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                  <text>Index

Neilson rates
TV's top shows

Worthy top choice
in annual NBA draft

Page 8.

Page 3.

-

entinel
15 Cents

,.\ :\1ultlnwdla llw. Nt•wspaper

Hijacker threatens
to blow up plane

PREPARE FOR HOLIDAYS - The village of
Racine and the Racine Volunteer Fire Department
have been working hard at grooming the town for the
annual Fourth of July celebration. Pictured here
working on a plugged drain are, in foreground, council

members Scott Wolfe and Bob Beegle. In bac k left to
right, are CETA employees who have been helping the
village, Steve Souder, Chris Bostick and Nick Bostic.
Council members have been taking turns at supervising these boys.

BANGKOK, Tha ila nd 1API The es tranged It a lian wife of a Sri
La nkan hijacker begged him toda y
to free ali 256 hos tages a board an
Alit alia jet he has threatened to dy·
namite. Sri Lanka's ambassador to
Thailand •ald.
The hijacker, identified by the
Ita lian E mbassy as 3.1-year-old Sepala Ekanayaka, seized the Boeing
747 with 260 people aboard on a
flight from New Delhi to Bangkok
earlier today, claiming he had dv·
namlte strapped arou nd his nC'Ck .
He later released four captives.
Thai officials said Ekanayaka de·
manded his wife bring his son from
It aly a nd asked for a $.100,CXXJ ran·
som for the hos tages, who report ·
cd ly in c luded an important
Austra lian official and his wife.
Sri La nkan ambassador Miss H.
Abeysekera said the hijacker's
wife appea lro to him in a taped te le·
phone conversat ion with the Italia n
am bassador to Thailand. The tape
was played in to the plane's cockpit.
Miss Abeysekera said.
"Give up!" she said thP w ifP

Recession
catches up

LANDSCAPING - Firemen Trevor Cardone,
Richard Lyons and John Holman do some last minute
landscaping around the fire station in Racine. The

firemen and squad members have made necessary 1mprovemenls around the fire station, while also dona ting
their time in cleaning up the village streets.

Good economic sign--index grows
WASHINGTON (AP) - A government index designed to show
future U.S. economic trends rose in
May, the Commerce Department
reported today ." It was the third
straight monthly gain and a nother
s ign the recession m ay be ending.

Our Reg. 88 .88

Our Reg. 42.88

68.97

AM/FM/I·tr. Or Cassette

-

1 St•t· tiun . 1-1 l'agt'!&lt;l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 30, 1982

1, 2, l, • WI ONlY

Ori.,in.,ll

Editorial 2
Sports 3-5
Society 6-8
Stat.- n.-ws I 0

Page 14.

The Daily
Voi.31,No.40
Co righted 1982

Planned Parenthood
drops from Title XX

styling

34.97

3·band Equalizer Booster
40· W booster for cor radio.

2 4.,
"1

Our Reg. 3.88 Car Cushions
Bucket seat or
•
••
king-size style.

Sole Price Gumouf!lpeclal
•

5713-oz' .jet-spray
helps clean carb.

The 0.3 percent increase in the
Index of Leading Indicators fol ·
lowed the sharp 1.3 percent In·
crease in April. Today's report a lso
revised the figure for March to a 0.2
percent Increase instead of the 0.5
percent decline earier reported.
That meant the index started going up in March for the first time
since a 1.1 percent drop in April
1981. Not since March and April of
1981 had the Index climbed two
months in a row.
Government officials have been

predicting the economy will pull out
of th e recession a nd ga ther
strength in the July-Septe mber
quarter, he lped in large measure
by the July I tax cut .
"The economy I• poised for rec·
overy from recession," Acting
Commerce Undersecretary Robert
Dederick said last week.
Private analysts have said, how·
ever , that sustained eco nom ic
growth may be difficult to maintain
unl ess interes t rates decline
markedly from their high levels.
Short-term Interest rates have
picked up again In the last few
weeks.
The biggest contributors to the
May gain in the Index of Leading
Indicators were new orders for con·
sumer goods and materia ls, building permits and prices for sens iti ve

raw materialc;.
Also ris ing last month was the
average workweek for prod uction
worke r s. Stock prices were
unchanged.
Declining in the new report were
money supply, change in total li nuid a."ets held by U.S. bus lnessl·.
average weekly Initia l cla ims for
state une mployment insura nce, delivery periormance by bus iness
vendors, a nd contracts a nd orders
for new plant a nd equipment .
The bigge•t drop In the Index in
the last year occurred last Septem ber, when it plunged 2.5 percent. It was fla t in NovOPmber but
fe ll in the next three months before
turning up In March.
Ali the figures are adjusted for
normal seasona l variations.

General wants another rate hike
For the second tbne this year,
General Telephone Co. of Ohio l'
seeking a rate hike for its telephone
service customers.
If the rate hike is approved by the
Public Utlllties Commission of
Ohio, the basic residential rate will
go up about 12 cents a day, according to Robert Randall, vice~resldent and general manager of
GTE.
j GTE also want~ to boost the cost
of coin telephone calls from 20 to 25
.cents
The rate hike application is expected to be rued with PUCO Oct. 1.
'
' a 9.4
GTE is seeking
$32.5 million,
percent ·boost In annual revenues,

Randall said.
PUCO granted a $27 mUllon rate
" Increase on April 26, but GTE was
seeking $63.3 mllllon. The Increases
took etiect May 5.
··

For Pomeroy area residents, the
new hike would raL•e the bill for a
private reSidential customer $3 a
month, from $11.85 to $14.85.
The phone company a lso wants
to impose a 1.25 percent late charge
on the past due balance of a phone
bill.
Randall said GTE needs the rate
hike to offset lnflation, ri•lng taxes
and other escalating expenses.
The phone company would actually receive only about half of the
increase If it is granted, he said.
The other half would be eaten up by
taxes.
The request will seek changes allowing the phone company to bill
customers·· oq an Individual basl~.
rather than charg!ng a fiat fee.
CuStomers who ilo not use certain
services, or use them less, wUI pay
less than other customers.

The proposal will call for a bas ic
line access charge, about 40 percent less than the regular monthly
fl at rate, plus a charge per call.
This charge would take into account factors such a• duration and
distance of a phone call, as well as
the time of day the call was made.
Randall said it would take several decades to bnplement this system statewide.
The phone company hopes to convince PUCO to change the way depreciation of their equipment Ill'
calculated.
Federally-ordered deregulation,
changing technology and competition have caused GTE to ask for
new methods of figuring depreciation, Randall said. ·
New methods would allow GTE
to more rapidly reinvest capital
and Improve service, he said.

CATLETTSBURG, Ky . rAP t The rf'Ce;;sion is catching up with
commerce in this stretch of the
Ohio River Va lley.
There was a day when a ma n,
temporarily ou t of wo rk. could go to
the river a nd find employment. But
jobs on boa ts are not too readil y
ava ilable now. Those who have
I hem are stayi ng on.
"We've quit accepting a pplica·
lions," said Frank Boggs, president
of Merdle Bogg• &amp; Sons. "So far we
haven't laid a ny of our people off
but bus iness i• down ."
His compa ny ha• five towboats
and a sternwheeler moving coal
barges and other products over
short distances between docks in
the Tri-State area, chiefl y on the
Ohio River between Gallipolis a nd
Greenup locks and dams.
"Business is sporadic," Boggs
sa id. "Some days we're bu•y. some
da ys most of the boats a in port ."
Towboa t traffic a lso has slowed
for the Ohio River Co .. one of the
bigger towing companies witfl ter·
minals a t Kenova and Huntington,
W.Va. The firm transpo rts goods
from St. Louis to Pittsburgh and all
points In between.
Bill Dean, tipple foreman at the
Kenova termina l, said one- third of
the workers there have been la id
off. The two terminals load coal. !l5
percent of It into thelr barges.
"We've cut off the evening shift
completely," Dean said. "That happened as soon as U.S. Steel shut its
mill down."
U.S. Steel recentl y clo•ed Its Huntington mill, putting approximately
600 men out of work and taking
away what made up 60 percent of
t.he Ohio River Co.'s business.
Most of the flrm 's towboats are
''staying fairly busy with other product•." Dean said.
The Kanawhll River Valley Is a
leading che mical-manufacturin g
region, with Charleston, W.Va. as
the hub. Boats travel along the Kanawha from the Ohio a lmost 100
miles upstream, nearly to the
mouth of the Gauley River , Its m ain
branch.
The Winfield Locks and Dam on
the Kanawha locked through 5.8
million tons of cargo during the first
five months of this year, whic h L•
about normal compared with the
same time frame last year.
At Galllpolls, the number of tows
and tonnage is down significantly.
The faclllty locked through 5, 727
tows carrying 45,186,CXXJ tons of
cargo In 1979. For 1!8! the figures
were 5,lli8 tows and 41,474,(0) tons,
and for 1981 they dropped to 4,814
tows and 40,385,(0) tons.

ttl

pleaded . "This is not the way to do it
if you love your baby.''
Before the hij acker heard his
wife's appea l, he released an in·
dian woman and her child, an Ital·
ia n man and an elderly JapanesP
man suffering an acu te intes tin al
hemorrh age, airpo rt officials said.
Austra lian officials sa id among
those aboard was Peter Francis
Cox . New South Wa les state minis·
ter for tra nsport and highwa ys, a nd
hio;; wifr. who were retu rning homr
from a four da y visit to Italy.
Thailand's Communication Min·
i.ster Amorn Silppaarcha told reporters th at despite the telephonP
piPas of Ita lian a mbassador Fran·
cesco Rlpa ndelli , the hijacker's
wife appea red unwilling to come to
Thailand.
Authorities hope Ekanayaka
wants to com m unicate directl y
wi th his wife, identified by the !tal
ian Foreign Ministry as Ann a AI·
dovra ndi , a teac her li ving in Sa n
Cesario, north of Bologna, wit h her
son, Frey.

The planP' s pilot. Capt. Giorgio
Amoro'&gt;o. i'&gt; in rad io contact w ith

thr· authoritiPs. He fo ld them he
saw tubes and wires sticking out of

the hijacker' s shirt but that the situation was calm .

Reporters saw a r least 50 Thai
police wilh light machine guns and
M 16 rifles ringing thp seized plane,
parked at Don Muang inte rnational
ai rport about a quarter-mile from
the main tPrminal. 'Jo ot her planes
wr rr nf'a rb~ ·.
Amorn. who, spokP with Amoroso bcforP four of the ca ptivPs
were frt:'f'd, ;;aid the co ndition of the
242 pa.,engr' r s and 18 crew
mrmlx•rs appeared good, but food
had run out. He sa id the jet did not
have enoug h fu el to lake off.
In the Sri Lankan capital of Colombo. narco ric.s officia ls said F.kanayaka IPft his homeland 13 years
ago and had been involved in ha·
shish trafficking in Yugosla via in
t974 and morphine smuggling in
Pakistan in 1~1. ThP\" ga\·e no
furthPr dPtails.

ToDAY

mm.IN THEW
Shuttle crew checks systems
CAPE CANAVERAL, F la. - Colum bia" s crew rigorou•ly tested
the space shuttle's navigational and thermal systems today as part
of the s hip's last shakedown cruise. But the astronauts seemed most
pleased when they surprised everyone by fixing a n experiment built
by nine Utah college student s.
In California, 186 miles below, Cha llenger was rolling off the as·
sembly line to become the second in America's fl eet of space shut ·
ties. By 198.1, four • hips will be ferrying commercia l, scientific a nd
military cargo to space.
With the shuttle's belly baked in the sun to dry out any soggy tiles,
Ken Mattingly and Henry Hartsfield turned their attent ion to the Get
Away Special tes ts that had defied repa ir Pffo rt s si nce launch last
Sunday.

Chinese dancer said missing
JACKSON , Miss. -Chinese dance rs say they're worried for the
safety of a colleague who vanished after taking a curt a in call and
requested political asylum during the Intern ational Ballet Competi·
lion here.
Lin Jlanwei, 24, was last seen Monda y night a t the Jackson Cit y
Audit orium aft er his pertormance of "Deer With It s Head Back'"a ballet about the hunter and the hunted.
A government source, who asked not to be ide ntified, said Lin had
reque•ted political asylum a nd was in federal custody.

Boeing Company pleads guilty
WASHINGTON- The Boeing Co. pleaded guilt y today to conceal·
lng more tha n $7 million in illegal comm is•io ns to sell:l.'i a irplanes to
foreign countries and agreed to pay $450,CXXJ in crimin a l fines and
costs.
In a plea bargain worked out with the Justice Department, the
giant a ircraft manufacturer pleaded guilt y in U.S. District Court to
40 counts of filing false statements with the U.S. Export-Import
Bank in connec tion with its financing of Boeing's sa IPS to airline• in
Spain, Lebanon, Honduras a nd the Dominican Republic in the early
1970s.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning num ber drawn Tuesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 815.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 1433.
The lottery reported earnings of $29!l,!1.14 on its 'da ily ga me. The
ea rnings came on sales of $846,366, while holders of winning ticket s
are entitled to share $547,272, lottery officia ls said .

Weather forecast
Southern Ohio- Clear and cool tonight. Lows 52-56. Winds north·
erly 5-10 mph. Sunny and pleasant tomorrow. Highs 74-79.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday lhrouJh SWlclay: Parily cloudy Friday_Scattered showers
and llnmdenltorm8 Saturday and Sunday. Wghs averaging from
arouud 80 norih to the mld-808 aouth. Lows In the upper 40s and liOs
Frldaf and mainly In the 80s on the weekend.

�Commentary
lllt ' uur i Si rt•t'\
I 'H nll' rll). 4 lh lll

614-992-2 1.&gt;6
Ot-:\'OH :IJ Ti iTIIF INTERt--:."11 I IF Til t-. Mt:I(;,.,._I\1 ,\ S41 "1, AH t-:A

ROBE RT L. WINGETT
110 11 HO EFI.I(l l

,\ ~~ • sla nt Publ h; ht•r /l 'o•n tr ulh·r

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
Nt·ws Edit ur

,\ MF MR E it nf T ht' As~ouda lt-d Pn·~~- lnhwd lluil\
,, mo·r 1o ·a n fl,jt'v. s p.ajk·r l'uhli ~&gt; ht·ni 1\Si'oH' h:ttinn
·

l 'r t ·-.~ A,~,,. · w t wn ltlltl

tho·

I.ETi f:RS Ill' III'I NIO N a n · \n•lenmt"d . Tht'\ -. huuld b•· lt':&gt;o' than :100 1o1 nnb lmlK . All
ldlt·n. art' ~ uhj rl'l In t•ditin ~:: 111od mus t ht· l&lt;oiKi~t·t l v. llh n&lt;lnt t', lllitl r o ·.-.~ uml lt•lt•pho nt·
nu m ht·r Nu u ns i.c llNllt•llt'r!&gt; v.ill ~&gt;!;· ptJhl b hr 1t. Lt•\ h·n.~&gt;huoh l ht· m K ' "~ ll..a~ h · . add rn•.-. m l!
l." ut·.-.. oool jlt'OW II II Iil lt'" ·

What's right with
city school systems?
Accordin g tn the conventiona l wisdom a bout I ruubl ed hi gh sc hools in
depressed neighborhoods of big cities. Rule High School he re should ha ve
been writte n off as a lus t ca use lung ago.
l ).)c.·a tcd in one of c poorest secti ons of Knoxv illl'. Tenn . Hul l· has &lt;J stud ent
body 53 pe rce nt white and 47 perce nt blac k. Most of tlll'ir pctrc nt.'i l·i thcr ea rn
meager incomes or rely on we lfare paymcnl"i fur fam il y support.
Ironi ca ll y, the level of economi c depri va ti on is a n impurtan t factor in
ke&lt;•ping the sc hool rac iall y integ rat ed. " There ca n bt· no wh it&lt;' fl ig ht from
Ru le," says guida nn' counselor Maria nna Dav 1s. " beca use our peoplewhite as well as black - are too porto IIIOVl' elscw hl' l'l'.''
Mem bers of the school ba nd once swallo wed tht' ll' pndc a nd acec pted
un ifo rms disea rd ed by anothe r hi gh sr hoo11nlhc n ty. As n·ccntl y as the la te
1970s. a bout tw(}-thi nls of the sc hool's 600 stud enl' fa tlt·d sta nda rdi zed co mpet ency test.&gt;;.
Today, how eve r , the stud e nts. fac ult y ITi l'lllbl' rs ;111d atl11 1111 istra tors a n '
burs ting wi th pride because Rul e recentl y was a 111nng tht• 110 sc hools in 36
cities honored by tlw ford Fnundo l1on's Hi ~o! h School Recugniti un Progra m .
At ;1 tim e when the dcclming qualit y of publi c l'du c&lt;J tion is till' objed of
i:llmost uni ve rsal di sma y but th e foc us of fl'Wcunstrudi ve efforts, Ford has
de\'isetl a unique a pproach to recog ni zin l.! a nd enco urag ing wha t it c ha ract(•r izcs i:I S '' the birth of a new spirit in cit y hi gh sdw,,ls a ll IIVt'r tht• t·ountry. ··
In the first phase of the prug ra 11 1. sc h11t1ls in wluch a t ll'i.ISl 30 perce nt of thl'
stude nt body is dra wn from low-i ncome fcu n illes Wt'l't' invt ted to nuuunak
themselves for $1,000 founda tio n a wo rds /,! ran ted 1111 t ht' ll;:JSIS nf signi ficantl y
improved pe rfonnnct• during t he pas t dl'l'a tk.
Submissions were judged for cffel'IIVl' school h•a dl' rs h1p. l'llha nced
teac hing efforts in bas 1c skills. lt'ac her r om nutlnent an d t'lll phas is on orde r
a nd discipline.
Amon g the winners was Ol iver H1gh School 111 Pi tts burgh, whe re police
patrols we re requ ired in th e h;1 l\ ways to cope w1th rac ial tens ltlll and st ude nt
viole nce in the la te 1960s. Tutla y. a senes of remedi al d fo rts has tr;:J nsfonned Oli ve r into what F ord calls" a n orderly, SUI't'essfu l sc hool. "
At DetrOit'S Ce ntra l High Sehoul. w1th a VIrt ua ll y a ll-black student bud y, a
similar self-help campa ign hos produced nota bi t' academi c itnprovc ments
in suc h diffi cult subj ecL"i as French . science a nd ma thema t iCS.
At Albuque rque High School , th e proportion of the stude nts passing the objective portion of the state's hi gh-sc hool profi cie ncy exa m has inc reased
ma rk edly fro m 57 pe rcent of 78 percent du r ing the past two yea rs.
F re mont Hi gh School m Oakland , Calif .. located in one of the ci ty's most
des titute a nd cri me-prone ne ighborhoods, has orga nized its fi rst marching
band in38 yea rs, IS running a uniqu e ural history progra m and boast.&gt;; that it.&gt;;
stud enl' have won $I million worth of college sc hola rships.
High schools in Atla nta , Baltnnore, Houston, Milwa ukee, Minnea polis.
New Orl ea ns, Salt l.akl• Cit y, Seattl e a nd Washington . D.C., h;:J vl' won initial
awards and now a rc eli gibl e for second-stage $20,000 gra nt.&gt;; from the f ord
Founda ti on.
Among other cities wit h winn e rs a rc Birm ingha 111, Alo.: CtliUII lbus, Ohi o;
Fresno. Calif.; J ackson, Miss.; Noliolk , Va.: Omaha, Nc b.; Po rtl a nd , Ore.;
Syracuse. N.Y.; and Tulsa. Okla .
Here at Rul e H1gh School. an ambitious tutorin g program has produced
what Principal Willa rd K Brown proudl y describo·s as " k1ds who light up
like Christmas trees."
In 1978, tw(}-thirds of the stud e nts la cked read1ng a nd nlilthematical skills
appropria te to their grade leve ls. Las t yea r , a lmos t twoHh irds passed the
sam e compe tency tests .
Revitalizati on of a moribund PTA . a th rcL'-yca r fund-ratsi ng ca mpai gn to
buy ne w ba nd un ifonns, establis hment of a stud ent ort gall e ry and a host of
othe r initia ti ves ha ve prod uced a new s pirit within the school and comlllunit y.
" The l!lnncy is in s i ~ n i fi ca nt . " Brown says of the Fnrd awa rd . " What's imIJI Irta nt IS the pridl' we have beca use our efforts have bee n recognized .··

Berry's World
II

" I don 'I know about you, but I don 'I want my
consciousness raised. "

The ma tter of Hinckl ey's "vindi ca ti on" - a strange sound, tha t
word has, used in the circ wnsta nces
- provokes several obse rva ti ons:
I l The noti on that a la w is clearl y
see n now as ha ving purely a bstract
a rchitecture will qui ckl y be reformed , lessening the likelihood of Hinckley II , a nd Hinckl ey lll, is - well,
remote. Mr. Morr is Abra m , the
d istin guished ed uca tor, lawye r a nd
civil ri ght.&gt;; cham pion wh o has just
1ssued his memoirs !" The Day Is
Short " l said , on the day after the
acquitta l was announ ced , tha t it
would surely ca tal yze lega l reform ,
to whi c h the a nswe r is tha t no s uch
thin g is by a ny mea ns predi cta ble.
Twe nt y-year·o lds wh o have
m ugged a nd tortured gra ndm others
on Munday, a re reg ula rly a rra igned
on Tuesda y, spend Wednesday
ya wn ing thr ough the procedur es to
which they a rc submitted , a nd a re
out on F riday looking a round the
ne ighborhood for fres he r meat.
They would smile. We have had a
c rim e wave tha t mounts, a bout
whi ch we ha ve done prac ti cally
nothing; a creeping illiteracy that
mount.&gt;;, about wh1c h we have done
practically nothing. We ma y have
gut our reputation back the re as a
ca n-d o society. We don 't dese rve it.
21 Mr. Abra m also said tha t the
adversa ry system in Ame ri ca is our
way of asce rtaining the truth. But as
soon as he said it , he was. rea lly,
sorry. The adv ersa ry system , before
a tribunal . is Ameica's way of
deciding public questi ons . for ins tan ce whethe r Hinckl ey will be
punished as a murde r. or me rely
detained as a psychi a tri c pa ti e nt. A
judicia l tri a l resol ves public policy
on how to deal with someone.
Nothin g else. tho::;c who desire to
believe that Hinckl ey is " guilty" in
th e communicable se nse of that
word are free to do so without
fearing that they a re obsc rura ntists
wh o stand in the way of scientific
e pistemol ogy. Dr. Johnson sa id that
it does not defa m~.:;pecula ti on to say

I have several loved ones in Rock
Springs Cemetery. Since this one
tnistee has been elected nothing
much has been done. My grandson
got so ashamed the way the
cemetery looks he has spent five
hours working out there.
Now this is what I would like to
have explained to me. They tell me
we have young people drawing ADC
at pro a month sleeping til noon,

living on easy street. Why not put a
lawn mower in their hands and let
them clean up all the cemeteries not
the just one? We try to make the
towns look spick and span. Why not
respect our loved ones that have
gone on? I want to lake this opportunity to thank Mr. Moore, when
he was trustee, he took good care of
the cemetery.
Ben Batey

wrot e, you s impl y have not
mastered the "Second Concerto." At
least, howeve r, we know tha t the
concerto exists. What we do not
kn ow is whether there is a ny wa y in
whi ch Hinckley can be " proved " to
ha ve known that what he was doing
was evil a nd unla wful.
Now the notion that a body of
kn owl edge, with
inopera ti ve
reference to whi ch two men ha ve
devoted their lives to the study of it,
can be prese nted to a jury, with an
"expert " advocate on one side and
a n " expert" advoca te on the contrary side, in the expectation tha t
tha t jury can adjudi cate as between
the antag onisti c pos itions is quite
s impl y, well, voodoo la w. If, sa y,
E instein and F e rmi could not ag ree
on , oh , the way in whi ch to weigh
ma tter in space, tha t a jury could,
listenin g to both men, come up with
the " right " answe r , is - well, a
supe rstiti on. So tha t we went to
ela borate lengths to und erwrite a
superstiti on. th e pu rpose of whi c h

NE W YORK (API - The cha mpion Los Angeles
La ker s are ric he r. the 1983 senior class of collj&gt;ge
baske tball ta le nt Is poot'C'r a nd .la mes Worthy is delighted after the Na tional Bas kelball Associa tion
draft.
Led by No. I pick Wort hy, S!'ven of the fi rs t nine
selections In the fi rs! round of T uesday's dr aft wer e
a mong the 12 juniors who had elected to skip their
fourth year of collegia te eligi bilily.
Unlike ma ny fi rst picks who have 10 play on weak
team s for years, 6-foot·9 Worlhy, lhe star on No rt h
Car olina 's national collegia te c hampionshi p tea m
las t season, w UI get the chance lo play fo r a w inner
Immedia tely.
"I'm ha ppy ju s! belngw tth this orga nizalio n," sa id
Worthy, who a dded tha t he does n't expec t to start
next season for the defendin g NBA cha m p ions.
"Tha t'll m a ke the adju stme nt eas ier."
The Laker s acqutred a s hot a t mak ing lhe No. I
choice from the Cleveland Cavalier s In a t ra de a nd
then won a coin flip wtth the Sa n Diego Clip per s.
Worthy, Ter ry Cummings of DePa ul and Doml·

was to let Hinckley go unpunished.
B ecaus~ he didn't know he was
trying to kill the president ? Ha rdly.
Because he didn't know it was
unlawful? Hardly . Because
because we are a Freud-{)bsessed
society, riveted to the a ngel - explanation of hwnan behavior, a nd if
somebody does something bad, it's
got to be because he didn 't get
enough food stamps when he was a
kid .
4) So where do we go from he re?
probably nowhere. But if the re is
comfort to be taken, it is in the solid
judgment of the American people
that their institutions are running
the danger of being, simply , usel ess.
The law , as regards to curbing
c rime, is about as useful as the
United Nations in c urbin g
agg ression. Cynicism isn't the answer. Realism, however, helps. And
realism begins by sti cking out our
tongues at the judge and the jurors
who went along with the expensiv e
cha rade.

The trial of John Hinckl ey for the
a tte mpted asassination of the
president is ove r . When the jury
r eturned a ve rdi ct of not guilty by
reason of insanity , the rea ction of
most of the nation was one of
shocked horror and di sbelief. Hinckley . you remember, was the young
man who shot President Rona ld
Reagan a nd three other men in
Was hington. D.C., Ma rch 30, 1981.
To hea r some of the a ngry comment.&gt;;, you would have thou ght the
jury had released the culprit to take
markmanship lessons and try again .
Not so' The jury found him not
guilty because the re was no other
decis ion they could arri ve a t under
the federal law by whi ch he was
tned. Under federal law, the burden
of proof that a person is sa ne or insane rest.&gt;; on the prosec ution . The
prosecution must prove, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that the defendant
was sane at the time of the a ct for
whi ch he is being tri ed. In view of
Hinckley 's biza rre condu ct at the
tim e of his arrest a nd before, as
proven in court, the re was no other

SCPJ&lt;Y

by

Garry Trudeau

The Daily ·Sentinel- Page-3

Sta tr, ta ke n eighth a nd ninlh by India na a nd Oct roi I.
respective ly ; &amp;-foot gua rd J ohn BagtPy of Boslon l'ol·
lege, picked by Clevela nd as the 12th sd rc lion: a nd
0.2 gua rd Rob Willia m s of Houston. who wa.s the \9t h
pick. by Denver.
The rest of the lt rst-round seleclions were O.&gt; guard
Keilh Edm onson of Purdu e, lOt h by Allanla : 1&gt;:1
gua rd La fayett e Lever of Arizona Sta le. ll lh by Por
!la nd; 6-3 guard Eric Floyd of Geo rgelow n. t:lth hv
New .Je rsey: 0.4 gua rd Les le r Co nner of Oregon
Stale, 141h by Golde n Sta te; 6-6 forward Dav id Third
kill of B rad ley. 15th by Phoen lx; 1&gt;5 swingma n Tern·
Teagle of Bay lor, 16th by Houslon; ti-5 guard Rrook&lt;•
Ste ppe of Georgia Tec h. 17th by Kansas Cil&gt;·: fi.:,
gua rd Ric ky P ierce of Ri ce, 1Hih by llt'lrull: li·5
swingma n Pa ul Presscy of Tu lsa. 20t h by Mi lwau
kee; 0. 7 forwa rd Eddie P hillip' of i\ labama. 21sl by·
New J e r.sey; 0. 11 cent er Mar k McNamara of Ca lifnr
nl a, 22nd by Philadelphia . a nd 6- 11 l'l' nl0r ll&lt;IIT&lt;'Il
Ttl tis of Clevela nd Sta te, 2.1rd by Bos ton .
T he surprisC's of thC' fir st roun d wf'rr pn J\'ir!t·d tw

Knut ts. a nd Dav is l'ach with two
singles a pi cn· .
Meigs scored its fi rst run 111 th e first frame wh&lt;• n Kent Wolft• lt•d off
with a s ing le, stoll' sl'cund, a nd th l'll
rod e horn e on a J erry Fields sing lt• .
Meigs ha d its big innmg in till' f1fth
when it scored six run s whe n He msley led off w1th a walk , Phil Kin g
singled , a nd Ton y Riffle had a n RBI
s in gle. Tl'IT)' Wa y la nd r oped
a nother RBI si ngk , foll owed by a n
error, Kova lchik walkl'd, Stewa 11
had a fielder's choin•. a nd J l'ff
Woy land had a n RBI singlt' . Ke nl
Wulft' thl•n empt il'd the bases with a
three RBI doubk .
Meigs will host l.ugan tn a tloub h·
!wader Satu rday Ci t Sy rat' USl' bl'g tn-

famil y. It was their c ha nce to strike
a blow against a syste m that has
made their race a vi ctim of
prejudice for more than a century . lt
speaks most hi ~hly for our jury
system and for the honor of black
Americans of our country that they
we re able to return an impartial verdict based solely on the law under
which the defendant was being tried .
I have heard the opinion expressed
that had Hinckley been tried under a
state law or even Washington law,
the ve rdi ct would have been different. Many states are already
studying changes in the law that
would let a defenda nt escape
retribution for his act.&gt;; of pleading
insanity at the time of the crime.
One state, Idaho, this year changed
the l~w on insanity as defense and
other states are expected to follow
suit. But it is not enough for the
states to change this one law or the
Congress to rewrite this one law.
States and Congress should study
their c riminal codes with an eye to
c hanging any law whic h gives a
criminal an unfair advantage ove r
his victim.

' .•
~

The fede ral court system should
give itself a thorough scrutiny . F or
the past thirty years the federal
court.&gt;; have been interfering more
and more in the decisions of state
courts. This intrusion into the state
courts should be stopped' I don 't
pretend to know how it could be sto(r
ped but only that it should. I can cite
you an example of the unwelcome intrusion of federal courts into the enforcement of state laws right here in
Florida .

CLOSE PLAY - Meigs first baseman Jerry Fields puts the tag on
a Marietta player as he dives back to the sack to avert a pick-off from
pitcher· Jeff Wayland during the second inning of 1\tesday evening's
American Legion game at Syracuse. While this pick-off play failed to
produce an out, Meigs went on to an 8-1 victory .

Florida has the death penalty for
first degree murder. There are now
close to 200 convicted murderers
awaiting execution in Florida . In the
last three years Governor Bob
Graham has signed 36 death warrant.&gt;;. All except one has escaped the
supreme penalty through the intervention of federal district judges.
In an effort to protect he right of a
criminal, the federal courts are
ignoring the rights of the victims.
The final decision as to what may
eventually happen to Hinckley could
well depend on the whim of a federal
judge.

there also wer e r eport s that he felt
s lighted ove r suc h Ite m s as travel
and hotel arrange ments during
Preside nt Reaga n 's E uropea n
tour.
He had threat ened to resign before, more than once, to e nforce the
demand tha t his be the one voice
Preside nt Re a g an- heard and
heeded on foreign policy. ·
Whatever the last straw was, and
Haig hasn't said publicly, It hardly
could have come al a worse time.
The Middle East Ls In turmoil, the
Falkland Islands war has Latin
American policy In disrepair, and
the United States Is just entering
strategic arms reduction talks with
the Soviet Union.
Those pressures can only be
heightened by the fac t, or the lm-

r CAN'r

JOIN YOUR t.R.A.
FAST, tW&amp;. MY
PA/lENT5 JIJ5T

WON'T {..f;f ME.

pression, of an adminLstration In
disarray. That Is the Impression
Haig bequeathed Reagan.
Two years ago, candidate Ronald
Reagan was denouncing the fore ign policy of President Jimmy
Carter as weak and Inconsistent.
"Instead of steadiness , we ha ve
had vacillation," Reagan said of
Carter in 1980. The edges weren'tas
rough tn Haig's resignation lette r,
bul some of the words we re the
same.
In that same campaign year, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance resigned on principle, because he had
opposed what proved to be a futile
attempt at mUitary rescue of the
American hostages then held by
Iran. Vance was specific In his dissent, general in hLs praise.

Punchless Reds
lose third straight
SAN FRANCISCO !API -San
Francisco Giants manager F ra nk
Robinson made a snap judgme nt
regarding left -hander Allee Ha m ·
maker's pitching ab lltl y , bul
neither regre ts tt .
Robinson watched Hammake r
pitch only once after the youngster
joined the Glanls In a spring·
training swap Involving Vida Blue.
The manager liked what he sa w,
· Indicating Hammaker wouldn't be
ln the minors long.
Hammaker, recalled afte r making one Triple-A start, promptly e n·
tered the Giants ' rotation a nd
gradually Improved to a point
where he registered a four-hll , 3-0
victory over the Cincinnati Reds
Tuesday night.
It was his first ma jor league shu·
toul. On the heels of his first m a jot
league complete game In a 4-3, 10tnnlng decision at Houston June 24,
Hammaker became the first Giant
to throw successive complete
games since Ed Whlto;on turned the
trick In June 1980.
"I liked him the first ttme I sa w
him 111 a B Game against the A's, "
Robinson recalled. "He showed me
be can get Jeft-hanllers oul. He
1 made them look bad a t the plate
' and that Impressed me.
"Beating the Astros In 10 Innings
last ·Week was a tremendous
confidence-builder for him. He
learned that he has good enough
stuff to win by getting the ball over

MAY/Jt tie !iHtXW
HAV511 tJMITW fiii5T,
JtAN/t. tie crxJ.I) J/J5T
fA5T fJIRIN6 THe a4Y

1111/ffN ~'fl5 OI!T5/t:Je

PIAY!N6. \

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

In Halg'scase, thecomplalnl was
ge neral, although there may be specifics to come. Members of the Sena te Foreign Relations Committee
have suggested that he should be
called to testify there on exactly
what he thinks Is wrong.
"He Is not finished as a political
force and a political leader in the
broader sense," said Nixon, who
accelerated Halg's Army career
and then signed him on as White
House chief of staff during the final
period of Watergate. "I don't think
we've heard the last of Secretary
Hatg."
What reQ1alns to be heard now is
the bUI of particulars behind Haig's
dlssati~factlon with Reagan foreign
policy.

HOY..
II4RENT5
C11N~

CMFTY.

I

the pla te and not try ing to be 100
fine."
Hammake r, 5-4, retired the first
11 batters and 11 of the last 12, strtk·
ing out four and walking none. He
too a lluded to the Astrodome victory as a pos sible turtnlng point .
"The Houston game gave me
confidence to know I can finis h,"
Hammaker said . "He (Robinson!
stayed with and It helped. Tonight I
had a good fastball and I spotted tt
well. I used II to stay ahead of the
hitters and they neve r adjus ted."
Curiously, lose r Bob Shirley , 2-5,
was eve n more effective Ihan Ha m ·
make r at the start, not allowing a
hit until the sixth. The Giants took a
1-0 lead In the second whe n Jack
Cla rk walked, went to third on Shirley 's throwing e rror on a pic koff
play and scored on Jim Wohlford's
sacrifice fly.
"I just wanted to throw strikes
and let them hit the ball," Shirle y
explained. "I wasn't thinking about
a no· hitter."
The Glanls concluded their scor·
lng In the sixth. Tom O'Ma lley ledolf with a triple and Hammaker
belled a 2-0 pitch for a run-scoring
single to center. Singles by Johnnie
LeMaster and Chili Davis loaded
the bases, and Clark hll a runningscoring single off reliever Joe
Price.
The Giants seek a series sweep
tonight, conludlng a one-week
home span.

I

:_.
, Beep, b e e p • - - - - - - - - - - ,,

fir -; t -;en ior Sf'IPf'IPd .
I~Pv in MagC'C', a ').I forwa rd from Califo rnia -Irv ine
who wa ~ on the l~Hl f-&lt;'2 A ll AmPr ica \f-'am w ith Sa mp.
..,on. Cumming" . Fl o~'d and Da i iP~' . was not selected
until thf' ]~lth pi('k. IJ~ · Phof'nix .
Thl' HI· round dr.lft !ash'Cl rwarly ti 1 : hours a nd con·
du (h't l wIth Bw;ton · s sclr't: 1ion of t)-10 La ndon Tu rner ,
" "i t:n· on lndbn:t''i l~+ Kl national champions hi p team
whc1 is paraly!i'fl a.·; !lw rt&gt;;;;u lt of an au to arci d c ntlas t
'-'UITIITII'I' "Wf• wou ld hJ.\'1' t)j;•P n honon&gt;d 10 have him.
bP part of thf'C'I'l tit·. . ." said Boston CrnPra l Ma nager
l{t&gt;d i\uf'rbach " Wp fp[l thi "i ir.., onP v..:a .v to show how
\\'t ' ft'll ;tiX1U1 him ."

gave off bee(rbeep sounds.
, MIAMI (AP) - It's called the
"We're the first National Foot; mlcroprocessorandtheMiamlDol·
1 phlns used It to monitor heart beats . ball League team to monitor .the
, -c~ur~ng workouts this spring.
· heart rates of our men In actual
training," Miami head trainer Bob
1 • About till! size of a bar of soap, the
1
Lundy said. "The lower the rate,
eJectronlc device was hooki!d on to
the better the state of physical
~ workout clothes of the Dolphin
conditioning."
players as they ran~ the field

In 110
&lt;t off-seaaon
. . camp.
. 1be device

.

BALTIMOR E lA P! One
thing's sure a bout retiring Ori oles'
skipper Ea rl Weave r : He won't become a footba ll coach nex t seaso n.
Tha t' s beca use Weaver wouldn 't
be a ble 10 wa it until the next Sun·
day for his tea m to bounce bac k
following a loss.
Weaver hopes Ihe Ortoles w tll do
just th a t tonight whe n Ba ltimor&lt;'
takes on the Clevela nd India ns.
wh o sca lped the Birds 9-2 1\tesday
nigh! .
" The good thtn g a bout baseba ll
as opposed to footba ll is tha t you
don't ha ve to wa it until nex t Sunday
- you can come bac k tomorrow. "
sa id the phtlosophical Weaver . who
a nnounced before !his season be·
gan tha t It would be hls las t as Ori·
oles rna na ge r.
"In football, whe n one lea rn gets
blown out, the re are a lol of good
plays, like long runs a nd touc hdown
passes. But in baseball , you just
have the bloops. Cle vela nd found
the holes that we found on Sunday
(when the Orioles ripped Detroit 1311 ."
The India ns' clubbing att ack of
nine runs on 11 hits was led by Andre Thornton, who hit his 19th ho·
me r of the year a nd a double and by
Chris Bando, who had a perfect 4for·4 night. Thornton, Mike Ftschlin
a nd Toby Harra each had two RBis
for Cleveland , which eve ned Its record at 35-35.
Cleveland took a 1-0 lead In the
second Inning whe n Thornton
sla mmed his home run, but the Orioles, 38-32, came back with lwo
runs In the fourth.
Da n Ford doubled, a nd walks to
Ke n Singleton and Eddie Murra y
loaded the bases. One out la ter.
Gary Roenlcke 's grounder forced
Ford at home, but Joe Nolan the n
lashed a two-run single. Starte r
John Denny, 5-8, got out of furthe r
trouble by getting Rich Daue r to
pop to second. The only othe r hit off
Denny was Dauer's two-out double
In the seventh.
But II was two four-run Innings by
the Indians that put the game out of
reach . The first was In the sixth
when Cleveland sent nine me n to
the plate.
Thornton drove In one run with a
double, and after loading the bases
aga inst Scott McGregor. S-6. three

Capture trophy
MADANG, Papua New Guinea
(API - Giuliano Glongo, 41, and
Cesare Glrando, 35, both of Italy, .
won the recent Camel Trophy '82
International off-road competition
here.
The 1,000-mUe driving event was
run through some of the world's
most primitive areas. The 11-day
test of drlvtng sklll and wilderness.
survival ran a course through rain
forests and rugged alpine ranges of
the Papua Highlands, concluding
with a day of river-crossing tests In
the tropical lowlands near Madang.
The ·winners finished well allead
of the runner-up team from West
Germany. The Anler!can team
placed third.

W; tshm gton r .H. ha ~ Olll' of lht•
;tn·o.t's fmt•st 11-all ls a long w1 th
Mt•tgs, an ti lht· two puwl'rhuU Sl'S
sho uld hook up 111 ;-t grl'al battle .
M11tltb y 1' \ ' lll'liH'. Mt ·l) •.s wlll tra\'1'1
to Alhl'IIS \tl l&lt;tkt• ull Hurl, PL'Il llsylv~unatll itllil{ht'l' holiday spt'l'lal.
l,llll'S('IIrt'
I~Xl 000 \00 - I 8 2
Man l'lta
!0011 OliO !Ox 8 14 \
Mv 1gs
Crt•lg ll\1'11
1l.P 1.
Pnkhl'lt .
Dt·\·ault.
Wrty!and 1 WP I. Wayl ;uul.
In a Wl'l'kt·nd d1 1Ublt · ht ·;uh' r Mt'l:':-.
spil l w1t h Bt·lpn· .
Hn l~t · r Km aklllk With n ·lld fro11
.J,•ff Wayl; tnd 111 Ihi' Sl'\'t•nlh Hlllll ll '
pwkt·d uplht· w111 fnr Ihi' lol'al Ml'l).!:-.

Ku\·;-dd11k had a full' mght on the

Jl HIUIH\ Wi th tht' l'Xl'l'p tiOil of a four
run th1rd lnrHn g. Mt'1gs lost the
tng hll'ap.li-5

WHAT?

S U PE R S U M M ER S ALE

WHEN?

8 A. M . TO 8 P .M.
THUR S DAY, JUL Y l s i

WHERE?
H ER IT AGE HO U SE
IN MI DD L EPO RT

nin~ all p.1 11. Tlll'll a big Fou rth of ~~~~· ~al~ll~.~~~~·ll~il~•·~S~n~u~tl~l.,~·u~f~fl~'r~et~l~tl~lt'~l~o.~"s::_··f~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jul y holida y spt'l' lal Wi ll lake pl a t'&lt;' •
Sunda y wht•n Meigs ta kt·s nn IIH·
hi ghly tout ed W&lt;Jsh ing ton Co urt
HoUSl' tl'a ll l.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAr

Cleveland dumps Orioles 9-2

co urse o con.s cientiuus jury could
take.
The re is no use to rehas h the
details of he Hinckl ey assassination
attempt or the tri a l wh1ch followed
more than a year later . You've read
and heard it all . If you a re an gry at
the ve rdi ct , direc t your an ge r not at
the jury but at the stupid federal law
which a llows s uch a n obvious
miscarriage of justice. J oin with
those who will seek a chan ge in the
law . No doubt the re will be a flood of
bills in the houses or Congress
seeking suc h c ha nge. Most of these
bills will be hastily written and will
do little more than cloud the iss ue
furthe r . But from both political parties in the Congress, there should be
enough dedi cated &gt;1atement to
correct what is obviously a bad law.
The majority of the members of both
houses were lawyers in private life.
I think the members of the Hinkley
jury should be applauded for their
courage in returning what they kne w
would be an u.1popular decison.
There they were - eleven blacks
and one white- sitting in judgment
on a white youth from a wealthy

Dallas a nd Cleveland .
The Maver ic ks had lrad!'d their star tin g cent er
from las ! year. Way ne COOJX'r , lo Portl a nd fo r guard
Kelvin Ra nsey on Mo nday and we re rxpec led to take
Thompson wll h I he fou11 h ptck.
Thompson. the leading co tlegia le rebounder last
sl'a~ un. was bf&gt;lit&gt;vt&gt;d by many scout~ to be the only
n·nlt•r capable of slarl ing in lhr NBA . Bul lns tead of
Thompson. thr Ma\'I'J'i('k'&gt; W{' nl \\'it h Gar ne tt , the

Meigs legion posts 8-l win over Athens
SYRACUSE - The Meigs sponsowcd Ame ri can Legion base ba ll
team ha nd ed Ma rietta a n 8-1
shelling here Tuesda y eve ning as
Meigs pounded out 14 hi ts en route tn
the VIctory. Meigs currentl y owns a
respectabl e 10-6 record .
Meigs hurl er Jeff Wayland bore
down from start to fini s h os he
posted 17 strikeout.&gt;; and e1 ght walk,;
whil t• going the di stonce. Way lontl
had a shut out unti l Creighton suff,•red the loss with re lief help from
Pritchett. They co111bined fo r fi ve
st rikeoul' a nd five wa lks.
The Meigs atta ck was led by Tony
Riffl e with two s ingles a nd a doubl e.
Kl' nt Wolfe had a s ingle a nd doubk ,
and Joe Bob He ms ley, Da ve Full rod ,
Phil Kin g, J e rry Fields, Te rry
Wa yland, Ruge r Kovail'hik . Steve
Skidm ore, Azne Beegle and J t•ff
Wa yland each s ingles.
I.eoding Marietta was MeVii';:J r ,

Does Haig have political career ahead?
WASHINGTON (API - Pe rha ps
Alexander M. Haig Jr. does ha ve a
political futu re, a' Ri c hard M.
Nixon sugges ts.
The de parting secreta ry of s ta te
has flirted with the Idea before . ex·
plorlng a possible pres ide ntial bid
in 1980. Two years earlie r . there
was speculation he might run for
the Senate. Haig has n't discussed
his plans, but elective politics might
make sense for a man who found
frustration at the pinnacle of appointive politics.
A resignation on principle can be
an asset In a candidate's resume.
A res ignation on pique ls not, and
there was some of that in Halg's
departure. He resigned with a general indictment of the administration' s foreign policy cou rse, but

nlque Wilkins of Georgia were cons ide red the three
super sta r-qu a lit y player s a va ila ble In the dra ft , a nd tt
was n't surprising whe n they became the first 11u·ee
picks.
Cummings, a 6-10 forward. was selected by San
Diego a nd Wilkins , a 6-7 dunk a rt lsl, was picked by
Ula h.
Worthy, Cum m ings a nd Wilkins. all juniors. a lso
set a pa tte rn for the ltrst round, as seven of the flrst
ninr c hotces a nd ninr of the fir st· round pick.s had one
year of eltgi blttty re ma ining until they decided to ski p
I heir senior c;easo rt~.
Only 0.9 fo rward Bill Ga rne tt of Wyomin g, selected
fourth by Dallas. a nd 0.5 gua rd Tr ent 1\tcker of Min·
nesota, c hosen No.6 by th e New York Knlcks. Int er·
ru pted I he s trin g of juniors a mong the fi rs t nine picks.
The othe r juniors In t hcfirst round were 0. 10 center
LaSa lle Thompson of Texas , la ke n by Ka nsas Cit y as
the fifth selec tion; 0.3 gua rd Quintin Da lley of San
Franclsco. selec ted No.7 by Chi cago; forwa r ds Cla rk
Kellogg of Ohio Sta le and Cliff Lev ingston of Wi c hit a

.,..-

The Hinckley verdict __________;L;;;.;;o~w_el_lW_in;;;;..ge_tt

Letter to editor
Wants answers

a bout il tha t 11 errs when it a nnounces that tw o plus two are eq ua l
to some other fi gure tha n four.
31 The spectacle, a t the Hinckl ey
tria l, of experts, so-ca lled, a rguing
with othe r experts, so-called , fo r the
be nefit of a jury on such ta ng led
ques ti ons as whether Hinckley knew
wha t he was doing a nd knew that
wha t he was doing was wrong, gives
us a textbook exa mpl e of the
preswnpti ons of scientist.&gt;; moving in
on public policy. The word "expertise" means "a body of ope rati ve
knowledge. " If no suc h knowl edge
extsts, for insta nce on the questwn of
whether Hinckl ey knew what he was
doing a nd tha t it was wrong, then no
one is by definiti on a n "expe rt" except in the sense tha t he is devoted to
try ing to a nswe r a ques ti on a bout
whi ch there is no ex pertise. If you a ttempi to pl ay Rac hma ninoff' s
"Second Co nce rto," devotin g your
lifeti me to the effort, but wha t
comes out in di sha rm oni ous sounds,
unrela ted to wha t Rac hm an inoff

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Lakers tab Worthy, several other juniors top choices

The Hinckley mess________;w.;_:.:.;t'll.;.;,;ia.;_m;_;:F.;_._B_uc_k_ley,:;__]r_.

The Daily Sent inel

PAT WHIT EHEA D

Wednesday, June 3o, 1982

Page- 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 30, 1982

more ru n" scorrd on Von H a~'('&lt;
groundf' r a nd &lt;:1 two-ru n s inglf' by
Mike F isc hl in .
Thr Ind ia n~· s('('o nd fou r ·run
ra ll y was in lhr Pigh th. a n inni ng
a ft er Denny lefl Ihe ga me .
"Denn y pil c hrd well lon ig hl ."
sa id India ns ' Ma nage r Dave Car·
cia " Hf' threw a lot of fas t ba lls a nd
had a good c wve. I !houg h! he
,;tarled 10 lire when he wa lked .Jim
Dwye r in lhe seve nlh innin g :;o I
look him oul ."

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614)-992-2104

or (304)-675-1244

is here!

ft's not diet! C'mon and try It!

�30, 1982
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lrt thf' lf'a d o;; lip awa_v with som P

s loppy pla y.
Th E'.\-' nnt only· allowed t hP Padr~:;
to clim b b. c~ int o lhc game, but
watchf'd them go a head o-4. The n.
after the Dodgers tied thrco nt es t in
the bottom of lht' ninth. they It'! it
s lip away once and fo r a ll in 1he lOth
on Alan Wiggin s' two-run singlr.

Fin al scow Sa n Diego 7. Los An
geles o.
The Padres' rally in !hP ninth inning was fue !Pd bv clu tch hitting
and the fat lur&lt;· of the Dodger
buUpC'n.
Rrus'i had sca tt rrC'd '&gt;iX hit s over
I he fir st eig ht innings. but Dave Edwards launched the Padres' big
ninth with a leadoff pinch home

I

I

run . Kurt &amp; ':acqua lat er las h('() a

DOWN. 1\lJT NOT OUT - 1\illie Jl'an King nf thl' Unilt•d Sl.ah•s slumduring hn mah'h &lt;Jgainst Aus tralia 's Wendy Turnbull Lit Wimblt•don.
Tut'sday. Sht' ilt'at Turnhull &amp;-2, &amp;-3. 1AP Last'rphoto 1
hit-~

run-sco ring double.
Reliever T erry F oro;;tPr got thr
nrxt two ou ts, bu t walkrd CPne Ri c hards. That broug ht on Tom Niedenfu er, who yielded a run-scoring
s ingle to Broder ick PPrkins th a t
brou ght home pinch-runner Wi ggi ns with the tying run and mov ing

Tennis showdown,
a pressure cooker
W!MBLEDOK. England ,,\1'' The

prr~sure

coukt•r

ttl&lt;.~!

is Wim -

bledon began boilin g tuda\· as th0
wompn mo\·f'd into t lw quJriPrfinal
round and the mPn tx•gin bumping

heads with olhPr '"""lf'd plal'!'rs.
Th ird -srf'drd Vii as ( ;rrulait i~
sta\'C'd off an upSC't bid h~ · Tomas

third SPt Whf'n darknPSS half('()
tlwir match TuPSday.'. And No ..t
Sandy· Mpy·cr wa&lt;; to play· Tim
Ma .\ 'OIIP. On thr womPn's sidr. six
of thP ~:even A mC'rican" to rPach the
qua rtf'rfin al round Tw~o..; da y al so
werr .&lt;;rhPdulf'd pla y.
To t~ s&lt;nl ed

Martina Kav ratil ova

Smid of l't£'chosim·ahta in the All-

L1cf'd surprL-;ing .loAnnr Russe ll:

England tenni.;; c hampi on~ hip s and
now fa(_'(~ hard · -~· n·ing Roscof'

Chris !&lt; ver t Lloyd, the defending

T ~.lfln( •r.

op~sf'fl

thf' No.14 ."&gt;('('CI

(;rrulaitis TuP"i da _v outla:&gt;IPd To-

rna". ada~· cou r1 :. ; pt·ciali:-;1. 6-7. :~ - 1-i.
6-l h-l t)-:2 to ad\'Jnn· to thP round of IIi. Smid captun'CI th&lt;· firsi -Sf'l
tiebrrakrr K-li
0Pfcndin g ('hd mpiun .f(lhn
M cF. nrt..lf' fan•d fdl&lt;JW Amf'riran

champion s('('(jC'd sf'co nd this yf'a r.

No. 1fl Rarbara Poll cr. and
r\o.:~ Tra cy· Au~ ; fin took on Wim·
b!t'Cion's rran d damc. No. 12 13i llie

.IPan 1-\ing .
!\o. t:l A nnP Smith, \Vho stunnr'Ci
fourth o,;ppdpd AndrPa .Jaeger,
;~w;tih thf' winner of thP fou11h
round match bf't\vcrn BPtti na

H(l nk PfLslf'r In lt&gt;ad

llungt •, lh&lt;' No. I I sr&lt;'Ci. and fellow

r~'r in g

,\rnt•rican (·a nd \·

~~ host of :~ ('Pd s
il quilrtprfinal hrrtll :\o.L
Jimm_\· Connors battlL'CI Au~; tr alian

Paul McNam('(•, fifth ·SC('(it·ci.Johan
Krirk of South ,Vrka mPI unh£'r aldrd Nick Si:t\' iano. \io.h ( ;ent·
May'Pr opposf'fi No. Hi StP\'P I )t•nton
and 12th-st'Pdt'd Mark l·:dmundson
of Au&lt;; tralia faci'd J'\t•w Zealanclrr

Hus«'l l Simpso n.
Tv:o four1h -rou nd match(-:-; havr

Richards to third. Richards then
raced home on Templeton's hig h
hop singlc over 1he mound.

Los Angeles rallied io tie the
score in its half of t he ninth on Russell' s RBI single before Wiggins
las hed his ga m e- winning hit In the
lOth off Steve Shirley, 0-1.
Cardinals 15, PhiUies 3
George Hendrick drove In &lt;;even
r uns w ith a base'i-loaded home run,
a doub le a nd a sac rifice fi y as St.
Louis rou ted Philadelphia and
hal!t'Ci the&gt; P hil lies' eight -game win·
nlng strea k.

Keith Hernand(."l had a double
and a Ihree- run homer for the Ca rdinals. wh ile Lonnie Sm ith knocked
in a pair of run s and Tom Herr went

three-for -four, sco red a run a nd
drove in another.
.Joaquin Andujar. 7-5, gave up s ix
hi Is in seven innings as he e nded I he
Phi lli&lt;'s' one-day stay in fir st place.
.Jeff Lahti finished up for the Cardina ls. giv ing up two harmless P hU arlPiphia run.s in thf' ninth.

Pirates 3, Cubs I
Dave Par ke r's run-scoring dou ble and Lee Lacy's two- run s ingle
in the eigh th inning led Pitt sbu rgh
over Chi cago.
Omar Moreno led o!f the eighth
wi th a bunt s ingle off Ferguson Jenkins, 0-9. Willie Hernandez relieved
and Johnny Ray's sac rifice bunt
movf'd More no to seco nd. Hernandez wa lked BU I Madlock intentionally and Jason Thompson' s
fie ldcr's -c hoi ce grou nder put
ru nne rs on first a nd third.
Parker, who ha d to leave the

game la ter In the eighth with a
pulled groin mu scle, then doubled
to score Moreno a nd send Thompson to third. Lacy, pinch-hitting for
Mike Eas ler, then s ingled to deliver
the final two runs.
Rick R hoden, 0-6, allowed 10 hil s,
struck out two and did not walk a
batter while registering his seco nd
comple te game of the season.
Mets 5, Expos 4
Ron Gardenhire hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning, the first
of his major league ca reer, to ra ll y
New York over MontreaL
With two out in the seventh.
Wa lly Backman, who had ea rlie r
doubled twice. s ingled o!f reliever
Ray Burris , 3-10. Gardenhire Ihen
tagged a 2-1 pllch for th e gamewinning homer.
Terry Leach, 1-0, limited the Expos to three hit s aft er replacing
sta rt er Char lie Puleo to start the
six th.
Br.1ves 6, Astros 5
Glenn Hubbard's run-scoring single wit h one out in the 11th inning
gave Atla nt a a co meback victory

hama track .-.;ta r . won thf' U.S. rlP·

ca thlon titl e for the second stra ight
yea r whf'n hP overtook .Jim Howell
in the final stages of lhP 10-cvcnt
rompetit ion .

Cri st harl a total of H.ll!7 points
and Howell finishf'd with R. lnH.
Crist a nd Howell led a charge bv
an AmPrican !Pam th at routed a
riddled WP'il Crrman tram in an

West Grrmany's two-man tota l of

16,01 ~ ,,
West Cermany had the overall
winnrr. as Herbert Prter su r ged in

the fina l thr('(' e vents to top Cri st
a nd Howell wit h 8, 187 points, the
first time he topped the 8,001 ma rk.

sl ugf est

111

Pon~

Leag ue

real

;wtinn

recentl y.

Jmun y Weber lwd an u uts t&lt;:~ndin g
ni ght lead 1ng Ea stern htttt•rs wi th a
long hmnc run . a duuble, and C:l
singk
Other F.astt-rr1 llltlt·rs wen· Whitt•
a Joubll' (1/lll Single. Kevin Murri s
two singles. Roger H&lt;:dst·r a duublt•.
1hll'y Ta y lor C:l hollll' run. C:llld Tom
F.verett i:i singlt•, Ewrl'tt WC:Is lht•
winnin g pitche r gi \'ing up e1ght h1t s

with SI X strikeouts i:ind c1ght wi:ilks.
Roger B&lt;J !se r got ttll' Sa\'l' giving
up thrt't' h1t.s with fi \' t' stnk eouts &lt;HHJ
ont' walk .
Lc&lt;:~din g Mason IH tlt•r was Long
with C:l four fur fin· n1 gh t 1ncluding
one double and three singles.
Other Ma son h11ters were Mitchell
a double &lt;Jnd a s1ngk. Mt·Guin· 2
singles, StardJt•r 2 smg ll's. Host' &lt;J
single C:~nd Hoffman 1 s1ngle . Hysell
and VC:~nMell'r shared JllO UJHJ duties
for Mason. Tlwy t' orllbincd to give up

10 hi ts wtlh 6 slrtkeouts ond5 walks.
Pantht·rs win
It was a c!ost• game, but Middl eport's Panthe rs l'Ciged Ne w
Haven's BrC:~vcs 5-i l. Winning pit·

cher was Juill' Roush with one wa lk
and four strikeouts.
A. Tennent was th e pitcher for the
Braves with tw o wolks and two
strikeouts. Cindy Holley made a
smashing homerun for Middleport
Kim Stewa rt c racked a double for
Middleport also. The Braves got a
double made by A. Tennent

Braves 7 Wranglers 6
In Junior girls softball league play
the New Haven Braves edged the
Middleport Wranglers 7-!i as both
clubs collected 10 hits. Tennant was
winning pitcher with one
strikeout and one walk. Cremeans
was the losing pitcher in relief of c.
Smith.
Barker and Sayre led New Haven
·with doubles along with five hitting
:from Tennant and J. Frye. Kim
Dent, Stephanie English, Denise
Gibeau! and Poiiie Chadwell led
Middleport along with Cremeans
who doubled.

the

Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm

Mt'll llwr Tht• A!iStH.'Iah·d Pn·s!i. lnlmltl Dill·

ly Pres..'i Assoual wn and lht· Anwnran
Nt'W!i J)ilpt •r PutJl1s her s AssOl'lH IIun. Nll tJOnll l
Adn·r tl sl n~ Ht•pn•s t·nt&lt;tll v e , Branh ~:un
Nt•W s J)&lt;IJ)t'l' Sa lt•s. 73:1 Tl urd Avt' llUt'. Nt•w
Yu rk , Nt'w Yurk 100 17

111!'
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Sunday 10 am-10 pm

0'{-,lj

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'&gt;211

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4lti

14''7

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298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

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I_'OSTMASTE.R St'nd addrt·ss tu Tilt' D ciil)
Sl·n t lrlt'l. l I I ( OtJrt St .. Purnt•ruy. Ohw 45769

SURSCRIPTION RATfo'...'-'
Hy l'arrit•r nr Mulur Ruutt"
01\' ' ""t't'k
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MA II. SURSfRIPTIONS

ln!i idt•Ohlu
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$!)6 .21

Examinations by Apt.
PH. 992-6545

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FRESH PORK BUTI

Steak or Roast ... ;8~

$139
•••

$139
Spare Ribs ..........~~ ..
COUNTRY STYL~

Transact ions

5

' · •" "I
' , •I 1 ~

11

1 h i!\ 1!. 1111&lt;"'

12 Ots. of Valvoline
Buyer's Check
From Valvoline

,, I ·,•

-..,, ·-• i·.,, 1-.

I ~l!·l•tll

MOTOR OIL

CASH

1'111 , [ ou r·h I l"!iil'.H,"' I
' '"' i ( , k •,_ Monll't',ll I
'-.1 1.• ••1·' 1·,_ l'hl l,to!t•lphld I
\l l.ll•ll ''· 1\,,u,l••n '&gt;.I t lnnlng'
'-,- on :: 10 · ~: '' ~ l .t l' Allj!l 'll'' '•. 111 llllllllJ0
"- " ' (;I ,HI&lt; I'&lt;" I I 'uwlnn.lli II

I ltli )TIII.II I

ALL-CLIMATE

o~' S),OOO

m :1

I lilt lllll.ol l

011

10W40

HAWAII
t1c kel and collectm ca rd at any part •opat1 ng store
You may also rece•vc a lree game \Ide! and o•
colleclor ca td (please speoty ) by ma il•ng a sell
addressed . stamped envelope to Fabulous Fortune
of Puzes. P 0 Bo• 26272 . Bl rmtngham . AL 352t6
L1mtt one t1cltel pet request one request pet pet son
per day Each wquost must be ma •led sopardtoly
S1mply punch out tho porl01atcd stKt•ons on tho
game t1cket to reveal lout game marltar s to play on
your colloclor card Some game ttckcts conta1n a
marker wh•ch slates "YOU OUAUFY FOR GRAND
PRIZE DRAW ING - II you Obta •n one ot these
mark ers you are e11g•ble to enter the Grand Pnze
Draw1ngs and the chance lo wm one ol st- tr•p s tor
rwo lo Hawan ot $3 ,000 cash Two Grand Pu1c
Draw1ngs w•ll be held All vahd entr ieS rece•vod by
May 27. t962 w•lt be ehg1blc toT the t.r st draw•ng on
May 26, 1982 Th1ee Grand Pnzes wdl be g1v on
away at th1s t1me All vahd entr1es tece•ved w1th •n l 4
days after ga me ends w•ll be ehg•ble lOt the second
draw•ng Three moTe Grand Pmos wdl be awaTded
1n !he second draw1ng

$5280
PRI('ES

WIN A TRIP
FORTWoro
NO PURC HASE NECESSARY Get a tree game

IHO

11UII'IIa~

Royals 12 Harrisonville 0
In Big Bend Pony l_kC:Ig uc &lt;Jdiu n
llw Pomeroy Royals rolled to a n
t•a sy 12-{) win over Harrisonvill e.
Pt&gt;J!ll'roy's victory ecune s a result of

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH JULY 5, 1982

$1.00

, ,, , ,, ll _, ,

.JaPger. No.7 Pam Shr iv&lt;'r a nd No _q
S~·J\'ia J·L-1nika of Weo,; t C crmany'

l o1 .t tutun· ' l'nll1d-ruund draft pkk
M II.W.ll 'I\U:
m : tl\l·&gt; Trarkd Pat
l 'tll mn inr;. ftol'\l.lid . In 1hf• ]1,1\[a.o; M it \'1'1
,, k.' ttu 1 l'lK"2 ·H ·o ntl wunrl ilrafl pick
'i,\;-... Ill I-:! ;t 1 1'1 .11'1'!-'ll S--Tradf'd .11.11'
I ll\ .1111 lt•l .,.-:mi. .11111 t hl'il '1n1nrl m und
•!1 .111 pl&lt;'k ](, I)H · 1/o u·-lon H1~·kt•h for
]'tX".! ... ~ ·~ ml n~11·d d1 .tit plt'k

49¢
Fryer Parts.......... ~~ ..
MIXED

CHUCK ROAST. ••.•..••.••••.•..•.•••..•.•...l~. 5 139
CUBE STEAK •..••.•••••••...•.......••..•.•. ~~-. s24 9
GROUND BEEF.............................. :~. 5 139
BUCKET

FHirrtJ,U . I.
Nu.tkmul Foothall l..t•a!(llt'
ll l · :· F ,\ I. 0 BH.I.'i - SI~rwd \'icrnr
I.Hlil '' r••lll&lt;'T IJ.II 'k kll'k , rt'IUr,..•r. to ol
.,.,,., ,/ urw lt·o •r ,,mlr;u·l,

Leaders
N•\TlON .· \I . l .EAGl lt:

'-,1 1.1"1l,
.{\1,. T l'ena, Pl tt sbu r~h. :no·
.1Th111l1).';on . l'ill·tmr~-:h ... rL'l. Frant'1Jilit,
1\lontn•tl. ..'\~!. Olivl'l . MtJIIIT'Pal. ;nl\

slrung hitting and excell ent b&lt;i Sl'r unnJng.
Errorless defense led
Pon1croy to its sixth victory in a row
ag ainst just one defeC:It. Harrison-

Hl 'M l.o Smllh, Sl l.uul~ . lit Daw &lt;;On ,
:'11••111n·•l .
'&gt;1 . ,\ol urptw . Al l anl ;t , ~.ti:
H11 .Inn;-... S.m Dil'l'"· ~~~ - .J.Thomp..;on,
l'iii,IJ\H gh. 4X
Hill Murphv . ·\ tl;mLI, '~. Ollwr. Mon
1n·al. S:1: ( ;m•rrr1·u. l .r,.; An~··li'S. :il:
ll !ll.v
Phll,ulrlptu;t,
~!!.
Matthl'ws.

\' J!lt· is now l--6.
Todd Hyse ll in his first star1 on the

l 'hlladtlphi ll, -lll: .J T hun\\)son, Pllt s bur~h.
4X, Tl.£&gt;flrll-.dy. San Dlf"go. 4JI; Cla rk. S;m
F1 ;tn(t;co. ~l'l
111'1 ~ Sa .~. \)1'
All)!l'h~-. 9:1;
KniJ{hl.

ntoUJHl pitched a strong game to post

lile win . Hysell's shut-out came
a lung with seven strikeouts and just
twnw&lt;ilks.

lluu ~ ~.n. 911: lllll'kllt 'l . l'hka,l!n. lfl; Daw
'on. ~l "n tn •al. ~: ,l_ft.l.V, Pl!!shul)!h. to!
!10 '1\U~ T K1•n nPd_v. S;m Dl('gfl, U :

C. Hanning suffered the loss with
Iwo strik eouts and four walks.
Pumeroy hitters were Jackie Welker
with a doubl e and two singles, Lee
Pnwell three singles, Todd Hysell,
Chris Kennedy and Rodney Ruush
each two s ingles, a nd Terry Smith.
Greg Fields each a double.
Welker alsn had four stolen bases
a nd three runs scored fur the winlll'rs. Barrett and Brevik had the
lune Harrisonville hits.

Defeat Pomeroy
In other softball action the Mid·
dleport Panthers defeated Pomeroy
IS-9. Julie Roush was again the winning pitcher with just one walk and
fiv e strikeouts. Roush has been
dominating league action this
season with excellent pitching per·
formances. Leading Middleport hit·
ting was Cindy Riffle, Juie Roush
and Sam Roush with tripl es and Kim
Stewart, Cindy Holley and Julie
Roush each with doubles.

'•

~I

I ' h11 .1).:"

and Kin g int o thr quart erfinals.

Panthers 12 Salisbury 7
In local softba ll ac l!on the Mid·
dl eport Panthers downed Salisbury
12-7 with pitcher Julie Roush gaining
the win. She fanned fi ve a nd walked
twu. whi le Rhonda Zirkle suffered
the loss.
She walked five and fanned three.
The Panthers haw now won six in a
row lo keep their winning streak
alive aga inst just one loss. Mid·
dl eport Panther hitters we re Cindy
Holley with a triple, and Margie
Smith a doubl e. Julie Roush helped
her ca use when she hit a grand s lam
home run in the second inning. M.
Musser had two home runs for
Salisbury.

STORE HOURS:

n
~~.

J,\
~I
!)11to;loun
•I'•
!'I
ll
\I

I ·.tl d• q Ill.&lt;
l\ .tl l·. t' I II \

l: utJll sht•d · ·v~· r y &lt;l flernHon , Mund&lt;1y lhrHug h
~ ru/u~. Ill {our\ Strnl, U1· the OhLU Vallt•y
l'uhl1shm~ Cull lfliill)' · Mull unt•dut. lnt:. .
Punwruy, Ohw ~ 5769. 992-2156 . St•,·und d ass
postaJ.!t' Jl&lt;lld o l Puuwruy . Ohw

443-C Locust St., Middleport
MON.
VISION EXAMINATION~
TUES.
THURS.
CONTACT LENSES
FRI.
9-12
CHILDREN'S VISION
1-5

Meigs summer league results
111 d

.

York
]"ol• lllll•

WSPS 14$--9601
A Di visiun uf Multimt'dill, lne.

.JAMES L. SCHMOLL, O.D.
Doctor of Optometry

1-S
6-9

!1
1:!

(18

!ill

\\•·'&gt;~•''1'1

The Braves , who trailed 0-0 in the
s ixth Inning, ra llied for the victory
off reliever Mike LaCoss. 3-3, the
fifth Hou ston pitcher.
P inc h hitte r Rufino Linares
s ingled with one out. took second
whe n Brett Buller reached on a n
infield s ingle and scored on Hubbard's line drive to left.

WED .

II

'

''"I

("lilt

international dua l m('('t he ld in conjun c tion with the li.1rd U.S. National
Championships .
An e ight -man American team
pilf'd up :!1.406 point s, easily topping

~

'o

over Hou 'iton .

U.S. track star wins decathlon

H
~

('

t "lo ·, ,·l.u,,)

tumlllin g rlow n. While Lloyd ' pent
th&lt;· aftt-rnoon pu rsu ing Nav rat ilova

Lluvd stormed bark from a fir st'"' 1i~ brmkcr loss to No. l oo Virginia Ruz ici of Romania to pos t a 6·7,
ti-l ti-1 Iriumph.

t:n.••knl IIW~km
\\' /.
l' t1 .

l ~lillllll•l

The Dail y Sentinel

ELL

r-r.-

·\.\11-:KifAN ,:,\Gl1E

:\I ill&lt; .lu k••

m; 1tdws. ;m upsPI would hard\~- - be
~:urpri~i ng, &lt;:i in cf' four ;.;PC'Cb C;l mf'

nrian TPaChf'r \\'a&lt;.; to comp lPi f' his
Jn(:ltch again'-il SwrdPn' s Stdan Si·
mon.'-''Y:.m. ThP two had won on(' o,;rt
(~ach and fought to a 2-~ tiP in thf'

~~~- 1111' ,,....)l'l!f'd

1~"1" "

tIn lht• strf'ngth of Tuesda ,-'s

wrr&lt;' ousted.

F.:C:I stl'rn bt·at Mason 15-11

Steve Bedrosian, 4-1, held Houston hitless over the final two
innings.

Hr~ · nold s.

\'&lt;' I to lx• ftntshed . 1-: tcw• nth-sr('(jpd

Majors

,\ li.lnT ,,

BATON ROUCE, La . tAPi - .J ohn
Cris t. a formr r UnivPrsit y of A la-

The Daily Sentinel- Page-5

Wednesday, June 30, 1982

Dodgers hand Padres comeback victory
By i\so;odated Press
You 've really got to hand it to the
San Diego PadrN.
Actua lly, th at's just what the Los
Angeles Dodgers did 'l'u t's day
night.
Win ning 4-0 in the ninth inning
w ith tnrir ac&lt;' Jpft- handrr JPtTJ'
Reuss on the mound. the Dodgers

Ohio

li. &lt;~Niml

Sl LtJUl'-,
(lSrnilh.

MoTi lT'f'ill.
1!1.
l.o.
Smtih.
1!1,
Carner, !lnuston.
1!-1;
S t! 1Ju1.~. I X: [i,k&gt;no, Clndnnall.

lk

'!l! I!'JYS· t;arnl'f . H ou~t o n, 6: Mel,{&gt;(',
St l. t~th. ~.: Sax. 1.11~ t\nJ..'I'lf's. ~: Salazar.
S.1n I tit &gt;gO.~: TPmpk• to n. San Dlt'j1;0, 5.
l!(l:'I1F HUI\"S: M urph~· . Atlanta . 21:
1-\111~'11\,111.
l ~ll&gt;hurgh .

Nt•w York, 17: .J Thompson.
1;,, ('arh•r, Montr1'al. 14: Bak

l't ].o'\ ,\ng~•h-s, I~
STl ll.t:N 1\ASt :S. I.Jl.Srn irh. SI. Louls. !7;

Plt l,.b\IT'-!h . .'1."&gt;. ]{;t lnt-s, Monltl'al .
Dtrnit'f. l'hll:111(' lphl a . .11: Sax, Los

Moofl1 10.

:n.

AttJ!t'l•'~ . .' 'l

REMANUFACTURED

• sass

WATER PUMPS
AxleSet

AS LOW AS

S1 3 16

-s2195

ONLY

EXCHANGE

... our own brand
• 1-3/16" Bore
• 9/16" Rod

sgas

Manufactured by
MONROE Automotive Equip. Co.
~---------·Avlliilblli 11 the

•o•• Gll.AUTO..P.ARTS,oCAT•o••
GALLIPOLIS
240 3rd Ave.
446-1813

POMEROY
119 w. 2nd
992 -2139

MASON
Route 33
773-5511

STARTERS&amp;
ALTERNATORS
Professionally
rebuill &amp; tested

Coopr&gt;r.

loO.E.M

AS LOW AS

*2700

Toromo, !13:

Cl('Veland

Cooper.

96: Garcia,
Mllwaukff&gt;, !11 ;

Mcfla£', Katt&lt;&gt;as Ctly, !10; Luzln.&lt;i ld, Chi·

ps~~~~ ~tEASANT A~~~.~~~!~. ,:au~
675 2731
-

0RIIvl£&gt;. Mil·

cago, 86.

fallowing Plrtl Plus Auttlllltll'n•-----.........- -

675 1520
'

M llwa uk{'(', 55;

WilLI~ 55.
~~~ Harrah,

specilicalions
for most U.S
cars . Priced
EXCHANGE
w/exchange .
Prices V erv By Appli cation

1 -IW"' .-

END!' · ·3-112

OOUBLE!i: L y nn, California. 21: Evans,
Bo!lrott M: McRa£&gt;, Kansa.~ City, '.lt: Cow·
l:ll'l. Seat,1 1e. :11: While, Kan.ooas C ity, 1!1.
TRIFf-E S: He rnd o n .
Del roll,
8; '
W.Wilstjn, Kan.'lall City, 8: Younl, MU·
wa u lte(J, 7; Up;haw, Toronto, 6:

Breft,

Ka~City,

6.
HOME RUNS: Thornton. Cieveland. 19;
()Rttvk&gt;. Milwaukee. 19: G. Thomaa, Mil·
waukee, '_ 18: Cooper, Milwaukee, 16;
Hrbek. Mln neaota, 16.

STOLEN

1704 Eastern Ave.

....
..,. Parts Plus autostor•s ...

,\MEHifAN l.EAGUE
AATTINti 11Zl al hal si: Harrah. CIPVl'land. :~: Bontif'll. Toront o. ..nR: COOJX'T.
Mllwaukre ..J.'l.'l; Hrllf' k. Mlnnt'SOia . .128:
Mdt.t(' . K an&lt;ias City, ..127
RUNS: R.Hendcrson, Oak land, 65: Har·
rah. Cll.'vt:&gt;land. ~7: Molllor. Mllwauke&lt;',
~: T\Xlrnt on. Clevt:&gt;Jan tl , ~ 1 : Brell, Kan·
Si ts City. 01l
lUll : McRae. Ka n.'as Cit y . 68: Thornton,
Clt'Vl'land. 62; Luzln&lt;ik1, Chicago, 58:

REMANUFACTURED

• Heavy Duty

P!TrHl:"/(; 1HI O.:~·L~Iol\.~1. H UI/:l'T'i, Mon·
&lt;0..'1. 7:'ll. 11&lt;7, ForSt·h, Sl.Loul~. ~-1.
7'!.', 1.m: D.ltobht&lt;;On. Pltt sburJ::h. 7-:!.
.1m. 1 !.l l teu~'. J.()O; Anw·IPS. ~~- .64.1.
:u2. 'iolu, Clnr-l nn ,tll, 7 4.. t&gt;\6. 2.27: Su l
um·. III'U~Ion. 7 4. fi.'\6 . ."1.:12: \' ;J]('WIJC'!a.
!.1"' . \n~-:Pit"' · H~li . li:!'1, l!l'l, Pulro. N£&gt;w
y lll k. h I. till. 4.Cfo
S' lllii\F:OUT~ Sol o.
Cincinnati.
ll."l:
l '.trllon. Phlladf'lphla. 1?1: Hvan. Hou:o;lon. lilt RngrN. Monln'&lt;ll. 112: Lollar,
S;m I lit~O. lfl
l n •;tl

BAS~1

RHender'Am,

Qak.

land, 12J Walhan, K&amp;n.WJ City, 25; l..eF·

446-4204

There's one,... you!

lore, Clllcago, 22: J .Cruz, Seattle, 18;
Haye5, Cleveland, 16; Molitor, Milwaukee,
16; Ga~ J a. 'I'Qrmto, 16.
·

-

.

MUELLER'S ELB~

Macaroni. ......~!~~-

2/$1

VINE RIPENED

.Bananas....................~~·. 29¢
.:cou

REGULAR

KOOL-AID

nDL"I0/$1 00
limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powel
Offer Expires .JulyS,

....couPON····
. . . ..
······
TENDERLEAF

SUGAR
5LB. BAG $139
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer E
Ju S, 1982

TEA BAGS
IOOCT. $179
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Julys, 1982

•••••

TIDE DETERGENT
1710Z.
$599
Limit On e Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July 5, 1982

• •••

�Pa e-6-The Daily Sentinel

rt, Ohio

, June 30, 1982

Wednesday,
June 30, 1982
,_

-

Cancer answerli e
A regular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society. to help
save your life from cancer.
Question: Does the tissue of a
woman's breast change from time to
lime?
ANSWERiine : Breast tissue is often nodular, and its consistency
varies from woman to woman. The
breast may feel less lwnpy after he
menstrual period when hormonal
levels are lower. Normally the skin
of the breast is smooth, but weight
Joss or advancing age may cause
wrinkles.

Question : If a woman 's mother
had breast cancer, is she liable to
have it also'
ANSWERiine : If a woman has a
familial history of br·east cancer
!mother or sister l or never had
children, or her first child after the
age of 30, she is at higher risk for the
disease.
Question : Does coloring your hair
involve any risk of cancer?
ANSWERiine : Prior to 1978 many
hair dyes contained 4MMPD. a
chemical that National Cancer Institute studies had found to cause
cancer in anima ls. After much
publicity . the Food and Drug Administratin ordered that, as of April

THE BEAUTIFUL CUYAHOGA - Lunch patrons of a riverfront
n•staurant dine in the sunshine while an excursion boat makes its way
down the Cuyahoga River near downtown Cleveland. The Cuyahoga .

which gained national notoriety in 1969 when it caught fire because of
pollutants floating on its surface, is well on its way to becoming a healthy
waterway once again. tAP Laserpholo)

ACS health tips from Farrah Fawcett

developed."

Question : Has l aL~rile been found
to be beneficial or worthless in
treating cancer"
ANSWERiine : A clinical trial of
laetrile conducted by the National
Cancer Institute founl that the substance not only is w&lt;rthless against
cancer, but is toxic. 1he resuls were
widely published and were carried
by the New England Journal ci
Medicine in its issue of January 28, •
i982.

·,

By Farrah Fawcett
·· The Ameri can Cance r Society
encoura ges each of us to pra ctice
go «l hea lth ha bits ." says
Mr chael. publi c information chairma n uf the Meigs Count y Unrt. The
followin g practices are some Farrah
Fawcett says are healthy .
In Charlie's Angles, 1 played a
character named Jill who thought
nothing of risking life and limb to
haul in thl' bad guys. Jri eve ry
episode, the script had me caught 111
the cl utches of some ev il doer. Fortunatcly, wit h the help of the other

s.

keep up a routine on your own , join
one of the clubs at school. or get
together with friends as interested in
excrcrse as you are .
I don't smoke. I hate the taste a
cigarette leaves in your mouth, and I
hate the wa y smoke clings to your
harr and clothes. Despite all those
advertisements determined to persuade us that smoking is glamorous.
I think it's one of the ugliest habits
there is. What smokin g does to your
l1t•a rt and lungs is frig htening. So if
you 've started to smoke. please try
to slop. Ask our teacher for names of

from the four basic groups I meat.
breads and cerea ls. milk , fruits and
veg etabl es 1. You· re probably
thinking how boring ! It isn·t.
because 1 vary my menu. For instance, 1 fulfill my meat group
requirement for the day sometimes
by having an omelette for dinner
Iyes, eggs fall onde r the meat
category , so do nuts ' ). When I don't
ha ve time for an elaborate lunch, 1
get by on a handful of raw nuts and a
plain yogurt. Lea rning what "surprise" foods are in the four groups,
then working them into your daily

meals, cut cut down on the portions .
Before you even do that, with your
family doctor about whether you
need a weight-reduction program.
I see my doctor regularly. Going
for medical and dental checkups at
regular interva ls is important,
because your doctor can spot and
treat minor problems before they
become major . Filling a cavity
before it starts hurting, for instance .
Also. it's important to establish a
good rapport with your doctor. That
way , you 'll feel comfortable asking
any questions you may have about

Angels. I'd always manage to groups in your school system or menu is one way of making rneab your body. As you grow older,
esca pe and have th e criminal&lt; rorrun unity thai can help you quit well-balanced and exciting . If you' re there' ll be certain medical tests
locked safely behind ba rs by the crgareltes. If you have n't started the weight-conscious and think that cut- your doctor will want you to start
ha bit, don 't ever. It's one decision ling out a meal a day is the best way taking on a regular basis. So it
episode's end .
Unlike Jill. I' m not one tu plan· you 'll alwa ys be glad you made .
to lose, reconsider. By skipping makes a lot of sense for you to get in11 1y lrfc in dange r. As a matter of
I ea l right. I try to eat three balan- meals. your body is depri ved of im- to the habit of seeing a doctor
fac t. J work ve ry hard at takrng good ced meals a day, consisting of foods portant nutrients . So cat three regularly now.
ca re uf my hea lth. Staying healthy is ,-----'----'------"-==-'===:......::.::.....:.::..:..._...::.::..:.:__:..:...__ _:__________
a

Lambert reunton
The La mberl family reunion wa'
held June 20 at Hemlock Grove
Gra nge Ha ll, wit h severa l in
a ttenda nce.
Present we re Mr . and Mrs. Gene
Lambert . Charlollr and Don; Mr.
and Mrs. David Lambert and Car·
rte . all of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Haning; Mr. and Mrs. Marvin While. Denise and Bryan. Flat ·
woods. Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Grover and J ennifer. Long Bottom; Mr . and Mrs. Steve Jeffe rs.
Jeremy and Amy Marie, CAdmus;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mourning, Elyria; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Glllogly,
Ailsa and Jeffrey, Albany; Mrs.
Edith Forrest. Middleport; Mrs.
Elizabeth Vaughan and Mrs. Helen
Johnson, both of Pomeroy .

CAKES
fl!t_All OCCASIONS

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
. . Ph. 992-6342

-

=.:1

Wins innovative color
award at quilt show

115 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH.

"Patterns Worth Repealing, " the
June f&gt;-20 exhibit of 78 Southeastern
Ohio's prize traditional quilts. drew
2,000 viewers from 24 states and
seven f11reign countries.
The show was organized by the
D~iry
Barn Southcash'rn Ohio
Cultural Arts Center in response to
requests from visitors to the 1979
and 1981 Quilt National exhibits of
contemporary quills. The purpsoc of
the shoi. Y#as to recrognize the
region's traditional quilts and quiltmakers.
Patterns Worth Repeating was a
success, with many viewers corning
from the ni~c Ct)unlics represented
arr•&gt;ng the quilts chosen for the
show. Meigs County had 16 quilts ron
cx~ibit during the show .

PH. 992-2342

r~i~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

HU I LANU

DEPARTMENT
STORE
Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Through Saturday. July 3rcJ
ECKRIDGE

Old Fashion loaf. •••••••••••• ~~~)2.15
ECKRtDGE

6nc reason fur th~ show' s success

Pickle &amp; Pimento loaf •••••• ~~~.$2.15

was the cooDetltJiim gi\'cn by the Co.
Cooperativ; E~nsion Scrvit'&lt;' and
HoJne Economic Agents in Sc..:iolu,
Hocking, Athens, Pike, Jackson,
Maigs, 1:awrcnce, Vinton and Ga llia
l'olinties, according to Pam Parker.

HOMEMADE

Ham Salad •••••••••••••••••••.• ;~~.$1.49
DAIRY

PRODUCE

1 lb. Teen Queen

........... '~.19
Margarine 2 FoRs1.19 Potatoes
2-Lb. Tray
t&lt; raft Single 16 Slice.
12 oz. Processed
Tomatoes ..........sl.39
Cheese ..............s1_.89 l-Lb. New
Bag 89'
Onions

Several Meigs County students
:were r~tly awarded scholarships from Ohio University for the
}982-&amp;3 school year.
~ Recetvlitg local awards were:
, fOMEROY--Linda Rae Eason,
~homore; Rebekah Long, fresh~m~n. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hai-old Lo.pg; Denise Turner,
'frdlhman, daughter of Mr. and
'M(s. Roger Turner; Myriam Ruth-

FROZEN
BANQUET 32 OZ.

Fried Chicken .......................................s3.39
12

___;

When it comes to choice cuts
the competition just can't cut it.
As a matter of fact, they don't
even se ll it.
Lots of our competitors serve
only standard cuts of beef. Bob
Evans serves only the choice cut.
It's part of our old fashioned
farm values because when your
reputation is at stake, you're
particular about everything on
the menu . So along with the
choice cut you'll get Blue Lake
green beans. Dinner rolls made
from scratch every hour and
served piping hot from the
oven. Freshly chopped cole
slaw and farm fresh baked potatoes complete with a country
helping of real sour cream. And
these are just a few of our favorites being served daily.
And we do mean serve.

oz.

Reams Noodles ......................... !:~~~.A.~.~-98' .

Bob Evans Steakhouse
is a cut above the rest.
At Bob Evans we do the serving.
Starting with the friendly hostess
to the waitress who makes sure
no meal is complete without a
nice big helping of country
hospitality.
So if you're looking for great
beef, not something to beef
about, come on down to Bob
Evans ' Steakhouse and take a
step back in time to the good
old days. The Steakhouse is
located at 1530 Eastern Avenue

'~
~&amp;'VaMS
STEAKHOUSE

Bob Evans brings you back~M

BROUGHTON'S

Fruit Drink ••••••••••••••••••••• ~:.~·•. 99~ -.
WHITE CLOUD
ROLL PACK $ .
.T01'Iet T"ISSUe ••••••••••••••••••••••
~ 1•39

~Calendar

4

'Sliced or.Half Peaches~ ••••••• $1.05 .··'
10 CT. EVERYDAY

Paper Plates •••••••••••••••• :. 2FOR 69~ -·'
••
~·

•'

I

i

4

H~tdog
.• Sauce •••••••••••••••• 2FOR. 89~
. . e~
.

.............

•' .

Armour Potted Meats ····~··2 Fo~ 69' ~l
--~~~ -

'I \

.. .

~r .
·'''

magu uw. . .

Miss l )hillip.. , 1.., th(• tt r~gh ter of
Mrs. A nn 1-';tu... n.Jugh, lt['{.&gt;dsv Ule.
ThP clas s w;,~-; a p;tr l of a home economic" cla...,s as.,.ignnJc•nt ta ught by
Mrs. . Jan ie(• 1\rstnf'r.

Phillips

Brush birthday
A surprise birthday party wa :;
held recently at !he home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Eblin , Sy racuse, for
!heir son-in·law, Robert Bru sh, of
Cent erburg.
Altending the event were Diana
Bru sh and child ren, Roger Eblin,
Connie Ross. Susie While. Mr. and
Mrs. Kev in Poll s, Brenda Bu rke.
Terri Mo reland. Bob White, Center·
bu rg, Mr. and Mr ~. Jim Bru ~ h . Mr
and Mrs. J ohn Shoemake r. Sun
bury, Oh.. Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Wine, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lewis .
Delawa re, Oh.. Mr . and Mrs. D"
nald Ta ppert and familv. Reynold'·
burg, Mr . and Vlrs. Woody Hooper
and son. Ballimore. Oh., Mr. and
Mrs. Gro rge Moore and family,
Columbu s.
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Moore and
son , Columbu ,, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Regan and da ught er. Lew L' Center,
Oh.. Mr. and Mrs. Tom McComb
and fa mily, Rod Colema n. J ane
Hunter. Kenny Reed, MI. Vernon.
Oh .. Ted S..verenz. Galena, Oh .. F: i·
leen Snyder, Middleport, Barbara
Snyder . La ngsv ille. and Karen
Morgan . Gallipoli,.

~;.

--'

.... . 'I!

lllE

Rf~"il

Mnvn:."
" " ' """

/Ill

PG

•
•
I \/H ,\

J) HHI

S rHir\1

SUPER SUMMER SALE!
THURSDAY, JULY 1st
START YOUR SUMMER WITH ABANG!
100 PAl R

Ray. Mrs. Mary Leedy Clovis, New
Mexico. and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
R.Epple and family. Middleport ,
enjoyed a plcntc supper Tuesday
evening at the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple.

WOMEN'S
SHOES

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bissell . of
Bashan, and Mr. and Mrs . Joe Bls·
sell. LongBottom. attended the fun·
eral of their nephew, Oral Keffer.
Tuesday at Chesterhill. He was the
son of the late Henry and Gracie
Bissell Keffer.

SHOES
SUPER VALUE

ASSORTED STYLES
SUPER
VALUE

Roge r and Janet Theiss recentl y
new their Cherokee Piper airplane
to several states while on vacation.
They visited their sister and
brothe r ·ln-law, Roy and Eunice
Jones Jr. In Sikeston. Mo.; cousins
of Mr. Theiss, Fred and Dorothy
Hempel, Galveston, Tx .. They also
visited Edwin and Billy Jean
Theiss of Spring, Tx .. and daughters In Florida, Teresa Chitty and
son. Billy Joel. Gainesville, and Su·
sa n Gooch, Daytona Beach .

ONE GROUP

$500
PR .

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ALL CHILDREN'S, WOMEN ' S &amp; M E N'S

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11..

ONEGROUPWOMEN'S
Jean Kennedy, Rutland, recently
received a vtslt from her sister.
May Edwards Gregory, of Las Vegas, Nev. Mrs. Gregory came to
attend the Rutland Alumni reunion.
This was her first trip home In 10
years.

SHOES

SUPER VALU E

ENTIRE STOCK
MEN ' S &amp; BOYS '

DINGO BOOTS
~~r~~30% OFF

i'2 PRICE

GROUP MEN ' S

SHOES
S
UP E R
VALUE

$500PR .

ONE GROUP
WOMEN'S

TENNIS SHOES
112 PRICf
SUPER VALUE

Reg. '150 00

Special

•ggss

When it's a diamond , the accessory is always right . Winter
su it, or summer's chiffon, the quiet good taste of an exquisitely
set diamond becomes a wardrobe favorite .

ANN'S

Snoopy - Lone Ranger
Ronald McDonald
&amp; Spiderman

SNEAKERS
$700

Come see our beautiful Diamond Pendant and ~arring Set by Cseullli:)•

SUM,.,ER HOVRS _
TUESDAY,THRU FRIDAY .
9to-5
fli•"'W~I.U SAT., SUN.; MON.
1 1112 .

ET

Sl MMt:R'!Ii

JULY 4TH WEEKEND CELEBRATION

KID POWER
SNEAKERS
~~~~~30~ OFF

. ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
·Pomona Grange will
meet Friday at Rock Springs
Grange Hall. A potluck supper
will be held at 7 p.m. followed by
the meetings at 8 p.m. Athens
County Grange will. attend. All
nlembers are urged to take a
cjlvered dish and th~ir own table
service.

l'i
~

r) 'O OZ. CASTLEBERRY

..

17:'&gt; prizr w in nPrs In t hi-; yl'ar'scom ·
JX•tl t ion . .I udg• ..., fur 1he contest
wrn· a num lx •r t1f ;tuthor it ics from
-;onH• .or ttw n;tt io n·s.,. leading

Meigs County
correspondence

~unty

29 OZ. DEL MONTE

~

Rhonda t' hill ips, a student at
Eastern High Scl10ol, was awarded
fifl h prize in 1he 2!\1 ha n nua l Le nnox
Chin a Cn•a liVI' Ta ble Setting conIes! rC'Cell!ly·.
Competing wi th n1orP than 6200
st uclen t ~. shf' wa:-. st 'll'&lt;'IC'd as one of

ALL

Tomato Soup •••••••••••••••••
2FoR59'
•

3 oz.

Wins contest

8 A.M. to 8 P.M.

FRIDAY

1031• 0?-- CAMPBELL'S

Pork &amp; Be•ns •••••••••••••••• 2FOR ·89

Barn's executive director .
The Extension Home Economists
organized judging days in their
rrountics at which Patterns Worth
Repeating coordinator Susan
IAJughridgc and Athens quiltt•r
Virginia Beals judged the quilts subtPitted for the show. Through this
prrocess, 610 quilts were judged and
regional interest gent•r;.~ted . Pat
Lend-a-Hand Club members met
Glass, Jackson An·a Horne
recently
at the home of Stella AI ·
Economist. provided an education
ktns
and
Ruby Diehl.
pr~1gra1n on tlw care . and conscrvatiron of quilts at each judgrng
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, who
day .
have spent the past two months in
Winners of the cash prizes Moses Lake. Wash., with Mr. and
provided by Stearns and Foster Mrs. Robert Day Blizzard, rewere Anna Sylvia Ray Ray of Vinton turned home Thursday.
County, $100 Bcsl of Show ; Mary
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Howard who
Knight of Jackson County, $50 Finest
Quilting ; and Ona Arix of Meigs have spent the past several months
County, $50 Innovative Color. Gen In Florida are here visiting his
Prorok of Panna Heights won the mother, Mrs. Melvin Howard.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sayre of Flor·
Arnish qurlt underwritten by McIda
visited two weeks here with Mr.
Donald's of Athens and Brady
and
Mrs. Carl Sayre and Mr. and
Buiek-Oldsmobile-Cadil lae and rafMrs. Joe Sayre.
fled off the last day of the show .
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop visited his mother In Kentucky over
the weekend.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Blackwood were his sister.
Mrs. Esta Mae Taylor, Georgia.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Horner, Albany, were Sunday guests of Mrs.
Ardis Waggoner.
child. senior; Greg T. Thoma~.
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Harbour. Mr.
freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Doand
Mrs. Earl Ewing and Mr. and
nald Thomas.
Mrs.
Dan Schenstricker of Mason
RUTLAND--Don B. Ttllts,junlor;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire,
visited
RACINE --Mark A. Simpson,
Wednesday evening.
sophomore;
Mrs. Robert Welsh and son,
DEXTER--Katrena Hale, freshJimmy, Marysville, spent two
man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J .B.
weeks here visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Hale;
K.C.
Welsh and other relatives.
LANGSVILLE --Tim Tomltn,
Mr.
and Mrs. Babe Whaley and
freshman, son of Sarah Jarrell;
son,
Terry.
Columbus, visited MonMIDDLEPORT-- Kevin King,
day with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire
senior;
and Mrs. Lola Clark.
LONGBOTTOM ·-Jeffrey C.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Brown,
Saunders, freshman .

- Dipped in egg and breadcrwnbs,
then pan fried .
- Raw. sliced or chunked and used
with dips.
A recipe combines zucchini , rice
and sausage in a delicious casserole
dish is called Baked Zucchini. This
dish could easily be prepared in the
microwave oven.
BAKED ZUCCHINI
2 mediwn zucchini (about
pound)
2 cups cooked rice
'" teaspoon garlic salt
1', teaspoon poultry seasoning
Salt and pepper to taste
'" pound sausage
Wash and cook onpeeled zucchini
for about 10 minutes in a small
amount of boiling salted water.
Drain and cut into halves lengthwise. Scoop out pulp and chop up.
Brown sausage and drain off excess
fat. Conbine wth rice, seasoning, and
chopped squash. Stuff squash with
mixture. Put into greased baking
dish and bake in pre-heated
moderate oven (350 deg. ) for 20
minutes, or until zucchini is tender.
Many homemakers have asked
me how to freeze zucchini . The only
really successful way to freeze zucchini is to wash tender young
squash, cut off blossom and stem ends and cut in slices. Blanch in boiling
water for 3 minutes. Cool immediately in ice water and rain well.
Pack in freezer bags or containers
leaving •,;, inch of headroom, seal
and freeze . Note: The zucchini may
also be shredded, blanched and
frozen for use in breads, etc.
It is not acceptable to bread zucchini slices and freeze because the
moisture content of the zucchiru
may tend to make the breading fall
off during cooking.
You may can and pickle zucchini
also. Making " pineapple" out of zucchini is not acceptable because of
the risk of food poisoning due to uncertain acidity of the squash
prepared like this.
For your free copy of zucchinitomato-hamburger casserole, contact Dale Stoll at the Meigs County
Extension Office at 992~96 .

- ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Thursday, 8 p.m .• practice for
tpspectton. All ol!lcers be present at grange hall.

Hunt's Ketchup .•••••••••••••••• $1.99
32 OZ. SMUCKERS
Grape Jelly ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,~1~59

'

By Dale M. Stoll
Meigs County Extension
Home Economist
Zucchini, zucchini, everywhere!
If you have zucchini coming out of
your ears, then you need some new
and different ideas for using up that
prolific vegetable'
Keep in mind zucchini should be
picked or purchased when the
squash is slim and relatively small .
The large ones tend to have large
hard seeds and are full of water. The
squash should be well-&lt;leveloped,
finn, fresh-looking and well-formed .
Look for glossy skin which indicates
a tender squash. Each pound of
squash will serve two persons.
You can plan on eating the zucchini rind, also, as it is very tender.
Zucchini is beocming a very
popular vegetable. It's a fast grower
and the plants yield well . In fact, it's
tough to keep up with zucchini I
Eating zucchini meal after meal
prepared the same way gets very
boring. There are lots of ways to fix
it and also many ways to preserve it.
Zucchini will keep in the
refrigerator in plastic bags or in the
refrigerator crisper for 3 to 5 days.
As with most vegetables, though, it's
better very fresh .
Here are some ideas for the
creative use of zucchini :
-Slice zucchini in one inch slices.
Thread on skewers with 2 Inch
chunks of uncooked corn on the cob
and cubes of marinated sirloin.
Baste with butter and salt and pepper and grill slowly over hot coats
until the meat is cooked .
- Shred, peeling and all, and fry in
a little butter or margarine.
- Make pancakes from shredded
zucchini . eggs, cheese, salt and pepper.
- Slice, then fry quickly in oil, butter, or margarine with a touch of
garlic.
- Cut into long. thin strips ; salt,
drain and ash; dry well; dust with
flour; fry in hot fat until crisp.
- Stuffed, with mixtures of meat
or fish and vegetables.
- Split, diced and used with other
vegetables; particularly with
tomatoes.

THURSDAY

440Z .

16 QZ. tAMP BELL'S

the Dairy

Meigs County students
receive scholarships

10 Lb. Idaho Bakong

Quarters

Residents elected
to Buckeye offices
Susan Laurie lightfoot, Route 4,
Pomeroy , who is attendrng Buckeye
Girls State at Ashland College, has
been elected county engineer .
Val eri e .Jpan .Jefft' rs, Pomeroy, has
been appointed Chrcf of Police and
Ka rla Kay Brown , Rutland , was appointed journal clerk of the State
Senate .

'MINDY' JOINS TilE CREW- Pam Dawber, perhaps best known as
"Mindy" in teh "Mork and Mindy" TV series, joins Gary Sandy, right,
backstage at New York's Minskoff theatre Tuesday during the reheansal
oof "The Pirates of Penza nee." Sandy wean; hat he dons in role of the
pirate king in the musical. Miss Dawber is joining the cast for thret•
weeks, starting Tuesday. ( AP Laserphoto)

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

POMEROY ·-Mr. and Mrs. David
Ctrcle. daughters. Meltssa and
Laura. and Miss Evelyn Circle, Columbus, visited Meigs County over
the Memorial Day holiday. They
came especially to go to the Greenlawn Cemetery where their parents. Otha and Lois Circle, are
buried and to take a scenic drive
along the Ohio River.

• 1982 Bob Evans Farms. Inc

" health fr eak " - a nicknaJTll'
I' m proud of.
Yu u sec, I'm glad people arc
nolrn ng that f work hard at sta ying
healthy. I just wish they 'd sta rt
practicing somr of the good hea lth
ha bi ts that I foll ow. Here's what I do
to protect my hea lth :
I exercist• every Uay. Thest· a re
tht· ways I go a bout it ; running on
the beac h, playi ng racquetba ll or
tennis. wurki gn uut in a gywn . If I
had the lirr rc. I'd do all of these
things, but as long as I manage to
get some form of exercise every
da y, I'm satisfi ed. Daily exercrsc
helps energize your body, makes you
fet•l alert and Jess tired . That' s why I
suggest you take up some form .
Swim. play volleyba ll. rrd" a bike ~
whatever you t• njoy. If ynu ca n't
lilt'

'

VIctor Roush, Syracuf!', who was
injured In a motorcyclt accident •
la~t week, Is In St. Mary'l Hospital, '· ~
Huntington. His room number l~ •
6012. He would appreciate hearing
from friend~.

Personals

-1

sv important to llll' that fri ends n 1U

.

Mrs. Lloyd Wright has been In
Rev. Ray Altmore. conference Lancaster caring for Mrs. Beulah
s uperintenden t of Mansfield, Oshier.
preached Sunday at Laurel Cliff , - - - - - - - - - - - - Freewill Methodist Church.

The Daily Sentinci- Page-7

What's cookin'?

6, 1978, hair dye\ containing MMPD
should carry a tarning label , and
that beauty shu infonn customers
of the label's , warning. Shortly
thereafter, major ir dye manufacturers agreed to nove MMPD and
·other controversi~ ingredients from
their products. I 1980 the FDA
suspended its regu lion requiring a
warning label on . air dyes containing MMPD. In a February, 1978
statement, the American Cancer
Snciety declared, "while available·
information does not prove or:
disprove that hair dyes cause cance(
in hwnan beings, tie American Cancer Society advise; caution in the
usc of the substan~ under question
until more defini6vc evidence is

Announcements
Mrs. Pierre Bossant, nee Janet
Rummel, formerly of Minersville,
has been visiting here the past
week. She and her husband work at
Boys Town. Nebraska. She asks
friends call her at 992-5423 or 9927480.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

Ullust,at!On Enllrged To Show Oeii•U

PR. SUPER
VALUE

ONE GROUP

NCAA lEATHER
BASKETBALL SHOES
AND OSAGA
RUNNING SHOES

O'ro OFF

HERITAGE HOUSE
OF SHOES
219-225 N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OH .

�Wednesday, June 30, 1982

'Nielsens save .(Cagney and Lacey'
"Cag·

lx' back next year. Sharon G1ess,

nf'y and L acC'y ,'' which seemed

LOS ANGELES !AP I -

o nP of the star.&lt;t of "House Calls,"

destinf'd for !he lelevlslon scrap
hrap las! year, finished second In
!hP TV ratings for the pas! week,
accordin g lo !he A. C. Nielsen Co.
llnl)' )I s Monday nigh! compan·
ton. "M ·A·S·H, " placed higher !han
!Ill' LT!S series about two pollc!'Wo
men who are also clo"' friends.
"Cagnf';t and Lacey, " now run·
nlng in th&lt;' "Lou Gran!" spol on

will relurn In !he fall, rep lacing
Meg Fosler as Chris Cagney In
"Cagney and Lacey ."
In all, CBS had seven shows In !he
Top 10 tor !he week ending June 'n
and won !he week . The other three
shows were ABC's. NBC's hJghesl ·
raled show was "Quincy" In 161h
place.
CB.&lt;; was firs! for lhcwl'ek wilha
raling of 4.1. ABC wa5 S&lt;'('()nd wllh
Ll.5 and NBC was lhlrd wilh I I. The
network." say lhl~ mPan" in an average prime-time minule 14.1pcrcenl
oft hfl nat ion 's home'S wC're tuned to
CBS.
Here are !he Top 10 shows: "M ·
A·S·H, " a rallng of 2:1.Hor I~ million
hou seholds, CBS; "Cagney and La·
C&lt;'y," 215 or 17.2 million. CBS;
"Hou&lt;;(' Ca lls:· 21.2 or 16.9 million .
CflS; " Harl to Harl ." 21.1 or 16.8

M onda!'S, was a :-;p1ing tryout o;;f'r-

i&lt;" lhal failed in !he ralings and
sN•med 10 lx' dead. II was given a
·· Ja, r chance" on a Sunday nigill
,t nd scorf'd well in !he ratings. Then
when CB.&lt;; droppf'd "Lou Gran!,"
thl' show !hal no one !hough! would
IJ~•

rt'OI'WPd was pickPd up for thf'

!.tiL
Third place In !he Nielsen ralings
\\\ 'nl to anolher CBS Monday nigh!
... hov.·. " House' Ca ll s." which won't

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dafly Sentinel-Page-9

Weather conditions ideal for record corn production

million ;, ABC; "The .Jf'ffersons,"
19.9 or 15.9 million, CB.&lt;;: "Too
Cio'l' for Comfort," 19.:!or 15.1 mil·
lion, ABC; "Alice," IH.7or14.9mil·
lion, CBS; "60 Mlnulf'S," IR.oor H .K
million, CB.&lt;;; "20-20," IK.:I or 14.6
million, ABC; "l)·apjX•r John ," I R
or IU million, CB.&lt;;.
HerP ar~ th~ next 10: "Fantasy
Island," ABC; "Three's Com ·
pany ." ABC; "One Day at a Time,"
CB.&lt;;; "WKHP In Cincinnati, " CB.&lt;;:
" The Lov~ Boa! ," ABC; "Quincy."
NBC; "C imme a Break," NBC;
"Archie Bunker's Place," CB.&lt;;;
"Diff'rpnt Strokes," NBC; " Hill
Sl!·ecJ fl lues," NBC

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API -A record corn crop could be In the offlng
for Ohio farmers, thanks to almost
six weeks of nearly Ideal weather
from the first of Aprtl to mid-May,
the Ohio Crop Heportlng Service

•

...

''f) '

says.
Farmers didn't stop planting un·
ttl seed germination became ques·
tionable because of dry soils,

leading to !he highest acreage of
corn ever In Ohio, the service said
Monday.
About 4,350,000 acres wer e
planted lo corn, 6 percent more
than last year and 5 percent higher
that the previous record of 4,150,t:XXJ
acres planted In 1980.
Soybean acreage was forecast at
:I,750,t:XXJ acres, 6 percen l more than

last year, but 9 percent below the
record 4,100,000 acres planted In
1979, the crop reporting service
said.
Nationally, an estimated 82.1 mil·
lion acres wa s planted In corn this
year, 2 pereent below the 1001
mark. Growers plan to harvest 73.6
million acres for grain this year,
down I percent from las! season.

A record-high 72.2 million acres
of soybeans were estimated lo have
been planted nationwide In 1982, up
6 percent from last year and 3 per·
cent higher than 1980.
Last week 's warmer tempera·
tures a nd drier conditions we re the
stimulus for rapid giowth of both
crops In the state, the •ervlce said.
Corn development progressed lo

aOOu t ttlr samr a.;; at thi.;; time last
vPa r . ThP wtwat hc.u·ve.;;t had ju'it
~tartf'Ci in r en tral and southe rn
Ohio. thr srrvicr said.

a sta te averagE' of 12 leavE's
emer ged, and the crop repo1·ting
service said many ar eas havE&gt; cor n

tha i Is chesl high.
Soy bea ns were rated good
throu ghout the state.
Oat() were rated fair with!:() pc'r
cent of I he crop heading or tx&gt;yond .
Winter wheat was ra ted fair as
ripl'ning progressed to 15 percent.

Somf' of thP incrt&gt;a sc&gt;d corn and
'iOy bran ac n·agr wa s at the ex (Jt'n:.;f' of win tf'r whPal . particularly
in north\\'f•Stf' rn Ohio.

HPn' arf' thr fiv p lowpo;; f. raf('(i

pr

' how ,;: "F lamingo Hoad," NBC:
"Thf' .James Boy,," NBC; mov ie"Tiw DuPiists," CflS; "Father
Murphy." NBC "Shaun Cass idy
Special," N IJC.

Helen help us
COPYRIGHT 1912 · THE KROGER CO ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY . JUNE 17 . THROUGH SATURDA Y JU l Y l

Men cling to beliefs, women realistic
fly HELEN BOTIEL
llF:AR HF:LEN
I n·&lt;Hl that over 70 percent of men
thmk !herr w1ves are completely
farlhful to the111 , yet surveys hav&lt;'
shown that about half or all wive s

DEAH BITIF:H :
" What Gnd takes away from you
1sn't ncrly so important as wh&lt;it you
do with tiw g1fts you have ll'fl."
Swrt believing this quut&lt;• and
you'll still 111ake your 111ark in life. If
you reject it. well , it won 't be loss of
a leg, but lack of detennination and
dnvl' th&lt;it cripples yo ur acting
l'a rccr .
Why nut spend your rt•euper&lt;iliun
tunc 111aking a study uf thl' many
stars who s him• i or havl' shonl' I
dcsp1te their h&lt;itHiicaps? ~ H.

havl' had extramarita l affairs or en~
I'IIUilter s.

At the sa 11u._• tin w, 65 percent uf
women q uesliorwd thought thcir
husband would pla y around ~ and
e~lmust two-third s or married ma les
say they do t or 111ighl. if given lh&lt;•
opportunity I .
What do&lt;'S th rs prove? ~ INTEHF:sn;D
DF:AH INTEHF:ST
That males arL' 1dc&lt;Jiists,
women rea hsl.':i, perhctps ?
Or 111aybt that all surveys should
be taken with fivt' grams of sa lt and
a dash of cold water ~ H.

DF:AH HEI .EN :
My husbnad thinks he's a failure rf
I don't have an orgasm every tinw. I
tell him that closeness and touchin g
and feeling well loved are just as
grea t as skyrockets. a nd there &lt;ire
nights rdays I wht&gt;n I want intercourse without having to try for
" the big one ." I'm the type who just
nmcc nlralt' fur this and sometimes
I'd rather just relax and nut make
the effort .
I reall y iovt• making love and I
ha ve rny goodl y :ihC:trc uf climaxt.•s,
so why should h&lt;• feel inadequate
when I don't ? Must I pretend to
sa tr sfy his male ego? ~ NOT UN·
DF:HSF:XF:D

DEAHHEI.EN :
If therL··s a God. why is HL' Stl
r ruel'! I was &lt;1 mnt.kl, un my w&lt;c~ y to
becmmng an actress. Now 1'111 a one·
le gge d fr ea k , thank s to an
;~utOJJHJblll' aCl' ldent .

I'm ltrcd nf Pollyannas who say
I'm lucky to be alive . How con ll•xist
as a tTipplt• when my livellhuOO
depend&lt;·d on a j&gt;e &lt;fed body ? ~ BIT·
TEH

1902 IN GALLI POLIS and POMEROY .
TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE

DEAH N.U. ·
Don't prl'lcnd . CoJIHIIUilicate !
When will men learn that real
women's C:trl'n't IU!lUC:tllyl the inSi"ltiCJble fin•- e~ntl-skyrockct s izzlers
t hal girl ic 1nagazines depict ?
Or maybe th&lt;•y relall' fe111alc
response to thl'ir own feelings of
failure when they dou ' t reach
orgasm . Or perhaps th ey enjoy
dreaming .
Your husband. CJIHI others lih•
hi111 , should realrze that even highly
41rgasJJ lit · wun1cn enjoy occas ional
" coasting" where Wilnnth and
doscncss are l'nough - and this is
no rd ll'l'lion on thl'ir prowess. In
fact it cou ld intTeast• JlitJie plctJsure
bl'l'tJusc on these occasions 11 1e11
lll'ctln't hold bat'k tJnd l'Oill'l'lllratt·
on their meitcs .
May I quote st•x thl'rapis~ I .orna
and Philip Sorrel who say " till' ru t·
porteilll'l' of orgrts m to tJ woman's
St.'X Ueil sa tisfe~diun hils been grossly
l'X(:Iggcratcd"? Thi s spt•t 'JtJJi y 1f sill'
knows sht• {'il ll but just dm·sn"t ft•t•l
ilkl• llt•vt.: r y time. H.

SAVE WITH

SUFFIIAf:IST Jlls&lt;•phihrw S. Irwin, wh11
n ·mt·mlwrs thl· drivt· that wun lhl' vuh• fur wnml'll,
says tlw wholt• wumt•n's nwvt•mt•nt has ht•cn laggin~ .

H•·h 1\ , ldt I To I&lt; '• ' 1\.r .,!,,tll
f\ 111 bo ! II 1\ 11
, l.j t&lt; lo l 1\ ,tlln 1\ l. ok•
[(, l" ll l.o 1\ l. tt rl,.lt .lrt o
II•••, t Vo• ku 11•·1 I• ., I J.r lo ll1tt k l• '- I• ·• llur
II• 11 .l .r ro , .., I oil" "\ . M.tl k ! "lrtt• I h Il l'&lt; l "••ltl r
.J, .I 11 I' ' 11 " ·" "· l'. or od , t I r•·"k ' Su... u o ll,rtll tt"l
.1. ,oil• II+ ll, u lt tt t l 'lr1 11-.-. I l.o ' '· Vro k1 )lo 1\o•r• l.
Klltl o+ rh [h ·M•..., .l.tl lh"'hllt 'l l"tro ·., ollur -.1.
l .oll •.tl .l Ftt lrr tw •·t 1\ tw• l. r t'l,l,. r li t +"tHI.t Fr 1.
I lt.u lt• 1;, ,11 1 .l rtrut ·l l.rl!h-.. t; ,tr _
\ 1;rr rll w1 .
\1 r• lr. w l f; t ,i\ S.11Hir ,1 ll. rlo · ll1•ltt r• lt1 "'k .
Hooltt.t ll.r"' k ll t' . Marl /ldl r ll, r., lt ·l . "l trt t.r
ll.l\ 11 .11 1. IIHI I" IJ,.fh to,ttt. S lw tt \ fl ull 1. Si r It
11•••1. llttiM ·rl llo•ud.l'-111 II . [lo~ltd l.tlrrt,tt..llr .
l l t • · ttd~t .l;ttlt "l . lit+ k 1\tt rt
l!o•IHtt Krlo lwu . I ..IJU t
1\1·· ·' 1-: rn l .tl'"""'h . Ft ;u rklrtr M;nlrn . M ~ trk
M.-i ;uu • Jd .t M ~r ! lt ll . Vto kr N•tllttti "ltit ll VI• k1
S. rul• · ~. H••lr• rl .o S1 r til •. Su ... rrr S"';rrrr1 l . ~lltto ·
I litI, ., 1\u tr iM ·rl .l 1'.tllt ·r ' ""· ()j,;t l l'ttr•l •. Sino
l{ ,.)wr l.' . Trrr;t Hot ~ r· . 11!-lrt u l~r Hotu .. lr. Tl tllll .r ~
\ttrr tr " ' II ~. I kl•·tt Sl; ro k AI( r o·rl .'ir1 tll r. (·,. tilt II
.'i1111lh . ( "urlr ' .'irrrtllr . l ; tlrr .o Str •rl!t. J.o• r tr
Srrr •llllo "tl . ILrl Sl· ·"'· 'll . 1\1.-llltrl.t Tlr• • tl t ; t ~. r ,, IIIII...
Tl '" lt "u . lr rr T rl lt'. Trrr • T to tr ltrr F1r ·rl Y• ·urrr

Tht• frnal lrurhll ror!l ,... tho · r..urllr llllh ' Wt "l"k..
1-!i&lt;tdrttl! JM'rt"d al llll" ~:a slt · n• lln:lr SdrrH•I hit~
IH"I'tl itiUIItUI\t "t·ll Narrtt·r l\ tt llh" noll Wt"l"l"
.'il·\ t"llih c rwh- . All A\
Dt'lt·ahSautln:-. Krrk
lh-• ·ol . Trt~ \' I S N1 "11dun . i\uc l'lit llittt tt ' W'"~t. T•,. Jrl

w,...,

(;ot a problen 1? An adult s ubjel'l
for tli sc u ss 10n '~ You t ';.tll kllk 11 ovl.'r
111 lwr culullln 1f yo u wnlt• to Hell'll
flolti'L

Tlw Ml'rr y Mak1•rs t V 4· H ( 'lub rr1d .Jurw "12
;rl tfr.t• Spt'IH"er hr11trr· w1th t·r~lrt lllt'trth1·rs anti
lhr1·r · atlvrs urs alh'ndtng fh•IIJS uf busuws.s
t ll.'i ~ · us~·tl urdutlt'd plmuung 11 Lnpl" Kur~-:s hlititd
&lt;ttl Jutlt' 29 a till di.'lt"USS1111.: judr.:iug t"\·r·rrts . Chns
SJM'!H"I"f g;tvl" it n•purt 1111 ·puthulo·s·· &lt;lttrl St'1"t'll&lt;l
Wluto· I.:&lt;! VI' a repttrl ''n Lht· frrst ard for por.'iun
s wal1uwt'rl hy ttrouth lll'frl's lutlt'nb wr-rt• St'rY1·d
hy tlw Spt'llt "CI"S . Tht· nt'X\ Htl'l.'lll tl! w11l bt· .lui~· :J
HI 7 :10 [Ul t. at tlw Pullrn•..; n·srth·Hn- wlwn · ecidr
m o•trrbt •r Will brmg s urrrdhllll! f11r l'ilr ·h 11f tlwrr
prujt"t"L&lt;o;
St·tttl Tros..~ t ·ll, Nt•ws Hepur1r·r
l1tt· FlalwtHJtb Flwr.~ rtrt'l Jut w 22 &lt;~1 1111· ( "urt r:.
humt• wtlh St•vo•n ll lt'IJ tbt·rs t~nrl urn· athtsttr mit( ·
l.t·mlclm·t•. Salt.&gt;s uf 4-H t"tttJkbo~tk ... w1•ro ·
tltso·us11t·tl ()t.·l~t&lt;tusln~ lruns wno · ~1\"1"11 l!y Clary
t"11111 ~ and Su1Att111t' Clt~ y . r:ar-y"s wa:- un Utt'
~l"I Mttrlltl)( a nd slruwin ~ ttf 1-!tli:lb ant.! Suwnrrt•"s
wt~ s abu ut f"n·Httv r· Arlo; ·· vuu r&gt;un ' t Say'" was
plt~ y t'tl frr1 n·t·rt•all••tl. Rl"frt·shtrrt•ub wt•n· .wr·
Vt"tt by S uwm tt' rla y and Mdalltt ' Manku r. Tlw
tll"ll l utt·o•lttt}! will l11 • .lui) 5 &lt;1\ 7 p . H t al tht·
Mankrtl n ·su lt•rwt• wlwrl" !111• dub Will t"I1JII}" it
SWHittlllll}! ()111"1 }" - SuzittHli'("Jay. Nt•ws Ht'J)tll"·
li'r
Tiro · Fr \·r· l'uml Slit t S lr tdr,· r ~ rrrd Ma\ 4 al
.l ;wktt" Strrrl"ill'r ·., lttonw "'·rlh ...rx IIH" tlllwl· ~ anti
um• advrsur Offwr·r ~ wr ·t1· t"lr·dr ·1l ;uul dut •s wrTo "
p.anl . I kllmrrs tralro&gt;lts anti n ·purL..; Wt'l"t" 1!1\TII IJ)
Mrd11•lh- Wrbull Hlltl Tr ·rrn• St;rn·ht·t 1l w~

le&lt;

The Hillbilllt'll 4-H Club nll'l Jul"lt' 15 ttl the
hotTr(' o( Billy Dyt•r w1\h Slll members, four ~:~dvisor.; and one v1s1tur Hltendm~ . Items of
bll!liness mdudL""d takrng a hikt' fur H dub
projt.'C't, dist·ussrn,l( phUl'i for a f!OHI in tht•
Rutland F ourth of Jul y purad~ and t.'OIIet.•t bottle
caps and pop cans fur rrt•yclinl( and for a moneymakinl( project . Rt'frt.oshmenls were served by
the Dyers . "rhe next mecltnl( is Jullt' 29 at tht•
Dyer home at 6 p.m . - Betty Ann Loftis, News

Tlu• 1-:HA i,; I'XJM'&lt;'If'd l ogo down
to dPfPal tndav as il ' final deadline
gof'S bv.
"Wf.''vr ht'('n marching in thr
o..; trPf'ts for I ~ yPa r s ," ~aid Mrs. lr·
win , !he mot hf'l' of r hrec and grand·
mother of II. "W&lt;• have disslpaled
our tlmP marching, m('('t ing and
prmching.
"Women haVI' tx&gt;en slow to Jearn
and vpry littlp has lx"'&lt;"n accomplish&lt;•d n'&lt;'ently."
ThP ERA was killed by women'&gt;
rPiuctancP to use their voir cff('{'1ivPi y by Piret ing morP women and
mr·n sympathetic to lhPir cauS&lt;',

l "l.rl II ' '' IM·II· ·•
I · ~• ~ .r :-\.r 1••I . j _,.., , Huo ko r
l ,ttt ll ll \ HttiH·f"b . Kt·rrm Hrlo !ow Ar lr ·ru · li rlo Ill•
Su... lll S.,·,tu r. To~ ld Wr burr liro ·rr l 1'-••tl •'" · ''' '·'
] ... uk -.. lkl"k ~ Krrrw ~ . .. :rr &lt;, t l(, ·.,..u rr •·r llu-.....-1 1
Kd l,·r . l ".r t ••l lk ~~&lt;lrrx 1\r r.. t r ll.r"'k
l'a rr •
F .. Jrr,. r . l '.r t rro o,r lltH ' f !-:&lt;IIIII" I •oll rr r... Mo lr "' '
C,rl.r"' ill . 1.!11It" Ht wk lo 1 ll,rr lo ·lto 11.111 11 &gt;. 11 "111 t1
ll.m lt"\1
Fu:lrll r r.: rarl• ·. All A·,
.l ultn llto ,. II " ' l11·1l• t
( ;t •ttt · J ,wuiJ~. I );tWil&lt;t I ;, Ul"'ot"l J .,, 1\r ,111111111
Nm t h r•rado ·. 11 "' IH ·II o·r
Slt• ·t 1 1 l(rlt ·ltw.
.J,tn r..., •rr .
1\rn!.r /lt-r ·d . Hhu11rla l 'ltrllr p:-. Sa r11h
l~·rr lhu br&gt;ll . l . t~l ll;rwk . l ~ · hluo I r,tft . Arwro
{"ullm:-. lir"llo "l" Hrwklt · ~ . At il' t•·S j" ' '" ,.,
Tt• lllli l! l" iulo- . All A·., A; u·nr r I ',II k• ·t . I .Hrt fir\ ·
J,,rrl ."llk .... l ',nrl. rFto·&lt;kt·r .
oltw li&lt;tt hdlt-r
i\1111 llrddlr ·. l ",ttlt.l ( "Itt• lro·.,lo-r . 1\rll ( ",d l. ll;rud\
l\al11
/O: io- l"r·rrllr c rado ·. All/\· ~
J)o ·r .. tt.lo-wdl 11 ot!
lwllr •r
l .t ..,;r (" " llrrr.~ . .lulw IO: IIw r lo-ld . [1;11 &lt;"
(;aul . M;rrk lito· ·· T111r l lotlwrt... .. 1.-ff Sltrt\1'1" ...
Mdr.-..~;r Tlll&gt;ll ra., . 1\r tau Wt·ll . 1-:rl Wo ·r r -~ . Anru
lluffrrr;ur , Sn&gt;ll.l ustr...
Twr ·lftl r 1-: l" &lt;ttk . All A· ~
Tr111 /k;t r h:-. Snt11
lltllttrt . S.amh f;r~·tw l . Krl;t \' &lt;tUtr;• 1\ "' lwll r·t
,]ttllll lil "it \"t"l". T rua Ko·;r\T I . l " ar~tlyu ll11wr·u.
Br.lt"l" Buo · klr ·~. S l ~t·r y l 1\u.. tr. All ... •ll t ",tulhuru.
Httt!t'l (;aut . Mrk.- llaul.o ·r. t "t ) ' l.t l /Jarl•·.1
I "IJ&lt; tfl t·.. M a ~:-.&lt; 11 . .f,.[rr r lhl'lwl . II"IM·r l I. Srrull r
Tt ·r n Sth rwt lo·tt

&lt;i h{'

Ttw MuunLltlllt't.'rs recently hl'id lwu uwl'llll~!l
un M~t Y 13 ~tnt! May 21. The fint mect111g wall
held at Timt Hiffk's IWU.'It' with one 11dvisor ~:~nd
*~vcn ntcmbcn; at~ · ndinlo( . It Willi decided to Litke
llltlllt'Y uut of the trc11sUry for prjt.'l' t bookll. For
rt'l 'rt"lltiun );(I:I II WS wen· pWyed uuldonnt.
II• rro ·..; httii'OII'I wt•n· .'lt'rvt.'C.I by Tina Riffle..
"SI" "' 1,rl J'IH H.~ f"t llw llt'XI _ 11lt'Ctin)t included
C..rul)"11 Elau • I•· : '" tldmb 1111 her cooklflt,t
project and K.aren l ..a•r ,IM ·I"I I• · · '' ,. •lo ·uil.'lnn her

tfUinel pig proJ&lt;d.

Tbe .econd mt:etilll(
McElroy's hoo~ with five

'1

WIIS held 1:11 Jc(f '
mcmbcn Mnd one advilor attendlllf(. [)emonll;traUorw were given by
Joey McElroy, Kar en Lambert, 11nd Jeff
McElroy. Joey's demon:Jtration :*liS o_n rope
tnotl: J(8ren gave 1 report on I(Wnca plKJIInd
Jeff~ a health Up oo wuhing a patient's hllir .
.~_reshnle~tl were IM!rYt.&gt;d by Kay McElroy. -

A DVE Rl iSED ITE M PUl l I

lli • M"rrrrla lttr"&lt;"t ' llll"l.ltrrw 17 . . tl Sl lt"tt\ Ar ·
""'" "' wtllr 111111" llll"ltolwt ~ ;urd lOA•· ilth.J&lt;o;&lt;•D
1'""""111 t;;~rr..- ~ 11o ·ro · pl.t .lo ·d J,r ,, ., ro·;rltPtt Tltt
m · ~l rrw drr rr w1ll lw .lurrr · ~~ a l l in · IJ,,,,, . ,.f
t ·. 11 ,j~" Et ttt • .rl 7 p 11 wlr• ·• o· Sln·r r ) Ar rrtoltl ,tt rd
Mdarrw Artu ·ld wrll !' tlo · rl• ·llto&gt;us lr .r1ro•rr:- •• ulltt ·rr
)'I " )' "' I '
K ,, I 1"11 r ; ur .tw rl . No · "' ~ llq H+t ""'
T l&gt;•· M• w-. ll• •"'rlt• ·:- tt d .lut w IO;rllho · l';rok•·l
lto •tl • "-til t • It Iof l! •&lt;"l ttlll"l ., illlol ••I!•" ,tth i' " l
pr ,·.., ·ttl Ti ro • lrtlo It» rtt !H"r ' dt ~• u.., ·,j n •ur rt 1
~&lt;nlo- alii I itt t",l ~ · II , . , •·111 ' :ttu l ' UI 1111w1 . u In r l w.~
l .r-.,r Vr \It&lt;\ , ., 1 &lt;II , . a rlt- rr ourr:-\r ;rltt&gt;ll ••II fu :-1 au\
d . o·lu h [ur lho ·rt ()ul rltll +! t "•···k· ·· :jii• •JI"O "I Tl w rro · ~1 '" ' ~ · t uw "'rill .. .lw w 1 ~ ;rl li
I' 11 ill l lw luur .. · .,( Ta r;r llur rrplur·) wlro ·tT lltl")
wr llrr •ak• • l!"t' •"I t"itr ll fur tl wtr 11 "I"' "1"&lt; ' &lt;11 11 s o" ·tal
1\;JI!t.l t 'arkr·• . N r ·w.~ l!qun"\o"r
l"l tt· Mr ·r r y M:tk1 · r~ 1 V 4·11 duh 11rd .I uno · 11 ;rl
llw ltt•l! w ,f IJ;n rrl Hro ... Y.ttlr ~ r ·\· , · ttrrr~·rrrh1·r ... ;ttrl l
111 ,, ;uh 1... .. , :- ;ollt·rrolrttt: l1t •rtt:- ..r lm.~ trw.-..s til' lud•·•l :-.-llrllr " f11rMI al audrttll.., Hllt l pl~ttlllllt~· "
lr rplt• Kril l!-' bl&lt;trttl. A :-.rfd y rt'IMII·t \\as J-: 1\" t'll lr~
t'lrtl ~ Spt'IU"t"l" 1111 tunr;uh~ ·s Tht · IH'll l rtwdill~
"'ri i iM • .lur t&lt;· 22 &lt;tlllll' SIWHI "t'f ro ·sttlt •trt "t '
St •ttll
Tr ~~~s .-11 . No·.,·s l ir"po~t1o"1"

n.. ' '"." ,; ,..

tl).1Citl~

"WomPn who arP '2;, yr&lt;.~r~; ur ll"'S ·
are oft0n mor{' dynamic,·' &lt;.; h f' said. '
"I de, paired unlilthP arrival of my :
grandchildren's genpral ion .
·

wtten
wfii CII

,K].,.er l o!ioe&lt;ll)''l f' w •ll r,r _l l 1,1-, .,

l oed "' " "oW' w tt . ,.,,,,, t' , ,,.,. " ""

WHAT?

com

LYDIA S. ZAPANTA, M.D.

WHEN?

Cornish
Game Hens

8 A.M. TO 8 P .M .
THURSDAY, JULY l s i

WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF
HER PRACTICE OF

OBSTETRICS and GYNECOLOGY

HERITAG E HOU SF
IN MIDDLEPORT

EFFKTIVE JULY 12, 1982
By Appointment
PHONE (304) 372-9362

(

99c

"located allhe End ol the

•dl&gt;l t:' IJ'ct " d '' "'' ""·) , ..,,. P··· ,., ,.,.. , ·• ,.

$

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef ...

29
•

Kroger
Beef Wieners.

JUMBO 5 SIZE

Honeydew
Melons ....

,

Country Club
Ice Cream

Bridge."

WEDGES AND UTilE
HEELS - MANY STYLES TO
CHOOSE FROM

MEN'S DRESS
AND CASUALS

GROUP OF
CHILDREN'S

PRICE

U.S. GOV'T GRAOED CHOICE BEEF
CHUCK BONELESS

THORN APPLE VALLEY RO UN D OR
BUFFET STYLE

Boston
Roll

Boneless
Smoked Hams.

lb

$1 99

KROGER WIENER OR

Pomeror. OH.

'/,·GAL. CTN.

PEDWIN, GRIZZLIES,
DEXTER, HUSH
PUPPIES
GROUP OF

HANDBAGS-

TENNIS SHOES

CANVAS, MACRAME,
STRAW, PATENT and LEATHER

FOR MEN, WOMEN
AND CHILDREN

Sandwich
Buns

3··B·CT. PKGS .

$128 $128

WOMEN'S FLAT SANDALS

CONNIE, FOOTWORKS,
AND HUSH PUPPIES IN
WHITE, PASTELS
AND BONE- WITH
COORDINATING
HANDBAGS

_, ·

'' , . .,, .. ,

14 · 17-LB . AVG .
HERRUD WHO ~ E

U.S. GOV 'T INSPECTED
FRESH GROUND

PH. 992-25511

WOMEN'S DRESS
SHOES·-

1'

Semi- Boneless
Smoked Ham

MEAT OR

VALUES THROUGHOUT
THE STORE

PINNBl STREET, RIPLEY, W.VA.

lb .

WHERE?

Adolph's Dairy Valley

SUMMER

OB/GYN

.,..

SUPER SUMMER SA L E

WITH FRIES ...... $1.19

Pome~or· Mason

•l .~~· r...•

ava rl dllle •o• l lt'&lt;..l •' 'l l •r,,. "'' "'" 'o.!. ·' 'q ' , • , ·.t•
Wllltlfl 1o11t• ¥''" l-:1 P• • r,,,.,., I&lt;• +· !&lt;1. •"' .,., , ·,...

l: verytn•"IJ ~" " '"" 11 • , "-~' " ·. 1 , '' " ', ,., , I '
satosl&lt;~c t•U" ' f'\l.t •r11 ~""&gt;!. ,. ~ • ,. , " ' ·" ' "'f"
' .
,..

79~

170 W. Marn

r

'"'I••" tt, , . .,.

•tern ""e ,...,11 otler · ' 'I• , ••, .• ,., . .. . ,. '

FISH SQUARES

'"l aid .

SANDALS
DRESS
AND
CASUALS

, ,!

rht..~·

..

.. n .. ~··t,.,. l ,,., .,., , · ·~r
J \l ,ltlittJit• It" ..,,,,. r •·.r • ' • ~ I• "
~1-y r'()\6(1'" 11&gt;~ .Ill 11 ...... . ~ .,,,
, ,· ol

LH 11

r~~~. W~c~h~a~v~c.;fa~ll;ed~l;o;u~~ l;l;in;;o~u;r~~;;.;;;::~~~~~::~:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

' ''""'" lu'"' \" lll.tko M.tt ~ lllt , .r ll ""' It' .r l ., l lw
tjlll&lt; k ,tt td t " d ' ~ ll.t .\ II !Ito II I&lt;11&gt;\1,1\t H\ 1"11 J-"Pt
1• ·• ro·; tlr&lt;•ll f,,.JII.oil l.tl' "'" pl;r\t ·d lldro ·s lr
11 o·llh "'' "' ,. '-'"! 1 ,.,JI11 To·1 r ,,. ;II ttl .o. ;. ., •II Sl;rr &lt; l11·r
.)o~dtt · .'it !t~lt"k.-1 )(r-jH tl kt

)

•ror Some Cost Cutters. No
Other Brands Are Stocked.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

"For Ii i years, lhe women of
AmPrica havP possessed lh~ most
powN w~apon for social jus! ir&lt;'
!hal a civ ilized nalion can lx'stow
upon il s cilizf'ns- the ballot.

,------------------'C.---------------1

Report&lt;'

"ald.

&lt;i ht•

4-H clubs report meettng news
K.ttt •rri,IIIIIH"rl . Ho "jH&gt;I"\• ·1

battle for the ERA. We have failed
our great leader s of !he 19th century, squandering !he years of our
political power with actl vi ti e&gt;
which held no threa t to our enemi&lt;"i
in government. Only when we or·
ganlze for their defeat will I he F:HA
become a reality," Mrs. lrwinsaid.
Too many women wa-.;t(' too
much time now, she sa id.
"ll's a disgracP th£' amoun t of
time squandered on bridge and
such by otherwise int elligent
women," Mrs. Irwin said. "My gen ·
eralion contributed absolutely no
thing to women's rights."
She said the hope lies with fulull'
gPnera tlon•.

CLEVELAND 1AP1 - In 1914,
.losPphin C' S. Irwin was onf' of 7,0Cl0
womrn who roctr horses through
1hi' sr m•ts 10 makP a public plea for
woml'n ·s suffragP bl'fore 200,001
chf'f'ring SJX'C iators.
Thr co nstitu tional amendment
gi\'ing womPn thP right to vote t_x&gt;..
ra mt • la w ju-.; t -.;Lx yPa r ~ later.
""Wl· ca nw a long way in a short
tim!' ... said Mr'i. Irwin . 92. "Aflf'r
lllat. the who!&lt;• m ovPment died
nat. '.
A re\"i\'al hl•gan aOOu t t:l yPars
ago, but it has n't t)('('n o.; trong
t'twu g h to win "uppo rt for thr proi~ &gt;S&lt; XI !-:qual 11ighls Ammdmm t,

•

Tht· Jh.:lr Fllt"r~ ~ - H t~· ltl ' "' " ntt·• ·lllr.: ~ n ·r..-tttly Tht· frr~t "no· Wit~ tHI Jwtt· 12 &lt;II Hurltly ant!
l .rrul/1 f:d., anb · hur r11· ~·rtli t·h·~ I'll rtlt"ttrl)t' !" ~ ant!
fuur utl v t .~" r ' allendltl}! ltt•rr rs uf husmt'.'t'l
dtSI"ll.'iSt'll rnduth•tl Sl'l lmg , .,Kr kl:toK&gt;k.~ and
maktn}! p• &gt;S\t•t s fur llw ( "hns ( ·1, ovr• r {·it r t&lt;HIIII"IIII·
t 1·st. Tiw rrwrrrt...: ·r~ wr'l l\ l1 s lirrr~ fur rr·nr·altr&gt;l!
Tht· nwrnbt'r ~ br tiur.:h l st~ l" k lunl"hl's till lht·
frs hur,t.( trrp
Tht· st'f' uml rrwdrng "- 'Still May 1~ t~l Buddy
ar"Ml l.urdll Edw;mb Wllll II rrtt•rrrbtor.. an•! fuur
lltlv tsors prt•s.!lll lll'rt L~ of bu.o;llll"SS mdUtlo'll
h.!! VIll,t.( It h•tnunt~dt• st rntl ;tt lht• merrrttnal llay
pun~tlt• and pus tr ·r .. fur Jht· Chn s ("luv1•r ('arlt Mrn
t"tllllt'SI A •lt·n•"nstratun Wit S ~ 1 \'t'll ttn fr shml-( by
JOt· Edwunh ant! Jant'l Stt ltnl'r Fur ro•cn·H\111/l .
tlw lnt'llli&gt;t'I""S Wt•nl fis hml! Tht• dub o"IIJttYt'll a
wrt•ner ruas l fur rr·fn·s lullt·nb Tht· tlt'lll ll tt't' lllll.:
1!1 May 29 at tlw t"lw ~ h · r &lt;"••I HHr umt y Hmlthttl-(
Jitill'l Stlllm·r . Nt•w:-. 1h-purlt·r
Tt"M" lh- lt•rr llt-lpt•r ":-. hdrl tlwtr St't"uml t rrt'l'ltrl~
Junt• 9 al tilt' hut tt t' ul t~livrsur. Ut•lcn HuliN .
Therl' wen· l't~htrrwmDt·rs and twu ad v ts urs 111
Hlit'ndtUt t·t· Tht· l"'sstbrltl) ttf a fh~&lt;tl 111 lht·
Rclo(.!llll:t J)ilrll tk amltho: F uurth of July panttlt• 111
R.!H"11lt'. lkfrl'shrrtt• nL~ wt·n· St' rVt'tl by Sherry
[ko-em . - Radwl lt,•tbt• l . Nr•ws Ht•purtcr
Tht· Countr y Cmr:.ut~ nrl'l Junt· 10 at !Itt' lrrultt'
nf Amy ami Alii.,. Hrtd1ro · wrtll tt·n llll"ltlbt·rs aut!
two ~:~dvtsor s utlt'ndm~ Busrncs.'i inl"ludt'tl
passing out SUinlt•y books . vts rtin~ lht• CulumbU.'i
Zoo aotl sc llm ~ ruttkbuJk!i. Refrcshmt' nt.'i wl'n:
served and lht• nt·x t tul't'\in~ .'lt'l for June 24 at tht&gt;
home of Pam Hti'!Jt· l - Lon Burke, News Rcpur-

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ON OYER
400 ITEMS AT A SAVINGS OF
10% TO 40% OVER THE
OTHER BRANDS AT KROGER . •

Suffragist advocate frustrated

Area honor roll students named
Til•: IHur.. r ' "II , f i\h· q·~ ll w lrS r l•• " ol f,. r ll r•· Ill
tl r~r • .,., . , · k ~ li , r ~ lr...- n . r ttii~&gt;IU U o·d ")",.I" tt.r tou ,j 1"
llu • lu•!l•&gt;t r ,.1] .r ~ ludo ·tll 11011.,1 tt r.w rl.r llt ,, 11 ·· ,,,
bdlt"r .\ ,u rwd1 .. 1tto t"ll "'' "'' l ho· f,ll""' il'l"
F n ltlltO"II r.I.... I 1\ -..h:. I r" ltl u II·,, ll h K.rlr ,.,,,
IM •II• ·Iuw I J.n rd F r, lr. t 1\rl h I" '' olr-tt . I ''·' Jj , If
111a n . S,u ul\ Jf,.l t [ , ' ' '·' .l.tt It' I .t lln .],.,,, ..
( "lrt~t 1••11• J .~ ,,,, , l .ur d.r l! u l ' I u l. r Sr• k ll•·ltln
Still'. I ~' ' r T.r ru u·r A h"•rr "I r "' • II &gt;
S.•pl t"il "''' '· Shol l \ Art rtold . t "lu r' Hu ro lolto
ll;rrroh l ",rr l l ",rr ,hll I ,,.. t, T rtt •·ll r1 F t ,ll ll" t
l ',ru l :Jar11 ·1 l&lt; h~t~ul;r .1.-ff , , ., ~1 tt h. w l t\o ·111to ol1
( "1\,rt lo-' Ku,tj &gt;j&gt; . [l.,ll,tld l .rll lo- Mo ·lr .....r !\lr
Mdlrw r. f ~ · r 1 M.r1 n.ud . Air +t !..1rr ll rrr:-. I ', ollr ~+ · IJI ·
1h t\t' . .lrttr l'• ·r r rrr l "lrtro k ILrl lrlru r rr \11 k f i r ~ ,.,
l~ ·rr S;rll &lt; l',tul.r S"'rl toki i. Tor rr· lh"r " .r 1\o·t&gt; tt l
.
Suo· Tl r; •tlr, t... Mr• h. wl W1.rll
.ltH II"' ·"· .l;ll rr to · i\o ,,.,. Tittol i\111-rr )( " "' ""·'
i\11 "11 "11 . Alltl&lt;~ Ho~ ~ lt.r I Jdl ro 1 f\,111. lt 1r .ttr
l\ntltt;rl"r""k ·' · l ·•ld rurrdrff . 1\ .oll t,r r.r tll .. kt
1\;Hia [l-r-M "'~ . F.llllr l .twko ·ll.'. T r1 1 F rfo · 1\tt "lti
~ · rn l . r"' . K;rr l llitt rlt-r . 1\ ttrl. t ll;tl lt •!Ill . I '.tUI,t I[,.,
1• ·11 . Ant" t" ltu bl,;rrd. ! "l lff,rd l•t·rl!" •lltr l .1' "
J,u 1 ''· Vitlo- r w .ll'ff•·J ' · Tlrt,t l .•"itl k. Sut..trr l .lt'l tl ·
!tM tl. Ht ·rr r;trd H"!t ll llt ". Kr1 ' Sn""'"' 11 l",tll\.r
Slot]l&lt;lll. l',ur l. r s ~.~, , f!, I J, ,pur. l.r ttll &lt;"l . l, rq•
Ta\ l••t w ,·!ll h I rll r'. ~1 r• h,w l l r" ' "rr' Aror ,, .
\",t.ll( "•• •tH\. r"~t . H ru, o \', wr\1o·1o t Hr r.u r Wrllt '
Su:...Hrrt, r
~ · ll t•• t 'o l .ttll. t \ lo .. lr rr o 1\ rt-..ltll ,\ ru lo ' ' " " ·

Sh1· hl:omt·s lhe struggles 11f lht· Equal Rights Amend·
mt·nt un wnmt•n's n·lurt.anl't' tu USl' lllt'ir volt• d ft•&lt;'liVl'ly . ( AP Last•rph11lul

SOOPER COST CUTTERS

Kroger
Welcomes
Your
Federol
Food
Stomps

JUMBO 72 SIZE

•

Kroger Frozen $129
Orange Juice ~;::.·
KROGER

California
Nectarines.

:~i!d

Northwest
Bing Cherries ..

32~~~~~ 129

.
Springdale
Fruit Drinks ... ~~!·

USDA
CHOICE

99C

AVAIIABI{ O NlY IN O:, IQ IHS
WITH DEll DEPARTMEN TI,
HOT fOODS AVAHA61f
11om Tit 1pm

FRESH MADE DELUXEPEPPERONI
MUSHROOM . CHEESE OR

:,:~igt:ffee ~~:$5~!;{.-::~:::ge

~CHICKEN ~EADYTOEAT,WISHBONE
11 •• .,,. '· 9-Pieces

' Fried Chicken

18

Fresh B~ked
Apple P1e.

2;,;~:;$499
$6

Bucket

24

_

$169

01

Pie

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs County happenings
Spt&gt;dal meeting set
ThP Eas te rn sc hool board will
havP a ; peclal meeting Thursday,
7:30p.m .. to discuss personnel a nd
;t udPnt matters. At H p.m ., the
mwtl ng will bP open to the public.
'111c m('('l!ng wi ll be a t the high
&lt;c hool gym .

Enwrgt&gt;ncy rum;
The Meigs Co. Emergency Medical S&lt;•rvlre reported three runs last
night ·

AI 12: 18 p.m .. the Middleport
f:MS took Hil!ia Jones from South
Third Ave nue to Pleasa nt Va lley
l! nsp ltal ; the Pomeroy squad took
Ollit• Ros ton from Pomeroy to
\'cterans Memorial Hospit al at
Ill: OR p.m .; at~ : :l3 p.m . the Rulland
'quad took f)(&gt;n nis McKinney from
Bc«·h Grove Road to Vete ra ns
Vl&lt;•mo.-ial lfos pilal

Veterans Memoria l Hospita l had
~ r\· rr ;.d admi~s io n s

and discharge&lt;;

~ · p~ tt · rda~ · .

Admiss ions -- Homer Clark, New
Haven. W. Va .. B.-ian .Justus, Ra cine. Robert Sa lser, Racine, Winnie
Dailc.v. Rac ine. Discharges--Juna
PiercP, Naom i Smit h, Debbie
Campbell, Bria n Justus, Homer
Clark. Paul Grady .

friday session
The Meigs Co. Pomona Grange
wi ll meet Friday, Jul y2a llheRock
Springs Grange hall a nd not Tuesda y, as was previously reported .
Meeting at 7 p.m . with potluck
&lt;bring covered dish. ta ble service!
a t 8 p.m . AIhe ns Co. will visit.

Marriage licenses

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API -Gov.
James A. Rhodes may have saved
Ohioans one month of UabU! ty
under a highe r sta te Income tax
whic h takes effect Thursday .
He vetoed a provision whic h
could have allowed the te mporary
surcharge to be collec ted, lt needed
to keep the budget In bala nce, for a
lOth month, Instead of havi ng It go
off after nine.
R hodes struck the provision.
a long with th ree others, last week
w he n he signed the lax hike bill.
The statute otherwise Imposes
the 50 pecent surc ha rge a nd cuts
spending a bout 10 percent to erase
a $1 .3 billion budge t deficit which
had been projected for the c urre nt
bie nnium .
Howeve r, some members of the
Senate a nd House said they didn 't
lea rn until Tuesday tha t the onl'month extender was pa rt of vetoed
language unde r whic h the re could
have been a not her I percent spending c ut.
The c ut could have triggered next
March, lt needed, as a nothe r fiscal

The following couples have applied for marriage lice nses in Meigs
Count y Proba te Cou rt :
Rick A. Taylor, 23, Middleport
and Carin S. Bailey, 20, Mlddll'porl; Lewls V. Johnson, 31, Minersville a nd Kathryn M. Johnson, 27,
Minersvil le; Bur l Blevins, 45,
Langsville a nd Joyce A. Perkins,
40, LangsvUie.

To end marriage
TerriL. Davls and Gene A. Davis
of Pomeroy have requested a marriage d issolution In Meigs County
Common P leas Court.

Firm seeks mont&gt;y
A West Virgi nia firm has sued a
local man for $6,692.0'l in Meigs
County Co mmon Pleas Cou rt.
The Is la nd Creek Coal Co ..
Holde n, W.Va., a lleges In the suit
that Robert B. Cozart, Pomeroy,
has fa iled to pay a debt he owes the
firm .
The company sta tes il sold Cozart
a Chry sler boat, motor, tra iler a nd
other m erc ha ndise which it has not
received payment on .

Book awards

$63 for pa sjing on a double yellow

line, a nd $113 for possc.sion of a
controlled su bsta nce; Wayne Cll'la nd , Rac ine, forie ited $363 for
DWl ; RobPrt Wilkinson, St. Alba ns, W. Va., forfeited $45 for
speed: Paul Hoffman , Letart , W.
Va ., forie ited $47, speed; David

Na ig ler, Raci ne, forfei ted $46,
speed; Teresa Thomas, Mlddll'port, forieited $45, speed; Ja mes
Keesee. Middleport, forfeited $63,
ex pired operator's li cense a nd $63
failure to register vehic le;

La rry Grogan. Middleport, foril'itcd $45. speed.
In Middleport Mayor's Court action last night, Ma yor Fred Hoffman reported severa l forfeits .
Mic hael Harrison, Middle port,
S:l7o for DWl a nd $50 for expired
license; Wesley M. Smith, Poml'roy, $375 for DWI; Calvin May le,
Pomeroy, $375, DWl a nd $100 for
driving under suspe nsion; James
Riley, Clifton, W. Va., $50, !eft -ofcent e r ; Earl Arc her, Middleport ,
$25. !a llure to obey signa l; Mike Til-

li s,

Middleport,

$75,

criminal

_.,....::::===-

SLEEPERS

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

Onoa..,

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uao

"~ '" ' '•"'"'

UOIO I I WO&lt; ...

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t/CIII

35 Yrs. Ex perien ce

Aqe 5, has 2 ac r es, well
drained and ca r ed for . 2
bedroom
ins ul ated
home, ba sement wi t h
garage and 2 porches.

SUCCESSFUL

! Curb Inflation

!
!

!

$45.000.
2.8 ACRES - Ju st right
f or
th e
fam il y .
3
bedrooms. range i n ki t
che n , ca rpeting and
basement wi th ga r age .

$25.000.

)Wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement

) For Rent

CAR WASH -

Sma ll

down and you are in
bu siness. Open in mor
ning , col lect cash a t

2
3.
4.

5.
6.
7.

8.
9. ~-----

10. - - - - - -

11. - - - - - 12. - - - - - 13. - - - - - - 14. - - - - - 15.
16.------

of

Mid

4 BEOROOMS - 2 lull
ba th s, fami l y rm , patio ,
qa r age
and
f acts
Ask1n.g $47,000

31. -- - - - 32.
33.
34.
35.

Mall Thll Coupon with RtmlttlriCI
Thl Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
·
Pomeroy, Oh, 457"

.

I,

I

~----------------------·
(

BASEMENTS!
PATIOS
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
RICHARD GARFIELO
985-4464

Sut Mur · ·. Helen and
Bruc e
) o~•tor d ,
All
Re.tlton . After Hrs.

9Ul611or H2-llll.

ousmg
Headquarters

6 \d I

-

L o-Boy
Tr enc her
water
Sewer
G&lt;lS Lrn es
Se ptic Sys tem s

6 27 I mo. Pd

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service
Call 992-6259
276 Sycamtne St.

Middleport, Ohio

PIANO

~~TU~ING
REPAIR

Coli Bill Word
Word's Keyboord

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
. N e w Hom es - ex ·
tensive remodeling

plf's that we r e coll ec ted
and anal yzed during th at
period showed th a t water
of qood mi crobiolo9 i ca l
qu fl lity wa s bein9 provided
to the publ ic.
The wa t er dep artment
ha s taken st ep s to ensure
that adequ a te monitorin9
wi ll be pe rform ed in the
future.

INT EREST RATE FEATURES

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS
Sizes start from 30x24"

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all

wood buildings 24xl6.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

level lot. Good buy a t $3 1,900.

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .

Ph. 614·843·2591
6-15-tic

POMEROY - N ice l y remod el ed 3·4 bedroom home,
leve l lot. exce ll ent neig hborhood - want $27,500,
$5,500 down , balance at 13% interest, 20 Y ea r s,

Greg Roush
Ph . 992 · 7583
or 992- 2282

HAl R REMOVAL

1&gt;

II I tno

Bail ey's Shoes. M1ddleport.

thru 8th l or vaca t ion
PERMANENT
Pr ol esstonal
E lectrol yS IS
Cen ter A M .A approved,
Doc tor relera ls, by ap
pointment only
304 675

6234

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
u .s . Rt . so East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holl an d, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
lJ ti c

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG _,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

• backhoe
*excavating
• se ptic sys tems
• A water , sewer
&amp; ga s lin es
• dump truck
• lim es ton e

......... ,...... h"l

1,:,1-:!rtlll WOf- l'tilfltfMfllllld
ttKtuuf WOf\
(frtt blllftlltsl

MOLJNTIAN State Ra ckin g
&amp; Pacing Associa tion Inc
is spo nsori ng a hor se show
Jul y 3 at 6 p .m . a t J ackson
Coun t y Junior Fa1rgroun
ds, Cott agevi ll e, WV . Wi l l
be
ra c k1nq ,
pac1ng.
wa lk 1ng hor se and English
classes
4

Giveawtty

A N Y PER SO N who has
an yth1ng to Q1ve away and
does not o ff er or a ttempt to
off er any o t her fh 1nq for
sa te may p lace an ad 1n lh1 s
column . Ther e will be no

992-6211 or992·7314

PH. 992-7201
J 29 tf c

li e

4cute kitten s to good home
Ca ll 6 14 379 2585 or 446
4110
femole

Ca ll

615 7771

licensed &amp; Bonded

Pomeroy , Ohio
9 30

l&lt; itfens to good hom e Call

446 4173.

BNtQ ie pup,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742 · 3195
3-7-ti c

.c&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; backhoe ser ·
\lice, water, sewer, •ponds ,
foundations,
reclamatio" .

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949·2291
or 949·2417
3-J·Ifn

W

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Lin e- Ditches
Water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tank s
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph. 167·7560

I-7 I tf c

bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

Seller financ ing, nice three bedroom

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

12% interest, 20 y ears t o pay balance of $22.400. r.t

$246.64/ month will negoiate - or SlO,OOO down. 10%
inte rest. $19,900 balance 20 years at $192.04/month.

7week ol d k 11ten . b l ack and
wh1le ma le. see 501 Bur
detl e St Po1nt Pleasant

Phone 304 675 6311
One Female dog, part Ger
mi'ln Sh epherd. par t Sa int
Bernard , 9 mont/1~ old .

2780

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call lor free siding
es tim ates, 949 · 2801 or
949 · 2860.
No Sund ay Calls

3·11 tf c

FREE pupp1es 7 wks . old
Par t Reg . Doberman &amp;
She phard Ca ll 61d 379 26 17.
Lo st and Found
FOUND Ma le wtnte dog
with brown co ll ar . Rt _ 7,
near Ra ccoo n Br idge Ca l l

"C UT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

B

All Makes

e Washer s
• Dish washers
e Ranges • Refrigerat-

ors
e Dryers • Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-S-

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

• Stnin less ~ f ee l
• F ibergi,1S S
• V inyl liners

PERSONALIZED
POOLS
1· 304 -1/3· 564
c. L . ki tch en
M.1 son , w . va .

620-t mo.

8·20-tfc

RUTLAND AREA - Assume loan, $5,700 down, in-

etudes assumption expenses , balance of $26,9~.47
at 12% Interest, appx . 28 year term remammg

FOUND .
Mate Bassett
Hound . Very we ll kept .
Bea utiful dog Yesterday

614 992-6204.
Found young femal e, pa rt
beag le, w hite with brown
spot s, c lose to Jericho
Road, H a rt z dog col lar, 304·

675 2104 or 675·4080.
7

Yard Sale

and 3. lOAM to 8PM. 133
State St . Ga llipoli s
Yard

Sa l e Jul y

I . 9AM

5PM . J e t. 160 &amp; 5S4, Porter .
Clothin g,
misc .

baby

i tems

&amp;

Ju ly 1, Thursday. d mi . out
Bu l av ill e a t log hou se . A nt .
rocke r . co lor TV, 10 spd .
bike , stro ll er , baby items,
maternity , pill ows , tru ck
topper , di sh es, and more

446-0978.

July 1st and 2nd .

Yard Sa le ll9 &amp; 122 4th
Ave .. Ga llipo li s. Fri . &amp; Sa t .

3rd. Lots of

Roger Hy5ell
GARAGE

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 .

Ga rage Sa le 9:00 to 5:00,
Thurs. &amp; Fri. Sa t . til t noon ,
1/2 prices. Fairfield Ac r es
Subdi vision .

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI , . . ...... . . . .. 992-6191
Donte·Turner , . , , , . , ... . , . . . ..... . , .. , , 992·1692
Je1n Trussell .. . , , .. . , . . , .....•.. . ..... 949·2660
Office ........ .... .... . ....... . ... .. .. 992-l2D

·w
,,

AUTO&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682

or 992·7121
3·2Hfc

desk ,
exercise
rhubarb , misc.

GARAGE

Comer Main &amp; S. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT
•All Mino1 &amp; Maj01
Auto &amp; Truck Repair
ofree Estimaln
•Reasonable Rain
Open 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon. lhru Sll
I"H . 992-7762
JackColem1n 6·21 ·
1 mo.

LoI s

Yard
Sale
Lot s
of
glassware Depress1on &amp;
new i tems . Mon July 5th , 9
to 5
Sou tt1 7nd St ,
Cheshire. Oh
Yard Sa le July 2nd &amp;. 3rd
9AM t ill ? Knife. Iunn y
books , old 1ron bed . tool s.
d 1shes, 1npack wr en ch 1
miles out Jerr1 co Rd Not
responsible for acc ,dents
675 11 44
Pal1o Sd le Dan Eva ns In
su rance Bl vd . on Ma1n St.
Vin ton F r 1day 9 fill? Spon
ser Sun shine c la ss ot
Un1ted MelhOdi SI .
Garage Sa le Old roulf' 7,
Addison. Oh July 1, / , 3
from lOAM l o 6PM
7
radios.
record s,
li!pcs.
women s c lothes s1zes 12 18
112. some ch il dr ens lf ems
and lot s of m1sc. 1fem s
Yard Sa le-Thurs &amp; Fr1dily ,
July I &amp; 2. 9 to? 1 m il e out
on Rt. 218 Couch . c lolh1nQ
&amp; misc. 1tems
Yard Sale Centenary Town
H ouse Thursday 9 6. Good
clean c loth es . lurn, ture.
bedspreads . drapes and
more
Yard Si!le Rt 141 a t Ccn
lenary , Ju ly I Childrens &amp;
adult c lothes, flr eplo ce.
stero. wha tn ot s. tcwrlry,
m1 s-c Rain dille July 7
Y.=.rd Sa le Rl 160 t urn r1q tll
Kemper Hollow Rd tor 1
m,-9 to5 Ju l y 1 / / 8HP
lrtwn tra c tor. lawnm owPr s,
cha1nsaw. TV , LXR Hond,l ,
baby c lo thes. m1 sc

904 Mossma n Circ le.
FOUR fami l y yard sa le,
50 1 Firs t St . Julylst. &amp; 2nd .
YARD sa le July 1st. a t
Ga lli polis Ferry, across
tr am Jordan Cemetery . 9
till 3
Thursday . July 1. 9 AM
Only , small app li ances.
lamps ,
miSCe ll an eo u s
1tems. 505 Mc Neill Avenue.
Po1n t Pleasant_
July 1 and 1nd, 2107 Monroe
Ave Po1nf Pleasant. above
Harmon F 1eld Cance ll ed if
rei1n
Bilby c lothes. storm door,
tru ck , rims. dishes, mise,
Post Pos t Office. Ga llipolis
Ferry, WV Thursday and
Fr1d0y
Tt~ ursday and F r iday 9 till
~-

/nd Lane Plyma le Road ,
Gall1pOI1S Ferry , WV .
Meadowbrook Driv e,
Po,nt Plea sant Fnday and
S,lturday 9 AM !il l
i911

GarclQC Sale . Bargatns, Ap
pl l i!n c es . books . tapes ,
-. l e reo
If ems.
b1 kes,
(lolhe s
From
Ti ff ins
Storeroom. tools New. etec·
tron1 C parts. copy mnchine,
Olf1ce mach1nes. Upper
End Marquefle Ave. Point
Pleasant.
F r iday
and
Sa turday 8 30 AM till .400
PM
Ro1n Sh1ne.
not
r&lt;' Spons,b le for accidents
Pub li c Sa le
&amp; Auc tion
Ro c k
Pearson,
Ex
pcr1enc ed AUCTIONEER
Estates. ani1Ques. farm ,
household L1ce nsed Ohto
WV Buy1nq ant,ques 304

773 5785. 773 9185
Auct1on every Fr 1. n1ghl at
the Hartford Community
Center Truckloads of new
merchandiSe eve ry week
Consiqme nts of new and
used mr&gt;r c hand1se .=~ l ways
welcome
R1 chard
Reynolds Auct 1oneer '175

3069

4'}6 8 177

J ul y 1.7.3 Old R l 7.
Chesh1re
Furn1lure .
clo thtnq, m1 sc Call 6 14 367
7209 .
Porch sa le
a! Mrl)(lnc
Michae l 's,
Laurel
Cliff .
Pomeroy
July 1 &amp; 7
o . shes.
whatnots.
cto th1ng , m1 sc
3 family
Clo thes. toy s.
some ant,q ues July I &amp;
July 2 AI McClung 's store
bu l d1nq, New Ha ven . W v

Wan ted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old fur
nlfure and Ant1ques of .111
k1nd s. c all Kenne th Sw.11n,
446 3159 or 256 196 7 1n Ol e
rven 1ngs
Buy 1ng
Gold,
S1lv er .
P1at1num , old co,ns. scrap
rmqs &amp; si lv erware Daily
quotes available . Al so
CO IO S B. COlO SUpplieS l or
Srllf' Sp rmq Valley Tra cJ1nq
Co , Sp rmg Valley Plcllil ,
446 8015 or 446 8026

4 family . Fr1 . Sat. Sun 133
Butternut .
Furniture ,
sew ing mac h1ne, bedd1nq,
gas heater . tools , h Sh1 ng
rod s. d ishes, ruq s, a1r cond
ward r obe , lawn mower .
type
wr1IN .
luqqoqe ,
co ll ec t1 ab les

Wr pay cash for late modf"l
clean used ca r s
Frenchtown C.=~r Co
Bill Ge ne Johnson

Baseme nt Pa11 0 sale July
1,2.3 . 361 Grant 5'-. 1n back,
Middl ep ort
Oh
M1cro
wave st and, brown t weed
platform rocker, l arqe c an
ner . elec mixer on stand.
Iowrey maqi c genie 88 2
keyboard or gan, qames,
books, br 1c brae. chi ldren s
clot hin q OX
and
up
Women ~ cloth ,ng , 10 and up
and much morf' 614 99/

446 8381

June i nd and 3rd 10 to? ??
180 S 2nd . Ave . M1dd leport
An tiques, pocke t wa tches.
c l ocks. rayo lamp, oil lam
ps , s t one
jar s.
quns,
b.Jskets. knive s,
wa l nut
tab le, r ocking c hair , wall
telephone, toys, c l othes,
humidif ier. V .W . qasol ine
hea ter. k erose ne hea ter,
sleep in g bag, blu e drapes.
ra in or shin e
July 1 and 2. on N or th Ma in
St . i n Rutland . Sears Sc r oll
saw , Rem1ngton
E lec
chain saw . 614 74'1 '1777 or

121 Union Ave . Ju l y I and 2.
9 thru 4.

4460069
Wnnted to cut and bale t1r~y
for percenlaqe of hay Call

BEDS IRON . BRASS. old
furn1 t ure.
qo l d, si l.vcr
dollars. wood 1Ce boxes,
stone i ars. an t iques. et c .
Comple t e
househo l ds
Wnte M 0 Miller, Rt d.
Pomeroy , Oh Or 992 7~6~
- --~

Go l d , silver . sler lin q ,
1ewelry. nnqs, old cotns &amp;
cur r ency Ed Burke tt Bnr
bPr Shop, M 1dd lepor1 997

3476
OLD FURNITURE , beds .
1ron , brass . or wood Kif
chen cu bbards of al l fypes
T abies, round or square
Wood ice boxes . Old de sk s
and bookcases . W II buy
co mplete house hold. Gol ct.
silver , o ld money, pockC't
wot c hes, c hain s, nngs, ond
etc I ndian Artifa c fs of all
lypes . A lso buying baseball
cN rds Osby Mart •n 99/

6370
Front be nch seat for 1968 69
Chevclle, 2 door , QOod
shape 304 675 5792

~ ~'"IIJienE ­

6 famil y yard sa le. Across
from F or es t run road on
Rt . 7.
Thursday
and
Fri day .

:::::;:-ser-.•jtes _~~
11

Th ur sday, Friday , and
Sa turd ay . July 1. 2.3 . From
10-5 on Co. Rd . 5 in Br ad
bury .
July 1 and 2. Long street ,
Rut l and . Furniture, nice
c lo thing, mi sc.

H elp Want ed

Bf'come a professiOnal 111
su rancc age nt , 3 openinQs .
Will tr ai n . Ca ll in cOn
tiden ce Ru m ley In sur an ce

Aqency. 446 ·)320 .

5 family . Thurs. and Fri .
212 Rock str ee t . Pomer oy .
.tth right turn off of Spring
Ave . Follow sig ns.

Part tim e cleaning per son
for bu si ness es tab l ishm ent
Sf' n d nam e, address and
phone number to bo)( 603 , 1n
care of Ga llipqlis D ady
Tribune , 825 3rd . Ave ..
Ga lli polis , Oh45631

July 1.2.3. 9 a .m. to 6 p.m.
Kingsbury Rd. off Rt . 33, 4

L PN ~eed ed tor doQtor's
offi ce . Part -tim e hOurs.

lane . Follow signs .

Yard Sate One day only no

FOUR family yard sa le
near the South Fork . July

Family Yar d Sate at Eno
General Store. Thursday ,
Friday &amp; Saturday. 81il6.

and

2. J. &amp;41h

July 1,2,3,4. 9 to 6. 778

4

Friday

Rum m ilge Sa le Park Cen
tra l He ffel on Sta te 5 1 Jul-;

Oliver St . Middl epor t .
Record cabi net , glass door
fire screen, gold swivel
rocker , girls c lothing . Lots
more!!!

before 9AM. 1925 Chestnut
st., Gallipolis.

sa le

EMMA Bell Aucl10n Scr
v1 cc Sale each Tuesday , 7
p m Mt Alto . acceptinq
r onstqnmenls Tuesdily 10
am
until sa l e l1m e
Buy1nq and sel l 1ng estates
Free es tat e appra,sal, 304

bik e,

ridiculous prices . Friday,
July 2nd .• 9 to 4. No sa les

YARD

Sa tu rday. July 2 and 3. 9·7,

o1

good ies.

J.----------+----------1 from
HMC , Rl . 160.
Bicycl e,
saddl e, sc hool

storage building, etc .

Sa Ie

742 2648.

Neighborhood Ga r age Sa le
Tara Estates, F r id ay 8: 30
to 4: 00. Bik es, baby i tems,
I urn ., and muc h more .

Jul y 2 &amp;

Yard

g l assware. Depress10n &amp;
n ew i tems Man July 51h, 9
to 5
South /nd
Sl ,
C heshire, Oh .

7567

Porch Sa l e a c hoice of good
c l ea n
i t ems f or sa l e,
reaso nab l e pr ices. Ju l y 2

Garage Sa le July I. 2 mil es

$278.24/month . Nice hom e on appx . l'h acres with '

A

446 0294 .
Oh1o ~wll l be c losed July 4th

44Hl7l
Muter C. 59 tic

Custom kitchens and appliances,
custom

Ten acre mini farm. three

home on a good stree t - wants $29,900, $7.500 down,

'

SWEEPER
and sew 1ng
ma chine repair , parts, and
suppli es .
Pick up and
deli very, Dav i s Vacuum
Cl ea ner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Ca ll

-----------+-----------+-----------j Stree
t Sa le Frida y Ju ly 2,
r
in Kanauga in fr ont of
Highway Inn .
C. R. MASH
Yard Sa le on Bull Run Rd .
WE POOL
in Vinton . Baby c lothes,
CONSTRUCTION
and misc. Thurs. &amp; Fri .
TOGETHER

MIDDLEPORT - Bea utiful older colonial with a ll
modern features inc luding a new swimming pooL
WB FP, centr a l air, et c., et c., S11,900down, balance
at 14% interes t , 20 year term , $591.91/month .

!

Announcements

1

$257 .75/ month .

'

Annapneemems::=--

• E l ec tric work
• Cu stom Po l e Bldgs .
•R oo ftnq Work
14 Ye.u s Ex pe n en ce

~=========~+----=---=-------==+-----------1

NEW LISTING - Nea r Pomeroy E l em entary, 3-4
bedrooms , huge f a mily room , full basement , nice

!

1----------"""'f

Ph. 949-2160 or 949·2322
no-rt e

614 256 l 52S .

Qenerel

eac h m onth . rwo (2) sam ·
pies w er e c oll ec ted and
analyzed for the month of

MID SUMMER
SAVINGS
•
ON
REtt\NANTS
ENDS OF - RO~LS
GRASS CARPET
AND SAVE $2- $5
ON
AG
PETS

mo

larg e or Small J obs

NEW LISTING - Wrap -around porc h, l'h b a ths,
four bedroom s, full ba se m ent, large paved parking
area , s tor age building , and appx. 1/J ac r e tot . Hou se
is ni ce at $32 ,500 .

RACINE -

"Stop UUef! ..

L
-----------+-----------+-----------1Phone 304 675 1385
r
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
MILLER
PULLINS
Puppies 6 weeks old Ca ll
614 756 1265 .
SIDING
EXCAVATING
ELECTRIC
BISSELL
3 Coon H oun d pup s 12 wks
- Dozer s
old, part W a lk er Rnd port
- Back h oes
SERVICE
b lack &amp; f an . Ca ll 614 379
- Dump Trucks
SIDING CO.

NEW LISTING - Barns, equipment sheds, cribs,
and garage ar e a ll in good condition on thi_s 89'h
ac re f arm . A ppx . 40 ac r es in hay and crop s, w1th the
balan ce in fenced pa s tu r e. L arge pond and an old
hou se. Al l minera l s. $48,000 .

June 30, July l , 2

CANDlELIGIII INN
Rl. I, Clloslli10, Oh.
St. Rt. 1, between Cheshire
&amp; Middleporl
Hrs.: Mon .·Sun.
1:00 P.M.-2:30A.M.
C.rry Out 8eer
&amp; Wine Aw1il1ble
Mon.-Ke1 Ni1ht
Tua. -Udits ni1ht 111 drinks
reduced for lhe women
Wed. ·''• Centurj nirftl 9-12, dr1tt
beer oniJ. Pool tourn1ment 2 1.m.
Thurs:-Otd M1twi uh H1ghl , 9 2-JO,
1
1 Centun Nlfhl .
Fn. &amp; Sit. - Uwe b1ncb - drink &amp;
drown uch night, 10 p.m.
S11n. - Piw , pitcher beer spe&lt;ill
price. Also 8Q's on Sund•r st1rling
June.
Month ottune. Thurs. Frt·Sdl
MARSHALL TENNANT BANO
Stop in, bring 1 lriend. We llso
hl'lt Happy Hour Mon.-S.t. 4 pm.·
6 p.m. Unadwertised spec i1is di1tr .
Hope to set JOU 11/ soon.
Phone 991-9913
6-1l mo

143 2nd . Ave .. Ga ll ipol is
Thurs . &amp; Fri . July I &amp; 2.
BW TV , c lo thing, odds &amp;
ends. 9AM to?

r:=========::t==========;t==========~ charqe to th e advert1ser

FJIEf PARki NG!

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

Ma y, 1982 . All of the sa m·

614 - ~ 85 · 4345
6/2 4/ 1 mo.

vi..

10 ACR ES - More or
LESS of covn try from
low to h1qh on a hill
Water
i'lnd el ec tr1 c
d\ll"ilo'lblr On!-; SIO.OOO

bedroom hom e wants $35,000 - $7 ,000 down, balan ce at 14.5% interest, 20 year term, $364.80&amp; month.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I·

!&gt;12-2 mo pd

dusk . Jus! $15,000 .

Reel Eatete -

CHESTER AREA -

20.
21.
22 .
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30. _ _ _ __

Call 843-3322

PH . 841·2075

17 .
18 .
19 , ~-----

l.

Village

Vinyl &amp; Awminum
Complete gutter work,
complete remodeling,
roofing of all types.
Woned in home area 20
years.
Free estimates

MODERN - Leve l yard
l arge enough for a ga r ··
den . 3 or 4 bedrooms, 8
i n a ll , n ea t and ni ce .
Wan t $31,500.

Nancy JasPers- As sociate

THE INCH!

The

Superior Siding Co.

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL

That' , nynn wnen you use a column
inch or more in newspaper advertising
be it display or classified you reach
thousands ol potential buyers that are
eager to receive your money -saving
message.

dl eport
is
r equired
to
co ll ect and examine a
minimum of three (3)
microbiologi &lt;;_ al samp l es

EUGENE LONG

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOM E - Living r oom h as
woodburning firep l ace, 1117 ba th, hardwood fl oor s,
we ll c onstr uc ted a n d insu la ted . Ask ing $35 ,000 .

IF YOU USE

I Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get
I results . Money not refundable .
I
1I Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Ph. 992·2174
2 26 ti c

PH. 992-2478

BUSINESS
IS ACINCH

Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savel II

Po m eroy, Oh .

3 F LAT ACR ES - In Racine , Oh . Ow ner wi11 help
fin ance . Asking $16,500 .

"' "''"'"'

r----------------------~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

LOOKS LIKE NEW -

$10,500.

.. fo•"'""'A" "' ""''

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of a ll types
• Sidi ng
• Remode ling
• Free estimates
•20 Yrs . e~eperience

TOM HOSKINS

4134]

NATHAN BIGGS

...

MUST SELL Le tart, OH . Lar ge li ving room
wi th fireplace .
F in anc in g avai lab le . Ask ing

'-'00

Cl ell LaBont e
36061 Ba shan Rd .
Long Bottom, OH .

Rad i ator Spec raltst

Phone
1-(614)· 992· 3325

tU- • .tl•..

,_._ __ ...... oh_,.... ,

o/ "'""''""IOII&lt;At

•C omm ercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio
247 · 3534
Free Estimat es

NEW LISTING - Close to Route 7 out of Mid·
dl epor t . 3 bedroom newer hom e on 2 acres. Renta l
tr ai ler a lso. Aski ng $35,000.

1.'1-,.,._
,,._.,.._

ages

in any quantity
Eggs Al so Avai l ab le

From
th e Sm a ll es t
H ea ter Co r e to th e
Larg es t Rad1ator.

[_

.....................

a ll

5 Fami l y Yard Sa le July 1
&amp; 2. I mi . out Georqes
Creek, on M cC ull y Rd Cur
t a in s, chi ldr ens c lothes.
and jeans.

3

CENTRAL REALTY

,., - ~-·~

"P"' " -"'

I&gt; G•"'"'"'" .. '"""

... "~•I. G &lt;Ooft

PUBLIC NOTIC E

$29995 '

,_"

H I-Aoo NDoot

,,................. . .

'' .... ~ ... ft ....
, , , . . .................. 00

Publi c wat er suppli es are
r e qu i r e d
by
State
Reg ul atio n. Rule 3745-81 ·
21. Ohio Administrative
Code , to routinelv monitor
the mi c robiolog ical quality
of the drinking water in
th eir distribution syste m in
order to ensure that sa fe
water is being suppli ed to
th e consum er .

Starting At

O..a( - t i O

of

available up to 8 Weeks

Yar_d.!~ -­

Yard Sale

Ga'rage Sa le Furniture,
games, etc. This Friday &amp;
Sa turday, 9 to 5. P l easan t
Va ll ey
Es tate s
near
H o l zer .

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

General

QUIET STREET, c lea n neig hbor hod. 2 bedroom
trai ler equipped kitc hen, spac iou s living r oom ,
now r ent s f or $200 . Aski n g $12,000.

_, ·-l-....... ..

_(_,.,

Ga lloat ... aoo

__····t-·•·
,·
__·-·
--c;.

~~--·~

IJ foo motO"''""

Address---------

Shop the Area's
Largest Furniture
Store

Thi s final ac ti on not
preceded by proposed ac
tion and i s appealable to
EBR . Repla ci ng waterline
on Main Street, Eas t of the
Junc iton w i th SR 33 .
(61 30 ltc

lelepltone ur.luft6ef, ..

,. h••nn• e ~' "''""'

~

/l ( om ~ MIIQ w • P"'" "'

•Residential

last wee k. Ef -

for r equirem ents.
Final Approval of Pl an s
and Spec ifi ca t ion s
Mayor &amp; Counci l
Pomeroy , Oh .

,.Ke. rover Me

II ~

16 YEARS EX P.

COMPLETE
RAO IA TOR
SER VIC E

(I•HoloMI Ol'pt

,.,_ ...

... ..,

" """'"'' .............
""' ~
11 1 0 " '

- :--·s _- zrr

"""""'""'""ll( ll IVI.IhOoO~""'''''""'
1-l"""-·
... .....
""'"""""'"
• ~·'"'"" lull!&gt;""
"'"'"'"' ~···
II""""'''
"""umonr.

I

NEW SHIPMENT
BY
FLEXSTEEL &amp; KNOX

Real Estate -

J&gt;omf'O r y Ol&gt;ooO\IU

l~ l.u ified

La BONTE'S
QUA 1l FARM

d 20 tic

Cle rk , OEPA, P.O. Box
1049 . Columbus, OH, 43216 .
Ph . (614) 41&gt;6·6037 . Consult
ORC Chap. 3745 a nd OAC
Cha ps. 3745-47 and 3746-5

-- ~__. ;:=::::-

l l ••""''""" " ' 'P• ·~·"''"''wro

.. . ........

AVAILABLE IN
3 SIZES
TWIN FULL QUEEN

(OEPA)

Jumbo Bo W ite
QUAt L

Ouail

Reel E1t1te - Gener•l

,. llv••.,.., '• ••A•....,
••~-&lt;-· ·~ ............
,. .. ..,.., '" ' &lt;e "•P• ·
........,.
""'~ft ..... ' """

OVER 30 IN STOCK

Ohio

Probate Judge/C lerk
(6) 30 ; (7) 7, 14 3t c

fec ti ve dates of fina l ac ti on
and
is su ance da t es of
propos e d
actio n s
ar e
stated . F in a I actions may
be appeal ed , in wri ting,
w ithin 30 days of th e date of
thi s notice, to the En ·
viro nm ent a l
Board
of
Review, Rm . 101, 250 E .
Town St.. Col umbu s, OH ,
432 15. Notice of any appea l
sh al l be fil ed wit h the direc ·
tor within 3 day s. Proposed
action s w ill beco m e f ina l
unle ss
a wri tt e n ad ·
i udi cat ion hearing r eques t
is submitted within 30 days
of the iss uance date; or the
direc tor r ev i ses/w i~hdr aws
the proposed ac tion . Any
per son m ay submit com ·
m ents and /or r equ es t a
r ega rding
any
m ee tin g
non -fin a l ac tion wi thin 30
days of th e date indi ca ted .
"Ac tion ", as u sed above
does not inc lu de r ece ipt of
a verif ied comp laint . If
si gnifi ca nt publi c int er es t
exis ts, a publ ic mee tin g
may be he ld . As to a n y ac ·
t ion, in c luding rece ipt of
veri fi ed com plai nt s, any
per son m ay obtai n notice of
further ac tion s, and ad·
dition a l
inf ormation .
Unl ess otherwi se provided
in noti ces of parti cul ar ac ·
tions, a ll commu ni ca tion s
shall be sent to : H ea ring

PHONE 992-2156
~~n'""''

Syrac use,

1.

Robert E . Buck

Effec tive Dale 06/23 / 82

lll(ou&lt; l ~ t

tres.c;passing in the mari na.

JUST IN TIME FOR YOUR
4TH OF JULY GUESTS

l ate of
45779 .

Th e
followin g
were
received / prepa r ed by the
Ohio
Environmenta l
Prot ec ti o n
Agency

MASON, W . VA .

Q,,.,,

O'Brien Electric I
Service

appoin t ed

Executor of the estate of
Myrt le M. Durst, deceased,

PUBLIC NOTICE

PICKENS HARDWARE

Or Wto l&lt;'

was

7

LAFF·A·DAY

t::::::::::J::==~=~~:;:.::=:;,-;::=========:;1
b h

County : Meigs

WINDOW FANS

The Daily Sentinel

7, 14 3tc

Court, Case No. 238 14,
Frank w . Porter Jr .. P.O.
Box 486 . Pomeroy, Ohio

Public Notic e

l rf'"ipass .

The fo llowing were fined:
Jeff Hysell, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, driving unde r suspe nsion a nd
$2'i0 a nd three days in jail for DWl;
Timothy Michael, Pomeroy, $250
ahd costs and three days In jail for
DWl; Max Geary, Midd leport, $100
a nd costs, driving unde r s uspensio n; Mike Manley, Middleport, 15
days In ja il for theft ; Otis McGowan, Middleport, 1:1 d ays In ja il, a ttempted theft; Robert Va n Meter,
Middleport, $25 a nd costs, d!sor·
de rly m a nner; Gregory La ude rmilt , Middleport, $100 a nd cos ts,

(7)

M On
eigsJune
Count
te
23, y1982,Prob
in athe

457 69

The

Business services

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
.
FIOUCIARY

H eml ock Grove. O hi o was
a ppoined Exec utor of the
es tate of Luc r e tia Werry
de ceased,
l a te o t
109
Pl easa nt Ridge, Pom eroy,
O hio 45769
Robert E . Bu ck
Probate Judge/C lerk

161 30 ;

Ohio
Public Notice

cour t, case No. 23681 , John
E . Werry, 43080 Cook Road,

Meets Tuesday

I ) tft ......... O

SOFA

tool to help keep the budge t In
balance.
As sent to Rhodes, the surcharge
would have ended on March :n,
1983, unless revenues were Insufficient to finish the bie nnium on June
30.
lf revenues were not sufficient,
the surcharge could have been exte nded for anothe r month, through
Aprll 30, the bill ha d provided.
Robert F. Howa rth Jr., Rhodes'
executive assista nt, said the governor was adaman t about removing
the provisiona l, 1 percent spending
c ut.
He said Rhodes felt that since the
governor has the a uthority to cut
sta te spending under existi ng law.
It was unnecessary.
But the 1 percent a nd the sur·
c harge were in the same section of
the bill a nd the governor couldn' t
veto one a nd not the other, Howa rth
said. He added: " They were lnext.-ica ble. It was a ll or none."
Legislative leaders of both pa rties Indica ted ea rlie r they would not
a tt empt to override the vetoes.

AND

The Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce wU I meet a t noon Tuesday,
July 6 a t Ve teran s Me morial
Hos pit aL

--·

P~~c No!_!~~ _

on June 25, 1982, in the
Meig s Cou nt y
Prob a t e

21" BOX FANS

READY TO GET STARTED - Columbus Guardian Angel trainees
pose in front of the Statehouse Tuesday with the Angels' Midwest regional
director Erir Brewe r , who is kneeling, and the Angels' national director
Lisa Sl iwa, who is sanding behind Brewer. Sliwa, of New York, and
Brewer, of Cleveland, were in Columbus to see if the new Angels are
ready to patrol Columbus streets. The first patrols begin July 21. ( AP
Laserphoto I

- ~

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

KEEP COOL THIS SUMMER

WASHINGTON ! API - Two
books were recently awarded a tie
posit ion for nrst place by the Robert F . Kennedy Book Awards
program .
The unu sual double fi rst prize
was given to Peter S. Prescoll for
"The Child Savers" a nd to Janet
Sh arp Her ma nn for "The Pursuit of
a Dream ."

for

-

Rhodes axes part of tax plan

Several cases end in mayor's court
Mayor Clarence Andrews rl'porled the following forfeits a nd
li nes in last night's Ma yo r's Court :
Ca rlos Lee Harris, Pomeroy, six
months' probat ion for assa ult ; Ri chard Darst, Cheshire forieited $3.:1,
speed; Char les Whi tti ngton. Pomeroy, forieited $5!3 for resisti ng a rrest a nd striking a police officer.
$6.1. disorder ly conduct. He was
also flnl&gt;d $213 a nd cos ts for assa uil .
Ra ndy Warde n, Mason, forieited

June 30, 1982

Wednesday, June 30, 1982

Phone 992-6633 .
Want ed cook Pliny Truck

Slop, 304937 ·2569 or 304757 8357.
12

S_it~a_!i~_!.~a_n ~~ __

Room, boa rd and laundr y
tor e lder ly . Rea son-ab le.

614-992 6748 or 992-6022.

lsi., 2nd ., . rd. 9 till 3. If
ra ins will be inside.

Will do babysitting in my

hom e. 614-992-5801.
YARD sale, antiques, TV

Yard Sate 2nd house past
Bidwell school on 55-4 .
Thur~ay and Friday.

equipment, CB
radios ,
misc . items. Main St .•

Leon, WV . Iill Sellout.

Cl ean Homes or Offices,
References,
Dependable.

.f'hone 304-675·6043.

�Ohio
13

Insurance

s1- -Household
- - - - -Goods

SANDY AND BEAVER In-

GOO D

sura nce Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
cove rage in Gallia County
for almost a
century .
Farm, home and personal
proper ty coverages are
avai lab le to meet in ·
dividual needs . Con ta c t
Nea t Insurance Agenc y ,
11 gent. Phone 446 -1694 .
lS

-

·-

446 7398 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof a, c hair , rocker , ot
loman , 3 tables , (extra
heavy by Fron ti er), $685 .
Sof a, c hair and loveseat.
S275 . Sofa s and chairs
priced from S285. to $795.
T ab ies, $38 and up fo $109
H 1de a beds,$340.. qu een
siz e, S380. Recliner s. S175 .
to S295 .. Lamps from S18 . to
S65 . 5 pc dinettes fr om $79 .•

----

Kc1ra te the ultimate in self
etc-fence all private lesso ns,
M en. women, &amp; children .
tnslruc t• on thru black belt.
A l so available Karate
unllor m s puching and
ki cking bags, and protec ·
l i ve equ 1pment . Jer ry
Lowe ry
&amp;
Associates
Kara t e
Studio.
14 3
Burling ton Rd ., Ja c kson ,

lo $385. 7 pc , $189 and up .
Wood table with 4 c hairs,

$2 19 up fo $495 . Desk $11 0.
Hut c hes, $300 . and $375 ..

Oh Ca l1614 286 -3074
Wanted to Do

Law n Mowing no yard to
b1 g or small. Reliable and
dependable . For estimate
cull 446 -3159 after 6PM 256

1967
44

Lot s &amp; Acre.1ge

35

Tr ash colle c t ion &amp; haul1ng
Ca ll 446 4480 .
&amp; ou ts ide pa1nlin g
free es timat es . Ca11 446

1794

9499.
For sate ont • and t1a lf ~1cr cs
m o re
or
t e~~ .
,1p
proxtm o trtv 600 II road
fr on tf1qe
on
Cor a
Cen terpo1n1 R&lt;l neM Ce n
l erpo ,nt $]. 000 00 Pir one
682 6Q4.:J

fiA3AEI31
Business
Opportunity

Bus1ness or s tore room 1n
Par k Cen tr a l Hotel.

22

'}to te;, Ftr st 101 1S 3 trnil r r
spn cf&gt; tr r1 il er park St• c ond
lot 1S 700 x?OO L oc all' cl 1n
Mrrr Nvillt'. •146 J6B4

Mo~ey !O !:oan

RE FINANCE or pur c ha se
your home . 30 year fi xed
ra te. wva . &amp; Ohio. L ead er
Mortgage, 77 E . Sta te St. ,

acre on
160 $4 ,500
nss um nbl r to.1 n C.=tl l 614

388 8437

AI hens, Oh . 614 592 3051.
Professional
Services

23

75 f'I UPS IJOIIOm land ,
woocteC1 M N I. q o oct toc ;~ t ,o n
on 375 S1•l l r l lC'~lP Cnll 614
388 R,l])

C&amp;L Bookkeep ing
Bookkeeping &amp; tax se r v tcl'
tor all type s of businesses.
Caro l Neal
446 386 7

TW O acrC' lOT'&gt; 1SO It r o ;~ ct
tr on t ,1 q r.
cily
Wrl l rr .
bell lllCI 84 L umiJ(' r , (,11\ 304

Real Estate
31

Home s for Sa l e

147 ac r e farm good house
and barns . Ca ll 446 2599 .
A ttra c t ive 4 bedroom IJ1
leve l. wal k ing dis t ance to
Hol zer Hos pital . Fir st t1 me
offered . Ca ll 446·0025
3 bedroom brick , 16 year
old hom e ,
!1 1
baths .
fir e pla ce.
qaritQ e.
basement . One acre F1r s t
time offered
for
sate
Bula vil le Road Cal l 614

245 92 10 or 614 992 3905
5 rooms and bath, utii1Ty
room. larg e patio. garaqe
and work -shop . Total etec
tri c, well insulated and
eas y to heal Comp letly
remed ied . $39.500 . 614 742
22 11 or afler 5. 614 742 720 1
Close
to school
Good
location
111 hea tth Must se l l 4
houses { 1 tS a double w tdcl
all rented . plu s 5 tot s. all 1n
one block on Oh10. R tver 1n
Reedsville
Wa ter. c tly
gas. Fir st S36,000 takes all
Oial6 14 378 6221
2 bedroom
Harrisonville

house
1n
$6 ,500 614

928 4417
3 bedroom
house
tn
Po meroy
V1nyl
sidinq ,
firep la ce . n1 ce loca t1 on
Pri ce d to se ll . $74.000 61.1

992 7446.
Super tocal1on, close to
Meigs H1gh school . 3
bd .room . brick front , ran
ch. 1'11 ba th s. Fully c ar
pe ted Fu ll ba seme nt, with
family room
Fara qe ,
utili ty and work shop. Over
1 ac r e. Asking $49.500 Hob
steft er Realty l or 1n
formation . 614 742 3097
Ass umable 71.~ per cent
loan. 4 bed r oom. 2 fut I
baths, all electric 7.5 xl00
corner lot . 1-304 -882 23 19

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
dition, 3 bedroom s, family
room with firepla ce. cen
traf air, basement . phone

67 5 68 73. 67\ 3618
O N E &lt;l C(' . clr 1i i('(J wf' ll , scp
ft c !,rnk 75 -.:75 Ul' iJn ,strcd
b lock bui ldtnQ $6. 500 one
llil lf mile ott rnd Greer
Road . 304 67 5 1949
LA RGE r1ver lot on Rt 2 i1t
G lenw ood Good well &amp; se p
11 c sys tt' m . ch('np, 304 576

7866

Hou scs forRen t

home. Phone

304-675·3675 afte r 5 PM
32

Mobile Home s
for Sa le

TRI -STATE
MOBILE
HOME S. USED MOBILE
HOME S, CA RS. TRUCKS .
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK
OUR PRICE S. CALL 446
7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOI',IES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOB I LE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. RT
35. PHONE 446·3868 .

1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond . Deluxe kitchen , large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidden util. room .

379·2310.
1971 Vinedale. Call 446-7427
before lOAM or affer 7PM.

2 choice
acres and 1980 3 bd.room
Ux70 mobile home. 521.000.
c 'aii61H49· 2639.
Near

Chester .

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

HOME.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured. Call
304·576-2711.

tor 1./f•n l lt'~l S f' Or
Lrl nd cont rrl( I 1n tow n or
co untry
Cnlt
Str o ut
RPalty , 446 0008
Hou ~ C'6

rm &amp; bn tt1 lnQu1r e

918 SN .oncl l\v(' . Gnll1 po ti.;,

) l)(!r houSI' CI OO d IOC ClliOrl ,
7 IJclr npt , HUO e xcc ptrd
A One Renl Es1c1tc.:.. (M ol
Ypaqer Realt or (,1 11 304

675 5104 o r 675 S386
Hou se. 170 3r d
Ave ,
Gntltpoll s 7 bdr . qr~ s hcnt .
dr p r PQ I hf' W1 c;, rmrt n
A qrnr y . 446 3643
For sale or r C' nl w.t11 opt1on
to buy J bclr . 638 Jay Or ,
GnlltpOII S $350 prr mo
Rrl 8°o ii SS Umf' loan . L1 ll
446 39 19
or
44 6 0021 ,
even 1no s 446 3189
rm tl OU t; f' &amp; IJa lll . rrt nne!
df•p n ·q Ca ll 446 3358
J

J
room &amp; bath
Full
bn scment 61 4 992 3090

Furnt shcd J rooms and
bcllh Ra c tnc OhtO 6 14 949

2

BEDROOM

A PARTMENTS Rent star
t')a t 1 bed room $151and2
bedr oom $188 per m on ttl

SPECIAL
RATES TO
SE NI ORS Ca ll "6 27 45 or
lenve m essaqe on mach1nc
! c., ! f loor 7 bdr unfurn1 sllr.d
P&lt;lld,
npc1rlm t"n l , ultl
downst own Gall1pOI1S Call
ot63 1 4th Ave Gal li pOli S

Furn1Sil E' Cl apar t mrn t .
IJdr , $195 . u tltlr r .:. pel .
adult s. 60 7 2n(J Ave .
Gntl1pol ts (all 446 4416 ,11
l er 7 PM

M odern 3 bedroom
rnilr s bcl Ck N ew
Re feren ces and
Phone
reQu1rcd

hou se, 5
Haven .
depos1 t
30 4 882

)686
42

I IJC'droom t urn1slwd ,'!p i
UTil iti eS Inc luded No pet s
S185 p lus ctcpo stl M1 cl
clfppor l 6 14 9917177
7 twdroom turn1 SilC'CI rlpt
Utdti1CS 1nc lud ed No pe ts
$105 plu s deposll M td
clleport 6 14 992 7177

/\PI\RTME N T
tn
Pl ensnn t, 614 446 8121

PI

MARSHALL Student s One
hlock f rom Stu dent Cen ter .
1.1 .1nd 3 bed ro om apart
nrr nts
av&lt;lilablr
A ll
utddiC S paid
J1m Tll t
IC'r son 304 776 83 45 a lt er
4 00 p m
A PARTME NT for r en t 1n
PI P leasant Phonf' 304
675 5Q68 after 5 p m
TIHt 't' r 00111 lurn i Sil ('CI
nporlm Pnt. ad ult s. no pet s.
Po1nl Plea siln l Pt1onc 304

Clean 12x60. 2 bdr . mobil e
home Furn. co nv enient,
qood
neighborhood.
air
co nd . sec dcp. r eq . Call at
fe r 5. 446-8558.

Furnt shcd Room s

SLEE PIN G

ROOMS and

l 1qt1t llou se k ec pinq
P,lrk (f'n tr nl H otf'l

Furn1shed 2 bedroom, all
etec. 2 miles ou t Rt : 588 .
Private lot, $165 .00 per mo.

Phone 446·3045 day , 446
2602 evening .

5651.
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

Small
trail er
spa ces .
Mason 304 -773 565 1

614·992·3324 .

49

For Lea se

For lease 2 bdr ., ceda r ran ·
ch
b e autifu l
s ton e
wra p around
f irepla ce.
deck . lovel y 6 acr e se tting ,
near Green Sc hool. Ca ll
Wisem an Agency , 446·3643 .

Mereh·amlfse
51

Hous ehold Goods
- - --· SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;

MOBILE HOME FOR
RENT WITH OPTION TO

- - - - - - - --

1982 Nashau for rent with

option fo buy, 14 x 70, with
7x20 expando, 2 bedroom, 2
baths, all e lectric. $300.
month, deposit &amp; referen ·
ces, 30~ · 576 · 2706 .
Apartment

su1te Holl ywood style . bunk
beet s, g la ss fr on t book
Crl SC' S F la~r Furntfure &amp;
De s1qn Galltpoli s F erry .
WV Open 9 6 Phone 304

67 5 1371
S4

Mi sc. Merchandice

Pl.=~ s t 1c

Septtc Tanks _ State
ond cou nt y appr oved . 1,000
qa t tank . price $3 40 Other
"l 17 C'S 1n stock . haul 1n your
p1 ckup truck . Call 614 286
5930. Jac k son, Oh RON

Pt .

Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614 · U5 · 948~ .

112 HP, fuel oil tank, pop

SHFTIIEHS

machine, one double wide
refrigerator, one antique
dining room suite . Between
Porter &amp; Ches hire on 554.
Sa le Fri ., Sa t. &amp; Sun . Ca ll

Over 1,000 cerami c m olds.
kil ns. and suppli es. 614·742 -

PAINTIN G
interior and
ex t er ior ,
plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling .

2820.

C1 •te2"'NU.

58

Fruit

71

304 675 1293 .

Ca r part s for sa le . 72
Plymouth 318 engine. and
tran smi ssio n. 2- 800 x 14

Pick your own sugar pod
bring
cont a iners.
peas.
$6 .00 bushel! also have ca b·
bage , ca uliflower, and
broccoli . In anoth er week
112 runner bean s, sa m e as
last year S6.00 bu shel .
Raynors Peach Orc hard,
Rt . 7, Lower River Rd . Call

446 4807 .

Farm sapplll!s
&amp; lh•estael!

Gene's
St eam
Ca rp e t
Clean -Sco tch Gaurd Fr ee
estimates -spring specia l s
61

T E R Pools sale. supp l1e s &amp;
InstallatiOn 403 2nd . Ave ..
Gallipol ts, Oh Ca ll 446
6579
In qround Ab lo ve
qround

good cond .. 614 ~ 256 · 6038. al ·
fe r 12 :30PM.

COLORED

Ferguson front end loader
with pump for Freguson

black &amp;

whi te TV, baby bed , oc casional antique tabl e. Ca ll

304 67S 6010.
Ce rami c Gr ee nware sa le, 3
miles out Jeri c ho Road ,
Point Pl easa nt , Some
items redu ce d 50 per ce nt .
Dealer s wel co me . Phone

Mod el II 48 Remington 12
qnuge auto .. mod Ca ll 614

9&lt;7 9509 a !fer 5 614 367 0327
12 i nc h Belsaw se lf feed
platncr, 9 se ts molding
knives. 1 sl1aper , seve ral
n tr a kniv es . Ca ll 446 9285 .

Buitding Supplies

$50 304 675 1349 .

614 -643·

NEW Holland haybine &amp;
baler, hay r ake, Kelly
backhoe, box blade . Ex ·
ce ll ent condition ca lf 304·

895 -3503. 304-697 ·2527.
Livestock

REG . QUARTER HOR SES

Build1ng material s b lock .
brick. se w er pipes, wi n
dows, lint el s, etc Claude
W int er s, Ri o Grande, 0 .
Ca ll614 245·51 21.

Training,
show ing ,
breed ing , sa tes and boar
ding . Conta c t. Dan Beam ,
Gallipolis, 446·0183 .

Used mater1a l s. Build1nq s I
&amp; R at GDC. Stee l beams ,
wood &amp; s ton e . See Jim
Gi les

AKC

KENNEL
Reg .

CHEVY Luv. ' 77 , 304·675·
1513 .
72
Mu s tang ,
6 cy l .,
automatic. new tires. ex cellent mechanical con d ition , c hea p, 304 -576 -2866.

72

Dober

mans. Call 446· 7795.

- -

$200 . Ca ll6 14 379 2464.
60 in . co nsol e stero AM FM
radio &amp; 8-tr ack, $100 Ca ll

614 2459398 .
Woodburner warm mar
ning stove &amp; warm mar
ning gas hea ter . Call 614 -

P .S. Run s good . 388-9342.
72 C hevy 1/2 ton pickup ,
PS, PB , au to .. reasonable .

Ca ll 614·388·9367.
1976 Chevy 1 ton Cab &amp;
Chassis, l ong whee l base,
v 8, 4 speed , new front
tires. a.c., am -fm ·S track
ster eo . Phone 614 -843 -4945
after 7 p .m .

1974

Ford

S500 .00. Ca ll304 -576·2174
fe r 5 :30p. m .

Reg i stered and grade her
ses, exc~ llent 4-H proj ec t .
English and western sa ddles
eve rything
im aginab le in hor se equip·
ment and suppli es, a lso
riding lesso ns and trail
rides and horse training .
Ruth Reeves , Hoof H ollow .

cellenf cond .. $3,700. Call
446·0S11 .

614 -698 3290.
Registered Quart er horse,
quarter mare. 614-698·3290.
Ni ce 8 week old pig s for

sa le . 614·843-3322.
Polled Hereford bull, 3
years old . Phone 304-895·

Son ia' s Professional

Stock Bull, Artif . Br ed, 1h
Her eford 1!2 Ays hire, 2
years . WI. 1400 lbs, Phone

Dog

Groomi ng . Ca ll614·388 ·8547
and ask for Sonia .

shols . Call 614·947·9509 af
fer S61067 ·0327 .

Registered

304-773-5466.
64

-- ~~_y~~!.:a_in__ _

Hay . SUS bale in field . 304675 -2254 or 30H75-l302 .

COLLIES
Collie

Grooming
pets. Wil l

se rvi ces for
c lip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer's. Reasonable.

For a ppf. 614·992-7342 .
AKC

Vans&amp;4W.D .

1979 F -150 4 wheel drive .
One owner . Good cond.,
mus t see to appreciate .

$6.000 . 614 ·992·3640.

71

Autos for Sale

of all

kinds,

mil es, $3800 . firm . 304
3628 .

Silverstone cookware. Call

446-3159.

Fr e n c h City
Painting
residenti al &amp; co mmer cial.
interior , ex terior. paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured

ceilings. Ca ll 614 -367 ·7784
or614·367 -7160 .

(I) Major league Base ·
ball : Houston at Atlanta

Creative
wood decks,
pressuriz ed pine, cedar &amp;
redwood . Free estimate .

Cil 0

CD

Ca ll61 4-388 ·9762 .

CIJ

Ewingfon .
9939 .

Call

liD Victory
&amp;l

614 ·388 -

1974 KAw. ZIE 900, 15,000
miles. $1,400. Cal1446·0208.
1974 Kawasawki 400, good
cond , on ly 3,000 miles, ca ll

614·256-1786 after 5.
RM250,

runs

exc.

Must se ll by Thu rsday .
$400 . 614·992·6362.
KE

100 en-

duro. Like new, exce llent
condition, only 924 miles.

comp l ete ly

1951 HARLEY

Call446·0515 anytime .

3.300,000 BTU's per hour .

2449 .

Stok er handl es 200 lbs. coal
per hour, if needed. A ll
pumps, gauges, electrica l
&amp; w iring equipmen t . Ca ll

New Zealand white rabbit,
ca n be registered, mixed

1971 4 dr ., Sky lark good
cond., $~50 or best offer.
Cal1446·6615 or 446-1780.
1963 2 door hard top Nova.
Good running &amp; body cond.

Davidson,

overhauled,

good condit ion , $1500. affer
5:30 ca ll 304·675 -1780.
1978 Tomos Moped tor $225 .
cal l 304·675-4359.

CHR I S TIAN 'S
CON ·
STRUCT ION .
Consfr ..
roofing , siding , spo uting,
fencing , painting , r epairs &amp;
c lea ning . 446 -7000, ca ll
before 8 and aft er 5: 30.

'r'IISE UP, "BULL".' IF GEEZ.' 1'/ELL ,THI\T
THAT H.ID TELLS TH' H.ID CAN'T GET
LAW ABOUT THIS
TOO ~ CilRR'flW
PLACE, WE'R.E
THAT HOUND!!
C:!R.ANO

IT LOOK£ LIKE
~ /&lt;JO.'... C/1/?.RYIN'

THf!T B/(j MUTT.'

Gene Smith, 9'12·6309.

a.c.,

other

extras, one

HP,RTS Used Cars, New
Haven West VIrginia . Over
20 less expensive cars In
stock.
198l FORO Escort, phone
895-3618.

MOVIE : 'Cutters Way '
1]) 700 Club
I]) (!]) I Heard It Through

WELCOME 10 THE CONTROl CENTER!
\'OU WILL NOW UNDERGO A BRIEF
BIO · CHEM SCAN FOR IDENTIF I·

the
Grapevine
Jame s
Baldwtn tours areas wh1ch
f1gured promtnently 1n the
c1v1l nght s struggle (90
m1n .)

CATION PURPOSES!

9:30 0

RINGLES ' SSERV ICE ex ·

CD CD

Love. Sidney

perienced mason, roofer ,
ca rp e nter,
e l ec tri c ian,
general
r epa ir s and
remode lin g. Phon e 304·675 -

S1dney ha s full crea twe
co ntrol of an advert1s1ng
agency's new accoun t . (A)

2088 or 675·4560.

Track'

CD

MOVIE : 'On the Right

0 Cil ®l

GASOIJNE ALLEY

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

0

(I) @ CBS Reports
'The Parole Game · Th1 s
program stud•es the pre sen t parole syst em and re views 1ts problems (60
m1n)

t 0 :30

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Phone 446·3888 or 446-4477

11 :oo

83 ~ - - E!-C_!~!_i~g __ -

I'M ON MY LUNCH
HOUR. AND I HAVE

Ga llipol is Diversified Con st. Co . Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates. 446 -4440 .

THE INFORMATION
YOUR MR. KOLINGER
AoKED FOR I

'""~' HERE/

ill MOVIE: 'High Risk '

742·2903.
-·

•

-

-

-

-

-

84

Cruise,

Dorsett
30~·675 ·

.l..

=Electrical
:: =·=:·

WHAT DID
LUKEY DO, PAW?

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors.
Fabric Shop,

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call6l4·367-7471
or 61 ~ - 367-0591.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1976· 1 ton Chevy Rear end
4.56 gear ratio, 1978·1 ton
Chevy rear end 4.10 gear
ratio. 614·843·4945 after 7
p.m .
Auto R~palr

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

something

hauled

away or something moved?

We'll do it. Call 446-3159 or
614·256· 1967 after 6.
Now Hauling limestone-fill
dirt-top soli -gravel. Free
estimates. Call 614-3677101.

- ---- ----- - -----JIMS Wafer Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304·675-7397.

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

PEANUTS

'II

ANOT~ER ROOT
,__BEE~. PLEASE

laL - - -uphOiitery- TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
446-7833 or 446·1833.
·---------~
MOWREYS Upholstery Rl.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
675·4154.
.

1

I 1

II

,.,.

I
)/1 I THANK
YO~

i

~r
f
II ll
I Ill! J
I

II

I.j

J AND NO~)i /I
I~ TOAST...

II i!l
I ill~

TO THE MAN

W~O

INVENTED T~E ROOF! _.-

I (1 II
ll I II~

II

I~
~

• K

Bridge."
The b1ddmg is typ1 cal of
rubber bndge. but prl'tt y

good in any C'ase Sam dtd
not ask for ares beca use
No rth 's two no -trum p
respon se made 11 mos t
unlik e ly that he would hold
the ace of s pad es and km g of
hearts . Sam did bid SIX

because a t worst he expect ed to have a hea rt ftn esse for
the small s lam.

West opened th e deucf' of
di amonds a nd Sam made as
neat a deceptiv e play as yo u

can imagine He
dummy 's queC'n 1

pla _ved

East's king fe ll In Sam ·s
ace and Sam playrd Jh o I 0
of

clubs. overta km g wtth

6-30-82

1

t(J 754
54

+ .J i
WEST

EAST

.J 7~14

+ A 10862

• KA

• 10 7'

+J 932
• 98 3

t K

••

10 8 6

SOLITII

+\I
.AQJ 963

class1c example of deccpt1v r
play . It ha s been used by
Fred Karpin in " The Play of
the Ca rd s . Se lf -Qumes a l

~I

• 52

Today 's hand IS o no he
pla yed about 30 yea rs ago
that has been ro ns1derrd a

tA
+AKQ111 2

Vulnerab le East -West
De aler South
Wt•s l

Nor th

East

Pa ss
Pass
l'a ss

2 NT
4+

Pa ss
Pa ss
l'ass

P a s~

1.

So uth

3+
6+

Openmg lead + 2

dummv ·s FIC'k Now ('&lt;WlP
tht' losing heart ftnP SSP
~ast was m and led the
Jack of dtamonds . JUSt what
anvone would do
~a m
ruffed, drrw West 's last two
trumps. ran hearts 1n ord er
to dl s&lt;"ard dumm y's three
spades and had sio l f' n the
slam

~
ACROSS
I Strikebreaker
5 Noted
composer
9 One with
a tooth
problem
10 Remains
12 Mubarak's
capital
13 Cathedral
feature
14 Building

wing
15 Bon 17 Destiny
18 A must
with beef
20 Morse Code
sound
21 Be borne
22 Fido's treat

37 Armisti ce
39 Terre - , Ind .
40 Jaded
41 Enfold
42 Salamander

OOWN
IOna - ol
one to ten
2 Hellman' s

''The - ''
3 Chalice ve il
4 Cliche
SSew
6 Snake
7 Free soul

8 Distaff rol e

Yesterday's Answer

II Dog

25 Kitchen

16 United
19 Faction
22 Sugar source
23 Ui undry
item
24 U.wyers'

adjunct
27 Secular
29 Costly
30 Aspect
31 Looked at
36 RR stop

9 Maple

concern

genus

12 wds .)

23 Aida's
"Nile - "
25 Postpone
26 Chinese
dynasty

Professional Rodeo
from Mesquite, TX

8_! __ __ ~-~!!"a I H~u_!i!!i_ __

M!H Tll

Sam Fr y Jr . of Now York .

27 Mortgage
28 Dolt

Cil

Pomeroy . 992·2284.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

the U.dy'
(I) Benny Hill Show
0 (I) MOVIE : 'Fear Is
the Key'
Cll Captioned ABC News
® MOVIE : 'The Boys of

11 :45 0 ill C!l Tonight Show
t 2:00 Cil Burns &amp; Allen

HE THROWED A
CANDY WRAPPER
ON TH' FLOOR

Deception wins slam

ffi MOVIE : 'Cowboy and

Paul Street '
&amp;) ~ Nightline

__ ~ ~..e!!!J!~r~f!~n

Need

News

(!) Another life

JAR construction Co. Dif ...
cher, backhoe, and dozer .
Footers, gas lines, water.
lines, Rutland, Ohio. 614·
-

o m m o m ®J m rw

reports on developments
at Wimbledon

The Hoeman. 614·992·2618.

-

(!) International Racquet ball
TBS Evening News
Cil Paper Chase
CID Newswatch

ill MOVIE : ' I Love You
Alice B. Toklas'
Cil Nashville RFD
(!) ESPN Sports Center
C!l News/Sports/Weather
liD Hitchcock
11 :30 0 ill (!) Wimbledon NBC

For water lines, sewer
lines, septic t anks or leaky
basements call Hayman

-

Cil Sing out America

rn

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Inboard-outboard

Car parts for sale. 72
Plymouth 318 engine, and
transmission. 2· 800 x 1~
11res. JQ.I-773-5882.

77

(60 mon I

Plumbing
_ ~ !t ~a!i~9. __ _

82

5580 .
- 0 :. ~

197~ Chrysler 16 II. boat
and trailer. 1975 Chrysler
90 HP motor, $3,000. For
detail call 446·9285.

You turned down
a date ... to write
a stupid
letter?

BRIDGE

by THOMAS JOSEPH

In ves tigates a ftre •n a h1gh
nse bu1fd1ng (A) (60 m1n .)
(I) &amp;) (ill Dynasty Alem
rek1ndles Blake ' s pass1on .
N1 ck romances Krystle and
Fall on mak es a dec1s10n
about her pregnancy (R)

Aunt Lil .. . I
ut I am twentll · ... and I can do without
appreciate your one ... l have saved people tr4inq to
concern for me! a little mone4 ...
plan my life
for me!

Jumble Book No. t9, cont aining It O puzzle s. 1!. ava il &lt;~ble lor $1 95 postpaid
!rom Jumble. cJo this newspaper. Bo• 34. Norwood . N.J 07648 Include your
name. address. rip code and make checks payable to New spaperboolta .

Baker' s Dozen

10:00 D CD CD Quincy Ouoncy

2010.

1978
Lund
in board/ outboard 18 II., 120
HP ~ki boat &amp; trailer . Ex .
cond. Call 614 -256-6236 or
446-8146.

76

owner. 614-992·5834:

(I)
&amp;I IJ?J MOVIE
'Midnight Offerings '
0 (I) ®l MOVIE : ' Race
for Your Life. Charlie
Brown '
Cil llll Mayport and All
That Jazz One of the
count ry 's larges t Jazz festi vals IS VIS it Cd 1n thi S pre·
sen tat1on {60 m1n )
0 ill CD Facts of Life A
Japanese
student's
at
tempt to become ·Amen ca n,zed " upse ts her father

CD

F &amp; K Tr ee Tr im ming ,
stump removal. 675·1331.

Lawrence Sidenstricker
Backhoe Serv ice . Call 675-

Boat with trailer,
6286.

1977 · Buick Regal: exc.
cond. V-6, auto., p .s:, p.b.,

'82 :

IAI

ALI.EYOOP

or 446·2454

--

120 HP

trade for motorcycle of

Racing

USAC Sprints from Terre
Haute. IN

9 :00

1 Jumble s GA ILY FISHY KETTLE IMPAlA
Answer When they go t mar ned . Ihi S co~_ld have been
th en " l1le's a 1m .. " FAMILIES

won 10 nation al champion-

Auto

INTO THE ACT.

I

ships in th e '30s an d ' 40s and
came back in 1958 10 win h1 s
lith . Today . Sa m still play s
rubbe r bridge at th e Rege ncy Whi st Club as he has lor
almost 50 years .

(!)

Gene's
Steam
Car pet
Clean -Sco tch Ga urd -Free
estimates-sprin g spec ials·

Ye sterday s

ill(!) Real People T o~

0

WA~1'1N6 TO 6ET

(Answers tomorrow)

mght ' s show fea tur es a
profe ss1onal dog walker . a
doc tor who 1s also a
stand-up comod1an and a
rodeo for sen1or Ci ti zens

Cil All God ' s Children

3330 or 614·388-9919.

J

Now arrange the Circled leners to
lorm the surpnse answer . as sug gesred by lhe ahove c&lt;~noon

Entertainment

(I) MOVIE : 'The Survivor '

Roofing, gutter, blow -in in·
sullation, siding &amp; painting .
10 yrs. ex peri ence. Cal l446 -

Boats and
- - ~otor:_s for ~~e- __

Mercury

equal value. 61H47·2605.

((Zl

(AI (60 mon I

C &amp; R Paint Center
Prof ess i ona l
painters ,
comme r cia l and residen tial. insured . 41 Court St ..
Ga llipoli s, 446 -9458, no an·
swe r 446·1758 .

75

26 ft. Skillcraft. 1972 1-0.
Sleeps 6. $6,000. Like new .
614·9'12·3402.

1975 Buick LaSabre. Sale or

Garden

Tonight

8 :00

RON 'S Televi sion Ser v ice .
Spec ializing in Zeni t h and
Motorol a, Quazar , a nd
house ca ll s. Phon e 576· 2398

(I) Family Feud
Laverne and Shirley
Business Report

(1~ Richard Simmons

Masonary work , Logue
Contracting,
Rt .
1,

estima tes, 614 -698 -8205 .

1978 Honda XL 175 lik e
new. $675. Call614·245·5515.

1966 Chevy Capri stat ion
wagon, 396 motor, fair

BOXER , Ph years old,
registered , female, 304-882·

rabbits, 8 weeks old . $3.00
eac h. 304·576· 2725.

675 ~

~~tor~t~t~s_

74

675·39'13 .

N ew
HB Smit h Com mercial coal fired boiler &amp;
s toker , s t il l
c rated.

variety of IIJ:~J)I1,

(!) Happy Days
0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
ClJ (!J) Mac Neil -Lehrer
Report
®l News
&amp;) (ill Muppet Show
7 :30 0 ill You Asked For It
Cil Another Life
(!) ESPN Sports Center

ADVANCED
Sea mle ss
Gutter · Door s.
Offering
continuous
guttering,
seamless siding, roofing,
garage
doors ,
free

lo $199, wall huggers $100.,

televisions, fans, new tools

([) Green Acres
(I) Entertainment Tonight

78 JEEP Renegade, 24.000

tully loaded . $6,995. Ca ll
446·9285.

AM ·FM cassette, rear win ·
dow defroster, new radial
tires. one owner. new cond .

bookcases,
smokers,
Hoover spin dry washer,

pet Cleaning fea tured by
Haff elt Brosthers Custom
Carpets . Free estima tes .

9'11 -7539 .

1982 Honda X R 100. Very

Gunv ille Road off Rf. 87,
ca ll304 ·458· 1619 .

bunk beds complete with
bunkies $170, several
dressers, hall trees, beds,
brass head board beds $35,

(!) ESPN Sportsforum

Ca ll 446·2107 .

rx

1

COULDSE.THE RE5UL"T OF EVERYONE

Print answer here:

CAPTAIN STEEMER Ca r ·

out (R i

good cond iti on. Phone 304-

1980 vw Rabbit, 2 dr .. hatchback, 4 spd ., air cond ..

cabinets, kitchen cabinets
wood &amp; metal, baby beds,
chests of drawers $25 to
$60, 3-way recliners $100,
gas &amp; electric ranges,
refrigerators, wash stands,

Beatles'

Cil Bull' s Eye

ROPE.

304·895-3802.

1979 TransAm extra c lean,

Cock tail s, white and cin namon , loca ll y raised .

367 · 7169

614-245· 9 181.

WA5H TUB85
1'5 WAITIN G FOR
YOU AT THE 8U $
'f'&gt;TATION. ALL ~OU
HAVE TO DO 15
6ET DOWN THI 5

Terry di SCovers that her
date w uh Mike has really
been a restaurant stake -

1975 Monte Car lo $1,000 .
Ca ll446·0924.

cond .. make offer . Call 446·
3594.

after 6PM .

BE AN ADVA NTA GE ...

Water wells . Commercial
and Dom esti c Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .

$600. 304·675 -4831.

THREE male AKC Silver
Poodles, ca ll 304-882 -3672.

811. pool fabl e . Cal l 446 8502

CRAZY!

([) Father Knows Best
(I) Muppot Show
0 (I) ®l CBS News
Cil Dr. Who
@ Lilias. Yoga and You
&amp;) (ill ABC News
7:DO 0 ill P .M. Mogazine
ill MOVIE : ' Birth of the

50MH IME 5 TOO MANY EA&lt;',¥5 CAN

1973 Chevy Blazer with
37,000 mi . Radio, a.c. p .s ..
p .b., auto .. tint g la ss, 10 in .
ra l l y whee l s with 10 x 15
Land trac tires . $1.700. 614·

KAWASAKI

registered . No Checks, 304 -

895-3958 .
Depression. carnival, pat te rn &amp; pre sse d glass .
Moped , ex. cond . Call 614 -

1ranspartatlen

pups. Call 614·256· 1267 or
446·2107 .

pup s,

af ~

1979 Dodge van 200. 3/ 4 ton ,

3833.

A KC

Torino

6752 .

POODLE GROOMING
Ca ll Judy Taylor a f 614 -367
7220

R ID GE

Gran

73

Call6 14·388·9790 .

POODLE

-- -

For sa fe Sheep . 12 Su ffock,
ewes $65 eac h. Cal16 14·256

$500 . Pony carl, $75 . Bay

Boarding and grooming .
AK C
Gordon
se tt e r s,
Eng l ish Cocker Spaniels.

P IN E

AWAY WITH THI5.
MAYBE HE 15

Truck 's for Sale

1978 112
Al most new ca ptain bed
w1th drawer s, new mat
tr ess. $400 new, will se ll

iF EA'!'&gt;Y THINK 5
HE'&lt;; (';01N6 TO 6ET

auto trans.. PS, PB , ex

Boarding all breeds, c l ean
fa c iliti es .
1ndoor -outd oor

Also

Morgan . Call614 379 2168 .

Pets for Sa le

HILLCREST

304·675· 1349.

1972 Chevy p; c kup $300.00 ,
Yearling Chestnut Fi ll y 1/2

AKC Reg . Brittany Spa ni e l
has been hunted and 11as
WEDDING dress. size 14 ,

135, $1 ,200. Call
2803 .

63

S6

1974 AMC Matador been
wrecked, can be fixed or
used for parts. $300 . Phone

For sa le Oliver hay baler ,

304 67S· 2039 .
SS

67 Cheve l1 e, 283 Automatic.
black on bla ck. Phone 304·

1976 Ford F250, automatic,

BR IARPATC H KENNELS
Buy , sell or trad e horses &amp;
pon1es. 1941 Ford 1 111 t .
pMtly re stor ed Cal l 614
379 276 1 after 4PM

_ -:_a.!:~ ~qui~men!_.

2 bedroom apt . far ge
rooms . basement , yard , appl iances furni shed . Ca ll
eve ning s 304 ·67 5-754 1.

TV,

73 PONTIAC LeMans , air
condi tioning ,
pow e r
stee ring , 350 engine, $700.
or best offer over S600. by 71-82 . 2511 Jefferson Ave . Pt .
Pleasa nt .

675· 4181.

1;res. 304-773· 5882.

Chow
puppi es.
CFA
Himal aya n, Per sian and
Siamese kittens. Ca ll 446·
38 44 alt er 4 p _m .

CE N

Autos for Sale

tJ

...

IENMURB±

6 :30 0 ill(!) NBC News
Cil $50,000 Pyramid

InC

- ~_:v'.eget_a~les

FOR guar anteed produc ts
and dependabl e service,
ca ll your loca l AMWAY
dis tributor, Robert H arper.

(I) Electric Company
ill) Over Easv

buill up roof . Ca ll 614·3889622 or 614·388·9857 .

~::==========r~==~~~~===1

---

••.a~ •· -"-· --

News
ffi My Throe Sons
(I) ABC News

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex perience , specia li zing in

$65 614·.9'12 ·296 1

I I (

s:oo o m m o m ®J m (ill

20 yrs . ex p . Ca ll 614·3889652 .

Genuine Redwood long
tab le wi th 2 l ong benche s.

Unscramble these four JumtMes.
one tetter to each square , to fo rm
four ordinary words

EVENING

__

1182.

1975 Case 450, dozer
tra c tor, 1.800 hr s. very
qood co nd .. $14,900 Ca ll

RATL IFF ' S POOL

~ m.!!'._o~e_!!l~.'!.!!_

pany 614·9'12·2205.

dleport 614 992 3142 or 742

Television
Viewing
6/30/82

Gasoline and hea tin g fuel.
Call Exce l sior Oil Com

rent
downtown
items . inBuilding
for sa Mid
le or-

DICK TRACY

STUCCO PLASTERING ·

2925or6 14 742·2085 .

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

rt, Ohio

Pomero

WEDNESDAY

t ext ur ed ceilings co m ·
mercia ! and residentiaL
free estimates. Call614 -256-

Rest . equip . for sa l e.
Tables, booth's, ice c r ea m
freez er and other assort.

June 30 1982

Home
__

0

•

DRAGO NWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL. AKC

446 4537

81

0

614 367 7869.

EVA NS ENTERPRISES

wringer type washers, hutch, coal &amp; wood heaters,

mobil e

gas light s . Phone 13041 882·
2972.

room suites from $140 up,
love seats from $70 up,
maple dinet sets from $99

$30 and up , twin and full
box springs &amp; mattress
lnew) $100, several utility

Pleasant. 304·576-2711 .

Moving away Sa le Tractor,
,bush hog, bl ade, molding,
John Deere riding mower 5

chair $199, 2 piece 1;ving

rec lin ers
SSO ,
maple
rockers
$49,
bedroom
suites SlSO, variety of table
lamps, marble top sta nds

BUY, setting on lot halfway
between Huntington &amp; Pt.

Ca ll614·245·9587 .

rug $22, 3 piece living room
- - ----- - - - - -- --- --..
Nice sports car. $2,300. 61-4·
suites couch -love seat· l - - - - - - - - - - - t . . . - - - - - - - - - - 1 9 9 2 - 3 6 4 0 .

2 bedroom , fur nished, with
garag e
and
patio .
Sy ra c us e .
614 -992 · 2282 .
S150. per month. Utilities
not inc luded.

houses,

USE D FURNITURE 5 pc
&amp; 7 pc dinctt sets, studi o
cou c h &amp; choir , bedroom

----~~--

Wednesda

14 foot Mustang trailer ,
SSOO .. electric brak es, gas,
refrigerator , 12 volt and

&amp; air c lea ning machine.

Gene Sm ith, 992·6309.

256 1768 .

PAWN SHOP 62 Olive Sf..
Gal l;poU s 9x12 1;noleum

2 bedroom trail er. Rea l
nice, adults only . Brown's
Trailer Park , Minersville.

homes,

lood . Ca ll614-256 1207 .

ap t .

Room
$115 ,
Furn1 SI1ed
u tdd 1es po1d , 919 2nd ave ,
Gallipol iS
Stnqle ma le.
share bath Ca ll 446·441 6 at
fer 7PM

2 bdr . mobil e hom e be low
E ureka Ref &amp;. dep . req .
Ca ll614 256 1922.

APARTMENTS,

ex tra n1ce, 5 l €'mp Frig .
drye r , each $90 , guaran

by Larry Wright

39 yds . ca rpet , humidifier

675 2453
45

'N' CARLYLE'"

-Misc. Merthafldice

? speC'd Whirlpoo l washer

992 7479

Mob1lc Hom e, Eureka,
Bdr . tur n , riverf r ont tot.
ret &amp; deposit Adult s, $100
mo 1 643 2644 .

44

446 0322

BEMCO mattresses or box
springs, full or twin , $58. 6
P1ece Nau gahyde heavy
wood living room su ite
6510
$695. Pillow arm sofa &amp;
chatr $375 . Roll top desk,
La r qp 1 room &amp; bath el
da rk &amp; ligh t . $189 Bunk
ltr,ency apa rt mPnl Mostly bed S, COmplete, InClUd e
f ur n1s ll L'd $100 a monll1 maffre ss, S I Q9 Com pl ete
plu s dC'P 614 9Q1 5691
water bed shop with 10
bedroom suttes on display.
start1nq prtcc $799 up 10
3 room !ur n npt for r en t
'S 7 ~ 0
n rnontt1. lrl CiuclJnQ S7 500 81q daddy cock t ail &amp;
Ultld H'~
I nqu1re ill M £' t(! S f'nd l (rb tc s S50. Wall A Way
r ec l1ner s $169 and up _ La
Inn 111 Pomer oy
l Boy r ec liner s 1n stock .

Park, Route 33 . North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Cal l
Mobile Hom es
for Rent

maple or pine fin ish .
Basse tt
Bedroom su tf es
Ct1 erry, $795
Bunk bed
comp lete with mallresses,
$250. and up to $395. Cap
lain' s beds, $275. complete .
Baby beds, $99 _Mattresses
or b ox sp rin gs, lull or twin ,
$58 , firm , $68. and $78 .
Queen se ts, $195 . 4 dr .
c t1ests. $47 . 5 dr . ches t s,
$54 . Bed tr ames , S20.and
S25 . 10 gun Gun ca binets,
$350.. dinette chai r s $20.
{1nd $15 . Gas or elec t ric
ranqes ,
$325
Baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
fram es $20. $25. &amp; $30 Used
F u rntlur e
bookcase,
rilnqes and TV ' s 3 miles
ou t Bu l .=~vdl e Rd Open 9am
to 7pm , Mon . lhr u Fri ., 9am
to 5pm, Sa t

Unf ru n1s t1 ed 1 bdrm npr t
m Cr own (lfy C11t 614 756

Room s wttt1 cook1ng. cab le,
a 1r , $40 a week 304 773

7619

for Rent

72 MOBILE home, Ux70,
8x10 expando, 3 bedrooms.
crown Haven. 57300. on
rented lot. 304·675-5762.

AND

H OtTH'S

304-675 1541
2 bedr oom

I

Ap t tor rent , furnt Shi'CI 111
Rr1C1 ne 6 14 413 8157 tor (1p
PI . (1fter 4 p m

RenTals
41

Apt~rtm e nt

for Rent

Pr1 c c rcdu cC'd 7 l ob w d h
rurnt wa ter rt osc to ct !V
tu-n, ts, $4 ,450 00 Cal l 4.:16

1ns1de

11

AP ·

P L I AN C E S
washers,
dryers ,
refrigerators,
range s .
Skaggs
Ap
pliances, Upper River Rd .,
beside St one Crest Motel.

Sc hool s Instruction

18

U SED

s4

June
1982
1a ---- cii.il&gt;in9- -

29 N. Mex.'s
capital
32 Alkali
:13 Nautical
chain
34 Scottish

river
35 Word with
(I) Nightline
Cll PBS U.te Night
¥
shave or call
&amp;) (ill The Love Boat A
ghost attempts to find his
widow a su1table husband,
Gopher's sister is attracted
to Doc and a divorced cou ple are accidentally locked
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
in a stateroom together .
AXYDLBAAXIl
Guest starring Janet Leigh ,
Jimmie Walker and Jamie
lo LONGFELLOW
Lee Cunis. (Ri (60 min .I
One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A Is
12 :30 ill MOVIE: 'The Music
Man'
used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single le tters.
apoatrophes, the length and formation Of the words are aU
Cil Jack Benny Show
(]) The Love Boat A ghost
hints. Each day the code letters are different
attempts to find his widow
CBYPTOQUOTES
a suitable husband, Go·
pher's sister is attracted to
Doc and a divorced couple
F
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Yesterday's Cryptoquole: ONCE IN AGOWEN HOUR I CAST
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1 :46 (!) News/Sign Off
PEOPIESAIDAWEED.TENNYSON
2:00 IJ)IIochotof Father

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a-••

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 30, 1982

Planned Parenthood program withdraws
from Title XX funding due to new .r ules

l'l

TOWN IMPROVEMENTS - Fin• Chid llank .Johnson puts tht• final
touches on a new sidt•waik ~ml pnn·h tht· firemen in Racine recently
poured around the fire sta tion in Hacirw. The Hac-inc Fire Department
has a full schedule of evenls prepared for tht· Fourth of July.

Due to new rules and regulations
which will Increase patient and administrative costs, Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Ohio has
decided to cease participation In
th e Title XX program starting July
1.
The program services approximately UXXl people In Gallla
County and more than 800ln Meigs
Count y. according to Kay A tkins, a
s}.Xlkesman for Planned Parent hood's office ln A thens, who said
the organization's purpose ls "to
prov ide hea lth care. not paper
work. "
Atkin:: said the new rules, Insti tuted by the Ohio Department of
Welfare. shlft much of the res}.Xlnsibility for Pl anned Parenthood
clients onto the agency Itself, particularl y in the area of ellgtbllty,
whi ch was formerly determined by
the count y welfare department.
Title XX . Atkins explained, is
funding the state provides to local
welfare departments for social services. such as day care. trans}.Xlrtation a nd nutrition . She said
rC'imbur'l:oement rates to agencies
like Planned Parenthood from the
welfa re department have been frozen for the second consecutive

"In addition, less money Is available for all Title XX services than
In previous years, and It ls expected
that further reductions will occur
as the year progresses," she added.
Atkins said the agency has had
"excellent relationships" with the
welfare departments It serves locally and In Lawrence, Jackson,
Vinton, Athens and Hocking counties, "but these new rules are so
onerou.-;."
Under the new rules, Atkins said
If Planned Parenthood made an Inaccura te ellgtblllty determination,
they would be bUled for services
and required to m ake r eimbursement to the welfare department.
" It would drastically Incr ease
time for staff work," she said.
"We're only concerned about giving good patient care."
The declslon to drop out of the
funding was made by the agency's
board of trustees Monday night to
help cut patient costs. It was also
felt the agency could operate more
smoothly without the rules associated with Title XX. The regulations, the board felt, are also
subject to further additions and the
costs In trying to administer contracts would probably continue to

Increase.
The board expressed deep concern over the care of the medically
Indigent, noting that "the Impact of
subsidized famlly planning Is greatest for those with the smallest
Incom e."
The board felt public sup}.Xlrt for

SPRING &amp; SUMMER

~

WOMEN'S

SANDALS
lf2 PRICE

vear.

. Villages receive gasoline funds

4l.
.

The v!llages of Pomeroy and
Middle}.Xlrt both received over
$2.000 from the state auditor as
their monthly share of the state's
seven cents per gallon gasoline ta x.
Pomeroy received $2.656. while
Middle}.Xlrt received $2,297. Meigs
County received $30.000. Eac h

Clost&gt;d July 5

CLEAN SIDEWALKS - Th" &gt;id•·"alks in ltal'im· art• among many

projcc·ts tht· town and fin• dt'Jmrtrnent han· going in pn·par_i ng for th!s
weekend. A full slatt•
celebration.

11f

Roush chosen

adi\'itit•s "ill ht· sponson•d for th1s Sundays

a..; /)mneroy

chairman

,·ide· tn"atmcnt for chil dren'&lt;; dis -

Thr Cr nt ra! Rt'). .;ional tJ IIJ&lt;'j ' IJI St
.Judr ChildrPn·.., Ht&gt;..,t·,trch ll ll..,pl!. tl

, .~t ..,t·~ -

announcf'd

tod a.\· tll.tr Hn •rHI.t
Roush ha.;; tx-f:&gt;n n.:.HTH 'tl dJ;urrn. tn
of thP hospital':- Pomt·ro.\ blkt· a

,·un• and p!T'\·rntion .

than .

Marriage

F'unds ra isC'd in thi :-; \ "h t r" " ,.,.f'lll
will tx&gt; U"ied to ... uppo rt tht· tHP.. pi
tal' s progra ms in rf'-.;f',i!Th. p. ttie nt
carf' and ed ucation. Th•· bik.P·a
thon will br held thi ' !all
St .

JuclP C'hildr('n ·._ l{j•..,t·arl"ll

Ho ~ pital

wa_..: foundfxl in 1 ~ 11)~ tu pro·

.1 nclt o rf'scarc h thcir c au :~C's .

licc•n;~t&gt;

Delb&lt;'l't D. Smith . 2.1, and Lorri A .
Barringer. 20. both of Reedwille.
applir&lt;:l for a marriage license
Tur•sclay in Meigs County Proba te
Court.

Th e Holzer Clinic wlll beciosefa t
the Main and Sycamore clinics In
Galli}.Xllls. the Jackson Co. Branch
in Jackson and the Meigs Co.
branch Monday, July 5 in observance of Independence Day. In
case of emergency during a holiday
period, staff will be on duty in the
emergency room, phone 44&amp;-5201 of
HMC. The clinic will resume normal opera tions at all facilities
TuC'&lt;;day.

Oivorct&gt; sought
My rtle Grogg, Shade. filed for divorce from Daniel A. Grogg, also of
Shade, in Meigs Count y Common
Pleas Court Tuesday.

St&gt;vt&gt;n intervie wed
Seven persons were inJervlewed
for the pri ncipal's }.XlSition at Meigs
High Sehool. not three as was implied in the article yesterday in The
Daily Sentinel
These seven were chosen from 28
applica nt s. After the seven were intel"iewed. the top three were interviewed again by the school board.

p

$1,200.

VALUES TO "' 35.00

$1

SHOES

TENNIS SHOES

$10

00

A PAIR

$1500

$}000

GROUP
WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN

GROUP

2

PAIRS FOR

SHOES
ssoo

PAIH

PAIR

MEN'S
SHOES

$1200

GROUP WOMEN'S

FIRECRACKER
BALL

MILLER SANDALS

SAT., JULY Jrd
Mason Fire Station
9 : 00P .M . TO 1: 00 A .M .
B . Y.O.B.
Tickets Sold At Door

PAIR

GROUP
MEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

MASON VOL.
FIRE DEPT.

ANNUAL

DRESS SANDALS
AND SHOES

WOMEN'S

township In the county received
Three other cities In the county
received funds: Syracuse, $751;
Racine, $696; and Rutland, $582.
These fund s can only be used for
street repairs.
The payments do not Include revenue from the recently-enacted
4.7 cents-per-gallon gasollne tax,
which Is computed and distrtbuted
separa tely on a monthly basis.

Planned Parenthood would con-tinue and private donations would:
help ease the money loss, Atkins:
said.
"In Meigs County, there's a rna;
jor Increase In people being
served," Atkins said, "so there's:
apparently a need for us."

PAIR

1f2 PRICE

MARGUERITE SHOES
"The Middle Shoe Store in the Middle Block "
POMEROY,OHIO

HERE COMES

1981. Blut lkll. ln&lt;:

ELBERFELDS and WRANGLER®
with a choice of big savings
for the whole family.

$1, $5 and $10 refunds. ,
Buy a pair of Wrangler cords-for men, women, boys, girls or kids-and get a $2
refund directly from Wrangler through the mail. Buy a pair of cords and a shirt-;-and
get a $5 refund. Buy a pair of cords, a shirt iiild a pair of denim jeans-and get a big
$10 refund. You can save up to 40% during this limited offer. Get You' Refund
Certificate It our store when you stop in to see our selection of Wrangler clothes.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
~----------------------------------------------------------~~'
'
... .:

...

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