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                  <text>Senators will let four vetoes stand
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) -State senators are expected to let stand Gov.
James A. Rhodes' four line--Item vetoes In Ohio's new tax Increase and
spending cut bill.
..
"I lhlnk It L~ unlikely ,!hal an attempt will be made to override, Senate
Presldenl Paul E. Glllmor, R-Port Clinton, said Monday.
GUimor said the vetoes do nothing to throw 'the budget-balancing bill,
which ts designed to erase a $1.3 billion deficit, ou t of kilter.
Sen . Richard H. Finan, RClnclnnati, the bill's chief sponsor, agreed,
although he said one veto could lead to deeper cuts In welfare spending
next year.
Finan said he had not seen Rhodes' veto message, but that based on
news accou nts of It, "I doubt If our (majority Sena te) ca ucus will have any
problems with it."
Finan noted that one of the vetoes, dealing with a welfare reserve
account It creates In the state Controlling Board, could lead to deeper

welfare cuts, "which Is what the Senate wanted in Ihe first place."
He referred to a veto deleting langu age which would have a llowed the
state to Initiate reductions In payments from the reserve accoun l to nursIng homes after the first six months of the new fiscal year -In January
1983.
Finan said the veto means that unless there Is a supplemental welfare
appropriation, the only other option would be to Increase the size of the cui
conta ined In the new law. That reduction was compromi~ed at 4 percenl .
The Republican-controlled Senate had Insisted In it s version of the bill on
a 7 percent reduction In welfare. while !he House, controlled by Democrats, wa nted to reduce It only by 1 percent.
The governor left some of the bill's more controversial sections alone.
including a 50 percenl surcharge on the state income tax, effective July 1.
and 10 percenl culs In mosl sta te agency spendin g.
The bill a lso raised or continued temporary taxes on corpora lions and
utilities for a total package Intended to finance state opera !Ions ttu·ough

June 30, 1983.
od
In vetoing reserve accounl procedures cont alnro in !he bill. Rh es
noted that Ohio's more !han 1,0Xl nursing homes would have to pre pm e
repons showing where they cou ld cut costs by .Ja n. 15, 1~ &amp;1 .
AI the same lime. the governor sate!' the Welfa re Depart men! a nd the
Controlling Board wou ld have been given 15days to approve or dtsappt ove
the reporls.
Rhodes called !he procedure "unre a lislic."
The reserve fund was established In !he Coni rolling Floard to ta ke ra re of
higher-lhan-anlicipa led we lfare cas eloads . If !hey occ ur.
The governor said !hal If !he case loads ar e hi g her th an IIJI• total _funds
approprlaled " !here are no a ll ernalives bul a supplemcn la l a ppropna llon
and-or benefil reduclions ...
Rhodes rejecled lhree olher sections of Ill~ bill . incl ud ing onr• which
would have lei the Office of Budge! and Managl' ment . in&lt;tmd of dcpm·l menl heads. delermlne programs in which cut s will occur

,,

The Daily
Vol.3l,No.39
Co pyrighted 1982

Astronauts face drolling day
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.- Columbia's astronauls faced a de-m anding day In space today, ready to give the s huttle's weightless
arm Its sllffest test yel even though both were tired and one suffered
slight motion sickness.
Their task on Fllghl 4 Is to certify Columbia a~ a commercial a nd
military cargo carrier starting on Its next trip In October or November. Bul NASA officials said Monday that flight mlghl have to be
delayed because the lwo booster rockets that helped hurl the shlp
lnlo space Sunday sank In !he Atlanllc Ocean when their parachule
systems failed. They were to have been recovered for reuse on a
laler fi!ght.

Economics force mine closing

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GEORGETOWN, Ohio- Consolidation Coal Co. announced M~n­
day !hal Its Franklin Hlghwall mine In the ea"ern Ohio commuruly
of Georgelown has been closed because of depressed markel
condillons.
George Schneider, senior vice president-mining for the region,
said the mine closed Indefinitely at mldnlghl Saturday.
Aboul 100 miners were affected, he sald. The deep mine near the
Harrison-Jefferson County lines produced 388,620 tons of steam coal
las! year.

Miami football player charged
OXFORD, Ohio -- A Miami University football player l~ being
held under $50,0Xl bond on charges of rape, aggravated burglary a nd
aggravated menacing.
Stephen D. Cole, 22, was arrested Sunday by Oxford pollee In
connection with the rape of a female student at the university earlier
tn !he day, pollee said. Cole Is a senior.

Three areas being emphasized
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Highway Patrol has planned a threefront effort to hold down traffic deaths over the July 4 weekend.
" We are exerting our efforts In three main areas: speed limit
compliance, (drunken-driving) enforcement and seat bell usage, "
Col. Jack Walsh, the patrol's superintendent, announced Monday.
"Violation of traffic laws and safety rules In these three area~
accounl for !he vast majority of traffic Injuries and deaths," he said.
Walsh said that beginning Friday night,~ percent of the patrol's
lroopers will be on duty. They will be concentrated In area~ known
for a high number of accidents and a high rate of drunken-driving

arrests.

Nuclear arms race talks begin
GENEVA, Switzerland - U.S. and Soviet officials begin a fresh
altempt today to check the nuclear arm~ race by reducing the
number of warheads that can span contlnenls and oceans.
A senior U.S. official said the American goal in the new talks Is to
diminish both the number and destructive power of nuclear weapon~. This goes beyond the objective President Reagan outlined In
May - a reduction In the number of nuclear warheads carried by
American and Soviet missiles.
The official said Monday that the Soviets have built up a 5-to-2 edge
In missile payload.

Leaders condemn invasion
BRUSSELS, Belgium - Leaders of the European Common
Market today "vigorously condemned" the Israeli Invasion of Lebanon and called for the Immediate, simultaneous withdrawal of
Israeli and Palestinian armed forces from Beirut
The statement on the Middle East, worked out with dlfflcully as
the two-day summit wound up, suggested Lebanese forces aided by
United Nations observers supervise the withdrawal.
Problems of drafting the Mideast statement were followed by
attempts at compromise on harsh criticism of U.S. trade policies.
Mrs. Thatcher notably demanded more moderate language than In
a draft circulated here earlier this morning.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohlo Lottery's dally game "The Number" wa~ ~1.
The lottery reported earnings of ~.882 trom the wagering on Its
dally game. The earnings carne on sales d. $860,581.50, while holders
0! winning tickets are entitled to share $654,699.50, lottery officials
said.

Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy tonight with a 30 percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms unW late at night. Lows near65. Winds northeasterly
10-15 mph. Becoming sUMy and less humid Wednesday. Highs near
~-

entinel
1 St•t·tion , 10 Paliws
15 ( ' ent s
A :\"1ultlnH'dla lnt '. 'ewspapf'r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 29, 1982
NC 11 4

Gallia
board
slices
budget
"Thl~ .s eems lo be finance nigh!,"
Gallia Counly Local Schools Super·
intendent Gary Toothaker commenled Monday nig h! as the county
board of education made more !han
a dozen spending cul sfor nexl year,
pondered a dlslrlcl Income lax a nd
learned the dlstricl may face a $1
million defl cll in li s upcoming
budget.
The cause of !he dislrlcl' s financial plighl was 1raced by Tool haker
and others lo the loss of $76 million
in evaluation from !he James M.
Gavin generallng plan! by slale
order In Augusl 1 ~81 .
Because of !his, !he eva lua lion
dropped from $335 million in 198l lo
$278 million for thls year - which
lranslaled lnlo a nel loss of $1 million in lax money for !he coumy
schools.
"Budgels ha ve decreased, a nd
the dlstricl is making efforts to live
wllhln its resources, bul we'll probably reach that trouble polnlln December 1983," Toothaker said In
predicting a shortfa ll In operallng
revenues.
David Campbell , assistant superIntendent, said the anllclpated general fund revenue for 1983 is
$7,284,280, including a n $82,0Xl
carryover.
But even with !hi~. Campbell said
the dlstrict will have a deficll of
$1,211,268.54.
"Hopefully, with pruden! spendIng and real tough decisions, that
carryover can be exceeded." he
said.
Toothaker expressed hope a lawsui! fUed by the Gallla County auditor' s office protesting !he stale's
decision to reapportion the Gav in
revenue from the county would
have some effect by !hen, " bul
given everything we know now, we
face some pretty tough times."
A hearing on the proposed 1983
school budge t was set by the board
for 10a.m. July 7ln the superintendent's office, with a special meellng
lo follow at noon.
"II would be advL~able for all of
us to look these over," board p res ldenl Fred Dee! said aboul the proposed budget. "II' s very dlfflcu II to
cut money when you have a large
percentage going Into fixed costs."
The board was presenled wllh a
(Continued on page 10)

1.
(

GAS FffiE - Pomeroy firefighters were called to
B&amp;R Discount Gas Station, 1120 E. Main St, about 3
p.m. Monday when an 8,006-gallon gasoline storage
tank caught on fire. Chief Charles Legar said an em-

I

ployee of the station was measuring the depth of tlu•
tank when gas fumes apparently lgnltt•d. There were
no Injuries.

Middleport council approves
survey, buys new machine
By Jeff Grabmeler
In ., eparate ac tions Monday
nigh!, Middleport VIllage Council
voled to purchase a billing mac hine
for the waler and sewer deparl menl and pay for an e ngineer ing
sludy of a village--owned slle near
Locus! and Laurel slreels.
The billing machine will cos!
$8,558 and will replace the currenl
machine which is outdaled a nd
prone to breakdowns, Mayor Fred
Hoffman said. The lone bid was
submilled by Ihe Burroughs Corp.
The machine will be paid for oul
of the village's waler and sewer
fund.
Funds from the Deparlmenl or
Housing and Urban Developmenl
will be used to pay for !he engineerIng survey on the village' s five-acre
site at Locus! and Lau rel. The
study wUI be done by the environmental consultant firm Floyd
Brown Associates, Limited of Marlon at a cos! of $4.300.
Hoffman said the firm will co nduel a preliminary field s urvey and

Eastern high(princial
hired at North Gallia
Three major position~ In the Gallla County Local School DL~trlct a building principal, a head football
coach and educable mentally
retarded-learning di~abllltles supervisor - were hired by the
county board of education Monday
night.
James D. Page, principal at
Eastern High Sehool In Meigs
County since the late 1970s, was
hired to be the new principal at
North Gallia High School.
Page will replace George
Hertzke, who had been building
principal at North Gallla since 1979.
Heitzke reslgtted the PQsltlon, effective at the end of the school year,
at the board's March meeting.
Page presently lives In Point
Pleasant
Stephen Brett Wilson wa~ named
head football coach at Hannan
Trace High School. Wilson is a 1981
graduate of Rio Grande College
and Community College and ha.'
been employed with the LoganHocking School District as a
teacher and coach since September

.,

19~.

Wilson replaces Larry Cremeens, who had helmed the Wildcat football team since 1975.
Cremeens resigned his supplemental contract In April. Wilson's
brother, Bruce, a teache r at
Bidwell-Porter Elementary, ts In
his second-year basketball coach at
North Gallia.
Wilson's appolntmenl filled !he
last of two football coaching vacancies faced by the district. Dary I
Well, who had coached the Kyger
Creek Bobeats for two seasons, re-·s lgned his supplemental contract In
April. He wa~ replaced by Mark
Hartman, who was the assistant
football coach.
The board approved the hiring of
Rosalie Reese, Cheshire, formerly
a teacher with the Gallipolis City
School District, as EMR-LD supervisor. She replaces Altred Scarberry, a longtime teacher and
principal, who resigned tbe supervisor's position In May for retirement reasons.

delermine a n approxim ale cos! for
adding filllo the sile lo bring il up 10
~I reel level.
In olher aci ion , council discussed
several village problems which will
have to be addressed In the fulu re.
A number of village streels have
been paved so many limes !hall he
asphall is reaching !he height of !he
curb. posing safety hazards, coun cilman Allen King said.
He said a car could eas ily jump
!he curb al some spots and would
pose a threat to pedeslrians.
One possible solulion would be 10
reuse the asphall on !he s lreels by
breaking II up and reheallng il.
King said thls would cos! as much.
or possibly more, !han using fresh
as phall .
King a lso suggested thai cou ncil' s streel committee e.&lt;amine !he
po5'ibllty of allowing only one--way
1raffle on Fronl Street. He said I he
slreel Is too narrow for two-way
1raffle. The slreet Is dangerous be-cause of !he number of children
playing near it, he said.
Another possible solulion lo !he
sa fely problem on Fronl Slreel is io

reduce !he current 2'i mph speed
limil, a t leas! doting children 's
summer vacalion. he added.
Village officials should a bo look
iniO suing !he federal government
for some act ion to stop erosion on
!he bank of !he Ohio River.
"The r iver is eating our town

away," King said.
Ol her cil ies and villages alo ng
!he Oh io River may be interesled in
laking pari In a s ui! , King said.
Hoffman said he wou ld in vesti -

gale !he possibilily wilh village solicil or Bernard Fullz.
A wal~r problem of anol her kind
is affecllng res ident s near Hudson
Slreel in !he v illage. King said.
King said during hea vy ram fall~
large amount s of wa trr drain in
ihese areas. causing floodi ng wll h
accompanying heallh and safety
problems.
Feder a l assislance might be
ava ilable lo build a reservoir lo colleci rain walcr during severe
slorms, King said . VillagP offi cials
~ hould look inl o !he possibilil y. he
said.

Miller chosen as
Meigs principal
The Meigs Local Board of Educallon. has named James E. Miller
principal for Meigs High School.
Miller ts currently serving as principal of Rolling Hills Local
School's Meadowbrook High School al Byesville. Ohio.
According to Meigs Local Superlntendenl Dan Morris. Miller's
official contract will begin Aug. 1, bul he Is expecled lo begin his
dulles sometime In July.
Morris said Mliler Is currenlly on vacation, bul he and his famil y
wut probably arrive In the area during the firs! two weeks of July .
Miller wa~ one of three persons Interviewed for the principal
position, left vacant when James Diehl retired. Diehl had been
principal of the hlgh school since conwUdatlon.
Previous to his job at Meadowbrook High School. Miller served as
a high school principal In the Northmor Local Schools and the Southeast Local Schools. He was also director of guidance In the Westerville, Ohio School System.
Miller also taught social studies and biology and coached basketball and track at North Central High School In Pioneer, Ohio.
He received a bachelor of arts degree at Franklin College of
Indiana. Miller earned a masters degree In education from the
University of Toledo. He has completed post-master's work at Ohlo
State University and the University of Dayton.

�The Daily Sentinel-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary

Farewell ERA _____________:I:..;:;a.;,;.;m;.:.:es:..:I;.;....~K..;.tilP:.;..:.a;.:.;.tr...:.:.;,;ick

The Daily Sentinel
lJJ( 'nurtStrt•l'l
l'nm,•rn)', Ohiu
&amp;Jt-99!· 2 1~

llF\ on: ll TIITII F INTERf-:"\TOF T tU: l\1t-:IC;.'- MASO\ ,\H .. -\

ROB ERT L. WI NI.F:TI
PAT WHITEHEAD
A ~~ • ~tu nl

l'uhlt ~ ht•r /(

ROB HO EF LICH

'uulrnlkr

DALE ROTH I.EII, JR .

\ \ H-.1\IIIt:H ul Th•· A~~ • wutlt'tl l'n·s~. Inl a nd llai h I' T&gt;'"
\m•·r•• ·an ~~-~l&gt; JIIIJ&gt;'I1' Publ i!&lt;ohen AN!&lt;o•wmtiun

I.FTTFRS OF 01'1'\IO '\ !HI'

~ d r nnwd

J.R. launches comellack effort

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, June 29, 1982

.h~•H ' IIIltun

Thn • huuld ht·lt'!&lt;o!&lt;o tha n :100

and tho·

~o~nnb lun~o: .

All

l..tkr' liTI' ' uhj•·•· t In •·t h ti n ~ u nd mu st l~t• ''~nnl 1.11lh mum·. a dd rt·!&lt;o~ unci tt•lt•phurw
1111111IWr '\o Ull!&lt;o i ~Twd ldh · r~ \I ill bo:· pu hll !&lt;oht·d l .t•ltt•r-. ~ huuld IM' 111 J.:nud Wt•Lt', adtlrel&lt;ll&gt;inl;!
ll&gt;'ll' '' · nul po.•r,unah lll''

Housing no exception
During the past few years the housin g industry has explored eve ry
possible argument for having its product co ns idered an exception to
the nJ!c, a sp&lt;'Cial case to be treated apar t from other s.
The house. It is said , has a Sp&lt;'Cial m eanin g in America n li ves. It Ls
she lt er. yes, but It is a lso sa id to be the anc hor of the communi ty.
Those who own hom es vo te more oft e n. housing leade rs argue.
Hom owner s. they say, also have other positi ve att ribut es: they
maintain prop&lt;'rll"" better th an do renters a nd thei r real es tat e
taxes suppo11 sc hools .
The ex treme of this argument is tha t without homeowners this
count ry couldn 't maintain Its democratic wa y of life. The housing
industry does n't see that as exaggera tion e ither ; it argues that way
every da y.
By exte ns ion. therefore. high inte res t ra tes are un·Am erica n. be·
ca uS!' high interest rates make it impossible for many millions of
hou&lt;;('holds to ll vp in a houS!' of their ow n a nd p&lt;'rpetua te the Ameri·
ca n dream .
The drea m . of course. has become a rig ht in the minds of many
people In the indust ry. We ll. not quit e a rig ht. but almos t one. Since
the l~lls. they observe. housing has been deemed a socia lly desira ·
blc goa l worthy of special ass lstanccfrom government. Seldom has
t hat thesis dra wn c riticis m . To the ca nt rary, it has been under sco red
by s ubs idies.
So bas ic Is hou sing to the American way of life a nd to the econom y,
argues one advoca te of fede ral a id , th a t you might even say the
indu stry's proble m s are cause rather than con'i('Q ue nce of the
rf'Cf'Ssion.
Build more houses, he cont e nds. a nd you 'll relieve the unemploy·
men! proble m ; you' ll pu t carpent ers a nd plumbers to work a t the
site. a nd lumber mill worke rs and fumiture mak ers to work a thou·
sand miles away.

No m a tt er. they say, that It wou ld tak e:; subs idies to get the ball
rolling; look instead at what you'd be doing for Ame rica . Can you
have a strong Am e rica without housing ? Ca n you have a strong
eco nomy without housing? Can a frustrated , poorly housed worker
be a productive one?
Las t week Congress sent a $3 billion int e r est ra te subsidy plan to
the White House, where it was vetoed and r e tumed to the Hou se . The
HouS&lt;' the n reversed it s earlie r decis ion a nd voted to susta in the
veto.
The admin ist ra tion cont ends that the ~ I medi c ine for housing
would be a lowering of interest ra tes through m or'£' b a~ i r f'('() nomic
reforms. A subsidy , it says, wou ld only worsen the high interest rate
problem .

Berry's World

WASHINGTON - At first glance,
th e Equal Rights Amendment
see m ed to be one of those
propositions, like sound nutrition
a nd good public schools , that no one
ra ti ona lly could oppose. In 1972·73,
with remarkably little debate or
publit' a ttenti on, 30 s tates swiftly
gave the E'RA a smiling glance and
voted the ir a pprova l.
The n the second glances came
along. In 1974 , only three more
states I Maine, Montana and Ohio )
ca m e a long. In 1975, only North
Dakota . There we re none in 1976 . In
1977, by a tw&lt;HO!e margin 111 the
state Senat e, Indiana ra tified . That
made 15. And at that point, more

we talking about? And what were
th ese new legislative powers that
would be ves ted in the Congress?
Opponent.,; advanced his argument
also - that the cmrunendable aims
of he ERA could better be reached
by judicial proceedings and by selec·
li ve legislation tha n by a sweeping
constitutional amendment. During
thh !().yea r period a ratification, the
Supreme Court tim e after tim e
nullified ge nd er· ba ed laws. On their
own vo lition , many sta tes repealed
at least some of the ir more olr
jectionable sta tutes. The federal
government stepped up its en·
forcem ent of laws prohibiting sex ual

discrimination in cmplovmcnt.

than fiv e yea rs ago, the movement
Politica l action, both pro a nd con.
played a part in the E RA 's failure.
Proponent.,; overplayed the ir hand
with tacti cs that left an impression
of blackmail or ex tortion. The
pressure that was exe rted to kee p in·

ground to a halt. This week, still
three stat es short of th e con·
stituti onal th re&lt;~f ourths . the Equal
Ri ght.,; Am endm e nt a t last runs ou t
of tim e. The E RA is dead .
The purpose of a post mortem

dustrial conventions from meeting
in non·ratifying states was a

mistake. In Virginia , screaming
proponents had to be dragg ed bodily
from the House and Senate cham·
hers. Meanwhile the opponent.,;,
skillfully led by Phyllis Schlafly .
r e li ed upon more produc ti ve
political ta cti cs.
Be hind th e co nstitutional
argument.,; and the politica l battles
was an uneasy feeling , hard to put
into words, that the ERA was well, unsee mingly, or just a little
radieal. The amendment, in this
view, carried overtones of a unisex
society . The chic, sophisticated
leaders of the pro-ERA forces we re
out of touch with reality : they nev er
really grasped the inarticulate opposition of many persons, both men
and women . to what was perceived
as a revolution in the tradition£·
roles of man th e provider and

woman the homemaker. In rural

district.,; of the South and Mideast,
this apprehension irrational
though it may have been - had a
profound effect.
What now? Many of us who stead·
fastly opposed the proposed con·
stitutional amendment, chiefly on
constitutional grounds, have no
quarrel with the broad proposition .
Laws that continue to treat women
unfairly must be subject to constant
exa mination and revision . In the
heat of the ]().year battle, it probably
w' impossible to undertake a im·
passionate, methodical study of
discriminatory statutes. Now that
the battle over ERA has ended, such
a study would be welcome. In a
spirit of conciliation and constructive endeavor, both friends and
foes of the am endme nt could agree
that much remains to be done - and
together they could get on with doing
it.

.¥

!l~··

land .:fii. BomM'II. Toronto. J.15. Mrllaf'.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EMtnTt Dtv~km
W L
Pee. GB
Phlladclptll a
41
.t l
562
Sr Lout~
42 :l1
S60
Montreal
:!l J J
. ~7
L,.J
New York
.l i :1!1
47!1
6
Plttsbui"Jlh
11 .'lli
.m
l:i
Chlc~o
~
46
.m 13

We!llt•m ntvM6on
43 :.!!!

All an t a

San Ok'j!:o
Los Anl.'f'l(&gt;&lt;;
San F'ranc i!R'O
Cincinnat i

Houston

.'!:A7

40
40
ll

.1 1

~J6.1

:~1

5."1.:1
WJ

.11
ll

42
42

4~

~ 1,&lt;1
~~'l

~:l:i

ll l,oz
121;

~~

l21'l

Mo~'11Gam~

Chlca~

6. Plll!&gt;bufl!h

~

Time has been poor aide for home buyer

'l'lte!lday'!l G&amp;mf'll
P\TTsburl{h l!lhoc!Pn 4·6t at Chicago
denklns ~lh
Nf'W York I PUlroli-4 t at Monln.•al IRolo,'{'f"S ~.11_ In)

Sf _ Loul~ tAndu]ar

builde r s ha ve gone ba nknJpl . Even
th e de m og raphi cs offer littl e
encouragement.
The latter, which Involve popula·
tlon mix, show a surge of house·
holds be in g fo rm ed in the
home buy ing ages on e ither side of
30, representing a potential for bid·
ding up prices If int ere~ t ra tes even·
tually fall .
So what do you do? A random
survey of builde rs , selle r s, buyers,
housing ana lysts and others who
feel they ca n make a contrlbutlon,
suggests that those who wa nt to buy
today should simply e xploit time.
To e xploit the times, remember,
is not to abuse a frie nd, ~ince time
hasn ' t been a frie nd of homebuye rs
for a decade or so. To the contrary,
it has been the e nemy, a nd a for·

1&gt;-~1 at

PhUa&lt;k&gt;lptlla

1Ruthvm 6-!ir. 1n1

mida ble one too. It is to be used .
- One of the more common ac·
commodatlons to the times Is to
avoid bank financing and seek It
Instead from the selle r. Some
builders are so despera te they ha ve
been known to offer bu yers nointe rest loa ns .
Genera lly, selle r s are unwilling
to give long·term first mortgages.
Often. however, they are willing to
help lessen yourcommilment to the
bank by offering you a second mort·
gage, or purchase money loan.
In that case, you will ha ve two
mortgages: one to the bank, the
other to the &gt;~Uer. The seller's loan
usually wlll be everal points lower,
according to th~ National Associa·
lion of Realtors. II represe nts a real
saving- some times several thou·

sand dollars over a 10·year period.
There is nothing to be e mba·
rassed about In asking thesellerfor
his help In financing. The Realtors
say that we ll over half the existing
homes sold during the past year
. have e mployed such financing
tactics.

Hou~tm

iJ Nlt&gt;kro li-61 at Atlanta t Walk

ti-61. 1n1

San

D\eJ:O I Montl'f\l.;('fl

&amp;41 &lt;II Loo An
In I
Cincinnati l liarrls 2-21 at San Francisco

l{l'lf'l' IRPU'i S !1-!it .

1H ammalwr 4-4 1. 1n1
Wednefwtay'!l Gamt'!l

Pittsburgh at

ChiC~!@

New York a1 Monll1'id. 1nr
Sl . Louls a t Phlladrlphla. 1 n r

Hou 'itm a t Atlanta. •nr
Sa n Dl£&gt;gO at lAX Anlo!('ll'!io. 1n1
CincinnaTI at San Franclo;ro. 1n 1

- Lowe r your sights - tempor·
arUy. One of the oddities about recent hou~ing statistics Is that some
young people have been able to find
good housing In areas thought to
have had little housing available.
One explanation tor the seeming
discrepancy is that determined
people have been restoring old
housing that was considered unin·
habitable, or converting structures
once used for commercial and In·
dustrlal purposes.

•
history
Today In
Today Is Tuesday, June 29, the 180lh day of 1982. There are 185 days left
In the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On June 29. 1949, South Africa began It s a partheid program of racial
segrega lion .
On this date:
In 1946, the British arrested more than 2,700 J ews In Palestine in an
attempt to stamp out alleged terrorism.
In 1966, for the first time In the Vietnam War, the United States bombed
North Vietnam's capital, Hanoi, and Its principle port, Halphong.
In 1967, Israel defied International protests and united the divided city of
Jerusalem tor the first time In two decades, following Its victory in the Six
Day War.
And In 1974, a landslide killed more than 250 people near Bogota,
Colombia.
Ten years ago: The Supreme Court ruled that the death penalty was
unconstitutional "cruel and unusual" punishment.
Five years ago: Secretary d State Cyrus Vance said the Carter admlnls·
tratlon was committed to seeking full diplomatic ties with China.
One year ago: China's Communist Party Chairman Hua Guofeng was
declared "no longer !It" for that post and was replaced by Hu Yaobang.
Today's birthdays: Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands Is 71 years old.
Black activist Stokely Carmichael Is 41.
Thought For Today: Knowledge comes. but wisdom tlngers. - Allred
Lord Tennyson. English poet (1$1892) .

For eve ry hom e computer sold in
An1e rica, the re is a computer widow
somewhere.
l dropped over to see the Bengals
the other night. Mrs. Bengal offered
mea drink.
"Where's Walter '" I asked Adele.
"Where he always is these nights.
he's in the library talking to his
home computer."
" He talks to a computer'"
" All the time. It's taken the place
of television, conversation and
foreplay," she said bitterly .
" I didn't know Walter was into
computers."
" That's all he 's into. As soon as he
finishes dinner, he leaves the table
and says, 'Well, I've got to go in and
program a new house hold fiscal
budget for 1983."
"At least he 's working to save you

watched football I could sit next to
him. But now that he has a home
computer he says he has to be a lone
with his software."
" You poor kid . Maybe he'll tire of
it. "
"No way. He reads computer
magazines the way he used to read
Playboy. His idea of a cente.iold
now is a 64-K Ram Micro-Computer
that will expa nd to 128 bytes and
produce a six-color high graphic
screen resolution .
" Has he told you this?"
" No, but he talks in his sleep."
" Well, at least he's not dreaming
about another woman," I said.
" I could compete with another
woman ," Adele said, "But I ca n't
compote with a computer. We have
no conununicaiton any more. the
only language he uses is BASOC,
COBOl and FORTRAN. I'm at my
wits' end."
"You're not thinking of leaving

money ."
"He says he's workign on a new
budget, but I walked in last night
and he was playing 'Star Wars.' He
told me he was just checking out his
floppy disk drive. I've never felt so
a lone in my life. At least when he

him?"
"I threatened to last week and he
said to hold off until he could
program all the variables, and come

DOONESBURY

up with modified alternative."
" Have you ever thought about get·
ling our yown home computer and
plugging into his? Pe rhaps hou could
talk that way."
"I'm not interested in interfacing
with him through a terminal. After
all, we're in the same house."
"Maybe I should talk to him, " I
suggested.
"You can try, but I doubt if it will
do any good."
"I went into the library and found
Walter hunched over his keyboard.
" Hi, Walter. Am I disturbing you'"
"No," he said, squinting at me. " I
was only justifying my margins."
"How's life?" I asked.
"Fine. I was having a problem
with my cursor for a while, but I
straightened it out by adding a
protocol."
"You hav e to be careful of cur·
sors," I said. "What neivs of
Adele?"
'~Wait

a minute," he said, "I'll

find out."
He put in a disk, pushed a code
key, and typed on the screen

ADELE. Then he hit his RETURN
button.
"Here il is," he said. She's either
in the kitchen, the bath, her bedroom
or went to a baseball game."
" A baseba II game?"
Walter looked worried. "That
doesn't sound right. But it's no
problem. All I have to do is hit the
DELETE button."
"Adele thinks she's losing you to a
floppy disk retrieval system, " I told
him .
"That's ridiculous.'' Walter said.
" All I'm trying to do is store and index data that will be able to forecast
how we can enjoy the September
years of our life."
"We've been friends for years, so
I'm goin to ask you a very personal
question, Walter. How much do you
love Adele?"
Walter, without saying a word, in·
serted a disk , and started hitting the
keyboard.
"What are you doing ?" I asked .
" I'm counting the ways. It's much
faster to do it on a computer."

by Garry Trudeau

'

r.t h. CIPYeland, '57: Molitor. MllwauiU'(',
53. ~rnazard, Chkago, ~ EvatL&lt;:, Ao!i·
ton. 49: Thornton, O..v('land 4 ~ Warhan.

Ka nsa'i Cll y. 4~ Rreu . Kan~a s City, 4!l
RBI : McRae. Kansas City, 91: Thorn·
Oj;:llvif'. Mllwauk(l(', 5..1: (OI'Jp(' r. Mllwaukl&gt;f&gt;. ~2
fliTS: Harrah . C\W('\aml. ~~: ( iarrla.
Toron to. 9'1: Mc R&lt;w. KanS&lt;Is Cit y, !lO:
C()()p('r. Mllwa ukf&gt;(&gt;, 811: LUilnskl. C hln~o .

"'

DOUBL~ :

Evan.~.

Do!. ton, 'J};

L~· nn .

California . aJ: McHaP. Kan'i&lt;l ~ City, l\1:.
ClNo'Pn~. Sl&gt;attlf&gt;, XI: WhiH•. Kan.lio3s Cit\'.

TRIP LES
llPrndon. 1)(-rrolt . H.
W WIL~on. Kan&lt;;a~ CU~· . II. You nt. Mil
"'auk.t&gt;f&gt;. 7. Upo;haw. Toronto. 6. B•"f'll .
Ka n ~a.~ City. 6.
HOM F. RUNS Ogli&lt;'ll', Mll,.•a ukt&gt;f&gt;. l'l:
lOOrnton. (l("Vpland. IB; (; Thoma~ . Mil
waukrf&gt;. IR: Hrtrk , MlniK'SOia . Ui. HOI'nickP. Baltlmorl'. l:i: RP JackJ;On . Call
fornla . l :i
STO LE N BASES· R IIPndt&gt;rf,(Ml. 0 11k
land. n : Wathan. K an~a-~ Cily. 21: (.('F
lorf'. Chicago. 2'l: J .Cruz. St-atile&gt;. lfl:
MolUor. Mllwa ukN'. 16: C.orcla. Toronto.
16.
PITC HING no [)(&gt;(olslons r Guidry. N1..,.,.
York. K-2. .!I.Xl ..lOt Vukovich. Mil ·
wa ukN&gt;. ~ -1. .15o. l 40: Zahn. California.
R-J. .rn. J. L1: BurAA. Chicago. 11--3. :m.
.1.~ 1:
Clancy. Toronto. 7-l. 700. 1~ :
Caudlll, Seattle. 7·3, .700. 2.19: Jloyt. Chi·
r4:o. 10.5. .f1i7. 2.UI: D.Man trwz. Ra l!l
mon•. 8-4. .667. 3.73.
STRIKEOUTS: F . Rannl~tPr . St&gt;aulr. 98:
Guidry. New York. 84: llarluor. Clf'\•Piand.
81. RJ ghf&gt;fH. New York. n : Eckc&gt;rslfov .
Jloo;ton. 74.
·

~DivWon

M

ret.

W L
.(1 2ft

Boston
I

1

40

a

w

.11

~

""'"'"

:w

:.;

GB
-

" '

:t

!'16.1

Raltlmorr

CIPVPiand
N~ York
Toronto

006

:\ J
:11
:l'l
35

.,.,•• "
11
11

ChJ""''

"' .
" ,.""

Searrlr
Oakland
TPxa&lt;;
Mintl{'S()1a

:ki

11

"

~121:

Landrpaux .l.o&lt;i Angf'll!"i.

:n~

QJ:I

-

.'!6.'1
.1(&gt;1
.5\4
fil-'1
.U\
1.11.')
40!1 J:\ !jl
.243 26!"1

Bos!On q_ Mtlwauk{l{' 7
Oakland R. Kansa~ Cll y 4
ChiC/llo!O R. Mlnt'le'Ota 7
Only ){at'fl{'§ schf'dull'd
'1'\adA.Y'" GIUl'leM
Sl&gt;alllf' Jllannlst&lt;'r &amp;-&lt;11 a t Toronto
•Clancy 7-Jr . rn t
CIPVPiand rOrnny .l-Ilt a r 13alllmon·
t MrG rf'ROr 8-~t . •n t
Boston JF.C k('f""')(&gt;y 7-b t a t [}(&gt;frolt rU I·
dur 2-~1. l n l
Mllwa ultl&gt;t&gt; 1Caldwpll 4-71 at Nrw York
oC.uld ry fl.-21. 1n1
California IF'orS('h 7-61 at TPxas tMI'd
lch ~ 6 1. ln l
Oakland 1McCatt y ~ I t a1 Kansas Cllv
lliood&lt;Hll , 1nJ
·
ChiCSRo 1Dot:;on .l-7r a t Mlnnl"SSOa
1 VIOIIi I-OJ , l nt
W~'1G.unew

SE.'alllr at Toronto. mr
CI{"Vl'land at B.1ltlmort&gt;. 1n 1
Boston a1 Df'lroll, 1n1
Milwaukee at Nf'W York. tnt
California Ill TPU.'I, 1n 1
Oakland at Kansa.o; City. m 1
Chicago 111 Mlnnl"iifa. 1n r

Leaders ·

Me&lt;~.

St Loul~. :m: .J .Thomp&lt;;on. Plll ~ burgh .
.tri: T.Pma. Plnsburgh. ~'t!li: Fra ni'Ona,

MontrPal.

l1
l1 :Ill
Wt!'iU'm Dlvbllon

California
Kansa~ Ci t)'

N.-\TION..U. LEAGUE
rl.ZI at balM "

flATTING

-

.-\MERICAN LEAGUE
BATTfNG 11Z at bats r: Harrah, CliNE&gt;-

RU NS: Lo.Smlth. St . Louis.~: lla wson.
Montrml. ~ : · Murphy. Atlanta. ~­
Ru.Joll('S. San Olt&gt;go. ~!+: .J Thomp!'&gt;On.
Plthbur}!h. 47
RBI : Murphy. Atlanta . !"il. Ollvl'r, Mon·
trral. ~l: Gu&lt;'rrffo, Los Angl'l(";. ~:
B.Diaz,
Phllack'lphla, 4!+: Matlhf&gt;w ~.
Philade-lphia. 48: J .Thompson. Pitts burgh.
4R: T.Kt&gt;nnt'dy, San OlPRI), 48.
HITS: Sax. Loo Ang('IPS. !f2: .! .Ray.
PITt sbur}!h. ~: Knll{ht . Houston. tiS:
BucknPr. ChiC&lt;l$1:0. 87: Dawson, Montwal.

"'Dawson.

OOUBL~ : T.Kennedy.

San [)]ego. 2..1:
Mont rt&gt;al , 19: Lo. Smith.
19:
Ga rnt"'". lloustoo. 19:

SI .Loul'\.
O.Smlth. SLLouls. 18; Cedeno. Clndnnatl.
1K
TRIPI...P-i: Ga rnPr. H(JJ! too. G: Sax.
Los An~e!' . 5: Salazar, San 01~. 5:
T(&gt;TllpleWn. San Dlc&gt;go. !'!: G TI('d With 4.
HOME RUNS: Mu!llhy . Atlanta. 21:
Kingman , Nf.'w York. 17: J. lOOmpson.
Plttsbur}!h. 15: Cart f'l'. Montrl'al. 14:
B.Diaz. Phlladf'lphla. 1:1: Bakr r . LM An·
tiePirs. 13: GlK'rrero, ~ Angpl~ . U:
Clark. San Franc\'ICO, 13.
~LEN BASES: Lo.Smlth. SI .Louio;.
17: Mormo. PUtsbuf}!h, .15: Raln!'f.. MontrPal. :11; ()(&gt;rnler. Phlladf'lphla, :11: Sax.
Los Angell'S.:!!.
PITCHlNG 110 Dreis ion.~ 1. H.ol(t'N.
Montrt&gt;al, ~3 . .?.10, 1.74: F'or!iCh, SI.L.ouL'i.
~.1. .rn. 4.03: D . Robln~m. Pl!tsburti{h, 7·
l .700. 4.13: R.f'uss, Los AnRf,'les. ~~- .643.
.1 H: Sot o, Clnclnnarl, H • .636. 2.27: Sui ·
ton. Hou.~ton , 7-4 . .636, 3.32: Valenz~a.
Los A nJn"ll"'', 10-6. .GZ, 2.trl: Pulro, Nf.'W
York. b-4 . .tm. 3.8'7.
STRIKEOUTS.: Soto. C1ndnnatl. 13.\:
ca rlton. PhUadelphla. 12!1: Rya n. Hou.~­
ton. 104; ROR'('rs, Momn&gt;al, 88: Lollar.
San OQQ. 82.

SAN FRANCISCO lAP) - Ear ly
scoring outbursts a nd co mple te
games have been rarities for the
San Francisco Giants durlng a 1982
season that at best has been a
struggle.
More often than not. the oppos i·
lion has scored firs t. and Gian ts'
start ers usually have given wa y to
a deep and reliable bullpen. ex·
plalning why the club posted only
seven complete games among it s
first 74.
That trend was altered dra m a ti·
cally Monday night whe n the
Giants er11pted for six r11ns in the
first inning and rlght ·ha nded Renie
Martin coasted to four·hit. 7·1 vic·

tory over the Cinci nn a ti Reds.
"It' s nice to be on the other end of
a big first inning," said manager
Fra nk Robin son after he watched
11 batters parade to the pla te off
start er Charlie Leibrandt . :1·2, a nd

" I just couldn 't get going," Lei·
brandt said . " I sta rted off in a bad
way a nd things went steadily down·
hill from there. It just wasn' t m)·
night ."
Martin, .H . had every! hin g going
his way, including a co mfortable

reliever Greg Harris.
Joe Morga n, back in the leadoff
spot, opened. the bottom of the first
with a home run a nd ca pped the
six· nJn rally with a sacr lfiCf' fl y.
In between, singles by Johnnie
Le Master and Chili Davl~ a nd J ack
Clark's walk set up a bases· loaded.
two- nJn double by Jim Wohlford . A
bases·full walk by Tom O'Ma lley
scored the foUJ1h r11n of the inning.
c has ing Leibrandt.

cushion. He struck out seven and

registered his fir st complete game
since June 4, 19fll. It was only the
third rout ·go ing performance of his
ma jor league ca reer.
" I didn't want to think of th at big
lead." sa id Martin, who lost a s hu·
tout when Da ve Van Go rd er
wa lked a nd Eddi e Mi lne r tripled in
the thi rd. "A big lead can mess you
up. I just put it out of m y mind.

" F in i ~ hin g

the gilmC' was impor-

t ani. but thf• big thing is go in g s ix or

good in nin gs and winning. It
also wa s nice• to giv(' thP bullpen a
ni ght off."
Thf' gam I' marked the mnajor
league drbut of Reds' rig ht ·ha nder
flrn Ha,·rs . who worked three in·
nings a nd was touched for Darrell
F:vans' lOth homer. an upper·dec k
blas t to r igh t in the sixt h.
The Giant.s. who host the Reds
agai n toni ght, a nnounced th at out ·
fielder J eff Leonard. on the dis·
a bled list sincl' Ma y 23 with a wris t
injury. wi ll report to Phoenix for a
rehabilitat ion per iod.

Sl'\"C' n

Phils blank Cards, move into first place
By Associated Press
For Philadelphia first baseman
Pete Rose, long hittin g strea ks
were nothing new. But bei ng in first
place was some! hing his Phillie
teammates had not experie nced in
1982.
Rose knew which was m ore
important.
''I'll get a not her one," Rose said.
"The important thing is we got fir st
place."
After once trailing the leade r s by
as many as nine games, the Phillies
moved to the head of the National
League East for the fir st time Ma n·
day as Steve Carlton bla nked the
St.Loul~ Cardinals on s ix hit s, 1·0.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Gordon
which ls located between Lake Erie
Johncock predicts that drivers wUJ
and downtown.
be bold Sunday on the airport run·
Johncock, who won the Indiana·
way that Is being groomed for the
polls 500 In May and the Rex Mays
. first ruMing of the Budweiser · 150 two weeks ago In Mllwaukee,
Cleveland 500.
said he was Impressed by the
"One think I especliilly Hke Is that
setting.
It's really wide," Johncock told re"This Is a lot dlfterent than we're
• porters Monday after driving a few
normally coming to," he said.
test laps. "There's going to be a lot
"You've got the skyscrapers, the
: of passing out there, and not just on
scenery. It's sure not something
. the straightaways.
we're used to.''
:
"Another thing I like Is that you
But Johncock and other top
: can slide oft this course and not hit
names In racing who will arrive In
: the wall or a ditch or something. I' Cleveland for the race probably
think you're going to see a few more
won't spend much time looking
:· spins. The guys are going to be a
around. The 2.48-mUe course will
keep them busy.
· little braver." .
Rows of bleacher seat~ have been
Johncock said he's Confident of
•. buD! for up to 45,000fans Su~~Uy at
his chances, but Is expecting plenty
' Burla! Lakefront Airport's new
ot competition !rom Rick Mears
· Iodlanapolls·car race course,
and Marlo Andrettl.

The Phils, own er s of a n elght ·ga me
winning st rea k. took a lead of .005
over St.Louis a nd a half game OV!'r
idle Montreal.
The night belonged to the Phillies
a nd Carlton. who became I he NL's
fir st JO.ga mc winner. a lthough he
would be joined later in I he evening
by Los Angeles' Ferna ndo Va lcnz u·
ela. Carlt on.l0.7, picked upthe ·IRth

runs with a two-run homC'r and a

run ~

single and Pedro Guercrro added a

Br:t\"t'S in a ra in-drlayC'd ga me.
·n. 7·R. picked up his !96th ca·
;, ' Ur)' despite a llowing hom
,liff Pocoroba a nd Rufino
flert Roberg'' pitched a

two- run homer to lead Va!Pnzu('Ja

shutout of his care.?r .

The Phill i0.; picked up the ga me' s
only r11n in the fifth off loser Steve
Mura. 5·7, when Bob Dernic r
s ingled . s tole second, a nd sco red on
Gary Ma tthew s' single.
Dodgers 6, Padres ·I
Steve Yeager knocked in thrH'

to his lO&lt;h v ic tory of the season.
Va lenzuel a, 10·6. had re lid help
from Steve Howe, who took over in
th e e ighth inning a nd earned his
eighth save.
Dodger fi rst basem an Steve Gar
vcy, who has played in 1.020co n."f'C·
ut ive games . had to leave the
IX'Ca use of a pulled right hamstrin g
and

hi ~

statu s was tf'rmed "on a

day·IO·da y basLs" by the Dodgers.
Astros 6, Braves 2
Nolan Ryan fired a fou r·hitt cr for
eight Innings and struc k out 10 bat ·
IPr s, while .Jost: Cru z drovf' in two

as lh&lt;' Ast ros defPated the

· tl inning in relief for

ll ou,ton

l uhs 6, Pirates 4
Chi cago's Lron Durham . who
has "f'\'Pn hit " in his lao;.; I Pigh t timfKi
up. blas tpd two home r11ns a nd a
11iplC' a nd drovp in four n..t ns to lead
the Cubs to a come.from ·behind
\' i C I O r~-'.

Dick T idrow.

:~1.

who hurled

thr('(' scorrlt-ss innings in relief. got
ltw v ictory for the Cubs .

- - - - - - - - - S p o r t s briefs ... - - - - - - - - low ing a co nfrontatio n with Earv in
th e first da y of the second round of
endin g Sunday , June 27, a nd Cal
" Ma gic " J ohnson . the l.a kers' s ta r
Ripken Jr .. received the honors in
the fin a h .
gua rd.
PRO BASKETBALL
the American League.
GOLF'
CHI CAGO tAP) - Pa ul Wes·
Bowa hit .625 during the week,
IOWA
CITY
. Iowa IAPi !head . who was fired by Los An·
including four stra ight three- hit
Form er U.S. Open c ha mpion Lou
gelcs because of his res trict ive
games during which he ra ised his
C ra ham fired a n S. under·pa r 64 to
offense. s igned a four·year ca nt rac t
average 40 point s to .2o2. Bowa had
wi n th e 16th Amana VIP pro-am
as head coac h of the Chicago Bulls.
two doubles, four RBI. one stolen
golf tournament .
The te rm s of the co ntrac t were not
base and scored three r11ns.
Cra ham. who pic ked up a $3,000
revealed but Thorn sa id the Laker s
Ripke n had 12 hit s in 27 at ·bat s.
c
hec
k from the sponsoring Amana
will not be pa yin g any of Wes·
including four doubles and two hoReh·
igera
tion Inc .. missed the VIP
!head' s salary .
mers . with a n on·base perce ntage
rf'&lt;'ord
by
one s Irake a nd led an as·
Wes
t
head
had
two
yea
rs
re
main·
of .483.
; au it on par b)' the 41 professiona l
in g on his $250.000 annual Lake r
SOCCER
go lfers who toured the University
contract when he was di smissed af·
MADRID tAP) - France beat
of ;r,wa's Finkbine Course.
ter 11 ga mes of the past season fol ·
Au stria 1·0 and Poland blanked Bel·
glum J.O as Zbigniew Bonlek had , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - his third three-goal game of the
Wor ld Cup soccer tou rnament on

BASEBALL
DAYTONA BEACH , Fla. (AP I
- J .R. Richard, felled by a near ·
f~tal stroke two years ago, pitched
four innings in the first start of hLs
comeback attempt with the Da y·
tona Beach Ast ros.
The former Houston A~tros
pitcher had spent the last month in
a special extended spring training
program in Sarasota. A sellout
crowd of 4,500 at City Island Park
, gave him a standing ovation before
the game a nd after he completed
his appearance.
NEW YORK (AP) - Short stop
Larry Bowa of the Chicago Cubs
was selected player of the week in
the National League for the week

TAKE THIS TEST
AND FIND OUT
IF YOU.RE RICH.
-

., ___ _

y., No

I. Do you own yonr own home?
2. Has your home increased in value?
3. Have you !IDd off any part of your
original mortgage?

DO
DO

DO

If you've answered "Yes" to all of the above questions.
amtinue with this test. You could be on your way
to lro&gt;ming rich.

Budweiser Cleveland
500 race this weekend

.
,,

Richard, 32, Sp&lt;'nl the past month in a StX'Cia l extended spring· training
program a t Sar asota, Fla. He joined the defmding Florida Stat e League
cha mpions over the weekend , but had dec lined to say much about his fir st
start s ince suffe ring the s troke on J uly :10. 1980 in Housto n.
Earlie r. he had expressed disa ppointment at having to begin his com e
back trail in the Florida Stat e Lmguc, where mos t pla .vl·rs are in their first
year of professional baseba ll.
"Every thing will be OK," he sa id Sa turclav . "Alii can thi nk about now Is
Monday night. "

ton. QpypJand. 60: Luzlnsk1. Chicago, ~­

AMERJ&lt;:AN LEAGUE

.

•

Kansas Clly, .112: HrbE'k. Mlnllf'!iOta.
Xl2: Cooper. Milwaukl&gt;P. J.l:l
RUNS: R.Hemk&gt;r.r.on, Oak land. 6-1. H:tr

1~.

Houston 6. Atlan ta ~
P hlladrlphla I. St. Louls ll
l...os Angell'S 6. San Dl~ 4
San F'ranc iMU 7. Cincinnati 1
Only Rame&lt;i sctwdult&gt;d

The compuler widow________~A;..:_:rt;_!;B;:_:;:u:;:;;.:ch:.:,::w~a!:;!ld

"Hi, there! You look like the kind of person with
whom I could share my liberal guilt!"

~

Scoreboard...

Majors

c

1QI82 by NEA. Inc

~

HARD WORK - J .R. Richard wipes sweat from his face after pitching his first game since being struck down by a stroke during the 19110
season. The former Houston star pitched 4 innings and left the game with
his team down 3-1. J.R. played his first game for the Daytona Beach
Astros, class A affiliate of the Houston Atros. ( AP Laserphoto)

Mon~· · GIUlle&lt;~

e

:.\'--~: ,~t

,,

~

NEW YORK IAPl- As millions
of people have learned over the
past decade. to walt and hope for
the "right " time to buy a house Is to
rely on a shifty pa rtne r .
Over tha t span, tim e has simpl y
been a poor aide to the home buyer.
F'trst came a time of Inflation, fol ·
lowed by a time of rising interest
rates, and the n a knockout combi·
nation of the two.
As Hamle t la m e nted, " The lime
Is out of joint. " It probably will re
main 50 for years to co me. That
assessm ent is based not on opinion
but on a cold·eyed look at circum·
s t a n ces fa c in g wou ld · b e
homeowne r s.
Prices have re tre ated only
slightly , mortgage rate~ remain
high , financing Institutions are
beset by their own troubles. many

achievem ent .··

Reds bombed in first inning, lose again

examination is to determine the
ca ww of dea th . In this insta nce. the
ca uses were multiple. Some rested
in reasoned arg wnc nls. some in
politica l action, so me in a n ill·
defined se nse of c ustom a tradition .
The first section of the proposa l
would hav e written this se ntence in
to th e Constitution : "Equality of
rights unde r the la w shall not be
denied or abridged by th e United
States or by a ny stat e on account of
sex. " the second section said : " The
Congress shall ha ve power to en·
force, by appropriate legislation. the
provisions of this a rti cle."
Critics arg ued persuasively - and
as it turn ed out. convincingly - that
the language lacked precision . Other
cons titutional ri ghts. such as the
ri ght to vote or the ri ght to a jury
'trial. as specific. This langua ge
c rea ted a field of unbounded dimen·
sions: "equality of right.,; under the
law ." The more the phrase was
analayzed in hypothetical applica tions, the more lhe uncertaint y
inc reased. What equal ri ghts were

the rlght ·ha nder picked up the ball a nd threw De Aza out.
Richard, who Is hopin g to regai n the form wt helped hi m fas hion a
107·71 career mark with Houston with a :!. 1oear ned run average and 1.493
strikeout s. comple ted the outing by gettin g Steve Turko to hit a n Inning·
endin g double play.
The hurler leaped a nd thrust his right arm int o the ai r in a dlsplay of
e motion.
" This will be a big ni ght for us and for .J .R," Day tona Beach Astros
Gene ral Manager Don Miers had said ea rlier in the&gt; day .
" He's definite ly go ing to he lp a tt c nd a nc'&lt;'. We've al ready sold a lot of
tic ke ts. a nd we'll get a lot of nat ional atten tion out of it," said Miers.
·"And for J .R., well, it' s som e thing he' s been wa it ing a long I ime fo r. He's
not only com e back phys ical ly, bu t just being able to pitch aga in is quit e an

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP ) - J .R. Richard, makin g hl~ first sta rt
since suffering a near fatal stroke two year s ago, pitc hed four innings
Monday night In a Cla~s A Florida State League game.
The towering rlght·hander, who once fright e ned major league batte rs
with hls &amp;-foot ·8 frame and blazing fast bali . threw 64 pitches- 37 strikes
and 'l:l balls - In launc hing the com ebac k that many thou ght he would
never be able to make.
The St. Petersburg Cardinal~. a St. Louis far mclub, touched Richard for
three runs on three hits In the first Inning, but the former Houston Astros
pitcher sett led down to comple te the rest of his four· inning s tint without
allowing another r11n.
Richard, who spent the past month in a special extended spring t ra ining
program in Sarasota, yie lded one more hit , str11ck ou t one a nd wa lked two
before a crowd of 4,500 a t City Isla nd Park .
He left the game trallinr '·1.
Team officials and doctors following Richard' s com ebac k effort had
said uncertaint y over how the pitcher would respond to batted ba lls was
their chief concern In his rehabilitative effort.
Duling the four· inning outing Monday night , Richard was invo lved in
only three fielding plays.
He was s low covering first base on two ~ low rollers to the right s ide oft he
Infield. In the third, St.Pete rsburg' s Manue l De Aza se nt a broken ba t line
drive bac k to the mound . The weak line r gla nced off Richard' s glove. a nd

I

4. What is the current value of your home'
5. Multiply this amount by .8 and write it here.
6. How much do you st:iU owe on your home?
7. Subtract answer 6from answer 5.

/

I

.l

l
I

~

,/

I.

.

-·-~t"'•

_·a, "

~

~··

.~

.

The amount you've written in #7 is the amount
you could borrow anytime you nred it from City Loon
and Savings. With that kind of money at your disJX)Sai,
you're a lot richer than you may have thought
Contact City Loon and Savings t&lt;XIay. Because
nobOOy knows you like we do.

·''
•
' ~

'
.)

t

... (
&gt;

MAKING A SPLASH- Atlanta Braves second baseman Glenn Hubbani kicks up a splash In center field Monday catcblng a Oy by Art Howe
of tbe.Jioustoa Aslr01 as their game was resumed after a long rain delay .
'The Astros woo tbe game, however, 6-2, at Atlanta Fulton County
Stadium. ( AP Laserpboto)

&amp;J 1:\ aTY LQ\N &amp;. SAVINGS

\::1 r:J aCootJd Data Canpany
125 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH.
Ph. 992·2171

.
•

'I

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, June 29, -1982

Remy's double tops Brewers
By AMoclated I'N8s
• One of baseball" s adagE" says a
w;lik is as good as a hit, but 8ostun's .Jrrry Rrmy provrd
~ 11 hPrwise.

1\'lth a .1-2 cou nt, the SCOr&lt;' tied
.u1d tht• bases loadro with two ou t in
tiH' S('\'Cnth inning Monda y ni ght .
l(t•nl\ foul('() off two pitches.
" I \\ · a~n't going to tak£' a third
..,, rik t·." hf' sa id. "I po~:;si bly should
ho~, ·r w" lkt &gt;d

when I foul('()offthoS&lt;'

pitdH&gt;:-. . hut I wa sn't going to tak(•

.tn.' chanc·t•s I was goi ng

to

.o;;wing

.tt .tn ., ·thing npar thf' o;;t rikP zone. In
th. tt -. ituatum . ~·ou juo;;t want so mt"'tlu ng gcxxl to hapJX'n. to hit the ball

11.11 cl .uld hopf' it falls in."
l!•·rm hit thr next pitch from Mil ',\ , tUkt't ' , t&lt;'P Pelf• \'uckovich hard .
It to-11 in if'ft crntt•r field fora thrPPrun dnublt • and thP f~Pd Sox wf'nl on
!11 , n,tp .1 t h!'(-'f'·gamc' lo"ing st rrak
ll\ dl'ft •: IIHlg lht• f1t'f'W('fS ~i-7.

In

tht·

onh· othPr

:\mrrican

J.•·. t ~ w · ~. t!lH's. ( )akland

1\ ,tn "· ' " ( ·II\
\1 111111 "'0!. 1

downed
)'{ -l ,wd Chicago Pdgf'd

r:-;-

game series with Milwaukee and
rega in a three-ga me lead over t he
Brcw~rs In the AL East.
Rcmy sa id the victory was Important as the Red Sox set out on an
11 - gam~ road trip. Ca tcher Rich
( ;pdman agrc&lt;'d.
"This was one of lhos&lt;&gt; knock down, drag-out affair s." sa id Gedman . who drovr in onP run and

...CtH"l&gt;d two . ''ThrBrewersareplaying w(•\1. but WC' slay'C'd with them .
WP fin a ll v got so m e balls to drop in
for u ... II '-; a good way· to start an
Important road 1rip."
Hl•my· also dro\·r in a run with a
doublt· in lhC' rour1h innng and &lt;;(&gt;!
up the t\'ing tall)' wllh a s ingle in I he
-;Lx ttl aftrr Ro.v 1-lowP ll 's two-run
hnmpr had g iw•n 1hP Br('Wf'rs a 4&lt;~

lrad rn the top of the slx lh. \_,orm a n
Thomas a lso homer('() for the
11rr\\'l'rs. his 1 ~ 1 h.
fl's K, l(oyab ~
f(ickl')' Henderson dro\'e in four
run-. and Dway·np Murphy· clu bbed
i.l
thn'f'- nm homrr a-. Oakland
hand~d

lknl\ ·., IM~P~ ch•ar ing double
.tntl .t two run lti plt&gt; h_,. Jim RirP
t~u , IJ,ttll· t "' \,ttf'r ht•lpt&gt;d tht' Rf'd
&lt;..... 1\ ... ,ll\. 1)-! t' th1 · finaiP of a four

Kansas City its third ron

'if'('uti\'f' Sf' lback. Hf' ndC'rson. who
ha. . . sto!Pn 71 ba s~. tagged loser
I.. liT~ · Gu ra for a basC'S-loadf'd sin·

Calendar

gle that gave the A's a 2-0 iead In the
second Inning and doubled home
two more runs in the slxthoffGrant
Ja ckson.
"Nothlng Rickey does surprises
me," said winn ing pitcher Rick
Langford, who allowed 10 hil s In 72:! Innings and was c hased In Kansa'
City 's three- run e ighth. "He's one
of thP really great players. He can
beat you In so many different
wa.vs
While Sox 8. TwIns 7
Hudy Law hit a three--run double
and Steve Kemp rapped a two-run
homer as lh&lt;' Chi cago Whlte Sox
pound&lt;'&lt;l AI Williams and Paul Bo-

TUESDAY
RUTLAND - Skating Tuesday
7:30p.m, to 10:30 p.m . at Rutland :
Civic Center. Admission $1 for
children and $2 for adulls. Bring

your own skates.
ROCK

n •frr to ttw bra&lt;:kl'l a..; ··ThrGrntlPman ·:-. Singltos .·· They- mu ~ t hJ \"C' \'i·
J.t_,. :\mritra j in mind.
HankPd ;r,th in thf' H"urld on thr
.\ . . :-.ociat ion of Tl'nn j..., I )rufC"i siona Is
n Hnputcr. ,\mritraj chu.-;.&lt;' not to
mr't'l tht• full \'u]\·o Cram! PrLx
t"lllllll1ittmf' nt thb yt&gt;ar and so
(", 11111' to \\'im b\('(\on through thf'
qu.tlif\·ing toumamrnt at RDf'tl;HTlptorl, J rut -thr oat roull' that
fin• ·timf' champion Hjorn Borg of
Swl'(lrn d('('linf'd to dri\·r.
Tlwn Amritraj SJt patif'ntl~ ·
through four day·" u f rain to gain J
fl\ "P· '-.('1 dPcision agai nst Amf'rican
.JI'ff Borowiak in wha t onf' com·
nH•nt.llor charactf'rizf'd ao..; t ht•
·· muo..;t sophis ticJt('(l" . m atch of thP

cb _,.
Fi n al!~·

comforta bl t' on thl' j..,'Tass
"'u rfact•, Amritra j &lt;.; fepo..; to tht' ba."if'"lrnr and the ball r•x plodes off th&lt;'
t•nd of hio,; Ouid srrving motion. Politf' ;1ppbuSf' follow s- thr crowds
hPrr n•membcr hi m fnr a llt hf' right
n'&lt;·t"ons: his conduct, his past hero-

ic,, - and a ll is sudd en!) right with
t ht• gpnt IPmen of I he All England
('lutJ and
g('nt' ral.

thf' tf'nni s world

in

'' 1·~\"(' l ~· thing

rP\"Ol H'&lt;l around
,\mritraj said Mon ·
r!J .\ ' .:.~ftpr nmning down Pa:-.cal
J&gt;ort f'S 0-:\. f~'l. 0-:1. mark ing thf' first
timr hf''s txostC'd thP F rf'nrhman in
four outings. '"Tht'l"f' was too much
p rf'S"iUI'£' on hi ~ ov•n st•rv ice b0C I USf' if hf' didn 't g PI thr first on£' in,
ht' knC'w I wa~ likPiy to win ...
111~

Sf'n·icc."'

Toda\·, Amritraj took on 14thS('('ded Roscoe Tanner. In other
matches. third -SE'eded Vitas Gerulait is opposed unscedru Tomas
Smid of Czechoslo\'ak ia, six th·
o..;('('cif'd Ct&gt;nC' May1r r play·Pd Larry
Stdan ki a nd No.7 Mats Wilander of
Sw('(lf&gt;n mC't Stai slov Birncr of
C l l'f' hn·-dov a k ia .
On the women's side. top-seeded

Martin a

~avra tilova

squan:'&lt;i off
against 11{-_,·c·ar-old Zina Garrison:

No.2 Chris Ev~rt Uoyd, the defend ing champion. met 15th -seeded Vi rgi nia Ru1.ici of Romania and
l ~l h · s t'f'dcd

B il lif' .f ra n

King

b"ttlru No .li Wend) TumbuU of
Au stralia.

Top-""&lt;'&lt;1('(1 .John Mrf.nroc. the
de fe nd ing c hampion. a nd No.2
.Jimm ~· Connors. SC'C'df'd to m eet in

the fina ls of th~ men' s si ngl&lt;"i, both
ad,·ancPd tlw fourth rou nd of the
rain -plagued e\·cnt Monday with
, ·irtorif's .
Au stralian P&lt;.~ul M cNa mee also
rP"rh('() th~ four1h round with a 7-6,
l !i, :1-6, h--1, !i-1 victo ry over South
African Kevin Curran.
McE nroe comfo rt ably sent compatriot Ll o_vd Bourne packing 6-2,
t)-2. !l-0, but Connors ran into I ro ubiP
against another qualifiPr. Drew Gitlin of E nc ino. Ca lif .. who took a set
from the lrft -handPr before grudging!~ ·

' UITC'ndroring t&gt;-2. 6-7. 7-;-.,

although lw wa&gt; knoc k('() out by
c;ar~ · Ward's thrff'-run homer in
the !Jolt om oft he eig hth . The Twins
add('() a four·th run Ron Washlngton' s groundH a nd Kent Hrbek hi t
his loth home in the bollom of the
ninth before Sa lome Barajas r&lt;:'corded his t:lth sa,·e. The v ic tory
lift('() the White Sox into a seco ndplace I ie wi th Kan s"' Cit y in thr AL
Wes t. thr('(' games behind idle
Cal iforni a .

"'
MAKES THE TAG - Milwaukee catcher Ted Simmons puts lhe tag on Boston Red Sox Jim Rice who
tried to score on a hit from Wade Boggs during first in-

to havr somronC' who hangs in

ning action Monday night at Fenway Park In Bosron.
Boggs hit to Ben Ogilvie in !ell field who made the
throw to home for the out. (AP Laserphoro)

Lakers will choose Worthy

I herr."

A"kC'd if hr was wonit-&gt;d at any

juncture of the three-hour match ,
the former Wimbledon cha mpion
added : " I don't get worried. That's
probabl)' the best thing about m y
ga me. I don't pia)' with fear ."
Advanc ing int o th~ third rou nd
Monda y a longs ide Amritraj, a s ta lwart of the Indi a n Dav is Cup sq uad,
wt'rr sixt h-SC'i"'df'd Genro Mayer.
who outlasted i\ust ralian Brad Drewett 6-7, ti-:l. 6-2. 6-1 In a match
begu n Sa turda\' : No. I! Br ia n

NE W YORK iAPI-TheLosA ngt&gt;les Lakers w ill c hoose J am!"
Worthy of Non h Carolina with the
first pick in the Na tional Basketball
Assoc iat ion draft, NBA c hief scout
Marty Blake predicts.
" I think it' s a m a iler of personal
preference," Blake said on the evP
of toda y's draft, whic h sta rted at
noon EDT a t Madison Square
Carden's Felt Forum . "! really
don't know, for example, lfthe roles
wer e reversed a nd Utah had the
first pick, if they would takt'
Worth)'. but I think for the particular nc&lt;'ds of the Los Angeles Lak e rs. thai Worthy fills thl' bill."
The Lakers didn ' t an nounce, as

TPachcr. who OC&gt;rlt Aus tralian Rod
Frawl~)' i - ~&gt;.

6-:1, H. 6-:1. and No.l4
RoscO&lt;' Tanner. who throttled fellow American Fritz Huchning, 6-:1.
li-:1. 6-7. 6-•1 with a serve th at
knock('() down I hP net at one poin t.
Abo gai nin g the third round were
Amf'r ican Nic k Saviano, who camr
from two sets down and fought off
two mat c h points before am bushing No.9 Hrian Gottfried 6-7,6-7,7-5.

lh C~' did two year~ ago w hen they
made Earvin "Magic" J ohnson the

fi rst pick, whether they would selec t Worthy, DePaul's All -

Am e rica n Terry Cummings or
Dominique Wilkins of Georgia. But
it was a foregone conclusion that
Los Angeles, San Diego a nd Uta h
would m a ke those three juniors the
first to be drafted.
All three tea m s say they would be
happy with a ny of the three, but
most observers have predicted a
Worthy -Cummings- Wilkins selection order for the La kers, Clippers
and J azz.
Blake, who does Initial scoutln g
repons for a ll 23 NBA tea m s, ca lled
Worthy, Cummings a nd Wilkins
" three great superstars. 1 don ' t
think you cou ld go wrong ta king
a ny of the m ."
He sa id his prediction th a t the
Lakers would take Worthy "doesn 't
mean that Terry Cummings or Dominique Wilkins may not in the fu-

ture be cl ass ifi ed as be lter
all-around players than Worthy."
Although Blake called the senior
cia% "a good crop, with as many as
20 big guards that could go In the
fir st two rounds, " the 1982 draft
could be remembered as the "Year
of the Underclassman."

rPplird : "No, and it
was not thP tlm!' for introductions.

I USPS 145-9101
A Dlvhlion of MulllmrdiM, lnr .

1\'IMBLEDOI\, England tAP I Tht• globe-circling ladi!" of the te n-

Mcrnbt·r : The AssUt..·iatt"d Pr~ss.Jn l arlll Dally Press Association arlll tht.' Amcrit•an
Nt•wspaper Publi.~~ rs As.&lt;iot.'IHtlon, NationHI
Ad vc rti s Jn~
Representative , BrHnhHm
Nt'wspaper &amp;tit's, 733 Third Avenue . New
York , New York 10017.

nis tour havC' their own names for
th &lt;•m- "weirdos," "kooks," "rral.it's," " se x fiC'nd..,."
Th f'~' rarely :; how their faces.
Thr~' lurk in I he shadows. They arC'
alwa.v s arou nd . Writing lettrr s.
S"ndin g gifts. Making obscene tel&lt;•

phone calls in the middle of the
night .

" It happ&lt;' ns to a lmost a ll of us,"
says Chrl" Evert Lloyd. A merica 's

qu(&gt;en of the couns. "Some tim es
we try to laugh it off. We joke about
it. But a ll of us realize it could be
'\C'fiOUS.

" ! get a larmed sometimes when
1a m in a s tra nge cit y or cou nt ry a ll
by myself."
Lloyd echoes the sentiment s of
most of her cont e mporaries when
she speaks of this not entirely new
but growing m enace of secret admire rs and warped mlnds who att ach their fantasies to the graceful
divas of thP couns.
" It' s as old as time Itself." says
72-year-old Ten Tlnling, a Wimbledon fixture for more than half a
century. "It happened to Suzanne
Lenglen just after World War I and
to Helen Wills In the 19:.Jls.
"If you are to be a hero or a heroine. you must take the consequences. These special human beings
(stars) consummate the secret
dreams of humanity."
JoAnne Russell, a statu!"que, '1:1year-old New Yorker, said she was
constantly pestered by a man who
wrote her letters and enclosed selfaddressed envelopes In an attempt
to set up a rendezvous.
"I turned It over to the poU_ce,"

·.
f.

POO!MASTEft &amp;llt.l address lu 1'he Dttily
Sent mel. Il l Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

~

s h~

ex plained. " Then the police
ca me bac k a nd said, 'He has a n
unlis ted number .' I sa id, "You're
the police. a r en ' t you?' Finally,
they go t rid of him ."
She said there was one fan who
followed her all th e way to
Wimb ledon.
"He ca me up to me, and I said.
' How did you get here'' He said he
was n't telling me a nythlng. But he
was just a young man . I figured he
was just one of the two members of
my fan club when I played team
tennis for the New York Apples.
"But , I couldn ' t help thinking of
Son of Sam. He killed girls first."
Seven tee n-ye ar -old Andrea
.Jaeger of Lincolns hlre, IlL, confided to John Husar of the Chicago
Tribune las t week that when she
was 16, a man foUowed he r from
Ohio to Florida.
" He was a murderer who wrote
that he wa• get ling out of jail on my
birt hday," s he said. "He followed
me to Florida. He said he loved me
and wanted to marry me. My
mothe r and father were worried.
But I thought It was funny ."
Lloyd received a death threat in
the Ca nadian Open at Toronto last
year and had 18 security men
guarding her throughout the tournament, but that wa• not her most
harrowing experience.
Tinting called It a syndrome akin
to the case of John Hinckley, who
had a crush on actress Jodie Foster
and attempted tosssasslnate President Reagan, only to be declared
Innocent by reason of Insanity.
"If you are a great star and deserve friends," reasoned T!nllng,"
you also deserve enemies."

A baby shower honoring C.D. Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ellis (the former Laura Ohlinger),
Rose Hill Road, was held June 231n
the Enterprise United Methodist
Church with Debbie Wlll, Beverly
Wil l and Becky Cotterill as
hostesses.
Games were won by Frankie
Hunnell, Kristen King and Helen
Davis. Peggy Crane won the door
gift. Refreshments were served to

Published t'Vl'ry ~tflernoun. Munilily throu.:h
F'n day , Ill Court Stred, by lht&gt; Ohiu"VH IIt•y
Pubhshml( Company - Mull uncdiH, lnl' ..
Pmnt'fU)'. Ohw 45769 , 992-2 156. St•l·ontl dass
nust.a~c !)&lt;lui 1:11 Purnt&gt;roy. Ohio.

By Will Grimsley
AP Correspoodeol

I

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Nu subsc.-npi!Oil.'i by lnllil pt.•nnitU.&gt;d m towns
wlwn• hmm• l"arrit•r scrvit•e I!I Hvailablt•.

MAII.SU RSCRIPriONS
IRiildto"Otiln
13Wcdt'i .. ....... . .
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26 Wct•k.'i .
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52 Wt•t•ks .
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Oubldt'Ohiu

Singles round match against fellow-American Kathy
Jordan. Tracy won &amp;-I, &amp;-I. (AP Wirephoto)

..

$1~ . 21

. 129.&amp;&lt;
.. $511.21 •

,.

Ransey traded for Maverick center
DALLAS (AP) - The Dallas
Mavericks traded center Wayne
Cooper a nd a 1985 f!rsl-round draft
choice to the Portland Trail Blazers
Monday In exchange for guard Kel-

vln Ransey.
The trade fanned speculation
that the Mavericks may takeTexa•
center LaSalle Thompson In Tuesday's National Basketball Assoclatlon draft.

r---::=:-----------==----------1

CHAIR .
It's Record For Durability 11 Uneurp8ned By Other Sews
In -h'l Prtc:e Range.
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comlor1a~ optn~tion.

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Get ~Free C!nyin(.Clse!
=.:;,;:P:.:;;OM;:;:;:E~RO~Y;:;_HO,_.M___
E-,-AU-To-

&amp;06llllio Sl

Thomas E. Jordan, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William F. Jordan, Rt. 2, Polnt
Pleasant, W Va., has enUstd in the
U.S. Air Force, according to Sgt.
Michael Stormer, Air Force
recruiter in Athens.
Upon graduation from the Air For·
ce's six-week basic military tralning
course at Lockland AFB, Texas,
Jordan will receive training ln the
electrician's specialty.
He is a 1981 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School

guest•.
Attending the event were Joyce
Davis, Emma Lou Davis, Carol Ohlinger, Valerle Simpson, Joanle
Simpson, Judy King and Kristen,
Ann Sisson, Jenny Wroth and Amy,
Peggy Cra. •nd JoEUen and Ben,
Cynthia Cottbill.
Sending gilts were Paul, Janet
and Teresa Simpson, Bill. Donia
and Billy Crane and Brenda and
Cara Walters.

June 30, 1982
Considerable emphasis will be placed on your organizational and
leadership abilities this coming year. \Vhen they're put to the test, you'll
flnd you can accomplish anything.
CANCER (JUDe Z1..July ZZ) You have a greater influence over your
peers at this time thany you may be aware of. Fortunately, you'll do an
the right things to enhance your popularity.
LEO (July ZS.Aug. ZZ) This ia the day to concentrate your sefforts,
energies and talents on a secret ambition which you've been harboring .
You'll pull it off If you really try.
VIRGO (Aug. zs.8ept. 18) Be hopeful in all of your involvements and
activities today, regardless of what outward appearances may lndicate.
Pleasant surprises are in store.
LIBRA (Sept. ZS.OCt. Z3) It's important to raise your sights today and
aim for lofty targets. Even If you fall short, which Isn't likely, you'll still
score high.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. ZZ) Your words carry considerable weight
today. You can sway persons who haven' been too keen on your Ideas to
your way of thlnklng.
SAGnTARIUS (Nov. ZS.Dec. %1) Lady Lucll may single you out for
special attention today. She could put you In a )!Oiition where you can par·
ticipate In another's good fortune.
CAPRICORN (Oft. ZWIL IJ) Even w!len dealing with groups
. today, yoli have the marveloua ability to make each member feel he or
she is getUng your peraonaJ attenti1111.
AQUARIUS (JIL zt.Feb. IJ) 'lbe only thing that could defeat you
today would be If you nurtured an uncertainty about your objectives. If
they're well defined, yciu'll achieve them.
·
PIBCI!lS (Feb.INIIreb II) Although you may not invite competition,
there iU potl8iblllty that it will seek you out today. Don't be fretful. The
.odds favor you.
.
ARiJijli (Mardi IJ...Ajlro IJ) Don't hesitate about Implementing
cllaogee which you feel wW benefit your family. Act In areu where there

"lonth

ON THE GROUND- Tracy Austin, U.S., lies on
the ground after she fell, during her Wimbledon Ladles

May H. Hays, daughter of Dorothy
and John Smith, Racine, has been
specially identified for early
promotion to senior ainnan in the
U.S. Air Force.
The ainnan was awarded the new
rating ahead of other Air Force
members by a "below-the-zone"
promotion board which considered
job performance, military
knowledge, bearing and self·
improvement efforts .
She is a 1971 graduate of Southern
Local Highichool, Racine.

Astrograph

. Sub.'i,·nbt•rs nu\ . dt'sinn~ lu p..y the curril'r
I'UtY. rcnu l m , ~tU~ ill'k'~ di(ft-1 ·111 Ttw Oitily
&amp;·ntmt'l 11n a 3, 6 q~ I ~
bMsis. Crl'dil
will!&gt;~· 1-!IVl'n t·ar+lhr du'h hililth.

J3Wt·l'ks .
2fi Wt•t•ks
52 Wt·t•k." .

Corps.
He Is now at home on Skinner
Road, Pomeroy.

•,

TAKING mE PLUNGE- Richard Weinberg and Ami Cacchillo of
Derby, Conn., literally take the plunge Into marriage during their wed·
ding In Derby, Sunday. The 36-year-old groom and the 21-year-old bride

. '

wlnplayonlyuupportiverole.
.·
' GDIINI (May 11...,_ II) There is IIOIIIetblng stin1nl which ahould
prove ft111ndally ..tvantqeous for you.It'a allhlflln&amp; condition affectinl
: your work or eareer.

'

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exc hanged traditional wedding rings and vows and were then declared
husband and wife in a hot lub at their hom e. ( AP Laserphotol

Helen help u s - - - - Friend is okay, but ... not as college roommate
it would be very hurtful , to go back
By Helen and Sue Bottel
on a commitment.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Since you've been "pretty good
A girl who has been my friend
during high school is going to attend friends ," I think you can manage
one more year together, especially if
the same college that I am.
I committed myself to room with you stop seeing this girl as an emher at the donn, but now I have barrassment. Has college, perhaps,
gone to your head' - HELEN
second thoughts.
She's never had a date, lacks personality and is overweight I really COLLEGE BOUND :
Since when does one roommate
don't think I coul~ put up with her
every day, though we've been pretty baby-sit the other' If you've got
what it takes to be accepted at
good friends for several years.
I want to have fun and go to par· college, a " dull " friend won't hold
ties, and I'm afraid I'd end up baby- you back. Rather you could he lp her
become more popular.
sitting her.
You might do worse with a collegeHow do I get out of this situation'
- COLLEGE BOUND OR JUST assigned roomie. - SUE
BOUND'
P.S. She doesn ' t take the paper so DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
What can be done about a girl who
it's okay to print this .
used to be nice but is getting more
DEARCBOJB :
It isn't honorable, and in this case s nobbish every day' II started when

she went to private school last year .
Now she lies about her big
conquests. She puts on airs and acts
sexy, like she's the most beautiful
girl in the world .
Actually guys don't see much to
he r, especially since she expects to
be on ve ry e&lt;pensive dates.
She's always flirting with other
girls' boyfriend and brags she could
take one of them away from us.
Our parents are good friends. so I
ca n' t drop her She reall y lore it
when she told me the other day that
" jeal ousy is lhe tribute medioerily
pays tn ~en ius." Meaning we're e:tll
just envinus to Ms. Superior .
HELP
DEAR HELP :
If your friend can be painfull y
" honest," why not you' Tell ht•r.
without anger, exactly how yo u fet'l.
!.l't her know yo u're disappoinl ed.

and thai you liked her bdit'r bl'fore
ht'r liked herself so well.
If she can' t accept thl' cnt it' Jsm,
well, shell end your frwndshrp, and
you'll be off Ihe hook. - HELEN
HELP :
And du l L• ll your part·nt s uf your

plans. They 've probably noticed Ihe
cha nge. too. and ma y L'ven &lt;ipplaud
your hom•sty .
Truth can sunw tll llL'S bnn J.! a pt•rStlll back - 1f slw 1sn't l ou far gum•.

- SUE
!Got a problem ' Or a subject for
discussion. two-teneratwn sty le?
Direct yo ur question::; to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, 1f you
w::~nt
a combinatton motherdaughter answer - in ra r e of ttlis
newspaper . I

Fernwood Garden Club members elect officers
The Fernwood Garden Club met at
the home of Mrs . Jan Knapp,
Langsville, for its June meeting.
The meeting opened by the
president, Mrs. Thelma Giles.
Devotions were given by Mrs. Ida
Murphy using "Different Kinds of
Gardening" by Edward Pitoniak,
"Rose Beyond the Wall" by Pauline
Penrod, and "Master Gardener" by
Janet Garibalda.

The Biblical Garden is at the
Cathedral Church of St. John in New
York City. There were plaques by
each plant listing names and Bible
references. The writer was so
moved by the garden that he bought
garden seeds on the way home to
plant a Biblical garden at his home.
A special gift of $15 was sent to
Wahkeena.
Nominations for officers were

vuted , with those elected as
president, Kathryn Johnson: firs1
v ice president. Suzanne Wa rner :
second vice president, Jan Knapp:
secretary, Marge Durtell, and
treasurer, Thelma Giles.
Orders for the bulb sale were sent.
The miniature flower show will be at
Alliphetina on August 12 by the
Valley View Garden Club.
Roll call was given by naming

som ething to put in the t·om post
hea p and also namin g dried foods.
Mrs. Ida Murphy gave the program
on "Compostin g Improves Soil" by
Bill Twarogowski, Athens County
Agent, and a copy give n to all mem-

bers. '
Meeting was adjourned with The
LtJrd's Prayer and refreshm ents
se rv ed by the hostess.

Meigs County and an~a births and birthdays
Imbcxlen

Blackwell, Darst

Mr. and Mrs. Skip Imboden, Midfirst child, Christopher Dougla~.
May 20 at O'Bieness Hospital .
Athens. The Infant weighed seven
pounds, 14 and one-half ounces and
was 20 and one-half Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mrs.
Lois Clelland, Pomeroy, and Thcr
rna• Clelland, Athens. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Imboden, Syracuse. Christopher has a half-brother, Shawn,
age2.

Two area children were honored
with birthday parties recently.
Among them was Amber Danlelle Blackwell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Steve (Shari) Russell,
who celebrated haer fifth birthday
June 21.
'

Jamie Leach, Paula Carmichael,
Mr. a nd Mrs. David Johnson and
sons, J eremy and Scottie, Cindy
Park, Gary Honaker and J e remy,
Janice Young and Sabrina.
Earlier In the day, Amber's
grandfather and uncle, Jerry
Colmer and Bill Colmer, visited
her.
Another June 21 birthday-child
Daniel Darst, son of

The party at her Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, home featured a Strawberry Shortcake theme. Amber received a Strawberry Shortcake
bicycle In honor of the occasion.

Danny a nd Sherri Darst. who celebrated his fourth birthday. The
the m e for Corey's party was Dukes
of Hazzard.
Attending the party were his
brother, Christoph er, gra ndpare nt s , Bud and Wanda Vining,
grandmother, Bonnie Darst, greatgrandmothers, Goldie Graham a nd
Gertrude Stivers, Home r and Rita
Smith, Junior, Teri and Shannon
Smith, DeiUah and Dawn DArst.
Sending gifts were Jim Ka uff. Anna
Jane Kincade a nd Charles Smith.

Guests were Arica Blackwell,
Amber's sister, maternal grandmother, Barbara Colmer, maternal great-grandmother, Mamie
Stephenson, Mr. and Mrs. Bernie
Wright and Jessica, Nancy Whltteklnd and son•. Shawn and Daniel,

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The Meigs County
Humane Society is
being misrepresented
by unknown pe
son(s).
Please be notified
that only one huma
agent exists. (nn•·:or•r•
the Humane Society

Imboden

is need fl!r.lniprovern;ent.
, ; · TAURUS (Aprllit-Mey II) ln apertnenhlparrangement the burden
for tUirig the Initiative will be.your reapo~lliblllty today. Your UIOdate

'-ri,,Dit.

&lt;

\

dleport, announce the birth of their

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rrl~r or Motur Rouk
on,· wt't'k .
. . 1! .00
Onl' Month
... 14.10
One Ycllr ."
.. ... 152.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Da1l y

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Oak

Baby shower held for Ellis

The Daily Sentinel

Sports World

Rnyal

Sgt. J.C. Steele, son of Robert
Steele, Athens, and the late Ruth
Steele, wa• honorably discharged
from the U.S. Marine Corps June
21, after four years of active duty.
He received the Good Conduct
medal, oversea's deployment libbon and Navy achievement medal
along with several marksmanship
award•. He spent time In Japan
and Cuba and, more recently, was
In VIrginia, where he served a• lnstrauctor for newly commissioned
officers of the Navy and Marllle

Con nor~

Today's

POMEROY The annual
Beaver reunion will be held Sunday, July 4, at Royal Oak Park. It Is
for the descendants, relatives and
friends of the late Charles and Fannie Beaver, Racine. There will be a
potluck meal at 1 p.m.
There wlll be country music and
all are Invited to bring instruments
and join ln. Games wUI be played.

Mary E. Hays, daugher of Dorothy
and John Smith of 31110Salsor Road,
Racine, has been specially identified
for early promotion to senior ainnan
in the U.S. Air Force.
The ainnan was awarded the new
rating ahead of other Air Force
members by a "below-the-zone"
promotion board which considered
job p er formance,
military
knowledge , bearing and selfimprovement efforts.
Hays is a supply facilities
specialist at MacDill Air Force
Base, Fla ., with the 56th Supply
Squadron.
She is a 1971 graduate of Southern
Local High School, Racine.

Two other juniors who probably
will go in the fir st two rounds are
guards Rob Williams of Houston
and John Bagley of Boston Coilege.

cuu piC' of U&lt;.~ ys , it 's a greal equalizer

7225.

SYRACUSE -The Bill Hubbard
Memorial Little League Tournament wlll be held July 7 In Syracuse. Deadline for entries In July 1,
with an entry fee of $10 and two
balls or $17 with no balls. The
numbers to call are 992-2909, 9927181 or 992-7775.

Service news notes

Dallas, which picks fourth ,
traded its starting center of last
year, Wayne Cooper, a nd a tuture
draft c hoice to Portland Monday
for guard Kelvin Ransey. This apparently opened the way for the
Mavericks to take sWl another junior, Texas ce nt e r LaSall e
Thompson.
Da llas reportedly a lso was cons idering BIU Garnett, a &amp;-9 senior
from Wyoming; and Trent Tucker,
a 6-5 senior guard from Minnesota.

"But if )·ou'rc a little off. like I
was aftr r not ha ving pla yed for a

Ballroom Dance Club will sponsor a
dance Saturday, July 3, at Royal
Oak park from 9 p.m. to I a .m.
Music will be provided by The Gentlemen Three.

POMEROY

Other underclassme n expected
to be drafted by one of I he first 12
teams are 6-7 forward Clark Kellogg of Ohio State, &amp;-8 forward Cll!f
Levingston ol Wichita State and &amp;-3
All-American guard Quintin Dalley
of San Franclsro.

7 - ~.

An excursion Is being planned for
senior citizens to Moundsville, W.
Va., July 28. Activities Include a
visit to the Fostoria Glass Factory
outlet, the Palace of Gold and
Grave Creek Ground•.
Cost of the trlp will be $28.50
which covers transportation, admission and an evening meal.
Lunch Is not Included.
Reserva tlons will be taken by
Edith Reiser at Meigs Senior Center every day except Tuesday from
1-2 p.m. until July 15. Payment In
tullls required upon sign-up.
For more Information, call 992-

Victor Roush, who suffered am&lt;&gt;torcycle accident Wednesday, Is In
St. Mary's Hospital. Huntington, In
surgical Intensive care. He would
appreciate heartng from frlends.

.,

Ask('() if he 'd rve r = n G itlin .
rank('(l 185th in the wor ld . play beforf' .

Meigs

Announcements

ris for SC'ven nmo;; in the fourth inning . Denni s Lamp was the winner,

McEnroe, Connors advance
at rain-soaked Wimbledon
IIU11ll.t-:ll0:\ . England tAP!Tho· go•ntiPm"n at the All-England
' ·'"''" Te nnls and Croq uet Clu b still

SPRINGS

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

Blackwell

\Ill\ II

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Page--6-The Dally Sentinel
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Three inducement
agreements signed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API Three Indu cement agreements
h &lt;~ve been signed to provide three
companies wtth $3.3 million In loans
under the state Economic Development Financing Act, according to a
joint announcement Monday by
Cov James A Rhodes and Ohio
Dev~lopmenl Director James A.
Du('rk

"The slgnmg of the agreements
will preserve or create 2'1:1 jobs for
Ohioans, " Rhodes said. "It Is
lltrough the utilization of such progra m s as EDFA that Ohio wtil be
.tble to provide assistance to companies planning to expand or
modf'rmze.··
EDFA loans are funded by profih fr-om state liquor sales.
The agreements signed Monday
l'O\Wed loans to Presrite Corp. of
Cleveland, Union Metal Manufacturing Co. of Canton and Miami
Valley Publishing Co. of Fairborn.
t~·cs rite wtil recei ve a $1.5 million. 20-year loan at 8 percent interest. preserving or crea ling 45 jobs.
Union Metal, a $1 million, 15-ycar
loan at 8 percent, Involving 100
jobs: and Miami Valley, an
$&amp;Xl,OO.l. 15-year loan at 10 percent.
involving 82 jobs . .
Rhodes and Duerk also an nouncf?d that they wou ld rE"l-um-

mend approval at the Development
Advisory Co mmittee' s meeting

Wednesday of applications for
another $2.4 mUllan In assistance
for six projects that would save or
create more than 680 jobs.
Among the applications were a
request by the City of Brook Park
for $750,oo.J for an access road to the
Park Corp. Industrial faclilty,
where a wor ld machlne tool trade
center Is belng formed, creating 500
jobs.
Also under conslrleratlon are applications by Fehers-Jacobs Wholesale Meals, Martlns Ferry, a
$142,500, 15-year loan at 8 percent
interest, 15 jobs; Macke Brothers,
Cincinnati, a $nl,oo.J, 15-year loan
at 8 percent, 40 jobs; Amity Mold,
Dayton, a $4W,oo.J, 20-year loan at
8.5 percent, 50 jobs; A&amp;B Foundry
Inc., Franklin, a $600,oo.J, 10-year
loan at 10 percent. 49 jobs: and
Magnetic Analysts Corp., Jacl&lt;.son
Towns hip ln Mahonlng County, a
$:nJ,oo.J, 15-year loan at 8 percent,
28 jobs.
"Before assistance Is finalized,
the state Cont rolling Board must
give it s approval to the six applications," Duerk said.
He said 17 projects have been approved so far under the EDFA program, with $18.4 million ln direct
loans and $11.2 million In loan guarantees to prrserve or create more
than 3,400 jobs.

No gas problem
seen this holiday
COLUMBUS. Ohio 1AP 1- Gasoline prices have shot up to last y£&gt;ar's leve ls just in t lme for
Independence Day travelers, but
Ohio motorLsLs still are paylng less
than the national average.
The Ohio Automobile Club says
fuel prices In the state are 8.9 cents
higher than they were over the
Memorial Day weekend Bu t they
are almost identical to the pump
pnces of las t July 4.
Officials are offering different as sessments about whether more tn
crca"es are on the way.
.. I think the oil companies are gomg to try to Increase it even more,"
said Gene Stein. executive director
of the Central OhiO Gasoline Deale" Association. "I think a lot will
depend on the consumers .. ll they
refuse to drive quite as much and
cut down their co nsumption, that' s
going to affect price."
Thomas P Ryan. a deput y director of the state Energy Department. sa id the pace of the recent
ptice nse appears to be slowing.
He sa1d gasoline a nd crude oil
supplies are beginning to recover
from low levels, while demand i!;
decreasing slightly.
.. It looks like we're a t a plateau,"
Rvan sa rd .. How long it lasts I can' t
say

Roller coaster prices and fierce
dealer competition as ide, motorLsts
a t least should have no worries
about shortages and gas llnes.
Ryan. who is chief of the depart ml'nt' s conservation, Information
and pla nnin g divi!;lon, said current
tnforamtion Indicates tha t ther e
will be no gasoline supply problems
for the foreseea ble futu re. He said
U.S oil import levels have dropped
Significantly.

"The vu lnerability Ls much less
today than it was two or three years
ago," Ryan said. "That doesn't im·
ply that a major Middle Eas t disruption wou ldn 't have some Impac t
here."
The a ut o c lub said fuel prices
have risen almost 9cents per gallon
in Ohio since ju st before Memorial
Day.
"What was a glut about two
month.s ago has pretty much turned
around and we're seeing the effects
of that," said Tony Priore, director
of marketing for the Ohio AAA.
A survey of 6,oo.J service stations
nationwide by the American Automobile Association showed that the
average price for regu lar and unleaded regular gasoline, taklng
self-serve and full-service pumps
into account , was $1.31.4 per gallon.
A year ago, It was $1.36.4.
In Ohio, the average price is
$1.30.5, compared to $1.30. 7 a year
ago.
Whatever the price, Priore said
ava ilability will not be a problem
for this hollday.
"A good percentage of stations Is
golng to be open over the hollda y.
There should not be any problem In
fining an open sta tion, " he said.
The state Transportation Department said Ohio gasoline consumption has dropped 3.2 percent this
fiscal year from figures of a year
ago.
Spokesman David Finley said
3. 94 billion gallons of fuel were
taxed by the slate from July 1981
through March 1982. Gallonage was
4.!ll billion for the same period a
year earller . He a ttributed the d£&gt;crease to more fuel-efficient vehicles, rather than reduced travel.

l

•

NOTICE OF FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County Court of Common
Pleas, Probate DivisiQn.
· To the Executor or Ad ·
min1 str ator · of the es tate,
.t o such of the following as
ar e residents of the St ate of
Oh10, VIZ - the su r v iving
spouse, th e nex t of k 1n, the
benef1 c 1aries und er
th e
Will ; and to the attor ney or
attorn eys representtng any
of th e aforeme nt1 on per
sons
Lucret1a Werry (Ca se
No 2368 11. 109 P leasant
R1dge, Pomeroy, Oh to.
You are hereby not1fied
that th e In ve ntor y and Ap·
pratsement · of the est ate
of the afore m en t1 oned,
deceased, lat e of sa 1d Coun
t y, were fil ed 1n th1 s Court
Sa 1d Inventory
and Ap
pra1sement
w ill be for
hear1ng before fh1 s Court
on the 19th day of July ,
1982. at t · 30 o'c lock P..M
An y person des1r1ng to
flle excep t1 ons th ere to
must fil e them a t least ft ve
days prior to the date se t
.
for hear in g
Gtven und er my hand
and sea l of sa 1d Court, th1 s
25 th day of Juoe, 1982
Robert E Buck, Judge
By Caro l yn G Thomas.
Deputy Clerk
161 29, Ill 6 l ie

•~

..,"'
..
•

•
FAMILY DROWNS - A Tacoma, Wash., woman and her lour
children drowned Monday when their car plunged Into the swollen
Colorado River in DeBeque Cadyon near Grand Junction, Colo. The

~igher i~terest

Investors demand

111&lt;0 0 n

~

OL ... IOn&lt;II'QWn&lt;l
I Yoodh lti PO •d •nOO•on&lt;O o

)I t1&lt;!mn .... ~OIO
n-·lfHomnt.,.~o"'

)J
)4

}Oif
AtU hoiOIAQO

11&amp;u10A~tt

,.c.....,.nv,Ew•~&gt;"'*"'

:: .

•

l VL( eR•p. ,

II M ' " " . " " " " '

..

~ormfw•-•

Fwtno"""'

..

~'

~.~~

-·- ...

... fO&lt;L&lt;UO

Curb Inflation · I
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
SaveJJJ

In pasturelands, It Is important to
make sure the land receives the
proper fertilizers a nd minerals, he
said. "This keeps the better grasses
established ln the field."
F irst said rotational grazlng and
the seeding of additiona l grasses
a nd legumes are other good erosion
control practices for pasturelands.
First said those needlng assistance In planning co nservation
needs can call the SoU Conservation
Office In Pomeroy.

26239 Legioo Rd .
Langsville. Oh 45751
161 29 lie

at,

Plaintiff s,
vs
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS
AND
DEVISEES
OF
WILLIAM L . KOEN IG, el

at,
These cash rates
Include discount
!Wanted
)For Sale
) Announcement
J For Rent

1.
2.

3.
4.

5.
6.
7.
8.
9.

10.
11 .

Safety break program

992-7224.

-

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PL E AS
OF
_
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ELS I E KOEN IG COOK, e l

Hospital.
At 1:58 p.m. Sunday the Pomeroy
squad took Tony Jewell from the
Meigs High School ball11eld to
Holzer Medical Center; at 6: 48
p.m. the Syracuse squad took Chris
Richmond from London Pool to
Holzer Medical Center.

The Blg Bend CB Club wW be
operating a "sa1ety break" program this Fourth of July weekend.
Members wW be stamng rest
stops on north and southbound
State Route 33 around the clock
from 6 p.m. Friday to 6 p.tn.
'
Monday.
Any member who has not signed
up to work, please call Linda Jett at

-- --~---

Public NQtice

Emergency squad kept busy
Eight emergency runs were
made by local units over the weekend, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reported.
At midnight Saturday the Mid·
dleport squad took Ernest Trlpplett
!rom WUJiam Street to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 5 a.m. Saturday the Tuppers Plains squad took
Harrison Rood, Reedsville, to St.
Joe's Hospital, Parkersburg; at
11: 10 a .m. Saturday the Pomeroy
squad took Georgia Swauger !rom
Powell's Super Valu to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 8:05 p.m .
the Racine squad took Michael
GI1no !rom Eakle Ridge to Holzer
Medical Center
At 8:12p.m. Saturday the l:'omeroyy squad took Francis Owen to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
11:08 p.m. the Rutland squad took
Daniel Eblin to Veterans MemQrlal'

Ml - ~11

II)

12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

.I

II

17.
18.
19, _ __ _ __
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.

30.
31.
32. _ _ _ _ __

33.
:-_
-34. __
__
_
35. _ _ _ _ _ __

Mall Thla Co11pon with RemiHance -

Tha Q•lly Sentinel
111 Court St.

L---~-!~~~~~~~~~-------J
(

Def endants.
Case No 18227
NOTIC E BY
PUBLICATION
To the unknown heirs and
devisees of William L.
Koenig; and the unknown
heirs and deVisees of F lora
J Koenig;
You are•hereby notified
that you have been named
defendants in a legal action
entitled Elsie Koenig Cook,
et al, Plaintiffs, vs . the
unknown
heirs
and
devisees of William L.
Koenig, et at ., Defendants.
This action has been
assigned case number
18,227 and Is pending in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Pomeroy,
Ohio45769.
The object of the Complaint is to quiet the title of
the Plaintiffs as against the
Defendants in the following'
described real estate, .towit:
Situated in the Township
of Salisbury; County of
Meigs, and State of Ohio,
being
bounded
and
described as follows:
Beginning at the northwest
corner of !he south half of
Settlcin 34, In · Salisbury
township, where a· •White
oak 15 ln. bears N 7 degrees
East18 links and a hickory '
8 ln. bears South 53 degree
east ,9 links; thence South
881/, degrees East along the
line passing through the

P&amp;S BU LD NG S

O'Brien Electric
Service
16 YEARS EXP.
• R esodentia 1
•Commercia l
•Industrial

Racone, Ohio
247-3534
Free Estimates
4 20 tt c

COMPLETE
RAD I ATOR
SE RV!CE
From
th e Smitlle s t
Hea t er Core to th e
Rad 1ilfOr Spec 1.l i1 St
NATHAN B IGGS
3S Yr s E )(per1ence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd St.

2.8 ACRES - Just r1ghl
for
the
f amily
3
bedrooms , rang e 1n k1t
c hen, car pet1nq and
basem en t W1fh qaraqe
$25,000
MODERN - Leve l yard
large enough for a gar
den 3 or 4 bPdrooms, 8
1n all , neat nnd n1 ce
Want $3 1,500

FREE PARK lN G !

Sue Murphy , Helen and
Bruc e TeafQrd,
All
Realtors . Aft er Hrs.
992-3615 or 992 -3325.

ousmg
Headquarters

NEW LISTING - Barns, equipm ent sheds, cnbs,
and garage are all 1n good cond1f1on on th1 s 89 1h
acre farm . Appx 40 acres 1n hay and crops, w1th the
ba~.;tnc e in f enced pasture Larg e pond and an old
hom;e A ll minerals . $48,000
NEW LISTING - Wrap -around porch, Jlh barn s,
four bedroomS, full basement, l arge paved park1nq
are~. storage building, and appx 1/ J acre tot Hou se
is nrce al $32,500.
NEW LISTING - Near Pom eroy E lemen.tary , 3 4
bedrooms, huge family room, full basempnt, ntce
leve l tot Good buy at $31,900

INTEREST RATE FEATURES
POMEROY - Nt ce ly r emodel ed 3 4 bedroom hom e,
leve l tot. exce ll ent nerghborhood - want $27.500,
$5,500 down, balance at 13% mter es t. 20 Yea r s,
$251.75/month .
MIDDLEPORT- Bea utiful older co lonial w1th al l
modern features includin g a new sw 1mming pooL
WB FP. ce ntral air, etc., etc., $11,900 down, ba lance
at 14% interest. 20 year term. $591.91/month.
CHESTER AREA - Ten acre mini farm, th ree
bedroom home wants $35,000 - $7,000 down , batao·
ee at 14.5% interest, 20 yea r term, $364.80&amp; month
RACINE - Sel ler financ ing, nice three bedroom
home on a good street - wants $29,900, $1,500 down,
12% interest, 20 years to pay balanc e of $22.400. •t
$246.64/month will negoiate- or $10,000 down, 10%
interest, $19,900 balance 20 years at $192 .04/ month
RUTLAND AREA - A\sume loan, $5,700 down , inetudes assumption expenses, balanc e of $26,960.41
at · 12% interest, appx . 28 year t erm r emaining
$278.24/ month. Nice home on appx. 1'12 acres with
storage building, etc.

MINERSVILLE- Nice three bedroom home with
full basement and riverview. $5,700 down, balance
of $29,800 at 13% interest, appx. 29 years term
remaining , $330.20/ month.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI •. . . .. ....•... 992-6191
Dottle Turner .....••. . . . . .......•.... .. 992-5692
Jean Trussell .. .. .. .............. ....... 949-2660
Qfflte _. ...... ... ...................... 992-2259

IB

A
~
,.

BASEMENTS
PATIOS
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
RICHARD GARFIELD
985-4464
6 14 1 mo

IIUI.lQI

' 7'

TOGETHER

PERSONAliZED
POOLS

COLEMAN'S
GARAGE

MIDDlEPORT
•All Minor &amp; Major
Auto &amp; Truck Reparo
•Foee Esltmates
•Reasonable Rates
Open 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon. thru Sat.

Gttmo

~~~TUNING
&amp;

REPAIR
Call Btl! Ward

PH 992 ·7762

Jack Coleman
&amp; Ttm Roush

6 lt
I mo

Ward's Keyboard

Jumbo Bob While
QUAIL
LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail
of
a ll
ages
ava 1lab l e up to 8 Weeks
rn any quanttty
Eggs AISQ Avat lab le
C Iell La Bon t e
36061 Bashan Rd .
Long Bottom, OH.
45343
614 -985 -4345
612411 mo

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
'Addons and remodehn1
- Roof1na•nd 1utter work
-Concrete work
- Piumbm11nd
etectncal work
!free Estimates)

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And Home Marntenance
• Rooting Qf all types
e Srdrng
• Remodeling
• Free est rm ates
• 20 Y rs. expe ri enc e

a

taco - (lavor

C.lrdOI

Than~ &lt;,

A Beln i Pfl 1 tl clnk You
Now nvn we nre l)&lt;lf k 111
ou r honw nit er our fi r !' wr
wou ld l1kP to nl ,ln k ttl •
Pomeroy F1rf' Df'pn rtml' nl
fnr ttw Swill clnd elf 1C1Pnl
'&gt; t'rVICI' ltw Tuppf'r S Pl rltllS
Thf'
F 1r(' Depnrtrnenl,
BPnrwn ll ow CtlUr CI1 ot
Cllr1 sl tor thP trniln 11 0111£'
nnd fiH' ErlS I /\f lwnc, Ct1ur
cl1 of Ct1r1 &lt;&gt; l tor lhf' Foori
tll,l l wa s Sl'nl to u&lt;:, 1Jl llf"nf'
of rH'Pd Al so our rr·I~ II V! 'S,
! rl\'ncl'-. diH1 nt tQhtJ(H ... . ,1 r1c1
HH ' Nr1110n Wtdl' rn&lt;&gt;u r ,ln(P
CnmprlllY
Ro lnnd &lt;1ncl Dnr •.., F rl &lt;:,t
lll,lll

TOM HOSKINS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION'
N ew Homes - ex ·
tens tv e remodeltng

Greg Roush
Ph. 992 -7583
or 992 -2282

992 -6215 or 992 -73 14
Pomeroy, Oh10
9 30 lf c

~

II I

We would l1k e to thank
those who helped 1n any
way dunng th e Illness and
death of our b e l oved
hu sband
and
ffllhcr
SpH1a l !hank s to lh f'
Pomeroy Chur c h of Chr 1sl .
rplallve s, ne1ghbor s and
lr1 ends tor fh Pir toad,
fl owPrS . praye r s. VISitS ~nd
c flrd s,
Broth ers
Nell
Proudfoot. Ewmg Funernl
Hom e nnd nur ses and doc
tor s ar Holz er Hosplla!
The Jul1u s Savagp Family

3

Ph . 949·2160 or 949 -2322
4 20 tf c

V. C. YOUNG Ill

For all your wiring
needs ;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Caii742·319S

or

446~312

Master C. 5 9 ff c

Vrs.a

• E tectnc work
•Cu stom Po l e B ld qs
•Roofing Work
14 Yeilrs E)(penenc e

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

try, Bernie, but I
the world JS qwte

nn

Announcements

SWEEPER find
sew1n g
mach1ne repa1r, pnrt s. and
suppl1 es
P1 c k up and
dP II VNY . Dav1 s Vacuum
C lpanpr, one hrlll milf' up
GPorgps Cr ee k Rd
Ca ll
446 0294
Bail ey's Shoe s. M1ddi£'POrl
Oh10 Wil l be c iOSf'd July 4111
lhru 81t1 for vacal1on
Fr1endly Horne Pnrf1C S
For hav1nQ il pnrty 1n June
or July, 25 pPr ce nt fr ee 1n
mer c handiSe Call Mnrll y n
Powell nt 614 991 6525

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Prof ess 1onal
E lec tr oly SIS
Cen ter AM A npproved.
Doc tor reterals . by ap
po1ntm en1 only
304 67 5
6134

BOGGS
us

Rl so Easo
Guysvr ll e, Ohro
AuthQrized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equrpment
Dealer

-

Dozers
Back hoes
Dump Trucks
La- Boy
Trencher
Water
Sewer
Gas L1nes
Se pt1 c Sys tem s

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service
Call 992·6259
276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
6·21 I mo

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND •
CONSTRUCTION

Dozer &amp; backhoe service, water, sewer, ponds,
foundations ,
reclam atiQ" .
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949 -2293
or 949 -24 11
3 3 lfn

W

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Water-Sewer· E lectnc
Gas Line- Ottches
water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph. 361 -7560

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•
•
•
•

backhoe
excavatrng
se ptrc systems
A wat er. sewer
&amp; gas line s
*dump truck
•limestone

4

G1veaway

Custom kitchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
8-20-lfc

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

st. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH:

AUTO&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Also Transmission
PH. 992·5682
or992-7121 ,
3-24-lfc

K1ftens to qood hom e Celli
446 4173
4 cut e k 11tens to qood home
Ca l! 614 379 2585 or 446
42 10

Licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201
3 29 lfc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING-CO.
" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free sid1ng
estimates, 949-2801 Qr
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls

3 tl tf c

1 1 t otc

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Garaqe Sa le July I , 2 mdr c,
fr om
HM C.
Rl
160
sa ddl e.
~r l wo!
BI CYC le.
desk.
exPrc1se
IJ1k 0
rhubnrb . rn1 sc
Por ch salf'
nt Ma)( tllC'
MI Chael 's,
Laurel Cld f ,
Pom eroy
July 1 &amp; 2
01 s h es,
wt1a 1 no 1s.
cloth1nq , m1sc
3 f amily
Clo th es. toy s.
so me anf1Ques July 1 &amp;
July 7 At M cC lung' s starr
buld1nq , Npw Hav en. W V
M cONm1ff 'S Trailer Co urt ,
Ga ll Ferry, clothps and
m1 sce llaneou s 1tpms, rhur
sday , Fr1day and Saturday
9 am ro ?
FOUR family yard sa le
near the Sou th Fork July
l si , 2nd , Jrd 9 till 3 If
ram s wil l be 1n s1de
YARD Sfl le. antiQU eS, TV
equ1pm f' nt . CB rad1o s,
1111 Sc
1lem s
Mam St ,
Leon , WV 'Ill Se llout
FOUR fam11y yftrd sa le,
501 F1rst Sf July l si &amp; 2nd

YARD snle July l si at
G all1pOI1 s Ferry
across
fr om Jorrlnn CemP i ery 9
till J

Pub li c Sa l e
&amp; Auct 10n

8

R1 c k
P e arson,
Ex
pcr1en ce d AUCTIO N EER
Es tates. an tiQU es, farm .
household L ICP nsed Ot110
WV Buy1nq ant1ques 304
773 S785. 773 9185

"C UT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

a

All Makes

• washers
• Dish washers
• Ranges • Refrigerators
e Dryers • Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-lfe

DABBLE
SHOP
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-2063
CHECK OUT OUR
BIBLE SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
Pac-Man Party Packs
and Cake Available
6-21 -1 mo.

Wnntr d coo k Pl.ny fruck
Stop, 304 937 7569 or 304
757 83S7
12

S1tunt 1on s Want ed

Room, boarct nnd l.~un f1ry
for e ld erl y
RP,l sonn ble
614 997 6748 or 992 602'J
Will do bnbySt l!1n q 1n my
llOmf' 614 997 5801
13

ln suril nce

SA NDY A ND BEAV E R In
suran ce Co hns alt ered
serv1ces for lir e msur cl ii CC
cov erag e 1n Ga ll 1a Coun ty
for
a lm ost
fl
cen tury
Fflrm . hom e and per son al
property
coverages Me
avadnb l e
to
m eC't 1n
d1V1dual
nped&lt;,
Con tnc t
Npal Ins uran ce Aqcn(y ,
aqpnf Ph o ne 446 1694
IS

Sc hools InstructiOn

Karate tn P ul t1nli! l f' 1n se !f
dPf ence all pr 1v cll£' lessons,
Men. wom en. &amp; clll ldr en
tn stru c t1on lllru blnck belt
Also
avn1lntJi c Kar at e
Ullli Orm c;
PU Cil 111q il nd
k1 Ck 1nq baq s clncj prolf'C
rQutprnent
Jrrry
l 1ve
Low e ry
&amp;
1\&lt;;soc•a tes
Karnt r
S turt1o
143
Burl 1nqton Ret
JiiCk c,o n.
0 11 Cilll6 14 }863074
16

Wanted t o Do

Lown M ow1nq no ynrcf to
Rel1nblf' and
depf' ncfClble For f'S I1 ma te
CCl ll 446 3 159 aftcr 6PM 756
1967
b •q 01 smal!

TrCl Sh co iiC'C l 1on &amp; ll,lU IIflQ
Ca ll446 4480
Will do bnby c, rtt. nq 1n m.,.
home Ci"111614 38A '1155
ln s1df' &amp; OU I Stdt' Prl1 1ll1nq
tr ee e". f 1mr1 tr&lt;&gt; Cal l 446
'1499

ANY PERSON who has
anyth1ng to g1ve nway find
1------------1-----------~-------------l does not off er or n tt emp t to
offer any othN th1 nq tor
sa le may placf' an nd 1n th1 s
co lumn Therp will be no
chargf' to the adver t1 ser

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Garage Sa le 9 00 to 5 oo .
Thurs &amp; Fr1 Sa t till noon
1/ 2 pr1 Cf'S Fa1 rfleld Acr('S
SubdtVI SIOn

RE G I STERED NURSE toe
POSifiQn Of tW cl lltl Sf'rV ICC'
d1r ec t or
l or
pr p &lt;:, tl coo l
program 1n C1bcll &amp; Mr1 son
Co unl1e s Pled~C apply by
July 1, C hild &amp; Family
Deve l opmpnt
Proqrnrn ,
So uthwestern Comrnu 1"~ 1 l y
Ac f1 on Council !n c , S40 5111
Ave
Hunl tnqton
WV
ptlone304 525 .'&gt; 151 E 0 E

EMMA Bel l Auclton Ser

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
I 3 lf c

wanted___ _

-----------

good1es

Au c ft on every Fr1 n1qht at
H ar tfor d Cornrnun1!y
Center Tru ckloads of new
mer chandtSC' every week
Cons 1gmpn l s of nC'w and
used rner c hand1s c a lw ays
R1c~1ard
w e l c ome
Rf'ynold s Auc t 10neN 275
3069

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Het~

"

Application will be ac
July t, Thursday, • mi
Bulav ill e at log house Ant . cep t ed
for apprent1ce
rock er, co lor TV, 10 spd plumbers and p1pe fitt ers
bike , str oll er, baby 1tems. Appli c ati o n s
may
be
matern1ty, pillows, tru ck p1ck ed up at 0 1110 Stat e
Emp l oyment Offi ce or ar
topper, d1 shes, and morP
446 0918
2134 Ga ll1a St . Par
tsmou th Appl1 ca nt s mu st
Neighborhood Garage Sa le be 18 to 25 v r s at aqe
Tara Estates , Fr1day 8 30 EOE
to 4 00 B1kes. bab y llem s.
Nef'd expPr•enfed rna n to
furn , and mu ch mor f&gt;
do body work rlnd clcn n up
Apply Hy sells U sPd Cars 1n
Street Sa le Fr1day July 2.
Rutland, Oh1o
1n Kanauqa 1n front of
H 1Qhwny Inn
LPN Neec1ed t or fJoc tor ·s
offi c e
Par t l lllw tl OL.r~
Yard Sa le on Bull Run Rd
Phonf' 99 ') 66 33
1n V1nton Baby c lothes.
and m1s c Thur s &amp; Fn
Wnn!Pd sompo ne to work 1n
J uly l si nnd 2nd
C0 1n op nnd dry ( lr',lflll1()
Apply
Du kf'
sh op
Yard Sa le 119 &amp; 177 41tl
Clf'anPr &lt;,
7419 JMk&lt;;on
Ave, Gfl ll1pOI1 S Fr1 &amp; Sa t
Ave Po111f P lt' il'&gt;,lll l W Vrt
July 2 &amp; Jrd
L ots at

lh f'

3 1 lte

L.uge or Sm.1 ll Job s
PH 992 2478
6 21 1 mo Pd

· r

v.

General

PH.992-2259

1;

!&gt; 122mopd

10 ACR ES - Mor e or
LESS of coun tr y from
low to h1gh on a hill
Wafer
a nd e lecfr1 c
availabl e On ly $10,000

POMEROY, OHIO

against you for the rel i
demanded in the Co
;plaint.
,
·
Larry E . S~nce~
Clerk Qf Court
.
Meigs Count
Common Pleas Coulii
(6) 29 ; (7) 6, 13, 20, 27; (8)"~

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete gutter work,
complete remodeling,
roofing of all types.
Worked in home area 20
years.
Free estimates
Call 843· 3322

4 BEDROOMS - 2 lull
bath s, f amily rm , pat 10,
garage
and
facts
Ask tn g $41,000

608 E. MAIN

~~~edu~~lefudg ~enf ''b
· def,a~tt will be render~

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

CAR WASH Sma ll
down and you a re 1n
bu s1ness Open 1n mar
n1ng, co ll ect cas h at
dusk Just$15.000

Real Ettete -

oK

Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph 992·2174
7 76 li e

. Phone
1-( 614 )-992·3325
LOOKS LIKE NEW Age 5, ha s 2 acre s, well
dra1ned and ce~re d for 2
bedroom
1n s ulat ed
home, basement w1 th
ga r age and 2 porches
$45,000

.,..

WE POOL

t-----------t-----------+-----------1

General

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone/42-3111
Velma Nic.nsky, Assoc.
Phone/42-3092

fl lcinq the west l1ne at sa 1Q
Sec t1on 34, 20 cha 1ns and 35
hnk s to th e place of begtr't ·
nmq, tf be 1ng 651h ac res ori
the west end of the N half
of the South half of Se,:: tion
34, Townsh•P 2. R 13, df the
Ohio Company's Purchase'.
ALSO, 51TUATED rn the
Twp . of Sa li sbury, County
of M e1gs, and Sta te of Ohio
bounded find desc nbed as
follows: lll.w Corner o~
Sec. 34, T 2, R. 13, Oh•o
Company's Purchase, c om -'
m c nc i nQ
at th e roaq
lf'ading from the Pomeroy.
&amp; Harn sonvlll e Road to the
Hysel Run Road at a pomf
where the north line of a 65
A Tract owed by Leonard
Koen1q
intersec t s saiU
Hy se l Run Road ; thence N.
61 deqrePs. W 12 rods, then "
ce 73 degrees W 6 rods; '
thencr N 60 deg r ees W 14
rod s; thenc e S 85 dPg r eQS
W 10 rods; lheoce S 44
deqrecs W 10 rods &amp; 2l
links to L eonard Koeniq's
N line; thence Ea st along
Leonard Koenig's N l tne to
the plac e of beg1nning, containtng 4 acres, more O:r'
lr.ss.
,,
Latest D eed Reference :•
Volume 282. Page 835.
Metgs County Deed Recol -.
ds.
.
You are required to anJ
swer the Complatnt withi r(
8 days after the t a~l
publi&lt;;ation of this nolle ~
whicb will be published o~ ,
ce e_ac h Week for six con"'
secutive weeks. The la St
pubiiCi!lion will be made
. August 3, 1982 and the 28
days for •t he answer wiit
· commence on that date. 1:
1
In case of your failure tp
answer
or
otherwis ~
(respond as required by thn
1
0
1

61e

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF THOMAS
EARL MANU EL, SR .,
OECEASED
Case No. 2380S
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY
On June 16, 1982, 1n th e
Me1gs Co unt y Proba te
Court, Case No
23808 ,
Theresa Manu el. Rou te 2.
Rac1ne, Oh 1o 45771 was ap
po1nted Ad mtn1 str alr1x of
the estatp of Thomas Ear l
Manue l, Sr, dec eased. late
of Rou t e 2, Rac1ne, Oh10
45771

BIMer
PHONE 142-2003
EXECUTIVE HOME Approx 3000 sq ft , 3
bedrooms, 2 ful l baths, 2
half baths, huge l1 v 1ng
room and d1n1ng room
w1th 2 f1rep laces, eQ UI P·
ped k1tchen, breakfast
room, basement , 3 car
garage This br rck lwo
st ory s1ts on 3 ac re-' w 1th
a magn1f1cent v 1ew Ca ll
today
FAIRVIEW HTS.
Nea r Me1gs H 1gh
3
bedroom ranch home,
a 1r co nd1t1on ed, basem
ent w 1th f am il y room ,
rec roo m and ga ra ge,
over 1 acre Blended
rate Ask rn g$49,500
MULBERRY
AVE.
LOCATION ~arge
two st ory h ome, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, b1g
II Vt n g
room
wdh
f1rep l ace, huge drnrng
room w1th bay w 1ndow,
modern kitchen, glass
enclosed sunporc h. car
peted an d drapenes,
basement w 1th wood ·
burner , hea ted double
gar age Owner will conSider so m e fina nc mg.
ACREAGE- 14 ac r es,
with 6 room hou se 10
need of repa1r, s1tuated
out Pom eroy , tu st off
Rt 1 Ask tn g $10,000
RUTLAND- On Sf Rl .
124 .
Extra
n1 ce J
bedroom ranch hom e,
large li v 1ng room w 1th
f1repla ce, mod ern k1t
chen, ga ra ge, pat10, on
117 acre Idea l locat1on
for only $36, 500

-w... _
----·
----·..-

L •~Hio(O

Public NQfice

I''

Yard Sale

Utility Buildings

GeoJ1e S. Hobstetter Jr.

_,_

., .............11....

Erosion affects Meigs' croplands
woodlands have excessive erosion
rates, which he said Is a good
figure.
First gave several suggestions to
keep erosion to a mlnlmum.
In croplands, farmers should a lternate field strips of corn and hay.
Crops should also be rotated and
no- tUJ or mlnimum-tUlage farming
methods should be used. Farmers
can also seed fall cover crops.
"These practices help hold soU
loss to tolerable levels," First said.

-·-

. . . . . o._

!'lwml&gt;t&lt;~ti.MUh"1

~~ t &lt;olp ..

l .~ ooo

:

..

NOrtcr OF
AI'PO IN TME NT
OF F I DUC I ARY
On Juno 22. 1982 . 1n 11\e
Mf'I\IS County
ProbM c
Cour t. Case No 23817 ,
V1 0if'ITil Arnott. 2581 1 Row e
Road. Rnc1nf'. Qh 1o 45771
was
appo 1ntrd
Ad
m1n1 Sirntr1x of the f'Strllf' of
Arthur
L
A r n 0 tl ,
dPrrN sed. lrtlf' of 15821
Rowe, Rn c 1nP, 0 1110-1577 1
Robert E Bu ck
Probate Judqe / Cirrk
16! 29 , 11!6. 13 3t c

HOBSTETTER REALTY

,..a. ,. :.

,,,...,~

Address---------

Nearly on£&gt;-quarter of Meigs
County's cropland and over onethird of Its past ureland are sufferIng from eros ion damage,
according to an official of the SoU
Conservation Service.
District ConservatlonLst Robert
L. First said these figures are from
the Cent ra l Ohio River Basln study,
recently completed after five years
of data collection.
The st udy, conducted by the SoU
Conservation Service, L~ an "inventory of soU use ln the state," First
said.
First said 37 percent of the pastureland and 24 percent of the cropland In Meigs County suffer !rom
excessive erosion.
Excessive erosion occurs when a
land area loses more than 4 tons of
soU per acre ln one year.
Land with an erosion rate over
thi~ figure can lose Its productive
capacity a~ farmland or pasturelanJ, First said.
First said that Ideally these erosion rates should be under 10
percent.
However, he said Meigs' rate Is
comparable to other counties slm·
Uar In topography, such as Gallla,
VInton and Jackson.
He said the heavy rains In the
past month have added to the
area's erosion problems.
" From the figures rnentlonect.:.It
Is clear to see that much work could
be done to protect our basic resource, the soU," First said.
Only 10 percent of the county's

rates

~

Od~ On&lt;OI

--~--

LAFF-A·DAY

Rl. I,
Oh.
Sl. Rl. I, between Cl!esh11e
&amp; Middleport
H11.· Mon. Sun.
2·00 P.M. 1-30 A.M
Sizes staro from 30x24"
• Statn l ess Stee l
c.uryOul Seer
eFtbergta ss
&amp;WineAvlllablo
eV1nytlm ers
Mon. MegNrghl
Sites from 4 to 6 and all
f
wood buildings 24x36.
ues.-Lidtes ntght all dnnks
lnsulatedDogHouses
reducedforlhewomen
Wed •;, C.n lu~ night 9 12. d11!1
J J
beer only Poollournament2 am.
1_304 _773 _S64
Rt . 3, Box 54
C. l. Krtchen
Thu 1s Old M1lwa.u•e H1ght, 92 30.
1
Racine,Oh.
M.1son,W Va
1CenturYNI P"h l
Ph . 614 _843 _2591
f rr. &amp; Sat lrwe bands dnnk &amp;
tf c
6 70 1 mo
drown each mght. 10 p.m.
6 15
Su n P1rn , p1tcher beer specu~ l
pnce Atso8Q'son Sundaystartrng
June
1-----------t-----------~ 1 Month ollune. ThUIS frr Sal
MARSHAll TEN NANT llANO
Stop 1n, brmg a fnend We also
NOW OPEN
hJVt Happy Hou1 Mon Sill 4 pm
6 p.rn Unadvtrltstd spemls d1aly
Hope to see you all soon
Phone 992-9913
Corner Main &amp; S. 2nd

Real Estate - General
Real Estate -

Pom.-or~

10.~ . .

Public Noftce

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

lc1rge s t Rad 1ator

By STEVEN P. ROSENFELD
dec lined to be more specific.
buyers to obtaln an a%uma ble
- The stock market rallied, with
AP Business Writer
While taxwriters try to come up
mortgage.
the
Dow Jones average of 30 indusFor the fifth straight week. inveswith more money for the governIn Its 6-2 ruling Monday, the high
trials
up 8.85 polnts to 811.93 alter
tors have demanded a higher !pierment, a 10 percent cut ln personal
court upheld a federal regulation
dlpplng
7.33 points on Friday. Anaest rate for money they loan the
income tax rates and a 7.4 percent
allowing federally chartered savlysiS
said
the boost Is explained
government , drlvlng U.S. Treasury
increase In Social Security benefit
ings and loan associations to' superpartly
by
the
surprising decllne reshort-term borrowing costs to the
payments take effect Thursday,
sede state laws and require
ported
Friday
ln the money supply
hi ghest levels since mid-February. • pourlng nearly $1 billion a week lnto
Immediate repayment of a mortand
by
anticipation
of good news
The Treasury borrowed $9 billion
the economy.
gage loan when a home Ls sold.
Wednesday
In
the
index
of leading
in the sale of three-a nd six- month
Meanw hile, a Suprem e Court rulIn other economic developments
economic
Indicators.
bills Monday, a nd by week's end
ing may make It harder for home
Monday:
wUI have raised $17 billion.
Financial economists expect the
Treasury wUI go on borrowing
binge In the second half of the year.
The Daily Sentinel
seeking an es tima ted $~ billion to
PHONE 992-2156
$100 bllllon over the next six months
and as much as $50 billion more in
Or Wflle D•••~ ~en t•ne l Cluso h H Depl
Ill Court Sl .
Otu o Hl•t
the first three month.s of nex t year .
In Ught of the hu ge cas h needs,
Pres ident Reagan signed legislation Monday raLs lng the federal
debt ceiling $64 billion to a record
Clauified ,.._ a~oer tlae
l l l .... ,.....
....,.,,
$1.143 trllllon until Sept. 30, the end
n-•IOl"""' ..., ..
)(ooooO lnonk&gt; III&lt;IO nod•On&lt;: OI
51CI T\1&amp;1104ioE&lt;tutPMtn!
"""""'"'""
ll p, .....
~·--~
nn ''""-'""'
foi.WeU.. t.I.plwne ucl..
UAnt ........ .
...... •wo~"
1. c.An"""""""'""'''
of the current fiscal year.
.......
10-UCin
S.O.Y.•oc-c~-·•
IH OPI&gt;o M &gt;
11IMII&amp;-"'I
"lw•ICI~""""'"
The average discount rate on the
,.
........
,.
,.
.....
,
..........
W\1
_._ ,.._c._
,. ~"'"''-" ..........
G.o llloC-.ty
p_,.,,,.tr
An.oC-011
•-c-..
I Potol•&lt; \•t•
-C-114
s ix-month Treasury bills auctioned
,.._"
.........,,
.. ~ """"
=~·~~ ~T,=-·
-.,
lfl--&lt;
......
' """'"""'e"'
f "'"''
-~­
eu
.. ' "'
Monday was 13.419 percent. up
,,._,.._
DLO"I."c-0.,_....
MRootE.,otoWoniO(I
,_..,_Gill
from 13.031 percent a week earlier
"'~'""' .,..._Utort
............. 0101
,...............
11-tmp.-ov.mon"
-~a nd the highest since the Feb. 16
~··­..
ll
onl..,
,, .....,.,, ,.,llont
fo&lt;OV0110'4
01
O)\ IUO' "&gt;n Wonl ....
•1-doHomoot"' R•n •
.. f ..&lt;:r&gt;&lt;•ll.ll•"·-·''""
level of 14.36 percent. Three-month
UptoiJ"""tll O....llo,
_.,_
U
IJ ' " ' "'""'" '
OJForm.,.,llont
••
uc.-·•'"""""'
.,. &gt;&lt;o, &amp; O •o•n
......,......, Ao...Pio
.,. ... .
.................
~":;.:::: ·.·.~~~ .'!,
"~'"'''""'"' r,....,d• • ,_,,..,
bills were auctioned at a n average
••
Ulot-H&amp;ft" llot.,.
d
IIU-11•••
Uplo
IIW"'tll
....
...........
.
01 WontO&lt;tloN ..,t
discount rate of 13.269 percent, up
,, "'•"'"" '"""
•I E"" 'Qmont ' "' •ont
from 12.88 percent ln the previous
week a nd the highes t s ince the
r----------------------~
- - - PubtiCNotice March 29 level of 13.399 percent.
Nottce
- - - - ----- - - - -- -Public
I
I
While the tab is a burden for taxce ntpr of s., 1d Sec t1 on 32
1
PUBLIC NOTICE
payers, there a r e benefit s to
ch.=11ns and 14 l1nk s to o
sa re m Twp . Trustees,
Inves tors.
I Meigs
stake, where an elm 8 u'\.
Co.. Will have a
I proposed use hearing for bea r s North 48 deq ree:s
Senate taxwriters were to begin
west to 16 l1nk s, and a r ed
r evenue sharing moni es,
work today under a mandate to find
oa k 12 1n bears west 25
July
5th,
1982
at
9
a.m.
at
$21 billion In new revenue for the
l1n ks,
th e nc e sou th 2
the Salem Firf' House. Th e
deqrees 10 mm west 20
fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 a nd $98
township has $19,691.00 of cha1n s and 35 l1nk s to a
unused
mon ey
from
billion over the next three years
stak e, where an as h 2 in
revenue shari ng and they ches bea r s south 59 deqrees
under a spending plan projecting a
wi I I get an added $6,854.00 eac h 22 11 nks, and a qurll
$103.9 billion deficit in the coming
this year. The Public will
12" bears north 87 deg r ees
fbca l year.
west 34 lin ks; th ence 88111
be given the opportunity to
Wnte your own ad and order by mail with this
df'grees west 32 cha1n s and
mak e ora l a nd written
Bob Dole, chairman of the Senate
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
14 link s to a stone 1n th'e
suggestions
r ega rding
results
Money
not
refundable
.
Finance Committee, said Monday
wes t linp of Sec t1on No 32 ~
possible use of revenue
when' a bu c k eye 5 in b ea r ~
his panel has reached general
sharing funds. A ll area
Name
__________
_
north 46 deq r ees west 6
Senior
Citizens
are
asked
to
agreement on about 75 percent of
ltnk s;
th en ce nor t h 2
participate .
deg r ees 10 minutes east
the three-year tax increase. Dole
Bonn te Scott
I (O td ..

Business Services

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
161 22. 2917) 6, 3tc

children's lather, Artist M. Eskridge, was swept off the car, but managed
to struggle to shore. He was bospltallzed for shock. aU but one of the
bodies were recovered, three were pulled fro_m the car. (AP Laserphoto I

The

Beagl e pup, fpma lc
615 777 1

Cal l

FEMALE silver b l ack k1 l
ten , 12 week s o ld, part
S1amese.par r B u rmese,
housebroken. 304 675 6145
WH 1TE Germnn Sheph er d,
two
fema le, r eg 1stN ed,
yea r s old, to a good homP,
ca ll agter 3 00 675 1611 or
67S 3750

6.

Lost and Found

FOUND Mal e wh 1te dog
w1 th brown co ll ar Rt 7,
near Ra ccoon Br1dgP Ca ll
614 256 1525
2 key r1ngs w 1th key s Long
10m l il ac macrame 1n the
V1C1 n1ty of Va ug han's Car
d1na t m M1ddleport
It
found mad to M1dd leporf
POII Cf' Dept
FOUND
Ma te Bas se tt
Hound VNY we ll kept
Beaut1ful dog Yes terday
614 992 6204
LO ST ZPbco Card 1na l 4
spinn1n g reel &amp; brown r od
Pond 9 TNT ar ea 304 931
3451 Reward
Found young fema le, part
beag le, whtte wi t h brown
spots, c lose to Jer 1c ho
Road , Hartz dog co ll ar, 304
615·2104 or 615 4080

i

-~~- YarcfSiii _ _

v• cc Sa l e enr t1 Tuc sd€ly, 7
p m Ml A lt o. &lt;Kcept1nq
co ns1qnment s Tue sday 10
am
unl1l sn le l1me
Buy1nq ond scll1no esta tes
Free es tate appra1Sill , 304

Wanted To Bu y

WANTED TO BUY Old fur
n1ture nnd An f1 ques of a ll
k1nd s. ca ll Kenneth Swam.
446 3159 or 256 Jli67 1n the
even1nqs
Buy1ng
Go ld ,
Silv er ,
Plat1num , old co 1ns, sc rap
r1nqs &amp; silv erware Dally
quotes ava1 l able
A l so
co 1n s &amp; c o1n suppl1 es for
sa le Sp n nq Va ll ey Trad1ng
Co. Spr1 nq Va ll ey Plaza.
446 8025 or 446 8026
We pfly cnc,h t or lcli C mode l
r lf'&lt;ln u &lt;,f'd rn rs
Frcn ctllown Cnr Co
Bill Grnf' Jot1nson
446 006~

Wanted to cut and bale hay
for percpn tagp at hay Cnl l
446 8381

BED S I RO N , BRA SS, old
lur nlfure. go l d, silver
dollar s, wood 1ce boxes ,
s tone tar s, ant 1ques, etc,
Comp l ete
housPhold s
Wnte MD Mil ler, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Oh Or 992 7760
Gold, SI IVPr, stcrl 1n g,
tewe lry , r1ngs. old coms &amp;
c urr ency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop. Midd leport 991
3476

OLD FUR NITU RE. bed s,
1ron, brass, or wood K 1t
c hen c ubb~rd s at all t ypes
T ab ies, r ound or sq uar e
Wood 1ce boxes. Old desks
and book cases Wtll buy
com pl ete hou se hold Gold,
s liv er , old money, pock et
watches, cha1n s, nngs, and
etc 1ndian A rt1fa c ts of all
types Also bu y ing ba seba ll
car ds Osby Mart1n 992

6310

e mplayment
&amp;ervlees

Por c h Sa le 708 2nd Ave,
Ga llipo li s. July lsi &amp; 2nd
Thur s.
&amp;
Fri ,
9·5
Misce ll aneous items.

11 ~--'-H,_,e,l"'p__.W
oc•::n"'t:ed
.._

Yard Sa te July t, 9AM
5PM. Jet 160 &amp; 554, Porter
Clothiog, baby item s &amp;
misc .

Beco m e a prof essional tn
surance agent, J openmgs.
Will train . Ca ll rn con·
fidence Rumley Insur ance
Agency, 446-3320.

- - --r------Moving Safe. Wednesday,
June 30, 1982. One mile out
Neighborhood Rd ., from
Rl. 141. For sale, wood bur·
ner, electric lawn mower,
&amp; other household items
8:00a .m . to 4:00p .m .

BU SIIlC'SS
Opportun1ty

Bu s1nPSS or storf' room 1n
Pnrk Ce ntrnl Hotel

418 8177
9

21

1- - - - - - -- - -Part time cleaning person
for business establishment.
Send name, address and
phone number to box 603, in
care of Gallipolis Daily
Tr ibune, 825 Jrd . Ave ,
Ga lli po li s. Oh 45631.

22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or pur c ha se
your homp 30 yeM f1 xf'd
r ate WVa &amp; Oh10 Lead er
MoriQilQe , 77 E Stat e 51
Ath ens Oh 614 592 3051
23

ProfessiOna l
Se rv1 ces

C&amp; L Bookk cc pmg
Bookkecp1nq &amp; tax ser v1 ce
for nil typ es of bus 1nPsses
Carol Nenl
446 3867

:Ren:s!atCE
31

Homes for Sa l e

142 acre farm qood hou se
and barn s Call 446 7599
Allract1ve 4 bl'droom b 1
levPI. walk1nq d1slan ce to
Holz er Hospilnl F1rst t1me
OII Ned Call 446 0075
3 bPdroom br1ck. 16 year
o ld
tlOm P,
11 1 br~ th s.
llr Pp l a cP .
qaragp,
basement One acre F1rsr
f 1mf' offered
for
sa te
Bu taville Road Cnll 614
245 9210 or 614 992 390S

5 room s and bath utll.ty
room. lnrqe pa110 , C/Maqe
and work shop Totnl ele'c
lr1 c. well 1nsulntrc1 and
easy to heat Co mp tett y
r emodl ed $39 .500 614 742
22 11 or af tpr 5. 6 14 74'1 2'101
Close
to
schoo l
Good
1oca t1 on
In Rutland suburbs . 1 acre
2 st ory farm hou se. $9,500
614 949 2428
Ill health Mus t se ll 4
houses ( 1 1S a double W1del
all re-n ted, plus 5 lots. a ll 1n
one block on Oh 1o R1ver 1n
Reedsvrlle
Water . c1ty
gas F1rst $36,000 take s all
Dtal614 31 8·6221

5 rooms &amp; bath &amp; show er
Middl e port,
Oh 10
Reasonable pn ce 6 14 992
7244

2 bedroom
hou se
in
Harn sonv 1tle. $6,500 614·
928·4411
3 bedroom
house
in
Pom eroy
Vmy l s1d ing,
f1replace, ni ce locatton .
Pri ced to se ll , $24,000 614'1'12·1446.

�Page-8-The Dally Sentinel
31

Homes for Sale

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
51

They'll Do It Every Time

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
dition , 3 bedrooms, family

r oom w it h fireplace , cen ·
rral air , basement , phone
304 675 1542
Three bedroom hou se, one
half ba sem ent. one and
one third acr e gr ound 304

675 3279

5

r oo m
h ou se
bath,
l 1r epl ac e 1n Pt Plea sant

113 ,000 304 67 5 5652
Mobile Home s
for Sale

T RI STATE
MOBILE
HOME S U SED MOBILE
HOME S, CAR S, TRUCK S
GA LLIPO L I S
CHECK
OUR PRI CES CALL 446
7572
CL EA N USED MOBILE
H O M ES
K ES SEL 'S
Q UA L I T Y
MOBIL E
HOME SA L ES, 4 Ml
WES T, GAL LIPOLIS, ~T

1980

W1nd sor

14 x 70,

new

bcd rrn

H1dd en utd

room

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent
----

45

Furn1 shed 2 bedroom, al l
elec., 2 miles out Rt . 588 .
Private lot, S165 .00 per mo .
Phone 446 -3045 day, 446 '160'1 even in g _

379 2310
Near Ches ter
2 c ho1 ce
dcres and 1980 3 bd .room

14 x 70 mobil e home $21,000 .

Ca ll 614 949 2639
USE D MOBIL E
576 2711

HOME

MOBIL E HOME S MOVED
L1 ce nsed &amp;

1nsured

72 MOBILE hom e, 14x70,

ax 10 ex panda, 3 bedroom s,
Crown Haven . $7300
rented lot . 304 675 -5762
JJ

on

Farms for Sa le

25 acres. 12601b _ toba cco
base. barn, crib , septi c
tank , well. 1980 3 bdr W1n
dsor Mobile home , '1 bath s,
furnished, in new con
ddion . All for $26,900 Call
.:1.:16 08.:14
50 Acr e farm, 3 bedroom
house
with
spa c 1ou s
remedi ed kitchen, 2 pond s,
barn , pr1 ced to sell . Se ll or
trade lor hou se in town
304 895 3083 304 675 4624

3S

2 bedroom trailer . Real
ni ce, adults on l y. Brown's
Trailer Park. Minersville
614 9923324
'1 bedroom, furnished , with
garage
and
patio
Syracu se
614 992 -2282 .
$150 . per month . Utilities
not in c luded

Call

304576 2711

Lots &amp; Acre_age

Pr1 ce redu ced . 2 lots w1fh
rural water close to c ity
11mits. $4,450 .00 Ca l l 446
1294
For sal e one and half acres
mor e o r
l ess ,
ap
proximately 600 It road
frontag e
on
Cora
Centerpo1nt Rd . near Cen
terpoint $3,000 .00 Phon e
682 6944

MOBILE HOME FOR
RENT WITH OPT ION TO
BUY, setting on lot halfway
between Huntington &amp; Pt.
Pleasant, 304 -576·2711
THREE bedroom trailer in
App le Grove, $250 a month
plus deposit, 2 car garage,
304 576 2682 .
1982 Na shau for rent with
option to buy , l.t x 70, with
7x'10 ex panda, 2 bedroom, 2
baths, all electri c $300
month, deposi f &amp; referen
ces, 304 576 2706

44

Apartment
for Rent

I AND 2 BEDROOM
APARTMENTS Rent star
Is a t : I bedroom $152 and 2
bedroom $188 per month .
SPECIAL
RATES
TO
SEN IORS _ Ca ll 446 -2745 or
leave message on machine .
Located in Oak HilL Oh 4
rm, furnished apt. No
children. Dep. &amp; ref . req .
Ca II 614 682 -6010 .
Unfurnished 2 bder . apart ment for rent . Pt . Pleasant,
675 -2218 8AM ·6PM, 6756753
until9 30 PM .

'} lots First lot 1S 3 trad er
spa ce trailer park . Se cond
lot is 700x200 Located 1n
Mercerv ill e, 446· 4684

3 rm s. &amp; ba th , private en
trance . Ca ll Nelli e Scar ·
berry, 4.:16·0847 .

ac re on 160 $4,500
assumable loan . Call 61.:1
388 8437 .

1st floor 2 bdr . unfurni shed
apar tm en t , uti I
paid,
downstown Ga llipoli s. Call
at 631 4th . Ave . Gal lipoli s

TWO acre lots 150 ft road
frontage,
C1l y
water,
behind 84 Lumber. call 304
675 6873, 675 36 18

Furnished apar tment,
bdr., $195, utlities pd.,
adults, 607 2nd Ave .,
Ga llipo li s Ca ll 446: 4416 at ·
ter 7PM .

ONE ace, drill ed well, sep
ti c tank '15x25 unfinished
block building $6,500 . one
half mile off end Greer
Road, 304 675 2949 .

Large 1 room &amp; bath ef·
ficiency apartment . Mostly
furnished $ 100. a month
plu s dep. 614·992 5692

LARGE nver lot on Rt . 2 at
Glenwood . Good well &amp; sep
ti c system, cheap, 304·576·
2866

3 room turn . apt . for rent.
$250 . a month, including
utilities. Inquire at Meigs
Inn in Pomeroy .

- -lfe n!als
-

41

-

--

---

House~ fo ~ ~e~t

Nice I bedroom ap t. in Mid·
dleport . Utilities paid . Fur ·
nished . Deposit required .
$225 . month . 614·992 3190.

Homes for Rent. Lease or
Land contract in town or
Call
Strout
cou ntry .
Really, 446·0008.

1 bedroom furnished apt.
Utiliti es included . No pets.
$185 plus deposit M id·
dleport 614 ·992 7177 .

Hou se 6 rm . &amp; bath . Inquire
918 Second Ave., Ga llipoli s.

'1 bedroom furni shed ap t .
Utilities in c luded. No pets.
S205 plus deposit . Mid ·
dleport 614992 -7177.

3 bdr . house good location,
2 bdr . apt, HUD excep ted .
A·One Rea l Estates, Caro l
Yeager Realtor . Call 304·
675·5104 or 675·5386.
Hou se, 120 3rd . Ave.,
Gall ipolis . 2 bdr ., gas hea t,
dep . req . The Wiseman
Agency, 446 3643.
For sa le or rent with option
to buy . 3 bdr., 638 Jay Dr,
Ga llipoli s. $350 pe r mo.
Ref. 8% assume loan . Ca ll
446 ·3919
or
446 ·0021,
evenings 446-3189.

2972.

serwlees
81

Apar tm ent s. 675·5548 .

APARTMENTS, mobi le
hom es,
hou ses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614 446 8221 or 614 -245·9484.
APARTMENT
in
Pleasanl614·446·8221.

Pt

2 bedroom apt . large
rooms, basement, yard, ap·
pliances furnished . Ca ll
evenings 304-675· 7541.

Unfurnished 2 br apt. ca ll
304-675-2218 from 8 a.m. to 6
p.m. Call 304 -675-6253 until
------- 1 9:30p.m.
4 room &amp; bath. Full - - - -- -- basement. 614-992 -3090.
MARSHALL Students. One
block from Student Center.
42
Mobile Homes
1.2 and 3 bedroom apart·
tor Rent
ments
availab le.
All
Mobile Home, Eureka, 1 utilities paid. Jim Tat·
Bdr., furn., riverfront lot, terson 304-776-8345 after
ref. &amp; deposit. Adults, S100 4:00p.m.

PAINTING
interior and
exter ior ,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs_ exp. Call 614-3889652.
Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex·
perience, specializing in
built up roof. Call 614-388 9622 or 614 -388 -9857.

-

4~

-

__ S_pac~f~ _ ~_!f!f __

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Ca ll
992 ·7479 .
Small
trailer
spaces .
Mason . 304 773 5651.

49

For
Lease
--- ---

-~-

For lease 2 bdr ., cedar ran ·
ch
beautiful
stone
fireplace, wrap around
deck, love l y 6 acre setting ,
near Green School. Ca ll
Wiseman Agency, 446·3643 .

Merehandlse

51

Household Goods

SWA IN
AUCTION FURNITURE 8.
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .,
Gallipoli s 9x12 linoleum
ru g $22, 3 piece li ving room
suites couch ·lo ve seat ·
chair $199, 2 piece living
room suites from $140 up,
love seats from $70 up,
maple dine! sets from $99
to $199, wa ll huggers $100.,
recliners
sao, map l e
rockers $49, bedroom
suites $150, variety of tabl e
lamps, marble top stand s
$30 and up, twin and lull
box sp ring s &amp; mattress
{new) $100, severa l utility
cab inets, kitchen cab in ets
wood &amp; metal, baby beds,
ches ts of drawers $25 to
$60, 3-way recliners $100,
gas &amp; electr ic ranges,
refrigerators, wash stands,
bunk beds comp lete with
bunkies $170 , severa l
dressers, ha ll tr ees, beds,
brass head board beds $35,
bookcases,
s mok e r s,
Hoover spi n dry washer,
wringer type washers, hut
c h, coa l &amp; wood heaters,
televisio ns, fans, new tool s
of a ll kinds, variety of
Silverstone cookware . Ca ll
446 3159 .
GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
range s .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pli ances, Upper Ri ver Rd.,
beside Ston e Crest Motel .
446 7398.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot ·
taman, 3 tab les, (extra
heavy by Frontier), $685.
Sofa , chair and lov esea t,
$275. Sofas and chairs
pri ced from $285 . to $795.
Tabl es, $38 and up to $109.
Hide -a-beds,$340., queen
size, $380. Rec liners, $175.
to $295., Lamps from $18. to
$65. 5 pc . dinettes from $79 .,
to $385 7 pc., $189. and up
Wood table wi th 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
Hutc hes, $300. and $375.,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites
Bassett
Cherry, $795.
Bunk bed
co mpl ete with mattresses,
$250. and up to $395. Cap tain's beds, $275. comp lete .
Baby beds, $99. Mattresses
or box spring S, full or twin,
$58, firm, $68. and $78.
Queen sets, $195. 4 dr .
chests, $42. 5 dr . chest s,
$54 . Bed frames, S20 .and
$25., 10 gun · Gun ca binets,
$350., dinette chairs $20.
and $25 . Gas or electric
ranges,
$325.
Baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
framesS20, $25, &amp; $30. Used
Furniture
book case,
ranges and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulavill e Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon. thru Fri ., 9am
to 5pm, Sa t. 446-0322

Buy, se ll or trade hor ses &amp;
ponies. 1941 Ford 1 1/2 t.
partly restored. Call 614·
379 276 1 after 4PM.
Model 11 ·48 Remington 12
gauge auto ., mod. Call 614 ·
947 9S09 after 5 614 ·367 -0327 .
12 in ch Belsaw se lf f eed
plainer, 9 se ts molding
knives, 1 shaper, severa l
extra knives . Ca ll446·9285.
39 yds . carpet, humidifier
&amp; air c lea nin g machine.
Cal l 614 -245 -9587

_____ ----.
WEDDING dress, size 14,
$50 . 304 -675 -1349 .
Couch &amp; c hair, 3 old TV
sets, 2 cab in ets, Sunray gas
stove . Ca ll 446·9344 or see
at 139 Lower Garfie ld ,
Ga llipolis .
-Argentina leather Eng li sh
sadd le. 4' cu tba ck, 21'seat,
exc. cond ., $250 Ca ll 614 ·
388 ·8270 .
Almost new cap t ain bed
wi th drawers, new mat ·
tress, $400 new, will se ll
$200 . Ca ll614 379 -2464.
60 in . co nso le stero AM -FM
radio &amp; 8·track, $100 . Ca ll
614 -245 -9398 .
- - - -~ -- .
Gasoline and hea ting fu e l .
Ca ll Exce lsio r Oil Com pany . 6149922205
Over 1.000 ceramic molds,
kilns, a nd supplies_ 614 -742
2925or614 742 2085.
17,000 BTU Frigidaire air
conditioner . Over th e cab
tru ck camper Sleeps 4.
614 ·992 ·3090.

AKC Reg . Old English
Sheep dog. female, 4 yrs.
old. Call 6142561786 a ft er

5.

Genui n e Redwood long
tabl e with 2 long benc hes.
$65 . 614 -.992-2961
FOR guaranteed products
and dependable se rvic e,
ca ll your loca l AMWAY
distributor, Robert Harper,
304·67S 1293.

Gene's
Stenm Carpet
Clea n-Sco tch Gaurd -Free
es timate s-spring specia ls·
Gene Smith, 992-6309.
2 bedroom apt. large
rooms, basement, yard, appliances furnished. Ca ll
even ings 304 -675 -7541 .

-

-

--- - -

- ---

Unfurnished 2 br apt. call
304 -675 2218 from 8 a.m. to6
p.m . Ca ll 304675-6253 until
9:30p.m.

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay. $1.25 bale in field. 304675·2254 or 304 -675 -1302 _

- ---

1976 Chevy 1 ton Cab &amp;
Chassis, long wheel base,
V-8, 4 speed, new front
tires. a.c., am ·fm -8 track
stereo. Phone 614 843 -4945
after 7 p.m .

1- - --

- - - --

-

2 bdr. trailer at Rodney,
carpet in living room &amp;
bedroom. Call614-245·9170.

French
City
Painting
residential &amp; commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured
ce ilings. Call 614-367 -7784
or 614-367 -7160.
·

1972 Chevy pickup $300.00,
1974 Ford Gran Torino
ssoo.oo. Call304 -576-2174 af ter 5:30p.m.

Crea tive wood decks,
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
redwood. Free estimate.
Call614-388-9762.

Vans &amp; 4 W,D,
1980 Pontiac Sunbird auto. 13
PINE RIDGE COL-JEs tran s., power steering, AM - 1979 Dodge Van 200, 3/4 ton ,
AKC Registered Colli e FM radio, excellent cond. auto tran s., PS, PB , ex ·
pups. Call 614·256· 1267 or Call446-4782 .
ce llent cond , $3,700_ Call
446 2107.
446-0511.
1- - - - - - - - - - --- - - 1975 Monte Car lo $1,000. I- - - - - - - Groom in g services for Call446 -0924.
1979 F -150 4 wheel drive.
pets. Will c lip English
One owner. Good cond .,
Sheep dog s, poodles &amp; 70 Chevelle Ma li bu 327 4 must see to appreciate.
Schnauzer 's . Reasonable. bbl. , ~uncie 4-speed, 4:11 $6,000.614-992 -3640.
For appt. 614 -992 7342 .
posL 'hew paint, slots, 1 --- - -------- ~~­
priced to se ll. Call 614388
'76 Ford van E 350,
AKC Registered Cocker 9311.
mechanically good, needs
Spaniel pups . Buff co lor .
paintS1200. 304·675 7454.
614·992 ·3018.
1979 TransAm ex tra c lea n , 1---- ---· - - - - -fully loaded . $6,995. Ca ll 1974 CHEVY Blazer with
POODLE
pups,
AKC 446 9285.
.54,000 mil es, inc ludes AM ·
registered . No Checks, 304 ·
FM cassette, 4" lift kit,
895·3958 .
73 Fiat 128 sedan, 40,000 15x38 gumbos mounted on
miles, S800 . 71 Super B, 383 10" white spoke whee ls,
THREE male AKC Si lver mag., 1 of 500, $650. Call has header s &amp; Holley . Want
$2,700. or best offer, 304 446 -3691 or 446 7365.
Poodles, ca ll 304 -882 ·3672.
882 -2821.

Masonary work, Logue
Contracting,
Rt.
l,
Ewington. Cal l 614-388 9939.

AKC Reg . Brittany Spanie l
has been hunted a nd has
shot s. Call 614 947 9509 al
ter 5 614 -3670327.

71

CAPTAIN EASY
THEY'll BE-LieVE I'M THe
REAL EA?Y IF I CAN GET TO

r'

ALL THAT'5
B~T HOW
00 'IOU PLAN ON
GETT IN 6 OUT
FINE,

HOLIDAY ACRE:; AND CATCH
THAT HOOAG BeFORE
THe IMPO!HOR DOE-5.

OF

HER~;

REMEMBER.

WHAT 'IOU 5AIO
WHEN WE WERE
TIE'D TO THAT
TREE AT BIG
RON'5, PETER

"7()METIMS:; 'IOU' VI? GOT TO
U5E 'lOUR BRAIN."

1966 Chevy Capri sta tion
wagon, 396 motor, fair 78 JEEP Renegade, 24,000
co nd ., make offer . Ca ll 446· · miles, $3800. firm . 304 -6753594.
3628.

BOXER, Jlh years o ld,
registered, female, 304·882·
2449

1980 VW Rabbit, 2 dr , hat chba ck, 4 spd ., air co nd .,
AM ·FM cassette, rear win ·
dow defroster, new radial
tir es, one owner, new cond .
Call446 -0515 anytime .

Mu sical
Instruments

57

Lowry Geni e organ $1000 .
304 -675 -3138.
58
Fruit
_____ _!_yegeta_~le~ __ _
Pick your own sugar pod
peas, bring
con t ai ners.
$6.00 bushell also have ca b·
bage, ca uliflower,
and
broccoli . In another week
1/2 runner beans, sa m e as
last year $6.00 bushel.
Raynors Peach Orchard,
Rt . 7, Lower River Rd . Call
446 4807.

Farm

Supplies

&amp; li!JeSIDEk
6~ --- -- ~a~"!_ ~~pme!l!_ _
Trac tor (David Brown 990
diesel with end loader), ex.
cond . Ca ll614 -379 -2651.

1971 4 dr., Sky lark good
cond., $450 or best offer.
Call 446-6615 or 446·1780.
1963 2 door hard top Nova .
Good running &amp; body cond .
Ni ce spor t s ca r . $2,300. 614·
992 -3640.
1978 Z28 Camaro. Blue, 4
speed, good cond . Must see
to appreciate_ $5,500 . 614·
992·3640.
1973 FORD Torino, 302, AT,
PS, PB . Good condition.
Call Pom eroy 992 ·2428.
1980
Olds.
Cutlass
Brougham . 30,000 miles,
new radial tir es, loaded.
Exc. cond . $6,800. 614 -992 2881.

--- ~ - --

Motorcycl~s__

1974 KAw. ZIE 900, 15,000
miles, $1,400 . Call446-0208.
RM250, runs exc.
Must se ll by Thursday.
$400. 614-992 -6362.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensi ve cars in
stock.
1981 FORD Escort, phone
895 -3618 ,

-

1- ---- - --- - -- - 1968 Harley Davidson, E ·
Glide al l new chrome, ex c.
running cond . $2500. 304675 -6726.

~IN TARAATIQJ 1'5 CCCCLE?

lDf?a\ID c:;,J

HMM,,, CO '/OJ 1).{1fJK IF WE:
00~ I H6'D A~WER 2

(§)

y

HO~'/.W::ON.

- -- -- - -

CHRISTIAN'S
CONSTRUCTION.
Constr.,
roofing, siding, spouting,
fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
c leaning _ 446 -2000, ca ll
before 8 and after 5: 30.
C &amp;
R Paint Center
Professional
painters,
commercial and residen tial , insured . 41 Court St.,
Gallipolis, 446-9458, no answer 446-1758.

ANNIE

THERE I YOU'RE LOOSE.'
WE'VE C';OT T' MAK.E
TII.ACKS NOW, 5ANDY !,1

.. YOU'KE TOO WEill&lt; T'RUN.1
OH GEE , 5ANDY.' YOU'VE
GOT T' TRY, OR. TH~E
!&lt;NECK BOY5 WILL ---

Roofing, gutter, blow-in in sullation":'siding &amp; painting .
10 yrs. experience. Call446·
3330 or 614-388-9919,
Gene's
Steam
Carpet
Clean-Scotch Gaurd -Free
estimates -spring specials Gene Smith, 992 -6309.
RON'S Te levision Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls . Phone 576-2398
or 446-2454.

ALLEY OOP
T'MJ ADULTS
CLAIMING 10 BE
ALLEY 00P AND
OOOLA' NO

F &amp; K Tree Trimming ,
stump removal. 675-1331.

IDENTIF ICATION!

KAWASAKI KE 100 en·
duro. Like new. excellent
condition, on l y 924 miles.
$600. 304·675·4831.

1--------1982 Honda XR 100. Very
good condition. Phone 304675 -3993.

1951 HARLEY Davidson,
comp letely overhauled,
good condition, $1500. after
5: 30 ca ll 304-675-1780.
· - - ----- - -

75

- - - - --

--

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1978
Lund
in -"
board/outboard 18 ft., 120
HP ski boat &amp; trailer. Ex.
cond. Ca ll 614-256-6236 or
446 -8146,

1974 Chrys ler 16 ft _ boat
and trailer . 1975 Chrys ler
90 H P motor, $3,000. For
detail cal l446-9285.
Sears 12ft. fiber glass, tri ·
haul boat with oars and
trailer. Call446-0418.

73 PONTIAC LeMans, air For sa le or trade 16.5 ft
conditioning,
power Wellcraft runabout, 140
steer ing, 350 erigine, $700. HP, 4 cyl., 10 Mercrui!ji!r,
or be~t offer over $600. by 7Registered and grade hor - 1-82, 2511 Jefferson Ave. Pt. conver tibl e with full can·
vas and mooring cover, HD
ses, exce ll ent 4-H project. Pleasant.
galvanized tilt trailer run ·
English and western sad ning lights, spot light, AMdles·
everythin
67 Cheve lle, 283 Automatic, FM radio, skis, life jacket,
imaginable in t'lorse
black on black. Phone 304· tow harness, boarding ladment and · supp lies, a I
der, garage kept, very good
riding lessons and trail 675-4181.
rides and horse training. -- -- ~ --- --~- I ~~~:ilion ; $3,800. Call 446Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow. 1974 AMC Matador been
614-698-3290.
wrecked, can be fixed or
used for parts. SJOO. Phone 26 ft. Skillcraft. 1972 1-0_
Sleeps 6. $6,000. Like new.
304-675-1349.
Registered Quarter
614·992-3402.
$500. Pony cart, $75.
quarter mare _614-698-3290. 70 DODGE 1 ton truck, 1------ - - - 120 H P Inboard-outboard
-- ~ - - - - - - - - - -1 $900. 70 Ford wrecker, $900_
Johnson 5'12 horse boat Mercury Cruise, Dorsett
motor. 304-576 -2372.
Boat with trailer, 304-6756286.
Yearling Chestnut Fi lly l/2
Morgan. Ca ll 614 -379 -2 168.

RINGLES'S SERVICE experienced mason, roofer,
ca rpenter ,
electric ian,
general
repairs
and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675-4560.
---~ -

-- -

- -- -

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304 -895-3802.

ADVANCED
Seam l ess
Gutter · Doors.
Otteri ng
continuous
guttering,
seamless siding, roofing,
garage
doors,
free
estimates, 614 -698-8205.

GASOLINE ALLEY

How about a movie
toniqht, Junie?
/ ,-~,

... but I have this
letter l absolutel4
must write!

~

Home?

Plumbing
___!_!leatin_g_~ _

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
83

Excavating

11M AFRAID NOT.
ORVILLE'S CRIED

•woLF'' ONCE

TOO OFTEN/

For water lines, sewer
lines, septic tanks or leaky
basements call Hayman
T~e Hoeman. 6_
14-992-2618.

JAR Construction Co. 011·
cher, backhoe, and dozer.
Footers, gas lines, water
lines. Rutland, Ohio. 614742 -2903.
Lawrence Sidenstricker
Backhoe Service. Call.675-

5580.
84
Electrical
___"!__Refr~eration -~

THAT

BROTHER IN- LAW
OF MINE

SEWING Machine repairs ..
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pom~roy. 992-2284,

SHORE 15

TRIGGER
HAPPY!!

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call614-367 -7471
or 614-367 -0591.
72
1981 Datsun pickup long
bed, 5 spd_, $5,100. Call «68380 after

s.

1976-1 ton Chevy oR ear end
gear ratio, 1978·1 ton
Chevy rear end 4.10 gear
ratio. 614-843-4945 after 7
p,m,

- - - - , . - - - - - - --,14.56
52 Chevy truck, new 67 283,
$695. Call «6-3691 or «6-

1977 Datsun pickup, short
bed, new paint. Call «61581 ,
197:i Ford

F·250

Ranger

englne,'-ooaywork,
a u!omatlc
l&lt;L T. 360Needs
trans,
S700 .
A46 · 2107,
call

e~enlngs,
1976 Ford F250, automatic,
P.S, Runs good, 388·9342,

77

Auto Repair

Duality Aulobody &amp; Paint
work. Professional ·custom
paint work on m9torcycles.
Auto Trim Center, «6· 1968,

6:30

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l~=~~~~L=~~
78
1977 Starcrafl fold down
camper
with electric
refrigerator &amp; awning,
$1,900,614-992-2581 ,

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

KJ

I I

Now Hauling limestone•fill
dirt-top soil -gravel, Free
estimates. Call 614-¥77101".

[XX
KLEETT

Happy Days
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Report
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6J (H) Entertainment
Tonight
B:OO 0 Cil C1J Bret Maverick
Guthrie is tned for murder
with Mavenck as h1s attor·
nay . IAI 160 mon I
CIJ MOVIE: 'Going Apel '
(l) National Geographic
Special
CII USA Junior Olympic
Boxing Tournament Fin als from the U.S. Air
Force Academy
Cil &amp;I (Ui Happy Days
Chach1 dec1des to play the
fi eld
(R)
!ClosedCaptioned]
0
CIJ ®l Cronkite's
Universe Th1s senes ex amines the full scope of
SC ientifiC aC ti VIty
(]) Danger UXB From
Masterpiece Theatre "D ig ging Out .· The bomb squad
IS called on to detonate a
bomb 1n a deserted fac tory
160 m•n I !Closed
Capttoned]
8 :30 CIJ &amp;I (j2) laverne and
Shirley Shirl ey conv inces
Carmine to wa lk down the
aisle with her ~A) [CiosedCapt oonedJ
0 CIJ ®I Two Of Us Nan
ca n't wa it to have a titled
Englishman as a house
guest. (R)
9:00 0 CV C1J Cassie &amp; Co.
Cass ie investigates the dl saprearan ce of a man
wonh two m1U1on dollars
160 mon)
(}) 700 Club
Cil
&amp;I
t12l Three's
Company Jack 's cook 1ng
pleases a mob ster (R)
[Ciosed·CaptoonedJ
0 C1J ®l MOVIE : 'White
Mama'
(I) American Playhouse
'True Story of Gregorio
Canez .· A legenda ry gun fight between a Texas
sheriff and a Mexican American ts the subject of
this original play. (2 hrs .)
[C losed Capt oonedJ
Danger UXB From
Masterpiece Theatre "Digging Out.· The bomb squad
is ca lled on to detonate a
bomb in a deserted fac tory
(60 min .) [Closed
Captioned[
9:30 Cil HBO Theater: Wait
Until Dark Three men ter·
ronze
a
young
bhnd
woman alone in her aparl·
ment .
CV MOVIE : 'Change of
Seasons'
Cil &amp;I 112! Too Close For
CQmfort Jackie beco mes
engaged to a cop. (R)
1 0 :00 0 Cil CD Flamingo Road
Michael Tyrone· s bank forecloses on the Weldon
Mill and Sam and Lane· s
romance is te sted . (R) (60
min .)
CIJ &amp;I (Ui Hart to Hart
The Harts discover that a
missing stamp has turned
up in their collection . {A)
!60 min .) [Closed Captioned[
Cill Newswatch
10:30 (})Sing out America
ffi TBS Evening News
Cill Hitchcock
11 :00 0 Cil CIJ 0 CIJ ®&gt; &amp;I (Ui
News
(}) Nashville RFD
(!) ESPN Sports Center

PEANUTS

I PAINTED LITTLE
FLOWERS ON TI-lE SIDE
OF '(OUR SUPPER D15H

JIMS Water S_e rvlce. Call
Jim Lanier; 304-675-7397,

---·
.:.___.

TRI STAT'E
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Galllpiifls,
«6-7833 or «6-1833,

---------~
MOWREYS Upholstery 'Fit. ·
1 Box 124, Pl. Pleasant JOA- ·
1
675-4154,
:·;·;I:~·, .: ;

"

;\

IT'5 TO GIVE YOU THE
ILLUSION THAT YOUR
LIFE IS MORE INTERESTING
THAN IT REALLY 15 ...

N~ws/Sports/Weather

(]) Firing Une
11 :30 0 Cil CD Wimbledon NBC
reports on developments
at Wimbledon .
Cil MOVIE: 'Saturday the
14th'
Cil MOVIE: 'Jau Singer'
(}) Another Ute
(() MOVIE: 'The Dark
Angel
CIJ Benny Hill Show
0 (]) Alice Jerry Reed
drops by Mel's diner. IR)
(j) MOVIE: 'Stand Up
and Be Counted'
Gl (D) Nlghttlne
11:46 II (f) CD Tonight Show
12:00 C1J Burna &amp; Allen
(!) PKA Full Contact
Karate
(]) Nlghtllne
0
(]) WKRP In
Cincinnati
Johnny's
daughter shows up unex·
pectedly, (R)
(]) PB~ Late Night

WH~N "TH~Y

601
MARRIED, THIS

I I I

m

CD

Need something haUled
away or something moved?
We'll do ·it. Call «6-3159 or
614-256-1967 after 6:

Upholstery

I

0 Cil CD 0 CIJ

Cill

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work_ Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446-44-40.

85

Car parts for sale, 72
Plymouth 318 engine, and
transmission. 2· 800 x 14
tires. 304-773·5882.

What letter are 401.1
writinq? An application
to the

Old Maids'

STARKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Serv ice. Shrubs
trimmed . Phone 304 -576 2010.
82

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

LAIGY

COUlD HAVE 6EEN
'THEIR 'liFE'S AIM . "

MIRA PI

rJ

Now arrange the or cled le"ers to
form the surpnse an swer as sug
gested by the above cartoon

1

Print answer here

I I I I I I I )"

" [

(Answer s tomorrow)
Yes terday s

Jumbles DAUNT CROON INFECT FAULTY
What some joggers tend t o d oRUN TO FAT

I An swer

Jumble Book No. 20, contalnlr.g 110 puutes , is available lor S1.95 poalplkf

0 CIJ

1978 11:2

- -~-

1975 Buick La Sabre . Sa le or
trade tor motorcyc le of
equa l va lue. 614 247·2605.

_

1978 Honda X L 175 like
new, $675. Call614 245-5515 .

- - - --- - ~·-- ·

NEW Hol land haybine &amp; 1977 Bui ck Regal, exc.
baler, hay rake, Ke lly cond. V -6, auto., p.s, p ,b _,
backhoe, box blade. Ex - a.c.. other extras, one
ce llent condition call 304- owner . 614·992· 5834.
895-3503,304 -697 2527 _
63
Livestock- - - REG. QUARTER HORSES
Training,
showing,
breeding, sa les and boar ·
ding. Contact, Dan Beam,
Ga llipol is, 446-0183.

74

-

m1f

~~ ®

Unscramble t~se tour Jumbles.
one letter to each square. to form
tour ordinary words

CD

BORN LOSER

Autos for Sale

Cock tail s, white a nd cin
namon, loca lly
raised .
G unvill e Road off Rt . 87,
ca ll 304·458·1619.

-

Car parts for sa le. 72
Plymouth 318 engine, and
tran sm iss ion . 2· BOO x 14
tir es. 304 ·773 -5882 .

64

-----

Large dog house suitable
fo r big dog also rototiller .
614 ·992 2941 .
Montgomery Ward 30"
e lec tri c range, gold $85.
Maytag automat ic washer
$65. 614 ·742 2352 .

24 Red laying hens. 304 -6751926.

7365,

2 bdr. mobile home below
Eureka. Ref. &amp; dep, req_
Call614·256-1922.

6 :00

m

Sonia's Professional Dog
Grooming . Call614 -3888547
and ask tor Soni a.

"!:!}

EVENING

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com mercial and residential,
fr ee estimates. Call614-2561182.

4rm.house&amp;bath, ref . and
dep. req . Call446-3358.

Clean 12x60, 2 bdr. mobile
home. Furn., convenient,
good neighborhood, air
cond., sec. dep_ req . Call af ter 5, «6-8558.

Home
Improvements

-----

174 pieces brown un ·
derpinning for a mobile
home used ju st 1 year . A
seven &amp; one half f ee t by 58
inche wide multicolored,
braided oval rug . White
uniforms (pantsuits) three
different sty les, si zes 9-10.
Ca ll aft er 4PM, 446 -3065

';1jl~'iM}
~

TUESDAY
6/29/82

Furnished Rooms

Rooms with cooking, cab le,
air, $-40 a week . 304 -773·
565 1

The Da,Jl Sentinei-Page-9

rt, Ohio

Television
Viewing

14 foot Mustang trailer,
$800., electric brakes, gas,
refrigerator, 12 volt and
gas lights. Phone (304) 882 -

--- --~

mo. 1·643-26«.

Pomeroy-Middle

by Larry

7:00

35 PH O N E 446 3868

cond Delu xe k 1l c hen , large
l1 v1ng r oom &amp; bath, 2

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

Household Goods

NEW HOURS Mon. lhru
Building materia ls block,
Thurs. 9to 6, Fri. 9 to8 . Sat.
brick, sewer pipes, wi n·
9 to 6. Electric range $65,
dews, lintels, etc. Claude
auto. washerS75, 5,000 BTU
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
air cond . $95, swivel rocker Ca
ll 614-245-5121.
$20, rocker recliner S20, 30
in. gas range $95. Skaggs
Appliances, Upper River Used materials. Buildings I
Rd., beside Stone Cr est &amp; R at GDC. Steel beams,
MoteL 446-7398 .
wood &amp; stone. See Jim
- - - - -- --- ----1 Giles.
2 speed Whirlpool washer 1--::;===;~:=;:"-"'-;:-:-=;::-extra nice, 5 temp Frig . 56
Pets for Sale
dryer, eac h S90, guaran·
DRAGONWYND
CAT teed. Ca ll614 -256-1207.
TERY
KENNEL. AKC
-=;:~::=:;:;::~:=:=::7~=-1 C how puppies , C F A
54
Misc. Merchandice
Himalayan, Persian and
Plastic Septi c Tanks. State Siamese kittens. Ca ll 446 ·
and cou nty approved. 1,000 3844 afte r 4 p.m.
gal. tank, price $340 . Other 1--- -------- -- - - -1
sizes in stock, haul in your HILLCREST KENNEL
pickup truck. Ca ll 614-286- Boarding all breeds, c lea n
5930, Jackson, Oh . RON indoor -outdoor facilities .
A lso AKC Reg _ Dober EVANS ENTERPRISES
mans. Call446 -7795.

Ass umable 711• percent
loan, 4 bedroom , 2 full
baths, all e lectric 75x100
corner lot . 1·304-882·2319.

32

June

from Jumble, c/o this newsp1per, 8011.34, Norwood. N.J 07648. Include your
name, address. zip code and make checks payable to News a rbooh .

BRIDGE
Go for the sure thing
By Oswald Jacoby

and Alan Sontag
NORTH
• 10 8 6 J
'I'AK
tAK
+QJ 9 8 5

Here is a Fred Karpin
hand for rubber bndge play ers . You are in a very sound

three

no-trump

contract

East has overcalled with a
spade. West opens the jack
of spades and East plays the

seven.
You are '" a hurry to get
the rubber over with and
win with your king . You
en ter dummy with a red ace
or king and try the club
finesse. East shou ld hold
that king as part of hi s vul nerable overcall . But to your
dismay. West produces that
card and leads t he deuce of
spades. East co llects four
spa de tncks and t he rubber
IS still going on .
You were unlucky, but you
had a sure-thing play . Just
duck that first spade. West
will lead a second spade
Und oubted ly, East Will take
his ace and queen and give
dummy a tnck with the 10.
However. you will take the
club finesse with comp lete
safety and be sure of your
contract

6-29-82

WEST
EAST
+AQ 975
+J2
'I'QJ 82
" 954
• J 9J
ti076 52
+ 2
K64
SOL'TII

+

+ K4

'1'10 761

• Q8 4
+A 10 7J
Vulnerable Bo1h
Dealer: North
North
1+
3 NT

West

Pa ss
Pa ss

Opemng lead

East

South

1'&lt;1 ss

1 NT
Pa ss

1•

•J

Why dld WP say that thiS IS
a hand for rubber bndge
pl&lt;1yers: Because a match
point player would undoubt edly play the k1ng of spades
at tnck one and go aft er as

many tri cks as poss 1ble

t------------------------

~'Dby THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I "Oh, - ,
I M eat cuts
Be Good"
2 Be in unison
3 Compare
5 Hammett
sleuth
4 Craving
10 Monster
5 Winter
II Memorize
condition
12 Khomeini 's
6 Antoinette
country
- Award
13 Misprints
7 Swiss r iver
15 Original
8 Have a limit
16 Thrice (Lat.) 9 Initiate
17 Spider's
14 Ease
handiwork
16 "Elmer's - "
18 Gob's mission 19 Famous
20 Malayan coin
engraver
21 Wee equine 22 Germ

Yesterday's Answer
23 Leaf opening
24 Literary
work
25 Card game
27 London
street
29 Hardship

30 Scandi·
navian
31 Unseasoned
38 French
season
37 "Cry River"

22
23
25
2S
27
2S

Marksman
Take captive
N.H. city
Lacerated
Old dance
Eggs
29 Severance
32 Torme

33

"When ~

to sleep ... "
34 Scand.
country
(abbr.)

35Claim
37 Pere's mate
38 Pretend
39 Alleviate
40 On the watch

41 What Bo
Derek is
(2 wds,)

6

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

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In I his sample A II "
used for the three L"s, X for the two o·s. etc. Single letters, apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lettel'l are different

CRYPTOQUOTES
MUHQ
HCLV

DU

VM

c

BMNAQU

QCGVZ

VZQGQ

HCFQ

TQMTNQ

LCDA

c
C

c

ZMYG

D

LQQ A_

PNMJQG,
JQQA.-VQUUKLMU

Yesterday's Cryptoquote : EVERY BABY BORN INTO THE_
WORLD IS A FINER ONE THAN THE LAST.-cHARIES

DICKENS

�--- --- --·-- ·-- --

·-· - -

---- - --- ·-.-------- - - - - - - ------ - - -·--- - ·Tuesday, June 29, 1982

Paul H. Cleland
P aul H. Cleland, 66. Rac ine. di ed
Monday at Veter a ns Hospita l, Huntington, W. Va.
He was the son of Thomas Art hu r
and Mable Wolfe Cleland, who preceded him In death. He Is surv ived
by brothers a nd sisters-In-law,
James Cleland , Robert Cleland,
Kenneth and Ka thy Cleland, E liza bethtown, Tenn ., Da llas and Ger a ldine Cleland, Rac ine . Willia m and
J ane Cleland , Racine; and sLster.,
Mrs. Jed 1Isabell P ickens, Shelby.
N.C., a nd Mrs. P a ul tl3e llvl
McMurray, Columbu s.
·
He was a member of the Raci ne
American Legion a nd a veteran of
WWII.
Funer al wUI be !rom the E wing
Funeral Chapel. Wednesday a l 3
p.m . Burial wUJ follow in Gree nwood Cemetery . Calling hours arc
Tuesday aft er 7 p.m .
The fam ily asks dona tio ns to thP

heart fund be m ade In lieu of
nowcrs.

Ray mond C. Douglas
Ray mond C. Douglas, 56, Pomeroy. died this mo rning at the Pomerov Health Care Center .
He was the son of the la te J esse
H. a nd R.o ma E . Sta nley Douglas.
He was preceded in death by two
brolher s.

He Is survived by two daught er s,
Tamea Hogs burg and Jill Douglas,
bo th of Ft. Collins, Colo.; one son,
John C. Douglas, Cincinnati; and
two s ister s, Da isy Van Dyke of Wa s hington Court Hou se and Sidney
Simpson of Arlington , Texas.
He was a lifelong car sales man in
At hens and Meigs counties.
Graves ide serv ices will be held 10
a.m . Thursday a t Burlingham
CPmctcry . ThcrP will be no
vis ila lion.

Meigs County happenings
Veteran!! Me morial
Veterans Me m orial Hos pit a l announces the following admission.•
and dischar ges Monda)·:
Admi ss io ns -- Nao mi Smi t h .
Pomeroy, Mabi e Pauley , Middi &lt;'po rt, Anna Prague, Dex ter , Ruby
Hallliday, Rutland , Ka thleen Lewhew, Pomeroy, Opie cobb. Mid·
dleport , Willia m Hyse ll. Pomeroy,
All a n Bl ac kwood , P omeroy.
E mma Way land , Middleport, Daniel Rauden, Hartford, W.Va .. Melvina Dav idson, Pomeroy. Paul
Gr ady. Long Bott om . Disc harges -J a mes Ada ms, Delorcs Wickline.

Emergency squads
have busy day
The Meigs Co. E mergP ncy Medi
cal Service reported severa l ru ns
overnight .
At 4: 26 a. m . Monda)·, the MiddiP.
port squad transpo rted Em ma
Way la nd from North Second to
Veterans Me mo ria l Hos pit a l. r&lt;'tumlng at 1: 13 p.m . to aga in take
her to Veterans Me murial Hospital.
At 8:36 a. m .. the Middlepo rt
squad took Arthur Pres ton from
Ches hire to Hoizer Medical Center;
Pomeroy E MS trans ported Dean
Blackwood from Powell 's Sup&lt;'!"
Va lu to VMH a t 11 :36 a .m .; Syracuse took Bill Hysell from 1he
Pomeroy Health Care Cent er to
VMH; at 2: 01 p.m. , Middleport
EMS was called to North Fifth.
Charles White was not trea ted or
transJXH1ed . At 9:55 p.m .. TuppP rs
Plains took VIo la Wc iam ann to
Holzer Medical Center .

Boosters to meet

i\NTIQUE CAR SHOW WINNERS-Pictured IU'e some of the
wbmers of the Big Bend Regatta auto show Saturday. Shown IU'e, not In
order, Roy Miller, Dick McDonald, HIUik CleiiUid, Uoyd Roth, Russ

Day, David McCoy, Don Berry, John Dunfee, Kim Neal, Sheldon Gerlach, BW JarreD, Tom Todd. AU partlclpiUits received trophies. (Jeff
CIU'SOD photo)

·---··· -·~--··

'"~·~r
II Ill II
II Ill II
II lll1II

II

power lines ont o the roof of the
buildin g.
The building received slight fire
damage to the roof a nd wa ter da m age to the showroom .
Appra isers were expected to
,·iew damage at the building today.

,,

. . ~·
/.~·

l!l:'\'7.1

i

To end marriages

I

GENERAL® STORES

The following divorce and dissolut ion applications were filed In
MP igs Co unt y Common Pleas
Cou t1:
.Jacki e L. Icenhower, Middleport, fil ed for di vorce from Ricky
W. Icenhower. P omeroy.
David C. F lagg and Julia H.
Flagg, Syracuse, filed for a dissolution of ma rri age.

• HAMLIN , WV
3U Wetnut Street

• WAYNE, WV
522 Hendr1ch Slr.. t

• GALLIPOLIS, OH
312-3HI Second Aw enue

• HURRICANE, WV
Mldlend Tr1ll

• CATLffiSBURG , KY
270$ Loulu Str.. t

• GREENFIELD, OH
22! Jelle~on Street

• KENOVA, WV
1329 Ch11tnut StrHI

• GREENUP , KY
M1ln Street

• LOGAN , OH
3e Wee! Meln Str"t

• MILTON , WV
1029 hleln StrMI

• LOUISA, KY
Meln Crose Slrlll

• PLAIN CITY, OH
11 I Well Meln Street

• RAVENSWOOD, WIJ
219 Washington Street

• CIRCLEVILLE, OH
129-131 w.. t Metn Street

• POMEROY , OH
202 Eest Meln Slraet

RUN 5-21

Satisladion Guaranteed
STARTS

WED.,

Divorees sought

JUNE 30TH

Four divorces were granted in
Me igs Count y Common Pleas
Cout1 recently:
Lcda M. Lee from Forest W.
Lee; Michae l Shay Faw from Enctt
A. Faw; Mary Smith !rom Wilbur
Smith; a nd Sharo n F . Correa from
Timoth v J . Cor rea .

BEST OF SHOW-{;hosen best of show In the American Made Motorcycle Competition, held Sunday on the Pomeroy piU'klng lot bt conjunction with the Regatta, was this cycle, shown with owner Tim
Dcmoskey, Pomeroy. Dcmoskey received a Best of Show trophy IUid a
leather tiding jacket from Athens Sport Cycle. Tim won the honor over
more than 200 other entnes.

Mt•et at shanty
The Meigs Co. Fox Chasers Ass n.
wi ll meet F rid ay, July 2, at the
' hant y on Eagle Ridge Road. Plans
for the picnic will be discussed.

The Pomeroy Fire Dept . recently
awarded the following prizes :
Weed eater , Cliff Thomas, Mid·
dl eport ; rod a nd reel, Sonya Wolfe,
Middleport ; la nt ern . Norma Goodwin , Pomeroy; ice cr eam freezer ,
Da le Davis. Middleport ; car wa sh
kit , Marge Reut er , Middleport ;
tot e cooler , Delores Tyree, Middle
port ; gift certifi cate !rom a norLst,
Robert Da vis, Minersvllle.

Trustees to meet
The Sa lisbu ry Tow nship trustees
wil l meet In regu la r session 7 p.m .
F riday .July 2 a t the home of Clerk
Wa nda Eblin on La urel Cliff Rd . All
meetings ar e open to the public.

LASTIC
OUSEWAR gS

CHAIN SAW COMPETHION...ShermiUI White competes lor a
plaque IUI&lt;Hlr ribbon In the second Mnual Chain Saw Competition held
Sunday as part of the 1982 Big Bend Regatta.(Jeff CIU'son photo)

Choose from :
.32 qt. utility tub
• 44 qt. round waste basket
• 16 qt. double well pail
• 1Y, bushel close weave laundry basket
• 6 pc. covered bowl set
• 36 qt. rectangular waste basket
.6 gal. trash can with cover and handles
• Y, gal. pitcher with four 16 oz. tumblers

Marriage licenses

Announee winners

Two couples recently applied for
marriage licenses In Me igs County
Probate CoUI1 :
Larry R. Fox, 19, Middleport and
Cheryl Lynn Raines, 17, Racine.
William B. Ebersbach, 65, St. Petersburg, Fla . a nd Catherine L.
Miller, 55, Pomeroy.

Smith-Nelson Buick-Pontiac Motors Inc .. 500 E. Main St., received
minimal damage In the Saturday
blaze which st ruck the building, a
spokesman for the car dealer said.
According to Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Legar, the lire was started
when high winds blew elect ric

Meets Thursday

Party Wednesday

Evangeline Chapter OES 172,
Middleport, wlll m eet Thursday,
July 1, at 7:30 p.m., when 25 year
pins wlll be awarded. Officers wear
chapter dress. Grand Elect a, Joyce
Da vls, wlll be presen\.

i

..

Modern Woodsmen MAtching
Fund Victory party wlll be Wednes·
day, June 30 at 8 p.m . at Tuppers
Plains, not Coolvllle , as was a nnounced earlier .

JUST IN TIME FOR YOUR
4TH OF JULY GUESTS

Minimal damage

OVER 30 IN STOCK

SOFAS

SLEEPERS

1

&lt;~

Here's d too l. comfortable
Wrangler® Jumors out1tt
that's got a touch o f ptzzaz.
Our pull-on shorts stay up
wtth both a full ela sttc
watsl and a "0 -nng" front.
They've al so got btg. handy
cargo pockets. They come
tn a vanety of pa stels and
whtt e, tn petit e. small,
medtum, and large, tn an
easy-to-care-for poly/cotton
twtll. Our multt·stnpe polo
shirt ts the perfect partner
to any color of our pull-on
shorts · each stripe "picks
up" a matching color. It's
an easy-to-care-for poly/cotton knit, in small, medium

• 1y, oz.
.Delicious
french fried
potllto sticks

~

'

I

i: l

LIBERTY STREET

LIQUID SOAP
.stock up now
• For bathroom sink
• Kitchen sink
• Shower and bath
• Attractive,
decorative

ALUMINUM FOIL
• 25 sq. ft.
rolls

.--- o f!

~
4_

ROLL

GIRLS' ONE OR TWO PIECE

BOYS' FAMOUS NAME BRAND

SWIM WEAR

TANK TOPS

• First quality
• Assorted colors
and styles
oSizes7 - 14

• Assorted styl es
.Solids and
stripes
.Sizes 4. 7

and large.

NEW SHIPMENT

Item~.

BY

FLEXSTEEL &amp; KNOX
~VAILABLE

IN

3 SIZES

Shop the Area's
Largest Furniture
Store

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
l

lWIN FULL QUEEN

POT TO STIC

\i\

$
""'~2 !

(Continued from page I I

DURKEE

YOUR$
CHOICE

:-.,

I

Gallia

:...Reduce expenditures for text·
book and supplementary materials
by 30 percent.
-Reduce overtime work to
emergencies only.
-Assign one cook on duty for the
breakfast program.
-Cut the budget for the county
mu~lc program by 50 percent.
-Cut the budget for the county
science and art show by 50 percent.
-Discontinue the board subsidy
for senior, eighth and sixth grade
trlps .•
Estimated savings to the dlsttict,
as estimated at the board's May
meeting, ranged from $IO,&lt;nl to
$50,&lt;nl for different cuts, according I
to district offlctals.

I,\
'

The Meigs Athle tic Boosters will
m eet tonight at 7: 30p.m .

llst of more than 30 areas which
could be cut In 1982-83 to head off the
money shortfall at its last meeting.
Monday night, the board agreed to
the following:
-Reduce travel reimbursement
to 19 cents per mile for all travel,
except for those cases which In·
volve contractural obligations, effective July 1.
-Reduce contributions from the
general fund to the school activity
funds by 50 percent .
-Institute fuU -day kindergarten,
effective fall 1982.
-Cut 50 percent of board of
education-paid fteld trips.
- Conserve telephone usage,
with a 15 percent reduction suggested for the fall.
-Institute conservation measures for usage of heat, electricity
and water.
-Require parents to pay for all
workbooks and uniform supply

~

• 125 count roll
• Absorbent

$

.-_ ROLLS
FOR

M

• First quality
• 100% cotton or
assorted fabric
blends

$

• Lace trims
• Embroidered
front
oSizes S,M,L

f
~

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•••

�</text>
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