<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14316" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14316?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T00:09:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45422">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1eaaad2fc46c27d645a4d3f4c843cec0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b61c5aac1a2c170fdd631b1c6b9f037f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44709">
                  <text>as Miss Univ~ne

Belpre swimmer
places third in
Spo$ Festival

Food chains not
blamed for high
•
grocery pnces

Page 10

Page4

Page 6

Miss .Canada chosen

·PORTI·FILES

I'Oft TA.CHl CK r1U
4!11 .. nip, II" wldl , I " &lt;*11

No. 14et-VI'A. Wlln~ l WOOifvr• ln

en tine

e

'3''

NILioN'S 110. SS.24

VoUl,No.U
C:py:lpl:tocl 1912

1 Section, 10 Pagel
U Cent1
A Muhlmedla Inc. Newtpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 27,19.8 2
'

SR 338' highway issue still dormant
Now Is the time to get thosel
keys mode. Don't be locked out
your car or house ever again I
AlGULAA ~PITA-fiLE
11)" n ~V~. 12lf' wi.-, 51'1'' deep

~;·~··'· ( ·

'3''

... ,,.a
..
., ••

TWO KEYS FOR

'

No. 1112·WA, W11nu1 WwOplll'l

N..&amp;s • .-.•a.t7

Jn"OL

'1"

,.

N810"!1 ......,•• ,

. .10"'•

'

.. OL

110.

!'·"·

NAIOIII'I - · •Lat.

basic haircutting kit
'
·
Rubbc~ r mclld

N" MHI'Mo••, ....

• AIIIM blalc tools fOf' economical hOme haircultlng
• Ou\tt, ~Wilful electromagnetic motor cli pper Ia

: ' T\YIST~POP

. ICE .CUBE·· TRAY
·· sET.

lightweight yet dUfable
• Preelelon cutting held to eliminate nicking and
pulling
• Two anap.on attachment combs tor culling
vtrMUIIty
• t&lt;lt Includes clipper, blade guard, 2 attachmtl).l
combs, b•Jbtr comb, oil , c leaning brusfl •nd

NILSON'S RIO.

t12.tt

Foam· filled. Leather grained
vinyls. Bathroom fashion colors.

'8''

Moclel ..20

ln01ructlono.

SECURITY CHEST

'

For Home,' Office, Business
or School Use. lack,
2 Keys , Double Wall
Insulated conlll'utlon.
X

9'f,"

14 '/o

X

'8''·

NILSON'S 110.

$12."

were

Durable tubular healing element.
1100 watt heating power. Element
lifts for easy cleaning . Select any
temperalure ' with' Infinite control
thermostat. Convenient extra
burner for home, office, camper or
school.

complete cooperation of the attorneys and the county
auditors," said Meigs Co. Commissioner Rlch Jones.
" This Is something·we need to do badly, but we won't
be successful unless the attorneys understand It and
are In agreement with lt."
David Gloeckner, Gallla-Melgs CETA dlrEctor.ln·
tervened In a discussion of the Utter Control Project
application, noting that six CETA people, In conjunction with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources,
were currently engaged In cleaning up area high·
ways. The ODNR supplies the supervisor and the
bags, van, etc., for the composite litter program,
while CETA supplies the people. "This Is not a grant
but a composite program," Gloeckner emphasized.
The program will go untU the last of August or September, he said, and offered his assistance with any
new application for a grant for .utter control by the
commission. "We did It to keep Meigs County's name
In the pot for tbe 10 million dollars avaUable In Ohio
for Utter control," he sald.
Jones said the commission was grateful for any
help It could get on the project. He added the comrnls·
s!on Intends to appoint a litter control board, likely
today.
Winding down the session was Commissioner

.,,,,.
~ILION'S

RIO. SU.ft.

and struck a tree. The car was dem·
ollshed. Clark was taken to PVH by
the New Haven Rescue Squad.
In other matters, Carl B. Hen·
dr!cks, 27, Pomeroy, Injured In a
one-vehicle accident In Meigs
County early Saturday, Is stDI In
stable ·condltlon In Holzer Medical
Center following surgery for a neck
Injury Monday.
Hendricks was northbound on
Ohki ''T at 3:33a.m. when his autO·
left the road and struck a guard
rall. Originally taken to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital, he was later
transferred to HMC.
The Gallla-Melgs Post of the

state highway patrol said Laura E.
Shafer, 21, Rt. 2, Crown City, was
not treated for an Injury she received after she lost control of her
vehicle on Ohio 71n Gallla County at
7:50a.m. Monday.
The vehicle went off the right side
of the road, struck a guard rail,
came back onto the road, drove off
the lett side and rested In a ditch,
causing moderate damage, the report Said.
No citation was Issued when a
southbound vehicle driven by Gil·
bert Smith, 38, Pomeroy, turned
left from 7 at the James M. Gavin
plant at Cheshire at 10:35 a.m. Into

tion" to survive against foreign
June 1981 and 51.5 percent from the
competition It said the U.S. Industry may move much of Its produc·
r-Prllme Lending Rat11-,
t!on overseas, with two-thirds of au
cars sold In America possibly built ·
abroad.
Two major banks - No. 4 Manu·
15.5%
facturers Hanover Trust Co. of
18%
New York and No. 6 Chemical
Split Ra..
Bank of New York - cut their
prime lending rates to 15.5 percent,
matching the rate's lowest level
since 191ll. Wachovla Bank &amp; Trust
Co. In Wtnston·Satem, N.C., ranked
32nd by deposits, matched the reduction, and others were expected
to foUow suit.
Last week, a 16 percent prime
rate swept the Industry. The prime ·
Is the base used by banks to calcu·
late Interest on loans to their best
corporate customers.
SPLIT RATE - ManufacIn other economic news: -The
turer's
Hanover Trust Co., the
National AssociatiOn of Realtors
naUoa's
fourth largest eomsaid In Washington that Its monthly
merelal
beak,
lowered Ita prime
survey showed resales of stnglelendiBg
rate
to
15.5 pereent Moofamlly houses at an annual rate of
day.
This
marked
lhe lowest
1.95 million In June, up 2.6 percent
polat
for
lhe
rate
slnee
Nov. 30,
tl,'om the May sales pace. But June
1981.
(AP
Laserphoto).
resales were off 27.2 percent from

JuiJH

N.ELS0N'S ·DRUG STORES

N~NCAI!IROW'S· .RHARMACY~
'

•

•

"'

&gt;

the path of a vehicle driven by
Roma Cremeans, 43, Rt. 1,
Rutland.
Smith's vehicle struck the lett
side of the Cremeans auto, causing
moderate damage to both.
Slight damage was reported to
two vehicles when they sideswiped
each other on Hannan Trace Road,
a mUe southof0hlo790,at3: 10p.m .
Monday. Marsha McGuire, 18, Rt.
2, Patrlot, was northbound when
her vehicle met a southbound auto
driven by Jane Cox,~. Rt. 2, Crown
City, on a hillcrest and collided, the
patrol said.
·

peak level of November 1978.
-The American Iron and Steel
Institute said steel production rose
to 1.292 mllllon tons In the week
ended July 24, up 3.7 percent from
the previous week. But It noted that
production for the year so far stU! Is
35.4 percent below tile level of the
same period a year ago.
- A government study sa id
health care spending continued to
outpace Inflation In 1981, growing
15.1 percent to $287 billion. The sum
represented spending of $1,225 for
every American and accou nted for
9.8 percent of the gross national product - a measure of all goods and
services produced by the economy.
- The Canadian Pulp and Paper
Association said newspr int produc·
tion In June totaled 652,!XXl metric
· tons, off 12.2 percent from May's
743,!XXl metric tons and a decline of
12.9 percent from 749,!XXl metric
tons In June 1981. Despite the drop,
U.S. newsprint Inventories re·
rnalned at near-record levels wtth
stocks on band June 30 totaling
1.564 million mettic tons, or a 61·
day supply.

Bitterness lingers after trustee election
c!de whether or not the tape remeeting was continued to allow for the persons chosen to count the
corder should be present, and the
the counting of approximately 500 proxies could not attend.I
board agreed unanimously to have
proxy votes offered In the election
This actiOn was strenuously proIt removed.
from members.
tested by Conley at the time, and
"It's my tape recorder, and If you
Some proxy votes, which had his objections were raised again at
want. It removed, call the sheriff,"
been revoked In the past week be- last night's meeting.
call8e some members felt they had
Later, Conley alleged the Wed· · Conley said. The tape recorder
been misled when they signed tbe J1ell(iay meeting was continued bestayed.
Following a 45-mlnute recess to
proxies, were not counted In tbe cause the board wanted more time
count the votes, the board then
election, which drew sharp protests to ~ additional proxies revoked,
agreed to an additional 1~· mlnute
from S01J1e members.
thus Increasing Gillespie's and
recess to consider Conley's power
William (,::onley, an aUOrney, Sheets' chances for reelection.
pl'l!lll!lted the boar~ a! one point
Warren Sheets lnfol'l'!'led Conley of attorney statement. Shortly after
this, association member Larry
with ·a power~ attorney stsiement . that It the ctefeated candidates feel
Little, Cheshire, left the meeting.
giving him perinJnlon to &lt;tier the electiOn was conducted llle" Mr. Chairman, I'm leaving.
truitees and auoclatiOn members more than 100 proxy votes forMra gaily, thell lbeycan take the matter
I've had enough," he told G!llesple.
. ilpol!lld tbele totals kl the board Moore. The .U.tement was rejected . to coilrt H the judge finds tn their
"It's a disgrace to the members r1
11111 mare thaD oo merriberl Mon- by tbe board wtMin Warren Sbei!tl favor, a new election can be
the
Gallla County Rural Water Astold
them
Conley
could
not
IISIUri1e
ofdered.
d!IYiatlbtat tile u.Dctatloa'solftce.
soclaUOn to see the way you people
·
·
A!!rlmony attherneetlngwasevl·
' AtW CCJIIII"""J. With lltOnley . IUCb responalblllty.
get up here and conduct ·a
MOIIday ntcht's sessiOn waa. a dent prior to Its beginning, When
· Wama Sb8eti Who Jtepped tn for
meeting."
continuation
d.
a
coritlnued
Dll!et·
GUJesple
objected
to
Conley's
sePtGiiKillur Joeeph Calli, the aaaocl:
"I sympathize ~th you," Gilles·
:lng
of
Jail
Wejlnelday,
When
the
'
cretary
tape
reCording
the
nteet·
atlaa'1 leP.l coomaet, tbe board
pie
retorted. "It Is a disgrace, par;tJI!I!rd
agreed
to
watt
on
e1ectllin
retng.
Warren
Sheeta
advlled
~
..,..S ID wutlulie tbe ek!ct10n u It_
tlculafly
tn the way some of you
IUltl
until
MQIIday
becauae
two
rl.
·
board
It
was
their
,p)easure
to
de• . Cll
Juiy' "19 wben ltl annual••
.r .r
' • .
t
been acting! '. ·
people
have
'

By KEVIN J(ELLY
KANAUGA · A disputed election
of trustees for the Gallla County Rural Water AssociatiOn has ended
with tbe reelection r1 two lncuJn.
bents, but bitterness over the way
the electiOn was conducted lingers.
llhmael Gillespie, the board
chairman, l!lld. Lewis Sheets won
additiOnal termS on the bolird witli
2.a and 247 vote!l, ~­
'lbl!y dl!fe.ted Bruce Stout, woo re1, ICI!Ivecl 187 - votes, anct Lawana
-, Moore, who got 182 votes.
/ ~ ~ttng committee r1

•

Jones' report on the cu rrent status of the Meigs
County Elderly Housing Corporation. The corpora·
tion has fonned a housing board for the MCEHC
consisting of Rich Jones, president , Eleanor Thomas,
BUI Young, Rev. Robert McGhee, Paul Bar rett and
Manning Webster.
The Housing Board has applied for a HUD grant,
section 2D2, to build a 46-unlt, 100 percent subsidized
housing complex for the elderly and hopes to lease the
old children's home building for use with the apart·
ment complex. The use of the old children's home,
which would house part of the units, would serve the
residents of the complex who needed food assistance,
etc.
"There Is stl1f competition for the grant, but we
hope to get good results," said Jones. He added be
hopes to hear more In September.
Also on the agenda was a report on finances by
Charles Blakeslee. He detailed expenditures totaling
$753.85, leaving a balance of $1544.61. The expend!·
tures were for Blakeslee' s expenses and the cost of
printing the brochures.
Bill Quickie reported on the Park District commit·
tee, concluding that Investigation Into available monJes for area park Improvements was continuing.

General Motors reports profit, prime
lending rate sliced by two major banks
By A_.,e•ed l'l'e88
Despite · the recessiOn's deteriorating effect on sales, the nation's
largest automaker has posted a
profit for the second quarter, but
losses more than tripled at another
major car company. Meanwhile,
an Interest rate that affects bus!·
ness borrowing took another dip.
General Motors Corp. said Mon·
day It earned $54iO mDllon In the
three months ended June ll, up 8.8
percent fi:om a profit of -$514.6 million Ill the second quart.lr of 1981.
Sales at the No. 1 domestic carmaker
off 4.8 percent to $l7.2
bllllpn from $18.02 billion.
Ainertcan Motors Corp. lost $E8. 7
mllllon In the second quarter, Its
ninth straight quarterly loss. The
loss at the fifth-largest automaker
was more than three times Its $19.9
million loss In the second quarter of
1981.
AMC sales fell to $667.2 million
!1'om $721.8 million.
A study released In Washington
by the National Science Foundation
said domestic automakers must
undergo "close to a cultural revolu·

Plre Rnl1tant

11 -3/4"

bridge.

The car tben overturned, came
back onto the right side of the road

The perfect "lllrter" kit lor
cutting hlir 11 .home.

+ •.

,

.·•toi .

WAR(;

NILION'I_.,, ... .

A 51)-year·old New Haven man
died In one-vehicle crash on u.s.
33 In Letart Monday afternoon, ac·
cording to the Mason County Sheriff's nepartment.
Homer Clark was dead on arrival
at Pleasant :Valley Hospital.
The sheriff's department said
Clark was eastbound at a high rate
of speed at 2: 2D p.m., apprdxl·
mately 1~ rnlli!s abovt: the f'l11llp
Sporn plant, when his car veered
left r1. center and struck West Creek

a

... ~UihCic

•

was another hlghllght of the meeting.
The brockure, which IIUlDfDlll1zes the major acttvl·
ties of tbe commission over the past year, will be
available at various sites around the county. "The
brochure Is not to iopk at. It's to 118e," said commls·
liOn ptesldent, Thereon· Johnson. More than 1001
brochul'l!ll wW also be sent to the tourism divisiOn of
the State d. Ohio, noted Charles Blakeslee. "I called
and asked them what they had on Meigs County and
they llkt 'Nothing.' We hope this brochure wtll rec·
ttfY that."
Aside fran the commission activities report, tbe
brochlJre also eontatns the latest census popuilltim
InformatiOn on Meigs County.
.
O&amp;ller maiten
Ways to ImProve the current condition of tbe property transfer process were also discussed. The tax
map dllce has a statement of the process In nearby
countJes, which summarizes tbe mafor functiOns
1\&amp;eh olllce performs. The tax omce plans to look at
the various su"'P'arles and then consider making
additions, deletions or modifications of the systems,
resulttng In a restructuring of Meigs County's
aystem. ·
"'lbe real secret of making It go Is obtaining the

New Haven man dies in crash

•

.

By IWJ.YANNE HOLTZ
There appears to be no new deVelopments on the
Meigs County highway situation. At least that was
the concensus of a report from the Highway Users
eornrntttee given by Frank Cleland at MODday's
Metp County ~nal PJanntng COIJ1JntUton
meeting.
ResoluUOns have been sent to area counties tncludtng the Athens area Chamber d. Commerce and tbe
Athens County ~onal PlallnJne Ccmmlulon. "The
comment Is as good as expected," Said Cleland. "We
bave gbtten a l'l!llponstble return." CJe!and also aajd
be feh tbe committee lboula ''blallllet tbe county"
before moving beyond Melp. "I was reluy glad to
see the Athens' resolutions come In, " be said.
James Jennings cited a tramc count done recently
by tbe West Vtrgtnla Hlibway Department trom
June 13-15 this year, a 48-bourperiod,on WestVIrgt·
nla'sRt. 338. tbeequtvalent d.Rt.3311onthe0hloalae.
The result was that an averqe llt 1,113 cars traveled
over the Rev~ !ridge di\I1Y. This w~ despite
the exlattng bad conditions. The ~ttvely low llgure
could Ukely be Improved tftberewaa a deeellt road on
the Ohio alae, said Jennlnga.
Introduction of the new Meigs County brochure

•

~

••

w

..

~ ''"""''"'•'·'~''""'

~ '

·.,

\

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary

Bench, Driessen lead
Reds to 4-2 triumph

Page-2-Jht Dai!Y Sentinel

PCIIIIIIVy.....Middleport, Ohio
Tg•c!"Y, July 2~,1,a2
. ..
... - -..
\

.I

T 0 Heather at 1..2L'_ ____,..,----::-,__J_ame__;,__s J_.

Berrv's World

EDITOR'S

NOTE:
Mr. change.
KU..trlek'1 eelliiiUI takH tile form
You asked ·me, "What's going
ol bll lllmlllll birtllday le11er to bll on?" Let me see. The five baby
IIJ'UIIdlupter Hatller, DOW a~ .wrens that were nesting in the
telllllDg 1 tiiiiUDer camp Ill Pe.,. hanging basket by the kitchen grew
Dlylvula.
up and flew away. The baby
Dear Jleather,
swallows have done the same thing,
. Your letters from camp have been and now they are putting on a flying
arriving in veritable torrents - to circus by the red bli'n. We have a
me, to your mother and father, to groundhog whose hole is·not 50 feet
brother Douglas, to Cousin Alina from the house. He bustles up when
and we have passed them around. he thinks no one -is looking, and eats
From these letters we gather that the blrd!eed that has fallen from the
(1) you once got homesick and cried, feeder In the oak tree, Half a dor~m
(2) you are making a bracelet, 3) quail have discovered the same ftee
you are In a play, (4) you are taking lunch.
Out In the garden the tomatoes are
some tennis lessons and (5) you are
getting a tan. All this is to be ex· ' finally beginning to ripen. The zu~
pected, but if your camp is any chin! is coming In, as it always does,
decent sort ol camp at aU, you also In quantities sufficient to feed your
are (6) BCratchlng chigger bites and entire camp for the rest of the sum"OK/ How about coming up with a good line
(7) peeling your sunburned nose.
mer. We are picking a dozen cucumabout returning - like General MacArthur
In your spare time, If I am not bers every morning; they are turdid/"
mistaken, you are sitting on your cot ning Into pickles by night I think we
in Bunk Four grousing about the
food and hungering for mail.
"Please, please, please," you said to
Alina, "please write or I won't eat
and I will die." To your father you
voiced a threat even more ominous:
"If you don't write l will elope with
Alex." Your message to brother
A constitutional amendment Is not going to balance the federal budget ·Oougla.s was direct and to the point:
, any more than a constitutional amendment stopped Americans !rom "If you don't write I will beat you up
whenlgethome."
drtnklng whiskey,
All for the camp food, you have
It's a matter of breaking habits, no matter what the Constitution says.
now
eloquently advised all of us that
And deficit spending is habitual.
the
food Is horrid, dreadful,
The 18th Amendment - prohibition - made it more dltricult for people
uneatable
and, as you spelled it,
to get and drtnk alcoholic beverages, from 1919 untll it was repealed In 1933.
"grose,"
which
18 close,
They had to break the law to drtnk, but they did it anyhow.
All
this
strikes
me as par for the
For all the sloganeering about the balanced budget amendment Its
summer-aunp
course.
.All camp
sponsors don't claim it would cure deficits, only discourage them. '
food
is
horrid
(though
some
is more
The proposed 27th Amendment would make it harder, and politically
horrid
than
others),
and
nota-yearmore dangerous, for Congress to vote deficit spending. Proponents of the
measure say It would change a bias toward more spending and more taxes old ever has been known to get
enough letters. You will find this
that now is built into the way the federal government handles money.
"It does not require that the budget In factbebalanced,"budgetdirector hard to believe, but your grandDavid A. Stockman told Congress. "It merely requires that - except 1n father was once 12 years old, and he
extraordinary circumstances - the Congress plan to spend no more than went to a YMCA summer camp in
Oklahoma, and he complained of
it takes In, and then that It ensure, with the president, that actual spending
terrible food and no mall- and that
does not exceed planned spending."
was 50 years ago. Some things,
It would take 261 votes In the House and 60 In the Senate to approve a
among
them summer camps, never
deficit. The theory is that those votes would clearly and simply Identify
proponents of deficit spending, so that their constituents could judge them
at election time.
The way it works now, spending votes are spread aU over the lot. A
member can vote for spending that will benefit the people back home, and
follow up with speeches denouncing budget deficits.
Congressional committees are supposed to be at work now on spending
reductions to meet the guidelines set by the budget resolution Congress
NEW YORK (AP)- Automoblle
already has passed. The House Post Office and ClvU Service Committee makers, the most humbled of all year slump In auto sales may be
defied the budget Instructions, voting to trtm the spending it supervises by American industries, may arise ending."
From that conclusion to a fore$113 million over the next three years, when It was supposed to have made from the debris of' their collapse
cast
of record sales and profits
cuts totaling $3.2 billion.
and begin earning prollts as early sounds Uke a leap oftaith, but Value
: A study commissioned by the Taxpayers Foundation, which has been as next year, according to an estl·
pushing the amendm~nt, says one of the reasons for the deficits is that the mate by one Investment advisory Line contends that higher volume,
overhead reductions and lower In·
benefits of a spending program are concentrated among a relatively small service.
terest and lnfiation rates wUl be
nu.~ber of people, while the cost is spread among aU the taxpayers.
To think that the automotive In· among major factors bringing
: Th~ competition between tax spenders and tax payers is highly un- dustry might come back delivers
equal, says Alvin Rabushka, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution of hope to other unfortunate victims of about the transcendent
transformation. ·
Stanford University. "It is simply not as worthwhile for an Individual the big receSsion. To housing, for
Here, greatly abbreviated, is the
taxpayer to spend much time and effort to save a few dollars In taxes as it instance, and to the Industrial
reasoning
behind the forecast:
Is tor the spending interests to secure millions or bUilons of dollars for Midwest.
themselves."
.
It sounds impossible that an inThe current slump dates to mldBesides, Rabushka says, spending has Immediate poUtlcal benefits dustry can ascend from previously
1979.
following the sharp rise In fuel
while the bill is added to the debt and doesn't come due untlllater.
unheard of losses of~ billion In just costs after the Iranian revolution,
J'ikeptlcs, and not all or them are Democrats, say it won't work, and that the past two years and earn $4.3
which reduced automobile usage
t~ answer to deficits is for members of Congress to discipline themselves
billion In 1983 and $6.8 billion a year and hence the need for replacement
to-withstand the political pressure for government spending.
from 19&amp;'i through 1987.
of vehicles.
But the advisory service, Value
At the same time, automobfie
Line Survey, has reasoned its way costs rose faster than prices. in gen.'
to the conclusion that "the three- eral, In part because of new safety

hav~ U~ked !he rabb!t problem,
though the barbed-wire barricades
and machine-gun emplacements
strike some visitors as just a Uttle
odd:
What's going on? Here at home
you haven't millsed a thing. The
summer dar&amp; are like aU summer
days - hot and hw;nld m~~tt of the
time, but in til!! late afternoon the
thunderheads ·roll up over Turkey
Mountain all black and purple, and
we run around cl~~tlng windows.
Then, crash, bangl It pours for 15
minutes. This doesn't help the freshcut hay, but It makes the zucchini

grow.

'

·Beyond the borders of Rapoahall'
nock County, a lot is going on. I have
lost track ol the wars and would
rather not tell you about them
anyhow. You have better things to

&gt;

_K,_'lp_;_
' at_ric_k

think shout on a 12th birthday than
man's Inhumanity to man. For the
time being, let us talk about copper
bracelets and clay pots and toasted
marshmallOW!! tmd hoW YOU hit
forehand and whether you hav~ lear·
ned to keep your feet together In a
jackknife dive. The wars can walt
These are the long summer days
of our life, my Jove, when homesick
tears are afternoon showers. They
don't last long, and they help you
grow. Give our regard4 !\) aU Your
. friends, and especially to yolir bunk·
mate who got her Up caught In her
braces. And come borne 110011.
said in one of your letters that you
missed aU of us, even Oougas.' Well,
vice versa. That's Latin for we mlas
you, too.

a

·Yoo

DOUBLE HOMERS - a.eta.U Redl' Dill to IMit Jie.d lUMI did ~ II!De wltb another bomer. Tbe
DrlesseaiJ treeled by Jolmay Buell at !lome plate af· Redl bell tbe CldcagoC.ba 1-Z. '{APLuerpboto).
ter blttlq a home no Ia 11ae fourllt IIIIIIDI.IIellcb weal

Love,
-GRANDFATHER

Waverly seeks cage mentor

A matter of
breaking. habits

Waverly High School is searching However, Thompson is Ill and may
not be able to coach this winter.
for a new basketbaU coach.
Roger "Gabby" Smith, head cage · While at Waverly, Smith's teams
mentor for the past three seasons, compiled a 40-30 record. He •ucwill be leaving to · asswne the ceeded the legendary C. D. ijawhee.
Smith is a 1971 graduate ol
~Uon of acting principal and ·
possibly head basketball coaching West11rn High SChool and a graduate
duties of Western High SChool In ol Lander College In South Carolina.
While at Western, Smith compiled a
Pike County.
Currently, the head coaching 1,636 point BCOrlng career while
leading his team to the regional
po~~itlon iB held by district superintendent Heckle Thompson, finals his senior year,

Scoreboard ...

folks of Rutland for allowing me to
serve their town as officer-in-charge
of the post office for the past eight
months. I certainly enjoyed my stay
in Rutland and the excellent exi&gt;e,rlence that the office provided me
with should enhance future assignments or possible promotions.
I would also like to especially mention that rural carrier Bea Wood and
clerk Margaret Edwards are two
conscientious, hard-working postal
employees. I feel grateful to have
had the opportunity to work with

PNlldelpNa

Sl ......

......

Plrtlbu!lll

New York

Chk:...

Ill Coort Slr«l
Pumeruy, Ohiu
11Hti·21M

J&gt;F.VOT&gt;:DTO THE INTERE.'&gt;'TOFTHE MEIG5:MASON AREA

49
..
.,

..
Ia
Ill

.!116
....
....

5I
51

:J7

.1116

"M
51

.4110

---·-

I lmrilediately telephlined lnformaUon, located the factory In
Hong Kong and called. Inspector 7
was· not the!'e but I got 110111e011e In
charge who spcke English. I ex·

ry oft'tlltlve bacll:ftelc! roach.

PHILADELPHIA-Named Joseph Pf nd-

BOOIUIY

N"lnal&amp;odr., LeiPe
DETROIT RED WINGS-Sianed Coli n
CamDbell. deffnteman.
N~ YORK RANGERS-Sianed Grant
.Ledyard. c!efeueman: and Steve Hakala.
left WlnJ.

. '8~
12

16ll
11\1

0

1

""'"""" ~- 12-&lt;) •• Cblcqo
(Martzf.4),
(II).
SAri DI'IO ILollor liH ond 7..!1 ••

A - !Walk 8-7 IDd Day......1. 1 lnl
~tu

(Ruthwlt 1-7) at Pitt.

bu!lll IMcWI11l.oma "'·

"'-

(n )

CIDdll:rlaU (Lfttnnll ~) at HellltOO

lll,yu Jl.9), (ft)
l.ol Anlelel 1V.R.olm t-21 at s.n Frandtoo (Barr 1·2 orR. Martin f..f,J, (n)

DOUBLE» T.Kennecl)', Son 6t..., 01;
Knipt. HoWtm. 24; ouver, Montreal, 22:
llladloclr, PIHihu!llh, 12; !'!led With 2L
1R1PI.D: McGee, St.Loull. 7: Gamer,
Hooston. 7; Temp&amp;etm, San IHeao. 7;
Morefto. Plttlb\u'ib. 6; Tholl., Houltcn. 6;
Puhi.- -L

S.. ill9 at Allanta lnl
Clnclnnltl II Houston {II)
N5o York at St. Lou.il tn)
U. Anaelet at San F'r'anc:ilol (nl

--

.WII&amp;ICANLEAOOE

L

.!113
519
....

-

ll

Cl

.016
.515

1\1

.48!1

10*

-st

Murpby, Allaola, 21: Caner, MonbUI,
:11:
J .~ PI!Uiou!llh,l8: - ·
Atlanta, 11; Cuemro. Los Anaela, 18:

I~

11 ..
41 11

l!O

Ill

Sl'OLEII !WID: -

6 : ~ St.Loulo, t1: "'-Man..11. G ; oomtor, Pltli-Na, 311; SU,

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

Ill

.a

Oaklond
,._

"

.!116

PITCHING 112 llodt-1 : -·MOO&gt;
treal. :12-4, -~ 1U; P. N..-o. Atl&amp;mta,
9-3, .7!!0, 3..11: ........ ""'
10&lt;.
.nl, 1.01: o.--.., Pit.......,, 10-5•
.1&gt;1, 118; Fcncll, St. Lout~, lD-5, .flfl,
191; Carlton. Pltll-IU. U11, !19,
118: v.-uo~L Lao ......, Ull .619,

•

.!Ill!

!

t1

58
!IC

.GC

14

•

0

31 ..
-..,..a-

.«N 14\1
.:147 :Mill

' CloYeiiD4
Detron
~CUy
New
Y«k s 1

,_
.., - - · ""' o.ao.
3.'1a

.,.

-~-~
' · Cblcaoo-2

-10·-·

o.ao.

j

.,

-

,._~~-~

Orlk1Mtl u,
T'cl'o!b

.

~.

7) , lnl

It 8c»taa ('1\ldcl' 5-

(Wdll.,),{n)

·-·

'

' RBI: McRae. Kuoao Qty• •, Cooper,

I I , . _ 1.._,

'

.,

.. _
,.,....
..._

/

Califonlo
!Wilt
,

W),(D) ·

, . , ·'

at.-

11.

Hn'I:Y~.

---.. ..
. ooua.a: Wbitt,

lll!ln&gt;ll.
111
" - a City, to; Youlll. MJI.
· -·"arm.,~~ u..-.
.,.._, ~ KuooOICIQ/, f; eoo.n.,
W.-

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

-.-;L

LIIDAU.

0

lft'OLI:N - - RJ'

Jamtt, Dltebir, from Evtatvllt.
MILW-AUKEE
BREWERS-

WIYDe Garlud pltcblnl l•tr\lctor at
Plllev~le
IKI'.I or tilt APPllar:hlu
........
POOnAU.
Nlllo.r F-ID Le.
HOUm&gt;N OILPIS-C!It Eric Dav•
Barr~. .IVt NeD;

PllfD,

BOB HOEFLicH
ll&lt;Mnl .........

,

.' TEN?

-·

/ I

.

7

w-

.....,.

0111·

II: Gon:la. a.
Ill-. CII)O, .. J.cJW. - · II; LeF·
-.~

• Named

Grot
llr,

Colll&gt;nlla,

II: Ollvll( - - · II: G.Tbomll.
tw.lli,.,...., ~ 22;
Cllqlor,- 21.

TJGIERI-OplloDtd

AmlrleU AIIOCIIUoa ud eallld UP Bob

P!I'CIIING

- I N , .1M, 1.11: Coud!llo CIW*y, ""' Yorll,

lt, ,1Jio, ~
lilt -

Clear,

~

11n OI\LIEANI wNn-C• corur .
llamm. tllebeell•: Lol... Gnfte, ....
flulve llelll: Rofllrt Par...,.. fllblel:

'

.

. I'I'RIICIXlVTIF

ilortror, -

.....,

Ml'mber : The A£!ioc..•ialed Prl'u,lnlal'kl Oai·
ly Prcl£ll A.s~lalion a nd t~ Am~ rh:an

Ne'W3j)lper Publi ~ht!n A:i.soclation, N111UU1U1I
Allvl'rti:si nj( Rl'pre se ntativl', Branha1n
Newspapcr Sl:tlt!S, 733 Thirtl Aventtt, New
York . New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: St!nd addrt!u to Tht! Dall y
Scntmcl . Ill Court St., Pom~ roy. Ohiu~789 .

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Hy Carrier ur Motor Rook
On(• Wt'ck . . .. .. .. .. .. . . .. . . .. .. .
~ Mon t h

Ul;

,-

121;

•

Subsi.·n bt•rs not tltosirin,l! In p,ay ttl!! carrlt!r .
mo~~ y rt!mit tn o~~ t.l vant&gt;e d t n~d to Tht' Oo~~Ur.
~ -n t m t'l tm 1:1 3, 6 nr 12 111onlh blsi.s. Cn.•\hl
w1ll bt· given t'Hrricr t'B l'h month.

Nu s ubsl..-ipl mns by H"ltli l l)t'nnitlt.'llm tuwru ·

wlwn· home l 'll rrit•r serv11·c i ~ t~ VHi htbl l'

Coen chosen
as head coach

ECHO

CRAIB SAW~
E

.,JIJ

CLJto

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

1------------------------

rates on

CheCk th~S8 oepos,tS•••

2
14...............

Nina's Hope moves
into tie for first

~~~~l

,

0/o

..(3.50~~~-

Pili••

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

t-100-212-t701.

•

_,., .,.....
-

Yarll, 1111; - . . . . , . , - •
~

B.~~~

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.

-w:::..m:.. . ~.•

NcwiEdiW

•

0

0

0

~1~ A'llrlUI . ... . . .. . .. . . .... (614~446-2765
. 300
Secmd Slreet " --" " " ' " (6 t 4 992·2t t1
JACI&lt;SON.-3tl6 ~ *' :llreet ..
(614 28&amp;4187

0

........

..

0

..

"

....

......

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

___
_ . . , . _ , .... a.. _~~,..,
__ ... _ _ ..
~.-

._
'

l

.

I
0

.

' ~.

\

noo

•uo

.... . .. . ... . ...... , .
Ont• Vca r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t52.~
SINGLE COPY
PRJCF...'i
D~u l y .
.. .. .. ... . ......... l ~Ce nll

1• ,
14, .,, lilt

·J""'·....._
,.,., U.&amp; .111, .1.11.

J..,..Grtt• o·coaad.....,.WWI..., U~

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992·2156. Sa'Ufld d au
posla l(l' p.yid ill Pomt'roy, Ohio.

.._a,t.
H, .112,

»e. .,,
.,,

1-i.

..._

Published evttry t~ rte moon, Mond¥ y throu ~-t h
Prithty, 111 Coort Sl ~ t . by the Ohio V1111lt.ty
Pubh!ihinl( Comp~~ny • Mullimt'tlht, Inc .,

CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati myself, 'I can't go on like this .' "
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Other Reds are nursing injuries.
lllll idto Ohh1
Reds relief pitcher Tom Hume was
13 Wl•l'ks . . ........... .. .. . . . ... 114.04
Shortstop
Dave
Concepcion
has
scheduled to have an arthroscopic
26 Wl•t·k.o; .. ... . ............... . $27,30
$2 Wt•t•ks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151.41
examination of his right knee missed tour games with an ankle
Ouhlt.l.- flhln
injury, and pitcher Tom Seaver has
today.
13 Wi·t'k~ .
.. 11&gt;.21
26 W t·t · k ~ .
... .... 129.1H .
Hume, who posted his 17th save been out of the rotation because a
$2 Wt•t•ks .
156.21
ot the season In a 4-2 victory over baseball hit his toe In batting prac·
. the Chicago Cubs Monday night, tlce Friday.
MELCOEN
didn't accompany the team to 1
Houston. Hume tore cartilege In his
knee two months ago, and has been
bothered by It since.
"I want to take this burden off of
me," Hume said. "I've been going
with It for almost two months and I
just
got tired or complaining about
Mel Coen, a 1964 graduate of
It
...
I
want to be able to pitch again.
Kyger Creek High School, has been
I
don't
want to go out there and ruin
named head football coach at
11'1 Record For Durability Ia UnaurpaiMd By Other 8awa
my
arm."
Fairless High School at Navarre,
In tt'1 Price Renga.
.
The examination won't necessar·
Ohio.
, ...u,..:
• ~~Ofopntllt
Coon has been an assistant cosch lly put Hume on the disabled list.
., ~ poeitlon
_.,.~;;::::-~~.....
"If
It's
as
I
understand
It,
It'
s
a
at Fairless for the past four years,
• LatQe ~I~ quoc:k.
[
of
seven
to
10
days,
unless
matter
serving under head coaches Dave
~ CII*MiOnr,
Dourm, Bob Maltarich, and Bill Of. it's worse{han we think It is," said
• Qroupecl fingrllp c;onlroll
fenbecher. He has worked with Reds Manager Russ Nixon.
lof . . . ...-.won.
I
Hume said the knee problem has
·~..::::."'backs and linebackers. The Falcons
• A~:ap~~tt", t4 ", 0f us· ww.
~-·1
were 24-26 with two All.{)hio Con· caused him to change his motion
.._.,..,...Gel AFree Cal?l"f
•
1Z.MClffl'M
UMIT£0
WARAANTY·
ference Championships (1978-1979) and put more stress on his arm and
shoulder. He said he's needed more
during tlie past four years.
Before going to Fairless as an time to loosen up recently.
ra.1 6tMi E. Malo Sl
Pit. MZ.Zot4
"-'!, Oil
"It's only been the last couple
assistant coach, Coen was , an
--- -··~
--assistant coach (three years - 1973- times out that I've really felt It,"
BRAKE SERVICE · FRONT END ALIGNMENT MOST CARS
Hume said. "I'm not the kind that
1976) and heac coach two years 1976-1978) at New Haven HighSchool gets stiff, but the last cou pie of
in Michigan. His record. as a head games I've been tight. That's not
coach was 9-9. His squad won its me.
"That shows me I'm not using
league championship (Southern
my legs. What I found out is I ha·
Thumb League) in 1976.
Coen is a graduate of Morehead ven't been pushing off. I've just
State University with a Bachelor of been using my arm
" ... I don't think I've been pitch·
Arts in Education. He currently is
teaching health and physical ing the way I should. A lot of the
education at Fairless. He is also games I felt good and I've pitched
doing graduate work in ad· aU right, but I haven't been consistministration at the University of ent. I felt the last thr~ games that!
shOuld have done the job. I said to
Akron.
He . is married to Janet Fischer
and has three children, Robin, Chris
and Melanie .
Coen, !!On of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
~..............
Coen, Sr. of Cheshire, was a former
COLtJ¥BUS, Ohio (AP) - Nl·
athlete at Kyger Creek under the
na's Hope moved into a tie for the
late Jim White, and John Wickline.
lead in the Ohio Sires Stakes point
standings after taking the first dlv·
islon of the third leg Monday night
at Scioto Downs.
ThrOIJIIh Mooda'l 812
Nina's Hope, driven by Chrts
~iant8 dump Fernando
Boring, set a trac.k record for 2·
• 11ore 111111 lilt •-•"' me a .,., 011111 INink
• year-old trottiJ!g fllUes rJ. 2: 021·5 by
ar trtlrrJir ahartii'M 18Diflllld Ioiii.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) · Bill posting a Jllne.length victory- her
• •£1!R•.,driiDIII 0111W SI,OOO ... not ltO,OOO
Laskey pitched a three-hitter and
second in four lifetime starts - to
• wiiiiiiOIIhna'al lnltllutloM.
Tom O'Ma!ley keyed a five-run pay $3.60, $2.!KJ and $2.!KJ.
third Inning with a three- run double
Tammera, which had been unde• 11o 111141 to t1t up rour 1110111r lOr 1ontar
as the Giants defeated Los Angeles feated in thejlre Stakes series, fin.
ace Fernando Vale112uela.
!shed second, followed by Sharp
• Int.... •rlrtl 1110nllllr or quarllflw. Or
With one out In the third inning, Sister.
Itt • Olllllllund.
.
Joe Morgan and Chili Davis
Burnt led all the way to win the
walked. Reggie Smith singled to second dlvl81on In a lUetlme record
1.~ for hu,uk .._
llllex•bdrty tS 1mportan1 to you,
score Morgan and the runners of 2:06 and claim her third victory
ask
about
our
7.5%
inlerest,
day
•n
· day out No Penalty CD with
moved up on the tllrow to the plate.
in four starts. The 2"' -length vic·
passboohvailabi~y.
Bol! Brenly was walked Intention· tory over Midnight Promise and
ally to load the bases and O'Malley
I'm A Ten returned $3.2Al. ~.!KJ and
~Savings &amp;_Loan. a Beneficial Finance SyStem aHi~ted
followed with his double. Johnnie
$2.60.
COIJllii!Y
has been accepting deposits in (Jhio since 1892.
LeM!ISter singled O'M8ney home.
The last trt!ecta of 9-7·1 Paid
Phone
or
visit your local Beneficial office today for lur1her
O'Malley's sacr111ce- fly accunted $1,068.
.
tnformaborl
as lo how you can start earning this high rale of
tor San Francisco's final run In the
A crowd of 2,641 wagered
tnler~
on
a
S-mooth Ttme Deposit. Come in now and
up
eighth.
$249,005.
yot,tr I)0Sia09-Iree deposit enVElope a1 any Beneficial
SyStem office in Ohio. Or call OUI toiHree ni,,,._.

112 Dldla.):-

- · 1&gt;4, .. . . 112; -

. -...
..... . _

~

Jll.l'

- . . _ IIVNit

S.uct•. · Plteber, to EvauvW• of tbt

IM.Ji

Publbhn'

Mllw..,.,.,

You..,

.. ~ Clllt&gt;nU. 21: """"""'

to)

Transactions
KeviD

KaNIU

~-.- ......
-.
'
'I1IJPI.D-

-·-11)

b .

C....... il;

~

Ookllio!l"""-1•1

"-

McRae. KanJU
City, 30:

Cllqlor, -.- ·. llll:
,CIIy,UJ.

·.

-CII)O at Qovolag (D)

DETROIT

Mllwaua, 123; Garda.

: , _ ·121; Hamil, CIMIU14 W

1-

-01-(D)
ChiCieO I I . . . . . _ (D)

Delrall Ill !W' Yortr.

Y.....,

· - ·Cillo,..,
7&lt;; ,.,._,
n:
LoaDid,
'Ill a..o.lolld.
Mllwoukoe,

.. .

-·
f-3),
ID) ~- 1141 II
~(VIola WI

,.

Mllwll""", .316:

· .331; - · Clowlml,
Rur&amp;R..Heodecw.
OakJud. Jll_
8i; Molitlr, Mllwauloee, 7i; Harnh. Cktvdand,
.71: Evano,- 18; -.mr. Cal Ill·

Dftroll (Morrtl U·IO) ·at NeW York -

\outt &amp;.U), (a)

v-.

GHIIII!I', MllwauW. D : Hrbtk. Min-

UJ 11 ~

IErlcboaS.T), 1n1
llllwl.- il1Uo7-SI

STRIKEOUTS: CarlloD.
Phll.tel·
PhiL
1111; Solo, Clncbmal~ 16'7; R,..., Hflultoo.
1lt, Rof1!ra; Mtlfttreal; 1i2: Valmzuela.
Lao-.~

... Clly,.3111:

illwoo ~, .. -

Olleolo

(Palnw &amp;.3), (It)
Kaalu City . (rr.t

8-5, .619,

.WII&amp;ICAN l.E.tAltiB
&amp;\M'ING (210 It t.ti): W.WLIIcrl. Kin·

~·-

(I.Aal7~7)

Plt-

Chrk, ""' ............ 11.

M 03
,!1&amp;7
a'-1.5171

.,

-

HOME RUNS: K1nplan, New York, ~;

oa

I'd.

1111 40
9 .,
52 U

T.- .

CMcaao. m .

Montfftl ., Cblcla'o (n)
Plllllldelphla 11 Plttltlurtft {II)

IUSPS ltf&gt;-11101
A. Otvblioa ul MuiUmfdil. lar.

· POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

Plttlb.tflh. U4: Buc~.
atver, Moatretl, W : Sax. Loa Anpla,
Ul.

............ o.....

w

M-

The Doily SenJinel

Buy Now.

R BI: M~, Atlanta, 61; Oltvt'l", Mon.
tretJ. 86; KinJman, Nt'W Yc:rk, 66; Guer"'"" L11o
6'1;
Son
!Jie&amp;O: oar~ su Frlnctlco. &lt;1.
Hmk KJIJittt, lbtltoo. 115; J.Ray,

Nt!w Yorll (M.soott 7·7) at SL Lou.11
(Mula 7•71, (D)

authority."
Despite his problems at the plate
and third base, Bench aald he's
waiting to see hew he performs for
the rest of the season before decld· ·
ing wl'ether to retire. He's under
contract through the lil!fi season.
"I've tried to avoid,that (thinking
about retirement) . I'll walt untll ail
the numbers are in," he said.

Home will have
knee examination

·=-~--

Leaders
NATIINAL l.E.tAlVII:
~TI'ING (21} at bati) :Oltver, MonbMJ,. .317; Kaqtd:, Houlton. .317: T.Pena,
Attlbw'Jb, .313: Larwn.wc, t.o. Anae&amp;t!t,
.310: Carter, Moutreal. JlO.
RUNS: Lo.Smltll. Stl.wJI. 'J9: Murpty,
Atlanta, II; DaWIOft, Molltreal. 6B; Sandbel'~ Chk:.... 6t Sdunldl. PhD-Na.

,....,.. o.u..

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

MENT PLEASE REFER TO IN·
SPECTOR 7.'

"'~

Only · - - k'hedu..S

Art Buchwald ·

plained the problem ofthe&amp;iZes':
~ jlowlds.'' ··
,'·
yourmea8utei!lents."·
He said Inspector 7 was a very
"Tiien that could be your trouble.
"That's very kind ot you," I told
reliable man and had worked In the Are most of your ~1'8 about him, "But I'm calling not 'only-for
factory for 15 y~. This was iiie fir: thllt heightADcl weight?"
myseH, but for aU the large-sized
st Ume they had had: a complaint
· "Yes; butldon;tseewhatthishas _men in America.
about him. He even admitted it was todowithyourshorts."
"Would you like us to fire Inthe first Ume they had had a
"It's quite cl~. To, t!Jem a spector 7?"
telephone call from the U.8. about MEDIUM looks like a large size, a
"Of course not. Inspector 7 is :
any of their Inspectors.
LARGE looks like an X·LARGE and probably a very fine !'IBn, But (
I told him I didn't want to make EXTRA·LARGE is too much for . don't believe you shiiUJd'pemut him
trouble(orinspector7,butlwasjust them. They ,a re ~In teimB of totJ:Y.OI'Ishorisfor America/' ' ,
curious about how. they Inspected the!nseives \Vhen they~re' lnspectil)g
"All ol o'ur employees ·are sinall "
their shorts that were exported to your shorts. Do they ll)ler try thein the mari sAid.
,J · ,, '
the United States. l menUoned that on?"
· ·
' "'I'hel! in order to rnail)tain your :
many ol my friends were also
''Once ina while."
credibility In the ·united Stlltes I
having diffiCUlty with the size of
"There you are. Inspector 7 puts. suggest U,lat you mvlte some portly
Hong Kong 9h!&gt;rlst
'
on the shorts, and m the basis of his American tourists to come Into the .
"What do yliu want to know about , height IIIICI weight is clowiHizing·aU factory and show your Inspectors
your pnnents. He has probably what is a LARGE size In shorts and
Inspector'l?" he asked.
"Well, for Olll! thing- how tall Is never seen a truly LARGE or an EX· what is X-LARGE.''
· 'LARGE-'
.. In'"'-Ufe."
.
he'·"
•""
.,._
'""
· !'Butifwedothat,'".........-7will :
"I believe he is 4 feet'lllnches,"
"There was a pause m the other lose face.''
""'V&lt;"~
·
the man said.
end of tile llile Iollowed by I!OfDe fast
."He will either have to lillie face or ·
"And how much does he welgh?"l chatter In Cldnele. Finally ·~u.., man put m .Lweight. U you people In Hong ••
wanted to llnow.
came back m the phme and sai!l, King want to Oood our stores with '
"We never-'~"
our u'".....,..-,..
"We will be happy to make a ""'·!..
1 ·
"'''""
......~-·
...... Ill
cothes,you'regolngtohave'tostart
:
tlle'11811 said. "BuH would·gueu85 shorts to YO!II' size if you will give us thinldngBIG."'
· ·
'

""-. Ualle• &amp;&amp;a&amp;. J'......U Le~~~te

16~

Jill

REDSKINS-

3*

ff

.m

Ill

CII!dnolU ~ OllcQo 2
Su l'riDolooo .. ).oo -

.......

All everyone 18 aware many ·of the
clothes that you find in stores are
now made In Taiwan, Hong Kong or
South Korea. While they are not
lacking In · quality, there are
problems with sizes.
'
For example, I bought a pair of
shorts the other day marked
1
LARGE. When l attemple&lt;/ to put
them on, l discovered they did not
II(~ first fear was that through
bracket- -c:r.eeP I had become X·
LARGE. Bt!Nlefore I panicked, I
asked my son, wllb.la a MEDIUM to
try them on. they' ~ him ~r­
fectly. It was obvious the)llqoie In
Hong Kong had made a ~
Fortunately, there wu a slip m;
eluded with the shorts which aald,
'ANYTHING WRONG WlTH GAR-

-

Jill
.515

,.

Kevin

Frank Carr and Kirk Wllaon. wide receiver•: aDd nm Norman. tackle. on wahl·

..dE

ROBERT L. WINGE'JT

Anl11tlnt Publlllhtr/C.ntrollt'r

.167
.!!32

:J7

KanluCUy

The Daily Sentinel

;

..

"

CbldnnaU

As most ol the townspeople are

PAT WHITEHEAD

!I)

,

Oil&lt;...

All in the waist

n

JETS-Tra~

P laced

Pc:1. 01
.&amp; -

42

....

San
Lao ........
"""'
.

them.

:Today Is Tuesday, July 'J:I, the 208th day of1982. There are 157 days left In
the year.
·
:Today's highlight In history:
:On July 27, 1953, the Korean War armistice was signed at Panmunjom.

:l

M

Iff

San Francllco

and pollution control equipment ter ..."They'll have to be turned ln.
and the need to retool for more fuel: So will the old gas-guzzlers that so
many people have hung onto.
effi~lent models. Cost-of-living
wage adjustments worsened the ' Revival might be.weak at first. .
problem. So did consumption or Volume this year might be about8.6
commodities - which rose very · mUilon units, Including imports,
fast - that are needed In "butfor1983weareexpectlngsales ·
near trend volume or 10.5 mnuon
carmaking.
cars," it says. By 19&amp;'i, demand
Atop those problems came high may be up to 12 mlUion units, bar·
·
interest rates, which greatly added ·ring more fuel price problems.
to the cost of car-ownership. If In· .
comes grew sufficiently this prot&gt;
Value Une expects foreign cars, :
Iem might have been offset. But :which captured 27 percent of the ·
Income growth lagged behind ris· U.S. market last year, to be a
ing costs.
smaller factor In the future. It foreAs a consequence·or the resulting .sees U.S. makers designing cars ·
drop In' sales, the average age or tor a world market and even becars has risen slgnlflcanily in the coming mont Involved In joint ven·
past few years. Many of tbe cars tures with foreign producers.
now three years old are fuel·
It all adds up, It says, to "consid·
efficient models, "and experience erably higher protltatollity" for doto date is that they deteriorate fas· mestic carmakers by 1.985-1987.

L

YORK

In 1983. '
WASHINGTON

!!&amp;

Attanla

~

Today in history

•

--_
"

e

aware, Mrs. Edwards received the
appointment as postmastar. Bet·
ween Mrs. Edwards at the post of.
flee and Mrs. Wood on the rural
route_, there can ·be no doubt tiiat'
Rutland's post office is In good hands.
I made many friends while ser·
ving at Rutland and wish only the
best 'for everyone there. - Broce H. ·
Taylor, 7 Bolleana Place, Athens,
Ohio45701.

Ntw

CINCINNA'l'l (AP) - The Cfn.
Reds' President Dick Wagner
cinnatl Reds' No. 5 hitter Is looking told McNamara to play rookies
more like the Johnny Bench of old Tom Lawless and Paul Housethan just an old Johnny Bench these holder. Bench wound up on the
days.
bench, although It's unclear who
·
The man who has hit more home made the decision.
runs than any other catcher in the
"That's behind me now. I don't
history of the major leagues know what the deal is," Bench said.
showed durtng a rour·game series ''There were a lot of Innuendos go.
with the Chicago Cubs that he ing around. I just can't let those
hasn't lost his touch.
things worry me."
Bench blasted a solo homer MonRuss Nixon, who r~pla c ed
day night and drove In a pair of runs McNamara as the Reds' manager.
to help the RedsbeattheCubs4-2. It made getting Bench back in the II·
gave him eight homers for the sea· neup one of his priorities. Besides
son, three ofthem in the four-game the controversy, Bench also has
series.
been hindered by a sore foot.
"Now, for one Utile series, lt'sfelt
Nixon was encouraged by his
awfully good," said Bench, who four-game performance.
came into the game· batting just
"I hope he keeps rtght on going,
.229.
too," Nixon said. "He means a hell
The Reds had counted on the 34- of a lot to this club, especially If he
year-old former catcher to supply gets in there and provides a little
power and run production when he leadership with his stick."
moved to third base this season.
Bench said he's made some
Things haven't worked out as changes in his swing that have
planned, and Bench round himself helped.
In the middle of controversy just
"Right now I'm feeling a little
befQre Manager John McNamara more patient, plusl .n getting good
was '!Ired after the All-Star game pitches to hit," he said. "I'm pulling
break.
the ball and pulling It with

----------=.1..:-===--------

back: and O..vt

Lonr. rtJ¥1111 ~k . to t~ &lt;.bJcaao O.an
for a colldtUonalalxtb· roond drah enol~

N.o'I)NAL I.EAOUE

Very grateful
I would like to thank all the good

CapP&lt;I... klcliOI'.

•,n. ...............

...

l!efett~lvfl

Robert Salter,

Majors

Investment advisor sees profit for auton.uikers

Letter to editor

The Daily Sentir::J-Paga 3

....

�~-----------------

Pag•

- .

--,-P"·~---

--

4 The Daily Sentinel

\Imagineers' finishing latest DisneY dream

McRae, Blue take spotl~ght
in KC's 8-1 win over Tribe
By A!I!IOclaled Press
It was Blue Monday for the Cleveland Indians, but a terrific night for
a couple of veterans with the Kansas City Royals.
"I'm not throwing as hard as I did
10 years ago on a consistent basisbut I stUI can get good pop on my
ra~tball when I need a strtkeout,"
said Kansas City' s VIda Blue after
overpowering the Indians Monday
night.
Blue gave up only four hits,
struck out four and walked four In
seven Innings to lead the Royals to
an 8-1 decls ion and Improve his record to 8-7.
Blue, who turns 33 on Wednesday , took the spotllght with another
veteran who was In good Iorin. Hal
McRae, the:Jf.year·old resurrected
slugger, singled twice, doubled and
homered to drive In three runs and
boost his American League-leading
RBI total to 88.
He credits his stunning run production this season to the Royals'
lineup.
WUIIe WUson added two 111ples as
the Royals collected 15 hits and
made ground In the hot AL West
race on the Calltornla Angels, who
lost 11-8 to the Oakland A's. The
Royals are now one game behind
the division leaders.
Blue pitched no-hit ball through
five Innings before running Into
trouble In the sixth, when the lndl·
ans scored their only run on Andre
Thornton's RBI single. Blue, how·
ever, settled down to retire the next
three hitters without turllher damage. Dan Qu!S"enberry tlnlshed up
with two scoreless Innings of relief.
1be Royals took a 3-0 lead against
Tom Brennan, ().2, with the help ot
two Cleveland errors In the third
Inning, and It proved to be all the
runs they needed.
A's 11, Angels 8
Rickey Henderson, who earlier

hlt a home run. blasted an eighth·
Inning double and stole home as
Oakland came back to beat Calltor·
nla In a wild game after blowing a
7-0 lead.
Henderson's double drove In the
go-ahead run as the A's scored tour
times to wipe out an 8-7 Calltornla
advantage.
Dave Beard, the thlrd Oakland
pitcher, pitched the final 32-3 In·
nJngs to gain his sixth win In 13
decisions.
Reggie Jackson' s two-run homer
In the sixth and RBI double In the
seventh had brought the Angels
Into the lead from the seven-run
deficit.
Red Sox 3, Blue Jays 2
Dwight Evans scored the tiebreaking f1!n on a double-play
grounder In the eighth Inning as
Boston rallied to beat Toronto. 1be
victory, combined with MUwaukee's loss to Texas, moved Boston
Into the AL East lead, one-half
game ahead or the Brewers.
Dennis Eckersley, 11·8, going the
distance for the 11th time In 21
starts, pitched a seven-hitter. Eck·
ersley outdueled rookie right·
hander Jim Gott, 1-6.
Toronto took a Hllead In the secondon an RBI single by AI Woods
and made It 2.0 In the ftfllh on AI·
!redo Griffin's hOme run. Boston
tted the score In the ftfllh on Glenn
Hottman's two-run homer.
1be Red Sox rallied to come from
behind to win tor the 29th time this
year.

Rangers 3, Brewers 1
Charlie Hough pitched a tour·
hitter to lead Texas over MUwau·
kee. Hough, 9-8, walked one and
struck oul four In hurUng his seventh complete game of the year.
No MUwaukee runner got as tar
as second base untll the seventh In·

naen G, Ya.nkes 3

Lance Parrish knocked In three
runs with a homer, single and a 111·
pie and Tom Brookens hit a tiebreaking, two-run double In the
fifth as Detroit defeated New York.
Winner Jerry Ujdur, 4·5, gave up
five hits, walked two and struck out
two before needing relief help.
Dave Rucker gave up an RBI sin·
gle to Lou Plnlella In the eighth In·
nlng before ~ave Gumpert came
on In the ninth to get the last two
outs for his first save.
Orioles .. WhUe Sox z
Gary Roenlcke homered and
drove In four runs, leading Baltimore over Chicago. It was the fifth
straight 111umph for the Orioles,
who posted a 5-l record whUe Man·
ager Earl Weaver sat out a seven·
day suspension for stJ1klng umpire
Terry Cooney. Weaver returns
tonight.
Roenlcke, homerless In his 19 previous games, hit his 16th with two
rullll!lrs aboard In the third Inning.
He~ doubled home a run In the
second and scored on a single by
Rick Dempsey.
TwiDa 10, Martoen 4
Gary Gaettl's ftrst·lnnlng grand
slam triggered Minnesota's homerun barrage as the Twins hurled
Seattle. Gaettl's 16th homer of the
season, ott Seattle left·hander
Floyd Bannister, 9-6, staked Jack
O'Connor, 4-3, to an earl)' W lead.
Gaettl's homer was one of four
for the Twins, who also got roundtrippers from Lenny Faedo, Gary
Ward and Tom Brunansky.

·Belpre swimmer takes third
.in National Sports Festival
INDIANAPOLIS (API -This Is
a time ot records for the National
Sports Festival, of bigger crowds
watching faster and stronger
athletes.
Swimming proved to be no ex·
ceptlon when It opened Its Festival
run Monday night.
An enthusiastic crowd of 4,450
fans, described by some or the com·
petltors as the largest they had·ever
seen In the United States, cheered
as nine meet records were broken
In 11 races In the new Indiana Unl·
verslty Natatorium.
"I never had such a good crowd."
said Michele Richardson, 13, of
Memphis, Tenn., who set a
women's 800-meter freestyle mark
of 8 minutes, 40.24 seconds In the
night's very tlrst race. "When I saw
the crowd, I almost dled .. .lt was
very embarraslng."
"It's a fast pool, really nice,"
added Jacqueline Komenlj , a
record-setter tn the 100-meter
breststroke at 1: 12.99. "I could tell
as soon as I got In It was fast. I think
It's the fastest In the country."
David Cowell of Belpre captured
a bronze medal In the 100 meter
butterfly. His time ot: 55.45seconds
bested the old meet record by :0010
giving him third place.
At Market Square Arena, mean·
whUe, Lee Ann MUter and WUIIam
Fauver won the pairs figure skat·
lng gold medal. The performance
was good enough for the judges but

lett the winners themselves a little
empty.
"There were some minor things
that went wrong," said Fauver,
whb skates with MUler out of the
WUmlngton (Del.) Skate Club. "It
was the kind of thing tbat happens
when you're not l()().percent relaxed. The easiest performances
are the best performances. Tonight
was not easy."
Leonard Harvey Nltz also had a
performance Monday that was not
easy, 'but for a dramatically differ·
ent reason.
Nltz, a cyclist from New York.
won a pair of gold medals - less
than three days after his mother '
was kUled and his father Injured In
an automohUe wreck Ill Utah.
He would talk only of his racing,
not of his tamUy tragedy. But In
discussing his victory over Dan
Casebeer In the point race, Nltz provided a clue to how he was able to
overcome the death he had learned
of In a phone call Sunday.
"It's all mental," he said, refer·
ring to cyclists. "1bat' s what puts
him over everybody else, the men·
tal part. For myself, the stronger
rider hardly never wins. It's the
guy who wants It the baddest, as
you saw In the points race here."
Nltz, 22, also led his bike group to
victory In team pursuit.
Local organizers said that ticket
sales through Sunday totaled
$738,0)), far more than the old

'

nlng when Cecil Cooper singled and
Ted Simmons doubled him home.
MlkeCaldweU, 7-10, took the loss.
Th~ Rangers got a run In the
fourth on Lamar Johnson's RBI
single and scored their eventual
winning run In the fifth on Doug
F1ynn' s two-strike suicide squeeze
bunt.

mark of $4.'10,0)) for an entire Fest!·
val set last year In Syracuse, N.Y.
1bls year's runs through Saturday.
America's best swimmers have
skipped the Festival to prepare for
the World Aquatic Championships,
opening Thursday In Ecuador.
Ice hockey opened. Mike Krenslng and Gregg Mobre scored two
goals apiece In the North' s 6-5 decl·
slon over the East, and a goal by
Rich Costello with nine seconds left
provided the South with a 4-4 tie
with the West.

man Bob Mervine; echoing a favor· of what he says may be the largest
lte company Une. "It's a step private building project In the coun·
toward getllng entertainment from try today.
There are 4,o:xl construction
real things as opposed to fantasy."
Twice the size of the Magic King· · ~r'kers making the stretch drive
dom and Unked to It by eight miles to complete the 550-acre project,
of monorail, Epcot Center still en· which .fs costing twice as much as
courages debate about whether It's the orlglnal Magic Kingdom did
when It opened 10 years ago.
primarily educational or
Some 1,llll !ull·tlrne artists, deentertaining.
·
Even some of the top Disney ottl· signers and engineers are IJ!volved,
plus anothel" 1,0)) In consulting
clals aren't sure.
Dick Nunls, president of Walt firms across the country, the Dis·
ney organization says.
Disney World, put It this way reEpcot will more than double Discently whUe conducting an lm·
pfOlTlptu tour, "I subscribe to what ney's Investment In the 27,400-acre
Walt always said - 'I would rather "vacation kingdom" site southwest
entertain and hope people learn of Orlando.
Participating In the Future
than teach .and hope they're enter·
World adventures Disney says are
talned.' "
At a distance, Epcot Center's a preview of the 21st century are
most sll1klng feature Is a sUver· the Bell System, Exxon, General
gleaming lJlO.foot geosphere, the Mot&lt;VS, Kratt, Kodak, American
.Spaceship Earth globe, at the gate- Express, Coca-Cola, Sperry Uni·
vac and General Elecll1c.
way to Future World.
1be foreign nations Involved In
From there, the visitor can
wander through pavlllons named World Showcase's first phase are
Universe of Energy, Transporta· Canada, France, Italy, Japan,
tlon, the Land, Imagination, New China, ,Mexico, Great Britain and
West Germany. 1be American Ad·
Horizons, and Computer Central.
Adjacent toFutureWorldanden· venture PaviliOn wW feature DJs.
clrcUng the 40-acre lagoon, the vJs. ney's first ' ·'walking' '
!tor will walk or ride aloilg vU!age audlo-anlmatronlc robot, Ben
streets joining Aztec pyramids, a Franklin, plus Thomas Jefferson
Japanese Shinto shrine, a broad pi· and other historical figures.
Everything Is big.
azza from Italy, Chinese pagodas, a
One single pavWon, the land, cov·
Bavarian blergarten and other sll·
ces . of lite from eight foreign era more than six acres, as big as
all of Tomorrowland In the Magic
cultures.
"I'm as excited as a kid waiting Kingdom.
1be lagoon takes up an area
for tt to open," says Nunls, super·
equal
to 85 football fields.
vising the day-to-day construction

By IKE FLORES
Oct. 1 for the first of an expected 8
Aa8oclated Press Writer
mUllan visitors a year.
LAKE B!JENA VISTA, _ Fla.
The new attraction, combined
. (AP) - Trucks plow through the with the famUlar amusement park
mud, 'roads. Construction cranes next door, Is projected to lure more
swing back and forth across the than W mUllan people a year to
cJoud.ftlled sky.
Florida.
Thousands of hard -hatted
For the visitor, the offerings of
worker~ swann 9Ver a pitied, busy · Disney's biggest and most ex pen·
landscape dotted with huge struc· slve project are described this
tures ranging from the odd·snaped way: 1n Future World, you travel
tuturlatlc to European ancient. the corridors of time and discover
Oriental temples meld with Amerl· what lles ahead. I.n World Show·
can frontier architecture, wunam case, you travel the countries ofthe
Sllakespeare' s birthplace and Pa· world and discover the famlly of
riA' El1lel Tower around a huge
man.
lagoon.
Epcot Center was originally EP·
The "lmaglneers" ot Walt DJs. COT - acronym for Experllnental
ney' s legacy are busy putting the
Prototype Community 1'1 Tomor·
final touches on their late master's
row, a tuturlstlc concept some envidream: a showplace combining the
sioned as a . plastlcxlomed city
put and the fUture, American tech·
where peop~ would Jive and work
noloi!Y with the fiavor ot foreign In a controlled laboratory
lands and cultures.
environment.
"nle $llXl rn!Uion Epcot Center Is
In the final stages of construction
That Ide« eventually gave way to
alollglllde central F1orlda' s biggest
the more practical, permanent ex·
tourist attraction -Walt Disney's
position of science, l!naglnatlon
Magic Kingdom.
and foreign cultures.
1be center' s two theme areas Disney officials defend It as
World Showcase, with pavillons re- 1 much more than a giant theme
presenting nine nations, and 1 park;
Future World, featuring the mar· !
"Epcot will he as different 1rom
vels of American science, lbdustry
Disneyland as this was from Coney
and Imagination' - wt11 be ready
lsland," says Disney World spokes-

OUl' BY A HAIR - Cleveland lndlaDB' bllseruuner Royals' shortstop U. L. Wasbing1on In tbe fifth inDIDg
Von flayes Is forced out at second base by Ka1188s City at Cleveland Stadium Monday algbt. Tbe Royall won
tbe game 8-1. (AP Laserpboto).

Meigs area meetings, happenings reported

Bartrum no-hits Tri-City club
Bill Marshall and Brian Decker fol·
lowed with back·to-back singles ad·
ding one more run In the Inning.
Robbie Grimm got an Inside-thepark home run on two errors to
open the top of the fltllh for the local
all-star team. Jeff Nelson and J .R.
Kitchen followed with a base-on·
balls. With two outs Matt Fisher
then delivered a single scoring both
Nelson and Kitchen giving the locals a comandlng ~lead after live
Innings of play.
Big Bend errupted for tlve more
runs In the tlnaJ Inning on three sin·
gles and four base-on-balls making
the score 13-0 going Into the botlonn
half of the sixth Inning.
Tri·City mounted a threat on Ba;·.
trum's shutout tn the bottom of the
Inning. An fielding error allowed
Polen to reach base and he ad·
vanced to third toUowlng yet
another error by the local all-stars.
Bartrum then struck out the next
two Tri·City batters and retired the
last baUer on a ground out to end
the game.
Leading the 11-hlt attack for Big
Bend were Brian Tannehill and
Robbie Grimm, each with two sin· .
gles, Michael Bartrum (2 for 5) , a
single and a home run (3 RBI' s),

BELPRE, Ohio -The Big Bend
All-Stars behind the no-hlt pitching
of Michael Bart rum posted an easy
13-0 erasing ot theTri-City All-Stars
from South Parkersburg, W.Va .. In
the second round of the doubleelimination Belpre Little League
All-Star Tournament.
Bartrum, In going the distance,
struck out 13 batters whUe walking
five and only threw 1l2 pitches.
Big Bend wasted Utile time In get·
tlng two runs on the board In the
Initial Inning. Brian Tannehill
opened the game with a single to
right field and advanced to third on
an error by the right !Ieider. J .R.
Kitchen drew a tree base and
quickly stole second base. Matt
Fisher then doubled scoring both
Tannehill and Kitchen, giving the
locals an early 2-0 lead.
The score remained at 2·0
through the second and thlrd Jn.
nlngs before the Big Bend AII·Stars
added three more runs In the top
halt of the fourth.
With one out Brian Tannehill
drew a base-on-balls to set the stage
tor Michael Bartrum's home run to
center field, his second ot the tour·
nament, making the score 4-0. J .R.
Kitchen followed with a walk, whUe

Silver Run Baptists

Matt Fisher (2for4),adoubleanda
single (4 RBI's), Bill Marshall, Ar·
tie Hunnell and Brian Decker, each
with a single.
The Big Bend All-Stars return to
Belpre on Saturday with game time
set for 6 p.m. against Tuppers
Plains.

Named to
Who's Who

Celebrates binhday
Chuck and Nice wunams of
Racine recently honored their son,
Adam, on his first birthday with a
family party at llhfalr home.
Cake, soft drinks and ice cream
Wl!re served to Miss Geraldine
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Cl~o
Wllllamll, Albany; Barbara Manuel,
Darmy and Timmy Gheen, Rebecca
Allen and brothers, Shannon and
. Corey. Adams atso received a card
· from hill great-gralidmother, Mrs.
Mabel Roush of Colwnbus.

·- -----Service notes-----Pvt. Gregory A. Flint, brother of
· Kathy A. Krebs, Point Pleasant, W.
Va., has completed basic training at
; Fort Jackson, S.C.
During the training, students
received Instruction in drill and

Paul Kosclelskl, the No. 1 men's
tennis seed from South Bend, Ind.,
Player of Week
was upset by Mike Velasquez r:J. AI·
'I \Iill\
HI II\
buquerque, N.M., 7·5, 7~ and then
1\I O,I
NEW YORK (AP) -Pittsburgh
\ltl\11
•
•
Kosclelskl and doubles partner
Pirates' pitcher John Candelaria,
I
Steve Bickham r:J. Edmond, Okla.,
I' I '
,·,
'
fell to Charles Short of Tacoma who won two games during the
week
of
JulY
19·25,
was
named
Na·
Wash., and Jim McNamee of Ed·
tiona! League Player of the Week.
rnonds, Wash., 6-2, t~. 6-3, also In
the se~. V~asquez played r---------------------~----------~--------L---------~---------­
for the singles title today against
Pat Harrison of Shreveport. La.,
who beat Richard Matuszewski ot
Hopewell Junction, N.Y., 6-1, 6-0.
And Kathy Arendsen, the famed
pitcher for sdtball' s Raybestos
Brakettes, repl'eSEIItlng the East.
uncorked two wlld pitches. for both
runs In a 2-0 loss to the West, the Sun
City, Ariz., Saint.
1be 6-toot·2 right-hander took
only her second loss In 26 games
16K TRS·80 Model ill
this season. She Is J.24.10 In her fiveyear career.

ET

TUESDAY
RUTLAND - There will be
skating Tuesday from 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center. Admission wiD be $1 for
children and $2 for alll!lts. Those
taking part are to bring their own
skates.

GET STARTED IN
TING AND SAVE 59••

• Compact Desk1op Computer
Features Built-In Monitor and
Keyboard
• Large Library of Ready-to-Run
Cassette Recorder Programs
•Ideal for Home Use and Professional Problem Solving
• Set Up a Budget, Track
lnve$tments .
• Play Excltlrig Computer Games ·
• Easily Expands Into our Deluxe
~-Disk Business System

..

POMERoY ~ Ohio Eta Phi.
Cl!ajlter · ot Beta Sigma
Soiwlty ~ Will hold I Hawaiian
. pool Jll1ly Tueaday at 8:30 p.m.
· at the bame ol Jenelle HaptiJaltaD Rcflealunenta ,W 1M!
.-veil All mimberllll'e urged to
attend . aile! .meet ' .the 1111H3
;,
&gt; pledces•.

rw

·~

•

•

A DIVISION OF TANDV CORPORATION

OPEN SKATING will he held at
Rutland Civic Center, 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. Tuesday; adults, $2;
children, •1; patrons should own
skates.
BIG BEND Regatta Committee
meeting will be 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Ohio Power offices,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; all interested persons are welcome.
1'hose with questions caU Ron
Ash at Ohio Power or Bill
Quickel, 99U677.

A barbecue prepared by Mr. and
Mrs. Wallace Bradford with a pic·
nlc supper and hayride was enjoyed by members of the ,Falthtul
Followers Class ot the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church recently at
the Bradford farm.
Durlllg a short business meeting
the birthdays of Ray Whaley, Bob
and Goldie Reed and HUber Qulvey
were observed. Next meeting will
be with Mr. and Mrs. Roger Watson
In Athens Aug. 25.
Guests were Phyllis Shlelds, Eva
Nunnally, and Bruce Bradford.
Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Whaley, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Watson, Mr. and Mrs. CecU
HeUman, Mr. and Mrs. Dora! HUI,
Mr. and Mrs. Zlba Mldklf!, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Haning,
Mr. and Mrs. HUber Qulvey, Sara
Cullums, Ann Lambert, Leota
Smith, Naomi Reed, Jane Hazel·
ton, Jessie White and the hosts.

Harrisonville Grange
,. Harrisonville Grange hosted areception Friday evening honoring
Mrs. Ruby Halliday In recognition
of 75 years of continuous and faith·
tuJ membership.
A potluck dinner preceded therecognition program attended by 47
mennbei"s from the seven granges
of Meigs County.
A cake was baked and decorated
by her granddaughter, Sharon
Jewell.
Following tne dinner the recognt·
tlon ceremony was presented by
Norman Will, master; Norma Lee,

Girl Scouts 1015
An overnight campout with a
weiner roast and hayride at the
Good farm near Reedsville was en·

Helen Help Us

POMEROY American~
Atlidllary wDl bave I! joint meet·'
..... j\llllin . . .enlon, July 'IT
at tllil Plilt IIDiile at 7: ~ P·!lll
lrflmbl!n are ur&amp;ed to attead. •
'

I

, _ , . , . . " " " '_ _ _ _

BY HELEN AND SUE BO'ITEL
GOING NUTS:
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
When the whole world seems
Mom and I lh;e with an aunt who's against you, it's easy to lash out,
an old maid and thinks she can talk crack wise and mean, then feel sorry
to me any old way just because she for yourself, because "no one unis free with the dough. We got tired derstands ...
of her lip and moved to my brother's
Perhaps you don't give anyone the
house.
chance to come cl011e. Try this: For
My sister-in-law told Mom she'd 1 .one whole week, don't fight with
like to take my face and scrape it your aunt, no matter what she says.
against a brick wall. That's how You probably can't transform "Miss
much she hates me, though I really LiWY" Into "Miss Serendipity," but
tried to love her. So we·moved back I'll bet you'll see a great change.
with Miss Lippy.
And If you make home life easier,
Meanwhile, my best friend foiind a things will work out better
new friend and ignores me. My three elsewhere.
brothers are mad at me and won~t
Especially If you knock the chip
speak, and my aunt and I are into It off your shoulder and stop expecting
again.
the worst. -SUE
I met this real nice guy, but he
doesn't want to get involved. DEAR HELEN:
Nothing goes right.
The stepchild who asked about a
All I need is someone who won't book for stepchUdren is In luct. Here
yell if I SaY something bad about aresevl!l'llll recmunend:
another
person. Don't suggest my
1. "Now 1 have a Stepparent and
at Forked Rwl State Park, Will
dad.
He's
remarried
and
doesn't
It's
Kind of Confusing" by James
preilent a pnlg1'8Jll on aitr.
want
me
either.
Any
suggestions?
Slnberg
Stenson (Avon).
phlblana and reptile~~ at the 'MidGOINGNUTSAT18
'1"0UrFamllyGotaStepparent"
dleport Ubrary, 2 p.m. 11ur.QEARG.N.:
by Carolyn E. Phllllpe, (Rep}
llday. He will dilcusB IIIDJ)hlblans
Maybe
"nothing
goes
right"
Boob).
· ·
and reptllea and their . place
becallie you're so good at flghtlnjj · · 3. "The Boya and Girls Book ol '
hlstoi'y. The program Is open to
all children.
and "saylllg Sllllethlng bad about , 'Stepfamllles" by Rlchar.d Gardner
~ per10111." Could an
I (Binlii!i).
TWIN .CJTY SHRINE CLUB, · ~ sister-In-law, three brotbera. a fOI'- i · 4. "AN"' Mother for Martha" by
.,_.... _ 1 ...
'l'burlda fo
. J:Der girlfriend, a !ather and 1 ~ · , Phyllll Green (Htimlln Scl8nces
;-'~~~ the ~ta~ .. tl.i.l boJfriead all reject you wit!Jout Prella)• .··
.
and Ida entour~~e. All llllriPerJ • . - ?
Oar new Jetter, Sti!pplrent News" .
and their ladles·lll'l! .Invited for . . Loc* toWibeon penonallforty ... 1wbJdM a cbllcinn'a 111Ct1oa titled
diJinet
. ' •""
.' -•nl~oldn,
pill IIIII
'
YI)W 'l ~~ ,. _ , . , wNdl IJu bad '

-.-

•unt;

arxi .. ··

....-~............. '!'!'..,.

• · ·' pi'Oili"JJ'

...,.,._.,....,..~...~.;~.~'·~·---~---. . . . . · -

~
--

--

1 ;

: ~pillitlvef"""'-dr
I.

'j

'

·

gram. Fltty·two sick calls were reported. Refreshments were served
to those named and Faye Hamil·
ton, Sandy Hawley , Mae Holter,
Leah Nease, Hilda Yeauger and
Mary Kay Roush.

Vineyard reunion

The 50th wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. James VIneyard was
observed at the 12th annual VIneyard famlly reunion held recently
at Royal Oak Park. Atlendlng the
reunion were 68 famUy members
and four guests, Including Bessie
Edens, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs.
Dorset VIneyard and famUy, Lltlle
Hocking; Mr. and Mrs. Les Damewood, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
Quentin Looney, Walton, W. Va. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Collins, Can·
ton; Mr. and Mrs. E. P. VIneyard
and
son, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
A program of concern for hand!·
VIneyard,
Tallmadge; Mr. and
capped and retarded persons high·
Mrs.
WUllam
Emmitt and famUy,
lighted the recent meeting of the
Tallmadge;
Mr.
and Mrs. William
Forest Run United Methodist
VIneyard,
Wooster;
Mae and Mary
Women held at the church.
F
.
VIneyard.
Reedsville;
Mlldred
Betty Blackwood and Ada Nease
Collins,
Canton;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
were hostesses with Erma Roush
Keith
VIneyard,
Belpre;
Mr.
and
giving devotions using readings
Mrs.
Charles
VIneyard
and
farnlly,
from Psalm 100 and 23. Kathleen
Scott presented a program on the Breman ; VIRGIL Daugerty,
handicapped using poetry written Spencer, W. Va.; Mr: and Mrs.
by handicapped and retarded per- Kenneth Creamer, Coolville; Mr.
sons. These Included "I Believe" by and Mrs. James VIneyard, Torch.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Creamer
Helen KeUer; "God's Image" by a
and
family , Coolville; Mr. and Mrs.
mentally retarded man; "Holy
Robert
Fetty and grandson, Cha·
Light" by a paralyzed man; and
rleston,
W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Sher·
"Prayer of Confession" by Kat·
man
Stimmerfleld
and Tara, Little
Ween Scott.
Hocking;
Mr.
and
Mrs. Donald
A dialogue on the handicapped
Weekley,
Columbus;.
Mr. and Mrs.
was read by Ada Nease and Nancy
Cecil
Smith,
Pomeroy;
Mr. and .
Merrifield, and Mary Nease read
Mrs.
Dar!
Sergent,
Charleston,
w.
the Ute story of Beulah Fawcett, a
Va.;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ernest
Jones
handicapped person or Chesterhill.
Evelyn Hollon talked on the church and Pat, Mt. Gllead; Mr. and Mrs.
bull! for handicapped persons, and John Freer and sons, South Bend,
prayer by Kathleen Scott and group Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Richardsinging ot "Count Your Blessings" son, Brookville; David Creamer,
Wayne VIneyard, Donnetta Par·
closed the program.
sons,
and Eskey HUI, Pomeroy.
July being a pall1otlc month, sev·
eral readings on the subject were . . - - - - - - - - -- - given. 1beselncluded "I Am Proud
to be an American", writings by
Will
bills
VIce President George Bush, Erma
.Bombeck, Barbara Manllrel and
House Speaker Ttp O'Nelll. For the
special of the evening, Noami
Wyatt read "1blngs Money Can't
Buy."
If you 're between 35
A picnic was set for Aug. 10 at the
and
65,you have a 1 in 3
church with a miscellaneous prochance of becoming disabled by accident or 1l l·
ness before you're 65.
Who will pay the mort·
gage or rent if you're
sick or 1nj ured and can 'I
work? Nationwide ca n
help - ca ll a Nationwide
Agent today and find out
how disability inco me
protection i nsu ranee can
give
and your home

Forest Run

MIDDLEPORT- Bible School
at Middleport Church of Christ
will take place Tuesday through
Aug. 6 from 9:30 a.m. to noon.
Theme "Jesus Leads the Way to ,
POMEROY -A reunion of old
a Brand New Dliy.'' All area
members of TOPS OH 5709 wtu
,. youth welcome.
be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Coonhunters buDding on the
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Rock Springs .fairgrounds.
Citizens ,will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 1
1bose atlendlng are to take a
the townhouse. Take cookies. ,
diet dish. For more Information
1
Beverages will be served. ·
former members arEf Invited to
call 992·7415.
POMEROY American :·
WEDNESDAY
Legion Auxiliary, Drew Weblter
. Post 39, Pomeroy, juniors and 1
HOBSON- Hobson Church of
s_eniors; will meet at 7:30 p.m. I Christ ·In Christian Union wtll
Tu~y.
. have a guest speaker Wednes·
day at 7: 30 p.m. Rev. Dorothy
SOUTHERN Local Board of • Whittington' will speak.
Education will meet Tuesday at 7 ·
p.m. In the cBfeterla at the high l
TI:IURSDAY.
' scbool.
DALE ANDERSON;' naturalist

99900

RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER ~Nm.
OR PARnCIPAnNG DEALER

ceremonies, weapons, map reading,
tactics, military courtesy, military
justice, first aid and Anny history
and traditions.
He is a I981 graduate of Point
Plfl!S8Ilt High School.

Calendar

.

1tad1e /haek

Faithful Followers

Jenny Lynn Manuel, daughter of
Charles and Evelyn Manuel, Raeine,
has been named to Who's Who
Among High School Students for the
second consecutive year.
A 1982 graduate of Southern High
School, Jenny was active in the
French club, national honor society,
student reporter, industrial arts
club, and received a four-year
scholarship from Rio Grande
College.
Manuel is attending Rio Grande
College majoring in Elementary
Education.

lecturer; Chester King, chaplain;
and Paullne Adkins, secretary .
1be cerllllcate ot recognition
from the National Grange was
presented by Meigs County Deputy
of the Ohio State Grange, Mendel
Jordan, and Elizabeth Jordan.
Also on display was the golden
shear booklet with the seals for
each five years of service. Mrs.
Halliday has held an office for 44 of
her 75 years In the subordlnant
grange. She has also served as
Pomona, lady assistant steward,
and lecturer In the Meigs County
Pomona Grange, and Is a member
of the State and National Grange. A
message ot congratulations was
read !rom James Ross, master of
the Ohio State Grange.

joyed by Junior Girl Scout Troop
1015 recentlY.
During the evening the group visited the beaver dam on Horse
Cave Road and observed the beav·
ers at work. 'They then returned to
the Good farm where a fireworks
diSplay was conducted by Monld L.
Good and Cadette Scout Jayne
Good.
OnJuly17, thescoutsasslstedthe
Brownie Troop 279 In the fly-up ceremony and welcomed the new jun.
lors Into the troop.
1be fiy·up was held at Forked
Run State Park. Ruby Drake sent
the Brownies "across the bridge"
to the junior troopwhereJaneGood
welcomed each with the gtrl scout
promise. Each received a hand·
shake from one of the juniors and
then were sent to Donna Good,
leader, for the ottlclal welcome Into
Troop 1015.
New members wW be registered
2 p.m. Aug. 17 atthe Reedsville firehouse. Registration fee Is $3.

A songfest will be held 7:30p.m.
Saturday at SUver Run FREE·
WILL Baptist Church featuring the
Gabriel Quartet and the Mt. Union
Choir.

Manuel
Williams

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST

EASY DOES IT - A construction worker walks carefully over the
dellcate-looldng roof of the soon to he complete Japanete Shinto shrine at
tbe soon to he opened Epcot Center at Disney World, Lake B11ena VIsta,
Fla. The center coven twice tbe space as Disney's Magic Kingdom. (AP
Laserphoto).

·

your
be paid up
when you're
laid up?

a

E. Secand St.
Pomera,, OH.
P.H. 992-6226

NATIONWIDE
INSURANCE
•
.. en,.....,.
~

,._OMIDIIIIJT\IIII6.IilllloiiWICII~

~~~
.... o..~: c..

�Pom-y-Middleport, Ohio

6-The Daily Sentinel

~

. t'~

Tu.doy, ~uly 27,1982

271982

Ohio

·consumers not blaming.food chain fQr prices

·.
...
'

'

JARED SHEETS, rtgbt, BDd Aaron Sheets, left, repreaented Meigs
County atlbe annual beef show of lbe Soulbeastem Ohio Dlstrtct Allgwl
Assn. held Jnly 20 at the Jackson County Fair. Aaron placed first with hls
JUDior yearling beUer 81111 Jared placed second with bls senior yearllng
beUer. Both Jared aDd Aaroil will be showing at the Meigs County talr.
1bey are tbe sons of Mr. and Mn. James R. Sheets of Rutland.

.~·- funeral costs issue
~ _.remains cloudy today

fu~~%:;~0~~;~ '~r..Grain

level.
' '
"All soaring Interest costs make
~- ' It harder to raise cash through conventlonal methods, many companies are selling off part of their
real-estate and then renting It back
from the purchaser," says Messer.
, . : Messer says this provides cash
forexpanslonofoperatlonsatacost
, . as much as 2-4 percentsge points
below the going r ate ·for regular
financing.

farW

Market
reports
. .. J

The Daily Sentinel

711J totiiO lbo. ~-7.10; 1111 and over .uiJO. '
Feeder Bllllrt: Good and Choice, 150 to 300 lbo.
4WUO; 101 1o 100 lbo. _ , 100 to 11110 tbo. 47·
:iCi.lO: 300 to800 lbo. _ , t110to roo lbo. 47.56.$1 :
'100 tom lbs. U48 .50; IOOJ,fldover4.f.J0..60.
Hotatetn Steers and Built, 300 to 1100 lbo. 44:Hil::i1a 1,000 lbo. and up4IUII~l0.
· Slaught&lt;r Cowo, uUthleo ~1.110; canners and

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

,._.,lll.._lor&amp;M
JJ , ........ .....

) o l _ .........,..

=-~=\~'"lrII

Top~~~~~c;_~~==·

JlllyU,*Z

OF

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
E LSIE KOENI G COOK. et
at , -

•

Feeder Steen: (Good andONiiceiiOHOIIIbo.

~rs:!~~i~·!tOiot.,.) IOHOIItbo.

44

U.504G;II0)..7C»Jbl. 37~.
Feeder Bulb : (Good and ONiicel IOHOII lbo.
47*.11G ;IOIHOOibo.4W4.

Plai nt iff s.

vs.
THE UNKNOWN HEI RS
AND DEV ISEES oF ·
WILLIAM L. KOENIG . et.

SlaughtorBIIllrt : (Overi,IIOOibo.)!a~Uo..

Slaughter Cows: UttUUeal'l-.15; Canners

andCUII&lt;r&gt;27.7Wt.lO.
SprtngerCows: (BytheHood)ztO.:I'II.
Cow and CaHPaln (By the Unit) 150o411.

at.

Defendants.
Case No. 18227
NOTICE BY
PU BL !CATtON

v..,., (Chotceand Prlme)~l.~t .

~ C.lveo: IBrllle lleldiiH2JO; !BY the
) 40-10.

HOGPRICES :
~:(No. 1, BliTOWiond GUtal llll).l31llbo.

51 outcherSowoiUI.

Feederi'II!'IByllleHead) t7.m7.

cos•.a
Health Clll"'t": ~
uo
contm"ues to n"se
nm

care spending continued to outpace
Inflation In 191!1, growing 15.1 per·
cent to $287 bllllon, a government
s t 0 d Y sald Mond ay.
The sum represented spending of
$1,225 for every American and ac·
counted for 9.8 percent of the gross
national product, the Health Care
.Financing Admlnlstratlon said In
ltsannualreportonnatlonalhealth
expenditures. The overl\lllntlatlon
rate for the year was 11.4 percent.

A consensus to renew the agreement for one ·year had been
reached by officials of the White
House and the State, Agriculture
and Treasury departments, The

The administration believes the
year's extension would tell the Soviets that martlallawwas not being
eased quickly enough In Poland
CBS News reported Monday , cltJni
no sources.
The agreement expires Sept. ro. .

Times quoted administration aides
as saying.
·
A one-year extension of the grain
agreement Is the minimum requested by Agriculture Secretary
.John R. Block, the Times said.
Block has said that American

A slmllar report was carried In

farmers, facing huge surpluses,
desperately need markets for their
grain.

to

·' : Ethel 1\filam to Henry K . Milam,
:,.. Lot424, Pomeroy.
, Baptist Church fo Rutland, nka 1
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church to
.,, · Robert~- Miller, Parcels, Rutland.
Pennzoll ComJlllny to Hartley,
~ .Hartley and Hartley, Jnc., Lot,
. Pomeroy.
·
·
' • . Arthur J. Strauss, Beulah E. ,
· StraUSIJtOArthurJ, Strauss,Beulah
;;.. ', E. ~USIJ, Pt. Lot22, Mjddleport. ·
. .,
L. Cowdery, Sandra L.
~rytoHouaeholdFina)ceLoan ·
l.cJtlOf,Ollve.
e1 D. Dunbar, Lu Anne DimLeading C. r e ek Conservancy,
RI
Way, Wllkeavllle.

·~

J~

C1freoce Abele to Leading Creek

;

~ancy,RightofWay,cVInton.

deqrees 10 min. west 20
ch~ins and 35 li nks to a
.stake, wh ere an ash 2 i n·
~hes bears south 59 decrees
eac h 22 link \, and a · gum
12" bears north 87 degrees
WPst 34 links; thence 8811,
drgrees west 32 chains .and
14 links to a stone in the
~Nest line of Section No . 32,
whero a buckeye S in . bears
nort h 46 degrees west 6
link s; the nc e north 2

I

~; ...::E~~o:% ~bllnd!;et l:..' :U:.!,~c Co., ~ ol

Way,

Opal W. IOoea, Karl W.IOOII to

Adelelde Smith

..:·iil'-.1 .• c

.-: ~(

•

.

•

.'

·Rog.- P. Panlell, Helen R..

~- '-

"'~ f

:!-_ ,.•.

1

I
·I

1

:ts.

! !~~~~u8r;:;ement

·1. •
2
_·
3
•.

•

5
·
6
7·

·I

·e..

9.
10.
11.
12..
13.
14.

I 16.

Jefautt will be rendered

::"tgainst you tor the relief
Jemanded in the Com·
Jlaint .

Larry E , Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Meigs County·
Common Pleas Court
' 6) 29 ; (7) 6. 13. 20. 27; (8) 3
lie
Public Notice

'

(7)

INS~'"'J!ON

*PRO SHOP
•• urrr squoro Two,
MocGrol••· D•nlop, &amp;
a.-to1lqoipnr11t
*GOlF LESSONS
AlUGIS
* FIELO TRIPS
55 Hote·tn-one ss
JOHN
TEAFORD
Chester,
OH . .

tensive remodeling

•In~~::~~~ SIDIIIG

. •Etec(rlc work
•C us tom P oIe Bid gs.
•Roofing work
14 Years Experience

CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and
bathrooms: Remodelina.
add ·ons, new homes,
plumbina. electric, sidina.

•Storm Ooors
•Storm Wind· ows
•Replecement
Windows
•New roofing
Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph. 992 _2772

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
or992· 2282

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

}~====~7~-~~~~-l~m~o~-~~==~=~~2~mo~~=~;;=;;~~;~~;;;~~;~;~

28.
29.
30.

•

~1.

PUBLIC NOTICE Public
Notice for Dark Diamond
.Coal Corp., Shade, Ohio
4577~ . An application Is at
the Meigs County Recor·
der's offlc&amp;for l'llrlp mine
operation, Frac. 3; T·2N ;
R·13·W; Sallabury Town·
ship, Meigs coun!V, Ohto. ·
I nternted people c11n see
these forms and maps at
.the Meigs County Recor·
1der's Office anytime. •

I

: . ~~:.,~~!i,.,

· , ..,....................... -;.,,_ ... ,_ ............... ~-.- ..

garage. carport and
large yard . Just $27,000.

:O~~,e:flckefn':~~. 1~~~;. ·
man Bit Service, Box 951,
Highway 1 North, MI. Car·
t1'1el. Illinois 62863; Alfred

~:~~~o;:ago."!ri:~r.nc:~'
50

742-2328
Rutland, Oh.
7-15·1 mo. 'J&gt;d .

7·16-2 mo. pd .

3·11-tfc

c~~~=Y·

~"~. andutor452, ~t£ vet~"::f.'::~.-.
Fiiili 5-,
-o; lhi

,

P"-70.n

•

' thal~er:n
~·dd::.~Tt
::.::.::r~~: .
l!ld •no::.~ ._._..,.P_~;..._:.,7!;.t-_ _
1

...;•..;·..;·:J

part hound. u.s-8180 or &lt;U6·
0568
Jcats, 2famolecallcoand1
male ;oellow. 1 male dog,

~=n~~!~r..!~S.~tack

&amp;

whatever.

Part Border Cotlle· lr lsh
Setter pups. Black, 8 wks .
otd. very pretty . Call 614·
379.· 2134 ..

home

and

a

smaller one. Baths and
city water . The pri ce is

negotiable .
$37,500.

Asking

INVEST - in these side·

,,

by·side houses and have
a business location.

Consigments of new and
used merchandise always

welcome .
Richard
Reynolds Auct ioneer. 2753069.

Cute, cuddly puppy needs a
good home. Just loves
mixed breed. Wormed and
people.
Tan and
white.
Veterinarian
Inspected
Hoeflich . 992-Sm .
PUPPIES . JOA-675-6233.
ONE male kitten, black &amp;
while . One female . black
with while paws. 1 female
calico cat. Phone 304·675·
3909 .
Puppies · part German
Shepherd and collie, 30~ ·
882·200A, evenings.

I

Wanted To Buy
WANTED TO BUY Old fur ·
nllure and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain.
446·3159 or 256·1967 In the

9

evenings.

Buying

Gold,

Silver,

K 111ens, block and while,

tiler trained, 3210 Howard
one
male.
females,
Avenue,
Pointtwo
Pleasant.
3 bogs of clothes, oil - dlf·
ferent kinds, must take all

We pay cash lor late model

Kitten•. phoneJOH75·A365.

BEDS· I RON. BRASS. old
furniture, gold. sliver

Two female puppies, nine
weeks·old ,
registered
Austrian
blue healer

Complete
household• .
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt. ~.
Pomeroy , Oh . Or992·7760.

dollar$, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc .,

Gold ,

silver,

sterling,

Two standing trees for jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
firewood . you move, 304- currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
675-415-1.
ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
3~7~ .

LOST balck &amp; white pony watches, chains, rings, and
vlnclnity of Teens Run· etc. Indian Artifacts of all
Providence Rd. Reward. types. Also bu ing baseball
Call 61056·1473 or 256· cards. Osby
rtin 992·
6805.
6370.
OLD wicker furniture, old

quills &amp; linens. caii614·24S·
9-wl.

l,
-'d '

KIRBY
SWEEPER
PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-082
oewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All makes and models
Antenna Installation
calls and shop

. . ...

Lost between Racine and

YOUNG'S

·~·--=r"·
-·
::==.

-=.::.t

wOI\

Lost · Horse. brciwn, Ap·
paloosa pony 1 week ago.
Vicinity Hickory Chapel
and Jericho Road . 30~·675·
6276 or 675-6999.

(Fr•lstiltlllsl

V. C. YOUNG Ill

( 304) 273· 4098

7

992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy,

7-8·1 mo. Pd.

· 1u

'"'""'

..

QUAIL FARM
Quail of all ages
available up to 8 Weeks
in any quantity
Eggs Also Available

I
I

.

0

• Downspouts
eNewor Repair
• Painting

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or 949·2263
7·14·tfc

'ce '
Servl

Heater

I

.I
I

'
I

'

'. j'·
I

I

'

'

A
ll .' ' ·. ·
1

I
1

I

, REALTORS:
Henry E . Cleland, Jr .. GRI .... : ....•.' . . .• 992-6191
JHn Trussell ......... ..... ............ Mf.U60
DOttle s. Turner ....................... HJ•sw.t

H H

..

and

sewing

supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·0294:.

7-Be!W~n ~ld-

Tuts.~UI.NttM.Z: Jt
Wedt.-':.t:...-try Draft
N'II'I ...2;Jt
Tttun.-Pool T•m.•zi.M
Fri. &amp; Sit. LtV! lANDI ·

-GasLinn

Moving Sale 128 State
Street. Wed . and Thurs.
9:00AM until 7: 00PM . Fur·
nllure, -clothing, and much
more .

Yard Sale on Route 279,
1u51 out of Centervi lie. Fri .
Lots of things, 3 Family at
Shirley Arrowoods .
Yard Sole Wed. 7·28 thur
Sat. 7·31. Rain or shine. An·
tlques, collectables, clocks,
cloth ing.
houseplants.
books, misc ., tools. 234
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
Huge Yard Sale 28, 29, &amp; 30.
Ed Marlin. Moore Jerrico
Rd. 4 112 miles from Ad·
dlson, lotlow signs. Books,
dolls, dishes, clothes, lots
of misc .

to

st. Rt.
dteporl&amp; Cheahlrt, Oh· •
PROUOLl' PRESENTS

. - Tre•cher .
·~
-Water'
-Sewer

Yard Sole July 28. 29, &amp; 30.
Good clothing, etc. Bradley
Harder ,
Route
160.
Ewlngton.

Three family garage sale
at Denver Weber's res! den·
ce In Reedsville, July 30
and 31, 9 a .m.
6 p.m.
Furniture, dishes, baby
Items. jewelry, men and
women'• clothing In all
slz... misc. 378·6293.
_

CANDLELIGHT INN

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-LC·Soy
.

OYfNER Wt~L FINANCE ~ Thls21acre.farm that
Is all !,need, spring water, big barn•. tmplement
shed, anct a lout bedroom horroe that has recently
bet!n rernoeleted throughout. Stop In and ask abOUt
lhlsot\e. $39,900.
LOTS One acre to 27 acres. As rnany acr115 as you
---would like. Water and electric avaliable. Starting at
. Sl,SC!O.
.
·

Announcements

machine repair, parts, and

EXCAVATING
....... oorers

.

.,

3

SWEEPER

ss.oao

.

God bless you all II Betty ,
Judy , and Teresa .

,. Free Estimates
4-20·11c .

LAND CO~TRACT ·- Owner will finance this four
bedroom home in Pomeroy with a coat. and WOod
tur~ace and approx. '~'• acre of ground wllh
down for IS years at tm interest with. moilf!IIY
p~ymenls of $282 .05. Sale price $28,500.
·i ·
.J .

our thanks and gratitude to
all who helped in the sud·
den death of my husband
and Judy's father, Ralph
G. Martin . The Middleport
Emergency Squad, Doctor
Wilma Mansfield, the
emergency room staff ,
Reverand Leslie Hayman ,
Disabled
American

the

247·3534

_NEW LISTING -I;ANTASTIC tlOME-wilhfour·
live bedrooms; 21h baths. large living room with
beautiful fireplace. 'de'n, big utility room and two .
porches. hlome Is In excellent condition with every
room carpeted arid lots of closets. $65,000.
· ·

I

to

16 YEARS EXP.
•Residential
•Cqmmercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio

NI;W LISTING - MIDDLEPORT'_ Neat two story
frame home with three · fqur be&lt;lrooms, dining
room with fireplace and bar: New carpeting
. throug~ouq:n ,900.
·

I

Core

Largest Radiator .

•

'
I'

SERVICE
the Smallest

From

Garage Sale Friday and
Saturday Debby Drive.
McGuire Subdivision. Fur·
niture. violets, appliances.
Tv, and encyclopedias.

We would like to express

• Gutters

Post no . 128,Feeny
Mr. Simpson.
veterans,
Bennet
and
Raw! ing,
Coats ,
~~======~=~~==~~~=:::==~
'8nen
' Electfl(•
COMPLETE
Blower Funeral Home. And
RADIATOR
all the friends and family .

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

I
I

card of Thanks

H. L WRITESEL

Clell LaBonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom, OH.
45341 '
614-915-4345

•I

'

ROOFING

LaBONTE'S -

.... r.

o: o: = :!:or ~ :.! •. ::..::!!-

Ct&gt;riftk&amp;...__._l
THISMoNTW.S lANDI
w... &amp;,..,n,
Large or smalt Jobs
MAw sit••• TeMNANTJ.&gt;
'"471
,,,~ .....
PH •
·•
L!)NE WOL~ 1•t
,..t ....
1 ltl-,_....,......:..;,:6:.,:·2~7·_:1,.::mo:.::::,·;.::J . H iW _ , _
-Sapt~c. Syst.MS

"2

•.

' llifM

Oor
•

' .

."

I

L

"SOL &amp; , ...
-

IOf -

WbSif1lO~

AWiiioiili•' i

P~ TMI,Awett.
.-HONI , . , . .
•'

MNII. .M

,

·7 +tmo,

NOW open New Irnage
HalrdeslgQ. Barrl Wn1fall
owner &amp; operator. Call for
apPOintment, 30H75-5115.
;

I

..

mun ica fion , and able to
attitude. Send re!ume to

P .O. Box 358 Athens, Ohio
45701.
Lady to live in with elderly
woman . Interested partie'
formation .

housework .

Send

ex·

perlence, salary expected
to Robert Winn, 27M! Crone
Rd . Zenia, Ohlo45385.

DEMONSTRAT E toys &amp;
gills. hOme party plan.
August to December . No
collecting,

delivering

or

cash Investment. Free kit,
Free training . 61~· 992 · 7046 .
12
Slluatlons Wanted
Private room . board and
laundry . Elderly only. 992·
6022 or 992-67 .a.
t have one vacancy in my
private home. Very good
experience. S.70. per mo.
667·6329 or 667·3-402 .
lc:3_ __,&gt;n,s,u'-'ra,n, c,e_ __
SANDY AND BEAVER in·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance

coverage tn Gallla county
lor almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
ava ilable to meet in·
dividual needs. Contact
Kai 1 Burleson , agent .
Phone 446-2921 .
Schools Instruction

the ultimate In self

HIGH
SCHOOL
GRADUATES/SENIORS.
You can earn over S5SO.OO
per month while learning a

valuable skill like com·
puter repairer, sheet metal
worker, or refrigerat ion.
Plus you will have a secure

Instruction lhru black btl!.
Also available Karate
uniforms puching and
kicking bags, and protec·
f i ve equipment. Jerry

Lowery &amp; Associates
Karate Studio , 143
Burlington Rd., Jackson
Oh. Call61086·307~ .
'
White's School of Taekwon
Do Korean Karale426Maln
St., Pl. Pleasant. New
students accept at any

surance and free tui tion to
any college or trade school
in West Virginia . In ·

class ·Men ,

women

or

Administrator

17
Miscellaneous
House painting. exterior

children. Hours Tue. a.
Thurs. 6 to 9PM and sat. 11
teresled persons may call to 2. Full line of Century
(304) 675·3950 or in West Martial Arts supplies also
Virginia call toll free HOO· sold . Call 614·367·0o4d0 or
&lt;U6- 3~26 after6PM.
6A2·3619.
for

ap ·

proximately
100 bed
SNFIICF nursing facility .
Ex ce llent salary and
benefits. Send resume to

P.O. Box 1088. Gallipolis,
Oh 45631.
Dependable babysitter lor
infant 8 to 5, Mon lhru Fri.
In my home. Call446·3132 .
L ig ht housekeeping
needed. Catl614·379·2622.
Survey Crewman Needed ·
minimum 3
perience .

years

ex·
Rod ·

man/ Chainm~n · should
have knowledge and ex·
perience with Electronic
Distance meters. Must be
able to set Opt)col Plum·
met equipment
1n·

strumentman ·

e~perlence

have

with otP&lt;tr.;;,l,~
Distance meters
Theolodlte. Must have
knowledge of Traverse and
Yertlcal · circuits. Send
resume to : P .D. Box 1472,
Portsmouth, Oh.45662. ·

Mature women to stay with
elderly couple, room,
board, plussalary. Call61~·
379·2609 or 61~· 379·25'3.

end . interior;

gutter

c1ean1ng, root painting re·
point chimneys, trash
hauling. lawns mowed 992 .
7419.
'
Carpener

Work

remodeling or repair. Wali

paneling and ceiling tile
Phone 992·2759.
·
II

Wanted to Do

L!'wn Mowing no yard to
b1g or .s mall. Reliable and
dependable. For estimate
call 446·3159 after 6PM 256·
1967.
Trash collection &amp; hauling
Call &lt;U6·WIQ.
·
Inter ior &amp; exterior pain·

ling. Reasonable rates.
Call for free estimate 446·
4173 .
•
Odd jobs or yards. Call «6·
6641 .
Would like to do painting,
Interior, exter ior &amp; roofing.

Call anytime 614-245· 1763 .

Room: boara and laundry.
Attention RN'S·Pomeroy elderly or disabled
H.c.c . now has opening for preferred. Have rereren·
full a net part II me R N for 3 ces. 446-85-12.
tp 11 and 11 to 7 snltts.
Upgraded salary and shift
differential . Contact Nancy
VanMeter director of Nur·
.sing. 614·992·6606.
21
Buslneu
Opportunity
Looki(IQ for women in·
terested In earning $20 to
· S60 or more In one evening
. havln~ . toy parlin, Work
own hours. can Frlencliy
Home Partin Manager
614-992-3561. Aiso bookin9
toy parties. If long dlatan·
call coll,ct.

If tM ...... WI ....,.

...:,_:,_______........;.u - ... - · - - ·

' 'H H·H ; H .....

Help W1nted

a $1.500 .00 enlistment
bonus, 535,000 Iife in·

,,

.:.~

11

schooling. Benefits include

1'\111

accurate

work with publ ic. · In·
dividual needs good Work

Karate

part l ime job with the Ar·
my National Guard offer

Yord Sate

with

typing and f iling skills,
good telephone com ·

defence 1111 private l-essons,
Men, women, &amp; Children .

shepar~

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PHONE

ser lees

Syracuse. Neutered male

mix. Answers to
name of Jesse. Old family
pet. Reward . 9~9 · 2862 .

Immediate opening lor In·
dividual

IS

.....
'
. .. •o . ". . .•.•o
. . . .• .•.• . .

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
Chester, Ohio

Harrisonville . 614·992·5264.

The elderly is my concern.

Table$, round or square .

ousing
Headquarters

AI·

hours .

WAITRESS . ma ids, bar·
lenders &amp; c lerks wanted.
Write qualif lcilllons a.
phOne number to : Job
Sorghum cha in mill. &lt;U6- Placement, P.O. Box 102,
Henderson. wv 25106.
1052.

Both lor $21,000.

"
rl•.

sitte r .
~

Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
446·0069

Wood Ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Wilt buy
complete household. Gold,
silver, old money, pocket

1 Mile West of
Fairgrounds on Old
Rt. 33.
Mon.·Fri. 8:30 to4 : 00
Ph. 992·6564

Wanted-Baby
ternoons .

Companion for elderly
woman . Live-In , light

iron, brass, or wood . Kit·

paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals.

Free tralni'11J,

hosteos gills, suppl ies. Call
614 · 992 · 7~ collect.

call 992·3727 for more In·

chen cubbards of all types.

CPomerov Serao
Iron &amp; Metal)
Now . picking ·- up ju,nk
auto bodies. Top prices

vestment.

quotes available . Also
coins &amp; coln supplies lor
sale. Spring Volley Trading
Co .. Spring Valley Plaza,
446·8025 or U6·8026.

bags, 304-675·6518.

mother. 30~· 675 - 2178 .

$1,000. POSSIBLE . And
more. between now and
December! Average 55.00
an nour demonstrating toys
part time. Evening or day.
House of Lloyd Par ty plan
hiring now. Free kit, no In·

Pl11tinum , old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Dally

clean used cars.

$23,000.

Lar ge

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.

Asking

2 HOUSI:S - Rent will
help you pay . A fam ily
cold divide. All utilities.

Rick Pearson , Ex ·
perlenced AUCTIONEER .
Estates. antique•. farm ,
household. Licensed Ohlowv. Buying antiques. ·JOA·
773·5785, 773-9185.

OLD FURNITURE, beds,

Real Ettata - General ·

·,

~: =m·v!!.~

Built G1r1ges''
C11i for free siding
tsttm1tes, 949·2101 orl
949·2160.
'
No Sunday Calls

If&gt; Collie female dog,
spayed, ails hots. 5 mo.old,

STORAGE BUILDING
- Plenty of parking,
water and elec tric .
Idea l for a garage or

.... .

a

"Buutlful, Custom ·

His name is AI Tromm .

C.ll 843-3322

gas fUrnace, carpeting,

BISSELL
SIDIN.GCO.

Or anything else you
want to do, because I
live with a carpenter.

HOBSltUER REALTY

NEW LISTING - St.
Rt. U3. Approx. 1.88
acres . 3 · bedroom ·
Barrington home with 2
baths. Island range and
double ovens In kitchen.
Family room with wood·
burner. 3 storage
buildings: Sells tor
$36.900.00.
NEW LISTING- Brick
St. In Pomeroy. 2 story
home with 2 bedrooms.
. Gas forced air furnace.
·Extra nice alze · lot.
N,eds · some' mlno(
but . a : re~l
1 repair
bargain · at ONLY
$12,000.00.
F.ARM - ill acres with
lovely A bedroom home,
2 bllha, family .room
·.with fireplace. Central
stereo and vacuum. ~~~
miMrals tncltJC!e&lt;l. Call
today, we 1\ave·
REDJJ,CED PRICE.
MIDDLE·P.ORT - This
hOma rllllects the love·
and care It has had. 3
. bedrooms. atn1110 - ·
alttlng .room, utility;
Everytlltng·,11 In t =
lhape. Close to
alld shOpping. OWner
wilting -to neootlate 1n
price J)f $3$,000.00.

~~~rn:; o~~·.d\~L~v
1. ~,f,~~·Ber~~oy.F$1~!
1I Trustee polrsuant to trus
.f~•:!ef~ ~'frl' '~n'll·
Testamettt of Row
·~=--~or:~wo srsilli

Tllt.,_lty ...Hntl

home

with modern bath. nat .

f'IIOIIE m:!Oi3

Ill of the Lilt Will
...
- · of AAtlama. Cllleti~Bolt
.,,
fl~hlo 11 Nancy

3J.

ranch

•3

SIDING

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE

Vinyl &amp; AluMinum
Complele ptter wort,
complete remtde!ina. roof.
ine of all lypes. Worked in
homearu 20 years.
Free estimates

lillllt S.ltltllbttot Jr.

dar I

:u.

bedroom

-

E'UGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

RMI !lblte- o•-1

·~:n;;~ ~ c~'\:."::

. 32.
33.

27 , ltc

.

John Suttle

FLOOR

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

. Public Nottce

NOTICE·OF
FORFEITURE
TO: Roy Proffitt, Box
128, Racine, Ohio 45771;
James E. Diddle, Box 587,
nard
Racine. Fultr,
Ohio 45771;
Box Ber·
723,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769; Ber·
nard Pomeroy,
Fultz, Trustee.
Box
723,
Ohio 45769;
Jay Hall, Jr.,
Cheshire,
OhioRoute
~56201,;
JELM Coal Sales, Route 1,
Cheshire~. Ohio ~5620;
Horace·
3.
Pomeroy,"arr,
OhioRoute
. 45769;
Samuel Ray Karr. Route3,

11

·

L

will be publ ished on·

judgment by

ONE

to

thirty (301 days lrom the
date of publication of this
Notice.
Respectfully,
JamesW.. Suttle

; e each week for six con;ecutive weeks . The last
lUblication will be made on

jrocedure,

:~~.:.;~..:'Sandra ~~aqeat, · :1 ~II Tllll cou,... WltiiRemlttlnce

Gily V. Slrpat, llertba Serpa&amp;, :

Nhi~h

last

17.
18 - - - - - - - I mel._ Illinois 6liOJ; central
Dll o-l~td ,Supply, P.O. Box
19·
1
•
I . lftie'rf·&lt;&gt;p ~ ~:.t~ ~:'r'
20
· · · - - - - - , - - ·I . •7th · StrHt, . .Shadyside,
2.1.
I Ohio
&gt;13947;1950
Frederick
22
1
berger,
NW Rei!·
33rd
·
Street,
Ft.
LaUderdale.
1 Ftor,lda 33309; Freclerlck-J .
23
·
I . Stobart, Box 21~L'cRa~1ne,
2•.
1 .Ohio 45171; DOODY Joe
25
·
I
26.
· · 1 Joe Adams!&gt;Jr., Five Poln·0

27. ·

interest

released of record w ithin

the

·espond as required by .the
)hiO Rules of · Civil

------1

in

lUblication of this notice

after

In case of your failure to
'tnswer
or
otherwise

~

Rev1sed

Lessee, Roger Adams, do
not have said lease

rea-----------

l( I)WFo.arn5tt1d1e

cessors

~uqu s l 3. 1982 and the 28
Jays tor the answer will
:ommence on that date.

Print 0111 worct In each
Spice below. Each In·
llllal or group of figures
counll as 1 word. Count
name and addrna Or
hone number 11 u--~.
..., ~==~~~~~~~~!!j
ou' ll get bttt.r rnults
IfgiveYOU
dHCrlbt
fully, To 1S·
price,
The Sentinel
reservn
. tht right' to ~~~tj~~~~tj
claaally, tdlt or niJect To
any ad. Your ad will be
1 1111
cP1Ut
ass 11 1nca1ion I1Proper
you'll -'T!o~s:'L_jl!!;!![~:!!J~~
check the proper bbx
Th-cashrlilln
below. ·
tncludedlacount

Ohio

; wer the Complaint within

Phone __....;_________

·

.

1 days

.

to

Code, Section 5301 .332. with
the Recorder ol Meigs
county, Ohio, if you as sue ·

You are r equired to an -

Nam•------------.

I Add
I :
I.

suant

835 .

\'\ eiqs County Deed Recor -

Write your own act anct orcter bY mall wltti this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

ll

Page

try on good hard road.

to file for record an At ·
fidavll of Forfeiture, pur·

Lat est Deed Referenc e:

282.

bedroom moder n home
with bath. basement
and garege in the coun·

more or less.
The undersigned, intends

ess.

volume

5a¥8 I I I

I

to~ Jlaii, ·Jr.,-

:~ :. tq~-~~~-~~· -.~~.=W.IOoea,~ =~=.=-.!
,;n_:_6Jy,l1.92ae~?,Lebanon.
CIII,~Of.d
·

Leonard Koeni g's N line to
rh e place of beginning, con·
taining 4 acres. more · or

Classlfleds and

~~·Barrett.
Florence Barrett I
·
.

~·

2

I

I
I
I

SouthernOhlo.ElectriccO. Rlchtol

Albert GOI!gleln, Ida Suan ·
· · Goegleln to Columbuunc!Soatbeni '

south

_Il

GroverC~ SIIasr,Jr.,Dortb.SIIIer, .
Olive.
'. .
Emma Siller to Roollcl.L. Saller,
lfarl1l E. FI'Ulk, Dele&amp; R. Frank J~ Uallel', Pan:el. Su&amp;t.un;
:1
to Columbua 8lld Southern nl.•o
uvwey E. Smltb, Deed., to 1 I
'
..,...
Aclelll4e
'EJectrfcCo.,Oilve.
•
·
P.~ Smith, Afl1d. ' W: Tranlfer• I · 15.
1

Way,

th enc e

II

Daniels.to Roger W. Hysell, Julia A.
Hyseli,Parcei,Sutton.
RogerW.HyselltoJullaA.HyseU,
Pan:el,Sutton.
Raymond MUllser, deceased,
Florence Musser,
Affidavit,

Cbarleslvan~,Jiettyllllaer,

links;

II

t ·

to Colwnbul and

i nc passing throu gh the

.r-------------""'...;.--------.
1
f
1
Curb In Ia IIon I
Pay Cash for .

i

Shrl~

Si tuated in the Township
of Salisbury , County of
Meigs, and State of Ohio,
being bounded and
desc ribe d as follows:
Begi nning at the nortnwest
' orner of the south hall of
Section 3•, in Sa lisbury
row nship. where a white
&gt;ak 15 in. bea rs N 7 degrees
" ast 18 links a nd a hickory
'i n. bears South 53 decree ·
'"'t 9 li nks; thence South

et al, Plaintiffs. vs . the
unknown
heirs
and
devisees of Will iam L .
Koen ig. e t a t., Defe ndants.
This action ha s bee n
assig ne d case numbe r
18.227 and is pending in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Me ios County, Pomeroy ,
Ohio45769.
The obj ect of 111e Com·
p la int is to quiet the title of
the Plaintiffs as aoainstthe

w.

E.

wi1·

center ·of said Section 32
ch~1ns and 1~ link s to a
sta ke, where an e lm 8 in.
bears Nort h 48 degrees
west to 16 links. and ;, red
oak 12 in . bears wes t 25

sey, Parcels
. , Mlddleport.
.
to Charles Barrett, .Florence · ·
Roy E. Proffitt, Lllllan Proffitt to · :Barrett, 84.72acre4!1 Rutland.
· : 1
Maxine ·Sellers, Right ' of ·Way,
Iva 'Pearl Dave, ~ to 1
Lebanon.
,
Doris M. Bamey, Mellla McDonald, ~ .
Paul
Safl'l!, .to Columblll and Cert. of Trans., Sdplo. .
Gary R. Dill FJOIIBi M 0111 to
· So
. utbeJ;n Ohio Electric Co., iUgbt of
•
e ·
Way,Lebanon.
Reliance Ellel'g)', Right rl Way,
Lavern Jordan,_Mary Jorilan to Chester.
Columbus and SoutiiMlrOhW Elec- _ Denver H. Nellon, Omit P . Nellon ~
tricCo.,RightofWay, CoJwDbi...
' to Denver H. Nelson, Oma P .
Bernard F. Sluivera, Jr., Pitric!a Nelaon, .lhcre,ltflddleport.

;~- - 'leffliiCY,Ri&amp;btolWay,Saliabury.

21

J'::: w.' ea~. Nea~ \.w~·

Defendants in the fol lowing
described real estate. to·

Koe nig; a nd the unknown
heirs and devisees of Flora
J . Koenig;
You are hereby notified
tha t you have been named
dofendants in a legal ac tion

R

usseU L. Wood, Rhonda R. Wood
to 'dNeacll E. Carsey, Lot 2 Parcel,
MI dleport.
,
Russell L. Wood, Rhonda R. Wood
to Jack W. Carsey, Lot 1 Parcel,
Middleport.
R
11 L W . Rhon

VIRGIL B. SR .
21_6 E. ~nd ~·
Phone
1-(614) ·992· 3325
Nice 2
2 ACRES -

Public Notice
Public Notice
between the undersigned
deg rees 10 minutes east James
. Suttle an~ John
along the west li~e of, said Suttle, was
and
Section J•; 20 cha1ns and 35 R!'9er AdamsLessors
as Lessee, of
links to the place of begin· wh1ch ' the Public Records
n jn9, it being 6S•h aCres on of Meigs County, Ohio, in·
thr, west end of the N. .,half dicate you to be successors
of the south half of Section in interest to, has expired
J• . Township2, R. IJ.oflhe by its terms for . non·
Ohio Company's Purcht~se .
payment of fental and by
ALSO, SITUATED in the the fact that tnere Is no
rwp. of Salisbury : County producing oil anf:t gas well
of M eifiS, and State of Ohio : on the premises.
Said lease is recorded in
bounded and described as
62, Page 381 of the
fOllows : N.W. Corner of Volume
Lease Records -In the office
Sec. 34, T. 2, R. 13, Ohio of
the county Recorder of
Company's Purchase, comMeigs County, Ohio, and
fl'H'! n ci n 9 at tn e road
has a descr iption as
)t"adi n9 tram the Pomeroy follows :
&amp; Ha_rr isonville Road to the
Being situated in
Hyse l R~n Road at a point Lebanon Townshi~. County
where the north line of a 65
of Meigs, Slate of Ohio In
A. Tract owed by Leonard Section 26. Township 3,
Rangel!.
Koen i q intersects said
Bounded on the
ttvsel Run Road ; thence N .
North bY lands of : L.
~ 1 degrees W 12 rods ; then·
Taylor
and C. E. Goodwin
or. 73 degrees W 6 rods;
East by lands of : C. E .rhe nce N 60 deqrees w 14
·ods; thence s 85 degrees Goodwin
South by lands of : M. L.
N 10 rods; thence S •4
and C. Carroll
:lr.qrees W 10 rods &amp; 21 Dingey
West by lands of : Lewis
inks to Leonard Koeniq' s
Edgell
N . tine: thence East atonq
Containing 2.46 acres,

Public Notice

18'h degr ees East alonQ the

extension set II

~N~!~~CTI~

·

To the unknown heirs and
devisees of Willi am l .

entitled Elsie Koenig Cook,

WAS,.,.;GTON (AP) _Health

WASHINGTON (APj- A year's
extenslono!theextsttngagreement
covering sales of U.S. grain to the
Soviet Union reportedly has been
agreed upon by President Reagan.

Maater c.

;_

Public Notice
IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS

A-U.eat••I&lt;Soloto

agr
. eement

Visa

11w-r••

Sowo,4001bo.andup5t.I0-53.10.
Pill' by the Headu-40.
CAITIEPRICES:

-:::r::..--........

446-4372

liM..,..,_.

Boarst$.48.

BearFront·End
Service
. Dependable . gua r·
anteed work. 9 yrs . Ex·
perlence .
SR 1Z4, Rutland, Oh. ·
For Appl. 742 ' 2057

C. R. MASH

KOK~~~RY

.&amp;

llk'"""'''"ifll
.. ll ..... fV &amp; CIII-Ir

..

Ph. Uf·2160 or949·2322
•·20-lfc

&amp; ELECTRONIC
SPIN WHEEL
BALANCE

ROUSH

REPAIR
Cell Bill Wanl , '
Werct•a KeyiiMnl

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

1)1-lll(t

TOM HOSKINS

276 Sycamore Sl
M'ddl
I ,eport, Oh'10

32

ALIGN' MENT

AndHomeMelnttnance
eRoollngollll types
eSidlni
·
eRtmoelellng
a FrH iatlmetes
e20 Yra. experience

"·II
992• 6259
W

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
pr 992•7121
. ~· 1fc

~~TUNING

l!liiiN!ItiiWtllltG

'"~t;;i~ 1~.":.nchot.,.ai!dprtmte7o.
~orcows-.

!'til' .. _

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone949·2293
or 949·2417
3·3-lln

OHIO VALLEY
ROOfiNG

I

~!· Rt. 1 2tPomaroy,o~

===-·
i=.--

t

HARRISON'S
TV Repa'l·r.
&amp;Service

~:::::::::t;::::::;;~=~~~=:i:==~6~-2~7~-l~~H~:;;;::;;:;:;.;;,~=~~=:;:;;::;;~7~·1~·l~m~o~.~

foiJe•i•r ··,· ......... .
\

sewers,

R Hysel
oger
GARAGE I

Dour &amp; back hoi aer·
vice, weter, sewer, pon·
ds ,
foundetlons,
reclamation.

CINII/W_._. ... .

411.~t : IIOOtoiOOtbo. 4WI: IOOtorootbo tl-49·

water,

ponds, fou.ndtlons,
reclamations.
.
We Specialise In
Racine &amp; Syracuse
Sewer Hookups
Phone 992-2293
7·28·1jn

EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

;

aootbo.ll-61.z:l; 1110ondover~7.».
Feeder HoWen: Good and Choice 150 to 100
lbo. 4H6; 300 to 100 lbo. 4U~41: iti6 to 1100 lbo.

Dozer &amp; btckhoe ser·

vice,

-26~·~1~m~o~-~
C&amp;M
r::::::~~~====~~r=======~::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~============~~~~==~~~;;~7~

16«1; 300 to 4001bo. - .IIG ; 100 to5Gtllbo $WI ·
5011 to eGO lbo. ll·ft.IO; 1110 lo 1110 lbo. $0-61; 1110 t;

·
f
·'' Mei•gs C. ounty property trans ers
Ruth Hayth, Parcels, r.tid-

U.S. Rl. 50 Eut
Guyavlile, Ohio
A.uthorlred John Deere,
New Holland, Bush H"Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
I·J·Ifc

PHONE 992·2156

Veal calvea fllo llhlcher, ~r cattle steady;
cows tl-f;21ower.
Feeder Steen: Good IIIII ONii.,., 250 to 100 lbo.

ML
CONTRACTING

SALES &amp;SERVICE

Or Wr l h O.il f SMfl~ CIUIIIIH o..t'
Ill C-' St., l"em..,.. , ~4Jitt

"

::rt.

BOGGS

,... .

.
Sale nery Saturday at 12 noon. Prices If!
takenfromllle ulfof Saturoay July 21. Trenda '

today's editions of The New York
Times, citing several unidentltled
administration sources.

.
.
.
Mabel M. Smith to Charles E :
0.,
Shoemsker,.60acre,Salisbury.
• .. l. Sidney T. Russell, deed., Ruth
Hayth, Myrna Lindsey, cert. of
Trans., Middleport.
." . Myrna Lindsey, et al, to Robert L.
•

percent

Bushless services

sumers are stockln&amp; up on bargain
Items when they 'find them, using .
prtce-otr coupons fNery chance
tbey get and . passing up namebrand products for the lessexpen51Ve store-lrand equivalents.
, Nearly eight out of every 10 con:
sumers a1ao said they're doing
more with leftovers at home arid at
least two-thirds said ~~taking
greater care In pJBillllllg their
meals.
WASHINGTON (AP) - 'lbe na·
tlon'scattle Inventory has declined
1 percent from a year ago, tDtalllng
123.7 mWion head at mld·year, the
Agriculture Department says.
Beef cows were down 4 percent
from July 1, 1981. at 38.6 m111lon,
and beef replacement heifers fell ~
pen;ent to 6.12 ml111on.
But the dairy cow herd continued
rising, climbing another 1 percent
from a year earlier to nearlyll mil·
llon head. Milk replacement heifers
numbered almost 4.8 mllllon, up 3
percent from the previous year.

Ohlo v.ue, Uveot.el Co.
Hlrllellleport

vantage of famUies at a dUficult
WASHINGTON (AP ) - A propt im e by selllng " pack age" fu ner·
osal requiring undertaker s to proals. · with costly and unwanted
, . vide customers with deta iled
Items.
' : fUneral costs Is coming before the
The funeral Industry has opposed
, , ,Federal Trade Commission, Its fu.
the rule, noting that Congress al·
ture ln Umbo after a decade of
ready put limitations on funeral
debate.
homes ln a 19!KJ law. An earlier ver.Two ITC otflclals on Monday reslon of the rule was rewritten fol·
rommended either dropping the
lowing passage of that legislation.
~ rule or studying the Issue further.
The Industry also contends that
.- Even If the rule Is a pproved by the
Its voluntary progrann to handle
' ITC, Congress could veto It
complaints Is sufficient.
'lbe F[OC staff that worked on the
On Monday, Timothy J. Murts,
~ rule has called for approva l, saying
dlrectoroftheFI'C'sconsumerpror· .the evidence Is " legally sufficient"
tectlon bureau, recommended
o' for adoption.
further Study before a rule Is
'': The funeral home proposal has
adopted and urged that the record
· .traveled a winding trail from the
ln the case be reopened.
early 1970s, the heyday of the consuM l1s ld th
,
u
sa
ere are· some ev1•
mer movement, untn now, when
dence of actual problems" In the
, ·the trend Is to curb regulatory a genIndustry but added that In the 10
'
.des such as the Fl'C.
years the Issue has been studied,
The FJ'C, which first raised the
"the commission did not ask rete,: Issue ln 1972, has gathered more
van! ·questions. We do not have
tllan 9,000 documents In the case
good statistical evidence about the
" and conducted hearings ln six "' extent of the problems.''
cities.
He said one study conducted af·
The proposal. tentatively
ter the record In the case was
·adopted last year, comes before the
Co
I sed ln 1976 f ound 94 percent oI
commissioners Wednesday . It
funeral directors were wUIIng to
, .: would require undertakers to draw
discuss prices over the phone..
· _ up Item-by-Item price lists and
The study questioned l ,:nl per·
· · 1\IlSwer questions about prices over
sons who had recently purchased
the phone.
funerals and found that :rT1 made
' . · In addition, It would be Ulegal for
theflrstapproachtotheundertaker
them to misrepresent whether
b t 1 phOne 01 those 74
ked
Y e e
·
•
as
, ·state laws require either caskets
about price and five were refused
for cremation or embalming of
such Information.
corpses.
.h e
Robert Tollison. director Of t
Proponents of the rule have
FfC's bureau of economics, also
,, iU-gued that funera l homes take ad- cited that study ln arguing the pro..
posedruleshouldbedroppedasun'·
necessary. He said the study
shOwed most people make the cho,; : Sale-leasebacks-&lt;&gt;
Ice of a funeral service on the basis
of reputation for quality or some
; .' · ' MIAMI (AP) - Sale-leasebaclls
other factor, not on price.
_• are fast becoming a new source of
··
, chnlrman of American Property
~ " ·Funll, a Mlaml·based real-estate
, . ·tnvestrnenttlrmspeclallzlngln sate
" leasebacks, they are running more
~ ' than 100 percent over last year's

Food Marketing Institute, a non·
prollt association of food wholesal·
ers and retailers with members bl
both the United States and abroad.
The Agriculture Depai1ment last
week said food prices, fr&lt;m May IQ
June, rose .6 percent on a
seasonally-adjusted basts, with
higher red meat costs the msjor
reason for the Increase.
With that blcrease, retan food prt·
ces last month were 5.2 percent
higher than In June 1981, and USDA
analysts predict food prices will
rtse by no more tban 6
thts
year. That would be the lowest an·
nual Increase since the 3.1 percent
'hike posted In 1976.
'lbe Institute's survey showed
that 60 percent of Americans are
finding It "harder to make ends
meet," and because of that economic squeeze large numbers of
shoppers are economizing lis much
as possible at the grocery store and
ln the kitchen.
.
.
At least seven out of every 10 con-

hundred blamed the Amerk:an
farmer. who Is lacing his third
straight year of decllnlng
In·
come following last year's record
harvest.s and llagg1ng domestic
and world economies.
Forty-four percent said no one In
particular Is responsible for rlsblg·
food prices and another 10 percent
said tbey' re not sure who's to
blame.
Bu~ for those who do see a culprit
ln the food·prtce spiral, 14 percent
ctted government policies, and
another 10 percent said rnlddlemen
costs were responsible.
Some f81'!11-state congressmen
fear that their effort.s to Improve
government price supports for
financially-strapped fanners will
be viewed by their urban col·
leagues as attacks on the
consumer.
The survey was based on Interviews with more than 1,000 persons
across the nation. It was conducted
ln January at the request of the

WASIDNGI'ON (AP) - Amerl·
can consumers belie';e the trend to
higher and higher food prices Is not
over yet, but many of them don' t
want to blame any particular link
In the nation's food chain, 11 consu·
mer survey shows.
The survey, conducted for the
Food Marketing Institute by Louis
Harris a nd Associates Inc., shows
that at least eight out of every 10
shoppers believe grocery store prl·
ces will continue rising this year.
Three of every 10 still feel that those
price Increases wUII'le substantial
But when 11 comes to laying
blame for the Increasing bite that
the weekly grocery bUI takes from
famUy paychecks, more than haU
of the shopping public either don't
want to point the finger at anyone
or don't know who to point It at, the
survey showed.
Only one consumer In every

.'

'

..

,.

�Ohio

Sentinel
21

--------·Household GOOds

51

They'll Do It Every Time

Business

Opportunity

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .
Gallipolis. 9x12 linole um
rug $22. 3 piece living room
suites couch-love seat·
chair $199. Call446-3159 .

LOOK 1NG for people who
want to earn between SSOO .
and 150.000. monthly
th rough this " newest and

fastes t growing company
in the nation". Call 304·675·
1293 .

GOOD
USED
AP PLIANCES - washers.
dryers ~
refr igerators,
ranges .
Skaggs Ap pliances. Upper River Rd.,
beside Slone Crest Motel.
446-7398 .

2~ ~-~o~~ to l~~-

REFINANcE or purchase
you r home. 30 year fixed
rate. w va. &amp; Ohio. Leader

Mbrtgage. 77 E . Stat e St ..
Athens. Oh . 6 14 591-3051

----Professional

21

~

Services

C&amp; L Bookk •ep ing
Bookk eeping &amp; tax serv ice
t or all t ypes of bu si ncsses.

Carol Nea l

::-=R eal

446-3862

estate
~

31

I&amp;

Hom es lor Sate

AISTiH f.MIIKoRTS,

LIAAHIItt'llU-IIP ,

LO W HEA T BILLS 3 bdr.
birck. lower Second Ave ..

GIIAIC'RAPlt&gt;S,

~:=::::~~===~r.:=;~~~"'!Cii;~·~~::.
446·

r. n~pla
ce. mode
rn kitchen,
Ga
llipolis.
Extra
lot .

tul l baseme nt . Ca ll
482! .
_ _ _ __ , - - - - - -

32

4 bdr . colonial , 2 fireplaces,
al llheextras . Shown by ap-

Mobile Homes
ior Sale

pointme nt . Call446-7802 . •

1980 BAYVIEW DELUXE
cent. air, fireplace ~ garden
J bdrm . home newly tub, underpinning with or
redecorated , mint con- without applla. Call «6dition . City schools . See 6211 or 614-388-9916.
Melvin Halley or cal l 446-

3897 .

12x60 Buddy mobile home
in eKcellent cond. Washer,
27 a cres with house near dryer. stove, new refrlg ..
Vinton for sale or trade. · nice furniture . Pallo, buill
on utility room . Call 614Call446-8615.
992-2684 after S p .m .
8 room house, double lot,
double garage. 680 S. 2nd.,
Middleport. Oh. $16,000 . No
resonable offer refused .
About 1 acre lot in Bradbury Ohio. trailer hook -up,
water, gas, electric, septic
tank . Call 614-992-2602 .
Maurice Durst. 4 E. St.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

3'-"3'-.....!F"a!!r.-"m!!'s~f~o!.r~Sa~l!!e_ _

-40 acres, 6 rm. house and
barn. tobacco base on St.
Rl. 218, 7 112 miles from
city . Call 61 4·245-9222 after
6.
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

River lot. 110 x 262. 992baths. Kitchen fully equip- 5949 .
ped. Large living room
with fire place. Most in·
terior hard wood . Full TWO acre lots-150 ft. road
basement. Finished room frontage, clly water.
over garage . AAust see to behind 84 Lumber, calf 304appreciate. Reduced for 675-6873.675-3618.
quick sale . 614-992-3530.
28 ACRES, tobacco allot 2 bdr. house wilh garage. ment, mineral rights, no
Two out buildings. River buildings, $10,500. 304-675·
view, beautiful lot. 949- 6851.
2687 .
'h ACRE with mobile
Middleporl-525 Broadway . home, located 3 miles off
S rooms, basement, Route 2 on Millstone Rd.
garage. Robery Wlnn, 27,j() Land contract. Phone 304Crone Rd.. Zenia Ohio. 576-2219.
45385 .

HOME tor sale, MI. Vernon
Ave. Under $40.000. Call
304-675-2973.
FOUR bedroom. excellent
neighborhood, huge !amity
room. bar &amp; wet sink, 304675-3779 between 5-9 p.m .
Beautifully restored VIc torian. S bedrooms, four
fireplaces, ornate carved
woodwork, air condition,
insulated, owner financing,
304-67 s-6m .
Loyely remodeled 3
bedroom home, basement,
fenced backyard. carpeted,
sided, storm windows, near
sc h'!"ls. 304·675-4338.
32

Mobile Homes

for Sale
TR' I-STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED-MOB ILE
HOMES, CARS. TRUCKS.
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK
OUR PRICES . CALL 446·
7572 .
CLE'AN USED MOB ILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SA LES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLI POLIS , RT
35. PHONE 446-3868 .
1980 Windsor 14x70, new

cond. De lu xe kit chen, large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidden util. room .
379-2310.
1971 12K60 Kirk wood almost
oile_ a cres lo1 with com ·
merc ial garage . Call 614·
256-6640 .
.
Now Moon 1970 mode l.
12x65 with 12' ex pa ndo, set
up in local park with Skir·
t in~ 8. ste ps . Ready to
maye into $6,500 . Ca ll 4463547 .

: .

~------

10x55 Great Lake 62 mode l,
ai r cond .. washer &amp; dryer.
tUlly furnished . Call -4463783.
1~80

Nashua 14x70 expando
dining &amp; living room , 3
b~rm .• 1 1/2 bath. central
a l r. Would like to sell on
land contract. Call446- 833~ 1979 Liberty Liberator
Sli,SOO . Contact John
Myers. Ohio Valley Bank.
Call446-2631 .
Chester· 14x70-1980 Mobile
hon'le, $12,000. Renl2 acres
with 11. Will sell all for
$21 ,000. 614-949 - 263~ .
USED MOBILE
576-2711.

Mobile Homes

for Rent
2 bedroom trailer. Real
nice, adults· only . e. ·own's
Trailer Park, Mine rsville.
614-992-3324.
2 bedroom mobile home in
New Haven . Adults Only .
No Pets. 304-675-1452 after
3.

Apartment
for Rent

44

Furnish 2 rooms and bath,

J or .4 bd.room home. l lf2

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad dition. 3 bedrooms. family
roo m with fi rep Iace, cen·
tral a ir, basement. phone
304-675-1542 .

42

clean, no pets, adults only.

Dep. required . Call 4461519.
4 room unfurnished i!pt. all
carpeted. utilities paid,
adulls only no pets: Call
4-46-3437 .

Efflency apartments lsi
floor &amp; 2nd. floor . Call 4460957 , 729 2nd Ave ..
Gallipolis.
Furnished efficiency, $135,
utillies pd. share bath, 701
4th . Ave .• Gallipoli&gt;. Call
«6-.1416 after 7PM.
lsi floor furnished apart ment, adults preferred. ref.
&amp; dep. required . Call 631
4th Ave ., Gallipolis.
3

room

furnished apt.
Deposit &amp; references
required . No pets, adults

only . tnquire 602 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis after 4PM.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair , rocke r , at·
tama n. 3 tables, !extra
heavy by Frontier), $685.
Sofa, chair and loveseat,
$275 . Sofas and chairs
priced from $285. to 1795.
Tables, $38 and up to $109.
Hlde-a -beds,S340., queen
size. $380. Recliners. $175.
to$295 .. Lamps from 118. 1o

~si8 ~c/~~el~~~~r~J~p·
Wood iable -~ith 4 chairs:

Hutches,
$219
up to $300.
$495. and
Desk $375.
$110.,
maple or p ine finish .
Bedroom suites - Bassett
Cherry, $795.
Bunk bed
complete with mattresses.
$250. and up to $395. Captain's beds, $275. complete.
Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
or box springs, full or twin,
$58., firm. $68. and pa.
Queen sets, $195 . 4 dr.
chests, S42 . 5 dr . chests.
154. Bed frames, 12C.and
$25., 10 gun - Gun c abinets,
$350., dinette chairs $20,
and $25 . Gas or electric
ranges,
$325 .
Baby
malresses, $25 I $35, bed
frames $20, $25. I $30. Used
Furniture
bookcase,
ranges and TV's. 3 miles ·
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon . fhru Fri., 9am
toSpm, Sat.
«6-0322
Gen . Elect. 2 spd .• avacodo
washer , extra n i ce.
Whirlpool apartment size
washer . $90 each. Call 614·
256-1207.
GE . dryer , while m int
shape, $90. Whirlpool coppertone auto washer, real
nice, SllO. Call446-8181 .
Goo vsed - living room
suites. 1-2 piece and 1-4
piece . Call «6-7749 .
Early American floral LR
suite, brown swivel rocker,
maple Ethan Allan dough boY end tables, coffee
table, lamp, hard rock
maple dinette set, dry sink.
desk . Call614-245-9132 .

by Lany Wrigtlt

79

Motor Home I/Campers , ·

66 Cortez motor home, exc.

'

J ~~~

a:oo •
81

Home

.~t l

Ol• .,MI.l.w

CAPTAIN EASY .
I I&lt; NOW VOli'L~ ALL ...-- - .
UNDERSTAND HOW I
FEEL A&amp;OUT HA\IINCI A
CELEI'RATION

667-6245. ~I!=========:;:=========~ Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years experience. sj)eclalizlng in
TEXACO HYDRAULIC 58
Fruit
buill up roof. Call 614-388OIL N0.32 .10 weight 55
&amp; v.evetables
9622 or614-388-9857.
gal. drum·s . Each $80.00.
614-667-3085 .
Pick your own bean and 1980 PODGE Diplomat CAPTAIN STEEMER Cartomatoes. S3 bu. each, station wagon, 304·675· 5867 .
pel Cteanlng featured by ·
WOOD for sale, 304-458- bring containers. Raynor
HaHelf Brosthers Custom
Peach Orchard, 446-4807, 1975 MONZA. 1971 DOdge
1833.
Lower River Rd . Closed Charger Super B with 383 Carpets. Free estimates.
Call 446-2107.
Firewood 125.00 pickup Sundays and Wednesday magnum, 304-675-5812.
evenings
load at farm , goal milk,
French City Painting
$3 ""gallon. 304-895-3395.
1968 Flat. good shape, 304- residential &amp; commercial,
Corn Silver Queen, while. 675-3476.
Interior. exterior, paper
Good used bedroom suite, For freezing $1.00 doz., for
hanging,
&amp;
textured
complete sao .• also electric freezing and canning. Call 1980 Ford Mustang, turbo ceilings_ Call 614-367-7784
614-256-1157.
fireplace with blower, Wl;
charge, four speed, $.5,900. or 614-367-7160.
1 lot yard sale llems $2().
Phone 304-458·1858.
304-675-6535.
HOME grown tomatoes, 10
Masonarv work. Logue
lb . basket or bushel . Phone
Rt .
1.
1971 Ford statlonwagon, V- Contracting ,
304-882-2361.
!
55
Building Supplies
8. nine passenger, 70,000 Ewington. Call 614-388miles, accepting bell offer. 9939 .
Building materials block,
CANNING tomatoes, $6,00· 304-675-2675.
.
brick, sewer pipes. win·
BU . 304-675-2929 after s.
dows, lintels. etc. Claude
CHRISTIAN ' S CON Winters. Rio Grande, 0 .
Constr .•
1972 Buick LeSabre. good STRUCTION .
HALF Runner beans. Blue running, hes current WV roofing, siding, spouting,
Call614-245-5121.
Lake 'beans, tomatoes. sticker. $300, 304-773-5082 f!mclng, painting. repairs &amp;
Harry Rhodes, 304-675-1981 . after5p.m.
cleaning. 446·2000, call
Metal sheets tor all
before8 and after 5:3o.
building purposes. Ftal
porcellan enamel coated.
4x81hru 4 x 12 . Prices, $7.00
SINGS CONCRETE CON 1974 Chevy. pick-up, 6 cyl., STRUCTION Specializing
to 19.60 . 614-667·3085.
auto., transmission . $800. in concrete driveways,
Be seen at 400 Lasley St. sidewalks, floors, patios,
S6 ......,.
Pets tor Sale
P o m e r o y . etc. 11 yr_ exp. Call 614-367'
,.,..
DRAGONWYND
CAT 7891.
'
TERY - KENNEL. AKC
1979 Chevy 4x4 loaded.
Chow puppies, CFA
$4200 or S500 and assume Gene's Steam Carpet
Himalayan, Persian and
payments, 304-458-1833 or Clean-Scotch Gaurd-Free
Farm Equipment
Siamese kittens. Call «6· 61
458·1052.
estlmates· spring specials3844 after 4 p .m .
'SUMMER SHOWDOWN'
Gene Smith, 992-6309.
JIVIDENS FARM EQUIP- 73
Van5&amp;4W.D.
M
E
N
T
HILLCREST KENNEL
446·1675
4·WD Chevy Surburban RON ' S Television Service.
Boarding , all breeds. AKC
Long
tractor,
Vermeer
AT, PB, PS, $1 ,600 OBO . Specializing in Zenith and
Reg . Dobermans pups and
Motorola, Quazar, and
Doberman Stud Service. balers. &amp; Hay equipment, Call 446-1927.
house calls. Phone 576-2J98
Call446-7795 .
bale movers, rotary llllersor446-2454.
$1039 .00, wagons, disc, post 1980 tuv 4x4 with topper,
diggers &amp; drivers, seeders, $4,995.00, 304-576-2403.
POODLE GROOMING .
F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
Call Judy Taylor al614-367- rotary cutters. blades. -;::==:;:;=:;::==::;===
stump removal . 675-1331.
gates, cultivators &amp; front :;;
7220 .
7·.::•:__ _:M::o:::t:.::o.:;rc,_,ycoc:.:le,s: _ _
end loaders.
And see us to get y.o ur parts 1975 Honda 500, luggage RINGLES'S SERVICE exSonia's Professional Dog &amp; complete service.
rack, adlustable back rest. perienced mason. roofer.
Grooming . Call614-388-8547 USED EQUIP:
helmet bag, 2 helmets, win· carpenter , electrician,
and ask for Sonia .
IH Hydro 70, Ford 2000, shield, low mileage, good general repairs and
Ford Jubilee. 16.5 MF, condltlbn, JBSO or best of- remodeling, Phone 304-675AKC COLLIE PUPPIES. MasSey Harris Pony, 70 fer. Call «6-2235 after 5 :00.
2088 or 675-4560.
Lassie type, Call 614-256- Oliver, 185 A. C. - 04006
Duetz, plows, disc, JD
1267.
manure &gt;preader, Ford 501 Kawasaki 100o L TO; 1981. Water wells. Commercial
mower, 19 ft. camping faring, crash bar, low 'and Domestic. Test hOles.
2 Reg . male Labador trailer.
miles. Call 4-46-9278, like Pumps Sales and Service.
Retrievers, professional we buy used equipment.
new, quick sale, $2.800.
304-895-3802 .
trained to hunt . Call 614388-8623 or 614-388-9991.
2-1981 XR200 Honda dirt ADVANCED
Seamless
63
Livestock
bikes and helmets. Call614- Gutter-Doors . Offering
AKC Reg. English Springer Registered Nubian goats. 245-5294.
continuous
guttering,
Spaniels, liver and while, rabbits, ducks, and
seamless siding, roofing,
all shots, $95. Call 446-8234.
doors,
free
guineas. Call614-388-9756.
79 Yamaha GT 80. 614-949- garage
estimates. 614 - 69~ · 82CS .
2749.
AKC REg . Cocker Spaniel Registered and grade horpups. Call «6-1262.
ses, excellent 4·H project. 1980 Honda CM400E. Like PAINTING interior &amp; exEnglish and western sad- new. Must sell. 614-742- terior, free estimates. 304675-1128.
Grooming services for dles evertthl
2025.
pets. Will clip English imaginable in
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp; ment and SUI)Dfles,
Kawasaki 1980 KE.UO. STARKS Tree Trimming
Schnauzer's. Reasonable. riding leswns
and Lawn Service. Shrubs
S1200or
bestoffe~. 992-7039.
rides
and
horse
For appt 614-992-7342.
trimmed. . Phone 304-576Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow.
2010.
CM«JJ Honda $900. 304-675·
For sale·long hair Ham· 614-698·3290.
_6252 or 675-1293.
sters. $2.50 each. Call 61412
Plumbing
882-2030.
4 goats. 304-458-1807.
&amp; Heating
1978 YAMAHA 500, good
CARTER'S PLUMBING
condition, .. low mileage.
REGISTERED. 2 year old, , Pigs, call 304-882-3448 .
$950.00, 304·675·3534.
AND 'HEATING
Redbone Coonhound, male.
cor. Fourth and Pine
· Sell or trade, 304-675-5646.
Pigs, cat I 304-895-3486.
1976 Harley Davlds_on Phone «6-3888 or 446-4477
Super
Glide, recently
MEXICAN
Hairless,
G
Excavating
female, spayed, pedigreed, 64
~--'H~•!.YL"~"!r.!a.'!in!__ rebuilt, fat bob tanks. 13
many
extras,304-8'15-3326.
2 lb. very tiny. wonderful Hay $1.50 bale. Call 446· Gallipolis Diversified Con,
home companion, $150 . call 6641 or 446-8J!I1.
st. CD. Custom dozer· &amp;
19~ Honda C BX, 31)4-675304-576-2491.
bac~hoe
work . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
Hay for Sate. $1 .25 per bale. 5851.
Six
months -old,
part «6-0373 .
- - - - - - - - eSiimates. «6-4-440.
Labrador, $30, 30&lt;1-773-5078.
197-i Kawasaki 750 Mech
Hay. $1 .25bale in field. 304- 111, low mileage. good con- Lawrence Sidenstrlcker
dillon, $1,000. Call 304-675- Backhoe Service. Calt 675·
Purebred beagle pups, 304- 675·2254 or 304-675-1302.
7462 .
5580.
895-3938.

11:30

UN.PE~

THE CIR~liM"fAt.JCS&amp;.

446 - ~229.

Small trailer spaces.
Mason. 304·773-5651.

Beautiful 2 bdr. mobile
.home on the O.J . White Rd
y;lth garden and out- . TWO large trailer sJl(!ts for
MOBILE HOMES MOVED· buildings _$150 mo. Call 446- rent. fully equlj)ped, $40.• .
Licensed • &amp; insured. Call : 3727.
m&lt;&gt;nth, 30H73-5319. ' ,
1
304-576-2711 .

...............
.. ... ' .. ..'
71

~

~

Autos for Solo

1977 Olds. Cutlass 442. Good
condition. Call evenlnys.
446-7781 .
1974 International station·
wagon exc. cond • c 1ean Interior, Ideal for flshl~g.
hunting &amp; camping. Very
roomy, $950. Call 614·2~5017.
·

2 trailers for rent. Air
71 New Moon, 2 bedroom ' cond. , completely fur·
$4,300. 304-882-2236.
nlshed,
very clean,
beautiful riverview, In
1973 14X70 Grandville ha&gt; · Kanauga, very sate
large rooms plus taundry location to II••· adults only,
room, must be moved, J04- no pets, deposit required,
Call «6-1602.
882t~82C.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call614-367-7471
or614-367-0591 .

Need something hauled
Fishing
boat
1211. away or something moved? ,
,aluminum. exc. cond., S300. We'll do II. Call _....·3159 or·
Will Include 7 112 HP , 614-256·1967 after 6.
motor, oars, 2 fuel ••nks.
1974 Datsun 260-Z, 6 cyl., 4 Call614-:!67-7801.
'
Now Hauling limestone-fill
spd. ; AM· FM. sunroof.
dlrt·top soli-graveL Free
$2,500. Call446-8050.
U ft. alUminum boat, estimates. Call 614-367fralter, 18 HP Johnson 7101.
1974 Fleetwood' &lt;;adlllec. motor : Call446-7504.
·Needs a few repairs. $.500.
Will ~aul dirt of any klntl or
992-5692.
any driveway materlet;
C.tlll Let.uY Cald'Nelt, 4464851 for estimate.

HARTS · UM&lt;I Cars.
Haven West Vlf'liiAII.
20 , _ expensive cars
stock.

17

Upl!o!stery

.
TRISTATE
- UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave•• Gatllpolls.
446-7133 or fl'-1133.

Cll

~·ve; oot-~e

I

,

lDI

MlOUT

Greedy play loses
By Otw... Jaeelly
udAiuS.&amp;q .

action .

- I GUESS 11£ I OUNI() •• l'IJE 5EEH
UUDElE FELT
THAT DUr-\P AH' IT
HE 11A0 A
5EEift5 IUHD 0' 5TIFF,
Pfi.ECEOEHT. EVEN FOR TH' H.HEC/1.5!

BEmR'N
BEiti' SHIPPED TO A

STILL-IT'S

LIJB'RIITORY!

U::tr.

bla two-cllamOild revene,
North cuebld botb major auU
ac:ea IIJid 10pported clubs.
Soutb COtlfldi!ioUy bid U!e
won the opening
heart lead wltb dummy's
ace IIJid Immediately drew
the oppotllnl trumps in two
t'OUJida, Next be led a small
spade to dummy's Jac!o. auccesafully flneulng west's

king.

At UliJ point, declarer
!mew bla contract wu safe.
He could ruff a heart ln his
band, lead a spade to the ace
aud trump dummy's lut
heart. Flnally1 be would exit
wltb the apaoe queen. West
would win bla kin&amp;~ but amy
return would pve !iOUUI his
slam. A dlamoocl lead away
from the queen &amp;lves South

three dWnond ,b'leu. A

tioned]

Ill (J)

T·Z7

The aqenc~

wants more
piciuresr

~~.~

qoinq,

Lil?

heart return allowa declarer
to ruff In bla band and discard one of dummy's

dllmoodl.
However, South went
down In his slam! Today's
band took place In a dupll·
cate tournament and decler·
er llfeedlly decided to play
for au overtrick. At trick
five South Jllayed a diamond
from the table and hopefully

IT SHORE WAS
THOuGHTY OF
SNUFFY TO

LOAN ME HIS
BUG KILLER

THAR'S ANOTHER

,,,oo • m

ONE OVER ON TH'
"'""' MANTELPIECE,
LOWEEZ'r'

'

.

em •

pOrts •

holdup. '(R)

·. (J) CeptlotiiCI ABC N -'
1)1 MOVIE: 'Herd Driver'
Nklhdlne
·
11:45 Ill Moi11E: 'Galuy of

Terror'
(I) MOVIE: 'The High lllld

a.

THIS IS OUR 8166E5T

GAMe OF ')1IE SEASON

~

a.! TilE MORNJN6 OF
OUR BI~ST 6AME, I
~5 POUR MV5ELF
A BOWL Of 1\IE SAME
KIND OF CEREAL ...

eon-

(J) Nlltilwlth1tllltlllnttt
•
(()
WK'-1'

ACROSS
1 Trail

l!fe, tfll

+s 6

+J7

SOUTH
+Q 8 2

'19

+A KH
+AKQ104

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
W01t

Nortb

East

Soulb

p.,,

I NT

Pass
Pau
Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

Pau
Pass
Pass
Pass

2'1
3+
4+
Pass

••

2+
3NT
&amp;+

Opening lead: •Q

flnesaed

the jack. When U!e
finelse lost, West returned a
heart and South ruffed.
When neither the 10 of diamonds nor the king of spades
later dropped, South bad
converted 1} trlckJ Into 11.
What declarer didn't con·
alder Is that six clubs Is an
excellent contract and many
of the other pairs would fall
to bid it In lact, only three
pain out of 14 did.

5 Stock
holdings
11 Roman

emperor

DOWN
I Old modeling
work

2 Expiate'

IZ Adjective
3 How awful!
for Abe
4 Not vert.
13 Shoot
·5 Sacred
skyward
place
Yesterday's Answer
14 Type of bird I Ancient
16 Dossier
211 ~ de
15 Ending
7 Hill builder
19 Pungent
resistance
for depend
I French
22 Garment
29 Not a soul
11 Dougla,s Revolution
slit
:10 Melville
11 Raw sugar
period
~1 Crowlilte
novel
18 Kismet
9 Sea Inlet
24 Oulllenge
35 Fold over
!II Brandy 10 English
25 Gazed
36 Actor
%1 Healthy
author
21 Decayed
Hingle
Z2 GoH cry
r:-..,;-"'1'7'-n. !3 NIICleus
!4 Disobey
25 Dessert wine
!S Bombast
!7 Go astray
Zll Augur
31 Mldlanite

lting
:12 Resident

(suffix)
:13 Actor ·
Scheider
34 Cut of pork
:Ill Stage Item

37 fwlne
togeth!:r

:JI First-rate
3t

Become
complex

DAIJ,Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

A'XYDLBAAXI
LONGPIII:LLOW

One letter .tlmpb standlt for another. In Ibis umple A II
UMd for Uoe tb- L's, X for the two ()'s, etr. Single !etten,
eptlltrvp'-, tbe ..nath and formollon ol the warda on all
hl11ta. Each .S., the-'eode !etten are dillerent
•· •

ciYnOQVOTBS
RWJXr JXDOB

DJPBV

DOB

EDXZA

XAPOQ

s u.

LSWFJVNU

YS ·

ML,

LSWFJVNU

OJ

"AV"

~- (Ill (1 lw.• 10

MAN WHo WILL SMilE WHEN EVERY11UNG GOES DEAD
WRONG.-ELLA WHEElER WI~X
, .
.

min.)

'·

106~3

t87

(() Pl8 . . . Night
• (JI l'liollllf ltlend An
undercoVer agent triCks
doWn I IOidltr of fortune

and~
~-del wortWI
II
lnUJ 1 ~

'

+7643
'IK

IlliG Acroes
Is one

In

ClnciNwtl Herb btcomll
irate when 101111 gMM
show hoiU lnv.cle hll prtvll8

+K 109
'IQJ82
• Q 10 ~ 2

61HM"tr
br THOMAS JOSEPH

•at

1111 Mlehtv"
12:00 CD..,. Allen
(I) PKA Fill

+9 ~ 3 2
EAST

WEST

1-----------------------

,.jot

BARNEY

7·27·8%

+AH
'I A 74
t643

slam.
Declarer

~~~~

(II MOVIE: 'Blind
Ambition' Part 1
(J) Danger UXB From
Muterplace
Theatre
Brian is sent to Cambridge
to assist on the boobytrapped ' Y' fuse . IRI (60
min.) [Closed Captioned[
B:30 ([) •
llZ Leveme &amp;
Shlrloy Laverne and Shirley
give a salute to entertain·
mont. (R) ICiosad Captioned!
9:00 D (1) (!) Brat Maverick
Meverick and Guthrie guard
a fortune in gold againat
some renegade Confederate soldiers. (RI (60 min .)
CD700 Club
([) B e - Game Show
Cll
•
at Three's
Company Furiey ~nd Larry
try to prevent Jack. Janet
and Terri from moving. (R)
[Closed Captioned)
(J) Myateryl 'MaNce Afar·
ethought. • Brought to trial
for the murder of hia w~e.
Or. Bicklelgh is convinced
that they cannot prove ha
case a!Jiinst him. (RI (60
min.) [Closed Captioned!
(fi) Danger UXB From
MaeterpiiCII
~
Brian is sent to Cambridge
to assist on the boobyI\
trapped 'Y' fuse . (R) (60
min.) [Closed Captioned!
9:30 Cll
l.eegue 111Mball: San Diego at Atlllntlt
(J) D ilZ Too, Cloel For
Comfon Hflnry is firad . (R)
10:00 D CD (!) McCieln'o Lew
An elderly man and some
professional robbers try to
rob 1 bank at the same
time. (R) (60 min.)
Ill MOVIE: 'Gas'
Ill MOVIE: 'Cheaper to
Keep Her'
Cll • ID Hart to Hllrt A
discovery by Jonathan's
wine partner leads to a
murder investigation. (RI
160 min.r !Closed Captioned!
lJ.) Firing Une
lDI NewaWIIIdl
10:30 CD Sing out America
lDI Hltchcoc:k
&lt;Il • (J)
(jJ
News
(I) Nlahvllle RFD
(I) ESPN &amp;porta Center
(!) Newa/SporU/WMiher
(I) Dave Allen et Lerge
1 1 :30 D CD (!) ToniGht Show
Cll Another Life
(J) Benny Hill BMw
Ill Cll Allee Mal lura he's
a. marked man altar hi re-

NORTH

Nortb-South bad au excel·
lent, but compllcated aucUon to reach liJ: clubl 011
tcday'a
After Soutb
bad llbo'wo
values with

(I) Women's Temio:
1 982 Federation Cup
Final fn&gt;m Santa Clera.
CA
Cll D at Happy Doyo
Jenny 's gossiping gats her
in trouble. IRI !Closed Cap-

are

(AnlwtlriiOrnOm&gt;W) :
Jumlllll: METAL BEGUN vALISE SIPHON
: How to go whhout sleep for aeven days and
not bt tired-SLEEP AT NIGHT

BRIDGE

Cll Another Life
(I) EBPN 8porU Center
Cll D (() F-lly FIUd
(!) l.evii'M IIICI Shlrloy
(J) BuallliH Report .
(II Richerd Simmon•
lDI
MOVIE:
'CipWn
Kldd'
•
1D Entertainment
Tonight
B:OO G Ill (!) Father Murphy
The orphenage holds an
open house for adoptive
parents. (RI (60 min .)
Ill HBO Theatre: The
Deadly Game Throe re·
tired
criminal
lawyers
amuse themselves by prosecuting
unsuspecting
house guests.
Ill MOVIE: 'Leave Yea·
terday Behind'
CD National Geographic

ANNIE

II I I I I )

M110Nell-l.ehrlr

(II N.• at F.mlly FIUd
7 :30 • (I) You Aaked For It
Ill ~ for 1111 PIMint
Barry Tompltina and Tim
McCarver holt this look at
tha past week' a beseball

OJR VJA'I .

/MIL-

I

ell .
1
toter • Y

Report

eo Mu£s our a'

GEE •• 1 DIDH'T THIHK. TH'
JUI16E COIJU) ~#Me TH'
1\HECH. BO'/G YIAIT
TRIAL AT TH' VUMI' 01
IHSTEAP O' PAYIH'

I

l;:"=.:=n:~=~\!:s:r==-,.;.:1

~-~~~gh

MOWREYS Ullhalstery Rl' 1 Box 12A, Pf. PI-nt ~

67H154.

y

save money.

•.

arr1nQ1 11111 llftora to
fonn .lllll IUiptol - · .. aug·
gnted by IIIII lboW t:II!Oon.

Answer here: HEWAS (

Cll lull's Eye
(I) NASL Wllkly
Cll EntlrUinmem Tonight

.7====.::;=:=:=::;:==
14
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

. JIMS Water service. Call
Jim Lanier, ~·675· 7397.

tl

cas N.-

e

Boafund .
Motors for Sale

Star Craft Tri· Haul skl
boat, 12.5 Evlnrude engine,
excelleilt cond. ~-0276.

IMOAWE~

(J) Dr. Who
lDI Ullee. Yogellld You
7:00
Cll P.M. M811Uine
(I) Money Mlltt.,. Tllia
special shows you how to

Clendenen Refrigeration.
Air conditioning, &amp;
Heating Service. Call 614·
1980 sears . ,12' fiberglass . 256-1446.
fishing boat, 7 112 HP
motor. !railer. oars. life SEWING Machine repairs,
jackets. S900. &lt;;all-«6·4712.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Fabric Shop,
sears 12 fl. fiberglass Scissors
fishing boll! with trailer Pomeroy. 992·2284.
and oar&gt;. $495.00. Phone
«6·0418.
15
General Hauling
75

..

.,_.,

e(1) (I)
(!) NBC N.MOVIE: 'Union City'
D (() 9

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

Call304-675-5152 .·

'Coyote's

(() Electric Company
lDI Over Eav'

(() e

---.......···..........
.... .
-. .........
. .. . .

1~75 Honda XR 75, ~250.

~OVIE:

(I) $110,000 Pynmld
at ABC N.-

or

HAY, top quality, 2nd. cutling, July 10th. S2.00 bale.
304-675-4114 or 614-379· 26~7.

II

(I) llftt of Non. Dllme
Footblll M 1974 Fighting
lriah v1. Michigan State
(() Mejor l.eegue a-.
bllll: &amp;.n Diego et Atlente

Improvements

PAINTING
Interior and
exterior, plumbing ,
roofing, some remOdeling.
2() yrs. exp. Call 614-3889652.

lLflltflr 1-1

.........

Ument'

STUCCO PLASTER.t NG
textured celllnqs com·
mercia! and residential,
free estimates. Call614-2561182.

Over 1,000 ceramic molds,
kilns , and supplies. 614-7422925 or 742-2085.

9

Cll &lt;Il rn • &lt;Il tme

!

._

·~

EVENING

Sears best 25,000 BTU air
conditioner. window model
cools s r . house, energy
saver, exc. cond., used ap·
prox . 2 mos. Call 614-24.5-9252 after SPM .

at 985-3913
$1500.

.I0

TUESDAY

7/27/82

For sale used Ditch Witch.
2200 trencer. Call 614-6947842 .

Sentinel-¥

TeleViSion
Viewing

.

1973 All• 23ft. Pull ca(llper,
good cond. Call 6)4-388. 8437.

1980 model tor sale, good
condition . Call614-388-8870.

The Dai

Pomero -Middleport, Ohio

cond .. $4,500. Call 614-388·
8747.

Two horse· horse trailer

18.000 BTU Amana Aircond. Used 1 month . $400.
Apartment partially fur - 949-2857 .
nished, util ities furnished,
4~1,-----;H
-:-o-uses-f:o
-r-=Rcenf;-­
adults. Call 446·3733. eve. 30 ln . elec. Sunray Range«6-0171 .
$85 .
Whirlpool
Auto.
3 bdr. house good location,
Washer-$75 . 61A-742-2352 .
2 bdr. apt, HUD excepted,
A-One Real Estates. Carol Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath.
Yeager Reallor. Call 304- clean, no pets, adults only, BEMCO mattresses or box
dep. req. Call446-1519 .
675-5104 or 675-5386.
springs. full or twin, $58 . 6
Piece Naugahyde heavy
House, 120 3rd . Ave., Furnished apt .• 7 Nell Ave .• wood living room suite
Gallipolis. 2.!&gt;dr., gas heat, Gallipolis. 3 rooms, $200, $595 . Pillow arm sofa &amp;
dep. req. the Wiseman water paid. Call 446-.1416 al - chair S295. Roll top desk,
ter 7PM .
Agency, 446·J6.43.
dark &amp; light, $189. Bunk
beds. complete, incj ude'
4 bedroom home. living Furnished efficiency, $150, mattress, $199. Complete
room, dining room &amp; utilities pd, 919 2nd Ave., water bed shop with 10
family room. city schools. Gallipolis. 2 rooms. single bedroom suites on disptay,
male. Call 446-.1416 after starling price $229. Up to
Call «6-1323.
$2500. Big daddy coctait &amp;
7PM.
end tables $50. Waii·A-Way
Unfurnished house, 3 bdr.,
recliners $169. and up. ~a­
Rodney Village II . Ref. 3 room furnished apt. $250. Z-Boy recliners in stock.
req., $200. Call 446-4416 af- month includes utilities. USED FURNITURE 5 pc.
Inquire at Meigs Inn in &amp; 7 pc. dinette sets,
ter 7PM.
Pomeroy.
bedroomsuite Hollywood
style, bunk beds, Fl~ir ·Fur­
5 room house, 661 Third
Ave., all new kitchen. new 3 bd.room apt., Middleport. nilure &amp; Design. Gallipolis
vinyl siding, gas heat, $150. mo. and Security dep. Ferry, WV . Open 9-6.
Phone 304-675-1371 .
deposif'requlred. Call after 992-5692.
6:00, 446·2396.
3 room furnished Apt. in 54
Misc. Merchandice
3 bd.room house. l'h baths. , Middleport. $225. per mo.
Ulilit&lt;es
inc
.
614-992-3190.
Plastic Septic Tanks. State
Family room and fire
and county approved. 1,000
place,
stove,
and
gal. lank, price $3,j(), Other
refrigerator !urn. Car- Aparl'ments. 304-675-5548.
sizes In stock, haul in your
peting. $300. mo. dep.req.
pickup truck. Call 614·286No pets Inside. 614-992-2362
APARTMENTS, mobile 5930, Jackson, Dh . RON
after 4 p.m .
homes,
houses .
Pt . EVANS ENTERPRISES
Pleasant and Gall ipolis.
Unfurnished 2 bd.room 614-446-8221 or 614-245-9484.
1975 Case 450, dozer house on 1 acre. with wood tractor. 1.800 hrs.. very
burner. One child only.
Three
room
furnished
good cond.. $14,900. Call
$150. deposit, $160. mo.
apartment, adults, no pels. «6-4537.
rent. 614-742-2753.
Point Pleasant.- Phone 304675-2453.
TLtFF'S POOL d:N Very nice 2 bd.room fur·
TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
nished house, overlooking
the river . Adults only. TWIN Rivers Tower now instaltatlon. 403 2nd. Ave.,
renting to qualified ap- Gallipolis, Oh. Call 446Minersville. 614·33U.
plicants, age 50 and older. 6519. In ground-Ablove
Phone 304-675-6679. HUD ground .
'
You'll love this -.J-4 acre assisted project
farm in the country w ith a
57
Musical
ADDITIONAL DISCOUN pond and small barn. This 2
Instruments
2
bedroom
apl.in
Mason.
T!
LIMITED
TIME
bedroom brick home is
only 2 miles from down ~ Adulls only. No pets. 304- ONLY! THE BIG, NEW Wurlltzer organ, Super
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY- Sprite. SBOO. Call 446·8224.
town Pl. Pleasant. Will 675-1452 after 3.
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN sign a year lease at s.ASO.
THREE room furnished CLUDE DECK, FENCE,
per month . 304-675-6276.
Conn Trombone for marcottage, utilities furnished, FILTER &amp; WARRANTY ching or beginning band
ARE NOW AVAILABLE
HOU SE for rent, 304-675- adults, no pets, 31\4·675-2812 FOR ONLY $999 . IN- members. Good cond. $125.
or675-1580.
or best offer_ 304-773-5679.
3017 .
STALLATION &amp; FINAN·
CING AVAILABLE. FIRFurnished
apartment, ST
42
Mobile Homes
COME. FIRST SERVE. 58
F~ult
adults,
304-675-2257.
for Rent
CALL H()t)-624·8511 (Ohio),
&amp; Vegetables
Home grown swee1 corn.
1-800·642-31)53 IWV) .
Furnished Rooms
Mobile Home, Eureka, 1 45
Charles McKeon Farm,
Bdr., !urn., riverfront lot.
room.
$125, Good used 13 and 14 Inch
Fairlield-Centenary Rd.
ref . &amp; deposit . Adults, $100 Sleeping
utilities pd. 919 2nd. Ave, !Ires. Cail.wl-?516.
Call 446·9.142.
mo. 1-643-26.14.
Ga Ill pol is. · Single male, j.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..l.::::::::::::::::::~
12x65, 3 bdr .• mobile home. range &amp; refrlg, _S200. Call
Clean, air cond., furnished, «6-.U16 after 7PM.
good location. ref. req _sec.
dep. req. Call «6-85~ .
Rooms with cooking, Cable;
air, S40 a week. 304-773FURNISHED mobile home 5651.
In city. Central air. One or
two adults only. Call 446- 46
Space for Rent
0338.
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
2 bdrm . unfurnished Pomeroy. Large tols. Call
mobite home In Cheshire ..
992 ' 1479 ·
. lhrl"-11'-L-4~1
Ref. &amp; dep. required. Call

HOME.

'
'N' CARLYLE"'

54
Left handed compound bow
bear like new, only shot once, $50. Call 446-3094 or 614388-8857 .

International c ub cadet . 12
h.p. with Hydrostatic drive
and lights. New battery
and starter. Has 48 in.
mower with extra blades.
Contact Marvin Keeb~ugh

271982

--

'
SU "P"-JXFPZQNDOB
YPNNPYDO "•.
Y1 1 diJ'~CI)'Jol &lt;•II: ...THEMANWORTIIWHilEISTHE 'l'

I
I

POJXVD 'B '

\

�Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel

Four nations unite against
•
U.S. gas pipeline sanctions
lion order tor 47 turbines to power
compressor
stations along the pipeThe West German and British goline.
Heinz
Duerr,
the head of the
vernments have joined France and
company,
said
the
loss
of this busiItaly In a united front opposing
ness
could
put
2,!XXl
people
out of
President Reagan's ban on exports
work.
It
would
also
burt
the
comof U.S.·llcensed equipment for the
pany,
which
10
days
ago
got
a
$250
Siberian gas pipeline.
mUllan
credit
tram
the
government
Manufacturus In the four na·
!Ions bold the bulk of the $11 bUllon to guarantee export contracts and
In European contracts for the pipe- persuade private banks to help res·
line, and their defiance represents tore the ftrm' s finanCial health.
1n London, Trade Secretary Lord
a major setback to Reagan's effort
Cockfield
Issued Brttaln' s strongest
to promote a European economic
denunciation
of the embargo yet,
war against the Soviet Union.
saying
It
"Is
an
attempt to Interfere
West Germany's state secretary
of economics, Otto Schlecht, said with existing Contracts and repres·
Monday that his government can· ents an unacceptable extension of
not order companies to honor their American extra-territorial
contracts for the pipeline, as the sovereignty."
French and Italian governments
He told the House of Lords the
did last week. But he said It wUl government hopes the dispute can
support any German busln115ses be solved In a "mutually acceptathat violate the U.S. embargo and ble way.... But It this proves ImposwUl protect !hem against Amer~ sible, I do wish to make clear that
can retallatlon.
we are determined to defend our
"The West German government national Interests."
1n Washington, State Depart·
welcomes any decisions by the
ftrms that help tulfUI the gas pipe. ment spokesman Dean Fischer
line· deal," he said In an Interview said Monday the U.S. government
regretted Italy's ~ton to Ignore
with the newspaper BUd.
AEG·Teletunken, a giant elec· the sanctions, but added the United
tronlcs ftrm, has announced It wUl States wished "toremalnlnregular
de!y the U.S. sanctions Imposed · contact with the government ot
June 18 because of continuing mar· Italy and other governments
tlal law In Poland, which the Rea· Involved."
The U.S. government has said It
gan administration blames on the
Is studying the legal Issues Involved
Soviet Union.
AEG-Telefunken bas a $225 niU- In rejection of the pipeline
BONN, West Germany (AP) -

sanctions.
Reagan's action last month extended a ban on export of U.S.
equipment lo the Soviet Union to
Include goods manufactured by foreign ·ftrms using U.S. technology
under AmeriCan license.
1n addition to the Polish situation,
the U.S. government says It does
not want Western Europe to become dependenl on Soviet gas. It
has said It also tears the Soviet mtl·
ltary budget will benefit tram the
$10 billion a year natural gas sales
are expected to bring In after !he
pipeline begins operating In 1984.
U.S. officials also see the pipeline
project as a big help to the Soviet
economy, which they believe Is In
deep trouble.
But Britain, France, Italy and
West Germany consider the ban an
Ulegal extension of American sovereignty. The contracts were
signed before the Imposition of
martial law In Poland last Dec. 13.
They also argue that the United
MJSS UNIVERSE CROWNED - Irene Saez, Mill second-year unlvenlty Btndent Uvea ID T!!rooiG and
States bas not come up with a pracUnlvene lt81, left, places lbe crown on 1be head of was aamed over 78 others 1D lbe flaals lD lbe coatest 1D
tical alternative for them to Soviet _. Miss Unlvene 1982, Karen Baldwin. Ml8l Canada. The Uma, Peru Monday nlgbt.
gas supplies, that the pipeline
means jobs and trade for Europeans during the worst economic
crisis since the Great Depression of
the 19lls, and that Reagan Is In no
position to ask Europe for sanctions
A panel of l2 judges, Including beamed live 11r satellite to 50 counLIMA, Peru (AP) - Miss Can·
as long as he lets U.S. farmers sell ada, a statuesque, auburn-haired AmeriCan actress Ocely Tyson, trtes, went smoothly despite con$1.8 bUllon or more worth ot grain a model tram Toronto, beat out 76
Broadway producer David Mer- cern by Peruvian pollee, who had
year to the Soviet Union.
beauties tram around the world to rick, and magician David Copper· Increased securtty forces tonowtng
field, narrowed the field and made scattered weekend bombings In
claim the crown as Miss Universe
Uma unrelated to the pageant.
the final decision.
1982.
Pollee said they doubled security
The contestants were judged In
"Tell me this Is a dream," Karen
forces
at the Amauta Stadium, a
Dianne Baldwin, a smUing, but swimsuit and evening gown compe.
buUrlng In an lndustr1al
converted
tltlon jlll_d personal Interviews.
tear.tull8-year·old, said as she was
neighborhood
two miles from the
Early In the evening, the field was
being led orr stage Monday night to
a gala ball In her honor. "I can't narrowed to l2 semi-finalists, In- center of the city.
believe it. I'm nervous .. .I'm very cluding contestants from BrazU,
South AfriCa, Finland, Peru, Gernervous.''
The violence, Including a blast at
rest ot our lives."
Master of ceremonies Bob many, England and Uruguay.
the U.S. Embassy ill Uma, was
The Innocent by reason of lnsan· Barker assured Miss Baldwin that
similAr to previous bombing at·
lty acquittal of accused presidential she had Indeed been named Miss
tacks In Uma and other Peruvlali
Miss Baldwin, the green-eyed, 5- cities by the Sendero Lumtnoso assaUant John Hinckley following Universe as she received the crown
an attack last year ·on President from lastyear'swlnner, IreneSaez toot, l.l).lnch first prize winner, said Lighted Path - a Communist or·
Reagan was not an Issue In the jury of Venezuela In a ceremony cap- before the contest that she wanted ganlzatlon that has taken
deliberations, the woman '181!1ping the annual pageant held this to study at the Fashion Institute of responsibility for 2,000 "lll!errllla
Technology In New York for a ca- actions" over a two-year period.
"It was mentioned, but just year In the Peruvian capital.
briefly at the beginning," she said.
The five runners-up were In reer In the beauty, fashion and moA news. conference after the
A second woman juror said In a order, Miss Guam, Patty Chong deling Industry.
Along . with the title, she gets pageant was cancelled without extelephone Interview that she Kerkos, 18, of Tamunlng; Miss
agreed the option of a guilty but Italy, Clnzla Flordepontl, 21, of $1SO,!lXI In cash and prizes and a planation and Miss Bll)dwln was
mentally m verdict would have Rome; Miss Gret'l;e, Tina Rossou, one-year personal appearance whisked off to the celebrity ball at
the downtown hotel where the T7
helped Ihe jury, but would not com- 19, of'Athens and Miss U.S.A., Terrt contract.
contestants
were staying.
The
two-hour
television,
show,
ment further or agree to be Utley, W, Cabot, Ark.
Identified.
"We did what we felt was right. I
can't say too much more.... I don't
want to have some suits coming
back on me," the woman said.
"We have to Uve with thedi!CisiOn
we made tor the rest of our llves, Lack of quorum
End marriages
Check vandalism
and right now I'm just trying to get
Two plate glass windows and two
my job and my tamUy back to nor·
Middleport council did not meet car windshetlds were damaged
Three dlvores were granted In
mal It's not something I'd want to Monday night due to a lack of yesterday at Smith-Nelson Buick, Meigs County Common Pleas
do again right away," the woman quorum.
East Main, Pomeroy police report. Court.
said.
The windows were apparently
Granted divorces were Michael
Both women said the jury had
shot with a pellet ot BB gun, leav- McDonald from Donna Sue McDoagreed during dellbertlons not toretng boles In the glass.
nald; WUilam R.
veal bow they had voted In :,~rellml· Free clothing day
There was approx!ma!ley $000 Gilmore, Sr., from Cynthia A. GO·
nary ballots on Ruppert's fate.
more; Judy A. Smith tram Donald
Free clothing day will be held at damage. The matter Is under
Meanwhtle, a hearing Is expected
Smith.
Investigation.
E.
In Hamtlton this week on bow and The Salvation Army, 115 Butternut
Ave., oh Thursday, July 29, tram 10
where ~uppert wUl be treated. Dea.m. untU noon. All area residents
fense attorneys said last week that
In
need of clothing are welcome.
James Levernier, M.D., Chair· ot Mason County and are very happy
because ot extensive evidence
man of the local chapter of the Big that the change was approved."
about his mental condition, they do
Brothers/Big Sisters of America has
Levemier continued, "Durtng the
not expect him to be Incarcerated Veterans Memorial
announced that the geographic coming months we will be recruiting
with a general prison population.
Ruppert was hospitalized at
ADMISSIONS---Charles White, scope of the chapter has been reeen- board members and other people InLima State Hospital under a clvU Middleport: Elizabeth Bartoe, tly expanded to include Mason Coun- terested in supporting the
mental commitment prior to · the Long Bottom; Fannie PhDilps, ty.
movement fr«m Mason County as
Levernier indicated that due to well as more individuals from the
trtal. He s)ient time at other mental Pomeroy.
local interest in Mason County, the Ohio counties."
Institutions after his conviction In
DISCHARGES --- Randy
.
National Association of Big
August 1975 In the original trtal.
Residents of Mason County who
Mazlngo.
Brothers/Big Sisters has approved are willing to participate in lbe
· That conviction, In a 2·1 vote by a
adding Mason County to the already development of the Big
three-judge panel, was overturned
established Big Brothe~ig Sisters Brothers/Big Sisters survive In
by the U.S. Supreme Court, after Court actions filed
of Meigs-Gallia-Jackson counties.
Ruppert claimed he had under·
Mason County are encouraged to
A suit In the amount' of $49,899.58
In commenting on the expansion, contact Dr. Levemier at 446-53'71 or
stood the judges' decision would
has been tued In Meigs Councy Dr. Levernier said, "We have
a board secretary, Linda Krasner, at
have to bE! unanimous.
Common Pleas Court against M. lot of interest expressed In Big 446-5500.
•
W. Cattle, Inc., Long Botlom, Ro- Brotheis/Big Sisters by _the people
land McDole and Paula F. McDole,
Stephens Oty, Va., and George Collins as treasurer.
·
Diana Due Phillips, Rutland,
separate trial has been ordered for
Mayle.
tued suit for divorce against Paul
Stacy was apprehended In Febru· Phillips, Rt. 2, Albany.
ary at Sprlngtteld, Ill., tonowing an -'
·
extensive 11UlJlhunt. He was re·
turned to Huntington and, along Boo8ten to meet
with Mayle, has been held at the
County JaU without bond for
The Meigs Athletic Boosters wUl
the past five months.
meet Tuesday, 7:ll p.m. at Meigs
H.S.

Sale Starts Weld ••
Ends Sat., July

·1-

Miss Canada chosen Miss Universe

Juror says some testimony
confusing in Ruppert trial
FINDLAY, Ohio (AP)- One of
the jurors who voted to convict
James U. Ruppert of two of the 11
murders he committed but acquit
hlin on the other nlnesayspsycblat·
nc testimony In the case was con·
fusing and not "clear cut."
The woman, who agreed to talk
only It not Identified, said there
were "aU kinds ot opinions, from
guQty to Innocent by reason of In·
sanity and every stripe In between"
as the jury deliberated for about
10~ hours at the end otthe six-week
retriaL

Ruppert, 47, ot HamUton, was
convicted Frlday of aggravated
murder In the shooting deaths of his
mother, Charity, and older brother,
Leonard, on Eastern Sunday 1975.
But the jury found him Innocent
by reason of Insanity In the shooting
deaths of his slster·ln·law, Alma,
and eight nieces and nephews rangIng In age from 4 to 17. The split
verdict raised questions among
prosecution and defense attorneys
as to how the decision was reached.
The female juror, who spoke to
The Associated Press In a telephone Interview Monday, said the
panel belleved Ruppert kUied his
mother and brother In a rage after
a long-held belief by the defendant
that they were conspiring against
him.

Ruppert, who pleaded Innocent
by reason ot lnsanlty to all 11
charges, was suffering from a paranoid psychosis which Included the
conspiracy delusion, according to
psychlatrtc witnesses called by the
defense.
The juror said although the jury
believed Ruppert was enraged
when he kUied his mother and
brother, he was not Insane at too'
time.
However, the jury theorized that
after they were shot, Ruppert
slipped over the edge Into Insanity
and went on to kill the rest of the

victims.
"That's on the light track," the
juror said.
The woman said having the option of finding a defendant guilty
but mentally U~ a proposal being
considered by the Ohio Senate judi·
clary committee, "makes a lot ot
sense to me. I think that would be
good.' '

'

The prosecution argued that If
Ruppert was acquitted on aU
charges, he would be In line to In·
herit his brother's $250,000.plus
estate.
"That was a consideration. but
not the major one" the jury examIned In finding Ruppert guilty, the
woman said.
"We started with all kinds of opln·
Ions, and went In all directions.
Somebody mentioned that there
was laughter by the jury on Thursday. If we hadn't laughed, we'd
have gone crazy. There was that
much teJISion," the juror said.
She se.ld the tension was not a
matter of conmcts among jurors,
but a reaction to the decision -the
eight-woman, lour-man panel was
to reach.·
"There was nothing about the
psychlatrtc testimony that was
clear cut. There was a lot ot gray
area. That made It dltflc;ult. When
he was Insane or not Insane was
part of the gray area," the woman
said.
She said jurors were scared when
retired Ashland County Common
Pleas Judge A. Ross Siverling, sit·
tlng by assignment, told them they
might be subject to clvU suit It they
talked to reporters.
"That's why I don't think you'll
find manyWho will talk to you, " she
said.
But the woman said she agreed to
talk because-she didn't "think It Is
fair to the public to hide behind
something !Ike this. It's a decision
each ot us has to live with for the

Meigs County happenings •.

Big Brother program expands

nad

r------------.. . .--:--------

Prosecution rests case against Stacy
car which was registered to Stacy,
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) '
.
Lawyers defending aecused mur- jumped out ot the vehicle and fled.
Authorttles said Harmon's rederer Bobby Dean Stacy have
volver,
with five bullets missing,
Indicated they will need just one
was
found
In the car. Five days
day to present their case, and It aplater,
Wnbert
Mayle Jr., whose tin·
peared unlikely they would call the
gerprlnts
were
found on the steer·
Columbus, Ohio, man to the witness
tng
wheel
of
Stacy's car, was
stand.
·
arri1Sted
at
his
Columbus
home. A
Stacy, ll, Is one ot two men
charged with the the execution·
style slaying of a Huntington pollee
otttcer last December.
The proseCution rested Its case
Mwas ldlled. The two men In the

ELBERFELDS IN
EROY
INDOOR-OUTDOOR

cabell

ONLY

Area deaths

Charles E. White
Emergency runs
• Meigs County· Emergency Medi·
cal ~ repolied several runs
overnight Monday.
At 10:03a.m., Rutland squad took
· Freel Cunningham to O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital, Athens; at
12: 48 p.m.. Middleport untt transported Michael Smith to Veterans
~emortal HCJ!IP!tal. At 7:111 p.m.,
Syracuse unit took Rachel McBride
to VMH, retum~n~at 8:14p.m. to
traDsfer bet to Holzer Medical ceD- .
ter; at 3:22 p.m.~ Tuppers PlaiDs
took~· MWer to vMif:
f

ars for the New York Central and
Penn RaUway.

'

Hospi~ , pews

$495

HOLZER MEDICAL CENI'ER
~J!8~Y·
Wilbur Boggs, LucUie Burris,
Tllll'lmy ~. Alma CaudUl, Ema

. He Is survived by his wife, Gwin.'
Charles E. White, TT, Middleport,
nle
L. Cottrell White; one daugllter Co~nellus, Timothy Cremeens,
died this motnlng at V~rans
and
lOll·In·law, Texanna J. and · Wanda·Hively, Goldie J&amp;cksoO: Or·
Memorial Hospital.
Howard
Well, Pomeroy; one vle Jealdns, AngelaUtteral, VITg!l
Mr. White was born Dec.l8,19o4
~ugllter, Amber Lee Well,
May, AJ;thUr Matheny, Charll!s
In Middleport, the 1011 ot .the late
Robeli S. and Fannie L. Quick Pomeroy: two sisters, Beulah c. ~. Mn. John Payne
White. He was . also ~ In White .and FlOrence ' Hannay, 8lld ICII. Emma ReyDorda, Homer
. I
Roll, Maele Saller, Pearl TICket!,
death by one aliter, Myrtle M. Wat· Mlddlejlort,
Fwleral
IM!IVIoes
wUl be helcl Goldie Terry, Mn. Af1IOI Weaver
ldns; two brothers, Robert M. and
· 'Illul'ltlay at 2p.m. at the Rawlings- and A
€harles White, Nicole
Nealey s. White.
Mr. Whlte·waa a member~ tbe Coats-Blower Funeral Home with Woel*eneer&amp; Ellzabetl! Woods.
First Baptist Church,. M)Meport; the Rev. Mark McCbiJiaoft!c!et!ng,
a World War D Army. veteru; 'Burlal will be ID Cherry Rldae
Mr. and~ RoPr Abllolt.ICII.
member ~ Bnitberbood rl, RaU· . Cemetery, FrleDdl may eall·a t the
w Aitlllle 8Dd __..... /"1~ 'funeral borne WednMday from 2 to Ponll!lioy;, ·Mr. IDd Mrs. 'e wtll
4and7to9.
'
. clerk
-' ·fm'-....
-- Hayes, dauihter, JackiOII,
HeI!Yworted aa
·II!Yl!ral
~
..

-

"

Today's Fashion Jeans
At Yesteryear's Prices

i

.

..

SQ. YD.

Ideal for ~a.ches, patios and detks. S~ed h•
6 and 12ft. widths. Grass green or black/JHI

tweed.

W~RE~OUSE
ST., POMIROY

To

our 3.97, Toddlers' Boxer Jeans. Polyester/Cotton, 2-4, .... $3
Our 6.97, Jr. Boys' Boxer Jeans. Cotton/Polyester, 4-7...... $4
Our 8.97, Boys' Western Jeans, Cotton/Polyester/Rayon, .. $6
Our8 57 Girls' Denim Jeans Of Polyester/Cotton, 7-14, .... $6
Our 10.96, Misses' Stylish Blue Denim Jeans Of Cotton, : ... $8
Our $9, Men's Western Jeans Ot 10-ounce Cotton Demm, $8
Not Shown:
Our 12.97, Students' Jeans Of Polyester/Cotton/Rayon, ... ~8

Available at your neighborhQod ~mart*

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="166">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2756">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44711">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44710">
              <text>July 27, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="241">
      <name>white</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
