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                  <text>r:,.a , 10-The Daily Sentinel

· Meigs County happe~ings.••
EMS weekend busy

Eastern girls meet

Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Service reported several runs
Saturday afternoon and Sunday.
At 12:25 p.m. Saturday, the Racine SQWI\I ·went to Twsp. Rd. 100
for the Infant son of Mark Yelcon.
The child was taken to VMJl, At
5: 37 p.m., Tuppers PlainS EMS
went to Pooler Road for Sally
Pooler, taking her St. Joseph's Hospital; at 5:47p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy unit went to Pomeroy Health
Care Center, taking Sam Pickens to
VMH; at 6:23p.m., Tuppers Plains
went to Eden Ridge, ReEdsvUle, to
transport Crystal McCoy to VMH.

All girls, grades nine through 12,
Interested, In playing volleyball at
Eastern lilgh School, should report
to the school at 7 p.m. Wednesday
for a shOrt meeting, Coach ·Pam
Douthitt announces.

Probe hit-skip wreek
A hit-sldp accident whlcb took
place over the weekend Is under In·
vestlgatlon by Pomeroy pollee.
At 2:25 a.m. Sunday morning,
Ruth Ann Mulford, westbound on
Rt. 7 Inside the Pomeroy corpora·
tlon llmlt, was struck on the left
front fender by a green truck bear·
log West VIrginia tags. The truck
did not stop. Pollee later charged
Sherman Henry, Henderson, W.
Va., with leavtng the scene ol an
accident and pasalng on a doullle
yellow line.
The Mulford vehicle Incurred
moderate · damage. No lnjurtes
were reported.

Rehearse tonight
A rehearsal of the :lJ young people making up the c!¥&gt;1r which will
sing at the Meigs County Fair next
Monday as a part of the opening
services of the Meigs County Minis·
terlal Association will be held at 7
this evening at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Ed Harkless,
Meigs Hlgh School vocal music supe!VIsor, has fOrmed the group and
Is directing. All members are
asked to attend tonight's ~l!earsal
when pictures are planned. ·•

Ucenl!e8 ·issued
Marriage licenses have been
Issued in the Meigs County Probate.
Court to Mark Allen Haley, :ll, Mld·
dleport, and Brenda Kay Haley, 2S,
Pomeroy; WUllam Wesley ·Hawk,
31, Route 4, Pomeroy, and Mary
Jane Smith, 18 , Route 1,
Middleport.

Seeks divorce
P11uletta Browning, Route 1, Rutland, has Wedsultfordlvorcetrom
Ronald H. Browning, Rutland, In
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. The plalntltf charges gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
Marriages of Donald C. Ward
and Rebecca Ann Waro and WilHam C. Gaddis and Jacqueline A.
Gaddis have been dissolved In the
same court.

SkatirJs Tuesday
There will be skating at the Ru·
tland Civic Center Tuesday from

7::lJ to 10:00 p.m. Admission Is $1
for children and $2 for adults. Those
attending are to take their own
skates.

Rot~

has picnic

Dr. and Mrs. R. R. Pickens
hosted the annual pollock picnic of
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club for members and famllles at
their home on Lincoln HJll Frtday
night. Swlnunlng .was a diversion of
the evening.

Pedestrian suffers injuries
POMEROY-One man Is hospitalized as the result of an accident
on State Route 7 at 2a.m. Saturday,
Meigs Couniy sherUfs deputies
report.
Deputies said the accident , ··
cured on State Route 7 approximately one-half mlle north of the
Bradbury exit.
According to the report, Thomas
C. Scally, 24, Middleport, ran Into

Mcindar· Ar ,,1m·

Pomeroy-Middl-=', Ohio

the path of a northbound ·vehicle
driven by Benjamin Elder, Jr., Vln·
cent. Scally suffered a fractured leg
and contusions. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy Ennergency SQI!IId and
later was transferred to Holzer
Medical Center.
No charges
were rued against the driver and
Investigation Is continuing.

Bombardment continues••• _______l!;:(Co;::::nt::::inu:::,:ed:.:,:from.:::::.t:pag::!!:'e~1 ':;-;-·- - : : - - : - - : who launched katyusha rockets.at Palestinian clvWans there untJI a
Israeli fOrces near the clt)i's race . multinational Western peacekeepcourse. The Tel Aviv command Ing torce Is deployed. Prevlou.sly Isalso said ItS tioops "consolidated" rael demanded that , all the
tbelt poiltlona 8J'OUIId the PLO en· estimated ~.ooo to 9,000 guerrillas
clave at the Bourg al-Barajneh re- leave before the peace~s
fugee camp on the southern-edge of from the United States, France,
Italy and Greece came ln.
the city.
Begin added that Israel woold
On the political front, Prime Minevict
any guerrt1tas whO refUsed to
Ister Menachem Begin expressed
leave
after the multinational fOrce
lll'tlmlsm SUnday that the P.alesatarted
moving ln.
tlne UberauOn Organization's forHowever.
Israeli Defense Minisces "will leave soon and we wW not
ter
Arlel
Sharon
denied· a deal had
have to enter Beirut"
been
struck.
Begin In a speech In Jerusalem
said that up to 2,500 guerrfilas could · "There Is no arrangement,
agreement or deal possible at the
remain In west Beirut to protect the

'I
Ira MuUord

&amp;nyUffie,

I '
Mrs. Edwin (Ruth) BaUey, 56,
Texas Road, Pomeroy, died SaturIra Ray MulfOrd, 62, Rt. 2 Letart,
day evening at Veterans Memorial died Friday In URtverstty Hospital.
Columbus.
Hospital.
Mrs. BaUeywas adaugbterofthe
Born March l7, l9'll,ln Cbesblre,
late Frank and Margaret Tldd son ci the late Dewey and 'I1Ielma
Gray.
Holley Mulford, he attended the
Surviving are her husband, Ed- First Church of God In New Haven
win; a son, Kenneth of Huntsvtlle, ·and was an equipment operator In
Alabama; a daughter, Mrs. RoeUa Qlieratlons at the Phlllp Sporn
plant.
Newbrough, Parkersburg, W. Va.;
a brother, Donald Gray, ColumSurviving Is his wife, OJlal L. Mulbus; 12 grandchildren, 16 greatford; a daughter, Mrs. Barbara
Jean Rouah of New Haven; a son.
grandchlldreo and uncle and two
aunts, BW and Gladys Gray, AI· . Richard of Esmond, m.; a sister,
llance, Role Elsln3er, BJ'Id8eporl
Mrs. wnina McDonald ot ColumMrs. Bailey was a member of the bus, a brother, John of Cheshire;
Fellowship Baptist Church · at eight grandchildren, a greatSelrlng.
grandchild and several niecel 8lld
nephews.
'
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing I Funeral
Funeral aervlces were held at at
Home With the • Rev. Gilbert l:OO.p.m Sunday In the Foglesong
Spencer and the Rev' Robert Sandr .....,...
•
n, """ """''
-officiating.
era ~tlng. Burial will be In Dave Fields
Home
Maao Bw1al tolM(lllllt Hermon Cemetery, Frlellds lowed In Gravel HJll CEmetery,
may call at the flmeral h9rrie at Cheshire.

~·---•

.

The Big Bend All-Stars, after
gaining the finals ol the 1982 double
ellmlnatloo Belpre UtUe League
baseball tournament in the winner's
bracket, dropped a twin blll to
Parkersburg Sunday, thus finished
second In the nearly one-month long
event.
Big Bend lost the first tilt, 2-1.
Brian Decker was charged with the
lOBS. Matt Flaher had a home run

and single for the losers. Robbie
Grimm had a pall' fi doubles.
The West Vlrgtnla entry woo the
nightcap and championship with a+
0 triwnph. Parkersburg (iniahed
with a 6-1 tournament mark. The Big
Bend crew flnlahed 4-2.
In the nightcap, Decker again was
charged with the loss. Big Bend had
two hits. singles by Robbie Grimm
and Bart Davis.

Squads kept busy

A toast to all

POMEROY--Meigs County's
emergency units were kept on the
move with calls Friday.
Pomeroy at 12: 58 41.m. took
Christy Sellers, Mechanic St., to
Holzer Medical Center; at 3: 33
p.m. took Robert Rupe fromPome;
roy Health Care Ceriter to Veterans
Memorial, and at ·7: 10 p.m. took
Emma and Gary Palmer from the
scene of a highway accident on
Route 7 to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 10:56 a.m. took BW
Fry, Cook Road to Holzer Medical.
Center and Syracuse at 9: lS a.m.
took Emma Hayman from ~­
cuse to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Rutland at 3:26p.m. took James ·
Gartner to Veterans Memortal .
Hospital and at 6: 36 p.m. took Ted
Hat11eld from the scene of a .motorcycle accident at Dexter to Veterans Memorial and he was later
moved to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Tuppers Plains at 7: 23 p.m. toolt ·
Harman Shain from CQunty Road ·
26 to Veterans Memorial Hospital. .
The Racine Unit at 9:44 p.m. took ,
Danny O'Brien to Holzer Medical '

WINSTON·SALEM, N.C.
(AP) - One million pounds of
margarine are enough to spread
22 pieces of toast for every man,
woman ;l;;d child In the U.S., according to R.Jl Archer, a package suppHer.

'fri.County Achlt VocaUOOII c.nter at Ncl.!on·
vllko aMOUI\C&lt;OIIIII h0110t' roll !OI'IIprin~ quarter

~;.... County resic!l ntr rec:elvlllj( honor roU
tn0J111onandth&lt;1J!')I&lt;ramthey..,punulnjare'

MachiJle trad&lt;l, Dlvld Bamh&lt;luse; Weldlll!(,
Ken ~1111111 .

I
AT.
CROWS

FAM·ILY .
ESTAU RANT

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1

Every Tueiday ~ight ·
.

ALL THE KENTUCKY . FRIEQ
CHICKEN
.. ·YOlf,C~N · ~l ·

lo( luttir lild.Colha.
•,..,..,
.a-. 1io
substltutls
.wiiiCII
11M .. ....
lddillonll

e

.

en tine

• VoU1,No.61
C.,.,rithtocl 1912

prlc:i.

'

·~

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•

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-

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·BAKED STEAK
- . DINNER
..
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.

Steelworkers to"' re\iew position '

..

WE;IRTON, W.Va. - Members of Weirton Steel's Independent

...._

Steelwo~ Union will spend the next two weeks revieWing a feasl.

blllty study oftbelr proposed takeover of the company, and WUl meet
later In the montll with consultants to i:llscuss any que5tlons, a union
omclar said Monday.
•
• 1 Walter Blsh, 4nlon president. told reporters that a meellng with
McKinsey &amp; Co. representatives has been set for AUg.1 24-25.
McKbJsey, 'the New York t1m1 that prepared tJw! feasibility study,
. has said Weirton workers and management couid operate the rom. pany ~ a break fl:om Its parent company, the National Steel
Corp. of Plttsburgb,bl!t only after a thorough reorgllll!zatlon and a
3Z percent combllled
reduction In wages and benefits.
.

. $335

.crows Family Restaurant......
'

992-3671

.

~

, ~---

'. Every Wednesday Nipt ·

.

OH;

.

Gains ex:pOrt marketing funds
.. I

Individual

' - The U.S. Department of Agriculture has
COLUMBUS, Ohio
approved Ohio's request;tor $25,000 In·matching funds to eontlnue
and expand thestate'sexport marketing program, says John Stackbouse, director of the state Agrlculture Department.
' The money will be usee!' to upgrade the exiSting program by providing Industry with better irade leads, Improved clteni services,
marketing seminars· and a revised export directory, Stackhouse
said Morfday.
·

Penon to Penon Contact

Accounts?
Spend afew minutes wrltlng dO'Ml any ques-

tions }'011 ~ aboUt the ~ IRA Accounts.
0uet1ons abOUt lnte~t rates, tax bene"ts,
~nythingf

Bring your questions to our IRA professionals.
Wl!'ll give you a clear picture ot the ~ IRJ\,s
and help you select the r~~nt plan that
best suhs your particular r'lt!eds.
1

Many IRAs involve long dlstat1Ce communlca·
tions. Your only contact with the people managing your IRA could be over the phone or by
mail.
·
·
But at our l:!ank you have a choice of doing
business over tt:le phone or over a desk- face
tO' face with a member of our staff.

No Commission,Cha'r9es . : ·
'
. .

·'7.
'

.

!!

The statf at aur FULL SERVICE BANK are

Market report ·

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Proi'IIIIONII!xpelllle . . . I
Slvt.... Menlgalnent .
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- The WloJitng number ,draWn In the Ohio Lot- ,,
l'/umber'' wils Q62. ,The jotllery nponed ·
eoulllnp ·o~ f1!15,rll Moqd&amp;y night ~ ~ ~ the pme. ·
Eaj'DIIIp eame 011 ialeB of $1.022.783. willie bolde,n ot WIDII1Da
tlclleture entitled tO lbere
lotteey odlda!t llld.
•·
dally pme "The

-.m.
..

Htstory 01

0~ foreeu., exten~~

Membel FDIC

l

~

~

tery'a

bank.
1

•

Ohio.lottery winners

' 1~ accOLnt: Is lmured by an
"t our !lank your
agency Of the US. GoWmment (FDIC) for up to
S100,000, Many flrrris can~ you high-yield,
tall-free Interest. aut no inYestrnent limi or In- ·
surante 'company wllllnsun! yout I~ Hke our

"

'

CANI'ON, Ohio- Ojleratlons at an Alhlanci OU CO. teflnery wbere
· there was an exPJqmn and fire Monda'y lbol\l4 return to normal.ln
a~t a month. offlcla(e say.
·.
•· '
'
.•
The fire broke out ihortly before noon and was qiiJckJy lroUgbt
lllllk!r Control by flrllftghtera ancl plant w0111l!ra, oft!Cia(e laid.
Plant lpOkeeman Alan Johnaon said the fire wea contained to one
area llf the faclllty. Officials said there were no In~ ll1d that the
ca111e of the expiQslon and fire had not been dl!tennlned.

not
commissiOnecJ sales people. They're salaried
professionals. So Instead of pressuring you with
a sales pitcl;l, our staff will giVe you straight
a~rs to your questions a~ an IRA
Account.
profeal-1 tod9

*'

To .r enew refiriery oPe,ration

H these IRA extrea.1re IS lmporhlnt to you
IS they 1n1 to us. C01111! tllk to In IRA

Cen~r.

2 Sections, 14 Pages
15 C.nts
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, T.uesday, August 10,1982

called tor firms Sllbrnltting blcls to trict housing and commercial redeInclude a buUdlng design and cost velopment and renovation
. · Middleport V,lllage· Coui1cll has figure.
.'
program. The firm wjll be pale! no
rejected one bid on theeonslructlon
The design ofthe buUdlng had dls- more than $12,000 from HUD ad, of an addltlon to·the tire sll!tlon and c:ouraged buDders from blcldlng on ministration furu¥.
hired an architect for a bualness
the project, the mayor said. To .enOfficials said the study will proI dlstr1ct renovation program.
CoUrage blddl,ng, councU decided to · vide guidelines as to what can be
Mayor Fred Hotrman reported hire Mohican Engineers, Mans- done to renovate the buslliess
Monday nlaJit the village received field, to come up with a design tor Sl!(!tlon.
only ·one bid - from A 'i: 0 Conthe building so advertlsemen!s for
The Reiser firm WUl be avallal)le
structiQn Co., GalllpoU•. for blcls caq be more specific. The firm to ~ residents for c6nsultatlon
$1031000 - for the firehouse will be paid no more than $9,000 to throughout the project on a regular
addition.
design the addition and oversee basis.
, Middleport reslden,ts In June ,aP- conslructlon once a buUdlng firm Is
The study will Include the makproved a tax measure io provide employed.'
Ing of maps to show existing physitunda for the addition. ·
.
Upon Hoffman's. ahd several cal conditions, existing land use,
. Alter discussion, councU rejected council members' recommenda- graphic analysis of hOusing stock,
the l&gt;ld and/ &amp;gl:eed to readve~ tion, David C. Reiser Architectural propose land use Including, but not
the project. However, Hqtfman Co., Athens, was hired to conduct limited to, expansion of housing, pe- ·
~d t~ las! advertisement tor bldl
.~Middleport central business dis- destrlan spaces, parking and
amenities.
.
There will be a phOtographic survey to shoW'buUdlng elevations and
pro'posed streetscape · studies.
There will be storefront renovailon
'guidelines with an Itemized suiVey
of each buUdlng with projected cost
figures for Improvements. Add!·
tiona! recommendations of the
study wUJ lnclu~ pedestrian traf·
ticking, lighting, l;mdscaplng,
street furniture and paving
materials.
F~ir ~ccident
Final' presentation of the study
..
. ..
will .Include display panels and
COLUMBUS, Ohio -'-A tun•house at the Ohio State Fair has been
maps to be suitable for public pres~afterbelrigtemporarllyshutdownovertheweekendwhen
(Continued on page 10)
a 4-.):!.ar~ girl telll)ead ~ from the ride to the·blacktop 5 feet
'
" -~ !ieiOW, olf!Cials said Milrlday.
·
·
' •
'
· I AmaJida Heaberlli1, daughter !)f Suzanne and D8nlel Healierlln of
Mansfield, required 12 ltltches on thj! right side of her hi!ad Satur~ay. She remained In fair condition.Monday In the Intensive care
unit of Chlldrep's Hospital with a fractured skull.
The child lost her balance In the tun hOuse as she tried to cross a
Section ·of Door co,ntalnlng a revolving disk and fell to the blacktop
below.
·'
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The ride was back !p operation Sund!!Y after the disk was made ·
~ta.tlonary and S&lt;~fety bars were added to prevent another fall.

DI.NIIG 11001 OIILY

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
/Mecahnit Sl; Pomeroy

.....

~

STOCKED IN:
42 INCH SINGLE BOWL
54 ..INtH SINGL£ BOWL
661fiCH 'DOUBLE ~

I

site re()pens

!

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY· ,,
DINING ROOM ONLY ' .
.ieMtltftli .... ,......
Cllidlll· • • c. -.. Hot
Manufactured from prime cold rolled. steel,
' electrically welrust protection by Durkote,
stainless steel bowls, deck type faucet, but·
cher block top.

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:/

Area deaths' ••.Page I Or '

By BOB HOJ,tl~~Jar
~4'1+481dWrlter

Carnahan, Robert Man.k!y, James
Nelson.. '.
.
Sunday ~ons-lda White,
Rutland; ..Samuel Pickens,
Pomeroy.
.
Sunday Dlscharged--Larence
Scarberry, Jr., Martha Roush,
Pauline Taylor.

Big Bend All-Stars fmish second

•·

H«&gt;rse show entries ,lue Friday••. Page 4

MiddlepOrt Council
rejects .Jo~e hid for
fire station addition

'

lfonor rolls

..

~gers ·half-game out•••Page 3

fjil~!~!!r,~

·~- n-- r~~~~~~·~R:oobb~Roo:l~~~=~n:u~l:~~rt:;~~~~~~~~~~~~

'
Hospital news
Ve&amp;erull Memorial HCJIIIIW
Saturday Admissions--Wilbur
Hanning, Middleport; Kenneth Ml·
chael, Pomeroy; Anna Rouah, New
Haven; Christy Baer, Pomeroy;
George Rowley, Pomeroy.
Saturday Dlscharges--Wallai:e
Hatfield, Richard DeMoss, Janet

way orrooted
another."
being
out of Beirut In one
Sharon said Israel also demanded guarantees that the deployment of the multinational fOrce
would not "serve as a screen 11&amp;hlnd which the terrorists could go
'
on operating."
.
/
In ~s. diplomatic souri
ces who declined to be ldentlfl!lcf
~ the Syrlan government would,.
not consider accepting any PLO
forces untJIIt Is assured Israel will
withdraw Its troops from Lebanon.
Lebanese and Palestinian sources cllilriled arrangements had In
fact been made with various Arab
countries to take In the guerrUias.
~ sources ~d the sticking·
point was the tlmtng of the cleployment of the force, that the PLO
agreed to begin Its withdrawal one
claY In advanoe of the arrival of the
first contlligents of the peacekeepllig force, but Israel demanded that

.
I

Area deaths
Ruth Bailey

at least half the gllerrlllu leave 11&amp;fore thee ~ peacekeePID&amp; tJ'OOPI!
arriVed • .
PLO spokesman Jamll Hllal aal4
Habib has worked put a plan UDder
which rliost ot the guerrillas would
leave Beirut by road 10 Syria With a ·
u.s. guarantee ot 'sate pas~
through . Israeli llneB1 Only tbole
guerrillaS who belong to SyliaJI.
backed factions of the PLO WCUk!
~y In Syrla, he said:
•

moment," he tole! Radio Israel at·
ter meetll)g with U.S. presldentlal
envoy Philip C. Habib at his headquarters In thE! Baabda suburt&gt; ·or
Belnll
.
Sharon saicl the main problem
was that Arab countries were' not
wWing to ilve retuge to the bulk of
the PLO forces.
.
'
'!Since no state Is ready to take
them, there Is Ill! agreement, no arrangement," he said. He added:
"The terrorists are on the verge of

.'

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w"41her

RHONDA STOCKWELL

Meigs area
instructor
earns award
Rbonda Stockwell, teacher at the
Carleton School in Meigs County,
was the reci,pient of the Robin Helsel
Graduate A\vard. ·
The award Is given on the basis of
Individual contr1bution to the field of
specilll educstion. Ms. Stockwell has
been a le,icher at .the Carleton
Seho!&gt;l for the past two years and
will be resuming her instruction
there in the intermediate level this
fall.
She· expects to complete her
master's .work at Ohio University
this year. Ma. Stockwell received a
de~ IIi elementary educatton
from Wittenberg Un,iversity at
~ield aild after that taught two
years · In the Londo!\ City ~hools
. prlortomovingtoMeigsCOunty.

She and her three-year-old son
realde In the U.rrtsonville Com-

IIUIIty~ .

...
A NEWllAZARD - Chlldrea play beside a large
garbage ]IUe In West Beirut Monday as the pile-up of
refuse over the past two months bad brought on a
bealth hazard for remaining residents of the battle-

~·

•

&gt; .

..

scarred city. Health autborltles are expressing con·
cern that the garbage plied on almost every street corner and the lack of medical supplies could be a new
danger to the residents. (AP Laserphoto).

Syrian missiles target ·
in latest Israeli raids
By The A880Ciated Press
zatton batteries.
Israel sent warplanes on ralds
Th~ Bourj ei-Barajneh Palestiagainst guerrUJa targets 'In 'west nian refugee camp and Its apBeirut today and said Its jets at- proaches on Beirut's southern edge
tacked Syrian missile batteries In took the brunt of the first atr strikes,
eastern Lebanon after Menachem Lebanon's state and privately
Begin's government approved "in owned radios said.
principle" U.S. plans to evacuate
Jets later dlvebombed the Fak·the PLO, but demanded changes.
hanl neighborhood that houses Ara·
The Tel Aviv command said war- fat's command headquarters as
planes knocked out a battery of Sy- well as the nearby Chatilla refugee
rian SAM-9 anti-aircraft mlssUes camp, the Btr Hassan residential
that had been moved Into Leban- neighborhood along the coast and
on's eastern Bekaa Valley despite the main traffic circle on the highIsrael's Insistence that the area he way to the airport.
eQ~pty of such weapons.
Associated Press correspondent
It was the third time Israel an- · Earleen F . Tatro, watching from
nounced attacking Syrian mlssU~
the rooftop of the AP's west Beirut
In Lebanon since It agreed to a office, saw 11 planes attacking In 23
cease-fire with Syria June 11.
minutes, shrouding the Fakhanl
"The state of Israel stands by Its
neighborhood In a haze of smoke.
decision not to permit vlllan occuThe air assaults, the second in
pants and had become a guerrUia
two days, shattered a siX-hour loU
base. The communique accused
that prevaUed after nlghtlong eK·
the guerrillas of harassing Israeli
changes of Intermittent artillery
troops with mortar, bazooka and
fire between Israeli and PLO forces
Ugtit-arms fire.
on Beirut's southern and eastern
All planes returned safely, It said.
outskirts.
The atr assaults began at 2 p.m.
Israel has Insisted since It In(8 a.m. EDT) at the rate of almost
vaded Lebanon June 6 tl crush the
one bombing sortie a minute, draw- guerrillaS that It would Increase
ing barrages of anti-aircraft fire
mUitary pressure at the same time
from. Palestlnll Liberation qrganl- It negotiates for a PLO withdrawal.

1

The Israeli position on a PLO pol·
lout was announced In Jerusalem
by Cabinet Secretary Dan Merldor,
who said his government was demanding as a precondition that It
be given "speedily" a list of all the
Arab countries to which the guerrfi·
las would retreat.
It also Insisted that the number of
departing guerrillas he equal to the
number of guerrillas that Israel believes are now in Beirut, Merldor
said.
Merldor said Israel continued to
demand that the majority of the
guerrillas leave Beirut before the
U.S.-French-Itallan force moves
Into the Lebanese capital.
Israel estimates the number of
guerrillas In Beirut at more than
7,100.
"The serious problem that comes
above all else now Is finding the accepting countries and the exact
numbers that each will accept, so
that the total of terrorists depart·
lng, according to Usts to be Issued,
will ·be the number of guerrillas
now in Belru t," Merldor said.
'Sources close to the negotiations
have said Jordan, Syria, Iraq and
Sudan are wUIIng to accept some of
(Continued on pa~e 10)

Metzenhaum, Ohio
Democrats confident

CINCINNATI (AP) -Democratic U.S. Sen. How·
ard Metzenbaum says his re-election campaign has
yet to go Into high gear, but that when It does, he'll
debate his Republican opponent and tout his Senate ·
voting record.
Television commercials for Republican state Sen.
Paul Pfeifer of Bucyrus already have appeared. In
them, Pfeifer recites his state legislative experience
and his farm background. He ends by saying those
experiences would make him a better senator than
Metienbaum.
"I don't expect to use any television spots for some
weeks yet, and I don't know what the thrust.of them
will be because \hey haven't been produced yet,"
Metzenbaum said Monday. ")3ut I'm sure they will
.relate tQ my record as a U.S. senator."
Metzenbaum. said be Is proud of his cost-c~~ttlng
stance ·on several measures and his amendment to
'
.
extend tmelliPloyment benefl.ts.
dented charges
that he Is refualng to debate Pfeifer.
'
' ."We're IIDlng to debate Senator Pfeifer ... but my
first responalblllty Is to the U.S..Senate," Metzenbaum Mid, retustni to say wben he might be avllllll- ·
ble•tor face-to-face confrontations with Pfeifer. In other polltlcal news:
-The new executive ·dlreCtot of the Oblo DeiJio.
cratlc Party, James RuvOlo, f!&amp;ures that If there Is a
65 percent tuulout of reiPstered ·voters on Nov. 2,
Demoeritl will sweep !be ltatewlde I'BCel.
A 65 pi!rc:ent turnout would iOta! Deatjy.3.7 mUllon

Hr

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l'omeroy-M!dc!leeort,
Ohio

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Dodgers trip Reds, trail

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Cofnmental-y

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The Daily Sentinel

I.

Ill Cnur t Strnl
l'unwru\ , Ohiu

t•

ii+Hi-t l5fl
Of: VOTED TO 'lltt: INTf: RF..'HOF Tilt: Mfo:JCiS.MMifl\ \JU·:,\

ROBERT L. WINGF.TI
PAT WHITEHEAD

ROR HOEFI.ICH

A~MI!ilalltf&gt;ubliHhtr/Cnntrullt•r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

A MF.MBF.R uf Tht&gt; A!iiWdlllrd

Pn-10~.

lnhend Dill)· l'rt'!is

i\sJOu~ · iulinn Mill!

tht•

Amt&gt;rh·Mn Nr•·llpapl'r PtJblil;hl'l'l A•Jrw dalinn.

1.1-:TJ'ERS OF OPINION 11n: \ulrnmnl. n e)' lltwlild IH·In~11 lhan- "unls tun,:. All
II•Ut•f14 1m· 11ubjet-t In tdilinr&lt; 1111d mu111 bto al;tnnl wUh Ul!lmt', uddrrs• aunt ldt•phntw
aumbrr. Ntt u•ltc~ lrllt'r~ will br JJ'Iblllitwd. l.t•llrn 11huukl br ill ~tlud Lllstt•. addn·Milnt:
i!J8HII,II111 ptMWRIIIUt'tt

Tough looking
:· job picture.
EVen It tile economy expands strongly, It rnlght be more difficult than In
;prior recoveries to lower the jobless rate.
• That discouraging assessment, shared by many economJsts and even
_some government analysts, Is contrary to the Whlte House J)(ISitlon that Its
;policies wm lead to long· term reductions In unemployment.
. The doubts arise for a varlet&gt;' of reasons, the most Important of which
.appear to be automation, foreign cqm)letltlon and a widespread recognl·
tlon by employers that they must shave their operating costs.
.
· The difficulties might also be compounded by a recovery that seems
· likely to be weak, even wlien measured by administration forecasts, which
.private-sector economJsts generally regard as too optimistic.
·
: In July, the situation worsened. With the jobless rate rising to 9.8 percent
" of tbe clvUian work force, analysts had to search back to the tallend of the
.Great Depression to find comparisons. ·
· About 10.8 nluUon people sought but !ailed to find jobs In July. Another
1.5 mllUon were said to have stopped looking, and 5.5 million more were
.working part-time In the absence of fuU·t!me jobs.
In previous recoveries since World War II, the gross national product
:expanded sharply In the first few months of recovery, sometimes at a 10
percent annual rate. Optimistic White House forecasts are half that.
Commerce Department &amp;~~alysts already have predicted ·that even
\ '
when
the auto Industry recovers, employment might be at lower levels
1
1 \ ,:?'·,than before tbe recession and that part of tbe reason might be automation.
&lt;.,.,·.·. Robert Dederick, Commerce Department assistant secretary for eco.nomic affairs, told a Senate subcommittee In January he expects 200,000
fewer autoworkers In the mld·19llB than In late 19'78.
,
. He blamed tbe situation on slower growth In the demand for cars,
-Increased UfMl of forelgn-buDt .parts, the switch to smaller cars and In·
.creased automation. Carmakers are depeliding heavOy on the latter factor
to reduce overall costs and remain competitive with Imports.
The 200,(W figure used by Dederick almost coincides with the number of
. hourly workers on Indefinite layoff from the five major automake~s. Last
· .week, 213,921 workers were listed In that category.
Most economists agree that productivity gains.In manufacturing wm
rely heavtly on greater use of automation, Including robots, a situation that
• . .at least temporarDy could mean fewer jobs.
: . : Robert Theobald, economist, futurist and adviser to corporations and
·. : ·municipal groups, says promises of more jobs areshort·slghted and bound
:. : to fall, since they are based on outdated economic patterns.
~: ; : He reasons that nonln1latlonary expansion, such as President Reagan
:: • )eeks, demands the use of automation. To promise jobs too, he says, Is a
- ; ~ntradlction and a promise that cannot be fuitUied.
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Berry's World

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Here is an uninstructed, but not
uneducated, guess as to what happened. For the sake of convenience,
notwithstanding that "there were
many players, we will limit the cast
to two - President Ronald Reagan
and Sen. Robert Dole.
Scene: the Oval Office.
Dole: Mr. President, we have an
election coming up an&lt;j there is no
way the party's going to make out
with the popular impression of what
your administration has come up
with.
R: Meaning?
D: A huge deficit and ricfl.
oriented tax relief.
R: Seventy percent of all tax relief
has gone to middle- and lower·
income groups, and the main pur·
pose of business tax relief is to spur
employment.
·
0 : Mr. President, this isn't a
political rally and I know all that. I
am here to say If we don't come up
with a tu: bill and a blll genel'ally interpreted as hitting the rich, Bill
Moyers wll b!l elected president.
R: Whatdoyouhavelnmlnd?
D: A hundred b'nllon, over three
years, one-half from business, onehalf from lndlvidilals. I
R: I thought David Stockman ~ys
there Isn't any difference between
taxeS paid by buafness and taxes
paid by Individuals?
D: There isn't aCtually. But people
don't know that, and CBS isn't going
to tell them.
R: What sort of · taxes on iJl.
dlviduals did you have In mind?
.0: TU:e 10 percent ot interest and
dividends as they accumulate.
There js $12 billion right there, In
part from· people who aren't
· declaring tllelr interest, In part from
people who are pa'ylng ahead like the
withholding tax.
'
R: I never did like the withholding
tax. Makes people forget they are
paying.
D: I Know, I know. But you $ave
up on that point when you were

governor of California, People are hear too m.uch ~~quawttng on these.
used to the Idea of withholding tax.
R: Whatliboutthebualneas taxes?
They wqn't mind If people who save
D: Business should contribute
submit to the aame thing. ·
more to. ~ unetlljJloyment funds
R: What else?
from which· the government draws
D: Taxes on cigarettes, telephones to pay benefits.
and airplane tickets, total over $10
It: Doesn't that just add to the cost
billion.
·of business which causes the unem.
R: Those are .regresaive taxes, ploymenlintheflntplace?
aren'tthey?
D: Well! sure. Built alSo penalizes
D: Sure they are, up to a point, but bad manag~ent.
.
·
they are already. The millionaire
R: Hmm. '
and the linemployed.dltchcllgger pay
D: ~ some 'complicated stuff,
the same· tax on cigarettes. Com- take back lhoae tu:·leaslng benefits,
pared to increases In · airfares that's over J1 bllllon, do away with
already In motion, ours won't be par· tile reillaurance deductions, that's te
ticularly noticeable. And people who b!llion, ease up on tu: crectlts ot one
are hit hard can phone more often at kind or another, and the one that will
night, that sOrt of thing. You won't get the headlines, no !leductlons for

•

meals unlesa you eat out of town.
R: Does that mean all
senators will have to go to Vlrs•lnla
lor lunch?
0: That's one po&amp;Sibillty. Or,
could make the restaurant
around the Capitol a aeparate town
ho ho. ·
&gt;.
'
R: Aren't you really silylng that
having .reduced .!axes, the R!!agan
admlnl8tration Is now in favor ot
.·raislngtailes?
,
·D: That's the way your enemies
will put it.
R: How will my friends putit?
D; WeU: you see, Mr, President
(Senalo!' '~e lHJes, ismlilng), you
don't have any friends left, so what
does It matter?

19110.

Secret documents and Intelligence
sources disclose the. appalling
reason for the president's decision:
U.S. experts do not a present have
adequate means to catch the Soviets
in violations of a test ban.
Eight years ago, the l}nited States
and the Soviet Union agreed to limit
underground nuclear tests- and the
only kind permitteli - to j50
kilotons, or roughly 10 times the siZe
of the Hiroshima bomb. The
Threshold Test Ban· Ttcaty was
never ratified by the United Sla~,
but the !50-kiloton limit was o~
served by both powers.
Then, in 1978, U.S. scientists unsure of their measurement sysiem,
secretly changed their methOds ci
calibrating a kiloton, In i!!fect
doubling the size of pennittedltest
explosions. When the Soviets su~
sequentiy doubled the sl!e of their
blasts, lntelllgence experts were

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"Ya know, Nancy, a day like this Is enough to
make a person forget a bslsnced budget
'
amendment. "

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..~ Today in history

.

• Today Is Tuesday, Aug. 10, the 222rid day of 1982.1bereare 143days ten·
• the year.
·In
,•
: Today's highlight tn·history:
; On Aug. 10, 1519, Spanish explorer Ferdinand Magellan began history's
•!first recorded voyage·around the world. ·
I

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()n thlJ date:

· , · In 1'192, 'the Frellcli monarchy was overthrown as mobs In Paris at·
..
:tacked the jlalace ot Louis XVI.
; In WI, ~Fulton's steamboat; "Claremont," made Its first trip.
: In 1821, Mlllouri entered the union as the :Mth state.· .
. .•
; , In 1914, Fr8nc:e declared Will' 011 Ailstrla·Hunpry at the start ot World

wari.

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~ Tea yean qo: The Pentaaon diocklaec! that l'I!Jli!WI!d hOm!Ug of North
Vletllllll llld otber tactics lil:ce the Conununillll' April c:dellalve bad
~.mont tllaD $1 bll1lon to u.s. mWtaJy ~.
•
• Five ,.... aao: New. York pollee arrested postal workel" David Berill&gt;- 1
twuz utile ~&amp;Called ".4kallber''ldller ots~peoplelnayear·lollg111!111!8ci 1

:lbcw•••

; ' One year aao:

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•; "nldl7'• ~ Slqers.Eddle ~and Jirnlm' Dean MeN. '
· 'l'bclulbt tiJr today: ·Beware the_fury ot,a patient man. - Jolm Dry•
Enlftab poet (163]..1100).
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American League

531 JOCXSOII PI(E · Rt .:IO WilT
Pl&gt;ono oWe· 415Z4
'
SAROMI MATWEtS ON .fAT .t SJif
ALL SEATS JtJST I J.OO

AOMISSION EVltrf 1UfSOIO' 11.00

"

....... Scoreboard ...
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"'"" .

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lack Anderson

alanned; they suspected a Jeak to stockpiling certification.
(ljiSSioris, for or against. I am no
tlleKremilnattllehighestlevels.
The rePort explains: "In the con- apologist for Sen. Ted Kennedy, but
Even with, the new measunng tinued non-nuclear testing of ·this time I thlnlt the Kennedy haters
method, the Soviets appear to have .weappns ~nts, It turns oUt , have Sunk to a new and disgraceful
exceeded the 156-klloton ilmit at with some regularity that individual low Jrfth a IICUIT!IOUB corfilc bOok
least 11 times since 1978. One test components fall or degrade. Even being distributed to Musachusetts
in September 19110 - waa clocked at acceptable components may voters.d~ Kennedy's ...-election
a likely aile of 350 kilotons, ac- becmle unavailable as manUrac- campaign. ·
cording to my sources.
turers shift prodUct lines or go out of
The unsubtle smear Is the haJl.
Indeed, as recently as July 4, the .business."
dlwork of DICit Hafer, a Maryland.
Russians set off a huge nuclear
This rr•.ans that neW components cartoonist who w'as paid $20,(W by
blast. It was estimated ala Ukely 200 or different materials have to be the Life Amendment Political Action
kilbni
'l~tons. •. or at least 110 11\'er tile used, jUld the resulting weapon may Committee tci rese~~rch, draw and
simply not work. AB the secret write the _aa..page bookl~t:1 LAP~C
J'rea(dent Reagal) ll!lked for the report states:
'.
.
says it's spelidlng $41)0,00 ln an effort
precise measurement ot tile SOviet
"Developing weapons remaim to to get a copy to every MassaciKlsetts
explosion, so that he could lodge a a. considerable extent an art -rather voter before Election Day,I!Jld silys
vehement protest with the Kremlin. than a science. Weapbns deaisns the response -so ·far has been
It was then ~t. heleamed such . which seem appropriate, based on "phenomenal."
'
precision was unpqsslble. A secret, 1 computer mqdels, fall to wotk as
Hafer's research sources were adhighly technical Pentagon briefing. prildlcted when actually tested.'!
mitteCIJy OIIHided- generally con.
disclosed that, in fact, the United
'Without periodic lejlta,' the sclen. servative po_bllcatlons, and once an
Sta!ea could not verify SOviet .com. t1sts say, there's no way to•be cer- unidentified "gu station attendant
pllance with a test ban.
lain these mongrelized mlsalles will in WOfCe&amp;ler." Yet he insists 1that
Tl)ere was another, perh8ps even dowhattlley'r,~'todo.
theresultta•:nodlfferentfrOn)other
more persuaalve reason the
In short, a test.IJan treaty would campaign Hterature" except for Its
president decided agai~ a test ban leave the United states doubly in the novel, caitoon fonnat.'
treaty: .u.s. nuclear weapons dark ,- about the rilllabillty of our , Kennedy's press secretary, Bob
laboratones "lnsisl that tlley. must ·own n~lear lWSfJOIIS and about any , . Shrum, obviously disagrees. "Some
. test up to approximately five violatlonsbytheSoyletUnlon.
of thiJ stuff~ soJow-down that it's
k119!ons ln order tD be able to verify
CARTOON CRUDITY; The Ken. creepy," he 81ild. Beyond that
perfonnance of the weapons for nedy~ have always aroused strong Shrum pointed "out· several

next?"

"S!Jn, I wlah you Wouldn't take our
talk lightly. Perhaps I &amp;hould have
explalneci these things to you before',
but I. didn't want to ruin your IIChool
da)'l. Yet what I am telling you now
)fill have a ~t effect on
everythlns you do.'
. ,
"Sorty, Dlld, but you have to admit wearing a tie aild 1 jacket.that
matchea the pants - what do you
call It, ' ,a lllitT - II a .pretty fuimy
'

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NEW ORLEANS SAJNT8-C•t Larry
Joae~, ruMina bKk, and Clef! Redd, lin..

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Oaki.Md at ae.tUt, (11)

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M o r • t1 o , Pfttltlw'atl. 6; Lo.Smlth.
• St.Loua. 6: P\IN, IIDultoft. .. '

, HOME RUNS - ""'-• New York.

II: -

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13; - - 22; Glorrero.
L&lt;lo · 22; a.r... San Fronc!oco,

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~W YORK (AP) - Callfomill

1W, •• Ul; . . . . Ql.

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Aqels tl!lrd - - Doul DeCin·
cea wu umed Amerit'a11 League
Pla)W ot tile .Week llld Reale

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Smith ot the Sail Fl'lltdlcD GlaDta
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flor tilt week ol AJIIIUil M
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D1QDc1!1 wet 12-fOI'K 111d
drlllll bailie 111111 Jilt weell:,
t willie Smtih batted .sal and helped

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Eric Fromm 7-6, 3-6, 7-6; Ramesh
Krishnan defeated Marcel Freeman 2-6, 6-2, 64, and Henri Leconte
beat Jerome Potier 7-6, 4-6, 6-1.
ATLANTA (AP)- Wendy White
beat Marie Plnterova of Czechosl&lt;&gt;vakla 6-2,64111 thellrstroundofthe
$100,000 Atlanta Women's Tennis
aasstc.
In other' matcbes, fourth-seeded
Mary Lou Platek defeated Marj&lt;&gt;!'ie ~l!lckwood of Canada &amp;.o, &amp;.o;
No.5 Ann Klyomurabeat Elise Bur·
gin lh!, 6-2; No.6 Yvonne Veflllaak
QfSouth Africa topped DukHee Lee
of Soulh Korea 64, 1-6, &amp;-2: and
1
elghth·seeded Candy Reynolds
doiVI!ecl Sabina Simmonds of Italy
7-6, 6-1.

· CLEVELAND (AP) - Vince
V.an Patten struggled to a 6-2, 3-6,
6-1 vtctory over Schalwke VanDer
Menle In the first round of the Fa·
·zio Tesmls Qasslc, 95th Western
~·
In other action, Tim WUklson
beat Mike Bauer, 5-7; 64, 64;
Nclul~a Odlzot of Nigeria won 2-6.
6-4, 7-6 (7-4) &amp;./er Larry Steranka;
alid Robert Van't Hot cloWned Jerli

I l l - -Cir.»: ~
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A...IAI

the Giants win seven straight
games.
NEW YORK (AP) - Major
league baseball attendance pushed
past the 30 million mark over the
weekend, according to figures released by Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn .
Wllh 2,044,252 fans attending
games last week - the fourth time
this year that attendance ·has been
over 2 million for one week - the
season's total reached 30,678,657.

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.Auto-Owners
lnaumnce
t..lre. Home. Car. Buslneu. One na1110 uys It alt

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S"roLEN BASES ...... Raines, Montrftl,

Sl; Menno, Pltteburah. ~1; Lo.Smith,
St.I.D.III, 41; Demler, PhUidelphla, «);

Plltlbu!JII
Mo..~

'

TORONTO (AP) - Ben Tester·
man of the U.S., scored a 4-6, 64, 64
upset of seventh·~ed Australian
Mark Edmond!lon In the first round
ot the $lXl,IMXl Player's Interna·
tlonal tennis tournament at the
York University Tennis Centre. .
In other matches, sixth-seeded
Mats Wllander of Sweden out·
playe4 American Tony Graham 63, 64; No.10 Chip Hooper beat
fellow American Matt Doyle 7-6, 63; No.ll Shlomo GUcksteln of Israel
dumped American Glen Holroyd 7·
6,&amp;-0; MartlnWostenholmeofCan·
ada defeated American Rick Fagel

llOIJBUS - T.Keul!lly, s.. ~&gt;~oat&gt;•
32: _
......... :il: I l l - . -

\10\ II

su~mary...

TENNm

RBI - M..,.,., A...la. ~; Carl&lt;. ,Son
Frandlco, 19; Klnpnan, Ntw York, 72:
. Cltwr, Montrnl, 71; 1-k!n&amp;ick, St.Lculs,
II.
'
llln - J.Ray, Pl-1111!. 1.11: Sox,

st.- LoUia

.

Sports

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

...

~

"

BATTING IHl at batll - McGet,
!J.Lcuk. .322: Oltvfr, Mm!.tnN.I, .317;
Kntaht, Houlton, .313; Lo.Smlth, St.Louis,
.3l'7: Oru·teor, McntrHI, • ·
RUNS - Lo.Smith, St.Low., 88; Murp~, Atlanta, 18; DIWIOn, r.loltr!al, 14;
- . . . Cblcqo, II; Sdlmldt, Plllla·

«a'•O....

Taaaat~

WINCS-

NA'ft}NAL 1&amp;\GUE

.

Brian ·Tennehlll, Jeff Nelson; second row, Robbie
Grimm, Matt Fisher, J. R. Kitchen, Bill Marshall, Artie JfunneU, Bill Brothers, John Sisson, 1lm Davis,
coach, and Mark Tannehill, coach; back row, Weldon
Bartrum, manager and Don Hunnell scorekeeper.

BIG BEND ALVSTARS- The Big Bend AU-Stars
llnlabecl secoDd In the Belpre Uttle League AJI..Star
" Toumameat SUIIIIay afternoon at Belpre: Pleiqred
above, first row left to rlgbt are: Brian Decker,
Michael Bartrum, Shawn Cunningham, Shane Grimm,
hat boy, Shawn Amott, Scott Williams, Bart Davis,

Leaders

f&amp;ufNI. tnl
.~ Oaldtncl ct.teeatty 6-11 at !INttlt IC&amp;att
~~) .( Ill

11 1 "

It\\

'# Tful (Hough U-8) at Mltwau.llee lSI• :
!0f1831, (ll)
Cal1l)nta (K.F~ »71 at ~
(WUI!aml3-ll , (Q)
CloYtiMd (WIIU~·liJIII ~City

"" EI

' ' \ I , IIU'

tl\1

,_Bolton ft'biTG 7~} &amp;1 . 'l\lroDto 1 ~stleb
,11-UI, (DI
.New York CAJexaoder 0.51 at OrtrU.t
IUJdlr $-5), Cnl
'
,_Ba~--.~~ 12-91 at CI\Jcaao

"

RED

:H~

~'l!ellllrl

ltSW'M 1241. (D)

r

·

John S DETROIT
Siped Tom
R.Owe, rllhl wblg.

_..,,Ba...... 5

-·-. I ,

!

ST.LOUIS CARDINALS-Cut Ralpb
Claytoa, wlclt receiver; Or.. Coml», dereutve IIMmu: eo.k Field. lh,ett.eter:
Steve Clirpenter, defe~~atv~
Jam•
WUIIUM, dlfenttve nd; t..wrtntW Relcl,
Ke" JoMaon aa4 Cree Foster, ruMinll
baeD; aad J• Youna, quarterbaek.
• WASHINGTON
REDSKINS-

' Mllwaulref t, Texul
...New
9, Ddrol.t 1
KanJu C!Qo 12. a...loDd 2

'

'

b~k« .

Torono 4. Boll&lt;a 2 '

ruracjes;r~;:;hwald

. "You ~n I have to poliJh them
.
'
"Can we proceed? These queer- too?"
looking leather things are callecl
"You don't have to, but they look
shoes. Do you l!ave any Idea what· better that way and ~ longer.
they'.re used for?"
· Here, put on theile socks and then
''Beata
USocks?"
"You put them on your feet to
protect them from sharp objects."
"YeS.' You wear them inside the
!'I don't wint to wear anyt1llng 'shoes so the leathet won't rub your
like. that, Dad. rn take my chan. feet.,.
'
'
ces... '
''. "Ithoughi the shcles. were sup, "I ~~~~;~·t kJ.!ow how to ~ it to poiled to prqtect my feet.''·
·
uo-.oded
'
you, son, but mOlt plaees require.
nv•• . you wear socks. SOn,
gt OWIH.ps to wear shoes."
, please don't ~e tldl too difficult
"Look, Dad, If you want me tO, I
for ine. t.itl' nOt vecy good ·at ex·
will wear,a nedrtle, and I'JI even go plaiDiilg tilt facti ot life, bUt l'elieve
along with the j.cket and matching me; rve been telling you the truth."
pants with I CIWM i!J them;-but I'm· .
11011')', Dad. Itis just that
not goins to pllt tiiCIIIe stupid leather you ve thrown .U thla stuff at me at
. things on my feet."
·
(\lie time, uid it comeli u a shOck."
• "Shoes, son, shoes. Believe me, . "Perhaps we've talked enaagbfor ·
you'll get used to them. After a while ODe day. TliuMIOW, I'd llkl! to tell
you might even get to'Uke them and you about a tl!lllll called a I'll«."
ll:eepthempilllabed."
'
"Ruorl1'11at''• funtiJ word."

61

!II
!II

B all--.
· ' New York

tnaC:

idea."

w L
eo "

Mtlwaulln

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

"This, my ·boy, is a suit - what
are you laughing at?"
"TiM! jacket does ~tch the pants,
and you will be expected to wear
them together during the diytime."
"But the pants have .a ·crease in
the front. What'athatfor?"
"I'm not certain ot its~. but
now that you are an adult, your are
supPosed to kf!!P ·a crease In your
pants."
'
.
"Man. what will l;heY think of

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Cwt Don

AIIJIIUCAH LIWll!ll:

'

IIH'bllck~ .

leued JIDl sznepantull.

Majors

4i'lfk eomrouen refuat!d to halldle t11ern tn aympathy with their ltrlk1Da I
.

an

;:.
•: .

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'

up a single to Ken Griffey, who was
Stoddard's throwing goofs.
"It wasn't one of his better sacrWcecl to second and scorecl the
c8rdlnals 7, Mets z
games," Weave~ said of Piilmer, tying run with two out when Rucker
WUIIe McGee hit a two-out, who was staked to a !Hl lead In the threw wildly to first after fielding
bases'loaded triple that fueled a second Inning. "All I lmow Is It WOlle Randolph's high ~hopper.
four. run, fifth..Inning rally apd car· · 'hppy Martinez gets two guys out Randolph took second on the error
rled St. Louts over New York.
and Jerry Mu,mphrey doubi:S~·
· !here wouldn't be any bunts."
In
The Inning erased a 2-1 Mets'lead
In even· more dramatic come- home. Oscar Gamble hom
and made a winner of Jeff Lahti,' back, the New York Yankees the ninth for New York's final J;Un.
:J.2, who took over for Dave LaPoint
roared from an early 7.0 deficit and
Blue J&amp;)'s 4, Reel Sox ! ',
· In the iourth Inning.
downed the Detroit Tigers g.7. In
·
Rance
Mulllnlks' teadof! home
LaPoint was charged with both other American League games, the
New York runs In the fourth which MDwaukee Brewers thumped '•the run tled the score.2·2 In the eighth
gave tbe Mets their 2-1lead. But tbe Texas Rangers 9-1, the Toronto Inning: Loser Dennis Eckerliey
Cardinals came back In the fifth Blue Jays defeated the Boston Red then lssu,ed one-out walks to WJllle
under a constant drizzle to score Sox 4-2, the Kansas City Royals Upshaw and Hosken Powell and
their game-Winning runs and chase
pounded the Qeveland Indians 12·2 . was replaced by Bob Stanley, who
rlght·hander Charlie Puleo, 8-9.
and the Oakland A's trounced tbe surrendered consecutive 'RBI sin·
Seattle Mariners 94. California and gles to Barry Bonnell AAd lloyd
Moseby. It was Boston'selghth set·
Minnesota had the night oft.
back In the last 11 games.
Yankees 9, nsen 7
The Tigers buUt a 7.()lead against
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
A's 9, Marlnet'f 4
AP Sports Writer
Ron Guidry on Lance Parrish's
Davey Lopes drove In four runs
The long ball helped start the Bal· tw&lt;&gt;-run homer In the first Inning
tilnore Orioles' downfall, but what and a five-run third, capped by a~d scored three, leading a JJ.hlt
really did them In were a couple of Glenn WDson'stw&lt;&gt;-rundouble. But Oakland attack as the A's rolled to
short balls.
George Frazier, Dave LaRoche their ntth consecutive victory lind
The Orioles led Chicago :..3 In the and Rich Gnssage held them to two handed Seattle Its fltth straight
loss. Lopes slammed a three-run
seventh Inning when Greg Luzlnskl hits the rest ot the way.
slammed a leadoff homer lor the
Dave Winfield's three-run homer homer In the seconcj Inning and also
White Sox. When the White Sox fl. In the seventh made It 7-5 and Roy drove In a run In the sixth with a
nally stopped running around the
Smalley opened the eighth with his groundout. Dan Meyer and Jeff
bases, they had scored six Urnes, 11th homer, chasing Detroit starter B~ghs also homered for the
A."'s,Who tagged loser Jim Beattie
helped by two mJsgulded throws Dan Petry.
lor
six runs In 32·31nnlngs, although
"I figured when we finally got Pefrom Baltimore reliever Tim Stod·
he
recorded
nine of his 11 outs on
datd on bunts, and defeated the Or I· try out or there we had a chance."
Strlk!!&lt;!UtS.
Winfield said. "He's one heck of a
oles 9-5.
But Baltimore Manager Earl pitcher. You just don'tflguretoget · r - - - - - - - - - - - Weaver was more upset with start· back from that far out with him on
'tng pitcher Jim Palmer and re- the mound."
Dave Rucker came on and gave
liever Tippy Martinez than
tonight's game between the two
teams.
,

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u.s. fllihta to Europe were ltalled when Canacllu •

~·- COUIIterparta.

half game

.

·,

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

•

~raves

r.::
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.The ·facts of.life .
This Is the time ci Yl!llr when
fathers sit down and have heart-toheart talks with their sons·.
"Son, now that you have
graduated, your mother feels I
would not be fulfilling my duties as a
father if I did not explain certain facts aboUt life to you."
"Yes, Dad."
"First, I would like to show you a
few thlllgs that you will .have to deal
with In the outside world; For~
pie, this l!eJn Is Callecl a neckUe."
"What do you do with it?"
"You tie it around your neck like
this and wear it with a shirt"
"Whatfor?"
"Nobody Ia quite sure. But when
you ·do go out Into the cold world,
people will expect you to wear.one.
It's the Establlslunent's answer to
the peace symbol.''
'
"It sure ,Loob funny. What else,
'
.
.
Dad.,
.'

"'

·Y

Test ban cheating
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan decided at a July 19
National Security Council meeting
that he didn't want to resume talks
with the Soviet Union and the British
on a comprehensive nuclear testing
ban. The talks were suspended in

lmllnp as Buckner bit 6-ll, who lost
Atlanta 1tarter ~~~ l'lm!z, 0.
\.·
his seventh straight game.
. 2, aDOWI!d CJaly one ldt and faced the
Ferguson Jenkins, 7·13, gained
JoeTorrelan'tpres~~n&amp;theparuc . m1n1mwn 12 batten throulb tour
I
his.
flrlt victory since July !j.
button yet, bill he figures bla 1n111Dp. RegleSmlth'alelldolhln·
A1t11w t, Plldrell S
• AtlaJ!tll Braves better get on the gle Ill the llfth started a two-run
Alall
Ashby
hit two solo home
' stlcil soon. ' '
·
Gtant rally. Jflt ~ daublecl
runs
and
.
D
on
Sutton
and two ~I lev·
,_
"We· nel!d our pep and spirit home one ot the runs and Barr
ers
combined
on
a
seven·hltter
to
b&amp;Ck1" said the chagrtried Atlanta singled home the other.
cany
Houston
over
San
Diego,
llli!Jlll&amp;er after watching bla noae·The G~ts scond an unearned
Sutton, ll·S. struck out one and
" I' dlvlngteamlale'~totheSanFran·
run In the alxth and added lnsu·
walked three In 72-3·Innings before
· raJICle 1ft the eighth 011 a two-run
• ,' cisco Gtantll MOIIday night. .
getting relief help from Bert ~
'
"I'm nOt ~ anythtni away triple by Dan'ell Evans.
berge
and Dave Smith, who gained
, , from J~ Bao'; He !)Itched a super
In other NL action, Chicago
hls
.
.
nlnth
save after giving up two
"' ,Kame - but we didn't have - 1( dowDed Molltreal ~2. Houston
runs In the ninth on an error and a
· tonight."
stopped San Dlago'-3, Philadelphia
·'· ' The Braves only IIUIII8ged three beat l'tttaburlll 4-3 tn the flnlt game sacrWce fly by plncll·hltter Kurt
Bevacqua.
.,,_-. hits olf Barr, who Is usually a rellef ot ·a doubleheader before the seJohn l.',{ontefu!ICO, 9-7, pitched the
. n , . pitcher and was JJia1dng only his
CQIId pme was JIUIIIellded by a rna.,·,' !ieeond start ot•the lealon. The re- jor ll!que cul'II!VI'Iaw and St. Louis tirst seven Innings for the Padr1!5,
, allowing all Houston's runs.
'
· suit was .Atlanta's seventh whipped New- York 7·2.
Phlllell4. Plralal a '
"' strawght loss.
Doclpn a, Bedlll
.
Pfnl:h-hltter George Vukovich
"Maybelt'sbec&amp;~~9eofwhathap~ Guerrero slugged' ' Jim
drove home two runs with a bases~ over the w~kend. but we're
Kern's llrit pitch of the 13th Inning
•· .·down." said,- ~. ieterrtna to a for Ida 22nd home -run to lead Los loaded double In the eighth Inning
ot1 ai:e reliever Kent Tekulve, ena·
., four1ame ~ ~ the LOe An· Angeles over Cincinnati, the
bllng J:lhlladelphla to edge PittsaoJes
.
rwo..;,.;.,.
'""e
didn't
have
•
'
~
..,..,..co~
Podges seventh straight win and
burgh In the first game of a
any life at all tonight.'' ·
11th In their last 12 11ames.
The Dodgers, by the way, trailed
RelleYer Dave Stewart, 7-6, re-· doubleheader .
Mike Easler drove In four runs
the Braves by 10% gamesll clays tired ·the last 18 batters to earn the
wltha two-run homer and a two-run
ago In the Nattonal League West, . vtctory. Stewart, who was 3-1
·f but are now only' a half.garne be- agailllt1heReds'lastyearwlthone ., sfngle, 88- the Pirates ra1l1ed from a
:hind the Braves as a resuh of their .save, walked one and struck aut !Hl deficit to take a 9-6 iead with two
out In the eighth Inning of the se:~, ,. 3-2, 13-lnillng victory over the an. live In his !f.
•
cond game when It was susi;lended
~"!: : .ctnnatt ~ Monday night. ·
Kern, 1-5, took over In the 11th
under a major league ruie.
;,-;: . .Tol'fl! held a J5.mlilute meeting llld worked out of a bues·IOaiJecl,
The Pirates had scored four runs
;; ·, In ~f:lubhouse with his team fol· DOIII!'OUt jam, then left tWO on In
In the top of the eighth when tile
~t' · lowtng Monday night's loss toone of the 12th before Guerrero nailed
game was halted by rain. The rule
~· baaeball's hottest tealllJ . .The him With a shot Into the left·
prohibits resumption of play tollow·
,;:1 Giants have WOII ellht ltralght.
center lleld pavilion at Dodger
lng
a rain delay past 12:45 a.m. The
"Going nine lnnlnp made me stadium.
suspended game wm b4;!gln prior to
!,:0,: happy. But l can't say I'm sur·
Calli t, Eipol %
:l': prised that 1 could do It," said the
Bill Buckner went 4-fol'-5, tnclud·
"::1:: 34·year·old Barr, who hadn't lng a pair of solo home runs, and
;:: pltche!l a comp(!!te game since Ryne Sandberg added a thJ'ee.nln
~. ~~
shot a1 Chica&amp;O defeated Montreal
4 Barr, 2·2, . the veteran right· for- Ita llfth straight vkltory. The
:::,. • haildet who started one pme In Cubs have WOII !even of their last
,,, ;; Apl'jl and has 36·rellef appearances eight, and the tiw-game Winning
:1..~·' this , ~ wallred none and streak Is iheir longest since August
..:- :·struck•out two. Barr allowed sin· of li'l9.
~:'1' ;• gles •lri the fourth, titth and sixth
The Cubs put the game away
..,.,. ln~p.
•
earJy, taking a 7.0 lead after 5~

By UN RAPPOPORT
AP 8pora Wrtler

The Daily Sentinel

Power--Pac.,ed
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Pape-4- The Daily Sentinel

..•'

Tumhiy, AU,IIt 10,1912

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

.

Helen help us

~Let this

Calendar,

be a lesson.. /

. '
BY HELEN AND SUE B01TEL

',
(ex)

'

y011 think. U your
girl truly
cares, abe may understand,. and walt
for the divorce. - SUE

nJFSDAY

LIBERATED

DEAR HELEN•ANDSUE:
DEARHEI-..Q Al'lDSUE:
I fell in love with a wonderful girl
YOilllid1JllOIIt people condemneCI'
who was younger than J was but
the young lllCitiler who lllld i
very mature. We planned oo DEAR HB:
'And If the baby arrives wooden IIPO!i" to IPII* her blb)''a
marriage when she finllhed high
"premature" - even If it doesn't legJ (after lfirnlnl bet. once). They
school.
est
heck temlty v1r1 aren't Bible nadenl
It was very hard for me to keep
pa
I've aent 7011 ~ight ~ from
from making love to her, but we both ~!!t"f!t.. YOIJ .c
•Your camp foDower may have ~ GGod Book that say in eeveraJ
wanted to walt for the wedding
already been pregnant before that different ,n ya, "Spare the rod and
night.
·
. . .,
. One weekend some boddiea and J fateful weekend. u abe ~~elected you spoil the child."
I'D ralrJe my children by ~ ·Book,
went on a camping trip. They as the ._.ble aunewbal naive
brought girls along and one thing led faD. guy, it's Ume' y011 found her 011t · thank you, and not a psyChology
time talklnc ~
to another ... Only my luck wasn't before y011're saddled with 18 years book. Why
wheedling when the sting fl. a switch
with me. "My" girl ended upx ol support payments. - HELEN
brlpgs instant obedience? ·pregnant. She wllllldn't get an aboro
CHRJBTJAN
tion and I had to marry her. (Our DEARHELENANDSUE:
,
Thll answers "Regretful" who DEAR CHRJBTJAN:
small Southern town - plus her
The
Spanlab
lnqulaltora,
~
thinks abe acts stupidly at parUea,
parents - stiD go by the rulea.)
upright·
reJigl~.
'had
the
sanie
I can't stand to look at her and as and conducts post morWma next
fl. the
soon as the baby cornea, we wi11 be day, feeling miserable ave£ all the idea, but their ~tion
1
Good
Book
dla~
't
end
with
divorced. But It's too late.for me and "goofs." I onCe dkl this too. ·
spankin~.
HELEN
AND~
:
Then I read an interview with a
my real love. I doubt she could ever
.
,-t
forgive me because I can't even do polished socialist. She said
(GOT
A
PROBLEM?
Or
a
sub~
that myself.
·everybody ~ fllles, mates
fordlscussioo, tw&lt;i11enel'lllonatyle?.
So let this be a lesaon to other tem- blunders, says idiotic things Direct
your quesllona to either SUe
pted gUys: if you really Jove 'your unleas he 0.. she just sits.home an the
or
Helen
Bottel - or both, if you
girl, don't mess around w'ith anyone time.
'
want
.
a
comblnatlo'n motherHer answer to bocHioos Ill "So
out of lust. It cpuld ruin your llfe.,daughter
inswer
- in care fl. thla
what?" She adviaed worry-prone
BEAR,TBROKEN
JlllW8P8per.
)
people to $lillie and bury them.
DEARH.B. :
So l'v~ learned to laugh at my
Women aren't as unforgiving as

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ONE POTATO- Thll ctaot po&amp;ato could be a oae
po&amp;ato meal for a family. 1'be po&amp;ato weiJbs two IUid
o~~&amp;laU pollllds aad Ill pictured willlllle grower, CleO

f:

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Wood, Syracuse. Wood aaya be alwaya bu a goed
po&amp;ato crop butaddllllat W. year'• lillie belt yeL He

vew 111e big po&amp;ato IDa amaD family prdeo plot.

ACB ·answers readers' questions
A regular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to help
save your lif~ from cancer.
QUESTION: Does a black skin
make one more susceptible to cancer?
ANSWERllne: There have been
sharp increases among black
Americans. ol cancers of the lung,
esophagus, larynx, oral cavity lll!d
.bladder. But this Ill most Ukely
because these canceni are strongly
811110Ciated with cigarette smoking,
or with cigarette $111oklng combined
with alcohol Intake. Other dif.
, ferences might be partly explained
by dietary, occupational, genetic·or
other factors. TI1eae however are
speculative and may take many
years to determine scientifiCllily.
Most can~rs occur because' of
something we do, eat; · drink or
smoke, and to 110me extent where we
live. Of practical significance too, Ia
· the fact that fewer black Americans
than whites have their cancers
diagnosed and treated in the earliest
and most curable stage. Moreover,
regardless of stage at diagnoslrl the
sqrvlval rate for blacks Ia lower than
that for whites. This may well have
more to do with health care delivery
than with biology. A national study
by the American Cancer Society
showed tllat black Americans are
Jess aware of cancer's warning
signals than whites; are much less
likely to get cancer information than
.whites; and lower income blacks are
Jess apt to see a doctor when they ex·
perience cancer's symptoms. Thus,
these are areas in which iJn.
pro\lements in education, early
detection, and treatment can have a

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cua·u-

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; Reymold,.
: llloinbi&gt;W C.&gt;Ofnedinn 4-H Club "'' ' May I .,
• Brlty Adk.intJ' h1•11e. Susan Ashley presided and
had char••· , ~ the pnlf&lt;ram. Tunya A..ln~ led
Oevntion!t. AdVbllnl are Betty Adtln~, Cindy
' Con ~tock and Keith Adkins. Member11 prwe,..
w&lt;re SUsan .Uhley, Tonya Adkl"!, Wendy
, Adi&lt;IN and Mi&amp;&lt;y Atllins. - Ropori&lt;l' M;,y

Draft horse ·entries due
Friday for Meigs Fair · .

1 . .•

Adkillll.
·' llloinbl•w o;,med lon 4-H Club mf l Ju,. S al
· 'Bell YAdkins' home. T!)flya Adkina prtslded and
o·hll••• oil he pr1111r1m. Jlre!ldol SI&lt;JYer and
1' ·had
Mi!SHY Adkln~ ll'd dt!Vtlthw. Krillti Cou11tock
: ,zave Mht!allb dem()fl8lratioo on bre!llhin~e, and
Jltoulh-tt,.IIIOOih teSUIKitatiun. Mil8)' Ai.airu

Na-

~l\'l' a flrst..Ud Ucmonatratltllland hOw to make
11 finlt ... id kit. Wit diiC\IIIed upconl.inM: 4-11

=.

•

.~&amp;ilanal......,

r

Mine Run (Strip) . .

.

{cooklelctliluefllld¢nk.cakl!sdeco.

~ rated with liiintS

S.,.. I, lfb

PM. M-att:

UH Stlhll•llrlcants lw

'

~

SHhl" _ . , toela, In •dlllltGn ID • .,
fuJI line of lullrl~nll. wealloat.ck•

' e lAIIi

eCHAINS

e FLIES
.SPARk I'LUGI

.

were

Rola1le Story, Audra
' Weill. WDma Pallrer, Barbara
" Tripp, HeleD Carpellll!r, Betsystlv·

'~

'Participation In ihe Meigs
County Fali' flower shows .·was '
planned during a recent mei!tlng of
the Middleport Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs. J .J. Fry,
Cheshire.
Tbe classlficatlona of the show,
materials to be used, and the special awards were noted. The meet·

lng was preceded by a picnic with
Mrs. Grace French giving the
prayer. For roll call members respOnded with a conunent on what
they like most about gardening.
Betsy Horky gave the program
showing an album of pictures taken
at this year's plantings, the me-

NCliiiUJ • ~

Ewing

Pat Life, Donna Morris, Barb

' While, Ida Allee airper, Debbie
Weber, JudY .wolfe, Elsie Hines,
Helen Qulvey, Helen ~. 1\'d!l

'

•

Correspondence

· Syracuse Nazarene

Mr. and Mrs. Rick Ash entertained with a party honoring their
daughter, Cariasa, three, on Aug. 3.
Also celebrating her birthday was
Betty Ash, Cariasa's grandmother.
ASmurfthemewascarriedoutand
homemade Ice cream was ~rved.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Ash, · grandparents, their
daughter, Tonia, Mr. and Mrs. CecU
Frazier, grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs, great·
grandparents, Thelma Hawley,
great-grandmother, Mr. and Mrs.
Mick Ash and son, Mike, Kristen
Bailey, Kevin Fields, Jennifer and
Jason Lawrence.
Both Cariasa and her grandmother were presented gifts. Sending gifts were Marie Dailey, Mr.
and Mrs. Randy Crawford and
Shauna, Mr. anti Mrs. Larry Bailey,
Mr. and Mrs. John Dailey,
Chillicothe.
The Ashes also announce the birth
ol their second child, a daughter,
Cara Lynn, on July 13. She weighed
eight pounds, ·eight ounces and was
21 Inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Ash have another
daughter, Cariasa, ttlree. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Frazier, Middleport, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Aah, Syracuse. .Great·
grandparents include Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs, Laurel Cliff, Mrs.
Thelma Hawley, Minersville, and
· Pearl Ash, Pomeroy.

celebrated his fifth birthday.
A party at his home carried out the
Dukes of Hazzard theme. Attending
were Adain, Jody and Todd Smith,
Mary Voss, Alan Hendricks, Dennis
Hoschar, Angie Teafotd, Lisa Tal·
terson and Wendy Carsey. Sending
gifts were Larry Brown, Brends
Tatterson, Louiae Casey and Tony's
grandparents, Violet Arnold, and
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Voss.

Davis
Mr. and Mn. Rodney Davis,
Westerville, announce the birth of a
daughter, July ~. at University
Hospital, Columbus. The Infant
wel8hed )line pounds, three ounces
and has been named Teresa Marte.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis have a son, Tl·
mothy, eight, and daughter, Tam·
ara, four.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Kenny Davis, Rutland, and Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Biddle, Columbus.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Worley Davis, Dexter.

.Tobin
Tom and

.

Brown

.m

.Role..

.

'

'

Jtinea,

1011,

EIJrlal

Clrl

Wlllllan

J - , Oev I "': lin. ~ .
lltran&amp; Wmr.vllle; llr. and ¥n.
, _ Sblto Md Krlltla 8Wt,
Go!Dipnlll· Mra. ICaamey ~
~
.
Barlal in Beech Omit

Cemete17.

'

. .

candy Tobin of Route 1,

Middleport, are annouriclng the
blrth'of their first chUd, a daughter,
Brandy Bea, born on July 3i at the
Pleasant Valley· Hosplial. The in·
fant weighed nine . pounds, one
ounce and was 21lnches long.
Maternal grandparents are ~
and Bea Wood, Route l, Rutland,
and paternal erancJparents are
Larry and Bess Hendricks,
Middleport.

NOTICE
'

Meigs County Extension Office at
99U696.

POMEROY - Several openings
in the Gingerbread House
pre-school program, Mrs. Sandy
Luckeydoo reports. Students will
be accepted as they register until
all opening have been fllled. Mrs.
Luckeydoo also requested that
those with registration forms return them to her Immediately.

r-;:=========::-

remain

,.Morris, Karep .Smith, Mildred
Ziegler, ' Mary Meredith, Naomi
Reed, Yvonne Young, Yvette
Youag, J~ Curtis, Belva WU·.
, lard
Betty, Milhoan.
'l'hole.uaable to aitend but send·
Tony Alan Brown, son ol Mr. and
ing' llftl were Ella Slllnn, Leota
Mrs. Kenneth Brown. recently
. Smith, Etta CuDUIIII, Martha
Stuttler, Viclly Burnpab, ~ p;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;;:;:;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;;:;~
Stewart. 0!i1a :!~art. i&lt;enda wwr. II
ams, Olive Page, Clady l.JIIton, Lu·
I
ctle King, ~ F1ck and ·Debbie

11ame wiUI the Rev. Don
alldat!na
...._ frD a diatlnce t;aDin8 ·
• a. ftllirllbame IIIII attending
•• :tJH lfr. aod ......
W
llltl Jmlc:e
'I
01. t I , Jilr, llld lira.
.,
1)11.-.. IIIII Tid. c.nat
&lt;~ 1

Junior Auxiliary

Brown

Ash

: Funeral lll'viCI!I. for Bertha ~; Mr. . aod Mri. Paul
~ ....... Pameroy, wbo died July,21, ' JQIII!I .11)11 Mr. aDd lira. Ralpb

.=lleld

TOPS 1456

A_rea birthdays celebrated

.

•~
,

•

help build a new church. Thelma lion of the Buckeye' as the official
Miller ~ave a ·report on the District tree.
Tile seal of, the state was rean Invitation to·the club members MisSionary Convention,
viewed
along with the motto, "With
to attend the silver anniversary
The offering was taken and Jan
God
all
things are possible." It was
celebration of' Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lavender played the offertory numHorky, Aug. 29, Zl8 South Fifth St., ber on the organ. Fannie Aleshire noted that the state fiag was
.Middleport, 2to 5p.m. Also Jl!ad at gave the stu~y on Afiica. She has a adopted in 1900, the state bird, the
the meetin&amp; was a note of thanka
goal of 125 books to be read by the cardinal, in 1933, and the state
from Mrs. Ruth Anderson for Dow· society. She urges everyone to read fl~r. a red carnation, In 191M.
Crossword puzzle books were
ers sent to her by the club during all five books.
her recent illness.
Debbie Powell brought the special made to be USed at Christmas. The
Members ol the club thanked music by singing Follow On. Scrip- group enjoyed pizza and pop followMrs. Lennie Haptonstall for ar·
lures were read by Fannie Aleshire, ing the meeting.
ranging the swim pjii1y enjoyed by Dottie Greathouse, Elladene Wal·
theclubmembersattheJulymeet· son, Mary Jane Arms and Gladys
lng held at the home of Mr. and Presley. New officen for the year
Frances Haggy was queen for
Mrs. William Haptonstall.
were installed by Rev. Kittle.
the
month of July In TOPS OH 1456
The Ohio Association of Garden · Benediction wa~ given by Norman
of
Rutland.
Linda Bailey was the
Clubs annual convention held In Co- Presley.
weekly
queen
at last week's meet·
lurnbus last week was noted. Arlng
with
Cindy
Hartenbach as
rangements .ror the eventng were
runner·up.
lnformatfon
on joining
made by Mrs. FlY who used daisies
Several special people to be re- may be obtained by calling 742In a low vase, and Mrs. Horky, dal·
membered on their birthdays and
sles and zinnias in a straw holidays were "adopted" by the 2233.
container.
Junior American J..egion AuxUiary
FoDowing the meeting a tour of of Drew Webster Post39, Pomeroy,
plant groupings in the yard of Mrs. at a recent meeting held at the
Fry were . viewed. Mrs. ·Robert
home of Mrs. Harry Davis, adviser .
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Tewksbary, Mrs. Paul Davis, Mrs.
"Adopted" were BW Rovnak, a Church Aug. 1 ws 100.
Charles Byer. and Mrs. Roscoe veteran at Arcadia Nursing Holne,
Mrs. Beulah Oehler, mother of
Fowler were guests.
Coolville;
Mrs.
Eulalia
Webster,
seMrs.
Jean Wright, is much Improved
' The September meeting will be
nior citizen, now co)lfined to Vete- from her recent operation.
held Sept: 17 at 7: 30'p.m. at Middle- rans Memortal Hospital; Dorothy
Scott Miller, nine-year-old son of
port United Presbytertan Church. Leifheit, handicapped lady, a resl· Rev. Robert Miller, has been repor·
Mrs. Irene Davis, Mrs. N.C. Wilson dent of the Ortent Developmental
ted ill.
and Mrs. Anderson will be Center: Ellen Couch, grand·
Edward Archer , Crooksville,
hostesses:
mother; and Jennifer Mankins, called on Mr. and Mrs. Norman
mascot.
Schaefer recently.
Mrs. Davis presented a past pres·
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kasper and
The SyraCIIIIe Church of the !dent's pin to Kim Patterson. Anita baby girl recently called on Mrs.
Nazarene monthly meeting of the Smith Is the new president. On be- Bertha Parker and Mr. and Mrs.
N.W.M.S. was called to order by half of the auxiliary, scholarship Robert Arnold and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
president, Mrs. Nada Kittle, on Aug. checkl were presented to Miss Pat· Smith.
4. She called for five volunteen to terson and Laura Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer,
read scripture.
Plans were made for the juniors Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story and son
Sherm Cundiff led song service. to assist the Meigs County Salon John spent a Sunday with Mr. and
Prayer requests were made and vii:e 710, Eight and Forty, with the cys- Mrs. William Perry, Athens.
president Sia Cundiff led in prayer. tic fibrosis drive In September.
Chester Will, Hemlock Grove,
Mn. Kittle stated five membel'll
A thank you note was sent to Miss called on Mrs. Della Stahl recently.
were going to Mexico in October to Erma Smith lor a contrtbutlon, and
Mrs. Grace Richel'llon, Athens,
cards were signed lor Mrs. Webs· Mrs. Audrey Hayes, Shade, visited
te.r, Miss Leifheit, Mrs. Ruth Mas- recently with Mrs. Della S&amp;ahl.
sar, and Mrs. Virgil Parsons, a
Mr. and Mrs. Peal'! Gilkey, Mrs.
patient at Holzer Medical Center.
Della Stahl attended the Hayes
Read at the meeting was a.lhank reunion on Sunday at Hemlock
Grove.
you note from Joseph RauRtaji.
chief of voluntary service at Chllli·
Mrs. James Gilmore attended
cothe Veterans Hospital. for dona· church services Sunday. She untions of door prizes, name tags, derwent sur~ery four weeks ago.
denture cups and other Items sent
Mrs. Beulah Ochier, mother of
by the juniors. A note was also re- Mrs. Jean Wri ~ ht, is a patient in
ceived from Mrs. Curly Walsh University Hospital, Colwnbus.
thanking the juniors for thoughtful·
Bible study attendance at the local
ness for the veterans.
church Wednesday evening was 41.
The program was on Ohio's adop- Everyone is welcome.

Ash

era, Dawn CARPER, Peg Carper,

'

~

I

Regionat ·announcements

!.Relatives. ~ttend' Reibel'
funeral
.

'rfiitt.

"

U8f!S,

·r puDCb, crackers and dip. A floral
piece c1 yellow aDd green' cam&amp;·
11oua
uaec1 011 the refresbment
,lable. ·Door prizes were woa by
t Belly Sttvera aDd Betty MJIIioin
: 1tJa Alke Carper, Barbara TriiiP

1tms

~

.'

1•

:tljmi!Beb)'StlveraWOOpmeprlzes.
n.e atll!ndiD&amp; and pre~e~~tlng

'.

thru

PRICE,
Pomeroy •••••• •• ••• .• •. .• •• ••••• • •;~ •••• -· ·~ !227'~!! TTonon
Middleport &amp; RICI!Ie ... , ..... .. .... • ...... ., .w
.
1 Meigs county
• • •• , • •••.• ~ . ..... .. . ....... ••·• Ton

c.o..l)._ .

•' A layette shower was given re1.cently for Wf!lfdy Halar by Vicki
!.Hughes at the ·horne c1 Mr. 'and
· Mrs. George.Carper.
t RefreshmeDIS Inc~ bootie

·

DUI TO THI -FACT TH'T OUR
.SIRVICI DEPT. HAS CLO$ED THI URYICI SPECIALS FEA·
TURID Ill THE NEWSPAPER AD
CANNOT IE HONORED.

Middleport Garden

honored at· }a. yette"shower

w•

SbeliiCurUI, edvilor, at 7 p.m. Dlllllledll plan
=--~~ to·.~~~ the flllr ~·- '

DELIVERED

.

'

~. Halar

and r&lt;part Wft

...:~..:= !!,
:.::'~~L ~
.,~ -~
..--.
11M nat.rnMtlAc be OIIAIC-12 at . hOmt tf

4 ToN MIMIMUM

. I

· Participants are reminded to
· meet at the high school at 5 p.m.
; Wednesday. Arrival Ume back at
: the hlah •school should be about 2
· am. .
&gt; The J.982.&amp;1 Meigs band recently
: completed a wt!!!)c t1 band camp at
: tile Meigs High School under the
: supervision of new director, Ma·
; f11Yn Goodnlte.
, 1be band spent eight ltol'irs each
: day in full band and field rehear·
1 a81.s. The halftime show thlrJ fall wiU
: ieature two trunipet solos, a gloek·
l ·i!Dsplelllolo and a tuba duet.
: To celebrate the end tile camp,
' the jpwpheld a swimming party at

r - -.....--~""'"-----~~--""r'..:;_;_;_....:..~~~

broucN a rabbit llld

j :HOUSE COAL
, '
· Prices are
.#!~"PIHiburgh, NR I
. effective

. fJ ~

Huntington, Wednesday, to ob-

da.Y allltlp CoalliJ Falrpoundo Gil AlljJ.U, at•
a.m. Slle1ia Cwtineol overll&gt;e -.Land allo
11MMn
"""' twop~
1'1111-Ald
- lftd ·!'~
Tile Ulloa
were !'~Akl
~,"
Planla." Tile -

during which planS were made for
a layette showj!r for Cathy Clifford
at the Sept. 7 meeting.
Margaret Amberpr Is hospital·
Jzed and Lora Oamewood Is recuperating from a foot InJury.
The Past CouncDors Club picnic
was. annciunced for 6 p.m. Aug. nat
the Reedsville Locks and Dam.
Ada Blsell wiU furnish the drinks
and members are pennltted to
bring guests. Others attending tbe
meeting were Ada Neutzllng,' Mae
McPeek, MaryK.Holter, AdaMor·
rls, Thelma White, ~l;yn Holley,
Betty RouSh, Esther Smith, Eliza·
beth Hayes, Zelda Weber, Leona
HensleY ~ Letha Wood.

Syracuse pool Frldjly.
aeanup day for th~: band food
booth at the fairgrounds wiU start
Tliursday mortling. Parents are
needed to operate the booth, whlcb
wiU open Sunday and close the fol·
lowing Saturday Dlght. Anyo'newil·
ling to work should contact either
MarHyn Epple at 992·7254 or Cathy
CiiadweU, 992-7024. Donations of
pies, cakes or vegetables would be
appreciated.
Tile band appreciates the admin·
lstratorof'theHenrySwlttFundfor
the donation of $100. The donation
was for marching in the Gen. Har·
~ parade May 22.
, Upcoming events are a boosters
meeting Spet. 13 and a Sept. 3 foot·
ball game at home between Meigs
and Belpre;

' aerve the festtval.

I

·.,

·

· MelgsMarcbl!igBandwiUattend
; Dnuna Across the Tri.State, in

S
,
eni

~en by Keith~~~

the hall.
Beskles Keller, several other
members c1 the coUnt::u wW attend
· the convention. Dorothy Ritchie,
' councUor, presided at the mei!tlng

•
:Band to go to H unttngton

Meigs ,persot:tals

l~wtre .GDeadrilor;ad.JeVenmembtn.
1be Item Glbullneu ~ f t l the CSelrHID

Keuer

Augut 11, 1112
Advancing your status and position in life will be very Important to
you over the coming months. You'll find the means to get the recognition
to which you f~l you are entitled.
.
'
LEO (July ZS.Aug. !!) Patience and tenacity are your greatest assets
in achieving objectives you set for yourself today. Use them, but don't
drag your feet.
VIRGO (Aug. zs.8epC. ZZ) If you truly have faith in your own ideas
; today, y011 won't have·dlfficulty in getting others to do so as well. They'D
know If you're slrlcere.
LIBRA 18epL zs.oct. Zl) Shifting conditions may cause complications for others today, bUt they are likely to work to your ultimate
advantage. Flow with events.
SCORPIO (OeL ~Nov. !!) Try to make matters Important to your
riulte fl. equal concern to yourself today. Your help and suppcx:t Is needed
, in ~r to resolve them effectively.
·
.
SAGrn'ARWS (Nov; ZS.Dec. U) You need meaningful involvements
today to satisfy your sense ol seU·worth. If there .isn't anything con' structlve you can do for yourself, look for ways to be helpful to others.
CAPRICORN IDee. 2Wm 18) Allow some Ume today for a
pleasurable activity unrelated to your usual routine. The change wiD not
·be frivolous or a waste ol time.
AQUARWS IJm •Feb. JJ) This Is a good day to catch up on all the
· -uwe tasks around home which require your attention, but which .you've
neglected.
'
P~ !Feb. ZNiarcb Zl) U there is someone you feel you should
get.ln tOuch with or 11&amp;ven~t been as good a friend to as you would li!te to
be, this Ill the day to make amends.
AIUE8 (Mardi Zl·Aprll U) Give priority today to matters of financial concern. You have a good head for facts and figures, and you could do
. IOIDI!I!1lng profitable.
, • TAURUS (Aprii . .May fit) You function best today if you are able to
• aet your own rouUnes and do things at your pace. Try to lay out your agen' · dafreefrbmir)terference. ,
·
GEMJNJ (May U..June !e) Subdue ,temptations today to talk about
things which ·were told to you in strict confidence. If you give away
secrets you may regret it later.
CANCER I.laDe 2l..July ZZ) Hopes can be realized today If you try to
acem~pllah them In a practical fashion. Take the necessary steps to turn
your dreams Into reality.

dl.~.

.5

· !hods she used and 1he resulta ~
each. Presented at the meeting was

The stale CODventlOn ·to be held
· Aug. 16-$ at Canton was dl.lcussed
' :with Marcia
belngJiamed as
the klcal represe~~tatlve at Tuesday
Dlght's meeting of Chestei" Couhcn
323, DaU&amp;hters of ~a. held at

Astrograph .

un:

..
-·by

ate

.

Cheste~ D of 'A

POINT' PLEASANT, W. Va.
- A Mary Kay glamour cllnlc
wW be oftered at Point Plea·
sant's ScotUsh Inn l'uesday at
7: 30 p.m. It Is free and open to
the public.

WEDNESDAY

AMERICAN
Cross bloodmobile Wednesday,, 1:30 to 5:30
p.m. at Meigs Senior Citizens
Cenfer, Mulberry Hei ghts,

Croup's causes and, treatment

4-H news notes .

l.u•*Y LJodi"' 4-H Club "'"' July a al Naya'
rcsidt.'nct:. Kri:&gt;UI Dtt il t')' pm ided. We di~tuaed
Wtlrkln~ nne shift in tilt ..H fuod btiOt.h at lhefair.
Advisor I• Mro. Mildred Nay. Membt!u pr,..nl
W&lt;l'l' Kri... O.il coy, Sora Noy, s...;. Nay, Karen

.

Family medicine

Resident takes first place for
knitting at senior's. craft show
Tile 1982 Buckeye Hi1IB Regional
Senior Citizens Craft Show was held
July 22-24 at the C. Wllllam O'Neill
Senior Center in Marietta, Ohio.
Over 100 craftsperson&amp; over 00 years
of age participated from Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, Perry and Washington counties.
The crafts were judged by local
experts in various categories and
the first place winners were as
flillows : Ceramics, Robert Trott,

ti!Dd IIIII askai.to~ a covered
dlih tOr the dinner ..

swift and Important Impact.
liable to develop cancer at sotne
·
·
QUESTION: Mter a girl has
reached her teens when should be Ume?
..
examined for uterine cancer?
ANSWERline: Women with breast
,
.
.
•
ANSWERiine: The American Can- ,lumps or thickenings, nipple
'
By Edwan!Sellncl, D.O.
munizationa agalnat the. dlrleases. scared and IJreathe harder and '
cer Society guidelines for cancer diacharge or other abnonnallties
AaalrltutProfe..rot
Tile characterirJ4ic bark·like cough faster. Thll ooly aggravates thli~
related checkups reconunends that are at higher riak for b~. cancer.
Family
and
breathing difficulty 8880ciated brea~ problt!lll. To allevtate the.
all asympwmatlc women age 20 and Such women should have an annual
with
croup are calllled by the syqlllml, sit with the child for ap-:
over, and those under 20 wh9 are examlnatioo by a doctor, and should
ol O.leopalbkl
swelling ol the vocal cords and the pnmlmately•30 miDutea In I Iteam
sellll8ily active, have a Pap test an- practice breast self-examination MedldDe
lining of llle windpipe helow them. filled batbrocm IUid J:'II!Bt eveey'
nually for two negative monthly. Tiley should also consult
QUESTION:
When the child with croup breatbes, two or tine hcJW:L It Ia allo pllllible
examlnationa, then at least every the doctot concerning the need for a What ia croup and
he or she rilakes harsh, rattling to reUeve tile breathlnc dlrJtreu by;
tliree years until the age ol85.
mammography~tion.
how Is it caused?
IIOUnda. U aevere respiratory dlf· CIITYln&amp; the child ~ lnt,o llle'
QUESTION: If one has had
For more information call m.
ANSWER: CfO.
flculty II encountered, the breast cool night, air. Frequently pmnts ,
several benign breast lwnpa, Is one 7531.
up Ia caused by a
bone and nedl1'1l1111Cles.tiecome very arrive at the emercency room with.
.vinis and Ill one of
prominent with each ~th.
their cnJUP)' ehlld ooly to find be Ia,
the most common ·
QU~ION: How Ia croup br'eallm.g mucb euler dlie to bla ex·;
treated?
. JI(IIIUA to the outllde alt.
respiratory dlrJea.
llCIIRECit
'
sea in cllildlen between the agea of
ANSWER: The
major!~&gt;' ol In IDDit
~
one and four. While it can occur at the time croup Ia treated at home. ~ treat the cnJUp symp,!
any time, crOup iB most common in Only a very small nwnber ol cases toms. U, hoWever, nooe ol them belp;
There are warning signals around swallowing.
require hollpitalization. In addiUon, the child after two or three hours or•
us every day - stop sig~ls, yield
- aJvious change in wart or mole. the fall and early Winter.'It niay be very
few cases are treated with an- if the c:'hil4l ... very rapid breathing.
preceded
by
several
daya
ol co14
signa, pollee sirens. But perhaps the
- Nagging cough or hoarseness.
symptoms
such
as
numy
nose,
mild
tibiotics
since the cause Ia generally
most Important of aD the signals The , American Cancer Society fever and a sporadic cough. viral. U It ia necessary to ~e the fl. to to 00 breaths per minute, . :
Cancer's Seven Warning Signals recommends that you conta&lt;:t your Frequently the vinls infects many child's temperature, the .ther- blulrJh hue to the fingernalla or lips •
unable to swallow an&gt;1blng or bu :
are the most overlooked.
doctor if you recognize any of these children in a geographic area and an mometer should be placed under the Ia
pronoanced
drooling, leek iJn. ;
The American Cancer Society si~ns in yourself. Early detection
epidemic of croup seems · In arm. When handling a child with rriediate medical attention. And, If;!
wants to tell you more about these and prompt treatment make the dif· progress. Other causes fl. croup may croup at home, it Ia especl•lly
Important signals. "Knowing aU ference in the cancer statistics. be due to measles ~ diphtheria; ne()essary to .be' comforting and you hive any queallont as to your '
chll4's condltion, give your •
seven is one ol the best protections About 131,000 people with cancer in but these are quite uncommon reasaurlng since ·a frantic approach physiclanacaD.
'
you have against cancer because the United States will probably die in nowadays due to the widespread iJn. often causes· the child to become
'
.
,. ' ••
like all signals, Cancer's Seven War- 1980 who might have been saved by
ning Signals help you laJre care of earlier treatmelit.
yourself by watching out for the
Of every six pe~ple who get cansigns that might mean trouble," said cer, two will be saved and four Will
,s, Michael, publlt;. lnfonnation die. But of the four ~ will die, one
The Daily Sentinel
chairman of the Meigs County unit.
might have been saved with earlier
, - Change In bowel or bladder diagnosis and prompt treatment.
Entries for the Meigs County Fair rosettel; and Grand Champion
IIJIPS-1
habits.
For more information and a pri~ draft horse show must be in by 4 .S&amp;allion and Gnpld Champion Mare
" Dfvlllla tfiiiiJ ' '[
'
- Aspre that does not heal. ·
ted liat of Cancer's Seven Warning p.m. Friday and Judging wiD be at 10 receiving tropl)les.
l'1llllllbed ... , " " " ' -......, tl1nJuidi
- Unusual bleeding or diacharge.
Signals, contact 'the MeiKB County
Frljloy, lll Coout
lilt 011io Vai!Oy
TherewiDaliobeanopenclaasfor
- Thickening or IWl\p in breast or uniJ of the American Cancer Society a.m. Tuesday,Aug.17.
l'llblilhl"'l can-. · llillllmetlla, Inc.,
Classes for cOmpetttion are:
fanner's hitch, with premiums of
...,_, ONo 411t. lfHIII.lloo.- &lt;'lau
elsewhere.
at Mulberry Hts. in Pomey, Ohio or
pclllqe paklatPotneror, Ol_&gt;lo.
Belgian:
Stallion
foal,
stallion
one
$2S
first
place,
$20
second
place,
and
- Indigestion .or difficulty in call itZ-7531.
year and under two yeafll, stallion $16 third pla&lt;;e.
_
, T i l e - Pr..,lldoad Dolt
It Pi.- A1aoc1otiGo and lilt Amnican
two years and under three years, · All Meigs County-owned horses
110- lapel'l'lrillilrllon .....
stallion three years .and under four are entered free upoo ,the purchase
AIIVOIIII1ntt ~~a,.......u••, · Bronhlm
New
jllper
Sola,
711
Thlnl
A..,...,
New
years, stallion four yea..S or over, ol a membership Ucket, and all outYGit!NowYonl•l7.
. mare foal, mare one Year and pnder . side county horses wiD require a $1
I'OII'I'MASTBR: Send - - io Tile DoHy
two years, mare two years and un- per bead entry fee after the purSentiiiOI,IUCooutSI., ,~,OIIlo-.
der three years, mare three yean chase fl. "' eDdb!tor tlcltel! Each
. ~una
and under four years; mare four exhibitor.lrJ requeated to display t,he
llyC.m.rw-yearsandover,mar,eandfoal, three ' owner's name,~ name, and adO..wftl&lt; . . .. I .. .. . . . . . . . . .. ... " " 11.111
O..Month ........ . .... .. ........ . uo '
best ol breed; Perchei'On: same dress behind llle hones.
'
. .. . ..... IIUO
Hocking County; Crocheting, Helen County.
classes as Belgian; Grade Horses: · No straw wiD be ' furni.shed, and. O..Y..r . ...............
liNGLE COPY
PIUCill
.
Jordan, Hocking County; Em1bese first place winners then gelding three years and over horses remoyed before 4 p.m. Satur-:
Doily ........... .. .. .. .... . : .. . 11 c.nta
broidery, Dorothy Smith, Hocking competed in a•statewide competition gelding under three years, ·.na~ day, 'Aug. 21, will forfeit the
.
Subo&lt;'flb&lt;n not deolrinollo pay lilt carrier
County; Knitting, Irene Chriaty, In Columb111, Helen Jordan foal, mare three years and under, premiwn. ·
1111y re~nlt In achoa.ril&gt;! ·dl"" lo Tho _Doily
Meigs County; Macrame, Audra (crocheting) ol Hoelting County and Jllllre three years and over, spring
I
lk'llllnol m a J, I 0&lt; II 1n0olh bull. Ctodlt '
will b./ ivcn ~ler eac..'h ntont.h.
Van Dyke, W!IShlngton County; Hal Y~ (woodwprking) ot colt.
MlsceDaneous, Lucille Clay, Meigs H~ County nceived first place
Premiums ol $15 for first, $12 for
·No """"'fipt""" by "'"II P&lt;f!nllled In 1o1ma
Mr. and Ml'll. Dale Roush and
whlon! tone t.'trri« lti'Vk-e ~ 1vaillble.
County; Quilts, Norwood Church awardl. The Norwood Church second,$9forthird,and~forfourth
children
ol
st.
Alballs
spent
the
past
Qullters, Washington Cowity; Sculp- Qullten ol WlllhiD8ton County took ·places will be awarded in each elias,
MAIL~~
ture, Hal Yarrington, HockiJ1g Coun- second place with their quilt. Those and . JUnior ChampiOn Stallion, week here with hill pjlr~lll, Mr. ·and
IJW..U
.... . .... .. ............. 111.81
ty; Weaving, Harold Smith, ri!ceivlng honorablemenUon awards Senior Champion S&amp;allion, Grand Mn. Albert ,Roush. :rtJeir son,
»
Wa&lt;b .... · .......... · .. .. .. .. . 12UI
Washington County, and Wood- were Robert Trott, Hocking County; Champion StalliOn, Junior ChaJn.. . · David, remained for a longer visit.
12W&lt;-.I!o&lt; ; .... ~Oi.i.' &gt;...... . 1$1.jl
working, Hal Yarrington, H~ Dofothy Smith, Hoelting County; pion Mare, Senior Champion Mare,
Mr. and Mrs. Oren Laplante ol
IJWt..U ......................... 111.11
• •,.... .... ~ ...... , ... , ... ..... IJUI
· Irene Cbrlaty, Melg,l County; Audra 411d Grand Cllampion Mare, wiD be Hernarido, Fla. were ·tecent vlsltors
12W..U ................. :•., . .... IIUI
.
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=Dyke, walhington CQWity; awarded in both Belgian· and Per- ' olMr.andMra.lJoydWright.
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. .. ld. Smith,
Clay, Meigs
County;
and . seillor
cheronchamptona
. classes, receiving
with juniilr
and r;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;!;;;~~~;;~~::;
bwolill'llll such "' fu,.H•i•l•• lll'tnH. Advllllll'll
Wllihinllton
County.
I'OfM!Ites
arc Betty Adkintl, Candy ConUJiuclr: and Kt&gt;ith
These Items u wen as an others and grand ,.............Ions
lYing
Allkin:t. Membt.'OI pr~nt Wt'f'l' Mi:ily Adklru,
f
the • .};_
.
....._.....
rece
T""Y" Adkins. Krisll C."nolo&lt;IJ ard B~erda
rom
statewi.., competition, will trophies, Gra.de llorae divialon will
Shw&lt;r.- Rep •o1&lt;r Mi ..y Adld...
be on dlrJplay at the Martin Janis feature Junlot' Champion Mare,
Senior Cen\er on the Ohio State . Senior Champion Mare, Junior
' .J
Fairgrounds during the fair, A'"'· &amp;- &lt;;hampton ' l'~l.ll•ft, and
or
1be Flltwood1Fl6ri,t-Il Club'metJulY2llt
-D
~·
22
llle home of llllella . • advllor. ~ llle
•
Champion GeJdiJ)g, . aD
, · J'eCd
ViJ\g
1

Cancer warning signals

Pomeroy.

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The Dally Sentlnei-P

• Ohio

Me.igs.·County 'organiza~ions hold meetings

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at

miatakea and now I~m

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1; r1/r
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ldd

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. R'I.JTLAND - Sbtifig at
I'OMEltOY :- All girls, grades
~ Qvic Centet, 7:311 to ·
9-12, Interested ' In playing
'10:3,11 p.m.; cN1dren, '1; adults,. · volleylaU at Eastern High $chool
P; ._,..own~tes. .
s.'lould report to high school 7
'
--.,..
p.m. Wednesday for short
MEIGS ~lhletlc Boosters,
meeting.
Tuelday, ~:ali p.m. at. hillh
sChool,
~'
I
POMEROY - American Red
Cross
!lloodmobile at Meigs
.. MIDDL}i:PORT Amateur
Senior
Citizens
Center, Mulberry
Gardl!aen wm meet w~
Heights,
Pomeroy,
1:30 to 5:30
~ at the horne of Mrs. Harry
p.m.
Moore. AlllatiJ)g holltes8 wiU be
Ka~ H)'lell. New ottlcers
POMEROY - Big Beno
wtl1 Ill: b!ltalled' by ¥n· Edgar Citizens Band Radio Club will
Reynolds. ,
meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
northboW1d roadside park oo
. MIDDLEPORT - Tbe Dun· Route 33. All are asked to attend
caD Flitnny of Tampa, F1a., wiD
the meeting at which a work
11t1 ~ at the Ash Street se1111ioit will be held.
.Freewill BaptiSt Church, Mid·
HARRISONVILLE
dJeliort, Saturday -at 7:30 p.m.
Harrisonville Chapter 256, Order
'' 1be publle Is Invited.
.
ol the Eastern Star,· will meet
I
1 1 "
7:30p.m. Tuesday at~ temple.
A~~
~,r.~~ ~~ ~~ ~ag~
Robert Morrill Night will be olr
I r
dinner
wiU be
. y at 7 p.m. at served with l)lembel'll of the
Masonic Fraternity to be
· · the bali. 1bere wUl a dance and
band at 9 p.m. Ali Eagles and ' hOnored; All Masons are invited
their famlllel! are Invited to at· to attend the meeting.

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1 hereby ·notify atr·my patient$ that 1 am physical· ·

iy unable to return to practice at Meigs Surgeons, Inc.
Ali M~ical r~ords are left with Dr. R ldgeway,
copies tor transfer to any phys~lan of cho1ce may be
obtained by signing a reqqest Ill hit oHice,.
, · 1 wish, to thank all who supported me during my
tenure here in Pomeroy. You are tt»num11ous to tha!lk
Individually. Your loyalty, encou~t. cards,
prayers, and adylce will always Ill .remembered. I
thank each of you sincerely and wllh you good health. ,

N.J. BILINGER, D.O.

Insure two
and save
If you 're a two-car fam ily,
Nationwide can save yo u
money on your auto
insurance. Additiona l liberalized benefits are av ai lable to those who qualify .
Call a Nationwide agent lor
complete details.

If you have a chair that you would

like to cane, attend the Chair Caning
Workshop on Sept. 7 and 8 at the
Meigs County Extension Office.
Tile class will concentrate on basic
chair caning and will cost $15 pius
supplies for the two sessions. Each
IK!SSion will be~in at 6 p.m. and end
around 9 p.m.
Interested -persons should contact
the Meigs County Exle115ion. Office
as soon as possible. All participants
are required to bring the piece of
furniture to be caned to the Ex·
tension Office on Friday, Aug. 20,
between 1 and 3 p.m. At that time,
the cost of supplies will he determined. Supplies will range in cost
fromfl to $15. :Vou must pay for sui&gt;'
plies on Aug. 20.
Registration is limited to 12 per·
sons. For more infonnation or to
regiater, contact Dale Stoll at the

NEACIL CARSEY
382 £. Second St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992·6226

1

~I NATIONWIDE
~~!Y.~~~~.~

u.

Nalionwlde Mutual 1nsunnca Comp• nv
Home Off1Ct : Columbus , Ohi o

·SPECIAL
On All Suede
And Leather Coat.r

SAVE 20%
On Cleaning of Att
Suedes and Leathers during
the month of August.
'

ROBINSON'S ..LAUNDRY
AND DRY 0 FANFRS
.

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Ph. 992-5428
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Ohio

enate-House conference··
'
~rnmittee agrees o~ taX lsf\lue
~ ·; Wj\SHING'I'ON (AP) -The con· ~panel negotiating a $98.9
- ~~-Increase bW has reached

.~ment on

most parts of an In·

duded $S-b011on package aimed at
'catehlrig ·careless or cheating

. ,IUpayers.

• The legislation would provide the
Illtemal Revenue Service a way to
· tlibtell tax collection on Income
"from savings bonds, capital gains,
:·~arter agreements and state
,JP.come-tax retums -large chunks
, d which now escape taxation.
I' . .

'· The agreement was reached by a
Senate-House conference commit·
:"" as Presklent Reagan stepped up
.ettorts to win congressional support
' for the bW. The measure would
:,i'alse about $99 blli\On In taxes and
.cut spending, chiefly for Medicare
' Uld Medicaid, by about $17 bUilon
"over the next three Y.e ars.

Reagan, concerned' about vocal
opposition to the bW amolli conservatives, arranged to deliver
a.House today. He c~lled of support
from about a dozen of the group.
"We feel somewhat more confl·
dent" about the bll~ said White
House spokes~ Lilrry Speakes.
"We're stw behind (but) he's
clearly making prilgress In those
meetings. It now ap))!!ArS
to be
r
more of a presenting the facts job
than a selling job."
"You don't have much of analternative" to the tax Increase, Ifthe
federal budget. and Interest rates
are to be reduced, Rep. Sllvlo
Conte, R-Mass., told reporters.
Rep. Edward R. Madigan, R·W.,
said Reagan used the meeting to
threaten a veto of any spending
bills that exceed the budget
Madigan said he left the meeting
"thinking the president wUI do

.

much better on I~ tax bill" than he
had originally thcilight.
Reagan 1\as beet! meeting With
House Republicans In an effort to
put down a rebelliOn that threatens
the tax blll and, With It his plans for
cutting government borrowll)g.
Lyn Notz~r. fdrmerly Reagan's
pollU&lt;:.al director, was leading the
conservative · cllarge against the
bllllut week. But, 8tter being subJected to a bit of Reagan's frlenclly
coaxing, he WaJ! persuaded to tum
1.80 degrees. He Is now leading a
White House cruppatgn for enactment of the bDI, worldnrt as an unpaid adviser. l --- ,-, '
"I had the president 's side of this
ellplained to
tliorouiJi!Y and I
~ that he' was righter than
~Other guys,''N'clfzilerSiild Monday. He added ·he' ooes not think
Americans Will view the tax bOost
as a fllp-Oop for Reagan.

.••

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
~nergy Department says Standard
"on (Ohio) has agreed to pay $15
·"mWlon - InClUding $4.4 mWion to
1•0hlo - to settle allegations of overcrude oU and refined petro-.leum products over a 7~-year
:'jlerlocl.
··, ;: SOhlo did not admit the violations
but said It agreed to the consent
·•·order to avoid a lengthy, expensive
"'egiii battle.
" Under the agreement announced
- Monday, Sohlo Will pay $5 million to
': .the federal government and $10mll·
. .UOn Will be dtsii1buted to the go" veniments of 19 states and the
·: 'District of Columbia.
The dlsii1butlon Is to be propor,.·tlonal to the amount of business So·: hlo does In the various states.
'. Ohio, where Sohlo Is headquar-

eo.

:pricing

tered, wUI get largest state share,
DOE reported. Pennsylvania Is
next With $1.4 miWon.

It will be up to state offldals ID
decide what to do with the money.
DOE spokeswoman SU11811111! H.
Howard said Sohlo was accused of
exceeding prlce controls set by the
agency's Economic Regulatory
Administration.
/
The payments are being made to
state and federal treasuries because "It would have beet! difficult
to ascertain who was overcharged," Ms. Howard said.
Neither OOE nor Sohlo would
give detaUs on the amounts of the
alleged overpricing.
•
"It basically stems fnm Inter·
pretatlona of tbe complicated OOE
prlce control system and the appll·

The alleged violations occurred
between Afll. 19,
an~ Jan. ZT,

tm.

981.

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.Canadians expected to .drill on' Eri~
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TOLE;OO, Oblo (AP) -A shOrt·

term surpl)ls of natural gas may be

"the reason Canadian companies
..~·.,.re not jumping at a chance to be
ceflrst tO drUI for natural gas In the
·' .United States' portions of Lake
_ -Erie, experts say.

HoWever, Rae Horst, chief geolo.; gist at Onlarlo's·petroleum resoul"
. · ~ ·ces laboratory In London, says, "I
expect they'll be over there very
.: s~rtly. or at Ieas,t trying to get per·
,. , ndssion tor exploration."
' U.S. Army Corps of·Engineers of' ; llclals In Buffalo say there Is a
short-term surplus of natural gas
supplies. But the Corps, In a four-

year, $13 miWon study ftthe poten·
tlal for drWing for oil and gas on the
lake, said, "All conventional natural gas resources Will .i~Jve to be
developed In onler to satisfy the~
mand for gas In the mld·to long-

term."

Richard Broussard. a spokes·
man for the Corps' Buffalo omce,
said neither Canadian or dOmestic
companies are waiting In line to
drUI Lake Erie.
The Corps has concluded that
natural gas can be safely extracted
from the eastern and central
basins.
Ivan CuthW, vtcepresldentotex·
ploratlon for the Toronto-.based

~au Co~. one of the two
lai'g8t petroleum lease holders on
Ontario'&amp; aide of the lake, said a

sublldlary of Consumers would be
lnterelted In worldJliiBB an oftshore
coatractor for An)!!rlcan Interests.
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Siperlor SMint c,.

' ,.,., .......

Between Cheshire &amp;
~14klltport, Ohio

......

r__.,..._

.

~02 Mechanic st.

Pomer,.,, OH.
PH.ttN$06

CCSJIIII ....., .....
c•• , ........ , ..... lllf.

. .. Dri::l:l ..............
W-Gnllllillll

.............ilia

M 111::11 . . II Price ,

rot. &amp; Sol I ,P.M..tlr.ll

,.....

,:

• · F,ea ..nlaJ.
. ,Ciii-B3322 •

M1111111 II Price

1111$ 1011111'1U.

IW.·Sol.-lllnll::l , _
IIII::II&amp;II:MI'MI:

YOUNG'S .

, · ~N'S
AUTO TRIM

. tUGENl LONG

CAIIDuLIGHT INN
' P!IESENTS

POMEROY - Nicely ''modeled 3-4 t&gt;edroom home,
level lot, excellent neighborhood . Owner wants
$5,500 down, balance - ) 13% Interest, 20 yoars,
S25l.75 month. Sale Prlce$27,500.

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i

7·1Mmo. pd .

e SEAT COVERS
e,)IINYL TOPS
e(ONV£RTIBLE TOPS
•cARPETS
• A Complet• Lint of
Automobile Upholstery
8·4· 1 mo. pd.

CARPENT£R
SERVIC~

....__,,

Ill&amp;

:::=.-=.r""""'
·-=.=
ltrltllit:IIIMI

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ttHm or tt2·7l14
Pomer9'f, Ohio
9-30-tfc

c.rr:C:a
.....'-rr· II
. O,.la.fri.
2:tl ,.._.tlf UP.
5::1.1 Sa ttl ,....tJO ....

OHIO VA.LLEY
ROOFING

PHONE tfl·tt13
B-1·1""·

· REEpSVILLE - A mobile home with an extra factory • bUilt 2 ·room addition and a porch. 2·3
be&lt;lroom•, family room, lots of closets, and a large
lot. Flnancln!JaVallable. $17,500.
pOMEROY- ljear the gtade school, 3-4 bedrooms,
huge family room, full basement, nice level lot.
Good bUY at $31.'900.
·
' VISIT OUR IOOIH AT IIIE IIEIGS coum FAint

REALTORS!
Htnry E. Cleland, Jr., GAt _.. __. _.... .. _992-6191
~~~n. Trussell . . .... ...... ..... . .... .. .. 949·2..0
~tt:e s. Turner .... ___ . . _. .... .... .. .. 992-5692
Office . . .. .. . ....... ........ .. ........ tt2·2259

DEPARTS rouRT - JGiat W. IIIDeldey Jr.,
llallked by two IJUI:'dl, leavl!l by
MoadaJ for SL Elllabetll'l Holpllal
he 8Jlllllllred Ia etJUrt to

. *"

•

m

i'

·:rc:

A
.

WL

I

lan"t it
about time

Hinckley stays hospitalized;·
therapy prograQlS devCloped '

••
. "Their buslnes'' Is drilling for

operatorS, and theY're
avallif!Ie;" cUthlll said. . ..
CoiiSUmers and. ~Ina Exploration eo.. with headquarters In
CaJpry, Alberta, each hold more
than a rnWion acres of Lake Erie
I - . A third Cana'dtan Interest
now exploring the lake Is Place on
and Gas Co. .cf. Port Rowan,
(other)

Ol)tarlo.

•

By ~KY MABOASAK
AMoo!eled l'reN Writer
WASHINGl'ON (AP) -The trial
over, the dl~&amp;~~osls done, doctoi's at
St. i:llza~hs Hospital wDI now
work out a treatment program for
Jolin W. Hinckley Jr., who still
"th!nks dally about ldiJlng Jodie
Foster," the actress. ·
Hospital spokesman Wayne
Pinel said Hinckley, 28, 1.11d a team
ft professionals Will Jointly work
·out the rfil'.• mix of group and lndl_.
vtdltal tl' m~py. the propl!l' dosage
t:t medication - anti-depressives
- Uld the acllvltles Ill whlcb he can
pattlclpa~.

Hinckley wu •sent to the feder·
ally flrtanoed filciUtY on )une 21 after a jury found him Innocent by
reason of Insanity on charges of
lhoQtlng President Reagan and
tlll'et? other men.
·
On Monday, U.S. District Judge
Barrington D. Parker ordered
Hinckley committed to the taclllty

,..
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•.j

'
m-lllg he Will un• Hinckley ~an 'Wipredll:tably dangerous person." Doctor~ • said
dergo treatment Untll now,lie has
. ~kley suffers from tour major
~ evaluated.
Parker, accepting the report of .penonallty disorders and major
St. EltzllbethS' doctors, found that depresSI01). which theY said Is ;tn
Hinckley Is "at the presmt time ••partial rerntsston. ••
"Pr:esently, lie thinks dailY about
and Will In the~blefuture be
kiiUng Jodl.e Foster," the actress
dangerous to !i1J111e1f or others."
with whom carried on a one-sided
Hinckley, wemng a plnstrlp
love affair and who he tried to IJn.
shirt, no sport coat and dark trouspress by shooting the preslden.t, the
ers without a belt, appeared In
'
Parker's courtrocm for the first report said •• ~ •
I
I
"In the rl!jll!llt past, he has ~- .
time since his a~.
In a finn voice, lie tuld Parker he pressed sexual and aggres5\Ve
'
Ideas about Ms. Foster," the l'I!PI'rt
was
waiving his J'llht to a hearing
on hla releaie. Dllcus8blg 1M doc- said. "He has more frequent
thoughts of murdering her; ;he nlrw
tors' evaluatlo~ of his current men·
tal state, Hinckley Said, "I don't · has thOUgttts ot raping hel\'&lt;' ;•
Pllleuald the hOspital rn\llt J1!1W
necessarily ' lllfee, with their
,
decide\
whether to move Hinckley
opinion."
'file law allows Hinckley to petl· from the8-tiy-13foot room m·a wlird
Uon the court evtry six months to with patlentS.wboee mental sta(!lls
tree him, and he must ask permis- being evaluated to a section where
sion any time wants to leave the all the residents have beet! tllrouCh
hospital grOOnds, even tor a few a trial, and, like Hinckley, hAve
hourS.
•
been fouhd Innocent by reason~ of
The St. Ellzabetbs report called ' lns&amp;nity.
1
Indefinite~.

'

The Daily Sentinel

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, 'J&amp;F
CONTRACTJNG
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_ TheDaily Sentinel

,_E 992-2156
0, Wrill DAilf ~ltul CIA.siltM Out.
Ill COIIriSI .• I ' - ,. O...ur"

J'

.•.

.'

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
..
Classlfleds and .
.
SavetiJ . .
'

I •

.

...

RNI

•

Write your own ad, and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel vour ad by phone when you get
~esults. Money not refundable.

VIRGIL I • Ill.

.21!1E· ~Bid lk

Phone
1·(614)·992·3325
NEW LISTING - 3.5
acres. -" mosllp level.
Good ~leelwood 12x70
two bedroom mobile
home . Cellar and water
well . :Just$20,000.
.
NEW LISTING - 7
room

house, 3 or •

bedrooms, but no~ a
large home. Needs a·
bath and some flxin'. 2
level lots for only
$16,500.
AEDUCED - 3 acres
with water tap, electric
and nat. gas available .
For ·a quick ,sale will
take $4,500.
BAAGAIN - Small 3
bedroom vinyl siding
home . Balh and all
utilities. Asking $16.000
but make us an offer.
BARGAIN - 6 room
frame home. Walk to
the stores, bath, nat. gas
ard other utilities. Want
$17,500. What will you
2.8

ACAE5

bedrooms,

I

Public Not"lc'_e_,_IN THE
. COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ROBERT G. dHLEY

:;.11
.
M-lf!llrlj Olllo 45710,
Pllilllll f,

·VI-

LOUISE HILBERT, - ·
•ddrtuwu

Y -·~-

&amp;:~urn

---·

ll'tHIR

AMIPOKI R,'

·General

~

I

give.

.I

Eltollt -

-

3

basement

with garage, bath. city
water, and gas . $25,000.
Assume mortgage.
2' ACRES - Eastern
·school. Remodeled 2
~rooms. modem bath
and ~ltthen. Aluminum
~!ding, 'basement and
pe~llng , • Offer might
bu .

'

sy AC.USE - Lovely 2

aaroe·

bl:droom, fur-.
nlillled mCblle ·hOme:

C. R. MASH .
CONST.RUCTION

3

Announcements

SWEEPER

and

sewing evenings.

WAITRESS. maids, bar·
tender&gt; &amp; clerks wanted.
Write qualification &amp; phone
number to: Job Placement,
P.O. Box 102, Henderson,
wv 25106.

maChine repair, parts, and

r, ca1~
at Grown's
' ,nidermy, Co. Rd. 25 ·

1.

Davj~

BISSELL .
SIDING CO.

PH. 992-6011

EXCAVATING

INC.

~

BACKHOE
FOR HIRE

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

•742·2328

r,:;;~~~~~~~::t:::::::::=1~3·~-'-----------·

=-ta~

.....

SERVICE
BARN

------ - - - -

9__ Wan_!ed To BuL_
WANTED TO BUY Old fur ·
nllure and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
444-3159 or 256-1967 in the

Pick up and Buying Gold, Silver, MATURE woman wltiT
restaurant experience. ApVacuum
old coins, scrap ply in Person at Homestead
I
one half mile up Platinum,
nre1r Chester.
rings &amp; silverware. Dally Really, 2411 Jackson Ave.
Georges Creek Ad. Call quotes
i .v . •1nd Rildio Rep.1ir
* ~eptlnystems .
available . Also Pt. Pleasant, wv .
446·0294
..
~Is" other
flectronic
* Awlttr, s.wer
coins &amp; coin. supplies tor
r m •ipment.
&amp;au lines
sale. Spring Valley Trading --- - -- 1 erry Rrown
Golf Lessons . John Co., Spring Valley Plaza. Experienced chef for
•dump truck
'I ectlnici.,n
restaurant. Please send
Teaford. Chester, Ohio.
•limestOne
446-8025 or 446·8026.
t\Sioci.lte decp-ee nnd
resume to BOK, P.6 ln care
l ~ tcl.us FC C hcense.
lice• &amp; Bonded
Pt. Pleasant Register,
:·hono9B5·3364 Avo .
PUBLIC NOTICE Public We pay cash for late model of
200 Main Sl·. Point
PH. 992·7201
nr 985-3833
Notice for Dark Diamond clean used cars.
Pleasanl, wv . 23550 .
3-29-lfc
7·16·1 mo.
Coal Corp., Shade, Ohio
Frenchtown Car Co .
.__ _ _ _.;...;...;..;;,.alm76. An application Is at
BiII Gene Johnson
WOMAN to care for elderly
446·0069
1----------+---------~ the Meigs County Recorman In his home, part time.
der's office for a strip mine
304-:175·3335.
operation, Frac. 3; T-2N;
R-13-W;
Salisbury
Town·
Wanted to bYY old house in
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
ship, Meigs County, Ohio. Gallipolis.
Will consider WELCOME WAGON INT.
SIDING
Interested people can see home needing
restoration Openings in Mas.on. Gallia
these forms and maps at or one already restOr'ed-:
a. Meigs countys for
the Meigs County Recor· Evans. Call446·2800. -.M.t energetic self starter with
der's Office anytime .
Cntom kitchens 1nd
car who likes meeting
people. Flexible hours,
bathraoms: Reniaclelina,
Wanted to buy antique gOod earning potential.
Finally Opening·Capco. dolls.
dd-tiS, new hOIIIH,
Call446-0857 .
Training provided free in
Antiques, collectables,
"lttUtiful, CUIIOII'I .
plumbinlo electric, sidilfl.
Charleston. Call 304-343·
used
furniture
&amp;
apBuilt G•nges" .
pliances. Something for BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old 6202 Monday 9-5, Tuesday
Coil for frH slcllng
FREE
everyone.
9:30 a.m.-4:30 fUrniture , gold, silver 9-noon, Wednesday 9·noon
estimotu, t4t·210t or i .
p.m . Mon., Wed., Fri . dollar&gt;. wood ice boxes, Or write Nancy Kelley, 16
f4f·2Nf.
.
EstiMATES
Other limes by ap- stone jars, antiques, etc., Abney Circle, Charleston,
No Sund•y Colts
households . v.;y_ 25314. Equal Op·
pointment. Buy-Sell- Trade. Complete
Write
:
M
.
D.
Miller,
Rt . .(, portunity Employer.
527
Fifth
St
..
Ivan
Powell
3-11·1fc
Res .• Racine, Oh. 614-949- Pomeroy, Oh. Or992-7760.
-· - -- - ~-.!. __ _
2485.
- - -- · - - ·-.1.:..---· - -BORED! Broke! Blue! Sell
Gold. silver, sterling. toys and gills for nations
jey,/elry, rings, old coins a. number 1 toy company
P,ERMANENT
currency. Ed Burkel! Bar· Free kit of SJOO. value. 614:
HAIR REMOVAL
COMPLETE
Professional Electrolysis ber Shop, Middleport. 992- 992-7046.
RADIATOR
Center. A.M.A. approved, 347~ .
SE'RVICE
Doctor referals, by apFrom the Smallest
DEPEND.ABLE Babysitpointment only. 304-675· OLD FURNITURE. beds. ter needed in my home, day
Heater Core to the
-Dozers
6234.
La~gest Radiator.
Iron, brass, or wood. Kit- shift, call between 4 and 10
-B•ckhoes.
chen cubbards of all types . p.m. 304·675-5628. .
-Dump Trucks
Radiator Specialist
Tables. round or square.
4
Giveaway
-Lo-Boy
NATHAN BIGGS
Wood ice boxes. Old desks
-Trencher ·
ANY PERSON who has and bOOkcases. Will buy 1-~ - -Sltuatloill WW~
35 Y rs·. e :wperience
-water ' ·
anything to give away and comf)lete household. Gold, SOMEONE to share ride to
-sewer
does not offer or attempt to sliver, old money, po::l&lt;et Ohio
SMITH
NELSON
University this fall
-Ga.sLines
offer any other thing for watches, chains, rings, and
·
.MOTORS,
-septic Systems
sale may place an ad In this etc. Indian Artifacts of all Call256·6324.
column.
There
will
be
no
Pomeroy, Oli.
types. Also buying baseball Large or Smoll Jobs
charge IOjthe advertiser.
Ph. 992-2174
cards. Osby Marlin 992- Will care for elderly men
PH. "2·2471
6370.
and women In our home
2-26-tfc
8+1 mo.
Also have rooms for rent
An older long haired male,
with or without board.
Used beginners set of golf Trained and experienced
long haired,
wnife
male clubs. Right or left handed. 614-992·7314:
;==::;;;;::===:;t====~===::i white
cat, 3 yr.
old semi.
cat Call446-0728.
John Teaford, Chester, Oh.
' 4-4
-0
4·-·----614-985-J&lt;/61 .
Will care for elde.rly men
Cut down 2 trees. have _ - ·- · -~· - - - - - - - and
in our home.
wOOd for firewOOd . Call446- WANTED-new hay, call Ed AI~ women
have rooms for rent
314f.
at30H43·591S.
with or without board.
Trained and experie~ced .
-..
.. .. ."'
Full size mattress. Caii446614·992-7314..
or anything else you
868L
want to do, because I
I would 1ike to do house
live with • carpenter.
Callicoat (llother cal a. I
cleaning In the Five PointsHis name is AI Tromm.
kitten. Caii61H88-8217.
Chester-Tuppers Pl•ins
11
Help W•nttd
area . Call Sharon 614-985responsible 4143.
3 kittens. 3'1&gt; mo. old. 2 Mature,
Rull•ncl, Oh.
babysl1fer. Elj!tded In my
Calico,
1
bl•ck
and
while.
7-15-1 mo. pd.
home for~ and 5 month old
61H42-2328.
OlflS. Fltl!lblt hours, 0\l(n House painting-exterior
transportalon, references. and interior . Trash
i~g - grass
cuttino .
TWO Guinea PigS, 304·895· Call 446-6256, 9 to 11 WeekChimney re-painting. ROOf
days.© ·
painting. 614-992·7419.
• backlrot
exc•vellng

.

oo

..
•t"

Someone to come dally io
help with house cleaning,
cooking &amp; yard sale. 614992·2645.

•
'•
'

H
•
Zanten, 31, of Evanston, m., was 1."s8id. Herhollll!towltwuno$ava1Ja..
since Israeli troops Invaded Le- ci&gt;nsulates lnZurlchwerecjamaged restaurant.
They were heckled by
killed and her husband David, 37, a b1e.
·
banon J1111e6 to crush the f'~l!ll~ by bombs.
sever'al hundred demonsl)'at.Qrs,
professor at Northwestern UnlverJewish leaden 'said the attack . Uberatlon Organization's miUtary
Antl·semltlsm Js a particularly mOst of them apparently Jewish,
slty, suffered minor shrapnel Monday on the city's best-known Olllanlzatlon there.
,
.·
·.sensitive subject In France, W:here , who shbuted "Mitterrand Is a traJ,
wounds, pollee said. A woman aged Jewlsti restaurailt, Jo Golden• "Jews to the ovens! ." ltlillarui the DreyfUs Atfalr at the tum of the tor" and den~mced F'reru;h media
about 50 was also kllled, but has not berg's, was ~ 1,bloQIIlest anti·
sbouted as they marched past a
century dlviled !be country and the cover~ of the Israeli ~va51on of
been positively ldenllfled.
semitic outbreak In France since synagogue In Rome during a strlke Vichy govefnment during World Lebanon. .
·
A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman World War II. They ~uled a
demonstration Jwie'25.·
War II sent 125,000 Jews to Nazi
Responsi~JWty tot thl! three at·
confirmed two Americans had demonstration Wednesday to pro- 1 "All Jews Forbidden To Enter," dl!ath camps. , F)'ance's .700,00(). tacks during the week betor11 was
been kWed but said the Identity of test International terrorism.
read a sign last week In a gi'(!CI!ry strong Jewish ·community II the · clalnned tiy Direct Action, ~ S!llall
the second victim could not be reIt was the fourth anti-Jewish at·
window In Ternl, north of Rome. fourth largest In the world after the ·French anarchist group, but It deleased pending permission from tack In Paris Ia el&amp;ht days but the
The grocer told pollee he was showUnited Stall!ll,lsrael and .the.Soviet
liled It was mvolved In the restau·
the family.
first to cause deaths or Injuries.
lng his "solidarity With uie heroic UDion.
· t '
rant attack. Pollee said tlleYbad
Another American tourist, Eva
Evidences of IIJitl·semit~m also Ralestinlan people."
"JIIdalsm Is~ a religion of ven·
solid evidence of the lilentlty of the
Shure, 65, from IWnols, was also have 111rfaced Ia Italy, West Ger·
· An explosion at the Munich air· · geance, but we hope that these at· , attackers.
.
wounded and hospltallz.ed,
lll&amp;IIY, Al111111i and SWit:llerland -port near the check·ln counter of tacks Will be n!prellsed," ~chief • The worst previous anU-Jewish
t
the Israeli alrlln~ El AI on July 31 rabbi oJ ~arls, Alliin Goldmail•..Ud . atta~k In France 111 recent YE:ars
lnj\u'l!d seven people. Last wl!ek at a inemOr1a1 III!I'VIce MondaY
occurred on Ocl 3, 198&gt;, -when a
youths threw bags t;l paint atls- nlgbt for the. victims of the resdynamite-rigged motorbike ex·
raell tour buses In Bertin.
tauraJit sh!lCJ!Ina.
.
.ploded O\ltslde a Parts synagogue
A few days after the Israeli lnva·
President Frucoll Mltterrand ) dlllng fouqieople and Woundlnl 12.
slon, the home of Nazi-hunter and Interior Mbllster Gastoa Def·
No one clatmed responslbWty. and
Simon Wlesenthal In Austria wu ferre attended the service, wblch
no one was ever arrested for the
· bombed, and the U.S. an!) Is-raeli was held 'at ·a synagogue near the
attack.
'
'
' -

:"!•'

I

~;;: . • •

..J...;....""'""'".-,

I

MIDDLEPORT - Atwo bedroom, one stbry home,
~:~pellng,. utllity room, fenced back yard. Only

·:Two Americans killed, .two wounded in Paris ,anti•semitism attack,_
"'I" ' PARIS (AP) -Two Americans
~~: were ldlled and twc wounded In the
:.. :,terrorist attack 1n the ancient Jew·
.•- lsb quarter of Paris, pollee and u.s.
•: o · Embassy officials said today.
t. The Americans were amot1!flhe
,.,,, six people kWed and 22 wounded In
.. tiE attack Monday on the city's
·~
ttamoosJewlshrestaumnt,o!. : 1008
fldals said.
The terrorist shooting spree In
Paris heightened fears of a new up! ::~; surge of anti-Semitism In Western
, - Europe as a result of Israel's lnva• slon t;t Lebanon.
American tourist

..

,I

Tills Is the aer:{lpd such settlement A similar US:nillllon-iettJe.
ment was ~last fall between
the department and Chevron.

"

}

POMEROY- owMr Will Sell thiS&gt; well ~onstructed
. 3 bedroom ,home with $4,000 'down and $286.78 a mon·
th for t'n-years. Interest rate Is 10%. 'Sale Price is ·

me

cation of that system In allOWing
Sohlo the dtscretiQn In allocating
and recovering Its ·Increased
costs," company spokesman
Randy D. Walthlus said In
.
Cleveland.
"The consent order ... resolves all
clalma and avolda·the time and ex·
pense of very lengthy, very compll·
-cated litigation," Walthlus iald.
"Sohlo does not-.tdmlt to any vJo.
latlol! or non-compliance With OOE
regulatloni In entering In the con·
sent order," he said

)~

CHESTER, - 11!1Prox. 12.5 a~res, 30 acres tillable,
11 acres In pastul'@, 2 ponds, barn, wveral sheds
heller barn. AIIO a nice 3 bedroom remodeled ho~
wlh oas furance and a ~burner . $89,500.

$~.100.

HOUSE
MANAGER
needed bW a rnldelltlal
care facUlty servicing
mentally tetardeil adults
Wllh behavior!• I dlaor~ .
Y•rd S•lt
Three yt~rs Of previOOt
relatetf
e.xperlence
required. Applicants must
have def!nlle leadership
ability; working k'nOwledge
of population betno sef'V811,
and a hlg~ energy leveJ.
Salary $15,000. per year
Michigan Sale. 50 _ Nell with
on·cali responsibility ..
Ave., Gallipolis. 8·10 to 8- Mostly
afternoon and
14.
.
evening work. Medical and·
dental insurance available.
Yard .Sale 170 Portsmouth If Interested send resume
Rd ..\Ned. &amp; Thursday.
to : Ohio ,Resldental Ser·
vices, P.O. Box 936,
GallipoliS, OH 4563~1;_._ ::._
Attention RN'S·Pomeroy
H.C.C. nOYo( has openln~ for
full and part lime RN tor 3
to 11 and 11 to 7 shifts.
Upgraded r.alary and ·shlft
Driveway sale. Aug . differentia . Contact Nancy
10,11,12. 8-6. 213 Union Ave. VanMeter director of NurBoys, • girls, bluejeans. sing. 614 - 992 ·~ . ·
SchOOl clothes. Hangers,
books.
HOMEMAKERS DREAM I
You control hours and In·
4 family . Rl.33. Top of Dar· come. Demonstrate toys
win Hill . 13th, Ulh. Fur· and gills. NO Investment,
nllure, flrtplace, clothing, NO experience. Also
appliances.
booking parties. Call 9925603 or write TOY LADIES
PARTY PLAN, Johnstown,
PA 15904.
.
near Portland, male
and tan Fox Hound.

&amp;OlE. MAll
POMEROY, OHIO
{ f ~992·2259.

'Ohio gets
$4.4 miUion of ~e~~~-~m~,.t
.
.~

Last •ncl Found

BOGGS
LaBONTE'$
QUAIL FARM ·
Quill' •••

&amp;SERVICE

all

•valloblt up 'o 1
In •ny -nllty.
MlfunOu•ll Avlllliblt
.lfNitytoTumCM •
C.leiiLaiOilte

....1hSM£1Rd.

L.... lottoM, Olt. ~5611
614-915'456.1

7-28-1

,,

PROFESSIONAL COUPLwill do babysitting
E dnlres full time babysit· Mother
in my home. 614·992-6766 or

ter for two y()Ut\g children 614·992,5671.
In our '. home. Variable
hours. -;, trensportatlon .
::-:::. 'l~;;r-;~~ = = =:.
Call' 446-6256 Weektlay mor·
nlnos.
SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance. Co. hn Oller'ed
services for fire II)SUrlnct
coverage In Gallla. County
lor almost a century.
FariT], home and Pti'IOIIII .
property cover"'" are
available to meet In·
· needs. Cont•ct
urles9n. · agenl.
446·2921.

1l::
----- ...----- --

�'

..
OhiO
._,

u .

54

"

: M;5c.Mercilanciic_e _

NORTH \Myrtle ·Beach, ' and county aPProved. 1.000
South Carblina, Sand Piper gai. tank, price S3'\D.' Other
Condo. 1385.00 week. Sleeps ·sizes In stock, haul In your
8 to 10, pool &amp; tennis court. pickup truck. Call 614-286·
one block to beach . Call 5930, Jackson, Oh : RON
EVANS ENTERPRI~ES
803·272-5943.' .

~5 ~ ~ ~u!n}sh~ ~~~~~

_

·-

- _.,.. ~MatWHome.

_.___ ·-

. .. .L!f!!!.'l!.'.! I

- - - - -· - ---r. Plastic Se~tjc Tonks. State

Karate the ultimate In self
.d efence all private lessons,
M~n. women, &amp; children.
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available Karate
uniforms puchlng and
,kicking bags, and protec·
live equipment. Jerry
t.owery &amp; Associates
Karate Studio,
1~3
Burlington Rd.. Jackson,
Qh . Caii61HIIIr307~ .

_

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'

·

---

I

tf,1912

"

•

----;~---!---~

•SO.

Case

--

-

..

Lawn MO\Ying no yard to
big or small. Reliable and
dependable. For estimate
call ~· 3159 after 6PM 256·
1967.
Trash collection &amp; hauling.
c;all~ · ~ .

---·- -

8:00

: :_

TNt &amp;JR\IJ I~ 11&gt;11
TilE POINT I!I' GOOO I
THI MATCH -OYERI

Household GoOds
-------·--·
SWAIN

W 1LL do house cleaning,
U .OO hour, can give
reference, 304-675 ·687~ or
675-3~.

You'll love this u acre
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE ~· 3868.

1980 Windsor

21

1~x7o.

new

cond. Deluxe kitchen, large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm. Hidden util . room.
379·2310.

lullness
O~rtunlty

farm In the country with a
pond and small barn. This 2
bedroom brick home Is
only 2 miles from down·
town Pt. Pleasant. Will
sign a year leeseats.c.so per
month. 304-675·6276.
42-- - Moiliie"Hilriiiis

-·

tor Rent
.. -- - - - - - - · - - 2 bdr. beautifully fur ·
nlshed, wall to wall carpet,
large living room, air
cond ., gas heat, private lot.
Call ~- 1~, 4 to 7PM.

CLEARANCE SALE OF
LOOKING for people who 1982 MODELS! SAVE
want to earn between l500 $1000.11 1~x70 Mansion
and
150,000 . monthly bd.ro6m . 2 full bath , 3 bdr. mobile home, com·
through this "n~west and upgrade turn., total elec .• pletely furnished . Call 416·
fastest growing company deluxe metal exterior, bay 9649.
lh the nation". Call 304·675· -windows front and rear;
1293. '
$13,950. 14 x 65 Mansion 3 2 bdr.' traller in Cheshire.
bd.room, front kitchen with Adults only. Call 614·3117·
LOOKING FOR people who banana bar, upgrade fur· 7329.
want to earn between $500. ' nlture, deluxe metal, bay
and $50,000 . monthly windows front 'nd rear. - ---··-- through this •newest and $12.950. AbOve prices In· 12x6S two bedroom, gas &amp;
fastest growing company elude delivery and sef-up. water paid, S250 per mo.
In the nation.• Call 304·675· See at Klngsbury . Home Call ~- 6513 .
Sales. liDO E . Main
1
2
9
3
Pomeroy or call 61.-992· 2 bedroom trailer. Real
7034.
nice, adults only.- Brown's
Trailer Park, Minersville.
22
Money to Loan
Owner financing 1980 14x70 6 U·992·3324.
REFINANCE or purchase Mobile Home. 112,000. 12
your home. 30 year fixed pet. Interest. $2,000 down. 3 bedroom Mobile Home,
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leeder 614-949·2639.
furnished. utllllles paid.
Mortgage, 77 E. Stare St.,
Also for rent-112 of apt.
Athens, Dh. 61H92·3051 .
furnished,
1
1974 New Moon Trailer. house.
Total. elec .• new carpeting, bedroom . No pets, no ·
23
Professional
underpinning. 614·992-7&lt;106. drunks or dope. For more
info. call 614·311M611,,John
Services
Sheets, 3112 mi. South Mid·
1973 14x70 Grandville has dleport.
C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; lax service large rooms plus laundry
room, must be moved, JO.f·
for all types of businesses.
882· 2820.
Carol Neal
~·3862
44
Apartment

l

USED MOBILE
576·2111 .

HOME .

AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis. Couch, loveseat
and
chair, · S199 . ;
wallhuggers 1125.; bunk
beds with bunkles, S170.;
bOx spring and mattress,
$100 .
Firm , $120. ;

Homes for Sale

l.n ground concrete pOol on
2 acre lot. Also has a 3 bdr.
air conditioned house with
full basement, 2 Wll

fireplaces,

new

carpet.

would consider lower
valued property in trade or
will finance with low down
payment and 10% interest.
Located 123 Garfield Ave.
Call ·~- 1~ .

.

H"ouse

in vinton. catt388·
88l3 after 5pm .
·MODERN 3 bedroom
'house, Patriot Star Rt.,
'Green
School.
Full
basement. Call416·3040.
- - - - Attractive 4 bdr. home in
city full basement, family
room, dining room, fully
carpeted. Assumable loan.

low down payment. Call af.
ter 5, ~-1323 .

--- - - - - - - - 2 bd.room . 80 x 100 lot. 1
small building . Garden
space. tn Mason behind
laundry mat. 58000 down.
take over payments or
$26,000. Call773·5089.

Cal1446·3159.

- -

----------

Three bedroom house in
Pomeroy . Nice

location :

Carpeted, vinyl siding,
fireplace . Priced to sell.
: $22.500. 614-992·7416.
· - - --- - - - - - '
: 3 bd. room house in 1
Pomeroy. Nice location .
All carpeted, vinyl siding,'

and fire-place . Priced to .

sellat$22,500. 61H92·7416. '
Rental properties for sale·
House for sale· Pomeroy . 2·
; Apt. bulldlng·Middleport.
" Trailer-Syracuse. 61H92·
6059 after 5:306U·992·7511.

New Haven Rental Proper·
ties for sale·3 apt. ·
bulldln9s. S houses for sale.
61~-992-6059. 614-992·7511 al·
.1 er 5:30.

·--------SPECIAL fi'RICE on wood

and coal burners, as long

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,

dryers,

Registered bletk male toy
poodle pUp. 1150. Also
Cocker Spaniel. female, sso.
4 vears old. 61~·992 · 7102.
·---- --- ·- -~-· 1965 Mustano: . lair shape,
TWO registered, 8 week ••• 675 5162
old, Bluetlck, female pups. - · ·
·.
~70
i:'i:v;"f;,;;r-d-;;.;~
Phone 3~·675·3328.
1
::.=--=======.:: :::.==- . engine, good work car,
57
Musl~~~
· ,
$300.00. ~-773· 5184 after
.. ~- _!~~~.!!.'!_ - ' 4:30.
_._
Baidwln Cabaret organ
with ' fun machine, , 1975 CUTLASS, $750. 304·
praclelly new . Has ' 2
keyboards. Call 6(1~·)79· 895·3(1.19.

35o

2623. ·'

I '

-si-·--:-- - -·-------'-&amp; v...tables
..
Mavtag a,utomat1c washer, -------.-:Your .own tomatoes.
colt 45 A.t .P. combat
Commander. Cal] ~9355.

-"""~ -----·-- ·----y,;~!

refrigerators, $95. GE dryer, $90. Both PIC:~
ranges. Skaggs Ap · real nice &amp; guaranteed. half runner or lima beans,
pilances, Upper River Rd .• Call ~- 8181 .
S6.00 j)u, corn Sl .OO doz.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
Raynor Pea.ch Orchard,
416·7398.
Rt. 7, Lower River Rd.,
Little buck stove, fireplace Gallipolis, «6-4807. ,
.insert, $400, good shape.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sola, chair, rocker, ot· Call416·1570.
Silver Queen sweet corn.
loman, 3 tables, (extra
Charles McKean Farm, ,
heavy by 'Frontier), $685, ove; l-:-oOO~;;,;;I~ ;;;;d~. 416·9«2.
•
Sola, chair and loveseat, kilns, and supp11es. 614-7~:12925
or742·2085.
$275. Sola$ and chairs
Cornfield beans, SS.OO bu.
--priced frorrl $285. to $89~.
Tables, S38 and up to S125. ·Ruger 22 Caliber. NeW Call614·245·9587.
Hlde-a·beds,WD. and up to mOdel. Single 6 MAG. or - -. - --- - ·- ·--·-"'7·- -· $525,. queen size, S380. regular. Other guns. 614· canning tomatoes, beets,
58 bushel, brlllo own ·con·
Recflners, ~175. to S325. , 742·2282.
talners, ~-675-'1288.
Lamps from $18. to 165. 5
pc. dinettes from S79 .. to 99 Player plano rolls. GoOd
--- - ,-- --··
S385. 7 pc., $189. and up.
cond.
Old
fashioned
songs.
WoOd table with six chairs
S395. to S650. Des~ $110. Caii61H49·211D.
Hutches, 1300. and S550 .•
maple or 1 pine finish . Hide· A· Bed. 614-949·2568.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
c~;.~;l~i~S795.
B
bed
~!
with maltr&lt;isse.s,
to
~ ---

____,

------·

.

'.

~alnt, new tires, runs

9ood, . SliOOO. Also 1970

Cheyrolet truck, needs
work, 1300. 304·882·2052.
~
~
.. ___, .. _ __ - - - -·--~·
PLYMOUTH Duster.' ~
automatic, runs goOd, $500.

.

Baby

I $3$, bed

Mobile Homes 1~ x 52 to u
1,$30. Used
X 70, from $9,500 up, 81 and
Furniture , ·: bookcase,
Effiency
apartments
lsi
82 models, K &amp; K
&amp; 2nd. floor. Call 416· rt~nges, .che,irs, end tables,
MobileHomes. 304-675·3000.
, 729' 2nd Ave.: recliners and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulavllle Rd. Open 9am
·- ------ - - -- ·
Ipolls.
to7pm, Mon. lhru Fri., 9am
3}:::::::.firms for
to 5pm, Sat. ·
100 acres farm in Meigs Co. 1st floor furnished apart·
416·0322
25 acres bOttom, rest ment, adults preferred. ref.
----·:-.--·
-·-· - pasture &amp; limber . 3 &amp; dep. required. Call 631
HARVEST •gold ·Whirlpool
bedroom remOdeled house. 4th Ave., Gallipolis.
wesh~r, nearly new, S160.;
Large barn· loaflng shed.
Double garage. $65,000. 614· Furnished 4 ~ooms &amp; bath, 3 Kenmore, washers, S90.
ea.; 1 ~ Avacado Kenmore
647-6227.
clean, no ~ pets , adults o~lv. , washer, $)10.; 1· G,E.
- -·;-- .
dep. reQ. Call416·1519.
washer, SilO . A number of
FARM for sale, 65 acres on
dryers, s90. ea., · guaran·
Fees Branch, . Hannan Small furnished house for 1 teed 30 days. Call 256·
District, Mason County, or 2 adults only. Call ~- 1207.r
caii30H76·2568.
0338 .
- _ _:. _ _ _ _ __ _
. - ..... - - - - - - - One conte1J1porary couch,
142 acre farm near Rio H\.10 available 2 bdr . . exc. cond .• IS150. Call 416·
Grande, house, buildings, deluxe, kitchen furnished, , 7.588, ,
"';"
mineral rights, with or goOd la&lt;;atlon, utilities par·· .. --without livestock and llally peid. 5 rm house for ' BEMCO mattresses or bOX
equipment, 614·416·2599. ·
rent. Resideotial and co111· , springs, full or tw)n, SSB. 6
mercia! properties for sa!e
- - ·- - · - - - - -·
- - - - - -- - - - or lease. A·One Real
~
Lots &amp; Acreage
Estates, Car9l Yeager, S595. Pillow arm sofa &amp;
112 acr.e lot on Mltcheii'Rd, Realtor. Caii30H75 · 51~or chair S295. Roll top desk,
rural water, city school, 675·5386.
dark &amp; light, $189. Bu~k
nice tor bUilding or trailer. - - ·- ........ -·--·- ·- - -beds, complete, Include
Call416·3933.
EFFICIENCY APT. at Rio mattress, S199. ·com"Jllete
---------~- -'
Gara n,~~: A v_ ail,able Wed.
water bed s~ with 10
bedroom suites o~ display,
2 acres. Panoramic tqp of
the hill view of, Big Bend of · - - -- · - - - - starting prlce$229. up ·to
Ohio River In Pomeroy. Furnished efficiency. Sl~ $2500. Big daddy coctail &amp;
Utilities, new 2 car gar:aoe. utilities paid, slnyle male,' .end tables ~ ..V(aii·I\·Way
Extras. Will consider land 919 Second Ave., Gallipolis. recliners 1169. and up. La·
Call416·4416 after 7PM.
Z· Boy recliners In stock.
cOn1('act. 6U-992-62SA.
.
USED FURNITU.RE 5 pc.
- · - - - - -- - --·- - - -·. - - -- - - &amp; 7 pc. dinette sets,
Two acre 1ots: 150 11. road 3 room turn•shed apt.•1250. · bedroomsu\te' Hollywood
frontage, city water, month includes utilities. style bunk~ -Flair Fur· '
behind8~Lumber. Call ,30~­
Inquire at Meigs Inn In nllure &amp; Design. Gallipolis
675-6873 or 675·31118.
Pomeroy .
f;erry,.
Qpen 9·6.
-----·-:---- - - - - - - - - - -·- - -·- - Phone30H75·1371. .
28 acres, tObacco allot· 1 bedroom garage apt. 51• --------..,...--ment, mineral rights, no S. ~th, Middleport, · Ohio. A) R conditioner, 18,000
buildings, $9,500. Call 304· Stove, refrigerator &amp; d) net· BTU, $125. 30H75·5684.
'
675-6851 .
.
. '
.
te set.•Newly·decorated·. No
---'-~
pets or children. Ruth . ~----~-------- - --Hyth, Wellston, Oh. 6108~- 53
20 ACRES, water &amp; mmoor. 6309.
~ntlque~-.
black top road,
STERLING.
0Rright Piano,
evenings, 304-675·7541.
dated 1891 , All original.
2 bd .rdom, turn.
Caii256·16G pt256-1r,l2.
1150. per mo.
· pay
utilities. 1 child '"ccepted.•
614·949· 2875 ..

5:![!=

_________

:=

l~v~~~ah/~"m h~~~~

0157

w.v. ·

,..

.. - --..·- -- -., -·---

allto-trans:, air:cond.,
cruise cont., a.m. ·f.m.

Privacy
glass . .. ,some
c11stbm work . 614·992·6330.

7:30

vour· own half runner
beans. ss.oo bu. and can·
Craftsman, 261nch Electric, ni~g tomatoes. S3.oo bu.
Start, 7HP. S.C.SO. Phbne304· ~ndrew cross farnn, Le\art
615·2468 .
' ~ells . 8 a .m.·nQOn. 61~·247·
2852 or992· 37~.
Tom·a toes, by . ba~ket or ,..
~ - -~
bushel. 304-675·1981. ;

---·-·-·- --· ... ...

'
- - ·--"""':·-

'
----·,
'

Refrigerator. stove, Atari
,game with cartridges an!l ~
compound bOW, Call 30•·
675·6777.
18'x3' SWIMMING pool,.
filter &amp; fence, $100. Call
~-675-6809 .

=. :::;-=.:::.::.:::;:.=: ==m= =.::, =:

5~ ___!!lildln,

SupJ!.I!:!!_s_
Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. lintels, ere. Claude
Winlers, Roio Grandi!, D.
caii6U·2-45'5121 . '
'

- ---~- -

•I:::_ Fa~Equ[e!!!_ent =: ,
Montgomery Trailer · sales.
614·649·~2~. Farm trailers,
See you at the. Mason Coun·
,t y Fair.
\
, lo · - - - ~----- --

- • - .. - liveS!..&lt;"

I

_. _

----·

SChool

E:.chOther'

e (JJ
Tonight

1220.•

.

_.,:.

..- ----··
'
------J'

'

'.('

I

•

•·•

,

..- ........
.............
~

AKC ReOlstered Poodle
pUppies. Call ~-0857.
~~-------

___..________
"

:n;j

.. " ..~. ~.!!~..!!.,tlj'!_ -·

~

______

ii
_, -~Autos.IDiS·ie--·
....._ _. -

PonW~.W. !'J·~·

·..

- ~ ..:X. .1-~-....;-- · - -· -:J"' ·-- - - -- - - ----1- ,

15

~ -. ·

_, _:_

Into a blonde.
Solllllry Men'

(J) ~I 'Rumpole of
Bailey.'
Conclution.
Rumpole takea
on the caM
of
Dave Ambi'ey. (80 min.)
IBl •o.nger .f,.IXB' From
MMUl piece
Thutre
'With l-ove From Adolf.'
llriln'a ·tnjurtes have left
him lhetterad. (80 min.)
8:30 _(I) MOVIE: 'Frkley 1111
13th' Pwt2
(J) • ""' T C'-- F
Comfott""'AprifandJack':
try to get ~ry end hit
brmtw back together. (R)

KIIIIP !tar'

(J) T8S Evening New.
(J) • ()I Hart 1D Hart Someone ettennpta to break

up the Hone' malriege. tRI
J:.C.jln.) lOosed eap.

1977 CAMAIIQ, Pl. 1'1, tilt
Wlllel. alr, 011011 COnd..
tmO. Can

»f.-.

-

and two

oom ·IUrnl- apll.

3D4-tll-2564. '

One bedroom apartment,
all utlllti!S peld. Phone.._
675-1191.

. c:.tl

ble opeulug bid

ao a Vlmm'

coup wu needed.
'"
He cubed dummy's ace of
clube to set up· Eli.at't klut;

Opening lead: t9

and ran bls. lut trump!
wblle dlscardlna tbe niDe

·

and six of c1ubi from
dununy.
,
Eut had to chuck hla kine'
of clubs on the lut trump Iii
order lo keep protection for
the diamond queen and
South's queen of clillll bad
become a winner.
·

By Onrald Jaeoby
... Alia SolliiJ

1be Vienna coup is a slm·

pie squeeze against one
opponent that Is complicated

bY tbe fact that be Is back of
t6e band !bat Is doing moat

,,

(NIIWBPAPEIIENTI!RPRIII:AJIN.)

of the squeezing.

.'

~

J

THOMAS JOSEPH
A,_,_
8 Archeol·

""""""

1 Majorca

IJ8!sl's find

aeaport
• Pretend

11 More........
"..,...

U

Eat away

8 German river
18 Tiber
lrl"·
·~,
_.._
14 River clam

u Temporary .
office

·
18 Auk genus
It Faucet

2t Neronlan
greetlng

holder

u I&gt;og

!I Scottilh

II llft•erle
.........

1'-

"'"'lorer

zt~box

17*

fl Uae
Zl n.Uia
_.....,

Yetrterday't Alllwer
· ·3'1Jndlan

28 Glad

'' \ ·

.;~,-..

buffalo

tidings

30Kiln
38Gravy + '7;.
" ...~y _ 3Z Slanting _31 Know~e 1
dally bread" 33 Hebrew lyre 40 Wife of ·

u

guitar

.
Z&amp; uncommon 34 Temble
2t Farmer
35 - B.
In India
.
Driftwood

' '

Cuc,bulalri , .
U "On the Jinka"
gadget

''

2t Rind
• Exaggerate
31 Volcanic

a Window style

(J) FJotng Una

"FiDnlab late
10:30 • N~
(I) Mlljor Lugua ..
IBl

' BARNEY

I 60T SOME

.

_____

MV BROTHER
BUBBA. WAS COMIN'

Gooo'NEWs
AN' saM&amp; 8AlX,';~ ! TO VISIT NexT ..

NEWS,PAW··

BauiMII: Clnclnnetl at

,,

·wea&lt;,eur

. HE Cl tANEiED
HIS MINO

Loe Angelee
(I) SJna out America

(]) Af-Star SportaChlll·

GOOQY!!.,
.WHAT'S
TH'BAD
NEWS?

leiloe
(I) M11Jor J.Hgua a..bell: 'j A1llnlll

M

Sell

r ... 1 100

IBl tllldoooc:IL
11:00 (I) .RioCe for 1111 Pennllnt
BarryTompklnaandTim
McCarver host thlt look at
the put weak' a bali8bal
action.
(I) Nrrhvllle iiFD'
(]) E8PN lporta ~

(J).(J)(JI.()IN.-

=-

(J) " - Allen 8t IMge

11 :30 (I) MOVIE: 'The Eubw

'!ll

~

HIJ
(Il 'TOIIJII!t ....
•
(J) Aloe . Allee. Flo•

..
..... - .... --- .. .. -JINIS water Service. Cell
Jim Lanier,
.. ... _-.... __ _. _,_ - ' ......

Virl and Mat ~ 'oold turkfiY' tDgicher. " '

fJ ella':r.:_ac.,.,._

~-675-7397.
;.

U:41

I&amp;a:•..:.-l'lyor
InC.-"

.

ancestor
%Yearn

s ·Falllfler
4 Golda 5Landllig

cM~

. 7 Be at

fault

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.- Here'a how to worlllt:
A ll Y D L B A A X J
II LONGW' &amp;LLOW

.

, !i~
ft:.:

~hool

··

NtiG ' DJCXH

UZQ

'

B.ZNU

R

QRX

NCYXGS

SZMRYQZXH
I

.

ZXMNBXNID

HC R Y

WCN :uzQ

'M~CiatJt!: ~:TI'~~~~=IB~.;;;t:~~il

~
,..~,.

·IF
..,........ .......
QaW . . . .•

$IT IN A MOTOR
BY.--(}.L\&amp;8iiitTON

,)

·'

:;.:

CRYFI'OctVOTIIII
'
. '

UZM · ·

MCWII:

, ,,

One let.t er almply atancb for aaotber. In this Wnple~ll
UMcl for t.h.o pu. L'a. X for. lhe two O'a, ,ete: Slnlle
·
apOil~ ~be lenl\h and formation of th8 wonli - ·
hlata. Elth daJ the ~ lettel'l ·~ dllennl
,

,.. . ~' ,BUZFU
·
PICA Ful CGntroot

.

1=-+-+-+...:.-t-

4i Adjust anew
............uently
;;;;;;;
1 Scot'•

(!)~..,.,.

I:'

motor

Pua

It

aa

·7~ Must111111 II, 1«10. Ca~l

:

4t

(Il McCieln't Lliw A 1().. .
011tpour
yMr;otd boy who has 33 Focilaraw
wltneued a robbery Ia ,put
Maintainable I
in danger when a nawapa· , Part
I * prints his name end od- • 1
· dreu. (R) (80 min.)
ol a suite

---- -·~--· ---

44604Aor2AS-f.q. •

SHill

u Fish sauce
10:00. (I) New.
(I) MOVIE: 'ChHper 1a zs Impend

Need something ~allied
away or IOmethlng moved?
We'll do it, Call -.3U9 or
61 ..256-1967
6.
•
~
:
I
'

.... . .. .

tRI (Closed

Captioned]
• (J) (JI MOVIE: 'The

------- · ~--.,......

-r

Nortll

nn.··w•
. "*by

w •

Get\eral Hauling·

.

til

IIJ changes
Company Janet

----

---

su•

er: Eut

Thutre

IMr parwonatity by turning

·

life Cl ~!'&lt;'«·~~d ii~R:elrigeration,
gas A
onlog , &amp;
con•\l~•'f~b~etop, new I'Heatfno service. Call 614·
304·773·
.a
r
~:39.
-·~SEWiNG Machine repairs,
.76- ------·--'--·::l·...- ·- Auto PariS -- .. service.• Aumorlzed Singer
_ _:_~~~!«l!L __ .Sales &amp; Service sharpen
Sc 1~\. • fi"'br.ic Shop,

ulnerable: Both

tB

1

~!oomlng ' services for
po:ts. Will clip ·, Enpllsh 1979 112 Plymouth ·ouster,
Sheep dogs, poodles 11 Jlant 6, 3 spd., economical •
SChnauzer's. ReaSOI)able. 37,000 miles, PS, PB, AM·
FM sr.ro. zitbart, ritw
For appt. 614-992'73~2.
re!llals, air cond., super
c.le.n. Call ~·2847.
'
, -.=--·-~_:,_.-~

'

H_P,,~orcuHtrai1ler.

uz

'With Love Fcom Adolf.'
Jl(lan'1 lnjuriea have felt
him lhettered. j80 llin.l
8:30 (J) •
Cll ........... •
8hlrtey Squlggy'a father
mekea 1 IUI'J)IiM ratum. (R)
]ClOUd Capoloned)
• Cll
Two of Ue
Btemwood gets In trouble
with Nan lor giving aid to
IMr lrctvivll.· (R)
9:00 • (I) (Il Bret Meverlck
Mavarlclc tries to wOik e
'atlng' on the leader of e
utopian group. (R) (80 mln. )
(J) 700 Club

~-- ---·

Eut toot bls ace llld'illlle'

of heart&amp; and coatlnlled tor·
bls Jllrlner to ruff. Now '
West led a diamond.
·
South rose with .dummy'a'
ace, played three ~ of
trumpa and paused for
study. He cal!le lo the COIP ·
CIIIIIOD that Eut beld botll
tbe king of clube and Clot diamonds for his vulilera.•

+QJ

~ c:::.JI"· (R)
~ (J) (JI Cronldte'a
UnlvwH
(J) •o.- UXB' Fram

. ...

+KU

.JI03

(J) • (II Hllppy 0. Ro. gar· and Fonzle end up det-

F &amp; K Tree Trimniln~,
stump removal , Call 67t

ic- -- -E-I~tri'fal --.-

~·lc

MMtet,lace

.AKSU
tQU3

SOUTH
tAUUil

Speclel Golf
Pnu ollllkwl: 1882 · PGA
Clwsnplomhlpa
Fram
T....... OK - Flnlll Round
(J) MOVIE: 'Twi&gt; Rode
Tagllhef'

STARKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Service . Shrub.'s
trimmed. Phone 30•·576·
2010 . •
..., .... '
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Call 576·2398 or

North and South mtpt',
well have fciuDd their wa7 to
three no-trump. We reallj,
can't find any aerloua faQJt
with North's jump lo fOIII' ,
spades.
u••

••

IOHU

~N

ago.

EAST

u

(I) MOVIE: 'The WfiY We

(J) NmluMI

playa It .

bridge

llllknown) Is suppoled fo:
have made It over lqG ~~ ,

.AKJ

tT
.107&amp;4 .

w-·

a.tNJ

tAU&amp;

Fon:e

z·

-

whist. In fact the play 1ot 1~
name becauae the belt play·1
er In VIenna (name

•Qn

Captioned]

(I) MOVIE: 'Anack

-·- --

Sta.rcr·aft. 15ft trl hull

NORTH
tQU4

(I) (Il Fllher Muophy
John and Moeea figln o tycoon who Ia trying to take
over e gold mine. (R) (80

!.

POO.DLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at'6U·3117·

Like au

Entertainment

min .) (Cioaad

'

goes back to the daya of

8:00 •

'1-.-..lo.. _; _ - - - - · --- - - -· 2 Gur. nsey family milk
Plumbing
1975 KAWASAIKI «XX KZ•. n ·
cows. o-. wit~ calf. .YQur excellent-eandltion,. priced
~ &amp;,Heating_
... ----- --- --·~
choice, $600. 691 " 61 ~t·· ho·lnw~. 304·1182·2762. ,
CARTER'S PLUMBING
- - - - - - -· - - ·-·- ·
.
AN'DHEATING
REGISTERED,
Arpine 1978 KAWASAKI 400, MOO
Cor. Fourth and Pine
dairy goats. Gentle, show miles, $900.00, ·167 Lane sl. Pho~e
«45·3888 or 446·4477
quality. StarMdoes, DHIR New Haven, 304·882·2636.
records, ADI&gt;A classified.,
ORAGONWYND
Nice selection of doe ~Ids.
TERY . KENNEL.
Stud service from •
HONDA. motorcycle,
Chow . puppies; CFA .classified bucks. ;;o..- ~· 'tellldiltion, miles, excellent 13 .. __ _ _!!!c.•~•!il!ll .. __
Himalayan, Persian and , 1763.
••
11,000. Call 304· Gallipol,is Diversified Con·
Siamese kittens. Call ~..
,
I ,.
st. Co. ·custom dozer &amp;
384&lt;1 after. P·"'r
;:;;;--;:;g~i~;:ed-;;ii;d
liackhoe .work . Special
·l'tereford bulls, yearlings.
farm rates. Call us for free
eslll!1ates. 416-4440:
HILLCREST KE.Nt&gt;jEL • Phone 304-675·3030· or 675·
Boarding all breads. AKC 4232.
------·~-- -~ J -·~ -·-Reg. Dobermans pUps and
Lawrence Sidenstricker
.Doberman Stud service.
Backhoe Serlve. Call 675·
Call ~ · 7795.'

- ~-- · ~-

.....

'

'MMB for

IBl MOVIE:

-· . ,.. - , - -- - - - · - - - ··

..... --- · ~·-· ---Metal sheets for 11)1
building purposes. Flat
porcejian enamel coated ,
4x8 thru ~ x 12. Prices, S7.00
toS9 .,Ml.6U·647·3085.
'
_ _ _ - - -- -- .56 - - Petstorsoli. - -

~

Simple squeeze wor~s
.
'

.()) lualn m Report
(JI Rlclwd Sll!lmona

.

~

BRIDGE

(J) Andy Glifllttl
(J) e'()) FMIIIy F....t
(!) ............... &amp;Noley

-·- ,-----· ---·---- I

____

1n MiddlePort -

(I) You Allced For It
(I) 118M for the .Pemw'lt
Beny Tompklna and Tim
McCIIver hoat thla look et
the pill Week' I baaebiU

(]) ESPN 8porl8 Center

-

~-

....

• al FMIIIy Feud

CON ·

1974 YAMAHA 350 street.
·- ·--'--- - -· - .. --..1.
Bored 30,000, exc. cond. RINGLE'S SERVICE eic·
S.C.SO. Call 643·0168.
,, l,.•oeo·ien,ced mason, roofing,
~ ....
- - - ---- --~ carpenter, electricJan,
1910 HONDA ATC 110, 3 general repairs an:d
remodeling. Call 3~·67$·
wheeler, exc. cond., saoo.
Call ~- 9278.
2088 Ill' 675:-4560·
'
. &lt;·-·- _______'... - .. ·:
__ _.. __ --,... ..
. --'
1910 KAWASAKI L TO. 440, Water Wells. Commercial
low mileage, 11200. Call and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
992·6317.
30~:895·3802.
'
) ' .. -·197/ Honda CL-200 street,
.. ·- -.. - - - · · - - - looks great, tnotpr needs· ADVANCED
Seamless
mirror'. repaired. $150. c'all1 Guttrr·Doors. Offering
61~·"' ·Q168.
contf11ouse
guttering,
.. ·- - --------·seamless "siding, roofing,
74 Yama~a street, 350, garage
doOYrs,
free
looks great, runs goOd, , , estimates, 61H98·82qs.
s.c.so. Cali61~·M:I·0168'.
• - - ·- - - ... .. - ·-- - PAINTING. ' interior &amp; ex·
-· - --~--·-- ·~ - --'-... - terior,
free estimates, 30~Motorcycle,
1972 650
Triumph, $700. Phone JO.c· 675·11211. 1 ''
·675· U94.
' '
I
-···- .. - ·-·-·-·- -.-- - --

-- --···-·

.

Ytaterday'ol J u -: N~LY GNARL TIMELY SUBMIT
~ : V~u might reove It to others, but you
wouldn1 Willi to eat 11 youoaall. A TENNIS BALL

e

fencing, painting, repairs·&amp;
cleaning. 446·2000, ca(i
before 8 and after 5:30.

. 1331.

I I )" ( I I , ,] ·.
~~~~

ectlon.
(J) Another ur.

-------- - -

·- . . . . ---. - ·- -- - - -

l

()IN-

Masonary wor.k, Logue
Contractln.Jl .
Rt .
1.
Ewlngton . Call 6i4-388·
9939.
CHRISTIAN'S

...... thl clrclediellerlll), '
lonn 1he IIUI'PriM .,....er, u IUO'
gaited by 1he . . . cMOD!i.·
•'

Print IIIIWII' her8: A .. ,

J::c=.~Ut....

Report

JON .ES BOYS , Y(ATER
SERVICE. Caii61•·311H471
.or 61~·3117·0591.
--·--.
,.....

Large home Situated on e
nice lot In svr..:uM, Ohio.
Good neighbor hoOd, will
accomodete 3 or 4 alngle
men • tlf' . alnglt women.
Private rooma Wlll! cam·
mon
coakll111
batlla.

1!I! a.-._
=~Hidy
I w®

,

IHARMIO
I
(I)

..-.v...,.,..vou
(I) P.M. M• 1~1e

(!)~D.ya

..

French City . Painting
residential &amp; commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hilngiqg 1 &amp;
textured
~eilln9,s, Call 614-367·77B;.t
or 6U·3117·716o. '
.

=

.HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dltlon,•3 bedrooms, family '
• foOm with flrepalce, cen·
tral air, basement, phone ·
30H75·1~.
.

Mnori, _:MW-773·~.

-

-

Lovely remodal•d 3 .
l!edroom hOlM. basement,
• fenced baekytrd, carpeted,
sided. storm windows, near Sr. house i. ...bath, adults
SC'1GO'I· 30H75;.c338. ·.
onlY,, no pets, on . Bob Me·
cormlck.Rd. Call416-2650.
i
HOUSE 1o lot for sale In

..

........
11m::::
Dr. Wllo
.

(I)~- Tonight

INGS CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION Specializing
In
driveways,
304-~·1679.
l ' side•wai•Rs, floors, patios,
etc. 11 yr . exp. Call614·3117,·
67 CAMARO, call 30H75• 7891 .
or 67.5-3246. ,
Gene's Steam Carpet'
· 4&lt;1ean· Scotch Gaurd· Free
estlmales·spring specials·
_:;,==.:.w
::~_;:
Gene Smith. 992·6309.
FOUR WHEEL drive
.'
'
· -~
·---"""':"
~hevy Suburban, auto., PS,
PB, great shape, $1600. or (:AR·PENTRY· DO.ORS,FL!·
OORING,WALL PANELI.bes1offer. Call416· 1927.
NG,CEILING TILE . AND
. . , ----· --· - ..--~- J-'
PAII!ITING.614-992·27S9. •
1979 DOdge van. p.s .; p.b.,
.'

n

ISEVURSj'
I I K I

We,~..,=

1975-F'~Ro"ltD'L~-n"dau, ~~~g~T!~~'o. s~~i~~:

new

.. -

La;;~er, Rid·i;~ s~~s

carpeted, ulllllles. &lt; paid,
adults only no pets. Call

.

.

.(J) ~ TlwM . _
. ...... Compmy
OW&lt; ·~ .

~-2&lt;45-4 .

----- !.!~!!.!.n.!'___ _
i room unfurnished apt. ali

C 11

coal ·Pittsburgh No. 8.
Delivered to Gallipolis, S30.
a ton; Pt. Pleasant, S31. a
ton, C.O. D. Call~· 1488 .

dressers, bunkie mattress,

~ - 3437.

31

HOUSE COAL tor sale,

summer rates. Mine run

' supply last. Call .wr
recliners, sao.; 9 )( 12 2783.
linoleum rugs, $22.; maple
rockers, S49., wringer METAL BU.ILDINGS, all
washers, refrigerators, sizes up to 40ft . long and 12
dinette sets , chesr. ft. wide. Call ~- 2783 .

~.

£ !•CD • (J) (JI •

~

- ---- -·- -----

RemOdeling &amp; Carpentry.
E lectrlcal &amp; Plumbing.~·
574-2989.

8:30

7:00

51

I

111111 Yl. usc.

l

WOULD LIKE to do
babysitting In my home.
Call ~· 8615.

Will baby sit small infant in
my home day or night. Call
416·3937.

MHINQ

. . "' Nocno 0....
,...... . . 1878 Fighting

Space lor Rent. Mobile
Home Space in i'ont
Pleasant, Free Water ·and
sewage. Phone 30~'675 · '
1699.

CARE FOR · elderly or
disabled in my home. Have
references. Cell416· 8~2 .

~~

TUESDAY
·8110/82

dozer· :

tractor, 1,800 hrs., verY;

Sleeping room . $115, good cond., $14,900. Call
utilities paid. Single male, 416·4537.
share bath . 919 Second Ave.
----·-·
Gallipolis. 446·4416 after
RATLIFF ' S POOL CEN·
7PM.
'
TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
.. - - --- -· - installation. 403 .2nd. Ave.~
46 _- _· . s.ea_&lt;~t!r~~-&gt;!! ~
GallipoliS, Oh. Call ~ COUNTRY MOBILE Home 6579 . In ground·Ablove
Park, Route 33, North of ground.
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·U79.

ii --winied to oo---

Ohio

--------------·-

1975

'i

. Television
VieWnlg

Winnebago 5111 Wheel, 1973
new ln\ide
and out, ult contained. ::114·
675-3213. .
"Chlefl~ln" like

••

I

.

The Dally Sentinel Pas• 9

I•

�.'
\-Yt''

•

'I•

Tuetday, August 10,19!? ·

Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel

: rt . cQUnell...
MI•ddl
. . epo

'

Mahoning County
sheriff indicted

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - A sheriff

ties to occur In Mahonlng County ...
In Ohio's crime-Infested Mahonlng and that as sheriff, he would not
Valley has been Indicted on federal Interfere with those activities."
racketeering charges that he acAn FBI agent who asked not to be '
cepted mob money and gave Mafia ldentWed said eight gangland slay·
activities a groon light.
lngs In the past 24 months have
An Investigation that began been linked to a battle between the
shortly after MahonlngCountyShe- PlttsburibandCievelandMatlafor .
rlff James A. Traflcant Jr. took of· control of the Mah9nlng Valley. ·
flee resulted In a seven-page
According to FBI affidavits un·
Indictment Monday that also sealed In connection with this lnves·
charged Traflcannt with fibbing on ligation and other federal probes,
his 198l federal Income tax return. the illegal activities consisted of
The sheriff, who had been under-. narcotics dealing and gambling.
federal Investigation for the past ~6
months, was accompanied by his
Co-conspirators named In the In·
attorney as he surret~dered Mon- dlctment, but not charged, were
day to the FBI In Youngstown.
James Prato, a Youngstown-area
Handcuffed, Traflcant was led restaurant owner; Joseph Naples
Into a federal magistrate's office In Jr., who operates a vending ma·
Oeveland, where he pleaded Inno- chine company In Youngstown;
cent to both charges and was re- Charles Carabbla and his brother,
leased on a $5,~ personal bond.
Orland Carabbla; and Salvatore
"I've expected this tor a long "Sam" Tra1lcantl.
ttme," Traflcant, 41, said after the
The Indictment Incorrectly !den·
arraignment. "A lot of pressure has tlfles Traflcant~ the sheriff's cambeen placed on me. I have a lot or paign manager, as "Samuel
Traflcantl," according to Stephen
enemies."
The charges stem from Trafl· Jigger, an attorney with the federal
cant's 19!Kl election campaign and Organized Crime Strike Foree. Au·
an Investigation of organized crime thoritles said they knew of no apIn the Mahonlng Valley, an area or parent family relationship between
northern Ohlothatoncewasa thrlv· the sheriff and Traflcantl
lng steel Industry center.
Federal Investigators claim Na·
pies and Prato represent the PittsThe Indictment said Traflcant, as
a candidate, "soUclted and ac· burgh family of John Sebastian
cepted $163,~ from his co- LaRocca and lhst the Carabblas
conspirators with the are ronnected to the Oeveland fam·
understanding that In exchange he Uy of James "Jack White"
would allow certain illegal actlvl· UcavoU.

Bob·Evans Farms
optimistic about future
The Bob Evans Farms Inc.
board of directors announced Mon·
day afternoon a 10 percent stock
dividend · at the annual shareholders meeting at the Bob Evans
Farm at Rio Grande.
One new share for each 10 shares
owned will be received by shareholders of the restaurant and sausage company as or Aug. 20. Cash
will be pafd In lieu of tractional
shares, based on the mean between
the bid and asked price of the com·
pany's common shares at the close
of business at Monday's meeting,
adjusted for the dividend.
"It Is the present Intention of the
board of directors to maintain the
annual dividend or 40 cents ~
share on the shares outstanding af·
ter the stock dividend," Evans said.
"This In effect will result In a 10
percent Increase In dividend
payout. The stock dividend allows
each shareholder to participate In
the company's growth and success
through the receipt of additional
shares and dividends."
. First quarter net sales, unau·
tilted at this point, or $44,433,00J
were reported tor a three-month period ending July 30, according to
Daniel E. Evans, chairman of the
board•and chief executive officer.
this Is a 1.2 percent Increase over

net sales of $39, 72!1,00J during the
same period last year, Evans said.
It was attributed to more restaurants In operation and Increased
sausage wholesale prices.
Net Income of $39,290,11Xl, or 35
cents ~ share, remained the
same as last year's first quarter net
Income due to higher live hog costs.
Evans said this was responsible for
a decline In sausage division net In·
come, offset by the restaurant dlv·
lslon lnarease.
Three new Bob Evans restaU· .
rants were opened during the first
quarter, bringing to 82 the number
In operation In a seven-state area at
the end of the quarter. coi'III)Ared
with 69 a year ago. Seven fe&amp;taU·
rantS are under construction. with
a total of 13 QeW Bob Evans Farms
Restaurants to open before the fla.
cal year-end.
Evans repOrted Bob Evans sausage will be Introduced Into Atlanta,
Knoxville and Chattanooga on
Sept. 27.
"We are very optimistic jibout
the future potential this new
lnarket area holdss for the com·
pany," he said.
The company also has a new
brown-and-serve sausage, and
plans for Its Introduction as a test In
Chicago In January 1983.

Area deaths
Elic Payne
Ellc Olnton Payne, 89, Rt. 2, Vln·
ton, died Monday morning In the
Veterans Administration HospitaL
Chillicothe.
Born Sept. 6, 1892, In Roane
County, W.Va., son of the late John
and Jane Reed Payne, he was a
retired Iarmer and World War I
veteran.
He marrted the former Ella Hal·
bert', who survives, on May 17, 1919,
In Roane County.
Also surviving are three sons,
John A. of Rt. 2, VInton, Joseph C.
of Woodbridge, Va., and David L. of

Ukiah, Call1.; tout daughters, Mrs.
Bill (Marie) Budd of Overton, Nev.,
Mrs. Bob (AUce) Thompson of
Pomeroy, Mrs. Arthur (Louise)
Bolend of Pollack Pines, Call1., and
Mrs. W.T. (Ellen) Urwin ol Waverly; 21grandchll~and28great·
grandchildren; a brother, Wellle of
Belpre; and a. sister, Melva Win·
grove of Walker, W.Va.
Funeral serviceS,will be held at 1
p.m. Thursday In the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, VInton, with
the Rev. John·B. Davis officiating.
'Burial will be In VInton Memorial
Park. Friends may call at tlie fun·
era! home from 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday.

JOLYNN BOSTER

Boster will
address area
residents
Jolynn Boster, Gallipolis attorney
and candidate fol the state
.legislature, will be the main speaker
at a Meigs County Democrat
meeting to be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at carpenter's Hall, E. Main
St., Pomeroy.
Also present for the Thursday
night meeting, which ill open to the
pubUc, will be Bill J,.avelle, loth
district Democrat conunltteernan,
and Dean Kayler, representing
Celebr~. Chester Wella, local
county commissioner candidate,
will be present.
Evelyn Thomas, coordinator of
the Richard Celeste candidacy In
I'!ielgs County, is •also planning a
potluck fund railliilg dinner on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Henry Hunter
residence near Chester.
• The Democrat convnlttee t.s al.so
making plans for the party's jlooth
· at the Meigs County Fair next week.

Syrian .••
I

entation and permilllent reference send a bill for the action tot¥
lnclu&lt;llng display panels, mapa, a railroad
iiUde presentation and 'too printed
H~ read a letter trom tile
workbopks. .
railroad I!KUcating that railroad
' The study will at.so lnclllde at policy doesn't permit the company
least two community workshoPs to to give the structure to the vlll11ge
further dillcuss -implementation and that no price has bl!en set as far
ta~ toafilnterestedperiOIISand as aelll,ng the buUdlng and lots Is,
the firm will O!'ianlze and contrib-. concerD.ed. Hoffman will again 9Jllute resource materla,l for the estab- tact the rallroad on the disposition
llslur)ent ol a community resource. ar the propert)o: 1
center. Working drawlnp of vU·
King brought up riverbank erolage hall will Include plana for reslon and sugested the village sue
modeling for additional office the federal government.
space utlllzlng the fllrmer fire sta·
However, council Indicated the
Uon on the ground level.
vUiage doesn't have fu'* for such
During a 2lfl·hour sesslpn. coun- action and It was reported FUll%
ell heard the complaints of one res!·
had Indicated such action would be
dentdeallngwlthrentalpropertyat a waste at time and money.
238 Walnut St.
,
At lhst poln( King asked Other
The resident said the property council members 11 they realized
has been neglected and'as a result,
how II)BDY matters had arisen dur;
there are roaches, rats, hlah'if88S 1ng the meeting about which they
81¥1 a collection of trash. She said could to no!)llng.
s~ bas also COJitacted the Meigs ' This lead to a motion by Council·
County Health Department about man Carl Horky llmltlng the tlmi!
the problem.
.that council will· discuss the river
Hoffman said he at.so contacted ei'Q81on problem at. future meet·
the health department, which In- tngs. While It had been decided at
spected the dliplex on July 21. Acan earUer session council will dis·
cording to the department's report, cuss tiie river problem at every
the owner of the boliie is to take
meeting, Hork.Y said time Is being
corrective a~n. ·
,
wasted at every meetlng.with long
Theresldentflllngthecomplalnt discussion on the matter about
Indicated action has!l't been taken. which council can do nothing.
Hot!man will get back In touch with
Horky's motion Umltlng the dis·
the health department about the . cusslonoftherlvererosionate\&lt;ery
mattB&gt;:
council meeting to a five-minute pe,, Hoffman will at.so write ·to the rlod met with a tie vote. Council·
property OWIII!I'. Coul)cllman ~ men Horky, Wllllllm Walters and
wey Horton reid from a village
Jack Satterfield voted .In favor of
· dlnance IndiCating action can be · l1mftlng the disCussion .time with
taken within the community King, Horton an4.J3ob Gilmore vot·
through the buDding Inspector 11
1ng against the limitation. .
corrections aren't niade.
Hoffman voted "yes," breaking
, Councn approved Hoffman's re- the tie and providing that future dis·
port showing receipts of.$4,598 for cussions on river erosion will be II·
the month of July. The·n')ayor said mlted to five mln~tes at each
Floyd G,. Browne Associates has council session.
. completed a study on Middleport
Council again came to odds near
Hnlln reference to drainage an~ thecloseofthemeettogwhenamodangers of a dlich to motorists.
. Thetlrm sugestsconcretlngthe
ditch area In question. Copies were
given to council members for

or- .

tlonWasmadetoglvetlleflrstreec!- · :·
lng to an ordinanCe which WOIId
. pi,'OVIde for First Street·to be esta,_
l!shed as a 0111!-~~north
-~
, trom Racl!le to ............... ~~-Hoffman Sllid' fbu! ~)lve
votes wolild be neceilaiy Jor P11'
sage' Into first readln&amp;; GDrnore,
Horky and Satterfield .voted Yl!l:
Walters and If~ no; and Kin&amp;. ,
who wanted .the one-way· estabUshed under emergency leglslalion; abstained.
Council also disCUSSed the empty·
lng of a seWer'8t the ll!'ci r1 Hartii\ger Parkw~y, near Second A~ue,
and Hotfrilan will look Into that
drainage problem.
A. meeting was planned 1or the
street committee to decide which
streets are jo be Improved and res- ~
yr!ace this faU, Horton Indicated,
he'd 1111e to see tiJe old~ IJlll!n.;
talned, but village ordinanCe out- . ·
lines steps through which the,
buUdlng woukl have to· be torn·
down. .
,
. ,
He urged pollee stepup In check· ·
lng on the depOt. A discussion was
held on the OhiO Hotel. It was repottecf a wall has !allen1 Hoffman
salll he had understood the building '
was to have been tom down. Since
progressdoesnotseemtobetaklng
· place In lhst direction, Hoffman
said he will contact the owner and
advise h!Jh that It muSt be torn'
down or the village will do It and bill ;
the owner.
Various weed probleml! In ,the'
town were discussed by Satterlleld..
•During the discussion pa the estabUshment of First Street as· a one-:
way ,street, both Walters and
Horton indicated !hey believe m&amp;k·
lng the street one-way will only en-·
courage speeding and as a result
'Increase the dangers on the narrow
street.
AlSo attending the meeting wllli
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.

study.

It was llifeed to place some II·
mestone on First Street, near the On probation
Jerildns prpperty and Councilman '
Allen Lee King again •brought the . ·Two defenc!ants, one charged
problem of stray dogs before coun- with theft . and the other forgery
cU recommendation that a system . with bcith having entereq pleas of
be used for poUce to shoot dogs with ~tyearu~.Mvebeenp~~on
tranquilizers and then hold the probation by Judge John C. Bacon,
according to entries In the Meigs
anirRai for the dog catcher.
Lewis.
However, councn didn't take aC. County Gammon Pleas Court.
tlon oo his fllliii'!Stlon, and Hotrman , Debra Lynn Russell, who
said he hAd been advised by SoUcJ. pleaded ~ty to theft, was placed
tor aernard Full2 the vWBge would on )li'OIN!tlon !or a period of three
be bitter orr to "stay out af the dog years with a special condition r1 the
~ool
probation being tMt restitution be
business."
made
In full to the Meigs County
The village has an ordinance pro'
.
By The AMOO!ated Preu
viding for dog OWIIerS to be tined 11' Welfare .I;lepaftment. It was aiso
CooL dry air is drl!lng eastward their animals are In violation. .
ordered that she be ~nsldered In·
toward Ohio.
King also brought up the Chesa· . eligible for food stamps.
1be hlllh pressure system will be peake and Ohio RallrQad aban·
On thil basis of·hls guncy plea '9
moving Into the state during the . doned depot on Ra~ s~. and forgery, Oarence McDaniel, Jr .
next .few days. .
reported that the structure Is being .was plaCed on p~tlon for a peTemperatures In most parts of inlsused and dangers are being rlod r1 three year~ with the proba·
the state ww stay In the'1ll!l unW the
t1on pelng contingent on regular
created as a result.
weekend with fair weather ex·
It was agreed that Hotrmari shall ·counseling rrom thi! Meigs County
peeled ttirough the rest at the week.
¥ental Health Center.
hav~ the entrances boarded up and
The divorce action of Steven Col·
llrui Perdew agalqst Janice F;lalne
Perdew fUed In the Mejgs County
Colllii}On PIP.as Court has been
(Continued from page 1)
the guerrlll115, and that Egypt may
take In ·a number as welL The latest
plan was worked out by u.s. presidential envoy Philip C. Habib In
Beirut and delivered to Prime Min·
lster Menachem Begin by the u.s.
ambassador In Israel, Samuel

Ohio to get
dry air

Patrol probes. -wrecks

The Gallla·Melgs post of the Ohio
Slate Highway Patrol Investigated
five traffic accidents In Meigs
County Monday. ·
·
Grace M. Wise, 70, Reedsville,
· was cited for failure to yield after a
collision on Ohio 681at 12:25 p.ll).
Wise was backing onto Ohio 681
from a gas station when she struck
a car drlvl!n by Dolores J. Watson,
31, ReecisvDle.
Both cars· were slightly
damaged.
. Two cars were damaged In a col·
Iiston on Ohio 7.atCR 279 at 2 p.m.
The patrol reported that Roger
D. Schau,. 32, Marietta was north·
bound QD Ohio 7 and was turning
onto CR 279 when the at:cldent
ocuiTed. Robert E. Sanders, 53,
Reedsville, attempted to ~ss
Schau while he was turning and
struck the left side of his llehicl~.

, •:

Meigs County happenings...

According to the patrol, ·Schau's
~ signal was oiJecured by a load
r1 tree llinlls he was hallllng.
Sanders' vehlclerecelvedmoder·
ate damage· and Sch4u's vehicle

EMS

runs

,.
·Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal serVtce 1 f!SilOllded to several
calls overnight Monday.
·
At 4:19 a:m.,1\ippers pialnswent
to RL 681 to treat Alfred Randolph.
who wa5 riot transported; at ~: 19
p.m., Pomeroy EMS. \\'f!lll to the
Meigs Senior Citizens Ceriter to
treat Elb:a Powell, whO was also
not transported; at 1: 50 P..m., Ru·
tland unit went to Danville to.take
.Myrtle Murphy to Holzer Medlc.al ,
Center; at 5:17 p.m., Syracuse:·
went to Cherry Street to 'tranaP,ort
Ron Jones to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
'
'

Marriage

a

.

The Saving Plac. ..

OPI~ DAILY AND SUNDAY

BGck-to·school ·~

Savings
·For Kids
The

kindS ~thai kids love f()( ringing in the
IChool yeart ComfortQble. easy-core cotuols
that male&amp; 1'101 •oework carefree f()( morns.

Our Rei- 7.91, llg lop' Welfem lhlrll of

woven. ydrn-~ed polyester/cotton. $6
our .... 6.t7, Jr.loys'llllrtU•7............ . sa

Our Reg. 1.9ll·9.96, 8irll' Sweat Shirt Or
Jeane. Acrylic sweat shirt In stripes. Blue denirh )e.ons of cotton or cotton/polyester /rayon
blend. Sizes 7-14.... .. ............... Each $7

.. _'? .. ,_.,_

Our Reg.l.97,11aaer loy•' ~l'!lm Jean• of
rugged cotton/J)9Tyester/rpyon in blue. $6
Our .... 6.97, Jr.l9ys' Jeo~4·7 ............ $1

·

t

Blackman, serenading the gover- years.
. He wali ~ on the fair·
nor with "Aci:Oss the Field" and
, R,llodl\s, 72, lui's been governor of , ~ndll, talldng abOut !he InvolveCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -At no "Stars an4 Stripes Forever," Is Ohio. for 16 ~ the .P8St 20 years, ' ment of farm rain Illes In
time does James A. Rhodes selim probably accustomed to lm· lmgerlhan,anyoneelae. TheCOiiatJ. 8irJcuiiurai exhlttts, when he spot·
tutton prm!ilta him from se king ted a ~across the road at ·
to enjoy being governor more than promptu reQIIests from Rhodes.
The Cleveland SL lgnatious high - electloit this year to tldrd ~ the sheep b8ri. hoslllg down an
when he's prowling the grounds of
,.umai In the ·hot and humid
the Ohio State Fair- promoting It school teacher has ~ on the staff . ~ve term.
His "wlirld's greatelt". claims . we,~ther.
' .
with a string of "world's greatest" . of trie state flilr !land .slnce·w.ir/ and
has been dlrei:tor since 191'0. ·
aalde, there Ia a lll!I10ua side to
claims. ·
'
• "Riibt aver there li the best picrui6des' praise was .equallY. en· 'Rhodes' booatlna of the fair,
"We have our OWn world's fair
here In Ohio," Rhodes said In a thuslastlc for the AJl.Ohlo State . "It's people ... lllOtbel'l, fatb1n, ture r1 tbe day - that tid washing
compariSon with !he event being Fair Youth Choir practicing else- ~. II'Bidatheri who tbe abeep. ~ tldt all work ...... 9,
bi!Ueve In tbelr chlldrea. It lllilip 10, U years old," Rhodes said. "'lbe
where oo the falrlrounds. ·
staged In KnoxvWe, Tenn.
''Thele are the finest voiCes In the · the family IIIII!tiB. and thll Ia fair Ia basically tor young people ...
"We're looklrlg at the flriest fair
totethemess In the family •.. he
In the nation. We Mve t!le largest nation; the world's ·greatelt state where they wan! to meet," Rhodes said.
'
cattleshow,lhillarpthorseshow, fair ~holr,'' the aOveruor sal!! u he liald.
the larget 'assemblance of tnO(Iel Introduced director Gtenvllle Tho- .
mas toagroupolCallll:letmembei-a '
· i
'··
;
trainS.'' the governor aald.
'
'
vuttlng a reheai'Sal of the AU· andThere:o~ performaDce of the
OhloStateFalrBand, Rhodes Intro''Battle Hymn r1 !hie Republic" at
, ·
duced the .dirEctor: "This Is Omar
RIO GRANDE -One Melp Coun- develapneat thniugb fundlrnentai
Blackman - world's greatest · events that Rhodes atlellds hall be,
come a s~d. .
·
ty · youth recently . attended tbe, ~ 8nd ec~~•ljlltiiiGa. 11oya In
bendleader." '· ' .
'lbonw, who heads the vocal , leCGIId . - . . af. CGacb Jolli ll'ldll7-12al&amp;taledtbeca~p.
And: the :m hleh &amp;Chool ' lllllal·
kGtt Pillla olllelp I{IP 8ebaGI
cl8111 ~ 8fO!IIId the state hewu . rinlllc department at ZIDelvllle · La,mn'• Rio Gr.D CGIIep
directing'? ;,The world's greatelt Hlah Scho()l, hal been """"" tile Bt*'@el! Cainp.
- tile laeal Jlllilh •·"• .. .
331-volce
fair choir for about II
Tile, ~ bullrected at lndlvlclual e&amp;~q~. ·
state fair band," Rhodes 'SII.Id.
.

··Pullins aitends Rio c8ge camp . ·

OspitaJ

NEW'FOR FALL
. ' WARM~UP OUTFITS

•

'

Oarence Eugene Jacks, 35, Mid'
· dleport, and V(r,glnta Mae Athey,
38, Mlddlep&lt;)rl
,
Daniel EdWard Ralrden, 24,
Hartford, and KathY Lea Mitchell,
28, Mlddlepprt.
Jo})nHatldemosGiatlopoulos,23,
dismissed~ ·
Pomeroy, and M,argery Kathryn
In ot¥r action &lt;if the Court, How· Cleveland, 23; Middleport. •
ard M. Ferguson, Charles F.
Donald Elson Stobart, 40; PomeKeeder, and James Tracy David· roy, and Rita Jean carr, 39,
son· ha~ l!een djschargm from Pomeroy.
· ·
probation.
·

H

Rhodes feels ·Ohio fair best in nation

e:.r-..

lioonses

was sUghtly clamaged.
'
The patrol also responded to
Funds·distributed
three single-car accidents IIi Meigs
State Auditor Thomas E.
County.
·
F~guson's office ~· the 'July
ChtlstopherLUly,29,Huntlngton,
· ~bution ~ $9,rl7,142, to the
W.Va., was southboUnd on Ohlo7 at
DeWS
state's counties; cities and villages
.3::Jl p.m. when a rOck was kicked
up by a northbound car, cracking
yeterans l\femorlal Hospital re- in revenue collected ftom the state's
seven cen!S per gallon gasoline tax.
his windshield.
·
ported three admissions and two
Am(\Wits received by Meigs CounFrankO. Wells,38, LongBottom. · !llliCharge Monday. • .'
ty COIIUDUilities from the lolllllnwas eastbound on Twp. Rd 2'72 at
Admls~lons-Deborah Smith,
ciude Middleport Village, f2,2rl;
9:45 p.m. ·When ~ struck a low· · Racine; Ruby Dalton, .Cheshire;
. hanglngtelephonellne.Hlscarwas
Lawrence Scarberry, LangsvWe.
Pom~roy Village, . ; ,Racine,
sUghtly damaged.
Discharp-Ruby Burt, George $6911; Rutland, $582. and Syracuse,
$751,'
Juette E. Hoasler, 54, Pomi!J'OY,
Rawley.
was eastbound on 01\10 12t west of
Rutl8nd at .12::.D a.m. today when
she struck a deer. Her car sustained sUght damage: ·
f

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
As8oclaled Press Writer

(Contlnuedfrompagel)

.

Umll'l ·

SALE N.OW
THRU SAT.

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