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en tine
Engineers seek collapse clues
·a t

...

Voi. 3G,N0.67

WINTHROP

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•

CO )t)LJ HAPPEN 1V KNON
'M-\AT tHe WEA1HiR5l.lOINSTO eJE: l-l KE TOMORROW~ .

vOHN RLl5tc:IN =AI~ THSJ&lt;e 15
ReALLY NO 5Ua-111-ll Nq le&gt; EYO
~TH~..l ONLY DIFFERENT
KIND5 ur- ~D 'NEA.1HER.11

THOIM"!SrtARDY .5AID, "THI516
THE: WS"ATHEF! THE CUCKOO
LIKE6,AND50 00 L''

i.

\

\

. .•

... AND HE

BERNARD AND I
AREN'T SPEAKING

KNOWS I'M
ReAt?Y TO
· EXPLOPE.'

I

ToDAY

... IN THEW

NORFOLK, Va.- Four Marine reservists from Pennsylvania have
been killed in a helicopter crash aboard the amphibious helicopter
ship Guam, the Navy reports.
~ CH53 8cla 'St&lt;allion.helicopter crashed and burped on the Guam's
flight d!!Cll ·!ate Sunday aftemC!;OR a!lout a&amp; miles .so!ltheast of
Morehead'Cicy, N.C.
, .
. ·
Atlantic Fleet headquarters in Norfolk said four Marines were injured and seven Navy persoMei suffered minor injuries. Two other
helicopters were destroyed. A Navy spokeswoman said the 5:25p.m.
crash caused a fire that was extinguished within five minutes. ·
HI.JVV

CAN

'TOU T'MJ
CARRY ON
LIKE THAT?

WELL, ITS
COMMUNICATION"'

Sudden noise causes panic
CHICAGO - The sudden noise that created a panic at a lakefront
concert here may have come from an exploding barbecue, police said.
About 7,000 concertgoers in Grant Park panicked Saturday night.
leaving about 80 people with minor injwies, authorities said, On Sunday, Tom Joyner, of radio station WJPC, which sponsored the event,
said a guard showed him a grill that had exploded.
·
The frightened crowd moved "like a tidal wave ali across the park,"
said guard Maurice Henderson. One of six bands at the soul music
event played on as the injured were loaded into ambulances.

PaliJCino shot to death
MIAMI BJ;ACH, Fla ..::. Jerome Palacino, 48, a convicted drug
smuggler, dll!d from four shots from a small-caliber automatic pistol,
authorities said,
The body was found by a friend Saturday in Palacino's $800,000 mansion in·Miami Beach. Palacino was convicted last year of importing
.00 planning to distribute more than $3 million worth of-drugs. In 1977,
he IJld three others pleaded guilty to extortion fqr faking a murder and
demahdlng Jl5,000 to get rid of "the body."

Vandal$ damage paintings
'

ClEVELAND - Police said four priceless paintings in the
Cleveland Musewn of Art were damaged when a vandal punched holes
in the canv~ with a candlestick. ·
.
Jaj:k Jerry Ne~. 45, a' P!i~ent at the Veterans' Administration
' Hosjlital near the rnusewn, surrendered moments after the incident
SW)day, police seid. They 541id Nelson, a artist who last month caused
authorities to close a doWiltO\VII shopping arcade wljlle he' sho\lted
from atop the rafters, was seen carrying a 2-foot·long candleholder.

Allies push·arms control talks
· "WE PUT 11 PINS IN EACH SHIF\UJIISSi'fHA'rCHe
TO HOJ,.D IT TOGETHER AND
TO FIND UNTIL. HE

I

i

1S Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

i

CATWALK COLLAPSE SCENE - An unidentified
man walks through the lobby of Kansas City's Hyatt
Regenry Hotel Sunday scattered with the wreckage of

Friday night's catwalk &lt;OIIapse. Two catwalks spanolug the lobby crashed onto a crowded dance floor
killing 111 and injuring 188 others. (AP Laserphoto).

Gallia lawmen seek escapee

Four reseroists die in crash

THE FIR'SrT llME HE 6R.E.AJ&lt;S
$0'-\ETHING, HE 'KNOWS I 'LL
GO UPSTAIRS AND LOCK
~E SEDR'OOM j;()()R.

i

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Aa today for Connie Alcala, Dolores whether people dancing or swaying
funerals began, engineers poked Cannona, Unda Louis Schurloclt contributed to the coUapse.
through tons of concrete IIJid twiated and Dolores Galvan, sister of Rachel
Crown Center President James
metal for clues In the collapse of two ·Galvan.
McClune said the hotel might be
suspended wal)cways at the Hyatt
Of the Injured, 90 remained open for business In a week or two.
Regehcy Hotel. The death toU stood hospitalized Sunday, 23 reportedly In
" Reopening depends on what the
at 113, with 186 Injured.
critical bmdition or bt Intensive care engineers teD us," McClune said. "If
The first funerals following units, Two of the Injured died Sun- there has not been any structural
FridaY's tragedy were scheduled day,boostlngthe~~toUtoll3.
damage to the hotel, we can reopen
today in TOpeka, Kan, for four young
The first Investigators - hired by without doing anything about
members of the Mariachi Estrella the hotel's architects from Failure replacing the bridges and we will as
Band who were at the Hyatt to ell' Analysis Associates .of Palo Alto, soon as it is safe.
tertaln a Fuller Brush Co. con- Calif. - were on the scene Sunday.
vention.
Four other Investigations also were
Meanwhile, the owner of the 81U10Wlced - by tl)e hotel owners,
"I don't know if we wiD replace the
luxUrious hotel said it might be the hotel managers, the contractor bridges," McClune added. "It is a
reopened within two weeks, and the and the city.
design we like. We have to look at
skybrldgesmightberepiaced.
"We are at workjlo find the most what happened, correct it and get
~re was still no official ex· qualified team," said Donald Hall, . back in operation.''
planation for the collapse, although preSident of HaUmark Cards Inc. " It
Mayor Richard Berkley and his
Investigators were !POking into the will be ._ very thorough In- wife, Sandy, spentfive hours visiting
posSibility that it might have been vestigation. ·~ HaD said the company the Injured in three hospitals. He
caused by people dancing or was contacting engineering finns promised the city would investigate
swaying on the spans.
across the country to put together a because "we have to bend over
The sis young w\)Rien in the team of lnvestlgaiots.
backwards to make sure there is
mariachi band w~re heading actoss
HaUmark is the parent of Crown (public) confidence," City Attorney
thecrowdedHyattlobbytoaroomto Center Redevelopment Co., which Aaron Wilson said later, however,
change' into Uieir costumes Friday owns the hotel, The hotel is managed that the city's legal authority to
night, when the second-and fourth- by Hyatt Corp.
probe the collapse was limited
floor walltways above them collapAmong the engineers contacted by because it occurred on private
sed, crushing people in the debris. Crown Center was 'James stratta of property.
Witnesses differed in accounts of
Four of the band members perished, Menlo Park, Calif., who was hired
and Rachel Galvan and Theresa ' by Kansas City to learn the cause of what happened in the seconds before
Cuevas were hospitalized.
the collapse of the ·Kemper Arena and during the disaster. Some said
Miss Galvan was in critical con- roo! here In 1979.
as many as 300 people were on the
clition at St. Mary's Hospital in Kan"The first thing you have to do is second-level walkway watching a
sas City on Sunday, but Mrs. Cuevas determine, did something let go or dance below in the lobby. Several
did something break'" Stratta said. were seen dancing and swaying to
had been released.
A joint funeral was being held He said it must also be determined themusicfrom below .

by Ed S.u llivatt:

Priscilla's Pop

1 section , 10 Po1ges

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 20,1981

Copyr;,hted 1981

0

Galiia County law enforcement of•
fleers were stili searching at press
time for a man who escaped from
the Gallia County jail early this morning.
James William Lovejoy, 33, Rt. 4,
Chesapeake, was originally taken to
the jail by Gallipolis City Police after being arrested in COMection with
a break-in at a city business this
morning.
He reportedly escaped after
~ ~ ot a:~,,.. be'wu
beft(g.proc~ssed in the jail.
The chain of events began at 1 : 27
a.m. when police were notified of a
possible break-in at Tawney's
Jewelers, 424 Second Ave.
Sgt. Joe Owen responded to the
caD. and radioed the station to send
belp when he became aware two
subjects were inside the building .

When the backup arrived, officers
were ready to move in when one of
the subjects, identified as Phillip
Michael Porter, 29, 518 Main St.,
Huntington, W.Va. , hurled himself
through Tawney's plate grass window and escaped on foot toward First Aveque. ,
Officers learned entry to
Tawney's was made through a
skylight. Nothing was reported
missing from the store. Details on
the.othe.,IRibject's escape remained
sketchy this morning.
Porter was arrested by police on
the 1100 block of First Avenue shortly
afterward and taken to the jail,
where he was bOOked for breaking
and entering. An arraignment was
scheduled in Gallipolis Municipal
Court for Porter this morning.
Police were notified of the other

subject and began searching for
hun. However. at 3:43 a.m. a
sheriff's department unit stopped a
silver Ford Pinto two-door with West
Virginia registration at Smith Buick
on Eastern Avenue reportedly
driven by Lovejoy.
In a possibly related incident, a
Pinto reportedly resembling the one
stopped"by police was seen shortly
before I a.m. at the Gallipolis Terminal Co., 1528 Eastern Ave. Upon
investigation, officers found a tractor trailer parked at the terminaL
owned by Aspiundh Tree Expert Co,,
had been tampered with. but nothing
was taken.
Police arrived on the scene and
took Lovejoy to the jail, where he
was booked and processed for complicity to breaking and entering
around 5:30a.m.

As he was being taken to the
shower stall in the jail. Lovejoy
reportedly shoved a chair in front of
jailer Bud Raygo and fled through
the side door by the new courthouse
furnace.
Police and sheriff' s deputies have
since been checking out reports in
which Lovejoy has been sighted. The
most positive lead came before 9:30
a.m. when Lovejoy was reportedly
seen in the weeds along the
Chickamauga Creek on Spruce
Street Extension.
As of press time, Lovejoy "1d not
been found.
Lovejoy is described as " " in
height, weighing 160 pounds, with
blue eyes and brown hair. He was
last seen wearing a pair of grey corduroy pants and a blue-tan-brown,
double-knit striped shirt.
-·-

Suspect admits
shooting Pontiff
ROME (AP) - Turkish terrorist
Mehmet Ali Agca today admitted he
shot Pope John Paul !1, but contested the right of an Italian court to
try him and claimed in a courtroom
outburst he had been tortured by his
Italian jailers.
On the opening day of his trial, the
23-year-old defendant said his life
had been threatend in !lalla~ jails
and that he had been subjected to
"inhuman" condltions since his
arrest for the May 13 shooting of the
pope and two American women in
St. Peter's Square.
In a statement translated from
Turkish to Italian, Agca said: "On
May 13, I was inside the confines of
· the Vatican when I shot ihe chief of
state of the Vatican. I don't agree to
be tried by an Italian court,"
Agca, who has growil a full black
beard dw1Jig his C!lnfliu!ment, addresSed the · court after the chief
judge rejected a defense motion
claiming Italy ha'd no jurisdiction in
theciae.
E~trlie~. ,Agca had shout~!!! from a
. bulletproof glass booth Inside the
courtroom lhat his jailers "have tortured me." After a Ill-minute recess.

he was allowed to address the court.
"I have lived for 60 days in
inhuman conditions," Agca said. " I
don't know if I am in a medieval jail
or a jail of a democratic country."
He appeared in good health as he
was Jed into the courtroom handcuffed to a police officer. Before the
outburst; he stood impassively as
scores of photographers snapped
photos and yelled out his name, scuf·
fling with courtroom guards who
tried to push them back.
Agca's fate is in the hands of a
jury of two women and four men.
Both the prosecution and defense
have predicted he will be sentenced
to life imprisorunent.
In· addition to the protective glass
booth for Agca, the 200 journalists
covering the trial had to show
special passes and then walk
through metal detectors.
Agca's court-appointed lawyer,
Pietro D'Ovidio, said before the trial
that his client confessed to the
shooting. He said he did not plan to
plead insanity ~cause there was no
evidence to support such a plea, and
he predicted Agca would be con(Contll'lued on page 10)

.&gt;. -.;

.

Boaters ·p~ man from river
I

'

"

.• ·,

'

·A 'lt-yeAt-Old Pot18niouth man
' • ria ~ b}' llcleteri lftet hb cir
· .,.. ~ the Ohio ~ver at Indian

.Run3:30p,ni.8uncllay~ '" ,

HO&amp;pital for observation by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Seffi~.

;

·

.

Ililulton.told sheriff's deputies he
' A~ to l!leriffls \liPi'tn'len~ got to,~ cllilili'to the edge of the ·roadteportl, Altliur C. DaultOn wu way after pasSing· an oncoming
lnftl!ni·,Q!J SJt U. n.r ll'ldlaq RWI . vehicle, al)d then rolled over the en-

-~
l1li ~ ~" O{rt~~e, fOil!!-·
way· ailcl · aabnitiJed In . ap1

~ ~ 18rwt'Gf. .ter;

·, ·'
• Jlin ~. ~~; ..nd
·Roiett Wlldalc, li'Mt.., 'were

''~ IF I DRAG THE INFIELD BETWEEN INNI~S?"
-~

balllanent.
Laftft-·"'
rted
' Llirj')' Rupe; •..,.. •;..e, repo
'garden tractor was stolen (rom his
horde aomet1me Ji'rtday night or
early Saturday mOrhlng.
' 'i'he .tnctor was in the'. garden
aprlOtlinateijo ~ · yards from the

. :IIOatiJtl'lll the~~~~ u..
eldlll&amp; oc:cw aalllllt !hey h In the
~1 I,M ~ rle!M &lt;*Ill lila ~- , . ,
,.... '
.:1r j ·. ' •~ , '-,2• , .•'· · \ • .;.,..,.:
·lnclde'nt
- ·, '
• ·I"'
' He' ll!rell to. lK. Joaeph \oestlgltlon.

..

·

·,is under
. .

hi·

AGCA TRIAL BEGINS- HaDdc:ulfm ~o AU Agca, the Turkltlb
temlrllt cllerged wlilt trytnc to murder l'flje 'Jolm Paul U, enters IDto
~ ewrt, M. . .y. Tbe IS-yeaMW deftlildallt, wearlug a hill black
~ lf'O~ IIi hit~ moatlll of bla ~ty, II led lllto courtroom bllldcuffed to a C.rblmere (paramOltary pollee officer). ( AP Laaerphoto.)

.

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�·- ------------

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

Commentar
I

How

'

'

Bi.ll, Rogers captures
I lOOt·BritiSh Open

Page--2-The Daily Sentln,.
Pomeroy-Middtepprt, Ohio
Monday, July 20,1981

Wdliam F. Buckley Jr.

to read BallL~- - - - - - - - - - 5 £ L5(-' -----,--------::-==-:::::=::-=

George Ball, a learned and witty motion, facial expressions and inman whose thought I suspect is often flection. "That's a areat idean!h can
be pronounced in wa}'! differerj
· governed by the mischievous deligta
enough to describe a proposal to athe takes in overstatement, has writtend a concert featuring Alicia de
ten wllat one might term the militant
Larrocha or a proposal to launch the
Establishment's official opposition
to Reagan's foreign policy. The third world war.
"Is alive and well" i• generally
column was published in the
associated with Hitler 1the generic
Washington Post under the title,
phrase : ""Hitler is alive and well and
"'That Old Cold War Obsession," and
living in Argentina" 1. You would
begins with sentences that might
never use "' is alive and well and
llave been written by Ball's old partliving in ... " to describe somebody.
ner 1they traveled together to Geror
something, you approve of.
many after the war, to assess the
"
John foster Dulles" is here~
damage done by Allied bombing I.
·
as
what the boys called anJohn Kenneth Galbraith. "John
tonomasia
. "'John Foster Dulles" is
foster Dulles is alive and well and
intended
to
convey a humorless.
living in the White House. Once
myopic,
driven,
unsophistocated .
aga in we hear his passionate charge
Calvi
nist
misanthrope.
We have
that the Soviet Union is the Analready
accomplished
a
great
deal
tichrist threatening civilization with
in
a
single
sentence.
a pernicious doctrine."
" On~ again we hear" means, in
Now even the most mformal
the
long form, "Would you believe it.
student of rhetoric. from these two
we are, A.D. 1981, and we are
here
sentences alune, can deduce prac·
made
to listen to something anybody
ttcally the whole of the forthcoming
10 should have outgrown."
over
message. It is said by students of
Following
this, the r hetorician will
communication that 95 percent of
give
you
as
exaggerated a version as
the signals we exchange are non·
possible
of
the position he is talkmg
verba l. They are done by ann-

Who can afford
a mortgage?
The good news from the savings and loan industry is that "today's sawy
horne buyers" are "no longer faced with a limited choice of mortgage plans"
because they can select among VRMs. RRMs. ARMs and GPMs.
The bad news is that tnJllions of families a re being denied the privilege
of home ownership because all of those alphabet-soup plans concocted by the
industry are exorbitantly expensive when compared with fixed-rate mortgages.
"The industry has tried to shift the entire risk of lending onto the
burrower - the horne buyer ... says Robert L. Gnaizda , an attorney with
Public Advocates Inc . a San franc isc&lt;&gt;-based public-interest law finn .
""Only the rich and those with a gambling strea k can now qualify for
mortgage loans ... adds Rep. Benjamin S. Rosenthal, D-N .Y., chairman of a
House subcommittee on consumer and monetary affairs that has exanuned
mortgage lendmg practices.
Soaring interest rates in recent years have produced financial setbacks
for the savings and Joan industry, but it remains considerably healthter than
1ts leaders claim when constantly appealing for federal regulators' approval
of Jucrattve new mortgage plans.
Of the more than $740 billion worth of funds held at the beginning of 1980
by savings and loan associations and mutual savings banks. approximately
$180 billion - almost 25 percent - was in passbook aCt'OWlts paying
depositors a pitiful 5.5 percent in annual interest but producing substantial
profits for the thrift institutions.
Those institutions a lso held rese rve s - accumulated profil.; ; from earlier
years- totaling more than $&lt;14 billion . Finally . the federal tax code allows
them to offset current losses against past profits to qualify for government
rebates. estimated to exceed $2 billion this year.
Yet the industry has convinced federal regullltors to authorize a succession of self-serving mortgage schemes. includtn~ three noating-rate
variations in three consecutive years.

What others say •••
By The AssO&lt;tated Press
Here is some editorial comment from Ohio newspapers in the past week:
THE YOUNGSTOWN VIN-DICATOR - ""11le haphazard way the Genenl
Assembly processes bills. especially in the rush to recess for sununer. is
d.isma yl nJ!.. The amendment to clnse a loophole in the fireworks law is one

example.
·Dealers were using an exception to the sales ban. a ll owtng sales for use
out of state. to flood Ohio with firework s.
·On June 26, at a Vindtcator reporter's request. Sen. Harry M"'hel. DYoungstown. checked pending iegtslation files about ftreworks and found
nothtng . A Senate leader, he sa id he hadn't been made aware uf any problem
Ill the law . Rep. Thomas J. Carney. D-Boardman. chainnan of the Senate
(;overnment committee. sa1d no on e had approached him about the tssue.
.. Meanwhile, the Ohio Pro"cuting Attorneys Association. at a general
membership meeting in Bryan. decided to draft legislation dosing the
loophole. to offer the Legisla ture next fall. A report of the OPAA"s plan appeared June 30.
"" That sa me day. the Senate adopted . :13-0. language to correct the
fi reworks bill that Sen. Charles I.. Butts had tnserted in an unrelated House
bil l. On July 2, the day before sununer recess. the House concurred. 116-{) _
··observers say that happens often to many items. of ail priorities. in the
rush. Unfo rtunately . there's little if any time to consider a bill's merits. Who
knows whether it's the best solution or one a t a ll '
.. That's the case with the fireworks amendment. If publtc hearings were
held . the void in pending legislation suggests they must not haw been
recent.
"" Was the Assembly ,reaching out for a quick fix to get a pesky problem off
the agenda. one ironically created by nawed rewriting of the law in 1978'
Certa inly, legislators knew they were too late to affect holiday sales.
.. Now the prosecuting attorneys ass!)Ciation calls the new measure
technica lly weak. 'likely to become a nother loophole.' Because of the old
loophole. fi reworks injured too many children and adults over this fourth ol
July . It' s appalling to think that we may face it again next year because of
the General Assembly's bungling."

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court StnoPt

Pomf'rO)'. Ohio
114-tfz-2151
OE\'O'TED TO THE lNTERESTOF'THE J\.IEIGS.MASON AREA

-

ROBERT L. WINGETr

...

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH
GftwftiMIIiln

Allhlllt PllbiiiiH/ColltrOlkr

DAI,.E ROTHGEB, JR.

_g..,

.\ MEMBER of Thto .4.•aocia&amp;ed Preu. lalaod DaUy
Anwri&lt;!IB N...pe,n Publl1bnw A....a.Uca

Prn1 Auodat&amp;oa aDd tlw

about. To wit, we are once again
hearing the " paosionate cllarge" t a
""passionate" charge is one you can
safety disregard, unless it is mad~
by Jacobo Timennanl "that the
Soviet Union is the Antichrist
threatening civilization with a pernicious doctrine."
Mr. Bali has now come out of the
closet. Eventually the rhetoric had
to evolve into a declarative sen-

rn·

-·-·'d concede tllat such .t'/k,a;nti
wuw
fi.:' '
as are practiced in the
Union
are in~ "perniciOWI." : Indeed,
although' George Ball · nks it
ridiculous to refer to ~e Soviet
Union as a "communist" nation since it is merely a recrudescence of

the old czarist nationalism, dresled
in fancy Mantst raiments, lilte Little Red Riding Hood's wolf, he
nevertheless admits that it is
capable of e•e"cising an :· atavistic
ciaustrophia" and launching a fullscale nuclear war- if we provoke it

I{O'geyed the fifth and double-bog~yed the 52&amp;-yard seventh.
Rogers ShOok off any threat by
way of !he Royal St. ~e's course making birdies at the niqth and lOth,
witli 10,000 fans pressing forward ·then kept tlleady with par golf aU the
and cbeering.
way to the finish.
He won $50,000. Langer; the first
"COming up that fairway was the
mlliJt. unique feeling I have · ever Gennan ever to make an Impact on
had," 1111id the 2&amp;-year-old TelUIII af- inlematiorlal golf, won a second
ter he had won Olie of the world's , prize of f35,000: Floyd and James
most famous tournaments Sunday each picked up $23,500. •
with score of '724-67·71 for a .._
Rogers was rated a ~llongsbot
by British bookies before the tour·
Wi4ler-par total of %16.
' For the first 1ime In the four-day nament, and at one stage considered
tournament the crowd got out of con- not corning over to play .
The course, notorious for its hilly
trol at the 18th green, and Rogers
fairways, blind holes and the
had to push his way through.
Rogers won by four strokes from treacherous winds tllat blow in from
Bernhard Langer of Gerniany, a PegweU Bay, defeated some of the
surprise runnerup. Raymond Floyd world's greatest players.
Jack Nicklaus, three-time British
and Britain's Mark James were
another three strokes behind in third Open champion, shot a nightmare 83
oq the first day and never had a
place.
Rogers began the final roWtd five chance ol winning. He ended up in a
strokes ahead of Langer and James, tie for 23rd place with a I«H&gt;ver·par
290.
and eight strokes ahead of Floyd.
Tom Watson, another three--time
He stayed ahead all day but at one
champion,
was never in touch with
point Langer crept to within a
stroke. This was after Rogers had

by, e.g., selling arms to China or
deployi.._ missiles in Etjrope. ~t
then ahoUid we do • 1 ~n. pes1des
impeaching John Foster "Diilles?
George Ball is too busy to tell ~- He
has all those fireworks to light.

Wbee !

a

Now, an .. Antichrist" is one of two
thmgs : Either one who denies or opposes Christ 1the Soviet Union does
this, officially!: or one who poses as
Christ, but is in fact doing the work
of the devil. In a sense the Soviet
Union does this also, because it
poses as the vehicle lor peace and
fraternity. but instead practices
violence and fratricide.
Well, but does the Soviet Union
" threaten "" civilization? This
requires that we agree basically on
what civilization is. If we appeal
from Philip drunk to Philip sober. as
the old English expression goes, we
could probably wrest from Mr. BaU
the admission that the elimination of
free speech and freedom of conscience, the tot.alitarianization of
culture and the subservience of the
individual to ideological ends is a
threat to civilizaiton . Probably. if we
got him in an unexcited mood, he

NO,SIR-

W~Tf!.i
I

binders.

But Ca rter quickly dtseovercd that
t h~· int r icacies of ecunumit.· anti
fon•igll policy ttrl' unly pttrl uf the
job ;-rt a n intl1rnatiunal s ununit.

Fur t.'XtUJipil' :

By The Associated Preis

- Tht• 1!179 Tokyn sununil

w;.~ s '";.~

(\l~c u s s 1n g

t.'nerg~ ·

pndJit'l ll s.

Clippers, both in the first inning.
Elsewhere, the Braves defeated
the Rochester Red Wings 6-4 , the
Charleston Charlies blanked the
Toledo Mud Hens ~. and the
Syracuse Chiefs edged the
Tidewater Tides 2·1 in 13 innings.
Braves 8, Red Wings t
Jerry Keller hit a two-run homer
in the first inning to give Richmond
a lead it never relinquished. Tealllmate Paul Runge added a three-run
homer in the second.
Mike Hart homered in lhe eighth

The Columbus Clippers usually
live by the big offense, but SWldaY

night, they died the same way.
The Pawtucket Red Sox buried the
Clippers 17-4 as Dave Koza homered
and drove in four runs. However,
Colwnbus remains comfortably in
first~ 911 games ahead of the secondplace Richmond Braves.
The Red Sox coUected 21 hits, including 12 extra-base hits, for 38
total bases against four Columbus
pitchers.
Jim Wilson added two doubles and
two singles, Chico Walker three
triples and Sam Bowen a pair of
doubles for the Red Sox .
In junior girls' softball action
Wilson, Walker, Mike Ongarato
Salisbury
blanked Pomeroy 18-0,
and Wade Boggs aU drove in three
behind Pomeroy a 13 hit attack and
runs for Pawtucket.
five strikeouts by Barb Hatfield,
Joel Finch, 4--4, pitched the first 5
who claimed the win. Diane White
1-3 innings, with Jim Dorsey taking
suffered
the loss.
over in the sixth for the Red Sox and
Good pitching and fielding by
striking out six to gain his first save.
Barb Hatfield and excellent first
Mike Bruhert, 4-1, was the loser.
base play by Rhonda Zirkle led to a
Steve Balboni hit his 23rd home run
of the season with one on and Mike rout of Pomeroy.
Salisbury hitters were Darla King
Patterson had a solo homer for the

•

Arneril'ans Wt.'l'l' wa iting on inkrminablt.• lint's a t gasolinl' s te-t lions
lmvk horm..•.
Tlw irony. at.·cording \ 11 thi s offirifll spea kin~ HllllJl)"lllHU SJ,\" , WHS
th{j ! ··in terrns of s ubst...nre." Tokyo
produced Ca rlt.•r's greatest sum·
1t1itry triumph : specific ta rgets for
~·nergy imports and eonst.•rrCitlnn .
- Another example of I his oct'UITl'd

ttl th l'

(~uat.ll'luupl'

summit in

Hl79 when then-Prinw Mllli sll'r
.lallll'S Ca llahan wHs ptrturl'&lt;l in tlw
Rrit ish press enjoying Ihl' farihbt&gt;all
mnll'r whilt.• tlw Rritish Isle!-: Wl'rt'
."i llnw buund rmd fctt.'ing a fuel shor·
li-i).! l' .

dl'fin ih• minus" fur Cet rll'r . says om·
pf Ill s fol'l llt'l' sl'nior aides. lH.'l'Cl USl'
wluk tlw prl':-; idt.•tlt wa:-; abn•ad

'

Rt•yc•tHI sut.·h public n ·lat ions
t•rniJctrrassrnL'Ilts. a pt.'rS(tJHtlity
dctsh ('an forcl' om• l('tHit•r onto tlw
ddt•n s i\ ·~· . Takt.• Carh•r and West
(;l'nrtarl Chancl'JJor Ht•lmut Sl·h·

Ill i! It .

··Wt•

t.'tlllStantly b l'S l't by.
Sch1nidt h1king p11t
shot s at \Ill' presidt•nt with Ameriean
jounmlists or German juurm:Jiists
whutlwn ft·cl it back tu the- Ameril'an
prt.•ss.·· lhl' Corh•r administratiun
&lt;tffirialreca lll'd .
. Thl' I pt.ll il'y I difft'I'CfH'l'S Wl'l'l'
rm l... sa ut tilt.' offi dal. l'iliJl~
\H'I'l'

l~ l rtit.· ularly .

dis putes

u\·t'r

nuriL•a r

· nun ·

proliferation rmd West [;l·rman
dl'ft.•nst.• spt.•nding. But. ht.• said,
Sctu"nutt wi:ls inelincd nut to deal
\l·i th tlw dtffl'rt.'llt.'l'S in su!Jstanrc.
bu! t tl bl't.'(IJ!ll' n.~r)· persona l Ctnd
1('iit1\" 1 with · I, is t.·omplainlo.; abtiUt

Prl's icknt C'arkr - and that

l(&lt;ts

a

n·n· diffi"·ull thing to til' a I with ...

S~1d1 CHl' till' pntential problems to
wllit'h Ht.•agan ;.mel his aides dt'\'nlt.&gt;d

thc·JHsdn·s in preparation fur tlwir

llll't'lings at lhl' annW:II economic
Sllllllllil nf the nation 's riche::,1
tit'lllllt.Tat..'ies that is now under way
in the peaceful scll in~ of a sprawling
h1g , ·hate au near Ottawa.
Ovcl·all. nfficials of the Carter ad!Jlillislratit.m dest.' ribed the swrunits
t lieir prcsiclcnt attended as suct·t·ssful Vl'nlurc:-;. But summits are
nut without har.ards. buth at home
and abro~ut .
·The bcncftls uf consultations and
t•xr hangc of vic\\'s arc very real. but
!Itt·) arc very difficult tu portray and
('tliiVIIlt'l'
pt.'uple there is any
benefit. .. satd tlw key Carter aide
whu recalled the Schmidt chili .
··You have tu Cttllll' up with
Sllltlt.'lhing t.•oncrete, and then you're
111\11 tht.• t.~s pt.•l'Latillns ~a me. You
hiw~ · tu nul unl y s ucceed. but you
hi-in' tu s un·t.·rd b,v a mnrgin greater

tournament. He kept going with
rounds of ?3, 6'7 ~ 70 and 70. He was
the man ,Rogers watched as he
played the home nine Saturday.
Langer, 23, is the son of a Munich
bricklayer. He said he hoped his success would do something to help golf
in Gennany, which has only two
public courses, at Duesseldorf and
Hamburg.
British golfers had their best Open
in decades. Britain had James tied
for third place, Sam Torrance fifth
and Nick Faldo, Sandy Lyle, Brian
Barnes and Nick Job all weU placed.
Three British players- Torrance,
Gordon Brand and Roger Chapman
- each had ·a hole--in-One at the llif&gt;yard 16th during the tournament.
S11ch a thing had never happened
before since the event was started in

11160.

;;
for the Rochester.
Winner Ken Dayley, IH, added
six strikeouts to his league-leading
total of 126. Brooks Carey, 7·9, was
charged with the loss.
Charlie&amp; 3, Mud Reus 0
Charleston's Tom Brennan, 11-5, ·
retired 15 Toledo batters in a row at
one point. Brennan, who only struck
out two, held the Mud Hens to four
hits. Toledo failed to get a man on
base between the third and eighth innings.

Syracuse blanks Pomeroy
and Carla King with triples, Jennifer
Couch with two doubles and a single,
Rhonda Zirkle a double, Kim Eblin a
double and single, Jodi Harrison two
singles, Maria Musser a single, and
Patricia Davis a single.
Diane White and Tisha Jarvis
singled for Pomeroy . Salisbury
raised its record to 13-0 while
Pomeroy dropped to 2-9.

•

1halll'X pt.'l'll'd, .. hl' Set id .

Would you like to save thousands?
own the horne free and clear, but years, 3 months, and the full 30 yean
could have it much better.
""Under our plan, you'll finance your life insurance Joan is paid up. called for in the mortgage), or
From then on. you pay only the in· $69.264.
1borrow on 1 your insurance and pay
surance
premium of $167 a month."
off your 30-year mortgage in 16
By
his
calculations, your net
years. when you're 56. And, you'll
from this you deduct costs. You
have acquired debt-free insurance in savings will have come to $60 ,224 will have U.!led up $8,800 of dividends
20 years, three months, when you're when compared with the more con ·
ventional technique of meeting the and spent an extra $2 a month ($761
80."
versus $75411 from the 7th through
for 6 years. he conti nues, you pay mortgage payment each month for 16th years. for another $240, or a
enonnous rewards. and how a
$592 a month for the mortgage and 30 years. or until age 70.
total of $9,040. The net : $60,224.
You will have accomplished it ali
careless approach to money matters $167 for the insurance, to meet tax
can cost you very dearly .
code requirements and to build cash by doing at least two very important
Some factOI'l! might make the net
Among other things, it is one of value and dividends to permit you to thinKs in these days of extremely
high interest rates:
btgger or smaller:
those many practices that. when to borrow on the policy.
I. You will have availed yourself
- If you've already built up cash
At the end of six years. you have
totaled together. answer that peren·
nial mystery question : How can $49,000 in principal remaining un of the relatively low Joan rates that, value , you might begin the program
your neighbor live so much better your mortgage. Your insurance, on by law, insurance companies are inunediately and thus save more.
- Some older policies have loon
than you when you earn as much as which you have been paying regular compelled to offer on cash-value
policies.
he does'
rates of 5 percent, rather than 8.
prerniwns, has no outstanding loans.
2. You will have reduced by 14
You need only two things to irn · But it ~oes have loan value.
- Tax brackets, which aren't conplement this technique, a mortgage
Up to this point, nothing creative years the duration of your interest sidered in this example, could
payments on the higher-cost mar· change the net savings. And paying
and an ordinary life insurance
has been attempted.
tgage
Joan.
policy, says Peter Daly, an in·
Now it begins .
off a mortgage loan early eliminates
Daly
works it out this way: You'll the interest deduction on income
surance and financial analyst for
from the 7th through the 16th
Prentice-Hall, who worked out this year. instead of paying $592 every have saved $592 a month for 117 taxes, which can greatly lower
month on the mortgage and $167 on months 1the difference between 20 taxes.
example .
Assume . he says for the purpose of the insurance - a total of $759 - you
pay $761 on the mortgage and
illustration, that you have a brand
new 30-year, $50,000 mortgage at 14 borrow enough from the policy to
percent interest, with monthly pay the ins11rance premium. Your
payments of $592 . Such a mortgage dividends will be used to pay the in terest.
is hardly a rarity today .
At the end of the 16th year, says
Further, assume you are 40 years
old and llave just bought a $100,000 Daly. your mortgage principal will
ordinary life insurance policy for be zero. You will have paid off your
Is this the year for the business ment to work with and as we, the
$2,005 a year, or $167 a month . Such mortgage 14 years ahead of time. · boom? I hope so. We Americans are workers, get blamL'&lt;i for not putting
policies generally permit you to But. you will have a $20,500 loan on always looking lor a job these days out more product in a day's work,
borrow on the cash value at 8 per· the life insurance.
and it's time businessmen of this lhey fail to see that old and rusted
So. for the 17th through 20th year. country spoke out. Now is a good piece of equipment might have been
cent.
"If you're like most people," said and an additional three months, you time because a tax break is up in the running a little slower today.
Daly, who was a general insurance pay nothing for the mortgage, it air. lnWashington, D. C., workers ol
If I were in a business of my own,
agent before becoming a senior having been paid. Now you must this great country will be the first to I'd sure be writing a lot.of letters tQ
editor at the publishing company, · concentrate on the insurance. You say our plants are getting old. Our my congressmen and pushing for
.. you 'II budget $759 a month to meet pay $759 each month, $167 of it railroads need much work done to that· tax cut for the business !&gt;f this
prerniwn payments, and $592 to them, our auto makers need a' new fine and free country. So, Mr.
your mortgage and premium costs."
And, he continues, when you're 70 amortize the loan.
overhaul, and all our World War II Businessman, sit down tonight and
years old, your home will be free and
Says Daly: "At the end of 20 years steel mills need replaced with'"new ·
Write a letter filr your tax cut. ' clear. Not bad, he says, but you and three months, not only do you more efficient and up-to-date-equip- Floyd H, Cleland.

NEW YORK (API - Would you
like to save thousands ol dollan maybe even $50,000 or more - with
little more effort tllan it lUes to sign
a few documents? Some 1lf you can.
beginning today.
This is not a sales pitch. Instead, it
is an illustration of how a creative
handling of finances can produce

Letter to the editor
Push for break

/

the leaders and finiahed tied with
Nicklllusat290.
Lee TreVino, who has won the title
twice~ could manage only a tie for
lith place at 287. .
Langer was the surprise of the

Pawtucket buries Clippers

Personalities can pose big challenge

]\1\ISt.·l~·af

.

~.

SANDWICH, Englanjl (APl - Bill
Rc!tlen, the 110111 British Open golf
champion, strode up the 18th .fair-

tence.

\\' ASHINGTON 1 AP 1 - A warning
f~&lt;r Hunald Reagan from the l' X·
pcrit..•nn• of his prL'liN' l'Ssur: In thl'
world uf mtt.•rnat ionn l sUJillllilry.
p1tll lics and pt.•rsonalil il'S can posl'
as J!lUdl ttf a l'h£11lenge £IS pnl iey .
Pn..•shh•nt CarlL'r i:l tlenderl hi s
suJJuJH ts wcll·rooted in thl' dl'lails nf
inll'rnatiun&lt;:tl eeono1nics. He had
~·rJgagL'(l in cnlnprl'lwnsi\"t' briefing s
and n•;.u l thouscl!lds of pagt.•s fru111

.

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middlepprt, Ohio

Monday, _July 20,1981

I

I

I

ROGERS WINS CLASSIC- American golfer Bill
Rogers of Texas, checks his scorecard. after wlnotog

) Strike talks resume today
WASHINGTON ( AP) - Baseball
returned today to this capital city
that it haWtts like a swruner ghost,
to be talked about rather than
played but with stakes as big as any
ever contested by Walter Johnson or
Harmon Killebrew
Negotiations to end the major
league players' strike over the issue
•rl free-agent compensation were to
' I'I!BWDB .at 2 p.m. EDT in the offices
ol the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service.
Today's sessiOJ;l was to be the first
since negotiations broke down lasf
Thursday. The players' union that
night proposed sending the case to
binding arbitration, a plan the
owners' negotiators promptly turneddown.
The next day, Labor Secretary
Raymond Donovan asked the two
sides in the 3!klay-old strike to shift
the negotiations to Washington from
New York, where they had been held
in an atmosphere federal mediator
Kenneth Moffett called a "goldfish

bowl."
Donovan, who also met with the
two sides in !'lew York last Wednesday, said the talks here were " a

. I
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GETI'INGREADV- Jack Nlcklalilll Wlllcbl!d by
a larg~ gaUecy of speelaton as be plays Ia the British

OpeD golf cbamplooshlps at Sandwich, Englaud. j AP
LaserpltotO).

Sunday's British Open Goll Classic with a four under
par performance.

last ditch" effort to end the strike
and save the rest of the season .
Through today, the walkout had canceled 462 games, or 22 percent of the
2,106-game campaign.
"The American people want
basehal( and they want a World
Series," Donovan said.
But negotiators for the pla yers
were not sure that a change in venue
would bring a settlement.
"'I don't believe in magic, " said
Marvin Miller, executive director of
the Major League Players
Association. "However, at this
point, we're certainly willing to try
anything that has the slightest hope
of resolving this problem.''
Mark Belanger, the Baltimore
Orioles' player representative who
attended most of the New York
negotiations, added to the
pessimism.
" If we go to Washington and the
same thing prevails there, there will
not be any smiling," he said, adding: " I wouldn't be surprised if in
1981 there is no more baseball."
But Belanger, like Miller interviewed on NBC Radio's "Sports
At Large" Saturday night, said the

players had acceded to Donovan's
request " because we want to make
an agreement. We will do anything
we can to get an agreement, short of
throwing in the towel."
Raymond Grebey, the director of
the Player Relations Committee, indicated that the switch to
Washington would help get the
stalled talks going by removing
them from the intensive news converage they received in New York.
" If there were less media
covera ge and more attention to the
issues, we'd ali be better off," said
Grebey.

DALE HILL
D TRACTORS
215 W. Main
Pomeroy

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Nobody knows
more about
Homeowner Loans
thanCityLoan.
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value of your house is. too. In fact, it's
worth far more today than ever hefore
At City Loan, we can help you
turn that increasing value into the
money you need to meet major
wants or needs. Like a college
education. Or remodeling the
house. Or to ml!ke a special
dream come true. With a
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$50,000 or more.
When it comes to solving a big
money problem, Ohio people
know Where to turn. To City Loan. Because nobody
knd.W yo~-and your ~- like we do.

Gj

125 E. Main St. • 992-2 t71

·--

IEM'ERS OF OPINION •rt wtlttaiH. Tiley IMilld be lela tta.- •erdl leaa. AU
1oUon oft oHJ«&lt;IO ..tiiiOIIII- II&lt; olpefwllll-,- ood
oam• . Nt ....... ~will" u•trllla .. Lftttn ...... lie ill ........ wMc I I
..........,
PI
. ,
·
).
••

1&lt;1.,.,_

l'£110[11 •

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�Monday, July ~0, 1981
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pagtt-4-The Daily Sentinel

Stanger, who had never finished
higher than fourth previously, birdied the same hole.
However, Stanger, who will be
married on August I to Bob Pyle, a
student at the Dallas Theolog ical
Semina ry, dropped ba ck to two with
a bogey on the par-4 16th and that
killed any chances she had of overtaking Caponi.
" I'm glad I had that mediocre
round today," smiled Caponi alter
accepting her first-prize check of
$18,750 that pushed her to third place
on this year's money list with
$132,033. " It will make me work ha rder for the U.S. Open ."
" It takes a rare person to wm that
championship The U.S. Golf
Associa tion is tricky in setting up its

courses. They are tough. When
you've won, you've played a great
tournament.
" Right now I'm thinking bette r,
but I don't know if I'm playing better. Winning the U.S. Open in 1970
was my greatest thrill. but winning
this time would be the best because I
know a lot more now "

Despite Sunday's dou ble bogey on
the No.l4, Capom explained. ·call it

confidence, or a gut feeling, or experience, I thought I was OK .
There's a Iinne to be aggressive and
there's a time to be passive. Julie
was aggressive at the wrong time."
Beth Daniel, the 1980 Player of the
Year, finished third with a 2115
thanks to a final day 68, her only subpar round of the tournament.
Kathy Martin closed out with a n
after setting a course record with a
66 Saturday and settled for fourth
place at 286. Hollis Stacy, a two-tinne
U.S. Open champ, matched Martin's
record Sunday to tie Betsy King ,
who wound up with a 69, at 287 for fifth place.
Sally Little, the defending WUI
champion, who has three triumphs
on this year's tour, posted a second
consecutive 74 and was far off the
pace at 291.
Kathy Whitworth, who needed at
least a fourth-place finish to become
the LPGA's first millionaire, had to
be satisfied with seventh place
despite carding her second straight
70 that gave her a 288. The 41-yearold golfer is now $1 ,031 short of the
coveted goal.

David Barr wins $200,000
Quad Cities golf tourney
By GEORGE STRODE
COAL VALLEY , Ill. I API - In
this case. David Barr's conse rvative
approach to golf playoffs was the
right one
"!wasn't going for the pins. I was
shooting for the center of the greens.
I didn 't wa nt to get too beld," said
the 2!!-yea r-old Canadian. savoring
his first American to ur victory in

four yea rs.
Barr sank a 3-foot putt for par on
the e1ght h sudden death hole to beat
Wood y Blackburn for the $200.000
Quad Citi es Open crowr . Blackburn 's pl ayoff philosophy differed
from Barr.
" You have to be aggress1ve. You
ca n't wait on the other guy to make a
mistake. ·· he sa1d .
It was a mistake by Blackburn
tha t cost him his first mdividual
lille. He won the 1976 D1sney team
event with Bill Kratzer!
He h1t a :&gt;-iron into a bunker at the
eight h green. From a buried lie, he

blasted 20 feel past the pin. mi"i ng
h1s b1d to save par.
Blackburn was stunned that his
approa ch shot went so sour. saying ,
"! thought it was nght dead on the
pin. I was lickin g my chops when it
was in fl1ghl. "
Barr and Blackburn had matched
pars for six straight holes after they
eliminated Victor Regalado. Don
Halldorson and former tennis pro
Fra nk Conner with birdies on the first sudd en death hole at Oakwood
Country Club.
Regalado . Halldorson and Conner
parred tha t hole while Barr and
Blackburn carded birdies.
The live-way playoff equaled the
largest ever in PGA Tour history .
The e1ght holes of sudden death was
the second longest of all-time. three
short of the record.
The fiv e leaders had tied after 72
holes with 270. IQ-under-par over thJ s
cozy 6,514-ya rd layout

Barr closed with a 66, Blackburn
67, Halldorson and Conner 69 and
Regalado 71.
Regalado 3-putted the last two
holes for bogey, forcing the playoff.
"I blew up again," said the 33year4&gt;ld Mexican, the 54-hole leader
by two shots. " I just gave it away."
Barr, with his first prize of $36,000,
won more than four times as much
as he had won in all of his 1981 starts.
The other four playoff participants
earned checks of $13,200 apiece.
Jack Renner, Calvin Peete, Dan
Pohl and Mark McCumber missed
making it a nine-way playoff by one
shot. They were at 271, !!-under.
Renner closed with a 66, McCumber and Peete 67s and Pohl69.
Scott Hoch, the defending champion, slipped to a 7J in the final round
and was al275, five shots in arrears.
It was the first time in As 11 years
that this tournament had gone to a
playoff.

Mancini posts unanimous decision
WARREN, Ohio 1 API - It took
Ray " Boom-Boom" Mancini onl y 20
fights as a professional to get a shut
at. the World Boxing Council lightweight championship , but a 12-round
unanimous decision over Jose Luis
Ramirez was the dec1ding factor.

town behind him ."
Fighting before a very partial
hometown crowd of ~ .000 at Packard
Hall, Mancini dominated the light in
hi s fir st defense of his North
American BoXIng FederatiOn hght-

Manci ni went the distance for the
nrst time in hi s professional career

the titl e May 16 in a to-round
t ~c hni c al
knockout uf Jorge
Mora les.
Promoter Jeff Lev ine s1gned ManCini after the Karmrez fi ght. Man-

Sunday to beat Ramirez, the WBC's
fourth-ranked lightweight.
Entering the nat1onally televiSed
fi ght Sunday , Mancini was the
WBC's seventh ranked lightweight
By the end of the bout, he had risen
to the top contender position - at
least in the eyes of current WBC
champion Ale xis Arguello

"I think he won all but the lOth
round . That was even," Arguello
sal(i . " He IS a great. great fighter .
He is young. He has a crowd . He has
a lot of pnde. and he has a whole

w e ~J;~ht

championship. Mancini wnn

cin i's mana ger. Dave Wolfe. said the

fi ght with Arguello will take place in
Oc tober at a site to be determined
lat er.
Rarmrez. 53-3 with 47 knockouts .
was ranked fourth among WBC
lightweights. The Mancini fight was
only his sixth outside h1s nalive
Mexico. Against Mancini. the southpaw could manage little effecti ve
lighlmg.

Referee Joey Bishop scored the
fight 120-108 for Mancini, judge
Willie Tanner scored it ll!l-110 Mancini, and judge Tony Mariano scored
it ll!l-112 for Mancini.
It was Ramirez who could have
gained a measure of revenge against
Arguello if he had beaten Mancini.
Ramirez lost· a WBC title fight to
Arguello on a split decision last
November . Arguello said he would
fi ght the winner of the ManciniRamirez fight.
Mancini, 20, said he is ready for
Arguello.
" I'm dyrng for that. I'm ready for
that now," an ecstatic Mancini said

after the fight. " He's a great fighter
and it will be a thrill, an honor just to
be mthe same ring with him."
Also witnessing Sunday's bout was
Conner WBC welterweight champiOn Roberto Duran, who is training
nPorhv Orwell for an
. 9 fight

The Meigs County Fair Oliwer
show was dlsc11811ed at the recent
meeting·of the Slar Garden Club
held at the home of Mrs. Ruby
Halliday and Mrs. Pauline Atkins
with Mrs. Sharon Jewell as eohostess.
Members were reminded' that
exhibit f011TU1 must be filed with
the Meigs County Fair Board
before Aug. 14 at 4 p.m . The
August meeting of the club will be
a noon luncheon at th~ Meigs Inn
on Aug . 13.
· A report was given on the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
open meeting attended by several
members of the Star Club. Mrs.
Stella Atkins presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Atkins giving

RAMS- Members of the Middleport T-Ball Rams

are, !root row from left to right, Llada Chapman,
Chuck CUanlngham, Bryan Hoffman, Dannie McCloud ,
Willie Grimes, and Tommy Cremeans. Back row, Mike

rs. Anna Ogdin presented the
pr am with Sharon Jewell
giving a report on " Planning
i&gt;ur Garden to Attract Birds."
S~e spoke of the need which birds
have for water, food and protection and suggested that glycerin
be added to the water in the winter to keep it from freezing. As
for food, she said the crabapple
and bittersweet shrub provide
this.

The Tuppers Plains Tigers came
home as champions of the Stewart
Little League Tournament recently,
clinching th~ iitle with an 8-0 shutout
victory over the Athens Kiwanis.
In the championship game Brian
Durst eame home as the winning
hurler. He fanned six and walked
just one. J. Conrath was the loser
with three walks and four strikeouts.
Besides pitching the three hit shut
out, Brian Durst doubled three
times.
Eddie Collins tnpled and singled,
Brent BisseII doubled and singled,
Darrin Drenner doubled, and Jeff
Caldwell, Allan Tripp singled for the
winners. P. Conrath tripled, Barker
doubled, and Thompson singled for
Athens Kiwanis .
Against Glouster Darin Drenner

claimed the win with four strikeouts
and two walks enroute to the 12-2
triumph. J . Koons suffered the loss
with seven strikouts and seven

walks.
For the Tigers Darin Drenner had
two tnples and a single. Eddie
Collins had double and singles,
Brian Dursl a triple, Jeff Caldwell,
Todd Wilson, Brent Bissell, and
Larry Spencer each had singles.
Glouster hitters were B. Sayre with
two singles and B. Lent with one
single.
Tuppers Plains posted a ~ route
over Albany as Jeff Caldwell went
the distance to fan four and walk one
in a n&lt;&gt;-hit perlonnant'€. Robert Ator
suffered the defeat with four
strikouts and one walk.
Charles Jones had a home run for

the winners, Brtan Durst had a triple
and double, Darin Drenner had two
doubles, Eddie Collins a double and
two singles. and Jeff Caldwell four
singles.
Allen Tripp had a single and Brent
Bissell had two singles.
In the third contest Tuppers Plains
tripped Athens IS-3 behind winning
pitcher Eddie Collins, who fanned ·
six and walked one. Adams suffered
the loss with five walks and six
strikeouts.
Eddie Collins and Damn Drenner
had home runs for the Tigers.
Collins also tripled and doubled,
Brian Durst tripled and singled,
Brent Bissell tripled and singled,
Jeff Caldwell, Daren Drenner each
tripled, and Larry Spencer, Charles
Jones eachsmgled.

Bengals open rookie camp
CINCINNATI IAPl - The Cincinnati Bengals open their rookte
and free agent camp today with an
optimism tempered by three consecutive losing seasons.
"We're very optimistic, but at the
same time we can't lose track of how
hard we had to work to get to where
we are now," said Coach Forrest

Gregg, beginning his second season
in Cindnnati.

"Our young players are going to
be a step better, and we think we
have some rookies who are going to
come through for us," Gregg said.
"But nbbody's going to give us
anything. We're going to have to
work for everything we get."
Thirteen draft choices and 17 free
agents were expected to report for
workouts today at Spinney Field
near downtown Cincinnati. The rest

of the squad has been told to report
Thursday at the club's W1lmmgton
Colleger complex .
The Bengals finished 6-10 last
season, Gregg's first as head coach,
after two straight 4-12 years.
Gregg said starting safety Dick
Jauron is still recovering from a

knee injury and won 't suit up a t the
start of camp.
Starting quarterback Ken Anderson has recovered from a series

Verser and Cris Collinsworth
showed the Bengals' determination
to improve their passing game this

season.
" It's qu1eker to get to the end zone
through the air, but you have to be
able to move the ball on the ground,"
Gregg said. "I'm not saying you
have to have a balance, but you have
to have the threat of balance. An OJ&gt;"
ponent isn't going to respect your
running game unless you have
proved you have one."
The Bengals have signed all 13 of
their 1981 draft choices.

of injuries that plagued him last
season. But Gregg said the job isn't
settled.
"What we'll do is open with Anderson as a starting quarterback," . - - - - - - - - - - - - - Gregg said. "He's healthy now and
ready to go. But we're not giving
him the job. That position is open
just like any other position."
The drafting of receivers David

Legion team scores
another big victory
The Meigs American Legion eon- · inning affair.
tinued to roll, by recently posting a
Kenny Brown singled twice and
convincing 14-4 win over Parkers- doubled for Meigs and Kent Wolfe
burg North. The win boosted Meigs singled twice and tripled. Bob
to 19-2-1.
Foster had two singles and a double,
Pitching ace Jeff Wayland clin- Roger Kovalchik had a single, triple,
ched the win by firing a nine and home run, Terry Wayland
strikeout, three walk performance. singled and doubled, Jeff Wayland '
Paul Gibson suffered the defeat, singled twice, and Jerry Fields
before getting relief from Dunlap singled.
and Keison. They combined for
Meigs is idle until Tuesday when it
seven strikouts and five walks.
meets Murray City at Meigs High
Meigs pounded out 18 hits, while School's field.
Parkersburg collected 11 in the nine r----------------1

Insurance Package ·
Do • ou own or operate a
small or medium-size

I ~!~~J~t~~~·,~~~ce,

NEW

YORK

Y..\NKEES-SiJ(ned

IJJmbHrdi. calcller , and llMil(nal
PHintsville of ttw Appalachian

Phi l

him

1t1

l.ea~~:ue .

FOOTBALL
Nadoul Foolblll L..eagut
BAJ .TIMORE
COJ.T&amp;--Traded
F'red
Cook, deFensive end, to the Wa.:shinKtun

undisclosed dn~rt l' huices.
CHICAGO BEARS-Sii(Tled Mike SinJ!It&gt;Utry. llnebcu.:kcr. Annuull(·~ the retirement II St:ott 7~Uek , offensive linenum.
0 E NVE R
BRONCOS- Si~~:ned
Cht)'
Brnwn, hMht end.
Rtdskins fur

LOS

ANGElES

RAMS--Signed

Mike

Clark, ddens1vc e nd ; Art Plunkett. uffensive tackle, ttnd Ron Seawell, linebacker,
lu three tll'le-year L,nlrac\8 each. Sil(ned
Ray Pulk, arK:! FUmdy Gill. linebackers,
11nd Eric Jotlfl80fl , safetv .

River Downs results

ce.
'I1le members and guests wore
corsages which they had made.
Mrs. Radekin won the hostess
gift. Refrestunents were served
by the hostesses at the close of
the meeting to those named and
Martha Chapman, Ruby Diehl,
Lula Lewis, Virginia Nelson,
Neva Nicholson, and Allegra
Will.
.

Katie 's Korner
Katie visits Sandusky
By Katie Crow
Sentinel writer
This time of year most everyone
dreams of a vacation and about 90
percent of us do
take that trip we
planned or one
similar.
Well - we took
a three day family
vacation - my
husband, ours
sons and their
wives and our
Katie
three grandchildren - and what a
grand and glorious three days it turned outto be.
Last Thursday morning, two cars
loaded, it was all abuard.
We hadn't traveled 20 miles when
we had to make our first pit stop.
Ten or so miles later another pit
stop. With three chil(iren what can
one expect but one pit stop after
another?
We finally arrived at our '
destination - Sandusky, Ohio on
beaubful Lake' Erie. It was fun time
from then on.
First a swim in the indoor pool
then to the outdoor pool, then golf,
the sauna, and so on.
The next day it was to· Cedar
Point. It has been over 3(f years since
I had vacationed at the amusement
center and , bey, have we come a
long way.

Cedar Point offers everything and
is comparable to Kings Island and
other famous parks. It is ideally
clean, great rides, eKcellent shows,
and good food.
The next day it was' a ·ride on the
ferry to Put-In-Bay, on South Bass
Island. I don't believe I have ever
seen so many boats in one location.
lrnagine an over-cautious grandmother on a ferry with three
children - you got the picture.
It was short, but how sweet it was.
If you want to take a trip an~ not
travel constantly, Cedar Point is a
very nice family vacation spot, I
highly recommend it.
Speaking of vacations, Ray
Manley and family of Middleport
just returned home following a month 's vacation. They traveled through
16 states, Oklahoma, Texas, Florida,
North Carolina, West Virginia,
Virginia, Georgia, and Alabama to
name a few. Ray remarked that they
had a wonderful time and really saw
the sights.

. A layette shower honoring Mrs.
Susan Well was held Monday, June
29, at the Meigs Inn with Mrs.
Lorena Arnold, Mrs. Pam See, Mrs.
Donna Morris and Mrs. Connie Marcum as ~ostesses.
Games were played with prizes
being won by Jennifer Arnold, Bonnie Morris, with Jane Quivey winning the door prize.
Cake, punch, mints and nuts were
served. Two eakes, one a replica of a
dress and the other a replica of pants, were baked and decorated by
Mrs. Well's aunt and cousin, Mrs.
Lorena Arnold and Mrs. Jane
Harris.
Attending were Edity Lanning,
Evelyn Lanning, Audra Well, Vickie
Hanson, Donna Cobb and Laura ,
Julie, Juanita and Heather, Louise
Well and Jill, Susie Grueser, Jody
Gwrun, Jane Harris and Sarah,
Carrie Grueser, Marcia Arnold and
Jennifer, Becky Romine, Cindy
Lyles, Goldie Reed, Avice Bailey,
Sandy Sargent and Kris, Jane
Quivey, Patti Gaul, Bonnie Morris,
Florence Well, Elizabeth Well, Doris
Snowden, Elsie Hines, and Jessica
Marcum.
Sending gifts were Judy Well,
Jody and Amanda, Mary Smith and
Lindsey, Sylvia Midkiff, Helen
Quivey, Helen Milhoan, Dorothy
. Van Kannel, Ella Smith and Kim
Grileser.

ByDaleSioO
Ex1eaaloa ,\geut
Home F.cooomlea
Back In theariy 1940s, the USDA
published .a st~~ternent to the effect
that it wall not safe to can low-acid
food products · ('vegetables, meats,
fish and poultry) by any method
othel" than by tbe use of a pressure
canner. Nearly 40 years later, and in
spite of many programs to educate
homemakers, only 41 percent of
tlJOSe who ean vegetables use a
: pressure canner ' or pressure
saucepan.
Such statistics are a concern since
the majority of ,ases of food-borne
botulism have been traced to improperly home-canned food . For
example, there were eight cases in
1979 and 18 cases in 1980, ·an from
foods canned or processed at home.
Home-canned beets, asparagus and
peppers were implicated in the outbreaks. In addition, three cases
resulted in death in 1980.
Food-borne botulism was first
discovered in the 1800s in Europe
and was a problem with sausages,
from whieh the disease got its name .
IBotulus is the Latin word for
sausage. I When refrigeration improved and the use of sodium nitrite
as a preservative was begun,
botulism in sausage was no longer a
significant problem. Conunercial
canners have very little problem
with bo'tulism because of stringent
controls.
Home canning can be made also
as long as precautions are taken to
make it safe. Food should be well
cleaned before processing. Remember, botulism spores are present in
soil, water and air. A detergent wash
is recommended for vegetables .
This means that one to two
teaspoons of liquid dishwashing
detergent should be used along with
cold water for washing vegetables.
They should be rinsed well with plenty of cold water until no odor of
detergent and no suds can be detected. Clostridium botulinum spores
are extremely heat resistant. This is
why boiling-water bath I BWB I can-

'·I

Have fi'tlmily fare

New arrival

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Boss Bogg
Star ol .T V's
Dukes ol. Hazzard
·wiJJ ·be .at
Camdell,'Par~
Tue•day, J~ly 2X
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Jackson Pomona Grange meljl- donations to sponsor the delegates
bers were guests at the .&lt;.recent . and pr&gt;&amp;lce an(! princess to the State
' .......,_.,.
meeting of the · Meigs · Co~ty Gralll!e .sessionthisfall.
Pomona Grange at.the Rock Springs
A petit~ori ~ponsored by the Meigs
grange hall.
·
Soli aild Wa~er Conservation District
A potluck supper preceded the :eoncernh1g fu~ding for the control of
. meeting. Elizabeth Jordan, GWA multiflora ro5es ·. 'was signed by
. ·chaiman, reported $221 had been members. Plans: were made for
Infant Doczi
' made on the recent b;ike sale and 'Meigs td \;isit with Jackson County
at Victory Gra~ge on July 31 at 7
p.m.~ visittoG'alliaC~unty was announced for 7:30 p.,in. on Aug. 8 at
AfamilypicnicwashostedbyMr. theVintonGrimge. ,·
Mr. and Mr!J. Ancy Oliver Diezi
: and Mrs. Robert Canaday at their
Depqty Mend~tl U,ordan reported IV, the forwer Barbara Raley, 715
· home on Hysell Run Road recently. , that inspection wll~:l,le atthe Sept. 4 Sycamore' St., r,tiddleport, are an· Attending were Mr. and Mrs. meeting. ·All orafi, baking ·and nOOnCirl{tbel birth of their first
Robert Russell, John Rusaell, John sewing contests ~II be judged at child, a1,five. pD\IIl
. d, six ounce sori,
Robert Russell, Jr., Fort McCoy, thattime.
·!
Andy Oqver J)oczi Von June 13 at
. Fl&amp;.;'Mrs. Chester Nichols, Sr.,.Mr. • Phyllis Rose, lecJllrer fqr Jackson • PleUant Valley Hospital.
: and ' ••~ . Chesler Nichola, Jr. an&lt;! ,County, , presented:.~ a program on
·Mafen!!ll gnndparenfll are Mr·.
""~
·
d F
" The
nd M Ronald Young and late
; da~ter, Te'r~ ; Mr. &amp;Jill MrS. "American, an
anners.
re ~obert
Haley, Middl....,...
. ' and
••Chii'les NichOls and 'children, ·Lance were .36 Meigs County members
,,..,. •
. 102 W. Main 99l-ll4l Pomeroy, o.
: anci·JQdy, Mrs. Edna Rhett, Dyla~ , ~ present . and 1q Jackson County maternal ,great-gralidparents are
Represenling
STATE
; anci' Chrilti. ·''Mr. and Mt:S· tw~ . ,rnembersther;e.
..
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Mr, lnd~~Carutllel'!'.Sr., ,
·~~ AUTOMOBILE
•
Rcibert NichoiS •Miss ·
b • hd
Middlepiirt; Mr. and Mra. John
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MUTUAL ·
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, n, Ann..o.u n.ce ir:_t oy
YOung, jtaclne, anct' the. Rev. ~ ·
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rents are
Please toll me moro obout · ~~~e
, 1 • ' 1;, MceOtier, Mrs. Geraldine • 21. 1\!J'S. Hlii'dfng ~~·llillWn.
Mr. ono Mn, A!tdY ,0. Qoczi IUt
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Rt•pn•se nlal l\'t'. Branhoml
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Sorry to report that Beulah Jones,
Middleport,. is a patient at University Hospital, Columbus, where she
has undergone a battery of tests .
Her room number is 785. Drop her a
card ; she could use some cheering
up.
We send our best wishes.

' Mr.

'

i\tht•rll .•l ll ~

SYRACUSE - Several members and Chris Guinther , Clyde, Debbie,
of the Syracuse Church of the Wendy, and Adam Triplett, Gordon,
Nazarene spent Wednesday at the Susan, Mary, Paula and Becky
Colwnbus camp grounds for the Sun- Winebrenner, Hazel Hayes, Oma
Hysell , Sis Cundiff, Maggie
day school spirit rally .
Winebrllflner, Fannie Aleshire, and
The Syracuse church was runner- Artis Grindley .
up in overall Sunday school
achievement in small church
groups, showing a 10 percent increase in average attendance. NorReturns home
man Presley is the superintendent.
John Lyons, Ill has been returned
Going from here were the Rev.
and Mrs. James B. Kittle, Nonnan to his home at Apache Junction,
and Gladys Presley, Jim and Ariz., after being hospitaliZed sinee
Thelma Miller, Leonard and Ora Feb. 6 at the Mesa Lutheran
Bass, John and Jeff Frank, Jan and Hospital for treatment of injuries
Becky Lavender, Willie, Beverly, snffered in a motorcycle aecident.

Pomona Grange polds potluck ·

apart-

MONDAY
REGULAR MEETITNG, Twin
City Shrine Club, Monday, with dinner to be sen(ed at 7 followed by
business meeting, at clubhouse ln.
Racine.
MEIGS REFUNDERS Club
meeting, Monday, 6:30p.m., Riverboat Room at Diamond Savings and
Loan.
AMERICAN LEGION Lafayette
Post Tl, bwliness meeting, 7 p.m.
VAILEY FREE WILL Baptist
Church will hold a revival begiMing
July 20 at 7:30 p.m. Reverend and
evangelist Joe Gwinn will lead
special singing. Pastor Steve Rollins
invites public to attend .
SOUTHERN LOCAL Board of
Education regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. Monday in · high school
cafeteria.
DIRECTORS OF PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club meeting at
7:30 p.m. Monday, home of Rev .
Robert McGee, 211 Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy.
REHEARSAL FOR Eastern High
School Marching Band 7 to 9 p.m.
Monday through Friday; all members and any new students interested in becoming members are
to report.
MEN'S FELLOWSHIP, Meigs
County Churches of Christ meeting
7:30p.m. Monday at Zion Church of
Christ. Revival plans, Aug . 2-7 to be
finalized.

ning is unsafe for low-acid foods.
The temperature In. BWB canning
reaches only . 212 degrees which i.s
not hot enough to destroy
Clostridium botulinum regat:dless of
how long the jars are prooessed.
If live spores ~in in a jar of
low-acid, home-Canned food, the
temperature of the food is
SO!Jlewhere between 38 and 118
degrees and there is no oxygen
present (the jar is vacuum packed ),
the conditions are right f~r the
spores to grow. As the spores grow,
the deadly neurotoxin is produced.
Pressure processing at 10 pouilds for
an appropriate length of time makes
the development of this silllation
highly unlikely. ·
As an added precaution, ·homecanned products should be
examined critically before use. Any
jars with bulged lids, evidence of
mold or gassiness should be discarded. Remember, when in doubt ,
PITCH it out. It will cost ·less to
throw the food out than to get sick
from eating it.
Before disposing of foods that are
suspect, boil them thoroughly to
inactivate the toxins so that children
andor pets cannot accidentally be
poisoned. Burying such foods is also
a good way of disposing of them.
Finally, all low-acid , home-canned
foods should be boiled before using .
Unfortunately, botulism may be
present without there being any
MIDDLEPORT Busine ss and
change of appearance or bad or off
Women, Monday 6:30
Professional
odor, so it is important to take this
p.m.
picnic
at
the home of Mrs.
last precaution . Remember, don't
AI
wilda
Werner
.
Members to take a
even taste a low-acid, home-canned
dish
and
their
own table sercovered
food until it has been boiled, since
vice .
only a tiny amount of the toxin can
be lethaL Put the food in a saucepan, r-- - - - - -- - - - - be sure it's covered with liquid,
bring to a boil for 10 to 15 minutes 120
The Dailv Scnlincl
minutes for starchy vegetables like
iUSPS 146-9&amp;01
corn) until all the food is heated to
1\ Di vision uf MuiUmt"dia, ln r.
boiling to assure that any possible
Publ1s llt'd I' VCr)' afll•nmun. Mt11111&lt;l y thnmg h
toxin is inactivated.
·
1-' n da ~·. Ill Cuurt Slrt•ct . by th t• Ohw Va lll'y
P ublishlll).! Cu111pa11 r - Mullunt'dla . ln e.,
Remember, botulism can be
Ptlllll'ru\', Ohw 45769. 992-2 156 . St•euud d &lt;1ss
prevented by using reliable, testedpu~tii~t· 'paid HI Pmm-ru~. Ollll&gt;.
for-safety methods of processing.
Mt'l llbtT : Ti ll' 1\sstlt'lrth•li Pr es.~ . lu lnnd Da lQuestions' Call the Meigs County
1\ Prfll\s Assut'l&lt;tl lllll atu ! till' Auwn r an
N,•wspapt•r Publi sher!' A:-;s. w. ·la l lnl l. Na \ ll •1 1al
Extension Office at 992-1l696.

Church members attend rally

Celebrated birthday
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Circle and
children, Marianne and Mark, returned to their home in Wichita, Kansas
after spending a vacation here with
thtr parents, Mrs. Mary Circle,
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee, Pomeroy. While here, the
12th birthday of Mark was
celebrated with a picnic at Forked
Run Park with his cousins, Jeff and
Julie Butcher and his aunt, Mrs. Jim
Butcher. The family visited
relatives here as well as friends in
Worthington and Coiwnbus.

Social Calendar

]\jt•wsJ&gt;&lt;tper

\y

"':II

of ooout 'Bar ln the' nnt.race ail\l
Blileh's HDII\!Y In ,the, iecoild .returned .1~.'80.
·
,I
·
Acrowd of8,1132 wagered'Stit,424,

MICHAEL - The .first birthday
of Michael Paul Honaker, son of
Palll aad Debt Honaker, Middleport, was celebrated on June
16. Gifts ·were presented by bis
parents, his sister, Usa Kay; bis
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Smith and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul HOnaker, Sr., Dreama and
Vena Honaker, Kelvin and Jan
Slaven, Mandy and Tyson.
Michael also receked a phone
call from his aunt, Mary Mills,
Texas.

c:

. CINCINNATI (AP)- With Perry
Ouzts up, Leader Jet took the lead at
the top of the final turn and went on
to a 4\'z-length victory Sunday ln the
featured race at River Downs.
The horse covered one mile, 70
yards on a sloppy track in 1:18 H to
pay 13.40, 12.80 anCI 12.40. TwibU
retumed
and $3.40 for ;&gt;lace,
and H0111e For Good pajd $:1.110 for

show • .
The 8-3 daDy double Combinlttlon

TAJ!.A - The first blrtbday of
Tara Beth Davis, daughter of
Mark and Teresa Davis, Middleport, was observed with a par·
ty on May 27. The honored guest
received gifts and a decorated
cake. Attending were grandparents, George and Ruby N lcinsky, and Willie and Dorothy
Davis, a great aunt, Goldie Dill,
and a brother, Todd, 3.

Then - you may qualify
for Stale Auto Mutual's
1 SERIES
ONE Business
' Pol icy .. · il modern-as· tomorrow package plan
· that combines an array of
· broad property and liabilitv coverages required to
safeguard your opera· floris. A II for a ver.y attr acfive, affordable premium.
Let us explain the
superior
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together
could prove interesting
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mall the handy coupon .
.
DALE
WARNER.
INSURANCE

BASEBALL

Mra. Wanetta Radekln talked
on selecting shrubs noting that
planting a garden has been
likened to decorating a living
room. She said that the shrubs
symbolize the ll'llls, the lawn the
carpet, the overhead arching
lrffs , the ceiling. When purchasing plants, she urged buying
good stock from a reliable sour-

Mrs. Well
honoree of
June shower

Tuppers Plains Tigers win
Stewart tournament title

A.merlc1D Leap~

camp

Je~·ll .

Clem, Kyle Simpson, Heather Franckowiak, Toby
Swartz, Shawn Cremeans, and Tricia Cogar. Coaches
are Jerry Swartz and George Hoffman.

Transactions

for rookies at tbe R-11kt"' camp Ill CUIIIIe, Pa.
Several vetenaa jollied lbe rooldes oa lbe epeaiJII day
of practice. (AP Luerpilolol.

devotions using "God Loves the
Whole World" and " If God
Forgot."
For roll call members named
their favorite bird. Guests were
Ann /Elizabeth Turner, Binda
Diehl, Dena Hoffman, and Cheryl

Page-S

The Daily Sentinel

Star garde'!Zers discuss flower show ~~!Preserve and Serve

Caponi takes Classic
JERICHO, N.Y. (AP) - Donna
·Caponi, the winningest golfer on this
year's LPGA tour as a result Of her
victory in $125,000 Western Union International Classic Swlday, heads
for the next stop - the U.S. Women 's
Open - with a special twinkle in her
.eyes.
It was in the 1969 Open that Caponi
scored her fi rst victory as a pro, and
the followin g year she became only
the second player to score successive victories in the event.
Since then, however, the 3!&gt;-yearold Caponi, a 17-year veteran of the
.women's tour, has not won that
cherished title . She will be going into
the 1981 edition, starting Thursday
in LaGrange, Ill. , with her fourth
victory of the year, No.23 Of her
career. Her 72-hole total of 282 in the
WUI Classic was 6 under par, good
for a two-stroke \ictory o,ver
unknown Julie Stanger.
Each closed out the four-&lt;ia y event
on the par 72 , 6,347-yard Meadow
Brook Club with a 73.
Caponi enjoyed a live-s troke adva ntage heading into the back nine.
A double bogey on the par-4 14th hole
cut her lead to one as the 2!&gt;-y ear-old

Pomerov-Mi&lt;!~lfport, Ohio

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Page--6-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs Property Transfers
Patsy R. Fowler, Raymond J .
Fowler to Keith E . Kingery , Debr a
L. Kingery, I A., Rutland.
Raymond J . Fowler, Palsy R.
Fowler to Talbott OU and Gas Co.,
R.W ., Rutland.
Cynthia L. Louther to Dora F .
Hysell, 11.16 A., Chester.
David Alan Griffth to Gary Grif·
fith, Parcel, Chester.
Carl H. Williams, dec. to Eve lyn
Miller, Dorothy Wllllams, Roger
Williams, Cert. Trans., Middleport.

Stevens.
Jum or Johnson of Racine called at
the home of Arthur J ohnson and
fami ly a nd Betty VanMeter a recent
Sat urday .
Betty Van Meter and Sheryl Leann
Johnson were at the home of Mr. and
Mrs.
William
Carelton and
daughters of Ra c ine a r ecent Satur ·
da y .

•

to Olarlee W. Lecar,

Jr.,

Mrs. Ada VanMeter and Mrs.
Mike Evans and family attended the
wedding of Susan Burns and Tholllll8
Durst at the Laurel CIIH Free
Methodi3t Church on Sunday af·

Amy

Legar, Parcell, Bedford.
Archie E. Lee, Jane P. Lee to
David
Allen Sayre, Roma Lynn
David C. Flagg, Julia B. Flagg to
1.01&amp; a~ Sutton.
Sayre,
Stephen L. Baldwin, Cathy E. Bald·
Paul R. Roush, Nancy Roua to
win, 10.435 acres, Sutton.
Blauaer Well Serv ., Inc., Right of
Way, Orange.
C. E. Lashley and Columbia Gu of
Ohio, Colurnb!;;. Gu Trans. Corp.,

Lewis Miller, Ruby Mae Miller to
Uberty Oil and Gas Corp. , Right of
Way , Olive .
Roger E . Weaver, Cathy Darlene
Weaver to David C. Flagg, Julia B.
Flagg, .51 acre, Syracuse.
James Day Canode to Vesta
Canode, Cert. of trans., Columbia.
Dorothy Young to Richard W.
Va ughan, Ruby A. Vaughan, Lot 52,
Pt. Lot 51 , Middleport.
Pea rl G . Ash to James L. Ebers bach, Mary C. Ebersbach, Lot 504,
P omeroy.

Ease., Cheater.
Katharine E. Slagle, Robert Slagel
to James W. Casey, Connie A.
Casey' Lot, Middleport.

•

Mildred Leora Williams to Freeman •

Kate Knotts to

Unda Doustas.
C. McKinney,

Wilbur Parker, Nellie Parker to

Joseph R. Poole, Martha F . Poole,

~:g:~res,

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Brace and
c hildren of Crown City spent the
Fourth of July with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace.
Mr. and Mrs. George Wallace of
Colwnbus spent July 4th weekend
with her parents, Mr . and Mrs .
Blythe Theiss .
Mr. and Mr,; . Eldred Hart of Eliot,
Maine are spending a vacation with
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hart and other
relatives and friends .
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Johnson of
New Brighton, Pa. spent a couple
days with Mr. and Mr,;. Jerry
Powell.

.

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e
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£
:

area. This position earns you up to $40.00
per week. Insurance Coverage is also in the
k
d
h ·
pac age ~n .mu..c more. . .
Anyone interested, please contact:
Mark Banks: Circulation Dept.
At: 992-2156 (Daily Sentinel)
_

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•:
•
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:OTHER CARRIER APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING :
e ACCEPTED. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED CALL: ~6-2342e
:
9?2-2156:
•
675-1333.

-

---· p;~ blic

CO M MON PLEA S C OURT

OF
M E IGS COUNTY , OHIO
E.

McDOLE ,

E T Al

PI.:J tnldl s. ,
CHARL ES

"T

TAYLOR ,

E T AL
Def e ndant ~

No . 17 ,86S

NOTI CE OF
PUBLICATION
To Charles T Tayl or.
Geor ge Coll ie, Cor a Conte .
and Cha rl es A Bak e r, a d
dr esses unknown •I ltv1ng,
and d decea sed, thei r
unkn own s pouses. het r s.
dev •s ee s ,
l e ga t e es ,
exec uto rs. nd m tn ts tr a tor s.
and fiSS IOn s.. whos e ad

Public Notice

Public Notice

dr esses a r-e unkown :
You a r e hereby notifi ed
that a Complain t to Qu1et
Tttle has been fil ed in the
Com mon Pl eas Court of
Me tgs County , Oh io, Case
No. 17,865 deman di ng qui et
11t 1e a t the fol10w1ng
descr tbed r eal estate. to
w' l
The fo ll owing descr ibed
re a l es ta te Sttuated 1n
Lebanon Towns h1 p, .n the
Coun ty of Metgs a nd Sta te
ot Ohto, to wtt:
Bei ng tn Ran ge I ll ),
Town IJ J. Sectio n 117l of
Jhe Ohio Company 's Pur
chase a nd desc r •bed as
fol lows · Beg tn n1ng at t ~e
Sout h E as t corner of la nds
form erl y owned by E H
State rs land , thence West

! Pay Cash for
! Classlfleds and

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II
Write
your
own
ad
and
order
oy
ma
il
w1th
this
I
. Cancel your ad by ptlone when you oet I
I coupon
re~ults . Money nor re fundable
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tNam•------------------ II
1
I Address ________________ I
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SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCJS
Siding ...
Roofing/ Gutter
Remacleling
Serving Your Area tor
20 Years

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates
Call Collecl
Ph . 84J·ll22 .
7· 13·2 mo. pd .

DOZER MlRK .
CATD+C
Farm .Ponds • Land
Clearing· Roads.
Call:

PUlliNS
EXVACATING
992·2478
or
Blaine Milhoan
985·3965
7-15· 1 mo. pd.

HOWARD .
ROTAVATORS
HJ 50"-20-lO H. P.
HA 60"-25·60 H.P.
HE 60"-4!1-80 H.P.
All Models Available

LEO MORRIS
Rl. I Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742·2455
5·11-lfc

ALL STEEL

Farm BuHdings
Sites
"From 30x3C"
SMALL

Utility Buildings
S1zes from 4K6 to 12x40

Savell I

:Phon•------------------

wi th South tine of sa1d land
te n rods, thenc e North to
the l1ne of Davtd Jones lot.
thence East ten rods to the
corner and sa 1d E . H.
Slater and Da vid Jones
land ten rods, then ce South
w1th the David Jones Ime to
the place of beginning to
conta in Two ( 2J a cres of
land, be the same more or
te ss
REFERENCE
DEED
VoL 112 , Page ~ 7 6 . Meigs
County Deed Reco rds .
The following descr ibed
r ea l esrate Situated 1n the
County ot Me igs . Township
of Lebano n an d Sta te ot
Ohi o, to·w1t .
Betng a par t o f Sec f1on
17, Town 3. Range 11. Ohio
Company ·s
Pur c hase .
bound ed as follow s .
Begtnnin g in The Wesl
hnc ot southwest S.W Ger
m a ns tot tn the ce nter of
Long Run
th ence wesr
alo ng sa1d S.W Ge r m&lt;tns.
west l1ne- 37 r ods and te n
links to a stake a t t he
souttleasf corner of Mrs
Jones lot. thence sourn
a lonq S1de l1ne of Mr s.
Jones land 86 rods 10 a

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
i11 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

21.

- - - --o-

22 .
23 .

24 .
25 .
26 .
27 .

28 .

29 .

- - - - --

31.
32 . _

_ _ __

_

33 . _ _
34. _ __
35. _ __ __

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Robert E Buck
Probale Judge/
Clerk
t 71 6, IJ, /0, Jtc

eMERCHANDISE
SI - HoUsettold GOO&lt;Il
51- CB , TV , R•CIIO Equopment
SJ- Antoques

s-4- Misc. Merctllnd olt
U - 8u•ldtnt Supplin

W- Pi!ht()r S"le

14- Buunen Train1n9
1i-5clloc:ils I nstrucllon
I..._Rid10, TV ,
&amp; ca R@JN•r
11- W•nted To Da

eFINANCIAL
! 1- auuneut
Opportuntty
21- Money to Lo•n
U - ProftSIIOftll

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
'' - F•rm EQuipml!nt
6l - Wanttcl tl!t auv
11 - Trucks for hie

J1- Mobile Homes
l()r Sit•
n-Fumslor S1le
)4- Busintn 8"ildi1191
U- Loh &amp; Acrt•t•
ll-Rtll Est1te WantH
J? - Rt~ltors

11 - Auto11or S.t•
7)- V•ns&amp;4W .D.
74- MatcrcyCIH
7!-Auto Parts
&amp; ACCtiiOf"IIU
77- Auto RtMir

Mont~a¥-1 : JO en S.tunlav
Tuuel•v thru Prklav 2: M P .M.
tM day before publlclllon

Sunday 2: JO P. M. Frtfay

.a.,

IJ- EICIVIflltf

~·.

"'

14- Eiectric•l

'

· Tltt PM'-IitMr rfNI'va tbt rilfltte • f ...- nfKiaBy aft...._
Oiltdioul. , ... ,.,_., ...... •Ill " " " ,..,..,1... " ' lftll't . . . . . .
•

'

tensive
remodel·
in g.
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work ·
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
6·31 mo.
t~IJ

-

Call Ken Young

f'AR'TS AND SE RIIICE
ALL MAl( ES

e Ootp(u• ls
• OllhW•\hl!rS
eHotWatr-r l.anks

•Wuners
• Dryer~
e R.angts

LaiJndrol! s

. ~ R e ntal
.

. ~ Apt .

Propr-rhes

Houle Owners

~ MDtlolf

I

POMEROY, OHIO

-PorJraits
-Wecktlngs
-Anniversaries
-Passports
-and Now, an
presslve, complele
of wedding •nd an·
niversary invitations
and
accessorie t- ·
Reasonilbly · priced,
quick service.
-Look
withoul
obligation.

992·2259

Free Estimates
992:0011
992-7656

ROOFING ·
All types of root work,

new or repair guHers
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160

•
Casting • T"r ailer Hitches
•
Metal
Fabrications.
Monday· Friday
4 p .m. t~ 11 p.m.
All Day Saturday

PH. 949-2285

2 _. lfc

SERVICE
For all of your wir·
ing needs.
Let George
)'our
present ''j,;c~:~~.li
~
system.
Residential
&amp;Commercial
Call742 · 3195
or 992· 7680
2 8 tt c

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

OHIO VAUEY
ROOFING
and Home Maintenance
• Rooting of all types
eSiding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 yrs . experience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949·2160
7·51fc

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water-Sewer·E lectric

- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

Gas Line-Ditches
Water line Hook· ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Pf1. 367·7560

V. C. YOUNG II

~92 · 6215

or 992·7311
Pomerov, Oh.

I 7-llfc

-J&amp;C
SAN ITAnON
SERVICE

FrOm the Smi1Uest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator
Radiator Specialist
.NATHAN BIGGS

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·5016
or 992·7505
4·1Hfc

35 ,.v.r~. f!=x~r!!lftc~

SMitH NELSON
MOtoRS INC.

Pomeroy, OH.
992·2174

·Bob, Charlene
and Jay"e
Hqeflich
'

Ph.

5·7·11C

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• Backhoe
• E •cavating
• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Lines
eDump Truck
• Tiencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded '

PH. 992-7201

Real Est1te

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Window~
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

:I.CIM,rr

.T

VIRGIL/B. SR:t.D
'216 e . second Street
Phone
1·( 614)·992·3325

SYRACUSE - Modern
7 room frame only a few
yrs. old . .4 bedrooms,
ceramic bath
w1th
shower, nat. gas F.A.
furnace, full basement
with family room . Car·
peting, large- porch and
nice lot near P .0 .
$37,500.
BARGAIN '- 3 bedroom
home in Middleport.
Modern bath, lots of
wood cabinets in the kit·
chen, nat. gas F .A. fur ·
na c e , large porch,
garage and storage.
Asking $18,500. Offer
welcomed.
J or 4
RACINE bedroom home, bath
w1th shower , nat . gas
F .A. furnace and cen·
tral air conditioning . 4
porches, stove &amp;
refrigerator in large kit.
Basement, carpeting,
city water and .66 of an
acre . S48,500 .
EXTRA NICE - Like
new J bedroom ranch.
Family room
with
heatolator fireplace ,
sun deck , large porch
and large wooded lot.
N1ce carpeting and dbl.
finished garage .
REMODELED - LOIS
of n ice carpeting , 3
bedrooms,
formica
bath, elec . baseboard
heat, 2 por ches , patio,
garden and nicely cared
for lot . 535,000.
l40 ACRES - Fenced.
some farm land, lots ot
deer and other wildlife- .
Several good spots tor
ponds, 10 room home, 2
full baths, free gas,
garage , and
other
buildings .
Owner
an)(ious to sell.
NICE OLDER HOME 7 rooms, J bedrooms,
nice carpeting, bath,
bui lt·in k it. w ith stove,
gas F .A. furnace. storm
drs . and windows .
Basement, front porch,
and garage . Asking
$27 ,500.
NEW LISTING - 1 to 3
acres of. n1ce laying land
with mail and school bus
service. S4.000per acre .

Housmg
Headquarters

EVERYBODY
Shops the

GET YOIJIL-WI'l11A

Want Ad

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

.

'

.....

tryou a ~·~·~l!le c.a&amp;r la&gt;w.W:• W.
aeW.pa..,r II H,ufqurwnd, al! your Coan
Hearlap ore lot14 Ia Col. . bu&amp;. 81- 1011
•utt ..-noully a11111d ~~a
Colu•lluo ...,.
11110. , , ..... C•l••.. .. "'"'"'•" Calli

...

w....... ..., ....,,.... .

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

.:.

a

'

Ann·ouncctments

' " A .....tl
..,Mo
,,.Allofo',.y
••. r., •eo'"
·,.,.r,
'

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
.u.\·02'14 ..

1

· 109 High 51., !"Oifteroy
,
6·28·1 mo.

Cleiond Greenliouse is now
open. · Vegetable planls,
tomalo plants, bedding
plants, pots and hanging
·,bukets .
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine, Ohio.

OWNER Wll:L CONSiDER uiNo CONTRACT .
on thtS large ·family home or set up as du
rental investment. 4 bedrooms 2 baths
P1e)( _for
ki~chen equipment, somefurnit~re . SJJ, Oori~t 1 ng ,

,.

FURNI·SHED -

2 bedroom hom

base,me~l.~asheat. SJl,OOO.oo

HOUH with acreage for
sale, 3 or~ bdrs., fully car·
peled, 2 barns, 379·2258 or
379·234:3, otter 6PM.

KITTENS, l lf2 weeks. 416·
4027 .
COLLIE and Coonhound
Puppies. 992·2770.

New 3 bdr . house with
garage and lull basement
$45,000. Call 416·0390.

KITTENS :104·675·11:18.

Housiuy
He adqua rte r s

WANT AD WAY

$OctAl

NEW CABIN or small
home, completely fur ·
nlshed, $3900. Call416·0390.

Gttnerill

EAFORDm

Located at Maplewood
Lake in Racine.
·
7· 17·1 mo.

TA~&amp;: Y ···

7 yr . old While female
American Egklnu Spilt
dog, fomlly moving. Call
.w6·394.

614·992·2181
Freezers
Refrigerators
Washers·Drvers
Air Conditioners
Also
severa .t
Repossessed al GOOD
Prices .
FINAL CLOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS
Make An Oller

.NEll'S
WELD SHOP
•Steel • AlUminum

H. L WRITESEL

ATTENTION LADIES I I I
Help pay olf those un·
wanted . bills working
ev•nlngs from 7: 30 to 10:30
p.m . as a fashion stylist.
Earn $8.00 to $10.00 per
hour profit. Ideal lor
homemaker with family.
call 992·3941 from 9·6.

5 month old Irish SeHer
pup 1 answers to the name
of
Brandon
In
MeadoWbrook. Phone :IIW·
67H«2.
7

Child care in mv home.
References, reliable. 9926309 .

Yard5.ale

wanled to do . Housework
Yard Sale Tue. &amp; Wed.
in Chester, Tuppers Plains,
Howard Childers reslden·
m eroy, Middleport . 992·
ce, Kootnz Sailor Rd., Vln· WANT TO BUY Old fur · .Po.
6331. .
niture
and
Antiques
of
all
lon, OH . Dishes, antique
drop leaf table, stero, kinds, call Kennelh Swain,
BUILDING and carPenlry
Home Interior decoration~. 256· 1967 in !he evenings .
and remodeling . Phone 30.4·
cfolhes, jewelry, coffee
fable &amp; ends tables, fish FEATHER BEDS WAN · 675 2440.
aquarium and misc . Items. TED, ANY CONDITION .
Proceeds for Gallia MISC .. BOX 65, AURORA,
Chrlslian School Bldgs INO . 47001 . GIVE DIREC·
lund.
TIDN WILL c;ALL SOON .
13
Insurance
Huge Yard Sale at home of CASH PAl D tor clean, late AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
Phyllis Mulholand In model u~ed cars. Smith SURANCE
been can ·
Wilkesville, Oh. GOOd used Bulck· Pontiac, GAllipolis, celled?
Lost
your
clothing, bedding~ toys, and Ohio. Call «6·2282.
operator 's License? Phone
antiques .
9 · 5,
July
\192·2143
22,23.&amp;24.
Yard Sale. Langsville Post
Office turn rlghl Slay on
hardtop. First land right.
Crouser Rd.

16

1·~1'---'H"e"l~pc.:W=a!!nt,ed,__ _
WANTED · Lease men, to
Yard Sale . Long St., teasae oil and gas properRutland.
Monday
&amp; ties, GAIIia ·and surrounTuesday. July 20 &amp; 21 . Rain ding counties . Inqulre lo
or shine .
Great Bend Oil Inc . 269
Lower
River
Rd . ,
600 McNeil , Pt . Pleasant, Gallipolis. Caii416·428S.
Saturday,
Monday,
Tuesdav, 9· 5. Clarinet, NURSING, RN, LPN,
moped, tools, etc.
similar medical training,
to complete Paramedical
Examinations for 1he in·
8
Public Sate
surance companies in
&amp; Auction
Gallipolis
part
time .
Neals Auction Hogsett, Arrange own schedule.
WVA. Rt. 2. every Sat. 7:00 Training provided . Ex ·
PM . (Consignments eel lent pay . For ap ·
lakenl, I Will buy furniture) plication and complete in ·
Lonnie Neal367·7101 .
formation mail one page
resume to Llfedala, 2200 E.
Antique aucllon, July 25. 10 Sunshine, Springfield, Mo.
a .m. Main 51., Laurelville, 65804.
Ohio. 40 piece~ of furniture,
Millersburg &amp; Norlhwood FRIENDLY HOME Toy
Carnival. Fenton Glass, Parties now in our 26th
Slore Indian, old clocks.
vear, is expanding to your
area, and has openings for
managers and dealers.
9
wanted lo Buy
Party plan experience
Want to buy good used, one helpful. Car &amp; phone
owner car with low mileage necessary. Ci!tll before 5
and want to buy baby p.m. to carol Day collect
calves. Phone alter 7: oo 518·489·8395.
PM 379·2160 .
$185.00 IO SSOO w~kiY doing
Standing limber . Call 388· mailing work . No ex ·
perience required . AP·
9906.
PLY: Circle Sales, P.O.
BEDS·IRON, BRASS. old Box 224·D, Richmond Hilt,
furniture, gold, silver NY 11418.
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc .• GET VALUABLE training
Complele
households. as a voung business person
Write: M.D . Miller, Rl. 4, and eorn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
Pomeroy, Oh. or 992·7760.
tinel route carrier. Phone
CHIP WOOD . Poles max. tJS right awav and get on
diameter 1-4" on largest the eligiblllly lisl at 992·
end. S12.SO per ton. Bundled 2156or992·2157.
stab . $10.50 per ton.
Oeliverd to Ohio Pallet Co., Opportunity is yours just
Rock Springs
Rd., tor the asking. Ask your
Beeline stylist and she will
Pomeroy. \192 ·2669.
be happy lo help you Join
fhe Beeline world of
Gold. silver. sterling, fashion
success. Phone
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp; \192 ·3941 and
between the hours
currency . Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleporl. 992· Of 9-6.
3476.
woman to stav with elderly
ladv in Cottageville on
HARPER
HALSTEAD weekend
. Phone 304·372SALVAGE CO., lllh and 3398,
Cottageville, wv .
Viand Slreet. now buying
metals (copper. brass,
aluminum, lead. stainless Secretary and receptionist.
steel, batteries and good lyping skills required.
radiators, ginseng, yellow Write P .O. Bo• 177. Pl.
root, catnip and sassafras). Pleasant .
10 am 10 6 pm dally. Also
Flea Market on Saturdavs . SEMI invalid needs help
CAII675·5868.
three days per week .
Staggard. 304-773·5897 .
Old lurnllure, stone Iars,
copper kettles and other SOMEONE to mow a three
types of antiques. Phone acre field on Rt. 2 af
416·3925 .
Flatrock, could make hay
II desired . Also want
REAR end for 77 L TO. walnut or cherry lumber.
Phonel04·675·U39.
,Phone 304·675·561 0.

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...
Gallia Co. Area Code
614 .
44&amp;-Gallipolis
l67-Cheshire
3-liinlon
245-Rio Grande
ln-watnut Dlsl.
2-Guyan Disl.
643-Arabia Dist.

Meigs co. Area Code
614
991-Middleporl
Pomeroy
91~Chester

l4l-Porlland
247-Lelart Falls
949-Raclne
742-Rulland
Mi!sonCo ~ W. Va.
Area Code 3M
675-PI. Pte..ant
4-L57&amp;-ApiiJe Grove
nl-Mal'lfl ·
IIi-New Haven

·
e, 3 car garage,

lftr-Lttart
9J7-Iuflolo

•

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
.

''•...

30H95·:1141.

,_

Bathrooms, Remodelin-

· '' Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for · free · siding
estimates, 949-2801 or
949·2160.
No Sunday Calls
3·11-tfc

&amp; cable tools, usually wells
In 1 day . Call Ray Beagle

~

Custom Kitchens, Appliances,
cuuom

g, Plumbing, Electrlc,
Heating.
·

WELL drilling , bOth rotary

;: ~ ~ W'li-IL''~ ~j~ ~

~'I"LANTt.
( ITI( ~
~;._I).
Of- ~:r WATt:.CZ.

To VOOd home 13 mo. old
malo Kalrn lerrler. Coli
-W6-0769.

POMEROY

Home Park\

lHE PHOlO
PLACE

608 E. MAIN

''

lh" Ad lor

APPLIANCE SERVICE

SALE AT

'Uct'
·',._
\1C01111011

Wf 111NPU' t=" lu ... /I"S

•" t ,) IN

., .

I'

' Pt. Pieailant, WV ~SD

CONSTRUCTION
New "omes • ex' ·

BIG

R•.Mash

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

They ' ll Do It Every T1me

TU.PPE;RS PLAINS - Ranch with 3 b ~
pet, patio, On.J,Y,. acre lot. $J 2,soo.oo. e rooms, car·

'

l·

-

Real E state - General

.

-

Contad: Qlrtdo!' iit Nunlnt
. PIMNnt Valley llllspltal
~~~"'i Drive ·

-

ROUSH

~ Co&lt;n

S ACRE~ _AND MOBILE HOME - 2-3 bedr
central a1r, garage, owner Will hel f. ooms,
$26,900.00.•. , ·
P 1nance.

~Eu.ENT ~RY, ~D BEN~FJ~ .,~

.. .. :u ...

E

.
LOT IN LETART - 1.25 acres suitabl I
lot or home. REDUCEDTQSJ,OOO.OO. e or tra1ter

Acute Care' Nurlitng Units

&amp; lltlrJwer•thtn
15-GtMr•l H•utl•t
14-M.M. R•~ir ,
17- UPhOIIt.ry

vou wanl an
i that comes rarely 1n a
pe rson's lltettme
you owe il lo yourself to tn ·
ll('&lt;;ttg..lf('.
I ll vou are abov e a verag e/ CAREER MIN
OED
2 NeM Appearanc e/ HIGHLY MOTIVATED
J AQQress.ve wtth outgotng personality .
4 Over 15 Cor matur e) I SEL F STARTER
5 High School graduate mm1mum with work1ng
f' xpcr1enc e or college degree
b Can be out of town 5 nights per week .
OLAN MILLS PORTRAIT STUOIOS ha s im ·
mcdl.lt(' opentngs for mature , professional sales.·
oncnted women and men that need to earn
'i&gt; 1s,uoo.oo &lt;lnd up per year . f, IH .OO per week wh1le in
tr&lt;ltntng wtth motel ewpenses, car allowance and
corp. benefits. Exper1ence in cosmetic, tewelry
retail sates such a s : Avon, Tllpperw.lre, Sar.:J
Cove ntry, telephone s01les helpful. For personal mtcrv1ew C&lt;lll John C. Hall TOLL FREE at 1·800-761 ·
SYOJ or C.OLL COLLECT 1-5ll· 323 -SS28 or l ·SI3-323 ·
S31 J . Mond.w through Thur~da y, be tween B: JO a.m.
· .J : J O p. m . or , send res ume to . ATTN : John c. Hall,
Po\t Ofltce BoK 300, Spnnglleld, OH 4SSOI . In West
in " call TOLL FREE l · BOO· S43· 59o::tO or 1-800·

POMEROY - 3 bedroom home with W F ·
· 8 · P., full
~asement with garage workshop
$34,500.00.
'
• 1arge lot

•net

11- Pium•tnt&amp; £JCIVIt. . .

lnurtl. . . ... .. . . .. . .... , , .. , . , , , 14.11'
UJI te Uwonh ... Silt dlyllfllfrti.. ....... ., . ... , .... ..... . . 11.11
C~ ~,r.,. ~ _worel~ ,.,- tinet
Mollllt HOII'If ..... IH Y.tr41 ..It I art I CCIII ltd .nly Witll UIIIIWitlt
.,.., , 2$ Cfftt cftar" tv 1ft Clrryl"- II• NuM .., IB C•re .. Tht
S..ttlttt.
.
.
~
.

lncorrec• JIIMnkMI.

Olfice 742·200l
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING
Ra c ine . Lo ve ly two
story hom e . Owner is
wood craftsman and
woodwork is exQui s ite
throughout . 5 bedrooms,
b ath , living ro o m ,
d•ing room , family
room . mode rn kit che n
with breakf as t room .
Also extra nice 24'x44'
workshop $37,500 .00
NEW LISTING - Nea r
Midd leport , off Rt 7.
Re model ed J bedroom
home . liv1ng room, kit·
c h e n , ut 111ty , bath ,
ce llar on 21 . 1 a cres with
tr u1t trees and grape ar·
bar. $16,000 .00 .
LOAN ASSUMPTION Low
1nterest . In
Rutland . Two story
home, 4 bedroom s, 2
baths, utility on 31 5
acre . Asking $33,000.00 .
NEW HOME - Nice 3
be droom , all electric ,
large living room , kH
chen and din1ng comb.,
bath.
carport
and
storage on large corne r
tot . Pri ce r e du c ed
S3B .500 00
FARM - 72 acres, large
2 story home, 3 or ~
bedrooms , 2 baths,
liv ing room , modern kit·
chen . carport
and
workshop. Barn with
electricity and water .
PRICE REDUCED -,.
$31,000 00.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone742·317l

•

Rates and Qther I nformatlon
u, ttU words ... tttrH

HOBSTETIER REALTY

Nursing, Care Unit
(primarily geriatrics)

•SERVICES

u, ,.,,..,...••........vinMrtfetl : . .. .. .... .... ... ' . "

Real Estate- General

qu•iified ·

lt - Homt lmpronmtnhl

Wont· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

A

REGISTERED NURSES
.

Meigs County Probate
Court , Case No . 23419 ,
Ronald Vance, Box 761,
New Haven, W . Va was ap·
poin ted Executor of the
estat e of Daisy Vance ,
decea sed . late of R. D. 4 ,
Pomeroy , Oh 10 ~5769 .
Robert E . Buck,
Judge
(!}6, 13.20, 3t.c

11

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ESTATE OF EDWARD
MARION
BLAKE,
DECEASED.
Case No. 23441 Docket 11
Page 243
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On May 29, 1981, in the

• TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE
11 _ Homts lor $lie

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF DAISY VAN
CE , DECEASED
Ca se No . 13419 Docket 11
page14 1
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOICIARY
On Jun e 4, 1981. 1n thP

( 71 6 , 13. ;,10 , JTC

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
is curren:t!J seeking

U - L•vestock
~ - Hay &amp; Grain
IS- Seed&amp; FerUiiJtr

5rrvicl!'

Ohio 45760 wa s appo1nted
Fiduciary of the estate of
Edward Mari on Blake . Jr .,
deceased , late of 55 South
Second Street, M1ddle port,
Oh io 45760
~
Robe rt E . Buc k,
Probdte J udge/
Cl erk

Public Notice

4t- EQu,pmenl tor Rtnl

11- Hei P w.,nted
U - 5•1ullfll WantHI

?0 .

457&lt;11.

..- s~ce tor Iii en!
41 - Wanted to Rent

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

18.
19.

RENTALS

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·84l· 259t
6·15 tf c

Public Nolice

M e •gs County
P rob ate
Court , Case No
23441,
Joy ce A. Blake. 55 South
Sec ond Street, M•ddlepo r t ,

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY . OHIO
ESTATE OF EDWIN H.
DAVIS, OECEASEO
C&lt;1 se No. 2J4S6 Dock e t 2
Page 244
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OFF I DUCIARY
On June 4 , 198 1, in The
Mei gs County Probate
Court . Ca se No. 1.3.:156.
Robert E Davis, Langs
vill e, Ohi o was appointed
E)(ecutor ot the estate of
Edwin H Dav ts, deceased,
la te of Langs v11te, Ohio

11 _ HO•aes tOr Rent
41- MODitl! Homn

tor Rent
44- Aparlmtnts for Rent
U - Furntshecl Rooms

._L()\fand Found
7- 'l'•rd Sa l t
1-P~tbhc S.lt
&amp; AIICiiCn
t - Winted to Buv

17 .

post ; thenc e east thirty pla int .
seve n rods and ten links to
Larry E. Spencer
a post ; thence north 86 rods
Clerk of Courts
to the place of beginnmg
Meigs County , Ohio
containing twenty acres .
16) 29. (7) 6 , 13. 20, 27 . 18) 3
bi C
"REFERENCE
bEED
Vol. 129, Page 516, Meigs
Public Notice
County Deed Records
The demand of the Com
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
plaint is that the t1tle to the
The
Board of Education
above described rea l estate
Eastern Local Sc hool
be qu1e ted in the names of of
01strict des 1res to rece ive
the Plaint 1ffs . Patric k E . sealed
bids on th e
Mc Dole and Emerson Me
following :
Dole
1 . Milk
and' Dairy
You a re requtred to an
Produc ts
swer the Complaint within
2. Bread
twenty eight !28) days at
In order to be considered
te r the last publication at
fh1 S notice which will be all sealed bids shall be
publ ished once each week recei ved in The reasurer 's
ice by 11. o'c lock noon on
tor siJ&lt; ( 6 ) consec utive off
weeks . The last publication July22, 1981 .
Sa1d Board of Education
w•ll be made on Augu st 3 ,
rese rves the right to acceot
1981, and the twenty ·e igtlf
o r !l' lf'fl .=~ n y it fl&lt;l .1 11 or Pcl r
118 1 days for ans wer will
15 ot nnv ?~ n et i"t ll htrlo:,
commence on I hat date
E Ioise Boston,
1n c n &lt;:.r· 0 1 '{O ur t n ilu r l ' to
Treasurer
a ns wer
or
otherwt se
Eastern Local
respond as requtred by fh e
Boa rd of Education
Ohio
Rul es of
Ci vi l
38900 SR 7
Procedure, jUdgeme nt by
Reedsvt lie, Ohio 45772
default will be rendered
a ga1nsf you for the r e lief
de manded in the Com
Public Notice

PHONE 992·2156

5- Happy Ach

) wan re-a
) For Sale
1 Announcement
l For Rent •

_ _ _,_P..u...
bl.,_,
lc Nolice

Wj{Nf AD INFORMATION

1- cardal Tt11nk'
1- ln Memoriam
l - Ailnounctmtllls
4-G•vuwa v

I
I
I
I
II
I
l
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Public Notice

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
.
SIDING

The Daily sentinei- Page--7

MISC. Mtl'ciNliiCII..

.

'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Notice

IN THE

PA T R I CK

.

:................................... .

Small investment, large returns, Senintel Want. Ads

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business·
Se"'ices
..

•

2.09 acres, .50 acre, •

Racine

Mr. and Mrs. Faye Countryman.
Greenville, spent the Fourth of July
with Mr. and Mrs. Ruy Howell.
Edward Arche r . Crooksv ille.
recently called on Mr. and Mrs . Norman Schaeffer .
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church July 12 wa s 86. Choir mem·
bers present were t4. A duet by Mrs.
Franklm Martin and Mrs. Shirley
Friend was sung. Guest speaker was
Joseph Sayer . He a nd his wife sang a
•
d uet.

Christy .
. hin.
Mr and Mrs . Charles E1c ger
spent the weekend with 0pan
Eichinger and Laura . The1r
daughter, Suzannah, returned home
· With them after visiting here for two

:=:~~lso~ Ce~. ~cE=: =······················~····~·~·····:
s=~~~=~~~
This newspaper is now acceptmg applications •
:::::=:.:=.=.~Glllllan) :
for a bundle drop carrier in the Middleport
:
18

Laurel Cliff ::.~~~::.W·
H.
News Notes ~:~~~ey,AudraFieming,G

ye C:~rs .

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Michaels
have returned from their wedding
trlptoNiagaraFallsandCanada.
Cary and Dennis Dobbins are .the
new proprietors at the local General
store.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Congo
visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Congo and
daughter at Letart Falls on Sunday.
Leota Birch was a Sunday over·
night guest of her sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Upps and Gale at Vincent.
Janet Middleawart has returned
from a vacation in Houston, Texas
with her sister, Lori.

Larry Hartman, Myerstown, Pa.
spent 8 few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Hartman.
James Eiselstein, Columbus,
called on Mrs. Golda Wolf recently.
Mr and Mrs. Virgil Wood, Spring·
field." spent the weekend with Mrs.
LelhaWood .
.
Mrs Harold Hawk and Krlstie,
Tuppe;.. PlainS, spent Sunday af·
temoon with Mr . and Mrs. Roy

RussellG.&amp;illey,~. toJ~~.------------------------------------------~~----~~~~~7

Phyllis Wooten, Donald E . Wooten

Attendance at Sunday morning
services July 5 at the Free Methodist
Church was 53. Choir members
present were 12. This day was
Pastor Shook 's la s t Sunday. Pastor
and Mrs. Shook are going to Canton.
He served the local church seven

temoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fowler and
children, Buckeye Lake, and Mr,;.
Ruby Bryant, Debra and Davi!l,
local, spent the Independence Day
weekend with Mrs. Myrtle Lewis
and family at Buffalo, W.Va.
Mrs. Wilma Tlllls, ReedsviUe,
visited her mother, Mrs. Oliver
Lawson on Monday evening.

Monda,y , July 20,1981

Chester

Stiversville News Notes

George A. Ziegler, M1ldnd Ziegler

Paul H. Qeland to Betty V. McMurray, .73 acre, 9 acres, Sutton.
Paul H . Qeland to Betty V . McMurray, Parcels, Sutton.

Carmel News,
By the Day
Eric Young of Sidney , Ohio is spen ·
ding his vacation with is g rand ·
pare nts, Mr. and Mr,; . Edson Roush.
E velyn Ingram a nd Jane O'Ne il
and sons of Colwnbus called on
relatives here on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs Alban Gris wold of
Vie nna , W. Va . and son ·in ·law ,
Howa rd Smith from Texas a nd Mr.
a nd Mrs . John Ours of Belpre were
recent guests of Mr . and Mrs.
· Douglas Circle.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Ches ter called a t the home of Mr
and Mrs . Robert Lee and family on a
r ecent Sunday evening .
Euni e Brinker a c companied by
Mr . a nd Mrs. Hayman Barnitz of
P om eroy went to the Stump funeral
home in Grantsville, W. Va. on Mon ·
da y to a ttend the funeral of Lora

Mqnday , July, 20,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In cama.countv.

In Melts County

44&amp;2342 .

' 992-2156

'

'
.

.

In

C:ounly

Radio TV
&amp; CB Repair

RON'S TV SERVICE
SpecialiZing in Zenith.
House Calls. Now servicing
Molorola Quazar. Call 1·
304 ·576·2398 or «6·2#5-C .. . _
18

Wan1edto Do

D.J."s LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Neigh·
bOrhood Rd., all mak.,; ser ·
viced . Specializing in Lawn
Boy . Blades sharpened .
Call .u.\·«25 after 5 p.m .
Pick up and delivery
available.
Certified Clerk· Typist will
do typing . Call 361·761S
anytime (80 cents pe r
page).

3 bdr . house. basement,
shower, AC, stove, refrig.,
curtains, carpet, garage,
shade trees, priced $39,000.
Located Rt. 160 &amp; 55-C, will
land contract. Calll88·8200.
6 rm . &amp; bath, on large lot,
Oak Hill, Oh. washer &amp;

dryer, air cond . Call 682·
7414 after I PM .
Large 2 story stone home,
well insullaled, wilh 31arge
bedrooms, one full bath, 2
112 baths, formal dining
room, newly remOdeled kit·
chen built in including dish·
washer, basement with
work shop, 2 car garage
with work ~hop, large oar·
den , 2 porches. 5-48 Grant
St.. Middleport. $59,500 .
Wanting quick sale to seMie
estate . Call 614·384·:1809 tor
appointment . (After lPM)
Remodeled 2 story house, 3
bedrooms upstairs, built· In
kitchen, dining room, large
living room, utility room,
pantry,
bath .
Frame
building and 113 acre lot .
Willing to negotiate price.
\192·7719 in Bradbury.
2 story house with aM ached
single &amp; S car garage. llf2
baths, 3 bedrooms, Iaroe
l.r ., stone fireplace , fully
carpeted . On 1 acre of
ground located 1 mile out
on 143 off Rt. 7 bypass . 9'12·
7040 .
Older home in the country
with 2.3 acres. 4 bedrooms.
bath, garage. Central!';'
located to all 3 mines .
$17,500 . 742 ·25()2 .
Modified A frame. 3 bdr . 2
baths, carpet . Sprial stairs,
circular stone fireplece , 8
acres. Call992-7741 .

TV service calls. Call 992 ·
6776 or 992·20l4 . Also used
color TV for sale .

OR RENT - almost new U x

7o, 3 bedroom. 1 '12 baths,
si ttino on nice lot, readv to
move into. Phone 30.4-5762711

~
21

Business
o~~ortunity

OWN YOUR own Jean
Shop. Offering all the
nationally known brands
such as Jordache, Vanderbilt, Calvin Klein,
Sedgefield, Levi and over
70 other brands. 513,500.00
includes beginning in ·
ventorv. airfare for 1 to the
apparel center, training,
fiKtures
and
Grand
Opening Prmotions. Call
Mr. Tate at Mademoiselle
Fashions 704-753·4738 .
LAWN &amp; Garden Equip·
ment Sal.,; &amp; Service.
Owner WiShes to retire.
Inquire at Ourdoor Equipmen! Sales, Jet. Rls. 7 &amp; 35,
Ga 11 ipolis, or phone «6·
3670 for appointment .
22

Money to Loan

FHA·VA-Convential Home
Loans. Columbus First
Mortgage Co., 463 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, Oh ., 4467172
23

Professional
Services

COMMERCIAL and in ·
photography .
dustrial
Phone «6·2909 or «6·7226
after • p .m .
Piano tuning and repair,
Love your~ ne.i.QI1b~r tune
your Piano. Bill Ward,
wards KeybOard . 446·4312.
Gallipolis.
GALLI A Cleaning and
Rent· A-Mald Service Inc.,
Free Esllmates, bonded,
Insured, phone 245-92J.4.
Cleaning by 1111! week, monthor conlractual .
complete Auction Service
slock reducllon·close oul$·
eslates·farm equlpment·ll·
vestoc)&lt;·real estale. Llcen·
sed and bonded In Ohio,
and west wv. Bud McGhee
Auction and Real Estate
Co. Call for terms. 441r0552
or 416·0818. 428 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, OH ., 456:11 ;
ROBERTS
CON ·
STRUCTION .CO. Inc., Out
trademark : Quality &amp;
Sallslectlon
We have
references. Phone 256· 15"1.
Plano and Organ lessons.
limited openings. Mary
Lucas, call 44/r9787.
Your Plano rusting in sum·
mer Humidity? Free In·
specllon wllh tunilfD. Lane
Daniels. 742-2951 ·or 992·
2082.
STARKS TrM Trlmmlng ·a.
Shrub · service. Insured.
Phone 304'576-2010.

I 978 Swinger one and oneh a It bath, fireplace . Phone
304-675·5672, 2 miles out
J ericho.
2 bedroom , air conditioned,
f urnished, out of town on
R t. 2. Small deposit. Phone
J 04-6756277.
F or sale or rent 9 room
house Park Drive S325. per
month . Phone 304·675·2885.
32

Mobile Homes
tor Sille

p RICES REDUCED · used
m oblle homes and travel

TRI · STATE
tr ailers.
MOBILE HOMES . CALL
«6·7572.

c LEAN

USED MOBILE
H OMES
KESSEL'S
Q UALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT .
35. PHONE «6·3868 or «6·
7274 .
72 lnde 12x60 mobile home,
79 Dodge van, a t8x36
g arage, 3 acres of land
s16000.00 or best offer. Call
388·8741 .
1974 New Moon Mobile
Horne Call «6·9759.
New 1982 6l!xl4, l bdr .. : 2
b aths, electric, turn .• gard en tub. bay window,
$ 13.95(). Several used lolal
e lectric (2 1979 Winsor's
70•14) . 1973 Bachelor Pen·
I house 70x12 with Roman
ub. 2 preowned double
wide, 2 &amp; 3 bdr. Kanauga
Mobte
Home
Sat~s .
Kanauga, Oh . Call416·9662.

'

Must sell 14x70, 3bdr.
mobile home on acre, ~
drilled well, $11,000. Cell
«6·4394, Davis Rd.
197l Crown Haven, 14x65,

I hree bedroom, new car-

pel, 1971 Cameron, 14x~.
two bedroom, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedroom, new carpel. 1916
cameron ,
12X60, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/2, new
carpet . 1970 PMC. 12x60,
two beclroom, new carpet,
B &amp; 5 Sales, Inc ., 2nd and
VIand Street, Pt. Pleasant,
WV Phone 675·«24.

198() 14x70 Mobile Home. 3
bedrooms, extra room with
wood burner, slnlng on 2
acres. Good building sjte
tor home. SU,OOO. 61 HIS·

4395.
12x60 Buddy, 3 bedroom,
turnJshed, central air,
washer· dryer, awning, under~innlng . Set up In Coun·
try Mol;llle Home Park .
$5,900. 992·7479 .

�The

Sentinel
42

USED Mabile Home. S76·
2711 .
1971 Darien 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Crown
Haven, lA x 65 wlfh 1 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 ·x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nesheu. u
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B 'I• s
Sales, Inc. 2nd ond Viand
Sis. Pl. Pleasant, wv .
Phone 675-4424.
Trailer tor sale or rent,
partly furnished, Gallipolis
Ferry. Phone:JOA·675· 1167.
12x60 mObile
Phone67H898.

67

home.

Mobi .. HomH
tor Rent

~745 .

2 bdr. ·trailer turn., gas and
water turn .• 1225 mo., S1oo
dep . Call «6·4225 or 446·
07S..
"They mu st ha\' e turned 1
Jlil'e-supjJ&lt;&gt;rl sy!tlf'm back oo ' ..
2 bdr. mObile nome tor
renl. Call«6-1052 after 5.
51

Unfurn., 2 bdr. trailer for
rent. Ceii«6·3J11.

For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom

1967 Trailer tor sale. Phone
:lOA-675-41198.

mobile home. Racine area.

992-5858 .

44

Na5hl 2 bedroom trailer,
pr iced on Inspection, good
condition . Phone 30~ · 675 6273 or 675-3442 .

2 bdr. apartment lg. LR:
and K itchen . Across from
Honda Shop no pets. Call
446-3937 or 367-0560.

55 acres, nine room house.
barn, minerals, secluded,
good hunting. Morning Star
area . $45.000. Additional
101 acres available. U9·
2630 .
Lots &amp; Acreage

lS

LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Ra ccoon Creek, all
utilities a\lailable, $300.
down, owner will finance .
call af1er 3 p.m ., 256-6413 .

2 acres on Floyd -Clark Rd .
c iOS&lt;! to Rl 160, S.O.OOO.
Phone -"6·0390 .
Green Beans. Pick your
own S6.00 bu . Raynor
Peach Orchard, 5 miles
below Gallipolis on Rl. 7.
Caii4A6-4807 .
1 plus acre lot on Flatwood

Rd .• all wooced . Call 9925396 after .5 .
10 acres near Portor on old
160. ideal for home or home
sites . Road
frontage ,
assumable mort ., low in ·

teres! . Call 388-9060 .

68•.

Roughly lli2 acre, S.R .
Harrisonville .
Asking
$3,500 742-2577

owner, 3 apartment
house on approx . 1 acre.
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
City wa,ter, wi II consider
land contract . 675-1883 9·5
BY

p .m .

145 ACRES 412 378· ISO..

.-:--~
A-:
pe
=
rtc::
m::ce::n7
t -~

lor Rent

Second floor finished ef·
ficiency apt. Furnished.
adults only , no pets. 729 2nd
Ave. Gallipolis. Coli 4460957 .

4 rent unfurn . apt. all car·
peled, $250 mo. SlOO dep,
utilities paid, no children,
no pets Call.u6·3A37.
For rent new 1 bdr. apt.
Caii4A6·0390 .

REGENCY APT INC. 2
bedroom.
kit ·
chenfurnlshed, carpeted,
bills partially paid . 5200
mo .
E )( Cellent ne i gh borhood , 675-6122 ex 615·
510~ -

Furnished efficiency apt.
utilities pd ., share
bath, suitable for one. Cali
446-4416 after 7PM.

$135

Furnished
Apt . S220,
utilities paid, adults, 1 bdr,
nice . Call ~ - 4416 after
7PM.
NIC E
UNFURNISHED
Apt. S200 mo. plus you pay
utilities. Adults only, no
pets. Available Aug . I, 446·
8067 .
1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call
992-7721.
Apartment for rent . Call
992-5908 .

1 bedroom apt., very nice,
private porch. luoe yard.
992-5880.

APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES675-4130.
Apartments. 675-5548 .

41

Houses for Rent

SMALL furnished apart·
ment, no pets, references
required , 30•·675·1365.

3 bdr . house S250. Referen ces, sec . dep., Rodney
Villiage II . Call 4A6 4416 af - For rent in Middleport, 2
bedroom furnished apart·
ter 7PM.
men!. Calli 30A-882 -2566.
2 bdr . house Lower Rt . 7,
ref . and dep . required . No
pels . Coll256· 1413.
3 bdr . house in Point
Pleasant, WV . Basement
and porch. Call 67S-5104 or
675·53ikl .

5 rm . house on Chillicothe
Rd . Phone .ull-3..07 .
Small 1 bdr., possible 2
bdr .• .5 miles below town on
Rt . 7. Nice backyard plenty
of parking. Catl Tom Leslie
446-7901 .
Available August 1, Jbdr.
ranch with basement, ref .
&amp; dep . req . Caii4A6-0595 .
For rent 2 bdr . house in
Centenary ref . and security
dep. req. Call .u6-A053 .
3 bedroom, a .c., fireplace .
Rutland area . S2SO plus
deposit. 992-2013 .
3 room furnished cottage,
utilities furnished, adults,
no pets . Phone 304·675·2812

or 30~ · 675 - 1580 .

TWO bedroom house 304 675-1311 or675·3812 .
42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

C"-i-onNI~ -

dleP stream eKtractlon. ,_

canning tomatoes. Andrew
Cross. Lefort Falls, Ohio.

1980 HO!lda NC 50 express,
1350. Phone 'lool6-7747 after
5PM.
1973 lionda 350. Good cond.
949·2535 after 5:00.

LOCJ&lt;iSMITH
Service . . '
-Resldenllel. automotive.
Emergency service. Cell
882·2079.

· "Molorcycles
J.•

••

ranges .
Skaggs Ap pliances, 1918 Eastern EASY crediT available now
to purchase furniture,
Ave .• 446-7398.

0

1 BEDROOM furnished
apartment. utilities paid,
304675-1897 1, 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apart·
ments now available at Pt.
Pleasant Inn . Also a
honeymoon suite . All
utilities paid . Apartments
as tow as SUO. a week .
Honeymoon suite S.CS. a
night . Caii30H75-6276.
45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light nou~ekeeping apt .•
Park Central Hotel.

46

Space for Rent

Trailer space for rent for
older couple . Call ~ - 1052
after 5 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992-7479 .
TRAILER spaces tor rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
992-3954 .

TRAILER space 3 miles
from town i unction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y. Pt . Pleasant, 6753248 .
•••••

10 . . . . . . . . .

._ 0

...

. .. .

..

53

Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave., 675· 1773.

6-55 gallon drums. 247·2092 .

RON ' S Television Service.
Spec:lallzing In Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone S76·2398
or 446·2454.

Construction equipment.
Ditch -Witch
trenchers
used. reconditioned R65
!65HPRAOI («JHP gas &amp;
diesel), 30 {30 hpl. All with
backhoe attachments
54
Misc. Merchilndtse
available; J20 and smaller
RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER · units . Day 1 · ~43 - 9751,
VICE, Complete sales, ser- evenings &amp; w~kends 1·592·
vice, supplies and in· 5685.
slallatlon. 446- 132~ .

Loc:li apples, exc . for sauce
Most anything used in &amp; eating. Fitzpatrick OrRestaurant and store chards, St. Rt . 689. Phone
equipment. RADCO 304- 669·3785. lirs . 10 o.m . -7
523-1378, Hunlinglon .
p.m .

Mlnature Poodles, 2 male,
2 females, 9 wks. old. For
more Info . c all882· 3956.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Fruils
&amp;
Vegetables
Homegrown·sweet corn,
cabbage, mangos, etc.
Charles McKean Farm .
Coll446·9442 .
....... -'

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

-

7800 BTU air cond., new.
Callll.oi3·W4.

Clean , good cond., neutral
color daveport with or
' HAY FEVER' HOME without new covers. Call
remedy, tradition for cen- 949-2271.
turies, it works. For com·
piete info and receipt send
today self addressed stam- 26' TROUTWOOD travel
ped envelope plus 51.00 to trlliter and camp site on
S. R.A . Co .• P .O. Box 284, Raccon Cr"e ek. Close to
Ohio River. $500 dOWn.
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
Owner will finance. 614-2561216.
6,000 BTU Westinghouse
air cond ., hosp. bed with
motor, 21' RCA color TV, NEED several items of fur ·
appliances,
babybed, glass lined elec . niture,
hotwater heater. canning televisions . Bio discounts
fruit jars. Phone 61•·«6· for quanity purchase .
Village Furniture 2605
0595.
Jackson Ave . 675· 1773.
0

Fiat Allis model 6-E dozer,
cargo wench, 1800 hrs.,
Fiat Allis model 545 end
loader, rubber tire, camp.
over hauled, exc . cond., 1
314 bucket. 1976 Chevorel2
ton truck, heavy duty 16 ft.
bed, twin holst, well
equiped, low mileage, all
are like new. Priced for
quick sale. Call Ripley,
WVA. 304·372-6390.

BIG discounts for cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.
18,000 BTU air conditioner,
excellent condition, S300.
Phone 304-675-2820.

Roper 8 hp rotary mower in
good working condition.
Phone 304-675 - 677~ or 675-

Burrough's
L6000 219~ .
Programmable Accounting
Machine. Good cond. Call
MUST sacrifice 6 ~e
t6141 4-411-2342 .
living room suite
.,
complete Queen size bed
WOOD BURNING add·on $175 . Caii30H75· 1374.
furnance tor gas· oil or ele&lt; ·
tric, and also works on hot GARAGE door $25 .00 .
water heat Still in factory Phone 30H82-3236.
carton . Would normally
cost around $1000, will sell
tor SAOO. Call614 256-1216.
Lowest prices on Bemco
bedding in the area. Call
for prices. Villiage Fur·
Firewood tor sale . Caii2S.· niture, 260.5 Jackson Ave .,
65'".
675-1773.
Refrigerator, S.SO . Call 367·
782~ .

D itch Wench Trencher
used. reconditioned R65 {65
HPI. R40 t40 HP, gas
diesel!. V-30 {30 HPJ. all
with backhoe attachments
available ; J20 and smaller
unit.
Call
1-443 -9751 ,
evenings and weekends 1·
592 -5685
Harness. collars, bridles,

5·cS~_B~u~i~
ld~in~g~
SU
~P~P~I~
ie~s-

Building materials, block ,
brick , sewer pipes, win ·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245-5121.

5cc
6_ _~P~e~t~•~fo~r~S~•~I~
e_ _
POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 3677220 .

etc. tor horses . Cali 2S6·

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow
puppies . CFA
For sate Whirlpool dish · Himalayan, Persian and
washer . Call 3889023. Bid· Siamese kittens . Call 446well, OH .
JBu after A p .m

...

IOf . t

.. .. .
..-. -o·•.. ...........
· ····-· ·

._.

61

-~

_..

•

'

llt"r

~

Farm Equipment

12HP, 2-wheel , Gravely, AO
in. mower,
26 in.
culitivotor. Sears electric
week·wacker 16 ln. cut.
Sears drop spreader. All in
exc. cond . Call«6-6575.
Farmall F20 tractor, S350.
Massie Harris with front
end loader,$650 . In ·
ternational 18 fl. flatbed
1966,1900. Phone 256-9303.
For Sale a 1200 bushell wire
corn crib . Call388·856.t.
For Sale Ford 3 pt. disc and
mowing machine for Super
A. Phone 256-1354.
Four 15,000 gallor tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone 1 304·422·2781.
1 good Case bailer and
wagon S2,500. I large pony
{52 in.) bay with black
maine and tail , whi1e
stocking legs. $300. 9853891.

1977 Cub Cadet {New motor
ln!talled last year) . .U"
mower.
10 "
plow,
cultivators. 44" push blade.
double disk., set of hillers,
small utility trailer. 246·
2092.
Farmall cub tractor with
cultivators. Has new clut·
ch, pressure plate, throw
out bearing, transmission
over hauled. magenta
overhauled. new starter,
new ballery, battery
cables, new voltage relay,
runs good . 247· 2092 .
1' double disk {drag type).

247 ·2092 .
GRAVELY tractor, L
model, electric start , with
mower, rota tiller, dual
wheels, $800. Phone 304-675·
4828.

TOPPER for pick up truck,
3'8" high, removable back.,
full door, good cond .•
1977 Olds Starflre olr cond .• $150.00.-CoLL 446·4225.
PS, PB, new. radial tires,
new Diehard battery, and 1972 314 T Ford pickup,
new point. Prl,ced to sell positive tractiOn rear end,
quick, small V·6 engine. motor good, body needs
Coli 446·1052.
work, S.OOO. Call 446-8508.

77 Trans AM near loan 77
Auto Rep;olr
value $3,600 . Call 446-1136
ROBERTS
BROTHERS
9AM!o8PM.
GARAGE . 24 hr. wrecker
69 Nova 307 cl, Railey service. "B lg or sma II" we
Wheels, good cond., 1500. tow them ell! 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
Phone 446·8061 or 446-3549.
- 4A6-2445 or Night
446·
4792.

1976 Pontiac Grand Prix.
Exc. cond., low mileage,
loaded with extras. Phone Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any color,free pickup
4-411·7736.
&amp; delivery in Gallipolis
area, Hammond Body
1966 Ford Falrlane good Shop, 221 Mi.ll St. 379·2782.
cond . Call992·3743.

10 cubic fl. chesllype
freezer less than 1 yr . old.
Call 446·0232 .

HILLCREST KENNEL Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. Dobermans. Call 446-779S.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
Eng Iish Cocker Spaniels .
Call 4A6-4191.

COOK' S Television
vice,
H.enderson,
Phone 675· 2250.

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675·1331 .
T and
R building ,
remodeling. also papering,
carpet Installation, end
general
home
lm ·
provements. 675-5689, 675·

&amp; v Body -shop want
1976 Mercury Marquis 4 your car looking new? Call
dr ., all extras, good cond .• 4-411·9304 Georges Creek Rd.
e)(tra clean, book $2,-400.
Sell 1.395. { FIrm I . 61 A-667- 7"'8===;;
c ::=
a :;
m:;:
p;:
ln:;:g;====
3085.
Equipment

SERVICES :
Harper ' s
Adult
Core
Center .
"Providing tne personal ;.care your elderly need In a _:
home-like atmosphere."
Call Robert or Dorothy . :
Harper, 675·1m .

Burgandy Monte Carlo 1980 Prowler camper 17 fl.,
Landau, 1976, loaded with fully self contalnt"d, ex.
cond. Call 256-6626, Crown
air . Call247 · 2~11 .
Cily , OH.
1969 Dodge Dart G TS,
asking $1,300. Caii9~9 - 212J. 1977 26 FT. TITAN motor
home, generator, air cond.,
TV antenna. 6 fl.
1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675- awning,
top carier, sleeps 6, 13,000
2722 or 675·5571.
miles . Call . 3671300 after
5:30.
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675- 8' camper lop. 247-2092.
1574 or 675-2881. -

11' !ruck camper lop . Very
1980 200SX Datsun, ex- nice. 247·2092.
cellent condition, loaded,
S6, 100.00 Call304-675·5090.
1978 Fold down Camper
with awing &amp; port-a · pol.
1975 Gold Duster, excellent Coll446-7230.
condition, original paint,
radial tires, new brakes
and shocks, completely 69 YELLOWSTONE self tuned up and front end contained. Phone 304·367·
aligned, 21 mpg, aluminum 3427.
rims Included $1,900 . Phone
304- 675- 18~2 after 5.
1978 Chevelle, very good
running condition . Phone
304·882·2914.
75 Triumph TR7 Hpeed
$2300. Phone 304-773-5351.
1980 Rennaull Le Car 1~.500
miles. $4,500. Phone 30•·
A58· 1006.

8.~1~----;:H;:o:;m::e:---Improvements

FOR BEST In Carpel
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway . Call 61~- .u6·
2096.
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpel Cleaning
4A6·4208

1972 Volkswagen A-I con·
dillon. Phone 304-675-3476.

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACT I NG, Carpentry
work .&amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446' 2787.

72

1980 vw truck diesel
engine, 40 MPG. ex. cond.,
$5,800 firm . Call otter 5:30
PM 367-0694.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car pel Cleaning featured by
liattell Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimate$ .
Call -1'.6·2107.
.1

For Sale 1972 GMC 7500
Plesel dump truck . Call 1·
614·694·7842.

WOODSJ1QP · Cabinets;
picnic· - tables,
porch
S)Nings.- m~t ~ prod\ic·
Is. ·101 Court St., GallipOliS .

2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown's Trailer Park . 99'2·
3324.

Cell~2572.
''
.;;

.

WE"l'HERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, .c all675· 1582,

2 bedroom Mobile HOme In
Racine . 5115. month, 175.
deposit . Pay own utilities.
367 -7811 .

1-9-75_F_or_d_31_4-lon--..,..:"p"'
·,~:-k""'~d
truck, automatic. · PS, PB,
360 engine, air cond. Call
446·2641, 8-5.

12x60 trailer in Syracuse.
air cond .. washer and
dryer . Call 992-2897.

Two 2 bedroom house
trailers for renl, furnished,
1 wlm central air, good for
working couple or couple
with 1 child. 1150 per month
plus deposit. 675-4088 .
2 bedroom mObile home In
N-Heven, adults only, no
;pels. Phone 30A·675·1452 or
m5· 2996.
•
2 bedrOOm mllblle home tor
n!flf. Phone 304-675-3115.

I

beCiioo!n

mobile _h ome,
merrlld ci!UIIIt onl't,._ Nil

=~~"t:' ~f!llone.

78 f7ord ,pickup, 74 .,i&gt;M&lt;:
.PickUp, 60·Ford PICkUPl-75 .
1 Alpine N_a nnv goal ·Cadillac; 76 fion&lt;le motor·
treshld In April !he first cycle, f - ' .. . dOOr lett
slqe for; 74 chevr'ofet. Ce.lt
lime. Call30oi-89HI21.
~-2821.
.
'
Hey·&amp; Grain

YOO ... r~VE
EEEN SPYf/'16

BEFc1 ~E.
O~IVEi\ , EoUT ...

him . (Repeal)

fO? fVE HA.! ~.A! 'Rc
ENVffWNMEHTflLI5TS
t ..1N:
ONE 2F
·• ~~UTr\NTL~
NOTHING ~~E l'f{)I{ST
.,.,
Or?OSEr TO
11.- •'A'"'"=
,j' IMUo- - '~
...
1
tH{)(}STfltiiL
:O'V IR0' .':'r:MAK~

r\Nf' I ri~E

THAP:'

DANCE
IN
AMERICA
·American De nc e F eetival :
Pilobolu..s' This program
presents a performance by the
Pitobolua Dance Theatre ,
taped at the 1980 American
Dance Feati\1&amp; 1, and leatures

M/IIA6E.'

the choreography of founders
Moses Pendleton andJonathen
Wolken. (eo mins.)
BAND

(~0

ALLEYOOP
AHTHREW IT
OUT, LAMAR! AH
AAIN'T NEVI:R
GONNA lOUOI '*lV
O'THET STUFF
AGAIN !

11

E!.._OQ!._8mmino will air.)

IIIJLIJ®J HOUSE CALLS Dr.

8 :00 CIJU Cil FLAMINGO ROAD
EventhoughLaneBallouknowa
aha wililoae Sam Curtis, ahe
rushes to Fielding Carlyle after
he seriously ln.i urea Christie in a
car cruh. (Repeat; eo mlna.)
CJ) 700CLUB
D CIJ ®J THE 188t MISS
UNIVERSE PAGEANT Some of
the most beautiful women in the
world will vie forth a title oiMiss
Universe 1981 from the
MinakoffTheater in New York
City . Host a: Bob Barker and
Etke Sommer. Guest star :Peter
Allen. (2 hra.)

EDWARD'S Backhoe and ;

Dozer Service. Specializing
GASOUNE ALLEY

I don't Ii~e it,
Clovia' This could
qet serious!

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

aDGDDANCEOFTWOCOU~

Fuller ·Electric Co. Com·
plete rewiring, commercial
or resldenllal, and elec·
trical malntalnance, also
on call . Ph. 446· 2171,
Gallipolis.

..

JACK' S REFRIGERATIO· .::::
N . air condition service, · .....,
commercial, industrial. ~ -.:Phone882· 2079 .
Mo'
;.~",
qotus B. Buck Jr. Home , "!
and Industrial Sewing ,
Machine Repair. Also will
trade or sell old or USed
sewing machl_n es. Phone
304·A58·1659.

----------

85

r_
rxr
. .....

.....
""
.,.c ... -· ·- ~ · ..... . ...

~

t
I I I IJ
t

I HELBED
tSOLFIS

Saturday ·s

I

WHA'T 'THE 8055
6AII:7

PLUME!IE~

AI!IOU"l' Hl5 INCOMPE -

iENI

HELPE~.

Now arrange the circled lerters to
lorm the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the abOve cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow )
Jumbles OBESE HABIT DENOTE RAN COR
Answer· Where to Ouy some 6quipment t o prevent
skidd ing - AT A CH AIN STORE

BRIDGE

Return of an old-time hand

NOW I'M REALLY
IN "mOU9LE/ I

:
·
:

Pli()MJ5El7 A!J~&gt;OI.L
OSEOIENCE TO
MARINKA WHEN
5HE SIGNEt&gt; ME

.

:

·

... AND TOCl&lt;&gt;.Y I
PI&lt;OMief't&gt; WINNIE I'D
SEE A PtXTQI(, ABOUT
MV DIET, ANI7 M.ARINI&lt;A
R:Wm~ ANY OUT·

PO I REALLY
LOOK AS

AS

AAQtl' I 'M
PNb~l/6
BETTER!

TO NjY CONTI?ACT!

General Hauling

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery. Call 256·
9368 anyll'l'e,

TRIES: CHINA AND AMERICA
Ben Stevenson , artistic
director of Houston Ballet ,
instrucla the students of the
Peking Oance Academy in
Western dance techniques , in
this film chronicle of one month
of lriendehlp, sharing and
learnina:_ (60 mina.)
tO:OO CllDlll THE LAST CONVERTIBLE George, Oal and Terry
have to no settled into family life
when they are reunited by their
25th claea reunion; there, they
discover that they do r10t yearn
for the i r ~oulh , but have
matured enough to accept the
present and look ahead to the
future. Stars: Bruce Bo.deitner.
Edward Albert . (Repeat ; 60
mins.) (Conclusion)
CIJ MOYIE -(BIOGRAPHICAL)
••• "Coal Miner' I Daughter"
1880
CIJ MEMORIES OF EUBIE
Alberta Hunter, Billy Taylor, the
cast of the Broadway show
"Eubie', and others perform in
this tribute to Jan: great Eubie
Blake. (eo mina .)
t0:25 Cil TBS EVENING NEWS
10:28 (J) CBII UPDATE NEWS
10:30 (J) THIS IS THE LIFE
&lt;Ill NEWS
10:58 (J) CINUPDATE NEWS
11:oo
Cll
llDHl2&gt; •
NEWS
CJ)
PRIORITY
ONE
INTERNATIONAL
(I) URBAN LEAGUE'S NA·
TIONAL CONVENTION 'New
- PStrategiea lor the Changing
T i mes' This yeu 'e theme
examinee the conservative
mood of the country and Ita
impact on Bla ck America, 11
wall a a Reagan's policies on
social
and
international
.
iSiuea.
&lt;Ill OUTER liMITS
!1:28 CJ) CBN UPDATE NEWS
t1:30 {])D(I)THETONIOHTSHOW
' The Beat Of Carson ' Gueate:

rn• rna CIJ

•

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestOne for driveways.
Call for estimates 367· 7101 _

BARNEY

Jones Boys water Service.
Call367-7471 or367·0591.

X !JUst GOT TO
HSVE' ME A BI66ER

DILLARDS
WATER
DELIVERY SERVICE .

~AP

\'IINNIE SAIP

I LOOt&lt;EI7 ?' I

5WE IN~FEREICE!

'HOUSE, PAW!!

.::r NEED
MORE

ELBOW

ROOM!!

JONES ' BOYS WATER
SERVI'CE. Call 367· 7471 or
.~7-()591. .
.
. '
,·

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

could defeat this contract by
leading a club a t tri ck two.
but he continues diamonds.''
Oswald: " East chucks a
low spade. South rulls and
pulls trumps. Then he cashes
his ace and king of spades
and leads a club toward
dummy. II West holds th e
club ace, South will make an
overtrick. But East has that
card and South comes up one
trick shorl of his contract. "
Alan : "Now' let's go back
to the play . Note that we
have been careful tQ give
declarer the d e uce of
trumps . So he only ta kes
three trump tricks . Then he
cashes the ace and king of
spades and notes that Wes t
has dropped the jack. Now
he leads his deuce o[ trumps
and East is on lead. H East
leads a club, declarer scores
dummy's king o[ clubs and
queen ol spades. II East
leads a spade, declarer gets
two spade tricks. Either w ay
he makes his contract."
Oswald: "This was a perfect salety play . Suppose
that Wes t holds that ace of

I NEVER
s.IOOLD
HAVE

.4

+Q 9 6 5

.-..

t 9754

+K s 3 2
EAST
+ 108743

WEST

.3
• J2

• 98 6 5

tAKQIOi 52
Q 10 9

• 3

'+

+A J 5

SOUTH

+AK
. AKQJI072

+J

+7 6 4
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer : West
Wesl

North

East

Sout h

1+
Pass

Pass
Pass

1•
Pass

4•

Openm g lead

+K

clubs . He still makes it . but
South is gomg to make h1s
contract. He will have given

up an overtr ick, but he can
that 30

certainly afford
point loss.' '

~ .. ~tof
lay THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Prosper
5 Bench-warmer
10 FloMda city

5 Oatmeal cak£
6 Bastinado
7 Deliver from
8 The French

12 11AHie" star

one

13 Prodigy
9 Ending for
15 Sitter
!urn or tim
of sorts
II Near
16 French Mver
the mouth
17 French cheese 14 Put on paper
17 - noire
Ill Owned
18 Domicile
21 Vanquish at
19 Seaweed
the polls
extract
24 Corporate
20 Hold it!
symbol
21 - Bator
25 The missus
22 African
27 Medicinal
river
plant
23 Store away
28 Entertain
29 UntMed
30 Opposite
of many
31 Dupe
32 Arab
gannent
35 HWlger
personified
39 Made
of cereal
40 Agitate
U Polisher
42 Ferment

banka, Jr ., June Valli, Or. Paul
Ehrllcll. (R-ot: flO mini .)
CJ) ANOTNal LII'E
(I) II!NNY IGU SHOW
• CIJ Cll LAtE MOYIE
'QUINCr. M.E.: An Ounca 01
Prevention' Aruralconatructlon
worker dlaa of fOod polaonlng
and Quincy dlec;over1 toxic
contamination h11 a pre ad
throughout the entire comm,unl·
ty . (Ropoot) · ' HARRY 0 :
Anatomy Of A Frame' Harry'a
frtand, a P011ce lieutenant, Ia
fi'amitd for murder and tuma to
liarrY for help. (Repeot)
' Cll DAVE AL.t.IN AT ~OE
. IID110Yll •(DRA'itj;)

tDI.

••.Ito

D•Wn 1173
'
AICIIIWI NIGHTLINI
, Anchored bY Ted Kopi&gt;tl.

:

11

11:31 CliiiOYII·(COIIIDYI•••
11
Cofne llow Your Horn"
11183

Yesterday 's Answer
24 Song
topic
26 Victor
30 Governess
or goat
31 The late
Angeli

33 Off (erring I
34 Once more
35 - the
mark
36 Bad actor
37 French

32 Asian

season

river

38 Pilfer

DOWN
I Actress,

Nina2 Throb
3 Joan Crawford film
• Building

ho+-+-t-+-

wing
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Ia

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work It:

One letter simply !tanda for another. In 1his sample A ia
used for the three L's, X ,for the two O's. r tc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and format~on or lhe words are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTI!S
DSK
ELXRK
NXL

WD

DSK

EIZFDLM

AWFDKL

HI

PID

HXPSDXHPWFK

Joan Rivera~ Oougtea Fair·

Mobile homes · moved
licensed, ·and bollded. S16~ ·:
2711 01'615·A391'. .
'

7·20·81

NORTH

Alan: " Here is an old-time
hand in modern dress. West

Amoa Weatherbv ia convinced

he's dying but Ia not prepared
tor a vislttromhia sister and two
couaina . (Repeal)
8:58 (J) CBN UPDA T'E NEWS

Ditcher work. Charles R.
Hatfield, Halfield Backhoe.
Gas. electric, and water.
742-2903.
'

BACK\lOE ana Septic tank
Service . Larry Slden·
slrlcker. 675-5580.

mine .)

8:05 Cil MOVIE ·{DRAMA)""
''SunaatBouleward' ' 1850
8:30 (J)
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
CIJ (j2J ID MONDAY NIGHT
BASEBALL {If I he player'e
strike is alill in effect, alternate

Dozer work. Small jObs a ·
specially. 742·2753.

84

performance·

traveled ! rom all over the
country to play at CarneoieHall.

-=========:=:=== ..
1560.

This

documentary profiles several
young string mus ic ians who

'1

liAY tor ule or trade
callle,·30oi·ASI-10S7.

C1J GREAT PERFORMANCES:

l '" ~·M

&lt;Ill ALEXANDER'S BACHTIME

Cell4~6'7404.

Two bedroom house trailer
on Ashton· Uplend Road .
1150 plus utilities end
damage deposit. 3 miles
from R I. 2. 675-4088.

THAT HE ... riNr

MIV?/1.

- - - ; - - -- - - - - w~. .

l979 Jeep Cherokee Golden
Eagle, ~. oir, radio, tape,
eKcellenl condition. Phone
304·773·5323 .
Trucks for Sale

TOLr ;1\E

in septic lank. 675·1234.

Wonted to Buy

.... .

... I I{ NO!/ '
SIUtD H~\E
TOLIJ YOO r\6CXJT
M~ f:f\OTHE!i

al
Excilvlting
·• .
DOZER WORK Compere ' .
our RATES. Phone 256- ·

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

Pony stud service. For ap·
point men! phone 992·3904.

4077th'a conspiracy to help

D. C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrical, healing,
roofing, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and home painting.
675-3376 or 675·1240.

STUCCO PLASTERING textured ceilings, com ·
merclal and residential.
free eslimales. Call 256·
1182.

Livestock

pressure. but he bridles at the

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

1970 Buick Skylark 350
automatic, runs good,
would make good work car.
1300. Phone 675·3423.

63

Potter knows he has only two
weeks to reduce hie high blood

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 4-411· 3888 or 446· 4477

SYCLE bar mower, duel
wheels tor old and new
mOd ~ l Gravely Tractors.
Phone 30~ - 895·3974.

2289.

SPECIAL

Ill CIJ®l M.A.S.H. Colonel

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

GRAVELY tractor with
mower . Phone 304·458-1880.

Standing timber, 10 acres

•• Amertcan Graffiti'' 1873
(I) !121 Ill ABC COMEDY

EXPERIENCED Mason,
Roofer, Carpenter, Elec·
trlclan, General repairs
and remodeling. Phone lOA·
675-2088 or 675-4560.
82

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
one letter to each square. to form
lour ordinary words.

agreeing to care for hi a

brother'a two young aona while
their parents are on vacation .
(Repeat; 60 mine .) (Closed·
Captioned; U.S .A .)
CJ) AMERICAN CATHOLIC
Cil MOVIE ·{COMEDY!''"

5304.

Quollly Cooling and
Heating Service Call 388·
9698.

or more. Phone 614·63A·

oun

WV

73 Dodge dart sport black
on black cragers, new
tires, J.40 automatic . Phone
304-675·1769.

62

CAioJ FI!HI ME

Ser-

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding . 30
yeBrs experience . Free
estimates . Remodeling.
Caii388-9BS7.

JOHN Deere bulldozer with
heavy duty trailer . Phone
30H75-2088 or 675-4560.

BOAI!.O, At.JP 'IOU

e

6042, Northup, OH .

ldaco Number 10 Dr illing
Rig good cond . Call 4-4118508.

~EMEM8E~ . ~0511"Ao

lfjf\lf.\.ftiD'\t

~ THATSCRAMBLEOWORDGAM£
~ ~ ~~ ~
byHenriArnoidand-BobLee

1

7:00 (J). PM MAGAZINE
(J)
A GREAT DAY TO
REMEMBER
(!)
BEACH BOYS IN
COIICERT
CIJ!I2la FAMILY FEUD
&lt;IJ NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
D (I) TIC TAC DOUGH
Cli (JJ) MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
9NEWS
7:05 (I) AU IN THI! FAMILY
7:30 ( I ) . BULLSEYE
Cil ANOTHER UFI!
Cli.CIJ JOKER'SWILO
(!) HOLL YWQOD SQUARES
Cli DICK CAVETT SHOW
9
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(JJ) URBAN LEAGUE'S NATIONAL CONVENTION 'Now
Strategies tor the Changing
Times ' This year's theme
examine a the conservative
mood of the country and Ita
impact on Black America, a a
wel l ea Reagan 's policies on
social
and
international
. iaeuea.
iR) Ql FACE THE MUSIC
7:35 CIJ GET SMART
7:58 CJ) CBNUPDATE NEWS
8:00 (I) 8 (!) LITTLE HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE Laura and
AlmanzoWUder soon learn they
have made a mistake by

YOU FOllOW IN AIJ6!LA~
SLOOP. IF' A~THIN6
60!~ WRON5,1'LL RAOIO
'IOU _AND JUMP OVER·

20'12.

4'x7' . 247 ·

Antiques

ATTENTION :
(IM PORTANT TO YOU! Will
pay cash or certifit"d check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or e-ntire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches. and
coin collections. Call 557·
3411 .

IYEIIINO

Free esllmates, reasonable - - _
rales. Scothguard; 99:1·6309 . ..., ·

HARPER Halstead, lawn · :
mower · repair and sharpening service, 10 e .m.·6
p .m . 675·5868.

Utility troller

· JULY20, 111111

•.•,..
- --c:----:::--:::-c;ene•s'
carpet Cleaning, •

CONTINIOUS no leak gut·
terlng. custom made for
·your home . For tree
·estimates, coli ADVANCE
'sEA'ML' ESS GUTTER
AND DOOR. 61H98·1205.

refrigerators,

2 Twin maple beds, good
condition, Point Pleasant
304-675·2698.

.~
' .

74

AIR CONDITIONERS
sale priced, all sizes Jn
stock, expert Installation
available. VIllage Fur ·
GOOD
USED
AP · nllu r e, 2605 Jackson Ave.,
PLIANCES
washers, 304-675·1n3.

dryers,

· BLOCK , AND
WORK. Cell 256-

under normal
ground condition. Free
shop et home service. Cell
HI00·62H511 .

televisions, or appliances.

2 bedroom mobile home
10x45 S1400. Phone 30A·675·
1452 or 675·2996.

Farms for Sale

Television
•
•
VIewmg

2 bdr. trailer. tum., gas
and water turn .• 1225. mo .•
1100 dep., no pets. Cell 446·
2 bdr. trailer Roush Lane,
Cheshire, Oh . Phone 1 · 304~
773·5882 .

T h e Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

LAFF · A · DAY

NSIA .

LWFKXPS

Valerday'1 ~110te: TRAVEL LIGliTLY. YOU ARE NOT

TRAVELING FOR PEOPlE ro SEE
PETERSON

YOU. - WILFERD A.

Prison demands
WASHINGTON (AP) - There is a nationwide boom
in priJ;on and jail ronstruction, reports a national construction publication.
.
More than 130 prisons and jails are under construction in 40 states, with an additional :18(\ proposed.
Their total estimated cost is $6 billion.

'•

�1o- The Daily Sentinel

Governor has no clemency plans
DAYTON, Ohio (API - Gov.
James A. Rhodes, saying it should
lie up to communities to decide
whether to pardon a convicted killer,
has no plans to grant clemency to
anyone sentenced to death under
Ohio's new capital punishment law.
" That's old-fashioned for a governor to act as a court Of laSt resort, "
Rhodes said Sunday as he signed a
bill reinstating the death penalty for
certain aggravated murders . " No
one knows when the bullet will strike
next."
The governor's action took place
before abOut :&gt;.50 Jaw enforcement officers at a meeting of the Ohio
Fraternal Order of Police. It gives
the state its first capital punishment
Jaw since July 3, 1978, when a
previous measure was ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Rhodes called on state legislators
to raise the amount of money

available to police and fire pe,..
sloners and to wldllW!I and funilles
of public safety officers killed while
on duty. He aald 15 Ohio peace Officers have been killed In the line Of
duty since 1978.
The bill aUows the death penalty to
be imposed for certain Bggravated
murders, sueh as thnse In which the
governor or a peace Officer, among
others, are slain.
In addition, it WOuld apply in cases
that involve aggravated murders
that occur during commission of a
felony.
Under the new law, a jury which
finds a defendant guilty of a capital
offense would meet to decide which
of three sentences to impose.
It could sentence a defendant to
death, to life imprisorunent with no
parole until after 30 full years in jail,
or to life with no parole until after 20
years behind bars.
The bill will become effective Oct.

Area deaths
Guy F. Gilkey

(Continued from page I I

Also survivej by one son and
daughter-in-law, Albert Westley Fry
and Martha Belle Fry, Denver, Colo.
She is survived by two sisters ,
Katie Gordon, West Jefferson, and
Gladys McClain, Shade; and two
daughter-in-laws Bernice Fry,
Pomeroy and Donna Fry, Rutland.
Fifteen grandchildren and 10
greal-grandchilriren also survive
her
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at
the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home. The Rev . Arland Hughes and
The Rev. Cecil Hughes wiD officiate.
Burial Will be at the Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytune .

Guy F . Gilkey, 79, 39 First St.,
Athens, rued Saturday evening at
O'Bieness Hospita l foll owing a brief
illness.
Mr. Gilkey was bOrn on Gilkey
Ridge in Meigs County the son of the
late Allen and Kalie Howett Gilkey.
He was also preceded in death by
one son. Allen Gilkey and three
brothers .
He
retired from Rose nberg
Salvage Co .. in 1967 following 45
years of service.
He is survived by his wtfe, Blanche Mehl Gtlkey: four sons. Merritt
Of Doylestown : David of Dayton :
Pearl of Donaldsvill e and Gerald of
Colorado Spring s, Colo.: tw o
daughters, Mrs. Walter 1Karen I Mabel Winebrenner
Jones, Athens. and Mrs. Kenneth
Mabel Mae Long Winbrenner, 80,
1Gladys I Baker, Barberton: 13
Middleport, died Sunday morning at
grandchidren and eight great grandReynolds Memorial Hospital in
children : three brothers, Pearl
Glendale, W.Va.
Gilkey, Pomeroy; Harry Gilkey,
She was bOrn Sept. 3, 1900, the
San Di ego, Cahf., and George
daughter of the late William and
Gilkey. Ne w Marshfield; two
Jessie Morris Long .
sisters, Hazel Akers , DenbO. Pa.,
Her husband, Charles Robert Winand Rhoda Lay of Sneed, Fla .
brenner preceded her in death in
Funeral serv1ces will be held
19'12.
Tuesday at I p.m . at the Hughes
She was also preceded in death by
Funeral Home in Athens with the
two sisters and three brothers.
Rev. Edward Morrison officiating.
She is survived by three daughters
Burial wLll be m West Unit Street
and
three son-in-laws : Donna and
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Charles
King, Moundsville, W.Va.;
funeral home today fro m 2 to 4 and 7
Iris
and
Ray Williams, Pomeroy ;
to9.
and Aldtne and Orner Russell, Grove
City.
She is also surv1ved by three
Ethel Mae Fry
silers. Alberta Wise. Sandusky,
Ethel Mae Fry, 85, Rutland, died Ohio : Grace Burns. Portsmouth,
Saturday at O'Bieness Memorial Va .: and Edie Burrows, Ft. Myers,
Hospital in Athens.
Fla .
She was born Oct. 25, 1895, in
One brother-in-law. Dale WinAthens County . She was the brenner. Crestline, and one sister-indaughter of the late Frank and law, Lelah M. Winbrenner, MidSylvesta Crippen Dayle.
dleport, also survive her.
Her husband, John G. Fry, also
Eight grandchildren and six greatpreceded her m death in 1967.
grandchildren also survive her.
Two sons, John James Fry and
Services will be held noon WedAlva L. Fry. preceded her in death.
nesday at the Rawlings-CoatsShe was also preceded in death by Blower Funeral Home, with the Rev .
Rick Reeder officiating.
SIX sisters and four brothers.
She is survived by two daughters
Burial will be at the Cheshire
and their husbands : Artie and Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call 4 p.m . to 9 p.m.
Gerald Reuter , Pomeroy , and Clara
Tuesday
at the funera l home .
and Faye Hovatter. Hillard , Ohio.

Meigs County happenings •••
Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS SATURDAY-Blanche Gibbs, Pomeroy: Joann Weyersmiller. Pomeroy; Beatric Blake,
Racine .
DISCHARGES---Gl en
Ston e,
Mayme Manning , Ruth Gosney .
ADMISSIONS SUNDAY--- Mary
Harbrecht, Pomeroy : Leah
Williams, Pomeroy; Bessie Turley,
Long Bottom.
DISCHARGE5-Clara Th omas,
Alta Dill, Joann Weyersmiller.

Prohibit dumping
Anyone found dumping trash at
the old Rutland dump will be prosectued warned John Miller, Mayor of
Rutland.

Closed W cdnesday
The title office located in the
Meigs County Court House will be
closed all day Wednesday . July 22, in
order for employes to attend a conferenc-e in Columbus, Larry Spencer, clerk of courts, announced
today .

e

19. But backers say that executions
may not occur in Ohio for months or
even years after that since opponents of capital punislunent have
Vhed to challenge the statute In the
courts on constitutional grounds.
After Rhodes signed the bill Sunday, the American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio aMounced it was launching a campaign to repeal the
death penalty.
Ohio ACLU Executive Director
Benson A. Wolman said the
organization's board of directors
would meet later this week to map
campaign strategy.
He said the effort would focus on
the courts, the Legislature and
public opinion, and would be in concert with other organizations, including the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peuple,
defense attorneys and church
groups.

Suspect
victed and would get the maximum
sentence.
Agea, described by police as a
cool, self-&lt;lisciplined gurunan who
had ties to right-wing groups in his
native Turkey , insists he acted alone
in the May 13 attack in St. Peter's
Square.
Prosecutors say they have no
evidence of a conspiracy. But police
say they are convinced someone
helped Agca, perhaps by financing
his travels around Europe and North
Africa after he escaped ·from a
Turkish jail in 1979.
State prosecutor Nicolo Amato
said he would call abOut 30 witnesses
after Agca finished testifying. Most
of the witnesses were in the square
during the shooting.
The pope, who is still hospitalized,
has not been asked to appear as a
witness or to give a deposition, legal
sources said. He is recovering from
a virus doctors say may have been
contracted from the massive blood
transfusions given him after the
shooting.

i

.

-

ea

Postal

'

'

WASl-UNGTON (API - A federal
mediator said Tuesday there was no
settlement in the Postal Service contract talks despite announcement by
two unions that tentative agreement
had been reached on a new threeyear contract.
" There's no agreement here, I've
still got people in there talking,"
said mediator Nicholas Fidandis
less than two hours after union
leaders said they had headed off a
possible strike by half a million
workers who move the nation's mail.
Fidandis declined to comment on

••

SIGNS DEATH PENALTY LAW- Ohio Gov. · peD811y In Oblo. Tbe slplng lOOk place before a
James A. RHodes signs a bUl relllstallllg lbe deatb oieellllg of !be Ohio Fratel'llll Order of Pollee Ill
Daytoo today. (AP Laserpboto 1-

Two persons were injured in a
Sunday afternoon traffic accident in
Meigs County, accordJng to the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the state highway patrol.
Orville W. Marks, 33, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Murl Wood, 83,
Pomeroy, a passenger, were not
treated at the scene for their injuries.
The patrol said Marks reportedly
went left of center while makmg a
tum from Scipio Twp. Rd. 282 onto
Twp. Rd . 5 at 2 p.m. when his car
collided with a vehicle driven by
Mary D. King, 52, Pomeroy.
Moderate damage was reported to
bOth vehicles and Marks was cited
for improper left turn.

the statements by the Postal Services two largest unions and then
asked reporters to leave the downtown Washington hotel suite where
he said negotiations were continuing .
A settlement had been announced
by Moe Biller, president Of the
American Postal Workers Union, in
conjunction with Vincent Sombrotto,
president of the National
Association of Letter Carriers, via a
tape-recorded telephone service for
union members.
Both union heads said they

One hurt, one cited
The Middleport Police Department investigated a car-motorcycle
accident Saturday at 5:09p.m. at the
intersection of Locust and Broadway
Streets it was reported.
Roger D. Williams, Dock St., Middleport was traveling north on
Locust and turned onto Broadway in
front of a motorcycle driven by Fred
Priddy.

First word of the collapse came
from federal mediator Nicholas
Fidandis, who emerged from the
. ~argaining room to tell reporters
waiting for the formal an nouncement of a settlement:

In case uf slrike ...

,-------------------------~

ELBERFELD$
JULY CLEARANCE
~

Saves You Plenty
on All Summer Clothing
·For Everyone In Your Family.

''·

'

•

• 'c,

NEITHER RAIN NOR SLEET NOR THREAT OF
STRIKE - Postal Service employees at the Los
Angeles Terminal Annex Station continue to work Moo-

day night as tbe Initial deadline lor a strike passes.
Negotiations between tbe Postal Service and its two
largest unions were scheduled to resume Tuesday. I AP
Laserphotol .

Tooiv

mmmiN THE WO lD
SALT LAKE CITY - A judge Monday postponed until Aug. 31 the
first-degree murder trial of avowed racist Joseph Paul Franklin, who
also received his seventh set of court-appointed attorneys ..
At Franklin's request, 3rd District Judge Jay E. Banks relieved Phil
L. Hansen and his son, Steven, as Franklin's attorneys. Hansen had
told the former Mobile, Ala .. resident that his daughter was acquainted with the family of one of two men Franklin is accused of killing .
Franklin, 31, is charged with the sniper slayings of Ted Fields 20,
and David Martin. 18, while they jogged near Sa lt Lake City's Liberty
Park in August.

on

City proud of Miss Universe
GERMANTOWN, Ohio - Even if she isn't Miss Universe, the folks
in this sma ll southwestern Ohio community say they're proud of hometown entrant Kim Seelbreede, who was Miss USA.
Miss Seelbrede, a 2G-year-old blonde who models in the Dayton area.
claimed the Miss USA title in May. Her parents and brother and sister
were in New York City with her during the past week for the Miss
Universe pageant.
"A lot Of people really (here\ thought she would go all the way, "
Mrs. Bender said late Monday night. "But three of us who work at the
Heritage House (variety slorel said if she ~ot into the top 12, we'd
bepleased.
. "I'm speaking for the whole town when I say we're proud of her ."

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Can't identify fingerprint
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A criminologist for the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and Investigation says a fingerprint on a
phony telegram found next to the body of slain millionaire Con.•tantine
"Dean" Milo is too vague to identify.
John H. Olenik, testifying Monday in the retrial of Frederick Milo,
said his department could not identify the faint fingerprint. Prints of
the victim as well as others - including Fred Milo, Dayid E. Harden
and Jolm Harris- were used in identification tests, he said .
Harden, 22, of Dayton, Ky., could not be found before the first trial,
which ended in a hung jury. He testified last week that he was paid
several hundred dollars to kill Constantine Milo.

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CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery'$ daily game '·The Number" was 130, The lottery reported earnings of $345,488.50 on its d.aily game "The Nwnber." The earnings came on aales of S8*J,413.50, w'!ile holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $534,925,lottery officials aaid .
.

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Bank
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Weather
Considerable cloudiness with a chance of showers or thunderstOITIIIl
today ending this evening. High in the low 111111. Partly cloudy tonight.
!Aw arOund 60. Mostly sunny W,~y. High 75 to 80. Ci)ance of
ra1Ji 50 percent today, 20 percenttuilight and nea~ zero Wednesday, ·
•
Olllo Emwled F'-.t
.
Oblo eslellded foreeul -'l'llllndlly u..qll Saturday. ~tit 1'11111'
•Y IIJid Friday. A. ellllle Ill 1bc wen.....,_, HJcb Ia tile In to mid
.., Liwlla tlielljlperlll uid In . . Tllli fry IMftllltiellll Iaiiie •

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Some area mail subscribers
to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Pomeroy Sentinel and Point
rteasant Register will still be
'able to receive their newspapers
if there is a postal strike.
Copies of tho newspapers will
be delivered to local stores and
post offices in the region. Subscribers can pick up their paper
by presenting a mailing label
from one of their previous copies .

NO DEAL - American Postal Workers President Moe BUler holds a
copy of a tentative contract which was offered to tbe union signed by U. S.
Postal Service negotiators. BiDer and postal union negotiators announced
tentative agreement early Tuesday morning, but tbe agreement fell
through shortly afterward when union leaders claimed a discrepancy in
tbe written agreement. The unions refused to sign the offered agreement
( AP Laserphoto) .

The executive boards of the two
· 1 : :TI)ere' s no agree ment here . I' ve
still gut people in there~':·.. __, . unions voted unanimously Monday
Postal Service officials were not night to reject out of hand a Postal
immediately available for com- Service wage offer extended just
hours eC:~rlier .
ment.
" This offer adds nothing except to
Despite stnke threats. the Postal
Service reported attendance was further insult 500,000 postal
normal at most post offices for workers ." said Biller.
Sumbrotto added, "We know we
predawn shifts and higher than norare right and we know the employer
mal at some facililies .
The Posta l Service said the public continues to provoke a nationwide
could expect "bl!Siness as usual" at strike."
Postal officials. however, said
the nation 's post offices in the event
of a strike. A contingency plan in- they expected to reach a settlement.
Monda y night's management
cluded suspending the Postal Service monopoly to let private com- proposal would have produced lower
panies deliver letters and calling out cost-of-living raises than had
more than 100,000 military per- previously been offered but would
sonnel, including national guar- have included small annual wage increases, Biller and Sombrato said.
dsmen and reservists, to sort mail.

Renewal levy put onNovember ballot

Judge postpones murder trial

Served with: Whipped
· Poatoes. Chicken Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and

in motion our telephone network,"
he said.
" Tift, tenns and conditions .. . were
discussed at length" in a caucuS
with top union policy-makers, Sombrotto said .
ll was at that point that " serious
questions about it" arose, he added.
"Then we returnejl to the bargaining
table. When the wage proposal was
presented, we noticed there was a
serious inconsistency with what we
had agreed to" orally.
"We don't v~ew it as a misunderstanding ," Biller said.
The union leaders refused to
elaborate on the discrepancy.
The unions had said the
agreement would continue unlimited
cost-of-living protection and provide
base pay raises of $750 per worker
the first year and $600 in each of the
next two years. It also would
prohibit any employee from being
forced to work more than 10 hours a
day for five consecutive days, the
unions said.

Winning Ohio lottery number

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thought they had a reached
agreement about 2 a.m. EDT on a
tentative three-year contract.
They had announced tbat to the
unions' rank and file on a taped
telephone message and even recommended ratification, but five hours
later Sombrotto said : " We are now
in a position where we don 't have a
contract."
"At approximately 2 a.m. , we
made an agreement. We brought
that, down to our rank and file and
our executive bOdies for their attention and ~pprova l .. . and we put

May was eastbound and tried to
swerve from the oncoming vehicle
when the accident occurred, the
report said.
Troopers said Jacob J. Melvan, 47,
Gallipolis, was not injured in a o~
car crash on Fairfield-Centenary
Road Sunday.
.
The report said Melvan was northbOund at 4:10 a.m. when his
vehicle went off the right llide Of the
road hit an embankment, weri~
acr~ the road and Off the left side;
finally striking a fence owned by
Harry R. Pitchford, Gallipolis.
'
Moderate damage was listed to
Melvan's vehicle and no citation wa~
issued.

The patrol investigated three
minor accidents In Gallia County
over the weekend .
Troopers said two vehicles, one
driven by Larry G. Duke, 40, Patriot
Star Route, and Charlene D. Batey,
36, Rt. I, Northup, reportedly
sideswiped each other on BaggsLincoln Road, one mile south of SR
n5, at 7 p.m. Saturday.
No citations were issued, the
patrol said.
The patrol went to CR 56 at 7:15
p.m. Saturday when 11n auto driven
by Lawrence May, 30, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
collided with an unknown vehicle,
wllich left the scene after the
collision.

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Two hurt in Meigs accident

For Just

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1 sect1on , 11 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. July 21,1981

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Emergency runs

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!

enttne

Voi.JO , No .os

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

EVERY ttnSDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

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Copyrighted 1981

AnnOdre, 56, of Buffalo, N.Y., one
Of the two women wounded in the attack, refused to return to Italy to
testify.
There was no word whether the
Priddy was taken to Veterans
other injured woman, Rose Hall, 21,
Memorial Hospital by the Midwould testify. A former resident of
dleport ER Squad.
Shirley, Mass. she is now living in
West Germany .
Williams was cited to court for
The trial is expected to last less
than a week. But if it is not finished failure to yield right of way .
by Aug. I, when the court takes a
month-long summer break, it will be . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - recessed until September.

Nine calls were answered by local
units over the weekend according to
Meigs County Emergency Service.
Saturday at 5:09 p.m. the Middleport unit was called to a carmotorcycle accident near the pool.
They transported Fred Priddy to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: al7 :22
p.m. the Middleport squad was
called to Rutland Street for Carl Still
who was treated at the scene: at 1:57
p.m. Sharon Roseberry, Apple
Grove Road was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Racine
Squad: at 8:21 p.m. the Rutland unit
treated Diana Carman.
Sunday at 7:'1:1 a.m. the Racine
Squad was called to county road 28
for Mary Circle who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center: Racine
again at 4 p.m. for Rex Justice,
Bashan Road, to St. Joseph
Hospital: Rutland at 8:32 a.m. for
Robert Dailey, Happy Hollow Road,
to Holzer Medical Center: Rutland
again at 10:14 a.m. for Ora Carsey,
Pagetown, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: at 4 p.m. Tuppers Plains to
lndain Run for Arthur Dalton who
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital.

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By KATIE CROW
PomeroY CouncU Is encouraging
payment of delinquent parking
tickets.
Monday night council agreed to
accept $1 payment for delinquent
parking tickets rather than the $2
payment until Aug. I. A parking
ticket is delinquent after 24 hours.
After the deadline. persons failing
to pay delinquent tickets cou ld be
charged up to $25 plus costs.
The action is to increase revenue
and to clear the books of all
delinquent parking tickets.
Council, in other business, agreed
to place on the November ballot a
renewal one mill levy for a five year
period, proceeds of which will be
used for street lighting.
Council also agreed to draw up an
ordinance to increase the fine on
charges of an open flask from $50 to
$100.
At the suggestion of counciiman
Harold Brown, council will direct a
letter to the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Division 10, Marietta, requesting an additional light on
Nye Ave .. allowing a right turn on

red.

...

It was reported thai the road un-

der the bridge has been repaired for
traffic, also four culverts have been
placed in the area .
Council also agreed to place two
high sodium lights at the former
sedior high school that is bemg
remodeled for a city building.
Counci l at the recommendation of
acting police chief, George Stitt,
hired Don Snyder as a part time
police officer.

..

Meeting with council was Charles
Legar, fire chief, who asked council
pay for painting of the inside and
outside of the fire station at a tota l
cost of $700. CouncLI agreed .
CouncLI also agreed to change the
heating system in the fire bay from
electric to gas with three overhead
heaters. Council asked that Legar
submit specifications in order that
the job may .be advertised .
Bill Snouffer asked councLI to Improve 35 feel of Ross Street that joms
Wehe Terrace to which council concurred.
Jake Koebel of Columbia Gas in-

fonned council the local gas company office located in Middleport
will close Aug. 6. The office will be
moved to Ganipolis.
Residents will still be offered the
same service as in the past Koebel
said. Residents may still pay their
bills at Swisher and Lohse in
Pomeroy, Dutton Drugs in Middleport, and Ridenours at Chester.
PROGRESS NOTED
Kim Shields, grant consultant. informed council that work on the htgh
school is progressing very well and
the FmHA is evaluating the fmal
drawings on the high school
bui lding.
Shields said no problems exist at
the present time and things seem to
be working smoothly.
Shields did suggest that council
continue input mto programs for
possible future grants through HUD .
However, he could not guarantee
future grants through HUD as it
depends on what action is taken by
the state.
Shields introduced Chuck Mann of
Engineering Associates who informed council of the various projec ~

it had been involved in and what it
could offer the village in the event
council would like to change Jrom
the present engineering finn of
Burgess and Niple .
..
A report showed that durinj,(tlie'
month of June 1,0911 parking tickets
were issued and $2,690 collected
frumthe parking meters .
L'

Steve Hartenbach. meterman, infun ned council that for the first two
weeks in July 635 parking tickets
were issued and $696 collected from
Ihe meters.
The Mayor's report for the month
of June in the amount of $2,017 was
accepted.
Larry Wehrung, councilman is a
patient at St. Jospeh Hospital,
Parkersburg. following a head injury he sustained in a fall at his
home it was reported.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Mayor Andrews. Attending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
Walton , clerk, Betty Baronick, John
Anderson, Harold Brown. Bruce
Reed and Bill Young, council members, Chief Stitt and Donnie Ward .

Southern board okays deficit budget
Southern's Local Board of
Education Monday nig~t approved a
deficit budget for 1982.
The budget, which shows anticipated receipts and expenditures,
1s submitted to the county auditor
for approval. At the end of 1981 the
district will show a deficit of $83,659
and at the end of 1982. a deficit of
$267,712. However, included in the
budget expenditures are expenses
such as roof repairs and purchase of
buses.
If money is not available, the
necessary repair will not be done.
However, it is necessary to list all
anticipated expenses even though
they may not materialize and which
automatically increases the ex-

penses to the point where the budget
does show a deficit.
The board, in other business, accepted the resignation of William
Hensler as teacher and head football
coach. ·
The board, following a lengthy
discussion, decided to elimmate
Hensler's position entirely on the
basis that other teachers could take
over Hensler's teaching load. Hensler earlier had been named head
coach replacing Howard Caldwell
and Mick Winebrenner who shared
the post last fall .
As for the head football coaching
position, it being eliminated.
The board agreed to place the football program under the jurisdiction

Police check two accidents
Pomeroy police investigated two
accidents, including . a hit-skip.
recently.
Leland Kirby, New Haven, W.Va.,
told police a truck hit his car
sometime yesterday, but did not
stop.
Pollee later found the truck and
impounded it, but the drlv~ has not
yet lleen i~entified.
;tctrby's car suataihed damages of
\Wer$150.
. ·
.,A lifO vehicle wreck on Route 733
at lleacon StaUon Saturday morning
· left one car with moderate damages.

Ridllrd Coleman, uttle Bcittom,

...-..waltlnll 'at • stop sign
I

to

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tum

left, when a !ruck driven by Robert
L. Wood, Racine, hit the rear of his.
car.
Coleman's car received over $150,
while Wood's truck was undamaged.
A theft of gasoline was reported at
Sugar Run Mill Monday night.
Polce say sometime during the
night someone cut a gas line on a
truck parked at the mill, and
•
drained the gasoline.
According to police reports, a
bicycle was stolen from the Derenberger residence in Pomecoy
sometime Monday night.
Pollee are investigating the incident.

of Frank W. Porter, a Pomeroy Attorney and Darrell Dugan
In other action, the board named
Ruth Stearns as head teacher at
Syracuse Elementary for the 1981-82
school year.
The bOard also employed Barbara
Beegle as a teacher for the 1981-82
school year and Linda Grindley wa s
hired as a cook at Letart Elementary for three hours per day.
The bOard accepted bids for dairy
products, bre11d, gas, nil, and equipment. Persons wishing to review the

1J1d~ C:tre invited to do so by corr
ta l' tin~ Nancy Carnahan, treasurer.

The board approved an int·apacitation pulLey for the superintendent and the treasurer.
Attending were Sue Grueser.
president. Don Sm 1th, vice
prestdent, Denny Evans, Shirley
Johnson and Charl es Pyles, board
members . Bobby Ord, s uperintendent, and Mrs . Carnahan. The
board will mc.ct a gain in regular
session un Aug. 10., at 7: 30p.m.

Marietta woman
dies in wreck
An 18-year-old Marietta woman
died as a result of injuMes suffered
in a ·one-car acci(Jent in Rio Grande
Monday night.
Julie M. Price was pronounced
dead of head injuries at Holzer
Medical Center at 12 :17 a.m. today.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Prjce was
driving west at 10:30 p.m. on Lake
Drive in the village, two-tenths of a
· mile north of SR 325, when she apparently lost control of her vehicle.
· The car then went off the left side
of the road and into a ditch, overturning.
,
Two passengers were in the car
when the accident occurred.

Terri J . Wilson. 19. Pomeroy , was
apparently not treated for injuries
suffered in the accident, and Dawn
Church, 18, Cheshtre, was taken to
HMC by the Gallia EMS, where she
was treated and released for
bruises.
Wilson and Church ·are registered
as students at Rio Grande College. 11
was not known if Price was
registered as a student yet at the
college.
EMS personnel were reportedly at
the scene for over an hour trying to
extract Price from the car's
wreckage.
Funeral arrangements had not yet
been announced this morning.

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