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                  <text>Pag e- 10- The Daily Se nlin e l

t-omeroy- Moaaleporl, Ohio

•

Meigs board dumps Supt. Gleason ,...•
dicated its primary onterest os in the
study for the junior high problem
stitute secretaries list until some only at the present time with the
move of students into the one strucsolution has been reached .
to be made before cold weather.
ture
The bQard hired SEM Partners,
Columbus, to do a feasibility study of Cost of the study on the jumor high
the junior high school with the aim situation will be $1300.
Transportation expenses for Mr.
being to close the central building
and move all of the students onto the and Mrs. Ken Matson for getting
students to and from a state school
one structure
Supt. Gleason recommended that 111 Columbus were approved. These
the Columbus form be employed to are reimbursable by the state . It
do a feasobliity study of all of the Y.'as agreed to readvertise for b1rls
;chools on the dostrict. The board 1nIContinued from page I 1
agreed to place Grinies on the sutr

•

at y

e

on various food and miscellaneous
items since earlier advertisements
failed to produce adequate bids.
APPROVE BUDGET
A budget was approved although it
was pointed out that amounts to be
received by the district through the
state are very indefinite at this time.
A nwnber of items on last night's
agenda were not discussed-at least

protect aga inst such events in the

Associated Press Writer

future and to address the issue of ap-

WASHINGTON 1AP1 - With a
pledge to expl orr "al l possible

propria te redress.''

remedies for the wrongs done," on
inquiry is beginmng into the interrunenl, without charge or crime,

l tst of witnesses for ils hearings

of 120.000 Japa neS&lt;'. 'during World

hane in the mass relocation in 1942
and associations representing the
Japanese who were onterned.
In the hysteria that follow ed the
D&lt;ee 7, 1941 Japanese attack on
Pear l Harbor, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt sigried the order that
resulted in the rounding up and imprisonment of 77.000 American
citizens of Japanese ancestry and
!3.000 Japunese natiOnals, most of
whom were U.S. residents .

Warll .
-- " We do not tntend to condud an
inqui.stlion or a trial," said J uan Z.
Bern-:;tein tn a std tement prepC:~re d
rur the openi n_g hearing or the ninemember CommissiOn on Warti me
Heluca ti11n a nd Internment of
Ctv tltans

" What we do 1ntend ... sht• su od.
·· is to see k to un derstand

wh e~ t

hap-

The tnternees came from CaliforArizona ,

Ore go n

today and Thursda y, scheduling former gove rnment officta ls who had a

wa~

sa id

to

require this

un-

The commission was established

last year by Congesss and Presodent
Carter sogned the bill. ca lling the internment "o1e of the disappointing

Meigs County happenings ...
Rt·ceiws bids

awarded and to reconfirm the
natt on' s commthnent to hwna n
rights.

way~ to

\ l'lt·rans Mt'morial

Ft vc btds we re received by Uw

Me1gs County Board
rnt ~~J uners

ri Comon the access road to be

built fr om Unoon Ave.. to Mul ber ry
HPtgh l "i ar ea .
SubmJttJOg bids and the a mount

fl

Wt'rt '

V. Webe r Constr udi un.

$353,99428: Alan Stone Co. Inc ..
$4:32.608.98: Shelly and Sands Contractors. $296.633.65: Robinson F.x ·
C&lt;i\~a ltn g Cu, $676,736.10

e:tnd Da vis

and Burton Contra ctors. $358.0:!5 06
Tw u electncal

rem·ed fur the Mentally Rel&lt;lrded
Collel.!e proper ty in S:.'ra cuse
Subm1tllng bids and tht&gt; a mount

were Northwes t Electnc. $155,636
ond P1ckenng Electric, $160,570.
/\II IJods will be l&lt;lken under cun.sJ deralwn anJ awarded

po~si bl y

toda) .

Two su1b for d1v0r('e cmd one
dissolut1or: were fil ed in M e i~s County Cununon Pleas Court
Filing fu r divorce were AuF!ustmc
Clonch . llarruwnvill e. aga inst Dc,d e
t\ .

Clonc h. Modd le port : Ma dalyn

MaP KeUt'y,

Pomeroy,

aga inst

Wolsun Pa tnc·k Kelley . Guysv il le.
fu&lt;nda l C. Friend. Rt. I, Long Bottom and Lu anrw S. Fnend. Rt. 1.
Minpr svillt&gt;. ftl ed· for dissolut1011 of

Jlldrrta gt.• .

\1arriag•· lil't'll!'it'!'i
Marrw ge licenses were 1ssued to

Ernest Lee Richmond, 31 , Rt. I,
D&lt;exter, and Glenda Fay Na pper, :11 .
Pomeroy: Do na ld futy Ja ckson, 24,
Reedsv ille , and J en ntfer J.v nn
Brrkhimer, 31. Reeds v tl ! t~ .
·

Additional hearings have been
scheduled 1n Los Angeles on Aug . 46: San Francisco, Aug . 11 -13: Seuttle. Sept. 9--JI : Anchorage , Sept. 15 :
Unalaska. Aleutian Islands, Sept. 17

Gallia-Meigs Post of the sta te highway pa trol
Th e patrol saod Steve .I Blackwell,
25, wa s northbound on SR 7 at 7:45

2Bth St.. Huntingto n. '
Ferrell Mortuary, Huntington, is
· Charge of arrangements . whic h
m

f1 cers fur 198!-ll2 Will be elected

emb ankment, ca using sloght
damage to the motorcycle and
modera te damage to Blackwell's
car .

The patrol also onvest1ga ted a oneca r accident in Clay Twp Monday
ni~ ht .

According to the report. Chris
Bm s, 20, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was eastrrotorcycl e ridden by Ja cob J. Gaul. bound on CR 8 at 7:20p.m. when he
59. Pomeroy, who wa s slowing to · lost control on a curve. went off the
make a left turn.
ri~ht side of the road and drove into
Blackwell's car then hit the left a ditch, causing moderate damage
side of Ga ul' s bike and then hi t an and no injury .

HEARING TESTS SET
ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

THURSDAY,
JULY 16
9 AM to 12 NOON

Will BE Given By
H . William Mattingly
BEL TONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
Anyone who has trouble heMing is wel come to have a hearing test us ·
ing modern electronic equipment ro determine if hi s loss is one whi ch
mav be helped. Some of the cause~ of hearing loss will be ex plained
and diagrams of how the ear works w.ill be shown .

we Also Service and Repair All Makes at Hearing Aids .
Batteries And Supplies For All M~kes For Sale.
1F YOU CANNOT COME IN .
CALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT .
PHONE 9'12-J6Z9

would

threaten

the

$2,500.

' ~ ··,

WASHINGTON - A five-week strain in u,s. relations with Israel
. ··· ~
.
over its attack Of!•ari I~aqi nuclear ~actor appeared at an eild Tuesday
with all signs J)oillliiJil toward •early reswnption of U.S. warplane
delivenes to Israef'i;'- · ' ;,. · .
Officially, the Rea~ i!drioinislration said it is withholding a final
decision pending consu)ti)tion~ \fith State Department Counselor
Robert McFarlane, who was due :b!lck in Washington Tuesday night
after talks with Prime Minister Me!l1ichem Begin.
But both American and Isra~II,Sources said a joint statement announced in Jersaleum Mon.day night apparently cleared the way for
U.S. shipment of 10F-16 jet fighters to IsraeL

HutrhnSuw~ :tt ;~:.

: .11

r·n~krP1~.:~ 1H1 llw J!",11 l • 4 .)(}. .t•t
SHr-:l·:r rnon:.&lt;

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

WHEN YOU
·BUY WITH
THE BEST.
INSURE
WITH THE
BEST

.

'

.Sl&lt;~ ul!h : ~· rl ~ mll! s H -5! 1

I

WE'RE STILL CELEBRAfiNG OUR

15th ANNIVERSARY
To show our appreciatio!\ for your patronage over the
pas! 15 years, we're making our most popular tire
available at affordable prices. Watch our ad for more
de a Is each week.

REMI~GTON

IFREE INSTALLATION

CIA chief Hugel resigns

.

WASHINGTON - Max Hugel, a millionaire outsider whose appoinbneut irlted car~r intelligence officers, resigned Tuesday as
overseer of the CIA's spy network hours after a report that he slipped
inside information about a fiiJII he once toeadetj to two Wall Street
brokers. •
.,. .
~~
~
Ml\!lntlme, it was le11med that U.S. District Judge Charles E.
Stewart Jr. ruled May 19 in New York that Hugel's boss, CIA Director
William J. Casey, knowingly' misled potential investors when he and
others lried to raise capital for an unsu~fij( fanning corporation in

TIRE SALE
AND BALANCING!

CUSHION-AIRE., BELTED

1968.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
JULY CLEARANCE

MEN'S SUMMER CAPS
GOOD SELECTION OF STYLES AND £0LORS.

ADJUSTABLE SIZE. VISORS ARE INCWDED.

Size
A78· 13
B78·13
C78-13
. B78·14
C78-14 '
E78-14
F78-14
G78· 14
H78·14
G78· 15
H78·15
L78· I 5

Each
$33 .45
33.98
35 .28
34.52
35 .39
37 .40 '
38.59
45.48
46.9
45.69
41.12
49.20

Excise
Tax
$1.69
1.80
i .90
1.92
1.93
2.14
2.28
2.44
2.62
2.50.
2.72
2.95

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Qivi.
d ed d~legates hackt~ work
.
· WARSAW, J&gt;oland - The dlvided delegates to an emergericy CommUnist' PIIJ'ty congress 'ffiurned to ', Wi!l-k today in closed session to
decide IIOW·to ~Iect their p/ulty chief. · ' · '
'
· ,.
'Tht! tbo·eat ci a new outlriak of labor unreal in Poland while "!he
' cong~ was meeting 8eeiniid'to be elis(jjg.'S.Itlc Cf!ilst doek workers
sal~ todilytbe government liiid "respbndell" to thell' 'demanils for better•benefilii and official rel:Ognilion •nd plans for a "hunger march" ·
today_ i~·~litn~top~lo:Xtsltorta~~ werecalledofl.
'

Galli.a County is one of the top 10
Ohio C~~unties in constmction growth
durinll ~une, the stale !fepartment of
industrial relations said •
Approved for ®JIStructlon during
'June was a. $2,029,000 conununity
and student center for continuing
·ed~ca~ion at_Rio G~ande , College. ..,

.. .
."1.2! .
·
· ..
Winning 0, .IUO lottery number
.

TREAD WEAR 120 ...

··

. 1,

1

.

·

The earniligs came 011 1111e1 of . ..._ ~e lllitlde'rl of wltuung .

POMEROY HOME '&amp; llfiTo ·
·Ph. 992·2094 :

Front Egd Alignment-'$12.50
.
.

·, Pomeroy, Ohio
'

.Passenger ea.S "

.

'

.

·•

,.

• '

!li · i ,

~

l ' ~~er.; 1. .
, .' • \ ,
1
· · "' ,f;u...;nse tag fees', , ' · ~:. ·

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!
,
'
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~D,·
;:.;.i."'.~.o_:;~~r:=~
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WI
&amp;1..
W ea~e

·

l

mlcHOa:CIIIncw It

,

'**

,_~ lrid 411 jl6ii\tlll nwnodoty.

~~ ~11!1!!....~ -,""

•i • ...-~

·

:The cost is~taU1,950,0(l0:
The ~rtment also •pproved an
$11,000,000 proJect to I)UUd thickeners
and a puinpltoU¥, at.Meig$ ttl~ ~o.
1 lin SR 124. Owner and operatqr-is
kenry ,Lester, Moundsville, W.Va., . 1
vic'e.:· • president ;' and . general ·

.

•

tlckellare entltlec! ~'!'~ .-; laUeiy "!ffclaJi A!d· ·,

606 E. Main'

,,

CIEVEI..AND - ,The .winlling nwnber drawn TuesdaY. night in the .
, ~ J:.llttMf,'a jlal1y_ g~ "The Number" wu ~~.
.
.
· 11\eiOiteryf!ljiortld~ofq,ea D!lthedally garhedrawln8.
l

WASHINGTON I API - Stutr
bornly high interest rates will drive
federal spending $10 billion higher
than President Reagan had planned
next year despite his extensive
budget cutting and rapidly receding
inflation, the administration reported today.
Next year's budget is now expected to top $700 billion.
In an updated budget and
economic forecast. the Office of
Budget and Management predicted
that inflation would unwind even
faster than earlier optimistic
forecasts had called for . Consumer
prices, which jumped 12.4 percent in
1980, are expected to rise 8.6 percent
this year and 6.2 percent in 1982 .
The forecast for interest rates,
however, was not so hopeful.
Already near record levels, short·
term rates are expected to remain
above 10 percent through 1982.
In addition, with nearly no
economic growth predicted for the
rest of 1981, unemployment will rise
to 7.7 percent in 1981 and remain at 7
· jll!rtent or higher through 1982, according to the forecast . rates will
stay in double digits through 1982,

Meigs project
given approval

'

.. t'" · '

'"""'

,• GOv. Jamea

~

Bl!IIOUDced'

'itiat 111e ~ullf'M«or ve~~
~ tilt
olllcellle tax
t ~ ,..,.._, w.,1q more IbM. 130

""''lie

( 1llllJIIII\tPbtUiilllforl,he•ror'

OliiO'a

4tttll, ~YI

• --.july
..5

..

1

•

I

&amp;9 ·,!iic8!

aild road
,•

~ ·t
!7. tle!p .,

~:

•
44iililtua•u4,111.78.
· • • C.

'

•

( '

for the ruhng Socialist Baath Party,
said today that Syria was determined to " defend Lebanon 's
territory and air space against
Israeli intrusions at whatever cost."
It said "Syria is not prepared to
allow Israel to tum Lebanon into an
enemy security zone.
Israel's chief of staff, Lt. Gen.
Raphael Eytan, said on state
television that the Jewish state
would continue to "attack guerrillas
on onr own tenns and not as a reaction." He said the guerrillas
received new arms supplies from
Libya, Syria and the Soviet Union
I Continued on page 14)
'I

in the future , permit the county
government to run in the red . We
will cut where cutting is necessary
to bring expenditures in line with the
money avai lable."
Jones recommended that the
board give con sideration to closing
the county infirmary if other means
can be found for caring for Meigs
County's indigent citizens.
" I believe that if explored
throughly we could find that there
are other ways of caring for these
cotizens that would he cheaper for
the taxpayers of Meigs County. Annual overall cost of operating the
county infirmary is approaching
$100,000 and will continue to in-

crease" Jones pointed out.
Commissioners agreed to study
the proposal made by Jones between
now and the first of the year .
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
reported that patching and paving
work was being done on county
roads, that the new mow-trim was
being used daily and that most of the
steel had arrived to he used on a
bridge located on county road 25.
In other business, commlssioners

reported that the contract for constructong the acess road will be let
on Friday of this week. They approved the schematic development
plan of the Meigs County Planning
Commission .

High interest rates drive
federal spending up again

.

'

YOUR CHOICE

1f2PRICE

Judge John C. Bacon ordered the
matter of sentencing continued upon
completion of a presentence investigation and report.
Randolph was released upon his
own recognizance to await final sentencing.
Also appearing before Judge
Bacon .Tuesday was Paul Edward
Snyder, 19, of Los Angeles, Calif., for
an extradition hearing following his
arrest Monday on a warrant from
California authorities.
Snyder had escaped from a state
mental hospital where he had been
placed following his con:.-iction of a
variety of charges including robbery, rape, felonious assault,
sodomy' mayhem and grand larceny. He had hitch-hiked here to
visit relatives in the Meigs area.
Snyder signed a waiver of the ex·
tradition process and will volun-. tarily return. to Califom.ia. He will be
returned to California by Los
Angeles County Sheriff deputies.

Five week strain
said over
.

1

are still incomplete.

Randy Lee Randolph, 21, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, entered a voluntary plea
of guilty to a charge of receiving
stolen property Tuesday in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Randolph was indicted July 2 by
the Meigs County Grand Jury on a
charge resulting from an incident in
February.
The stolen property ''lncluded a
complete stereo system and other
items belonging to Ted Hayes of
Pomeroy. They were taken in'a Mar·
ch 23, breaking and entering at the
Hayes residence.
Due to the fact the property was
valued for more than $150, receiving
stolen property is a felony of the
fourth degree carrying a possible
penalty of six months to five years in
a state prison and a fine of up to

MASSlLLON, Ohio - All six P91ice ·officers on the night shift called
in sick Tuesday night in an apparent job p~t, leaving the depart·
. ment's afternoon ·shift to work overtime, a~ording to Lt. William
Seymour.
The night shift had worked frol)l 10 p.m. Monday until 2 p.m.
Tuesday when most of the day shift, scheduled to take over at 6 a.m.
Tuesday, called in sick.
Normally, 20 officers are scheduled to work during the day, but
several are off for vacation and leave. Nine day-shift officers called in
sick, and four reported .to work, Chief Fred Kirbride said.

i:i
~Lm~o:hl1'1" Hulb , Ovt·r 1.00(1 lb., • 4B 5-:i5 so
t";uuwrs wul Cu l\ t-r:-. :lf.-42 i!t
Spnal! t-r &lt; ·u ~ ~ , By tht· !Jto ad , tt.Ju-:rm
Vt:tl.~ •Ch••lct·ari, JPrurw •!ti·ill
H: ,!J,(";IIn·.' ,lh t h,·llt·;td•~fi:Jn.a5
'"" I'II IC f:.&lt; ·
:.o '~~-~ ~N" I. Barrov.. ~ &lt;~ n• l r;ilb ' !l.ll~ !ltl tbs

Hut 1 'ht'r B 11 ars~ J -4 :t

g~ven

All six officers catlin sick

~i l511 . m ~oolb.~ u.5fl

He is surviveU by his wife , LaVond
a: a d aug hter. Mela nni l,ynn ; and

Fostona . v1ce pres1de nt : Ma ry
Tay l or , Coolville, secretary: Lucille
l.ernley. Galluwav.. treasurer . Of-

nomination

.

(N AACP 1

" son. Richard. They lived at 1373

a.m . when he attempted to pa::;s a

For Pomeroy, Ohio

he was elected first VICe

.
prest'd en t an d Ia t e r actmg
president
of the Huntington branch of the
Nationa l Association for the Advan cernent or Co lored Peopl e

Middleport . president : Ron Taylor.

Patrol cites Pomeroy man
A Pomeroy man was cit ed fo r
passing tn a hazardous zone in a twovehJclc e:~c~·idc nt in Meigs County
Monday mormng . &lt;:~ccord in g lo the

1977.

abortion groups. They claomed the

iJ

pointed to the area labor council.

fn

and 19 other conservative and anti-

Meigs County's General Fund will
show a $102,973.50 defidt in 1982 according to figures approved Tuesday
during the weekly county commissioners' meeting.
The budget for 1982 total s
$5,267,249.79.
According to Cl)mmissioner
Richard Jones, the general fund
receipts for 1982, as estimated by the
county auditor, woll be $1,348,405.89
while expenditures in the general
fund are estimated at $1,451,379.30,
thus leaving a deficit of $102,973.50.
JonlJs said,"Based on the figures
now available it is quite clear that
all county offices can look forward to
departmental budget cuts in 1982.
We have not in the past, nor will we

•

Casey misled investors

NEW YORK - A federal judge has found that CIA director William
J. Casey knowingly misled potential investors when he and others
tried to raise capital for an unsuccessful fanning corporation in 1968.
Casey and other officers and directors of the firm issued a circular
in which pertinent facts were misrepresented or omitted, the judge
said.
The finding was made by U.S. District Judge Charles E. Stewart Jr.
on May 19 in an initial decision involving a 1974 class action damage
suit filed by investors in a New Orleans finn called Multlponics Inc.
. ....
.")""' ' ~ '
,... .....

alliance that helped elect Reagan
last fall .
The groups claimed that the
Justice Department may have
"covered up" infonnation about
Livestock
Mrs. O'Connor's alleged proabortion stance during her days in
report .... ~M the Arizona Senate. or that Mrs.
O'Connor may ha ;e been less than
forthcomong about her voting record
on abortion and support for the
,\tht·n~ t . i\·~·~ h•dl. Saks
S.at urda)·. J ull ll. 1981
Equal Rights Amendment .
&lt;xni.E PI&lt;II'ES
Mrs. O'Connor sa id she believed
Fl'o'lit-r S (l 'l'r .• o (;ul ~l &lt;111d ("li ult"l"l :100-500 l b~
55 Jj~i:l ~!1 : ~~o-7oo IIJ., . 5! 50-5~1
·
the
Capitol Hill meetings
were
l"ITdn Ht·tftn . r;utl1 Lmt1Chnu· 1 ·~ :mo-500 1bs
customary
for
Supreme
Court
~!1-J.l !)(! : son.;oo lb., ~~l-111 ; ::,
Ft•o•dN Au lb ' r;,,"' rHIII Chilli I ' ' :lfMl.;,oo lbs
nominees.

prominent in Huntington civic cir-

fur Jul y 26 at Forest Acres Park in
Rutland . The potluck dinner wiU
begin at l p.m . Each fa mi ly attendtng should prov ide tts own
lH•\•eragl' and table serv tet.' .
Offtc~rs fDr 1980-81 an' Hub.~· Fife,

Fofc. 992-:1464 or Mary Tay lnr, 667:14:14.

is_s ues as abortion and said Supreme

cles, died Sunday in Lynchburg, Va ..
whi le on vaca tion with his family .
A 16--year employee with Hunlongton All oys, he was shop steward
and a member of the mill grievance
coorunottee. and was recently ap-

The 13th annual reun 1un of the
Taylor-Harper families has been set

r FRIDAY lhru THURSDAY! l
LJULY 10 thru 16 _

Christian civil war annistiee under
an Arab League mandate.
Damascus Radio noted that there
have been three Israeli air assaults
into Lebanon since Habib began his
third Middle East shuttle last Thursday to avert a Syrian·lsraeli
onilitary showdown in Lebanon.
"These attacks obviously are a
result of plain coordination between
the U.S. administration and the
Zionist enemy ," the official radio
said hours before Habib was expected to fly to Syria from Saudi
Arabia.
An editorial in the Sy rian
newspaper Tichron, which speaks

Commissioners okay
1982 deficit budget

Guilty
plea

••• IN THEW

BARGAIN MA1'1NffS ON SAr &amp; SUN
AU SEATS JUST S r .50
AOMISSJON EVERY TUfS OAY S 1.50

O'Connor to replace retired Justice
Potter Stewart and hecome the first
woman on the Supreme Court was
denounced last week by the Moral
Ma jority, the Conservative Caucus

loeatioos. Gleason said that he will ask board of
education members to look over the stadium and approve repalntiug and other needed work at the site.

ToDAY

53 1 JAC~SON PIKE Rt 35 WEST
Phone 446 · 4524

President Reagan 's choice or Mrs

Court nomin ees generally do not say
hl&gt;w they would vote in specific
cases whi ch mi ght come before
them .
Among those Mrs. O'Connor was
scheduled to meet was Sen. Jesse
Helms. R-N C.. who has expressed

Richard A. Smger. 35, a fonn er
Meig s County resident who was

Taylor Harper
reunion set

chairman,

issues were in line with t heir own .·

But she refused to doscuss such

Ric-hard A. Sin~t'r

Conunittec

Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker, other Senate leaders and
various members of the Judicoary
panel.
Sources said there was a tentative
plan for Mrs. O'Connor to meet with
a a group of about 20 conservative
senators to persuade them that her
views on abortion and other social

s he said.

Area Deaths

btx.len .

Judiciary

groups, was sc heduled to meet with
severa l key senators on Capilol Hill
this afternoon, aft~r a morning visot
to the Justtce Department.
"I've tried to be candid and woll
continue to try to be so" in Senate
Judocoary Cnmmittee hearings that
now may be delayed until Seplemher , Mrs. O'Connor saod Monday
at an airport news conference
arra nged by White House aides.
" I simply don 't know what I'll be
asked" durong this week' s meetings,

civil liberties demand nothi ng less."

INSPECTS - ·Meigs Local ScboiJI District Supt.
David L. Gleason Tuesday afternoon Inspected the bad
condition of the Meigs Marauder Stadium iu Pomeroy,
where mst spots are showing through In numerous

that decision are not known .
She also was to meet with Sen.
Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., the

come under fire from conservative

country's honor and corrunitment to

Theft of seve ral bags of feed from
1n front of the Sugar Run Mill also
took place on Saturday according to
a report filed Monday by Rohert lm-

Mrs. O'Connor 's specific views un

The 51-year-old Arizona appeals
court judge, whose past stance on
abortion and women's rights ha ve

mission will explore all ~ossible

W Jolmson, fu&lt;cine , was broken out
by vandals early Monday mornin ~.
Pulice sa id a black bicyc le at the
home of David Capehart , Lincoln
He1ghl.'l , was stolen Monday af-

folluw1n g the potluck dinner. An v
que s ti u ns s hou Id be d1r ec ted to Rub~

her Supreme Court nomination.

remedi es for the wrongs done. This

Pomeroy Police report that a car
wmdow in a vehicle owned by .James

skepticism about her selection, and
Sen. John East: R-N.C .. a Judicoary
Corrunittee member who has said he
would not support a Supreme Court
nominee who agreed with the 1973
decision legalizing abortions.

WASHINGTON iAPI - Sandra D.
O'Connor, still silent on abortion and
other subsl&lt;!nti ve questions. is courtong the natoon ·s politi cal leaders in
hopes of defusing any opposition to

.. There are no easy answers ...
Mrs. Be rnstein said. "But the com-

ternoon.

To •·nrlmarriagt·s

O'Connor silent on abortion issue

to Congress what compensati on
should be paod and to whom.
Estimates are that the Japanese lost
$400 mollion on property

Cht•l'k rumplai 11 Is

arrival at Washington National Airport Monday. Mrs.
O'Connor Is scheduled to meet with key senators on
Capitol Hill today. I AP Laserpholu I.

Supreme Court, answers questions for reporters on her

The commission will recommend

Admotted- -Co rinne
Hage r ,
Pome roy: Chilton Cadle. Rutland :
James Wolfe, Middleport; Dona ld
N&gt;ckels, Pomeroy; Robert Roush,
Letart, W. Va .; Taylor Hawki ns.
Middleport : Glen Stone. Lakin:
Cathy Riffle. Moddleport : Leona
Pullins. Long Bottom .
Di sc harged-- Ronald
Juniak.
Alv1ra Barr. Lowell Collins, Erma
Wi lson, Melvin Fores ter. Roy
Housh

btcb werr also

Sc ht Jol to bt.• erected on the Ca rl eton

SUPREME COURT NOMINEE - Sandra O'Connor, President Ronald Reagan's nominee to the

precedented treatment of a national
group

and sometimes ernbiirrassing oecur re nces Ill the history of our
nation ."
Ca rter sa id the commi s~J on 's task
was to assess the episode to see if
adequate compensatiOn had be en

pent•d and wh\. tu focus on

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Syria's
state radio today blamed U.S.
presidential envoy Philip C. Habib
for Israel's escalated air attacks on
Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon.
Israeli warplanes struck a dozen
Palestine Uberation Organization
guerrilla
stronghulds
along
Lebanon's Mediterranean coast and
inland mountains Tuesday, killing 10
guerrillas and villagers and injuring
35, police said.
Israeli jet fighters also shot down
a Syrian jet in a dogfight over
Syrian-held Lebaoes.e territory .
Syria maintains a 22,000-man army
to police Lebanon 's Mosl em·

a nd

Washington and the Pribilof and
Aleutian islands. They were sent to
10 permanent camps in Utah ,
Arjzona , Colorado, Wyoming ,
Arkansas, California and Idaho.
" They were detaoned without trial,
wothout hearings of any kind," Mrs.
Bernstein sa id. ·Military necessity

The coorunissoon had an ambitious

IS Ce~IS

Syria blames
United States

in open session-as the board moved

into the executive session without
taking up the matters.

ni a ,

ellttn·e

Ohio,

Japanese hearings begin today
By HARRY fi'. ROSENTHAL

•

the report predicts.
The mid-year forecast says
Reagan is abandoning plans to hold
spending in 1982 to $695.3 billion the ceiling he set in February, when
he proposed $48.6 billion in federal
program cuts.
Instead, the administration now
expects spending next year to total
$704.8 billion because higher interest
rates have driven up the govern·
ment's borrowing costs by more
than $10 billion.
D&lt;espite the spending increase,
Reagan predicts the budget deficit
for fiscal 1982 will actually be
somewhat lower than than he had
projected earlier - $42.5 billion
rather than $45 billoon.
The reduced deficit, however, is
the result solely of Reagan 's
decision to scale down the size of his
proposed tax cut for next year by $12
billion, the revised report said.
Interest rates also are pushing
spending for this year to $661.2
billion, $6 billion above Reagan's
earlier ceiling, but the anticipated
budget deficit will rise less than $1
billion, to $:15.6 billion, because of the
smaller tax-cut proposal.

The revised figures do not back
away from Reagan 's pledge to
balance the budget by 1984, but the
increases brought on by economic
events beyond Reagan's direct con-trol raise doubt about his ability to
achieve a balanced budget except by
tnrruning his tax-cui plan.
The new fi gures provide some am-munition to Democratic critics of his
plan I&lt;&gt; cut personal tax rates for
three years in a row. They argue
that it would be unwise for Congress
to lock itself into a three-year cut,
with the risk that higher than expected federa I spending will lead to
even wider deficits by 1984.
Reagan's forecasters are sticking
with their optimistic predictions of
February that the economy will
grow by a healthy 5.2 percent in 1982
because of the stimulative effect his
tax cuts would have.
The economy , adjusted for inflation , is expected to grow 2.5 per·
cent in 1981, only because of a record
jump in first quarter activity.
Interest rates are clooe to record
levels because of government efforts
to dampen inflation by limiting the
growth of credit.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

Commentar

National League wWS'
board all star game ·
_ -~~

Page-2-The Daily sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesda , ~uly 15,19J1

~

From Myra Bradwell to Sandra O'Connor..__ _J_am_es_J_.K_ilpa_tric_k
Mrs. Bradwell appealed. In April
1873, the U. S. Supreme Court also
gave her the brush-off. It was within
the police powers of Illinois to limit
membership in the bar to males
only. Only Chief Justice Salmon P.
Chase dissented, and be didn't say
why .
Justice Joseph P. Bradley was so
shocked by the whole astonishing
idea that he wrote a flaming concurring opinion in which two other
justices joined. History , nature, the
common law, and " the usages of
Westminster Hall from time immemorial" argued against the
proposition. Bradley felt impelled to
expand upon the wide diffeence in
the spheres and destinies of man and

WASHINGTON - It was just the
other day that I was invoking the
19th-century shade of Myra Bradwell, but with the nomination of Sandra Day O'CoMor to the Supreme
Court, the old story takes on an
especially poignant meaning. From
Mrs. Bradwell to Mrs. O'CoMor, it's
been a! ong, uphill climb for ladies in
the law.
Myra Bradwell, may she rest in
peace, was a native of Vermont who
moved to Chicago sometime in the
mid-1850s. Not long after ratification
of the Fourteenth Amendment in
1868, she did a most audacious, unfeminine thing : She applied for a
license to practice law. Curiously,
she did not rely upon the equal
protection clause but rather upon
the privileges and immunities
clause, but in any event the Supreme
Court of Illinois summarily turned

woman .

"Man is, or should be, woman's
protector and defender . The natural
and proper timidity and delicacy
which belongs to the female sex
evidently unfits it for many of the 0&lt;'-

her down . No women were to be

allowed in court.

The Uail, Sentinel
I l l I uurl

~ trt&gt;t'l

l'ttnwrn~ .

Ohin

61~ - ~!12 - 2' 136

Ill

~ I

IT I-'.0 Til 'Ill F

I.._H :H~:S T

I W THE

Mt:II.S- \L\ Sil~

"-REA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
BOB HOEFLICH

'.\l WIIIH .IIEAil
otu l ·uhlt•lw t f l " lllt " lln

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
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LH ' It'. i!ddr•· -, m~

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Cowboy has hisday
D€magogs and llheral democrats.

ward Kennedy is a multi-millionaire

being one and the same, prate more

and he made his fortun€ in the free-

programs.

These guys not only want to fly first class on a featherh&lt;'\1 but want to
be tucked in every night. One of
them frQ!Jl Mississippi attached a
rider on an appropriation bill going
through congress to allow for those
of them living in the Washington, D.
C. area to allow for him a gardener
at a salary of $13,000 a year. This
because of th• high cost of living in
that area.
There is en entrenched anny of
robinhoods who take from th€
productive and give il to the unproductive. They manage to give a
little something to everyone to get
their vote. All this socialisti c set-up
doesn't do much for the people who
are suffering; it h€lps and entrenches the bureaucrats.
They yell that Reagan takes from
the "pore" and gives to the rich . Ed-

enterprise business world he won't

support.
Lyndon Johnson saJd he was
"pore" when he started but he ended
up on his Texas ranch worth millions
and he was on the public payroll
from beginning to end.
Jimmy Carter says Utopia is at
the end of the American rainbow,
but he wants congress to pass a law,
special for him, so he can buy at
discount on the taxpayers at
military stores . As an ex-president

he has an annual salary more than
$60,000 in addition to many presiden-

tial perks on the public cuff.
These liberals bugled to "cut
Reagan off at the pass." But the
wise Southern Demos, in lhe parlance of th€ R•hel general Nathan Bedford Forrest, got there "fustest with
the mostest" and the Cowboy won
the day and the budget cuts. That is
with 100 percent Republican support.
Gayle Price
Ed.'s Note : What about retired
presidents Ford and Nixon '

Just as the court has benefited in
times past from a Western viewpoint, or an academic or a black or a
Jewish or a Catholic viewpoint, or
the viewpoint of a lawyer In private
practice, now we will have some
benefit, however subtle, of a
woman's viewpoint.
Excellent! In the term just ended,
the court disposed of cases having to
do with abortion, child custody, teenaged sex, nude dancing, sex
discrimination in employment,

property settlements In divorce, and
the registration of women (but 'not
men) for a potential draft. No ooe
can say how Mrs. O'Connor might
have voted in these cases if she had
beeb 11\ttlnl! on the court. She might
have voted just as the departing Potter Stewart voted. But she would
have brought tO the consideration of
these cases a body of personal experit:nce - a cast of mine, if you
please - that has not been there
before.

None of this, I know, ill suppoeed to
matter. Justices In theory approach
eae.h case without personal
prejudice OF bias. 'lbey fwldlon as
carpenters, In one metaphOI', who
simply lay the boards of law aga!Dst
the llquare of the Constitution, 'lbe
theory ill spedOUB. Justices are not
disembodied spirits. 'lbey are mor·
tals, and · to this day they have aU
been mortal men. Now we are to
have a mortal woman. Myra Bradwell would be pleased. And so am I.

cases.' '

It would be interesting to know
what ever became of Myra Bradwell. She was born a century before
her time, but last week 's nomination
of Sandra O'Connor to the high court
vindicates her pioneering effort. The
Senate Judiciary Committee expects to expedite confinnation
hearing5on the nominee, in an effort
to complete action hefore the August
recess.
Mrs. O'Connor will be welcome on
the court. Members of our highest
tribunal come to that bench equipped not only with experience in the
law but with all the other experiences of their lifetimes also. It
t.akes nothing from Thurgood Marshall's stature to observ€ that Lyndon Johnson wanted to name the fir·
st black to the court. By the same
token, it is evident that Mrs. O'Connor has heen chosen over males with
much lugher qualifications precisely
because she is a woman.

Concerning Mr. Reagan's choice
for the Supreme Court, a few ob-

lower prices of oil company shares, ..
some of which are down 30 percent
since early this year.
For the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries, he said, it
means economic problems. "Very
few OPEC countries invested
wisely, " he said. "Gold, military
aircraft. But their industrial
operations aren't efficient." In a
world market, he said, they cannot
compete.
Because of the changed supplydemand ratio, the economic outlook
for nations heretofore dependent on
OPEC oil is now different from what
it was, according to Aliber. They'll
pay less for oil. And they may have
other sources of supply, too, a result
of discoveries made in recent years.
But in Aliber's view, the major
change in the ratio has been that
users have redesigned their capital
equipment.
There are, he points out, 100
million cars In the United States.
Each year, 10 inlllioo are scrapped
and 10 mlllion new ones added to
stock. The scrapped cars were getting 10 or 11 miles to the gallon,
whereas the new onenre .getting 23
miles. That trend will continue, he
says.

LATE IN 111E GAME -

American League
"manager" Jim Schaefer, seated left, prepares to roll
the dice as biB National league counterpart John
Halpern, seated center, plans his strategy. The two

the Court. On the que,;tion of
whether she might have t11ken the
initiative some time after 1973, in an
mdependent action, to propose such

I I To favor Mrs. O'Connor 's confinnation is not the same as saying

a resolution, there is no rPady an-

that there wasn't a better qualified
jurist around. But that much can be
said at almost any moment any
president is called on to make a
selection.
Clearly Mr. Reagan's thought was
dominated by his anxiety to name a
woman. While skeptical of the
proposition that the Supreme Court
should be sexually I or racially I
representative, in fact the presence
of a woman in the court serves two
purposes. The first is to demonstrate
that Mr. Reagan's political promises
are not mere campaign oratory. The
second is to demonstrate that a
president who opposes the Equal
Right• Amendment is not for that
reason insensitive to the desire of
women to demonstrate that there
are no political boundaries to their
ascendancy.
21 On the question of whether Mrs.
O'Connor is for or against abortion,
we are told by the president that she
opposes abortion . Presumably he
had this confidence from her, since
Mrs. O'Connor has hardly been
voluble on the subject, one way or
another. Her opponents point
especially to her blocking, in 1973 in
the Arizona legislature, a resolution
calling for a constitutional amendment to prohibit abortion. But Mrs.
O'Connor pointed out that her oppoSition was procedural. Because
under Arizona law, non-.germane
resolutions are forbidden. She was
then, in her opposition, paying the
kind of attention to legislative
authority that one assumes she will
continue to pay when she reaches

swer. It is not inconceivable that
Mrs. O'Connor arrived at her
present position on abortion lately,
reluctantly, and with continuing
doubts about the feasibility at this
point of a constitutional amendment.
3) The anti-abortion constituency
should from time to time remind itself that there are a great many very
decent people who believe in abortiOn : or, one step down !rum that,
disbelieve in disallowing abortion . It
shouldn't be the position of
American conservatives that appointees to the Court agree with us
on even major philosophical matters, except as implicitly I or explicitly) asserted in the Cor"titution.
The fight to illegalize abortion will
prove to be as extensive a&lt; that to
illegalize slavery. Less bloody in one
sense only, that the victims of the
latter fight were formally alive,
those of the former, alive, but unborn. The pomt here is that the fight
against abortion requires a patient,
tenaciOus, long-standing, resolute
battle for the minds of men. But
precisely not for the minds of
Supreme Court justices.
4I It would be good, as a providential matter, if every member of the
Supreme Court came arow1d to the
position that unborn babies should
enjoy constitutional protections. But
the fight is over Rose vs. Wude. That
decision, described by constitutional
scholar Robert Bork as probably the
most indefenSible ruling of the Court
in this century, was made by a Court
majority assertive about its own
preferences. We want someone on

WASHINGTON I API - Think
t.anks are a growth industry in
Washington. They come in varying
sizes and ideological hues. They
commission studies, offer haven to
economists and administrators who
come and go from government with
shifts in power.
Some produce ideas that take
hold. Some produce paper.
They operate on the outskirts of
politics, as tax-exempt,. educational
organizations. But it takes officeholding politiciii,OS to translate the
propositions they generate Into
programs and action. ,

15.223%
14.480%

.A!..
.....,

the Court who is not assertive about
his i? - the ultimate test of the personal doing the work of two) own
opinions. Mrs. O'CoMor, judging
from the record, has a high respect
for the right of the people to govern
themselves through their
legislators. She is a conservative
Republican in political outlook. Conservatives should prefer to see
someone on tbe Court who, while in
favor of abortion, would rule against
those who won in Roe vs. Wade than
someone opposed to abortion, who
will interpret the Constitution as a

collection of their personal credenda.
5I And finally, the anti-abortion
constituency will nnake a grave
mistake if it launches an all-out effort to defeat Mrs. O'Connor.
Because among other things she is
going to be confirmed by a heavy
majority.
And it would be a pity to invite the
conclusion that the political strength
of the anti-abortion constituency is
measured by the size of the minority
who vote against Mrs. O'Connor.

Now there's a think tank devoted
to pointing the Democratic Party in
new directions by generating ideas
to serve liberal objectives in what
seems a conservative era.
The Center for Democratic Policy
is bent on writing a new agenda for
liberalism, in a party that
discovered its lease on power was
·
ending.
"Democrats for the past 40 years
have been running against Herbert
Hoover and for Franklin
Roosevelt," says Ted Van Dyk,
president of the center. He helped
four Democrats run for president.

.

.

'

~

local television producers played a game version of the
All Star Game Tuesday In Clevellllld Stadium. Watching closely is "umpire" James Williams, left. ( AP
Laserphoto).

Labor Secretary Donovan
joins baseball session
By Associated Press
Labor Secretary Raymond
Donovan plans to throw the weight
of the Reagan Administration into
the effort to end the 34-day-old
baseball players strike.
Donovan was to accompany
federal mediator Kenneth Moffett
today when club owners' negotiators
and players' representatives
resumed bargaining in New York. It
was to be the first meeting since
talks broke up Saturday amidst
much bitterness after owners rejected a settlement proposal drawn up
by Moffett.
The negative effects of the strike
- economic losses in 'the 24 major
league cities and the cancellation of
3112 of the 2,106 scheduled regularseason· games - apparently are
serious enough in Donovan's opinion
that he should intervene with Moffett. The 52nd All.Star Game, which
had been scheduled for Tuesday
night in Cleveland, also is a strike
casualty.
"The secretary is deeply concerned about the economic impact
that the strike is having on many
American cities," said Donovan

onetime play-by-play announcer for
aide Earl Cox.
the
Chicago Cubs, has said little
The strike hegan June 12 over the
type of compensation teams should publicly about the strike.
But he said Tuesday he would like
he awarded when they lose free
to see the strike settled soon.
agents.
Moffett said Donovan would open
"I agree
with Samuel
Gompers,
created
the American
today's negotiations by making a who
statement, but added that the Federation of Labor, who said,
secretary did not plan to stay for the 'Anytime there's a strike, there's a
breakdown in communications.'''
entire session.
"I believe Mr. Donovan's presen· the President said.
Marvin Miller, executive director
ce at this meeting will emphasize the
importance of bringing this dispute of the players' union, said Tuesday
the players had no new ideas. "We
to a conclusion," Moffett said.
Moffett and Cox confirmed that if ar• constantly reviewing our
the new round of :talks fails to position, but we haven't come up
produce a settlement, Donovan will with anything new," Miller said.
In an interview aired on the CBS
summon representatives of both
network,
Baseball Commissioner
sides to Washington for intensive
Bowie
Kuhn
said, "I think we're getbargaining that would be ac- '
ting
very
near
a settlement." Kuhn
companied by a news blackout.
added
that
he
believed the club
Moffett said he preferred not to
owners
had
made
a "significant step
discuss in detail the option of conforward
in
their
rewrite" of Mofducting negotiations under the
fett's
settlement
plan
last week.
auspices of the Labor Department.
The commissioner said he was ·
"That's one jwnp ahead," he said.
"I'd like to wait and see what hap- looking at a numher of ways to
pens when the two sides resume resume the season once the strike
ends, including the possibility of a
talks."
President Reagan himself, a round-robin tournament.

@.

r::============:!::=========================~

.Going
Somewhere?

Oester feels players will need
mini training camp after strike

"At this point, the only thing I can think of for us
to do is to keep our fingers crossed that
Reagan ·s policy WILL favor the rich."

Energy demands
Think tanks growing in Washington
said declining
NEW YORK I API - New cars use
less fuel. So do new commercial jets.
And new houses also. "Demand for
energy is declining quite sharply
because of changes in the I nation's I
capital stock," said the professor.
He observed thai consumer
psychology has changed too : Peopl€
actually are cutting down on usage,
and using alternative fuels. France
and Japan have nuclear plants
coming on stream. The United
States has coal.
Coal isn't just an alternative; il is
far more efficient, too, costing only
·30 percent to 40 percent the cost of oil
:when measured in the output of
:British thermal units. The United
States has plenty of it.
The enonnlty of the .energy
change has not been popularly appreciated, said Robert Z. Aliber,
· professor of international
: economics, Graduate School of
: Bllllineaa, University of Chicago. "It
: is not properly perceived," he said,
• · uert1ng that dependence on OPEC
.• Is decllnlng.
: Political Interests, he suggested, ·
· may not acknowledge the change for
: fear of upeettlng the conservation,,
: trend. But, he continued, "You're
• ptt1ng a little sense of it now in the

CLEVELAND (AP)- Pittsburgh game.
The Nationals were held close for ·
Pirates' outfielder Dave Parker of
The game - the only one in town three iimings by American League
the National League was voted an because of the strike - drew plenty starter Len Barker of the Cleveland·
imaginary game hero and some of attention, but the 77,000 ticket Indians. In the fourth, a tw&lt;H'Wl
15,000 real baseball fans eased their holders to the indefinitely postponed homer by Philadelphia's Manny
frustration at cancellation of the real contest stayed away. Some 58 Trillo gave the Nationals aU they .
Major League All-Star Game with a diehards cheered In the lower sec- needed. They added 12 more runs in·
deafening chorus of boos.
lions of the cavernous stadium.
battering five American League pit-·
That's how Clevelanders
On this day, the National League chers.
celebrated the passing of Tuesday's assaulted the record book, ripping 17
National League Manager John
scheduled date for the 48th mid· hits, including four home runs and Halpern, a producer for WKYC-TV
season classic.
three doubles. The American in Cleveland, said it simply : "The
"We always want more, but this (s League was held to two runs on four National League creamed 'em."
great, just great," said Jeff Kin· , . . : . : h i : : ' t s : : : . · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·
sbach, a disc jockey from WMMSFM, who ,led the booing Tuesday
evening aimed " at Municipal
Stadium.
"These people are true Clevelanders. This is out of pride ... to show
people that we are tired of being
stood up, tired of being made a joke
of," he said.
Joel Rothstein, promoter for the.
Wild Horses rock band who played to
Effective
the crowd at the city's All Nation's
Annual
Festival, said the Wild Horses
Yield
thought of the idea for the booing.
The 36-second boo was recorded at
130 decibels, 20 decibels higher than
the accepted pain level.
Parker and his nnates walloped the
Current
American League l:f-2 in a Strat-&lt;&gt;Interest
Matic baseball game played at the
Rale
Stadium's home plate with a game
boanl and statistical cards.
The dice game pits hitters against
6-month Money Market Certificate
pitchers by comparing ratings for
$ 10 .000 m1n1mum Investment rerw 1r ed lnt eres tlll&lt;l V oe ~..1 1 0 mon t hly quMtert v 01 nt
power, speed and defensive ability.
matur 1ty d1re clly to you or lriHl slerr ed 1n1 o diiOIIler Ol&lt;inlOnd S&lt;t v1ng s accOunt !:I lee
In most cases, results are
!1VC ann ual y1 eld ba sea on re,nvestm~Cnl ol p11nu~rJI .-1 110 1nteresr at mt~r ur ll y 1h1s 15
believable.
.1n annua l rare suotec r to ch,tnoe ill renew.t l f ede•JI reyu ta llons protu bn compouno
Trappings for the game of makelllQ Ol Inter est and rf'lulre rl Sub Sir!ll ltill mtcreslpe nal! y lor e&lt;Jrly Wl!h arawi1 1
beli.~ve were real enough with Hallof-Fame pitcher Bob Feller
throwing out the ceremonial first
DIAMOND SAVINGS
dice; local favorite Rocco Scotti
AND LOAN COMPANY
bellowing both the Canadian and
216 w. Main, Pomeroy
American national anthems and
M-W 9-4 ThuL &amp; Sat. 9-Noon
--1 ~L11 1 .., ........ .., .. ,. s· ····~"· ···· · ,
Municipal Stadium's scoreboard
Friday 9-6
lighted to show progress of the

Highest Yield.
Guaranteed Rate.

How to think
about Sandra O'Connor..___Wi_ill_iam_F._B_uc_k_ler_J_r.
sen'ations :

Letter to the editor
and more weUare here and abroad .
suddenly thought up fixes for 50
' years of m1s-management, a scandalous food stamp program,
unionism that promot€8 socialism
and more and b1gger social

cupatioos of civil life. The constitution of the family organization,
which is founded in the divine or·
dinance as well as in the nature of
things, indicates the domestic
sphere as that which properly
belongs to the domain and function
of womanhood . .. The paramOWit
destiny and mission of woman are to
fulfill the noble and benign office of
wife and mother. Thsi is the law of
the Creator. And the rules of civil
society must be adapted to the
general constitution of things, and
cannot be based upon exceptional

·Vfi

Now, out of the White House and
halfway out of power in Congress,
Democrats have to build a new
policy base, Van Dyk said. That's
what his outfit is going to try to
deliver. It won't be easy.
Van Dyk sees the economy, with
the emphasis on Inflation, and the
decentralization of government
power as the two major issues of ihe
day. He a lao sees the Democrats in
trouble on both, unless · they can
come up with some new 8118wers.
Democrats were in charge while
deficits and inflation ~. Thty
are ldenttlled, Van Dyk says, with

'\big, centralized bureaucratic
federal government," which is what
most voters don't want.
. He talks about, In effect, a conservative approacli to reach liberal
goals. To an extent, that's what Jinnmy Carter tried unsuccessfully.
But VanDyk says.the new center
can cqme up with fresh ideas for
Democrats, ideas he claims will
start•. to show up in the 1982
congressional campai8J18, The, cen·
ter .has just COmmisslOIIed lis first
set of studies, On wages, prices,
lazes and econOmic productivity.

' if the
CINCINNATI (AP) - Even
baseball players' strike is settled
soon, the season is at least a couple
of weeks away from .resuming, Cin·cinnati Reds second baseman Ron
Oester predioted.
'
()ester said ballplayers will need a
mini-spring training to get back into
' .
shape once the players' strike over

· Settlement
faces 50-50
.c hance· to&lt;Jay

free agent compensation is settled.
Although he has been working out
regularly at the University of Cinci1Ul8ti baseball diamond with other
Reds players, Oester said there's no
substitute for a regular game.
"I'd have to say that it'll require
at least two weeks to get ready, even
though most of us have been trying
to stay in shape," Oester said.
"There probably are some,
however, who haven't been working
out much, .and they'll need extra
time.''

Pitchers in particular can expect
to be rusty, Oester said.
"It's going to be a really important peril1d for all pitchers, both
starters and relievers, because·theY
may have been throwing during the
past rtiOnth, but that's nothing like
·
actual competition,;, he said.
A group of Redli players worked
out dally at the l.tC camplls.when the
strike began. The woi'kouts have
diminished to three times a .week Mondays, W~ys and Fridays.
The' 21'&gt;-year-old Oester said ·lie Is
surprised that the strike • has

dragged on so long.
"Truthfully, I never thought there
would be a strike," he said. "Then,
when it happened, I Figured it would
only last a week. But I sure turned
outto be wrong."
.
Oester said he feels badly for
baseball fans ·who are deprived of a
favorite pasttime. But he doesn't
think fans will abandon the game
because of the strike.
The Cincinnati native has been
helping hi!&gt; wife Jackie and another
couple run a day care center they
own in suburban Cincinnati. About
35 to 40 kids are enrolled at the center during the summer; he said.
"I get to visit the center and play
with the kids more during the strike,
of course," Oester said. "I'd say I
get .out there two to three times a
week right now."
Oester ~id the youngsters realize
he is a ballplayer. :·
"They may be young, but a lot of
them ~!ready are fans," Oester said.
"And. I hope th!!y always stay that
way, t(\0, and come down and watch
us play at,Riverfront Stadium."

When you leave on your vacation, let us pack
a pak for you. Let us save your newspapers
for you until you return home, ~nd at that
time we will deliver every back 1ssue so that
you can catch up on the news that you
·
missed while you were away.
If you prefer to take your paper with you on
your vacation, we can arrange that too.
Call our circulation department or mail this
handy coupon to our circulation department
today.

The Daily Sentinel

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SYRACUSE Heavy rains
washed away Monday night action
in the local Syracuse Little League
Tournament, but a bright warm
Tuesday made it possible for four
more area teams to advance to the
next round in the tourney.
Cheshire, Syracuse, Bidwell, and
the Pomeroy Pirates each advanced
by posting exciting wins Tuesday

evening.
l

',........,. : :;·· ~"!! ' .

MIDDLEPORT BRAVES - Members of this
season's Mjddleport Brave Little League team are,
front, 1-r, Troy Qualls, Steve Cassell, Chuck Pullins,
Donald Stein, Tim Cassell. Back row - Donnie Nilz,

Agents seek
guarantees ·
for players ·

Four more teams
from Syracuse Tournament

'

·""

Wednesda

rt, Ohio

. -"\

Eddie Baer. Jeff Nelson, Tracy Holcomb, Donnie
Becker, Scott Hanning . Absent "'·ere Torn Buckley,
Jason Bush. Last row - Coaches Charles Cassell, Ed
Baer, and Don banning.

The first contest lasted only four
innings as Bidwell bombed Glouster
A. L. 2().(), T. Holstein was the win. ning pitcher for Bidwell, going the
distance to fan six and walk seven .
D. Davis suffered the loss, fanning
eight and walking just one.
S. Glassburn doubled twice and
singled for Bidwell, J . Pickens
doubled and singled, and R. Walsh
hit a home run and two doubles to
lead the winners. D. Herbert singled
for Glouster's only hit.
In another four inning contest, the
Pomeroy Pirates sailed to an 11-1
victory over Rio Grande. This game
concluded first round action in the
tournament. Dave Hendricks picked
up the win with six strikeouts and

In the finale, Cheshire det'eated
New Haven tl-3 in second rOund play.
Mike Bradbury posted the win with
strikeouts and siX willb. R.
Weaver suffered the 10!18, although
he had a fine outing. He fanned 11
and walked six.
Torruny Waugh singled twice for
the winners, while Mike Bradbury,
J . R. Wright, and Theron Hodge
each added singles. D. Jolmson
singled twice for New Haven, and B.
Davis, M. Friend singled once.
Despite Monday's rainout the
tournament will return to its regular
schedule on Wednesday due to the
fact Jackson forfeited to Glouster
and the Middleport Indians forfeited
to the Gallipolis Athletics.
Wednesday, the Galiipoils White
Sox will play the Albany Fanners,
Pomeroy Powell's will face Glouster
Mathews Ins., and the New Haven
Reds will play Rutland's Reds in the
final game. Thursday, Murray City
will meet Mason, Galllpolis' Padres
will meet Glowiter Burr Oak, and
Bidwell will play the Pomeroy
Pirates.

five walks, whlle going the distance.
Andy Howard suffered the loss, fanning two and walking one in his stint
on the
For the Pirate crew Rod
singled and tripled, Phll Kin1g~1;11'
Brian Freeman tripled, and
Moore pounded a home run.
Howard and Jackson Call
singled for Rio Grande.
In the first night of second round
play Syracuse blanked Middleport ·
1~. behind a no-hit, no-run perfonnance by David Amburgey. Amburgey fanned five and walked
seven, while picking up the fourth
no-hitter of the tournament. Ealier
Syracuse pounded the Gallipolis Red
Sox in first round play.
Shawn Cunningham had three
singles for the winners, Douglas
Owens had a home run and single,
John Riffle had a double, Chris Baer
had two doubles, and Kevin Grueser
had a double to pace Syracuse. Middleport placed no one in the hit
colwnn, while Scott hanning suffered the loss as the Middleport pitcher. He fanned eight and walked
six.

mound.

CINCINNATI (API - Agents for
two Cincinnati Reds starters say tbe
ballclub must become more willing
to guarantee contracts if It intends to

'

keepth~m .

INDIANS - Members of the Middleport Indians
baseball team are Paul Melton, Jeff Hood. Erie John-

,

son, Mark Smith, Robbie Cundiff, Todd Hood, and Ed
Kllehen. Jr. The Indian Coach is Ed Kitchen.

Today's

Sports World
By WW Grimsley
AP Correspondent
Strikes, mavericks. feuds. wild
superstiti ons , heroes and anti·
heroes ~ they' re not new to
baseball .
They go back to the game's
pnmitive years and all these volatilP
· ingredient_..; are embodied in oue uf
·· the game's most illustrious pioneer.s
- the jut· jawed, contentious John
McGraw. manager of the Giants for
29 years.
Ca ll him " Muggsy ," but don 't
forget to duck.
"Newspaperm en called hirn
: 'Muggsy,"' said Rube Marquard ,
pitcher for the Gia nts from 1908 unti l
1915, "a nd that's the only thing he
despised. Anybody called h1m. he
didn't care who 11 was, he 'd take a
pop at him and he couldn 't lick a
stamp."
McGraw· s idiosy ncra sies and
superstitions are woven th rough a
dramatic e ra of American history in
a remarkable film. " The Glory of
Their Times ," which will be
r es hown
on th e
Na t1on al
Educational Network next Muml&lt;Jy
evening, starling at 9 p.m . EDT .
Written and produced by Bud
Greenspan, whose Olympic and
other sports documentaries have
won nwnerous awards, the one-hour
show is based on the best-selling
book by Lawrence S. Ritter . The first showing in 1976 was overshadowed by the Montreal Olympics.
The presentation is a r ich look mto
baseball's colorful past, giving
v1ewers glimpses of s uch legends as
Christy Mathewson , 1'y Cobb,
Walter Johnson, Babe Ruth and
McGraw .
When McGraw won the National
League pennant with the GianL• in

..

1904 . he refused to let his team cornpete against the Boston Red Sox
because he did not recognize the
newly formed Amencan League.
Although he never won it . he
hmsted thr World Series banner atop
a fl ag pule al the Pulu Grounds
The next year the Giants won
aga in a nd th1s time McGraw agreed
to play lhe Philadel phia Athletics.
SuperstJtJous. he dressed his players
in black fro m head to foot. The Gian'-' won. In 1911 , faCJng the A's again
in the Wurld Senes. old Muggsy
repealed lhe funereal clothing act
and won again.
That was the year that McGraw
was approached by a tall, lanky man
who mlroduced himself as Cha rles
Victory Faust and clai med that a
fortune teller had told him that if he
pitched for the Giants the tea m was
certain to wmthe pennant.
McGraw was intrigued but skeplica l. He a llowed the man to pitch a
few balls to him . The pitches had no
z1p. But McGra w was not one to defy
s uperstition . So he issued Faust a

uniform.
Eve ry day, Faust put on the
unifonn a nd warmed up w1th the
team. He got tn two games - barely.
Faust's sluff was so innocuous that
batsmen almost broke their backs
swingmg at the popcorn balls .
Faust survived. So did the Giants.
They won the pennant in 1911. The
next year, Faust came back . The
Giants won again . They repeated in
1913.
Over the winter. Faust wrote
McGraw that he wasn't feeling too
well and suggested that if the Giants
would send him to Hot Springs, Ark .,
to get in shape he would be ready·for
the next season .

STORY &amp; STORY

....'
'

McEnroe will get
his day in court
NEW YORK I API ~ John
McEnroe , who owned Wimbledon's
center cuurt a few weeks ago, will
gel his da y in "court" later this monlh, an appearance which could save
him as much as $14 ,750 in fines and a
costly suspension .
Me n· s
I nt erna tJ on a I
The
Professiona l Tennis Council. the
nine-man body that ~overns the
~rand prix tennis Circuit, Will be
he&lt;::tring an appeal by McEnroe, the
Wimbledon singles champion. over
fines imposed by Wimbledon as a
result of his behavior during the
prestigiou s tournament at the
statelyaii-EnglandTennisClub .
SpecJflcally, McEnroe objects to a
$750 fme levied agamst him for
a lleged abuse of a linesman during a
doubles match ~ but that's only the
s urface issue .
McEnroe also was fined $1 ,500 fur
two other minor infractions ~
displays of temper during his flfslround singles victory over Torn
Gullickson - a nd is not appealing
those fines. But Wimbledon also has
recommended two other fines
amounting to $12.500. And when
fin es pass the $5,000 plateau. players
can be suspended, too, for as much

this I might have come over about
last Friday."
But Lee Trevino, two-tune British
Open champion who played the course with the long-driving Floyd, still
tabbed him as one of the favorites
for the $50,000 first prize.
" This course is going to favor a big
hitter, and I like Floyd, " Trevino
said.
Australia's David Graham. the
U.S. Open champion, also picked
Floyd to win.
But British bookies made Tom
Watson the favorite at 4-1, Jack
Nicklaus second at 5-1, and saw
Floyd as a 2f&gt;-llongshot. ·
Floyd, who has won more than a
half-million dollars this year, tried
to explain why life begins at38.
"Many golfers are at their best
between 35 and 45," he said. "It's
nothing of a freak to start playing
well at my age . " The mental and the
physical are starting to complement
each other. I now know my
capabilities and my limitations.
" I know the shots I bring off only
occasionally, and those are the ones
I try to stay away from . It's about

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Scioto Uowns results
cOLUMBUS, Ohlo ( AP) - Truffle
Lobell won the second featured race
in the Ohio Sire Stakes for 2-year-old
trotting fillies Tuesday at Scioto
Downs. The horse finished in 2:05 2-5
and paid $3.80, $3 and $2.20.
In the 5th featured race, Darby's
Dancer finished in 2:06 2-:i and paid
$6.60, $3.40 and $3.
In the 8th featured race, Proxie's
Garland finished in 2:051-:i and paid
$3.80, $2.80 and $2.40.
The first trifecla of 4-1-2 paid
$803 .70.
A crowd of 4,539 wagered $331,088 .

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

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Office Hours

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Se~ndwich Spree~d

FLORENCE, Ky. (API :- PapaJ.
captured the featured seventh race
Tuesday night at Latonia. Papa J.
paid $21i. $10 and $4.20. April Dolly
was second lor $5.80 and $2.40 and
Hilarious Beau third for $2.40.
The :;..:; double of Johnny B. Tup
and B.G. Counsel pald $195.60. The
crowd ol1,187 bet $94,504.

Will Be
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

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Latonia results

Specializing In Internal
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IKO INDUSTRIES, INC.

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1981

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OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:30 TO 4:30
SAT. 8:30 TO 12:00 NOON

In the past, some ballplayers who
couldn't gel guarantees and wanted
to insure their contracts tOOk out
private policies. But Reich said Griffey, who underwent knee surgery
two years ago, doesn't want to follow
that route.
"We have been willing to in the
past, but thai can change from year
to year,'' -Reich said:- "II !an iAdividual insurance policy) is unacceptable now. This time he's'going to
get a guaranteed contract, whoever
signs him."
Reich said there are advantages to
a player having a private insurance
policy. In case of injury, the player
could get a tax·free, lump-sum settlement from an insurance company. A guaranteed contract would
pay him over the term of the
agreement on a taxable basis.
" But there's a big difference when
you're dealing wltlj a situation like
Ken Griffey's," Reich said. "Ken
Griffey is a guy who depends highly
on his speed and rs more vulnerable
and has a higher risk of a
debilitalin·g injury than some other
player might have.' '

wind and pin placements."
Floyd has won four tournaments
this year the Tournament
Players' Championship at Jacksonville, Fla., the Dora! at Miami, the
Westchester Classic and the
Canadian PGA .
He was runnerup to Nicklaus in
the British Open at St. Andrews,
Scotland, in 1978.
The Royal St. George's Club and
the Roya l and Ancient Golf Club between them have spent a lot of money
on a new irrigation system to
prepare this course for its first
British Open in 32 years.

24e

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season.

ICE CREAM BAR or SANDWICH

AnORNEYS AT LAW
Steven L. Story
Karen H. Story

-..:' .

POMEROY, 0.

Shortstop Dave Concepcion also
could opt lor free agency after this

SPECIAL Of THE WI.KI

·- -· ..._-· ..._-· -- -· ..._

298 SECOND ST.

guarantees."

Marshall Happer, administrator
of the New York-based council. said ,-------------L~~--------.:_Tuesday McEnroe "has been invited
to present his side of the story by
.Jul y 21. By the same token, 1 have
asked fur information !videotapes
plus statements by umpires and
Jinc,;men 1from the Wimbledon committee and J'm not exactly sure
when we're going to gel it, so 1 can't
say at this time when this matter is
going to be concluded."
It won't be on July 21. John
McEnroe Sr., a lawyer who will
represent his 22-year-old son before
the council, told The Assoaiated
Press late Tuesday he has " asked
for and received an extension
because we haven't received a copy
of the charges from Wimbledon, so
how can we answer them or prepare
to ans~er them? When we have the
charges. we will present our facts
and our side of the story."
If the pro tennis council upholds
'the charges and levies fines beyond
the $1.500 which McEnroe is not appealing, and if it tacks on a suspension, the issue will immediately go
before an independent arbitrator,
one of 30 or so around the world
Medicin~
whom the council calls upon in such

r~a~s~2l~d~a::_ys~·----------~~~~---------

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Agent Tom Reich said ouUielder
Ken Griffey won't sign another contract that's not guaranteed. Agent
Rich Bry said outfielder Dave
Collins also wants guarantees.
Both players, are in the option
years of their contracts. Griffey
could become a free agent after this
season, and Collins needs more than
three weeks of playing time to reach
the six-year mark for free agent
eligibility.
Under a guaranteed contract, a
player gets paid even if he injures
himseH while playing and is
disabled.
"If the Reds want to sign players
of ability, they're going to have to
change with the times," Bry said.
"They've lost one guy here and .one
guy there and now they've got three
they could lose.
" In my opinion, no player of this
quality is going to accept a ·contract
that is not guaranteed. I'd take 20
percent less money with guarantees
over 20 percent more money without

Floyd takes first look at course
SANDWICH, England ( AP l - " If
I had known the golf course was like
this, I'd have come here a few days
earlier." said Ray Floyd, one of the
favorites to win the !lOth British
Open starting Thursday.
The burly American, enjoying his
best season at 38, had his first look at
the Royal St. George's links, set
amid sand dunes beside the English
Channel, and confessed it puzzled
him .
.. It's a helluva test of golf out
there," Floyd said Tuesday . "When
you gel on the lee for the first lime.
yo u really have no idea where to go.
You need tu know the golf course a
bit.
" Yuu can't see the bunkers, and
you can't see some of the pins . If I
had realized it was going to be like,

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18,1981

�f

Weclliesday. July 15,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport.phio

Tri-County News
Reynolds opens
restaurant

Mr. and Mrs.

NEW HAVEN Kenneth
Reynolds has opened Ius second
restaurant, this one IDfaled in New
Haven. It has been named Kenny's
Restaurant . After extensive
renovation Ius bllSiness 1formerly
Nancy 's Resta urant) opened July 6
with the following employees ready
to serve home-&lt;:ooked meals starting
with breakfast at 6 a .m. They are
Movetta Sands, Mlldred Neal, Ruth
Weaver, Bonnie Varian, Jane McCloud . Orvlila Ohlinger, Carol
Young and Maureen Camp.
Meals Will be served at noon, piz·
zas from 4 to 11 p.m., Monday
through Thursday. and from 4 p.m.
Menifee Blevins
· to t2 midnight on Friday and Saturday .
Mr. Reynolds. a Conner insurance
agent, has successfully operated the
Falcon Parkette in Clifton for the
past three years. He resides in Clif·
flowers .
ton with his wife, Linda, and Keith,
The three-tiered wedding cake 15. Kelly , 11 and Kendra, four .
was white, decorated with spring
flowers and wlute chocolate mint Church concludes
leaves, separated with wlute colum·
ns and topped with two doves carry- Bible school
ing wedding bands m their beaks.
MASON - Bible school was conPunch, mixed nuts and white cluded at Christian Brethren Church
chocolate mints shaped like cupids, with an average daily attendance of
wedding bells, doves and green rrunt 77 youths. Mrs. George Zuspan, Jr.
leaves were served with cake. was director and Mrs. Connie ThomPresiding at the table were Kim pson was music director . The theme
Stewart, sister-in-law of the bride; was '·Jesus, Your Word Lives in
Betty Gearhart, cousm of the bride, Me."
and Freeda Chapman. a friend of the
Refreshmenls were prepared by
bride.
Mrs. Clara Lewis assisted by Bessie
Mrs. Thelma Ward, a friend of the Tennant and Vickie Cottrill.
family, made the mints and al.su
Teachers and assistants were as
made and decorated the wedding follows: Nursery . Tammy Carson,
cake . Assisting at the table and assis ta nt, Theresa Ord; kinflower arrangements were made by dergarten , Becky Stewart.
Mrs. Ellen Stewart, sister-in-law of assistant, Alice Harmon ; primary,
the bride.
Linda Zuspan, Sarah Zuspan; rnidThe new Mrs. Blevins and bride- dler class, Sandra Henry; junior
groom attended Meigs High School.
dept. , Connie Thompson, Ji ll
The couple now reside in Lake Bumga rdner. and youth departWales, Fla .
ment, Liz Ohl inger. Els ie Roac h.
Out-of-town guests were Helen
A hayride will take place this
Trout of Cheshire ; R1chard and Kim Saturday . Jul y 18, for youths who at·
Stewart of Da vton; Bill Beach, tended Bible school and church
JackJe Ratliff of Columbus; Guy and camp. The group will leave at 5:30
Rosella Stewart of West Columbia, p.m. from the Chnstian Brethren
W. Va .; Dav1d Paul. Harry and Church , in Mason.
Lester Stewart of Middlepori ; Rick
Stewart of Salem Center; Rusty Historical Society meets
Meadows of Rutla nd and lmogean
MASON - The Mason Historical
Blevins, Pomeroy .
Society
held its July meeting at the
The bride's grandmother. Mirl
Lewis
home
on Brown Street with 12
Ratliff of Cheshire was unable to atpersons
attending.
Devotionals were
tend becallSe of illness.
presented by Catherme Smith . Her

Stewart, Blevins wed
Miss Tina Stewart, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Stewart,
Gallipolis, and Menifee Blevins, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Blevins,
Pomeroy, were united on marriage
on April 3 at 12:15 p.m. in the home
of the bride's parents.
The couple were united by the
Rev. Miles Trout, a friend of the
family.
. The bride was attired in a floorlength gown. Her bridal bouquet was
of silk, pink lavender, white daisies
with burgundy rose buds. Greenery
and baby's breath with satin
streamers tied in lovers' knots fell
from the bouquet. From the groom,
be placed in her bouquet a daisy
(rom his boutonniere. The necklace
and earrings were of green cultured
pearls, a gift from her sister-in-law,
Mrs. Ellen Stewart.
The maid of honor was Miss Carla
Chapman, Cheslure, a friend of the
bride. She wore a floor-length gown
Qf blue organza and carried a spnng
bouquet.
The best man for the bridegroom
was Carl Stewart, brother of the
bride.
Miss Cindy Musser reg1stered the
guests. Each mother was presented
a bouquet from the bride , of yellow,
burgundy rosebuds , satin n bbons
and baby's breath.
· After the wedding, a reception was
neld at the bride's parents' home .
The reception table was covered
with white linen, featuring a wedding hell and doves for the cen ter·
piece with yellow. pink and blue silk

Celebrated birthday
CUFTON - The birthday of Mrs.
Denver (Ann) Blake was observed
on July 4. at_the home of her sister,
Mrs. Richard Gilkey. Homemade
ice cream, cake and other foods
were enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs. Denver · Blake and daughters, Mrs.
Helen Williams, Mrs. Sarah Willis,
Miss Ann Williams, Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Gilkey, Mrs. Clara Williams
and Mr. and~ - Gilkey and Mark.

Hold cookout
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Capehart held their annual Fourth of
July cookout with the following attencling: Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson,
Melanie, Marcia and Mary Alice,
Harold Rose, Jr., New Haven; Mrs.
Lee Richardson, Mrs. Jack (Dia ne)
Troy and sons, Johnny and Timmy.

Announce birth
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Harris are announcing the birth of a
son, Jeffrey Keith, on June 30 at
Pleasant Valley ,Hospital. He
weighed seven pounds and II ounces.

Mr. and Mrs. Harris also have a
da ughter, Julie Beth, 19 months. The
mother is the former Cecilia Smith.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Smith, Mrs. Wilma Hill,
Mason, and Harvey Harris, Canton,
Ohio. Mrs. Marie Smith, Clifton, is
the great-gran dmother.

Announce recepton
·A reception following the Aug. 1
wedding of Crystal Jacobs, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Jacobs,
Minersville, and Leonard E. Dalley ,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard E.
Dailey, Reedsville, wili be held at
the Riverboat Room of the Diamond
Savings and Loan Co. The openchurch wedding will take place at
7:30p.m. at the PORJeroy Church of

Christ.

Gorden Club to meet
The Winding Trail Garden Cfub

wili meet Monday at the home 11
Mrs. Robert Lewis. There will be a
short business meeting at 6 p.m .
followed by a picnic supper at 6:30
p.m. Everyone is to take a covered
dish. Premium books for the Meigs
County Fair will be distributed and
the Fair flower shows will be
discussed.

"fMPP '

· Mrs. Wright was the weeky best
loser with Linda Stewart as runner·
up. Mrs. Wright was presented a
dollar and ribbon and members sang
in ber honor. Mrs. Haggy was the
previous week's best loser. lnfonnation on U. club may be obtained by calling , ...: 1()62.

Mr. and Mrs. Harley Haning of
Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, attended
the Lambert reuni,.. held recently
at the Route 33 Roadside Park near
Pomeroy. Their names were unirltentionally omitted from an earlier
listing of those attending the

Retired teachers
to hove picnic
The

Meigs

County

Retired

JleiCbls, Miell., and the ~~~aternal · Teachers As!locllltion will bave a
~ate J. M. and Mildred picnic Saturday at 6 p.m. at the New
,.__,.,_
Haven Park. M~mbers are to take a
Ga ul ,"-'......-.
covered dish.

CHAPMAN SHOES
CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

Dale Stoll,
Meigs Couuty
Extmlllea Acent,
Home Ecoaomlca

Are you looldiig for new ways to
prepare cabbage?
Cabbage is an especially good buy
now, but · many homemakers are
tired of preparing the old standby
coleslaw and sauerkraut recipes.
Here are two good recipes that use
cabbage.
Cabbage Casserole
I Makes 6-8 servingB)
Finely chop or shred mediwn bead
of cabbage. Cook cabbage in threesix T. boiling water for about five
minutes. (Cabbage will be crisp but
tender.) Drain well.
,
To make cheese sauce: Melt over
· low heat 2 T. butter or margarine.
Take off heat. Add and blend in one
and one-half to two T. flour. Stir In
slowly I cup milk. Return to heat.
Cook and stir until smooth and
boiling. While hot, mix In I cup
grated cheese. Stir until melted.
· Season with salt and papper.
Put cabbage In buttered casserole
and add sauce. Mix well. Top with I
cup buttered breadcrumbs. Bake at
375 degrees for 10-15 minutes or until
the crumbs are brown and the
casserole is hot and bubbly.
Choose cabbage heads that are
firm and heavy . Outer leaves should
be fresh, green and free from insect .
damage.
Many homemakers are interested
in coleslaw that can be frozen.
Frozen Cole Slaw
I head cabbaee. lanze: I carrot: I

pepper. Chop f~~- Add l t. salt and
let sand one hour. Squeeze out salt.
Prepare syrup: 2 cups sugar; 1
cup vinegar; 1-&gt; cup water; I l
celery seed. .
Boil three minutes, let cool, pour
over mixture. Let stand a few
minutes. Pack in containers and
freeze.
Are you going bananas? Do you
buy bananas when they 11re plentiful
or when they are reduced at the
grocery store and find that you cannot use them right away? What do
you do?
I've had several calls about this
problem and although there Is little
information about preserving
bananas, I have discovered that it Is
possible to freeze them. Mash
bananas and mix with commercial
fruit preserver (check label for
correct amount). The fruit preser·
ver is available at grocery stores,
usually iii the canning section, and
keeps fruits from darkening .
Measure bananas and freeze in one
cup amounls. When you are ready to
make banana bread, for example,
thaw the mashed bananas and add to
the recipe.
The texture of the bananas
changes somewhat, but the flavor is
acceptable.
For your free banana bread
recipe, call the Meigs County Ex·
tension Office at 9!12-6696.

.

HOT DOGS••••• .,... ••••1o~

.R.C. COLA ..••••..•..... 5$
COME HAVE LUNCH
OR .DINNER WITH US
I

•

.

:

• '

"

STARTS THURS., JULY 16th
E --- - SAT JULY 18th

CARPET

•44•

-WALNUT Rea. '99.95
~ atESI' (K.D.l

-WUUr Rll. '159 .. '69

-WER DRESSER (ltD)

-WALNUT Reg. '69.95'

FULL

A friendship quilt will be created title will be the member who has lost
for the best lo.er from July 7 to Dec. the most weight for the year, star·
I by the TOPS OH 570, Pomeroy, ting with the first weigh-In in
Club.
January and ending with the second
Plans for making the quilt were weight-In In December.
Each member was asked to take a
made at a recent meeting of the club
and each member was asked to con- macrame item or another craft to
tribute a 12 x 12 quilt block inscribed the next meetJnc. It was noted that
with her name and a design of her Bernice Durst has been hospitalized.
own creation.
The 24 members attending had a
Also plaMed was the "Miss total net I09!! of over 21 pounds.
Christmas" contest which will Weekly queeiiB were Unnie Aleshire
cubninate on Dec. 22. Winner of the and Mary Roush, with Frances
Haggy as rwmer-up. Information on

Friday!
Saturday!

LIVING ROOM
SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES!
DINING ROOMS!

CONSOLE TV

WEDNESDAY
THE MEIGS COUNTY Board of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities and the Meigs
Cheryl Lynn Kennedy and John
County Commissioners will hold Randall Thomas exchanged wed·
ground breaking ceremonies for the ding vows in a double ring ceremony
Meigs County Training Center on at Trinity Church, Pomeroy, on
Wednesday, July 15, at 12 noon in the Apnl 26 at 2:30p.m., not August 26
village of Syracuse.
as was erroneously printed in the
REVIVAL at Ash Street Freewill ~unday Times-Sentinel.
Baptist Church, Middleport, Wed- , - - - - - - - - - - - - nesday through Sunday at 7:30p.m.
nightly. Paul Taylor guest speaker.
There will be special singing. The
public is invited.
MEIGS COUNTY Democrats will
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
carpenters' hall, East Main Street,
Pomeroy.
TIIURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, Thursday, potluck at noon at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Goeglein. Members are to take a
covered dish, their own table service, and beverage.

• ltoputer itn'
Popul1r Price

ZENITH
Black &amp;

WE WILL BE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
JULY 20-AUG. 3

White.

9"
Diagonal

AMANA
RADARANGE
.
MICROWAVE
ONLY

$219

NORGE
lARGE PORTABLE

DISHWASHER
White with cuttilg
board top. (1 On~)
Regular '497 .95

DINING ROOM SUITE
2-Pc. HUTCH
TABLE &amp;4 CHAIRS

$19995

00

REG. 1129
. ONLY .$

·
88

Re l ilx 1J1
p.ck

s l y~

your

DINEnE
SETS
TABLE.- 4 CHAIRS

,....._,

ACCENT TABLES
END 11BL£S

.

~eg.~ •3811

~-

2-END TABLES

00

save

'

. AICC . . .

'1

.'899.95

ONLY

·YOU off Your
'

'.

&amp; 6 CHAIRS
''
Reg. Price

Letnie- ~
'

(4 SIDE

CU II*'II'.JIUICtiM d
..... bidding mllnl

2 CAPT.)

launt priaM IIIII' fllr you
Whe n the famou s m aker of t hese
sleep-sets offered them to u~ a t suc h
biiJ \&lt;lVIf'l~s. we b ou ~hl all we could
get Now we' r e passing the savon.gs
to you. All are top-quahty seh w •lh
reo ntorced edges, we•ght-balanud

NOW

•

~ upport
.1nd manymore l u•ury
feature\ . Chooce ol hrmnen, 1n
\l!~e r.tl (!ecor ;~to r coven

..•

, FUU OR lWIN
- - - -~--.... SIZE
ONLY '99.00
QU~EN SIZE
lh PRICE
REG. '399.00 ·a·CU.

-·- $299 ' NOW .
'

. .FT.

REG. $499

. .. a~ your
GIIJson n1en

ea~a---­

·GIBSON

deliver more

14 Cubic Fl Frost-Clear

• ·more Vllue for your money with
featuret like: Guanllan !Iaiii.
· defrost wtter drain, edjustMJJe cold

now
open.

REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER

control, lift-out bnketa. autom•tk:

lll•norllglttandoountirt&gt;llaneocl tid.
• 'more proteCtion With loct&lt; and new
oafety that pOpo out IIIIo your hand
.. you .., for;ol it.

PICKENS ·HARDWARE

Quailty··;elltures mllktl. ;nls ~
9'"HI buy -

6 posltl()n ad·•

tuttabfe g!ldlo •oul shl'lves, 1
glide-out crlwers, converllble

MASON, W; VA.

~Sible

dOon, remov~ble

door r iKkS.. optional rDIIen,
•~,Ice ma~oter cepabillty .

~ ''

(

'
I

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II

$89

DINING ROOM TABLE

'·

GREAT SAVINGS THROUGHOUT
THE STORE!
.

ssgoo
CHAIRS

ALL WOOD

Reg. 1369 set

~wllll ..

'

•Pressure Cookers
•Stone Jars
· •Cold Pack Canners
•Freezer Bags
•Tomato Juicers

you 'll

What a sty It ~Icc han for ~uch a
to ..... 5a l e p r1ce
&lt;'I comforl&lt;'lble
noqn b&lt;'~&lt;k ~wi~e l rocke r or vuur
c hoo ce ol 3 gorqeou!&gt; p 1llow bac k
c ht~or5. All are ~ tyl t'd tor bc.)uly
and built tor I I

TABLE SIZE 108"x42"

·JlEAT!

&amp;ee:tting Needs

ONLY

and when vou

s tyl l' .

ONLY

- :·s PI~CE S£T

. .AND THE
614/992-2133

LOTS OF OTHER SIZES
AT THESE LOW PRICES

RIGHT OFF FACTORY

•75

Miss Bernice Ann Durst is
recuperating at the home of Miss
Martha Howell, Race St., Mid·
dleport. She was discharged,, from
the Holzer Medical Center J.'riday
after being treated for a knee injury .

·12xl5 Living Room Carpet 1299.95

ALL WOOD

. .BANK ONE .. _

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

;'179.95

BUY AT WHOLESALE PRICE'

NEW STYLE WITH SWIVEL BASE
Only 3 At This Price

j!~-1

NOW.

12x15 TV Room Carpet

~ 25" DIAGONAL COLOR

Reg. 1849.95

Reg.

' 12115 Kitchen Carpet

'1900

:.~!~~may be obtained by catting

Miss Durst recovering

.Cash &amp; Cany Prices- DelivelY Available _

THE BEDROOM

00

.

1NOW'S THE TIME TO BUY ·.WHILE OlHER PRICES ARE GOING UP :•
INGElS PRICES ARE BEING LOWERED.

RIGHT BEHIND THE -STORE
-. -. ...

'

AT 1940 PRICES

·TOPS plans quilt for loser

Social Calendar

3-DAYS
ONLY
.
OPEN 9 TIL 5
THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.
JULY 16-17-18

THE GOOD OLE DAYS

. .,0

reunion.

WHAT A UCKING! - Almost anyone likes an Ice cream bar on a hot
day. That lnclndes Eric Sand, 5. Not to be left out was his dog, Turkey.
Eric Is tbe son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Sand of Bismarck, N. 0. lAP
Laserphota).

Cookmg?

POMEROY
.PASTRY SHOP

Attend Lambert reunion

Announce birth

S

Correction

Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight
returned to Pomeroy Monday night
following a vacation in Virginia . The
couple mel their son and daughter·
in-Ia w, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Knight of
Antioch, Ill., at Norfolk, Va. , and
they all visited Williamsburg,
Jamestown, and Virginia Beach.

A towel contest was started at last
week's meeting of TOPS 1466 held at
the Rutland EMS office.
Members were asked to take
either a hand towel or a kitchen
toWel for a team contest where the
winners will divide the towels. The
contest will end on Aug. 12. Gloria
Cliler explained the rules. Nellie
liaggy won the picnic basket contest
receiving the basket and aU its contents. Mrs. Oiler displayed a picture
of · the club's float in the Jul~ 4
parade at Rutland. It was noted that
lllrs. Shorty Wright and Mrs. Haggy
Will talk on TOPS with Linda Laven ,

$teVenMorg111,4.
•
· Paternal IJ'IIIdparenta are Herllert and , _ Clay, Dearbum

subject was "evaluate your hands."
During the business meeting
reports needed at the home were
discussed.
Attending the potluck lunch were
Mildred Gibbs, Noreen Layne, Mary
Roush, Catherine Smith, Joyce Carson, Helen Barton, Bessie Ingels,
Lois Test, Lucille Swackhamer,
Ruth Grinstead, Hazel Smith and a
guest, Marie Elias.

Couple vacations
in Virginia

Rutland
TOPS
,,
begins contest

Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. Clay, the
former Pabicia Gaul, of 4760 Pearl,
Ypsilanti, Mich. 48197, are announcing the birth of their second
child, a son, Patrick Loren, July 4, at
St. Jo.eph Mercy Hosital in Ann Arbor, Mich.
The infant weighed seven pounds,
eight ouncet! and was ?ll inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Clay have another son,

What

1

1

'

�Wednesday. July 15,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wectnes!ljly, July 15,1981

Cheshire
TOPS Club rrleets; begins many contests
Of!

CBS most-viewed network for past eight weeks ·
LOS ANGELES (API - CBS'
reruns grablled siJ: of the top 10 slots
- including the first three - in last
week's A.C. Nielsen ratings to make
CBS the most-viewed network for
the eighth consecutive week.
During a week in which the
highest-rated original program the ABC newsmagazine "21).20" came in 12th, CBS' top-rated trio Included all reruns of shows dealing
with doctors.
" M-A.S.H" led off with a 21.5 percent rating, which according to the
networks means 17.2 million
households, or 21.5 percent of all79.9
million American homes with
television sets, tuned in to "M-A.S.
H."

Following

" M· A·S·H"

were

"House Calls" and "Trapper John,
M.D.,'' with ratings of 20.1 and 19.2
respectively. The other CBS d ·
ferings In the top 10 were "The Jeffersons," "Lou Grant" and "60
Minutes."
The network's overall· average
rating for the week ending July 12
was 13.5, meaning that during an
average prime-time minute 13.5 percent of all households were tuned in
to CBS. ABC came in secorid with an
average rating of 12.7 and NBC
followed with 11.7.
The highest-rated non-CBS
program was NBC's "The Facts of
We," In 4th place with a 19.0 rating.
ABC's "Three's Company,'' which
the previous week had pushed the
perennially popular " M·A.S.H"
from the No. I slot, was down ~o fifth

· Passive conservation
Helen Help Us
can save energy

If you've planted a tree that
shades your southern windows
during the swnrner, then loses its
leaves to let the sun in during the
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
winter, you're practicing passive
S~lal correspoudenl
energy conservation. Passive
DEAR HELEN:
energy conservation means using
I'm a young man of 26, single, shy
the sun and wind to heat and cool
and lonely, with a full education, no
your home naturally, with little or no
bad vices, varied interests, from
equipment.
music and art to tennis and horseAccording to the U.S. Department
back riding. Singles bars tum me
of Energy, the most common
off.
passive energy ideas in use today . My former girlfriend moved away
are insulation, weatherstripping, ...and I haven't been that lucky since.
and storm windows or insulated
She was very attractive and inglass. But the potential for cutting
telligent. It seemed when I was with
SIXTH AVENUE STROLL - Ronald Reagan Jr. , President
heating and cooling bills does not
her, women noticed me, but when
Reagan's youngest son, strolls down New York's Sixth Avenue Monday
end there . More techniques aid in
I'm
alone it's like they're looking
night with his wife Doria, after seeing the movie "Stuntman'' at the
"Passive Design: It's a Natural. "
through
a pane of glass.
Waverly Theater. I AP Laserphoto) .
The booklet is $1.50 from the ConI'd like to meet the woman who
sumer Information Center, Dept.
wondered why singles couldn't wear
193J, Pueblo, Colorado8!009.
T-shirts that said, "Speak first, I'm
shy," but I know you don't give out
addresses. Am trying your list of
places to meet others, but I wish
more females would hear you when
you say, "Don't wait for him tn
make
the first move r"
w1th scouring powder and a sponge. lid, I can easily pull out as much
By Polly Fisher
Here
's another suggestion: I think
I think that will probably take the
Special correspondent
yarn at a lime as I want. and it
singles
should be able to recognize
DEAR POLI.V - My son has a crayon off your son 's desk. If not, try always stays clean and neat. - J. V.
one
another
on sight. Why don't
d&lt;·sk with a black cha lkboard top . A softening the crayon with a little dry
DEAR POLLY - Here's another
available
men
pin small blue ribcleaning flu id or lighter fluid. Be suggestion for what to do with leftfn end's child
bons
to
their
shirt
pockets or jackets
careful , though , since these fluids over bars of soap :
colored on the
and
girls
wear
the
ribbon in their
are flanunable . - POLLY
bla ckboard with
Dry the bars and rub over a thin
DEAR
POLLY
When
growing
hair'
AI
least
it
could
start concrayons and I
sheer. Put the shavings in a pretty
cantaloupes or honeydews, place clear glass container and make your versation . - LONELY YOUNG
ca n't get the
plastic lids from coffee cans, etc. un- own room deodorizer. Use different MAN, ANYTOWN, USA
marks off. The
der each melon. this will protect colors of soap for a pretty effect.
chalk won't even
DEARLYM :
them from rotting and keep the skins
wn te where there
Polly will send you one of her
Have you tried any of the singles
clean. - J . S.
is crayon. What
s1gned thank-you newspaper coupon clubs listed in your local newsDEAR POLLY - When knitting I clippers if she uses your favorite paper? Really, they ren't "for losers
can 1do to remove
roll a skein of ya rn into a ball, then Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her only": many " blue ribbon" matches
the marks? - I. J.
Polly
put it m a pretty decorative coffee colwnn. Write POLLY'S POIN- happen from this kind of mixing. OEAR 1.. J . - When I was httle.
ca n. With a small hole in the plastic TERS in care of this newspaper.
we always scrubbed our blackboard
H.

place with an 11.1 r.t~n~~.

vn

. The TOPS (Ta_ke
follllds Sen·
s1bly) Club held1ts meeJing on Monday, July 13, at Cheshire Baptiat .
Church.
·
·
Helen Trelut, assistant weight
recorder, announced that Edith Gardoer was winner of the. "Miss Summertime " cQntest with Janet
Thomas as he'*unrier-up. They lost
the most weightfrom April 2().July6.
Freda Henderspn,leader, presented
Edith Gardner with a crown and a

"Trapper John, M.D.,'' CBS, 19.2,
1U million homes; 4. "The Facta of
Ufe,'' NBC, 19.0, 15.2 million homes ;
$."Three's Company,'' ABC,l8,8, 15
mlllloo homes; 6. "The Jeffersons,"
CBS, 11.6, 14.9 million homes; 7.
" Lou Grant," CBS, 18.6, 14.9 million
homes; 8. " Hart to Hart," ABC, 18.6,
14.9 mllllon homes; 9. "60 Minutes,"
CBS, 18.5, 14.8 mllllon homes; 10.
"Too Close for Comfort," ABC, 18.0,
14.4 million homes. ·

r1 ABC'• "Roola: The
Nut Geoetall0111" occupied the
ratlnp celllr Jut week, In eeth
place with a NliJII al U- meaninc
i t - viewed In u mlliiciD llllnla.
The rest of the bOitGm five were
CBS' "The Incredible Rulli," In &amp;2nd
place with an U r.llnll; NBC's
"santord" - one of few flrllt-run
series epl80da oo t1Je Uat - In 83rd
place, 1.2; NBC's BJ l the Bear,"
In 64th place, 7.4; and "CBS ReporThe second 10: 11. "Diff'rem
ts : What ShaU We Do About
Strokes,"
NBC; 12."21).211," ABC; 13.
Mother,'' 65th place with a 6.9
uAlice,H
CBS;
14. " Tile Love ~t,"
rating.
The week's top 10 shows, their ABC; 15. "Quincy, M.E." NBC; 16.
ratings and nwnber of homes tuned "Fantasy Island," ABC; 17. " The
in: I. "M-A.S.H,'' CBS, 21.5, 17.2 Dukes of Hazzard," CBS; 18. " HapmllUon homes; 2. "House Calla," PY Days,'' ABC; 19. "Lavern &amp;
CBS, 211.1, 16 milUon homes; 3. Shirley," ABC; 211. "CHIPS," NBC.
Plitt

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

check for $10 from the TOPS Qlub.
Henderson presented a corsage and
a check for $5 to Janet Thomas.
Freda Henderson stated 14 members participated in the contest, with
100 pounds loss, a one-half pound
gam, w1th a net loss of 99''&gt; pound,s.
Refreshments were furnished by the
TOPS Club and prepjlred by Edith
Gardner and Janet Thomas.
The Pledge of Allegiance, TOPS
Pledge a nd TOPS Prayer were led

by Nancy Whitteklf!d. Exercises
were done to music. ·
·
A family picnic is scheduled for
July 20. Weigh-in will . be held,
followed by a short busfness
meeting. The picnic will be held at
the roadside park on Rt. 7 in
Gallipolis. Each member is to bring
a covered dish and her own place
setting .
The contest titled '"Losers Are
Winners," began on June 8 and will

continue as long as any member has
a weight loss. Prize will be announced. A contest call ed "My Goal·
Plus" began on June 22 and will end
on August 17 . Members set their own
goal. Prize for the contest is TOPS
Club will pay membership dues for
two weeks for each member who
loses her goal or more.
A new contest began on July !3,
and will continue until Oct. 26 . The
contest is entitled "Harvest Queen"

and the wmner Will be the member
who loses the most we1ghtfrom July
13-0cl. 26.

Losers of the week were Helen
Trout, Katie Curfman, Janel
Thomas, Catherme Little, Freda
Henderson and Nancy Whittekmd.
Ed1th Gardner, w.e1ght recorder , announced that Nancy Wlutt~~md was
"Best Loser of the Week. Whlltekind received a gift from the gift
box. Anyone who gains must put a

SAYI u• TO 40% ON
SOO•I• COST CUTTI•S
COIPAIED TO OTH£1 BUilDS' AT KROGER.

Shy single seeking someone special

Polly's Pointers

Removing crayon from chalkboard

Middleport nurse named coordinator
for County Senior Citizens Center
Mrs. Sharon Dailey, R.N ., of Middleport has been named health coor·
dinator for the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center.
Mrs. Dailey, who will work parttime for the Center, will have the
responsibility of health education for
older Americans, assist patients in
their transition from the hospital to
home care, work toward a better understanding by the patients of
medication and treatment, and
provide some home health care.
For the past four years, Mrs.
Dailey has been employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and Is
currently the head nurse in the intensive care unit. Prior to her employment at Veterans, she worked
fur seven years at Doctor's Hospital
in Nelsonville. She holds a nursing
diploma from Aultman Hospital in
Canton, and will receive her
bachelor of sciencel"degree in nursing from Ohio University this fall.
Mrs. Dailey Is also a paramedia
instructor at .the Hocking Technical
School. She is married to Kevin
Dailey of Middleport and the couple
have three children.

\

Buckley reunion July 26

..---

NEW COORDINATOR - Sharon Dalley, a registered nurse from Middleport, has been named health coordinator for Meigs County SeDlor
Citizens Center.

The 45th annual Buckley reunion
will be held Sunday, July 26, at the
Bellville Dam Park in Reedsville
beginning with a potluck dinner at 1
p.m.

READERS ALL:
Especially singles ...
The same mail that brought
"Lonely Young Man's" letter also

included a pOssible answer to his Since you've received no invitations
problems: a packet of infonnation from him in five years, he evidently
on "The Fine Arts Network," Box prefers business lunches to family
4714, Cleveland, Ohio, 44126.
dinners.- K
This comparatively
new
Got a problem? An adult subject
organization, through its ad·
vertisements in The Saturday for discussion? You can talk it over ·
Review of .Literature, The New York in her column if you write to Helen
Times Book Review, The Nation, Bottel, care of this newspaper.
and other prestige publications, at·
tracts cultured, intelligent singles . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - who meet one another first by letter
or telephone and later - well, who
knows what the future will hold? Its
membership (aged early 20s
through late 60s) includes working
artists and writers, physicians, attorneys, economists, nurses,
musicians, diplomats, professionals
of every kind, from all over the
United States and some foreign
countries. (The management reserves the right to reject applicants it
considers unsuitable.)
For a $23 yearly fee. one receives
an interesting newsletter plus one
free copy of a fellow member's personal data sheet each month. Additional data sheets are available at
60 cents: members are urged to contact anyone who seems compatible
with them.
For further infonnation, write to
the Cleveland address above. - H.

"FOI SHISOOP£1 COST ClnliS. RO OTNliiUU$ All STOCK£0.

~

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'IQutltld

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W'lft of'ftf' "t'OI.I .,our ct\o«:e of 1 comaerlt* r.-n
~ 1\!Mtl'l. r-"'chntiJ the .. me 11v•ngs or 1 rl#lc'*k
-..cP'I tWII!tntlttt yOu 10 pyre,.._. IP'Ie ICJ'tet'lltlt(! 1ltm 11 the
ldYtt1__, pnce 'MIP'I.n lO OII/I
l'ttm . ,...

fli(I!OII lOW ~I!Cl

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Hillcrest
BBQ Souce

E~ng .,0.., bl,y I I tl.rCJVI'I

11 gutrtnt.O for yQur I0\11
.,tllftc11Qn ,..,...._of mtnult(turtr rt yO\,! 1'1 not ut.a
'-:1. "'CJIIIIII' _."epllcl .,our 1l tm ""'', !I'll UMe brend or 1
ar::lml*lble bf
or rt'11.1nd yO\Ir ex;rcl'lf.. prrce

IN •'OM[ h'OV AND C. t.l t 1 1' 0l 1 ~ ~ ~0~1"

i;;Asize Pk,. $129
Ground Bee ... lb .

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

,.......,9 ~ ~
1- 1~ c

:@?~ .
I
1
1
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SAVE
40'

12

.

1•··17-11. AYG . WHOlE

Semi.·Bonel,~s .

Smoked Ham ... lb.
FUSH riCNIC

.I

$119
89 C

SCIImon·.. ..... lb.

...

FRESH SilVER SAlMON

Steaks ... .. .. . lb .

~

4tl'l WEE,.: 7:10 I 9:30P.M .
I I SUN MATitU[Sl : lO &amp; 3:30

.
. .
.

MECHANIC ON DUTYI

Q.ASSES IN MAKING

JEAN$, T-SHIRTS AND
SWIMSUITS WU..L BEGIN
JUN~l7th. CAll FOR
'

'

For Pomeroy, Ohio

. ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

Pork 'N'

79

... ·. " .. lb.

CIOVPI V A ll i !

Margarine I l h
Quarters ",

IN THE PIECE . KROGER

lb.

COUNTII• 0\i H&lt;

Angel Food
"""'l"'
Ca ke
U OC H!

Flake

KROGER

Marshmallow
Creme
'"'

I) " '

2
.. ~;.,~~--

Pot Pies
• . .. .. . 4-Tube
Ballard B'ISCUitS
.Pak
' BunJ ........ ... I·Ct.
Kroger
Pkg.

'

•

SANDWICH OR WIENER

89C

Country Oven
Pretzels !,';
kll l OGG 5

sse

Special K 15 0 1
Cereal
'"
G OlD (Rf\1

Morsh mallows

CHECK OUR PRICES FIRST!

,,,
lb

A\IONO,A.ll

Moore's American Hardware
Feel Free to Use Our 2nd St. Entrance
KRAFT QUAKTERS

t4 Kant ootd

Parkay • 16·01. .5.
Margar1ne...Pkg.

Overlay
Cbain

Cheese Singles :;,;~ '

9C

·. :

•

Coo

Morasch jno
Ch err1es
•
B oo
1...
AII ONDAII

St.NDY MAC. DEll STVU

'

•

GE,.UINE

;{

~~~~~~oe, IB!·'2~ s.
'

(5 ·11. 84G POTATOIJ $1.")
~

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1

1

•

C

.Broccoli ...... ...·Bunch'69 ·
_fRISH

lHURSDAY,
JULY 16
9 AM to 12 NOON

' _· CAUFOINIA

•

.

-'Nectarines ........ lb.
.; 'tAllfOINIA, liD OR ·

Will BE Given By
H. William Mattingly

·

't

· ,:r.

·

99 c

$ugar Cookies .... oa•.
89 C
Kaiser Rolls

;II'ISH IAKEp

lOLLI AYAIIAIU

59c
99 C

• •.

( oo

limo
Beons

16 U l
( un

63c
49c
43c
. 39c

DAYTIMI

Co111fort

.O-Ct

DiaperJ

•••

l&lt;lOQUI "

Worcestenhire
)flt ·OI

Sauce

a11

MIOGU

Steak

,,,

lO ·o r

Sauce

.

COUNTRY

OvE~

let er-n
Cups ...

ggc

...

U ·CI

IIG'II'A illf

Vanilla
Wafers

'

Each

I oo

M"A OGU

J.lines..· ·.. .. .. .. .. · toe
·FIISH ;lOIIIOA ' ·

( un

Vienno
Sou sage

~liCit)

OR .V THE PIEC:E . DOMEJTIC

flESH 11\K.D

I I o •

t&lt;R OCE R

Boiled Ham- - ~~~~~·~NATURAl
$299
Swiss .Cheese ..... . lb .

•,Blue Plums ....... lb ..
~nlsH NiW
. Blueberries ..... Pint
JERSEY

sgc
49c
Mondori11
Oranges

~IICED

•

$}39

H IIL( I!I \ 1

Til 7pm

PIUS DEPOSIT

'

I. 0 I

$ 19

Bean
Coffee
.. ,. Bag _ .
.
'
. . 2.5·01sJ19 .
.Deo dorant ....... Ctnr.
~ "

STORES ~ITH
DEll DEPTS .
HOT FO~DS

Pear
Holves

69c

AVAILAilE I lam

\ 3-lb. ss69

.

MENNEN SPUD STICK

/\"··"""' I

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

1

SPOTliGHT

"""'~n" : AVAilABLE ~Nl YIN

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES,

KKAFT AMEiftCAN

by~

.t '"

r••..,

C.O l O C lll ',I

Grade A
Large Eggs .. ... ...

IN THE DAIRY DEPl. (7·0Z . TUBISI

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

I

Coconut

INSTALLED

carrying
out birthday
a "Tom with
and aJerry"
on his third
party
theme. He received both a "Tom and
Jerry" cake and a "Fred Flintstone'' cake.
Gifts were presented to him and
cake, ice cream, chips and punch
were served to his parents, Danny
and Sherri Darst, his brother,
Christopher, his grandparents,
Eldon and Wanda Vining, his grandmother, Bonnie Darst, an aunt, Rita
Vining, and his great-grandmother
Gertrude Stivers, Anna Jane Kin:
caid, and Kim Kauff.

Beans

Tumblers ... ......... ... Each

FROZEN BANQUET

• Mufflers • Brakes .
• Shocks • And More

Corey Daniel Darst was honored

40 · 01

13-0Z . 5\Zf . SESAME STREET

HEARING TESTS SET
MAKE YOUR OWN
DESIGNER JEANS!

Baking
Mi1

MAUll IAStUT GI"Dl AA Hl{Cf LA.G-1 IGCS . DOl ,.., .

. .'"'l
-

Jlff y

$1
99 C
Meat Bologna .... .. ...
59 C

$299
$349

25c
sgc
''•
sgc
"•
''&lt;~~· 29c
"•

I ''

Chips

~:~~:::~..

3$ 29

,

FRESI! WHOLE
Al~SKAN .SILYEI

"- ~
- ---""'[.PG

Potato

U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE
BEEF CHUCK

Buttermilk or
White Bread

Pork ftoast ........... lb.

' "ll"''ll.,/
1 11
1111\1

COUNTIV 0'¥ EN

AVONOAll

KROGER

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.

95

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renmg

STOII ·PACKAGED COUNTRV STVU

COirtl ctllllll 1111 II 1•111&amp;1 Iii! II !Ill
IH\11110 UPLICIIliiiA!I 11111!11111

~'ll~'i~~l;

K0roge~

SJ 09

·--····-·····--IDI

1000 l ~l A 1\j {J IIH N( H () k
ITA l iAN l 1Q \I I D

Gunnoe's
: Beef Patty M1x .... lb.
Country .Sausage 1
I
Sliced.
Bacon ...... ..
'
.
$129
:
l·lb .
II
22-ot. $179
Roll
Game Hen ........ Pkg .
I

u•n
tU ~TO PER
~'"'
liMIT
ONE COUPON
FAMll y

~~ ~·

Tea

A ILEND OF IEEf &amp; HYDIATED. TEXT\IRED
VEGETAILE PKOTE[N, KIO:ER'S PRO

(2 ll ROll 12 57) .

1

·Bags

FROZEN TVSON . U.s.t:i .A. GUDE A
CORNISH

'II tl

'"

Pi11a

IN-STORE OKO\I'N

WI IUilYE THE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NON(
lOLD TO o'I A.Llll

I

II or

Fox De luxe

COI'YI ICiHT 1111 · THI kiOGII CO . ITU.U AND P'IICU
GOOO SUNOAY JUl'l' ,, THIU UTUIOAY JUll II I til

DEAR HELEN :
My husband has be£n employed
1in sales) for five years with the
same company. Please settle a
dispute : Does the boss invite us to
dinner first, or do we invite him and
his wife?- OONFUSED
DEAR CON:
The boss should make the first
social move but it isn't mandatory.

Sew-Rite Sewing Club members
and guests enjoyed a cookout recently at the Route 33 roadside park. Attending were Flo Strickland, Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Wehrung, Mr; and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs. Don
CoUins, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Wells.

HOLLY FARMS,
U.S.D.A. GRA,DE-A

ADVERTISED ITEM POLI CY
.......
,_
f\1....,.. lor .... on MC"' 1(,.,•• StOlt
of

Eoch ol

Members hold cookout

Celebrates birthday

gift in the box . Net loss for the weell
was 6'¥• pounds.
Members are reminded to bring in .
their calorie sheet each week. Those'·
who do not tum in calorie sheet, :
must reach into the "Penalty Box" .
and pay the penalty.
Songs were led by Helen Trout.
Members present were Nora Nitz
from Middleport; Shari Blackwell,
Mamie Stephenson, Freda Henderson a!YI Nancy Whittekind from
Pomeroy; 'Helen Trout, Edith Gardner , Katie Curfman, Janet Thomas
and Catherine Little from Cheshire.

IC~OC(It

To111at~

.

;,

Paste

.REGisrRAnON. . .

O&amp;C
Onion l'i

THE SEWIN.GCENTER

I(IOGU f

1

'(..

Whipped
•
Toppeng

"On The T"

.,

.,

... ,

''::.59':
;t ''
U

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59~

�12.
employees
.. .
finish course
Recently 12 employees of the
Graham Plant, Foote Mmeral Company, completed lndustnal Fire and
Rescue courses. Courses covered
the followong, ropes and knots,
patient packaging, hoisting and
lowenng procedures, ha!ardous
materials,
rescue
strategy,
breathong
apparatus,
attack
procedures woth water, portable fore
extmguoshers, c henustry of fore, and
tactical thinkong
The course was onstructed by the
West Virgoma Umversity fore servoce extensoon from Morgantown,
W Va Employees who completed
this course were : Lester Taylor,
Rochard fulthburn, Mochael Wolfe
Lawrence Grady. Robert Gardner:
Melvm Coen, James Hall , Terr}
.f~enry, Jack Johnson, Bnan Kearns.
Audie McFarland. and Don Mills

Auditor to publish
delinquent tax list
A hst of dehnquent real estate
wxes on Me1gs County w1ll be
publis hed d11nng the next few
weeks. Howard E F rank, coun ty
aud1 tor, announced today

In compl1arH.:e wath the prov1saons
of sectoon 5721 03 of the Ohoo Revosed
Code there woll be pubhshed a list &gt;X
de lonquent rea l eswte upon wh och

the taxes, assessm ents a nd penalties
or e1ther have nut been paod for two
consec uti ve tax payong penods If
delonque nt taxes are paod 111 £ull or
arrJ ngerncnts made woth the county
treas ure r to pay not later than 48
hours before sa od pubh catoon the

parcel will be removed from the
deli nqu ent !1st before advertosong,
Frank sa1d

Pomeroy- Moddleport, Ohio

.·

Arrests total 67

Property
transfers

Sixty-seven arrests were made by
the Moddleport Police Department
during June, according to the monthly report of Pollee Chief J . .!,
Cremeans .
Of the total arrests, %4 were made
on disorderly manner charges and
rune on charges of drivong while intoxocated. There were ftve arrests
for droving Wlder suspension and
three each fo r speeding and reckless
operatoon. There were two each for
oss wng menacong threats. assault,
possessiOn of martJUana, s tealing
gasolone and vandalism. Other offenses had only one arrest each.

George Eldon Green, Louise Lila
Green to Wolllam E. Polley, Norma
J Polley, 9.20 acres, Scopio
Darold G Grahaln, Shirley A.
Graham to Russell Eshelman,
Louose Eshelman, Lots, Harrosonvolle
Gordon West, Margaret West to
Henry L Moore, Lois Moore, Lots'
12-19, fulc me.
Lawrence R Wolfe, Dolores Wolle
to W&gt;lham B. Davodson, Karen S
Davodson, 6.5 acres, Sutton.
Wolliam B. Davidson, Karen S.
Davodson to Lawrence R Wolfe
.
Dolores Wolfe, 196 acre, Sutton.
Sebert Belcher, Jr. to Doana Sue
Belcher. 10 34 ac r es. Columboa .
Frances Imboden to Leading
Creek Cons Dost., Ease , Rutland
Maunce E Johnson, Marga ret D
Johnson to Leadong CreeR Cons
Do st.. Ease , Salisbury
Carole Arnold to Leadong Creek
Cons. Dost., Ease . Sahsbury .

The Family Of William
Earl Lockhart would like to
thank
their
friend
relatives for their acts
kindnress. Special thanks
to Rev . Richard G~aham
. Rev. Jones, Dr. Sholtis:
waugh-Halley-W&lt;&gt;Od tuner·
al home, end the people if
the VIllage Of Crown City
for flowers, fOOd, ond
money.

oi

transferred to county court and
three persons were placed on
probatoon. Pollee cruosers were
droven 4 ,622 moles dunng the month.

THE PH010
PLACE

The Middleport Fore Department
answered a total of 61 calls- 13 fire
and 411 emergency runs - durong
June accordong to the report o£ Fire
Chief J eff Darst
Of the 48 emergency calls 44 were
on town and fo ur were out of town
All vehicles were droven a total of
917 2o rul es dunng the m onth.

$13,885.26. $5,524 .06, $512.94; street
levy, $370 48, $21.65, $9,475 24;
federal revenue sharong, no receipts, $242.30, $.1,647 &gt;II; HUD, $70,000,
$68,976 73, $4,487 .3 1; general bond
retirement, $12:!49, $7 22, $17 ,621 94 ;
samtary sewer, $9,744 43, $10,260.83,
$8,183.71; sanotary sewer escrow, no
receopts, $8,635 04 , $149,030.15 ;
wa te r ,
$9,991.10 , $7.664 . 20,
$43,3111 12 , water meter trusts, $225,
$100, $7 ,976.57; water tank, $1,349 01.
no dosbursements . $141 ,483 25
Receipts for the month totaled
$127,139.91 whole disbursements
amounted to $1:MI 776

LEGAL NOTICE
THE COURT OF CO MMON PLEAS , MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
No 2J2 tO
IN THE MATTER OF
THE ADOPT ION OF
JOHN J AY PROFF ITT
J OHN L DOD DERER
whos e las t Know n address
wa s 524 Brown Aven ue,
Harv e y, LOUIS ta na, 70058,
o tn e rw tse
res +de n ce
unknown , will tak e noltcf'
!hat on th e 6th day 01 Oc
Tober,
19 SO
Ju s eph
Raym o nd
Protl1 ll ,
Pelt l!oner , h ied a Pe t+ Tt on
tor Adopl+ on perta1ntng to
Jo hn Jay Dodde rer , a c hild
born Nove tnbe r 1st 196 7 a t
Co lumbu s , Oh10
Sa 1d
Pc t•t 1one r se('kS a c ha n ge
of rhe name at sa 1d c htld
t ram John J a y Dodderer to
John J ay Profi tIt
IN

Publtc Nott ce

Public Noflce

Publtc Not1ce

Pet tlt oner l urther
s lates that he was marr1ed
to Ar de th Kay Pr oltt n , tor
merly Arrl f't h Kdy Doa
derrr o n ~f'p t c mber 30th ,
1'il71 onu Sdtd c h1ld ha s
bee n l1v1ng tn the home of
sa td Pel+ttoner S•nce Scp
fe mbet 30th, 197 2 and that
sa1d m 1nor 1S tn the per
manenl c ustody ot 1\rde th
Sa •d

Kay Profhll , Rou te 3,
Rac tne Oh 10 45771
Satd Pcttl tOnc r furth er
alt eqes tn ll+ S Pett110n that
•he cons e nt ot Jo hn L Dod
aerer •s notreq u+r eatolh•s
adOPiton b y r eason of th e
ta ct that the sa td Jo hn L
Dodderer
na s fad ed,
w 11 hout tuSt1f1 ab le caus e to
co rnmun.ca te w1th th e
m1 nor or ro pro v1de for th e
m a tnt e nance and suppor t
ot th e m• nor as rcqu1rcd by
lilw or tUd1 c•a l dec ree for a

r----------------------Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

1

pe r' oct
of
one
yea r
precedtng th e ftltng of the
adopl•o n pelt ltOn or th e
pla ce m e nt of the mtnor tn
the home of the peltl•oner.
John Joseph Proff111
You are rf'Qutred to an
swe r W1fh tn twe nty ctqhl
days
af ter
the
last
publt Cdl1an wh1 c h wtl l be
on the 5th day ot August,
19B l
FurThermore, th e
hea r .ng on sa1d ado plton tS
schedu led tor the Ylh day of
Septeniber, 1981 at 10 00
o clock AM before the
Honor ab le Robert E Buck.,
Proba te Ju dge. at the
Me1gs Co unty Court House,
Pomeroy , OhJO
JOSEP H RAY MOND
PROFFITT
Pe t.t 1oner
Robf'rl E Ouck Judq ('
Prnbnt(' Court 0 1
M r 1q5 Co unty Oh to
IS. Ex Ollt CtO( If'rk
t 6 J 24, t 7 1 I , 8, 15. 22, '1.9 Ol l

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich

5 lie

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not1ce tS hereby g1 ve n
that th e V1llag e of Po meroy
has m ade appltcat1on to th e
Un1te d Stafes Department
of Agrteulturc, Far me r s
Home Ad mm1strat +on , lor
ftnanc •a I ass1stance .n or
der to res tore and renovate

dn n es oi, a nd h&lt;we a n at

teet on a floodpl a •n
The purpose of th• s not• ce
•s to obta•n comment s from
th e gener a l publi c on (l)
T he •mpacts of 1ocar• n9 the
pro1ecl W1fhm the 1den
tif1ed floo dpla.n , (7) Alter
nat •ve pro1 ec t s•tes, and (3)

MethOds

'I

IName---------1
!Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1Phone,._________________

IS $176,450 00

of sorts among Denver residents, many of whom spend
hours on the banks of Duck Lake hoping to catch a
glimpse of Albert. ( AP Laserpboto) .

eANNOUNCEMENTS
l- In Memon•m
l - Announ cement 1
4---G•ve•w•r

4&lt;1- Ap.artments lOr Rent

1 - c~ rdof Th•nh

45 - F urni~Pied

i-- H.appy Ads
6-l.Oiltllnd Found
J- Y •rd S.te1- Pu bhc S•••
&amp; A1.1ct•on

41- W.llnled t o Re-nt

48- Equ,pmenllor

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Mail This Coupqn wtth Remi,l tance
The Daily Sentonel
Bo•729

_____ :~m_::o~·-0~~~5:6~--~-- ...

I,
I
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1
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J

Sl- Anl•q ues
S!a-Butld•ng Supplt t~
s•- Pth ll)r S• tt

tn\tn. chon

16- R•dtD TV
&amp; CB RtPI•r

11 - Wii nled

To

Do

eFARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Oppar1un.ty

64- HI V &amp;

Serv1 cn

Mom•s

for S•l•
JJ- F•rms I Dr S"•

614-992-2181'
F re eters
Refngerators
W.1shers Dryers
A1r Condtt1oners

11- Vins &amp; 4 w D
14 - Mctorcvcles
1S- Auto P1rt1

35-- Lots 1 Acre•e•
36- Rell E1t•te W11ntH1
Jl- Ji!UitGn

Want-Ad Adverttstng
Deadlines
MOndiY-2 lO Oft S.turd•y
Tuesd•y lhru Frldey 1 JO PM
ttte diY !teton ltUbllut•on
Sundly 2 :WPM Frtdly

e5ERVICES
11 - H.,me tmpro ... ements
U - Piumb•n91 Exc•v•t1rt9
U - E ~c•v •hne

..-E tectrtc•l
I. Refrtttr•llon

FINAL CLOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS
Malee An Offer

•••

Up to IS wOrds

one dly tnsertton .

Up to IS words.

thtft d•r lnurhon
tb: dlyunsuuon ..

RuUand Furniture Carpet Shop
SUMMER CARPO SALE

APPUANCE SERVICE

Pomeroy , OH .
991-2174

(Extra Good)
Reg. SI6.9S sq.
d

•

Wonl'lcr~

• Qq•('r )

• if""''"

(A ... er•ge 4 words l)er 11ne l

57 tfc

•

O!~Q01oith

•

Dnnwoutt•n

• Hot W.:~ ter r .1nk~

Sonce lfSl
Soec1"1 Rilles For

MODIIe Horne s•lu IIIII Y.l rd Ill•• ere •ccepteCI Oftl'l' With Ultl with
orcler. 25 c•nt c~r11 tor 1c11 c•rrv•nt lox Num . .r In Clre ef TM

I .nth•• I
TM Pwbh1Mr rnenn IN rlettr to ean Of' rej.ct &amp;fly ••• ...meet
.tlledlon11 he Puettll,., wm not M res,ons lble for more.._ _
•...n one

t

• c OIR l."undru.• \

I I l' ~lll lff •

IROGER.HYSELL'S
GARAGE

I ,lf Ill

I t.

I

t&gt;l l M J IH."I

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it

'•r ,

SMAI.;L

~ - BuildinP

..

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1!1\ (1( 1 I

I•

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11 • • •I l /I I {I

1

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Caii742·319S
or 992-7680

J&amp;C
SANITATION:
SERVICE'

1

,

·•

• :..., • 1 '

Trash''Pickup ln.
The v.mage of
Micldlepot1, !),h.
• . Ph. 992-50.16 '
o" 992-7
•

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1"

Ut i!• I fi l ii
tnt I
I ' " ' ! ''

TOM HOSKINS
,

t '• I '

' ' •l

"'

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• Backhoe
e Excavat1ng
• Sept1c Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Ltnes
• Dump Tructo:
• rrencher
L 1ce nsed &amp; Bonded

PH. 992-7201
5 21 lf c

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water-Sewer-E lectnc
Gas Ltne· Ditches
Water L1ne Hook -ups
Sept1c Tanks
County Certifted
Roush Lane
Chesh1re, Oh.
Ph . 367-7560
t 7 1 lfc

I

Housing
H eadquarte rs

T

EAFORDm

VIRGIL B SR

tJ:!

2 16 E.Phone
Second Street

H614) -992-332S
NEW LISTING - L1ke
new
ranch
home
ove rlook tng the Oh10
Rtver from
Ka1ser
Alum 3 bed rooms, 1'!2
baths, 30 ft. ltvt ng rm ,
equ1pped btrch ~.•t c h e n ,
full b ase m e nt With
ta m.tv room, hot water
h eat, copper plu m b1 ng,
garage a nd J acres
Asktng S65.000
PLAYTIME
Ftsh,
boa t , a nd sw• m on the
OhiO E n10Y t he su m
m er, pn vate lot a nd 3
bedrooms, 1111 bath,
mob tl e home 1n ex
ce ll e nt con dt t1 on tor
only $13,500
BRICK RANCH - Very
nt ce 3 bedroom , 11&lt;J
bath, 3 yrs old Ntce se t
t .ng 1n th e cou ntry on 3
acres Central a tr a n d
heat. equ tpped k1t, a nd
la rge garage
Only
$57.000
HUNTING
Wold
t ur key, deer, grouse,
ft s h1ng , boat1ng a nd
sw 1mm1ng near Park
your cam pe r a nd ent OY
the wtld Te rm s m ay b e
FREE GAS
Save
your heat money and
put tt on a vacat1on L c
waer a nd small house
Terms$1 1.500
NICE MOBILE HOME
On corne r rentable
lot 1978 Hillcr es t ldx70
Has 3 bedrooms, 11 1
baths $12.000
NE AR POMEROY 11? a cr es, 3 bed room
ranch hom e Carport,
porc h a nd
severa l
buildtng s Only $24,000
'1 1 1 ACRES
Cool
remod eled 1 be dr oom
s tone hom e Has F A
gas lurnace Cedar h•s
a n d her c losets, lots of
butl t tn cab tn e ts , utlltty
room, wood burntng
t ,n•place
Look s ltke
new tnStde Only $21,500
12 Y R OLD RANCH tn e)(ce lle nt cond1110n J
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
centrl atr and heat,
tamtiY room, ga rag e
wtth Gen1e and larg e lot
S7S,OOO

Housing
Headquarters
Real Estate

Cleland Greenhouse Is now
open . Vegetable plants ,
tomato pianos, beddlnjl
plants, pots and hanging
baskels.
Gerald i ne
Cleland, Racine, Ohio

" Be.a ultlul , Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free stdlng
esttmates, 949 ·2801 or
949 2860.
No Sunday Ciills
J II lfc

EVERYBODY
Shops the

No trespassing on R1chards
8. son Inc. properly at
Letart Falls or Apple
Grove, Ohio. VIolators w111
be prosecuted
4

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does nol otter or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad tn this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser

4 kittens 9 wks old Call
245 5804

1 white kitten litter tra1ne d
Call245·5463
Small Chthuhu, house
broken Ca II 388 9984
Double oven cook stove,
gas, fa1r cond Call 446

3870.
COLLIE and Coonhound
Pupp1es. 992·2770.
FREE to good home only
Full blooded German
Police Male 4 years old .
Phone 304-937 2435
TWO year Mountain Kerr
male and seven year St
Bernard male to good
home only Phone 3()4 937
2&lt;35
Smallltght tan female puppy, verv playful, loves
children . Phone 3()4 675
55{)6
5

Happy Ads

Picking up easy play organ
Low c:town
low monthly
Cred1t manager
I•l~;:,~;~~:n~i
614 592 5122.
In your area

General

WANT AD WAY

HOBSTrnER
Office 742·2003
Georges . Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW
LISTING
Rrt c tn e
Lovelv two
srory hom e Owner 1s
wood c rafts man and
woodwork is exC1u1site
throughout 5 bedrooms.
bath ,
living room.
dtning room , family
room, mod e rn ki-tchen
with breakfaSt room.
Also extra n1ce 24'x44'
works hop S37,500 00
NEW LtSTING - Near
Middleport, off Rl 7
Re modeled J bedroom
home , ltvtng room . k1t
chen, utility , bath ,
cellar: on 21 • acres w1Th
fruit trees and grape ar
bor. 516,000.00.
LOAN A55UM~TION ­
Low ·1ntere·st
In
Rolland
Two story
home , 4 bedrooms, 2
• oalhs, uti lilY &lt;on 3/ S
acre . Ask&gt;n!J $33!000 .00. i
NEW HOME - Ni ce 3
b&lt;ld~oom. all el~~ tric ,
1ar,{l, living r90m, kil·
chen and din ing 'comb,. '
.Carpo'r t ' ilnd
~lo;-.;·v,~ o~ ll.argo
n idllced

NEW LISTING - Ren
tal 1nves tm e nt pr ope rtv
apartment house w1th
three '1 bedroom apart
m e nts , eac h
w1th
separate uttltt1e s a nd
e ntrance Glazed block
bulld1ng w1th l1ttle
ma1ntenance Exce llen t
co nd1fton S24.500 00
SURROUNDED
BY
SHADE
TREES
Makes thts 3 bed room
new home tUSt a ltttl e
coo ter on a hot day It
ha s
a
beautiful
fire place. carp e t , a nd
new raJlge 1n ktlchen
Many rflore fea tures 1n
c tud1ng 1 75 ac r es
$42.000 00
EASTERN OtSTRICT
23 acres wt1h a
vartety of land There 15
a gorgeous butldtn g s tte,
bottom land, t1mber
land w1th some oak t1m
ber, and a small s tr eam
Utt11ttes
availabl e
$18,000 00 .
RANCH HOME IN THE
COUNTRY Just 4
years old, wtth a large
kitc hen , 3 bedrooms,
utt1ttv room , an at
ta c hed gar age and a
detached garage, over
an acre that tS partly
fe nced and n•c e laytng
tand 539,900 .00.
HANDYMAN'S SPECI ·
AL - Has a b ig lot and a
1 room , 11!2 story home,
w1th a fireplace , front
porch. and a rear porc h
$13 ,000.00 .
BEATS
RENT
RECEIPTS - One floor
plan . home. wllh 2
bedrooms, dining room,
large UIIHtv room, bath,
front porch, garage and
t:J ~
. acres approx.
&lt;$16,200.00'. '
tN

AND SEE .
URES~F OUR 80
ENT PROPE ·

-'

YARD SALE Hull Arl Pol
tery, oak rocker / old lam
ps, desk, kitchen Iable. sad
dies, toys, books, clothes,
etc Thurs.. Fri., &amp; Sat
{16,17,181 .
lsi
and
Raolroad, Bidwell 388 9710.
YARD SALE 15, 16, 8. 17 at
Thurman
bestde fire
station. Tools, clothing,
furniture , and mtsc 10 .00
to7 :00.
s family yard sale. 15·16 17
Me&gt;QS Co. Beagle Club. Rt.
692. Rain or shine
Porch sale, Edith Spen·
cer's, 277 Main St , M1d
dleport Fri. Sat., 9 4. Sat.
everything cheap
Rain
cancels.
Yard sale in Bradbury.
Tues , Wed .. Thurs., 9·3 6
lam&gt;ly .
Yard Sale. 670 s . 4th so ..
Middleport July 16. 17, 18,
9· ? .

'
Friday,
17. 9·4 :30. Girls 10
Speed. etc.. Old; Rt. 33, Nter
Carpers Nursery. FOllow
signs. Rain cancels.

sor
·
' 4·11-lfc

GARAGE
SALE
1099
Teodora, July 16-17 An
tlques ,
co Hectables ,
clothes, books. Samsontte
table &amp; chatrs, and m1sc.
2 FAMILY YARD SALE
Thurs and Frl 9-5 CB
ra dios, tools, toys, books,
adult
and
childrens
clothmg 487 Kathy St,
Pleasant Vall e y Estates,
Rt 35 passed Stale H1gh·
way Patrol
Garage Sale, 3 1/2 mill's
out Bulavtlle Rd.. first
drtve past Layne 's Fur
niture J uly 17 18, Fr1 and
Sat , 9 4 B I on de dresse r
with large m1rror , toys, od
ds and ends, dishes, all
stzes of c1oth1ng. Most
things SO cents a nd under
Held at Mrs. He rm an
Skaggs
YARD SALE Thurs Sal ,
10-5 Large assortment of
clothes, several t1res,
household items, CB radto
Mitchell Rd

FHA VA Conventtal Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgage Co , 463 Second
Ave, Gallipolis, Oh. , 446
7172

Wtth the Army Nat tonat
Guard, you' II hav e a part
t1me 10b wtth full -tim e
benef1ts You w1ll attend
tratntng one weekend each
month and two weeks each
yea r Benefits include low
cost life tnsurance, ex
cellent pay and a tree pen
sian plan Plus. the Army
Guard's valuable techn1ca1
schooling will prepare you
for a well paymg CtVIItan
job Call675 3951J

COMMERCIAL and tn
dustnal
phol og raphy
Phone 446 '1909 or 446 7226
after 4 p.m

Part-ftme (4 hours a week )
Registered Nurse ( RN) to
work in 1ntermed1ate care
taciltty for the mentally
retarded
Part ttme Ltcensed Prac
tical Nurse (LPN) to
d1spense med tc atton to
res Jde nt s ot an in
termediate care factlit y for
th e m e ntally retarded
Hours vary , depend1ng on
when medication needs to
be dtspensed Please con
tact J ohn Le hew 446 1642,
exl 332.
Country Rock Band needs
drummer &amp; base player
Own equtpment a must
Call446 3808.
Sl85 oo lo SSOO weekly doin g
matllng work
No ex
pertence requtred
AP
PLY C~rcle Sales, P 0
Box 224-0, Rtchmond Htll,
NY 11418

Air cond 1t toned Ant1ques,
furn tture , dtshes. school
desks, b1kes, table, boys
clothes, toys, everyday
beg 1nn 1ng 10 a .m Camp
bells on Jericho Road
GET VALUABLE tr.:uning
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
8
Public Sale
some great gifts as a Sen
&amp; Auction
ftnel route earner Phone
Neals Auct1on Hogsett , us nght away and get on
WVA Rt 2 Every Sal 7 00 the e1tg1btl1ty 11st at 992
PM .
(Consignments 2156 or 992 2157
taken) , (will buy fUrnitur e}
Lonnie Neal367-7101
Opportuntty 1s yours jus t
for the asking Ask your
AUCTION at Ml Alto Auc
Beeltne stylist and she wtll
fton &amp; Sales every Thur
be happy lo help you join
sday 7 p.m . Antique auc
th e Beeline world of
tion first Sunday each mon
fash1on and success Phone
th 1 p.m Cons1gnments ac
992 ·3941 between the hours
cepted each Wednesday 6 of 9·6
10 p. m . Thursday 12 noon lo
6 p m. Ken Cole Au c
R N needed for weekends
tioneer
Exc beneftts Call Arcad ta
Nursmg Home, Coolville
- - -Wanled
- - lo Buy
9
/)b) 3196
SCA SH '
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
42 OLIVE 8. SECOND
OR CALL
446·4175

OPEN 9 T05
WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture and Antiques of all
ktnds, call Kenneth Swa1n,
256·1967 in the evenings
FEATHER BEDS WAN
TED, ANY CONDITION .
MISC, BOX 65, AURORA,
IND 47001 GIVE OlREC.
TION WILL CALL SOON .
WANTED
TO
BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM , STERLING·
COINS,
RINGS ,
JEWELRY , MISC . ITEMS .
ABSOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEED .
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT.
OHI0992 · 3~76 .

BEDS IRON, BRASS, old
furniture , gold , silver
dollars, wood tee bOxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc .•
Complete
households.
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt .C,
Pomeroy , Oh . Or 992·776lJ.

Pictures, old Pomeroy
Gr,de School ._ bull~lng
before closing. Write
Robert S . Vore, 105
~qKenrle Orlve, Lime,
Ohio.u&amp;OS.

Money to loan

WANTED · Lease men, to
leasae oil and gas proper
ties, GAII 1a and surroun
dmg counties. Inquire to
Great Bend Oil Inc 269
Low e r
R1v er
Rd
Gallipolis Ca11446 4285

Wman to s tay with elderly
lady Help wtth caokmg
and
l1ght
housework
Phone 992 7807 or 992 3767
Cashters, stock clerks fo r
grocery store Send resume
to Bo&gt;C 729-C co Dally Sen
tine!, Pomeroy, Ohio45769
Free rent, will furni sh
house on farm 1n Mason
County tn exchange tor
cartng of elderly lady
Prefer refired couple
Please send resume and
references toP 0 Box 6193,
Charleston, w Va 25302
Wanted,
Expenenced
dairyman mterested 1n
working w1th and mtlking
Holstein cattle, S1x day
work week Send resume to
Box P 10. In Care of Poont
Pleasant Register. P . 0
Box 237, Potnt Pleasant,
w va 25551J

Profess1onal
Serv1ces

23

P1ano tuntng a nd repatr ,
Love your ne 1ghbor tune
your P1ano Bill Ward ,
Wards Keyboard 446 4372 ,
Galltpolis
GALLIA Cteantng and
Rent-A-Matd Service Inc ,
Free Est1mates, bonded ,
msured, phone 245 9234
Clea n1ng by th e week, mon
thor co ntractual
Complete Auct1on Service
stock red uct ion c lose outs
estates farm eQuipment-It
vestock real estate. L1cen
sed and bonded 1n Oh1o,
and w est wv Bud McGhee
Auc tiOn and Real Estate
Co Call for terms 446-0552
or 446·0818 428 Second
Ave , Galltpolts, OH , 4.5631.
ROBERT S
CON ·
STRUCTION CO Inc. Qut
trademark
Qualtty &amp;
Sattsfact1on
We have
refe r e nces Phone 256 1560
P1ano and Organ lessot. 11m 1ted open1ngs
Mar \
Lu ca s, ca ll d46 9787
WELL drtlllng, both rotary
&amp; cable tools , usually w~ll s
1n l day Call Ray Beagl e
304 895 38•1
STARKS Tree Trtmmtng &amp;
Shrub service
Insured
PhOne 304 576 2010

Real &amp;slate
31

Homes tor Sale

NEW CABIN or small
hom e, c ompl e tely fur
n"hed. S3900 Call 446 0390.
House wtth acreage tor
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs, fully carpeted, 2 barns , 379 22)8 or
379 23•3. alle r 6PM
New 3 bdr house With
garage and full basement
$45,000 Call•46·0390.
3 bdr hom e, kit , d tning
rm , 1tv1ng rm
With
firepla ce, large family
room w1fh woodburner; 1
1/ 2 baths, fen ced in
ba c kyard, n1 ce bar-b q
ar ea, and c1ty sc hools. Call
446 2003
9% assuma bl e loan "'on
roomv . 3 bdr home with
large tam1ly room, rtew
carpet, central atr, and
pool w1th deck S1 tuated on
acre lot '" good neigt't borhood . Ca ll 446 7535
3 bdr house, basement ,
showe r , AC, stove, retrig. ,
c urtams., ca rpet, garage,
shade tre es, prt ced $39,000
Located Rt 160 &amp; 554, Will
land contract Cai138B 8200.
House 4 rm , bath, garage,
on Mtll Creek Rd 1/ 4 acre
ground Phone 446-00S..

Woman to stay w'i th elderly
ladv in Cottageville on
weekend. Phone 304-3723398, conagevllle, wv .

6 rm 8. bath, on large lot.
Oak Htll , Oh Washer &amp;
dryer, a tr cond Call 682
7414 aller IPM

12

Large 2 story stone hom!!,
we111nsullated, with3 large
be drooms, one full bath, -2
112 baths, formal d 1 nin~
room , ne wly remodele&lt;:fkitchen butlt 1n including dish
washe r , basement with
work s hop, 2 cer gara~
with work shop, large gaC
den, 2 porches 548 GPOnl
St , Midd le port. S59 ,~ .
wanttng quick sale to settle
eslale Ca ll 614·380809'felr
appotntmeno . !After! PM!,

Siluations Wanled

Wi II care for: elderly 1n my
private home. Good exp,
reasonable rates Male or
female 61.7 3«l2 or 61.7 6329.
Vacancy tor room, board
and care tor etderlv 1n my
home 992·6()22 .
BUILDING and carpentry
and remodeling. Phone 30467 5-2 ,j,j(),
13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN SURANCE
been can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's License? Phone

II

• t·t!t '

I

Yard Sale July 15,16,8.17.
9·00 till 4 00 1.6 mtle out
Clark Chapel Rd .

2i

992-2143

Jtelna. :~uW 1~·,11 .

'

Gigantic .t FamtiY Yard
Sale July 16,17 ,8.18. 8 30
till? 1 mile above Chesh1re,
Rt 7.

Fri. 8. Sal., 17·18. Forst
road on left after passing
WMPO radio station . Rain CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter lA" on largest
cancels .•
end S12.51J per ton . Bundled
stab . $10.50 per lon.
Y~rd Sale. cbilege Ave., Oellverd to Ohio Patlet Co ,
Rutland. Fri., July . 17. Rock
Springs Rd .,
~detlne Snowden residenPomeroy . 992.·2689.
.
ce.
'

flral' time, \O ~ell . Many

•

GARAGE SALE Wed and
Thurs . July 158.16, lOAM to
5PM 2021 112 Chatham Ave
Gallipolis. 2 len speed
bikes, clothes, tables,
skates. m1ac Watch for
stgns

--

.315 22nc1· StrHt. Hamnv

I

TV service cal ls Call 991 6776 or 992·2034. Also uS&lt;Id
color TV tor sale

hlghesl pr ices
I PAY
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, Jewelry, etc.
Conlacl Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

1

'Jlt,

•

•

! Il l • II

II 1 1 '

II I

I I /'1 II .. .

(,tcl&gt;

I

"''

Director of Nursing
Ple11ant Vallay Hospital
Valley Drive
Pl. Plusant, WV 25550

'

For all of your wiring needs.

I• I

. · ._.51~·~ ~
"FroW.JJOx30'1

'

Let George M•l,le~;rc·o;'ii;~-J
your present !.! I
svstem .
Restd enltal
&amp;Coin mereta I

992-6215 Ill' "2·1314
Pomeroy. Oh.

'

1 t I II f
! '

rJ tl

- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work ·
- concrete work
..... Plumbing •nd
electrical work
1 Free Estimates)

EXCELLENT SALARY AND BENEFIT·S

tHI l ol• ' h 11 0 (1
lj)0\4' 111 I ' ,, I

' I .1 r l nt
II
r net• I ' I ~ t 11 .t I '

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
t SERVICES"

V. C. YOUNG

ltl

IH I HnllH l
• 1 r,ttl 11111 r•

() Jt

1 ' •. +t lll f
i

992-5682

for
Nursing Care Unit
(primarily geriatrics)
and

I

I / I I

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m.-5:30p.m.

seeking
qualified

\~ f

/1 IIHIII / t •(l Jll tlll ti 0' 4' 11 '

t ' • , ,, II Oil.

742-2211

WI

I I

• ltn nt

• MOb1t P HOmP P " r~~

RUTLAND FURNITURE

&lt;

'
I

Fil l'ntal P.ropcrllt'S
' API Hou ~e Own rn

~

current~

Ar1 equa,l opportun

BOGGS

I

SALES &amp; SERVICE

RC"p.t•rtnq

GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now&amp;Save$2-$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Remnants $2.50 up. Gr.ass carpet $4.99 yd.
Green and Brown,
Drive A Little - Save A Lot

Main St.

Ph.

PARTS AND SEll VI CE
Al.l. MAkES

RUBBER BACK Mc3G~~~~;pel
Cash·n-Carry
1 Roll Each
Brown , Blue,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Call Ken Young

11

Contact:

R ad1ator Spec•altst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs . Expenence

Rl'te renc e

Fanri Buildings

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

FrOm the Smallest
Heater core to the
Largest Radiator

Misc . Merchand1se
,...l'l'P rtm Ad tor Future

OHIO VAUEY
ROOFING

Reo I Estate- Generol

Vonyl &amp; Alumonum
SIDING

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Rl. 1 Stde Htll Rd.
Rutland, Oh10
PH . 742 · 2455
5 11 lfC

11 - UpM;t .. tery

Rates and Other Information

COMPLETE

LEO MORRIS

se vEc&gt;r a l
Al s o
Repossessed at GOOD
Pr1ces.

Acute Care Nursing Units

lr-GenH•I H•uiiAI
M- M H RePo~tt

992-6011
992-7656

HJ 50" - 20-30 H.P .
HA 60"-25· 60 H. P .
HE 60"- 4So80 H.PAII Models Avatlable

REGISTERED NURSES

11 - Auto Re11••r

Free Estimates

10 7 tf c

Jl - AutO' lOt S.alf

&amp;. Accessor.es

M- Bus1n•n Butld•ntl

I"Correct lfl&amp;ertiOfl.

• • ••

I

eTRANSPORTATtON

e REAL ESTATE
JI - Homutor s•le

words

I 'IIDflllllll'lt

L__ _

o o o o I o o 0 o o o l 0 0 Oo 0 0 o 001 o 00 I o 0

is

ll- PrDIUJIOn•l

Up to u

&amp;

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Gr ••n

6S- Sttd &amp; Fer11l11H

11 - Monl'y to l.o.an

Custom t&lt; liChens, Appltances ,
Custom
Bathrooms. Remodehn
g, Plumb1ng, Electnc,
Heattng

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS

U - W•ntfll to 8u~
Truck~ tor Silt

U - L H;fUOCk

C. R. Mash
Construction

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

7l-

au~,neut

31- Mob!le

S4

BIG APPLIANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY

Call 992-7034

' 1- F 1 rm EC!t.llpment

e F INANCIAL
1-

Mobtle Hom e Parts and
Acc esso n es. Hotpo1nt
reg capac1tv washer 1
dryer !!599, Entrance
pl a tform
w /s t e p s
ftbergl.a ss
With
ntumtnum rathng SIB~
Roof co.attng !IJI so,
W.1ter Hea ter 10% Olf
dunng month of July
Metal wtndow c1 ank
h.1ndl es - Spectal 89c,
S1d e mount w1ndow
operillors S l 89
KINGSBURY HOME S
Piirts and Accessones
Rt 124
Mlnersv tlle,Ohto
992-5587

Misc . Merchandise

$}2~
yd . Gr•ss95 •q .yd ~:::~r3m:q·
.......:.:::...:....J..____;_.:__..J__ _:.=...yd.

2...... ..........................• $11,~60
3...
$12,060
4.
'12 300
5..
·112,660
0. 0 ••••••••••••••• 0 0 •••••••• 0

Mobile Home s
for Sale

W/ Paddtng
In stalled
Start 1ng

Models at Athens and._.Pomeroy

5&lt;1-M t~ c Merctr.~nd 1se

8USIAfU lriltnln9

ts--scttoot1

1

~ 1 - HoU~~tftold GDods
Sl- ( 8 , TV , R•d10 Equopment

l2

CARPET

NO DOWN
PAYMENT

0 •••• 0. 0 0 0 •••••• 0 0 ••• •• •• 0

oMERCHANDISE

B u~

1 1 - Hell~ W•nted
n - s••u•t•d w o~ n •ect

18
19

Rent

rh tS Instrument Prepared
Bv rhomas ,M Wlllough

Free Eshmates
Re asonable Pr1ces
Call Howa rd
949 2862
949 2160
2 4 ti c

elnsulat1on
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wmdows
• Replacement
Wtndows

Ter ry K Bumpass

S4

new or repatr gutters
and downspouts. gutter
cl eilntng and pamttng.
All work guaranteed.

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Lessor -

Lessor V•c tona E BUm pass

Free Estimates
Call Collect
Ph . 843 -3322
7 13 '1 m o pd

All types of root work,

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

171 IS, lie

992-2478
or
Blaine Milhoan
985-3965

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

6 1S 1 mo.

La w ,

PULLINS
EXVACATING

EUGENE LONG

Middleport, Oh .
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime

by , Attorney at
Toledo . Oh10 43604

Farni Ponds - Land
Clearing- Roads .
Call :

Siding
Roohng 1 Gutter
Remodeling
Servtng Your Area for
10 Years

12 Park St.

Publtc Notice

CAT~

6 3 I mo

ALL CARPET IS MARKED DOWN

3 13edroom Ranch Hom e

000 0 0

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

I
I
I
I
I
I

Rooms

46-S tJiCe tor Rent

Al tce Pennmgton
- Lessor

_______:__-11

Payments as Low As ..
Sl SO . 000 per month
Depe ndng on your 1ncom e
Numbe r &gt;n Fa moly - Mil xomum
Yearly Incom e

RENTALS
41 _ HOule ~ ror"Rent
42- Mob•l• Home ~
tor Rent

l4 -

co mments ..v1th1n 30 d ays descrtbed as The- nor lh
fr om the da te of tht S nottce west qua rter o f Sec tton 23 ,
Tow n 3, Range 13 tn th e
IO
Laure nce G
Bowman , Oh10 company 's Pu rc hase,
Chtef.
Communtfy Bedford Towns h tp, Me1gs
P rograms
County, OhtO b ounded on
Un1ted Sta tes De pa rt the North by lands of
ment ot Agnc ulfu re
Day ton and Maud Tu bbs,
Fa rm e r s Hom e Ad on th e East by John J
m •n •strat1on
Cuckter, on t he South by
o; oo N H1 gh Street, Room land s ot D Whaley a n d
507
Marr Woodyard and on the
Co lumbu s, Oh10 43215
Wes by I ands of Mary
Woodyard a nd D Tubbs,
!61 15, 16. 17, 31c
wh1 c h lease has b ee n recor
ded 1n Vol dl, at page 408
Public Notice
Me1gs County , Oh10 Lease
Records, IS HE REBY
NOTICE OF
DECLARE D
FOR
NONCOMPLIANCE
FElTED, due to fa1lure of
AND FORFEITURE
the lessee, 1ts successor s o r
OF LEASE
ass1gns to
conttnue to
To J E CONNORS
produce the ex 1Sitng well
PITTSBURGH OIL AND drtlled
th e re on tn pav•ng
GAS COMPANY
es or otherw1se ac
OHtO · WEST VIRGINIA quant1t1
cord1ng to the te rm s a nd
OIL AND GAS COMPANY
cond1t1on sof sa 1d lease
tt th e tesse e, ti s s ue
CHESTER A. HUFF
cessors or ass 1gn s doe s no t
LORIS SWADLEY
have sat e!~ lease re leased of
ROBBINS
GAS record
w1thm thtrt y (30)
ASS OCIATE S
from the date of the
Please take nott ce th at days
of tht s not tce or
the lease of Ed na Qu1 vey rece1pt
rom
the
dat e
of
and Chr1 Sttn a Qu1vey, fpubl1
t1 on hereof, tt 1S the
Lessor, to J E Co nnors. tnt en ca
fton of lessors to fil e
Lessee, (and s ubseq ue ntl y tor reco
rd w1th the County
ass1gned to the a bove
Reco
r
der
sat d cou nty an
nam ed tnd1 V1duals and AFFIDAVof
IT OF ! NON
co mpan1es) da ted May 18 , COM
P L IA N CE
ANDJ
1949 cove r1n g 132 acres of FORFEITURE
lan d 1n Bedford Towns htp,
MetQS
Cou nt y,
Ohto,
Ja m es Penn1ngt on

AU AMERICAN HOMES
1% Interest

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Public Nottce
- Lessor

PubliC NOtiCe

DOZER WORK

tensive remodeling.
• E le~trical work
• Roofing work
13Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

KAUFPS
PWMBING
.AND
HEATING

Zoo and for over a month has managed to elude the
nets and snares of zoo keepers. He has become a hero

GATOR CATCIJERS - Two of Denver Zoo's
alligator catchers put on their hip-waders and grabbed
their net. on Tuesday in hot pursuit of · Albert the
escaped alligator who has made his home In Duck Lake
at Denver's City Park. Albert escaped from the De nver

Any par ty wtshmg to
co m me nt on the proposal
s hou ld prov 1de w r 1tt en ~------w-~Miiiii~Hcimo!S

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept .
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0. , 45769

9- W•nted h

or

The/re posed pro tect 1S
locate on Sta te Route J J
nea r th e ce nte r of down
tow n Pom e roy Oht o Th e
bu1id1ng m quest1on •s the
old Pomeroy H1gh Sc hooL
cons tru cte d tn 1914 The
build1n9 tS constructl'd of
r ed bnck and stone, tS J
s tor1es h1gh , a nd 1S tn the
"E nQII Sh Revtvnl" s t yle of
a rch1tect ur e
The proposed amount o f
Farmers
Hom e
Ad
m1nls lrat1 0 n f1nan c 1ng IS
sooo.ooo oo
Th e
tot a l
pro 1ec t cost, •nc ludtng a
$76.450 00 gra nt from the
Economtc Developmen t
Ad m1 n tstra t• on , U
s
Department of Commerce,

PHONE 992-2156

I

II

avo.ct mq

tloodplam
1m
haza rds s hould
no pr ac t• cab le
to t he proposed

WANT AD INFORMATION

wr ,te your own ad and order by ma ll wt th th1 s
coupon Ca nce l your ad by phone when vou get
r esu lts Money not refundabl~

) wanrea
I For Sale
) Announ ce me nt
) For Rent •

ot

reduc1 ng
pacts an d
the r e be
a ltcrnahve
protect S1te

ANYONE
who
has
relatives burled In Ward
Cemetery Who would like
their graves mowed, please
send donations to : Sam
Oldaker, P 0 Box 88 , Leon,
wv 25123 .
.

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex•

109 H1gh St., Pomeroy
6 28 l mo

PubliC Nottce

the 'O ld Pom eroy H 1gh
Sc hool" lor use as the
VIllage H al l The pro 1ec t
wou ld be w •fht n the boun

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

- Portraits
- Weddings
-Anniversaries
-Passports
-and Now, an tm·
pressive, complete line
of wedding and anniversary invitations
and
acce s sories.
Reasonably
priced,
QUICk servtce.
-Look
Without
obligation.

Village funds at $439,351
All Moddleport Vollage funds as of
June 30 totaled $439,351 65, Vollage
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
Receopts, dos bursements. respecti vely, and the balance of eac h of the
funds makong up the total on elude :
ge n e ral , $1 2. 464 31, $19 .033 91 ,
$1 5,980 .37 , street lights, $370.49,
$1,041.28. $10,317 30 ; cemetery ,
$1,663.26, $1,047 22, ,$41 62; fore
equopment, $1.300. S56'7.41. $421 32
def1cot , sw murung pool, $5.376.10.
$3,534.94, $4,674.21; fore truck,
$246.99, $3,164 44. $22,727 67, plannmg comnussoo n, no receopts, $17 74,
$231 99;
stree t
m ain t e n ance,

In Loving memory of Nellie
Roberts on her 781h btr1
h
d
a
y
.
Sadty missed by Lawrence,
Sharon, Tim, Craig.

Business
Services
=====:------~-----------r------------l

Seven cases were diSilllSSed, :;ix

Small investment, large returns, Senint~l Want Ads
Publtc Not1ce

•

'

Page-10-The Daoly Sentonel

- --

_____....,.__,

Mod1f ied A frame, three
bedrooms, IWO baths, caW·
pet. Spiral stairs. circular
stpne fireplace. B acre$.
992-77&lt;1 .
•
~ew ~' bedroom home, q
bathsl large living
dining room combllllltlo~.
built In . ,jdlchen·launi:trv
room , 2 g ~ reges. fully car.·
peted, forced air healing
air conditioning. corlot. 992' 5062, 8a.m .·1 p', 1
appolntmen .

ropm-

RldloTV
&amp; Cl R'!)!ir

RON'S TV SERVICE
Specializing In Zenith.
House Calls. Now servicing
Motorola Quaiar, Call 1·

304·576-2398 or .146·2454.

fo

'

I '

,~,

',

"""'

�,,

44

Homn for Sale

By owner. old house, lot
electric, gas, water In town
for 18le or trade for 1 pl1ce
on the Ohio River. 222
Beech St., Alberta Backus.

4~1'--.....!H~ou!!.!-!!.:f!!or!!:.!R!.!en!!!!.l_

2bdr. unturn. apt.. clean.
good location on Main Sf. ,
For Rent 5 room house on VInton, Oh, sec. dep. Call
St. Rt. 7, accept on child . 245-5118.
Call256-6474 or 446-4'12.

~ room house and acreage.
Driving distance to mines
or 'Athena on St. Rt. 1.0.
Across
from
school.
1lwlldli)H' for bualnell
poaalbll tlel":1ltll.az~t . . ....
••

Furnished Apt. $220,
Clean 5 rm . In utilities paid, adults, 1 bdr,
Eureka, full size basement, nice . Call ~ · «16 after
fuel oil turn.~nce. Call 256- 7PM.
6547 .
1 bedroom opts. available
3 bdr. house $2.50 . Releren· at Riverside Apts. Equal
ces, sec. dep., Rodney Opportunity Housing. Call
Vllllage 11. Call ~4416 af· 992·mt.
ter 7PM.

OR RENT · almost new lAx
70, 3 bedroom, 1 '"' baths,
sitting on nice tot. ready to
move Into. Phone ~·576·
2711 .

Apartment for rent. Call
2 bdr. house Lower Rt. 7, 992-5908.
ref. and dep. required. No
pels. Call256-1413.
1 bedroom apt., very nice,
private porch, large yard .
3 bdr. house 1n Point 992-5880.
Pleasant, WV . Basement
and porch. Call 675-5104 or
1 bedroom apartment .
675-5386.
Fully furnished , air con·
dllloner, TV. Adulls only.
Available August 1. 3bdr . 992·5304.
home with fireplace, In
country . City schOOls, $250
Fur ·
per mo. For appointment APARTMENTS .
call
256 · 9363 . nished or unfurnished . 675·
1371
days,
675 ·3812

Three bedroom house with
big lot and garden. by
owner. Phone 30-4-675-:1529.
House. 2 years otd, camp
Conley. Assumable 8 and
one-fourth percent toan.
Phone 304·675-6615.

1978 Swinger one and one·
haft bath, fireplace . Phone
304·576-5672. 2 miles out
.Jeri.cho.

6 rm., &amp; bath, located at

2410 Monroe . Rent
reasonable. Call ~· 7310.

2 bedroom, air conditioned,
furnished, out of town on

Rt. 2. Small dePOSit. Phone
304·675-6277 .

32

c:==;;c===.=c:==.=:::====

mobile homes and travel

trailers .
TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES. CALL
&lt;IA6·7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. A MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT.
35. PHONE W.-3868 or~
727•.

SfNICe for Rent
3 bedroom, a.c .• fireplace . 46
~uttand area. $250 plus COUNTRY MOBILE Home
deposit. 992·2013.
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
3 bedroom house In Letart 992·7•79.
Falls, Ohio. 2•7·2684 or 247·
2664.
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
3 room furnished cottage, Home Park, Cheshire. Oh.
ufllltles furnished, adults, 992·3954.
no pets. Phone 304-675-2812
or 304·675·1560.
TRAILER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 af
TWO bedroom house 30•· old Y, Pt. Pleasant, 67S·
675· 1371 or 675-3812.
3248.

For Sale New 1981 Fair·
mont Mobile home. 52&gt;&lt;14.
all electric, 2 bdr. only 7
mos. old. Need to sale due
to relocating. Call W.·9303.

1978 Festival mob. home.
turn . t•x70 fl .. 3 bdr., 2
baths. SIO.OOO. Call 256·
9309.
1980 double wide mobile
nome, 3 bdr, 2 full baths,
like
new.
$16,500.
Negotiable. Catl256·6345.

42

oir cond .• good cond. Call
W.-2651 or ~ - 0876.

1976

Viand Street, Pt. Pleasant,

wv Phone 675·«2•.

Mobile

Home. l4x70. 3 bedroom , 2

full boths, toto! electric,
central air . On 1 acre of

ground. On St. Rf. 154.
$15,900. 992·7774.
USED Mobile Home. 576·
2711 .
1971 Darian 12 x 65, J
Crown

Haven, 1• x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 1• x 70, 3
' bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
)( 60, 2 bedrooms. B 1;., S
Sales. tnc. 2nd and Viand
Sis. Pt. Pleasant, wv.
Phone 675·4424.

Trailer tor sale or rent.
partly furnished, Gallipolis
Ferry. Phone30H75· 1867.

ll

• • • ' ..

•

•• •

•

home.

F1rms tor S.le

55 acres, nine room house,
barn, minerals, secluded,
good hunting . Morning Star
area. $65,000. Additional
101 acres available. 9&amp;

51

Hoover Sweepers repaired
at Empire Furniture, 842
Second Avo, GaiUpolls, OH .

For Sale: 1000 ge lion
PLASTIC septic tanks.
State approved . Phone 2165930. Jackson, Ohio.

Interior and Exterior pain·
ling, trallor roofs, and dry
wall SIB ahd up, 15 yrs. ex·
pertenct. Free est. Call~·

MOst anything used In
Restaurant and store
equipment. RADCO ~·
523-1378, Huntington.

For Salt 1972 GMC 7500
Dine! dump truck. Call 1· Ashworth Installment Ser·
614-694-7842.
vtce. Carpet, vinyl,
ceramic tile, floor tile, for·
19t9 Chevy truck tong bed mica counter tops, all work
Ul engine runs great, body guaranteeed. Call ~1019.
needs work. $450 •. Call 446Carpenter work, any type
om.
remodeling. Call ~2910.

for Renl
House for rent, 57 Olive St.
1 bdr ., unfurnished, no
you pay utilities, dep.
req., $150. mo. ~·7886. AI·

35 acre farm with barn.

Electric &amp; water. Good
place for new home or
trailer site . For In·
formation Arnold Grate,
Rutland. Days 742-2511,
evenings 742·2246.

fer5~ · «145 .

2 bdr. apartment lg. LR
and Kitchen. Across from
Honda Shop no pets. Call

54

Misc. Merch•ndise

AIR CONDITIONERS
sale priced. all sires in
stock, expert Installation
available. Village Fur·
nlture, 2605 Jackson Ave.,
304-675-1773.

Special Sale! Satellite An·
tenna, BUY direct from
manfacturer,
180 TV
stations. Call602-622·2290.

l

•·NH

omen

c.n

•

'

~ ~ ~~.

sewing
machine
wlfh
For Sale Good
used Futura
carrying case . Asking
$200.00, call W.· U44.
6,boo BTU Westinghouse
air cond., hOSP. bed with
motor, 21' RCA color TV,
blbybed, otoss lined elec.
hotwater heater, canning
fruit Jars. Phone 614· ~
0595.

73

~==~======::;=========~
S4

Ml5c. Merc!Nindlae

Lowest prices on Bemco
bedding In the area. Call
for prices. VIllage Fur·
nlture, 2605 Jackson Avo.
675· 1773.

stove, good shape, 5200.
Phone 367-7824.

Stereo componet system.
Phone ~-675·6800 .

Fiat Allis modei6·E dorer,
cargo wench, 1800 hrs ..
Flat Allis model 545 end
lOader, rubber tire, comp.

Smith and Wesson model
29, 44 magum I Inch barrel,
presentation case. S350.
Phone ~-67H172.s

314 bucket. 1976 Chevoret 2
ton truck, heavy duty 16 ft.
bed, twin holst, well
equiped, low mileage, oil
are like new. Priced for
quick sale . Call Ripley,
WVA, 304·372-6390.

BEAR Polar LTO compound bow with eight
arrow quiver and bear
sights. $90. Call after 5 only
lOA-675· 187•.
Building Supplln

Building materials, block.
L6000 · brick, sewer pipes, win·
Programmable Accoonting dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Machine. Good cond. Call Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
(614) &lt;U6·2342 .
Ca112As-5121.
Burrough's

Ray's Used Furniture
May tag washer, $85 ea.,
dryers $85 ea ., roilaway
bed $30, hospital bed SIOO,
bookcase $30, che•t of
drawers $35, coffee table &amp;
2 end tobles to match $30,
blanket chest $85, watt
cabinet $20, organ stool US,
WOOd &amp; coal heaters S65.

Open 10 tlll6. Coll367·0637.
size 10,
slacks, rops, and pants
suits. $1 .00 to $6.00, like
new. Call 245·9314 after
6:00 .

appliances,

televisions. Big discounts
for quanlly purchase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675· 1773.
BIG discounts for cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone 1·~· 422·2781.
1 good Case bailer and
wagon $2,500. 1 large pony
(52 ln.) bay with black
maine and tall, while
stocking legs. S300. 985·
3191 .
NEW

post hole diggers
135 Massey Ferguson
tractor $3550. Formal! H
tractor 1650. Phone 576-2328
or 576· 2606.

s:zso.

63
55

Farm Equipment

3 REGISTERED Nubian
goats. 1 BillY SIO.oo, 2 nan·
ny's S75.00 each. Call 304·
675·2372 or 895·3952 .
Hoy&amp; Grain
HAY for sate or trade for
cattle, 304·458·1057.

Pets for Salt

56

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGDNWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow puppies. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call ~ 3844 after • p.m.
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
lndoor·outdoor. facilities .
Also AKC Reo. Dober·
mans. Call4-46·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
A K C Gordon sellers,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call ~· •191.
THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675·2063, Pl. Pleasant. New
nours. Now open on Wed.
Open 11·• Mon. thru Sat.
Fri. hours 11-6.
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian an Poodle
PUPS895·3958.
Chow Chow puples. ex ·
cellent pedigree, black
cream and rl!d, male and
female. GlenwOOd 304-762·
2035.
Beautiful AKC Pekingese,
loy poodles champion
blOOdline. tiny, teacup
Pomeranlans, shots,

wor

med and Parvo. very
reasonable. Phone 304-743·
8002.
57

Llvea!Gck

Muslcol
Instruments

Wurlitzer
'funmaker•
organ. Cassette player and
rhythm bullt· in, exc. cond.
Call 304·675·5320 after 4:30
PM.
~===ci72::r.===
5I
Fruit

&amp; Vepeto!ltea •
Fruits
&amp;
Vegetable~
Homegrown-sweet corn,
cabbage, mangos, etc .
Charles McKean Farm .
Call4-46·9442.
Home grown vegetables for
sale. Call ~4710.
Green beans, pick your
own $6.00 bu. Raynor
Peach Orchard, 5 miles
below Gallipolis on Rt. 7.
~-1807.

BEANS,
cabbage ,
potatoes, squash, cucum·
bars, etc. Larry Sayre, 304•
89
_ 5_·_33_19_._ _ _ _ __

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

7:111

7:11
8:00

11

Autos for Sale

75 VW Rabbit very good
cond., $2,000. Call245·5077.
1978 CAMARO, sliver with
black Interior. 305 cu. In,
PS, AC, ln·dash tape.
$4,000. Call ~80A9 afler
3:30.
1971 Chevy Impala runs
good, S300. Catl256-6215.
1979 4 cyt. Chevy Monra
HB. Sllver·grey. Auto., PS,
PB. oiQ,OOO miles, $3,500.
Caii9A9·2184.
1• Ford Torino 4 dr, good
lires, gOOd mech. cond.,
needs body work &amp; battery,
S225. 73 Ford LTO 4 dr .. fair
tires &amp; mech. cond., needs
body work &amp; batlery, 200.
73 GMC 31 • T truck needs
some repair, $600. Call 245·
5276.

1972 Chevy 1/2 T, 3 spd.,
good cond., $345. 1965 In·
ternatlonat, 3 spd, 112 T,
good cond., 6 cyf., 1425. 197•
OOctge Monaco Broughm
staflonwagon, 9 passanger'
$875. 1974 Ford 112 T
pickup, $625. Caii367-01A9.

I

boJCihelrway out of IINI ghano;
avlolt1otheWorldHaaw,waight
Bkllna Champlonahlpa ; hog
wreatllng In t.talne: and 1 Salt
Lake CHy policeman who drag
racea with the local teeuaer.1.

AND '1'01.1 &amp;HOULI&gt;
&amp;ee BOMI! .Of' THe

~

01/P G0ll&gt;l55 OIJ
· OVI!R THI!R!i .•

peychopath

~-576· 2585.

ll!!mlno.)

•
()) (II
THE WHITE
SHADOW Salami belte an op·
aggravated aaaault, a charge
carrying a two to four year prl·
eon aentence. (Repeat; 80
mina.)

. Yeslerday s

XI X] HISK XXI X)

I Jumbles
Answer

(Answers tomorrow)

LOVER ABHOR FAULTY BARREN
What the fortune·teller said when asked
how she fell about her work I HAVE A BALL

Jumble BOOk No. 15·, conIaan
. Ing I 10 puzzles, is available tor S1.75 poelpilkt
from Jumble, cJo this newe"r:J'",; Bo• 34 ,...___... N • or••• lnct·~
name, add res&amp;, .r:lp code a make
•
·
uuu, ..... - - ._ )101M"
chech payable to Newt plprtrbool!;s.

()) A TOUCH OF CHURCHILL,
A TOUCH OF HITLER 'The Life
of Cecil Rhodea' Cecil Rhodea
waaamlneowner.apollllclan,e
con man, name~take of the

Rhocleo

Scholarehlp

ond

founder of Rhodeela. Thla
documenterylookaattheroleot
the European In Africa during
the laat of the t9th century
through the etory ot thlalaet of
Englend'e empire builders. (90

BRIDGE
Adventures in card play

mine.)

8:05

~MOVIE·(BIOGRAPHYI''I&gt;
1

8:11
D:OO

ANNIE

.,.ANNIE GEf~D UP!7ET ABQIT
BEINtS GENT lD BED EARLY, BOT
GOMETI!IMti I HAVE TV
AGH. YOO, ANGELA '" SOMETI!I/'Iti
HIEiHLY PEftSONAL- .m-r-r--'

ffi

CBN UPDATE NEWS
•
(!)
DIFF'REHT
STROKES Though udctened

haoto bethanktullor. (Repoe1)

~

ooed·Captlonecl)
700~UB

ALLEYOOP

Dorer work done bY hour or
lob. Free estimates. Phone
614-245·5515.

()) PICHICThecomedyteam of
Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Cor·
batt, knowl'1 ae the 'Two Ron·
nle.e', etarin thi.e humoroua tale
or an outing with a cruety gener·
ala_M Jl!..• aon.

Dorer work. Small lobs a
specialty . 742-2753.
GASOLINE ALLEY

10:00 (])-.zJQUINCYOulncy'uce
labtechnichtn, Sam, developaa
prOOIIS b)l which hi prOVII
that a .euapected raplat it In·
nocant bace u1e hi ateeth do not
match the bite mark.aleft on the
rape victlrna . (Rapaat; 80
mine.)

EDWARD'S BackhOe and
Oorer Service. Speclallrlng
In septic tank. 675· 1234.

()) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Oucheaa of Duke Street : A
Lady of Vll1ue' George Duo·
dale, a well· known womanlz:er,
takes a fancy to Diana Strick·
land, a bea(Jtllui new oueat at
the hotel, who aoon lalla under
hla epella11d ie prepared to
abandon her family for her new

BACKHOE and Septic tank
1975 OOclge statlonwagen. FOR sale, 1969 GMC 'I• ton Service
larry Slden ·
Dependable. $700. or best custom camper, heavv stricker..675-5580.
offer. 992·3717.
• duty, 4 speed transmission,
spill rim tires, 614·~7798 ,
14
Electrical
1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675·
&amp; Relrlgerallon
2722 or 675·5571.
1978 Fold down camper
with awing &amp; port·a·pol. Fuller Electric Co. Com·
Plete rewiring, commercial
MORRISON'S Auto sates. Call W.·7230.
or residential, and elec·
Henderson, wv. Phone 675·
lrlcal malnhlinance, also
157A or 675·2881 .
on call. Ph . 446· 2171,
Gallipolis.
1980 200SX Datsun, ex·
cellent condition, loaded, 1::1----,H"'o.,-m_e_ __
Quaitly Cooling and
$6,100.00 CalllOA·675·5090.
Improvements
Healing service Call 38896911.
FOR
BEST
In
Carpet
1974 Super Beetle, exc.
cond. $2,600. Phone JOA-675· Cleaning · Call Smellrer's
Steamway. Call 614·~ SEWI!'oiG Machine repairs,
2835.
2096.
service .. Authorired Singer
Sales &amp;, Se~vlce . Sharpen
1977 RABBIT, 4 Speed, 304·
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
STANLEY STEEMER
675-6923.
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
Carpel Cleaning
4-46·A208
73 OOclge dart sport black
JACK'S REFRIGERATIOon black cragers. new
N. air condition service,
tires, JoiO automatic. Phone JIM MARCUM Roofing
304·675· 1769,
I •FIOU11tng and siding. 30 commercial, Industrial.
years experience. Free Phone882·2079.
estimates. Remodeling.
1975 Gold Duster, excellent Call318·9857. ·
Ctotus B. Buck Jr. Home
condition, orlgln.~l paint,
and Industrial Sewing
radial fires, new brakes
Machine Repair. AlSO will
and shocks, completely STUCCO PLAUERING · trade or sell old or used
tuned up and front end textured ceilings; corn·
machines. Phone
aligned, 21 111PG· aluminum mercia! and residential, sewing
estimates. Call 256- · 304-458·1659.
rimstnctudld $19.00. Phone
1182.
304·675·1842 after 5.
IS
General Hauling
CON · JIM'S
1978 Chevette, very good SANDERS
DEPENDABLE
running condition . Phone TRACTING, Carpentry water delivery. Ctt 256work IIi painting, concrete,
304·812-2914.
9368 anytime.
landscaping, ~·2717.

10:05
10:28
10:30
10:11

1t:oo
BUT 1 00/II'T

WELL, YOU SEEM
LISTLESS ... PI?AYVN .. .
HIGH· 6TRUNG! AND
A LITTLE PALE
AF&lt;OUNP THE GILL~
IF YOU A5K ME.'

NEFPA
rocTOR!THE

OTHER Mb,~L·5 ~~
TOLD ME:
WHAT TO

PO.'

•·
I

(80 mlna.)
TBB EV!NING NEWS
CBNUPDATENEWS
LA1111Y JONES
NEWS
CIINUPOATENEWS

•rnm•(J)(IJ&lt;Dl•

NEWS
C1J TIIS IS THE UFE
(]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) " "
11

11:05
11:28
1 t :30

Amertcen Gigolo" 1180

I

E ALLEN AT LARGE
TERUMITS .
HT GALLERY
UPDATE NEWS
THETONIGHTSHOW

'The Beat Of Care on' Guests:
Erik Eatrada, Marahe M11on,
Placido Domingo, Tom Wolfe.
epeat; 80 mine.)

l

ANOTHER LIFE
JI.ENNY IIILL SHOW
()) CBBLATEMOVIE 'Aeh

Wedneada y'

1973

Stare:

Ellzobelh Ttylor, Henry Fonda.
()) ABC CAPnONI!D NEWS
(JD) MOVIE -(COMEDY) 0 '1&gt;
"AI!Ivlclercl BlbY" 1IMII
ABCNEWSNIGHTUNE
~ohoredbyTod Koppel.
t1:38 lJJ MOVIE ·(COIIEDY) "I&gt;
....,...... On TM Rocke"

(II).

'·~
~

,'.
.'.
.
''
••
,'

NOW HAULING house coat
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call for estimates 367·7101

-.•,

Jones Bovs Water Service.
Call367·7471 or367-0591.

'

OIL LARDS
WATER .
DEL'IIiERY SERVICE .
Call ~- 7404,
•

:·'·

KEEP THEM DADBURN
THANK·VOU NoTES
TO VORESELF

12:00

play for Coptoln Slublng; 1nd
Gopher holpo 1 rellring neigh·
bor find ahlpboard romance.

(Ii-I; 7Jimlna.)
12:30 CIJ •
CD
TOMORROW
COABT·TO.COAIT Gueol:
Walter Wlll iama, aconomlet.

( .

(I) LOVI!IOAT Ayounglortune
tallarmokHerornantlcplayfor
Cepteln Stublng; and Gop!Nir
help a e rei Iring neighbor find

l, f'

1 *~ ~eh:j:::c:::et;
IDOU(l

TRI.STATrE
.. ',~
'U.I!HOLSTE~Y SHOP '
\
1163J:!!. Avt., Galll""lls
•'.
4ol6-·-or4-46' 1133. .·

.. . . . .
.ICJIOUEifiOTHelll

.
..
aru
;.

-IIIID·

....
. ...

.

IIIOVIE -(IUIPINIII) •••
=l•r•DJ~Rt" 1111

'
'' .
1:00

IIIWI .

\

~·
IIOIIIrACILftiNOW·

··.a~ri'JRUORT

1IOVIII(ADVINTUI!III••

'... lililiiNtl"1144
'"'""""'

C811~!1DORT

• 1110 ': _ AIIO'IMIII IM'I

NORTH
+A

•

J~

7-15-81
4

• 7 54
• Q 10

+J6; 2
EAST
+K2
.10g83
• 7 6; 3
t K982
+ K 10 8 3
+Q74
SOUTH

WEST
• 53
.KQJ

himself lacing an unfavorable lead of the king of
hearts. He ducked once on
. general principles. Sometimes, the opening leader
will shift, but West continued with the queen of the
I s uit.
t South took his ace and led
the queen of spades. West
: followed low and South
. thought tor some time
before rising with dummy's

• Q 10 9 7 6

• A6 2
.... JI
+A9

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

ace.
Then he led dummy's
queen of diamonds . East
covered . South took his ace,
· led the four of diamonds
back to dummy's 10,
returned to his hand with the
ace of clubs and discarded
dummy's last heart on the
jack of diamonds.
Later on , he lost one club
. and the king of spades. but
he had his I 0 tricks.
Don't think that we are
showing result play . The

North

East

SouU

Pass
2+
Pass
Pass
••
Pass
Pass
Opening lead:•K

3+
Pass

1+

result was favorable, but the

play was almost automatic
for a real expert.
'
The point is that the contract was not going to make
if the diamond finesse lost. ·
With the diamond finesse:
right, a successful spade

finesse would produce ao .
overtrick. With fhe diamond

finesse wrong, it would
merely mean going down
one instead of two.

~tMI..,.H,t
by THOMAS JOSEPH

DOWN
1 "I Walk the

ACROSS

1 Crowd

together
Line" singer
5 Swedish wine 2 Mature
measure
3 Muslim
9 Amonasro's
prayer call
daughter
4 Scottish
10 Mother
name prefix
of Dionysus
5 Sagacious
Yesterday's ADI!wer '
13 Astronaut's
6 Amalgamate
business
7 Candlenut 20 Mentally
26 They're
15 Biddy
tree
fecund
able-bodied
16 Drag
8 Devotional 21 Unspeakable %8 Greek island ·
17 Tanguay
Ulrving R.
22 Opposite
31lnlet
18 - de
or Isaac Don
of pro:limal 32 Contend
foie gras
12 Euphoric
%3 Off the
33 Bottled up
19 Slower (mus. ) 14 Mrican
carrack
:15 Luckman of
20 Spanish
beast
24 Tricky;
football
movie house 18 Breakwater
evasive
36 Chop oft

fain!:

%1 Sandy tract
22 Had the
audacity
24 Had a feast
25 Czech river
28 Class
Z7 Shinto
temple
28 Yield
29 Tyke
30 Tease
31 Sunnount
34 1940 Colbert

film
37 Descendant

of Levi
38 Pizzeria
fixtUre
39 Barly garden
. 40 Jaunty
?·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

(10 mine.)

~~

_::

NEWS NIGNTLINE
by Ted Koppel.
az•LOVIBOATAyounglor·
tuna taller rnakea a romantic

• 1:00
1:10
' 1:10

Mobile . homes moved
licensed, and bonded. 576:
2711 or 675-4398.

r . .ac
~cltored

••

::·..t.·:

Today's hand comes from
a very good book on card
play called "Adventures in
Card Play" by Geza Ottlik
and Hugh Kelsey. Unfor·
tunately, the book is of a
very advanced nature and
only for a handful of bridge
players.
South found himself iJo
four spades after an aggres·

sive auction. He also found

(J2) •
ABC SUMMER
MOYIE 'OiaaeterOn TheCoaet·
liner' 1979 Stara: Wllllom
Sha.tne,.t.._Yveha Mlmlaux.
• ()) rnv CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Happily Ever
After' 1978 Stare:. Suzanne
Somera, Bruce Boxleltner.
liD A TOUCH OF CHURCHILL,
A TOUCH OF HITLER 'The Life
of Cecil Rhodes' Cecil Rhodes
wae a mine owner, apolltician, a
con man, namaeake of the
Rhodes Scholarahlp and
founder o f Rhodaela. This
documantarylookaatth'eroleof
the European In Africa during
the laet of the 19th century
through the story of thialaat of
England'a empire bulldere. (90
mlniJ
11:30 (])•CIJTHEFACTSOFLIFE
Blair 11 upaot and embarraaaed
when her coueln Gerl, 1
comedienne who Ia cOnfined to
a wheelchair, come a tovlelt her
M_ochool. (Repeot)
(!)MOVIE ·IWEBTERNJ ""
~~ ..ghPialnaDrtfter'' 1873

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Healing,
Rt.1 Gallipolis, 367·7853.

Oifcher work. Charles R .
Hatfield, Hatfield Backhoe.
Gas, electric, and water.
742·2903.

'Amazlng How1rd Hughee''
rt II.
1177

tolearnfromadoctorthathewill
neverbetallenoughtoplaybaa·
kat ball, Arnold meet a a little girl
who Ia confined to a wheelchair
and reallz:es the manythlnga he

Plumbing

, ,,Upl!o!atery

Answerhere: K

frH for all and Ia charo4Kf with

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone~· 3888 or ~·«77

17 &lt;,

gested by the abOve cartoon.

poalng pi•••• In a baoketboll

&amp; Healing

'JONES BOYS WATER
SERVIC.E . Call 367-7&lt;471 or
367·0591.

Now a"ange the cirded letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug -

me1hodlcelly

booby trap• the cabe of a email
company he'a out to dee troy,
end the angela put thelrllvea on
the line to lure the culprit Into
maklnQhlanextmo-ve. (Repeat;

A792.

E &amp; V Body Shop Want
your car looking new? Call
~9~GeorgesCreek Rd.
-:===~=::::;::===
jj
Compi... "
Equipment
10 fl. truck camper. Phone

'

az• CHAAUI!' 8ANGEL8

ta•la when I fevenge IHklng

TOPPER for pick up lruGk,
3'8" high, removable back,
full door, good cond ., D. C. contrac1ors Plum·
bing, electrical, heating,
$150.00. CaLL ~- 4225 .
rooting, aluminum. vinyl
siding, and nome painting:
77
AuiORe!ll!ir
675·3376 or 675·12&lt;10.
ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr . wrecker
service. "Big or small" we
tow them alii 2332 Eastern DOZER WORK Cornplire
Ave .• Gallipolis, Ohio. Day oul RATES. Phone 256·
· W.·2«5 or Night . ~­ 1560.
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any color, free pickup
&amp; delivery In Gallipolis
area, Hammond Body
Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782 .

pal1;80mlno.)

~cw.B

Thaangelatoketotheot~oln

Boa lund
Motors for Sole

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. ~·7717.

...

' ::;.;.~·--·

GIET 8IIAIIT

ce!l. UPDATI! NI!WB
.CIJIIEALPEOPLEAWa·
ohlngton femllytha1 palnto floo·

· Motorcycln

82

EVI!NING

pole• for allvlno; a man who
tralna troubled youngatere to

Vana&amp;4W.D.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

LISKY

JULY 111, 11181

T and
R building,
remodeling, also papering,
carpet Installation, and
1979 Starcraft fiberglass genen1l
home
imboat, skis and accessories. provements. 675·5689, 67S·
90 h.p. used bery little. 5304.
$4,500. 992-6272 af"r 5.
76

t
t ) I --J

I

CONTI N IOUS no leak gut·
1975 Honda 750 · many ex· terlng, custom made for
tras, gd. cond. Call ~-0648 your home. For free
estimates, call ADVANCE
after6PM.
SEAMLESS GUTTER
1978 Honda Hawk CB oiOOA, AND DOOR . 614-698-8205.
Highway pegs, crash bar,
sissy bar, very good cond., HARPER Halstead, lawn
7600 miles, $950. Call ~ mower repair and shar·
pening service, 10 a.m .·6
·.nn.
p.m. 675-5868.
1977 HONOA, SUPER
SPORT, «Xlc:c A cycle, like RON'S Television Service.
new Gondllon. Call 256-1331 Speclallrlpg In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar. and
affer5PM.
house cans. Phone 576·2398
HONDA CB 360T 19761600. or AA6-2454.
Motorcycle. Phone 304·773·
5425 afler 1 weekdays COOK'S Television Ser·
anyll me on weekends.
vice,
Henderson, wv
Phone 675-22.50.
75 Honda 550 super sport,
excellent condition $900. F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675· 1331.
Pnone 304·895·3954.
75

.

one letter to•ICh square, to~
four ordinary warda.

RINGLE'S
SERVICE:
61 Ford Bronco, 6 cyt . .' 3 Complete
bUilding,
..,._.., no rust. 21 mpg, remodeling , repairing,
$150. firm. runs good, 304· large or small Jobs done ef·
flclenlly . Phone 675-2088 or
675-4560.
-~------576-2919.
1972 Chevrolet Batrer, LOCKSMITH
Service .
White spoke rima, lockout, Residential, automotive .
hubs, good tires, excellent
Emergency service. Call
shape, 304·675·3308 after 6.
882·2079.
74

Microwave oven with elect.

over hauled, exc. cond., 1

61

by HenftAmoldondBobL.e ...

UnacrOITt&gt;fa 1helo four Jumbles

1977 Chevy dump track ex .
cond., low mileage, other Gene's carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
extras. Call446·2838.
Free estimates, reasonable
rates. Scothguard, 992·6309.

'HAY FEVER ' HOME
remedy. tradition tor cen·
turles, It works. For com·
ptete Info and receipt send
today self addressed slam·
ped envelope plus $1 .00 to
S. R.A. Co., P .O. Box 284,
Gallipolis. OH .45631 .

W.·3937 or 367·0560.
1~-------....1.---------1-NEW
red
potatoes ;.
35
Lots&amp;Acroop
floor finished ef·
Th 'II D
!1omegrownS7.50per50tbs
LOTS · Real nice camPSite
apt. Furnished,
ey
0 It Every Time
Delivered In Point
on Raccoon Creek, all laclui1'Sonly, no pets. 729 2nd
Pleal8nt. Phone 30.4·895.
ulllltln available, $300.
Gallipolis. Call 4-46\oOI/"li' IN
3590.
clOWn, owner will finance,
7HtE S10RE
call after 3 p. m., 256-6413.
/IV7' 'l1fE '
4 rent unfurn. apt. all car~ f4ETS
2 acrn on Ffoyd·Ciark Rd. petl!d, S250 mo. SIOO dep,
WA~/7
clOSe to Rl. 160, $4,000. utilities paid, no children,
ON ....
Form Eqillpment ·
Phone416-0390.
no pals. Call446-3437.
JOhn oeere 24T baler wtt~
bate
kicker,
Maasev
Green Beans. Pick your For rent new 1 bdr. apt.
, Ferguson hayrock, 3 pol'lf
own $6.00 bu . Raynor can 446·0390.
PGSI hole digger 9 ln., al:lt
Peach Orchard, 5 miles
good , cond. Call H1A·
belOW GallipOliS on Rt. 7. REGENCY APT.
2394 o r - Tom Jonnlllta
Call416-_,7.
·
bedroom,
Thurman, OH,
cllenlurnllhed, carpeted,
'
2 rots for sale 16 Nell Ave., bills partially paid. S200
.mo.
Excellent
neigh·
S6,000, 31 Ntll Ave., $4.000.
borhood, 675-6722 or 675P~one
or 992-7042.
5104.
B:Y owner, 3 apartment
!JOUle on IPIIfOX. 1 ~re.
LhHt In one,. rent
ID'
make Your pavlltlllt.
be .- r l e d ll~le horilt.
City werer, wl!l '*-Icier
land contract. +75-1113 ..,
Furnlshld elflcltncy '8Pf.
P.:l'l·
' " ' Ul!llllft pel., ....,. .
battl, IUIIable for - · C:.ll. · .
..._441Uftw7PM.
' loiS ACRES 412-371·11114.

l~~i)~~~~~::i·

. 'ftft~\Mtf!l'il ~THATICRAIIBLI!DWORDCWIE '

1562.

• • -1

Household Good•

H~~~ne.
lmprovtmtnh

RATLIFF POOLS I. SER·
VICE, Complete sales,-·
viet, supplln In·
stallellon. ~ 1324.

nlture,

2630.

...

Mise, MercltandiA

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker. of·
toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair
and loveseat, S27S. Wedding dress size 12, exc.
2 bdr. trailer furn., oas and
water furn ., $225 mo. , $100 Sofas and chairs priced cond ., SJ.~O . 20' B/W TV,
dep. Call 4-46·4225 or W.· from $275. to $695. Tables, S50. Call W.·8554.
$38 and up to $109. H Ide·•·
0756.
beds,$3.40., queen sire, $380. WOOD BURNING add·on
Recliners, $165., $295.,
Modern mobile home, cen· Lamps from $18 . lo $65. s furnancefor gas·oil or elec·
!rat air, 1 or 2 adull$ ontv . pc. dinettes from $79., to trlc, and also works on hot
water heat. Still in factory
Call ~ · 0338 .
$365. 7 pc ., $189. and up. carton . Would normally
Wood table and .t chairs,
cost around $1000, will sell
For rent, 10)( 50 2 bedroom $350 up to $495. Hutches, for $400. Caii6U·256·1216.
mobile home. Racine area . $300. and $375., maple or
pine finish. Bedroom suites
992·5858.
POOLS :
· Bassett Oak, S6•9., SWIMMING
PRE · SEASON SALE :
Bassett
Cherry,
$765.
Bunk
2 bedroom trailer for rent . bed complete with mat· $999.00 INSTALLED! I!
Brown's Trailer Park. 992· tresses. $250. and up to Above ground pool COM·
332 •.
$350. Captain's beds, $275. PLETEL Y INSTALLED
complete. Baby beds, S89. starling at sm.oo. Price In·
2 bedroom Mobile Home. 1 Manresses or box springs, eludes pool, deck, fence,
bedroom apt. utilities paid, full or twin, $55., firm, $65. fitter. liner, and In ·
1 child accepted. No pets or and $75. Queen sets, $185. 5 stallation under normal
drunks. John Sheets, 3'h dr. chests, $49. • dr . chests, ground condition. Free
miles south of Middleport $42. Bed frames, S20.and shop at home service. Call
on Rt . 7.
S2S., 10 gun · Gun cabinets, HI00·62HS11 .
$350., dinene chairs 520.
Two bedroom nouse trailer and $25. Tappan gas or Half runner beans. $10.00
on Ashton·Upland Road . electric ranges, S2115.
bushel . Pick your own,
.
Ranges, bring your own container.
$150 plus utilities and USED
damage deposit. 3 miles retregerators, and TV's,
George Hill, Racine, Ohio.
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd .
from Rl. 2. 675-«188 .
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon.
Sears Kenmore Portable
thru Fri., 9am to Spm, Sat.
Two 2 bedroom house
dishwasher . Good cond .
W.-0322
trailers for rent, furnished,
992·32.2.
1 with central air, gOOd tor
USED
AP ·
working couple or couple GOOD
Canning tomatoes. Andrew
with 1 child. $150 per month PLIANCES · washers, Cross. Letart Falls, Ohio.
dryers,
refrigerators,
plus dePOSit . 675·«188.
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
ptiances, 1918 Eastern 26' TROUTWOOD travel
1 bedroom mobile home. Ave., ~ · 7398 .
trailer and camp site on
married couple onlv . No
Raccon Creek. Close to
pels. $150. per month .
Ohio
River . S500 down.
PHONE 304·675·4151.
53
Antiques
owner wilt finance. 614·256·
ATTENTION:
(IM · 1216.
2 bedroom mobile home at PORTANT TO YOU) Will
Apple Grove across from pay cash or certified check EASY credit available now
Goodyear Plant 5135 . for anTiques and collec· to purchase furniture,
Utilities, deposit and tlbles or entire estates. televisions, or appliances.
reference required. Phone Nothing too large. Also, Village furniture 2605
~· 576·2•79.
guns. pocket watches, and Jackson Ave .• 675· 1773.
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411.
NEEDseveralitemsof fur ·

Cameron.
12x6'0. two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/2, new
carpet. 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom, new carpet,
B &amp; s Sates, Inc .• 2nd and

67 12x60 mobile
Phone 675·'"8.

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

S4

Ladies clothing

For rent 2 bdr. total elec ·
tric mobile home, dep.
required . Call ~- &lt;1303 .

1973 Crown Haven, 1Ax65.
three bedroom, new car·
pet, 1971 Cameron, 1Ax64,
two bedroom, new carpet .
1972 Champion. 12x60, two

1972

on Greer Rd., sewer and

773·5882.

197• New Moon Mobile
Home. Coli ~- 9759 .

bedrooms .

TRAILER space for rent

2 bdr. trailer Roush Lane.
Cheshire, Oh. Phone 1 · 30~ ·

72 Inde 12x60 mobile home,
79 Dodge van. a 18x36
garage, 3 acres of land
$16000 00 or best offer. Call
388·87.7.

Kirkwood

Mobile Homes
for Rent

water available. 304·836·
2 bdr. trailer, furn., gas S937 between 9 &amp; 11 .
and water turn., $225. mo.,
$100 dep., no pets. Call W.·
4745.

n Granville, 2 bdr. awning,

1973

APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES 67S·•130.

house in
Pomeroy . $125 a month, Apartments. 675·5548 .
plus utilities and dePOSit.
992·7511 .
SMALL furnished apart·
ment, no pets, references
1 bedroom furnished house required, 304·675· 1365.
on Ohio River south of Mid·
dleport. 2 children, no pets. 45
Furnished Room•
References &amp; depos it ~---'-======'­
required. Must keep yard SLEEPING RO.OMS and
maintained. $150. month, light housekeeping apt ..
$150 deposit. 614·837·3614.
Park Comtral Hotel.

PRICES REDUCED · used

new carpet.

evenings.

Unfurnished

Mobile Homes
tor Sate

bedroom,

Apartment
tor lent

Is

how
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hiDto . Each day the code letters are d1lerent.
&lt;:aYPI'OQUOTBS

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..

Wednesday, July 15,1981 · :;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.
.

..

.

Syria blames Americans
(C«&lt;ttnued frvm page 1J
that were destroyed In the recent air
raids.
Israel's third air assault Into
Lebanon this week has the Lebanese

considering a call for a U.N.
Security Council debate 011 what 8

'recept~ve to. Ha~IJ's deplomatk ef·
fort to defuse the mllai1e crlsls.
It was the lftb flg!Ur plane Syria
has lost In air battles with Israel
over Lebanon since Jtme 18'19. 1be
last Syrian plane was downed over

13. •
PLO sources conflnned a war· · :
plane crashed east ol the sourthern . :
Lebanon port city ol Slndon, 25 miles : ·
south ol Belrul ~ rep(lrter : :
Nablh Basho said Syrian and Iaraeli · :
aircraft were seen tradinc roCket : ·

east Lebanon's Bekaa Valley 011 Feb

WE HONOR

aoum;

·fire over the town of
-midway : :
government official described as
hetweenSldOIIandJizzlne.
: ·
~:
''Israel's escaliltin8 aggression."
Approve
funding
The
Palestinian
guerrilla
com::
During a meeting today on the
mand
claimed
one
Israeli
jet
was
hit
:
·
A
U.S.
House
ol
Representatives
topic, two sonic booms shook the
.
by
a
shoulder-ftred
SAM·?
missile
:
.
subcommittee
apappropriations
Lebanese capital and the state radio
blamed Israeli jets, saying they proved federal dollars to be spent on during the alr strllte and was seen • :
crashed tbe sound barrier over the renovation of the Gallipolls flying In flames toward Israel. But : :
Locks and Dam and other related the Israeli military command In Tel ·: ·
Beirut and other Lebanese cities.
Aviv said all its planes returned ._.
projects
Tuesday.
Syria moved SAM~ anti-aircraft
safely.
The
$1.6
million,
which
will
be
mlssiles into Lebanon's Bekaa
Valley after Israeli jets shot down spent during the 19112 fiscal year, will
two Syrian helicopters in the valley finance an advanced englneerillg
Veterans Memorial
Apri128. Syria has refused to pull the and design study on the dam.
Admitted-Donald Meadows, Por- :
The
allocations
must
be
approved
missiles out despite repeated Israeli
Zelda Davia, Pomeroy; An..
tland;'
by
the
full
House
·
Appropriations
threats to destroy them In bomb
nette
Boyd,
Pomeroy.
. .:
Committee before taking any furraids.
BaUey,
Ka~y
:
Discharged-Unda
ther
steps
on
the
congressional
ladA Syrian official, who declined to
Riffle,
Charles
Jones.
be quoted by name, said Syria will der.
not change its policy of keeping the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - missiles in Lebanon. He ·said his
government "does not expect much
from Habib's visit."
Observers said the loos of the
Syrian jet could make President
Hafez Assad's government even less

HOSPITAL NEWS

SEWER DITCH RESCUE - Rescue workers try
frantically to free 21-year·old David Shaler from a lfl.
foot deep sewer ditch that caved in on him Tuesday.
Shaler and another employee of a Carbon Co. coo-

struction firm were iostalltog pipes when tbe waD of
tbe ditch gave way without warning. He was
discovered beneath the cave-In In a sitting position
with bis arms extended below him and bislegs crossed.
1AP Laserphoto ).

ELBERFELD$
JULY CLEARANCE

Jury selection hegins in Woomer trial
lo Bunch and published in a local
news paper last week would reduce
his effectiveness as a defense attorney.
Stevens then asked Circuit Judge
Ernest Finney of Sumter to postpone
the trial two days, until a
replacement for Bunch had time to
familiarize himseU with the case.
But Solicitor Jim Dunn said Stevens'
choice for ci&gt;-Counsel, Colwnbia at·
turney David Brock , was already
familiar with the case since he had
argued Woomer's appeal before the
State Supreme Court.
Finney denied Steven's request to
delay the tnal and scheduled formal
JUry selection for 2 p.m. Tuesday.
Attorneys for both sides expect jury
selection to conswne most of the
week .

CONWAY . S. C. !API - Jury
selection began Tuesday in the
resente ncing tria l of Ronald
· Rusty " Woomer. who was convicted in 1979 of committing lour
murders during a one-day crime
spree through three coastal South
Carolina counties.
Woomer, a native of Huntington,
W.Va., was sentenced to die in the
electric chai r almost two years a g o,
bul the sl&lt;lte Supreme Court over·
turned tha t sentence in Apri l, ruling
improper mstructions had been
given to the jury.
During pre-trial motions Monday,
Conway attorney Evans Bunch was
dJSmissed from defending the cas e
a t Woomer's request. Woomer and
chief defense counsel Cleveland
Stevens said sl&lt;ltements attributed

Area· deaths
.

"!

---

John Wesley Moon, 85 , 99 Kerr St.,
Pomeroy , died Tuesday at Camden
Clark Memonal Hospital, Parker·
sbug.
Mr Moon was born Nov. 24 , 1895
the son of the late Milledge and
Carrie Moon. He was also preceded
in death by II brothers a nd sisters.
two daughters. one son and his first
wtfe. Lillie M. Moon.
Mr. Moon was a trustee and member of the Mt. Moriah Church Mid·
dleport .
He is survived by his wife. Annie

nieces and nephews.

Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m . at the Mt. Moriah
Church with the Rev. Henry Key of.
ficiating . Burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends may call
at Ewing Funeral Home alter 7 p.m.
this evening .

Man assaulted by rioters
BAY VILLAGE , Ohio !AP I - Lee
Petet son, a political science student
from Cleveland State University .
went to London to work for a member of Parliament and ended up in a
hospital.
The 2(}-year-old college senior was
back in his family's home here
Tuesday. He said he returned after
he and three fri ends were assaulted
on a London street by a ga ng of 16
teenag ers .
Peterson viewed his attack as
related to the problems that erupted
in riots m English cities in the past
two weeks .
" Idle hands and all that type of
!lung. There's a great deal of unem·
ployment ; there's some hard

feelings

He sa1d he thought the gang
suspected one of his companions.
whose head had been shaved for
med ical reasons, of being a
"skinhead," Skinheads are young,
working-class whites who shave
their heads and have a reputation
£or street violence.
What shocked Peterson most of all
was an attitude he encountered
while in an English hospital: people
seemed to think that an American
from a big city would be used to that
kind of thing

Annual reunion set
The annual Matlack family
reunion will be held Sunday, July 19,
at the Lancaster Fairgrounds. All
families and friends are invited.

Marriage license
A marriage license was issued to
John Stephen Thomas, 23, Rt. 1, Middleport, and Gina Marie Thompson.
21, Pomeroy .

Eight defendants were fined in the costs, running a stop sign.
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoi·
Seven defendants foneit ed bonds
fman Tuesday night.
They are Eddie Russell, Mid· and one was fined in the court of
dleport, $225 and costs and three Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
days in jail, driving wlule in· Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Rollie Hemsley,
toxtcated; Roy Boggs, Middleport.
$50 and costs, disorderly manner; 10 Pomeroy Route 2, $27, ::peeding;
days in jail, destruction of property, James Harry Clark, Gallipolis, $34,
and $100 and costs. assault; Alfred speeding; Larry D. Hysell, MidEvans, Route I, MidcUeport, $100 dleport, $50 and costs, failure to
and costs, destruction of property; register a motor vehicle; Elwood
Howard Ferguson, Middleport, $50 Booth, Lancaster, $30, passing a
and costs, disorderly manner; vehicle on the right; James Butcher,
Michard Hubbard , Syracuse. $225 Wellston, $30, speeding ; Jenny
and costs, three days in jail, driving White, Long Bottom, $30, assured
while intoxicated; Carl Hughes, clear distance ; Sharon C. Russell,
Middleport, $100 and costs, destruc- Pomeroy, $30, speeding . fined $50
tion of property; Kenneth W. Mad- and costs and placed on probation on
den, Middleport, $50 and costs, con- a disorderly manner charge was
suming beer in a motor vehicle; Frank Haggy of Pomeroy.
Davtd Spangler, Rutland, $10 and

Man dies in wreck;
two vehicles found
POINT PLEASANT - A :U.year·
old Glenwood man was killed bel·
ween 7:30 and 8 p.m. Monday in a
tractor accident near his home. ac·
cording to a report by the Mason
County Sheriff's Department. ·
Homer Holley was pronounced
dead at the scene by Mason County
Coroner John Grubb. HoOey was apparently traveling rapidly on a
gravel road when he lost control of
the tractor and slid over an em·
bankment.
The victim apparently died of
head injuries sustained when his
tractor hit a tree, the report in·
dicated.
The body was taken to the Heck
Funeral Home in Milton by the
Valley Rescue Squad.
Funeral
arran~ements are incomplete.
Two vehicles originally stolen in
Ohio have been recovered by tbe

Mason County Sheriff's Department
with cooperation from the Mason
Police Department.
A 1980 Ford LTD originally stolen
in Colwnbus was recovered in
Mason, and a 1972 Suzuki motorcycle reported stolen from Logan,
Ohio was recovered in the Jerry's
Run area.
The thefts are still under in·
vestigation. The sheriff's depart·
ment estimated the total value of the
two vehicles was $6,100.

SUMMER
.
.
HANDBAGS
- ·-·- - -----.
..

.

Many_ styles in canvas,
terry,
tea ther
c 1oth,
leather and cloth eyelet .

Hubbard tribute set
A tribute will be paid to BiD Hubbard by the members of the
Syracuse Fire Department Friday
at 6 p.m. at the Syracuse BaUfleld.
The public is invited to attend.

Veal calves steady. Cow:J steady . Feeder cattle

$4-&amp; lower. Total Head 599.

Ft:eder steen: Good and O.Oice 2SO to 300 lbs.
55-&amp;1.50; 300 to .00 lbs. 5UO; 400 to 500 Jill. UjO.
59.541; 500 to 600 lbs. 51-60; 600 tCJ700 lba. 41-55; 100
to 800 lbe. t:t.»$2.SO; UJ and over +W7.
Feeder Heifers: Good andChoia Z50 to300 lbs.
48-$7; 300 to 400 lba. 46.50-St; 400 to 500 6-63: 500

Reg. $7 .oo .. .. . . . . . . . . Sale $5.25
Reg. $9.00 .......... . . Sale $6.75
Reg. $13.00 ........... Sale$9.75
Reg. $17 .00 .......... Sale$12.75

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

G.I

~

sanda~oot ex relnfolced toe. Limit 3.
whl le BOO lost

while 50 last.

Eckrich •

Lb

.

JUMBO BOLOGNA ........ ~.s1.tu..::J1
Eckrich

Lb.

PICKLE &amp; PIMENTO LOAF •• SJ.97
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••• ~b~.sl.39 ,

1 lb. Blue Bonner Quarters

MARGARINE • • •

79$

Clearfield Old
&amp; Sharp

ORAN$ES ... ~•m..... 6/49'
10 lb ...Hew White

POTATOES ...... ?.~~ .. '1.99
..

J lb. New Lo· Di

aiEESE • ~b~

.s2.Q9

Baca

APPLES .. •.. •.. •.. ••••.•• 89' ·'

Hb. Cello Pack

.. 2 Packs lor

1201.

COUNTRY TIME LEMONADE .. 69'
.

-.

~

'

i

'

PORK-N-BEANS ••••••••••••l
4 Rol

Pack~harmin

TOILET TISSUE ••••••• :~ ~ $1.39
9

••

32

oz. GOlden Isle

MUSTARD··· ••••••••• ;:r.. 59'
·

··

w12o ott

·

,

Bollle

DISH DETERGENT•••••••••• $1.19
'

32 oz. Miracle Whip ·

·

.

· sAlAD
DRESSING •••• ~~ •••• 't69
_..
.
·.:&lt;
'
"

%10 lo ZIO lbo. -.511.
.10.
.
Pip - by llie heod IWZ. .
Sows401llbo. one! up

•

memory. Limit 1,

17 oz. Del Monte

Bob~lves 4$.10.

"

CASIO #HL807
HAND-HELD
CALCUlATOR
8-dlglt LCD. Wltn

Hclstetnsteenand bu.J.Ls300 tol»lbs. ~1 .
lk&amp;lll 1.11110 lbo. onclup48-65.
Slaughter cowa- utilltielll-45; Canners and
cutter.~«&lt; and down.
Sprlngfr cows- by'llie head 21W311.
Cows and calves by the head 375-640
Veal calves - choice and prime 87~;
5261.:10.

Boon

•

with

~~· snw ~··· :·····~a.".~-~ $1;'~

Top

&lt;"!!

TOP KNEE-HI'S

lbs. 40-46.SO; IOOand over f0.-45.
Feeder BuJII: Good and Choice 210 to :1110 lbo..
i.I.IMI: 3110 to 4C!O lbs. 50-SII; 100 to 100 lbo. 10lll.:JO; 100 lo81llllbo. 4741; 81l1l to7110 lbo. M-61 ; 7110

•ood

.. r . . •. .

Regular or Queen size

··

to 800 lbl. 4J.41; 100 and aver 40-U.50.

·~

Kmarl® COMFORT

·~.
24 oz. Armour

tofl001bl. 44-$1 ; 80Gto7001td.42.50-41; 700toQ ·

SALE STARTS
TODAY UNTIL
JULY 22, 1981

·'&lt;'

22'o~. oaw~ '

Ohio Valley Uo;rstocll. Co.

...

........

". ·

&amp;de eve"ry Seturday at 1 p.m. Prices taken
from the auctton of Saturday, Ju.ly JJ , Trends:

.

21oz.'VanCamp

r....,----------------....:.:.....:..::.::..:.....:.:..:.:...:::._::::________..._____~

Market report

'I

immigrants."

Peter~on said.

EmergPncy calls
Two calls were answered Tuesday
by local units, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services repor·
ts. The Pomeroy unit at 10:11 p.m .
took Ronald Grady from the county
jail to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and later he was transferred to the
Holzer Medical Center. The Racine
Unit at 5:32 p.m. took Icy Tucker
from the intersection of Routes 124
and 338 to Pleasant Valley Hospital .

toward

The woman, on crutches and
wearing a brace on the jaw injured
by shotgun blast during the abduction, survived the attempted
killing and later helped police iden·
Illy her assailant.
Woomer received the death
penalty in the shotgun slaying of
Louise Sellers, 34, of Pawleys
Island.
Woomer was captured in the early

morning hours of Feb. 23, 1979, as
police surrounded the Myrtle Beach
Motel, where he and Eugene Skaar
were staying. Skaar conunitted
suicide rather than surrender to
police.
The Feb. 22, 1979, crime spree left
a Cottageville coin collector robbed
and killed and a Georgetown County
man and woman murdered. Later
that night, the two Pawleys Island
women were abducted.
Woomer was given We &lt;entences
for the murders of Arnie Richar·
dson, 27, and his ~year-old sister·
in-law, Earldean Wright, at Richardson's house in Georgetown County.
Woomer also received the death
penalty in CoUeton County for the
slaying of John Turner, 67, of Cottageville.

] Mayor's Court

L. Bryant Moon; four sons, Phillip
A. Moon, Stanford J . Moon. and Lyle
Vmclent Moon all of Pomeroy, and
John Moon Jr., Dayton; one
daughter, Mary Lena Carter.
Dayton, seven grandchildren 12
great grandchildren and several

john. W Pslt&gt;v. Moon

Woomer. a 26-year-old West
Virginia native , clutched his
mother's hand as they watched the
proceedings. Also in court was one
of two women Woomer and another
man were convicted of abducting
from Pawleys Island and later
raping and leaving for dead on a
deserted road near Socas tee.

·

·

FRUIT COCKTAIL ·~~.!~·:~ ••.2
f

'

··11

.

·

~~'
·

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    <tag tagId="730">
      <name>moon</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
