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Baseball's all-star
teams announced ...

Additional scenes
from Racine parade

Page 4

Page 10

e

•

at y

Long Bottom resident
given cancer award
Page 9

••

enttne
I Section, 14 Pa1es U Cenll
A ,Mulllmedla Inc. Newspaper

Voi.3J,No.U
Copyrlrhled 1982

NORADchief
given extra
assignment

.....
LI. .Y GLASS

DAWN

Claims deaths weird coincidence

HALF-LITER

DISHWASHING

·WINE

LIQUID

·CARAFE

WHIT£-BWE-IROWJI

22 OL

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'1,00

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BLOUNTSTOWN, F1a. - Teen·age baby sitter Christine Falllltg
says It's "weird coincidence" that five small children trusted to her
care have died.
And It given the chance, she would baby·slt again, she says.
"I know It sounds tunny, It's an awful weird coincidence that It
always happens to me, but there'sreallynottoomuchlcandoorsay
about It," the 19-year-old baby sitter said In an Interview published
Tuesday In The Tampa Tribune.
The latest In a string of tragedies Involving Miss Falling In this
Panhandle community was the death of 2·month-okl Travis D. Cote.
man. She was found dead Saturday on a small mattrEss In a trailer
Miss Falling shares with a man named Robert Johnson, who discovered the body, authorities said.

10~01.
-~
REG.
'1,41··

••

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\

. Earthquake rocks desert ..area
LUCERNE VALLEY, Callt. -A mild earthquake rocked the
California desert early today, but caused no reported damage, ottl·
clals said.
The temblor registered &amp;2 on the Richter scale, according to
Clyde campbell, a warning controller for the state Office or Emergency Services In Sacramento. The quake, at 1: 44 a.m., was centered about 20 miles east of Lucerne Valley. near Sugar Loaf
Mountain In San Bernadino County.
A dispatcher for the San Bernadino County SherUf' s Department
In nearby VIctorville said the sherUf's office had gotten no calls
about the quake and no damage had been reported.

Aunt's testimony disallowed
I

FINDLAY, Ohio- The presiding judge In the retrial9f a Hamil-ton man charged with mutderlng 11 of his relatives refused to allow
testimony today from the defendaht's matettial aunt about the fal'l')lly's history' of merital Ulness.
Ashland County Judge A. Ross Siverling, sitting by appointment In

LIBBY EMBASSY

CASCADE

ONE PIEC:I STEMWARE

DESK FAN

; " BIG :&amp;s OL

2FOR'1 ·00

. . REG. '12.15

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Those Hot DIJI And Niahb

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10
•

Stoessel assumes Haig's -duties

.

.

WASlflNGTON- Walter J. Stoessel has taken over as secretary
of state until George Shultz takes office.
Stoessel, a 62-year-ofd career diplomat who was _deputy secretary
of state, took•over Monday wben Alexander M. Halg Jr. officially
ended his !&amp;-month tenn as secretary, said State Department spc&gt;keSman Dean Fischer.
Fischer said Tuesday that the decision for Halg to step down
before Shultz took over was jointly made over the weekend by
President Reagan, ~lg and Shultz.
'f
-

·

~ID

BARS

FAMILY NAPKINS

·

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7

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BODY

scon

the retrial of 47-year-okl James U. Ruppert, disallowed the testlm·
ony of Ruby Lee tliat was presented In the defendant's original trial
In 1975.
During that proceeding, Ruppert was convicted of 11 counts of
aggravated murder In the shooting deaths on Easter Sunday ,1975, of
his mother, Charity; brother, Leonard; stster·ln-law, Alma; and
elgh( nieces and nephews. But that verdict was overturned on
appeal.

BEDSI-DE OR

DETERGENT

GLASSES
,REG.£A.
'1.00

6" ~ TWO SPEED - ADJUST AILE

DISHWASHER

6% oz. WINE

UMW official will run again

-·lAUNDRY
'DETERGEN1'
Rq. 49' Ea.

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$

5"

IEII.'Ul

.

CHARLESTON, ·w.va. - United Mine Workers SecretaryTreasurl!F\'I'Uiatd Esselstyn said Tuesday he will seek reelection to
' the position as an lndepen'dent candidate.
...
In a news statement with a Tuesday release, Esselstyn said his
candidacy will offer the union's rank·and-tue coal miners "an Independent voice, providing the check and balance ·I think we need ~
the UMWA regardless of whom Is elected president"
Esse)styD, 36, Is the third person to announce his candidacy for the
position. To be placed on the November election ballot, he will have
. to be endorsed by 251ocal unions In nominating conventions hetweel!..
now and A:ug. 1.

•

Judgment error proves costly

OUR BUSINESS
BEGINS WITH

FRUTH PHA-B MAC¥

OPEfi"J&gt; DAYS

FtLLiNG YOUR

·"THE EVERYTHINGS STORES" .

A WEEK

PRESC~IfTIONS

.

101 Sixth Ave.
tt.n11......,, w.

·, . .-.. . . , ~Ave ... - . ·.. 364 Ja~M.. Pille
v.: ... . -. ,Ninf ........... v•.. . '.O.IIIpllls; o. '·'"
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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
The Secretary of the Air Force has
decided to fonn a new major command,
Space
Command
(SPACECOM) effective September
I. This new organization will be
located in Colorado Springs, and will
be commanded by Meigs native,
. General James V. Hartinger,
current Corrunander-in-Chief, North
American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).
General Hartinger will retain his
current authority and responsibilities in this combined command.
The SPACECOM vice commander
will be Lt. General Richard C.
Henry, who will retain his current
responsibilities as Commander of
Air Force Systems Conunand's
Space Division.
Creation of Space Command will
further consolidate operational
space activities into a MAJCOM for
USAF space operations. This new
command will also provide an interface between space-related
research and development and
operational users. It is the Air Force's hope and belief that
SPACECOM will develop quickly into a unified command.
The formation of Space Command
will be accomplished within e~isting
Air Force end strength levels.
Initially, appro~imately :&gt;110 manpower authorizations will transfer
from Offutt AFB, Nebraska, from
Crow also stated. that unless river
Strate'gic Air Command and Air Foractivities are resumed the name
will have to be changed.
Quickel reported that the all
American Motorcyle show was a
The Meigs County Commissionhuge success with over 50 entries. ers announced Tuesday they have
Crow also recommended that the received six appUcatlons for ComPomeroy Chamber join the Ohio munity Development Block Grant
Festival Association. Quickel and funds.
Ash were named tp attend a festival
Submitting applications were
meeting In Columbus on Aug. 7.
Chester Fire Department for a new
The chamber agreed t.o hold next firehouse roof and doors In the
year's event the last weekend In amount of $2,1ro; Bashan Fire
June.
Dept., for repairs to their fire truck
Jim Frecker, president, ap- In the amount or $2,(fj(); Rutland
pointed Crow, Ash and Joe Clark to VIllage for a waterline extension In
a committee to submit names to be the amount of $1,995; Be!lford
considered to serve on the board of Township to upgrade T-235 (Gilkey
trustees.
• Ridge Road) In the amount of
Scott Lucas, administrator at $5,1XXl; Racine VUiage for funds to
Veterans Memorial Hospital Intro- Install a waterline with fire hyduced Dr. Carl Thompson, Dr. drants In the area of the south anWilma Mansfield and Dr. James nexation In the amount of $4,1nl and
Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Witherell.
A chamber picnic was dlscussed, Department to upgrade their firehouse In the amount of $7,404.!Kl.
but no action was taken.
Commissioners took the requests
under advisement and are expected to make a decision before
the end of this week on which appll·

12G W.
3ild. 'St: !•-•' .
"
.Wtl~tlll. 0 •• . ' ·..

ALL STORES

CINCINNATI - City trash collectors were told to work Monday at
triple-time pay, only to discover that hardly anybody put garbage
out on the hOliday.
City Manager Sylvester Murray said the decision to collect garbage on a holldaY was.meant to save money Instead of waste it.
. Garbage co11ectora had to drive the same routes on Tuesday as
Monday and mw;t push l!le rest of the week's collections back a day.
The city I!JSt $28.1:121 on the miscalculation, Rowe said.

F.~U ~AlliNG

Winning Ohio lottery number

)

f

CLEVELAND -The Ohio Lottery today released computer delayed figureS for Its drawing of the semi-weekly ''Pick-4" game.
The pool for the Tuesday night drawing was $214,m7.ro. The 45
percent retUI'IIed to winning bettbr8 was ~,lllll.M. A $1 straight bet
returned $3,432, apd a $1 boxed bet retllrned $1'-1. The winning
number In the Pick 4.game was 7610.

'
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,,.

''
'

·Weather foreoost .
p~ cloudy with ll percent chanCe or widely scattered siiOwen
·or !hUIIdefstonns tQDiiblllld 'lbunday. Not quite as hWDid 'lbursday. Lows tonlgilt around 'IO.IIIgha Thlll'lday~: WlndiiiOUtllwesterly to westl!rly 10 mpb'Ol' leu.
'
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General James Hartinger
Will do it again!

Regatta termed
successful event
The 1982 Big Bend Regatta was
tenned a success-by BUI Quickel
and Fred Crow 1\t a meeting of
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
Tuesd&lt;!Y at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
It was noted that the affair did
make money but. no definite figure
was given.
Crow commended the Middleport Chamber of Commerce for Its
assistanCe with the dinner held at
Royal Oak Park for Charles
Stobart.
Crow also commended Ron Ash
for assisting with the queens and
the winners of this year's event and
John Anderson and Jim Frecker
for their work with the parade.
Crow emphasized that It t.he Regatta Is to continue the chamber
would have to operate In a dlf1erent
maMer. He suggested that the
Pomeroy Chamber be joined by the
Middleport Chamber and the
Meigs County Jaycees.

ces Communications Command
assets, to Colorado Springs, Colo., to
augment existing space personnellti
the Aerospace Defense Center staff
As the space mission evolves and
new systems become operational,
manpower adjustmentl! will lie
programmed in follow-on Air Force
budgets.
Creation of Space Command will
require no additional military construction dollars in the 1983 Air Force budget. It is anticipated that
military construction projects will
be programmed in follow-on Air
Force budgets as requirements
become better defined. An environmental assessment has been
completed on this action with a finding of no significant impact.
General Hartinger became
Deputy Chief of StafUPians at North
American Air Defense Command,
Ent Air Force Base, Colo. in June
1970 and then moved to Maxwell Air
Force Base, Ala. in May 1973 as
Commandant of the Air War
College.
From 1975 to 1980, General Hartinger was Commander- or both Tactical Air Conunand Air Forces, 9th
Air Force at Shaw Air Force Base,
S.C., and 12th Air Force with
headquarters at Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas. He asswned hls
present position on January I, 19110.
He is the son of Mrs. Violet Har·
linger of Middleport.
1

Requests under consideration

48 jobs abolished
at state facility

Forty-eight jobs at GalliPolis DeIn a brief statement., Zlmmervelopmental Center will be abol- man said the abollshments are conlshed as of July, 2(), according to slstent with the· table of
Super! n tend en\ Robert organization presented to GDC
Zlmmennan.
stalt on June 1.
Zimmerman made the an"Owing to a great decrease In tile
nouncement this morning as post· number of people residing at GDC,
lngs of ~ positions slated for through their movement to a less
abolishment were made In the cen- restrictive environment In the cornIer's bulldlngs. Two-week layoff no- munlty, II has become necessary to
tlces. were being distributed, a abolish the positions listed above,"
· spokesman reported.
the superintendent said.
·
The jobs were all fulltlme posl·
"Up to the present time, attrition
_ tlons, ZlmmEirrnan said. ··
of stalt by way of retirements, reSiated for abolishment &amp;J'e tile slgnatlons, etc., has accounted for
following, with tire number of em· even a greater number or positions
. · ployees In each· ctliSslfJcatlon tol- which would otherwise have had to
lowing, the superintendent said.
be abQllshed," he continued . .
Hqspltal aide, ' three; bosplt8t
Zimmerman said "we truly realdli IUPervlsor I, two' bospltal gret that so,ne employees must
aide sullm'ilor·' n, Six; activity lose their jobs. It Is a tragedy for
tberllplst spec!allst I, 19; food ser- some, we know that Howeve~. the
v1ee worker, three; food lei'VIce 1111- bare reality 1s that GDC no longer
jleTYIIor I, two; boiler maintenance · needs the number or staff presently ·
'll'lll'ller, two; lalllldry worker, six.
employed to serve the greatly reOeeeH!c:a'bllln wblcb cme per· duced population that CUJ1..1!11tlY re1011 will he laid orr areedlvlty !hersides here."
apy admlnlltrala' .n. deltvery · . The abollshments have been an.worker I, maintenance' repa1t noupced less Qlan a week after a
" worker J, ma"tepence ~ tourorGDCbystate,localandOhlo
~ ll and~ I.
(Contlnuedon~gel4) .

'~

ca !Ions meet CDBG guidelines.
Projects selected will be for·
warded to the State of Ohio for
consideration.
Attending were Henry Wells,
president, Richard Jones · and
David Koblentz, commissioners,
Mary Hobstetter, clerk and Martha
Chambers.

Gallia man sentenced
A33-year-old Crown City man received 13 months In prison for his
part In an overall consptracy to produce child pornography and transport It across state lines.
James WUIIAm Quthrle Is to be
paroled after serving one-third of
the sentence, Judge Robert J.
Staker said In U.S. District Court In .
Huntington, W.Va. Tuesday.
Guthrie col!ld !)ave received a
maximum sentence of five years In
prison and up to $10,!XXl In fines.
Staker dld not Impose a fine on
G~thrle.

&gt;.

I

I.

I

~ pn~~ldellt . or
llle aiJieDee .of ~01' Cllnllce 'AIIdrewa, II&amp;
cep&amp;ed a IIIII Gil !leWf ell 111e villale fnm Drew Welllter POit . .
AlTierlcu Lep111. ·,whldJ wu preal!llted by Genld ,B ollpl, : · ·

PIIB8EN'1'JID 'NEW FIAG-Larr)'. Webrilq,

POIIWO)

Ceuncl,

ConuntncJer,
.

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Ill

�,..

Commentary
The l)aily .Sentinel
Ill Court Strwt
Pum~ruy , Oh ltt
ll .. ts%·ZIM
DF.VfTTF.OTO Til E INTEREST OF TltE MEIGS-MASON AHEA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
l' ublls lwr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Asslsuuu Publhi b~r/ C untrullt' r

DALE R0111GEB, JR.
Nr ws EdUur
A MEMBER of T~ All.!jorlatf!d Prto!ts, lnlHnd Dall)' Pn-tu~ AtU&amp;IM'laUun aiM! th&lt;r
Amt' ri r un Nt' w l pa~r Publlahnv An o('iallon.

I.F:TI£RS OF OPINION llfl' wel('tmed. ney •hould bt le111 lhlil300 Wtlni!IIOOJ(. All
Jtottt'l1i 11rr subjrtt tu l'dltlnJ( and mu1t tw slt[at'd with nam~ . 11ddrru and ttlrpOOnt
numllil!r. Nu umlgrwd lettt!n will bt- publbdwd . LA't~n •hwld llt' Ia IJOIId tole, 1ddrfttllltf(
il'l!iUH, nvl persnnalltkt:.
I'

I

(;DC: no simple
solutions available

Pomer,oy-Middleporl, Ohio
Wednesday, July 7, lB!I2 ·

.

The atomic cafe:,__________c_·ar_ry_W-:-,il_ls
WASHJNGTON - "The Atomic communists blowing up ihe Statue of operation. The officer who sends literally when a flash OCCIJI'!I near a
Cafe" is a feature-length film, now' UIM;rty u a way of celebrating the
them off on the .exercise assured family picnicking In a cltlllred space. ·
showing In Waahlngton, that should lnsbtutlon of their reign over this
them that the mushroom cloud Is a The tablecloth is whls{led from the '
be widely distributed, both to com- country.
beautiful sight and ends his talk with grass and spread over the heads of ·
mercial theaters and to schools. On
the easy assurance: "Don't worry the eaters.
.
The radio of fears allotted to the
the surface, It is a history of the bomb and to conununtsm led, during
about it, you'll be OK."
• An educational film is Dafl'&amp;ted by
popular culture of tbe 1950s, the Korean war, to congressional .
The most timely part of the fUm is a friendly turtle, who teaches people
somewhat like those old news calls for use of the bomb. A young' devoted to the civil defense program how to "duck- and cover," to a dit·
features that chronicled passing Sen. IJoyd Bentsen, then in the
(for resiBting which Dorothy Day ty resembling the jingle for Rice-afads (hula hoops, say, or silly putty). House of Representatives, calmly
and others went to jail). The proper Roni. Th,e varj9us fllm cllpe'are jUJ;·
But the cultural trivia of this assured the camera that this Is the
stocking of shelters is shown as a taposed 'in dlstUrblng . l'aya, but
movie has to do with the obvious course to pursue.
regular school project. Adults are there is no further C9flllll8lll. After
domestication of the bomb within
warned they may need a bottle rl. all, selling duc!!-aneJ.eo'(~ as If It ·
Actually, the only fighting men we
our culture. The Atomic Cafe was a subjected to radiation were our own
tranquilizers in the shelter, "a bottle were a processed' rice Is (~~
real diner - which reflected the troops, shown advancing on a lest
of 100 for a family of four." The ad- that defeats Intelligent~.
trend In names that gave us the · explosion as guinea pigs in a wipe-up
vice to take cover Is portrayed
· : . ,f.('f:f atomic cocktail and the atomic kiss.
·'lbla jaunty, even celebratory, at·
Illude toward the bomb was
deliberately cultivated. Government
training and propaganda films, as ;
well as .newsreels, ridiculed fear of
the bomb as hysterical noll8ell8e. In
one film, a whiiHmocked scientist
demonstrates the , statistical
foolishness of concern about
radlaUoo. People who express that
fear are said to devote 80 percent of
their concern to what is only 15 percent of the bomb's destructive im·
pact. (Read another way, that formula would go: "Don't worry,
thinga are actually five times as bad
as you think.'')
Other fllma ' treated fear of
radiation as pronounced fonn of
personal vanity. What If a pa~~~~lng
dose of fallout should be translated
into a fallout It one's hair? That
could•eaally be treated, In the short
run, by a toupee. And, In the tong
run, ooe's hair would grow back.
While films and patriotic
organizations were telling us not to
worry about the bomb, they busily
told us to fear a communist takeover
in America. One patriotic town In
Wisconsin put itself under communist domination for 24 hours to
Not guilty by reason of insanity
shbw what it would be lllte. 'I'he
American Legion showed u8 films ci

An advertlsment that once ran lor ·a heavy equlpment company had a
headline that said "There are no simple solutions, only inteliJgent
choices."
The abolishment of 250 jobs at the Gallipolis Developmental Center Is
one of those problems that defy simple solutions- or possibly any solution
at all.
Basically, the problem rests in the confiicting and possibly lrreconclla·
ble Interests of two groups - the GDC employees and the GDC clients.
The sticky dllemna Is the result of a state plan which wW move.Ul
clients out of GDC, resulting In the loss of250 jobs. Most of the clients who
are being moved out are being placed in less-restrictive settings, such as
tne Parent Volunteer Association cottages which are nearly completed on
the GDC gtounds.
In these less-restrictive settings, the mentally retarded can learn to
function In society. They have more freedom and more responsibWty.
Some can hold Jobs In sheltered workshops. Here they can ~aln selfrespect and escape from the more demeaning aspects of uvlng in an
lnstituilon.
Of course, as the clients move out of institutions such as the GDC, less
people are needed to work at such centers. This Is why employees have to
lose their jobs.
No one wants to see anyone out of work. When 250 persons lose their job
In the area, all of us are losers. Obviously, the employees and their famWes
wW be hurt the most. But all area stores, resturaunts and newspapers will
do less business because of the Increase in unemployed.
We are faced with the legttamite interests of both the employees and the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A tax
clients, neither of which can be completely satisfied with whatever declon folks whorunafoulofthe law has
. slOn Is made.
However, the state has made the right decision in movingcUentsout of ~lved the fiscal problem, of Ohio's
GDC. For too long in this country and thils state, the mentally retarded crime victim reparations program
have been tJ;eated as ~nd-class citizens. Polltlclalis could safely Ignore without sparking much protest
them, because they have no power. But regardless of their condition, they from those who pay it.
Revenue from court costs' as·
are Americans with the same rights as the rest of us.
sessed for nearly all offenses i~
·~1'!e.fore touring the GDC grounds last Friclay, local and state politicians
vll\ved a video tape showing conditions at GDC just live years ago. The used to finance the fund from w~ch
conditions shown were shocking. Client, Uved dormitory-style, with over eligible crime victim.~ or their &lt;rur·
50 persons Uving in one large room, with only small dividers between beds. vivors may seek awards. ,
Faced with dwindling reserves In
·Many clients were naked, their clothes strewn across the room. Feces and
the account, the General Assembly
urtne marred the Door In several spots.
Now the state Is moving the clients Into smaller, more humane cottages last November agrEed to Increase
and group homes. Here they can Uvewith dignity and become contributing the court cost asseo~sment - or tax
- from S3 to $10. Another S3 was
members of society.
Oearly, Uus is the way the state must move. The mentally retarded have tacked on for the state public dethe right to be treated as human. beings, despite their dlsabWties. •
· fenders' program.
Charles E. Crowley, clerk ol the
Sen. Oakley Collins has only served to confuse the Issue by claiming
mismanagement on the part of GDC officials has caused the loss of jobs. Ohio Court of Claims which admln·
lsters the crime victim.&lt;i program,
He Is polltlciclzlng an Issue which Is basically non·polltical,
We support Collins' attempts to save jobs at the center. But jobs should said there has been a turnaround in
not be saved at the expense of the welfare of clients. Clients should not be Its .financial coflllltlon.
"We have seen an Increase In the
forced to stay In an Institution If they can function In a less restrictive
setting.
·
colleetlon,," he said. The current
Realistically, we doubt any way could be found to save the jobs without balance i, about S3 million com·
. pared to a low of $400.mJ at one
hurting the clients.
Abolishing jobs at GDC Is not the best Imaginable solution to the problems at the center - but It may be the only realistic one.

~

-~ayoffs tarnish

economic rainbow .
HOUSTON (API - The gold of slightly In a number of areas, and
the Texas rainbow Is tarnished by the tendency might worsen. Some
layoffs, a rising jobless rate In some · analysts predict rates as high as 'i'
areas and a mUd slowing of growth. percent this summer in Houston
But unlike so many areas, there Is and Dallas, the state's economic
powerhouses. Yet Texas's rates
still an economic rainbow.
are
far below the national unem·
By most measures the Texas
economy stUI remains strong, ployment rate of 9.5 percent In
June.
'
~ealthy and perhaps poised for
another surge forward, even as the
Statewide, the Texas Employ·
omy tor the natio.n as a whole ment Commission reported a jobtinues to struggle.
.
less rate of 5.9 percent, up fli&gt;m •. 3
think we're sjarting Into a percent in the same period of 1981.
~m period," said a San Antonio Only four majOr labor markets ertlnomlst. And In Houston an au- Amarlllo, Austin, Odessa and
thority on business observed: ''The McAllen-Pharr-Edinburg .._
outlook Is exceedingly bright for the showed Improved job ·pictUres for
April. ~
rest of the century," ,
Despite these problems, much
Nevertheless, the state has taken
some locally severe bumps, optimiSm prevails. In some re.
and bruises.
·
spects, current difficulties are
scrapes
I
.
The "oil patch" ~ been stag. viewed as mere bumps on a high·
gered by a severe cutback In dril- speed economic highway Into the
ling, a decline in refinery capacity futUre. Economic forecasters seem
and a sharp reduction in demand to agree that Texas is the place to
for oil field equipment. Dolleiis of. be no , matter what the national
oil-related business have been cut· economy doeli.
ling jobs, and more laylds are pre.
dieted. Industry analysts say aome
companies may fold before the pic- Waldman named .
ture llnl)roYel.
The Dalla8·Fort Worth area was
NEW YORK (AP) - Plane
~:;:,' tallure It Brallllf In· Waldman hal been named deputy
1111
About UXII* were . cllrector It the Solomou ·a. Guillenthe airline ceued opera- helpl Mullurn.
May 12. Tbere IIIIo·baii!!.
Mn. Waldtnan will . . . Qle
day-to-daf operatloa of the
nwii!Vm.
,

t

~~~::~·~~:ua.bave~

Th~

system works

'The difference between our a lot of the inside stuff how the
political system and some others I
Reagan White House gave you the
won't ·mention ill that If you are a sword, and you'u be the Reader's
high official and f!ill in disfavor with Digest foldout for February.''
the leader, instead ol asking
, "I'm not sure I want to write a
political asylwn you become a very book."
hot literary and show biz per·
"Don't play games, AI. You're hot
now
,. but the attention span in this
sonallty,
.
While AI Haig may have lost many country Is down to 10 minutes. Every
of the ~rks he wu entitled to as week' you delay, they'll chop :I!JO
secretary ol State, his lively career grand off the offer."
and combative spirit give him air op"!'II think llboUt it."
portunity to laugh all the way to the
The phone rings in the Haig
household again.
bank.
This is what happens when
"This is Hiram Beaumont with the
someOne with a very high profile Beaumont Lecture Bureau. Sorry to
gets the boot from tlie government.
l)ear you lost your job, Mr. Haig, but
The flrs,t call ~ receives Is from we were wondering If you wQuld ~e
Fast Fingers Dundy, tile literary a lecture date for the Junior League
agent. "AI, I just talked to Burn- Town Hall series In Rochester this
twood Preu. They made me an lifer fqll?" •.
•
"I don't have a lecture put
ol$1 million for worldwide rights to
your book."
·
together yet."
·
"Just wing it. ·They want to see
"Idon'tbilvea book."
"You do now. You're hot, AI. you as much u hear you. Tell them
how Weinberger did you in, how Bill
~ore you walked the pllink for
Clark
doesn't know El Salvador
fteasan, I couldn't get .$50 for your
memoirs. But atter·your ~Uon from Las Vegas, hoW Richard Allen
the phone tang off the hoot. Give us got his Selko watch, and how .they
a lot ol Watergate, ~ lot ol Nixon and

oftheOhloMunicipalJudgesAs~

elation, said there has been little
negative response from violators.
"I thought and a bunch of us
thought that the people would be
upset with this. I don't really think

around for three runs In the fourth
ott I.ellrandt The rally .was hiihlighted by RBI hits by GeneTenaoe
&amp;1111 Mike Ramley.
. Pbllls GluAal
Bo Dlaz' b&amp;Jel.loaded single in
the eighth inning gave the Phillielia
3-~ lead, !hell Tug McGraw came
out of the bullpen to pick up the save
by setting down the Giants In order
in the ninth.
McGraw had spent the a1ternoon

a.

.

'

know each other lllce we used to. Me
and Pete and Joe and (Johnny)
Bench and Perez, we knew wbilt
each guy was like, when he could
!a¥ a joke. Youcouldjollewithany
one of them. Now we've got a lot of
. new guys. We've got a lot of guys
who have never been on a winning
team. It's d!Uerent."
The Reds shortstop salcl be hopes
the team Is at 'least learning.
"I hope we do better next year,
but I don't own the team," he said.
"I think we need one long-ball hit·
ter. We •ve go t to fl nd one

CINCINNATI (AP)- Shortstop
Dave Concepcion fears that thectn·
clnnatl Reds could loee 100 games
this season for ·the first time In the
club's J13.year history.
"I've never been on a team that
lost 100 g&amp;ml!ll," the 13th·year veteran said. "I hope we don't lose 100
games. But the way we're playing,
it looks lllce we're going for that

they know where the money's go.
lng," Paulson said.
The MassWon Municipal Court
Judge pointed out that the fine tor
drlvln~ while Intoxicated and other '
offenses sttll l, higher than the ·
court costs. . ,
•
"It's not for us to decide whether
it'sgoodorbad; wejustcollectit,"
he said. "We kind offeel that If they
(legislators) want . to exact a tax ·
that's their business."
Crowley said the amount of
awards paid to victims of crime in
Ohio from 1976 thrOugh May this
year totals $22.2 mWion.

mark."
It the Reds continue at their cur·
rent pace,
woul!l·end the sea·
son with about 100 IoNes. The Reds,
currentlY 31~. bilve not been that
far under .500 since 19QI, when Concepcion was 12 years old.

uteY

season,
oomewher~" Gec)rge'

Before this
Concepcion
before
Foster. This
year, he's hitting ahead of Dan
Driessen.
"I'm not going to put any presure
on lite guys behind me," be said.
"It's different for everybody. I bilve
to bear down more at home plate
now than In the past, Not because
Driessen's behind me, but because
they're pitching me clitlerent.
"To have a guy like Foslef behind you, they know he can hit~ ~t
in a minute. Driessen has that, ex~tted

Concepcion, who played during
the 19'10!1.whell ~Reds were one of
the mpst successful teams In baseball history, said he ~an sense a dlf.
terence In the RIM1s clubhouse
because so many of the current
players have not played on a
winner before:
"It's a funny feeling," he said.
"Before, after the games we used
to get qether- Pete (RI&amp;!), Joe
Morgan, ('l'ony) Perez. We'd eat together. We'd drink together.
"It's nol'the same now. We don't

Today in history
Today Is Wednesday, July7, the188thdayof1982. Thereare177daysleft
In the year.
I
Today's highlight In history:
On July7, 1913, Brltaln'sHouseofCommons passed the Irl~hHomeRule
BUI.
Also on this !jate:
In 1898. the United States annexed the Island of Hawaii.

Bid Bend Youth A~soc.

Team
New Haveo Dodgers
Mason Pirates
Pomeroy Pizza Shack
Pomeroy Powell's
New Haven Yankees
Middleport Mustangs
Middleport Cubs
Syracuse
Pomeroy Sugar Run
. Ashland
Mason Cubs
Rutland
Harrisonville
Sa tem Center
.
Big Bend Pee wee Girts
Team
NewHaven
l;'omerov

Art Buchwald
sat you in the wrong seat on Air For· do Is stand up in the lobby of an airce One when you went to France. ]l'lrt and say 'Do I loolr familiar? I
We're talking big money now, Mr. used to be the secretary ot State~
Haig; not the peanuts we got you Nobody knows who •I am any more
when you lett NATO."
and that's why I never leave home
11
How big?" '
without my American Expresa·
"Whije your popularity lasts, I cap Card.' It only takes a day, General,
get you as much as they pay and you get paid every time it nms:
Kissinger. Of course after six mon- If you have any questions, call
ths you may have to start doing Senator · Sam Ervin. The · com·
Kiwanis dates again. But people are mercia! has given him a whole new
funny and willing to pay just to see career."
how you .are holdil\g up under your · "I'll have to tall! it over with my
ordeal. There's nothing that excites wife."
an audience like a gu)l who has just
RING, RING, RING
been j)ersonally sacked by the
"AI, President Gerry Ford
President."
spealting. Sorry to hear about the
· "l'llgetbacktovou."
falllng out between you and Ronnie.
,
RING, RING, RING
What I'm calling about is, now that
"Gene~at 'Haig. This Is the Dabney . you've got time on your hands, l was
Advert1smg Agency. We were woildering lf·you'd still like to lila in
making up our late 1983 advertising \ my Pro-Celebrity TenniS Tc!u-.
schedule for one of our clients, and nament here 1n Pabn Springs. •
we were wondering If you would be . "!didn't thinll fOU'd still want me
interested 'II' doing a.TV commercial to play in your T~ TOiji'IWilent
ayellrfromnextDeCember."
·
now,sir."
,.
"Wbolsyourcllent?"
"!sure do. Just because a ll'llll1
"The ~rican Express ICredit leaves pablic office C!Qesn't mean hii
C&amp;rd people. All you would liave ·to career l!J.over:"
·
,,

MiddlepOrt Mid9ets ,......Mason
Middleport Dusters
Big Bend LiHie League
Bovs' Standings
Team
Mas.on Rangers
Rutland
New Haven
Syracuse
MasonVFW
Middleport Braves
Middleport Indians
Pomeroy
·
Harrisonville
Salem Center

W.l.

12 0
10 2
10 2

8 4
7 4
6 4
5 6

5 7

4 7
3 8

1 a
1 9
t 10

7 1
7 1

7:30
7· U

7: 307-7

17

I

16

Aullancl

t : 15~7 · 14

''"''"'
1:45

J:Jouc

Bird, 5-S, flld Wlllle HerJIIIIIdez, wbo etll'lll!d his aeventh
save, comb~Jled to bold the NL West

.

I

l

,,,.

I

G41lllfOIIS 11111rt

1· 20

••ctnt tttels

leaders to llx hill. Ken Dayley, 4-5,
took !J1e lou for Atlanta.
Pb tal,Amall
Jim Morrison gave LarryMcWU·
l1ams the only run he needed with a
solo home run in the .econd lnnjpg
as the Plratei-Dlpjled tlie' Attros.

I

6: 1SH

'I

AIINiny ""''

5
8: 45
7· 16

,,.. ,..

M11rr•'

lO

14

7 : ~7-f
1 uHtrs l'llinl

..a,

17
7;l0H4

NttsOI'I'o'ille

McWilliams,
acquired from
· Atlanta last week, ran his record to

cnv
I

II

.ChHitlre

1:457· 14

IUdwtll

6: UH

7

6: 30

MkklleltOrllndllnt

7-21

G-.IIIDCIIII YU .. tn
7:~,.,

• I

l\uctl9fl

Jl

19

6: UH5

Alblony F~rm t n

2$

1:4lH

'J

Muon R'"'""'

6 : 30
7·19

Gaiii!MIIII JNdrtl

6: U 7·12

10

~ vracu1e

J

lO

7: 107·12
Albany

race at Scioto Downs Tuesday night
m pay $5.m. ~ aD.u3.6o.

.

· ~ In eeconifwas Savvy lor $1UO ·
and $7.~. Third was Sharp Knife
The winner's time

11

Aoy.~oll

7: 4S
1-10

Pomtrov Powells

1:4S 7-12

GICKIIftr

1 :45 7· 1S

Gaiiii!!!IIS -!nl!t~

6;11 Hl

SponsorecJ
By
Syracuse
Volunteer

II

II

Burr Olio Lodte

26

"

IJ

RIIICiM ROylll

Fire

7:45
7-19

New Hntn Recb

7 : l0 7- ll

"I

Glouster
M.stthewslns.

6: 157· 16

G Ailipoli\

12

Department

.

SYRACUSE - Pairings have been
announced for the 1982 Syracuse-BID
Hubbard Memorial Uttle . league
baseball tournament which begins
tonight at the Syracuse ball park.
Thirty teams are entered in this
year's tournament which is spansored by the Syracuse Volunteer
Fire Department.
First round play begins tonight
and continues weekdays through
July 21 , the date scheduled for the
championship and consolation

cept everybody knows Foster has
more power than Driessen has.

"Ihadmoreguysinscorlngposl·
lion last year than I have this
year," he said. "I'm a better hitter
with men in scoring position"
Concepcion said he hopes this
season endli quickly.
"1bere's no~ Impossible, but
It's going to be very hard for us to
get to the top," Concepcion said.
"It's llke 101).1, ~1. It's very tough
when YIN don't have a real stro!lg
team to do it. We have come from
behind before, but we were in se-

.

.

•

Memorz.al tournament beg~-ns tonrght
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

Pizza Burgers
$109
With Fries . . . . . . '1.49

Adolph's Dairy Valley

games.
Three games will be scheduled
each evening starting with tonight's
games between the Middleport
Braves and Gallipolis Senators;
Albany's Merchanb and Rutland;
and at 8:45 a match-up between
Chester and Gallipolis' Tigers.

PH ...2.25S.
570 W. Main

"louled at the End ot the

Pomeroy, OH.

PomtJoy·MISIHI Brid&amp;e."

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WED. THRU SAT.

The Saving Place "'

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Pick up your FREE
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and p'e rformance certUI·
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Limit 1 per customer.

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was 2:03.

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Middleport, OH.

'P.it.
. tri-2U2
.
•

JOHN A. WADE, M~D., INC~
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
..
EAR, .NOSE &amp;'liiROAT .
GENERAL ALLERGIST
,,

.

"

7 :30 7- 15
Nelsonville Let•n Snlnll

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

i, •I

I:U
1·11

DOWNING-CHlLDS
INSURANCE
.
AGENCY

€lasl)i ROgue, ~ by Bueford
Lunsford. won the featured eighth

for$11.

.

um.E LEAGVE TOVBNAMENT ·

ll

w.L.

Scioto downs

•
~ .·

I

1

2 4

'

.I

CONSOLATION

Hl

Bend area standin~
Pee Wee Bays' Standings

,.

IS
l : ~l

AtNny Mtrtftlnt•

bloop single.

r~co~nd~pla~ce~·~"~-

~

Galh,Oiil Stntton

All star Concepcion fears I 00 losses

Added tax fails to spark offical protest
court costs assessed for soine traf· ·
fie violations exceed the fine levied
for the offense.
Motorists who ease past a stop
sign, for example, might face a fine
of $5 In many communities'. But
they would also pay $28 worth of
court costs, part of which i~ the $13 .
state evy.
Judge Paul E. Paulson, president

6;157· 7

's almoSt incomprebeuslble teaching some YtJWiilters about
that this kind of thing is taklni
pitching. That night, he came to 3-0 agalnlt the Aatros this -.o!l as
place," ~ catcher Dave Van
VeteriiJIB Stadium and worked on . he tossed a live-hitter. 'He struck
Gorder. "Wbel! you tO.e nine
oome of the thlngi be aald.
~tfourand walked none in his first
. stralgllt you feel lllce, 'Geez, whllt
'1t helped," said McGraw. "Up. complete game of the season. else can happen!"'
until tonlgbt mi screwball hadn't · . "Hll best pitch tonigllt was a
StLouis' Steve Mura, &amp;-7, banded
reavted the way I .wailted to. I
white ball with red sti1np on it,"
the Reds their ninth straliht loes,
threw It without any doubts."
Pirate MaD8aer Chuck Tanner
beatinglheml-1 Tuesday on a four·
Another PhllUe reliever, Sparky joked. "He threw a good fastball,
hitter and pullhlngthem deeper into
Lyle, 3-2, got the victory. Dlaz' singood breaking ball and good fork·
the cellar in the West
. gle carne ott loser Fred Breining, ball, and he had good control on all
The Reds' nine-game losing
4-2.
of them.''
streak is. their tonaest since they
t.-e. I. Expoa 1
"All my pitches were working
dropped 11 in a row In 1966. Tues·
P,adre starta' Jl)lm Curtis, 6-4, real good for me. I had them all
day's loss gave them a31~record,
slngled.home two runs While Gene tonight and that'sklndofunusual,"
and they trail flrst·place Atlanta by
Rlchardli and B1'0derick Perkins said McWllllarns.
a whopping 18~ games.
each drove In a 1'11!1 as San Diego
Loser Bob Knepper fell to 2-10
sent. the slumping Expos to their
"lt'SI!ITI~bilving thereeven though he allowed just three
12th 1oes In 15 garnee.
hill in seven innings.
·
COrd we have," said loser Charlie
Eric Show relleved Curtis in the
Leibrandt, 1;4: ''I'm 11\11'(! every guy
Dadien t, MIIU S
on this team .look.s at the morning sixth and Lull J;)eLeon pitched the
Dave Stewart, 44, hurled six
newspaper and says, 'Why? Why is t1na1 three inlllnp tor his sixth save strong lnnlnp, scattering six lilts
as the seeond-pla(:e Padres moved
and fanning tour, as the Dodgers
this happening?"'
to within 3~ garnee of pace-aettlng were aided by' live Met errors
The restructured Reda lost their
which led to live unearned nms.
1981 starting ~!field of George Fos- Atlanta In the NL West
Ray
Burris,
3-11,
was
the
loser
lor
St,ewart wasn't annoyed whell he
ter, Dave Colllns and Ken Griffey
Montreal.
was
replaced by 'Terry Forster In
either to trades or free agency.
CubB
1,
Brave~~
I
the
seventh
inning.
'lbelr 40-man spring training roster
The Cubll snapped the Braves'
Steve Yellil!l' had three hits for
contained 18 players who bad never
six-game winniDg streak as Junior
the bodgers. The Mets, who lost
seen action in a Cincinna&amp;l uniform.
Kennedy
capped
a
~run
Chi·
tlielr fourth straight game, got 00.
The Cards, who lead the NL East
cago
seven,th
inning
with
a
nro.run
mers from Ron Hodges and George
by .002 over Philadelphia, batted
Foster.

a

point la,t year.
"It's gone back up and the In·
crease Is very noticeable. We do
have more money to operate now,"
Crowley said.
At ·the same time they Increased
the fee, legislators reduced from
$50,mJ to $25,mJ the maximum
amount which could be awarded to
crime victims or their dependents.
Crowley said u Is too soon to ten
what impact that wUI have because
It applies only to offenses commit·
ted after Nov. 15, 1981.
But he hopes to have enough In·
formation on which to base a decision by JuneJO, 1983. That's when a
new state budget Is to be in place
and when, unless extended, the cur·
rent court costs hike will expire.
Initial concern about the Increase
appears to have abated.
"I think people do know It's a tern·
porary Increase and It wW be rethought In light of the maximum
award (reduction)," Crowley said.
As a result of the change, the

'
Mtctdleport lravu

'

ByA.WetedrThe CincinDatl Reds spent much
of the l9'lllll dominating the Na·
tiona! Le~e. They won six NL
West titles, four pennants and two
world championships. And they
had baaeball's best overall record
lut season.
Now, midway through this sea·
the Reds are j\181 another lastteam With a Jlble.game losing

.

The DJUiy Sentinei-Pqe
.J4 ,u rlsonvlll t

Bewildered Reds seek
solution to' problems

Pag~z-'lbe Dally ~nel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Weil)eeday, July 7, 1982

.

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�P.~-4--The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio

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PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH JULY12, 1982

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,

AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL-STARS -The elgbl
;V~ayen named to, lbe American League alarllug team
:lor 1be 1982 AU.Siar game In Montreal are: CaWornla
;.~ogels Reggie Jackson; California Angela Bobby
;· ;

,....

,.•

Grieb; KaDIBs City Royals George Brett; CaWOI'IIJa
Aogels Rod Carew; Chicago While Sox Carlton Flak·
MOwaukee Brewers Robin Yount; CaWornla Angeb
Fred Lynn; Oakland A's Rickey Henderson. (AP
Laserphoto) .

,.

:; NEW YORK (AP) -Catcher
:: •Gary Carter of the Montreal Ex;:;pos, who hit two home runs and
; was named Most Valuable
•.• Player In last year's contest, led
players In the tina! balloting
: : ror tbe 1982 All-Star Game an, ; nounced today.
· • Carter received 2,785,407votes
· : In the fan election and ts one or
Expos selecled for the Na. • tiona! League team for next
:: tuesday night's game In
, :MontreaL
; Also chosen for the NL start. • lng · team !rom Montreal were
:·outfielders Andre Dawson and
~ Tim Raines. Phtladelphia also
· • placed three starters on the
: team - third baseman Mike
: Schmidt, second baseman
; Manny Trillo and first basemWI
: Pete Rose.
: · The other NL starters wtll be
: ~ shortstop Dave Concepcion of
• Cincinnati and outfielder Dale
'
, • Murphy of Atlanta.
: : A total ol 9,347,447 votes were
' ; cast In the computerized ballot' • lng sponsored by Gillette. Car, , ter' s total vote just outdiStanced
; ; Schmidt, the two-time National

::a11

:three

.

League MVP, who llnlshed with
2,748,210.
Darrell Porter of St. LouiS fin·
!Shed second to Carter among
catchers with 1,&lt;ll4,013 whlle
.
'
Ron Cey of Los Angeles with
1,008,349, and At.lanta's Bob
Horner with 1,065,4lll, followed
Schmidt In the third base
balloting .
Rose, who set a record when
he was chosen to a fifth All-Star
starting position last year, fin .
!Shed wUh 1,845,679 votes to
1,349,123 for Steve Garvey or Los
Angeles. Montreal's AI Oliver
llnlshed third In the first base
race with 1,172,~.
Trillo, runner-up In last year's
balloting, won the closest race In
All-Star history , totallng
1,506,402 to 1,504,m lor rookie
Steve Sax of Los Angeles, a margin ol just 1,625 votes. PhU
Garner of Houston was third
with 1,CD,517.
Concepcion, selected as the
starting NL shortstop . for the
llflh time, received 2,203,574

'.

votes to 1;267,543 for Ozzle Smith .
ol St. Louts and l,re1.947 tor Sao
Diego's Gariy Templeton.
Dawson led aU outfielders
with 1,685,704, followed by
Murphy with 1,664,863 and
Raines with l.Jii2,&amp;51. Dusty
Baker of. Los Angeles was fourth
with 1,343,135, followed by Pedro
Guerrero of Los Angeles
( 1,122,347) •. and George Foster of
the New York Mets (1,003,453) .
The American League starters, announced Tuesday, w111
be California teammates Rod
Carew at first base and Bobby
Grlch at second, Robin Yount of
Mtlwaukee at shortstop, George
Brett of Kansas City at third,
Oakland's Rickey Henderson
and Reggie Jackson and Fred
Lynn of California In the outfield
wtth Carlton Fisk or the Chicago
White Sox catching. Fisk's
2,625,650 votes led all AL
players.
'
Pitching statls and reserves
for the 28-man sqtlads w111 be selected by the league offices and
Managers BUly Martin of the AL
and Tom Lasorda of the NL later
thiS week.

PORTI.AND, Ore. (AP)- J&gt;ro.
fesslonal golf takes a step ~k In
time Thursday when Arnold
Palmer begins defense of his U.S.
Senior Open gott championship.
The $150,001 tournament, the top
senior golf event In the country, ts In
Its third year. The first toUrnament,
which bad a minimum age limit of
55, was won by Argentine Roberto
De Vlcenzo.
The age limit was dropped to 50
for last year's tournament, which
Palmer won In WI 18-hole playoff ·
with Billy Casper and Michigan ·
club professional Bob Stone In Birmingham, Mich.
The field Includes some ol the
great names of gol!: ·
-The 52-year-old Palmer, who IS
perhaps the most popular golfer In
the sport's history and has won 61
professional tour1!1!ents, Including
lour Masters titles.
-Casper, 51, winner of51Proles·
slonal Golf Association tour events
and one olthe best pullers the game
has known.
-Gene Littler, 51, last year's
leading money winner on the seniors' tour with $137,427.
-Bob Goalby, 53, the senior
tour's top money winner this year
at $35,550.
Other challengers are Doug

P~thers

Golf event held

_

y

The women of the Jay Mar Golf
Club held their Ladles Day June 29
with 13 attending. After a short busIness meeting held to discuss a
scotch foursome, 1B holes were
played. Prizes went to: Low Net
Team-Nellie Brown and Elizabeth
Lohse; low putts--Elizabeth Lohse
and Dorothy Karr. female goiters
are welcome at . any Ladles Day,
every Tuesday at the club.

Casper won the old Portland
Open on the course three consecutive years.
"This course lends Itself to the
Senior Open," Casper said. "It Is
not long ·but It IS very demanding..
You have to !frlve well, and good
Iron shots are rewarded:"
Palmer agreed.
"It's a very good course for the
Senior Open," said Palmer. who
was followed by an estimated 1,001
spectatollll as he completed a practice round. 'It's not loog, but It's
challenging enough. The rough Is
tnugh, the way the USGA wants It,

DALLAS (AP) -Gene Stallings,
saying he had a commiJment with
the Dallas Cowboys, Tuesday
turned down the belld coaching job
lor the Birmingham StaWons of the
new United States Football
League.
Stallings, defensive · backfield
coach tor the Cowboys, met last
week In QndnMtl with Stallions
OWDel' Marvin Warner, former
bassado~ to ,Switzerland.

am-

SCOUT OLYMPICS - Tbls group of cab scoutll frum Pomeroy Pack
, ..249 recently parllclpated In 1be MGM cllltrld Cab Scout Olympl~ where
::It came away wltb tbe overall ebamplonsblp. Memben of lbe pack are,
:: iroot, J.r, Jolm Alldenon, Chase Cleland, Jeremy Heck, Eric Heck, and
:.::Jason Wrigbt. Rear - Cary Betzlng, SliiWD Hawley, wbo wu lint
• )veraU for eight year ollll; Robbie Fields, lint overall for nine year olds;
' · "1a01 Cleland, first overall for 10 yearolds; Randy Hawley, and Tim Hall.

-'13

•

.3111

Ill!

..

3% '

4 INCH SOL:ID SEWE~ A'ND
DRAIN PIPE :

•

Leaden.

The Daily Sentinel
IUSPS I - I
ADt.llloto al Mlllllmftllo,

!lj'·

PubUsl'!t!d t!Vl'f'Y anrmonn, Mondiy lh,'OUI!h
Friday. Ill C..Url St...t, by tile OIJIIi Vall•y
Pl.lbli»hi n~e COinJ*ny • Multiltll!dll

Inc:

Pomt~)'. OhilJ 457et, ttz.~IOI: Set.wd c1W

""""K&lt;Piidot Pomeroy, Ohio.
I

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'

Mernber : The Aasucia\al ~. lnf•nd Dai·
ly Prt:&amp;1 ~h1ti00 and the AITWril'Mn
Newspoper l'llblilh&lt;no Allloo.i.ltion, Nallooll
Advertisin)l Repre.ent.alive, Br•nhatn
Ntw.~per S.Jes, 7S3 'ntlrd Avenue, New

York,NtwYorkJOOJ7.

443-C Locust St., Middleport
' MON.

TUU.

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..12

W ·

VISION E-XAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES
CHILDREN'S VISION
Eumin.tioiiS'bJ ....
PH. 992-6~5..,...

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AND DRAIN PIPE
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. PLUS.ALL OTHER HARDW~RE NEEbS:

f!ICKENS HARDWAilE
MAlOti. W, Y;A.

.¢

Chickens..............L~~
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$
39
Chuck Roast .......~~·..
BUCKET
49
Cube Steaks........t!l;~

•

POsTMAsTER: Send ocldr....tp'l'he Daily
St!ntu'll!l, Ill Court St .• Pomeroy, Ohio 40718.
, SUI\SCliiPTION RATJ!S
By Cirrla' or -Rio I&lt;

g::;"""'
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CHOPPED SIRLOIN PATliES ••••••••••••• !:-•• '1 79
FRENCH CITY WIENERS •••••••••••••••• !!~~:~~-.99$
SUPERIOR LUNCH MEAT•••••••••••••••••• !~·. '139

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·Year ....... .. : ......••• ... ...

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PRICES

Daily .. ........ .... : .. ... .... .. t~c.n ..
Subsnib..·~ _nul dt::sirin~ lu PIIY lhe carrh.!l'
llliiY. remit 1n adv11111..~ diret.t lo The !)!ily '
&amp;.:ntml'l on 11 3, 6 or 12 1~th tuia. Ctl!CJil
will bt•..:ivtncuriet ~Mc hnionth .

N'u subsi.TipUon., by 11\1111 ptonnil\l'd in towrtl
wlk'rt• honlt! l'llnit•r ~rvk'l! isavailabk.!.
MAILSUBSCRIJ'TIONS
t•klo: tltolo
IJ Wl't!ks .. .. ...... : .. .. . ......... 114.04

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1$1.ll

sarnantba .Roush, Sherry CQoper,

13WPt•k., .
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2fi Wt't·k.~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . $29.64
52 Wt...ok.~
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Loill Davidson, Darla Hawley, and
.Kim Stewart each singled.

SPECIA-L.

8'1 10
IN LIVING
COLOR
ONLY

49

88¢·

$ sg : COTTAGE CHEESE ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;:~!-. '1"
Gatsu IL~ .........ft! ...

r.r ,.,.

'DINNER TREAT

DATE: · FRt/JULY 9

~ SAT., JULY 10
PHOTOGR~PHERS' fll ..lll.ll. ~L 7.,~HOURS:
SAT. 1~ A.M. TIL 4:38 P.ll. .

.

'

KRAn

VALLEY BELL

HE(NZ

... • Limit ' - .
-ufllit 1
eOnt Special P• F111llr

'

GEORGIA PEACHES ••••• ~ ••••••••••••• .:. ......~~~.39~
.PARKAY MARGARINE •••••••••••••••••••• t8~ •• 2/'1

·-•Single or Group taken

JAMES L SCHMOLL, O.D.
Doctor of ·optometry

·'100·'10·

~~

GRADE AWHOLE

r-r==========~

Middleport 1wnped to a 4-1 lead in
the first inning and was never
· challen'ged all Julie Roush picked up
the win witb a great pitching performance. Roush fanned eight and
walked eight.
Julie Roush had a home run for the
~nners, Julie Hysell and Margie
Smith doubled and singled, Cindy
Holley doubled, while Kristi Richmond, Ruth Porter, Leanne Plants,

· Declines offer

'

--

.519

and the greens ar.e fast. Tile). coold .
Ford, Mike Souchak, George
,
get
taster It we don't have rain. A :
Bayer, An wan. OWl Sikes, Miller
lot
ol
what happens wUl ~on ·
Barber, Gay Brewer and Dow
·
whether
we get some rain."
Flnsterwald.
The
course
may play tqber
The tournament lost one otlts bigthWI
Casper
remembers
lt. The
gest names when 70-year-old Sam
!ahtWays
have
been
II3I'I'OWed
5 to ·
Snead had to withdraw at the last
yards
since
the
old
Portland
.
10
minute because of eye trouble.
Open
days.
The tournament wiD be played on
The 72-hole tolll'lltllllellt runs
the venerable Ponland Gott Club
through
Sunday witb 150 gotten 1n ·
course In the city's West Hllls. The
the
field,
Including !lome amateurs. ,
par-n, 6,43!1-yard layout, designed
Mostofthernhadtosurvlvequallfy,
In 1914, was the site ollhe 11rst malng
rounds.
But
those
wttb
the
most
jor victory lor Ben Hogan, who won
success In their golllng'llal'l!ers are
the PGA championship there In
exempt, Including fonner U.S.
1946.
Open, U.S. Amateur, PGA, Brttlsh
The 1947 Ryder Cup match was
Open and Masters champions.
played at the Portland club.

post ninth victory

The Middleport Panthe1'8 girls'
softball team recently boosted its
record to 9-1 by overwhelming
Harrisonville 11-1.

.

.st

away at this time. AA valid entries received within 1"
Cllys sner game ends will be etigible tor tne second
drawtng. Three more Grand Prizes wlh be awarded
in the MCOnd drawing.

Oddl very ~ on IN n.ombet of Ga!m4l Tic*ela ,au
OOCiin. The mo11 'fCM.I c:ollllcl, tM befttr 'fOol' ctwcM o1
wwnn;. Oddl 10 obiMI GraNt Pm• ~ ""'IIW n ~
lot dr~&amp;l .,. 1 lf'l 52 000. lo"""' GraNt Prill Dr~&amp;l .
will ~ on IN n\111'1~ o1 q~,~...,._,.
Fabuioua f011uoe ol PHl"H Sinn I'WM52 II!Mirog pllytd If!
15t"'"' ~-., Otlo. ~~ ~ - v~ . Wn~
'lirginja wld Ktn(lldcy
Scheduled lttm~nttion dl'- ot thla ~orrobon it J4Ay 11. 1112 .
~. f8bubul Focturtt o! Pnz• oncally lndlllfhln all
9IIM bdtltl art di&amp;tnbuled

Palmer to defend senior title

Carter leads NL all stars

'.

""'

Concepcion; Phlladelpbla' PbDlles Pete Role;
Plalladelpbla Pbi1Ue1 MIDDY Trillo; I'M1adel!*ll
PltliUel Mike Scluqldt and Atlanta Braves Dale Mill'
pby. (APLuerphoto) .
.

NATIONAL LEAGUE AILSTARS - 1be elgbt
pllyen aamed to lbe NaU..I Leape •tartbll team
for the lJ8! AIJ.Siar game ID Meatreal are: M.treal
Expos Tim Ra!Del; Molltreal ~Andre DaWIOD;

'3,000

HAWAII . CASH
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Get a tree game
tiektllnd eolledOf card at any participtting store.
You may aleo receive a tree 9ame ticket andtor
colklc1or card (please specify) by malting a seJIaddressed, stamped erwek)pe to FabulOus Fortune
ol Prizes. P.O. Bo• 26272. Birm1ngham. "L 35216
Umit one tk:ke.t per request, one request per per10n
per day. Each. reauest must be mailed separatety
Simply punch out the per1orated sections on the
game ticket to reveal four game marXera to play on
"//OX collectbr card. SOme game hcketl contain a
marker which states ':YOU QUALIFY FOR GRAND
PRlZE DRAWING.• If you obtain one oltheae
markers yOlJ are eligil:!te to enfer·lhe Grand Prize
DnrMn;s and tne chanCe IO·win oc-re· ol si11 trip!~ tor
two to flawali or $3 ,000 cash. Two Grsnct Prize
Drawings will be held. All valid entries recei~ed by
May 21, 1982 will be eligible IOf" the lirtt drawing on
May 28, 1982. Three Grand Pnzes will be gNen

Mootreal ~ Gary Carter; CIDcm.tl Redl DIIYe

LYNN

YOUNT

FOR TWO TO oil

MtiRPIIY

SCHMIDT

ROSE

WIN A TRIP

· Transactions
••rp1JL '
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Limit One Per Customer
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'

150Z.

4·/$1

·TUNA
6.50Z.

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79¢

LIMIT 3 PLEASE
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July
1982

SUGAR
SLB. BAG

'$}39

Li.m it One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer EKplres July 12, 1912

�Page-6-~

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
,.

Meigs County
meetings
held-..
·
.
.-------......----.;....
.
..,ft...,
faml'··
1\111-

:Who's Who accepts
Southern High grad

Healt h clUb

Robin Burnem, a 1812 graduate ot
Southern High School, for a second
year has been selected for "Who's
)Vho Among American High School
. Students."
Recommended tiy the · Southem
High School teaching staff, Burnem
was recognized for her academic
achievement. Only five percent of those nominated from 10,000 high
schools in the United States are
selected for the honor.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
R. Burnem of Route 2, Racine,
Robin's picture and autobiography
'WiU be Included In the 1981-&amp; edition.
of "Who's Who Among American
High School Students."

Burnem

1HURSDAY

Middleport Masonic Temple.
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
and Installation will. be at 7:30
p.m. All masons and Order of.the
Eastern Star members are invited to attend. Scheduled to be
installed are Jeff Elliott, master
councilor; Bret Howard, senior
councilor; and Adam Martin,
junior councilor.

ROCK SPRINGS - Inspection
will be held at the 8 p.m. meeting
Thursday of Rock Springs
Grange to be held at the grange
hall on the fairgrounds. Members
are to take smaU antiques for the
program.

FRIDAY

'

:HARRISONVILLE Chapter
· 25;i, ·Order of the Eastern Star,

will have a hake sale at Kroger's
on Friday lieglnnlng at 9 a.m.

SATIJRDAY
NEW OFFICERS will be installed for Melgs Chapter, Order
, 'd DeMolay, Ssturd&amp;y night at
•
•

lidertd later.
It waa allo auggeated that the

several donaUona were made at
the July 1 meeting of Rock Sprlnp
church select I reporter to help with
Better Health Club held at the home
the pubUclty, and alliO discussed was
of Mrs. Wllllam Grueser.
the need for playpens baby beds and
Receiving donations from the
toysforthenursery. '
club were the cancer societY, the
LarryPickenshadtheprayer'With
heart fund, the Salvation Army,
Drama Pickens giving the
and emergency and fire
treasurer's report. At the next
departments.
meeting new _._.
officers will bedin
elected.
Mrs. Lewis Grueser gave devoNancy Mou.., gave rea gs on
· rnade
Uons. Mrs. Geroge Skinner, pres!·
the Fourth of JulY. PIana were
dent, appclnted Mrs. William
for the next meeting to be held at
Gruf!S!!r chaplain for the coming
Pickens pool on Aug. 9 at 8 p.m. A
year.
---'-out -'U
~"'""
,., be held. Mark Seevers
The program prepared by Mrs. win · have devotions. Attending
Fred GoegJein Included "Shock·
besides those named are Jim and
....... ste
lng' ' by Mrs. Wllllam Grueser;
Carol
Anderson, Fem MOn "'• ve
,
·
Pick
"How to Prevent NlihtlY Leg
andstefam
ens.
Cramps" by Mrs. Hugll Bearhs;
"Stick on Patches Replaces Pills"
.J l
by Mrs. Roger Leifheit: "Avoiding .. _
MpUonSickness" byMrs. ArleeAb&gt;:~,· A~ show by Bonnie Christ·
bott; "~Purge Syndrome":
man of Glouster. Church was teaby Mrs. Lewis Grueaer; and
tured at the recent meetl,ni of the
"Laughing Matter" by Mrs. Walter Women's Fellowship · of the
MorriB.
..Churches of Christ held at Bradford
The contest was prepared by Church:
Mrs. Jim Conkle and won by Mrs.
Christman In her presentaUon
Arlie Abbott and Mrs. Lewis IISI!d a puppet. MOlly, with skits and
Grueser.TheJulymeetlngwWbea !IDngl. AnnLarnbertpresldedatthe
picnic at the home of Mrs. Fred business ' meeting dllrinl which
_Goegleln. The meetlngcloeedwlth Unie a report was g!Vl!ll on mat·
the benediction. Refreahments tress coven for Ohio Valley Chriswere served to thoSe named and t1an camp. A letter was reed from ·
Mrs. Clifford Leifheit, DorothY and the Grundy Mountain M1SSION
Michael Leifheit.
School thanking the Meigs women
for contrtbullons. It was deCided to
donate money from the fellOwship
fund to a member for hospital

BrawQrd·:
_
women.. ..

Calendar

RUTLAND - A dance wll be
held Friday from 8 io 11:30 p.m.
' at Rutland Civic Center. Cost
will be $2 for singles and $3 for
, couples. Music Unllmlted will be
entertaining.

_,, lo a n__...
In
..the~-,area.bt Both
-·•
_,
"~
mattera will be eon-

LONG BOTI'OM - An Ice
cream social will be held Saturday at 4 p.m. at Red Crlsplns
Comer In Long Bottom, at tWe
corner of State Route 124 and 248
across from the Methodist
Church by Long Bottom Com·
muntty Association. Besides five
flavors of homemade Ice cream,
there wW be hot dogs with sauce,
. pie and cake. The p~am will
Include square dancing, and entertainment by several vocalists
and local bands. Prizes wW be
given.

Astrograph

Young Adult Oass

expenses.
A county-wide revival was announced for August at the camp
site. Alao announced was the dally
vacation Bible school currently underway at the Pomeroy church.
' Next meetlnc wW be hosted by
Dexter Church with Marge Purtell
to have 'the program.
Ruth Underwood led the ~nlng
song service prayer by Frances
Hysell followed the prayer song, "I
Know Who Holds Tomorrow." De-

A dinner to honor Mm Stevens,
pastor, Immediately foUowlng the
Sunday morning worship eervlces on
July 18 at the church was planned
.during a meeting of the Young Adult
Clsas of the Bradford Ch!lfCh of
Christ Monday evening.
Vicki Smith presided at the
meeting during which time it was
suggested that an open house for the
church · be planned. and alao that

sonnel.
Both classroom work and field
demonstrations, including a demonstration on machinery extrication
with air bags, will be included In the
9:30a.m. to 4 p.m: session conducted
by AI · Pugh, safety leader,
cooperative extension service, Ohio
State University.
Judy McCombs, emergency
medical technician coordinator, said
20 participants are needed to conduct the workshop and preregistration is necessary prior to
July 12. The registration fee Is SlO
and checks should be msde ·payable
to CHEAO and mailed to Hocking
Technical CoUege, Nelsonville, Ohio
45764, Attn: Judy McComba, EMT
Coordinator.

Jack L

.

Dexter, Cynthta Pitzer: Long

·scout named . _
Amy Luct.eydoo has been selected
as the outatandl(lg junior of Middleport Junior Scout Troop I03t.
Daughter of Roger and Sandra
Luckeydoo, Middleport, Amy lias
been active In scouUng since the
second grade.
The scout is an active member of
Heath United Methodist Church, l!Ji.
joys piano ll1d dance, besides camping snd fishlrig. She 'Will be a sixth
grade student at the BradbUry
Elementary School thiS fall. In 19111
she was selected outataDding

Lyons Jr.

Watson card shower

Van Meter reunion

Wildwood Garden

NOW

"f2

,_,w

PRICE

CHAPMAN
SHOES
.
.

08/GYN ..
··WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF ·
·
HER PRACTICE OF

OBSTETRICS and GYNECOLOGY
PINNaL SIMI, RIUY, W.

VA:

. ELL.CIIVI J\I,Y 12; 1912
ly Appointment

-.!PHON-E (304) 37i-1544
·-·

I.

.•

.'

Mr. and Mrs. WUllam Bailey. Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Ba!·

ley, Hysell Run; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Ball, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. ·

James Emmit, Jimmy and Julle, ·
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bal·
ley, Pomeroy; Miss Christine Bal· · ·
ley, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baney,
J,r.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Russell. Ml· .
nersville, and Robert Venoy were
Sunday visitors of Bertha Russell
and Earl Russell.

~

...

~

romaro

KeTCHUP

J

Plans for creating spoon favors for
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs' annual convention to be held
in Columbus, Aug. :W, 'were inade
when Wildwood Garden Club members met recently at the hol!le of
Mrs. Hilda Yeauger with Mrs. Grace
Fisher as co-hostess.
Mrs. Marcia Amol&lt;!, president,
read a commllilications from Region
11, OAqc, regarding the convention.

ICroger 1
Welco1111

Your
FWefal
,, .fOod

wh·~r;·

Smoked Picnics .. lb.
.,

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I

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HAM SALAD .

Ill

•

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. . $2.09
I

CABBAGE , • • • . • ,L~. 25'
6 oz. Cello Pa~k Red

MARGARINE • , • . • . 79'

Cantaloupe.&amp; .... ,,,.

'

113 Ct. California

CHEESE •'. • ••• L.b~ '1.97 ' ORANGES ••• .••• '6/59'

~~~~less

Grapes

\

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200 Cou11t KJeen.ex White
~ox

JACIAL TISSUES

I

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.CHICKEN GUMBO·SOUP • can 2/.79~
46oz. Dole
I

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SL19

17 Oz. Stokely

SUCCOTASH

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cans

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lb.

99

U.S. GOV'T INSPI!CTED .

Serve
'N' Save 1-lb. $J89 Any Size Pkg.
•
1 Sliced Bacon.. ..Pkg.
Ground Beef..... tb .
FRESH GROUND

HOlt Y FARMS.
U.S.D.A. GRADE A

KROGER -

l"!GE HEADS

BuHermilk
·.Bread

.fresh .
· · Cauliflower

Club
·Ice Cream

gc3• $f2i Sj2i

Pick of
the Chix

79e

Fresh
SJ29:
Blueberries ..... Pint
· . .. ·

~::~~···· ......,2-,hL

~JS1.09

5

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SJ49

U.S. GOV'T GRADED
CHOICE BEEF

Boneless Rib
Eye Steak

.!4

lb.

89~

10Jf4 Oz. Campbells

·PI~EA~PLE · JUICE

·l· Chclck i i

USDA
-CHOICE

,,

FIRST Of THE SEASON
WHITE '

12 oz. OLD ORCHARD APPLE JUICE • ~a.n .98'
llb. BOOTH PERCH FIUETS .• ·. . s1.99

c

.. -

RADISHES • • • • • • 21 49'

Ohio Colby Longhorn

Center Blade Cut

'
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New

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BEEF CHUCK

IN THE PIECE

Pkg.\

F;;~hE
lib. Kraft Parkay .
Quarters

·

SLICED INTO

• 'li.'

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Boston Butt
$ J49
'
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Steaks ..... tb.
'

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I WHOLE FRESH

...... ''
:-~·

Eckridge1

SPINACH
.ALL SALE SHOE$ fOR
MEN, WOMEN .AND
CHILDREN . '

Mr. and 'Mrs. Robert :Russell;
WoUe Pen, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom

WI RISIIIVI THI RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANfiTIU. NONI
SOLD TO DIA\US.

KROGER WIENER

~~:~~~~~.... ~!";::

~~1 09 r.r:w:: /ggs .......
SJ99 CKroger
3
H

SJ49

KROGER

0

15 oz. Armour

LYDIA S. ZAPANTA, M.D.

Mrs. Gamet Ervine . visited Mrs.
Miriam Walters at Belpre.

CO,.RIGHT IHI • THI KROGU CO. ITIMI AND PRICII
GOOD SUNDAY, JULY' · THROUGH SATURDAY 'JULY 10
IHI. IN GALLIPOLISandPOMEROY:
'

'

Outst~mding junior

.

.

.

Schroeder of Columbus .

s
, e

Homemade

Bottom, Sheila Horky, Middleport,
Linda Eli.o;on, Jane Lee Hoeftlch,
Clifford Kennedy, KeUJe &amp;nlddle,
aU of Pomeroy, David ones, Mary
Obltz, both of Racine, ,J&lt;aien fro.
, bert, ReedsVille, Jana Burson, Ss·
muel Kern, Camille SwlndeU. aU of ·
Shade and Margaret ~berger,
Syracuse.

Neville reunion

Booster Class

SLICED BACO.N

On thedean'sli~tforOhloUniver­
slty' s spring quarter locaUy are
Robin BArton, Coolville, Katrena

'Area announcements

grandson,

A fainoy reunion was held re- Summerfield, Candi, Wendy and
cently
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Crystal of Medina have returned af·
visited Ills eriftCimolher, Mrs. FranRDbert
Bailey, Wolfe Pen. Atteitd- ter vlsitlng Mr. and Mrs. Jed RusclaM~onMondaylfte~ . . ,
lng
were
Mr. and Mrs. · Wayne sell of Powers, Oregon. They
Mrs. Sylvll Wolfe, Mr. ll1d Mrs.
Zurcher,
Tammy
and Mollica, Mr.
stopped at Yellowstone National
Monty Ray Wolfe and Mrs. Unnie
and
Mrs.
Clarence
Mattox,
Jr.,
Park and other points of Interest.
BeUe Alshire went to Camp
Mark,
Sandy
and
Keith,
Pomeroy,
·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Balley,
LeJeune, N.C. to visit Mr. and Mrs.
and
Jobn
Zurcher
and
Miss
Arlene
Sr.
of Wolfe Pen recently hosted a
Wilsall Wolfe.
.
famtly gathering. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Shain and Hali.·Pomeroy.
Ron

l~~~-~Ph~.9~92~·6;34~2~~~~~~~~~~~~

OU's dean's list
Hale,

scripture frcm I John foUowed by
time and money. In Spanish she . the Lord's Prayer. Members gave
sang "How.Great Thou Art."
favorite readings With these IIiEleanor Hoover had the prayer eluding patriotic ~.
and the hy~ "Softly and TencJ.
Arrangements Included "School's
erly'' concluded the meeting.
Out" by Hilda Yeauger, an
arrangement of flowers and foliage
flostlng ln. a glass bowl. Evelyn
Mrs. Emma Adams host ed the Hollon's arrangemenl was of pink
Ch
queen Elizabeth roses, d.usty miller
Booster Class of First Baptist ur·
a"d
~o~
chatherhomefortheJunemeetil)g.
" honeysuckle In a ~ar
~"'"~ ~ ·~
ed
talner,
wh1
'le
Dorothy
Smith
.
had
a
Vice President Mildred Hart open
f 11 ed patn'otic · arrangement us!ng, red
the meeting with devotio!IS' o ow
roses, blue and white hvdrangeas,
by a business session.
and iris leaves around a ~white canMrs. Marjorie Grimm presented a
program out of the book "All the dle.
Refreslunenlll were ,rved by the :.
Master's Men" (disciples). Scriphostess
to 14 .members. Do
. rls
lure reading was from James 4:1-10.
She read · a prayer by. Katherine Grueser won tile hostess gift. !\fter
M"KrSI®l. - . ;~· ·'
- -- . the meeting a coOIUe sate Wflll held.
"' 'Reamngs by members were ''How Each member brought \WQ dozen
Jesus Sought to Charige 'fhem" ; r-c-ooki_··_es_f_or_the_sa_l_e_
. ..,...--+~
"The SslnUiness of Servanthood";
"Request for Special Privilege,
James ·and John"; "Stories of
Disciples"; "Jesus Washes Their
Feet." The closing prayer was by
Dorothy Badgley. During a
fellowship hour, Mrs. Adams,
hostess, served delicious refreshments to 14 members.

Harold Hsymsn In \YesterYille.
Mrs. Garnet Ervine and 'Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Shain spent a day at
Burr.Oak camp With Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Reed.
Mlils Wibna Rose of Columbus
spent two weeks recently with Mr.
and Mts. Ward Ssyre and alao
vjslted her a1111t, Mrs. Mildred WoUe
at Pomeroy Health Center. ·
-

Wolf~en News Notes--------··'

FOR AU OCCASIONS

He is a member of the Racine Fire
Department and resides in Racine.
...

By Mrs. Franc:il Morrl8
Mrs. A. C:·Bradford received the
sad news of the death tf a great·
nephew at Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Solon Butcher of
Spencer, W. Va. and their
stewart Butcher of Cleveland, spent
Monday with Mrs.'Gretta Slmpeon.
Mr. and Mrs. BUllfll)'lJUU1 spent a
recent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.

'

CAKES

Area graduation notes

Paul D. Matson

Racme Social E~ents.. __. _ ___;·- -..,..,.-

It ·waa )IOtld that 1 Cllrd had bien '
IIRIIoBobHotlllch. .
Devotlona b)' Mra. Y•l!lll' ~
eluded "God II Everywhere~' with

voiiOnl were liven by PlaY
H
MlloftbeMolcoChlldrell'a ome.
She uiiCIICI'Ipture trom Jobll e: 12
and the topic was 011 waste of food,

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

Tech school has seminar

NE~NVILLE - A workshop to
enable those first arriving on the
.:
July 8, 1982
scene of a farm accident to respcnd
'- You will be fortunate this coming year through participation in
i,;,rojects which others began. The contribuUon you will make will be both
to the needs of a victim Ia the purpose of a seminar scheduled at
unique and necessary.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don't be dismayed by early signals today.
HocldQg Technical College Saturday,Julyl7.
• Your luck improves as time ticks un. Give it an assist when you catch
Each year, farmers are severely
your second wind.
LEO (July 23-Aug. ZZ) Ventures or arrangements that you hsve
injured or kiUed In accidents 'With
which require a partner should work out rather weU for you today. Solo
fann equipment or from contact
with dangerous chemicals, fwnes or
effo~ may not.
VIRGO (Aug. %3-Sept.. ZZ) Your financial prospects look 'brighwr
gases. Those first arriving on the
today, although you may not get an !mmediate yield from your efforts.
scene need training to enable to ·
prepare for and to safely usess the
HQwever, they will trickle in soon.
, ; LIBRA (Sept. ZS.OCL 23) You need stimulating activities today in or·
rescue needs of a farm related ac- ·
¥~er to function at your best, so don't back away from challenge or comcident.
: petition. Think "win" and you will.
The Information would be useful to
SCORPIO (Oct. :U.Nov. 22) You are capable of substantial acemergency medical service percomplishments today, so if there is something important you wish to consonnel, fire departments,
clude, bring aU your forces to bear.
cooperative extension agents and
SAG!TrARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Try to keep your schedule as
health and law enforcement perflexible as possible today. If something better comes up than that which
you've planned, you'll be able to take advantage of it.
·
CAPRICORN (Dee. %2-.Jan. 19) Your possibilities for profit look good
·
today, but not necessarily from new ventures. Try to make the cash
register ring from a proven source.
AQU,lRIUS (Jan. f8.Feb. lt) Success is likely today because you'll
know how to reduce mountains to molehills and deal with them satisfacAlnnan First Class paul D. Mat·
torily.
PISCES (Feb. 5-Mareb ZO) Although a situation appears to be a · son, son of Kenneth E. and Eloise H.
negative one, your concerns should prove groundless today when you
Matson of 34109 Pine Grove Road,
probe the matter more deeply.
.
Minersville, has graduated from the
ARIES (Mareb Zl·Aprll19) Your becoming manner in dealing,with· U.S. Air Force avionic inertial and
others today wiD win you admiration and respect. You might even turn an
radar navigation systems apeclallst
co11l'SI at Keesler ·Air Force Base,
adversarylntoanaUy!
• TAURUS (Aprllf».May ZO) Conditions should be right today to afford
Miss.
you opportunities to achieve two important· goals. One pertains to y_our
Graduates of the coune were
taught basic electronics ll1d the use
)latus, the other to your income.
GEMINI (May 21-Jane ZO) It's not that you'll be out to use people
of computer systems dealing with
today, but good things could develop for you from your social co~tacts.
navigation and weapons, and eamed
Let those who like you help.
credits toward an associate degree
in applied seience throogh the Community College of the .Air Force.
'
Matson will nbw serve at
Homestead Air Force Base, Fla.,
with the 31st Aircraft Generatlon
_.--.
Squadron. He is a 19111 graduate of
· Dinner will be served at noon. Frien- Meigs High School, Pomeroy.
ds and relatives of the family are
A Neville Family reunion will be welcome.
:held at Krodel Park the last Sstur·
:day In July.
Specialist Fourth Class Jack L.
.
Lyoos Jr. of Racine recently atA card shower is being planned by tended the Ohio Military Academy'•
William A. Watson. His birthday Ia r&gt;rimary non-commialloned .officer ·
July 12. His addriss Is William A. course at camp Atterbur7,Ind.
Watson; 167·704-4E 134, P.O. Box511,
Lyons, 1 member II the Ohio
: A VanMeter reunion will be held 254 West Spring Street, Colwnbus, National Guard's Batte17 D 11174th
' :Sunday, July 11, at Portland Park. Ohio43216.
ADA Battalion, Marietta, graduated
on June 19.

The Dally Sentinel-Page-,

ee •.. •...

Doz.

79

·lb.

.

Can

AVAILAILI ONlY IN SfOiil
WITH OUI OE,AitTMENTI
HOT FOODS AVAILAIU
1 Iom Til 7pm

c

s.

Fresh Made
Cheese
Pizzas .. Plua•
DELUXE. PEPPERONI, MUSHROOM OR SAUSAGE
PIZZAS ... 2.. 12-INCH PIZZAS $6.50

_"h IIEADY

Cans
1

1

I,

I

I

I

I

I

'&gt;•' " '"I

I

'

'

' ··· ·~- ~---·~ -·-·• '~'

· 15oz. Armour

'.
~

I

I

I

"I

I

I

I

10 oz. Troplcana

FRUIT ~RINKS
20 Oz. Del Manta

'CRUSHEDP

I

·' •

I

I.

Milk

· GAL. CTN.

· · tan

cans
• • •

Chicken Bucket

RETURNABLE .,..fTII'c
MOUNtAIN DEW.

' o

"·"
2~

6 oz. Star Kist
I

'.' ~•

~Springdale

CORNED BEEF HASH

LIGHT TUNA

It··· •• •" ' ' " · ,
.t •• ' ·•· '•I

$ .• •

1 1,'

Diet Pepsi.or Pepsi Cola

28 .

$4g~

Fresh Baked
$J69
•
24-az •
.Apple P1e.. .. .. .. Pte
'
.

�Eight-year-old feted
CLEVELAND -

Dtlorw · R.
FraN!:, ~ng Bottom, was a

lirvlee Qrpnlsatloo.
.
F.or erample, the cruude or fund-

Ana•l Awlll'd, Frank wu one of al

1 1 110

honleutorl.'! ~m~9_!1 candlthrilldledtatoforhlthev
.e
raiilng totals for the coimty has
...,
more than tripled In the past tllree received it. It means a lot to me and
yean. Therefore, the unit. is now · it'a II(IIJJetbing I'll.always·tre.uui'l!,"
able to conduct an lncreaalng IIIIJno she said.
Ohio Di on; ACI who hive demiJIIoo ber of cancer educational programs,
Working with a staff of 111)1!, Mn.
strllled
leadenlllp and · she uys, sOme of these Include stop. Frank attributel much ol the
ac~
th the liOCiety. As , ' smotlng.prQifll'llS; supporting can- American.Cancer Society's llla!elll
executive ell
of the Meigs cer screenJng for women; ~ursing In MeigS Cowity to the work ol her
County Unit, Mrs. 'Frank has done conferences; and educational volunteen.
.
J)lllllhat.
·
programs for studellts:
· Her daughter, Cathy Dee, has suf•
For the put tllree yean she has
fered from kidney failure for many
held thlt pO.titioo, and for the
Frank works closely Witll other years. On April 16 Mrs. Frank
preceding18 yeara, llhe worked for community organizations. Her donated one of her kldneyli•to Clithy
·the ACI on a volunteer bula. During cooperative attitude stems from the Dee. So far, the cperatlon pelfonned
her \IJne in otfice, Mf!i. Frant ..ys phiiOIOflhy, "You do your best at University Hospitslln ColumbUs,
the Meigs ~ Cowity t Unit of , the becaUie you care - not because you has been a success. Therefore, in adAmerican Cance~ r Society has wantt.ooutdosomeoneelse."
dillon IC) her work for ACS, She his
become recog~ized ,as an lmJIOiiant
Sel~ by her ACS peers for the taken over the care of her daughter
rectpl~ of the American' Cm:er
Socl~etyel Award" at a recent
staJ
ranee in Mt.&amp;erling, Oh.
The a
Ia given to Btaff o1 the

dJnr£

•IPLETE STICI ·:' :·.~-,

SALE IROUP·
'cLEARAICE &amp;ROUP

LADIES'
SPRIIG AID SUIIER

SANDALS I FASHIOI

FOOTWEAR/

1

GITIII 40 QU.• RT

CHILDREI'S
SPRIIG I SUMlER

HillSIDE
,
.
ICE

~· OFF

t

·; ,· REI PRICE

~REI PRICE

LADIES
SPRIII&amp; AID SUMlER

SPORTSWEAR
.

~OFF
;I REI PRICE

SPECIAL JULY
CLEIIRAICE GROUP
OUT THEY GO! .

lfiG All SUMlER

.S·WEAR
3!~F

E!
BUDDY·L
a~E. I~IYI DUTY
FAIOUS IURRAY
24" HEAVY. IUTY 3··WIRE 1QO FO~T
'22"·3Y2 H.P.
EITE.SIOI CORDS
POWER. iOWER CHARCOAL
&amp;RILLS
'
.
I

IEUUR $111••

$

... R'IUUI·DRIP
ELECTIIC PERl

* aa·

IEI'S.WIIEI'S.CIILIIEI'S

V·STRIP
ZORRIE THOIGS
'

66! IIRDEIHOSE

CIRD REIIFIRCED

SPECIAL •ouP
•mt
I WESTEII I POP

LP REC'DRD ILBUIS

workshop

Mlensvllle, Rick Pierce and Bar·
bara Lambert, WllkesvDie, Mr.
8)1d Mrs. Rusty Pierce and son, Ja.

lll"dd'
~149
. ..
RUIIER I YIIYL

·

GIRDER· TOOLS

$'4'' 88
.

.

UOI

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

~ Uilited Pteabyterlan_ Ministry
in Meigs County is sponsoring .two ~ Salem Center, Mrs. FLoyd
craft worbhope &lt;and two Vacation Gentner, Mra. Marie Abdon and
Bible-Scllooia' during July. The craft granddaughter, Laura Abdon,
worlrahope, ~ed . "The . Rainbow ·CIIelsea, MICh., Mr. and Mrs. Cha·
Comection" \1rill be led by junior
Newton alld daughter, Jc4ol
and aenlor high schqol youth.
Waverly, Mr. and Mrs. David
The first workahlip will be in Plel'ce, Mans!leld and Mrs. Carol
Ra\:ine, July 7-9 on, the parking lot Pierce.
next to ~ !)ld bank building. The . Pierce received gifts from
~ will be 'on the lawn in front of
' famll~.
tile Rlllland ~unity building.
Each 1\ainbow Connection will begin
at9:~a~. al\d be cpen untilll a.m.
Big Bend Girl Scout Day Camp, to
Anyone is welcome to join in the
making of crafts with the youth. be held at Camp Kiashuta near
There ~ no charge for the materiala Chester, will be held July 12-16.
8/tllough donations will be accepted. Camp directors are Rhea and
. The Vpcation Billie Schoola will be Harold Norris. Registration will be
held 1at the Han-isonville United accepted through July 8.
Dorothy Barton West of Silver
The final session of training for the
Presbyterian Church, July 11·15
from 7 to 8:30 p.m. and at First day camp program was held recen- Spring, Md. , is the autllor of a book
"Thomas Skinner of
Uniied Presbyterjiln Church of Mid- tly at the camp site. Among the entitled
Malden,
Massachusetts:
Descen·
dleport, July 2JI.3(i from 9 a.m. to 12 skilla practiced were pitching a tent,
dants."
Mrs.
West
is
a
daughter
of
noon'. Both sc~ are for children IIJ!Ilting a fire ring, gathering three
from three yean' to siXth grade. The types of wood for fire building, as the late A. E. (Elza) and Mabel Skinner Barton of Rutland.
school at Hanisonville wU) have a well as cooking skills.
One of her ancestors, Asahei Skin·
After the day's training, the
special Bible study for youtll and
ner,
die41n Rutland in 1851. He had
adults led by Rev. Wanda Johnson, leaders spent time around a camp
been
bQrn in Massachusetts, but the
director-pastor of United fire baking apples on a stick, singing
family
had moved to Maine where
Presbyterian Ministry in Meigs. The songs, and telling of their ex.
youth leading the workshops will periences in girl scouting.
his father, Daniel, was the f1rst ocAttending tile training session cupant of Corinth, Maine.
also be leading craft workshops at
In 1815 one of history's greatest
were Debbie Buck, Lynne Arms,
the two vacatil"' Bible schools.
volcanic
eruptions took . place in
The Rainbow CoMectlon and the Sandy Luckeydoo, Anna G:hapman,
8
children's Sfllool at Harrisonville Annie Chapman, Tammy Capehart, what is now Indonesia. By 181 a
will be led byflarold Johnson, direc- Shari Cogar, Susan Jett, Darla cloud of volcanic dust was suapended over the Northern Hemisphere,
tor of Christian Education. Carroll No~s and the camp directors.
shutting out the sunlight. A blizzard
Ann Harpe.! will direct the Midin June dropped several inches ci
dleport school, assisted by Johnson
snow on parts ol New England. The
and the chul-cli's chri$tian education
A
layette
shower
honoring
Tammy
year was described as "without a
· coliuniitee: ~ · ··•:
Johnson ..as held receptly at the swnmer" and many of the residents
home of Mrs. Freda Henderson.
of Northern New England, faced
Ha~tesses for the shower were
with impossible fanning conditions,
, A combination ~lrthday party· Mrs. Henderson and Barbara were infected with "Ohio Fever."
Asahel left Maine with a yoke ol
famlly !lUnion wa~ held recently at Colmer. Cake, cheese and ham
crackers,
candy,
coffee
and
punch
oxen,
a covered wagon, a cow, 12
the home of Carol R. Pierce, the

Patriotic services

Rutland descendents

....

HOODED

SIDlER BRILL

TIIIEE PIECE

STEEL Hill

UOI

.~

Patriotic services were held dur·
lng the Sunday School hour at
POMEROY United Methodist
Church which was decorated for
the occasion by Mrs. Robert
·M~pe~lntendent Allen Downie

Helping him celebrate and re~g tamlly relation.~ were Mr.
and M,rs. Robert Baker and daugh·
ter, €hrlstLna; -Canal Winchester,
Mr. lmd Mrs: Robert E. Pierce,
Groveport, Oh~. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Pierce, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie ' Danlson and son, Ryan,
Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. wnuam
Johnson and son, PhUUp, Carroll,
Oh., Twtla ~ Johnson, Columbus,
Mrs. Danny Jobnson·and son, Ben·
jarilln, North l,.ewisburg, Oh., Mr.
and Mrs. lfarcy Newton; Omego,,
Oh., Mr. 8Jid Mrs. Stanley Sheline, .

IARDEI 'TOOL SET

'

The tough~t thing
about buying a diamond
engagement ring
is figuring out how much
you should spend.

I

0

• •

..

. "'·

Today you should expect to set aside
at least one to two months' salary ·
for a diamond engagement rin g.
When you're ready to make that
purchase, ask us for assistance.
We will help you select a diamond
within your budget that you will"both
be happy with for years to come .

..

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'

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gave devotions which was followed
by slngingof"Amerlca, theBeautllui" and the reading of "The Social
Obligations of a Christian." The
pledge of allegiance was led by
Mrs. Gerald wn 4ermuth, and
Frank Vaughan gave a brlef talk on
tile Christian attitude toward God

and country.
·
There was a reading "I Am the
Untied States" by Mrs. Robert
Cutler, and the program closed
wltll singing of "My eo.untry 'tis of
Thee" and prayer.
....1._ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ __

..

..-:=-=..::..:._:_____

1:;~82 Bob Evans F"arm s. Inc

No one deserves this
more than you.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

bomree.
1

'•

..

Pierce·1birthclay

UOI

TIIU.TIP

children and a pregnant wile. The
long ·journey was interrupted by a
year in Pennsylvania, but he eventually arrived in Rutland where he
settled on Leading Creek.
AJ)long the nearly· 1,800 descen·
dants mentioned in the book are Otis
Skinner, author and actor; his
equally famollll daughter, Cornelia
Otis Skinner, actress and author;
and Richard Skinner, Governor of .
Vennont, 1~1823.
Asahel was the father ci 22
children. As would be expect~.
many of his d~scendants went west;
but many still live In southern Ohio.
Thomas Skinner, immigrant,
came from Chichester, England,
between 1648 and 1651.

wefe served. Mrs. Henderson haked
the cake inscribed "Baby Johnson"
and also created tile stork, carriage,
baby and bootie replicas In candy.
Games were played with prizes
going to Mamie Stephenson, Mrs.
Dorotlly Bentz, Jill Johnson, Cindy
Rutan, Barbara Eblin, Anna
Bareswilt, who also won the door
prize. Others attending were Mrs.
Shari Blackwell and daughters, Ambel' and Arica, Eunice Eblin, Peggy
Jotmson, Mrs. Paulett&amp; Farley.
Sending gifts were Wandll Eblin,
Roberta Caruthers, Bonnie Conde,
Bernice Jeffers, Virginia Smith,
Mary Colmer, Madalyn McClung,
Hyllia Eblin, Sandy Wright,
Beatrice Rairden and Joann Byers.

John'son shower

$,
. 8~
RIIES.SHOVELS.HOES

FOLGERS
COFFEE

IEUWSta

00

CWUICEIROUP

IOUITIII
IROWI

'

Girl Scouts

SPECIAL
CLEIRIICE &amp;ROUP

1

Cr~

Hysell

"

rles

~OFF

GeollleFranklln. He is a minister at
the Church of Christ, Mowrystown,
Oh.
.

Happenings reported in Meigs County area

'

CLOTH Ill&amp;

1

; \

Ste.ven Wesley Hy1ell, son of Mr.
and ltfn. Nonnan E. Hysell,
Children's Home Road, Pomeroy,
and two grandchildren.
celebrated
his eighth birthday
· An acti\le civic leader,' Mrs. Frank
recently.
Attending
besides his
· hu been a den mother, bro"imie and ·
parents
were
Terry
and
Norma Jean
giriiCOUIIeader, officer of local and
Hysell,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bruce A.
county Pl'A, youth leader at church,
Hysell
and
Samantha,
and
Mr. and
room rnot)ler, FHA chapter mother
Mrs.
Dores
Arnold,
Pomeroy.
and band booster. She also worked
at EaStern High School as study hall
monitor and 1111retacy from 1975-77.
It can be said that l;&gt;ehind every
great woman is a man. In this case,
the msn is Harlis Frank. According
to Mrs. Frank, "My husband is a
retired marine engineer, and is one
of my best (ACS) volunteers - he
does a little of everything."
The Franks also have a son,

$500REWARD
For correct information as to the per"son responsible
tor the theft of a 2 inch water pump and vandalism of
other equipment at the Coal Power, Inc. Mine on
Forest Run Road. Informations name and payment of
reward will be held in the strictest of confidence. Call
·Larr.y Hunt or Stanley Hunt at 992·2280.

NO CONVICTION NECESSARY

..

IIIIT Fill MIWII''

11

210·'£~ftt ·SIDlED

,I

CT ·u~rr

~~The
Fingertip
od'
.

World
of Classifieds"

1 .

'!

J

: 1\c•t•d I'Ofll\'lhinl( fixc•d. addrd or rc•mon·M Ju•t

•, c•h,...k tlttl''firofl'••ional•

3 DIIIDIDS

CHUII(
LIGHT TUIA

69•

~ ..

'IEU..IIEW

111111

PE~ERS

:tttt

.

•'

.· ,~~HONE 992-215.6
IJ

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.. I

l' '

After a long, hard day, there\; noth·
things the simple way. The old fashing better thafl a big, thick, juicy steak.
ioned way.
A Bob Evan's Steak. Cut from choice
So come on down to Bob Evans
cuts of beef. Served with farm
Steakhouse for the biggest,
fresh baked potatoes, real
thickest, juiciest steak
sour .cream and dinner
around. Because after
rolls made from scratch
all, who deserves it
and served piping hot
more than you. Bob
right from the oven.
Evans Steakhouse is
You see at Bob Evans"
located at 1530 Eastern
STEAKHOUSE
Steitkhouse we still do
Avenue in Gallipolis.

,,

'· i!' or·. 111WriteCourt
Dally Sentinel ctasstflecl Dfpt.
St.1 .-omeory, O!lio 45769 .
p '
~

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Bob&amp;va4W

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.. ~ t

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The . Daily Sentinel .
~

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.. ..••
•

Bob.Evans brings you back:M

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Pomeroy-Middleport,_Ohio

• W~es.day, JulY 7, lJIIIl
--~--~----~--~~----------------------------------~--------------------------------~--~~~.,~~mw
'.
Page-1()-The Dally ~tlnel

., '

:Scenes from. July 4th
•
.Parade at Racine

p

-

.

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...

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·•

.

M.UII£~~'Q
I

Card of Thanks

•ln~u••
.
•Storm
•Storm Windows ·
•Replacement [
Wlndtws
•New IJOfinl • ;
Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

C&amp;M

•SEAT COVERS
•VINYl. TOPS
•CONVERTIBLE TOPS
•CARPETS '
•A Complete Line of
Automobile Upholstery
7·1-1 mo. pd .

-::--:-::--------1

BOGGS

EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

302 Mecllani&lt; 51.
Pomeroy. OH .
PH. 992-6506

RMI Ellllte - Go-.1

SALES ~ SERVICE
U.S. Rt. SO east
Guysvillt, Ohio
Aulhorlred John bHre,
New Hollond, Bush Hot
Farm Equipmenl
Dtalor·
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·tfc

D.O ltr &amp; lllekllot str·
vice, water, s.wer, pon-ds,
foundatlon·s,
reclamation.

Licensed a Bonded
Phon• 949·229~
or 949·2417
3·3-lfn

Tbe
Southern High School cheerleaders' float, "Cheer for
Freedom," woD the $100 savings bond a~rded by

Racine Home Nalio1181 Bank for helDg flrslln the DODtheme dlvloloo of the anuual Racine July 4th parade.

Radiator Speciall.s t
NATHAN BIG«;S

st41iHENel~p;
MOTORS, I C.
Pomeroy, &lt;i~.
Ph. 992-2174

YOUNG'S

FOR F

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

~--·
==~-

•

e WUhtrs
e Dish·
wuhers
eRan1e1 • Retriltrll·
on

• Dryers -• Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

-==

,,. Estillllool

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215 or "2-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-lfc

l -c.J4) ·992-3325
NEW LISTING · -

I. EGA I. NOTICE
82·815· TP·COI
No1ice is herebv given
that lhe Public Ulilit ies

Kirk wood mobile home
and 2 lots. Central ·air·

heal, nice equipped kll·
chen, chain·link fenced
yard , 2 car garage·

· Commissior) of Ohio has
initiated ar\ investigation
Into the reasonableness of
the intra-office private
l ines of voice grade
chargers (formerl y known
as intra -exchange elC ·
tensi on line charges or off·
premise
extension
chl!lrges)
of
Genera

shop. Nice for only
$32,500.
CHEAPIE - 6 room
frame, bath , gas heat,
stove,
refrigerator.
carpeting and view of
river . Ask ing $16,000.

CHEAPIE

Company

Ohio as containe in i
Genera l ExchcSi'lge Tari

CONSTRUCTi
.
vn
_ eK-

51 ·

~:,..ity
. '~·-~.ijidlinp

UU

Ill

S·laes from ·4 to 6 and all
wOOd buildiRIS14K36.
Insulated Dot Hdusts

. INGS
P&amp;s BUILD

.

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(
15TH PARADE- "Re:l," a pony owned by Beverly Cnnnlagba"' of
Cottageville, W. Va., baa parUclpaled In eacb and every Racine Jllly 4th
·...-..!
Pa1111de. Shown on "Res" al this year'o pan1de are Beverly's cblldrellt
Ollvill and zachary Cuanlngb•m. "Re:l" waa orlglaally bought by Bob .

SECOND PLACE The
Racine First Baplllll Cburcb had
the float judged second heslln the
Don-theme category of the Ra~lne
July 4th celebration. Rldlog on
the float, UUed "Tbe Whole World
In HlJ Haods," were Aagel
Silkier, Ray Proffitt, Heidi Solder
aad Jeff Buebel.

,'

Hart for bls daughter, Beverly, whea she was a youapter. ·

you want it ...

you·ve gotit.. .

I

N

16 YEARS

•

E~P.

• Residential
•Commersial
•I ndustria I
Racine, Ohio

247-3534

PHONt

o t , I

•Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing Work ·
14 Years !;xperien&lt;e
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992·2?82

"Beautiful, Cuslom ·
Built Garages"
Call lor I reo siding
estimates, 949·2101 01' '
949·:11160.
No Sunday Calls
3 11 If

~-~c~
:==~=~===~f======:':":':~:'~Fr~~~~~~~·
DABBLE
:U

The Daily Sentinel

•Eiectricwork

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

O'Brien Electric! OHIOVAUEY
~rvice
ROOFING
1

!(

.I,

Rl. 3, Bo• 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·1163-2591

New Homes
tensive remodeling

I NG

Free Estimates
OO·Itc

992~2156

SHOP

And Home Maintenance
• Roolinl of all typos
estding
• Remodeling
• Freo eslimates
e20 Yrs. 01perience

TOM HOSKINS

Ph. 949-2160 or 949· 2322
4·20·1fc

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

parlies will be g!ven an op ·
portunlly
lo
presenl
e vidence malerial lo lhe
issue in lhis case . Further
information may be ob ·
tained from lhe Secrelary
of I he Commission, 375
Soulh High Street. Colum ·
bus, Ohio 43215.

······
.............. .. .
_,
... ,.................

1 1· Business Opportunity

12 -Money to Loan
23 -Profess ional Services

5·Happy Ads
6·Lost a nd Found
7-Yard Sale (paid'" rtdvanr• ·i
a-Publ ic Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wanted to Buy

Classified pages cover the

Sl· Household Goods
52·CB. TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53·Antiques -

nAulos tor Sa le
72 Trucks lor Sale
73·Vaos&amp;; WD

54·Misc. M er chandi se

74·Motorcycles

55· Build ing Supplies

75· Boats &amp; Motors

56 · Pets for Sa le

76 -Auto Parts&amp; Accessories
77 ·Auto Repair
78 -Gamping Equipment

57 -Musci al I n~truments
58 -Fruits &amp; vegetables
59· For Sale or Trade

31 ·Homes tor Sa"le
Jf""Mobile Homes for Sa le
33 ·Farms for Sa le
J..j·Bu si ness Buildings
35 Lots &amp; Acreag e
36 -Real Estate wnnt en

EmpiD"/MBRI

.

11 Help Wanted
11 Si tu ation Wan ted

Galtia County
Arei1 Code 614

388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Oisl.
643-Arabia Disl.
3/9- Walnut

Public Notic;e

Public Notice

ORDINANCE NO . 119·82
AN ORDINANCE TO
APP.ROVE . ADOPT ANO
ENACT
THE
19 82
REPLACEMENT PAGE S
TO THE COD I F l E D OR ·
OINAN CES: TO REPEAL
ORO I NANCE S IN CON ·
FLI CT THEREWITH ; TO
PUBL IS H THE E NA CT·
MENT OF NEW MAT ·
TER ; AND DECLARIN G
AN EMERGENCY .
WHER EAS, ce rtain

chapters are hereb y added .
amended or r epea led as
respective ly indicated in
order to co mply with
cur r ent State law :
Sect ion 335. 11 (Amen ·

ded)

Ch apter 517 . Gambling

!Amended)
537 . 10

T elep h o n e

Harass ment (Amended)

SECTION Ill. This Or ·

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC ~ ALE

In
addifion .
ap ·
proximately $11,000.00 to

The following described
item will be offered for
public sale to the highest

bidder on the 19th day of
Ju ly, 1982. al 10 o'clock

a.m .

1979 Oldsmobile 2 dr .

JT07G7316004

' July 7, 14

now, therefore :

·•

Be ''H ordained by the
council of. the Vi II age of
Middleport as follows :
SECTION I. The or·
dinances- of the Village of
Middleport. Ohio, ot a
gentrel ' and perm~nent.
na1jure,
aS
reVISed,
recodified, rearranged and
con-tolldated into com.ponent codes. tille5. chap·
ters and sections wi t_hin the
1982 Replacement pages lo
t~&gt;e&gt;G.oc;lified ordinances are
he~-~y, •pprove&lt;f and adop·
te · ·
~·CTION
II.
The
fo11cW.&gt;Ing sections and

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY'
on June 25, 19~, In the
Meigs county Probate
Covrt, Case No. 23681, John
E . Werry, 43080 Cook Road.
Hemlock G,rove. Ohio was
appoined E•ecutor of the
estate of Lucr~lia Werry
deceased. late of 109
Pleasant ~idge, Pomerov,
OhioA.S769.
•
•
ROO.rt E. Buck
Probate Judge/Clerk
(6) 30; (7) 7, 1431C ·

Up to 15 Word s · Onf' C1ity insertion
lJp to 15 Word !.
Thr ee flil.V 1nsNtion

87· Upho lslery

Up lo 15 Words ... Six day

l

Ser . No .

ds will be available on a
competi tive discretionary
bMis for transportation .
hea lth or in·home services
in any, severa l or " -II of the
eigh t count i es in th e
District.
Letters of lntenl to sub ·
mit a grant proposal must
be submitted post marked

i•

, I

I

.tl.oo

· . s~ :oo

insertion ............ , .. S7.00

ql.lo

'&gt;

'

6-14l mo.

J'

- PUU,IftS

t hai on Salurday, July lOth.
1982, atlO:OO a .m . a public
sale will be held at 105
Union Avenue, Pomeroy, . (7) 7, 8, 9, 31c
Ohio. to sell for cash the
1978 Ford. 2 Dr. Sedan,

i'

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-·

MID SUMM.ER
SAVINGS
ON

.

REMNANTS.
ENDS OF .ROLLS
GRASS CARPET
AND
- SAVE ·S2 .;. ss
.

CARP.ETS

eptic Systems&gt;
.

1

Small'

t arge or
Jobs
lo·
PH. 992 ·2478
,, •.
6·27-o mo . Pd.

·

"'_ \

•

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1

Merchandice
. . ..Misc.
--- --· - ·--·

$_~AG

~

r,

~wnerfinancl~oavailable ,

COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : Da vid M. Polk,
THE PUBLIC UTILITiES
Secretary

$17,500.
2 HOUSES -

7 li e

i

LANQ CONTRACT- Bealtne high lntorest rates '
wilh 10% owner financ ing on · this neal three··: .
bedroom, one floor plan home in Pomeroy on large
lotwi.th go rage. Wilh sA.OOO down a~d S286.78/month
tor ten year term for a total price of S25JOO.\ •
svR'AcusE ' .,.. , Thr._ bedrocim ' ~ome 1 newly li&lt;
re111odeled on double lot. FUlly Insulated.' Assume
loan wllh S5,m clown at 1011&gt;% interest for 21 years
S213.00/month pay'!'enlfor a tota,I price of S2S.OOO. '
FARM - LONG BOTTOM ·wooded acreage with newly . relnot:l&lt;!lo&lt;~
bed.room home, new -vinyl aiding, i}lSiuliled.J,Ijlew
lwo car garjlg@, Asking $55,000
h_o use, ga~age and small acr•a!l@ sep.alte.'

I ·.

tHARRISON'S
~

~

.TV ReP.air
&amp; Service
Call99~-62~9
.

'

276 SJU~J~ore Sl.
Mi~dlepilrt,' Ohio
6-27-1 mo.

or

•

remod,llnc.
roofin&amp; of all types.
Wubd in home 1111 20
yen.
Free estillllles
call 1143-3322

.. ~~~~i~ No!_i~e .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
. On June 23, 1982 , in lhe

Meigs Countv Probate
Court. Case No. 23814.
Frank W . Porter Jr ., P .O .
Box 486, Pomeroy , Ohio
45769
wa s
app ointed
Executor of the est ate of
Myrtl e M . Durst , deceased,
lat e ol Syracuse, Ohio
Robert E . Buck
Probate Jud ge/C lerk

lull ba ths.

full

ment, nice
and neat as

carpeting
a pi n. Ask·

TRADE

-

Or

take mobile home on.
or sell th is 11 room
home with 2 rentals tor

$25.000.
WE
ADVERTISE
YOUR PLAC E 5 or 6
TIMES A MONTH .

• stainless Steel
• Fi~erglass
• Viriyll incrs

FRn

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

rAR~ING!

Sue Murphy , Helen and
Bruce Teaford, Ml
Realtors . After Hrs.

c. L. t&lt; itchen
Mason. W.Va .

Housing
Headquarters

6·20·1 mo

J

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail of all ages
available up to 8 Weeks
in any quantitY
Eggs Also Available
Clelll.aBonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Botlom. OH.
45343
614·985·4345
6124/1 mp.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

i

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
3·2Hfc

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savelll

NOW OPEN

COLEMAN'S
GARAGE

Comer M1in I S. 2nd
IIIOOLIPOIT
•All Minor &amp; Major
Auto I True• Rtj)lil
ofrH Estim1tes
•RNSIIIIIble Alles
Open 8a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon. thru Sst
PH . 992· 7762
JK• Coleman 6·n
I Tim Roosll 1 mo

J&amp;f_
CONTRACT! NG

Write your own ad and onter bv mall w ith lhis
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money nol refundable .

Name_......_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Addreu---------------Phone-----------------

•lllckhoe

* e•cavating ·

*septic systems\

a gas lines

•dump truck
• limestone

• .
REAL TORS
· '. .
HenryE' . Cietond; Jr.,GRI .. .' ......~ .... ft2:·1t~
· DoHie Turner .. . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. , .lft·UH
, Jeon Tfuisell ................ . ..... I.' ... ,....,...
Office .................. .... ...... , ... tti·Dtt
'
\

BALANCE
Front'-End

women

in

Alhens, Gallia, and Meig•

home at no cost. Call Frlen· Huge yard sale, Ju ly 81h,
dly Home manager at 614· and 9th. 9·6. Wolfe Pen Rd.
992·3561 for more info.
Charles K lng residence.
PeRMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Professional Electrolysis
Center. A.M.A. approved,
Doctor referals, by op·
poinlmenl only. 304·675·
6234 .

•

Glveaw•y

ANY

PERSON who has

anything to give away and

does not offer or attempt lo

charge to the advertiser .

Call-'46·3428.
4 kiHens. 8 wks. old, litter

trained . Call-'46-0-467 .
female,

spayed,

half

Cat young yellow and white

male. Call «6· 3199.
DOG good c hilds pel. phone
304·675·4333 .
TINY female ca li co kitten.

found on 1·77 . Call 304-895·
3629 . We will deliver .
ONE angora while &amp;. gray
cal. Phone 304·675·2041.

Los I and Found

LOST:

Plains water dept. ar ea.

CustQm kitchens ·a nd appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodelllll,
plumbing, electric. and
hHting.

FREE.
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

Tues.- Udies Ni.Pnlt· 2:JCI
Weclls.- •.certry Dralt
NiQfll 1·2 :JO
Tltur, . -Pool Tovrn. •2: :10
Fri. I Silt. liVE BANDS
( Drinlt &amp; Drown eactl nlthfl
lHIS MONTI:I'S BANDS
WeG. &amp; Thurs.

MARSHALL TENNAN\t--1 .
Fri, I S.l.
lONE WOLF 1•2
we tlildly •nnOuMe rh•i euh
8·20·tfc
nigtll Dl the Blind w~ Dllero
drln~ iUMI drown. Some drln"'
rtctuctd durlllf Und. ·
------"'!"'-~='i'tl Ou( Hrs. Man.· Fri .J:tCI-2: JCI;
r'
S.t. &amp; S~tt~. •i:JI. C•try Out
Beer •IMI Wl~e AuU•b" ••
Min imum Pric.s- Thelow.st.
PHONE ftHtl:l
7: 1-1 mo.

.SERVICE

l

4. _ _ _~--

5. _ _ _ _ __
6. _ __ __

1. _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ _ __

9.
10.
11.
12.

--~--.--

- - - - - -?" - ---:-.;.__ _
_ _ _ __ _

13. ----,-,--~
14. --,.-.;._....___

Mall

0

19, - - - - - 20.
21.
22.
23.
24, _ _ _ _ __
25. - - - - - 24. - -- - - 27. - - - - - 28. _ __ _ __

29.
30.
31. - - -- - 32.
___ _ __
33. _ _ _ __
;14.

35. - - - -- -

Thll Coupon with RemiHance
he Dolly St!ltlnel

.m courtst,

Cllitlllrw, Qlf.

H·IHc

3. - - , - - - - - -

----':--=-----

llwtltLalll

I'll.,.,_.,.. ,

1. --~--2. _ _ _ _ __

~--:-------;.._--1: •15.
1•• -.:.......,.;.__ __

W•lw-s-Etectrlc
Gas Llne-Ditclltl · '
W•ter LIM HIOII-ups .1
. SeptiC TankS
County Cwtlfled

17. - - - - - 18 . _ __ _ __

I For Rent

1tomeroy,·o11. 45769

!..~!;~~:.l:!:!~_ l..·-.,;;-... ··-·~--·--,----------.--

.. ••

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13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered

services for fire Insurance
coverage In Gallla County
for almo51 a century.
Farm. home and pt!rsonal

property cover ages are
available lo meet In·
dlvldual needs. Contact
Neal Insurance Agency.
agent. Phone -'46· 1694.
15

Schoolsln51ructlon

Karate the ultimate In self
defence oil private lessons.
Men, women, a. children.
1nslruclion thru black bell.
Also available Karate
uniforms puch lng and
kicking bogs, and prole&lt;:·
live equlpmenl. Jerry
Lowery &amp; A•soclates
Karole Studio , 143
Burilnglon Rd., Jackson,
Oh. Call614·286·3074 .

household . Licensed Ohlo- Repair and ref inishing of
WV. Buying antiques. 304· anllque furniture . 12 yrs.
exp .
Quality
work ,
773 -5785. 77H185 .
resonable rate•. 614-992·
2851 .
lhe Harllord Communily
Cenler . Truckloads of new

l..::Bc__.:.
W:.:a:;;n:;;
led
= l'-"o-=D:.:o' --

merchandise every week.
consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome .
Richard
Reynolds Auctioneer . 27S ·

Lawn Mowing no yard to
big or small . Reliable and
dependable. For eslimate
call «6·3159 afler 6PM 256·
1967.

3069.

EMMA Bell Auction Ser ·
vi ce. Sale each Tuesday, 7

p.m . MI . Allo, accept ing
consignments Tuesday 10
a.m . unHI sale time .

9- - - wa.n leciTo Buy

Call tor free estimale, «6·
4173.

WANTED TO BUY Old fur ·
«6·3159 or 256·1967 in lhe
evenings .

4-46-0069

on ears. Call 304-675-2169

,..- - - - -- - - - - BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
furniture , gold, silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,

YARD SALE. Wed. and
Thurs .• July 7 and 8.

Complete

Games. toys,
misc.
15 mi.

Pomeroy, Oh . Dr 992-7760.

c lothing ,
South of

Gallipolis on Stale Roule 7.
Yard Sale Clolhes, baby

households.

Write : M .D . Miller, Rt . ...

silver,

slerllng,
jewelry. rings, old coins &amp;

Gold,

currency . Ed Burkett Bar·

items &amp; misc . 127 Garfield,
Ave. Tues thru Friday . 10
li II 5.

3~76 .

1st Time Yard Sale July 7,

OLD FURNITURE. beds.
iron. brass, or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of ail types.

Ave .•

exercise

Interior &amp; exterior painting . Reasonable rates.

lnside ·Outslde pointin9,
Home remodeling , repair
and plumbing, reasonable.
Phone30H82·2987.
BABYSITTING in my
home, Monday- Friday,
6:00 a . m.·6 :00 p. m. Call
New Haven, 304·882·2Aol9 .
HOU.S ECLEANI NG and all
types of sewing, phone JIU·
882·2554 or 304·895· 3439.

flaane•a•

Frenchtown Car Co.

mixed, tri colored with
some apparent medication

Yard Sale

Inside &amp; outside palnllng
tree estimates. Call 4-46·
9#19 .

B iII Gene Johnson

anytime and identify.

Trash collection &amp; hauling .
Call «6-«80.

Buying and selling eslales.
Free estale a!&gt;praisal, 304·
428·8177.

collie shepherd·husky lype

ber Shop. Middleport. 992·

21

Business
Opportunity

DEALERS wonted for
reveiutionary household
fire e•li~9uishers. Operate

your own business &amp;
receive unlimited income.

For details call Ed Rahall
at3Q.4·253 ·3320.

-

22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year filed
rat•. WV a. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State St.,
Athens, Oh . 614·592·3051 .
23

Profesaional
Services

Tables. round or square.

Wood ice bo•es. Old desks
and bOOkcases. Wi II buy
complete household. Gold,
silver. old money, pocket

C&amp;l. Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; taK service
for ali types of businesses.
Carol Neal
-'46·3862

walches. chains. rings, and
elc . Indian Artifacts of all
lypes. Also buying baseball
cards . Osby Martin 992·

Yard Sale 428 Hedgewood
&amp; 430 Hedgewood. Evans
All ison.

Items date

6370.

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

'

serilltes

11
Help Wanted
3 family. July 10 and 11,
Position
Available. Inbeyond Hitchin Post, Rl. 7,
Pomeroy . Playpen, cur· structor Bachelors degree.
tains. mattress, baby and Able to meet Ohio Deparl·
toddlers clothes, avon, ment of Educallon MSPR

tapes,
jeans, remanent Certification requirements
pieces, snow tires, truck or be willing to obtain . Con·

produce , lact: Loren D. Phelps,
Superintendenl, (614) 3670102, Ga ilia county ·Board
of MR/OD, P.O. Box 14,
July 8-9. 9·5. July 10 ·9·12. Cheshire. Oh 45620 .
Rustic Hills J.une St.
Syracuse. Nice clothing,
girls sizes 10· 14, womens
RN'S·Pomer.o y
clolhing, 12· 16, Barbie Atlention
now
has
opening for
H.C.C.
stuff, toys and games. fuJI and part lime
f~r 3
chlldrens encyclopedias, to 11 and 11 to 7RNshills.
and
books,
2 good Upgraded salary and shift
matr""ses and bo• springs dillerential . Contact Nancy
with frames, 10 ap. bicycle. VanMeter dlre&lt;:lor of Nur20 in. bicycfeo' several other sing. 614-'192·6606.
nice items.
racks,

Vacancy for elderly . Room
and board and la~ndry . 614·
992-6022 or 992·67oil.

-

farm,

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .

lantern,

Will do lllbysitling in my
home. 614·99l·51CI1 .

1..7_....!M
= Is,c,elcela,n,eou=s, __

antiques,

Within one day of each
other but a couple of miles
apart · One hound dog, one

Garfield

Situations Wanted

Estates,

Co .. Spring Valley Plaza ,
«6-8025 or 4-46·8026.

133

12

Ex -

Pearson ,

house Wednesday. Child in
grave need . 985-4295 .

1 Pink baby blankel on

back lo early 1930. Thurs. &amp;
Fri . 91o 5.

)Announcement

Rick

railing in front of court

1

em·

perienced AUCTIONEER.

Buying
Gold,
Silver ,
Platinum, old coins. scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale . Spring Valley Trading

Sl. Bernard Dog. 614-985·
3563 .

and

St. Rt. 7-Between Middleport &amp; Cheshire, Oh.
PROUDLY PRESENTS

Public Sale

Chester· Tuppers

bike. school desk. bicycle,

)Wanted
JFor Sale

8

ni1ure and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,

6

oppo,.+ .,nlfy

Auction every Fri. night a1

Dachshund and hall
Beagle, 7 yrs. old . Moving ,
needs good home. Call 614·
2.S·9502.

niture,

CANDLELIGHT INN

item s.

&amp; Auction

misc .

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

YARD Sale, 105 S. Park
Dr .. Pl . Pieasa nl . Thursday July Blh. 9·? Misc.

offer any other thing tor

Gorage Sale July 10. 2 mil.
from HMC, Rt. 160. Fur-

include discount

Mulberry Hgls. Pomeroy.
6th house on right from
town. Lots of nice clean
clolhes and m isc. Items.
Thurs. July 81h Friday July
9th . 10 a.m .- 5 p.m . 614·992·
2550.

sale may place an ad in lh i;;
column. There w ill be no

1

Grandparent , for

Buckeye Community Ser·
vices to work with children
with mental retardallon.
Requirements include :
· al least 60 years of age.
- Income. guidelines: single,
$5,390: married, 57, 115;
f""lly of three, $1.8«l.
C•ll614-388-9n2 for further
Information.
Buckeye
community Services is an

3 family , Sal . only, Hub·

or others who would like to bard St. Syracuse. Fur·
get free things or who niture, glassware, clothing,
would like to become a antiques, toys. many other
dealer for Friendly Home iterm.
Parties. Or have parties at

.

3-29·tfc

.ALIGNMENT
&amp; ELECTRONIC
SPIN WHEEL

Sat. Clolhlng &amp; misc .

for

Foster

equal

Pick your own green beans· 2 Family Yard Sale. First
half
runners .
$5 .00 house on right coming Into
Thurman . Thurs., Fri. &amp;
bu . Dallas Hill . 247·2664'.
Looking

Position Available. In ·
depentdent Living Worker .
High school diploma, In·
teresled and knowledge
about persons with ment•l
retardation/developmental
dlsabllltln. Must have own
transportation. Five (Sl
references required. conloCI: Loren D. Phelpl,
Superintendent (614) 367·
0102, Gallia county Board
of MR/00, P .D. BOK 14,
Cheshire, Oh 45620.

plover.

Gallipolis. 9 to 5. Jig saw,
tables, miscelleanous .

Ucensed &amp; Bonded
- PH. 992-7201

Yard Sale rain or shine.

Sal. &amp; Sun . July 10 &amp; 11 .
Time 9:00 to 5: 00. Route 35

Yard Sale Sanders Hill off
Golf
Lessons . John Ne ig hborhood Rd. Thur·
sday 9 lo 5. One Day Only .
Teaford . Chesler, Ohio .

9.

* "Avtater, St'Ver

tables. TV, c hlldrens
clothes&amp; ml5c. Ite ms.

Route 554 in Kyger . Wayne equip., and misc.

992· 3615 or 992-3325.

1-304·773· 564

Garage Sale Thurs., Fri. &amp;.
Sal. at brick hOUse, corner
of Berger &amp; Chatham Ave .
(5 Family) . dishes, jars.

SlsMln residence.

base·

We have severa l. just
drop in and see.

Misc. Mer&lt;handice

Garage Sale July 8 &amp; 9. 9·5.
St. Rt. 160 one ml. N. of
Porler . Glassware, bed .
furn ., bOOks, clolhlng, sch .
desk, mixer, CB radio,
misc.

across from Gallla Auto
Sales. Wa1ch for signs.
Garage Sale July 8, 9 Slale Tools, c lothes, fishing

Yellow k itten , blue eyes .

ing only 565 ,000 .
BUILDING ' SITES -

(6) 30; (7) 7, u 3tc

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
-'46·0294 ..

reduce the price of this
one under re novation , if
taken soon.
Has hot water heat, 2

Yard Sale Thurs ., Fri. &amp;.
Sal. George's Creek Rd .'
clothes, baby
of misc .

curtains, toys, coffee &amp; end

Ra ci ne. Only $37 ,500 .
COMPI.ETE ·IT - will

3 bedroom
home with 2 renta ls.

45779.

Announcements

K ihens lo good hom e. Call
«6-4173.

I.OVEL Y -

TOGETHER

5-12-2 oro. pd

BalhS, ci ·

ty water. gas heat.
storms, nice large
yard, near stores in

These cash rates

ASSUME THE LOAN '- On this two bedfOOm home
with 1h acre lot in Rut)and with $6,130 ~own, 28'12
year term at 13% interesl, payl)'lenls at
S3~7 . o0tmonth on a remaining balance ol'S26 870 62
fof a tot~l price of s:1_3.000.
'
' ·

'

Vinyl &amp;Allnninum
ptter work,

. Complete
complete

AUTO &amp; TRUCK \
1
REPAIR
\

l-Gas Lines

PRICE REDUCED- A spill entry, lhree bed; oom
home with 2V&gt; baths, family room, lull basement,
garage on appx. one acre land . Reduc e~ to $.45 90()•

follow ing collateral :

full basement and new·
ly
paint@d 1 in side.

WE POOL

Superior Sidirw Co.

St. Rt. 124Pomeroy, OH!

' f-Trenth,er
.-water
· L Sey.-er

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

Notice is hereby gjven

I

985-4.64

-Backhoes
.:-Pump Trucks
-Lo-Boy

PUBLIC NOTICE

ON

PARKING LOTS
.fCEMENT FINISHER
1fiCHARO G~RFIELD
I .

-Doters

Public Notice ·

--··-~ -

ORIVEW~YS .

'

Secretary

program Yelr. In Meigs .
LEGAl. NOTICE
county, grant proposals '· The Public Ulililles com·
being soiiciled to continue mission ' ' Ohio has set tor
lhe following se~vlces: In· public hearing Case No. 82·
formalion and Rel~rral, 769·GA·GCR to review the '
outreach 1 and 11, Tran· gas cosI re&lt;:ovtry rates· of
sportation, Home · Main· the Syracuse hOme Utilities
tenahce, education, Health Company·,
Inc., the
Asseasment. , Health ser- operations of its purchaed
Gas Adlustmont Clause
vices, Recreation, Escort a~d relaled matters. This
an~· Legal Services, · hear(ng is schedUled . to .
begin at 10:00 a .m. ,
'Protective Services.
$44,85~ . 50
is
I he Thursday, ,August 5,
,estimated amount of Title at lhe Offices of the
lli· B funils .available for all mission, 375 soulh
·services. Federal and State st., columbus,
4a:i1s~·
regulations and policies en- . 1Ail Interested
courage public notification will be. 11tven ·
of this planning pllase.

i

U~VATING

(7) 2, 4. 6. 7, 8, 9. 1171c

---

BASEMENTS!
PATIOS

~-

By : Dav id M. Polk ,

54

,
:

I

portun ity tO be heard. Fur·
ther i nformation may be
atta ined by contacting the
Commission .
The ~ublic Utilities
Commission of Ohio

S15,000.00 of Title Ill · B fun ·

can

EUGEN£ _LONG

White
QUAIL

Public Notice

Public Notice

Sale of the security l isted
dinance is hereby declared above w i II be held on the
to be an emergency premises of The City Loan
provisions within th e measure and its immediate &amp; savings Company, 125 no late r lhan July Jl 2, ·1982.
Codif ied Ordi nances should pa ssage is necessary in or · East
Main
Street. Grant proposals --fm.lst 1 be
be amended to conform der to prese rve, protect Pomeroy, Ohio.
submi tted postmarked no
w ith curr ent State law as and m aintain the health , •
Seller reserves the right laler than July 30. 1982. Ali
r equi red by th e Ohio Con· sa fety and welfare of the to bid and lhe righl lo
citizens of Middleport,- Ohio reject any and all bids . grant awards are subjec t to
~ titut i on ; and
WHEREA S, various or · and for the further reason Prior to the date of sa le, the availability of funds .
To obtain a proposal for ·
dinanc~s of A general and· that it is necessary to bring
arrangements may be
permanent nature have the Traff ic and General of - made to inspect this mer · mat or additional in·
been passed by Council fenses Codes into com · chandise by ca lling 992·2171 formation , please contac t:
Ms. Cindy L . Farson,
whict1 should be Included in plianc e with current State between the hours ol 9:00
Direc tor/ Area Agency on
the Codified Ordinances; law as required by Art icle a .m. and 5:00p.m
x v 111, Section J of the Ohio (7 )711c
Aging
a~d
WHEREAS, Counci l has Constitution .
Buckeye Hills · Hocking
SECTION IV . This Or · - -- -PUblic ·Notice_ _ _
heretofore entered into a
Valley Regional Develop·
cdntract with the Walter H. dinance shal l take effect
merit District
REQUEST FOR
Drane Company to prepar e and be . in force i m216 Putnam Street
PROPOSALS
and· publish such r evision ; med iately following ·its
410 51. Clair Bui lding
passage
and
approval.
Buckeye
Hills
·
Hocking
and
Mariella, Ohio 45750
Passed
lhe
14th
day
of
WHEREAS .
the
Valley Regional Develop· ' (614) 374-9436
June, 1982
c~ification of such or ·
ment District Area Agency (7) 2. 6, 731c
dioiances. together with the A!lest : Jon Buck
on Aging ls offering notice
new l)latter to be adopled, Clerk· Treasurer
ot , the ,proposal developPublic Notice
carlljlorky ment period lor the 1983,
the·matters to be amended
Pre~idenr

Mason co, wv
Area Co&lt;io 304
675-Pt. Pleasanl
458--LeiJm
, Po~eroy
576--Appl• Grove
985-Chesler
773-Mason
.
343- Portland
247-Lelart Falls •· 882-Ne~¥ Haven
949-R.a cine
J95-l.etart ' ·
742-Rulland
f'37-BuffiiiO
667-Coolville

(Average 4 wcrds per line)

Public Notice

coupe Starfire,

81 -Home I mprovements
82· Plumbing &amp; Heating
83· Excavating
84· Elecrical &amp; Refr iqerati on
SS·General Hauling
B6· M . H. Repair

$42,500. BUT ... ?
CHEAPIE - Almosl an
t~cre, 2 bedrooms,, bath,

-·--·----------~

Meigs County

446-Gatlipolis

61 -Farm Equ ipm ent
61-Wanted to buy
63 -Lives tock
64 H ay &amp; Grain
65 -Seed&amp; Fertilizer

!

I.

Arra Cod0614.
99:!L-Mtddleporl

J61-Cheshire

41 -Houses for Rent
.t2 ·Mobi le Homes for Rent
.tJ·Farms for Rent
44·Apartment for Rent
.tS·Furnished Rooms
46-Space for rent
47 -Wanted to Rent
48 · EQuipment for Rent
49 -For Lease

13· 1nsur anc e
14-Business Tr ain ing
15-Schqols In stru cti on
16· Ri!dio, TV &amp; C~ Repair
17 -Mi sce ll aneous
18-Want ed To do

.

following telephone exchanges.

ser, lees

and those lo be replaced
are before the Council;

all your wiring
~eds; · furnaces
repair service and
iistallation.
,
ResldeJitial
&amp; Commercial

Flnanelai _

1-Cardof Thank s (pnid in ndvance)
2 Cr~rd of Tll anks (pa•d in itdvitnce)
) ·Announcement s
4-Giveawav

home, large modern
bath, T. P. water, tur·
nace and carpeting .

WILL

MILLER
ELECT.RIC
SERVICE
,, .

Good

bedrooms, balh, full
base ment with garage,
Ohio Power ani! good
financing .
Asking
$25,000.
HORSE FARM - LOIS
of good grass, woods
and fences. 2 bedroom

~~;:

Or Write Daily Sentinel Clasl 1fied Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

-

place for children. 3

the hearing all interested

~'---------t------..,...----1-----------1 54
l·

Jusl $17,500.
2.8 ACRES

has been scheduled lor July
30, 1982 at 9:30a. m ., at the
offices of lhi&gt;'Commission,
375 Soulh High Slreel.
Columbus. Ohio 43215 . At

(7)

3

bedrooms. gas furnace.
carpeting , new wiring ,
baseMent, near stores.

:=t.~~;;~~==;jtr==~~~~f==jtr~~~=:=~~~=~il This investigation has been
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
designaled as Case No. 82 ·
ROUSH
D
815 ·TP·COI and a hearing
S
I

3

woods with

T. P. water on hard
road In Racine School
District tor jUS! S5.000.
NEW LISTING- 14X65

lsi
Re vised Sheet No. 4.
P . u.c.o . No. 7, Section 6,

ftlt

3

·

Phone

Publi&lt; Notiu

Telephone

The ,family of Paul (Turk I
Clealand wishe. lo thank
all who helped in any way
during the recent death of
our brolher. Special !hanks
lo ewing Funeral Home
and pall bearers and to
those sending flowers and
food. ,T hese things were
greatly appreciated .

VIRGIL B. SR.

m e. 2nd st.

acres of

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smail~st
Heater Core to lhe
Largest Radi~tk 1

li _ _,
H ::el:s::P.;:W:.:•:::nceled
~--

_

'

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

f --- -Yird Sale

......
.. . .-....
..... ' ............
.. . .

Business .serVices
INSU!ATION

FIRSf IN NON-THEME DIVISION

'lbe D~Sentlnei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Mlddl~port, Ohio

fresh

more .

LADIES-CAREER OP·
PORTUNITY need• AREA
SUPERVISOR to hire,
train, manage toy -gift party demOnstrators. .No in·
Gara!l@ Sale · Friday, July vntment, tltKiable hOUrs,
t, '9-~. Moving• Sale - work at home, ground floor
Miscellaneous, clothing, opportunity, Cali BeHy
boOks, 3-4 warwick
. Road. . . .t1lllect today, 30H4-4-G92~.
YARD sale, all week,
Gallipolis
Ferry,
by
Powell's Barber Shop.

31

Homes tor Sale

bet'ti'1/0m. -2112

L-o~.;;;;-

bath home . Gar•oe. family
room . Walking distance
from Holzer . Call 4-46·0025.
For sale nearty new 3 bdr.
house on Rt. 160, 2 1/2
miles, norlh of Hospital,
large lawn and garden, 3/4
acre . $32,.100, at lO'!!t in·
terest,

same

down

payment. Call «6·0157.
House for sale, 4 rm. &amp;.
garage, 11,. acre
ground , rural woler. Call
«6·00,.,
.

bath,

Five room house, Doth,
fireplace. in town sn.ooo:
Phone 304·67S.S652.

- - - -·--·-

FOR sale or trade, 3
bedroom hOuse, all ele.:trlc, 2112 acre ground, rural
waler, 131 ·11. Ironia!!@, 1'1&gt;
miles out Crab Creek Rd.
Call after 12:00 p.m . 304·
675·3329.
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad- ·
dillOn, 3 bedrOoms. family
room with fireplace, Ctfl;
tral air, basement, PhOne
JIU-675-1542.

�P~e-12-The

Dally Sentinel

--~"',;.

They'll Do It Every Time

J 1 _ _,_
·H,_,o:.em:.ee:.::sc:f"'
or,_s,a~l!'::
e-c_
3 bdr. brick , great loca tion ,

1 112 bl. fr om pa rk , fu ll

basement.
fireptace 1

ex tra
mod .

lot.

k it chen,

carpeted Ca ll446·4826.
5 rooms and bath , utility
room , large patio, garage
and work·shop. Total elec·
tr ic, well insulateod and
easy to heat. Compl etly

romodled. S39,500 . 614-742·
221 1 or after 5, 614 ·742-2201 .
Close to
loca tion .

schooL

Good

3 bedr oo m
h ouse
in
Pomeroy . Viny l Siding ,
fireplace, ni ce loca ti on .
Priced t o se lL $24.000 614·

992 1&lt;46.
Br ick 3 bedroom . Priced
ri qht. Do own decorati ng

and sa ve more. Bula vil le
Rd . 614-245 ·92 10 or 61H92·
3905 .
For rent or sa le. 3 bd .room,
1 bath , family room . la rge

yard
, oyfruit
trees .. 614
in- IL.::::::::::::::::::::::::::"T~~~-;:~~';':-'~-j
Pomer
. S250. month
_______ -~--992·522B .
41- HOusesfor Rent
44
Apartment
lor Re nT
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad· For rent 3 bdr. house i n Rio
3 r oom turn . apt . for rent .
dition. 3 bedrooms. fa mil y Grande . Accept children
5250. a month , including
room w i th fir epla ce, ce n· and pets. Ca ll 446·0157 .
utH it ies. Inquire at M eigs
tra l air, basement, phone
Inn in Pomeroy .
304-6751542 .
2 bed room house. Ni ce &amp;
clea n. Some carpet. Full Newly remodeled apt. in
2 bedroom home. Phone basem e nt .
Depo s it. Middl eport. 992·3590.
304-675·3675 alter 5 PM .
refere nc es. 614·992·3090.
Modern 3 bedroom
miles beck New
References and
requi red. Phone

TRI -STAT E
MOBILE
HOMES. USE D-MOBILE
HOMES, CARS, TRUCKS.
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK
OUP. PRICES . CALL 446·
7572.

2686 .
42 ---;M
:-;-:o;b:':;i7:
1ec:;H
';co::m
::ce:::s: -for RenT
Mobile Home, Eureka, 1
Bdr ., turn .. riverfront lot ,
ref. &amp; de posit . Adults, $100
mo. 1·643·2644.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S.
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
)5. PHONE 446·3868 .

Clea n 12)(60, 2 bdr . mobil e
home . Furn ., convenient,
good neighborhood , air
cond .• sec. dep. req. Ca l l af ·
fer 5, 446·8558.

1980 Windsor Ux70,
cond . Deluxe kitchen, large
living room &amp; bath , 2
bedrm . Hidden utll. room .
379·2310.

Air cond ., adults only , no
pets. Beautiful rivervi ew
in Kanauga .
Deposit
required . Call446·1602 .

1971 Vinedale. Call 446·7427
before lOAM or after 7PM.

FURNISHED mobi le hom e
in ci t y. Central ai r . one or
two adults only . Call 446·
0338.

1980 BAYVIEW DELUXE .

central ai r, fireplace , gar·
den tub, underpinning with
or without appliances. Cal l
446·6211 or 388-9916 .

For

sale

1970

For rent tr ailer space,
loca ted on Georges Creek
Rd . Ca ll446·3666.

Elcona

trailer , 12x65, total elec tric
with wood burner. Call614·
379 ·2124.
Near

Chester .

2

2 bdr . furnished, wall to
wall c arpet, in Gallipolis,
private lot. Call 446-1409,
between 410 8.

choice

acres and 1980 3 bd.room
l4x70 mob ile home . $21,000.
Cal1614·949·2639.

2 bedroom trail er . Rea l
nice, adults only . B11own 's
Trailer Park, Minersville .
614-992·3324.

12x65 Gregory 2 bedroom .
Air cond . unit, porch. gas
heat. Lot also avai lable.
614·992-6093 .

2 bedroom trailer . Bottle
gas cooking &amp; heating . $140
per month plus deposit. 614·
949·2461.

Mobile Home for Sllle . 1974
Hillcrest . 2 bedroom .

$4,500. 614·992·3917.

Mobile nome for rent on 6
acres. $225. month with op·
lion to buy . 614· 742 ·2266.

1975 12x60 completely turn.
$5,000 . 614·843·2414.
USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

2 bd .room in MiddlePor t .
Furnished, prefer adults
only , no pets. $150. man·
thly . 992-7841 or992·6510.

HOME

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

33

Two bedroom
mobile
home, nice yars. phone 304·
675-3885.

..,.--::

Fa-rms for Sale

THREE bedroom trailer
with 2 car garage, kitchen
furni shed, $250. a month
and $200. deposit . Call after
8 p.m . 304·576·2682 .

1.42 acre farm near Rio
Grande . Good house,
buildings and barns. Tobac ·
co base &amp; live stock . Call
446-,2599.

34

Bu s=i=
n e=s=s=;B:cu:ciId in g s

JS

Lots &amp; Acreage

TWO bedroom, furnished,
carpet , air conditioned, 1;,.
mil e out Sandhill d ., $200.00
month plus deposi t 304-6752195.

25 acres bottom land,
wooded area , good location
on 325. Sell cheap. Call 614388·8437.
1

house. 5
Haven,
deposit
304·882·

lf• MILE out Sa ndhill Rd,
304·675·3834 .

-----··---

acre on Rt . 160, $4,500

assumable loan . Call 614·
388·8437 .

TWO bed room mobile
home , partially furni shed,
$200. month304675·4154. ·

TWO acre lols-150 ft . road
frontage , c ity
water.
behind 84 Lumber, c all 304·
675-6873,675-3618.

TWO bedroom trail er $185.
month plus util iti es, plus
deposi t. 304-675-651 2.

122 acres farm, m ode r n
house Mason County. WV . 6
outbuildings, plenty water,
'mineral rights, Tribble
Road . 304 ·458·1820 or 937·
2375.

44

Apartment
lor Rent

Unfrunished 2 bdrm. aprt .
in Crown City . Ca ll 614·256·
6520.

Two acres, black top road,

Furnish 2 rooms and bath,
clean, no pets, adults onl Y.
Dep. required . Call 446·
1519 .

corner Greer Road . Phone
304·675-1198.
28 ACRES , tobacco allot·
ment, mineral rights, no
buildings, 510.500. 304·675·
6851 .

TWO BOR . apartm ent in
Crown City. 5175 . Call 256·
6495.

FURNISHED deluxe apartment , central air and heat.
One or two adults only. Cal
446·0338.

Rentals
41 _.-.!!
H~ou~s~e:!sc.:fo
,rc_:R
::.e
:::n::.:t__

Unfurnished 2 bedroom
garage apt., 3 bedroom upstairs apls, 2 bedroom
hOuse. Call 446·2374 or 446·
0284.

Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land contract in town or
country .
Calf
Strout
Realty, -H6-0008.
~

bdr. house good location,
excepted .
A-One Real Estates, Carol
Yeager Realtor . Call 304675·5104 or 675-5386.

t bdr. api, · HUD

Sr . aparfll'lenl, 2 baths,
!urn., adults oply, no pets,
water paid. ~100 dep., $200
rent. &lt;:all 446·3587.

4 room unfurnished apt. all
corpeTed. utilities paid,
adiJIIs only no pets. Call
446·3437.

House: 120 3rd. Ave.,
Gallipolis. 2 bdr., gas heat,
'\. dep. req. The W iseman
-Agency, 446-3643.

2 bdr. apt. Partially
off
Street
Second Avfl.,
Call 614·256-

3 bed. river view home,
DR, LLR, new remodeled,
$300. Call614·367-0461.

• ick, air condition house
1 ,,. renT on 14 acre farm
Lar~e 1 room &amp; bath ~f­
th 1n 2 m lies of_ town. flciency
apartment. Mostly
.., I I
barn and ( -pond,
furnished $100 . a . mont~
only. $450 m9"th. pius
dep. 614·992·5692.
.·""' ' 14-675·6276.

.

'

51

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.
S4 __MJ~ c: ~ Merchandi.~ _

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 67 Olive St..
Gall ipolis. 9x12 linoleum
rug $22, 3 piece living room
s uites ·c ouch-love seatc ha ir $199, 2 piece living
room sui tes from $140 up,
love .seats from 570 up,
maple dine! sets from $99
to 5199, wa ll hug ge rs Sll)(h
r ec l iners
$80,
mapl e
rockers S.t9, bedroom
suites $150, var iety of table
lamps, marble top stands
530 and up, twin and full
box springs &amp; mattress
( new) $100, severa l utili t y
cabinets. kitchen cabinets
wood &amp; metal, babY beds.
c hest s of drawers $25 to
$60, 3-way recline rs 51 00,
gas &amp; electri c ranges,
refrigerators, wash stands,
bunk beds compl~te with
bunki es S1 70 , se veral
dressers, hall trees, beds.
brass head board beds $35,
book c ases,
smokers ,
Hoover ·spin dry wa sher,
wringer type wa shers, hut·
ch, coal &amp; wood hea ters,
televisions,
fan s,var
new
of
al l kinds,
ietytools
of
silver stone cookwar e. Call
446-3159.

1 GE auto $90. I Whirlpool
auto $110, la te model GE
S120. All wash er recon ditioned and in mi nt shape .
446·8181 .

--~

'--·~----------·-

Wednesd,ay, JuJy 7,
KIT ' N' CARLYLE ••

49

For lea se 2 bdr ., cedar ran c h beautiful
stone
fireplace, wrap around
deck, lovely 6 acre setting,
nea r Green School . Call
Wise man Agency, 446·3643 .

51

Household Goods

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · wash e rs,
dry er s,
refrigera to rs ,
ran ges
S kaggs
Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·7398.

Truck ca mper, sleeps 6,
wi II sel l cheap. 70 01 iver
tractor, 46 model extra
good shape . 1 Dodge Van 74
model , 1 king wood or coal
burner , warm morning woo
burner . Call614·256·6569.

ADD ITIONAL DISCOUN ·
T!
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY! THE BIG, NEW,
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY ·
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN ·
CLUDE DECK , FENCE ,
FILTER AND WARRAN ·
TY
ARE
NOW
AVAILABLE FOR ONLY
$999.
INSTALLATION
AND
F I NANCING
AVAILABLE .
FIRST
COME. FIRST SERVE .
CALL 1·800·624-8511, Ohio;
1·800·642·3053 wv .

. •c•.,..-.wc ·

beds· !=========~;:========~

Two electric hospita l
with mattresses S.SO. each .
Phone 304· 773-5873 .

11 ·-- 1iuj_o s tor)~ 1~ ~ ::

BLACK &amp; white 23" T\1 ,
can be seen at 2312 Madison
Ave. Pt . Pleasa nt.

1979 Firebirdl 51 •omatic, 5
new Rad ials. Am·FM. Call
after6 P .M. 304-675·7599.

"T;HI!It:E'9 l&gt;OMI!TMING
, Fll&gt;HY AfitOUND
THI&amp; L.AKl!.

AIR conditioner , 304·675·
3939.

1972 Jeep, 304-675·6153.
1973 cuTlass supreme tor
sale or t•ade, best offer.
304-895·3520.

--· . _......... .

-·1·11-- l ' l ' '

70 FORD Torino wagon,
good running condition,
SJOO. see at 1911 N. Main St.
Pt. Pleasant.

IIO "T'

a Lbestaerc
61

Farm Equipment

'S UMMER SHOWDOWN '
Jividen's'Farm Equipment
446·1675
Long tractors, Vermeer
balers &amp; hay equipment,
bale movers, wagons,
rotary tillers, disc , post
digger &amp; drivers, seeders,
rotary cutters, blades,
gates &amp; front .end loader.
And see us to get your parts
&amp; complete service!
USED EQUIP :
IH Hydro 70, 2000 Ford, 550
Oliver, 70 Oliver, MF 65,
rotary tiller, disc., plows.
cultivators, JD manure
spreader, Ford 501 mower .
.we buy used equip.
1976 Gravely tractor elec.
start, w ith rotary mower,
cultivator, plows &amp; sulky,
exc.·cond ., $1,350. Call 446·
4149.

1978 Long 360 diesel farm
trac tor, like new, best of ·
fer . Call 446· 4042 .

63

-:----:c-- - Livestock

-~

-

- - - --

1977 OAT SUN . 200 SX, 4
cyl ., 2 door, approximately
30 m~g . smooth running &amp;
riding, $2650: 304-675-7301 . .
81 FORD Escort, poyjer
steering, power brakes, air
conditioned,
AM · FM
stereo, $5,700. Call 304·675·
2571 .

n-

- l'ruck"Stor

saiii-

72 Chevy 1/2 ton pickup,
PS, PB. auto .• reasonable.
Call614·388·9367.
--"

- - - - -·---

76' Ford pickup super cab,
360 engine, auto Iran·
smisslon. air conditioner,
Sl.Ooo or best offer. Call
6U-669·5023.
1972 Chevy pickup $300.00,
1974 Ford Gran Torino
5500.00 . Caii30H76·2174 af ter 5:30p.m .
1971 Ford 390 motor, $175;
1969 Ford Pickup truck,
wrecked for parts, $150 .
Phone 30.(-675·3031.

REG . QUARTER HORSES
Train i ng~
showing,
vans &amp; 4 W.O.
breeding, sales and boar· 7J
ding . ConTact, Dan Beam , 1979 F·Ord Bronco, 40,000
Gallipolis, 446-0183.
miles, new tires. $5,400 .
·-, Phone 304-773-5826 .
Registe red and grade hor·
ses. excellent 4·H project. 74
Motorcycles
English and western sad dles ·
everything 1974 Kawasawkl 400, oo0&lt;1
i maginable in horse equip- ·cond, only 3,000 miles, call
ment and supplies, also 6U·256·1786 alter 5.
rid ing lessons and trail
rides and horse training. 1981 Honda CB900 cusTom.
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow. Fully dressed. Call 446·
614-698-3290.
3820 .
Massey Ferguson 8 h.p .
lawn tractor. Good cond . 38
in. cut. 614·985-4105.

SPINET -Console Plano
Barga in Wanted: Respon- TWO registered Alpine
sible party to take over low dairy milking goats, 304monthly payments on 458·1825 .
Spinelpiano. Can be seen
locally .
Write
Cred ' t 6~ =::-Ear&amp;-Gra.f!t==
Manager : P .0 . Box 33
Wanted to cut and bale hay
Friedens, PA 15541 .
for percentage of hay. Call
446·8381.
Fruit
.
58
&amp;Veget•~-Custom hay bal ing. Square
I
PiCk your own ha lf runners or round bales. Call 446·
$6.00 bu . Bring container. 6566 or 446·4036.
Open 6 days a week . Closed
Wednesday , even ings and Hay . Sl .25 bale in field . 304·
Sundays. Raynors Peach 675·2254 or 304·675-1302 .
Orcahrd , Rt .7, Lower
River Rd .• Gallipolis, Oh,
446·4807 .

---

1976 Honda 500 T, new fork
mount !erring , padded
backrest with 8,000 miles.
'$850.00. 256·1298.
1975 750 Suzuki, full
dressed, 6,100 miles, $1.300.
Call 446·0935 or 614·256·6694
or 614·256·6704 .

1975 HONDA . 250 Enduro,
excellent condition, 5325.
304-675·4210.
1978 Harley Davidson, low
rider. Can be seen at 2217
Jackson A\lenue, Jack
Hudson, Point P leasanT,
$3500.
1979 Honda X R 80 $350 .
Phone 304·675-3031.

-

75

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

18' Mark Twain tri -haul
boat, walk t~ru windshield,
canopy, 188 HP Mercruiser
inboard outboard motor,
tilt trailer, exc. cond.,
$3,500. Call ~- tl042 .
1978 BAJA, 1978 150 H P
Mercury motOr. Teri!"lessee
trailer 5500. and take over
·payments . 304· 675· 3137
anytime.

79

'

Motor Home

/Campers

8 If. slide In truck camper.'
73 Granville Pontiac runs exc. cond .. fully equipped.
good, good ~ubber. Calf 614· C"ll614-388·880].
,256-6255.

'.

~.

STARKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Service . .Shrull_s
trimmed. Phone 304·5T6;
2010.
-

HARTS VHCI &lt;:a.-.. New
' Haven WHI VIrginia. Over
20 less expensive cars ln
stock.
· · I

CARTER ~ $

Pl.UMBING
AND !-iEATI NG
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

__.... __ --=

~~-

Excavating

_,,
'WINNIE
MORE THAN

8UT LAST 1 HEARD
5HE WANTED TO BE

AN AC7'/US8/

For water lines, sewer
lines, septic tanks or lea~
basements call 11aym110
The Hoeman. 614·992·261~.'
-------~:
JAR Construction Co. O'itcher, "backhoe, and doze(.
Footers, gas lines, wa:(er
lines, RuTland, Ohio. 611·
742·2903.
'

THAT'S WHERE HER
HEART 15, BUT
SHE TRIED THE
THEATER AND
COULDN'T QU ITE
..MKE; IT.

Lawrence S'ldenstricke'r
Backhoe Service.• Call 675-

''
BARNEY

- __ &amp; Relri,.ratiol)_ __

I'LL BE WITH VOU

ASI PUT
· ••''IIUI~ S~N - OUT

HANG IT
ON THIS
THING

ON TH' PORCH I
LOWEEZY

a

a.

-·-.~....:.

Need_ -SO!nething hayl~ ­
·away or ~")ethlng movect?
, We'll de1 it. Ca,ll 446·31~ ~r.
614·256-1967 after 6.

. . _... - - - -·--·-=-~·

a

Now Hauling limestone•fill
dirf·top · SOII·oravel·, Free
estimaTes. Call 614·3677101.
-· 7-~ - - -· - ..... -~

. i cAN't BELIEVE
YOU SU66ESTED THAT

VI

y s .v

.-le 1963 GMC
m41df Info cemper.
cclnd. Call~~-

.,

'

They wuz
jes'talkin'
an' eatin'
pizza...

I

1----------------------~~"·~

oGASOUNE ALLEY

· BUILDING, remodeling,
carpentry, roofing, plum~
bing, concrete work. 304;
675·2440.
.,

..

For sale . spe«~ Qu,en
dryer ~ood condition. Call
773·5346. Stainless - steel .
drum, avacado gfee~ .

()) a

ADVANCED . Seam leU
Gutter-Doors . Offertrib
continuous
gullerlng,
seamless siding, roolinm
garage
doo~s.
free
estim~tes, 614-698·J205.
.,

J,i m Lanier, 304-675-7397. ·,
-..-- - · 4 .
. •.!;.

anytime before 3 a,nd after
7, 446·0814.

9'••

- ----------;

J IMS Water Service. Call

·~

~·

Water \Yells. Commerci~l
and Domestic. TesT holes;
Pumps Sales and Service ..
304·895-3802:
•'

electt'fial-·- :-

BRIDGE

a

RINGLES'SSERVICE ex·
perlenced mason, roofer.
carpenter , electrician ,
general repairs and
remodeling, Phone 304-6/S;
2088 or 675·4560.

Complni
Equipment

2363.

TAll£ CAR.E d ~
PIW81D1!

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

SEW ING Machine repai~t
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service S~arpen
Scissors. • Fabric · Shop,
Pomeroy. ~2284.
·

1979 17' Wilderness camping -t~aller. Nl!lN CO!Id.
Tarnden axels. self
rained, carefree awning.
- ~eese hitch. 54;500, 614·992·

.-BUT AT LU1GT IT~ f;CTTIN ;
/J&amp; 1/WAY F/?01'4 Til' I(JIECK.
FI/GTE~'N WCC'N /l(JN!-

Nflff,,.Tif' IUVEil'LL

_______ _;; :_
..

5580.

I I I I I ) [ I I 1,]

+

RON ' S Television Service;
Specializing In Zenith ani'!
Motorola, Q_uazar, anct
house calls. Phone 574·23'/lt
or446-2454.
.,

Gallipolis Diversified ConsT. Co . Custom dOzer &amp;
backhoe work. Special
farm rates. Call us for tree
estimates. 446·4440.
'

.

Cil Cil II ()) &lt;m a G1

Newa
(I) MOVIE: 'Sammy, tho
Wev· Out Seal' Pert 1
(I) MOVIE: ' Buml'
()) My Thnoe Sono
1· 1
())ABfNewa
()) Elei:trlc Com1111ny
(fi) Over Eooy
WHAT 15A'THIN6 61RL.5
8 :30 8 (I) (!) NBC Newa
MIIS&gt;HT 15E .
(I) $60,000 Pyramid
(JJ Flltller Know. Best
()) Muppet Show
Now arrange· the circled loners to
D ()) ()D CBS News
tonn the surprloa answer. as sug())Or. Who
gestod by the above cartoon.
(fi) Ullat, Yoga end You
aGIABCNewa
7 :00 8 (I) P.M. Magazine
IN (
II
(I) MOVIE: Sammy, tho
(Answers tomorrow)
Wev·Out Seat' Part 2
(I) Bun:a Eye
Jumbles · SNORT AIDED ERMINE "BASKET
Yeslerday s
C!l ESPN Sporttforum
Answer : She wao almost )lltod at the altar (JJ Green Acre•
A NEAR MISS
I]) Entertainment Tonlght
(!) Happy Days
• ()) nc lac Dough
I]) [jj) MecNall-l.ehrer
Report
&lt;m Newa
(}I Muppet Show
7:30 D
(I) Major League
llaaebaH: Cincinnati at
Plttaburgh
(I) Another uta
(!) ESPN Sparta Center
By Olw.Jd Jaeoby
I]) Andy Grtfftth
aad' AlaD Soatal
()) D ()) Family Feud
(!) Laverne end Shirley
"The American Bridge
NORTH
7-7-11
()) Bualnest Report
TeacMr's Quarterly" Is usu·
.10 8 43
&lt;m Richerd Simmons
'1'9642
ally a source of hatlds. In
[jj) Vlctoty Garden
K8
general,
their
hands
are
a
IDI Entertainment
+KQ&amp;
Illustrative of some point of
Tonight
bidding or play that should
8:00 (I) Yesteryear: 1917 Dick
WEST
EAST
be of Interest to students.
Cavett hosts this look at
•· ·-.K781
., 8 7 3
., 10
the events of 1917.
(I) MOVIE: 'Two-Woy
.QJ10~7
+A6432
Today's hand entitled
Stretch'
+JI0984
+532
"Transportation Problem"
(I) AU God' 1 Children
SOUTH
was reported b)' master
(!) Auto Racing 'B2:
'+AQJ92
teacher Hildegard Rolland.
CART Budweln¥- Clove'I'AKQJS
South opens with an old·
land 600
fubloned forcing two bid.
(JJ MOVIE: 'The Far
.... 7
' Somehow or other, It turns
Country'
out tbat East and West were
I])
1D1 Greatest
Vulnerable: North-South
American Hero An elderly
using Alvin Roth's unusual
Dealer: South
man holds a SWAT team
no-trump convention. West's
W011
Nortb East
at bay. (R) (60 min .)
two no-trump overcall asks
(!) Reel Pooplo Tonight's
for minor suits and East
2NT
34
show features e howling
goes whole hog and jumps to
Paas
Pass
Pasa
contest for dogs. a devofive diamonds.
tee of pyramid power end
South jumps to six spades.
a visit with disc jockey Dr.
West thlnU about saving at
Opening lead: tQ
Oemento. (R) (60 min.)
seven diamonds, but thinks
D I]) &lt;m Mr. Mot11n Max
better of It and leads his
must find an apprentice
queen or diamonds against
within 72 hours or else. (R)
the spade slam.
())
(fi)
Hollywood's
Diamonds are continued.
Children (60 min.)
South ruffs and here Is
B:30 D ()) &lt;m ln Security An
South's ruff with a hlflh
where the transportation
attractive young divorcee
spade bas really paid off . Re.
problem
arises.
South
must
is panicked when she's
leads dummy's I 0 of spades.
ruff
with
the
queen
or
jack.
suddenly promoted to se·
East plays low and South
Then
he
enten
dummy
curity chiaf of a departplays his nine. Now be Is still
with a biBb club and leads
ment store.
able to lead a spade from
the
elflht
or
spades.
East
9 :00 (I) MOVIE : 'For Your
dummy. He picks up East's
plays
tlle
five
and
South
the
Only'
f011r spades and makes his
(I) 700 Ctub
deuce.
slam.
(jJ The Fall Guy
West shows out, but
Cott takes over for an injured stuntman . (A) (60
min .)
(!) Facu of Ufe T ootie
jeopardizes her friendships
at school because of her
obsession with a rock star.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
(R)
ACROSS
DOWN
1!1 (I) ® MOVIE: 'Scared
Streight! Another Stor(
1 All I Southern
(I)
[jj) Creation
ve. 5 Malay V.I.P. beauty
Evolution:
Battle
In/
%Scl..fi creature
Classroom This documen· to Verve
3 Recruit 's
tary examines the ·crea- 11 Love,
tionist' approach to sciregimen
Italian style
ence educetion. (60 min.)
4 Black cuckoo
9 :30 (I) MOVIE: 'Change of 12 Virna 5 Old song
Season•'
13 Cerebral
(!) Love, Sidney Patti 15 Tropical
Yesterday's Auawer
6 Catkin
takes violin lessons from
7 Actor Voight
19 "We're
21 Emotionless
wreath
luhak Perlman. (A)
8
Fonner
U.S
.A.
having
a
29 Belief avowal
16
Bon
10:00 1J (I) (!) Quincy An inlegalities
surance investigator asks 17 Anger
- wave ... " 30 Lasso
for Quincy's help to Jlt'OVO 18 Charm
9 Give a listen
22 Measure
31 Novelist,
that the death of
race
14
Like
some
23 Track man
Thomas horse was intentional . (A) i!OGeartooth
pin-ups
24 Dislodge
36 Cut coin edge
21 Tissue
(60 min .)
(JJ TBS Evening News
25 Languish 37 CoUectlon
16 Lofty
22 Spark Cll Ill 1D1 Dynasty Krystle 23 Bucolic
learns that Alexis is with
Blake In Rome , Fallon 25 Devoulness
evades Jeff and STeven 26 l'fe·med
and Sammy Jo face a Jusc ourse
tice of lhe Peace. (A) 160
(abbr.)
min.l
()) Paper Chase
27 Comes in
(fi) Newswatch
first
1 0 :30 I]) Sing out America
28
Greek
(fi) Hitchcock
letter
11:00 1J (I) Cll 0 Cll ® ID ~
News
28 Twist
I]) Nashville RFD
3% Eternity
C!l ESPN Sports Center
33
Deer
(I) All In the Family
34
Chemin
de
(!) Newa/Sporto/Weather
(I) Dave Allen at Large
11 :30 IJ (I)(!) Tonight Show
35 I'lestroyed
(I)
MOVIE:
'Rag~edy
37 Far afield
Man'
(I) MOVIE: 'The High and 38 Nasty
the Mighty'
38 Treaty org.
I]) Another Ufe
(I)
MOVIE:
'AIJIIche 40 Instigate
Uprising'
41 Irish
()) Bonny Hill Show
islands
0
(I) MOVIE: 'The
Initiation of Sarah'
(I) Captioned ABC Newo
® MOVIE: 'Indiscreet'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ill ~ Nlghtline
1 ~:0'0 (I) Burna Allen
A X ·y D L B A A X B
(!) ESPN Boxing Spacial
II
'L
0 N G F E. L L 0 W
Bobby Czyz vs. Manuel
Melon from ToTowa, NJ.
One letter simplY standa for another. In thia sample A· Ia
I]) Nlghtllne ,
used far the -tbree L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
(I) PBS Late Night
apoatrophea the length _and formation of the words are all
(}I The Love Boat A
hints. Each day the codelettera are different.
,
rock star falls in love wkh
a deaf passerl{l!ll'. Doc
halps a gambler and the
crevv auape(ta that a ~
pie is trying to do away
CBYPTOQUOTES
wkh the · captain. Guaa1
starring Sonny Bono, Char·
M W RS
PJPRSVC
lie Callas and Jill St. JotWl. VWRUR
EUR
(R) (60 rhin.)
12:30 8 (I) (!) Late Night with RTBUNVWLSZ
JIV
ULZWVUSC
Dl1llld Letterman Da•id is
joined by Pater Tork. (60
J
NJI :
EBEUP
LV
BRV
min.) •
.
. ()) Jeclt a.inny Show
URSEUY
()) The Love Bol1t A rock VWRN
OECC . - GIIlRC
atar lalla in love wkh e
d8tlf puaenger, Doc; helps
· 1 gambler and the crew
SUipeCIS That 8 couple Ia
Yetterday'• ~: WOROO WJ'IHOUT TIIOUGirl'S
Trying to do IWIY with the _
NEVER TO JU!AVEN 00.-W.SHAKESPEARE
captain .

Transportation woes

UMERICKS.

Gene's Steam Carpef.
Clean-Scotch Gaurd·Free.
estimates-spring special~·
Gene Smith. 9112·6309.
';

-·

e

a

AT MAKII-l€&gt; W

Roofing, gutters, blow-in'
insulation. siding &amp; pain·
ling . Call 446-3330 or 61~ 388·9919.

77

7B

~Ll,IM Slffi&lt;

OLYMPIC 'STAIN.
· In
stock only, $11.00 per
gallon. Pt. Pleasant Paint:
and Wallpaper, front of the
Post Office-on Mal~ St.

83

I WHART!
10 ()

tDOSTILj

. - -•

c &amp; R Pofnl
Professional
pa i nters,;
commercial and residel1;'
Tlal, Insured. ~1 Court St.,
Gallipolis, 446-9451, nQ an - ·
swer 446·1758.

&amp; Healing
-·-·--..---

four ordinary WOIIII.

.I

'
Center '.

=-==-====:::::::::......--=----· -~ ·
· Plumbing

U........oie " - lou&lt; Jumblet,

one 1e1ttr to oiCh ~. ID form

Answer: ..

CHRIS i, IAN ' S CON ·
STRUCTION . . Conslr .,
roofing, siding, spoofing. ,.
fencing, painting,-repairsJ,
cleaning. «6-2000, call ~
before&amp; and after 5 :30. · ·

84 -- - ---

Auto Repair

CONFil~llNCB,

Contratli g l_ , . ,,Rt.
1,'~
Ewlngtori. CaiJ '614·38t;
9939.
: • .
.

-------'---Quality AUIObody &amp; Pafnl
work. Profe$SIOnal custom
p~int Wl)rk _
on·moTorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446·1968.

HAVE YOU BEEN 'f

W..so~ary I, wo~~c ; · t.guei

12
74 Honda 350, $375. or best
offer. Phone 304-576·2010.

EA~Y. WHS~E

I TOLD YOU WE HAP A LO-r TO 60
01/Eit !eFORS THE PFlE!l&amp;

I

·~

ft'ft~~f!}ft ~lMTICRMILIDWORDGAIII
~ ~ ~~· , byHeMAmoldriBobLH

tBYBURGt

CA PTAJN EASY

French l ~l~fl/
' .r Palnttnv!
res ldenli., l . .. · mmercial,•
interior, ,
lor, papei( ·
hanging, ·
· , textur~f.
ceilings.. 41 j 14·367·77tf,
or61N61.·716o. ,
ol,:

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Senttnei-Page-13

I KI J

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car•
peT Clellning feat~red by
Hoffelt 'Bro~ther~ ~ustom~
carpets. Free estimates.~
Calf446·2107 . ,
''
:

1972 20 fl. Starcrait camFor sale .. Dodge Char~r. per, self (Ontalnecl,
0 .
340 rebuilt engine, Good COnd. ,_13,000. Call 446·0935
cond. 614·992-6362.
· or 614-~6694 or 614-256·

4 chairs &amp; sola. Call

8:00

~ ,·

Five 100 Ft. toba cco beds,
Morgan Woodlawn Farm,
Pliny . 304·675· 1286.

D~

EVENING

Mar e um
Roofing ·
Spouting. 30 years ex·
perience, specializing tn:'
buill up r.oof. Call 614·3889622 or 614·388·?857·

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Home grown sweet corn. 71
Sofa, chair, rocker, otAutos for Sale
Charles McKeon Farm,
toman, J tables. &lt;extra
Fairfield-Centenary Rd . 1975 Monte CariQ $1,000.
heavy by Frontier). $685.
Call 446·9442. ·
Call 446·0924.
sota. chair and loveseat,
$275 . Sofas and chairs
priced from 5285. to S795.
TOMATOES
&amp;
other 1966 Chevy Capri station
Tabies, $38 and up to 5109.
vegatables wholesale or wagon, 396 motor, fair
Hide· a · beds,$340., queen
retail , 304·895-3400.
cond., make offer. Call 446·
size, S380. Recliners, $175 .
3594.
lo$295 ., LampsfromS18. to
Produce, tomatoes, sweet
565. 5 pc. dinette• from $79 .,
to $385. 7 pc., $189. and up . Dozer 55 International TD6 corn. Wholesale and retail . 1965 ChevroleT Malibu
Wood table with 4 chairs, with wench, $2,500. 77 Andrew Cross farm ·247· super sporJ, conv., new top,
$219 up to 5495. Desk S110 . Plymouth 440 engine. Call 2852 or 992·3734 Andrew tires. 65,000 miles. 283 auTo,
Sayre, 843·2064.
fair cond. Call614-388·9342.
Hutches, 5300. and 5375., 614-388 ·1288 after 6.
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites
Bassett
2.000 bu . ear corn . S2.50 lju.
Rabbit, 2 dr ., hal·
Cherry, $795. Bunk bed WEDDING CAKES made 9.t9·2579 ,
Gene
Yost1
I
·
~~~~~
4
spd., air cond .,
compfete with mattresses , to sell at reasonable prices. Racine, Rt. 1.
1
cassette, rear win 388·8482
for
fee
esTimate.
$250. and up to $395 . Cap·
dow defroster, new radial
ta in's beds, S275. complete .
For sale-bunch beans· you tires, one owner, new cond.
Baby beds, $99. Mattreues Reduce safe and fast with pick. 6 bu:, w2 miles below Call 446·0515 anytime. \-- ·
or bo&lt; springs, full or twin , GoBese Capsules and E· Ravenswood bridge on S.R.
sse .• firm , 568 . and $78 . Vap "water pill&gt;", Fruth 338. Profllts produce- 614· For sale 72 LaMens Pon·
Queen sets, $195. 4 dr . Pharmacy.
843·2t83atter9 p .m .
·
tiac · body gOOd cond., no
chests, 542. 5 dr . chests, ~_:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::_l::::::~"~::::::::::::::~ reasonable offer refused .
$54. Bed frames, S20.and
Call 446·4289.
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., dinette chairs $20.
For sale 1950 Olds 88 all
and 525. Gas or electrit
orginal, good condition.
range,;,
$325 .
Baby
Call 446·0198.
matresses. S25 &amp; S35, bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; SJO. Used
Furniture -· bookcase,
1978 orange Gremlin auto.,
ranges and TV's. 3 miles
S1.300. Cal_l614-245·9502. .
out Bulaville Rd .. Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am
75 Ford Gran Torino. Call
to5pm, Sat.
446·3479.
446·0322
WHI RL.POOL apartment
size washer. $90.; G.E .
washer. extra nice, $ll0. ;
May tag copper!one · dryer,
$100. All guaranteed 30
days.
Call 256-1207
anytime.

7/1/82

'l
a.;:

Ram Gol f c lubs, 3 through
9, and pitching wedge. ex·
cellenl condit ion . 30H75·
5856.

Musical
Instruments

WEDNESDAY

PAINTING
Interior arid '
exterior, pl~mbtng, .
rooting. some remodeling.'·
20 yr.. exp. Call 614·318{
9652.
'

Ceramic Greenware sa le, 3
miles out Jer ic ho Road,
Po i nt Pl easa nt , Some
items r educed 50 per cent .
Dea lers welcome . Phone
304·675·2039.

57

Television
Viewing

,

STUCCO PLASTERING ~~
textured cellln~s com-·-·
mercia I and · residfntlal,i
free estimates, Call614·256-:·
1182. I
' " I

.~----- ---:--·-

Taking orders for antique
solid oak reproduc tion fur ·
niture. Claw foot round
table 48' $250 , corner cup·
board $300, curved glass
china 5275, wash stand with
mirror &amp; bowl &amp; pitcher in ·
eluded 575. Plus · more
wholesale to th e publ ic.
Call446·3759 .

sap ' ' ' '
" _ _ _tm_pr_~vtment•

2 bd .room , fu r ni shed,
uti l it ies inc . $205. plus $60.
deposil . Middle port. 614·
992-7177 .

For Lease

-

•

i

ai - --- -Hoiii.--

FOR guaranteed products
a nd dependable service,
ca ll your local AMWAY
disTributor, Robert Harper,
304·675·1293.

------·

..

The
Wright

For sa le Whirlpool washer
tid dryer li ke new S400 set,
pool elect ri c range
75, chest $50, dresser $50,
box spri ngs a nd mat·
li.,,55i,s 1 full and 1 twin 550
seT. Call614·245·9502 .

RAWLEIGH • PRODVCTS
BEMCO mattresses or box See your fr iendly Rawleigh
spri ngs, ful l or twin, SS8 . 6 Dealer a Krodel Park Flea
Piece Naugahyde heavy
Market, July 8th . &amp; 9th .
wood living room suite 8:00 a .m .-5 :00 p .m . Wilma
5695. Pillow arm sofa &amp; &amp; Dale Wood, Di stributors,
chai r $375. Roll top desk , 304-675·1090.
One bd .room . unfurni shed, dark &amp; light. $189. Bunk
ready for immed iate oc · beds, complete, include
maltress, $199. Complete
cupancy . Caii61A-992·2094.
Building Supplies
water bed shop ~jth 10 S5
bedroom
suites.on
display,
Building
mater ials block,
Apartments. 304·675·5548 .
starting price $299. up to brick, sewer pipes, win·
52500. Big daddy cocktai l &amp;
APARTMENTS , mob ile e nd tab l'e s $50 . Wall -A-Way dows, lintels, etc. Claude
hom es.
hou ses.
Pt . recliners $169 . and up. La- Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Pl easa nt and Gallipolis. Z·Boy recliners in stock . Call614·245·5121 .
61A-446·8221 or 614·245·9484. USED FURNITURE 5 pc .
P e ts for Sale
&amp; 7 pc. dinett se ts, studio S6
Pt . couch &amp; chair, bedroom DRAGONWYND
APARTMENT
in
CAT ·
suite Hollywood style, bunk TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Pl easa nt , 614-446·822 1.
beds, glass front book· Chow
puppi es.
CFA
cases. Fla i r Furniture &amp;
Three room furni shed Design. Gallipotis Ferry, Hi malayan, Pers ian and
apartment, adults, ri'o pets, WV Open 9·6. Phone 304· Siamese kittens. Call 446·
38« after 4 p .m .
Point Pleasant. Phone 304· 675·1371 .
675·2453 .
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Board ing all breeds, clean
SMALL turnisned apart·
indoor·outdoor facilities.
ment, r efer ences, 30-t-675· 54
Misc . Merchandice .
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
1365
:::.____:_:=
Plastic Septic Tanks. State mans. Cafl446·7795.
and county approved . 1,000
4-l - FUniiShediOOrn5 gal. tank, price 5340. Other POODLE GROOMING .
Furnished Room . $125. sizes in stock , haul in your Call Judy Taylorat614-367 ·
utiliti es pa id, 919 2nd ave., pickup truc k. Call 614·286· 7220.
Gallipolis. Single male, 5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
share bath . Cal l 446·4416 at· EVANS ENTERPRISES
Sonia's Professional Dog
ler 7PM .
Grooming . Call614·388-8547
197 5 Case · 450, dozer· and ask for Sonia .
Rooms with cooking, ca ble, tractor, 1,800 hrs., very
air, $40 a week . 304-773· good cond., $14,900. Call
PINE RIDGE COLLIES
5651 .
446-4537 .
AKC RegisTered Collie
pups. Call 6U·256 1267 or
46
Space for Rent
RA TLIFF 'S POOL CEN · 446·2107 .
TE R Pools sale, supplies &amp;
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, Nort h of installation . .OJ 2nd . Ave., Toy white Peek ·a ·poo. Calf
Gallipolis, Oh . Call 4-46·
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call 6579 . In ground ·Ablove 614-256-1361.
992·7479.
ground .
•
Baby RabbiTs for sate,
Office space for rent. 2 nice New H B Smith Co m - assorted colors, $5.00 each,
room s, S17S . mo . all mercial coal fired boiler &amp; Georges Creek Road 446·
4680.
utilities paid . Also 2 stoker , still
crated .
bd.room Apt. in Pom eroy. 3,300;000 BTU 's per hour .
$200. per mo. Call Cfealand
Stoker handles 200 lbs. coal Grooming services for
Realty 614-992-2259.
per hour, if needed. All pets. Will clip English
pumps, gauges, electrical Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Small
trailer spaces . &amp; wiring equipment. Call Schnauzer's. Reasonable.
For appl. 614·992·7342 .
Mason. 304·773·5651 .
614·245-9181.

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Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy-MidcDeport,

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O~o

enttne

Racine council appt-oves '83 budget
A proposed budget for 1983
totaling $91,255.25 was adopted by
Racine Village Council Monday
night.
Frank Cleland, finance committee
chairman, noted street lighting is
now costing the village approximately $6,000 a year . The Ohio
Power Company will be contacted to
see if different lighting could be installed that would cut costs.
Charles Shain, chief of poli ce,
requested a six months leave of absence effective Aug. I , which was
approved. A replacement will be
made as soon as possible.
It was announced that the village
has applied for a $4,000 grant
through the Community Development Block Grant Program administered by the Meigs County
Commissioners.
William Jennings, Columbus, is
submitting the application for the
grant.
The grant, if approved, will be
used to improve the water system by
extending the waterline from Broadway to Yellowbush and out Johns
Town Road and by installing three
fire hydrants. The village will

Mayor's Court

provide labor and equipment.
It was noted Ohio Highway Department has installecJ new corporation
limit signs.
Council voted to purchase a six inch hydraulic sewer flusher to help
keep the storm sewers cleaned.
Glen Rizer, street commissioner,
was authorized to purchase a weed
eater. Costs will be shared by the
village, the water board and the
cemetery board.
Lots in the village needing to be
cleaned up were discussed. Leiters
will be sent to the owners requesting
lots be cleaned,
Henry Bentz, Jr. thanked council
for correcting a drainage problem
on Third Street in front of his property. Bentz also informed council there
,~is.- a problem with water on Sixth
Street running into and flooding his
backyard. The street committee will
meet with Bentz to survey the site
and work out a solution,
Council authorized council member, Robert Beegle, to make application for the village to participate in the Green Thumb
Project. The project provides employment for senior citizens in

Area deaths

J

Middleport Mayor's Court was
conducted by Mayor Fred Hoffman
Cinda Kay Roush
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting a $100 fine and costs
Clnda Kay Roush, 20, West eo.
was Bill Lee, Middleport ,
Iumbla, died Tuesday morning In
Intoxication.
Plea~ant Valley Hospital.
Fined were--Howard Ferguson,
Born Dec. 15, 1961, In Gallipolis,
Rutland, $236 and costs lor old
daughter of John Curtis and Wanda
tines; Alfred Evans, Middleport,
Lee Nicholson Roush, who both sur·
$50 and costs, disorderly manner; · vlve In West Columbia, she at·
John Ward, Middleport, two fines,
t e nd e d Point Pleasant
both 50 and costs, disorderly
Presbyterian Church.
manner; Stephen Smith, New
Also surviving Is a sister, Mrs.
Haven, W. Va., 50 and costs, open
Carolyn Buckley of Hebron; two
Rasks; Larry Cundiff, Middleport,
brothers, Curt.ls and Chester. both
$250and costs and three days lnjall,
of West Columbia; and her grand·
and $100 and costs, no drtvlng privi- mother, Mrs. Evelyn Nicholson of
lege; Danny L. Walker, Rutland,
Clifton, W.Va .
S250 and costs, DWI; Robert C.
Funeral services will be held at
Roush, Syracuse, $200 and costs,
1:30 p.m. Thursday In Point Plea·
purchasing Intoxicating liquor;
sant Presbyterian Church, with the
WUIIam Moffett, Coolville, $25 and
Rev. Malcolm Mciver otflclatlng.
costs, reckless operation; Dennis
Burial wUI be In Suncrest Memorial
WISe, Middleport, $25 and costs, no
Park. Friends may call at tbe Fooperator's llcense.
glesong . Funeral Home, Mason,
Roger McDaniel, Rutland, $250 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
and costs and three days In jail,
The body wUI be taken to the
DWI, and $25 and costs, no opera·
church one hour prior to the
tor's license; Rex Vance, Pomeservice.
roy, $25 and costs, expired tags;
Charles Cremeens, Coolville, $250 Delbert G. Layfield
and costs and three days In jail,
DWI; Randy Albright, West eo.
Delbert Glen Layfield, 84, of
lumbla, W. Va.,S!iOandcosts,dlsor- Route 1, Harrisville, W. Va. who
derly manner; Phil Massie, visited frequently In Meigs County
Galllpolls, $100 and costs and :ll with his granddaughter, Mrs. Hodays on each ol four charges, public mer (lrene Baxter), died Saturday
Indecency, $50 and costs, lour at hls home.
charges; disorderly manner, $50
Funeral services were held TUesand costs, four charges.
day al 1 p.m. at the Ratguel Fun·
era! Home In cairo, W. Va. with
burial In the Layfield Cemetery.
He Is survived by two daughters,
Pauline McNemar, former Meigs
(Continued from page 1l
County resident, now ol Frazeys·
burg, and Minnie Layfield, Harris·
Department of Mental Retardation
and Developmental DlsabUitles of- ville, two s.ons, Russell Layfield and
Glenn Layfield, Harrisville, ttve
ttctais. Sen. Oakley Coffins, Rgrandchildren, and 12 greatIronton, and Rep. Claire "Buzz"
grandchildren.
Ball Jr., R-Athens, Indicated they
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Baxter and
would possibly call for an Investigafamily
attended the funeral servition ol the center to stave off proces
Tuesday.
jected job abollshments.
ODMR officials, however, have
remained steadlljSt In clalmlng reduced client populat.lon at GDC will Norman Leroy Lehew
mean reduced staff levels.' The cenNorman Leroy Lehew, 70, Rt. 1,
ter has been maintaining the' acPortland,
died Tuesday night at the
cepted 1: 1.59 rat.lo for staff-client
Veterans
Hospital
In Huntington.
levels.
Mr.
LehewwasbornatSherman.
The action has been protested by
city officials, who feel the state Is W. Va., the son of lhe late Strother
not preparing the city and the A. and Clara Allee Safreed Lehew.
county for Increased unemploy- He was also preceded In death by
one sister and one brotber.
ment levels.
He was a member of the MethoAside from attrition, this has
dist
Church, and D. A. V. ,
been the first direct job abolishPomeroy.
ment at GDC since May 1!&amp;, when
He Is survived by his wUe, qer14 people lost their jobs.
trude
Mulltn'ex Lehew; one da~b­
Zimmerman was unavailable for
ter,
Norma
Elab]e Lehew, at
further comment this morning.
home; one.son, Larry Max Lehew,
Pomeroy; one sister, Mrs. Mildred
Morehead, Portland; one granddaughter, Melissa Ann Lel\ew.
Three suits !or divorce and a suit
tor support have been tUed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Filing for divorce were Dtana L.
Tlllls, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, against Dennis Tillis, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; Joetta
Mortis, Long Bottom, ·against
Tracy Morris, Parkersburg; Harry
Ernest Whytsell, Reedsville,
against Debb~ Louis Whytsell, eo.
Iumbta Station, Oblo.
Mildred Fowler flied for support
under the Reciprocal Agreement
Act against Donald Fowler.
.
Granted divorces were Rose
Marie Smith from Ricky Allen
Smith, aka Charles Wtggem,; Charles William Craig from RIKlnda Jo ·.
Craig; Judith Lynn Hoscbar from
Thomas wuuam· Qoscbar.
·
The marriage of Helen Floy Harl
and George G. Hart was dissolved . .

48 jobs

Marriages end

Ask to wed
"'

''

Man1age licenses were issued In
probate court to Roy Flem Clonch,
45, Rt. $, Albany, and Elaine Louise
Eggleston, 38, Rt 3, f\lbany; MI. ~I Lee Smltll, 22, Reedsville,
and.carrie Lynn RUey, 22. Allfance.
1

public service jobs - 24 hours per
week atmlnlmwn wage.
Council requested a 'resident stop
burning trash and throwing other lit·
ter in tbe ditches. Many of the drains·
are clogged with burned trash.
Letters of commendation will be·
sent to Steve Souder, Nick Bostick,
Chris Bostick and Jerry Wolfe who
worked for the villag~ for the past
three weeks under a program administered by the Meigs County
Juvenile Court.
Mayor Charles Pyles commended
council members, carroll Teaford,
Robert Beegle and Scott Wolfe for
their work in cleaning ditches, ·
streets and sidewalks.
Frank Cleland was commended
for his work on the budget as well as
the work he is doing in helping obtain the lnfonnati!Jn for the Block
Grant application.
Attending were Mayor Pyles,
Margie Wolfe, chirk-treasurer,
Robert Beegle, Frank Cleland,
Jeanette Lawrence, Ben Petrel,
carroll Teaford, and Scott Wolfe,
council members, Glenn Rizer,
street commissioners and Bentz.

$59350

,-,

Fimeral services will be held'
Thursday at 2 p.m. at tbe Straight
Tucker Funeral Home, Ravenswood with the Rev. Ronald
McCully officiating. Burial will be
In Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home today
from 2 to 9.

Aurda R. Fleming
Aurda Rosetta Fleming, 36, 1re5
Wyoming Drive, Fort Myers, Fla.,
died at 9: :ll p.m. last Saturday In
Fort Myers.
Born Sept. 7, 1945, In Madison,
W.Va., she was the daughter of
Henry C. and Edna Plantz McKinney, who both survive at Rt. 1,
Vinton.
Also surviving Is her husband, •
Dr. Arthur Fleming; two sons,
Paul and Christopher, at home;
three sisters, Mrs. Berteen Raikes
of Bradlordvllle, Ky., Mrs. Pauline
Moss of Fort Myers and Mrs. Florence Schulte ol Harrtsburg, Ky.;
and four brothers, Henry of Delaware, Don of Rt. 3, Galllpolls, Raymond ol Columbus and Dennis of
Vinton.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday In the waugbHalley·Wood Funeral Home, with
the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.
Burial will be In Pine Street Cemetery. Thez;ewill be no calling hours.

"

Five die in head-on .crash
·

1111RD THEME FLOAT - A float entered by
Leglna Hart IJid Mayla Yoacbam, with a theme of
"GeOille Wasblllgton at Mt. Vernon," was winner of

-,

thlnlplace, lntbethemecatecoryoftheRaelne~aly4th
Parade. Ou th,e Roat, from lett, are ~ O'Brien,
SbawnO'Brien,MaylaYoacbamaildLeglnaHart.

Lawmakers want dorms for pages

To end marriages
Asuit for divorce and an action for
'dissolution of marriage have been
filed In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Shirley M. Thompson, Racine,
filed for divorce against Harry R..
Thompson, Elyria.
William C. Gaddis, Reedsville,
and Jacqueline A. Gaddis, Reed·
sville, filed for dissolution of
marriage.

Ask to wed

Orden due now
Orders for produce and bulk
orders will be taken by the Meigs
Food Co-op Thursday from 1 to 3: :II
p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center.
Pick-up will be on July 15 after 3: :II
p.m.

In MIQht lor _ , hlndtlng

nl pecked wttti
.._to do
the work tor rou-

Uprtght with
, _ Driven 12"
beater bar bruah rott
beats, s-ps,
cleans deep
doWn dirt.

ANN'S
CAKE DECORATING
SUPPLIES

.REDUCED

Y2

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

seet&lt;lno headlight

Veterans Memorial

NOWONLY

$8--995 :,~t,s.
·

Located in the
Upper Block in Pomeroy

Hartley Shoes

.HARTLEY SHOES
1

1

POMEROY, OHIO
992-5272

Jeffrey Wayne Thompson, 22, Johnstown, was charged Wednesday, said Licking Coonty Sheriff Gerry BU!y.
·
Thompson Uved less than a half mile from the home or Elizabeth
A. Hendren, who was tounddeadlnanupstairsbedroomoftbehouse
by her husband, David, when he returned home from work about 9
p.m. last. Thursday.

Carter takes Gallipolis post
GALLIPOLIS- Joseph D. Carter, superintendent of the Richland
City School District In Belmont County, has been named tile new
head of the Galllpolls City Schools system.
Carter, 45, signed a three-year contract with the City board of
education Wednesday night after they voted unanimously to accept
him as superintendent. His salary was set at $:1l,::llllperyear, and he
· l wUiseiVe·as a consultant to the district until he officially takes office
·on -\~; 1_. _, .• "
. ' ,- ·
·1 Kctlhg Slii!erlritenaent NeU S;plders satd C':arter was the first l:rlerall choice of the screening. coihmlttee, whlch ha reviewed 45-50
applicatiOns lor the superintendent's posltiD!I since June.

I

Model
6720

NEW YORK - An actress-model who portrayed the "little blue ·
nun" In television wine commerCials killed her boyfriend with hls
pollee revolver during a lover's quarrel early Wednesday and then
fatally shot herself, pollee said.
The bodies of Catherine ReiUy, 28, and Transit Authority Police
Officer Michael Condon, 34, were found In the woman's apartment
on Manhattan's East Side'.
NeighiJOrS reported hearing two shots about 12: 45 a.m. An emergency sqq&amp;il kildclled down the locked door of Ms. ReUly's apartment and found the couple dead in the llvlng room. His service
revolver was on the floor.

·

Toot Set Included

Winning Ohio lottery number

berfelds ~·-.
·In
-

the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 122.

The lottery reported earnings of $346,1$50 from the wagering on

of winning tickets
said.

are entitled to share $535,lm.50,
lottery omctais
.
.

Weather forecast
. P~IY cloudy ionlgbt wltll :1) percent chance ol thunderstonns
through late eve!llng. Lows·6&amp;70. Winds llgbt and variable. Friday,

~~.loudywlth~percentcllanaloftbunderstonns.Higbslnthe

CfflSCB

·$~350

WE HAVE OVER 100 REMNANTS AND
SHORT ROLLS, SOME lARGE ENOUGH TO DO
-•A UVING ROOM, HALL AND STAIRWAY . .OTHERS THAT WILL DO A BEDROOM OR
:BATHROOM - - AND~ WILL GUARANTEE '·.THAT YOU CAN BUY ANY ONE Of THESE
.. ., PIECES FOR LESS THAN FACTORY cOsT.
" · W£ ALSO HAVE ROLLS Of PET OF ALL
TYPES. BRING US A QUOTE FROM OTHER
'CARPET STORES IN THE AREA ·ANt- WE
GUARANTEE WE.CAJI BEAT.THIEIR PRICES.

COOL COMFORT - What fun the splashing was for the tiny tots In
the baby pool at Middleport Wednesday wben the tempetaturell moved Into the 80's. Natalie Granda!, Shane Moodillpaugh and Wendy Smith
thoroughly enjoyed their afternoon of splasblng.

nuu-&lt;&gt;UO

Esten.w Ohio F-.&amp;
8a&amp;uJ'IIIQ&gt;' Ibroup MOIIIIQ:

~lfilllowenlllldthuDclelri!tormSaQmlq.F•IIundalJ;Dd

MoDIIaJ1JDaiB '\&amp;he 1IIJPill''lUIIIDil• Lon In u.eupj.er Miiud

-.

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,

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Business was booming at the Middlpeort pool Wednesday afternoon
as the temperatures soared to 92 and the town kids looked for
something cool to do.
So they went swimming.
Mter the cool temperatures and rainy days of June, Rusty Bookman, pool and park mana~er, rep~rted good July attendance at the
pool and generally ~ood participation all season in the various other
activities sehedWooat the General Hartinger Park.
Bookin~rt announced a golf clinic to be conducted by Bill Childs of
the Jaymar Golf Course to be held at the park Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m.
No registration is required and ther~ is no fee for the clinic.
Registrations ~recurrently being taken at the pool for the junior and
senior basketball league which will get underway n xt week. The
junior league for eighth graders and those under that will play on
Tuesdays and Wednesdays, while the senior league for those in the ninth grade and over will play on Mondays and Thursdays.
On July 21 a pool party will be held for those over 12 years of age ..
Music will be provided and the cost for the party to be held from 8 to 10
p.m. will he $1 per person .
Awreslling clinic has been planned for July 31 in the shelter house at
the park on July 31 from 9 a.m. to S p.m. The clinic will be conducted
by Meigs Coach Larry Grimes and those interested should contact
Grimes at992-li622 to register.
Plans are also underway for a swirn-a-thon for the Meigs unit of the
American cancer Society in August. Further details orr the fund
raising project will be announced later.
Meanwhile, swiming lessons being taught by Helen Zinn are underway at the pool with new classes to start Monday.

Soviets issue troop Warning
MOSCOW (AP) - SOviet Prestdent Leonid Brezhnev today
warned President Reagan against
·~ sending American troops to Lebanon, the official Tass news
agency said.
Tass said Brezhnev sent a message to Reagan saying that 11 U.S.
Marines were dispatched to Beirut
"the Soviet Union would buDd Its
policy with due consideration of this

fact."
The Tass report did not specify
what steps the Soviets were prepared to take In response to the pos·
slble contribution ol U.S. combat
troops to a multinational peacekeeping forte for Lebanon.
Brezhnev called on Reagan "to
do everything depending on the
United States to end the bloodshed
In Lebanon, to halt the barbaric ex-

CLEVEL.AND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night bt
Its dally game. 'I'hl! eatulngs came on sales of$881.·267, while holders

the 80's. Several special activities Including a pool party with musk on
July Z1 and a swlm-a-tbon as a fund raiser for the American Cancer
Society on Aug.7 are being planned.

Temperatures
soar, children
head to pool

NEWARK, Ohio- A man paroled after a1978rapeconvlctlonbas
been c;harged with aggravated murder In tbe rape-slaying of a
22-year-old woman II) her rural Johnstown home, authorities say.

Actress kills boyfriend, herself

•2 position Dial-A-Nap®
rug height adjustment
•Po--'ul dirt

NEW FALL SHEOS ARRIVING DAILY .

.Parolee charged with murder

LOS ANGELES - President Reagan met WedneSday wtth top
White House advisers for an update on the crisis In west Beirut and
then flew back to hls ranch near SantaBarbara, Calif., toresumehls
vacation.
White House ·spokesman Larry Speakes suggested thllt statements .of rejection by various Palestine Uberatlon Qrganlzatlon
groups of Reagan's offer to send l,WJ American combat troops to
evacuate trapped PLO guerrillas from west Beirut should not be
taken at face value.
Speakes said Reagan met Wednesday with White House Chief of
Staff James A. Baker Ill and National Security Adviser William P.
Clark lor a brlellng on the latest Middle East developments.

SUMMER HOURS

PRICE

POPULAR PLACE - Tbe Mlddlport pool was a 'papillar pillce for
young and old alike Wednesay afternoon as the tempera. . . -nllato

Reagan .meets with advisers

NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS
ALL SUMMER SHOES

Pomeroy Council failed to meet
Monday night due to lack ol
quorum.

"

BATAVIA, ohio·- Richard L. Weston has ~ ordered' held
without bond after pleading Innocent to the execution-style kllllitgs ol
a Clermont County llreworks dealer 8!ld three members of hls
family.
.
.On July 6, 1981, Wtlllam Stevenson, 46; his wUe, Lynda, 36; their
son, BU!y Jr., 5; and Stevenson's brother-In-law, Edward Dowell, :11,
were found shot to death Inside WUllam Stevenson's burning Bethel
home.
;
Investigators Said each person had been shot - Stevenson seven
tlmes - and tbe bodies had beeii doused with gasoline and tbe house
set lltlre to,disguiSe the slaytngs. ·
Weston, a 42-year-old Batesville, Ind., resident, appeared In Clermont County Common Pleas Coort on Wedne¢ay for hls arraignment. No trlal date has been set.

\

CONTINUED CLEARANC E
SALE

'
No quorum,

ADMISSION5-Jacquellne God·
dis, Racine; Lynda Adkins, Minersville; Elsie Cross, Minersville,
• Dakota Lauderrnlt, Minersville;
Barb Smith, Middleport; Michael
VVrlght, l.a~e
DISCHARGES---Everett Caldwell, Anna Sprague, Sarah
Harmon.

UPRIGHT
1.
VACUUM CLEANER
This hMYJ !luty nc Ia light

,.:..------------1

at 2: 38 p.m .. Barbara Smith was
taken from Park Street to VMH by
Middleport; at 4: 53 p.m., 'I)Ippers
Plains took Gladys Thomas from
Oak Hill Road 'to HMC; at 10: 48
p.m., Racine transferred Joe Proffltt ·from Mile HID Road to VMH.

Middleport Emergency Medical
Service reported numerous activIty overnight Tuesday.
At 9: 17 a.m., Middleport squad
took George King from Leading
Creek Road to V,eterans Memorial
Hospital; at 9:49 a.m., Pomeroy
EMS made an emergency transfer
of Everett Caldwell from VMH to
Holzer Medical Center; at 10: G
a.m., Syracuse took George King
on an emergency transfer from
VMH to camden Clark Hospital,
Huntington.
At 11: G a.m., Tuppers Plains
squad took Jackie Gaddis to VMH;

A marriage license was issued in
Probate Court to Gary WBfl'e Martin, 19, Charleston, and Mary Arlene
Knight, 19, Racine.

MEDINA, Ohio (AP) - Five people wer~ killed when their car
struck a tractor-trailer rig head-on Wednesday afternoon. according
to the Norwalk post of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Pollee said a car driven by Robert K. Wallace, 20, of HomervDle,
was northbound on Olllo Route 601 about a half-mlle norm or Oblo
Route 61 when It apparently went oft the right side of the road, and
veered back on the blgbway out ol control. The car then went 1e1t ol
center and' struck a southbound truck driven by Gregory L. Truax,
33, of Akron.

Weston enters not guilty.plea -

any one ttme must find their own pages, said during those hearings .
accomodatlons. However, some of that the supervision issue was "a
the young men live 'in hOII!Itng PfOo potential tlme bomb." Molloy also
vlded by the U.S. Capitol Page asked for construction of a
Alumni Association and someoftbe dormitory.
Wright s.ald hls previous efforts
girls stay In the Thompson·
to
establish such a facility "failed
Markward Hall, a private facUlty.
because
many me!Jiber&amp; of Con"For several years I have been
working for the establishment of an gress felt they might be criticized .
official dormitory where these for spending government money .
young people could be quartered lor such a purpose .... Maybe these
and supervised under tight con- . new reports will help change that :
trol," s.ald House Majority Leader attitude."
Authorization for such a facUlty
James Wright., D-Texas, ln a recent
exists,
according to Sen. James
statement.
When youngsters are .through Abdnor, R-S.D., and land for It has
with their school and page dulles, • been purchased near the Capitol.
he s.ald, they "suddenly t!nd them·
selves footloose and free of any real , - - - - - - - - - - - -:
supervision In a city full of
temptat.lon."
The Issue has come up before. Six
years ago, congressmen In the
House Education and Labor Committee discussed the lack of suilervlslon for the pages In off-duty
hours. The hearings were on tbe Capitol Page School, which Is run by
the District of Columbia. ·
House Doorkeeper James Molloy, whose office oversees the

WASHINGTON (AP) - Disturbed by reports that former congressional pages may liave
engaged In drug trafficking and illicit sex, some lawmakers are renewing calls for construction of a
. dormitory where the teen-agers
could be supervised.
The recent allegations have
prompted several membersofCongress to question whetber pages on
. capitol Hill are able to handle
weeks or months ol unsupervised
residence In Washington.
At present, there Is no official dormitory for the pages, who range In
age from 14 to 18 years old.
Most of the approximately 100
pages who work In Congress as
messengers and errand-runners at

Emergency·squads kept busy

.POMEROY LA~MA
.

•

termination by the Israeli troops or
Lebanese and Palestinians women, children and old men,"
·
Tass said.
Asked about the report, a U.S.
Embassy spokesman, who decllned to be Identified, said, "We
don't comment on private ex·
changes between our leader:s. and
we are disappointed that Tass did
so."
Tass charged in an unsigned ·

commentary Wednesday night that
the plan to send about 1,WJ U.S.
Marines to Lebanon was "dangerous" and said It would "lead to a
further sharpaggravatlonoftheexplosive situation In the Middle East.
"Att.empt.s are being made to
strenghten the aggressor and in the
final analysts to supplement the Israell occupation with U.S. occupalion." Ta s s said In the
commentary.

Six people hurt in area traffic accidents
Six people were Injured In a two- ·
car crash on U.S. :11 near the Jackson: County llqe Wednesday
afternoon, tbe Gallla-Melgs Post of
the state highway patrol said
One of the Injured, Arthur Dixon,
59, Warren,~., was llsted In s.atlstactorycondltlont111smornlngln
Holzer Medlcal Center. He was admltted tor treatment of a back Injury, according_ · to a hospital
spokesman.
Dixon Was driver ct a W!!5tbound
vehiclewhenltcomdedat2:45p.m.

Gilbert, 33, Rt. 2, Bidwell. The pa·
trol said Gilbert was northbound
and was crossing 351n front of Dix·
on's veblcle. It was struck ' In the
right slde by Dixon.
Also Injured was Gilbert; lm·
ogene Gilbert. 13, Rt. 2, Bidwell, a
passenger In the Gilbert vehicle;
and three passengers In Dixon's
car - Denise Dixon, 23, Utica,
Mich., Dennis Vacca, 32, and Dar·
lene Vacca, 31, both Rochester,
Mich.
All were taken to HMC and

lng Injuries: Dottle Gilbert. cut s met two vehicles on the road. The
and bruises to the left hand and truck werit Into a ditch, causing
shoulder; Imogene Gilbert, bruised moderate damage.
right thigh; DeniSe Dixon, broken
The patrol said a vehlciJbli~g a
toes and a bruised foot; I)fnnls · grader, driven by Emmett' MCCasVacca, elbow cuts; and Darlene key, 69, Rt. 1, Rutland, was moder Vacca, multiple bruises.
at ely damaged by an unknown
Both vehicles were severely vehicle whlle stopped at the interdamaged In the crash, and the pa- s.ectlon of Rutland Twp. Rd . 346and
trol Cited Dottle Gilbert for failure
Meigs 'County Rd. 3 at 4: 40 p.m.
to yield.
A vehicle dr lven by Fred Taylor,.
In other accidents Wednesday, a 27, '"Rt. 1, Ewington, was modertractor trailer operated · by Row·
ately damaged by a deer wlien It
land Harris, 33, Rt. 1, Mlnfol'll, . collided with th!!-au.toon0hlo160at

::=:~;;~~;:::::::==~~w1:th~a~y:ehl::c:~~~:::en~by~Do::tt:~~L~.~=tre:a:t:ed~an::d~~::eas::ed::fo:r:tbe~fo:llo:w~-,;arov:::e~o=tf~O:bl:o~2:~~a:t~1~p~.m:·~w:h:m::u~;5~:00~a~.m~.~~~::Y:·~~~. . . . . .

· ·fitchins · •t~JI• .
cholen for 1982
AU Star Gcme '

Rech rally to snap
nine game string

Soviet Embassy
bombed in West
Beirut, Lebanon

Page3 .

Page 12

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