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                  <text>Expos head NL
all star squads

Rockets draft
Ralph Sampson

Page 3

Page 4

Voi.32,No.54

Rib fractures

•

enttne

e
Cop,........

Family Medicine:

2 Sec:tiont, 14 Pages
20 C.nh
A Muhi'J".dia Inc . Newspa~r

Pomeroy-Middlep.ort, Ohio, Wednesday, June 29, 1983

ttl3

1984 budgets show deficit spending

c:::~~.--..

By KATIE CROW

The Saving Place •

Smtlnel !Uif

Based on estimated receipts and expenditures
Meigs County will operate In the " red" In 1984
according to the budget cornpUed In the office ot the
Meigs County Commissioners.
However, county commlssioners Indicated the
financial pictUre could change by the end oftheyear as
necessary cuts In departmentai requests will be made
to keep the county In the "black."
Anticipated receipts In the general fund for 1984
shows a- balance of $1,4ai,991Mi0. Departmental
budgets sulmltted show a balance of $1,643,665.10.
With the departmental budgets submitted the general
fund would have a deficit for 1984 of $23!1,214.44..
The law requires that anticipated budgets be
sulmitted to the county auditor by July 1. The budgets
will be at the office of the auditor after July 1, for
viewing. Commissioners wUI.adopt the bldgeton July

Ou• hom '~'""""" •• !o&gt; ~ave eve') lilt. ..
lOUd q~.., .n ~toco Qll "'-'' oN&gt;'""" ft 1 n
ac_,,,_,. olem •I ~QI ~'"laDle to- .,"'
cnao~ ~~~ rn an~ ur ro•eoeen ·•~•o" ·
~

man w«&gt; ,,~,.., •

R~o n

n·.,c• "" •OQ..-ol

""''r""""''" '·-""' '"'" o• •uoon

101 " '"
lii.m I• IIU"'tll\ I lr&gt;nt&gt; r"" n ~,"&lt;l .l!l ....

~al~ "'"'" "' ••·we• •volldlll~ " ' ••I '~''
1W • C\.OT&gt;II&lt;OI~I~~ ~u~h• • 1~m ol" ' ' ''"' "

••llle rewtt""'"' ~' '' "

Roomy 12x12' Screenhouse
Fire-retardant polyethylene. 7'6" center height, 5'10"
walls. 2 zipper doors; free-standing metal frame.
Mfr. May Vary.- Said In Sporting Goods Dept.

12.
Richard JollES said if this is the actual situation by
Jan.l ol1984o!!Ice holders can lookfmward to a budget
cuto!$234,214.44.
If the anticipated budget is adopted by the first of the
year the foUow!ng departments will show deficits:

welfare department, $325.1~; county highway,
$184,1)», T.B., $25,897.98; emergency medical transfer
service, $3,527.69.
Most of the budgets swnitted by the various
departments were up over last year. The county
auditor budget was up $7,1)», !he commissioners had
an Increase of$37 ,(XX), this Included hiring a consultant
grants admlrustrator tor the county at a cost ofsal,mJ.
and $5,mJforengtneering fees for the Tuppers Plains
project.
·
Common pleas court up $21,00); probate court was
down from $25,mJ to $22,mJ as was juvenUe court:
prosecuting attorney's o!!Ice up $1,500; treasurer's

oHice up $2,1XXJ; clerk of courts up $8,mJ county court
up S5,1XXJ; board of elections up $6,mJ, sherll!'s
department up $6J,mJ, $45,mJ of the Increase is for
salariy Increases for employes and the automatic
salary Increase for the sherrttf. All county officlais
have an.automatic Increase In salaries.
The recorder's olflce up $7,mJ, county home up
$5,1XXJ; mental retardation down, $5,mJ.
Jones also added that it was not unusua l to cut
budgets. Last year's projection showed a deficit of
s~.mJ.

Jones said "The board of commissioners will be
fiscally responsible In January and all cuts needed to
be made to brlng department budgets in balance will
be made. WewUl not operate ih the red ."
The determination, as to whether the county's
general fund budge! shows a deficit or not Is based on
the auditor's estimated receipts for 1984.
DaVid Koblentz, president, reported appUcation for
a littler control grant must be submitted to the Ohio

Department of Natural Resources by July 29. A gran I
up to s:JX),OO is available to the county.
Larry Hunt of Abundent Life Coa l Co .. requested a
variance along the landfUI road for thP purpose of
constructing a sediment pond. The commissioners
agreed as long It was 100 fl'l't from the road and no
closer! hat :jO feet.
·•
Hunt was questioned by mmmlssloners and Phil
Roberts, county engineer in regard to the recent
damage created to munty road 30 near Forest Run
Mine. Hunt said the company would resurface the
road. There wUI be a meeting Thursday with Hunt,
Roberts and Manning Roush. commissioner to work
out details.
Asphalt bids for July were submitted by Asphalt
Materials, Marietta and Mar-Zane, Zanesvtlle.
The board accepted the bid of Mar-Zane for mixing
grades and primer and scaling bids from Asphalt
Materials.

Housing -bids
under review
ByCHARLENEHOEFUCH
Sentinel stall

Groundbreaklng for the construction of the $19 million senior cillzens
and handicapped housing complex · on Mulberry Heights is expected
sometime 'this In July.
Richard Jones, president of the Meigs County Elderly Housing
Corporation, reported Tuesday six bids on the HUD project have been
received and will be ~ by corporation officers with Fred Schwab,
architect, at Its July 6 meeling,
. At ·that time, unless something unforeseen happens, a contract will be
awarded. Construction will begin Immediately afterwards.
·
Bids on the project came from Northland of Columbls, $1,489,1)»,
Candlelight Corporation, ColumbUs, $1,550,00); M.&amp; T. -Construction,
Gallipolls, $1,598,700; Wallick Construction, Columbus $1,617,1)».
Schnippel Construction, Botkins, $1,619,500; and Wesam Corporation,
Pomeroy, $1,762,(XX).
Funds available for actual construction, excluding engineerrlng, design
work, and furnishings, total $1.6 million, Jones reported.
The housing project, sponsored by the Meigs County Council on Aging.
has been named "The Maples." It will have 46 units for elderly and
handicapped residents and will Incorporate the old children's home.
Sixteen of the units Including a two bedroom apartment for the manager
wUl be In the children's home ruUdlng while 30 units will be In the attached
new brick and stone three-story structure.
,...
Enclosed walkways on each fioor will connect the old biDding to the new,
and an elevator will be Installed to open on all threefioors. Slxoftheunits In
the new buDding will be speciflcaUy equipped for the handicapped.
A large community room with an outdoor patio will be on the first fioor of
the new structure along with a laundry and spedal activity room .
On each floor there will also be smaU areas for gathering or sitting along
the halls.
WhUe the century old, county owned, children's homewW be renovated,
the basic architectural design will be retained. The buDding has been
accepted for registry In the National Register of Historical Places.
The parking area will be on the south side of the complex with the
entrance between the medical buDding and the front of the old children's
home.
Housing appllcatlons are currently being taken at the Senior Citizens
· Center. WhUe the housing Is subsidized, It is not free, Eleanor Thomas,
Center director, advises.

c~

Price

Ptn1ati httorer
Helps· restore colc;&gt;r,
Shine. 16 ft. OZ. Save:

careter;a s~ecial
8(1-6. 12)

•

12.97

I gallon Chi Con
Sturdy metal. With
vent, nexlble spout.

•

Ea.

Monro·Matlc'"Shockl

Sizes for many u.s.
and. foreign cars.

2.29

I· oz.· Chopped Beefsteak
With Sauteed On ioi'!S, .~Qtatoes,
Vegetabl!!t, Roll,.l""er ·:.
Thull. fhru Sot. Onl'y

AvoHoble Qnly 11"1 Sl'ote•s Wlth Cal. lei'IO

!l!l'I!IICe canmlttee deliberations on
Gov. Richard Celeste's $25 billion
budget bill are off to a slow start.
But leaders of both the House and
Senate expressed optlm1ml Tues·
day that the two-year spending plan
will be on the governor's desk by
Friday, the start of the 1983-1985

biennium.
In brief, separate sessions Tues·
day and ]'Uesday night, the Six·
member committee agreed on
about IIW dalen relatiVely obscure
. provisions In whatlsexpectedtobea
cunprunlse package.

But major 1~ such as builness

taxes, IChool llmdlng, I'I!OI'plllza·
tlon at twoi!mbattledstateqencles,

and other matters were ten on a
blck burner for mtt!tbijS which
were cartlnutng today.
Thecanmitteeofbu'DeiiiUCIBt.l
IIIII two Republicans - h!flectlni
Dei•w• aile COJI!rol of both
cllllnben -a&amp; \Aild a Senate plan
IJDIIII: Which the llall! wiD hql pay
the tullloa 1:1 certain ltudlatl at

Ohio'• private coue,e. and
IIIIM!nltles.

housing

~'UfJlplex

for lhe elderly 1111d handlcllJlp&lt;.'ll Is

_._

__ -

to get
/'~

Emission controls force electric bills up
By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP!Uif

to cut sulpher dioxide emissions
eight million tons by 1900.
Some environmentalists have
Identified these emissions with acid
rain, which has reportedly contami nated lakes and rtvers in the
Northeast and Ca nada. kllUng
aquatic life.
Dowd and E E 1 spokesmen repeatedly emphaslzl'd that sulpher
dioxide emissions from coal-fited
Midwest powerplants havenot been
positively linked to acid rain In the
Northeast.
''1bere is just not enough Informa tion available," Dowd said. AEP
has · already cut emissions at Its
plants 25 pem'ilt, he said, with no
discernible effect on acid rain.
AEP olflclals estimate StaUord's
bill would cost the company $5.1
billlon to Implement.
"Do we 110 out with this multi-

billion program that may not havP
any perceptible benefits?" Dowd
asked.
Most of the costs ol such a
program would have to he passed to
consumers, he said.
Increases In electrtcc bills would
vary among AEP 's eight utility
companies depending on wha!
would have to be done to meet
standards, according to officials.
Customers of Ohio Power Co.
would see the largest rate Increase
because of the cost of Installing
scrubbers at the company's Gavin
plant .
Dowd said reliable Dgures show
costs of $!IX) million to Install
scrubbers at the plwtt's two units.
Officials note that Gavin's 1,300
megawatt units are the largest In the
world and, correspondingly, produce a . large amount of sulter

Fair memberships $6 apiece

l

cxp&lt;.&gt;ctA~I

!'ftderway In lale July or early Augu._'it.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Electric bills In Gallla wtd Meigs counties
will rise between 6 and 38 percent If
power c&lt;xnpanles are forced to
drastically cut emissions at coal·
!Ired gmeratlng plants, utility
spokesmen said at a news conferenceTuesday.
The staggering cost of lilting the
Gen. James M. Gavin generating
plant In Cheshire and other plants
with emission controls would cost
the average Ohio Power Co.
Under the propos8J, students who
residential consumer an additional
are resldentso!Ohloandcandldates
Sel9
a year -a 38 percent Increase.
for bachelor dqrees will become
officials
said.
eligible for a$eirolultiongrantlfthey
Residential
customers of Colwn·
·opt to attend a private school,
bus
and
Southern
Ohio Electric Co.,
starting In ihe fall of 1984.
the
company
which
serves the
The budget bill contains $5 mUUon
Gallla·Melgs
area,
would
pay an
to unde2write the subsidies. Sponadditional
$76
each
year,
an
sors said the assistance Is needed to
Increase of 6.2 pertent.
help close an ever-widening gap
1be figures were released T!ies·
between tuitions at prtvate and
day
as part of a nationwide
public institutions.
tele-news
conference sponsored by
In other actiOn. the committee
Neither lnfiation nor unemploy.
the
Edison
Electric Institute, a trade ment have affected the price of
went almJ&amp; with a Senate proposal
wl!lch delaya the start of the association of Investor-owned elect- membership tickets to the annual
ltatewkle wOrkfare Jll'08I'8I'I - In . ric companies. EEl officials In Meigs County Fair - they'll be
wl!lch wel1are cllelita woric for their Washlniton answered questions going again this year at S6 each.
heneftta - unW September llllll. trun reporlel'll across the nation,
'The membership tickets for the
InCluding Huntington, W.Va., Via
Varloul county pilot prolects would
1983 fal,r have been distributed to
contbwe In the Interim, howl!ver. attellte hookups.
numerous Meigs County business
Afterward, A. Joseph Dowd, houses and a ticket entitles the
The committee ICI'Bpped a Senate
amendment wblch would have aenlor vice-president of American purchaser to tree parking and free
l'l!ltniCtllred Obto'• barberlni laws EJectl1c Power, held a similar news gate idmluion for the entire five
and OKed a prqlOII] n!lllaCinl the cm!erence In Columbus. Both Ohio days and nights ctthefalr. Persons
advllory COUDCII 011 won- witb a Power and C&amp;SOE are part of the Interested In rldlng on the midway
AEPII)'stern.
mteCommllllon 011 w~
can pay S2 a day and ride all they
IndultJy lellden fOIICII8ed atten· wWI. In addition, purchue Of a
Roue !1PeU« Vemal G. Riffe
Jr., [).New ap.ton, and Senate tim on 1 llll1 currently betOf!! membership Ucket entitles the
PleJJdeDt Harry Methel, D- Qqreu - spoiiiOred by Sen. blyer to wte for directors of the
YOIIJIIIIDWD, aid IIIey belle Ire !hi! Robert T. Stafford, R.·Vt. - which Mlep CQUnty Agricultural Society
would 11orte utDJttes In the M)dwest which annuallY llaaed the fair. This
bulfpt will be pe IIF ' 011 time.

Celeste budget bill
deliberations off
'to slow beginning
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Con-

AIICHITECI"S DRAWING- Construction on this $1.9 miUlon 46 unit

year's fair wtll run from Aug. 16
through Aug. ro.
Membership tickets can be purchased pt the New York Clothing
House; 'Green Lantern, Pomeroy;
Middleport Departl]1ent Store;
MOler Brothers Grocery, Rutland;
Wald Cross Sons, Racine; Baum
Lumber Co., Chester; Sugar Run
Flour Mill, Swisher·Lohse Pilar·
macy, Five Points Grtll, Pomeroy;
Nita Jean Ritchie, 'nippers Plains;
Glueckner's Restaurant In Pomeroy; Puncan'a Grocery, Route 681,
Darwin; Clay's Shake Haven,
Chester; Helen Baer Store and D.
J.'a, Syracuse, and Dorsel Larkins,
Long Bottom.

dioxide emissions.
The AEP figures an• J:&gt;&lt;H1 of a
24-company study conducted by the
EE l which sutvcyed the e&lt;'Onom lc
effects of lhe Statford bill on
Individual utilities In thai study,
O hio Power Co.'s rate lncreaS&lt;.'S
were the largest of !he companies
partlrlpaUng.
Dowd guessed thai acid rain
legislation has a 50percent chanceol
being passed by Congress sometime
next year.
But Instead of a law further
restrtcting sulfer dioxide emissions,
Dowd said AEP would support
legislation that would req4lre an
accelerated study or how Midwest
power plants are related to acid rain
In the Northeast.
"I think we're finding that loca l
sources play a much greater role
than previously believed," he said.
Within three to four years
scientists should know If sources In
the Northeast cause much of the
acid rain problem there, Dowd said.

W ealher forecast
Mostly cloudy. Scattered thunderstonns. High, 8&gt;-85. Mostly cl!Judy
with a chance of thunderstorms
tonight. Low, 65-70. Cloudy with
scattered thunderstoiTIIS Thursday.
High, 82-86. Chance of rain: 40
percent today, 40 percent tonight
and 40 pen:ent Thursday.
Ohio Exttmded
. Frida,)' lhroulh SWiday: ehanee
of lllultlenJionn. F'rlda.v. Fair for
lhe w I •d. HIP., 8H2. tow.,

85-71.

�CommentaJ'Y

W;dnetdav. June

~ ,...,.....__,._..,..,~c:::::l .....
~v

ROBERT L. WI NGE'IT
PuhiiMher

. PAT WHITEHEAD

,

.

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DI!VOTEI&gt; TO THI! INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AHEA

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manarer

i\w"l"hml Pubi!Mht!r/ (_:ont rolle r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol The Alwocluted Pl'e!foi, Inland Dally Pretl8 A.'fiOClatkl n llDd the
...bnerirnn Nf'W"f)aper Publliiherw Association.

' • I.EITE.IL~ OF OI, INION ~ welcomt.&gt;d. 'lbey 11hould be letN~ lhiUI 300 word.111on111.
, l\l.lletkrs arc subjcd to edltlnR Md m!J.!!t hr Rlgned with name, addre8l!i and teiepikme
hllftlher. No umilflC(I letters wtu be publl.&lt;1hed. LetterM Mould be ln good taHte, a.ddrftt.
i!driK" M~ not pl'I'MOnaiJtlei.

Indefensible spending

Il you need a measure of black
antagonism toward tbe Reagan'
adlnlstratlon, read on.
In early June, a group of black
Republicans · told President Reagan's political people that admlnlstratlon policies have created a ·
"vt!llgeance vote" In black Amer·
lea. The black Republicans said
that It will be Impossible to explain
or defend the Reagan program to
black Amertca and complained
that the Wblte House has created
antagonism toward the president
among blacks. They said the
administration accepts that antagonlsm as afactofpolltlcalltfe, taktng
no steps to refute or disprove II.
The administration denied that It
Is hostile toward blacks, but
admitted that It has not had black
Americans In mind when It was
devised Its policies. It argued that It
has trl.ed to restart tbe economy by
unleashing capitalism and that, It It
sueceeds, blacks will benefit with
all others.

: : After months of Intense public debate and delicate behlnd·the-scenes
negotiations, Congress Is on the verge of adopting a budget resolution
sponded that the tree market
e~llng for a live percent Increase In defense spending next year.
The black
tolerateRepublicans
practices that
re·
That re presents only half of the 10 percent Increase Insisted upon by cannot
threaten
a
sizable
segment
of
the
the White House- but adoption of the lower figure wUI hardly be a serious
population purely because of Its
s~tback for President Reagan and other advocates of profligate mUitary
raee. That marks tbose people as
spending.
Obscured by the coni roversy over the extent to which the defense enemies, the black Republicans
said, and leads them to plot your
tiudget should be expanded next yea r Is the !act that a m asslv" mllltary
removal.
buildup already has been funded through "xtraord lnary Increases In
Those dusky members of the
recent years .
In a series of actions unprecedented In modern non·wartlme years, the Grand Old Party spoke lor no more
than 10 percent of black Americans
P-entagon's budget was Increased by 14.7 percent In 1981,9.2 percent ln 1982
whO vote. But their alienation
'!!'d 4.8 percent In 1983. Because those ligures are compounded on a
means
that the other 90 percent wt11
cumulative basis, another five percent Increase would mean that the 1984,
register
their frustration with great
military budget will be 38 to 40 percent higher than the comparable 1980
vigor. A look at that frustration, and
figure.
the reasons why It exists, appeared·
Moreover, the supposedly modest additional fiv e percent Increase
a week after the "vengeance vote"
would have virtually no Impact on efforts to reduee federal budget deficits
Issue surfaced.
which are likely to soar to unmanageable levels In future years.
.The U.S. Commission on Civil
. The various spending formulas embraced by the White House, S..nate
Rights, und"r attack by the pres!and House are surprisingly similar- and all are substantially higher than
the $243.9 billion and the S..nate (whose figure Is likely to be closest to ihe
amount fin a lly approved ) proposed $270.6 billion.
Thus, on every working day of fiscal 1984 - five days a week, all 52
weeks of the year - the Pentagon will be spending more than $1 billion In
pu blic fund s.
WASHI NGTON - Three years
Much of tha t Is earmarked for major weapons systems whose sales
enrich the country 's defense m ntractors but do little to enhance the ago, the United States and the
Soviet Union maneuvered danger·
na tion's security.
.. Among the !oglea I ca ndidates for cancellation are these weapons ously near the edge of war over
systems c ited by the Cent er on Budget and Polley Priorities and the Center Ira n. I have pieced togetber the
suppressed story from news trag·
for Defense Informa tion:
; - The Army's AH·iil attack helleopter which has limited ments , secret documents a nd
Interviews.
m aneuverability but will cost $637 million next year.
It beganon Aprtl25, 1980, with the
, - The Army's Division Air Defense Gun, a flawed weapon that has
bollixed
attempt to rescue Amerl ·
consistently· fa iled· performance .tests.. but .wllkost $293 million next year.
·can
hostages
from 'Iran. The ita~
~ The Navy's F 1A·lB jet fighter and the Air Foree's C-5B cargo
after
the
disaster
In the desert ,
&lt;(lrcraft , bot h planes plagued by mst overruns . The F/ A·I8 wUI cost $1.6
wrttes
former
National
5e;curlty
billion nex t year while the C·5B will cost $378 million next year.
Adviser
Zblgnlew
Brzezinski,
"I
In addition , there are numerous other weapon systems - Including the
Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle, the M·l tank, the UH·60A helicopter convened a m eeting In my office, on
apd the Aegis cruiser- whose abandonment would save billions of dollars. the Instruction of the President, to
An Air Force study completed earlier this year shows that the costs of plan another rescue mission."
The bantam Brzezinski had
such weapons systems are consistently underestimated . As a result , the
Oefense Department either will have to seek future massive Increases ln always argued not only for a rescue
f!indlng m· abandon almost one-quarter of all weapons systems raid but a lso lor a larger, punitive
military assault . "The actions that
acquisit ions scheduled during the next live yea rs.
:. The first victim of those Inexorable Increases In weapons systems made the most sense to me," he
recalls, "Involved seizing Kharg
~ost s has been the Defense Depa r1ment' s opera tions and maintenance
Isla
nd , Iran's main oll·export facUaccount s - the funds which are vital for sustained milit ary readiness
lty,
and
Impos ing a naval blockade,
because they pay for thP fixed cost s of opera ting the armed serv ices.
possibly
combined with some air
· Prior to 1982, the O&amp;M share of the tota l defense budget always
strikes."
e,?&lt;Ceeded the pol1 1on devoted to procurement- but now that relarlonshlp
In the strictest secrecy, Intense
has been reversed a nd the unhmlthy trend almost certainly wUI be
preparations
for a second mission
9xacerba t.e d In the future .
·
·
Although they cla im to be committed to enhancing national defense, began at training camps from
the president and othe r Intransigent proponents of a misguided and Florida to California . But ther"
unrealistic spend ing progra m may actually be undermlnlrg the country's
economy and It s milit ary strength .

'

dent for Its sober, factual criticism
of his programs, let loo!!e another,
salvo. In mid-June. Using public
data It llad obtained only after
tbreatenlng the Wblte Hous.. with a
subpoena, the commlsslon Issued a
report showing that Reagan had
apPointed about .. two-thirds fewer
blacks to h(gh-leel federal positions
than bad President Carter.
The report sbow!!d that 16.1
percent of the judges appointed by
Carter during this four.year term
were black and 15.1 percent were
women. In the first two Y&lt;'ars of the
Reagan . administration, only 2.5

percent 'or judicial appointments
were black and only 8.3 percent
woml)n. '!be commission said that
only 4.1 percent of Reagan's
!ull-ttme appolnt..es w..re black,
eompared to 12.1 percent under
Carter.
.
Joining til&lt;' commission majority
was chafr!nan Clarence Pendleton,
the black Reagan appointee from
San Diego.
In late May, President Reagan
!Ired only black woman On the
eommlsslon, Howard University
professor Mary Frances Berry. He
would have also removed a white
woman, JW RuckeiShaus, It be had

not just hhd ~ husband, wwta,
to replace tile woman he'd !Ired as
adnifntstrator rJ. the Environmental Protection ~.
Replacing Dr. Berry and two
other cornmtsslonen - who had
been vigorous In di!taUing the
Reagan ctvU rJghts taU~~- wW be
threE&gt; nominees whO tBcribe ~
S~?lves as Democrats. That~le,
slllce the party has no I" "' 011
the Issue that attra&lt;:ted lilt!!!\ to
Reagan: affirmative actbL A.ll
threE&gt; oppose the laws wblcll ~
I &lt;&gt;gal - that Is to say, CQilSt1tutJout
- sanction to that series rl.
remedies lor discrtmtnatlon.

;~~~2~!~!~~~~~~~~~~~
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••, ... .,...

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Berry's World
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" lam READY for 19841"

'foday
in history
..
.

:1'oday Is Wednesday, June 29, the UWl day of a!J. There are~ days

left In tbe year.
:-roctay's highlight In history:
June 29, 1966;' the United Stat.e s bombed North VIetnam's capital of
Hanoi and the port of Haiphong for the first lime during tbe Vletnain War.
On this date: ·
·
, .In 1811), .France took eontrol of the South PacHic Island of Tahiti.

:On

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.j,

~·

were leaks . In early May 1980, Time
magazine quoted Egypt's Presldednt Anwar Sadat as saying , " I
have promised the American people that I shall give facUlties for the
rescue of the hostages." And
Newsweek quoted "a senior adminIstration official" whO also discussed a new rescue attempt. " I
think," he said, " It will be OCtober
or. November before the factors are ·
favorable as they are now with
respect to wind, temperature and
length of night. "
The Russians, It turned out, were
not' fooled. our National Securtty
Ag..ncy Intercepted some secret
Soviet message. It was clear from
these lnterceps that the Kremlin
was tully aware of what was
happening . They ev&lt;&gt;n had know!·
edge of the liming. Some cables
referred to the Impending U.S.
action In Iran as an " October
coup.''

The Kremlin reacted by shifting
men a nd ·materlalfrom Europe lo
the edge of Iran and deploying half
of Its Afghanistan forces close to the
Iranian border. This formidable
array of men and equipment

Included the crack 100th Guard
Airborne Division - 8,000 tough
paratroopers who went Into Afgh·
anisian first and seized the Kabul
airport.
Clearly, the Soviets were preparIng for a military confrontation ln
Iran. But was this merely a bluff to
deter tben·Presldent Jimmy Cat1er
!rom taking military action against
Iran?
·
·
Cart er asked the Defense Intelllgence Agency to "study and report
on possible Soviet military reac·
tlons to various scenarios ln which
the United States forces have
Invaded Iran. " Back came a
warning that the U.S. action likely
would l ead t o a nu c l e ar
confrontation.
On the way to the president 's
desk, the nucl..ar reference was
mysteriously removed from the
DIA's response. But what remained
was sobeting enough. Carter was
told that the Spv les could be
expected to retaliate with a major
air and ground assault . Still , he
didn't even slow his milit ary
prepara tions .
Every president Is entitled to

secrecy in matters of national
security. But Carter's top military
advisers feared he was embarked
on a course that could result In a
de bacle so lnextrtcable, a prospect
so dangerous that they resorted to
desperate measures. They slipped
classified lniormatlon to me about
Carter's plans.
- The question of publjslilng this
classified material was the ihomler
because It d&lt;'alt with mtlltary
preparations still In progress. Butln
my reporter's presumption, I felt It
a duty to alert the public about the
president's omlnlous actions.
So on August 18, 19&amp;1, I began a
seles of columns about Carter's
secret preparations for an October
action In Iran. " The ostensible
purpose," I wrote, "Is to rescue the
hostages, but the operation would
also exact military retribution ." I
referred to Kharg Island as the
most llkely target of vengeance.
The White ·House Issued the
expected denial, howling In outrage
at my "grotesque and absolutely
·
irresponsible" stories.

Goldwater's quarantine.____w_ill_iam_A._R_us_h_er

NEW YORK tNEA)- " Lite Is a
long discovery, , Isn't It?" write
Hilaire BeUoc In on" of his most
famou s poems:
"You only get your wisdom bit by
bit.
II you have luck you flnd In early
youth ·
How dangerous It Is to tell the
Truth."
One of the reasons Barry GOld·
wat.. r never became president was
that he failed to make the Important
dlscov"ry . F ortunately, the voters
of Arizona keep sending him to til&lt;'
Senate anyway, so for lJ years this
country has had the benefit of his
blunt truth-speaking on subjects
that nobody else In pubUc lite would
touch with a l().foot pole.
Recently; on "Faee the Na tlon, "
S..n. Goldwater was at It again. It
there Is one thing thfs eountry Is
united on, It Is the proposition that
American forces must never be
sent to Central America to block the
communlsi·backed guerrUias who
are battling for control of a whole
area. President Reagan flatly
pledged as much In his rec..nt
address to a joint session of
Congress - and rec..lved a blp:u11·
san ovation for doing so.
Nonsense, says Barry Gold·
water. "If I were the president .. I
would say, 'If It becomes nec..ssary
to save Central America, we WOI
use our troops, our alrcratt, our
forces.'' It's that Important. " ,
Let there be nil doubt who has the
eurrently popular side of this Issue:
Goldwater Is deep In the minority.
Every opinion poll on th subject
• Indicates that Americans OYet'whelmt.niiY oppo~~e the commit·
ment of U.S. troops to combat In
Central America, even .If the

alternative Is communist control of continues through s uch staging· openly, with a request tor the
El Salvador, Honduras and Gua· areas as Libya and (above a ll)
necessary approval and a careful
temala, as well as Nicaragua . This Cuba, and then crosses the Gulf of explanation ot the probable conse·
Is, of course, a by·product of our Mexico to Nicaragua, whence It quences If a pproval was denied.
grim experlenee In VIetnam. And finally reaches Its destination. I! the That would leave the final decision
for conservative political leaders United states were to declare a up to the representatives of ~
like President Reagan there Is a . quarantine on all shipments of people, and It they wlthbeld th"lr
further and equally Important military supplies to Nicaragua, and approval the stage would be set tor
consideration: Left-liberal spokes- enforce It with U.S. nava l and air a continuing debatP. on American
men have been casting almost power guided by our Intelligence policy, punctuated by a series of
desperately for a fresh Issue, and facilities, the guerrilla Insurrection commu!IISt sluccesses coming ever
nothing would suit their purpose ln El Salvador would dry up and closer to tbe Rio Grande. Sooner or
better tlian "another Vl,.tnam." It come to an end very quickly Indeed. later, American public opinion
Is as safe a bet as anything ln
But would any American admln· would swing around to supporting a
politics can be, therefore, that lstratlon ever have the political quarantine - a nd people would be
Goldwater's proposal will get ex- courage to propose such a thing? saying, n(!t for the llrst time, that
actly nowhere until the 1984 elec· Possibly yes provided the Barry Goldwater was right after
lions are safey over.
proposal was presented to Congress all.
Thereafter, however, common
sense on this wjlole subject might .
just conceivably begin to assert
Itself - and not only annong
L0 oK ON TH&lt;:! BRiGJ.JT gjiDe . Dio)(iN l&lt;iW~D
Republicans but among realistic·
aNY BacTeRia iN THe WaTeR, Toxic
. minded Democrats as well.
In the !trst place, as Goldwater
pointed out on "Face the Nation,"
the particular type rJ. Intervention
that would probably be required
woUld not lnvolv" U.S. ground
forces at aU: "We would start with a
quarantine: quarantine to make It
possible to eornpletely stop suppu..s
flowing Into Nicaragua and EI
Salvador. We could use aircraft, It
that became necessary," .
Goldwater Is pointing out there a
vital .difference betwef'll the sltua·
lions In VIetnam and Central
Amertca: In VIetnam, the eomrnunlst forces were supplied overland,
by raU and ultlmall!ly truck, down
the HI Chi Minh Trail, from a
communist heartiand not tar away.
El Salvador, on tbe other hanc!..ts at
the eDd of a long and preeartou.s line
of supply that begins In Russia,
~

FuMe5 SoLVeD ouR TeRMiTe. PROBLeM,
aND THaNK8 To RaD oN Gal&gt;, NOTH ING
eveR §PoiL~ iN THe ReFRiGeRaToR.

-

•'

Philadelphia In the final week of
NEW YORK (AP) - It wW be a to!&gt;' heavy wtnnei'S at their positions.
CecUCooperofMUwaukeetraUed
balloting. He !In !shed with 879,078 to
veteran American League AII·Star
Carew
at
Orst
base,
with
681,967
700,UXl'for
Garvey, whO was second.
team headed by perennial piCks Rod
votes
to
tbe
Angel
star's
1,901,334.
Smith
beat
out Cincinnati 's Dave
Carew at first base and G&lt;'Org&lt;&gt;
Callforrua's
DougDeCinces
finished
Coneepeion.
MVP
of tire NL's 4-1·
Brett at thtrd base, against a
behind
Brett's
1,7(8,344wlth697,936.
victory
last
yea
r.
for
thP shortstop
new-look National League squad
No
player
had
a
larger
plurality
with
1,389,063
to
512,00.:
f-·r the
job
with three Orst-tlme starters ln the
than
Yount,
tbeAmertcanLeague's
Reds'
star
.
50th anniV&lt;'rsary game July 6 at
m05t valuable player last Y&lt;'ar. U .L .
OZZIESMITH
ANDRE DAWSON
Chicago's Comiskey Park.
·st.I.Guts
Washington
of Kansas City was
MOitltftal ·
California's Carew was s..lected
second
at
that
position with 441,750.
for the 14th conseeutlve Y&lt;&gt;ar and
TrtUo
wrote
some
All-Star history,
Brett of Kansas City won his eighth ·
first
player
selected to
becoming
the
straight election by the fans ln the
the
starting
team
ln
eonsecut
lve
Ali·Star balloting sponsored by
years
lor
different
t..agues.
Last
Gillette.
Joining tbem ln tbe AL's Infield year he won the closest election In .
aresecondbasemanManny'l'rilloof Ali·Star history, beatlngSaxbyl.625
the Cleveland Indians, who started votes to earn the starting seccnd
this game lor the National League base job tor the NL. This time, he
last year when he played for the won another close race, totaling
Philadelphia Phlllles, and shortstop 790,343 ballots to 685,138 for Jim
Robin Yount of the Milwaukee Gantner of Milwaukee.
Lynn led au AL outfielders with
Brewers, who led all players In the
1,007,005
votes while Jackson reballoting this year with 1.956.964
ceived 1,002,715 and Wln!leld
votes.
1,0W,547.
Ben Ogilvie of Milwaukee
Named to the AL outfield were
finished
fourth with 856.632. It
TIM
RAINES
Ca lifornia's Fred Lynn and Reggie
ALOLIVER
GARY CARTER
MIKE SCHMIIYl'
marked
the
third Ali·Star selection
Montreal
Jackson, along with DaY&lt;' Wlnft,.ld
Montreal
Phtladelpllla
Montreal
for
Winfield,
!Uth for Lynn and lOth
of the New York Yankees. Ted
for
Jackson.
Simmons of MUwaukee won the
Slrrunons, who was the starting
NATIONAL LEAGUE ALLSTARS - 'lbe8e starting squad for next wook's AD Star game In
starting catcher 's job.
National
League catcher In 1979
National League players were named '1\Jesilay as the Chicago. (AP Laserpltolo).
----·---The NL starting llnrop Includes
----STA M..-· IU- - - - when
he
played
lor
St.
Lou
is,
four plaY&lt;&gt;rs from the Montreal
received 9-16,264 votes to S'M, 741 for
Expos- oultlelders Andre Dawson
-------d --the runner·up, Lance Parrish of
and Tim Raines, first baseman AI
-I'(;
Oliver and catcher Gary Carter . Detroit.
Ca rter led ihe NL vote with
Oliver, shortstop Olzle Smith of St.
1,457,843,
outdistancing Darrell PorLouis and seccnd baseman Steve
S..ars tripped the Middleport turns on the mound for New Haven victory ov"r Salem Center.
ter
of
St.
Louis,
who had 9~.367 .
fanning nine, walking 10. and giving
Other Pom..roy hitters were Sax of Los Angeles are the first -time
Mustangs 14·1 as Jason Wright
Sax,
the
1982
NL Rookie of the
up 13 hits.
Reuter and Taylor with hme runs, starters. The other NL starters are
went the distance fanning 10,
Year
and
only
!lrst·year
NL player
Terry Reuter had two doubles,
Jeremy Heck a triple, a nd Shawn outfielder Dale Murphy of Atlanta
walking three and hurling a
selected for the Ali·S!ar game last
Hawley a double. Terry McGuire and thtrd baseman Mlk" Schmidt of
no-hitter along the way. Robbie · Robbie Fields, Shawn Hawley,
year,
was an easy winner al seccnd
John Haggy, Jason Wright, and M.
had two s ingles lor .Salem Center Philadelphia.
Fields had a grand slam home run,
base with · 1,019,881, bea ting Joe
Managers
Whitey
Berzog
of
the
·
Buncll each had doubles. .
and Jones singled.
while Wright homered, Chase
Morgan of Philadelphia, whO had
again
kept
Its
perfect
Kevin Taylor was the winning National League and HarVey Kuenn
Pomeroy
Cleland tr1pled, Shawn Hawley
668.192.
string Intact with a 9.0 shut.·out win
pitcher with relief from Reuter. of the American League will name
tripled, Terry Reuter singled , and
Oliver won the cloSPSt NL race,
over the Mason Cubs. Wright was They fanned 12. walked seven, and the pitching staffs and remaining
Kevtn Taylor singled.
Starting Fridayovertaking
San Diego's Steve Gar·
the winning pitcher with relief from
gave up three hits. Jones and Terry members of their 28-man squads
In another rampage Pomeroy
vey,
Keith
HernandPZ
of
the
New
Burt Reynolds In
Kevin Taylor. They combined for 13 McGuire teamed up for 10 strike later this week.
S..ars skinned the New Haven
York
Mets
and
Pete
Rose
of
"Stoker Ace"
Carew, Brett a nd Yount were all
strike outs, no walks, and two hits. outS, six walks, and 15 hits .
Yankees 12,1 durtng local pee wee
league action.
Kearns suffered lh&lt;' loss. Shawn r--~------~--------------------------------------~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~
Hawley and Robbie Fields each hit
Wright was again lh&lt;' winning
home runs, Ertc Heck tripled and
pitcher In five Innings of work,
Wright doubled.
gaining relief from T.. rry Reuter.
Jason Wright hit for the cycle to
The duo combined lor 13 strt~e outs,
lead Pomeroy S..ars to a 17-4
six walks , and allowed just one hit.
Garner, Wood, and Harboun .took

Rl Tl iRN', ;',, IH)I

Summer league results given

Brink of war______--:--------.,.-J_a_ck_A_nd_._er_so_n

''

Carew, Brett head AL squad; ~
four Expos lead NL team

29~ 11183

Measuring t~e feelings __· ~--J_ul_ian_B-,--ond_

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Middleport, Ohio

2-The Daily SentiiWI
1\!oiNI'Of Middlepaot, Ohio
Page

TIME TO

KEEP YOUR COOL

·RE-ROOF
-~._

Hickel 20 lap whiner at Hilltop
MARJE'ITA - Local driver
Benny Hickel has waited nine
years, bul'the walt was well worth It
as he charged to victory In I be :D lap
late model feature at Hilltop
Speedway here Sunday evening.
Hickel's fine driving has always
placed him ln top finishes over the
years and Sunday was no exception
as the local hot shoe bested th"

entire field Sunday. Hickel's clo~st
eompeutor was Jack Boot ·who
placed a distant second. '
' Mirnih,pori;s M11re French also
put on quite a diSplay by claiming
another win for the locals by
winning his heat race . In the Super
Late division Earl Hill triumphed
over Tom Amos, Butch McGill,
La'r ry Bond, and Gene Adkins.

0

FAN

Jr.InlncarN~U.
the hObby

stock division
Ravenswood's Junior Abk!s came
oH the tall In another exciting race

passing the entire field to win the
feature In that division.
Pomeroy 's Benny Hick e l
stormed to a seeond plaee Onlsll,
over Steve Shav"rs and Jack Boot.
Benny Hickel made It another line
evening by driving to victory In the
last car dash.
Phil Davis of Galllpols led 191aps
of tbe Street Stock feature but fell
shon on the last lap as Bob Keith
sUpped by on tbe Inside to claim the
championship ln that division .
Following Keith across the line
were Davis In the elghl·ball special,
Terry Toncray, Mark Dickson,
Donnie Kennison, and Marc French
of Middleport. In the fast car dash
for Street Stocks the lead changed
hands live ttmes as Terry Toncray
posted wht win . Phil Davis was
second and Marc French third.

MASON W.VA.

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" AI The End ;_, the Pome10y-Ma_, Brid"
~-

~

STARTS THURSDA
JUNE 30TH AT 9:00 A.M. .

There will be a "Crazy Golt''
outing for rnt&gt;n and lady golfers at
lh&lt;' JayMar Golf Club July 3
beginning at 4 ·p.m. Ladles are to
bring a covered dish and all are
asked to bring their table servtce.
Meat will be provided at the club.
On Monday, July 4, the JayMar
men will hold a two-man best baD
playoff. Tee times are from 8 a.m.
to I p.m . ,For further Information
call tbe club or sign up as a two-man
team. Prizes tor low III'08S and low
net with handicap will be awarded.

sHINGLEs

DAIRY VAu.EY

SPRING &amp;. SUMMER
. ·

•

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Crazy golf outing sel ·

At The Ma11111
Vol. File Dlpt.
l!wfy Wul 11 d!IY
At7:CIOP.M.
"4 11.-ER IOIIUS"
."5 UIClY IAlLS"

I'

PI(:KENS 'HARDWARE

Meigs racers in -g ood showing
STEW ART - In his !lrst outing of
the season Larry Bond h"aded the
local contingent by claiming the 25
la p Mid-season Championship for
Super Late models at Skyline
Speedway.
Bond came off the taU and locked
Into a torrid battle with Racine's
Gene Adkins as both battled wbeel
to wheel for most of the race.
Bond, a second generation
driver, claimed the win ov"r
Adkins, J. C. Hoffman, Racine's
Scott Wolfe, Jim West. and Hllton
Wolfe, Jr. The llrst five finishers
received trophl"s along with their
winnings for tbe evening.
In the super late last car dash J.
C. Hoffman engaged In an early
battle with Steve AI'ITil'ntrout, then
sailed to victory over Scott WoHe In
car 14, and teainmate Hilton Wolfe,

WITH A
WINDOW
OR BOX

I ,

MATERIALS COMPANY

M11on •.W. Va.

Ph. 773-5554

'·

�·Pon~eroy

Rockets tab Sampson
for 01ajor transfusion
NEWYORK(AP)-TheHouston pect to become a multlinmlonaire In
Rockets, ln desperate need of a the next few years.
winners' transfusion, are getting a
"!just need a roof over my head,"
sizable dose of successful players.
Sampson added . "I'm not going to
Ralph Sampson of VIrginia, the buy $100,001 of this and $100,001 of
rare college player who is heralded that."
as the beginning of an era even
McCray was not a big scorer for
before he plays a professional game, Louisvflle - he averaged U.O per
and Rodney McCray of Lou Is ville game his senior year -and Houston
were chosen by the Rockets as the passed up thechancetotakeseveral
first and third picks of Tuesday's players who scored· twice that
Nationa l Basketball Association much. But he Is considered a
draft.
"team" manwhowfllrebound, play
The Rockets finished 14-68 last defense and pass the ball to
season, but lnSampsonandMcCray Sampson Inside.
they took two players who are used
While Sampson was the "reward"
to walklng oH the floor a winner. for having the worst record ln the
Virginia was 112-24 ln Sampson's
four years at center, whUe Louisville
was 110.26. Including a national title
Boston pounds Indians
ln 19m.
Houston had known since May 19,
Tony Armas belted a two-run
when it won a coln flip with Indiana,
homer to pace a 13-hlt attack that
that It would be able to take Included six doubles, two by Carl
Sampson with the No. 1 pick . Now,
Yastrzemskl.
!hi' next step for the Rockets Is to
Armas blasted his 17th ln the fifth
sign the 7-fooH three-time colleInning as the Red Sox scored five
giate Player of the Year.
runs to pin the loss on Rick Sutclltfe,
Sampson, who turned down 9-3.
several lucrative oHers In recent
Boston got off to a bad start as
years so he could graduate, Indi- Cleveland had a 3-1 lead ln the fourth
cated that he l' not Interested ln
Inning and was threa tenlng to get
breaking the Rockets' bank.
more when Mark Clear came out of
"The money factor is not that the bullpen.
big," he said. "II money would have
.Clear did not allow a hit until the
meant something, I'd have been a
eighth and finished with two-hit
pro a eouple ofyears by now."
relief In 5 1-3 Innings to raise his
Nevertheless, Sampson can exrecord to 2-2.

round.
The Cleveland Cavaliers chose
three Ohio college players: ClnclnnaU forward Dwight Jones In the
fourth round, John Carroll guard
Jolm Columbo In the seventh round
and Xavier forward Jon Hanley ln
the lOth round.
An Xavier teammate of Hanley's,
guard Anthony Hicks, went to. the
MUwaukee Bucks In the seventh
round.

mixed doubles, has captured a
record 20 Wimbl edon
championships.
On Tuesday, King's battlescarred legs and accurate volleys
carried her past giant-killer Kathy
Jordan 7-5, 6-4 and lnto the
Thursday's semi-finals. There, she
will meet third-seeded Andrea
Jaeger, a 6-4, 6-1 winner over No. 11
Barbara Potter.
Last year, King also reached the
Wimbledon semt-flnals, -delighting ·
the fans crowded around the courts ·
here and millions more who
watched on television, before she

was ousted by Chris Evert Lloyd.
This time, Lloyd Isn't around,
having been upset ln the third round
by Jordan.
"I thought I would have an early
exit against Beth Herr (ln the second
round), so I never thought I'd be ln
the seml-flnals," King said. She got
by Herr6-7, 6-2,8-6, theonlytlmethis
year she has been forced to go three
sets.
"But I think I've gotten this far
because I have worked aU year on
my serve and my backWard and
forwa rd mobtuty, which I think are
the most Important aspects of my
game on grass," she said. "My only
two goals this year are Wimbledon
and Team Tennis."
· · Thursday's other semi-final wUI
pit top-seectect Martina Navratllova
against South Africa's Yvonne
Vermaak. Navratllova, who has yet
to lose a set In this tournament,
continued her domlnallon by bludgeoning Jennifer Mundel of South
Africa 6-3,6-1. Vermaak eliminated
37-year-old VIrginia Wade of Britain, the 1917 Wimbledon singles
champion, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2.
In the men 's qu;uter-flnal
. matches Tuesday , third-seeded
Ivan Lend! of C""'hoslovaklka
ousted Roscoe Tanner 7-5, 7-6, 6-3,
whlle New zealand's Chris Lewis
stoppedMeiPurce116-7,6-0,6-4, 7-61n
a battle of unseeded players.
The women's final Is scheduled
for Saturday and the men's flnalwfll
be held Sunday.

Hagler-Duran
fightNov.8
NEW YORK (AP) -Undisputed
worldmlddlewelghtchamplonMarvelous Marvin Hagler will defend
his title against Roberto Duran In

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..

. 'I

DEFEATED
Kalby Jordan of lhe United S1a1e8 gives her
racquet a look as It lies on u.e ground durintJ her Ladles SintJIIlll
quartef'flnal match agalnsl BIDfe Jean KlngTuellday a1 the Wimbledon
Tennis Championships In England. King went on to win the maleh,
advancing to lhe semi-finals. (AP Laserpholo).

November.
Boxing promoter Bob Arum said
that Hagler signed the contract
Tuesday ln Brockton, Mass .', 'where
he lives, for the 15-round bout Duran
onNov. S.
Hagler Is recognized as champion
by the World Boxing Association,
the World Boxing CQUncll and the
United States Boxing Assoclationlntemational. Since the bout Is
scheduled for 15 rounds, there was
doubt that WBC)YOUid recognize the
bout The WBC now limits Its
championship fights to 12 rounds.

:o n
l2 :w

"'"""'""

32
II

Nt'W York

Pt.t. GR
. ~1

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.13

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3
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31 -H
1\letlda;y's Gllmt!ll

San ~
Clne!Mall

~ '7
~~

.486
.1185
.464
• .458

Zl -H
WEST DIVIiiON
l..o5 AnpWs
46 :!6
Atlanta
+1 :ll
. San Fnmdst-o
.11 l5

.493 10 '7
.'i lJ 161-S

. Chkago 8. Pltt.sOOrgb 7, 1l ~~~~
Montreal 5, Phlladclphl&lt;~ ~- 1st game 11
Innings, pp1 . rain
Montreal at PhUIIdrlpllia. 2nd ll:arTif'
ppcl. , rain

NEow York »l Sc. Louis t-8
Clnclnnlltl S. San Francis«:~ &lt;&amp;
Hou.ltoo 4, Atlanta 3
w. ~

9. Sao D... 5

·W~ aGanteK

Piti!ibui'Rh

tBibby

Chk~

at

.1-11

tRuUwen fo-51
Houston tNit&gt;kro 4-61 at Atlanta tDayiey
1-01 , I n\

San Franl."bco 1Krukow" ~o-41 at Clnctn·
nat! t8emly1 +Bl . tnt
Montreal IRoit'r's 10-3 and Sandl'rson -1·
!'i l at PhUadelphla tCarltoo 8-8 and Hudson 1 -~1. j nl

Nt"W York !Swan 1·41 a! St . Lools tHagen 2-h , tn l
Loe Angt&gt;les t~almzUP!a ~ i at San
Otego t'Illurmond 0-{1 6r Sosa {)-I). tnl
~a Games

THE TOPS - Ralph Samp&amp;on, left, of the
Uillverslty of VIrginia IUid - Steve Sllpanovlch of
Mlsaouri shake hands after they were picked number
one and two fe!lpectlvely In the National Basketball

ground balls."
Theil; In the ninth Inning, with the
Giants' Darrell Evans on first base,
Reds second baseman Ron &lt;lester
booted a ground ball hit by Joel
Youngblood putting two men on.
Rain halted the game 12 minutes.
"&lt;lester's luckY he's aUve,"
kidded Reds Manager Rusi; Nixon .
"! wasteUlng him J hoped there
wouldn't be another one hit to him. •'
Relief pitcher Ben Hayes fielded
the final out. preserving the victory
for relief ~Jtcher Ted Power, 3-4.
KrPnchkkl fouled six -pitches
befor.- l . ·- g-ame-winning shot between flrsland second base.
It was his first hit as a plnchhitter
ln 10 tries.
"Your adrenalln just getsgolng a
IItle btl more when there are
ruruters In scoring position and the
game's on the llne. I'll hii ·In that
situation any day of the week," said
Krenchlckl.
Eddie Milner had three hits and
Team
w ..J.. ·=red two mns plus a run batted ln
Ak&gt;xander ....... .......... .. ........ .
. .. 7 0
Middleport ...... ....... .
and Dave Concepcion and Jolm
..... fi 0
Mason ·······v ····-- .... .- .... , ...... .
......·. J j Bench eaeh had an RBI · Dann
Syracuse ........................... .
.... 2 j
Racln~ ...... ......................... .
. .. 0 1 . Bllardello hit his second ho~e run of
West Division
the season for Cincinnati.
Nt.W HavPn ..
........ ... .6 0
For the Giants, BobBrenley, Jack
Pomeroy ..... .
·· ··········· . ···- ··-·· .4 2
EastPrn ..... ..
Clark and Jeff Leonard had RBls tor
.............. 4 2
Harrlsonvtl!('
... . ·-· .......... 1 6
the Giants .
Rutland ...... .
. --------- ............. 0 1
Minton, 2-4, was tagged with the
loss.
CINCINNATI (AP) - "! could
see a game winning RBI going down
the drain," joked Wayne Krenchlckl
after his 8th Inning run-scoring
single broke a five-game losing
streak for the Cincinnati Reds.
. The Reds, after dropping five to
the Atlanta Braves here, came.trom
behind. to beat the San Francisco
Giants 5-4 Tuesday night.
"It's always tough to lose one like
that," Giants Manager F rank
Robinson said.
Giants relief pitcher Greg Mtoton
gave up tWo hits and a walk as the
Reds broke San Franclsco's4-31ead.
" Minton Is not what heoncewas,"
said Robinson. "His problem Is he's
not getting people out, not getting

M-G-M standings

H.ouston at Atlm1ta. tn l
Nt'W York at St. Lou~. tnl
AMI!KICAN UAGUE
EAST DIVtiJON
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The Daily Sentinel

Toronto

31

.563 -

'"
33

35
:.;

I!

"'

.507
.478
.444

Kansas &lt;;:1.1)'

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34

33
35
33

Olikland

35

39

Seattlf'

"'

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·aos~an

MilwaukeP
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J~

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.m 10\ol.i
.l'.l 14 \'j

.473

49

'l\te8da.y'1 Game~~

Boston 11 , tleW'I.and 3
t:ll!trott !i, Milwaukee

Tl'xlli

733 Third Avenuf'. New York, New
York 10011.

srR II&lt;EOlJTS. Stleb. TOI'Ofl!O.. 1{!);
Bly k'W'ft . clP.'(&gt;!an&lt;t 93: Moms. Dt1ruit.
Ill: Hoyt . Chica,(o, ?!); HWJ(h . Tellilll. 74.

Cil)' ,

18:

Sl.anle)o . lUton. 16; C&lt;~udlll. SPattk&gt;. 1.5:
I...DpPr. Detroit. 11; R.Davl..~. Min.-ora.

11.
SA110NAL I..Eo\GUE
BATilNG 070 at batsl·: ~astef. P\ns
bufllh. ~liJ: Knight , HotiSIOI'\, ..l16; Htondrk.'k. SI. Louls. ..115: D&lt;IW!!iOO. Montmal.
..1l2: MadMrk, P!tbbur¢1. .m
RL~ : Murphy, Atlanta. &amp;'i: Garvf'y
san DlcJlo, 5rt: RainE's, MontrCal, !;&amp;;
Evans, San Franctsro. ~ G\.lf'n'Cro, Lo5
AnRP~es.

46.
RBI : Daw!iDfl . Monn~al . ~: MuJl)hy.
Atlanta . :..1 : Ht&gt;ndrl('k. Sllialb, 52:
E-vans. San F'ranctsro. 48: Gtwrrero. Los
Angeles, -n.
HITS: Thon, Houston, 92: Dawson.
MOiltrPal . !!1: K.Hr&gt;rnandP.J:. NPW York,
86: OUver. Mof\tf"{'al. 86: Murphy. AI·
lanta. R'l
DOUBLES: Gan1t·y. San Di~. 19:
8\K'II.rK'!', Chlc4&lt;). 1ll Dawson. Montre-al,
111: J .Ray, Ptlfs!JUr~:h. l!l: Knight, Hous
ton, 1.8; ouver, Montn-al, 111.
m[f'LES : Mormo. Hwston, II: Bu ll(&gt;~".
.\t1al118,
1\i
Dtlwl§On. Monn--eal.
fi:
K.Hem amlez. Nt&gt;w VtYk.. S: Ralnes. MonII'l'ai, 5; WashinJrlon. Atlan ta. 5.
HOME RUNS: Evan.c;, San F'ranc\sro
19; MUllley, Atlanta, \9; GU(I~I"(). W
An~es .
16:
Dawson, Mcmlrt'al, 14;
Schmid!. P hUadt&gt;lphla, I~
~LF.N BASE3: R.ainf'S. Mcmlll'al. :tl:

LeMastc&gt;r. San Franclsro. 27: Wilson
N-· 'iork. :iii: Moreno. Uouston. 24:
s.sax, Los AJlgciC!, 2-1 .
·
PITCHING 16 ~lsklnsl :

F"alroiK', AI
.En1, 2.42: Montefusco, Sw1
DM:t;o. 6-t, .851, 4.1f!:: R.)'&lt;tll. Hou.ston . f&gt;. t .
R'l7, 2.m: P .Pe-t-m:. Atlanta . 9-2..81B. 2.37:
Hooton. Los A~lei. 7-2. .778. J.IE.
STRU&lt;EOUTS: Carllon, PhUadf'tphla,
117; Solo, CTiiC'I nnati , U1; McWilliams,
PlltSbuJJ:h, 98: Ben!llyi. Ci ncinnati. R\:
Ro~~- M9ntreal, 1!2.
SAVES: Reard:lrl. Monlrt'al. 12: La ve! ~. San Francisco. 11: llt'droslan. At ·
lanta, 9: Lc.Smlth, Ch.!rago, 9: ~ art' ll!'d
w1th !!.

laru.a, &amp;1,

3. Cal!l:lrnla 1

WeGtmc~q • "Gamell
Oticago 1Burrv; 3-~1 at Seanle 1Young

7-71 ·'
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at Nf'W

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!Young ().I f, ln f
~'"G~

In

plr~

('Xt"h&lt;Ul!!" for !it'COnd·round
h 1!81 ancll!:ll'l.

Tom McMUien. fo rward, from thl' Atlrulta
llawks In eu-hanl(l! b Ra11dy Wlnman ,
jlUard-fotward .•

Texas at Callfornla, 1111
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Karuas"City at Onklnnc!
Balt!Jnor'tl at New York. tnt

towns wh ef(' hom(' c;irrt or se rvlcP. Is
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KAN&amp;\S CITY KINGS- Traded first rou nd plek Ennlf; Whatk.&gt;y, j:l\lanl, Ala twna. to Chlt·agu lor Mark Ol!rrcllnj:t,
forward . A«}ulrt'd Larry Midl('aux . fur·
ward. University of Houston. In eXchan~
for Chris MCN ('aly, !ON"ard. San JOM'
Sl.a tc. and a 1984 Sl"(''rrd-round Pi&lt;'k.
NEW .JERSEY NETS-Acquirt'd Olrk
Mlnnil"l"leld. ~arl:l, trom thl&gt; Dallas Ma -

draft

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OutMide

l&lt;aii.SII5 City. .341; Grtrfey. N_. York.
.DR; Thornlon , CIPvf'land, .J'li.

RUSS: Yount. Milwaukee.

~;

Rlpkrn .

casttno, Mlllnc-scta, ~ :
Ward, MlrtneS(lla . 48; E .Murr.ty, Balli·
I1"IOft'' ~ 7.
RBI: Kltlle. Chk:"!tii:O. ~ : Wa rd, Min ·
116"o0111 . ~: c.oq..r. M!1waukfof', .f.!: Rlrf'.
BMion. 47: DE:&lt;'!fl&lt;'f'S. Ca Ufornla. 16.
HITS: BoliQlS. Boston. ~; Whlfak.('f. [)r-..
Baltimor't', 49;

lrOit, 9J; Cai"'('Y.', Ca lllomla, !12: Casttno.
Mlnllt'SO!a, ll!t: Ward, MlnrM"SOia , lB.
DOUBLE!;: McRne, Kan1.11s City, '14 :
~ - Jb;too. XI: Hrt:J:&gt;k. Min!K'!i~Jla . 21.
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DALLAS t'OWIXlYS-SIJ!:ned Brya11
Cald\.1.-cll. drlcnslvl' t'11d. to a §f'ri(~ of
one-yedr contrn('ts .
DENVER
BRONCOS-Sii'lcd SII"Vf"
Bu.slrk. llnt&gt;badll'r, to a wrk&gt;s of Ofl('-yt"!lf
ronlrarts. Slgrwd John Oyer, pla&lt;'t'klckl'r .
GREE N DAY PA{]{F.R..&lt;;-Tr&lt;U&lt;d John
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Grttnt. wlcJl. rro.•h:t•r. 10 a llf'riPS ol onc-\'f'nr rontrnc-ls.

No. 334

HO&lt;.XE\'
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NEW 'IIORJ&lt; Ri\f';G~ H S-SI!ml'd Ron

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Zanesville girl wins golf title
MARION, Ohlcr (AP) -Michele
Redman of Zanesville finished with
a 1-under-par 147 to wtri the Ohio
State Junior Girls Golf Tournament
at the 5,440-yard Marlon Country

Club course.
Redman, whohadaflrsl -round75,
shot a 2-under-par 72 ln TUesday's
final.

c~~w,.

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Cubs 8, Pirates 7
At Chicago. a throwing error by
Pittsburgh second baseman Johnny
Ray enabled Leon Durham to score
__ from second baSe In th~ bottom of.
the 11th lnnlng as the Cubs snapped
the longest winning streak In the
majors this season. With darkress
closing In, Durham opened the lith
with an Infield hit off Kent Tekulve

MSEBALL

Balllmotl' at New York. Ptxl.. min

threw wildly past first as Durham·-scored .

-_,

Transactions

Se.antt 6, -CI\I('&lt;W! 2

Se-nd address to ThE&gt;
Dally Sentl n('l, 111 Co urt St., P o m proy
Ohio 45769.
..
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52 We&lt;'k!'&gt;

.E57. ,1.11: RLJad&lt;!on. ·Toronto.. 5-1. .833.

-1.:fi; 5anCtlez. .California, H • .m. 3.51.

.a

Oakland II, Kan.&lt;;AS City 3

POST~ASTER :

26 W e rk.c; .. ... .. ...... . ...... .... .... .....

RUNS: Kln1e, ChlcaMO. 18;
Armas, lUton. 17; R.ft. Bosta\, IS; DPctnce~~. California. t••: 5 a~ tied wtth 1-1.
STOLEN BA...~: Wllson. Kari!as Cit)·.
:IT: J.CNZ, t.lticago, ]); RHti\OI"rSorr.
Oakland. .12; R.Law, Chka.RQ, 29; SamplE-. ·
T£"Mas. z;.
P rT'('H! NG 46 dt&gt;ct!;tlns l: Flana,:an.
Baltlmore. 6-0. 1.(00, 2.Tl; K!soo. Ca lllornla. 7-1 . .Jn!i. 2.9..1; KOO&amp;mllll. Chka«&lt;. 6-1.

grounded to Ray, who attempted to
tag Moreland and missed and then

~---~~~~~][21iiiiiii. ii~ii.~~~~iiijiiil~ -::•·

Pittsburgh Pirates lose one and two
other teams play a tie?
All _those things happened In the
National League 'l;uesdaY night.the Cardinals Whipped the New
York Mets 8-1 after their losing
streak reached eight games when
they dropped the opener of their
doubleheader 10.1, the Pll'ates'
nine-game wJnnlng came to an end
when they were beaten by the
Chicago Cubs 8-7 ln lllnnlngs and
. the Montreal Expos and Philadelphia were halted by raln ln the
bottom of th~ 11th tied 5-5.
David Green and Andy VanSlyke
hanmwrett hclnne runs ln the fourth
Inning and Dave LaPoint blanked
the Mets on four hits until the ninth
as the Cardinals snapped their
longest loslngstreakslnce19!10. Tom
Gorman held the Cards hitless until
Green led .oH the fourth with his
homer. Two outs later, Glenn
Brummer singled and Van Slyke
homered, flnaUy giving the Busch
Stadium crowd something to cheer
about.
1n the opener, New York rookie
Darry I Strawberry homered twice
and drove ln five runs, while Ed
Lynch scattered seven hits ln eight
Innings. Huble Brooks had a double
and four singles as the Mets bombed
Bob Forsch and Jim Kaat for 19 hits.
Strawberry, who also hit a three-run
. homer off Forsch last Thursday, has
three homers and eight RB!s ln his
last two games.
The Cards' victory ended two
drtJughts - their eight -game slide
and Green's abstinence from a cool
postgame brew.

•• HOME

SAVES: ~Jsenberry, Kansas

and went to second on a single by
Keith Moreland.
Bowa then

Louts
Cardinals
game,
How about
a Junewin
dayawhen
thethe
St.

MlAner.ota 5, Toronto 2

pQNDti\OSA

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Iron
Gate, driven by Jeff Four, finished
the mlle In 2: 092-51'uesday night at
Scioto DOwns In the first division of
the Ohio Sires Stakes, paying $?D.?D,
$6.60 and $3.00.
Mister Excitement finished seCOnd to pay $3.?)) and $2.40. Action
Yankee paid $2.40 to show.
In the second division, Cornstalk,
driven by Robert Roberts, finished
ln 2: 091-5 to pay $4.?D, $3.?Dand$2.[(1_
Fire horse paid $3.80 and $3.?D to
place, and Worthy Ne;);"s. $7.!10 t&lt;',
show.
The fifth race lrlfecta of3-1-7 paid
$1,353.90.
The crowd of 3,012 bet $240,675.

Momreal ~ Philadelphia
San FrWl('fsro at Clnclnlllltl
Ptti5b.tllth at C hicygo
Loe AI1@E'Ies a! San Diego

All!iOCiatlon draft held In New York Tliesday.
SjUDpson Wall picked by the HOW!ton Roekets and
Stlpanovtch by the Indiana Pacers. (APLaserphoto).

Cincinnati snaps losing streak

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SUNDAY'S LUNCHEON SPECIAL
BAKED HAM

CHOICE OF POTATO
CHOICE OF VEGETABLE

•

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SPECIALS ........... s2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS .......................... s1.99

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

DINING ROOM QOSES AT 8 MONDAY-SATURDAY
. DINING ROOM QOSES AT 4 ON SUNDAY
Cany-Out Window Open Until 10 Monday-Sunday

EAR, -NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Dining Room Will S. CJo.ed July 4tll
Carry-Out Window Will S. Open 9 a.m.-9. p.m.

OHice Hours by Appoin.tmeflt Only

ENective July 5 Dining Room Clotes
At 1:00 P.M. Monday.Sotunlay

or (304) ~75-1244

-~

38

St . l..oo.W
Pbllidt'lphla

Cbl&lt;...

TRY OUR DAILY

CALL (614) 992-2104

~

W

By AWM'l•ted Pl'e!I8
What Is so rare as a day In June?

TR[f'L£'i: C..Moore. MUwaullfto, 5;
G.Wti!ion. Detroit. S; Gr1ffln. TorUli~ S;
Hemmn... DHmlt. S: K.GIIaon. Dmdt. 5;
Whitaker. Drtrolt. 5: Winfield. New York.

Majors
bd:nl ,.....
NATIONM.. LF.AGUE
1!.\ST DIVI!ION .

direct result of the trade that was
most responsible for their 14-68
mark. Tbe No.3 pick was obtained
by Houston as part of the trade that
three-lime NBA Most Valuable
Player Moses Malone to
Philadelphia.
Sampson said he believed the
Rockets had plenty of talent despite
their record.
"We'D just have to pull together,"
he said. Sampson calted McCray
"an excellent player. He plays the
game the way II should be played.''
MeanwhUe, Granville Watters of
Ohio State was the first of six Ohio
college players selected ln the
National Basketball Assoclallon
draft on Monday.
The Portland Trall Blazers chose
the f&gt;.foot-11 center In the second
round of the draft. Walters was the
39th player chosen &lt;NeraU. ·
Wright State forward .Gary Monroe went to Portland ln the fifth

Cubs s~ap Pirate win.string; Cards win ):

Scoreboard ...
., ,., &amp;

NBA, the Rockets got McCray as a

·King advances to semi finals
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)'There Is a long-lasting love affair
going on between BUlle Jeah King
and the Wimbledon Tennis Championships. It Is not one-sided and
deflnllely not unrequlled.
"I wtu always dream about being
ln the Wimbledon final untU I am !10
years old," said King, who at 39 has
qujtea few years to go to reach that
goal.
·
_She has won the coveted women's
s1ngles title on tlie famed grass
courts or the All-England Lawn
Tennis and Croquet Club six times
and,lncludlngwomen'sdoublesand

••

The Daily Sentinel- . Page-S, •·.

Middleport, Ohio

T--....

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lnttuO•s 11\-you -e an·"' ulad 11
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IMhiiiU all-yo~-un-eat ntad
bar baked 001110 and ••rm 11111 1

bl useOw~hot~t altco"•"· T~l '

notiMI.~to11ttdpallntstuk

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Lunch
SniH"ial!

Dlt~~tm

'IIIith blllltt NO urryllutl. ttnl'ltll

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with butter, M&lt;l Urf!OUtl. ttMO
111 ,sed wltl\otMr d scount,.Ta- '

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M Olrlitipa\11\Q stUkhOusu.

MUFFLER
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~·-·=~:::r:~:!~~~~~~ti)O"'I.ChO~t)Hittta\'1.

GALLIPOLIS

240 Third A'if. 1704 Elsttm Ave.

•

. .., , . , ,. 011111
. . ... YOU"

(Across from the Airport)

GAlliPOLIS, OH.

""AUTO PARTS
31.000 :L&amp;LI74:L

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UPPER RIVER ROAD

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TO INSTALL

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StniiBIIrQ•r or fl.tl Sand•~tl

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not inti. "'parttc\pl\lftQ stuk·

THE EASY

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446-1813

446-4204

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POMEROY
119 W. 2nd
992·2139

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MASON

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Route 33

n3·5511

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Th'e Daily

1983

Knapp birth.

Tbe Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

w,dne t'rty, June 29, 1983

6

' !lag•

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. STORE HOURS:
Mo11.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Family Medicine

Broken ~ ribs
By

Edw.,.ct Schreck, D.O.

AMI8ianl Prof- of
Family Medlclne
Ohio Unlvel'lllty C&lt;lllege
of Ooteopathlc Medicine
Queotloo: I · was bumped quite

Goodwin of Pomeroy holds a bronze medal wblch he
found and would like toretumtotheowner. The medal bearsthesymhol
of West VIrginia and the dates, 1861-1865 along with the ~ In
Latin, "Mountaineer Men are Always Free", On the side of the medal Is
the Inscription, "Patrick Klleen, Co. D, 13th Reg.lnf. Volunteers." The
medal was apparently struck In New York. Owner of the medal can
contact Goodwin at 992-3019.
MEDAI~Davtd

Grant received to attend
annual library meeting
Linda F . Cochran, Children 's
Consultant at Ohio Valley Area
Libraries (OVAL} has received a
Shirley Olofson grant to attend the
Amerlcn Library Association's An·
nual Conference In Los Angeles
June 23·29.
The Olofson grants are awarded
annua lly to three Individua ls,
chosen from nationwide appllca·
lions , who wtll be attending their
second American Library Assocla·
lion Conference. Cochran was
chosen because of her Interest In
professional library activities at the
national level and her demon·
strated commitment to proles·
slonal development.
Dur1ng the conference, Cochran

expects to · attend a program
entitled "Who speaks lor the
children? Strategies to Promote
Cltlldten's Library Serv ices Politically, Publicly, and Profession·
ally," an open forum on picture
books for older children entitled,
"Picture Books: More Than a
Story," and a program on use of
Cable TV by libraries. In addlton to
programs, Cochran expects to
attend exhibits of the newest In
library books, furniture, and equipment, and to have the oppor1unlth
to meet authors of children's books.
As ovAL Children's Consultant,
Cochran works closely with Ruth
Powers, Librarian at the Meigs
County Public Library.

hard durlng a softball game last
week. My chest still hurts. Do you
think I have a broken rib?
Answer: Because more people
are active In the sum.mer, the
number of Injuries from accidents
and falls often goes up. Rib
fractures are frequent occurrences.
Of course, I can't diagnose you
through the newspaper, but I can
give you some Idea of what usually
happens If a rib Is broken.
Almost Invariably a rib fracture
Is caused by trauma to the chest
wall, such as when the chest hits the
steering wheel of a car during a
crash. In a healthy adult, It takes
approximately l,!m pounds of force
for 10 milliseconds to fracture a rib.
In older Individuals with bone
disease or osteoporosis, the force
required tor a break ls much less.
Children have much more resiliency and more cartilage In the
ribs, and therefore experience rib
fractures less frequently . Shearing,
twisting or sudden accelera lion or
deceleration to,rces can complicate

Long Bottom group
plans ice cream social

create fu'J1her problems

a rib fracture by causing injuries to
chest organs.
Quefitlons: How does a fractured
rib feel?
Answer: The patient's most
frequent complaint Is of pain.
Usually he or she can point to one
specltlc place along a rib that Is
painful, especially during movement. Pressure put over the site of
the rib fracture may cause a
cracking sound. There may also be
some swelling or brulslng over the
area of the fracture .
Que811on: How are rib fractures
diagnosed•
Answer: Rib fractures are dlag·
nosed by a combination of physical
examination and X·rays. Fractures
do not always show Immediately In
X·rays of the ribs, however.
Sometimes the fracture Is not
detectable tor several days, until
new bone ls laid down at the
fracture site.
A physician will look not only tor
the fracture Itself but also for other
problems that cah complicate the
patient's condition: a collapsed
lung (pneumothorax). blooiHn the
chest cavity (hemothorax} and
Injuries to the heart or the large
blood vessels that come In or out of
he heart. Physicians also k&gt;ok for
possible escape of air from the
lunglnto the skin around the chest
wan. This happens when the jagged
edges of the broken rib pierce the ·

to the liver, spleen, kidney and
diaphragm can result If the lower
ribs are fractured. U the first or
second ribs are broken, close
attention must be paid to lnjulres to
the wind pipe (trachea } and the
heart. Complications occur In about
5 to 18 percent of rib fracture cases.
Queollon: How are rib fractures
treated? ··•
Answer: Most rib fractures 'heal
quite easUy on their own with little
Intervention on the part of the
physician or the patient. Rib belts
are sometimes used to provide
patient comfort but a doctor might
advise against them In certain
cases. Patients with fractures
should avoid strenous activity and
may find sleeping In a chaise or
chair more eomfortable than lying
down. Only rarely Is surgery
Deeded for broken rtbs.
Of course, Injuries caused to
Internal organs by the fracture
must be treated, but trealment
depends on the Joea tlon and nature
of the Injury. The possibility of
Internal Injury from a fracture ls
real - and I suggeSt you ask your

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

physician to examine your chest
and determine the cause of your
pain.

L

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Her·Futilre is
in Your
Hands

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Legion Auxiliary

New o!!lcers were Installed when
the American Legion AuxUiary,
Racine Post 602, met at the hall
recently.
Margaret Yost, past president,
Installed the new officers, Julia
Norr1s, president; Martha Lou
Beegle, first vtce president; Louise
Stewart, secretary; Libby Willford,
treasurer; Eunle Brinker, sergeant
at arms; and Thelma Walton,
historian .
Beulah Nelgler. second vice
president, and Frances Roberts,
chaplain, will be Installed a t a later
time.
A dOnation was sent to thedlst r1cl
president for the E ighth Dlstrlct
birthday party to be held at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital In
July. The unit also made a donation
of SZJ to the firemen' s auxiliary
toward the July 4 dinner.
Buckeye Girls State delegate,
Laren Wolfe. will be Invited to give
her report at the July meeting.
Leora Young, retiring president,
thanked the otflcers and members
for their suppor1 over the past two
years.
~he presented each of!lcerwtth an

Alfred UMW
AHred UMW discussed ha v1ng a
get-acquainted meal for the new
minister, Rev. Archer, when they
met at the church June 21. They
also discussed serving at the Bible
Bowl which will be at Alfred Church
July 31 and agreed that all the
church would want to help the
serving.
President Nellie Parker called
the meeting to order, and Nina
Robinson gave the open prayer.
Secretary Martha Poole read the
minutes of the May meeting, and
Treasurer Ruth Brooks gave the
treasury report. Nine members
were present, and one guest .
Fourteen sick calls were reported .
Mrs. Parker summarized a letter to
local presidents that gave guidelines on Inappropriate undertakings
for UMW women as an oganlzatlon.
The society voted to pay Mrs.
Robinson the postage spent on
sending maps to Zaire and to pay
any such postage In the future.
Thelma Henderson
a m!s-

-==Pulsar:Quartz=
. =::
Why pay more.
Or settle for less.

.------------------------1

SUMMER CLEARANCE

Clo180ut S pecialsl

WOMEN'S CASUALS

DRESS SHOES

BY CONNIES, FOOnwlRKS.
CANDIES
Wedps and Uttle Heels

BY CONNIES. f001WORKS,
AND HUSHPUPPIES.
OF

WOllEN'SCANVAS
AND MESH

DRESS and
CASUALS

(u:\
~

1/2

BY
HUSH PUPPIES.
IIOIIlfE &amp;
GRIZZLIES
GROUP OF

TENNIS SHOES

WEDGES &amp;
BALLERINAS
CHILDREN'S
SANDALS

PRICE

STRIDE-RIT£
AND
HUSHPUPPIES

FDR MEN,
WOMEN AND
CHILDREN

GROUP Of WOIEII'S

SUMMER HANDBAGS
Pulsar a ..~,....
Always a beat beyond. tedl1.nO~)AY·

FLAT SANDALS

MAN¥ OTHER SALE SHOES THROUGHOUT THE STORE
INCLUDING ONE GROUP OF,

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES
$1 000 A Pair OR

Chuck Roast .....L~·

•••

PH. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd

Mill St.

Middlep0r1

2

Pair For $1500

AU. SAIP5 ANAL

CHAPMAN SHOES
-Next to IIHrfeld• In Pomeroy

49

•

SUPERIOR BONELESS WHOLE .

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

$

% Pork loin ..... ~!~
i

1
I

E-Z-Carve

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Kelllv Swisher

Middleport

The fifth birthday of Kelly Ann
Swis her was observed recently wtth
a Strawberty Shortcake themed
party.
Her guests were Misty SwiSher,
Amber Cumings, Carrie Mullens,
Angle SWiger1, Tamml Buckley,
Tyson Buckley, Stacey Fry, Evan
Struble, and Jerod Stewar1.

OLD FASHION LOAF ......... Sl.99

MIXED

¢

BATTER DIPPED

¢

Fryer Parts...........L!••

·Fish....................... :~·.

:

$ 69

Hams.L~..

..

.
W1~11ers ....................
PESCHKE

¢

12 OZ. PKG.

AGAR

BOILED HAM .............. Sl.97
SUPERIOR 1-LB. PACKAGED

WIENERS .................... Sl.69

•

HOMEMADE

SMALL

EGGS..~!~:.IL79

QUARTS OF BROUGHTON'S

.

CHOC. MILK ...... :9.~·694

I-LB. BLUE BONNET QUARTERS

(I

MARGARINE ....... ~~:. 89 4
KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 SLICE
•PIMENTO PROCESSED

CHEESE ......... ~-~~: '1.97

Ba11anas ............. :~·.

,

Misty Swisher

STARTS THURSDAY, 9:00A.M.
GROUP Of WOMEN'S

USDA CHOICE _

:Kelly Swisher
.birthday party

Misty Swisher
· b~rthday party
FINALIST - Tiffany Dawn
Coleman, nlne-yeBNJid daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lee
Coleman, Louisville, Ky., has
been oelecled as a flnall8t In the
1983 Miss Kentucky Natlonlll
Pre-Teen Pageanl July 9. It Is
the official stale pageanllor lhe
nallonal to be conducted In
Lehlp Acres, Fla., In November. She Is granddau(lhter
ol the late Uoyd and Peggy
Hoftman of Pomeroy. Local
sponsors of Miss Coleman are
Mr. and Mrs. Kellh Searles of
Middleport.

f

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slons repor1 on Zaire, Alrtca, where
during the last century their culture
has changed greatly with the
comlng of new Ideas and
technology.
All members took part In reading
and discussion of "Strenglhs of
Black FamUles and Roles of Black
Women." They all agreed that we
could learn much from the strong
family and social ties ot black
families. The program opened with
unison reading of "Prayer for
FamUies" and closed with prayer
by Florence Ann Spencer.
Others present were Clara Fol·
lrod, Geevleve Guthr1e and Anna
Thompson.
Next meeting will be July 19 at
the church with Mrs . Parker and
Mrs. Henderson as hostesses, Mrs .
Poole wUI lead the program "Gifts
to Share."

POMEROY, 0.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.. J.ULY 2, 1983

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Knapp of
Johnstown are announcing the birth
ot a son, Timothy Allen, born on
AprU 5 at the Riverside Hospital In
Columbus. He weighed seven
pounds, llounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Knapp have another
son, Billy.
Grandparent$ are Mrs. Douglas
Knapp, Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs.
James Craig, Buffalo, W. Va. Mrs.
Emmogene Holstein Congo, Syra·
cuse, Is a foster grandmother.

Groups meet_.....,...._..;.._
__
.....,....
___
_
.
American Legion Auxiliary stick
pin ,
Refreshments were served by
Thelma Walton during a concluding
social hour.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quanities.

l
Timothy Allen Knapp

Teaching your children
JaDOU[ God is not enough ·
insure spiritual
- they also need
· learn to discover
on their own.
books and Bit)le~
Hospitalized
children will give them
Mrs . Denver L . ru Mlddlepo rt ,
a good foundation for
lsapatlentatSt.Anthony'sHospltal,
growth. Invest in your
Columbus, where she underwent
child's future with a
surgery this week. Her room
number 1s 51lJ.
collection of quality
lining of the lung. When thls ltntn::g~ls~r;;;;:=;;:::;~~=~;;;;:;;;;:;-j children's books and
tom , air can leak out undem~~th
·
Bibles from:
the skin. On examination

Annual Ice cream social of the
Long Bottom Community Associaappears as a swelling which gives
tion will be held July 9 at the new
off a crackling sound when pres·
Long Bottom Community BuDding.
sure Is applied to the skin. Injuries
Serving will begin at 4 p.m . and
continue throughout the evening.
Flavors will be lemon, pineapple,
chQCOiate and vanilla.
Hot dogs and sauce, pie arid cake
as well as beverages will be
available and there will be enter·
talnmenl by local bands and square ·
dancing. Door prizes will Include a
handmade porch swing and . two
rocking chairs.

298 SEOOND ' ST.

12 Ol. REAMES

A Smurf theme was carried out
for the 11th birthday obsetvance of
Misty Kay Swisher.
Attending the party were Kelly
Swisher, Jeremy Buskirk, Jamie
Buskirk, Chrlstlan HUI, Evan Struble, and An!!le Swisher.

1-LB. TASTY BIRD FRYING

NOODLES ......... PKG. 894

ERScTN.79 4

59
M
.I
k
2l 0 I .........G:~L2~ ••••
0/

160 COUNT

SCOTT. NAPKI,NS ..•••....~~~~ 89¢

Hart birth

24 COUNT DIPLOMAT KNIVES, FORKS,

. Mr. and Mrs. Monty Rae Hart,
Middleport, announce the birth of a
son, Travis Tyler, June 2 at the
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
The Infant weighed eight pouijds,
sevenouncesandwas21tncheslong.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Charles S. Wildermuth,
Pomeroy, and maternal great·
!lrandfalher Is Allen Dill Sr.,
Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Gilbert Hart, Racine, and
the paternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hayman,
Syracuse.
·
Mr.and Mrs. Har1 have three
daughters, Corissa, eight; Chanda,
ftve; and Alicia, three.

SPOONS .•.•.••....••...... ;~~~;49c
100 COUNT GENERIC WHITE

PAPER PLAT"ES ....••.... ~~.G.-79¢
100 COUNT LIPTON

TEA BAGS ..•••.•.....•..8.~t S2.79
7'12 OZ. CARNATION

SPREADABLES ........q~~- Sl.29
· 16 OZ. IDAHOAN
INSTANT POTAlOES ....~~~.99c
16 OZ. 25 COUNT STYROFOAM

cu·Ps ........................P.~Q.• 79'

Roush birth

40 OZ.· TEEN QUEEN

PORK-n-BEANS .•.••••... ~~~. 89

4

16 OZ. DEL MONTE SLICED

PEACHES •. ,.•••...•. ~.~~ 2/SL49
GALLONS OF RICH-n-READY
... ~~H9.~ 51.29
·-~---~·~-----

•

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Fran Roush, Racine, Is announcIng the birth of her 1011, Joshua
Edward Cununtns Ro\1&amp;11:. June lt.
ihe lllfant weighed el(lht pounds, 12
and wu 22 lDcbes ioi!IRoush has anotll!!' lim, JBIOII Paul.
' 'lbelatePauiK.andMaryA.Ours
~ grandpu'ents. FOitergrandparents are .Jenny l...olle and Bub DaviS.

'I'

$

VALLEY BELL

(6 PAK $1.

PlASTIC

PARKAY

$ 99 Margarine •••••••••
LB.

Coca-C0Ia.c:~E• ~F•~4•~Mj~ •••
12 OZ. CANS

¢

BOUNTY

·1
T()\ft#E! ~ ••••••••••••• !2~.•
JuMBO

TIDE DETERGENT
84 oz.

''

$299

CLOROX BLEACH
GALLON

79¢

Per Customer
At Powelrs
July 2, 1983

••

•••

••

29

Cream ......~~:!; .. .

lc~

CHARMIN

TOILET .TISSUE
PKG.

Customer
Powell's
2, 1983

$

BORDEN'S ELSIE

4 ROLL

•

',

99¢

COUNTRY TIMES

LEMONADE
IOQT.
SIZE

$199

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires July 2. 1983

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w.ill•llkly, June 29, 1913

The Daily Sentinel

Calendar
WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY

SYRACUSE - Carleton Col·
lege Board of Trustees W!ll meet.
'lbur,;day at 7 p.m., at the

SALfSBURY - Salisbury
Townlhlp Trustees will llleelln
regUlar session Friday at 7 p.m.

Carleton School.

. POMEROY -The WUdwood

·Garden Club will meet at 7: :ll
Wednesday evening at the hOme
of Mrs. Dwight Mllhoan.

1HURSDAY
RUTI.AND - Rutland Town-

ship Trustees will meet In
regular session at 6::ll p.m.

MIDDJ..EPORT - Tennis
be held at
Middleport Park Thursday
through July 1, 2, and 3. There
wUl be ltll!ll's singles, men's
doubles, men's Intermediate,

Eblin, Laurel Cllff Road. AU
rnee1:lnp are open to the pubUc.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Eastern Athletic PooSters wUI hold a work
session on Sunday, July 3, at 7

women's singles and doubles

and mixed doubles.

Thursday.

•

communications se rvi ces to

all customers of the Ohio Bell
Telephone Company and , in
aclclition, affects the rates ami
charges for certain services
govemecl by conc urrence.~ of
other telephone companies
serving all other subscribers
in the State of Ohio.
Th e affel'l ecl Ohio Be ll
Telephone Company tariffs
arc :

Exc hange and
Ne twork Serv ice' (P.U .C. O
Tariff
No . I)

...

years. The group Is baSed In
Kansport, Temt. This Is the !lrst
revival at the church under the
new pastor, Tom Kelly, a local
school teacher. The public Is

POMEROY - Betty Baker
and the JoyfUl Sonrv!s will

conduct special serviceS each
evenlrli from now through July 3
at the Full Gospel Ughlhouse,
Hiland Road, Just- atf Route 7
by-pass In Pomeroy at 7::ll p.m._

Invited". ---MASON, W.Va. -A Fourth of
JIJ)y celebration will be held on ·
July 4 at the city park In Mason.
The event will klck-otr with a

Pon~e~or

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Middleport, Ohio

4-H news

Syracuse couple vis#s · ~urope for anniversary.________

parade at U a.m. Uttle Mr. aild

Don and Mary Lisle, Syracuse,
recently returned from England
and France, a trtp which they gave
each other In Observance of their
42nd wedding anniversary. Before
they departed the chOir at the
Asbury United Methodist Church

Mlsl Firecracker w!ll be unounced at 110()11.-alld pma
!be c'llldren will get underway at
1 p.m. Sky divers wt11 be
featured at 2 p.m.
'l1lere will be fmc!, ~
music, a1ld a flea ~
avallable during the day. '11ae
wishing to take part In tllr
parade or the Uttle Mr.lllll Mils

ar

presented her with a corsage and
hlm with a boutonniere.
··Flying v1a Jet rrom ColUJilbus •to

Palace. '!'hey toured
Windsor Castle, drove throughEton
College, visited the Tower of
London, Wesbnlnster Abbey, St.
Paul Cathedral and had-lunCh at
Whlttnad Brewecy whlcjl contains'
the "Overlord Embroidery," which
goes around · the room and Is a
tribute to the efforts of the allies to
liberate Europe durtng World War

Bucklngharri

New York to London toMallcheSter,
they were met by frielld&amp;and taken
to Prestatyn, North Wales. Mr. and
Mrs. Lisle were attanpanled by
Byron Hysell and OUve Reyer of

Lancaster who visited with her son

Ryl, North Wales.
The Llsles traveled by train to

London for a sightseeing tour,
staying at the Reu~ns Hotel behind

they visited the
Museum of War and Uberatlon on
top of Mountain Fort Du Roule
overlooking the port and city. They
took a train to Volognes, France
where Don was stationed, renovated but much the same as then,
and also visited the Musee Regina!
Du Cidre there.

The couple saw. the Changing of
"the Guard at Buckingham Palace,
traveled ' the tubes to the train
station, took the ferry toCbe{'bourg,
France across the EngUsh cllannel.

Usle was a member of the 7'l9th
RaHway Operating Battalion which
was headquartered at the Cherbourg -- station In France durtng

.-· ...

.

The Stray Cats 4-H O~b has recently htld ' :
two meetings. The ttnt meeting wu held on ·
May 12 at the Mme of Russell Keller, wtth :
seven members and one advts&lt;l' anendipa:. .
BusineSS disCussed inCluded attending a .
recreauonal W(J"ksl'l&gt;p on June 8, and ·
money-making Ideas. Project boril&lt;J ...,.. • ·
passed out tO members. Volleyball was · :
played for rea:eatk&gt;n and refr"estunents ¥.1!ft : .
""""lly Russell Keller.
The second meetlna was held on May 26 at
the ho!ne' of Doug Bfoaver. The membel"'
discussed going to 4-H camp. For recreation.
the club plaY&lt;'(~ pool and video games.
Retreshrnm ts were servt'd by Doug Beaver.
- Shen1 M~ . lleYo'S reporter.

WorldWarU.
ln France

11.

I

Firecracker conteat may obtain
ln1ormat!on at the city by!ldlac
In Mason.

KROGER

OLAOl.Y
WELCOMES
YOUR fEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION
OF THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
FOR INCREASES AND
ADJUSTMENTS IN
RATES AND CHARGES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 4909.19 of
the Ohio Revised Code, the
Ohio Bell Tele phone Company here by gives notice that
on March 31, 1983, it filed
with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio an Applicati on (P.U.C.O. Case No.
83-300-TP-A IR ) f(}l" authority to increase and adjust it s
rates and charges for telecommunications services and
to change its regulations and
practices affecting the same.
Thi s notice contain s the
substance and prayer of the
Application . However, any
interes ted party de siring
compl e te , dc tHil ed information with respect to all
affected rates, charges, regulations and practices should
inspect a copy of the Applica tion and all attached
schedules at the office of the
'Cominission, 375 South Hil(h
Street , Columbus, Ohio. A
copy of the Application and
the proposed tariff shee ts is
also available for inspection
durjng normal business hours ·
at Ohio Bell public business
offices. In addition , the proposed tariffs were n1 ailcd to
th e mayors and legislative
authorities of all municipalities in Ohio on February 25,
1983, as part of the Company 's notil'icati o n of it s
intent to fi le.
This Application affec ts
rates and charges for tel e-

-·

of tapes and recordlnp overtbe

Happenings

at the home of the clerk. Wan4a

tournament will

Ms. Baker has wrlttsl many
of the songs presented by the
group wh)Cb has made amunber

p.m. 111 the hJg)l school In
preparation · for the July 4th
barbecue. AU help will be
apprectated.

+1· June 29, 1983

Message Toll Td ~phone Service
(P.U C.O.
Tariff
No. 7)

LOCALEXCHANGESER~CE

PRIVATE LINE

Ohio BeU is asking to increase local service rates because it now
tosts more than $25 a month to provide basic residence service, but
the Company is collecting only about $12 a month for this service. ·
The difference has traditionally been made up by a subsidy from long
distance and other discretionary services, but these sources are rapidly
disappearing.
The introduction of competition in the telephone industry and
changes in public policy over the past 15 years have brought about the
reorganization of the Bell System. This reorganization resulting in the
divestiture of Ohio Bell and 21 other Bell telephone companies from AT&amp;T,
scheduled for January I, 1984, has put a deadline on the need for replacing
the revenue lost through the elimination of this historical subsidy.

SER~CES

RESIDENCE

SER~CE

The increases proposed in monthly rates for residence customers.
for !-party unlimited, 2-party unlimited, !-party message, 2-party message
and l-party measured rate service access lines are shown below. Monthly
usage .allowances and the charge for additional local messages over the
allowances for message service will not be changed, nor will the time
and mileage charges for measured rate service.
-

___

~rese11t

1-party•

2-(llrty··

OMIIIIII1M

Ulllmitld
SI03((

1-partyt
111e$N18

2-p'ly..

1-JIIIY:j:
-

~

$!2 .95S8.25
$810
$5.80
Proposed
I B.BO
14.90
!2.00
t 1.85
8.50
Note: Pnces do not indude IT'&lt;)ftthly charges lor leased telephooes or the proposed $4 monthly charge per
hne lor all customers explained In the Long Distance Sectioo of this notice.
•Unfimilolt StNlce
Pnce &gt;ncltJdes line an~ uni,~ed usiiQe
.. 2-P arty Service
Subscribers with_2-party unlimMed or message servrce can retarn the _serv&gt;ce at thelf present locatroos. llUt
new 2-party servrce will be rnstalled.

no

tMesSIIIStrvicl
Pnce rnclulils 30 outgoino toe~ calls moontly Each all&lt;llliooallotal call will cootinue to oe 7 cents .

;Moas.rett Sntca

The price is lor the line ooly. The cllafge tor each ootllQillO local call deuenls uprin when and whefe the till
rs placed and its du&gt;alion. No chanvos are prooosed lor any ot these usage rates.

NON-RESIDENCE SERVICE
The increases proposed in monthly rates fo( non-residence customers
for individu~l line message and -measu-red serviCe, rotary lifle message
and measured service, PBX trunk message and measured service and
semi -public coin service are shown below. The monthly usage allowance
and the charge for additional local messages over the allowance will not
be changed, nor will the time and mileage charges for measured rate
service.
lndlvld~t

IIIII

ROlli'/ IIIIo

. PBX tntnk

Sontl·ttallllc catn

Present
s2i.s5
S2~ 05 S2~. 60 S2~ 40 s2t60
S19.95
Prooosed
28,5li
27.80
32.60
31 .90
36.55
31.90
25.iifi
Note· Prices-do not rnclude mootllly charges lor leased telephOOes or the prooosed $4 roonthly charge per
lme lor all customers e1plained rn the Long Drstance Sectioo of this notice.

d .JO

"MISSIOI Service

The puce 101 message non-resu:tence serv1ce 1ncludes 90 outgoino tocat calls. Add1110na11ocat calls are 1 cents
each. No chanoes are prO!)Osetl ln tM allowance or lhe pnce per call.

tMeasurett S«vlcl

The price is lor the lrne only. The charge lor each outgoing local call depends upon whetl and where the
callrs placed and 11s durauoo No chanocs are prooosed lot any ot tltese usl!lle rates.

GENERAL
Monthly rates lor optional one-way Extended Area Service and Community
Cat ling Service woulrl 1-(enerally be increased in proportion to the overall
increase in basic exchanl(e service. In addition, Ohio Be ll is asking to establi'h 2- wa~· . non~ &gt; ptional Extcncl.c&lt;l Area Service between 36 contiguous Ohio
Bell communities over the next few years as electronic switching systems
are installed in central offices.
Service rates nut proposed to he changed in this Application include :
• The monthly ca ll allowance for local calls under messap;e rate service
and Ihe charl(c for acldilionallocal calls over the allowances, as well as
time and mileage charges under measured rate service.
• The monthly allowance !or calls to Directory Assistance.
• The charge for local coin telephone calls not requiring an operator.

'

Private l.inc
Se-rvi ce Tariff

(I'U C.O.
No . 2)

Mobile Telct•hone(P.U .C O.
Service Tariff
No. 3)
"(Proposal to withclraw genertil manual service from this
tariff.)

Any person, firm, corporation or as110eiatlon may file,
pursuant to Section 4909.19
of the Ohio Revised Code,
objections to the proposed
increases and ~djustments in
rates and charges, and to the
proposed changes in regula·
lions and practices affectine
the same. The objections may
allege that such Application
contains proposals that are
unjust and discriminatory or
unre850nable. Recommenda·
lions which differ from the
Application may be made by
the staff of the Public Utilltles
Commission of Ohio or . by
Intervening parties and may
be adopted by the Commis·
sion.

INSTALLATION, MOVE AND CHANGE CHARGES .
Some clemettls of the basic charges to install , move and change service
and eq uipment would he increased and some would be decreased . However, residence and individual line non-residence customers would be able
to avoicl some of the charges by obtaining their equipment at an Ohio Bell
Servtce Center or by providing their own equipment. More detailed information ahout these it ems can he found in the proposed tariH sheets.

CHARGES FOR INSTALLING SERVICE
FOR RESIDENCES AND SMALL BUSINESSES
Llllll
Reslderlce
Non-residence

Pmottl

$3! .65
54.50

p~:
32.00

25.00

33.00
!1 .00

Dotto on CMSIIIIIIItrs' Promlsts
flrsl 15 minutes
Eaco additiorlal t5 mlnules

tO.OO

CHARGES FOR INSTALLING SER~CE FOR BUSINESSES
WITH MORE THAN ONE LINE AND CENTREX
lltto

Business 14 lirle mmple)
Wllrl Dotto on CUSIDIIOIS' PrlltiUS

,.,..

$148.00

$128.00 PtU; ud

50.Bftt

33.00 - tirst 15 min.•
It .00 - 81C!t IIIII. t 5 mifl•

53.00 '
21.11)t'

59.00

Cotttru·
Each service order

. . . DDIIIII ~· P'rllllal
tch¥ge tor wor1&lt; art customers' prtllltiles.
"The proposed Cllarge ,.,.ld be baited upon hlw
lllltlr It extra rNterlilrs reqoolr1d.

r

33.00- tlrSt 15 m1r1.•
tt.oo- 8IC!t 11111. t5m•

ktnu It tiles to complete this 110!11. AlltlltltNI t:NrQes lillY

MISCELLANEOUS
SER~CES

(SPECIAL CIRCUITS)
Increases a_r_e proposed
in the service connection
charges, non-recurring ·
charges and monthly rates for
most special circuits, foreign
exchange and foreign central
office service as well as for
private line channels and
associated equipment. More
detailed information about
these items can be found in
the proposed tariff sheets.

TOUCH-TONE
CALLING SERVICE
Currently there is a
charge to change from rotary
dial to TOUCH-TONE®service or back again. Ohio Bell
is asking to increase the
charge for changing to either
TOUCH -TONE or rotary
dial service . However, the
Company is also asking to
eliminate the separate service connection charge for
TOUCH-TONE on new installations by incorporating
it into the basic service and
equipment charge a customer
pays at the time of installation . The Company is also
requesting a 20 percent in·
crease in the recurring month·
· ly charge for TOUCH-TONE
service.

LONG DISTANCE
CALLS WITHIN OHIO
Ohio Bell is proposing a
$4 monthly charge per line to
all customers and to decrease
prices on direct dialed long
distance calls within Ohio an
average of 40 percent. Both
of these changes will apply
to all customers of other
Tclq1hone Companies which
concur in Ohio Bells Message
Toll Tclet•hone Service Tariff.
The proposed charge wou ld
he in addition to the proposed
new monthly rates for local
exchange service. The combined effect of the reduction
in long distance rates ancl the
new $4 charge per customer
line will not increase Ohio
Bell revenue .

DIRECT INWARD
DIALING SERVICE
(PBX CUSTOMERS)
Ohio Bell is seeking to
restructure the rates for direct
inward dialing service for
PBX customers to a more
usage sensitive basis. The
Company is proposing a rate
for each group of 20 numbers
and an additional rate based
on the number of trunks associated with such numbers.

CUSTOMER
- OPERATING CENTER
SERVICE
Ohio Bell is ·seeking lo
establish a new service for
Telephone Answering Services and Alarm Companies
called Customer Operating
Center Service. This service
would provide a dedicated
complement of cable pairs to
these businesses and allow
them to subscribe to bulk lines
instead of having to subscribe
to single lines. The service
would include a rate for the
cable and a charge for each
line activated.

l

The following items are
illustrative of changes in rates
and charges for some miscel- .
laneous services . More detailed information about these
items can be found in the
proposed tariff sheets.
• Increases in exchange
related services such as
the exchange access portion of Centrex lines,
airport lines and exhibi.
tion hall lines as well as
dormitory stations, joint
user service and special
recording trunks.
The following are illustrative of services for which the
Company is proposing increases of about 20 percent:
• Custom Calling Services
• Non-Published Service
• Additional Directory
Listings
• Certain Telephone Answering Services
• Directory Assistance Calls
• Operator Handled Local
Coin Calls
• Transfer of Toll Chatge
Service (also known as
Enterprise Service).
The prayer of the Application requests the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
to do the following: ..
(a) Find that the Company's '
present rates and charges·
which are proposed to be
changed and the regulations
and practices affecting the
same are unjust, unreasonable and insufficient to yield
reasonable compensation for
the services rendered;
(b) Find thai the rates and
charges and regulations and
practices which the Company
proposes to change are just
and reasonable and will prO:
vide not more than a fair and
reasonable rate of return on
the value of the Company's
property actually used and
useful for the convenience
of the public;
(c) Approve the filing of
the proposed schedule sheets
contained in Schedule E-I of
the Application, modified to
reflect such revisions, if any,
as may become effective,
pursuant to orders of the Commission, during the interim
between the filing of the
Application and the date upon which the schedule sheets
become effective:
(d) Order that the proposed
sheets become effective forthwith ;
(e) Approve the withdrawal
of the schedule sheets which
are proposed to be changed
contained in Schedule E-Z.of
the application, modified to
reflect such revisions, if any,
as may become effective, pursuant to orders of the Commission , during the interim
between the filing of the
Application and the date upon which said schedule sheets
are approved for withdrawal;
. (f) Grant such other and
further relief to which the
Company is reasonably entitled:
The form of this notice has
been approved by the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

-

I a rt. ol '"''' bdvertl1ed iteml i1 required to Ill readily
awoolable lgo tole ;,. eor h Kroger Store ••cept 11
IPI I •I •IOIIy noted in thit od_ If WI do U!l'l Ot.~f of 01'1
ath•" •••d Hem we .,. ill oHer r&amp;Ju WO\If c.l'loi(l of I
compa r ab l e ,,,., wl'll" gyo ilolt l e reflellint the tome
1g., .ngl o• o •ouHherla wh ic h w ill entitle 'fOil to pvrchotl
'"" oovertued 1 tem ot the ad vertlted prlre within 20
do,, Only one wen do • roupon will be O((lpted per Iter,"~
puH hen eel

. \nc\uding 4.'"·5

'

TOTAl SATISFACTION GUARANTeE

Your Friend~ Kroger Store

•

~·•••'~'"9 yo .. buy at lhog•• ' ' tl'oro,t.oed fen your total
\ol •lloct•O" ••go•dl•u al monwlo t lure r II ,a .. oro ftQI
ut"h•d Kroger .,.. , 11 r1ploce yo,.r 11om .,.;,~ the 111m1

brand o• o com,aroble btond or rofu"d your gy rc houi

9am
TlllOpm
Open Tuesday July 5th At 7:00am

Of Ju\y SaVIft9

P'' ' "

COP'YRIGHT ltl3 • TMI ,UOGll CO . ITI!MS AND ~ltcU
COOO SUNDAY . JUNI ~6 . JHIOUGH SATUIOA.Y , AlLY 2 .

""'IN GAlliPOLIS. AND POIERDY STORES
.
f

And Resume Nonnal Hours

"SI'OVI lHl liGHT TO liMIT QUANTIJiil . NONI

DEALEI$.

INC•IVIIOU~m ~ WRAPPED SLICES

14-17-LB. AVG. WHOLE

c

c

lb.

Polar Pak~
Ice Cream

Kroger America
Cheese Food

....... Boneless
Smoked Hams

12-oz.
Pkg.

'

S-7-lB. AVf;.. PORTIONS ••• LB. $1.19

Kroger All

Meat Wieners

l-Ib,
. . Pkg.

U.S.D . A . INSPECTED 10-14-lB . AVG.

Frozen

c

99 fat Milk ...... $149
69C
2
::! Dog -.. :.~:99 C
.

KROGER

.

0.5% Low-

~~~·.

,J
1
09
Cheese .-.. ....

KROGER

CoHage

KROGER SANDWICH OR

Young Turkeys .

lb .

5

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE . BEEF

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

~$

SOlD IN 5-IB . !lOllS ONlY ... ~ .95 each

I
/

RED, RIPE

Whole
Watermelons

TilE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY

•Each
•

,-,

38

8

PLUS
DEPOSIT

Pak

I

KIIOGU

Multi-Grain
Bread

•

2

16·01.

Lva.

Rib Steak ...

COME10 UFE

•

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola

Bag

Embers
Charcoal
WHERE NEW
IDEAS

..,

1-lb.

Bone In

CHOICE

..

PINT RETURNABLE BOTILES

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ,
BEEF 7-tNCH CUT

USDA

lb. .

•

ctnr .

Country Oven
Potato Chips

10

...

FIIOUN KIIOGU

Whipped
Topping

II

C:

-Ill.

KIIOCEII CHAIICOAI LICHTER FlUID
S2-0l . CAN ... $1."

12·01.
Ctnr.

IN THE HUSK

Yellow
Sweet Corn
9·Piece
BucketFULL MEAL DEAL INrt;LU,JU:

5

Eare

12·oz., Potato Solod, 12·oz. laked leona

Northwest
Bi~g Cherries

AMERICAN 011 MUSTARD POTATO SALAD.
SWIIT CHOPPED OR CREAMY SHREDDED
COLE SLAW OR MACARONI SALAD

20% OH
Salad Sale ....

. 87c

�--1913

The Daily

Se~tinel

PHONE
992-2156
W.itt
Cloooilit4 o..c.
Ill'

Doilty-

111 eo.rt st.. ' -· -

'

PH: 1-304-773-5634
Mason, W. Va .
C. L. Kitchen

EAFORD

6·29·! mo pd.

ALASKAN JOBS
~le

JACK'S
SEPTIC SERVICE

needoo in the eonstructioo industry. Many jobs to.oo filled from laborers to engineers. For information please enclose
seH-addressed, stamped envelope and mail to:

Cleaninc &amp;
Installation
of New Systems

AKCO

"Senior Citizens
10% .Discount"

6318 N . High St.
Suite 600
Columbua, Ohio 43216

Day or Nighr

RETRIEVES PART - Stale PoUce and
Transportation Department workers retrieve a part
of the T·95 bridge over the Mlanus River In

RIO
DISTRICT
COUNTIES OF GALUA·MEIGS-JACKSON-VINTON

•Greenwich, Conn. Tue!lday. Three people were ldlled
and three Injured when lhe span collapsed 110d feD '70
feel Into the river. (AP Lase111holo).

Notice Ia hereby given that two copies of the
propoted budget and estimate of cost of
opel'lltlon of the Rio Granda Convnunity
- Collage Diltrict. Counties of GaUia, Jac!&lt;lon,
Meiga; lind Vinton, State of Ohio, including the
cost of operating the Community Collage of
llllid district for the fiscal year 1984, are on fila
in _the , !lffiCe of . the undersigned Sacretary·
Treeau,. of the Board of TruStees open to
i~_on of .the P'!bllc P'!l'IIUIInt to the
requiremellta of law.
A public hearing on the propoted budget for
the Rio Grande Community Collage District
wiH be held at Allan . Hall 201, Rio Grande,
Ohio, on July 6, 1983 at 12:00 noon.

.Survivors watched trucks disappear
GREENWICH, COnn. (AP ) Wllliam Anderson and his girlfriend
were driving In darkneSs over the
Mlanus River, when suddenly two
trucks jackknifed ahead of them.
"I slammed on my brakes but It
looked like we were fixing to be In a
three-car wreck
and then the
trucks just disappeared," said the
University of Tennessee graduate
st udent, a lucky -- but shaken survivor of a bridge collapse on an
Interstate highway_
Anderson, .'lO, of KnoxvUie,
learned tater that along with the
trucks. a three-lane, 100-foot section
of the bridge had fallen 60 feet Into
the tide- swollen rtv.er or onto Its
marshy bank.
Three people died lrt the predawn
accident Tuesday, and three others
were seriously Injured.
"I thought I heard an explosion,"
said another eyewitness, Gordon
Gl)man, whose horn&lt;' Is on the river
llank .
"I looked out the window and I saw
a truck and a car coming off the
bridge and going Into the water.
Then 1 could hear moans. I could

hear people moaning."
The car carrying Anderson and
his girlfriend, Shannon Kelly of
Atlanta, came to a skidding stop 10
feet sh&lt;irt of the gaping hole In the
bridge on Intei'sta te 95.
Leaving their car In the center
lane, Anderson and Ms. ·Kelly
wa lked to the median guard rail.
There, Anderson tried frantically to
warn another car as It approat hed
the brokeq bridge.
"They tried to slow down." he
said. "But they didn 't make it. I' m
sure they just thought we had
troubles with our car and were
trying to stop them, " he told The
KnoxvWe Journal In a phone
Interview from his destination of
Portland, Maine.
Anderson and Ms. Kelly had left
Atlanta on Friday arid the two were
making stops as they traveled to
Ma ine to attend a wedding. Aller
wa tching · the New York Yankees
play Monday night, they headed
north on the turnpike and reached
the bridge at about 1:30 -a.m ..
driving In the rain _
'' I was In the cent er lane and saw

Meigs County happenings
Emergency runs
Local emergency units answered
five calls Tuesday and Wednesday
morning with all patient s going to
V~terans Memorial Hospital, the
Meigs County Emergency Medleal
Service reports.,
Wednesday at 3:44 a .m .. Middleport was called for William Lowe.
1262 Powell St.: Syracusewascalted
for Ruth Lewis, Dusky St. On
Tuesday at 9: l4 a.m. , Pomeroy
went to 400 Mulberry for Bernard
Might; Raclt)e at 2:49 p.m. was
ca lled for Cella Jenkins and at 4: :l6
p.m .. Mlddlpeort was called to
Imperial Elect ric for Jim Fisher.

Plan victory party
Modern Woodmen of America.
Camp 10900, wiU_stage a victory
par1y and meeting at 8 p.m.
Thursday a t the Tuppers Plains
Fire Station to make a public
presentation of the totat proceeds of
a fund drive conducted by the group.
Recelv lng the proceeds wlll be the
CootvWe Volunt eer Fire Department. Chester Volunteer Fire
Department and the TuppersPtalns
Volunteer F ire Department and
Rescue Squad. The camp wUI
provide cake, Ice cream and other
refreshments for the party.

To meet Friday

Veterans Memorial

the trucks in the left and right lanes
up ahead throw on their brakes,"
Anderson said. "I started to slow
down then and thought we were
going to be In an accident
"The truck in the right lane
started to Jackknife and the cab
came au the way around facing us
and then It went over.
"It reaDy wasn't apparent what
had happened, but after! stopped, --I was pretty nervous," Anderson
sa id. "We didn't know If the rest of
the bridge was going togo. "
After seeing the car go over the
side, Anderson succeeded in stopping a tractor-trailer, whose driver
used a CB radio to call for help.
It was another hour before
Anderson and Ms. Kelly were able to
back oft of the bridge, and they
pulled over for a few hours to'regalli
their composure.
"We did a lot of praying," he said.
"It was so dose, Another fiV\! o~ .10
mph and we'i::ouid have been down
there too. It was prettyh&lt;irribleandl
remember hearing tlie truck' saxtes
scrape as It went over. We just
wanted to get away from there."

POMEROY
lANDMARK

-~-

$12 95
Good Selection Of

GOI,.D SEAL
CX&gt;NGOLEUM

Cony -

r,

lllii'J I

! ::1 i 1

i ·li'f/'11
Admitted--Herbert Parker, SyraCallihan. Jason Cardwell, 1 ,------------~------------..
cuse; James Hockman, Bidwell; Opal
Donna Channell, Connie Cremeans,
I

Michelle Shamblin , Hartford; Ira
Wayland, Big Prairie, Oh.; Betty
Stover . Kanauga; VIrginia Boyd,
Pomeroy; Kimberly Jenkins, Racine; George Scott, Long Bottom:
Marvin Edwards. CUlton. W. Va.
Discharged--Cecil DeLong, Robert Williams, Sr.

Meeting postponed
The meeting of the Carleton
Board of Trustees scheduled for
Thursday has been cancelled due to
the death of Herbert Parker,
Syracuse, who served as president.
Tite meeting has been rescheduled for '!Uesday, July 5, at 7 p.m.
at Carleton Sehool.

Divorce sought
Peggy Sue Hill, Rt. 2, Racine, filed
suit for dlv01ce In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against Max
Edward Hill, Rt . 2, Racine.
In the same court, Leo Francis
Layne was granted a divorce from
Christine Annette Layne.

MaiTiage license
A marriage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
George William Hess, 20, Rt. 3,
Albany. and Janice Marie Fllkas,
19, Rt. 3, Albany.

Fteeta rna1. Michael Edelman,
Elsie Fulmer, Travis Greal, Gene
Hammond. Harry Hilt. Carolyn
Horsley. VIckie Jenkins, Russeu
Moore, Lilly Morning, Fred Parker.
Leo Plants, Linda Slayton, Dewey
Stone, Pamela Taylor, Ralph Taylor. Larry Thomas, Rachel Thomas,
s tephenTracey,RalphWaugh.Orat
Waybright, James WeyersmWer,
CharlesWIUiam, Mrs.DonaldWIWs
Jr. and son.
BIR111S
Mr. and Mrs_Jeffery Harvey, son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs_ Terry
Napler, daughter , Hamden_

Ohio louery winner

CU f b In fl G tlon 1I
I
Pay Cas· h for
1
Classlfleds and l1
Save I I I
11
-~

I Write your own ad and order by moil with th is I
I coupon. Ca ne. I vour ad by phone when you vet I
I results. Money not refundable.
I
I
j
1

Nam•------------

l Address&gt;---------

1
1 Phone, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
CLEVELAND (APl - The I
wbmlng number dr~wn Tuesday 1 Print one word in each
space below . Each in·
night In the Ohio Lottery's daUy I tit ial or group of ligures
game, "The Number," was 613.
I counts as • word . Count
In the "Pick 4" gwne, played five I name and address or Worcl~
times a week, the winning number I ~~~~~ ;~~~~;er' 1re~~1~
was 2636.
I it you describe fully, ---1-....:...j.:.:~f--..:..;.!-_;_i
The lottery reported earn~nBs of . I give _Price . The Sentinel Tots
$124 566 50 from the wagering on Its I r"'er,ves the nght to -T0
• · Earn~nBscameonsales 1 any
classtfy
, edtt ad
or witt
re ject -~·~·.j..._:_~~~~~--!
dallygame.
ad
.'Your
be
1
of $942 ~.50, whlle hOlders of I put In the propei ll~O~J:.lL-~~E~tt_:~,
winning. tickets were entitled to I classification it you' ll I
check the proper box
These ca!h rates
share $817,519, ortlctais said.
1be tow.
;nclude discount
1

-.,-.+-+----,+--+---;

Special service~ set

I
I
1
I

I
1
1

)Wanted
IForSate
1Announcement

11

J For Rent

1

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11.

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l&lt;
. - - • -- -to_
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I
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
I
The Dally sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, 011. 45769
1

.!

.,

I

I
I

•

1
1

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

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

DNitr

Older

..,

·················-···········-

PH. (304) 882-2276

Part BNgla puppiea. Call

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDI NGS
Sizes start from L2'Kl6'
Sizes from 6'16' Up
· to 14'136'
I nsul1td Do1 Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

llaci!!t. 011. • . · - 1 '
"l'tt bl4-443-5i:91 . '

!·3·tfc

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

6-20-t mo.

IO~Uc

"CUT OUT
FOR RJTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

Roger Hysell
GARAGE .

•Walhera •Dithwashert
Ranges
•ftafrtgerators
•Dryer&amp; •frHIIrl

PARTS ond SERVICE

H ·ttC

St. Rt. 124, Pomtror. OH .

RADIATOR

H. L. Writesel

SERVICE

ROOFING

and recore redilltorl end ' - ·

We

tar -

C8l'l ntpllir

w. C8l'l ....,

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

acid boll and rod out
dlatuoa. Wa el8o ntpllir

Also Transmisaion

PAT HILL FORD

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
H ·Uc

ra·

GaTanlta.
992-2196
Middleport, "Ohio
I·IHtt

----Gaue11 .,_.
~and

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 or 992·7314

locatoo

Pomeroy, Ohio

HOME REPAIR

POOLS

Roofing · Siding ·
Troughs, ·
Do~n Spouts
Windows · Doors
For "All" Your Home
Repairs ...

PHONE:
1-304-773-5634

t 11calwook

(Fr.. E1HmatM)

in

PERSONALIZED

'

"Free Estimates" ...

Mason, W. Va.

Call : George Gum

C. L. Kitchen

Ph. 992-5433

4-17-1 mo

11-M-Hc

5·!6·2 me .

ISears I

MIUER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

_97 ACRES - 7 room home.
OUtbiritding;, lree gas Of will
divid~ Eastern schools.

~allation .

Raaidential
&amp; Commercial
C•ll 742-3196
H ·tlc

MoBILE HOllE - l'rlth large add-on buldin~ asphalt drilleway.
Located on QUiet street out of high water in Racine_The living room
is extra large. There is a cement walk and large covered porch, also
a metal storage buildin&amp; You can be 1n th~ ooe in two """ks lor
on~ $16.900.

Riders &amp; Sons
SALVAGE COMPANY
S.R. 124-Ph. 992-5468
Buyers of &amp;IHS. aluminum
Clll$, iroa, mellts.
TOP PRICES
Copp« ....................45' lb.
Alminum Clns
20&lt; lb.
bdillors ..... ... .. __ _30' lb.
Asst. Glass .. $1.00 hunthd
llixed Iron .. $1.00 hundred
Also Piekinc Up Auto BoditS

NEW LISTING - Priced for quicksal~ 2bedrooms, bat~ large living 10001 and eat~n kitchen. Lower level has 3rd bedroom, laundry
area and extra room Concrete floor with shed at the end of drive.
Conventional and FmHA f~ancing possible. As~ng $27,500. Make
your offer. owners loss can be yoor gain. Located in Racin~

00 . . . .

3 ACRES IN RACINE -Surveyed flat ~nd. private and peacelul
location. Owner will h~p fmanc~
NEW LtsnNG - ~ mile out of Racin~ 3bedroom home on \! acre
fol, living 10001 carpeted, kitcherta and d~ilg room Pine &amp;Cedar.
Look and make offer. Asking $24,900_

Trencher &amp;
Backhoe Service

FREE
ESTIMATES

For all your wiring
needs; furnace• te· •
pair aervlce and in- I

Housing
Headquarters

6-22-l OlO.· Pd-

Eleven puppi11 to give away.
Half Lemon Walker , halt
~lack and tan Beegle. Good

hunting dog1 l 992-6265 .

To good home . Kitten. 3

Puppie1 , mother, small dog.

304 676-4064.

TWO kittens , 1 cat, 304·

876-5728 .

Septic.Systems -

Water: ~as, Sewer

•Chain Link Fence

-carpeting

•Painting

!Sears]
CATALOG IIIIERCHANT
Pomeroy, OH.
Greu &amp; Potty Glbbs-Owntrs

PH . 992·2178 ,_,._,,

&amp; Electric
Cable Lines
Custom Welding-Certified
Small Plumbin&amp; Jobs
(Bonded &amp; liconsod)

992-2834

304-676-7248.

All types of roof Mrt, new
or ~pair. cutters and ' 6

doors and windows. · ·
All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

Call: 949-2263
or 949-3091;_10_11 ,

Lost and Found

Lott-- Girl'e clats ring at
Meigs County Fair Grounds.

Roword. 986-3081 .

Ryder Truck Rtntti·One· WI,

Locol and OllHIIy low rates
iop-llllinllin«! trucks

Rl,.,. sills, """ .. uipment
H111d trut:ks. furniture pads
Nit-ide rOid sorvi&lt;e

MINE RUN

KING

STRIP
COAL

TropltJ
"'--'! M1nufactur
PLAQUES·

ENGRAVING.

SJ()OO ATON

0 Jericho Rd.

PH. 992-2280

I-3DW75-13

ULTRA CLEAN
CLEANING SERVICE

NEW USTING - 2 bedroom trailer, 12•55. tor salecompletelyfurnished Of unfurnished. inclooing underpinnin~ Ask oo this one.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY 'JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 992·6951
Or 992-2751 To heve A llmace

PIWI.

986-4244.

Illy Foen Etdndion llotltod,
Colpot llld u,ltolstoty cr.tin,
Dttp . , _ • Short O!yirw
r- lilt ._ cloy. Anti-lOiail
1111......
ol'lofotsionot Spot flotnoni Sor-

• I

oflrtor Stri~ Soolln' Wox·

...

..:,SC:Nr::·

NOTICE OF
FORECAST Fl Ll NG

&amp;Contn.tioi

Ct..,iOC

FNI ~ on Ill Slrwitls

lnsur1nce Work Welcome

Coli Rlclt Hovener

992·2108 &amp;l-Imo

On April 13, 1983, Monogaheta Power
Company, 1310 Fairmont Avenue, Fairont ~
Virginia, filed its Annual long-Term Forecast Re-port with the Division of Planning and Forecsts of
the Ohio Department of Energy. Copies of this fo-.
recast and information of a regional nature pre·
paretl by ECAR are on file at the following libraries:
Library
County
Veron Alden library
Athens
Meigs Local;,School D;..irict
Pubic library
Meigs
Monroe ~nty District Library
Monroe
Kate love Simpson Library
Morgan'
Caklwefl Public Library
Noble
Washington CoUnty
Public library
Washington
Nelsonvile Public library
Athens

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Be1utiful, Cus,om
Built GIIIIIS '
Clll for frH Sid inc IS· :
timiiiS, 949-2801 or

949-2160.

No Sunday Calli

J.ll·tft

New Homes - Extensive
Remodelin1.
•I nsur1nce Worl:
OCustom Pole Btd&amp;s.
&amp; Glii&amp;IS
•Roofin1 Work
&lt;Aitninurn &amp; Vin,l Sidin&amp;S
15 Yean bpe,ience

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7513
or 992 .. 2282 111 1-i lc

GOING OUT Of
BUSINESS SALE
All SALES FINAL!
20% OFF ·
Our Low E¥ttyd1y
Prices Until Stock
Is Sold .

322 llo. Second St.
ltlidtlltport, Ohio 45160
1110.

Golf l.assons Special
ADULTS .. .. ... 6 for $40.00
STUDENTS ____ 6 for $30.00
'Golf Trips
'Pro Shop
'Fitting Center
'ltletal Woods
'Club Repair
'Fishina
•
John Tulord
Chester 6 16 I mo

TERESA'S
CAKE
DECORATING
Wedding cakes and
All Occasion Cakes

P\1.

PH. 992-3047
6-21-t 1110.

clothing .

ot Centerville.

GARAGE Sale . Redwood
g1te , ttorm door, blby toy1,

Yard Sale Friday &amp; Sat. JUly
1 6 2. 9-1 Clothes&amp;. misc. Le
Grande Ave .. off Rt . 141 .

108

10 Family Yard Sale bAntiques . electric organ, canning 6 freezing containers,
clothes Uean1), dishes. etc . 1
mile from Centenary on Rl .
141 , June 30-July 1

clothing. etc . Frldoy 8:30-1
Engllth

Court .

Pt

GIGANTIC yard tale , Thurl·
day . Friday S. Saturday .
Staffhou• Rd ., Pt. Plea-

lint . Fill o beg t1 .00.

office at 3m fout1ll Slreet. Marietla, Ohio.

0

ear,.tM, . btdlno• ....
sllo!Nr. ID or MI. rtlrlt-.
frmllet. I lot. Wllerltelttt.

,..._ .._ ... alact., or
bllfarr fialtll. .,..,. '· ...

cellllt Ill fllloll.

$2,700.00 or lilt Offlr
PH.H2·30015

---.:•&lt;imiirv--- ·------

SoUth Partt. Pt. Pleasant .
Don 't mill thia one . some thing for ev.ryone . Th'-' rt·
day, 10 :00, Friday open till
dark. Bicycles.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1- - - - - - - - - -

Garage sale July 1 8r. 2, 9

o.m. to e p.m. 37938

Kingsbury Rd. New Searl
Jet pump &amp; tank , o ld vanity
dresser, dishwasher . child 's
car seat, boy' s clothes to
size 4 , misc .

Rummage &amp; Mit ~ . Sale.
Wed . thru Sat., Clark Chapel
Ad. 1 mile off Rt . 160 at
Por1er .

Three family yard sa le. Fri day and Saturday, upper &amp;nd
of Syracu se . 10 a·.m . to 4
p.m.
Furniture. carpet.
playpen , ca r seat. b11by
things and c hildren ' •
clothes.

Yard Sale Arnold St. Bidwell . Wed . &amp; Tnurs. New
uxaphone. complete , Atari.
2 bike1, toys. book., clo·
thing. jeant.

I- - - - - - - - - -

Antiques : clocks , wood
churn, wall telephone. wal·
nut table, round oak tabte,
pocket watchll. jewelry-·
10K, 14K ; kn ives. guns.
dehumidifier, video recor~er
neech: repair, VW gasoline
heeler . upright aweeper,
lawn mower. toys. curtains,
cloth8s . July 1,2 ,3 . 9 -4 .

Yord Solo. Frl

&amp;

Garage 11le --July 1,2 ,3 .
1624 Lincoln Heights ,
Pomeroy. Clothes &amp; toys , 1
1 0 -spaad , 2 3 -speeds . Boyt '
clothes. 9 - n
Big vard talel Roush Land ·

ing. 46909 SR 124. Satur-

day and Sunday .

Yard sale, three family ,
Friday . July 1. 2 34 Mulberry
Ave .. Pomeroy. 9 a .m . to 4
p.m .
Thursday and Friday. Follow
12.t from Reed svil le to
Riverview School tign . Turn
right. 3rd house on left .
Ya'd Sale July 1 and 2, 9
a .m . at Don lisle' s , Syra cuse . Rt . 124 . Rain can celt.
Yard 11le Tuesday through
Friday . acro11 from Brad bury Elementary .
July 4 and 6 . Buck Town
Road . Letart . Ohio. Purl
Willis retidence.
Yard sale -- Ellen Ebertbach
ratidenca. Depot St ., Rutland. July 2 and 3 , 9 1. m . to

Porterbroqk Subdivision .

Sat . illt_12 .

I

Children &amp; adult clothing .
fireplace doors. toys. house·
hold items, mite·.

446-9800
Public Sole
8t Auction

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
'lowest Rates
Around
'Friendly Servie

Auction every Tuesday
night. Krodel Park Club
Houte , Pt. Pleaaant WV.
Auct. 'LonniO Neal. Call

814-387-7101 .

Rick Pearson -Auctioneer
Service . Ettate. Farm , An ·
tlque &amp; liquidation ule.s .
licensed &amp; ·bond8d in Ohio •

WVo . 304 -773 -5786 or
304-773-9186 .

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY
· -li-II C

Applications will be ac ·
cepted July 1 tt thrv 1Oth tor
apprentice ·plumbtn &amp; pipe
fitters. Applica.ion may be
pick up et the Ohio State
Employment Office or 2134
Ga,lla St., Po rttmouth ,Oh .
TranscriPt of grade• muat be
presented at Ohio State
Employment offi~e prio r t o
aptitude test Applic ant
mutt be 18 to 26 years of
age . E.O .E.

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'Sidin1
'Roofing
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodeling
20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 843-5425
~2lm~otl

AUCTION every Saturday

night. 6 p.m. Mt . Alto

Auction Barn . Consign ·
menta taken every Saturday
1 :00 till tale time . Emma
Bell Auctineer, 304 -4:28-

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
9

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulltion

•SwmDoon
•Storm Wr'\doWI
~eplacemant 'MndOWI

•New Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772
6/ 27/tfn

Wonted To Buy

3 Announcements

OeorljOI Croelo Ad .
446-0294.

Colt

592-3061 . or 12 to 4PM 1980 BAYVIEW Dolu,.,
1-80 0 -341 -6664 in Ohio .
23

Professional
Service s

PIANO TUNING-LANE' OA -

omount. Colt 614-388· 13
Insurance
8806 .
--------

•..,..,.,,

31 Homes lor Solo

1974 Kirkw oo d. unfur nished two SR . appliances;
underpinning , c arpet , ceilIng tan . Excellent Condit ion.

Newly remodeled 2 norv
fra me. 1 Yz bath. 3 Vr acret,
city schools, riverv ie w .
&amp; 6.

dlep ort. Newly remodeled
home with fireplace . polli·
ble woodburner. close to
schools 1nd ~hopping . Call

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

BEDS -IRON , BRASS, old

jara, afttklue•. etc ., Complata houaeholda . Wrlta:
M .D. Mlll•r. At . .t. Pomeroy,

meet Individual nwda . Con·
tact Ray Wedemeyer. agent.
Phone 388-8249 .

3 bdr. brick home, 1 'h bath•.
run b111m4nt, nice private
yard, located on ManlnDr. 1

Ara you paying to much for
Gold, sltver. starling , ja- your hoaphal-health lnauwairy, ringe. old coin1 • ranee . Call Carroll

ble loan at 1 0% Interest .
Sritall down payment. Call
814-38B -8348daysor448-

By owner, 3 bdr., modern
home.·tuU buement. central
heat &amp; air, 2 acres of land.

toH furniture. gold , 11tver clot· homo and peroonet property Coli 614-378-2613 .
weight with N- Shope Diet lara, wood ice boxes, ltone coverau•• are available to 1- - - - - - - - - -

Wanted to buy. N•w . uMd&amp;.
entiqua furniture. WHI buy 1

piece ol complete houH·
holdt. Ctlt Otby A. Martin
614·tltl2·e370.

1- - - - - - - - - : - mi. from Hoapltol. Auumi 8042 evo. Alit lor Cothy.

building. Scout Comp Rd .

Eaetem Local School Diatrlct . .t ..13 acres. C1ll 9BI5·

4346.

'

OenerJI Hauling tnd Tr11h HouM for ule in Harr,ton-

Wonted: Old hardbound Nmovel Bervlco. Reliable
boob, old dlerleo, letto&lt;1, .,d dependoblo. Coli 446·
etc. No textbOoko. Atoo, old 3168 between. and e .
peln11ngt. 193·1111. ,
Wonting to do wallpapering,
CLEAN ocrop oluminum, 30 Interior • eoterlor pointing.
conto tb. otoo buying cent 20 Al.o houMCieaning • yard
cenll lb. Tr1-8tete 8atvoge worlt. Ctlt 448-4Ue or
304·623·6172.
446·8623 .,

1981 Happy House 14•62
on lot Johnson 's MH Park ,
eJitc. co nd. Call 614-266 -

1775 .

1971 Winnebago motor
home (big one) , very good .

Catl448-7077.

14o70 Elcono 78, 3 bdr ..
both end hoff, t9,000. Cot!
between 8 &amp; 9 in • ...,e.

EJittra nice 1974 Freedom.

12' ' 65 ' mobtle homo. At!

elactrlc , with air condi- ,

!loner. Aaklng t7,000. Cttl
Hob1tetter Re11ty, 992·

5738 .

14 :~~86 Schult mobile home,

3·bOdroom houH. full baoo- excellent condition, on 1 .22
mant. smal! barn and out

18 Wented to Do

1 4x70 trailer &amp; 10 acre• ot

HOUSE FOR SALE In Mid- electric furn . or unfurn. Set

Control hunger and

Pten and Hydrea W1tar Pille
at Fruth Pharmec:y.

810,000 . Coli 256 -6035 or
oftoo7 PM 258 -1672.

fond . too t26.000. Coli
132.000. Colt 446-4222 814-388-9949 oftar 5PM .

surance Co . hat offered
Mrvlcas for fire in1urance
coverage In Gallia County
tor almost a century . Farm,

Call e14 -388-

------~-­

Coli 614-446-0176.

Wonted. Junk tutoa, ony SANOY AND BEAVER In· 614-992-8941 ·
condition.
9303 .

614 -246 -6406 or 4480212.

614-742-2961 .

7 p.m. 304·676·23U be- between 9

fore 7 .

448-8211 .

N 1E LS . Reliable service 1969 121160 2 bdr. tot• I
since 1966. A11ociate o f alec. •3.400. 1979 14~682
Brunicardi Mutic Co . Phone bdr.. total alec.. •&amp;.900.

1-==========
Penon•l Care , tle11lble
houn. would like to tplit
wMk . 304-875 -5019 after

1 4x70 2 BR C / A. tirepl•ca.
garden tub . nppliancet . underpinning. I 1 4 ,00. Call

Must .tell 1976 1411170 w ith
tilt out, remodeled. new
PIANO TUNING 86 off plu1 ~ arpet throughout. total
discounts to senior citirans · electric. w ood burner. cenchurches-sc hools . Call Bill tral air . partially furnished.
Ward Ward ' s Keyboard . underpinning , ,9 ,800. Call

446-4372.

Situation a
Wanted

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL ·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
AT 35. PHONE 446-7274 .

2 lots &amp; a mobile home
12• 60. 2 bedroom. with
rural water . gas heat. Has
furniture . pri ce
HOME LOANS 11 % fi•od su·me
$ 12,600 . Or41ou&amp; mobile
rate. Leader Mortgage , 77 E. 114.800
. Clll448 -1240.
State, Athens, Ot"t io . 1 -614-

26660 .

1-

32 Mobile Homos
for Salo

22 Money to loan

Person to cara for elderly
man in hit home. 304-675-

SUndlng Timber . any

SWEEPER . and aewlng me·
china rapelr, pert1, and
auppliea.
Pick up and
,dtllvary, Davit Vacuum
CJNner. one half mila up

that you do business wilh
pe op le you know, and NOT
to send monov through the
ma il until you have investigated the oHering.

FUN JOB. PART TIME LADIES NEEDED TO HIRE TRAIN TOY -GIFT DEMONSTRATORS . FREE
TRAINING. NO EXTRA FINAL WEEKS OF HIRING.
CALL BETTY COLLECT
304-744-0924.

AECPTIONIST Allittant tor
doctors office . Send complete resume with 11iary
re(fuiremenu to 80.11 S -30,
Point Pleasant Register. 200
Main St. Pt. Pleasan t. WV

2861 .

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES _ USEO - CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
INOTICEI
THE OHIO VALL EY PUB- CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
liSHING CO . recommends 448 -7672.

Looking tor women who
would like to have toy
parties or would like to be a
Friendly Home Dealer. Get
kit with •280. to •300 .
worth of toy• &amp; giftt to a tan
with . For more info . ca ll
Pomaroy 992 -3561 .

Volley P1azo. 446 -8026 or 12
448 -8028 .

448 -0069

HOUSE. frame, 1 'h ttory,
upstairs unfin il hed . full
basamel\t. ca rport . e111tra
large lo t, call 304 -882-

21

3637.

Buying Gold, Silver, Pletl ·
num . Gold and Silver pricea
are the highest In two years,
check our price• on gold •
silver. acrap jewelry . Buying
Old coin• . scrap rings 8t
silverware . Daily quotes
available . Alto coina 81 coin
supplies for tale. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring

&amp; dirt hauling . will ley short
or long 911 S. w ater line ~.
backhoe work . Free ettlmates . Pt-t p na 304 -273 -

lllnanglel

Complete Auctioneer Ser- p.m. at 814 -992 -8297 .
vice. Also do appralsalt. E.O.E.
Licensed &amp; bonded to Jell .
Houaeholda. farm furnls~ ­
lngs &amp; Real eatate . Over 26
years e"perlence in buying &amp;
selling new. used It antique
furniture . 614-992 -6370 .
Osby A. Martin.

ASSUMABlE 8 1Jt percent
loan . 3 bedroom. central air.
all electric, 2 lots 2 3 0 tt.
long. Gallipolis Farry. Wlll
take trailer trade-in. 304-

3186_or· 304.- 273 -9830

Registered Nune wanted
tor ~ . V . Therapy t8am. Catual part time status. Call
Brenda Jac!uon, after 2

EUGENE LONG

h perience hou se painting
and lawn mower repair. Very
reasonable r&amp;tes. Call 448 -

6688.
SELL THE. BEST. Sell Avon . SEPTIC systems. tands cap · 875 -8809 .
Call 448 -3368 .
ing (all size of dozers ). gravel

curroncy. Ed Burton Iorber Snowden, 448·4290.
..Shop, Middleport . 892- 1-----------.,
3476.

A copy of the forecast is available lor public in·
spedion at Monongahela Power CA!mpany's business

Grog Bliloy'-992-6864.

30 &amp; July 1. 8:302936 MEADOWBROOK Juno
8
:00
.
ClothinQ all tizet.
Drive. Pt. Pteonnt. Frlcley,
ite ms. Off ST.
9-7 Soturdoy 8-12:00. Good houtehold
RT.
35
.
county
Rd 8. Village 180 S._2nd. Middleport.
junior winter and tumm•!

Golli oils , Ohio

Oti. Dr !192-7760.

FOR SALE
18 FT. WILD CAT
TRAVEL TRAILER

boy 'a clothing, jeant. blcy·
cle, clothing , toys. heme.

Lost 'or mi11ing -- 1 0 month
old palamona colt. lilt seen
on SR881 East. Darwin .
Information. call992- 3888 .

We P•Y caah for late model
clean u ..d cars.
Frenchtown C•r Co .
8111 Gene Johnton

"'Ucentad &amp; lntpeetad"

BAILEY'S SHOES
5-25- t

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

9-5. Good bobv clothing.

RIVERSIDE V.W. INC.

2 2J.tk.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Garage Sale Thur1. S. Fri..

July 1 and 2, 1 mi . from Five
Points, Flatwoods Road .

hinc tips and insur~nct

6·1·1 mo pd

THE

TROPHY

·

FOUND -- Young female
poodle-typ8 mix . Black with

lin

ture. Iota more.

&amp; Vicinity

For God 10 lo ved the world
that He gave Hit only
begonen Son, 1hat who soever believeth in Him
should not peri1h. but have
everlasting life . John 3 :18 ,

6

Rd . Gottlpolto. Antique furni-

brook. Pt . Pl"aant , Thuraday &amp; Friday . Gun1. knlvea.

.. --- -Gaiii-i:ioiis---------

downspouts," &amp;Utter clean·

in&amp; and paintinc, siOfllt

.t Family Yard Sale July 1-2.
from 9 to 6, 71 Mill Creek

2914 Birch Ave. Mudow-

Happy Ads

742-2328

Pomeroy, Ohio

June 29th . 30th . 9 milea
from Pt , P._aunt on Rt . 2.
Everything from A·Z. 8 · 1 .

BLOCK 1olo, t 20. 122, 128

8t77.

NEW LISTING- 2 bedroom fully furnished Mobile Hom~ Including wasller and dryer. Located on private drive. Asking Sli.OOO.

Mononphela Power Company

7809.

TWO year old male reglttared Pekingese. ro good
home, no children , phone

hom~

Any iniEr!Sed person may, within thirty (~ •
days following the dele ol this publication, file a motion, with the IMon ol Planning for Forecasts of the '
Ohio Department of Energy, to interwne in any sche- :
duled hearings on the ..on&amp;·Term Fcwecast Report' '.

Two wh ite male ldtte.na and
mother to give away . 992-

8

Williams Trenching

&amp;Vicinity

montho old . 304 -676· Ple ..ent.
2t36.

All Malces

Yard Sale at 1163 Seeond
Ave .• Gallipolis. July 111, &amp;
2od. 8 to 7. Good ae ..ction
of boys. women• &amp; man•
clothing . Tools, and lots. of
appliances . chain hoist.
ttone crock, no junk .

watch•• and mi.c.

KITTENS . 304-675-3922.

*Vinyl Liner
*fiberglass __
*Stainless Steel

-Addoro and ............
•:Rug cnl .,.... wDIII

CENTRAL ~REALTY

;;r.v! r, I til
lllJILANU

Routt 1
Lon1 Bottom, OH. 45743
915·4193 or 992·3067

oiiACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEIIS
ol.IIESTONE
.WATER. GAS,end
. SEWER LINES
oi'OIOS, IECLAIATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
IIOIIDED &amp; IIIOitlt GUARN11EED !
PHONE Jll CLIFFORD
992-7201
J-1-1.

IIIODLEPORT - 2 bedroom
near sta-es. $17,500.

Good tltru June 15

-·

Cash &amp;
Carry

RUTLAND FURNITURE

DISCHARGE;; JUNE 28
Maggie Arnold, Roger Bissell,

$8,500.

~ 6l4-992·2181

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

POMEROY -

~:J:~K

Cash &amp;

$499

tRAILER &amp; 2 LOTS Syracuse.

15 Cu. FL. .. 1325.95
Pri~

Roofi11 &amp; Siclinc Co.

Farm Equipment

•DOZER

OVER 300 ACRES- 10 room
hom~ 2 baths and free gas

SPECIAL

15 male kittens, 1 female ~
tiger, 3 tong hair. Call

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

UTILITY BUILDINGS

New llolilnd. Bush Hoc

J&amp;F

EXCELilNT - fOf the business couple. 2\! baths, modem
7 rooms.

CAR WASH - Good
near service statiort.

------Pi-Pieiisa'rit .... -

1 Border Collie m.olo block &amp;
white, 1 yr. old. Call 815268-1836.

6·9·1 mo

Authorized John Deer,

CONTRACTING

'" THE COUNTRY - 14x70
trailer and 3 acres.

0000

3 boooo of lmoll chlldrenl
dothlng . Loflovor from yord
..r• • con 446-0898.
614-388-8771 .

"FINONG NOVtDIS PIIVACY Pt.US
PIDTEcTION F01 CHttORIN &amp; PliTS"

,

room.

CHEST MODELS
5 Cu. Ft. ..... 1235.95
1285.95
8 Cu. Ft.
15 Cu. Ft. ... 1355.95
20 Cu. Ft. ... 1418.95
25 Cu. Ft. oo• 14n.95

Good Selactillr! Of
GRAsS CARPET

..c.1.
c.ou.,···

U.$. RT. 5.0 EAST
GUYSVILll. OHIO

12-20-Nc

RIVER FRONT- 3 bedrooms.
fumac~ carpeting and famiy

FREEZER SALE

STARTING AT
INSTAllED
WITH PAD

cll•rvo to tho ~&lt;~verttur.

RUTlAND - 2 strry, 3
bedrooms and 2 level lois.

SERVICE STATION
992-9932

::::., :::

:,~~m~1_•c:.,;: !~n 1: . tt;,~

~'\ r

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

12 UNITS - Uve in ooe and
rent lhe others.

-·

L.lll(l:sl ~cii:Cilllll lit ~'ll lilll:;i sll:ttl 1111111

NEW USTIIIG - Just tight br
chiklrert. 3 bedroOms, bath, TP
water, CMpetin&amp; fuR basement,
tumau, front porch, bam, and
9 acres in the country.
$32.500.

SWill POOL - l 'h baths.
c;r-pet 7 rooms in Middleport

SERVICE STATION
OPEN 24 HAS. A DAY

Giveaw•y

!.~h:VE~09~1~

CHAIN LINK FENONG NEEDS

BOGGS

in1- Sidin1- Conerttt
Pllios ~ Sidewalks New ConslrllCiion - Rt·
moiltllnJ - Cqsto111 Pole
IMM.

COUNTRY - A family home
with Heat-o-latOf. 3 bedrooms.

LOWEST PRICES
lN AREA

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO_ S
CARPET SHOP

CARPET

64 Misc. Merchandiaa

TIRE SALE

11!0 GRANDE COMMUNITY COLUGE DISTRICT
Dr. Hennen L

Hospital News

Betty Baker and , 'the Joy!ul
Sounds wUI be cond)lcting special
The Meigs County Fox Chasers
services beginning this evening and
Association wlll meet at tbe cablnon
Hearing slated set
runnlng tllrough July 3, a( the Full
Eagle Ridge Friday at 7:30p.m.
Gospel LighthOuse on Hiland Road,
The Community Block Grant
just oft the Route 7 by-pass at
Potluck dinner !let
hearing Wtu he held by the Meigs - Pomeroy.
County Commissioners this evening
Services wW begin at 7:.JI p.m.,
The Long Bottom Community at 7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens
nightly.
.
Assoclaiton will hold a potluck Center.
This Is the first revival under a
dinner this eVening at 6 p.m. In the
new pastor, Tom Kelly, Who lsalsoa
new Long Bottom Community Mee18 Saturday
local school teacher.
Building.
The public Is·Invited.
HarrisonvWe Lodge F&amp;AM wlll
Friday dance
meet Saturday, July 2. at 7: :rl p.m.
Public hearing !let
at the temple. All master masons
1-'0MEROY - .A dance party
Invited to attend.
will
be held at Royal Oak Park
The board of trustees of Seiplo
Friday
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Township wW have a public hearing Postpone shower
sponsored
by Royal Oak Dance
on July 1 at 7 p.m at the township
Club
for
members
and guests.
building to discuss' budget and
A sh&lt;iwer for the Rev. Steve
Music
wlll
be
Provided
by the
revenue sharing for the fiscal year. Nelson, new pastor. planned for
'l'l!nettmers.
PoUuck
cllnner
will
All citizens, especially senior citi- Saturday night at theAsburyUnlted·
be at 6: :rl p.m. sharp. Admlallon
zens are Invited to attend, Betty J . Methodist Church has been postIs $15 per couple. Iced. tea and
Bishop, clerk announced. ·
poned until Saturday, July 9.
coffee will be provided.
t

j

~litchtn C.bintls - Roof·

VI R G I L B . S R . · f!:IUl:-:!1::101~,~~~216 r. 2ncl St.
Phone
H 614 )· 992-3325

HOUY PAliK -14•70and 18
acres in the country.

6-29-1 me. pd.

•

· The Daily Sentinel-Page- II

Middleport, Ohio

oftor 4. 614-245-6671.

N£VI USTIIIG - Modernized
2 bedroom holne. Fumi!Ce,
bat~ CMpetin&amp; 1, basement,
and central air. Just $15.000

PH. 992-7119

Pomero f

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel

New Hontes - btensive
RemodtliRI
'lnsurenee Work
'Custom Pole Bld&amp;s.
I GarlltS
'Roofinc Work
'Aluminum &amp;
Vinrl Sidin1s
David Bricklot
PH ,992· 7119

THE DAILY SENTINEL

.8,·
- •
,·. usiness _se~~·, ,

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

GENERAL
CONTRACTING, Inc.

THE DAILY SENTINEL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR
ROUTES IN POMEROY.
CALL 992-2156

June 29, 1983

i~::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::~~r:;;;=:;=;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;=:~::~~==ii1~~o~rwauem~lo
offer any other thing for -.Ia

Deviil Brickle•
Bullineu With

HElP WANT D

Hard working

m~

We~luenlay,

vNio, t5.600. Colt 1·114·
928-44t7. .

1-----------::-BY owner, GrMnbrler Eat·

ate. mid ontry whh 2 car
gorego. 2288 oq. ft.. 3.6
ecret, 2 yeart old. 1715,000.

Phone 304-773·9114 ofler
I p.m .

acres . Flatwooda Ad ..
POmeroy. Porch, g1rage, ,
metal building. nice gerden

opoce. 742 -2430.

USED MOBILE HOME .:
671-2711 '
.
1978 Shannon. ,3 bdrm. ott

alae . 14x70, built-on room.
12Jt28 .coaiorwoodburner. ··,
large porchtl, utility bldg.
'acre lend, axe . cond. good
well, Jerry' s Run Road.

Applo Grove. 304-876·
2356.
I

�- --- - -

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

12 The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every lime

32 Mobile Homes
Good clean u•d mobile
home. 81 model, total elK.
With washer. Clll 448 ·

2&amp;Q6.
WHY

PAY

RENT1

Now

14'x70' 3 bedroom Fairmont mobile home, lilt price

1 15 , 995 .

Now only

$13. 995 . Plus free air conditioner. 1 0 percent down pluJ
low bank financing. A fullot
of mobile hOmes to choose

-~

Hi ,__,. a ....... AlumlnUm.,.ng.molole.-.
wood. brlcll, -dlltOftO

~WI1/I

111kSEP/IWS-·

buldl"' eured.
941-

OFFiiT~

t

'

•

i
-

FIGUI&lt;E OUT

WHY---

-

USED M obile Homes. 304·

576-2711 .

F • K T- Trimming. ltump
romovol. C81UI78-1331 . ·

33 Farms for Sale .

RINGLE'S IERVtCE eape-o
rlencod rooting. lncludktthot tor opplcatlon. corpentar, oloctrlcloli, m01on. Cell
304-871 ' 20BB or 17&amp;41180. -

W.U.r Willa. Commerclol
ond Domeotlc. Told holeo.
Pumpo Soleo ond Service.
304-1911-3802.

87 VOLK8WAGON camper·
von. goo_d condltlon,,1200.
304 -8711-31BI . 2910
Spruce Avo . Pt. Pleount.

~HREE

Furni1hed one _br ept. in pt.
Pleasant . Extra nice. adults
only . No Peb. 304 -8761388 .
.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
For Sale : From 2 to 11 acr..
elderly &amp; disabled with liin
in Galllpolla Townahip, on
income of leta than
Bulavillo Rd . Coli 446 -.
$12,300. Renting ·for 30
FOR RENT WITH OPTION percent q.f adjusted InCome4570 .
TO BUY : 14' Wido, 2 bod - . Phone 304-871) -8679 .
1h Ac re lot, 1 mi. from room, all electric mobile
Hospital, just off . 36 on home. setting on nice lot. FURNISHED opertment.
Mit.c hetl Rd . City schools; ready to move into. 8186.00 do_wntown Pt . Plea11nt. All
rural water . $7&amp;00 . Call par month . 304-678-2711 . utilities · P•id, depoatt re446-3933 or 676-1867.
quired ; 304·896 . 3450.
2 br. mobile home. fur nished •186 . per month .
1 Y, Acrea. 400 ft . road
frontage, Centerpoln't Road, 304-876 -651.2.
good location near
churchet . •3.000 . 00 . NICE. 2 bedroom house, For rent Sleeping Roome
basement , in nice neighbor- and light houae keeping
-......, Phone 6B2-6944 .
hood, clean condltioo. 1
2 lA ACRES . corner Greer &amp; child allowed , 304-675 - rooms. Park Central Hotel.
8 Mile . Black top road. city 1301 .
Call 448-0758.
water available, owner will
Sleeping room t126, utildea
SIX room houu for rent, . pold, alnglo molo. Shore
p•~ for tap . 304-676-1198.
304-675-2780.
bath, 919 Second Ave.
Gallipolil. Cell 448-4418
1 . 3 acre land, teptic tank,
city water, alec . outbuilding,
after 7PM.
2 mllos out Sand Hill Rd. on
Farms for Rent
Bethel Road . 16.000 . 304Have vacancy for elderly
876 -4399 .
person. Room , board .and
Farmhouse end-or farm . 3 f.a undry. Resoneble. 814·
bedr.. furnance . wood - 992-8022 .
burn•'· c~rpeting, rural wa ter.. 4-buildiflgl, 10 mi. from
Gallipolis. · .'226 · mo . or 46 Space for -Rent ·
41 Houses for Rent
•360 with 176 acre farm .
~
814-868-3730.
Large
trailer
lot'
on
BLIIaviile4 rma &amp;. blth, located 733 176 acre palture-hey farm .
Addialon
Rd.
Coli
US-4265
Third Ave .. Gollipollo. 8185 fanced , good water, axe . or 448-4736 . ·
mo ., 876 dopoolt. Call446- grass, corral, two barns.
3870 or 446 -1340.
1300 lba . tobacco blsa. COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
82,000 yr. 814-668 -3730.
Park, Route 33 , Nonh of
2 bdr. house for rent at 50
Pomeroy. Large 1011. Call
lincoln Ave .. Gallipolis. Re·
992
-7479 .
tired couple only . Call 446 · 44
Apartment
3059.
for Rent

!;;:=;;========
1----------

2 .bedroom house In New Unfurnl1hed apt . 3 rm . &amp;
Haven w -ac , full basement- bath. 1513Y.t Third Ave .,
, tinglf~ car garage. and wood Galllpollt. •135 mo. Call
burner. no pota. 304 -882- 14_4_6_-_4_2_2_2.:_,.:_9_t.:_o_;6.:_____
3203 or 304-882 -28B2 .
I"
Furniahad 2 rooms and bath.
Oown11elra. Clean. No pets.
Adults only . Reference re42 Mobile Homes
qulrad . 448 -1519 .
- for Rent
Furnished apt .. t210, utilitloo pd .. 1 bdr .. 920 4th
Mobile home tor rant . Cell Avo., Golllpolio . Coli 446448 -0756 .
4418 oft or 7PM .

FOR AENT Mobile HOmo, 2 Unfurnilhld apt .. 4 room a&amp;
BR. furn . w / w carpet, 19ft. bath, adults only, ref. a. sec.
LA . nat . gat hut, air cond .. dop . req. Coli 448-0444 .
prlvolo lot . ·Ph. 448-1409
from 4 to B p.m.
Mod•rn 1 bdr. apt. conYI·
- - - - - - nient location, no pett.
3 bedroom mobllo homo for 1185 . Coll446-20611 .
rent. VJ mile off At. 7 on 1-:-----_::___:_::.::_:_::__
Bulaville-Addlton Rd In Ad· Furnished Apartments. 1
diaon, Nlce1h acralot. •200 and 2 BR , •t7!i ,. s. up .
mo . Coli 814-388 -971111.
Golllpollo, 446-4418 oftor 7
p .m.
2 bdr . trailer furnished. 1- - - - - - - - - located by Rt . 180 Auto Apt . for rent . Half double-2
Clinic. 1180 mo .. 160 dop- bd .room Apt. Adult• procolt . Coli 814 -388 -9703 .
toned . No polo. 814 -992 2749 .
Eureka : Riverfront lot, furn ..
, bdr .. e100 i'no .. adultaref. 1 bed room Apt. 1198. mo.
llo dopoalt . 1 -814 -843 - Including utllltloo . Equol
2644 .
houolng opportunity. Contact Vlllaga Manor Apta.
2 bdr. troller In Ch01hlro, 814-892 -178'7.
odulto only. Coli 814-3877329 .
·
flllc•I•'IM. ~ room offlclonoy
4x70
2
bdr.
ell
opt. Furiilm.inn Lenu••lllo.
1
1 9Bo
1100 . month. 814-992 oloctno . mobllo homo whh 1882.
appllancll, waaher &amp; dryer.
Dn 2 ocrelot. 1200 mo. Coli 3 room &amp; bath fuml1hld apt.
814-3B8-8B01 .
814-992 -UOB .

49

For Lease

74

Wither a. dryer elmond
color. lie11 than 2 .,..,, old,
90 dly worronty, U211. Coli
448-81 B1 .

67

Brand new •wing machine
189. 1 9B3- While HWlng
machin• alightly paint dam·
ogo, retail 1329. Coli .8 14386-4638 collect.

GIBSON tuher ouo.oftor4,
304-878-3231.

Newer couch &amp; chair. good
cond., &amp; ga1 atova. Call
448-0713 .

164iMiiSC::-ii;;(;iii8;;cjiile
I

&amp;e

Muaicel
lnltrumenta

71

Fruit
l!o Veget8blea

lllook. roopberrloo. 304-87111388.

··· ·- .

~~.:.

...

.

....

~~~~~~~~~~~

I:
Firewood 81 Ferm Equipment
May-July. 1----------

Knouff Cool •
Prlc.. reduced
Pick up or dollvorod . We
honor HEAP Vouchero. Coli
814-2118-82411 .
1 -----~----

For ule metai 'Culvert linch
thru eo Inch In stock . State
opprovod 18 gouge 121nch
16.36. por ft., 24 Inch
.1 o 111r ft. 38 lrich
.eo por ft. Aloo plaldlo
culvert in f1ock . 8 Inch thru
181nch. &amp;Inch 11 .BOporfl ..
12 Inch 13 .80 por fl . Ron
t;vans Ent ... priHa, 4 mi.
South of Jackson on ST. AT.
93. 81 4 -2B8-8930 .
Limlltone. Sand, Brevet
Delivered In M ..on. Meiga,

Golllo or pick up ot Richordo
• Son . Coll448-7788.

NEW • UHCI Horveotoro
Structuroa. Automotld 11vootock toodlng-cqmputor
fHderl. Call colltm 114·
15815·22&amp;0. John L. Betta.

ON~ u•d Now Hollond
model 1110 lor.. rounu
bel••· t4.100. 2 N-model
84 7 Now Hollon d. round
~lara. e7 ~300 . 1 new, New
Hollond modol Bl1 round
belor, IB,300. Keolero Sorv!co Contor, II. Rt. 17. Pt.
PIMHni-Riploy Rd. 3041111-3174.
. ..

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

1----------

"

'

.........
... ...
..~

1 bedroom furnlahed ·apt.
814-812-8434, 112-8814
or 304-882-21188 .

12 •82 2 bedroom troHer.
Aduhs only. Brown' • Traler
Pork. 814 -892-3324 .

2 bedroom Apt., nice neighborhood In Middleport.
Aduilo preferred. No peto.
e 14-992-212e.

~------- lc -

2 bedroom mobUe home h1
Roclna. 814-387-0211.

1 2 • eo 2 bedroom mobile
home for rent. ApproJI. B
mlleo from Middleport or
Pomeroy. 992 -1~81 .

Sml!lll furnished apartment
for ,.,.t 't o older Wortcfng of
UtHkleo pold.

Aponmanu . 304- 871 SII4S .

Motorcycle•
'-

1978 Hondo ·1110 4 cyl., loll
o.f eKtret. excellent c.o nd .•
con 814-211-IB38.

s...

E • R Treo
lce. tully
lnaured, fr•• eetlmatea.
Phone 114-387-0831; coli
aft• &amp;.

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece cuetom fit your home.
Guo••-· AdvonC:ed Gutter. IDoy •1 4-BIZ-4088,1
lnlght 814-881-8208-1
·

Autos for Sale

~;~-

I:;:;:::::;:====:;::=:::::

THE C:OUNT6ft

8 :30

(!;IR.~!

~HE'''

PA!;,6o oun
l THINK 5HE.'5 DVIN(; '/OIJ 60TTA HELP!

!=;:;==:::======
31512.

1178 Thunderbird olr cond ..
PS. Pl. cruiH. 302 ong!ne.
exc. cond. , llao 81 C.maro .
Coli 814-387-7238 .

-.....

e

..

••

::

j

ShMp 10 OW&lt;Oa, 131ombo.
.Coli 448-0874 .

,.

aJIItAATlJI.ATI()fl!;! ~ DI&lt;C~ lD CfEI.I
N11aOUIIT ArM BAAl&lt; IS AW1'51: ONE:.
Wf D!&lt;AL IN TRUST! 'f;O

Colvu for ule. 1143-81118.
eftor I.

. ·-

t.

~ l)f, I~ li'V!iif ..,... ~r.._

•

••

•

•
•I

Hell-blood 81mmontol bullo
ond htltero. llro PVF Lombert B2314.1 --grondoon ot
Ren1 772, Big colwlo from
ood boot hord. c,n e 1 449-2822.

l

3 Alpine goota, 1 mother, 2
kldo. 304-188-3121 .

1911 Doclgo Omnl 4 opd ..
new tlr11, atero, •2.110 .
Coli 441-8830.
1811 Plymouth Horizon, 38
mpt. 4 door, ec, aJic. oond .
C1lloltor II, 304-871-2411 .
11 Pontile Grond Prix,
chompogne gold. exc . oond.
mony oxuao. 304-871128t7.

8EDROOM ouhe, drw-.

che.a:, quHn 1l1e mattre11 •

Motors Homaa
&amp; Campers

1978 MoHord com-21ft.,
exc. cond., 1 - a t , Mlf
~ontolnld. Coli 114-2488231.
1973 Storcroft ol-• 8
f1 ,000 firm . Celll14-288:
1137.
IUY foctory direct. Ught-lght, flberglooo Scomp
t 3' "'1&lt;1 ,.. trolloro.
MW 18' lith. whoel, Coil
now toM " - 1 -100-3414112 for , _ brochure and
Hvel

":

tricvcte race for adulta. got- .
fers playing on snow and
'the fastest banender In the
West.' (R) (60 min.)
Cll MOVIE: ' Endlfto Love'
(l) MOVIE: "Big Mo'

..

"'
COIILP BE- Tf/15
WIN CJOI'f'T LOO!f
MUCH, BUT I T

CIJ I

fJ GPCC14L

tf!!M~ ON

TlrJHT,

1'11/GG tiNNIE.'
TffE5E ROf/1?5
WEflEN'T tf!EIJNT
rOlf HIGH GPEEIJ5.'
I CAN'T BELIEVE

YEAH .•• BUT WE 'D

WE1RE A!:l'UM..LY

BETlliR MAKE
SURE!

Ill/ FRANCE DURING
WORLD WAR ONE!

GASOLINE ALLEY

Should
~ere i; a memo
be readin'
wht~t Mr. Bic~er Rid:11r"c: private
wrote ! ,.---,---...,,..
stuff?

were

n my

des~!

rt

sa~-- -

TIIHMY~l

72

Tn~cka for Sale

Nowo Ia the
News
(I) MOVIE : 'Deeth Wloh II'
(I) MOVIE: 'Beckllt'
CIJ e il) Dy.-tv Sommv
Jo returns to Denver end
Mark takes advamage of AI·
oxis. (R) 160 min .) !Closed
Coptionodl
.INN Newo
10:30 eCIJTul Latka and Simk~
host a matchmaking party
lA)
Cll Stor nmo
(jJ) Genorwtlona of Flnlll·
once Tonlghl'a program
chronicle• the black relilt·
ance movement in South Af·
rice. 160 min.)
In Seorch of ....
10:45 (I) TIS Ewnlnp Newe
1 1 :00
Cll (I) • CIJ 11D 1D
Newe
()) ESPN ~""!"
CD Newei8PMstw-..
Ill [~eve Allen 81 Lorge
lenn•,- Hill ~
11 :30e Cll CD

•

11 "

BARNEY

I HATE AN' DESPISE

e
e

DOC PRITCHART'S
WAITIN' ROOIM

•

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l11on .

" " l'rod dump ,~
fiiO . 104-IIZ-3327

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'

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c.tllno
(I) 8olp
(I) Pollcelholy A police

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lllESE f't.iRPLE
AICi

•

FLOWERS
WILD IRIS ---

.

. "•

ASK TI-lE SEE IF HE

OPEN THE LENS TO Z.8 ...
TAAT WILL~ ONE MAIN
FLOWER IN FOCUS Alii' LEAVE
OTIIERS SO«T OF FUZZY..•

(M8wero lornorrow)

: FLOUR AGING INTACT LEDGE R
! Jumbioa
Answer: Her face Ia her fo rt une, and it runs int o

YesterdA)I'S

this- A NIC E FIGURE

I

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Tell-tale heart
looking but not too smart .
He thought that "lead"
meant a problem involving
the. opening lead and had
nothing to do with metal.
This time Portia gave him
the opening lead and told
him to study very carefully .
She reti red to an a lcove and
started lo sing qulelly. Bassanio was Intent on the problem, but couldn't help hearing Portia singing, "The king
of hearts, he made some

-·
.-..
.

i.Z::...O==---'-'---

••

..,

·~

tarts." ·

...

t K101113
+Ht0171

Vulnerable: East-Wesl
Dealer: West
Wnt
Nortb Eut
Soutb
I'
Pass
It
2t
••
Pass
Pass
~•
Db\ .
Db\.

5t
Pass

Pass
Pas.'!

.-

--~

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: +9

By O.wald Jacoby
ood Jamoo.Joeolly
Bassanlo, the only suitor
left, could have chosen the
gold or silver problem. But
if you recall your Shakespeare. Bassanio was good

~y

him to play that ca rd'
That nine of clubs lead
looked like a singl eton. Wha t
had the king of hearts to do
with that ? Now Bassanio let
dummy win lha t club lead
a nd led his heart majesty .
East played low. Bassanio
ch~cked his five of spades
The s uccessful loser-on-loser
play had made it imp&lt;Jsslble
lor East to gain the" lead.
Bassanio had won both the
rubber and the fa ir Port ia .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

ACROSS
%Perfect
I Arizona
3 Masseuse's
Indian
place
5 Diamond
4theft
and c raft'
10 Jewish month 5 British
·n British
servant
medical
S Ame ri can
journal
juns t
13 Surcease
7 Noun suffi x
14 Pollen
8 May be
bearer
relieved
15 Immense
at 3 Down
17 Sooner than
9 Showin~ an
18 Wing (Lat. J
ev il grin
II King ISp. I
1% Peat'!! deul
ZO N.M. Indian
li Mideast
U Famed
land l'var. 1
anatomist
Z% Caddoan
Z3 Argot
Indian
Z4 Up the r.-"'T'r"...,...-,...(lost)
M Zestful
Z7 IWata
Z8 - digger
%t Candlenut

Yesterday's Answer
Z3 Presidential
nic:knarnc
24Vulca ni c
depression
2S Balkan
counlry
26 Chinese
society
26 Types

30Chopped, .

as oniort.'i
32 Ma p book '•·
33 Villa - .
Italy
36 Fre netic
state

38 sta ndstill

tree
30 !Wtreat
31 Tablet

34 Coal 35 Ungrateful

one
37 Intertwine
31 Troubles
41 Unruly one
41 Insect
42 Plowed

earth
43 To be (Lat.)

DOWN
I Italian
city

DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AitYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW ·

lo

One letter almply llantlt lor another. In this sample A 11 ...
used lor the lh- L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters
lpollropheo, the length ond !ormation ol the worda are ali
hlnu. El&lt;h day the code lellen are dlflere nt.

CaYnOQVOTES

L

BLG

SLGGJR

11 :48~ Cll CD Tonlgllt llhow

XJSLRY

L

...... Allen

Top llenlt ........ .
lprtng 11;11 Ms
(J) MOYI • T. . . . IDm of
the ~~u, Mocu = '

'The

-- --- ~----'---~'·---"-'-'=-~--- --- ---

dummy. Did Portia want

THOMAS JOSEPH

APMY,

=:t

Eve n Bassanio knew that
the proper rhyme was " The
queen of hearts ." Could
there be any reason why she
had said "king "?
Bassanio wasn 't too good
a bridge player, but he did
see the king of hearts in

tiMT•VJ ttf

TIO~

QJE

OY

KRLMR .

SLG

K SJ CR

L

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LXHLEK ,
RJ

FJ

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KOLE
Y~Cl)_tl tpte: WHEN A PERSON VISITS YOU,
. REMEidiER 11!;'8 YOUR GUEST, RECEIVE lUM VERY

.

. KINDLY, AND BE SURE HE HAS 11lE BEST.-&lt;iELETT ' '
B~£88

. i

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'K 108 62
tQJ
tQJ
EAST
WEST
+ A Q 10 8
+KH2
'AQJ 7 3
'~ 54
• 54
t A7 2
t6 5 42
SOU TH

PA

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SJJNPGZ

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.

NORTH
• ~ 763

CIINitll.....

12:00

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BRIDGE

min.)

(I) PIS L8le Nleht
lit AI 1ft 1M Family

MINDS MOVIN6 ..

. -·
..

bocomea 10 lnvolvld with hio men ond
their problilmo that he him... oufforo. (R) 12 lira.. 30

PEANUTS

.. ......

• ...........

i t XI I Jt I I X)

Compue

Comedy Joe Plocopo hoot•
thia look at what mokoa colotudento Iough.
Another Ufw

....., "

8.

'

e

~ .....,._:

PAII'!ITING - I n - .,d
I
1.
eoterlor, plumblnl. raoflng, JONEliBOYSWATEJI,*I!it...... _......... 20 .,.._ VICE . Call 114-3B7-Ul~J
exp. Colt 114-:UI-IIIZ.
or 814-317-0811 .
· ·
:-:~

=----:e-.r:::::::
...............................

81••uu•

8 &lt;Il CD

e

1171 l'orcl F-100 Exploror, Mercum Rooflnt • Spout- Nood 1 aometllln1 h"Wi~
Ing. 10 _ . ..,......01,
301 ......... V·l .. AM- . . . . . . . In bull .. roof. -yor-1.~
W.'H do It- Cel
-3111
PM rldJo, PI, r11oo ' -•
...OOOflrm. Coii441-:U33 Colt 114-. . .·MB7•
or 104-171-1117
H a a - 1 . . . , _ _ . _ JIMI · WATIR llltVICE',
Coli .IIIII ~. 104--871'
1171 OMC heWf - · P8,
Pl. 1ood e•a mi::.J~i ....., ................. 10 7317.
·'
.-..Ac.......... .
yn. up. l'rw tl 1w-. Coli
Upholltjry
t14·M7-0401•114-:U7- 17
.
· -·
1144.
. Clll 1114-ZII- 0480. ·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
• wath••· dryet'a, refrlgara·
to••- ran....
Appllancoo. Upper 'Rtwor Rd ..
bookie Stone Croot Mot-•
.
...
448-731!1- '

PKA Full Contact
Koreto from T uiH. OK

1 0 :00

SEWING
Mrvlce .
IIIII •
STUCCO PLA8TERING texturld .......... _....,._
olol ·~d -lllentlol, ....
NI-IH. Coli 114-2881112.

married.

())

YOUR SAKE, THEN FOR

·- .:-e
' DEPENDABLE WAiJtijii'DRY~R REPAIR. GUa"loio;
,t - worl&lt; . Cell onyt!me
814-211-IB20 or 114-21,__
1207.
• ~ ~-

box 1prlngo. 12110. Antiquo
flrepllc• m1ntel with bevel
mirror, excellent condlth)n,
., 80. 304-8711-4877.

BUr THE POINT 15, MAYBE NOW YOU'LL
PO SOMETHING AOOUT IT - IF NOT FOR.

, Electrical
l!o Refrigeration •..,_-

Spy

()) Auto lloclng '83: Off
Rood RIICing from Pomona,CA
(I) e ID Fell Guy A 'beg
m11r'l' Who witnessed .a mur·
dor turns to Colt lor help. IRI
160 min.)
Ill CIJ Ufellne to • Dying
WOI'td
()) Mark Rua10ll Special
Comedian Mark Russell pre·
sent&amp; his own special brand
of 'Washington humor.'
® Archie Bunkor'a Ploc:e
Archie plans a partY for Mr .
Van A but discovers that his
friends are ·commies.· (RI
(jJ) Hunter end the Huntld
• MOVIE: '40 Poundo of
Trouble'
MOVIE :
' Who'a
B:30 (I)
Minding the Mlnt7'
()) Grond Central James
Eart Jones hosts this look at
America 's foremost BeatiJI
Arts buildin·y . New·York Cj· ·
ty ' a Grand Central Station .
® Gloria T110 ·newly separated Gloria sets out to stan
e new life for herself and her
son Joey _ (Ri
9 :00 8 Cll Cil Foeto of Ufe Jo is
angered when she discovers
that her favorite teacher is
leaving Eastland . IRI !Closed
Captionedj
CIJ 700 Cub
il) Taleo of the Gold
Monkey Believing Sarah· Is
dood , Joke, Jack and Corky
nv to Manila and une.~tpect ­
edly meet Gen . OouQLas Ma cArthur. IRI 160 min .)
8
(I)
®
MOVIE :
'Homowel'd Bound'
CIJ Johnny Got Hlo Gun A
young Wor1d War 1veteran,
trapped inside a mutilated
body. tries to tell the wortd
that he can think end feel
'emotion . (2 hrs _)
·
(jJ) Wlult Mokoo Robblt
Run? A Profile of John
Updike Writer John Updi~o
reflects on his lffe and work
while ori e nationel publicity
tour. 160 min.I
9:30 G Cll CD Buff.lo Bill Bill decides that it is time to get

()) e

...GOTCHA wil l pay ...soon as
-th' city a million city has acquire
title t' th' full
dolla' fer th'
fifty acre'!
factory site ...

Cot 2 t I Hoo. donro, oro~
loodoro, dump trucli. · e'i.:
448 -1142 be-n 7 a.lit
to Ill p.m.
· ..
84

Prlntanshrhera:

n•ght's program feature ~ a

.

J .A.R . Conmuctlon Co .
Wotor Llr1e1. Foot•n
Draine. All kinde of Ditching:
Rutlond , Oh. 814 -7422903 .
.

Mlliu~ Excovoting. ·au11doiM
llo beckhos HrYice. ..,.-.
mento, foot-. IIndo~
driveway•. farm po.nd·l~
814-742-2407 or 814-7422081 .

Now 1\'rlnQI !lie Circlld Ionero to
1om&gt; tile ourprloe anawer. as ouugoatod by the eboYe cortoon .

(I) Tic Toe Dough

e

.-.--

79

NE!:DEDTO IMP'RE~5
A L..AUNDRE5S.

e

.(jJ ~•'a Court
estorTrek
·
7 :30 • (I) Lie Detector
CIJ Wlmbleton Update
CIJ Doble GUllo
I]) ESPN SpamConter
(I) • (I) F...,lly Feud
()) Buolneoo Report
Ill Orol Flobortw
(fi) Nuc- Neworeel
il)
Entertainment
Tonight
S:OO • (I) CD Real P-Ia To-

1 liS Muldonu convertible.
1112 VW Roltblt. Colll14441-1238.
1974 Dodge Chorgor, ontine good, neldo oome body
-rk. .Appr. III.OGO miiM.
eeeo . Coli otter &amp;PM. 4417388 .

CD NBC Newt!
Lon T'IWt Bob

(I) (jJ) MII&lt;Neii-Lehrer
Report
(ll-

2 yr . old !Iuper Chlx gullding, excellent terilperrMnt
and conforf'ftlltlon, Nady to
troln, '710. Cell 441-8810
or 182-3101.
Young Jeraty mila cow. Call
814-218-88«.

t)

CD Ch8111e'a Angelo

e

Excavating

Llveltock

I VELGO
I KJ

(I)

Wldy .
(I) Entertainment Tonlght

JIM'S PLUMBING. HE-ATING . Fomerly Dewlt.t'a
Plumbing. CoM 114-387;01178 .
.

83

1878 Iuick Le8obro, good
oond., olr, tlh wheel. Coli
«8-3131.

I

Today' a ahow featu1os "Net
Ploy.· 1ho koy to playing win- ning tenni1.
(I)
till ABC N.(I) (ll C8S Newo
(I) Dr. Who
(fi) ()ver Euy
7 :00 • (I) PM MeguiM
CIJ llurno • Allen
()) ESPN'a Horoe lloclng

AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phono «S-3S88 or 4414477
Auto Parts
l!o Accessories

-~-=---

Pley Your lest Tennla

0

78

1

tJ.

·s.n.

.

SUPER C FermaH, plow-

by Hilnrl-oncl Bob Leo

• Wild. Wild Weet
B:1 II ()) NCAA lnotruct 1one1

t87B Herloy-Devldoon Low Roofing and Carpentry
Rider . 13800 , for ule. ~ -A.l!!t o•~-!!! ...,..,._ colt , ..
m'"'nv "m•omnn. 814-,
1878 Chevy C.prlco Cln- trade. 848-2448. C.lleiien- " 387-0t94.
.• ale, 4 dr. Helen, one owner. lngs lift• 1 ~00.
12.100. Cell 448-18111 or 1-:-:=--:------~ CALL 304-871-1283 lor · :-:.
448-1244 ,
.
19BO · KowoHkl LTD JSO.
Ver, low milaae. llka new. cqncraut and blecll top Uli- · .: .. :
mate•. metill · buHdlrii and · .·~
7_8 Plymouth Voloro Prwmlor A*lng 12000. 148-214B or .fence erection coatt. All~ . ::.
4 dr' .. eir cond.'. one owfter. ,.,~ Deovloj;,H~onkioloj--;r~.SlOO-o.­ buy!n~ ond Hlllntl heevy
...:
Coll 441 -1815 or 448equlpmont. HorN • . - ''
1244. '
1879 Suzuki
~~
ISOO mllu,
new . trailer Nllt. Furniture. et.Ctrical &amp; electronic auppliel
•·
1978 Mocury Mirqulo 12,100. 247-41B1 or 247- and
aquipment . P...unt
88,000 mi., PS, PI, olr, ._3:-:2::1-6::.- - - - - - - MHdowa Diatributors and '" 1
1-trool&lt;, good cond., ooklng ;Selea.
11 ,800. Clll448-4347.
HONDA, 1981 CB 900
cuotom , 12BSO. 304-878~lnlmum .11c aquer• foot ·
1880 Ford Pinto. Auto., 28111 .
to . aluminlu your mobile
PS·PB, rldlo. Rool lhorp.
homo roof. 304-871-1 293.
12898. John'• Auto Soloo.
and
Open IYI'o. Coll448-4712.
10 percent eboVe my lowest
M otora for Sale
cost on brand name realden~
1181 Monte Corio low 1- - - - - - - - - - tlol llo lnduotrlol oloetric •
mlloege. Coli e 14-28818 ft . e••• lrecker 111. bal· electronic aqulpment •
1948.
•--1 •o HP M
. · supplloo. 304-871-1293.
.. /&gt;. •,
~ • ..
ercury motor.
I
1178 Plymouth Voloro many extras. · 1 yr. Q{d, R.OOFING • out~do polntSport coupe 11,991: 1177 14.100 . Cell --114-248- ipg. frM eatlmatn. 014·
.
;
·ooclge Royol Monoco 4 dr . 11418.
387-oeu. . .
Sidon 11 .298. Coli 4411882.
·Plumbing
82
l!o Heating

,dlac, cutttvltOfl, 7ft. mow·
lng rnochlno. 1200.00. 304878•1887 oftor 1 p.m.

83

Got your corpot In ahlp
ohope. Weter removol, FREE
ESTIMATES.• , FURNITURE
CLEANING.1 CAPTAIN
STEAMER B14-44li-2107.

till

(I) ()I •

(I) MOVIE: 'Rew Deol'
.(1) Tic T• Dough

CART~R'B PLUMBING

Small en gl n 11 repel rtd.
Hove your old mowor rocon- 82 Wanted to Buy
ditloned for 1 fraction of the 1 - - - - - - - - ' - colt of a new one. W. now
are equipped to-fix outboard
boat motors. Nel.on • Son• Want to L..11. Need 2.100
in Eureka, Ohio. Cl.ll 814 _ lb. tobecco . Will ply 1 .315
per lb. Call441·8777, 44e218 _1543 .

For sale or le..a by owner.
c ommerc 1e1 building suite~le for a Floritt with a walk
mto cooler, or can be uMd
for any kind of buainen or I- -- - - - - -- office IPICII. Excellent lo- Nice 71 Ford PU, bedroom
:~~~~~~~~er River Rd . Call suite, hldeabad. 11x32 pool
cover. Coli otter 4 4483224.
.
', '
" '
18,000 BTU window olr
51 Household Goode conditioner. 220 volt. uHd
very llttla, raaaoneble. Call
Used electric ranges eJicel - l -4 4-'8_-_1_9_6_&amp;_._ _ _ _ __
lent condition . Occasional
velvet c hair . Corbin • 2 places of leea all wool
Snyder Furniture , 448 - c1rpet, excellent quality,
avocado grHn. One 111118
1171 .
fl. x 1 21'1 fl. priced 111178;
30' elec. renge •9&amp;, 40· the other 1l1e 9 ft x 12Yt ft.
oleo . range 17&amp;. 40 oleo. priced at n 215 . Include•
renge coppenone t9B. 30' h11vy duty foam padding.
448-0123 ofur
oes range avacado eelS, Coli
portable Hoover waaher 8:00PM
196, queen size box aprlnga 1-:----------&amp; ma«re11 e4&amp;. 8,000 BTU Ntw Oak Furniture, tablea,
air conditioner 185, Whirl,. chalra, cupboarda. pie aeft.
pool refrlg. •s&amp;. GE refrlg dry alnks. Paul Conkel•
•ee. dining room tebla •ea. Antlquea, Tuppera Plain•.
couch •2B .·Skagga Appllan ·
cea, Upper River Rd, Gllli- 3-ton Ctntrllllrcondltioner.
polio, 448-7398 .
Good condition . 1880. Coli
992-3974.
Rev'• Used Furniture Walnuc
tllt-top toble. wicker ldool , SEVEN moplo cholro, n-ly
old IDYl. wood plent atand. rtflnlthed. Etegere for dlt·
cadtr wardrobe, breakfaat pley. Phone 304-171-1121 .
set. dreaaars, ch..t , book·
caae, refrigerator. lampa • Malt raccoon *10. 10 pr.
glassware. Cell 814-317· boyajuna, 14 riiQ. IIkenew
0637 .
126. for oil . 304-171-11079 .
Birch kltchtn cabinets. Nine
foot alnk batt unit. 42 Inch
baae unit, yertow tapa.
Three wall unlta. Broom
cloMI. 992-3301 or 9928481 .

...-

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

Trailers for rent, ' furnlshad,
air cond ., ovarlooldng Ohio
River In K1n1uga, o ·h. Foe•
tor• Troller Pork, 448 -1802.

I GHUOO

~

RON'I 'kleviolon Service.
lpeclollalnu lr\ ·Zenith ond
MOtor oil , Quaz~;r. end ··
houM catla. cal 171-2311· 'u
or~.a4114.

(I) (I) •

8:00 •

your home by refinishing •
tho!IO hordwood ftooral 10
t••ra ••perl·e nce. Phone
U4-37B-8349.

3 bdr. 2 bath. 4 voar old 1- - - - - - - -- rench. near Rodnev. $276
per mo . Call 814 · 367 - 2 bdr . Regency Inc. Apart menta $20.0 per mo. or If
.7478 .
income it t10 ,000 or leas
Two bedroom, furnished , HUD available. A-One Real
two air conditioners, clean Estates, Carol Yeager, Real ·
condition, 1 child, no pete. tor. C•ll 304 -871 -&amp;104 or
$160 per month , PH . 1304) ._3
-:-0::4-:--::
8::
7 -&amp;-_7_3_B_6 _._ _ __
882-2466 .
I
APARTMENTS IEHD) ono
TWO bedroom house on Mt. bedroom rent 1t1rts at 8157
Vernon Ave . $226 . a month per mo. two bedroom atarta
call Mrs Jack BuJiton, 304· ot I 193. Dopoalt $200 Ino
pata) near Spring Valley
876-2661 .
Cinema . Coli 446-2745 or
6 room houae on Rt. 2 , Pt. leave me11ege.
Pleuant . 1216 .00. Deposit 1- - - -__::.__ _ __
Required . Hud accepted . 1 bedroo m apartment for
304-458 -1866.
rent . Coll446 -0390.

tour CAdi •Y wonil.

. r]

Pro~ol floar -dint
..d reflillehlng. . - t l f y

on St . At. 2. 304-5762711 .

36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ Ing available. Call448 -822 1
after 6 weekdays.

Urw••**

WEDNESDAY

:
·..:

1.!!11 ~~·

.,._four
Juntila,
_ _ .......
_
. .. lorm

'_)

GENE'I CARPET CLEAN- - '::
lNG IIIIRVICE. Recom• • · i
mended for: profe.,ionlf ~ • -.~
ote_om ole. . lna . •••~ • ;
Guord-F- E l d -- Call
f3on' 11 114-H2-8301. '

MS£n'/NGS·M'VE'60T 10

bedroom, all elect·
nc, 14x70, partly fuml1hed,
buih on room 12x28, coal or
wood burner, le~ge porches,
utility building. ecre land.
excellent .condition, good
well. .Jerry ' t Run Rd .'
1275.00 month pluo .,00.
deposit. reference. 304 8.76 -2368.

~

•

LUNCHOOH

from . All State Mobile
Homes, half way between
Point Pleasant &amp; Huntington

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

ft~rutfi)ft ~niATICfi'WIOD-N

Television
Viewing

:..

~- Alecl ..

IMWf~·-Full¥
In- ~
Mtlnwtee
. • 14~
.
.

~

I&lt;IXPS F,4WIIG

13

Ohio

·,

a.PISI.II'E

.

J\AW 29. 1983

51 Hounhold Good•

.-----

for Sale

1913

Ohio

- - ·----'-·

�..
~·•=rr . ·-··.J.ot:=:,rt,
n-. _""::.!::' Ohio'

Answers sought in latest political puzzle

REAGAN BRIEFING - President Reagan addresses the
Advisory Council on Private Sector Initiatives Tuesday In the Ea8t
Room of the White !louse. The president held a nationally televllled
news confer ence later Tuesday nlght ..(AP LaserphuW).

Area deaths
John C. Lambert
John C. Lambert, 66, 2111 Nort h
Main St., Point Pleasa nt, died
Tuesday at 12:40 p.m . at P leasant
Valley Hospi tal.
Born Sept. 30, 1916 in Kanawha ·
County, he was ine son of John L.
Lambert of Charleston a nd the la te'
Allie Wilson Lambert.
He was a ret Ired school teac her
from Meigs County schools wilh 16
employee of the accounting depa r·t"
ment of the Marie tt a Manufartur"
lng Company with 22 years of
service.
La mber t was a member, forme r
deacon and Sund ay School teacher
of the Presbyte rian Church . He was
'also a vetera n of WWllwllh theU$"
Army Air Corps .
A graduate of Mlddlepori High
School, Lambert graduated fmm
Rio Grande College and a tte nded
Ohio University In Alltens. He was
also a member of the Southeaste rn
Ohio football league for two yea rs.
He was preceded In dea th by his
first wife Ruth Will Lamhett and
brothers .James a nd Charles .
Other survivors besides It is fa ther
a re hls wife Donna Lynch La mbt)rt ;
one daughter, Mrs".lohnora McKin"
ney, Sarasota , Fla"; one son, · Dr.
MOton B. Lambert. ClncinnatL one
siste r, Mrs. Troy "Esthe r" Russ&lt;'ll,
Point Pleasa nt ; three brothe rs,
Harold Lambert. Witcher; E mmett
Lambert, Sh rewsbury; Pau l l.am"
bert, Richm ond , Va " and five
grandchildren.
Funeral serv ices will ix' a t 11 :Lm .
Thursday a t the Crow"ll usscll
Funeral' Hom e wll h the Rev"
Malrolrn C. MdVI'r Ill offi cia ting"
Burial will follow In Kirkla nd
Memorial Ga rdens. Friends may
call a t the funera l home fmm 2 to 4
p"m . and 7 to !l p.m today.

Speake.,. l'hosm
The Rev" Na ncy Coyle of the
Mlddlepot1 Churc hof the Nazarenc,
will be speaker a t spcdal services to
he held at 7: 30 p"m Thu rsday a t lite
Salvation Army, 115Butt ernut Ave. ,
Pom eroy.
Rev. Coyle a nd Edlth Spenc&lt;'rwlll
present musical numbers a nd the
public Is lnvlled. Eloise Adams will
preside over the servic''.

HERBERT PARKER

Herbert S. Parker
Herbert Samuel Parker, 72,
College St.. Syracuse. long time
educator, died Tuesday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr . Pa-rker was a retired princl"
pa l a nd teacher having taught In
Meigs County Schools lor 39 years.
He was a members of the Syracuse
Asbury United Methodist Church,
Ret ired Teachers Association and
president of the Carleton College
Board of T111stees.
He was born July 30, 1910 at Long
Dolt om, a son of tbe late P earl and
Addle Staneari ParkeL
He Is survived by his wife, Irene
Summe rfield Parker; two sons,
Robert Parker.. Marietta, and
Howard P arker, Agoura, CaUl"; one
da ug hte r, Nancy CampbeU, Ra·
cine; one sister, Lucille Schrader,
Frankfort, Ky.; si)&lt; brothers, Wilbur
Parker, Alfred, Ohio; Marton
Parker a nd Howard Parke r, both of
Long Bottom; Edson ParkeJ, Au·
r'Ora, Colorado; WUI!s Parker,
ParkPrsburg a nd Homer Parker,
Rutland; silr grandchildren and
ttu"ee s tep"g randchlldren a nd sev.
· eral nieces and nephews.
Fune ra I servIces wUI he held
Friday at 2: ~ p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev" Steve
Nelson officiating. Burial wUI be In
Chris tia n Cemetery, Tuppers
Plains" F riends may call at the
funeral home Thursday from 2 to 4
a nd 7 to 9.

replied: "Oh, no. Ab8olutely not.
There's nothing settled. The Clllly
way the presldelit could do It would
be to get all of his boys tugetber IIJid
tell us Who It was (that) ~

lngupwardltsestlmateofeconomlc
growth this year, frQm 4.7 percent to
5.5 percent. He said " America's
economy Is beginning to sparkle"
after the deepest recession since
World War II.
Reagan · declared' himself trus-

lnquiryofthemattersays, "There's .
a lot of unanswered questions" and
promlsestopursueUlem.
The president, at a nationally
broadcast news conterence Tues·
day ntght, repeatedly refused to'
pass jllllgment on ,the propriety of
his advisers' useofdocumentstrom
the 'rlvat Carter camp·ln preparing
hlmtorthedebale.
Whllrsayina hewantstheJuSuce
Department to Investigate ''vely
carefUlly" whether there was any
wrongdoing, Reagan said he does

tratedbycrltlcswhoportrayhtmas r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
a president whci8e policies laver the
rlchattheexpenseofthepoor.
f
rich don't need my help,'' he said.
etV.
"l'mdolngthlngSthatlthlnkare
fair to all of the people," he added.
.
.
" But wbatl want to see above allis
that thlscountryremalnsacountcy
·
where someone can always get
rich""
· On the Carter briefing book,
Reagan saki ~ never saw the ·
materials and doubted that they
ROU18 7
wereofmuchuse, ~honeofhls
Tuppers Plaina, Ohio

:'The

~'::,~;.r:~~'f.;

N

20 cases end in
Me igs County Court

Page3

Page5

Pagt&gt; 12

·e

ANN'S
Cake DecOraflng
.
Supplies

· Vo1.32,No.55

.::de:ba::te:..:advlse:..::.:.rs:::·.::Da:..:vl::d_:S:.::toc=kman==·JJ~!!!!!!!Ph~.~66~7~-84;;85~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!=:~!!!~~~

not Intend
to matter.
reprimand any of his ,.
staff
over the
Rep. Donald Albosta, n.M!ch.,
chalmwl of a Housesubcommlttee
that has been looking Into the
matter, said, "I think we have to
continue. There's a lot of unans·
wereclquesttonsandalotofdltferent
viewpoints as to what went on."
Qletlons about the brletlng book
and Central America dominated the
news conference.
The president refused to flatly
rule out ever sending U.S. combat
troops to Central America. "Prest·
dents I'II!Ver say never," Reagan
said, quickly adding that he has no
plan or Intention of sending forces to
the region and thit.t the nations In
Cenlrl\1 AmeriCa don't want them.
In an opening statement, Reagan
said the admlnlstratlon was revls·

Seven defendants were fined, two
forfeited bonds and another was
placed on probation In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined were Charles Whittington,
Pomewy, $213 and costs, assault,
and $25, failure to pay old tines; Bill
Powell, Pomeroy, and John W.
Russell, Pomeroy, $63 and costs
each on disorderly manner
charges; Aaron L. Moms, Pomeroy, Route 3, $63 and costs,
disorderly manner and plaeedonslx
months probation; William Reeves,
Pomeroy, $113 and costs, lntoxlca·
tlon; Tim 'Thomas. Pomeroy, $213,
assault, and Elatne MltcheU, Po~
roy, $63 and costs, disorderly
manner. Forfeiting bonds were
William Whittington, $46, speeding,
and CJifford S. Kennedy, Pomeroy,
$43,lllegaltum. Plaeedonprobatlon
for six months was Blaine Qualls,
Pomeroy, ctlargm wtth Issuing
menacing threat!.

Petal Pirik, Jade Green, and
Wedai'~voc)d Blue. "And. like all

N~~:~~lllathroo!n Tissue.

•~

Soft Prints is quilted

with !lowers for extra softness.
Softness you can actually see"
SO use the 35t off COjlPOO
·
.below and try new Northern
. Soft Prints.

·

/

COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A total
of 20,586 newly unemployed Ohioans
tued their llrstclalmsforunemploy·
ment benefits under state law In the
week ending June 18, . the Ohio
Bureau of Employtl)ent Servlres
said Tuesday .
'
That total was 0.7 percent higher
than the previous week.
In addition, OBES officials said
7,382 unemployed Ohioans ex·
hausted their benefits during the

desi!,Tl
in 4fresh colors
~\\

·~\. ~.·"·

The raising of the rates for the
heavy commercial users has been
under study sJnce February. Coun"
cUfelt 11 was not fair that schools, for
example, onlY paid $.ll a quarter
while the residential users pald $I6a
quarter. It Is hoped that .c ouncil's
action will make the rates more
equitable.
The foUilwtng Is a breakdown of
ganons used and therost: minimum
charge ls$2.70!or2,&lt;mgallons; 2001
to 5,&lt;m, 54.73; 5001 to s.&lt;m. $8.78:
s,ooito n.&lt;m. s12:93; 11,001 toU.im. ·
$16.88; 14,001 to 17,00), $2).93; 17,001
to :!),&lt;m, $24.98; :!),OO)i to. 23,00),
$29.03; 23,001 to27,00), $33.(1!; 27,001
to ~.00). $38.48; ~;001 to 35,&lt;m.
$43.88; 35,001 to 40,00), $50.63; 40,001
to 50,00), $00.75; 50,001 to 60,00),
$74"25; 60,001 and up $1.35 per l,&lt;m
gallons .
Action on the Flood Damage
Prevention Insurance Ordinance
was tabled untU July 5 meeting. It Is
hoped that a representative ol the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources will be present toexplatn the
ordinance.
'"
Tuesday, July 5, at7p.m. council
will hold a public hearing on the I~
budget and use of tederql ,revenue ,
sharing money. 'All residents are
tilVited especially :;enlor citizens.
Council will meet In executive
session tontjptt at 7 p.m.

Eastern officials
found guilty on
con·t~mpt charges

SAVE35¢

On two 4·roll packs at Northern" Soft Prints

Richard Roberts, Eastern Local
Superintendent; David Janson,
Eastern High Principal, !llld the
Easlei:Jl Board ol Educa tlon have
been found guilty of contempt of
court, according to an entry filed In
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Judge Charles H. Knight
The judge has ruled that the three
parties are In contempt of court
"due to their willing disregard and
vlolatton of the April 21, 1983,
temporary ,restraining order"
Issued by the court.
According to the entry Rita
Lincicome, a teacher In the district,
whose contract was not renewed,
resulting In tbe ortglnal court action
lnvolvlng the three parties , was
dented representation by the board
of education at an April 27 meeting
as guaranteed by paragraph three
under the fair dlsrnlssat procedure.

t,.y

Petal Pink
Autumn Gold
Jade Green
Wedgwood Blue

week.

r------------.....1.--- ----------------------------:______

It's a great time for Frankies, the Keener Wiener.

The entry further states thai
Roberts and Janson did not comply
with the court's temporary res"
training order In that the written
recommendation of non-renewal
did not " clearly set forth reasons
justlfytng a conclusion of gross
Inefficiency wtth reference to eva",
lu atlons documenting said

reasons:''
The court In the entry rules that
RollPrts and Janson shall not offer
employment lor the Lincicome
position vacated by their actions on
April Zl, 1983 untU final detennlna·
tlon of the case and that the Eastern
Board shall not retain or obtain the
services of any Individual to occupy
that position vacated by their
actions on April 27 until final
determination of the matter Is
made.

Guiding Hand board
• •
sues commr,sswners

19 INCH .SUPREME
PUSH MOWER WITH
MANUAL START

CHESHIRE- The Oallla County
Board of Mentai Retardation has

CLEARANCE

$27500

The baseball, picnic , CAmping and cookout
so are SUPERIOR'S Frankies.
the nutritious franks that are just right lor
"
. ~u.mmertime tun. ~rankies cook up plump and
JUtcy because they remade from the finest cuts of
meat. And special seasoning gives them a special
taste. Select from All Beet. All Meat, Jumbo,
Chicken or Cheese Frankies. Pick up .a pack or
twQ and get some sizzling soon.
se~n is here! And

ELBERFELDS

MECHANIC STREET
WAREHOUSE
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-3671

aslu!d for a court ruling declaring
the county has a legal obligation to
lund Its programs, Including the
' " tlnanclally trwbled Guiding Hand
School.
.
·· Gallipolis attorney WU!lam Con·
ley, representing the mental retar"
dation board, !lied a request for a
dl!claratoey Judgement Wednesday
In county common pteu crurt.
The 11111 names the county
' cmtr111a11o11er the rounty budget
cunmllllali lnd the director ol the
Ohio Deplrlment of Mental Retar·
dation .. detendant.l.
Accord1ng to· tile IIIII, the county
~havealeplrtlpoll·

slblllty under -tbl 51211.(11 o1 the
Ohio ~ Coclr to adequately
~ lund mental retardation pJ'OII'NYIB.

,

'

The county ... _ to provide '
addltlollal fwllblg IIIII u a mu1t
• the ptalntllf .. faced wtth the

-- __..

enttne

a.I

20

2 S.Crions, 12 Pug••
C.nh
A Mullim.dla Inc. New1pap•t

'

Rates for trash collections were
Increased following the passage or
an on:llnance Wednesday night by
Racine VIllage Couneil.
The new rates are as foUows:
residential customers, $1.'1 "per
quarter and Increase of $1 per
month; residential customers out·
side the v111age $16.50 per quarter; .
light commercial, not requlrlng use
of mechanlcl equipment to load, $18
per quarter; heavy commercial,
requiring the use of a: backhoe to
load, $.ll per quarter.
. To haul refrigerators, "stoves,
sofas; bot water tanks, etc" there Is
an additional fee of $5 on pickup of
the Items.
The ordinance also requires that
trash . he placed at the curb In
suitable containers such as plastic
bags, trash cans or boxes . It Is also
ooted that trash cans be cleaned.
U trash collections are not paid
wtthln ~ days the pickup service
will be discontinued and to have the
serviCe restored the customer inust
pay the delll)quent amount plus a lee
of$5.
In other action, council passed an
on:lbtance Increasing water rates
'--,"for·"heavy.commerclal" users. ""
The "heavy commercial" customers will be billed monthly. All
commerclal customers have metersexcept theca!&lt;washandonewUI
be Installed as soon as possible.

File first time claims
cuvcltv rose

•

Trash rates
·increased in
Racine village
.

With Northern's new Soft Prints. you
get mQre than .softness, You get a more
attractive bathroom. because Northern's.
Prints has a lovely rose design that .
.CC!rn4~S in four fresh.J':Olors:.Autumn

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thul'5day. June 30, 1983.

C.,yrithted 1913

As time goes by. you'll know wh\4

'

Bench an all star

What's cooking?
Cool kitchens

Reds top Giants;

SMURF PANS

I 0 cases ended
by Mayor Andrews

years service and was a f01mcr

now the administration's budget
·director, has said It was helpful.
" "Slrlre It never got to the debater,
what pwposedld It serve?" Reagan
asked.
Albosta, asked It Reagan'&gt;
an&amp;wers had cleared up the matter,

WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest·
dent fleagan says he has no Idea Who
pvehlscampalgnJimmyCarter's
brlellng papers for .their debate In ·
19M or whether they v.we obtained
by Illegal or unetlilcal means:
But a congressrrien heading an

.•

"

f

-

-~--

.'
PREPARE FOR JULY 4 CELEBRATION- Four e mployees lor
the City of Galllpolls were busy working on a stage Tioursday morning In
preparation lor the 18th annual River Recreation Ft&gt;stlval In neiU'by

G!llllpolls. The event, similar to la.'ll weekend's Big B&lt;lnd Regalia,
fc11turcs a queen conte!il Satunlay evening, spedat e nte rtainment,
canoe J'..Ces, uri show. hu ge piU'ade and KIKIVIIic firework.• display on
lndependenc't' Day"

\

Deadline near for Ohio .budget
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Law"
makers had some big standoffs to
resolve as the July 1 rtscal year
deadline approached on Gov" Rl"
chard Celeste's$25 bUIIon. tw4rycar
budget bill.
Although legislative leade rs said
they stU! were optimistic on final
action today, a temporary Inte rim
budget - to run the stale for 30 or
perhaps 60 days - was being
prepared.
House Speaker Ve rnal G. Riffe
Jr., [}New Boston, said the prepa·
ration of an Interim budget Is
routine. "You have to have something just In case," he said .
The big taxation and spending bUI
Is belore a Senate-House conference
committee which met three times
Wednesday and resolved numerous
differences. But wtth some exceptions, theagreementswerecompar"

a tlvely minor.
ents $~ credi ts on the ir Income tax,
One such except ton was a
vrrsus a House proposal to Increase
package of business tax changes
the individual exemption In that tax
agreed to earlier by Cl'leste a nd
from $650 to $1,&lt;m. Senators argued
business leaders. It was accepted as
that th e credits would give more tax
part of an envisioned compm m lse
relief to wage earners of $40,00) a
bill.
year or less.
The package Includes a 0.5
-Conflicting plans to switch
percent Increase In the e&gt;&lt;lstlng 9.2 banks a nd other financial lnstltu"
percent maximum In the corporate
lions from a deposits tax to a levy on
franchise Income tax, a pha&amp;-down
net worth, wtth different rates being
from 35 percent to 25 percent of the
proposed by the Senate and House.
tangibles tax on Inventories and
11le Senate ca lled lor a ra te In
equipment and a n extens ion of the
permanent idW of 15 mills for all
sales tax to Include computer
lnstltut Ions whUe the House set 31
services.
mills lor savings and loans and 15for
Rep . William E . Hlnlg, D"New
banks.
Philadelphia, cha irman of the
-Senate pmposals to add two
conference commit tee, said Wed" mem bers to the Ohio BuDding
nesday night that these other Item s
Authority and tbe Ohio Industrial
still were "on hold: "
Commission, allowing the gove rnor
- A Senate provision giving · to name Democrats to take control
taxpayers and each ofthelr4jepend" of those agencies lor his party"

Columbia Gas defends rate policy again

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) by Clnctruoau Gas &amp; Electrtc Co ..
Genev ieve Tuchow, spokesw4r
Smartlnl{ from an attack by the Spratley sa ld . ·
man for Columbia Gas, said the
state consumers' counsel, Columbia
lmmedlale elilslng of Its opera "
Gas of Ohio Inc. has defended Its
lions ... " the suit states.
natural gas prtelng policy as lair to
Guiding Hand, a school for the
Its customers.
mentally retarded ope!'ated by the
At a Wednesdaynewsconlerence,
The first of two public heartngs on commissioners has been set lor
board. will run out of funds In August
Coonsel William ,Spratley accu9ed the 1983 Department of Housing and noon on July 26, Davis said. The
and could llliS!lJ,OO) In the red by the
Columbia of having the highest Urban Development Community deadline for the commissioners to
end of the year. school ottlclals say.
average gas rates In Ohio and Block Grant Program lor Meigs select projects and submit propos.
Conley and school oftlclals, In
·
attacked
the utility's policy of County was held Wednesday even" als to the Ohio Department of
several rneet!np wtth the rommls·
rates
at local levels, saying It lng at the Senior Citizens Center Development Is August 12.
setting
stoners sb)ce March, have wll"led
In addition to competing for the
has
resulted
Ina
wllledlsparlty In Its wtth some 2.5 representauves of
of impending Iepl action Uthey did
customers'
monthly
bills.
townships,
villages
and
brian:ts
1n
$87,600
In lonnula funds allocated to
not receive more money.
attendance.
the
county,
Davis explained there
Spratley said the average
" However, the commlsslonerrs
monthly bill In Columbia Gas'
Frank Davls, ol the Buckeye are other categortes In which
said they are unsure of their fundln&amp;
Sfil'Vlce ,area ranges from $82.70 at Hllls·Hocklng · Valley Valley Re- appltcatlons wUl he considered on a
responstiXIItles under the law.
At a meeting June 10, CoounJs.. , Dublin In Franklin County to $1.'!8.39 gtonal Development District, ex· statewide competitive basis. He
at Sta11on:l In Monroe County, plalned the BlOCk Grant Program . said these are new categories and
stoner Verlln Swain said he "would
according to a semiannual survey g\lldellnes and deadlines for the Include $4.5 lor housing rehabWta"
Uke to see (the Laue) to cOurt" to
conducted
by the counsel.
board of Meigs County tlon, $4.5 million for economic ·
resolve the lAue.
"The
average
monthly
bill
for
the
Commissioners.
• development and S11.7 mlUion for a
The action !lied Wednelday Is
gas
e&lt;rnpa~~y's
entire
billing
area
The
Meigs
County
Commission·
' jobs bill .
"asldl!i the ' crurt to . Interpret
totaled
SIII.Sl,
and
that
CQITipares
to
ers
have
been
notified
they
will
All three Meigs commissioners,
5126.m," Cooley llllld.
.
receive
$117,600
to
be
disbursed
as
Manning
Roush, Davld Koblentz
The board feels the county l1llWl $'12.32 for CllillXuaa of East Ohio
Gas Canpany, m:ro tor Dayton HUD Block,Gran.t s this year.
and R,lchard Jones, along wtth
.provide_.., money to "tund 1111:
Powl!l" IIJid I4hl Cm!pany CUll&amp;
DeadUne lor appUcatlona tor the Clerk Mary Hobstetter, were pres·
prqvarna mandated by law," he
said.
.
mers, and $'19.14" In areaa lei'VIc:t'll (Uant .niOIIey to be submitted to the ent at the hearing.

Outline block grant program

ao

These provisions were not In the
House bW.
- A Senate a me ndment which
would permit the sale by grocery
stores, carryouts, and other permit
holders of cordials and other
alcoholic beverages whic h contain
up to 30 percent alcohol by volume"
The llmlt currently Is 21 percent.
This provision was not In the House
ve rsion"
The four Democrats and two
Republicans on the committee also
had not resolved dl!lerences on
school funding a lthough Hlnlg and
others Indicated this was not seen as
a serious obstacle.
Both versions of the school
lundlng proposals give prlnnary a nd
secondary education a record $1
billion biennial Increase, from $3.7
billion In thcl981"19ffiblennlum. The
Senate added about $117 million to
the House total.

)ltUity's policy of local rates gives
communities the choice of being
billed based on the cost of service to
their community rather than paying
an averag_'!l fee.
She said Stalfonl pays a higher
rate because of extensive work
performed by the utlllty there
recently "
"The whole city was recently
re-piped "" and they knew at that
time that It would raise the base
rates so high," Ms. Tuchow said.
Spratley said there are 744
dltterent residential rates lor
lumbla's 1 mllllon customers, while
the stale's other major utUltles
charge unlfonn rates.
"We belleve that differences as
much as U) between the communt.
ties In one county lor the same
amountolgas Is a c)earcaaeofprlce
dlscrttnlnatton, " Spratley said.
"By accident of geograplly,lfyou
happen to live In one part o1 the
county or the othei', you're Jllllllna
that much difference for the same
amount of gas .

- - -------

eo.

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