings .

,- - -C-ard Oi ;o
T.:h::
an:;k;::s; - --·- - - --- -

NEW LI ST ING - Wrap · aro und porch, 11h baths,
tour bedroo m s, full basement, large paved parking
area, storage bui l ding, an d appx . 1/ J acre lot . Hou se
is ni ce a t $32 ,500 .

•
•
•
•

Radiator Specialist

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

WANTED TO BUY Old fur

NEW LISTING - Barns, equipment sheds, cribs,
and garage ar e all in good cond iti on on this 89 1h
ac r e farm . Appx . 40 acres in hay and crops, w ith the
balance in fen ced pastur e. Large pond and an old
house . All min erals . S48,000 .

CONTRACTING

A uc ti on every Fri night a t
the Hartford Comm uni t y
Ce nter . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigmen ts of new and
used merchandise always
we l com e .
Ri c hard
Reynolds Auctioneer . 275

To my m a n y friends and
well wishers, thank s for the
ca rd s, the personal notes of
e n cour ~ge m en t,
and the
te lep hone ca ll s. They were
all appre c ia ted very much .
E li zabeth Davis

I r.1 Fl~

PH.992·2259

J&amp;F

From the
Smallest
Hea t er Core to th e
La rg es t Radiator.

FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON
71 Bu":o1ness Oppor l undy

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·1fc

RADIATOR

16 YEARS EXP.
• R esidentia I
•Comm e rcial
•Industrial
Racine. Ohio
247·3534
Free Estimates
4 20-lfc

85

Or Write Daily Senlinet'Ciassified Dept .
Ill Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

1 (i! r d of T han k s i PrllrlH l .HJv,Hl(t' )
'} (clrd of Th rlnk s ! Pc1•0 HI .tcJv,met•)
J A nnouncC'tn ('n t'&gt;
4 G1vea w av
5 H a pp y Ads
6 Los t a nd F ound
7 Y a rd Sa le 1Pc11d Ill oHI V, JI ){ •'I
8 Pub f•c S(1tr
&amp; Aucl100
9 W an ted to Bu y

Farm Equipment
Dealer

/l

9 _ ~ ~ ~~t~ '!.~ Bu~

I

New Holland, Bush Hog

COMPLETE

St. Rl. 124 Pomeroy, OH

Mertbandlse

Authorized John Deere,

Ex

~~;=~~~~§~~l household
Estates, .a ntiques
, farm
Licensed
Ohio ,
WV . Buying antiques . 304 ·
f!
773:578:,7739 185~

=anmmHements·

In sura nce

SANDY AND BEAVER In ·

3069.

Ani E1t1t1 - Gener1l

J

- I
JFMAMJJASONDJFMAM

The Daily Sentinel

u .s. Rl. so East
Guysville, Ohio

Pearson ,

13

perienced AUCT IONEER .

~

SALES &amp; SERVICE

6-14 1 mo

O'Brien Electric
Service

l

BOGGS

BASEMENTSf
PATIOS I
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
RICHARD GARFIELD
985·4464

years.
.I

0 II I ' TI O

6-27 -1 mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete gutter work,
complete remodeling.
roofing of all types.
Worlted in home area 20

'·

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
or 992-2 282

Middleport, Ohio

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

Retail Sales--------,

• E l ectric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs .
•Roofing Work
14 Years Experience

276 Sycamore St.

Public Sa le
&amp; Auction

Rick

LAFF·A-DAY

MID SUMMER
SAVINGS
ON
REMNANTS
ENDS OF ROLLS
GRASS CARPET
AND SAVE $2 - $5
ON SHAG CARPETS

, New Homes - extensive remodeling

Call 992·6259

PH . 992·2478
6 27·1 mo. Pd .

·'
Milions

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Tr uck s
Lo- Boy
Tre n cher
Water
Sewer
Gas Lines
Septic System s

The DaUy Sentinel-Page-7
8

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION'

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

Large or Sm a ll J ob s

,I

recessions.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

insur ed . Call

304-576·271 I.
1973,

14x70, 3 bedroom

mobile home, has ' large
rooms, will sell parti~lly

furnished . 304·882·2820.
U x70 mobile home, all
electric, ac, 2 bedroom Mid
additional room 110,000
firm . 304·882·3358 or 304·.
882·2271.

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

Mobile HomM

31

for Sale

S4

- ----

M isc . M erchandice

ss

Plastic Sep ti c Tanks . State
and county approved. 1.000
gal. tank, .price $340. Other
siz es in st ock, haul in your

TRISTATE
MOBILE
HOME S USEO· MOBILE
HOMES . CARS, TRUCKS.
CHECK
GALL IPOLI S
OU R PRI CES CALL 446
7572

pi c kup truck . Call 614·286·
5930. Ja ckson , Oh . RON
EVAI'jS ENTERPR ISES

Buildiog Supplies

1975 Case 450 , doze r tr ac tor , 1,800 hrs ., very
good cond .. $14 ,900. Call

1980 w.nosor

446·4537 .

14 x70 . new

H10dC'n u f il

room

379 )) 10
174 piec es brown un ·
dcrprnnrng lor a mobile

197 1 Elcona trad er . 60xl2 .
turn•stled . new hE't"'VY wOOd
I pc 11v1ng room su•te . new
Oln('ll(' S&lt;' l wa l ~ r heater 3

h~f1year .

ton cen trill a1 r cond . un
orrp.nlllrlQ.
70 It xB II
porch

rvot prt

~7500

c ond

Very

"'t'G..t~.~.

qood

6149977909

847 6.Kl0-n~ST.,

[ ft rct•vC' un l• l t he end of

FarmsforSa le

7S MIC'S 176010 tobac c o
onsc . b&lt;trn . cr•b . se pt •&lt;
1,1nk . well 1980 3 bdr w.n
cto;or Mobile home , 7 baths ,
turn•shNL 1n new con

(ld•on All tor S76 900 Cetll
446 08 .t4

68 acre tar m 7 rm &amp; bath
70 acrr&gt; boffom land . Iaroe

100M &lt;O oasc. O•q pond . on
71R Catt 446 0637

SO Arrf' 1,1rm . J hedroom
r1ou sr
wr lll
spa cto us
rC'rnodlf'(1 kil c hen . I ponds.
bnrn . prrCN1 to se ll Sel l or
! r&lt;ld e l or house on town

304 895 3083 304 675 46)4

42

51

Mobrle Homes
lor Rent

Mob rle Home. Eureka ,
Bdr . t urn . r rve rfronl lot ,
ref &amp; depo'jrf Adulls, S100
rna I 643 1644
Cledn 11x60. 1 bdr mobile
home Furn . c onv entent.
Qood
nerg hborh ood.
ar r
cond. sec dep req . Call af
ter 5. 446 8558

44

Apartme nt
lor Rent

Apar tm ent , 2 bdr .. unf , no
pe ts Call 446 3937 .

L ot s &amp; Acreag e

lS

Prr ci" reduced 1 l ots wr th
ru rtll Willer close to crly
lrm ll &lt;&gt; S4.450 00 Ca ll 446
1'}94
For &lt;&gt;tlle one and halt acre s
rnorr
or
less .
ap
proxoma tf'ly bOO II road
f ron t age
on
Cora
Cen tcrporn l Rd nea r Cen
h' rpornt SJ.OOO 00 Pt1o ne
687 6944

A ND

2

BEDROOM

APA RTMENTS Rent star
ts at · 1 bedroom S152 and 2
bedroom $188 per month .

S PECI AL

RATE S

TO

SENIOR S Ca ll 446 2745 or
lea ve messaqe on ma chine .
Loca ted .n Oak Hrl l. Oh 4
rm . furnt shed ap t
No
c htldren Oep &amp; ref req .
Ca l l 6t4 682 60 10
Unfurnr shed '1 bd cr a pMf
m en ! for rent Pt Plea sant.

Household Goods

SWA IN
AUCTIO N FUR NI TURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olrve St ..
Ga llipOlis _ 9x l 1 l rno leum
rug sn, 3 prece l ivi n g room
su rt es couch love seat
c hair $199, 1 piece living
room suites from $140 up,
love sea l s from $70 up,
mapl e drnet se ts fr om $99
Ia $ 199 . wall hugger s $100 ..
r ec ltner s
$80,
mapl e
r oc k e rs $A9 , hPdroom
surt es $150, variety of tabl e
lamps, marb le top stand s
$30 and up, twin and full
box springs &amp; mattr ess
(new) $100, seve r al uti li ty
c r1binet s, kitchen c abinets
wood &amp; metal. baby bed s,
ches ts of drawers S25 to
S60, 3 way r ecline r s $100 ,
gas &amp; elec t n c ranges,
refrigerator s, wash stand s,
bunk. beds comp lete with
bunkr es $170,
several
dr esse r s. hall trees , bed s.
bra ss head boarrt beds SJ5.
book c a ses.
smokers .
Hoover sptn dry wnsher.
wrinqe r type washers , hut
c h , coal &amp; wood healer s.
te lcv•srons, tan s, new too l s
of all krnds, varr c ly of
sr!ver stone cookwr1re Cnll

446 3159

675 1118 BAM 6PM , 67 5 67 53
until 9 30 PM

G OOD

r1Ut'
on
160 S4 ,500
rl SS UrTlrlbl f' lO&lt;In Call 614

J rm s &amp; oath , pr rva tc en
tr ,1nCt' Cnll Ncllre Sc u
berry 446 08 47

P L I A NC E S
wa sht&gt;r S,
dryers,
refrrqerator s,
r a nq es
Sk aqqs
Ap
phanccs . Upper R rv N Rd ..
be st de Stone Cresl M otet
446 7398

38S 8437
TWO r~ c rr lo ts 150 II road
lr ont iHl('
c dy
w&lt;~trr .
twnr no 8J L umbrr c all 304

675 6873.6 75 3618
Lot 40 X 130 . qood loca tr on
rn tow n c all Some r vr l le
Rrrllly tor mor e detail s
30 4 675 3030 or 675 3431
ON E r1cc, drilled well . se p
Ir e lilnk 15x75 unfrnr shc d
b loc k buildrnq $6.500 one
IM II mile o ff end G re e r
ROM!. 304 675 1949

Re.n.tals
Hou ses lor Rent

"

I s! f loor 1 bdr unturnt shed
apMTment . utrt
pa td,
downstown Ga ll rpolrs Ca ll
a l6)1 4th Ave Ga llrpolr s
LMQe 1 r oom &amp; ba th c f
frc•ency apa rt men t M os tly
furn. shed $100 a month
plu s dep 614 99 2 5692
3 r oom tv r n ap t for r ent
$250 a month. rn c ludrnq
ufrl ,fr es lnqurr e r1 1 M erq s
Inn r n Pom eroy
N rcc 1 be dr oo m &lt;'~PI .n Mrd
dleporl Utrl!li es pa td Fur
nr shed Oeposrt rcqurred
$715 montll 614 9913190
Apart men ts 675 55 48
A P ART MENT S. mob rle
homPs ,
hOU Sf'S,
PI
Plen san l clnd Ga l l rpol rs
614 446 811 1 or61-4 245 9484

Housr6 rm &amp;ba t-11 lnqutre
'-118 Sr ro nd Ave , Ga llrpolr s

A PARTM E NT
rn
Pl easan t , 6 14 446 8221

3 !)dr llOu sr qood locafron,
2 !)dr .1p t, HUO cxce ptPd
A One Rea l Es t ;Hes. Carol
Yeaq cr Rer~l t o r Cnll 304

PI

2 bedroom
npt
lnrq e
room s, basement. yard, ap
plran ces l urnr shed
Ca ll
eveninqs JOt! 67 5 7541

675 5104 or 675 5386
H ouse.
110 3rd
Ave .
Ga llrpolrs 1 bdr , ga s heclf.
r11'P
req
The W rsem an
Aqency, ·M 6 36-13

Unfurn rs hed 2 br apt c all
3046751118fr om8a m 1o 6
p m Ca ll 304 675 6153 untrl
9 · 30 p m
45

Fo r sale or r ent w rth opt ron
buy 3 bdr . 638 Jay Or ,
Ga l l rpo l rs S350 per mo
Re i 8'lo assume loan Call
446 39 19
or
446 0021.
f'Ven rnq s 446 J 189
10

Po m e r o y 1
bd roo m,
r emo del ed.
408
Spring
CrJrpe ted. sec urr t y deposit
SIOO Rent $195 Ca ll aft er 6
p m 991 1788

7 room hou se. stove and
r efrtq In Pom eroy $200
per month plu s utrlities
Oe pos rf requrr ed _ 614 991
. 7)84

room &amp;
bath
Full
basemen! . 614 997 3090
Mobi 1e Homes
for Rent

7 bdr mobi le home be low
Eureka . Ref . &amp; dep . req .

Cal l 614·256· 1922
1 bdr . trai l er at Rodney,
carpel in l iving room &amp;
oedroom . Ca ll 6 14·245·9 170.

Furn •shed Rooms

SLEE PI NG ROOMS and
lrght house keepin g
Park Ce nlral HoteL

apt _,

Furnr shed Room . $1 25.
utrlrtie s paid, 919 2nd ave .,
Ga llrp olr s
Sinql e ma le,
shnre bath Ca ll 446 4416 at
tcr 7PM .
Rooms wrth cookinq, cab le,
llrr , $40 a we ek . 304 773
5651 .
46

Space for Rent

COU N TRY MOB I LE Home
Park , Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy . Large lot s. Call

992 7479
Small
trarler
spa ces .
Mason 304 773 5651 .
49

For Lease

For tease 2 bdr ., cedar r an
ch
beautifu l
s ton e
firepl ace,
wrap around
deck, love l y 6 ac r e se ttin g,
nea r G r ee n Sc hool. Ca ll
Wiseman Agency, 446·3643 .

Furnis hed 2 bedroom, a ll
elec .. 1 m iles out Rt . 588 .
Pr i vate lot , $165 .00 per mo.

Merth3Adi5fF

Phone 446·3045 day , 446·
1602 evening .

Sl

1 bed r oom tr a i ler. Real
nice, ad ult s only . Brown 's
Trailer Park . Minersville.

USED FURNITURE . Used

614·9'12·3324.
MOB IL E HOME FOR
RE NT WITH OPTION TO
BUY, setting on lot halfway
between Huntington &amp; Pl .
Pleasant, 304·576· 2711 .
---- -- -~-

THREE bedroom trailer in
App le Grove. $250 a month
plu s deposit, 2 car garage,

304-576· 2682 .
1982 Nashau for rent with
option to buy. 14 X 70. llfilh
7x20 expando, 2 bedroom, 2
b;,ths, all electric. $300.
month , deposit &amp;. referen·
ces, lOA-576·2706.

Hou se hold Goods

sofa , lovesea t , chair, sofa
and chai r , 19 cu . ft . side by
side r efrigera tor , used ca r ·
pet, room size . Corbin and
Snyder Furniture, 4.46· 1171 .

NEW HOURS Mon. lhru
Thurs . 9 lo6, Fri. 9 to B. Sat.
9 to 6. Efeclric range $65,

LAYNE ' S FU RNITUR E
So l a. c ha tr , rocker . ot
tomari . J tab les, (extra
heavy by Fr on trer) . $68 5
So fa . char r and lov esra L
$175
So fas and charr s
prr c ed tram $285 . to $795 .
Tables. $38 and up to $109
Hrde a beds ,$340 .. queen
si ze . SJfiO Rrc liners. $175
to $195 _, Lamps from $18. to
$65 . 5 pc drnetles f rom $79 .,
to $385 7 pc., $189 and up
Wood table wirh 4 charrs.
$119 up to $495 _ Desk $11 0
Hutc he s. $300 and $37 5.,
maple or prn e frn 1sh .
Bedroom surtes
Ba sse t!
Che rr y, $795
Bunk bed
c ompl ete w rth matt r esses ,
torn 's bed s. S27S comp lete
Baby beds, $99 _Mattre sses
or box sprrnqs , fu l l or twin .
$58 , ftrm , $68 . and $78
Queen se ts. $195. 4 dr
ches ts, $41 5 dr . che sts,
$54 . Bed frame s. $10 .and
$15, 10 qun Gun cabine t s.
$350 .. dine tte c 11 airs $20
rtnd $15 . Gas or elec tr ic
ranqes.
$325
Baby
mrtt r esses, $15 &amp; $35, bed
lrames $20, $'15. &amp; $30. Used
Furni l ure
bookcase,
ranges and TV 's. J mrle s
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm , Mon . lhr u F rr , 9am
to 5pm. Sa t

446 0321

--·~-

-+

+

$2500 . Big dad dy cock ta il &amp;
end tab les $50. Wall · A Way
r ec l iner s $169 . and up. La
Z Boy recliners i n stock .

USED FURNITURE 5 pc.
&amp; 7 pc. dinett se ts, studio
couc h &amp; chai r , bedroom
suite Hollywood sty le, bunk
beds , glass fr on t book
c ases . Flair Furnitur e &amp;
Design . Gallipol is Ferry ,
WV Open 9-6. Phone 304

81

teed . Calf 614-256·1207.

AKC

Reg .

POODLE

HUH , E-AGY~

Mar cum
Roo fin g
&amp;
Spouting . JO years ex ·
perience, specializing in
built up roof . Ca ll 614·J88·

-·

Ca ll Judy T ay lor at 614· 367 ·

7220.

39 yds c arpe t . humidifier
&amp; air c leaninq ma chine .

P IN E

RIDGE

AKC

Reg i stered

Ca ll 614 245 9587
Ce r amrc Gr ee nware Sale
on Saturday ,Monday and
Tu esday , 3 miles out
Jericho
Road ,
Point
Plea san t
So me ttems
r ed uced 50 per cen t .
Dea ler s we lco me Phone

304 67 5 2039

'76

Co lli e

pups. Ca ll 614-156· 1267 or
446·2107 .
G rooming servi ce s l or
pets. Will clip Eng l ish
Sheep dogs, poodle s &amp;
Sc hn auzer 's. Reasonable.

Fo r appt. 614 992 7342
POODLE

pups,

AKC

reqi ste red . No Check s, 304
SNAPPER mower , 8 HP ,
JO rn c h cut, elec tn c start . 6
speed, 5 c utt in g hcr qht s,

895 3958 .

$400 .00, 304 675 48 )8

Pood les, ca II 304·882· 3672.

8 H P rrdrnq lawn mower .
r oto trll cr, snow blade for
qrn vc ly , pu sh mower

phone 304 675 6809
One whr te corn Ma sler
m etal detec tor , 5000 D . I
year ol d S150 Pho ne 304

671 177 1
Cou ch &amp; c harr , 3 old TV
se ts, 1 cn b rnet s, Sunray qas
stov e. Ca ll 446 9344 or sec
at 139 Lower G arfield ,
Galltpolr s
Argcn t 1na 1ea tt1 er Englrstl
sadd le. 4' c u tbil ck . 21'sea t,
exc cond, $250 Call 614

388 8170
Almost new ca pta rn bed
with drawe r s, new mat
tre ss, $400 new. wrll sell

THREE rnale AKC Si l ver

Coc ktails. whi te and c in
namon, l ocil ll y raised .
Gunvi lle Road off Rt . 87.
cal l 304 -458 -1619

57

Lowry Geni c organ $1000 .

614 245 9398
Gasolrn e and heitt rnq f ue l
Ca ll E xcels1or Ort Com
pany 614 997 1105

~~j _&amp; Grain

64

Hay SUS ba le in fi e ld . 304
675·2254 or 304·675· 1302.

Transpartauan
71

Autos lor Sale

1980 Pontiac Sunbird au to .
tr a ns., power steering, AM
FM radio, exce llent cond .

1925 or 614 742 2085
1 lot of end ma tched oak
fl ooring 1 1 &lt;~ in . $150 614

992 7112 a tier 5 p. m
17 ,000 BTU Fr igidarre a rr
condrt ioner Ov er the cab
t ru ck c amper Sire ns 4

Montgomery W.1rrt 30"
elec tri c ran9e. gol d $85.
Maytag au toma t ic washer

$65 . 614 74) 2352
N EW Rem in gton mode !
870, 12 guage, JO inc h F .C..

304-675·2879 .
55

'!uilding Supplies

Building ma teria lS block,
brick, sewer pipes, w in dows, linte ls, efc. Cla ud e
W rnter s, R i o Grande, 0 .

Ca ll 614 245 5121 .
REDUCED .

Meta l sheet's flat por ce lin
ename l coa ted, wi ll nai L
won't rust . Ex . material a ll
t ypes of building 20·14·
gauge 4' x8' S7 .00, 4' x 10'

2 bedroom apt. l arge
rooms , basement, yard , appliances furnished . Ca ll

350,

70 Cheve ll e Malibu 317 4
bbl., Muncie 4-speed , 4 : 11
posi. new paint, slots,
priced to sel l. Ca ll 614·388 ·

Prck your own sugar pod
peas,
brinq co ntainer s.
$6 .00 bushe ll al so have ci:tb
baqe, ca uliflower,
and
brocco l i. In anoth er week
111 runner beans. sf'tme as
las t year $6 .00bu shel.
Raynors Peach Orc nt1rd.
Rt . 7, L owe r Riv er Rd . Call
446 8407
~ --:

- ~ldve:siiel&lt; - ~

61

Grave ly Tratto r s Free
A t ac hm en t promoti on ends
June 30th . Buy your new
Gr ave l y now and receive a
fr ee ata chm ent with your
tr ac tor . Out door E quip·
ment Sa le Jet . of Rt 7 &amp; 35,
Ga llipoli ~. 446·3670. Wee k ·
day 91o5. Sal . 9Jo I.
Gr ave l y Tractor s 12 H P
r iding tr ac tor with 50 in
mower , used,
in good
co nd _, $1,800 . Out~oor
Equipment Sa le Jet. ot Rt ,
7 &amp; 35, Ga llipoli s, 446·3670 .
Weekday 9 to 5, Sat. 9 to 1.
Tra c tor (David Brown 990
diesel with en d loader) , ex .

cond. Ca ll61079·2651.
1965 MF 35 Gasolin e tra c tor
wi th 6 Ft . scra per bl ade

$).795. Phone 304· 576·2197 .
63

Live~tock

Ga lli polis. 446·0183 .

Motorcycles

79 Suzuki 850, 2,500 mil es,
em ac ul ate condition , $2,500
or best offer . Ca ll446·8195 .

19 79 Tr ansAm ext r a c lean,
fully loaded $6 ,995. Call
446 9285 .

1974 KAw . ZIE 900, 15,000
mi les, $1.400 . Ca ll 446 0208 .

1980

Toyota

Celica

exc.

cond . Cal l alter 5. 675 7438
1969 Camara SS fo r sa le or
trade for pickup tru ck . Ca ll

6143677307

197811:1 RM150 , runs exc.
Must se ll by T hu rsday .

$400 6 14 992 6362 .
1968 H arl ey Davidson, E
Gl ide a ll new chrome, exc.
running co nd . $2500 . J04

675·6726
For Sa le or Trade f or good
used ca r . Honda 76 CR 250
Elsinore, Exce ll ent co n·
dition . Phone 304·675·4661.

1967 1/7 T Ford pickup, J

spd ., 6 cy l. , $325 . 1972 Nova,
$495 Ca ll 446·0157.

KAWASAK I KE

100 e n

duro. Li ke new, exce ll ent
condi ti on, on l y 924 m il es.

1966 Chevy Capri sla li on
wagon, 396 m otor , f arr
cond ., make offer . Call 446

$600. 304 ·675 4831 .

3594.

QOOd cond i ti on . Phone 304

1982 Hond a X R 100 . Ve r y
675·39'13 .

1963 2 door hard top Nova .
Good running &amp; body co nd .
Ni ce sports ca r . S2 ,300. 614·

75

9'12·3640.

speed, good cond . Mu st see
to apprecia t e. $5,500. 61 ·4

1973 FORO Torino. 302, AT,
PS, PB . Good conditi on.
Ca ll Pomeroy 991 -2418.

1980

O ld s .

Cutlass

Brougham . 30,000 mi les,
new radia l tir es, loaded.

Exc. cond. $6.500. 614·9'12·
)881.

Boats and
Moton fo..- Sale

1980 Bomber c la ss ic bass
and ski boa t , full y eq uiped ,
90 HP .motor and trail er .

cond . Call 614·256·6236 or
446·8146.

and

dependable

service_,

calf your local AMWAY
distributor, Robert Harper,
304-675· 1293.

,!

R€f'AIRI'-!6 IT ~S
eu:JJ.Et..ITAR'/, M'i

(

~ ... I /J£R~L..I/
Tl6!-IWJ~D A
Sl::ReW 1-1~~

AW~

1n&lt;

OH, GAtJOY-. WHAT HAVE THEY OONE
'ftJU'? YOU 'IU: ALL BITTEN BY IJ(JfiG
AN' .., AN' THERE
ARE ALL TH06E

THERE'SALWAYS SOMETHERE'S SOMETHIH' THIN' 11\0VIN' DOON AT
MOVIN' OOWI'I AT TH' OUitlP, DUMMY ' ·- AN'
TH' OUMP, "REO"! I DON'T \"'AHNA LOOI&lt;.
TOO CLOSE AT 1/HAT
IT 15.1•.•

.,J TELL YAH

IIWFUL·LOO!UH'

.~~'"'-..., GCAATCffG!

8 :30

1~81

FORD Escort, phone
895·3618.

0

2088 or 675·4560 .

9 :00

GASOUNE ALLEY

304 895 3802 .
c mless

f

CD 700 Club
CIJ ®

a COUSin
of yours

0

too
old

could be

her.'

I

20 10 .
9 :30

Plumbing

73 PONTIAC LeMan s , a"
co nditioning ,
pow e r
steering, 350 engine, $700.
or best offer over $600 . by 7-

1·82, 2511 Jefferson Ave . Pt .
Pleasant.

67 Chevel le, 283 Automatic,
bla ck on bla ck . Phone 304·

675·4181.

ning lights, spot fight , AM ·
FM radio, skis, fife jacket,

wrec ked , can be fixed or
used tor parts. $300. Phone

Karate

Cor . Fourth and Pine

30&lt;-675· 1349.

Johnson

5112

horse

boat

~~~~~~~~~~,...,=:-::-=.;.~~~~~~!,172

742·2903.

1981 Datsun pickup . long
bed: s spd .. $5,100. Call~ 8380 after 5.
52 Chevy truck , new 67 283,
$695. Calf 4&lt;16-3691 or ~ ·
7365.
1977 Datsun pickup, short
bed, new paint. Call ~1581 .

B IL L DIDN'T
SAY. BUT
I 'M SURE
WE'LL TRY
TO RETURN
IT TO HIM JUST
AS SOO N AS
WE CA N.

E ..•

120 HP

5580.

Mercury Cruise , Dorsett
Boat with trailer, 304·675-

Auto Parts

76

&amp; ..Accessories
. -· - ..

-

KE-100 76 Kawasaki, $150.
or best offer. 614·9'12·6047.

a4

~A'HNEY

~ ~e~rigeration

DREAMED I WAS A

SEWING Machine repairs ,
service. Authorized Singer
Sa les &amp; Seryice Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

ASTERNAUT WHIZZIN'
,

. .
Gen~r~I_H~uling_

THROUGH
SPACE (

GLORY BE!!
WHAT WAS
IT LIKE?

- ·

-

· -

• •

· -

-

-

+ •

-

1973 Ford F -250 Ranger
· XL T. 360 engine. automatic
tra'ns. Needs bodywork,
$700 .
446 -2707,
call
evenings.

Camping
E;qulpment

shooting . (R)(60 min .)
(I) We Dig Coal:

·. PEANUTS

.

\ "'i·,.

,.

..,.

sec.

•

•

•

-

-

- -

-

•

•

H

-

o

ssoo.oo.

I

'

\

A

10:15 (I) TBS Evening News
t0:30 CD Sing out America
&lt;ID Hitchcock
11
CIJ ®
(lll
News
·Monty
ill
MOVIE:
Python and the Holy
Grail'
CD Nashville RFD
ill ESPN Sports Center
(!J News/Sports/Weather
Cil Dick Cavett Firs t of

TH' GOODEST
PART WAS BEIN

WEIGHTlESS

I

m

-

•

Pass
Pass

3•

s•

Pass
Pass

7.

l'a ss

Pa ss

Pa ss

z•4 NT

Opemng lead +Q

on th e fifth s pad e and cla1m
his slam ·

Alan
happen

·· An y thing ran
If you p1ck up a

h;md like this tom orrow.
don't overlook thl' sure th1ng
play ."

40 Cervine
DOWN
I Ade book
2 Actress
Rigg
3 In prison
4 One a t the
bar (abbr . )
5 Scold
6 Extol
7 Ending
lor cow
8lncarcerated
9 Oozing
out
10 Going wrong
16 Saucy
19 Singer
Ronstadt

Yesterday's Answer
20 Alcohol
so urce
23 Dodgson's
pen name
24 Abscond
25 Autumn
remnants
26 " Dragnet"
hero

29 Evergreen
shrub
30 Register
32 Prehistoric
mound
35 "1'\edennaus"
36 Minced
oath

33 Max
34
36
37
36

- Sydow
Nullified
Encircled
N.Y . city
Different

39 ''Two People"

on

• 28

developments

at Wimbladon .
ill Another Ufe
(I) Benny Hill Show
0 CIJ Quincy Quincy in-

614·367·

JIMS Water S~rvice . Ca ll ..
•t. 1963 TrentwOOd self. Jim Lagier&lt;J04-67S·7397.
contained camper, sleeps
I'
4, a ·c with awning, can be
17
5een a !Shady Watrs camp; .
I•
10 miles south Rt. 2, Pt.
'TRISTATE
1976 Ford F250, automatic, Pleasant.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
:,
P.S. Runs good. 388·9342 . .
Ave., Gallipolis. , .:
.:....--·---- -__..:.. 1163
or4MI·1833.
'·
14 foot Mustang tralrer; 4&lt;16·7833
.
.
~ · ~.
1972 Chevy pickup $300.00, $800,, electric brakes, Gas,
·~.J · ' ·
1974 Ford Gran TorinO refrigerator, 12 volt and M'OWREYS Upholstery Rf :·
Call J.O.l ·576· 217~ af · gas lights. Phone (304) 182· 1 Box 1U, PI ..Pieasanl, JO.I· ;:
2972.
.· 675·4154.
ler 5:30p.m.
,.
0

&amp;

ACROSS
I Egyptian
liz.ard
5 Philospher
Pascal
II Tumult
12 Breadwinner
13 Marsupial
14 Stern blade
15 Hospice
16 Cushion
17 Wire news
service
18 Young bird
of prey
20 "-and
bear it"
21 Employ
2% Resounded
23 Be unable
24 Snake's
tooth
25 Fat
26 French
policeman
(sl.)
27 Earth
goddess
26 Quit; revoke
31 - deco
32 Divide
the honors

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

vestigates an alleged acci·

Now Hauling limestone-fill
dirt·top soil·gravel. Free'

71

Cagney

Lacey Cagney and Lacey
are faced with charges of
bigotry in a street gang

repons

-

call.

®

So uth

1 1 :16 (I) Allin the Family
1 1 :30 0 ill (!J Wimbledon NBC

7_! . .. _ ~u_l'1_ ~~paJr
Need something haul ed
Duality Aulobody &amp; Paint away or something moved?
work. Professional custom We' ll ~o it. Call 4&lt;16·3159 or
paint work on motorcycles. 614·25/&gt;·1967 after 6 .
Auto Trim C~nter., ~--1968.
estimales .
7101.

CIJ

East

~~.,."",r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

two parts . Singing Group
Honey Cole and the Cope·
cetics are the guests .

Car parts for sale_. 72 85
Plymouth 311 engine, and JONES BOYS WATER -,
transmission . . 2· 800 x 14 SERVICE . Call614·367 ·7471 •
tires . 304·773·5882.
or 614·367-0591.

- ----· - ·

Hous a Calls Dr.

:oo o m m o

''

,

.

Contact

Norman Solomon faces a
malpractice sun . (R)
(I) Festival of Hands 'Is·
sa 's T reas ure.' The National Theatre of the Deaf
performs a well-known Ja panese fairy tale .

1 0:00 Q

,- ..,

LAST NIGHT I

Electrical

Pomeroy . 9'12·2284 .

®

Full

Portrait Of Three Women
Marilyn M cC usker, the first
woman coa l miner to die in
a mine accident, and her
female co+workers are presented in thi s moving documentary . (60 min .)
(ij) Nawswatch

Lawren ce Sid e ns tri cke r
Backhoe Service. Call 675·.

.

To:_u~k~s:fo! ~a!_e

HE ... HE WON' T
~E WANTING
HIS MONE Y
~ACK, WILL HE?

The Hoeman . 614·9'12·2618 .

26 II. Sk·ilf c raff . 1972 1·0 .
Sleeps lr. $6,000. Like new .
614·9'12·3402 .

motor. 304·576·2372.

1--------....L----------1'513.

YES, AND TH IS
TIM£ I'M AFRAID
THE RUPTURE IS
PERM ANENT.

Fcir water Hnes, sewe r
tines. sept ic tank s or lea ky
basem ents ca ll Hayman

JAR Construction Co. Dit "' .
cher, baCkhoe , and doze r. ·
Footers. gas lines. water-'
lines, Rutland , Ohio. 614· ~·

6286.
70 DODGE 1 ton truck,
S900. 70 Ford wrecker. $900.

SO BILL AND HIS
BROTHER HAD A
FALLING·OUT
H?
AGAI

der . garage kept, very good
condition, $3,800. Calf 446·
9265.

Inboard -outboard

PKA

Q (I)

CART ER 'S PLUMB IN G
AND HEATIN G

tow harness, boarding lad·

1974 AMC MafadQr bee n

CII MOVIE : ·Eivisl'
Ill

Gallipolis Diversifi ed Con ·
s t . Co. Custom doz er &amp;
backhoe work . Specia l
farm rates. Call u s tor free
est im ates. 446·4440.

M'A'S'H

Hawkeye, B.J . and Charles
are placed on the camp · s
promotion board. (A)
@
Silent
Spring
of
Rachel Carson The extent
to which pesticides may
endanger man and hi s environment IS explored . (60
mi n.)

for

that

North

Afl(•r t hat back to dumm y

MOVIE :

day ·

I'm

West

in

(I) MOVIE: ' Big Wednes -

Not a chance!

Slim, how
(

aJ

ill

0

••

Vu lnerab le : Neither
Dea ler So uth

w1th th e Jac k of trum ps to
disca rd h1 s losmg d1 amond

'Midnight Lace'

""'r• r•n• P•• ••' "'

83

WKRP

..

" ; 4
• Q9 7
+ KJS 53
+QJ 10962
+K8 7543
SOUTH
+A K Q 10
"A KQ 10 8 6 3
• 62

wonder abou t the apparentl y

Cincinnati Bailey tempo r·
arily allows Johnny to
move 1n with her. (A)

Water wells . Commercia l
a nd Dom est ic. Test holes.
Pumps Sa les and Service .

Sea rs 12ft . tiber glass, tri ·
haul boa t with oars a nd
trailer . Call446·0418 .

®

.

s illy question and then diSca rd the 10 of spades."
Oswa ld : " After that 10 of
s pades discard, South would
play two rounds of trumps
a nd the ace-ki ng-queen of
s pad es. The n he would go
over to dummy WJth the nin e
of trumps to ruff a spade

(lll ABC Monday

CIJ

.....

WEST
• J 863

"J9 72
+ A 10 4
+A
EAST

Ala n: " Of course . 1f the
hand were presented as a
problem the pla yers would

Night Baseball: T eam6 t o
be Announced

~ _Heati~g

For sa le or 'trad e 16.5 ft
Wellc raft runabout , 140
HP, 4 c yl. . 10 Mercruiser ,
convertib le with futl ca n·
vas ""d mooring cover, HD
galvanized tilt trailer run ·

C1J &amp;I

6-28 -82

.9 7542

wou ld go wrong at trick one
a nd disrard a low d1am ond
on the ace of clubs."

ag •ng. (60 mm I

RINGL ES'S SERV ICE ex ·
peri enced m ason , roof er ,
ca rpe nt e r ,
e l ec tri cia n ,
genera l
repairs
a nd
r emodeling . Phone 304·675·

to seven hearts on

Oswa ld "l'red say s that
he would be willing to wager
that a t least 99 pe rcent of
the world 's bridge players

(I) Mast erpi ece Theater
'Private H•story of a Campaign That Fa1led .' Mark
Twain ' s story of the early
years of the Crvrl War
deals w 1t h several boys
who
en li sted
for
the
chance at adven ture but
found only the real111es of
war . (60 mm .)
(ij)
Don't Count the
Candles Thr s documentary , hosted by England' s
most
famous photographer, Lord Snowdon, of fers a sensitive look at

WINNIE
HAR TS U sed Cars, New
Ha ve n Wes t V irginia . Ov er
20 less ex pensi ve ca r s in
stock .

ge ts So uth

s imple. although norm a lly
poor bidding . Thus. South
would have had no idea
abo ut what to do if North
showed one ace after the
Blackwood four no-tr ump:·

ane lh play Cup•d . (R)

F &amp; K Tree Trimmin g,
s tump remova l. 675 ·1331.

LJKEL Y

Vegetable s that soun d as th ough they
should never be se rved aboard sh tp - LEEKS

Ala n: " Hand No . I is obvi ·
ous ly one l'red made up. He

Geographic

West The Ca lico K1d re·
turn s to Copper Creek . (R)
0
(I)
®
Private
Benjamin Benjamin and Gi-

or 446·1454

DECADE

NOIITII

Austra lian
Rules
Football
(I) MOVIE : .This Property
Is Condemned'
CIJ &amp;I ill) Best of the

RON'S T elev ision Serv ice .
Special izin g in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar , and
house ca ll s. Phone 576·2398

BUSHY

Oswa ld: "Fred Karpin ha s
come out with a book ca lled
'The P lay of the Cards. SelfQuizzes at Bridge' ' It
inc ludes 104 hands . Some
a re made up; ot hers are old timers , but practically eve ry
one is interesting ."

CD

Gene's
St eam
Carpet
Clea n-Scotch Gaurd ·Free
es t imates·sp ring specials·
Gene Smi th , 992·6309 .

Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

Answer

(Answe•s tornonow)

EV OKE

By Oswa ld Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Probes
Entertainment

(]) Nationa l
Special

3330 or 614·388 ·9'119.

de l a il ca ll 446·9285.

I Jumbles

It's quiz time

son . (R) (60 min .) \Closed·
Captioned!
Cil MOVIE : · High Risk ·

Roofing, g utter , blow· in in·
su ll ati on, siding&amp; p aint in g .
10 yrs . experie nce . Ca ll 446·

and tr ai l er . 1975 Chrysler
90 H P mot or, S3,000. For

I I ] [I] [ I I J

BRIDGE

the Prairie Mr. Edward s
goes to Chicago to claim
the body of his adopted

,,.""9 "'1 Poo o ,,.

ANNIE

STARK S Tree Trimmin g
and Lawn Se rvic e. Shrubs
trimm ed. Phone 304·576·

[

Jumble Bool. No. 19. containing 1tO puules. rs avar lable lor St 9S postpaid
!rom Jumble, c/o I his newspaper . Bo11 l4 . Norwood . N J 07648 Include your
name. address. zip code and make checks pay able to New spaperbooks

Tonight
8 :00 0 ill (!J Unle Housa On

C &amp; R Paint Cen ter
Professional
p ain t ers,
com m erc ial and residen ·
tial. i nsur ed . 41 Court St _,
Gallipolis, 446·9458, no an ·
swe r 446·1758 .

1974 Chrys ler 16 ft . boat

.
S aturday s

ill Tic

® Media
18 ~

A60LT~ .

roofing, siding, spouting,
l e nci ng, painting, r epairs &amp;
c lea n in g . 446·2000, ca lf
before8and after 5 : 30.

82

Print answer here

Tac Dough
®
M acNei l-Lehrer
Report
® News
&amp;l (lll Muppet Show
7 :30 0 ill You Asked For It
CD Another Ufe
(J) ESPN Sports Canter
(I) Andy Griffith
CIJ Q CIJ Family Feud
(!J Laverne and Shirley
(I) Business Report
® Richard Simmons

Cil

BORN LOSER

estima les, 614·698 ·8205.

Now arrange the Ci rcled leMrs to
lorm Ihe surprrse answer . as sug ·
gested by the above car1oon

I KJ

Lilias , Yoga and You

&amp;1 112i ABC News
0 ill P .M. Magazine
CD Bull's Eye

Q

Gutter ·Doo.- :_ .
Vffering
co ntinuou s
g uttering ,
sea mless sidin g, roofing,
ga rag e
door s,
free

TEND TO DO.

TULFAY

CD Happy Days

Ca ll 614·367 ·0690.
1978
Lund
in
board /outboard 18 ff ., 120
HP sk i boat &amp; trail er . Ex.

J066E~5

(I) Green Acres
Cl) Entertainment Tonight

'
I,

614·388·

'

WHAT 5-0M E

ball
I

CHRISTIAN'S
CO N
S TRU CT ION .
Co n slr ..

--

FOR _guaranteed products

Ca ll

A DVA NCED

991-3640

REG . QUARTER HOR SES
Tr aining,
s how i ng ,
breeding, sales and boar ·
ding . Contact, Dan Beam ,

74

93 11

Farm Eq uipm en!

New and U sed Troy · Built
I iiie r !&gt;
for
gardening .
Swis her Implement John
Deere Dealer , Rf . l ,
Gallipolis, 446·0475 .

54,000 mil es, i nc ludes AM ·
FM casse tte. 4" lift kit,
15x38 gumbos mounted OIJ
10" white spoke wheels,
ha s header s&amp; Holl ey. Want
$2 ,700 . or best offer. 304·

1978 Hond a XL 175 lik e
new, $675 . Ca ll614·245 55 15.

446 3691 or 446 7365.

Fruit

Ewington .
9'139.

245·5575 .

Phone 304 675 1835 .

&amp; Vegetables

1974 CHEVY Blazer with

19 75 Monte Ca r lo Sl.OOO .

Used Conn Trumpet. good
c ondr t 10n . Price \100 .

58

Ma sonar y work ,
Log ue
Contracting,
· Rt .
1,

lil l12i

(!) ESPN'a Inside Base·

Call614·388·9762.

pain! $1200 . 304·675·7454 .

Call 446·0924

CHEVY Luv, '77, 304·675·

Gene Smith, 9'12·6309 .

E

1980 Honda odessy, 2 ext r as
rear tires. $1 ,000 . Ca ll 614-

73 F ia t 118 seda n , 40,000
miles, S800. 71 Supe r B . 383
mag .. 1 of 500 , $650. Ca ll

614·698 ·3290.

PRICE · s

va n

Ca ll 4464782 .

19 78 Z28 Ca maro. Blue, 4
Over 1.000 ce ramic molds,
kilns , and supp l ies 614 742

Ford

882 ·282 1.

304 675 3238 .

$100 Call 614 379 1464
60 i n . con sole stero AM F M
rad io &amp; 8 tra c k . $100 Ca ll

MUSICal
In str um en ts

$5 .00 . Tuppers Pl ain s, Ohio

Ge ne's
Steam
Carpet
Clean-Sco tc h Gaurd -Free
estimates-spring specials·

'i

mechanical l Y good, needs

COLLIES

614 ·66 7 3085 .

tires. 304-773-5882.

7:00

Sonia's Professional DOQ
CA PTAIN STEE MER Car·
Groomin g . Call614·386· 8547 1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;.-r----------~ pet Cleaning fea tured by
and ask for Son ia .
,.
Haffelt Brosthers Cus tom
Ca rpets. Free es t imates .
63
vaos &amp; 4V&gt;/,D.
73
Ca ll 446·2107 .
- - -- Livestock
AKC mal e pood le puppy .
Also whi te fema le pood l e
1979 F -150 4 wheel dri ve .
Registered
Quar
te
r
horse
,
Phone 446·0857 .
One owner . Good cond .•
S500. Pony ca r t. SIS. Bay must see to appr ec i ate . French Cit y Paint ing
r es identia l &amp; commercial.
quarter mare . 614·698 -3190. $6,000. 614·9'12·36ol().
interior, ex terior, paper
AKC Reg . Old Eng li s h
hanging ,
&amp;
t extu r ed
Sheep dog, femal e, 4 yrs .
old . Call 614·256 1786 a tl er 14 Red laying hens . 304 675· 1979 Ford Ranger XL T. 4 ce ilings. Ca ll 614·36f7784
1926 .
or 614·367 ·7160 .
w hee l drive -400 cu .in .,
5
auto .• ai r ·cond ., dua l ta nk s,
Poll ed Hereford bulL J 36,000 mi . S5.500 . 614992· Crea ti ve
wood
de ck s,
AKC Reg . Brittany Span iel
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
has been hunted and ha s yea r s old Phone 304·895 5875 .
3833 .
redwood
Free es timate.
shots. Ca ll 614 947 ·9509 af ·

675 1.

Ca r parts for sa le. 72
Pl y mou th 318 engine, and
tra nsmiss ion . 2· 800 x 14

CID

9622 or 614-388·9857 .

$8 .00, 4'xl2' $9 .60. 4'x odd

S4 : Mi sc. Merchandice

THERE·7
NOTHIN6 LJ!&lt;e
GETT!N6 AWAY
FROM IT ALL,

20 yr s . exp. Ca ll 614·388·
9652.

GROO MIN G :

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

News
(I) My Three Sons
CJ) ABC News
(I) Electric Company
®Over Easy
6 :30 0 ill C!J NBC News
ill MOVIE : · Home from
the Hill'
CD $50.000 Pyramid
(I) Fathet Knows Best
CIJ Muppet Show
Q CIJ ® CBS News
Cil Dr. Who

CAPTAJN_E~Y.- _

PAINT IN G
interior and
e)(fer i or.
plumbing ,
r oofing, some r emode l ing .

Boarding and gr oomi ng .
AKC
Gordon
se tt ers,
English Cocker Span ie ls.

Call614-388 9790.

s:oo o m m o m ®

1182.

BRIARPATCH KE NN ELS

byHenri A.rnoldandBoblee

EVENING

+

t ex tur ed ceili ng s com ·
mercia l and residential.
free estima tes . Ca ii 614·2S6·

man s. Ca ll446· 7795.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

6/28/82

ST UCCO PLASTERING

Dobe r ·

COUC H , long brown ear ly
Amer ica n, $3 0. 304 -675·

Unfurnished 2 br apt. calf
304·675·2218 from 8 a.m. to 6
p .m . Call 304-675-6253 until
9 :30p.m .

dryer, each $90, guaran·

Also

'ft ftl}f.\.0 ffi'\l

~ ~ ~~ ®

MONDAY

Home
_ !m_p~o~t:~~l!_!s_

Boarding a ll breeds , c lean
i ndoor outdoor fa ci liti es.

Registered and grade hor·
ses, exce ll ent 4·H projec t .
English and western sad·
dies ·
eve rything
imaginab le in horse equip·
ment and supplies, atso
riding lessons and trail
rides and horse training .
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow .

675· 1371.

I

ser.-ltes

KE NN EL

ler 5 614 367-0317

Large dog hou se surlabl e
for big dog a l so r olotil ler .
614 9'/) )941 .

BEMCO malfr esses or bo x
spri n gs, full or twin , $58 . 6
P rece N augahyde heavy
wood living room suite
$695 . Pillow arm sofa &amp;
c hair $375 . Roll top desk,
dark &amp; light , $189 . Bunk
beds. co mpl et e, include
mat tress, $199 . Com pl ete
water bed shop wi th 10
bedroom suif e'j on di splay.
star t ing price $299 . up to

HILLCREST

Television
•
•
viewing

electric
awnin g.

$1,900. 614·9'12·2581.

Chow
puppies,
CFA
Himalaya n, PerS LJn and
Sia m ese k itten s. Call 446 ·
3844 after 4 p.m .

614156 1188atfer6

446 3124

$20, rocker recliner $20, 30
in. gas rang e $95. Skqggs

2 speed Whirlpool washer
extra nice, 5 temp -frlg,

Doz er 55 International T06
with wenc h, $15.000 . 77
P lymou th 440 cng rnc . Call

614 992 3090

auto. washer S75. 5,000 BTU
air cond . $95, swivel rocker

Motel. 4&lt;16· 7398.

11 inc h Be lsa w set! feed
pl ai ner , 9 sets molding
knrv es, 1 Shaper , several
ex tr a kniv es. Call446·9285 .

Ches t of drawer s. co uch &amp;
c ha rr, and drnelfe se l Ca ll

evenings 304·675· 7541 .

A ppliances, Upper .River
Rd.. beside Stone Crest

947 9509 afler 5 614 367 0317 .

AP

$150 and up lo $395 Cap

Homes tor Rp nt . Le ase or
L and con tr ac t rn town or
co u n tr y
Ca ll
Str ou t
Rctll ly , 446 0008

Model 11 48 Remington 12
qauqe auto , mod . Cal l 614

$50 304 67 5 1349
USED

-

1977 Starcrafl fold down

DRAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY
KE NN EL . AKC

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

_ __ t;.~!P'!''!!'!... _ --

------~

W E DDING dre ss. Srle 14 ,

7 lo t&lt;; F trs t lot tS J trader
c,.pacP tr,l tlN park SC'cond
lo t rS 700x700 Loca ted rn
MN CNvrlle . 446 J684

42

seven &amp; one half feet by 58
in c t1 e wide multicol ored,
brarded ova_ l ru g. White
uniform s (pa ntsuits) thr ee
different styles, sizes 9· 10 .
Ca ll aft er 4PM,·446·3065 .

CHJCA60,:W..

June
33

A

·11 - - ~ - ~ caniiiiii9camper
with
refrigerator &amp;

RATLIFF 'S POOL CEN ·
TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
ins tallation 403 1nd. Ave ..
Ga ll rpoli s, Oh . Call 446
6579
I n ground· Ab love
g round

cond Oeluxf' k!l chen . tarQe
t.v.nq room &amp; ba t h . 7
t)('(trm

by Larry Wtlght

Pets for Sale
-·-~

CLEA N USED MOBILE
H O M ES
KESSEL 'S
QUALITY
M OB ILE
HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST , GALLIPOLIS. RT
31 P HONE 446 3S6a

KIT 'N' CARLYLE""

U sed materials . Buildings I
&amp; R a t GDC. Stee l beams.
wood &amp; stone . See Jim
Gi les.

S6

Monday, Julie 28, 1982

!'fonday, June 28, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

VES, MA'AM .. HE'S
AN ATTORNEY

l-IE WANTS TO ORDER AN
S.lriNCI-l X 11 3/4-INCI-I
CANARY YELLOW, F=IFTY
PAGE LEGAL PAD•.•

AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atands lor another. In this sample A Ia
dantal drowning . (R) 160
used lor the thr~ L's, X for the two D's, etc. Single letters,
min .)
apo~trophes, the length and formation of the wordo are all
(I) Captioned ABC Newt
® MOVIE: 'The Laat ' blots. Each day the cod~ letters are dllere nt.
ReHI'
_ __ _
caYPTOQUOTES
- - . .i])) Nlghtll""
'
1 1 :411
(!) Tonight Show
FALH
YHMA
MWZ
FJFE
(I) MOVIE: 'Dead End'
ZCZLE
12:00 (I) MOVIE: 'Laot Metro'
(I) Sumo lit Allen
XYHZL
AHZ
MWJH
YO
J
GALVN
C1J 1 982 World Lacrosse
Cltampioq,ahlp ITom Baltl·
IWJLVZD
NYIBZHD
VJ DM.
' MWZ
more. MD
(I) Nlghtllne
(I) PBS Lorte Night
Cit MOVIE: 'Story ol 1
Loye Story'
Yesterday's CrypWcjuote : FOR OF ALL SAD WORDS 0'
\12:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Don't Go
TONGUE OR PEN, THE SADDEST ARE THESE : IT MIG'
I
N- the Water'
1
1 HAVEBEEN.-WHITTIER
~2!:;;..=:§?:::~~~]
(J) Jack Benny Show
&gt;-· ·
' . ·--·-· - - - ·

eill

a

I

�-· Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

_Monday, June 28, 1982

Area deaths

Ethel F. Stewart

,,

II

.•

~

J

I

JCN IO R DI\'ISIO'O WI'\'&lt;ERS - Winnl'rs in the
juni ur di \ is ion at th t• a nnual frog jum p Wt'rt' Sta cy
Ruwrn a n. HJ.!t' 5,

plan· "ilh h!'r

W i:l ~ llt's \ ill l'.

fro ~

Ohi u Y.ho look st•rond
1\ ermil who jumpt·d II fl'el, eight

inches. Mt'lissa Rae Smith, age 5, Leta rt, W. Va., took
third plare wi th her frog J um per who had a jump at 11
ft•rl. P ictured, 1-r, a re Joy&lt;'t' Smith, sis trr of Melissa,
Melissa . Tt•rry Speneer, Gra nd Croa ker a nd Stacy
Bowma n held by her la ther, Dann y.

E thel Forbes Stew art, 88, Pomeroy , died Saturday a t Holzer Medi·
cal Center.
She was a member of Minersville
U nited Methodist Chu rch.
She was preceded in death by her
parents, F ra nces a nd Louisa
Brinker Forbes; hu sband, Frank
Stewart; one daughter , Maxine Stewart Sayre; three bothers a nd two
s is ters.
She Is survived by one daughter ,
Evelyn Lucke, Sy racuse; one son,
Victor E . Stewart, Merritt Island,
F la .; two grandchildren a nd four
great-gra ndchildren.
F uner a l services w ill be 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Chapel with
the Rev. Robert McGee a nd the
Rev. Stanley Merrifie ld officia ting.
Friends may call a ny1ime. Burial
will be a t Beech Grove cem entery.

sero nd plare. J um pi ng lor frog lor Lefebre was Steve
Mayna rd. Pktured, 1-r , are Akers, LeFebre and
Maynard.

Chu rch. He was retired from Imper ial Electric.
He was preceded in death by his
wife Frances Wilcoxen, his parents
a nd one son.
He is survived by three daugh·
ters, Carol Young of Columbus,
Dottle Brown of Hampton, Va . and
He len Wilcoxen o! Columbus; one
son, Lt. Lar ry Wilcoxen of Quantico, Va .; one brother , F rederick
Wilcoxen of Johns town, Ohio; two
s L, ters. Donna J ones of Mt. Vernon,
Ohio a nd Veda Kryzton o! Chicago;
a ncl three grandchildren

Funeral services wUI be 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Racine Baptist
Church with the Rev . Don Wa lker
officiating. Friends m ay can af(er 3
p.m . Tuesday at the Ewing Chapel.
Burta l will be a t Leta rt F alls
Cem etery.

a..~

Dora B. Grimm, 95, a fo rmer res·
ident of Letart Falls . died Sunday
a t St. Antho ny Hosp it a l in
Col um bus.
She was a resident of Lutherar
Senior City in Columbus.
She was preceded in death by her
pa r ent s. Alfred B. a nd Ka te F inney
Alexa nder; hus ba nd, Ea rl P.
Grimm; one da ug hte r a nd two
brothers.
She is survived by one son, Ha·
roid B. Grimm, Racine; one daugh·
ter. Olive Ruth Woodyard. Carroll.
Ohio; one slster , Ruth Barnitz,
Pom eroy; four gra ndchildren a nd
s ix grea t-grandc hildren.
Fune ra l services will be 10 a .m .
Wednesday at the Ewing Chapel
wi th the Rev. Ja mes Clark officia l·
in!':. Vis itors may call a t the funeral
ho m e a fter 3 p.m. Tuesday. Burial
will be a t Letar t Falls Cem etery.

Harry W. Bumgarner , 80, New
Haven. died Satu rday a t his
res ide nce.
Born July W, 1901 in P lymouth,
W.Va ., he was the son of the late
Clyde a nd Florence Fields Bum·
gar ner. He was a television repa ir·
m a n in New Haven, a m e m ber of
ChrL, Iia n Brethren Chu rch. and a
m e m ber of Junior OUAM.
Survivors include his wife Gorm a
Oliver Bumgarner, New Haven;
one sis ter , Mrs. Rachael Sayre,
New Haven; one brothe r , Everett

SALE STARTS TODAY

lllrouch J•lr 4, 1112 ••II• •••1ttt111 lut. e•ntltr ri&amp;hh
We 1re 101 rea,elllhle fer t,ocra,hlulerron. Sorrr, no

r111n1~ .
~llllrlo

tough
customers come in all sizes.'"
Becau~

.'
'I

Rubbermaod

I,

Dora B. Grimm

Harry W. Bumgarner

WI NNE RS IN TEAM &lt;"OMI' ETITIO N - Ur ia n
Ak r rs. Uotytun. jumping for Stt·n ga s Food too k firs t
plan. Lion t'l Lefebre jumping lor LaSalle Hotel.

I

SUPPLEMENT TO : THE POMEROY SENTIN EL

I

I

..

·-~

• 3 position cover turns for
free pour ing . pOuri ng
wit h Ice guard , a nd
closed .
•Handl e d esigned f or
e ase
of
l i ft ing &amp;
pouring
•Large gall on size is ideal

IN 1111' STOCK
•'

j

44~

for preparing soh d rinks

NILSON'S RIG. 54'

/
She's all set
for sunny
days in this
cool pair.
Classic
western cut
short In
durable
poly/cotton
twill. In tropic
shades and
classic white,
sizes 4-6X.
Pretty pastel
candy stripe
jersey tank
top has white
trim. Sizes
S-M-L.

.,••

or st oring ju ices for o
large group

HOLMES SARDINES

\\_,

I

3 '!. O l .
•in soybean oil
•In mu stard

Brctnd Cot Food

YOUR CHOICE
''

j
/
/

.

THRIVE

i

NELSON'S REG. 49' EACH

3 3/.t oz.

HOLMES
FISH STEAKS

I

'1'7

I

/"

Brand Dog Food

5 Lb. lag

Box

PRIICE
IACAROII

IllISCI

•Louisiana Re d Hot Sauce
•Chili
•Soybean Oil

IILU WAFERS

•Elbow
style

YOUR CHOICE

••

HEREFORD
CORNED BEEF

e r a l nieces and nephews.
F uner a l services are Tuesday a l
1: 30 a t the Christia n Brethren
Chu rc h, in Mason, w ith the Rev.
J immy Lewis officia ting. Burial
w UI follow at the Gr a ha m Cemetary. Friend' may call from 2-4
p. m . a nd 7-9 p.m . a t F oglesong
Fu ne ra l Home .

BatiYRuth .

HOT OR COLD
FOAl CUPS

1111108

Fll IEWTOIS

NELSON'S REG. S1.5t

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

Martin Wilcoxen, 64, Rt. 2, Racine , died Sunday at the Thurber
Village Care Center, Columbus.
He was a World Wa r II veteran
a nd a me mber of Racine Baptist

·NIUOW-a.aiO.

42'1AQf

'117

Martin Wilroxen

BABY RUTH
OR
BUnERFIIGER
. ., ..

•16 Oz .

NELS~/R!!~CH

B umgarner , New Ha v en ; and sev-

•Easy lighting
•Long burning
•10 Lb. Bog

'177

79e

0~.

5 Lb. Bag

DO&amp; CHOW

Brand Cat Food

11

CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS

. Brand Dog Food

.

.1::r.*

NELSON'S REG. S2.t7

CHUCI WI&amp;OI

IV. Ch:. • SO Ct.
YOUR CHOICE
NILSON'S REG. ft'

2·LITRE COKE

5 •oR '100
NELSON'S REG.
30• EA.CH

n Oz;
•6.4 OJ. H Ct.

SENIOR DIVISION WI NNE RS- Taking the top
hmwrs in thr st• ni ur divi .. iun wt•rt• Rub Pa inter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy. whust frng jumptd II feet a nd ll inr hcs,

.:'•'

Bri an Akers, Dayton, second place with a jump of 10
lee! a nd two a nd on l~ h a ll inches and Cha rlie Monds,
Le banon with a jump of nine feet and nine a nd one-hall
inc hes.

..

f ..... ,

NELSON'S RIG. •1.29
N~SREG ••Ut

Thinking
about
buying
a new car?

·

FRENCH'S
IUSTIRD
OCEAISPRAY

Thefts investigated
TAKING FIRST PLACE HONORS in the junior division at the annual
frog jump were J eremy Raymond, age 6, Pomeroy, with " Leapy." The
frog had a jump of 13 feet and two inches.

Market repo
ATHENS LIV E STOC K SAL ES
J un c 26, 1982
CA T TL E PR ICES
Feeder St eers (good c l1oi•c ) 300

500 lbs. 48.50·62 . 500 700 lbs. 41 62.50,
Feeder Heifer s (good·choicel 300·
500 lbs. 46.50·54, 500· 700 lbs. 43·55,
Feeder Bulls (good·c hoice) 300·500
lbs . 46·61. 500· 70 lbs. 45 .25-61.50 .

Slaughter Bull s (over 1,000 lbs.)

49·53 .85, Slaugh ter Cows : ut ilities

42 .50·48 , Cann ers·Cutlers 35.50· 43. 75.
Springer Cows (by the head.) 260·
170 , Cow Calf Pai rs (b y the unit) 355·
430 ,

Veals

(cho ice-prim e )

62·69 ,

Baby Ca lves I by the head) 22. 50·HO ,
(by the pound) 40 ·75 .
Hogs ( No. 1, bar rows and gilts)
200·230 lbs. 60-61.60, Butcher Sows
47· 53 .50 , Butcher Boars 46 · 48 ,
Feeder Pigs (b y the head) 32-67 .

The Me igs County sheriff's depa rtment reports thieves broke into
a Rutland home owned by Richard
Warner.
Warner dL,covered the break-In
Satu rday morning. TWeves entered by breaking a window pane
out of the front door.
A camera, rifle, BB gun, cassette
player , on lamp, empty bottles and
$W of change were taken.
Teresa Whitt, Beech Grove Rd.,
Rutland, reported Saturday afternoon tha t an AM-FM eight-track
stereo was taken trom her vehicle.
Later Saturday evening she ·reported that It had been returned. No
charges were tned.

YOUR CHOICE

•32 Oz.

'109

'

NILSON'S RIO.
7t~

NELSON'S RIG. f11.2t

LIPTOI IISTAIT TEA
20% More Teal
Free quart decanter

&lt;

3.6 Oz.

'1''

NILSON'S REG. •ut

PROF. POOLS JUICES

61
I.I
;
Jii
F
;_
. ::.l lJi.ll:

Farmers
Bank

10UR CHOICE
Memht·r I'DIC

RIGULAR

12 Ct.

1

Trio J!'lce • 1.45 Ch:. • Apple Juice • 1.45 Ch:.

NILSON~$ RIO. , .. IACH

Your Community Owned Bank

.,,.

YOUR CHOICE

The Farmers Bank
is The Place to go
for your new car loan.

Fs

FREICH'S POTATOES
•Crtsrv Top
•Reo Cheese
•Au Gratin

•Cranberry Juice
Cock toil
•Cronopple Drink

NELSON'S REG. S1.37

STRAIGHT RACE WINNER
was Carol Smith of Middleport.
Her frog jumped 50 feet in 44
seconds.

NILSON'S RIG; 7t'

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