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bv Dick Cavalli .

WINTHROP
HEY, LCOKAT
THAT ONE

J-ri5 TH~ ONLY

LJTTl.-E 6TA!&lt;

fN'"THE WHOLE

JM.'f6f: IT'S A
51~ THAT
MEANT F0&lt;
ME ALO\JE.

5TAR

I'LL ALWAYS
THINK OF IT
A5M'/OWN

"THATONNINE:f A Eit.CW-

M'YONN

IN-lHE-DARK- WA~
WOULD IN\01-.VE
ME I t-.1 EMOTIONAL

PEf&lt;50NAL
STAR.

PER50NAL 5TAR.

2 Sectionl , 12 Page•
15 Ce nll
A Muhimedio In c New•pope r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 7, 1982

By The Associated Press
As the final hour s before Tuesday's primary election ticked away,
Ohio' s guberna torial ca ndida tes fa nned out across the state in last-ditch
campaign offensives.
Ohio Attorney General William Brown a nd former Cincinna ti Councilman Jerry Springer, both Democrat.,, hit the campaign trail hard during
the weekend. Brown made several appeara nces in the Clevela nd area
Sunday, while Springer m ade stops In Youngstown, Dayton a nd
Cincinna ti.
Their appearances ca me In the wake of a poll that showed them tra iling
former Lt. Gov. Richard Celes te . Celes te made numerous campaign appearances in the Cleveland area Sunday a nd even crossed paths with
Brown at a dedication of Alta House, a n Italian community facilit y.
In the su rvey, conducted by The Akron Beacon Journal-U niversity of
Akron, Celeste captu red 34 percent of the vote, while Brown had 24 percent
a nd Springer 17 percent. A to ta l of 25 percent were undecided.
A Columbus Dispa tch mall poll publis hed Sunday showed Celeste a nd
Brown deadlocked with 38 percent a piece and Springer with 24 percent.
The Akron survey, conducted May 24-28 a nd June 1-2, was based on
interviews wlth 773 registered voters.

I NE?v1:R ReAUZED

6&lt;X&gt;DNI~

Ff&lt;OM~CN 1

Vol.31 ,No.2J
Copyrighted 1982

Polls show close gubernatorial race

rre

eKY. ·

UP-n-1ERE".

enttne
In the Republica n gubernatoria l battle, the Akron survey showed U.S.
Rep. Clarence Brown of Urbana with a subs ta ntial lead over former
Cuya hoga County Commissioner Seth Taft.
Brown collec ted 32 percent of tile vote and Taft had 22percent . Sta te Sen.
Thomas Van Meter of Ashland captu red 12 percent, while Robert Teater.
on leave as stat e na tural resources direc tor. had 2 percent. A total of 32
percent were undecided.
Ta ft spent Sunda y campaigning In nort heastern Ohio, while Brown was
In Columbus a nd Dayton . Van Meter sched uled ca mpaign a ppearances In
Berea and northwestern Ohio.
In ot her sta tewide races, the Beacon Journa l-University of Akron voter
survey showed former state Sen. Anthony Cala brese leading in the Democratic race for secretary of state. Compared to a previous poll , however .
the s urvey indicated tha t support was growing for state Rep. Sherrod
Brown a nd former Clevela nd Ma yor Dennis Kucinlch. Ca labrese was
favored by 25 percent, Brown had 14 percent. Kuclnlch had 10 percent. a nd
Cuya hoga County Treasurer Francis Ga ul collec ted 6 percent.
The Columbus Dlspatch su rvey a lso showed Brown a nd Kucinich gainIng on Calabrese tram a previous poll .
Franklin County Treasurer Dana Rinehart easily outdistanced hLs two

opponent s In the r.OP's sta te treasurer's race. accord(pg to th&lt;' i\kron poll.
Rinehart had about 24 percent. Richard Harris of Wausron had 9 peret•nt .
and former State Rep. Howard Knight of Sa ndusky Cou nt y had 8 perce nt .
Nearly 60 percent of those Interviewed said they were undecided .
The sa me survey showed that 68 percent of those interviewed rl'mained
undec ided about the outcome of the Democratic state trea, utw' s ra cr .
which features seven ca ndidates.
State Sen. Kenneth Cox of Barberton hall R (X'I'Ccnt; MontgomPry
Count y Prosecutor Lee Fa lke, 6 percent; Marion Cou nt y Trrasurl'r Mar·y
Ellen Withrow. 6 percent; Richard Wittenberg. a Toledo a id&lt;' to U.S . Sen .
Howa rd Metzenba um , 5 percent; former Akron councilma n and LJ .S.
Attorney J am es Williams, 3 percent; Mike Kelly of Cincinnati. 3 percent
a nd Ashta bula Cnun ty Recorder '11mothy Lemire. about I percent.
Jesse Marquette of the Uni versity of i\kron polit ical science department
; a id the relative lac k of interest in these racPs makes the out come particu
la rly difficult to forecast.
In other politica l news:
-In a brief editorial Sunda y, The tCieve land t Plain Dealer rndo r;f'd
Taft a nd Celeste for governor. "We gave our su pport to ('rl("; tr and Taft
t

Con tinued on page 12 l

Trooper,
commander
honored

ENT~ENl5.

ToDAY
mmm~N

THrE WO lfD

COI,UMBUS - In n·rt·1non1es
held hen• rt•rt·ntly Colonel .l ii&lt;'k
Walsh. Ohto Stall' Hi ghwa y Patrul
superinteru..lcn l. &lt;JwanJed Clliitiuns
nf Mt'rit to l.t . Ernt·s t W.
Wt gg lt•sw•wth ami Tpr. Allan L.
Wheell'r nf llw G&lt;JIIIpull s Post of tlw
Hig hw&lt;J y P&lt;Jtrnl.
Lt . Wq.!g lt•s wurth and Tpr .
Wht•t·ll'r werl' t'lkd fur tht'IJ' dfu rts
lu &lt;:tpp relwnd two men Hli:lt had rubbed llw Tuppers Pla ms bnnwh of
Bank On t•1111 MatTh II .
Both off1n'rs h&lt;:td jn11Wd lo1 ·al ant.!
county offwwls 111 till' pursu1tof lht·
bclnk robber' s ra r tHl SL&lt;:t tl' Route 14:1
111 Mt'I )..!S County wht'!l the sus pt•rts
&lt;Jb&lt;:tndoned tht•lr t'Cl l" and fled un fool.
Lt . Wi ).!J.d es wo rt h cmd Tpr .
Wht•t•ler chased the nwn mto the
surroundm):!. co untrys ld t• and cii ptured t heiTI . One was an ned w1th a
revol\"t•r and had f1red shuts ell lht•
pursu 1ng tlfft n·rs
Lt . Wi gg ll'swurth. a 28-yt·ar
vt' kran llf lill' Hl ).! hway Patrol. has
bt•t•nlht• rnmmantkr of lht• pe~trul 's
Gallipolis Post Sl!H'e 1971. A 11£1ll\"t:'
of Akron . lw st'n·t:d w1lh till' U. S
An nv 111 tlw Knrt:&lt;:~ncunflll"l &lt;:~ n d wa~
dt:co~·ated st·\·er£11 llllll'S by tht· Arlll)" and thl' Un1tt·d Niitwns t· mn-

Continue search at well sites

Priscilla's Pop

by Ed Sullivan

SURE,
MRS. BOll?.
COAE ON IN .'

HI, DEAR ·" IS
YOUR MOM HOME&lt;'

IT WAS A KNOCK-IiOW'N.
DRAG-ouT Dlt;CU?SION,
6UT "rrJR NOM WA~
SO CALM···

I JUST WANTED 10 TELL HER

AGAIN 'rOW MUCH I ADMIRED
HER SELF-CONTROL AT THE
CLUB MEETING LAST NIGHT.'

EVERYCNE

WA~REALLY

IMPRESSED.'

VINTON - Ga llla County s heriff's deputies and members of the
Vinton Voluntee r Fire Department were still a t the site of two wells
on Scott School Road near Vinton, searching for a possibly dls mem·
bered corpse at the bottom of one of the wells.
Draining operations on the first well, located on the Noah Brewer
farm, s tarted Friday a nd yie lded no results so far. Work on the
second nea rby well was reported to be continuing this morning.
The s heriff' s department Initiated the search a fter receiving in for ·
mation the body of a teen age gi rl. who m ay have been li ving in the
area severa l years ago, had been killed a nd dismembered at th at
lime a nd her re mains dumped In the well.

Heavy storms leave 11 dead
NEW HAVE N. Conn . -A weekend storm pelted southern New
E ngland wlth up to 11 Inches of r a in, a nd overflow ing rivers tore
houses off foundations and washed out dams and bridges. The flood·
ing was blamed for a t least 11 deat hs, a uthorities !Xl ld .
The most severe problems were reported in Ivoryton, Conn ..
where two dams on the Fall River bu rst Sunday, releasing a wall of
water tha t washed away four houses a nd several cars.
Rocks shifted In the center of a da m nea r Leominster. Mas s., as
rain fe ll , but the dam he ld a nd water s were receding.

Man sought in murder, abduction
SHE~ ALWAYS

1

THAT WAY. THOUGH .

Tl-IE REST OF U$

LET Ol=l=' srEAM.
'NITH SCF!EAMING

AND YEWNG---·

IN THE
I? ';HE, BAGEMENT.

WHERE

P&gt;NYWAY

HA-VE A t;E.AT, EMILY"·
.

("(

'?

CLEVELAND- Pollee a re seeking a man they say a bducted two
women from a bar, killed one and raped, robbed and shot the other.
Pollee sa id they found the body of Mary Ann Finnegan, 42, of
Barberton, Saturday aft ernoon In her pickup truck behind a building
on the city's west side.
While checking the scene , police heard a noise In the bushes a nd
found a 38-year-old woma n from Mentor about 45feet from the truck
in bushes several feet high, he said.
Pollee said the Injured victim, whose Identity was not revea led
because she Is a rape victim, was In critical condition Sunday night
a t Metropolitan General Hospital In Cleveland.

Priesthood down, role must change

by Ar' &amp; Chip Sansom
DRAT, -rnev·~ eorretJ AWA'I
LO&gt;\~~t

CINCINNATI- The role of priests Is changing as the number of
young men choosing priesthood declines, c hurch officials say.
Catholic officials say they're confident tha t lay ministries can tlo
the job that dwindling numbers of priests wUI leave open.
The Rev. Michael P lace, dean of Mount St. Mary's lay pastoral
ministry program, one of the fi rst In the country, said 70 men a nd
women are expected to enroll In the program this fall .
Father Robert Krlege, voca tion director of the .Covington, Ky. ,
diocese, said there wUI a lways be pries ts to do the job priests a re
supposed to do.

Rebel foreces seize control
PARIS- Rebel forces of Chad 's former Prime Minister Hlssene
Habre seized control of the capital, N'Djamena, today af!Pr encoun·
tering little resistance In a dawn a ttack, reports reaching Paris said .
Government forces loyal to President Goukounl Oueddel gave up
after about 30 minutes of fighting in the center of town near the
president's office, the French news agency Agence France Presse
reported.
Goukouril's whereabouts were not Immediately known.
After sporadic shooting near the presidential headquarters, the
civil populatlon came Into the street to welcome Habre 's forces, the
report said.

Earthquake shakes Mexico today
••

~~C.NJ'T

CATCH '~M AU..,..ctlJ'T ~teL.. .

BAD, AtJOTHER

(.()/.Jf; ALDtJe,

MEXICO CITY - A strong earthquake shook central a nd southern Mexico early today, llttE:rlng some of Mexico City's streets with
broken glass and cutting off power to parts of the capital. But ther e
were no immediate reports of casualties or major damage.
A secon,d tremor rocked the capital about four hours after the
Initial quake, residents said. There were no reports of casualties or
damage.
The Tacubaya seismograph station said the first tremor at 12:53
a.m. (2:53a .m. EDT) had a magnitude of 6.5 on the Richter scale
and was centered on the Pacific coast 248 miles southwest of Mexico
City, 1n tbe states of Oaxaca and Guerrero.

Il-l 00
Weather forecast
Clear tonight. Lows 60-65. Winds southwesterly around 10 mph.
Partly cloudy Tuesday. Highs In the mld-805. Chance of showers W
percent.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Wednesday through Friday:
CbaDce of tlhowera or llnmderalonns each day.HJP In the upper
'701!1811d 8011 Wednileday 8lld In the '70s 'lbunday and Friday. Lows In
the upper~ to the mid_. Weclneecl~ 8lld IIIOiily In the li08 'lbW'II-

day and Friday.

lllCl JH.i.

SLIP - This is the scene on Union Ave., Pomeroy,
wht•re the recent heavy rains have apparentl y caust&gt;tl tl
slip nf several feet in depth. Orrurrin~ over lhe

.

•

••

,
.

Tpr . Wht•t•k r . a Hu nlH lJ.!lun . W.
VC:J . na ll\"l', jnuwd tlw p&lt;:~ t rnl tn 1971
&lt;:tlld hiiS sern·d ill tilt' Giilllpoll s Post
ht s t·nltl"l' can·l·r .

Israeli forces advance through Lebanon
gunners out of range of northern
ls rae l.

By The Associated Press
Five Israeli armored columns
shielded by a ir and naval bombard·
ments advanced through southern
Leba non, capturing a key Palestl·
nla n stronghold in a massive lnva·
s ian ai med at driving guerrilla

U.N. a nd Pa lestinia n sources
said W,OOO Israeli troop' and
hundreds of tanks battled guerrillas a nd their leftist Lebanese allies
Sunday from the outskirts of Tyre.
the port and Palestinian milita ry
center on the Mediterranea n 12
miles north of the border, to points
north of the Llta nl River, the limit
of Israel's 1978 Invas ion.

Man ~stable'
after accident
A Patriot man was hospitalized
following a one-car accident on
Ohio 2J3 Sunday morning, accordIng to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the
state highway patrol.
Steven J. Paullns, 22, was reported to be In stable condltlon thls
morning In Holzer Medical Center's intensive care unit . A hospita l
spokes man said he was being
trea ted for a broken collar bone.
The patrol .-ald Paullns was west·
bound at 6:10 a.m. when his auto
went off the left side of the road and
struc k a tree, severely damagin g
the vehicle.
Paullns was taken to HMC by the
Ga Uia EMS, and was cited for DWI
by the patrol.
Two other accidents were investl·
gated by the patrol over the
weekend.
The patrol said Virginia E. Chapman, 45, Rt. 1, Crown City, was
northbound on Ohio 7 at 6: W a.m.
Saturday when she lost control of
her vehicle, went off the right side
of the road and struck a tree, caus·
ing moderate damage.
.
Kevin W. :Jones, 17, Dexter, was
westbound on Meigs County Rd. 4
(McCumber Road), five mlles west
of Rutland, at 9: :ll p.m. Saturday.
Travelling at a high rate of speed,
the report said Jones drove off the
left side of the road and struck a
small building.
The vehicle then continued on.
strlldng a barn, went across the.
road and struck a culvert. Thevehl·
cle then went Into the right lane of
the road and stopped.
Moderate damage was reported
to the car, the patrol said.

I~ one thrust across the Ll ta ni
during the night, the Is ra eli milItary comma nd said troops captured the Crusader-era Beaufort
Castle, a heavlly-fortlfled clifftop
Palestinian base that for years
ra ined a rtillery fire and rockets on
the Israel's northernmost town of
Metulla, 3Y, miles to the 30Uth, a nd
much of the surrounding Galilee
panhandle.
The Israe li announcement at

dawn today ca pped six years of
fruitless Israelis effort s to knock
out the Bea ufort Castle batteries
with repea ted air strikes, foiled
when the guerrillas pulled their
gu ns back Into the maze of tunnels
in the cliff.
Residents of Metulla sa id a heavy
artillery a nd air a ttack on the for·
tress Sunday night stopped at midnight. a nd a pparently the Infa nt ry
moved up then, crossed the Lltanl
River a nd overran the clifftop
fortress .
As Syri a claimed Its forces in Lebanon were e ngaging the Invaders
a nd the fighting threatened to escala te Into full-scale war, the 15-natlon
U.N. Security Council demanded
una nimously Sunday night tha t Israel "withdraw all its military forces forthwith a nd unconditionally."
The council ordered the combat·
a nts to advise U.N. SecretaryGenera l J avier Perez de Cuella r of

thei r acceptance of the resolution
wit hin 24 houro;; . 1-.r.:tPI was Px ·
peeled to Ignore it.
In a le tt er to President Reaga n.
Isr aeli Prime Minister Menachrm
Begin said the in vasion. mounted
on the 15th ann iversary oft he start
of the 1967 Arab-Is raeli War . wa5 a
limited ope ra tion a imed a t pus hm g
" the terrorists 40 kilom eter s 125
mllest nor1hward."
Reagan. wrapping up a summit
wlth leaders of six othe r industrialIzed nat ion s a t Ver!Xlilles. france.
decried th e v iolrncf"' &lt;~ n rl rl.i,.. .
pat ched Middle Eas t trouble·
shooter Philip Hab ib to thP area to
try to head off an esca la tion.
Begin sa id the offensive. which
started about II a.m . Sunday whe n
tanks bega n ro lling into southern
Lebano n, was ca lled "Peace tor
Galilee ."
"The terrorists are aim ing their
gu ns excl us ively at the c ivilia n popul a tion ." Begin said. " The pu rpose
of the enem y Is to kill - to ki ll .lews.
m en, women and chi ldrC' n."

ON HAND - AUendlnJ Sunday's opeD ' - at lbe
new Carletoll Scbool at Syracuae aloq wllh 5110 oUier

people were, 1-r, Cbrl8 LaP. lldnllnl8tnltor; Mmnilll WebMer, lcq Ume member olthe MelpCounty

w

• '

weekend, th e slippage caused water lines tn break as
the berm dropped away from the side nf the road.
Repairs were made by the village water depa rtment.

~

MenU! ReWdatlOn Board and Carol Layh, admlnlslra&amp;lve 811818&amp;an1. See lllory and other photos on page
1.2.

�Commentary
I II I uyrl "tn ·• 1
l'unH rn1 tlhn o
ti 1~ · !19! · ~ 156
Ill \11\1· 111111111 1'\lHH.'I OJ I"IH \IIIL...._\1\,, 11\ \IIJ·,\

HOIIEHT 1.. Wl'-f;En

1101\lfOFI·I.I('II
I,, no •r;1l

\ I ,Hlit )! &gt; I

DAI.F IWTH(;EB . .I H.

1 \II \ 11 \llt ·d lht· ' " "'l.lh·d l'r' ' '

lnlot~wllfaill l'n·,,

"'"~'illlun and lht·

\mo 1,.,111\&gt; " ' JI.IJUI J'uh]I , ]H f ' ' ' " " l,ll!HU

I I 1 II I! ' Ill 111'1'\111'\ . In "' ' '' •+llll'd I ho ·l ,h.,u\11 ho k'' Lhun JOO ~o~nnb lnn j.! . t\11
,, 11o r -. ,or• , uhj•, 1 '" o ·t h l lll ~ .nul lllll 'l ho 'li! llt"d o.111h !1:1111,. , ;uhln"'' otntl ldo·phuno·
till mho 1 '" uii•I CIII"tll !'!kr-. "Ill ho puh], , IJ,·tl I dh ·r-. .. huuhl ho· 1111!"',.1 la,h• itllltrt·,, IIH!
' " " ' , n niJ" r-.nn,ll t llt''

Levies endorsed
H ~trdl~ an) nnt' would d1 spull' the l'lcwn that this 1sn' t a ).!Ood tum• to havt•
a l&lt;IX lt•\'Yon lhl' ballot.
In fad. rnust peupJLo would rrdt•r nt'\'t'r \' !lllll~ on a proposal to ra1se
pn1rwrty la xt·s. But. unfortunatl'ly. we don't havt• that luxury as 1t takes
nJollt'Y to prDvJde tht• st'l'\' lees Clnd t'qUiprnent for VCi nous program.s and
JH'IIjl'dS .

Mt•J gs County Vtltt·rs will hicl\ ' t' stllllt' major property lclx del' rsions to
"'"ke "l lht• polls Tuesd") .
Fur Jnsl&lt;tlll't'. the) \\Ill tit't'ldc 1f 1nuney is made ava1lablt: to efficiently
opt•rak and rnamWin lhL' nt•w Ca rld on Sf'llotll for menl&lt;:llly hctndrca pped
pt•rstms
Th1s 1s a 1 5 nulls contwumg it'\'Ythat Wt' ft'l'l ment...-; yo ur vote and support.
Must or the funds to build tht• new butldinj.! Ill Syraeuse l'f.Hilt' from state
snUJTes, but 1t IS thl' respunsiblirty of Meigs Countians to provide C:ldequate
lllPill'Y ltllll&lt;J lrl tc.-&amp;m &lt;Jnd oper&lt;Jit' the f&lt;Je ility.
Sonll' pt'tlple an· unf;;~irly tTJIJcctl that Lht· new building was ever construded ht'l'CIUSt' there an• olde r Sl"huol structures slC~ndllll! vacant. The fact
1s th&lt;d tlw Mt•Jgs Coun ty Board u£ Mt•ntc.-&amp;1 Rl't.ardation could nut ubl&lt;un state
aullo upl! rat!P ont:' uf thl' older bulidtngs to meet se~fety and fire regulc:atwns,
dt '.
VtTY ft•w pt•oplt• will &lt;Jr~ue &lt;Jg&lt;Jinst prov1dlllg ltlt}-noll'h l'dUt'&lt;:ltlonal opportunllll'S fur thl' mentally handt cappt•d - espec tc:all y when they tc:akt· into
t'OllS Hll' rrt lll/11 that thiS IS on\y a 1.5 llll]\[t'\'Y CJild Wl' p&lt;:~y la XL'S Ullin l'X('eS.S of
20 nnlls tn t·d ut'atl' thl' lll\Wt' fortunute _'ttl uth~ 111 our otlwr school s of thl' cu un1\

Tlu ·n · i11't ' othl'r proposals till Tut' s da~ 's ballot tha t dt'St'f\'t'S \'Olt'r surr
port. uw ludtn l.' tht· half 1111 11 ntt'iis un· for till' Mt'IJ..!S County Health Dl'partnwnt. tht• two nu ll proposa l to l'Xpand lht' Middleport firl' house il!ltl lht•
·tlu t ' t'IIHIIlt·\· ~· 111 Eastl'rn l.ot"al St"hnol D1stnrt .
In sununat1 on. wt· \\uultl l1 kt ' tu t·ncouracl' Ml'l l-!:-i Co unl1ans to lllctke
tlh·1r \uti HI' d• ·•·1s1nn ba sed m1 lnn L'· I'i:lllt!t' IJt'lldJts, nnt just beeausl' of the
l'lll [Till Stdtt• nf tilt' l't'U rlOrlly .

Letters to editor
Urges passage
Members uf tht• cxl'cutJVt:&gt; l'OIIlJJUtlee of the Meigs Local Teachers'
Assot·Jatwn ur ge passage of the 1.5
mill levy tn prnv u.Je nperat1ng expenses fo r Ci:lrlelvn School .
The new Ca rleto n School. whtl'h
will pen in Sy r&lt;:~ l'USe la ter this yee~r,
provides classes for the mentally
reta rd ed cht ld rt•n of Meigs Count y.
as well as tre~ming &lt;Jnd work expcnence for "dulls . Passage of the
levy w1ll en" ble the school to contmue its ve ry necessary educationul
progrctnL - Jeane Bowen, 992-7536.
.Jack Sl"vtn. MI.TA PreSident. 992:1710.

Monday, June 7, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

levy so lh"tthey will bt• better equipped to protect our lives w1d properly. - fred Hoffm"n, Mayor, Village
o[ Middleport.

Health levy needed

Tht• C:l&lt;'eurnulallon of 1cono&lt;.'lastu·
fll!ures has bt•come a cotta ge mdustry . Pett•r Gran•, the chief
t'Xl'l' Uli Vt' uffil'er of the Grc:ace Co., IS
the Gener"l Motors of th e industry,
i:lllll h1s statisti Cians poke grea t mortal holt•s rn lht' argwnents uf tlw
lnost'-llllrltlt•tl . D1d yo u know , fur mstann·, thc:at the St)-ralll•d neh,
Wlthuut whose mah•\'Oienet• Tip
O'Nt·i ll and Teddy K&lt;'llllt•dy would
ha\'t' no or\t' to hobgobllnizt• them
dur 1111-' then· awful 1\l ,l.! htmi:lres, arc
not \'l'l'Y 1111porti:lnl as revenue
protlun'rs '&gt; If you took evt·ry
Anu•rrt ·c:an paying 50 pt•rrent ta x on
lht· mar ~ 1nal dollar, and taxed that
AnwrH'i:lll nut by 50 percent but by
100 pt•rt·t·nt. you would i:ldtl to the
t!Cl\'t'rlllllt'nl letkt· only four percent
11f tht· ex 1sl1ng L&lt;:IX reVl'llUt'S . Yup.
lhal ·, n eht. The rich just don 't
f1 cun· nTy IIIUch un the scale of
thrrlgs. You ntn f111d a mah&lt;trajc:ah
lncukd down w1th rubi l'S e~nd
tiJCJJilunds and frankmn•nst' i:I JH..I
myrrh. but tf you lake all that sluff
fn1111 lmn and spread 1l C~roum..l to
,., . , , r~ Indwn , lhl' l'ffl't'ls i:ll'l' \'ery
nt·arly ne gll gli1lt•.
CorH'rl'lt•ly · Tlw ta Xl'S from all
/\lllt'l'll'ans t'i:lrning $75.000 or lllOre
CIJilount tn two pt'rcent of ft•deral
rt'\'t'llllt'S. TlluSt' who t'i:l rll bel ween
$60,000 "nd $75,000 prm·ide mmther
two pt'ITt'nl. Thost• earning between
$50.000 "nd $60.000 Me another two
fWrn·nt. Thost' t'Ct rlllllg bctwet•n
$40.000 and $50.000 anntlwr fnur pern ·nt. Anti those bet wt ·•·n $35.000 c:and
$40.000. another 6 percent. Wh"llhis
llll'C:I1lS 1s that et reduction in lax to a
lop marginal ralt· nf 36 rwr cent
woultl sat"nfll't' on\~ 9.2 pPrcenl of
currl'lll 1'1'\'t'll Ut'S . Forty pt•rc.•nt of
all tCJXt'S an· pard by lhost' Y.hnst• 111c·lllllt' rec:al'llt'S only $14,000. Tht•
Jllllltlll. lht·n . thal nnt' has .merl'iy to
raJSt' taXI'S on upptT brack ets to
~ • t • llt' r a It' on ·a ns 11f l'l'\'1·nut• is s i mplt•
- wt·ll. lht· k111tl of lhmg that Tip
O'Nl•lil and Tt·ddy Kt•nnedy usl' as
boob ball
Srw&lt;Jkrng of St&gt;na lnr Kt•nnetly &lt;:IIlli
nf Lht· l'otlagt• Industry of figures.

l

WASHINGTON (AP) - Until
Mickey Mouse got lnto the act, the
8-year-old congressional budget
system was supposed to be a way to
solve old problems, not create new
ones. Now everybody seems to be
unhappy with lt .
It seldom worked on time, and so
far this year it hasn't worked at aU.
The House killed every budget plan
available for the year beginning
next Oct. 1, and ls trylng all over
again.
Whlle tt does so, the Office of
Management a nd Budget Is starting to prepare the administration's
proposals for the year after that.
"The United States government's program for arrivlng at a
budget Is about the mostlrresponsl·
ble, Mtckey Mouse arrangement
that any governmental body has
ever practiced," says President

HAPPY TOGETHER- Members of the Euclid High School baseball
h·am rt&gt;lrhratt• their virtory Saturday as wif1!1ers over Lancaster in the
AAA stale baseball tournament in Columbus. Reacting from left are
William Mauser, James Mitch, Bruce Benedict (241 and catcher Gary

By TIM PUET
Associated Press Writer
A little more than two month &gt;
ago, student• at Dayton Roth were
told thls was the last year for lhelr
high school. Since then, they have
made sure the year would be a
memorable one.
Roth won the Class AA boys tllle
Saturday in the s tate hlgh sc hool
track champlonshlps. scoring 77
points to outdistance runner-up Columbus Wehrle by 37 points.
The crown goes with the Class
AA boys basketball title Roth won
in March, two days after lea rnin g
of the Daylon 'chool board's deci·
slon to tum the Roth building Into a
junior high. Roth won the boys
Class AAA basketball and tra ck IIlles in 1981 before belng dropped a
class this year because of declining
enrollment.
Roth'&gt; Laron Brown. who won
the 400-meter das h for the second
stralght year, noted that his team
had been expected to take the AA
title and said, " I got the feeling that
people were aga inst us" when he
first came onto the Ohlo Stadlum
track.
"But afterwards, when we took a
victory lap around the track. I fell
good," he said.
Cleveland John Adams used a
victory In the final Class AAA boys
event. the I,I&gt;Xl-meter relay, 10 fin Ish in a tie for team honors with
Cleveland Heights. Each team had
32 points. Trotwood Madison and
Lancaster were tied for third with

lll.

Columbus Mlfflln won the girls
AAA title with 56 polnts, far outdlslanctng second-place Upper Arllnglon's 26'1,.
Columbus East was the girls AA
w inner w ith 60 points . Runner-up

Sunbury Big Walnut had 41.
Day10n Chrlstian won Its firs!
boys Clas.• A championship with 42
poi nts. &gt;ix better tha n defending
c hampion Col umbus Academy .
MinSicr wo n Its s ixth girls Class A
crown in seven years. with Zanesville Rosecra ns second by a 45-37
count .
That reversed last year's result,
when Rosecran• ended Minster's
five-year monopoly on the title.
Defendlng Class A champton
Matt Vermllllon of Twin Valley
North became the first pole vaulter
to c lear 16feet at the event, topping
the old mark of 14-9'h by more than
one foot . The pole vault record was
among 15 gtrls and five boys sta nd·
a rds broken .
This was the 75th yea r for the
boys champ lonshlps and the elghth
for the girls.
Euc lid won the Class AAA baseball championship, defeating Lancaster 3·2 as Gary Casto scored
without the benefit of a hit in !he
fifth Inning .
for Euclid Coach Paul Serra.

on the winning stde." Serra said af·
ter the victo ry. "We are normally a
very stron g defens ive team. but It
was clul ch hils loday thai broughl
u&gt; the victory ."
Doug Rulan pitched a lh reehltler and flgurPd In each Urbana
score as lhc Hlllcllmbers shul out
Bucyrus Wynford 4-0 lo ""n ClaS&gt;
AA honors . Columbus AradPmy's
John Bueha nan pitched a lhrN·hltter as his learn blanked CadiL :\-11
for !he Cla'5 A title.
Kettering fairmont Eas t powered II hits and Jean Nace threw
a five-hitter In a 12-3 victory over
Westervllle North In the Cia" AAA
girls softball final.
Anne Haynam scored the win ning run on a p"ssed ball as Kins·
man Badger held on 10 edge
Columbus DeSa les 7-6 to win the
Class AA title.
Archbold scored 11 limes in the
third and plated runs in every inning bul one In a 20-5 roul of Lockland for the Class A championship.
The basebaU tournament was at
Ohio Sla le. while the softba ll games
were pla yed al Ashland.
Mike Massie, Cleveland West
Tech's only va"llY tenms player.

defeated Todd Peters of Cincinna tl
Walnul Hills 6-4, 6.:1 for the boys
Class AAA tennis crown a I Ohio
Stale. fresh m an John Kass of Colun,bus Academy was the Class AAA winner, 6-4, b-:l over .Jeffrey
Scolnlck of Ora nge.
Two Upper Arli ngton teams met
in lhe Cia" AM doubles finals,
wilh Ihe team of Ch1is LaLonde and
Tod Auch defeating Steven Stran ne
.tnd Shawn Walton b-2, b-2.
The A·AA doubles honors we nt to
Pele Mudre and Darln Pangalangan of Columbu s DeSales. who defpatf\d C;Jr~ · l ··r~ · and .John Hixon of
Columbus St Charles b-7. 7.6. 6-2.

Rt•tains &lt;'rown
BECKENHAM. Engl"nd Kevin Cune n of Soulh Africa dPfea led Buster Mollr"m or Britain,
7-6. 6-4. to relain his men 's s ingles
tille a lthc Beckenham Grass Court
Tennis Ch"mpionships.
Pam Sh ri ver of Ihe United States
successfully defended her singles
Iitle against E lizabeth Sayers of
Australia 6-.1. b-2.

EASTERN EAGLES
ARE EAGER

whose teams had lost titles in on£&gt;-

run defeats in 1978 and 1979, the viclory was a vindication of sorts.
"II was a terrible feeling lhen,
but It sure was dlfferenttoday to be

FOR YOUR HELP!

Casto. f AP Laserphotu) .

Swan., Hodges pace Mets to 6-3 victory

News item: MX missiles may be deployed in very deep holes.

Reagan, who didn't think It aU that
bad a year ago, when It was workIng his way.
When Congress was approving
the new budget system in 1974,
then-Rep. AI Ullman of Oregon,
chairman of the Ways and Means
Committee, said ll would be "the
most significant reform of the 20th
century."
It Isn't. Reagan says the system
ought to be changed, and he Is not
alone in that suggestion. There are
proposals in Congress for a shlft to
a two-year budgeting system. And
there are complaints that the current process has become a
roadblock .
The preside nt's spokesman,
Larry Speakes, said Reagan had
two speclflc ldeas for change: an
Item veto, and a requirement that
administration budgets get an up-

or-down vote In Congress.
The Item veto Is something president' always have coveted, and
Congresses always have denied. It
would permit the rejection of specific items in an appropriation wllh·
out veto of the entire measure. But
lf a president could pick and
choose, Congress would lose the
leverage ll now achieves by pack'
aging Items the White House want'
with ttems the administration
opposes.
Richard Nixon found a way, for a
time, and the dispute that resulted
was a factor in the budget overhaul.
As a result, the 1974 budget reform
act forbids lmpoundment of appropriated funds without congressional permission. When Congress
votes to spend money, lt has to be
spent, unless the president reports
that he plans to Impound the appropriation and the House and Senate

both approve.
After the House rejected all Its
alternatlve budgel,, Reagan complained that there was no actton on
the 1983 budget he submitted.
But Reagan's Republican aWes
blocked consideration of his original budget plan when a ll'st vote
loomed in the Senate Budget Committee earlier this year. The push
came from Democral~. who fl«ured the Reagan budget would be
trounced and the admlnistrallon
embarrassed. Later, during llegotlatlons almed at a budgetcon'lpromlse, the original Reagan plan wat
put to a committee vote and rejected unanimously.
They' II have to come up with
something, or keep the government
gotng, as they usually do, with resolutions extending old
appropriations.

By A!&amp;lCiated Press
Randy Jones camedownwith the
flu and the New York Mets' pitching staff needed a shot In the arm.
Enter Cralg Swan.
"That Swan pitched .super,"
Mets Manager George Bamberger
said after the right -hander won his
flrst game as a starter since June
11. 1980 in Sunday's 6-3 victory over
Ihe Cincinnati Reds.
Swan, called on by Bamberger at
the last minute to replace the ailing
Jones , pitched slx innings and scattered eight hits to win his fourltl
game in five decisions. He pitched
tough when he had to, strandlng a
total of ,;even Ctnclnnall runners In
the fourth. flfth and sixth Innings.
Swan borrowed a page Sunday
from Tom Seaver, the former
Mets' ace.
Ron Hodges belted a three- run
homer in the third inning and Joel
Youngblood added a solo shot in the
eighth to help the Mets break a
four-game losing streak.
Tom Hausman worked 22-3 innings in relief of Swan, then yielded
to Nell Allen in the ninth. The Mets'
top reliever struck out Mike Vall
with two men on base to earn hls
14th save.
Dodgers 5, Cardinals 3
Second ba&gt;eman Steve Sax
atoned for a seventh·lnning error
with a two-run triple In the top of the
ninth to carry Los Angeles over St.
Louis.
Sax tripled off Bruce Sutter, 3-2,
the lhlrd St. Louts pitcher, following

American unemploy..__m_e_n_t____R_o_b_er_t_wa_lt_er_s

Your help needed

t

!

I!

~~

Mickey Mouse act creates additional problems

As wt· gd t'loSl' lol·il'dloll tune I
woul d l1kl' tu Ci:lll atlt·ntlon to till'
lonll Hl·al th Dt'partllll'llt
As you prtlbi:lbl y know . i:l ti:lx lt·\·y
w1ll bt' till yo ur ballot. E\·en though
lctXl'S lllidll I'&lt;:IISt' i"l SIIIC:IIl CllllUUrll.
I'll \'ult• " Yt•s" for support of thl'
llt-alth Dep"rlmenl.
Many folks an· not CIWCII'I' of tlw
nulllt'rtll!S Sl'I'\'11'\'S th;.-11 tlw Health
rkpartnli'Jll J)I'0\'1\kS Tlwy hi:IVt' a
,o.; llo\ ('lJnJc' wllt'l'l' all c·hildn·n 1lli:l~
r•·t't'l\'1' 1lt'tTssary shnt.'i, a Wt'\1-ehiltl
t·llnw for rnutnll' phystcals c:and i:llso
;. tdnnmslt•r tht · WIC progrmn.
At thl' sa 1ne tinw . lhis tlt•pe~ rtment
Tnlht• rt·s ult·nts of Mu..ltlll'ptJrt
1nom tors and Ill'L'llSt'S our n ·stauranA ~ your 111a yor . I would \i kt• to
l&lt;tkt · th rs upportwutv to urgt• vou to ts. &lt;Jild responds to i:lth·ll't' ur ('OIIl·
\'nit' yt•s till llw two ~lull firl' Prolt·t·- pla11tls of the publlt'. B111h ami de"th
n ·r\Jflt '&lt;Jll'S a re i"lisu hantllt&gt;d there.
tloll lt•vy at Tue s de~y' s elcdwn .
ALLENTOWN, Pa. fNEAJ Tlw st·n·Jres. si:lfe).! uCinls, and pt•rFunds frorn lh1s lt•vy Will bt• ust•d
· " The last month and a half has been
son&lt;JI
proft·ssiuni:llism
of
our
Mci
J.
o
!S
f1tr ,·onstr udwn nf a much nt•edetl
County Ht•i:Ji lh DrpwtrrJt•nt Clrt' both real bad," says John Hottenstein, a
iit ltlltion \o tilt' t•xistin )..' flrt' stat1nn
rf cippro\'t•tl ett Tut'sda y's t'ledllm . a nt·c·t·ssJty anti a blt:ss1ng. I hope the 52-year-old installer of home msulation, as he reca lls the scant
t'onstrut'llllll will be starll•tl as soon puhlw ag n ·cs w1th me.
of lime he has been emamount
Su
plt·&lt;Jst'
rt'lllt'lllbcr
the
Sl'
r\'ll'l'
as possrlllt · ifOJ)I'fully . lht• aUdJtHlfl
ployed in recent weeks.
JH' tl\ 11h&gt;tl to US, i:I IHI till' jobs pro\'IJt•d
t'llU]ti lJt' t·mnplt ·tl'd th1s y1·ar Stl that
"Three hours last week ... 17 hours
flrt' and t'lllt'l'l-'t'ncy \ t•luclt•s can ;,I] I for our lllt'tlical professiOnal s by th1s
the week before that ... then one day
tax-funtlt·d
or ~an 1wtion . c:and ,·ott·
bt· lwust•d lllSitk dunn)..' tlw w1nfl·r
... and zero - nothing - a month
.. Yt'S." - Bli I Crcuw . Poml'roy
rlhlllths.
ago,"
he says in an unemotional,
Cnnslrudwn of tilt' p!TSt'llt flrt '
matter-of-fact tone of voice. " It's
hoU St' wa s Jlt&lt;Jde pussibll' 1)\ our
been more off than on."
pciS~a gt• of a bond ISSUl' S~'\'l' l'i:l l
Jim Coyne, a fellow Allentown
yt•a rs e~go . Th1s will ex pirt• on Dt•t ·.
resident, was one of 250 people laid
31. 1984 and Llu s onl'-half mill wi ll no
1\ four Idl er word wh1ch lll l.'C:IIlS sn
off rece ntly when an entire textile
]cJil,l.! t'r bt• on tlw l&lt;:lx dupilc&lt;:ilt' aft1·r llllll'h to sn llli:lrlY .
mill was shut down in Nazareth Pa
thallllll&lt;'.
WI' who an· so fortunc:a tt• and
a
nearby conununily. " Some ~eek~
Dut• to tlw llltTt'ast·d amount nf lw&lt;:~lthy fuul olhtTs who nt•cd our
we
work and some we don't," he ext'qUiprnenl lll't 'l'S!':iary to pro\·rd1· lwlp. All n\'er th1s gn•c:at lc:and of ours
plains.
cHkqui:lh' fin · and t'lllergt•nrv tht•n • an• rnult1tudes of people who
Coyne is single, but Hottenstein
proteelwn for you , Uw prcst•nt fu·~ tlt'cd hdp . Most uf the ~c peupk i:lrl'
must
provide financial support for
stc.-&amp;tion dot's not han· sufficient gdllll g help "nd being ""red for
his
wife
and two children. "THey
space for housmg the net'essary lwt'aust• . we are a caring nC:Jtlon .
don't
complain,"
he says softly, "but
t'QUipment. This means that sorne Me1 ~s County IS no exception.
it's tough on them."
must be left outs1de which cre"les
At a time of growing concern
numerous problems. espt•cially in
about a nationwide unemployment
We
have
an
excellent
111enlal
bad weather.
rate or 9.4 pe(cent, those two men
As you know. a ll uf our firemen retardation program here in Metgs
are
among the millions of jobless
but
the
facilities
h"ve
been
County,
are \·olunteers and donate their tu ne
workers
living in metropolitan areas
e~nd servke fnr your protection . limited .
throughout the country where the
With
a
"
Ye'"
vote
from
you
for
M"ny hours are spent by these
vo lunteers fighting fires, making the me1'tal retardation levy on June
.. ANOPEVE6QTAU THe CfltfMITemergency runs, maintaining equip- 8, the program can be enlarged and
TEE hDlX 00/E, ANO IT'S 601116 70
can
accommodate
more
people
in
ment and working at money-making
BCA GO(XJIIiii'l:FT; SO rM REAL
projects so they can have better the future as the need arises.
Of117M15TIC, IIIIKJ/ flJiMIIlJ5 Me, I
Remember all mentally retarded
511{)(JtP CALL 71lEASIJRY, AND IAIIU
equipment lu .serve you.
~ USTEN 70MS ~ltWTII?
Whenever they come to the voters people aren't born that way. Some
/
for assistance, you can most surely are caused by falls, car accidents,
!eve",
etc.
high
believe that it is for something which
will be of benefit to all residents.
I feel that we have one or the best
Any of us could be a victim of the
fire departments anywhere and I'm
above. But thanks to you, if it ever
sure that you feel the same way.
Let's show these volunteers that happens, there will be ~a ring people
we appreciate what they are doing with adequate facilities ready to
for us and go out Tuesday and vote " help" when necessary. - Nora E.
yes on the two-mill fire protection Rice, Middleport.

Supports fire levy

tkvotetl 48 pen·en\ of h1s bud)..! d to St'rvices, tlll'n for I:?XCeSS!Vl' SUcfl
spt•ndm ~. And cerl"inl y for spenne~twnc:al ddt·nst•, Rea ga n propost·tl
t!tng
only half as much for national
to spend 26 per&lt;'&lt;'lll.
"s JFK did ."
defense
" Both pn•s1dents advot'att•d ant!
Ponr Ted. In 1976 I rcgtslered in
dft•ded a n·dudwn of lax ratt•s to
s tnnulc:alt· llw t't'oncnny
llw this space alarm at tht• continuin ~
prt'rt'QUISlll' ln fullt·mp\oylnl'nt . It IS Jnnt•c:ase of fedt~ ri:ll spend1n g .
mt en•sllllg tn St't' hnw t'l:ll'h Sene~ tor Kennedy issued a sle~temen t
ln the dft'l'l lh"l. ex pressed "s a
fc:a shionet..llht•st' rl'dUd lons :
" TO CORPORATIONS
J fK rat1o of _t! ross natwnc:al product ,
tllredt·t..l 29 pt'l"&lt;'t'lll of h1s total lax fl•dt•ri:JI spl'ntlln J.! hctdn 't nsen s ince
cut to t'orpori:Jtwns, Rea ~ an 22 Jll'r- tht• l'Cirly '50s. renminmg ·'almost
pn•t·tsely constant "l aboul 20 pert't•n1.
'TO INDIVIDUAlS Of lh&lt;' tall' cent .'' S1nct' Sl·nator Kennedy wrott·
-n·ductwn fnr IIHh\'lduab. till' slli:lrt' thcsl' wonls. gove rnment spending
gmng tn tlw tnp fl\'1' incu11H' h"s risen to nc"rly 24 percent of
br"ckl'b · JfK. 29 perl'enl. Rt·" ~&lt;lll. GNP. " The next lime Mr. Buckley
fet•ls the ur ge ln shoot from the hip
2.1 pt'lTelll.
·'Thi s need not mhibit yn ur on eeonmnit' 1ss ucs and la x reform,"
cnt1cism of Rea gan's propo se~ls . sa td the St' n"t ur . " I hope he'll lie
You can st1ll criii CIZt' hun - 1f not down until Jt passt'S, or i:lt least
fur llladl:.q uate s pending for SOt' ial c hee k wtlh a responsible

patriotism requin•s that I shan• a
Jetter i:itldressed tt) the senator only
last Wl'ek . Thl' wnkr is " Mr. Paul
M"nlwun of Nt•w York,lo w1t ·
" Dt•ar Sen"lor Kt•nnl'dy : I h" vt•
bt•cn 1nost ml ~rt•s t ed in you r CUill·
nwnts e~boul President Reagan 's
propost•d budgt'l whieh points up llw
grl'at eunt r as t bl'tWt'l'il yo ur
bruthl'r's soc1al philosu phy when ht•
\\-'C:I :-1 prt·sidenl and that of ReaJ,!an .
.. As yo u rt'llll'lllber, your brutlwr
fcwed snn 1lar probh•ms of allocatmg
spt·nding bl'lwcen socia l sen· lct•s
rtnd natwnctl defense, i:lnd Jl is
t•n!J gh temng ltl sel' tlw t'lllphasis
pl"l'ed by each president.
"SOCIA L SER VI CES
JFK
dt•\"O{ed 25 percent of hi S budget to
sonal serv it·es. Ree~gan proposed to
spt'lld 53 pt'l'l't'lll.
" NATIONA L DEfENSE : JfK

The Daily Sentinei - Poge- 3

Dayton Roth., Urbana cop championships

Just the factslooL ________w_iL_Lia_m_F_.B_uc_k_Ley---'-Jr.

The Daily Sentinel

I' AT II IIITEIII·:,\ ll

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 7, 1982

20.6 percent ; Bay City, 19.2 percent ;
Muskegon, I7.9 percent; Detroit,
I7.3 percent; Jackson, 16.8 percent;
and Battle Creek, 15.9 percent.
Here in the Lehigh Valley, about
50 miles north of Philadelphia and 90
miles west of New York City, unemployment has not reached those
levels, but it has been in double
digits throughout the first three
months of 1982 and w 10.9 percent in
March.
Th"t's unusual because the valley
long has had a thriving economy and
is an area of diversified employment
opportunities. Binney &amp; Smith Inc.
produces Crayolas here, Mars Inc .
makes M&amp;M candy and the
American Can Co. manufactures
Dixie Cups.
Neighboring Bethlehem, Pa.,
houses the corporate headquarters
and Bethlehem works of the
Bethlehem Steel Co. At the aging
production facility, a work force of
1!,000 has been reduced by 1,800 - a
cut of more than 16 percent.
In addition, the troubled sltel
company . is in the process of
reducing its salaried, predominantly
white-collar work force by 10 per-

w1employmenl rate "!ready has
climbed into double digits.
Although that April figure
represents the highest level or unemployment since the Labor Department began compiling monthly
statistics in 1947, the nationwide
average masks an even more severe
problem that threatens to become
chronic, pervasive and debilitating
in dozens of urban centers.
In California's San Joaquin
Valley, unemployment in March
(reported figures for individual
cities always lag one month behind
the natiOnal average) reached 20.2
percent in Modesto, 19.0 percent in
Stockton and 16.1 percent in Fresno.
In Anderson, Ind., the total was
20.9 percent, while Muncie, Ind.,
reported 17.0 percent. Unemployment reached 17.8 percent in
Youngstown, Ohio; 15.7 percent in
Johnstown, Pa.; I8.8 percent in
Janesville-Beloit, Wis.; and 17.7 percent in Vineland, N.J., and surrounding communities.
In Michigan, seven of the state's 11
urban areas recorded unemployment levels in excess of 15 percent; Flint, 23.5 percent; Saginaw,

eenl through attrition and an additional five percent through layoffs.
At the Allentown Works of the
Western Electric Co., the manufaclunng subsidiary of the American
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co.,
"significant layoffs" last spring adversely affected 830 employees ~ I9
percent of the plant's entire work
force.
The Mack Track Co., whtch employed 6,700 people in the late 1970s
laid off I ,200 of those workers in i~
late 1980. "We've brought a few
people back.. " says a company
spokesman, "but not many."
High unemployment is especially
disturbing here because the area is a
microcosm of the nation, with heavy
mdustry co-existing with a thriving
agricultural base in communities offering many small-town amentities.
"Allentown," boasts the local
chamber of commerce, "is
prospering because there are jobs
... " Unfortunately, that's not true
these days - and a community that
twice in recent years has been
designated an "All-American City"
IS suffering.

MIAT?..

IN AWAY.

HOiQ 01{)

SIJ5TAINEO

YOU ..

t:iJPIIORJA

I

MAL,l;11;4R .

DOONESBURY

a single by Ron Roenicke, a for·
ceout and a base hit by Rtck Monday to give the Dodgers a 4-3 lead .
Ken Landreaux followed Sax's trl·
pte with a sacrlflce fly to give the
Dodgers a two-run cushion.
Steve Howe, 4-1, was the winner
with relief help from Tom Neleden·
fuer and Terry Forsler, who gained
his lhlrd save.
The Cardinals had gone a head 3-2
with a three·run rally in the seventh
with Ihe help of Sax's wlld throw.
Pirates 2, Padres I
Tony Pena's one-out single In the
ninth lnning drove in the winning
run as Pittsburgh beat San Otego
a nd handed Tlm Lollar his first loss
of the season.
Lollar, 5-1, yielded a leadoff single in the ninth to Lee Lacy, who
had struck out In thr ee previous at bats. Bill Madlock sacrlflced Lacy
to second and Jason Thompson was
intentionally walked before Pena
followed with his game-winntng hit .
Kent Tekulve, 3-1, who pitched
the Pirates out of a no-out , basesloaded jam ln the ninth, gained the
victory. Loloar, who struck out
nine, lost for the first time since
Sept. 16, 1981, a span over which he
was 6-0.
Giants 5, Cubs 3
Reliever Greg Minton saved San
francisco's third straight victory
over Chicago and Duane Kuiper
doubled and scored on Jim Wohlford's sacrifice fly In the seventh to
snap a 3-3 lie as the Giants beat the
Cubs.
Kuiper, pinch-hilling for pitcher

Scoreboard..•
By Tht'

~:la&amp;t'd

AMt.Kit AN

Prftlll

W

GB

""' -.n:l'l

Oo;otroll

.l2

I!!

Boston

.\.1

19

'!1

"

.m

25

24
25

25

26

""
4'lJ

77\1.1

24

29

.4..\1

9%

Tl

NI."W York
Ball! mort'
Toronto

529

51f1
s~

Western IMvWon
Kansa&lt;~ City

29

CaUfomla

31

'l9
26

Chicago
SealtlP
~~~d
TPII8~
Mln~la

21
2.3
22

58J

-

.574

-

.5&amp;1

•n

29

473

~

~

-~

S'h
6'h

11

.:rJ
43

.Jii2

10 1~

13

.'Ltl • 19

S&amp;lunb.y's G&amp;mN
(1(&gt;V£&gt;1and at Toronto, ppd . rain
Se-attk&gt; at Detroit, ppd., rain
Mllwaukl't' 11 . Oakland 3
K.ln..as C11y at NPW Yorli., ppd., rain
Balt1mort&gt; 3. Mlnl'l('~t.a I
ChiC&lt;ijtO 2, TPXllS1
Btl'ilnn 7. Ca llfomla 2
Sunday'• GaJ'llelt
Toronto~~. CJ(&gt;Vpland 1·7
()('tro1J 10. Sl&gt;al11l' 'l
Kansas City 14. New York I
Baltlm&lt;rl' 7. Minnesota ), 11 tnniillt'
Boston ~- California l
Mllwauk~

7,

Dakl&lt;md

'!1

San Francl'ICO

",..

1Welshl-l! . cnl
Atlanta tP Nlekro
!Wekh 5-3), IAI
Only garnl"'i

I

PIU~burgh
Oi lc~o

II New York. t nl

Tourney results
Ohio ID&amp;h School Boyt BuebUI
Stale 1'owmarnelll CUmp6onlhlpt

Euclid
tnl

~··Re~u~&amp;a
At ONo S&amp;a&amp;e Ulltvenlty

CIA!I8"""

3. l.aiiCUter 2

CLASS .U

Urbana t, Bucyrus Wynford 0
CIA88 A

Col. Academy 12, Cadiz 0

-·-

--~
......... &lt;:Glop

l1

... 08
.ill
"
.!31
·~
23 .529
t'li

"
:n28

"25

:12

28

....
.528
.3119

w....,...21
. .588
"

3)

l1

D~eRo

~neduk&gt;d

W L

PhUIICiel~·

,,

at San

............... OIN8ollboll

Montreel

Allanta

4-~1

J.21 at Los Angelt&gt;oi

Atlanta al Lo!l Ange~ . tnl
Houston at San Francisco, tnl

t

-"'-

·~

12

Pl~1ns

ScllOo l Boosters

The Equal Payment Plan.
Feb. Mar. Apr. May June July

Morureal

NA110NAL LEAGUE

St.LoulK
New York
Plttstllrgh
OUcago

at

at Philadelphia. cn 1
Cincinnati at San Diego, t n1

Kan5U Oty at Mlnnellota, tnl
Sean}e at Texas. (nl

Pel Po l Adv by the Tuppers

rain

Sf . Louis at Montrt&gt;al. tn J

Callfom1a at Tororuo, tnl
New York at Boston, tnl

CkovelaOO at ~1. (nl
Ba lli~ at Milwaukee,
oakland at Chicago, (nl

SUPPORT THE CARLETON LEVY

81,J

rue.a.,.•a Gllmt&amp;

'l'uesday's G&amp;mM

ISNT NOR-

DO YOU?

Sunday's Garnn•
2. San 01(11:0 I
Montrt'al 6, Atlanla .1
Los An~l("; 5. St Louis .1
New York 6. Clnclnnall J
San FrancL'IC'O ~. ChlcftRO .1
Hou'&gt;IOO 7, PhiladE'Iphla li
Moeday'• Gamer;
Pltt.~rjth tSann!Pnto J.{)J at Nl'w rork
tfak.UJE' J.2l, tnl
Chk'ago !Noles ~~ at Ph!Jadl'lphln

St Louis !Andujar ~~

2

.Jeff Reardon. 3-0. was the winner
wllh three innings of one-hit pitchIng. Astros 7,Phlllles 6
Pinch ·hltter Danny Heep drove
home two runs with a 'Ingle In I he
nlnlh "nd Phil Ga rner 's infield hi!
scored the winning run a.&gt; Hou sto n
rallied 10 beat Philadelphia.
The Astros tmUe&lt;l b-4 enlering
the ninlh, but pinch hit.s by Dickie
Than a nd Alan Knicely set the stage
for Hee p's lwo-run s ingle off
Warren Brusstar, 2-2. Heep took second on a single by Terry Puhl. took
thlrd on a grounder by Ray Knlghl
a nd scored the winning run when
Brusstar fielded Garner's slow
roller and lhrew wlldly past flrsl
base. Vern Ruhle. 4-3, was the
wtnner.

PIU'ibur~~:h

1SandProon 5--ll. tnl
Clnclnnatl 1Berenyl

ChlcaRO 4
·
Monday't Gum!l
Ck&gt;vt&gt;land !Denny l-51 at Torooto !Leal
4·31. tnt
Baltlmort' t Palm('r Z.3l at MUwaukef'
tCaklwell J...t1 . tnl
Oakland tLangford f.7t at Chicago
tTroul 4-41. tnl
Kansas City tCn"t'l 1·11 at Minnesota
tCa~tUio 2-Jt. tnl
Seat! it- t Ncl-.on J.7t at Tl'Kat: t Mallack
t.Jl , tnt
Only games scheduled

WE CARE!

seventh of the

sea::&gt;on.

1

29

tRuthvl'fl ~3 1 . tnl

T('Xa~ ~

oul homer. hi'

''" ..1'·,1
""
'".,
"'

ll
'!1
ll

2'1 .J )
Saturday's GilmeR
~n F'ranclsro 2, C hlc~o I
San ~o at PI!L'ibUrJ;t h ppd ,
Clnclnnall 6 Nt&gt;w York 'l
Atlanta 2 Morl1rPal l
l..oo; AnRPIM 6. St Loul~ ~
Phlladelphla ~- Houston ~

Cincinnati

rl't.

I.

l..o5 AnJi:{'IM
Houston

l.f:A&lt;ilJE

Ea.•th•m DlvWon

Clt&gt;V('Iand
Mllwau]U&gt;(&gt;

"'

SanD~

Majors

Rente Marlin. 1-3, belted a fly ball
that became entrapped in the vines
In Chicago's Wrigley field and was
ruled a double. He moved lo third
on a groundout and &gt;cored on Wohlford' s sacrlllce fly off Randy
Martz, 4-5.
The series sweep was the Gl"nts'
flrsl of the season. Minton plcked
up his ninth save by blanking lhe
Cubs in the ninth lnnlng .
Expos 6, Braves 3
Gary Carter and Chris Speier
eac h hit RBI &gt;Ingles in theelghth as
Montreal broke a 3-3 tie and went on
to beat Atlanta. Carter's single off
Larry McWllllams, 2-3, scored Andre Dawson with the lie- breaking
run before Speier's base hit gave
the Expos a 5-3 lead.
The Expos had lied the game 3-:l
In the slxth on Tlm Wallach' s two-

SUPPORT OUR SCHOOL LEVY!

aAIIIIUA

Kettering Flirrnool E. 1.2, Westervtllot
N.J

,

aAIIII.U
KJn•man Badger 7, Col. DeSalel 6
aAIIIIA
Archbold XI, an. Lockland

~

A convenient way to budget
for your electric bill.
Some household expenses are fairly steady throughout the year. But
your electric bill varies from month to month because your electric usage
fluctuates with the changing seasons. The billls usually higher In the winter.
It dips a httle In the spring months, then, for most people, rises during the air
conditioning season, before dropping again In the fall .
We can't do anything about the weather, but we can help you smooth
out the ups and downs of your electric bill. And that's by offering you our ·
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With the Equal Payment Plan, we bill you a fixed amount each month
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Your account Is reviewed every six months to see that your budget
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We give it our best.
OHIO POWER COMPANY

�Page-4-The Daily Sentine l

Monday, June 7, 1982

Pome roy- Middleport, Ohio

Royals bombard Yankees; Indians split
By Associated P ress
By the e nd of the s ix th Inning, a
Jot of the fa ns In New York were
c ha nting "Let' s Go. Mets ! "
The proble m was, they were
Ya nkee fa ns.
By the e nd of the sixth Inning, the
Yankees' problem was Kansas
City's IHJ lead.
Some lime after Ka nsas City's 14·
I vic tory Sunday, Roya ls' Ma nager
Dick Howser was re laxing In his
office whe n the phone ra ng. Wi th·
out m issing a bea t, Howser. who
used to m a nage the tea m in the
other c lubhouse, reached for there·
ceiver a nd, smiling at his ow n joke,
sa id : "Sorry. George. I'm on the
ot her end now."
It wasn' t Ste inbre nner calling, of
course . He may have bee n b usy on
the ot her phon&lt;!. thoug h, with Gene
Michael.
The Royal s could do virt ua lly no
wrong aga inst the Ya nk.s. pounding
Mike Morgan and three relievers
for 22 hil s. "When a c lub hits .290something," Howser sa id of the
Roya ls' .295 ba tt ing average.
"we're going to score runs ."
"That 's just a good old ·fas hioned
butt·kickl ng ," said the Ya nks' re·
lief ace. Goose Gossage, who never
left the buii (X'n . " It 's embarrassing
to Jose like t hat. But as a player , not
a fa n. you 'd ra ther lose like tha t
tha n a 2·1 game. Los ing 2·11s m ore

frustra ting."
Roya ls sta rt e r VIda Blue pitc hed
six Innings of 2·hll ball . The Yanks'
run ca m e on Butc h Wynegar's
eighth·lnnlng home r off Grant
Jackson.
Aike ns had five hils, Including
three doubles, a nd drove In fo ur
ru ns. George Brett had four hits.
includ ing a home r , a ne Ha l McRae
a nd John Wa tha n drove In three
runs

a piece.

Detroit r lght ·ha nder Da n Petry
was looking fmward to a pitc hing
duel with Seattle's Gaylord Perry.
The onl y proble m was, Perry
wasn 't around long enough.
The Tigers c hased Pe r ry with a
six ·run fi rst inning , threesco rfngon
La nre Pa rrish's double. And Pet ry
pitched a three·hltler.
Red Sox 5, Angels I
Rick Mille r broke a twe w1 th a
,;ingle in a tw&lt;r run seve nth·lnnlng
a nd Ga ry Alle nson hit a tw&lt;r run h&lt;r
mer in the ninth as Boston saddled
the Angels w1 th their .s eventh con·
secu ti ve Joss.
Ma rk Clear ba lled w1nner Bob
Ojeda out of a bases· loaded, one-out
ja m in the seventh Inning a nd
pitc hed 22·3 Innings of two·hi t,
three·sttikeout . no·wa lk relief fo r
his lOt h save.
Orioles 7, Twins 5
Baltimore's E ddie Mu rray was
wondering wha t Twins reliever

Ron Da vis rnlg ht throw him In the
11th Inning with one out a nd one on.
He guessed right on the first pitc h
a nd put It over the Me trodome wa ll.
"He threw m e a cha ngeup In the
ninth a nd I hit It otf the e nd of m y
bat ," Murray said, "so I kind of fig·
ured he'd give m e a fastball."
The Ortoles nea rly put It away in
the top of the ninth on Te r ry Crow·
ley's plnc h·hom e r , but a triple by
Ke nt Hrbek a nd J esus Vega'ssacrl·
flee fl y In the bottom of the ninth
prolonged the Twins' agony.

Barajas, a n J im Sundberg greeted
him with a line double to belt to give
the Rangers the ir vic tory.

T he Da il y Se nt ine l
t USPS l4S.910 i
A Di vlslun uf Multimrdiw , Inc.

Pubhsht.od t&gt;vrry afkrnonn. Mundit) thruu..:h
fmtay . Il l Cou rt Stn·t"l . by tht• Ohtu Vallt•y
Pubhshm)( Corn pany
Multmwd aa . lrw .
Pumr ruy. Ohw 4.5769, 992-2 1:16 St•t·uud das:o.
ptJS LIU~t' pau.J a t Purnt•ruy. Ohru
Member : Tht.' ASSUt.'Uil t'tl Prrs.~. Inland Oar ·
ly Press Assoc.·ut ltun a nd ttw Auwrrnw
Nrws~prr Publishers 1h.sUt.'ratwn , Natwnal
A d vrr ll s rn ~
Rrprcst·n ta tr l't', Br anham
Nrwspuper Sa les. 733 Tturr.l Avenut· . Nt•w
Ytlrk. New Yurk !001 7.

Brewers 7, A's 2
Harvey Kue nn has yet to expe·
r le nce the agony o! defea t. The
Brewe rs have won five In a row.
tour of the m since he replaced Bob
Rodgers as the ir m a nager .
Ted Simmons and J im Gantne r
homered and Gorman Thom as
drove In three runs aga ins t the A's.
The weekend was a roug h one for
Oa kiand pitc her s - 28 runs a nd 43
hi ts a llowed In the three·ga m e
sertes.
Rangers 5, While Sox 4
Chicago's J e rry Koosm a n wild·
pitched Te xas' tying run hom e In
the seventh Inning and, In the
e ighth, ga ve up two-out singles to
Mark Wagner a nd George Wright.
So White Sox Manager Tony La·
Russa called for relie ve r Salom e

dit '' t ·\P l .&lt; t...,tTp hottH .

Former outfielder
dislikes Astroturf
('J:\C I:\:\Xfl tA I' I - In hisdac··
th(' gra"·' \\ .~ ... JTI.itk h~· &lt;;od in,..IPad
of :'vl ono..,. t nto But if hP w&lt;•tv a rookir
no\·:. fornH'r &lt;'i ncinnat i Rf:&gt;do;; out ·
fif' ld( •t .li m Cn'f'ngraso;; figured hr
mig tn lt-.trn to likt• the -. tuiJIJ iy :-;ur·
fact• tt1.11 \Lt ..., .ts forl'ign to him as
ti gtlt ·fittlll).! uniform ....
" You (.'; Jn havf' that ~t uff,"
Cn•f'ngras ~ .;; aid. l cXJki ng down his
nos&lt;' at thl ' A~trotu1i in flivcrfront

Stadium . " I don't likl' it . It's too
ta.;;l, for o nr thing .
··Rut if it wa .~ :MJ ~~ Par~ ago and I
\I.'J~ a .\ ·oun g man. rna~ · b£&gt; I'd likf'

i I. ..
ThP :Jrtific ial gra s'"' was just one
of thl ' thin g~ Cr£'Cngra.ss and h is
fornlf'r tpammatC's had to adjust to

Su nda r durin g th~ l{c&lt;h' fir" Old
Timl'rs ga m f' .;incP 1974 .
Thirt \' fi\ · ~ 1\&lt;'ds players and
r&lt;"Cht•s from the 1 Y~b and 1960s
bPcamP ltw boys of summer for a
couplr of hours, and so me learned
tlwt th(•ir L'.VC's ight a nd r0flexes
WPJ"i' m a n • in an autum ny mood.
S!'\W; &lt;i of tht•m arc sti ll in base·
hal! a:..: ~co ut...: and roac hes. One i s a
sta tr• {'OUJ"I c]prk: anot her is a freelancf' v.TiiL' r . Some of their wa is-

tlines lta\·e lost the battle to keep up
with thl·ir appetites.
The skill.; that made them major
lmgut•rs ar~ sti ll there. thoug h ad·
mittc'(l ]~ · ru s t~ · .

" Th is ought to t:w a Jot of fu n. a,;
don't throw hard." sa id

long a s th(·~ ·

Grce ngrass. a n outfielder wit h the
Reds in 19:.2·55. " I ho(X' the y throw
a Jot of r ha nge ups a nd s low r urves.
" My reflexes a re good e nough to
get me ou t of the way of the ba ll. ..
Wearing the ir form -fi ttin g uniform s . a group of mode rn &lt;lay Red,;
pla ye r,; gathered arou nd the bat ·
ling cage to watch the "Old Ti·
mers" take the ir ru t&gt; a nd offer
ad vice.

"Tommy, s how 'em how you hit
'em off m e." pitc he r Tom Seaver
ye ll&lt;'&lt;!, as former infielde r Tommy
H~ l m s dug ln. Helms res p&lt;mded
wit h a solid sm ac k th a t brought a
gush of ad m ira tion.
Greengrass suggested tha t t he
game has n 't c ha nged as muc h as
the players s ince his ti me.
" I don' t think It's c ha nged a
whole lot," G ree ngrass said . " They
still use a ba t. a ball a nd gloves.
They've got to run . hit a nd throw.
" The game has n't c ha nged. But
the people who play it have
cha nged ."
The bigges t cha nge, of course, is
money .
" In our day, you wa nt ed to be the
best ballplayer you could . They
wa nt to be the best today, but
they' re going to be wea lthy in a
short li m e. too," he said .
" The top salary whe n I was play·
ing was Sta n Musia l's $45,&lt;XXJ. You
ca n imagine wha t the rest of the
people were m a king. The rnln·
imum salary was $5.&lt;XXJ."

BETHeSDA. Md . tAP I - Cra ig
Sta dl er has easily reta ined his
Ke mper Ope n c ha mpl o n&gt;hip ,
boosted his mo ney·winning lead on
the pro golf tour to $312,058 a nd es·
ta bllshed the largest winning ma r·
gi n of t he year - seve n st rokes.
For a ll this , he gave some of the
credit , fter his vic tory Sunday to
those In the ga llery who were root·
ing for J ack Nickl a us. playing In
the sa m e threesome with Stad ler
a nd Dr. Gil Morga n.
Stad ler. who fired a closing ·
rou nd 69 a nd pos ted a 275 - J3.
under· par fo r the 72 hole; over the
Co ngress io nal Country C lu b
rou rSl', said th at the pr&lt;rNir kl a us
crowd pum ped him up after he had
bogeyed the eighth hole. " It got me
a li tt le more excited today tha n I
have been in the past. You' re never
going to have everybody pulling for
one guy or the other. Obviously,
you're going to have a lot of people
pulling for J ac k more tha n a nybody
else. or A m old 1Pa lmer) tha n
a ny body else.
" It 's one of the reasons !'birdied
No.9. I don' t hea r a lot of things, but
a lot of things you ca n't avoid . And.
for a couple of holes In there. six,
seven a nd eight. there was a lot of
nega tivis m in there.
'"Oh. come on, you ca n choke it ,
you've done It before.· These kind of
things. I've heard the m before. I
heard tha t about 30 or 40 times on
the front nine . It 's fi ne, lf they wa nt
to say It , they're going to say it. I'm
not going to s top the m . Tha t kind of
got m e going, I think more tha n a n·
ythlng. I kind of turned, a nd unde r
m y brea th, said a few things a nd
we nt on ," he said .
Nic kl a us a nd Morga n a p(X'ared
to ha ve second place wra pped up
but Seve Balles teros of Spa in came
st rong
to m a runne
tc h Stadler
's 69with
a nd
on
ta ke
the $43,200
rupprize
a 282. Nic kla us a nd Morga n tied for
third a t 283 a nd won $23,200 eac h.
Stadle r , who ea rlier this spring
won the Maste rs, had a re la tively

easy time In the fin al round over the
par·72, 7, 17:J.yard layout In subu r·
ba n Washinglon.
Going in wllh a three.,;troke lead
over Nickla us, Stadle r birdied the
first two holes to jump out a fi ve·
st roke adva ntage before com ing up
with a bogey. Alte r a pa r, he pic ked
up two more bi rdies while Nic kl a us
m a de pa r , to ta ke a slx·shot edge.
" I didn't hit the ba ll as well as I
d id the last two days, but I m a de
ever;1hlng ha p(X'n a nd nobody
rea lly m ade a substa ntial run a t m e
early whic h didn't hu rt the ca use
a ny," he sa id.
Stadle r said he believes the turn·
ing po int ca m e after he bogeyed
No.8 a nd ca m e into No.9 wfl h a fi ve·
st roke lead .
" !hit a s hot about 6 feet above the
pin ." he said . " J ack was about 20
feet away. He hit wha t looked llkea
(X'rfec t putt , but II spun out a nd
d idn' t go in . I didn ' t hit a very good
putt a nd it took a little bound left
a nd jus t dribbled in the rig ht side of
the hole. The way the putt s were
hit , it s hould have been a tw&lt;rshot
swing. J ack s hould have m ade hls
a nd I s hould have rnl ssed mine."

7 6ers rout Lakers

t hl'll' mother and
Sl 00
SA 40
$52 80

SINGl.f: ('OPY
PRJr FS

Sub.-.tnl&gt;t·rs nut des t nn~t lu pu.) tht· t'arrwt
Hltly rruut rn advann· dtrt't"\ \u Tht· Dt~t l}
S..·nltnt•l un &lt;1 J, 6 ur 12 rnun th l.li:lsrs. ( 'rt•dtl
Wilt bl· 1!1\'l'Jl l ' &lt;ll"rll'f t'&lt;l t "h t r1011\h
Nu ~ u bsnrpl mns by tllt~rl J&gt;t'rtllt\t t'll tn \u~· n:o
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out how low your monthly payment could be.

CRRDllHRlJF'
AMERICA~
'1
·

·

.

Mrs. Dor nth y Lel' a nti Mr. anti
Mrs. Ric ky F:va ns spt• nt Mollwr's
Day wt•e kt•nd a t the home of Mr. and

Lht.• Jr gran dm other, M r s. Maq..!drt'l
Johnson, Rar llll', Mr. j:jlld M r s. I..

$30,000 OR ft/0~£ ON OUN H(J(JS£! •

OF

were surprised Tuesday eve ning
with a housewarming at their Reedsville hom e.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Kee n rece ntly purehased the form er Rose Thoma;
property. Those a ttend ing lhe
housewarm i ng presented Mrs. Keen
wi lh a . p ict qre ar rangeme nt.
Refreslunenis were served lo Teddy
Mundry, Ne ll ~ Wilso n, Max ine
Powell , Kay Barton, Darlene Barton , E mm a Durs t , Margaret
Ca uthorn , Ge r a ldine Holsinger,
Ales hra Holstnger, an d Le!l tra
Holsinger.

SUBSCRIPTION R A T F~~
Ry Ca rrir r or Motor Ruulr
Ont• wt•t•k
Onr Month
Orw Yt•ar

to Tho· Dad)

'f-rHE.Y SAY W£ CAN 80/A.OIA/ UP fO

PHILADE LPHIA lAP) - The
Philade lphia 76ers too k the fi rst
s te p in mission improba ble.
The 71iers, down 1·3 ln the ir best·
of· seve n series aga inst the Los An·
geles Lake r.&gt; for the Na tiona l
Basketball Associa tion cha mpion·
ship, routed the Lake r s 1J5.102Sun·
day to stay a live .
Alive but not still not well . No
team ever has climbed out of a 1·3
hole In the J6.yea r history of the
NBA. a nd the Sixe rs have to play
Ga m e 6 In Los Ange les Tuesday

Ma lcolm

Mrs. E tl w&lt;:.~rd Te mpl eton, B&lt;.~ i ky
Run . Tlwy t'i:Ulll' es pecially to St't'

a dd rr~s

Oulsitlt· Ohiu

DJSI'I 'TE AT Til E P LATE - Tt•xas Ra ngt'r t•a lr her Jim Sundbe rg
1 IIIJ arg ut·s " ith lwnw pi &lt;J tt• umpin· La rry Rarm·tt during the srventh in·
nin g of Su tul ay ·~ ga nH' af,!a ins t tht• (' hic &lt;J gn Whitt• Sux in Arlington, Texas
Sta dium. ( 'ar ll un Fisk nf th t• Sox C'a mt• hom t• tu S&lt;'ore. ah ead nf Sundh..rg· ... tag . Su ndlwrg d i ~ pu tt ·d th t· call. so umpin· Barndt is pointing out
\du·n · tlw t;~g on urn·d . Ha ngt· r n ·lit·f pitcht•r Dav t• St· hmidt 1241 wat-

REEDSV ILLE-- Mrs.

1Charlotte I Keen a nd son. Brei,

Jti,'ve got your loan

In Gallipolis:
502 Second Street
Phone 446-4113

also Vlsi tl'd w1 th

an d Sandy, Roc im•, M r . and
Mrs. Vi r).!il Let•. Pomeroy, anti M r .
and Mrs. Ca rroll J ohnson. MHI·
dkport. Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Telll·
pldun a tt enlh'd the quilt show at llw
Se·n1or Cill'/.l'llS b uildin g.
Lt't '

Sunday di nne r guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Russell of fulc ine
were Ma rine Ca ptain a nd Mrs. Ka rl
Russell and children, Melissa and
Kenneth, Scott Depot, W. Va .. Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Smith, Rock Springs,
Pa ul Dea n Pa rsons a nd da ughte r .
Amber Dawn , Gallipolis; Dorothy
Da nda kis, Athe ns, a nd Mr. a nd Mrs.
Floyd T. Cha pma n a nd da ughter,
Kim berl y, Pick erin~ton .
Easter guesls of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Smith we re Ca pta in a nd Mrs. Ka rl
Russell . MeliSsa a nd Kenny of Scolt
Depot. W.Va. Mr. a nd Mrs. Ke nn eth
Russell of Rac ine a nd Mr. and Mrs .
Do na ld Smith a nd Sa bnna of
Pom eroy, jomed the fa mil y and the
lOth birthday of Kenn y was obse rved
with C:t bunn y ca ke and ice crea m

Long Bottom News Notes
Mae McPeek Is recupera ting
!rom a hlp injury received In a tall.
She Is now a t hom e a nd undergoing
the ra py.
Mrs . Betty Newlun a nd Bill And·
e rson were recently m arrted a t
Chester, W. Va.
Cathy S(X'ncer unde rwe nt a kid·
ney tra nsplant at University Hospl·
tal, Columbus, on AprU 16. Donor of
the kidney was he r m othe r . Mrs.
Delores Fra nk.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Clyde Ada m s were
recent overnight visitors of Zelma
Vermillion and Mr. a nd Mrs. J oe
Evans, Reynoldsburg.
Dorset Larkins Is a patient a t the
Holzer Medical Center .
Connie Walls, da ughter of Mrs.
E rnestine Haym a n, a nd Larry Hill.
son of Willouby Hill were recent
m arrted a t the Portla nd Methodist
Churc h. The couple now resides in
Portl a nd.
Mary Ellen Andrew of Pennsy l·
va nla was the recent vis itor of her
father , Francis Andre w, a nd her
sister a nd family, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Larry Collins.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Larry Drtggs a nd
fa mily we re recent guests of his
brothe rs . E rnie Driggs a nd Don
Drtggs a nd families. Mrs. Driggs
a nd da ughter remained for a sev·
e ra ! days' visit a t the Larry Driggs
hom e.

Butler, Ka thy F itzpatrick , Mr. a nd
Mrs. Ed Kindle r a nd fa mily, Lan·
cas te r ; Day to n Hay m a n a nd
Peggy, Parkersburg; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Larry Hill a nd sons, Portland ; Mr.
a nd Mrs. Martin Nes.selroad, Mr.
a nd Mrs. Tom Hayman, Mrs. Keith
Ridenour a nd fa mily, Phyllis Lar·
kln s a nd gra ndc hild ren, J a nie
F itch, a nd Ruby Brewer , Long Bot·
tom ; Mr. a nd Mrs. Jim Arbaugh
a nd Issac, Little Hocking , a nd Mr.
a nd Mrs. Joe Barnhart, Glenford .
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dorsel La rkins vi·
sited In Gallipolis w1th their da ugh·
ter a nd fa mily, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Salisbury a nd c hildren, Ada m a nd
Aaron who returned home w1th the
La rkins fo r a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F itch vi·
sited the ir son a nd da ughter·in·la w ,
Bobby a nd Da nlle Fitc h.
Dora P ierce a nd gra ndd a ughter,
Kathy. went to Mingo Junction over
the weekend.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dougle Ball a nd
fa rnlly, Montgo m ery, W. Va. are
vacationing he re w1th his parents,
Mr. a nd Mrs. Millard Ball .

Debbie Griffin. da ughter of Mr.
a nd Mrs. Ernie Griffin , recently
completed he r cosm otology tra in·
lng a t a P arke rsburg school and
has accepted e mploym e nt a t Your
Father's Mustache in the Grand
Central Mall.
Friends here have received word
from Mr. a nd Mrs. Da le Connoly
Sr ., forme rly of Long Bottom , now
residing in F1ortda, tha t the ir son.
Da le Jr. Is In medical school.
Donna Connoly recently gradua ted
from nurses training a nd is work·
Jng a t a hospi tal there.

He ino Lind has returned from
Lo ng Bottom Community Associ·
Bost on a nd Lynn, Mass., whe re he
a
tlon
meets the last Wednessday of
vis ited his niece a nd famil y, Mr. a nd
each
m onth a t the cummunlty
Mrs. Steve Stelter.
bullding. The next meeting will be
Mr. a nd Mrs. Duane McLaughlin
a nd fam ily a re he re with the ir June 30 a t8 p.m . The bullders com·
m lttee of the club meets every Wed·
fa milies, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
nesday a t 8 p.m. a nd a m eeting of
Mc Laughlin and Mr. and Mrs. F red
Williamson, Rutland. The fa m ily is the ladles fund ra ise r committee
in lhe process of moving from Ha m - has been a nnounced for June 9 a nd
pton, Va. to Cha rleston, S. C. a nd 23 a t 8 p.m . a t the bulldlng.
will be in Meigs Counly for another
Long Bottom Senior Ci tizens
week.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Leona rd Russ of m eet the second a nd fourth Tues·
Cleve land s pe nt th e holtda y day of eac h month In the base me nt
weekend here visiting their a un ts, of Long Bottom Me thodist Churc h.
Mrs. Genevieve Meinha rt a nd Miss They sponsor a free blood pressure
a nd we ight cllnlc on the fourth
E nnaSmith.
Fonne r Pom eroy resident Rose Tuesday of every m onth fro m 9
Ginthe r is confined to the Mid- a. m . until noon .
dl etown Hospital , Middletown . Ca r Many Long Bottom reside nts had
ds ma y be se nt lo her the re.
IP'ests
over the holiday weeke nd .
Mr . a nd Mrs. Ea rl Steiner of
VIsiting
with Mrs. E rnestine
Wa rren spent the Memorial Day
yman
were
Mr. and Mrs. E lbert
Ha
weekend here with his mothe r, Mrs .
Ma ri e Steiner , Middleport. They a t- Flltzpatrlc k, Mr. a nd Mrs. Bob
F ltzpa trtck a nd c hildre n, Dave
t e nd ed th e Rutl a nd Alumni
Associa tion ba nquet a nd dan ce
Saturday.
Mrs. Betty Hmruner of Columbus
spe nt the weekend here with Mr. a nd
TUPPE RS PLAI NS - A Fatlwr 's
Mrs. Bob Hoefli ch a nd J ay ne . Day dinne r will bt• ht•l d al th e
Visiting Sunday were Mr . a nd Mrs. fi rehoust• i n Tuppers Plains by th e
Dallas J ones and children, Colum- La dies Auxi lia ry uf the Ora nge
bus.
Vulunlt'L'r F irt' Depa rtn Jt.•nt. Sl·rv in.t.'
will begi n at 4:30 p.m . Cost nf th e
j'¥1r. a nd Mrs. Phil Wise, Mcba kt·d stea k dinner will bt• $3 .75.
Connelsville, ~ pent a Sunday her e
vis iting his ~artnts , tne !~ev. ~ ,, d
Mrs. Cecil Wise a nd ddughter.
Rosalie, Five Points.
RUTLA ND - Daily Vat·allllll
Grace Glaze, formerly of Middle · Bi blt' Sehoul wtl l be held .Jul y 12- 16
from 6:30 tu 8:30p.m . ea eh t'\'ening
port, Is now making her home with
a
t Rulland United Methodist Chu rhe r son·in·law and da ughter, Mr.

Announcements

r-i~~~~~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~
JOLYNN BOSTER IS:
-A Resident of Gallia County.
-A Practicing Attorney, Gallipolis
-A Graduate of OSU Law School, 1976
-Married to Veterinarian, Allan Boster.

Bible schools set

·and Mrs. William Radford,ln Rock
Springs . She Is visiting In Columbus
w1th a nother da ughte r a nd son·ln·
law, Mr. and Mrs . Don Pullins , a nd
joined the m for E aster weeke nd in
Indianapolis, Ind . with Ron a nd
Deanna Reed . Mr. Reed Is educa·
tlon minister at Southpolnt Heights
Church of Chrtst.
On Thursday Mrs.Giaze wlll fly
to Texas for a visit w1th Carl Glaze
a nd his family a t Longview and w1ll
also visit Sgt. Major Ha rry Glaze
and family at Fort Polk, La. , returning in C:tbout three weeks.

1'11.

A family gathering was held on
Memorial Day at the home o! Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Barton, Pomeroy, In
observance of the birthday annlver·sary of Ardith Barton.
A cookout was enjoyed after an
afternoon of swlmmlng. Those aidtending were Mr. and Mrs. BOB
Barton, Scotty and Billy, Mr. and
' Becky Lee.
Mrs.
Ardith Barton, Pomeroy;
· Mrs. Richard Young, son, Ertck,
Mrs.
Judy Jewell, Brian and
· and Jane JohnSOn, spent the weeDeanna Denny, Rutland; Betty
kend with Mr. and Mrs. Edson
Reed and John Raber, Randy and
Roush.
Crysial
Lee, Barry and Judy Ste' Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
wart,
·
TeJTY
and Brenda Wyatt,
.springfield were recent guests of
Robby,
Adam
and Michael Middle:Lula and ~ema Circle and other
port;
Bill and Madeline Goorey,
:telalives.
• Mrs. Martha Lee and daughter, Ray 'BriCkles, Rutland, and Randy
jlecky, visited at the hQme o1. Mrs. :::.~~' Shawn and ·
•Ethel Orr of CheSter on Monday .

DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE

for

STATE REPRESENTATIVE
94th District
OLD TIMER REDS SHOW THEffi FORM - Former Cincinnati Reds' slugger Gordy Coleman takes a
mean cut at a pitch, but watches It bolll!ce harmlessly
into the dirt as he joined several othe r l ormer Redo of
the 1950s a nd 1960s In an old timers' game Sunday prior

to the Reds-Mets game In Cincinnati. Colell1lln, who
now owns up to a weight of %50 pounds, hit Z6 home runs
lor the Redllln 1961, and followed In 1962 with 28. f AP
Laserpbotot .

(Gallia, Meigs·&amp; Athens Counties)
.

Poi4 fGI II! tht loltot l01 Sllto RIP!-- Cooooollloo, Doootlll I . t:ewlol. T - , IH Jollto E. lbllidly, Cllairm~n.
.

...

"·

!

Guests of Mr. a nd Mrs. Pa ul
Ha uber ha ve been Mr. a nd Mrs.
Tom Kibble, Brta n and Da nielle,
Eagle Ridge Road ; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Dave Dalley, Rae Lynn, Portla nd;
J oe Evans, Reynoldsburg; He rb
Cairns, Hf bron; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Doug Ha uber , Tim a nd Kim, Ba·
sha n. Mitchell Holley s(X'nt the
weeke nd w1th Scott Ha uber .

Meigs County area births and birthdays
Dixon
PO ME R OY ·· Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dixon of Vlctorta, Texas, are
a nnouncing me birth of a son, Jef·
frey Andrew, J une 3. The seven
pound, five ounce Infa nt was 19
inches long.
Gra ndparents are Mr. a nd Mrs.
Buddy Harrell , Corpus Christi,
Texas, a nd Mr. a nd Mrs. Herbert
Dixon, Pomeroy.

Se•ntliiiJ.! g1fts we·n · Mr and Mr ..,
Lmn·ll
J&gt;ril'l ', palnna l 1' 1;!ltdpal't'llls. Mr and Mr ~ !Jurt Tllttll lil~.
and Mr:-;. Ntll"lllil (;uodwtll

Wright
Mr. ant! Mr ~
Da \t d Wr! J.' lt! .
f:&lt;Jlllpoli s. fprnn·rl~ uf Hut l;uul. t t l\ ·
twunn· lh1 · Mtl\. 1 IHrlll trf tlwll
clctu )..! htl•r , l .aura .I.ICIIh' She· Wt'll~l wd
St '\' t 'll

Mullen
Mr. and Mrs. Cha rles B. Mullen.
the former Debl BaUey, Middleport, announce the birth of a son,
Charles Ian, May 19 at O ' Ble ness

pounds. Sr\t'll ttUill't'.'i ttl Hi

\ \ i t ...,

Manuel
.ltr•·

\1 ;Hit\l'l

IJi rlltd ;r_
\ \\ rt l1 .1
;~t

llw H()IJ

1

t•l e•IJJ"&lt;llt'd l11." 4~Hh
]JWilll" ;rr1d t'1111kuut

Lt · \~L.., Pt~rk

t)]l

\1,~ _,

:11

Tlt1 · da~ wit :-. spt'lll ft:-.l 11 111: . p l; t~I!IJ~
!' Otll l\' ~ :111d \ ' I~\( \Il l
Alktldt lli ' \\I'll ' \1r .tltd ,'\ lt ~ Ar 1111 \d llu pp . Sll;rte•rt .tnd .lt·l11ll~
llupp . Jr, ·nt · l l upp . F ltt ...,:-.ll',tlld l·: mtt'
Bu:-.11 . l&gt;t •ll \b!tUe l . 'lt~rl t . Tnllllll~
;Htd T• 'll l ;\l&lt;ttlu..t . l&gt;t~lldk T;llhnl(.
Sr tl .It HI I kill :-.'
M.11H1• ·I.
l nn

I~ mdlt's lon j.' .

:\1anu..t . .lt ·ar l .tnd ll. tn ~

Mr. an d M r s Wiw hl h;i\t ' " "' 111 ·
Cnwkdt. fnur I';Jtt•rn; tl 1' t antipi l t"L"nl s art· Mr and Mr ~ l&gt;;i\HI
Wn ght. Pumt Plt·&lt;~ sant Mr:-. ll rtt.t' l
Wn ght ts H gn·al ·I.' I"&lt;HHilllt 11litT Tl 11·
rnall'rrlctl gr antlparl'nt s an· 1\t' \
and Mr s. Fn·d Mt"Cal\J ~l t·t .

t 1, .

H PII .., h

lh'I -

. 11 111 :\tn \ 111 \1d ;u lr•·. H.t t' lll.l
M..C ; 1111 , . 'J', ·rr ~ . 1&gt;t-b1J 1, .. Tt ·11 .' . .Jr
dltd 1';1( \ 1t"(; 1111 t·. H~&gt;I J. 1 _\IIJ 1 ;tnt!
,~, , 0111111 , . t\r"tll...,. Arlntt · ,trtd ll 11\\ilrd
s.·;H· it-~ . Fd 1tl 1 \1o~nu t ·l .rrtd tlw
lwn•rr. ·d t•u 1·.., [
(; 1ft..., ;nHI ;1rd :-. \\ t 'l" l ' pr ,...,,·rtt• ·d l1r
M ;unwl fn!lt r\\'Jr q ,1 Tl1 1:-- r.., Y~&gt;ur
1.1 ft' " pi t'~ l II t d t I till \\II II t "\r I 1\ I II &gt;
..,~,.., 11 . r . [ 1111 ; 1 Jlu pp

Me m orial Hospital, Athe ns. The infant we ig hed nine pounds . twoounces and was 22 inches long.
Suut h:-; uk. w1\h Mr and Mrs Hul&gt;arl
are Mr ' a nd Mrs •
Wll&lt;l &lt;· ll"U&lt;
..·' ,.. f&gt;ir tlc'· W Vc1. llw
G ra ndpa ,~nts
._
v
Harry L. BaUey, Pom eroy, a nd Mr.
g rl'al· ~ nnldpan·nh .
a nd Mrs. Don Mulle n, Middleport . . - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mrs. Rhoda Hacke tt, Mlddleport, ls
a grea t·grandmother.

Wilson
Mrs. Ellen Wi lson celebrated her
89th bi rthd ay with her fam ily Thursday nig ht . He r son-in-law a nd
da ughter . Mr . a nd Mrs. Virg il
Hayes. we re here from Col umbus
along with som e fri ends. Mr. a nd

OUR
THE STREET.
EVIR'mi!NG MUST BE OUT BY THEN. THIS IS A WALL TO WAll 0£AR.
ANCI. YOU CAN SAVE NOW UKE NEVER BEFOI!E. HURRY! THESE BAR·

M r:;. Sam M&lt;.~ ri o n , Co l wn bus. She

received ma ny ca rd;; a nd gifts.

Price
'·

Barbara FUtzpkatrlc k a nd Lort
F ltzpa trtc k of La ncaster were weeke nd v is it ors o f Er n est in e
Hayma n.

Fall term
enrollment
figures up

Price

RIO GR ANDE - Accl'ptances fur
the fall term a t Ri o Gra nde College
Hnd Community College a re up ove r
100 stu dents from this same timl'

Skl'Y Mir hell e P rll'l', J cmg hlt: r uf
Mr. a nd Mrs. Steve Price, PuJnl' roy.
n•ce nll y l'l'leb rateLI ht•r t hi rd bt r·
lhtlay with a pa rt y al he r home .
A Dukes of Hazza rd the n Jt• "·as
n-1 rried out wi th lhl' l'ake be1ng
dt·t·uri:i led as i:t Cunfl•de ral t' fli:l g.

last ycC:tr, acco rding t o 8la tisti cs
rell'ased r ecentl y by DeanS . B r ow n ,
D irector of Admissions and Recur·

Guesls lllt.' luli ctl Stan•y's pan·nts
and sislt'r. Stepha lilt.' , lw r J.!l"i:lnd·
pa rents. Mr . Ci lld Mrs. ChC:tr!es

ds .
Brow n said thal 363 stud ents haVl'
bee n aecepted so fa r fur the fa ll te rm
eo mpa red to 254 at !he sa me tim e

W,·rry. Mr . and Mrs. Nrc k D,·Poy.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Mi k&lt;· Wl•rry. Bra nd un
a nd Ryan. Mr . a nd Mrs . Bob W&lt;'ITY
a nd Kyk , Mrs. Peggy Tay lor an d

last yei:l r.

C&lt;HTi. Mrs. B C:triJa r a Cunnin12.harn .

He sa id tha t 11 5 resident mal es.
118 res rdenl females, 37 commute r
males. a nd 93 r orrunuter fema les
have bee n accepted . Last yea r a t
th is time. the sc hool reported 11 2
resi de nt mal es. 11 5 res ide nt
females. 33 cmrunuter ma les, an d 39
commuter fema les.
Brow n sa id that 50 appli ca ti ons
are still be ing processed. Ri o Grande College a nd Communit y College
has a n overall e nrohrunenl a nnua ll y
of approxi m at el y 1.300 sludPnts

POME ROY - Appli cations fur th e
Me igs County Fair King a nd Quee n
co nlest may be picked up a! th e
Meigs County E xt ension Office il
was a nnounced .
Pa rti cipa nts mw;t be 16 yea rs old
a nd enroll ed in a youth orga niza tion
such as 4-H . FFA . VI CA, Girl Scouts
a nd Buy Scouts.
Appli ca tions must be returned to
the extension office by June 18. Interviews will be held on July 2. F or
more information contact the extens ion office at 992-6696.

Papers filed
RA CIN E - Secretary of Stale Anthony J . Cele brezze, Jr. reports a rticl es of incorporation ha ve been
fil ed with his office in Colwnbus by
Ba rbara Gheen's Painting, Ine ..
Racine. Bar bara Gheen is the incorpora tor a nd agent.

Property
transfers
Warren D. Reeves, Olive Ruth
Reeves to Burkeye Rura l Electri c
Cooperati ve, Inc., Ri ght of Way,
Scipio.
Ronald J. Raymond , Leulla C.
Raymond to Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Inc. , Right of Way,
sCipio.
James Warner, Lori Warner to
Franklin Real Estate Co., .23 acre ,
Sutton.
Franklin Real Estate Company to
Michael E . Swiger, Lura R. Swiger,
Lot 295.23 acre, Sutton.
Dwight Graham to Lucille Hiett,
Leafy Ch~steen, 30 acres, Rutland.
William D. Scott, Lorene M. Scott
to Roger D. CottertU, Parcels,
Scipio.

MAlTRESSES
TWIN

FULL

Reg. $89 .9

'$5995 $7995

.. c ER
SAVE S30

SAV E $30

·~

I SFURNITURE

~too;;d

854 Second
Thu rs
Gallipolis 446-9523

r---:;;;;;;~~~~~!~;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;::;;::;;::;:;;;~:--

rates on
Check th-:~ pepositS•••

13• ...

Applications
now available

.

Tht• Cukc.s bury ma terial with a
diff&lt;&gt;rt' nt theme fur ea ch elass will
tw u.scd in lhl' program. A special
prese ntati on will bl' inel ud ed durin g
each evening's devoti onal pcri ntl .
The dos ing program will ta ke pla n•
on Saturda y, June 17.
Workers inc lude M a rjori e Rin •,
J a net Morris . Jeanne Slawter . J a ne
Wiseman, Margaret Edwa rds, Edith
Talbert . J a ne Wise, Rev. a nd Mrs.
Robert Rider, and Fay Sauer . Othe r
workers are needed and those inte rested in assisting are asked to
contact Mrs. Sauer.

Carmel News, Birthday
By the Day
Bprton
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Leist and
sons, Mrs. Evelyn Ingram, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas O'Neil and sons, Columbus, were visitors at the holl)e
of Robert Lee and family,
. Saturday.
Michelle JohnSOn, Raclne. was
the overnight Saturday guest of

The Dai ly Sent inel- Page - S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Meigs area correspondence ________

Sentm t'l. I l l Cuurt St . Pomt•flly . Ohru 45769

PaiTM ASTE R . Srnd

Stadler takes Kemper Open, boosts earnings

Monday, June 7, 1982

11 1'·''

11

I ···.· •' •I'

'

il
o,o

'

iH· ••· l '' ''''•'·''',ll"'"'''''

Monday61
\nrouQh
• More than the 6-month rate at any Ohio bank
or federally-chartered savings and loan.

• Minimum deposit only $5,000 ... not $10,000
as with most financial Institutions.
• No need to tie up JOUr money for longer periods
for higher rates.
• Interest mailed monthly or quarterly. Or
let H compound.
7.5o/o tor Passbook Savers: If flex1brhty 1s 1mpor1an1 lo you .
ask about our 7.5% 1nterest. day 1n · day out No Penalty CO w1th
passbook availabtl1 ty.
Capttal Savtngs &amp; Loan . a Benefic1al F1nance System af'il1aled
company has been accepttng depos1ts tn Ohto s1nce 1892
Phone or vis1t your local Benef1c1al oH1ce today lor furth er
informatton as to how you can start earntng th 1s h1gh rate of
interest on a 6·month T1me Depos1t. Come tn now and piCk up
your postage·free deposit envelope at any Beneftc1al Ftnance
System office in Ohio. Or call our toll·lree number
1-800·282-1706.

West Beneficial Finance, Inc.
POMEROY - 300 West Second Street ..
GALLIPOLIS- 416 2nd Avenue .
ATHENS- 1015 East State Street .

. .(6 14) 992·2 111
(6 14) 446·2765
(614) 593·3372

Rate at time of ~rc ha se is guaranteed for lhe enhre sut&gt;month penod Substanl ral penalty tor early
withdrawal of time accounts. Deposita lc:cep!ed Cllly tram ()hro restdenls RaJas and terms subjeCI lo

change.

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 7, 1982

Eastern High student
national award winner

Student
rece1ves
scholarship

Tmnn1 y C ai &lt;J w &lt;:~y, dau)!.hter of Mr.
and Mrs. F.n· rt'lt Ca laway, has been
rwln t·d a 1982 Un itct.J States NHti onaf
Award w1nncr 111 mathema tics. lhL'

Carolyn Bowen of Eastern High
School has been awar·ded the Francis Shane Memorial Scholarship to
Attend Rio Gra nde College and Community College.
The schola rs hip is awa rded each
year to a Meigs County hi gh school
senior enterin g the Rio Grande nursing progra m. The schol a rship is
granted on the bas is of academi c
promise.
She served tw o yea rs as an office
aid and was a member of the
Naltonal Honor Society for two
yea rs.
She is the da ughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bowen of Pomeroy.

S t &lt;:~ l t •s

Tht·
ac a d e m y
se l e ct s
A&lt;' hit•ve mcnt Academy wmners

upon the l'Xclusivc recommendation
nf teache rs, coac hes, counselors or

A t'hlC\'t'lllcn t

other sc hool spo ns ored und upon Uw

&lt;tllnu ut·cd today .
(';.daway who alt t•rHls Eastt•rn
H 1 ~ h Sdwol wa s lltl lll tna tL•d for tlw
na llnlla l award by Mrs. N&lt;:~lll ' Y
l . ark1ns. rmr tlwrna lrt·s tt'at·her . Her
ll(H tlt ' will appt.·ar 111 tlw U111kd

sl&lt;l nda rtls for selection set forth by
tlw aca dem y. The c r iter is is th e

Unllt•d
At ·adem~

St;r\1·:-. Ad lll'\ t' lllt'll l Ac;.Hk rny Offlctd l

Yt ·a rbtlt lk .

publi..-ht•d

IICI\IOII&lt;t ll\

st udt•nt 's at·ademlc pt•rforrnant'l',

tnleresl a nd a pltlude, lead ership
qua lllll'S, responsibility enthusiasm .
nwt ivatllln to lea r a nd improve
t'illl t'nship , attiludl' and cooperati ve
spirit , dt•pe lllla bil i t ~, , and recomnwnda lwn fro m a teache r or dirt•ctor.

•

Bowen

•

Calendar
MONDAY

Meigs area organizations hold meetings
Slinderella
POME ROY··Sha ron Swa in a nd
Carole Da iley were the top weight
losers a t the Ches ter Class of Slin·
derella held Monda y night. At the
Tuesday meeting at Mason, Jane
J ohnson lost the most weight and
Gewa nna Nichols was runne r -up.
Ca thy Workma n lost the most
weight a t the exerclse class . Informa tion on classes may be obtained
by calling J o Ann Newsome, 992-

3382.

Rose Garden Club
Nt·w offu:ers we re elected and
p la n ~ 111ade fu r a CiV ICplantin g when
HtlSt' \, arden Cl ub rn l't recentl y at
tiJt• huillt' uf Mrs. Carl BC:trnhll l, Tuppt.·rs Pla ms .
EhTh.'d wt· re Mrs. J ohn Rice.
prt·sHkn t : Mrs. Wt•s ley Arba ul-! h.
\'Wt' Wt'Sldl'n t : Mrs. Ha rl l')' Rice.
st·ndar~· : Mrs. Fredenck Goe bt·l,
tn·as url' r : Mrs Jamt's Stout. news
I' ! 'JJ!II'It •J' .

Mrs . Ha rl er Ht n· reported that
flo wt• rs wi ll bt· planlt'tl at lhl' TupJil' rs Pl;nns F.h·rnc ntary Sd 1no! wrth
till' a~s r sl a i lt' t ' of Mrs . \lo n na Arb&lt;:iU)~ h ·s l' lrl scout troop.
Mrs . .J ohn Arbcmgh upe nL'tl the
rllt't'lHl J.! w1 th tl t· vot1ons us tng scn p\url' from Ho!lli:I IIS 2 and a spnng
pr&lt;Jyn F11r roll call membl' rs
nal!l t'tll ll t•lr favon h' beLidlllg pla nt.
Tlw Gctrdt•tll'r 's Cn·ed wets re&lt;J d 111
UlliSOi l.

.J nh n Hl t't' , Me tgs Count v
agrit·ultu n· agt'n l. pn•se nted a
prugralll on the 17-yeo r CICadas.
Mrs. Ma ry .J a ne Goe bt·l rt•ad timel y
ganknill f! tips a ml Mrs. Wesley ArbciU j.! h n •ad thL' ve rst• of thl' month .
Mrs . Hubal C'al dwt·ll. Mrs. Ma r)·
.Jam· Got·!wl. ;uul Mrs. Vt'iT iCI Stout ,
tll splctyt•d flowl'r CI ITangements.
Hdn•shn h·nts Wl' rt• sen ·t•d by the
hoskss. Tlw .Junt · family pll'ni c will
ht· lwld at lilt· homl' uf Mr. a nti Mrs.
(;lt·nStoul.

Chester United
Methodist Church
Women
'Sirall j.! L'I'S i:i !ld Sjounw rs with
M• ·" was tilt' pr og r&lt;:~ m tnptc for thl'
,Jur h' :1 ll lt'l'tlllg of Clwskr Umtetl
Ml'l lim hsl Wt~ lllt'!l ht•l d n ·n· ntl y at
lilt• d l UI'I' h .
Mrs. Ktt lhr yn Mora and Mrs.
.hll'kH· Frost WL'rl' thl' program
ll'adt·rs With Mrs. Mora rt•ttdin g
sl'nptun · from Lt• \'. 25. The progra m
tlt·a lt wtth und erskmdin g somL' of
tlw ptTs un al tl ynannc:-; m v ol n~d in
t T nss 1 n ~ bnrtlt'rs and a discussion of
sc)('i&lt;d probh·ms a ris1n12 frnm thi s
t·c•untr y's suuthwt·stt•rn border.
1\ gruup disc ussion followed l'Oilc·•·ming internal realities which
di \' Hit· pt'opk . Hymn sin g m ~ was
·rhrs Is My ~ · ath e r' s World " wrth
Mrs. Helt•n Wolf at the pta no. Mcm·
bt·rs joined ha nds fur s m ~ in g " Thl'
Ttt• That Binds ."
A tota l of 54 sick and shut- in calls
fo r tht· 111unth of Ma y was reported.
Pla ns Wt.' l"l' finali zed for an Election
Day dtmll'r lt&gt; be held at the church
Tuesda y. It was voted that the
Women's Society will purchase 15
nt'w hymnals for the church. Plans
were a lso discussed for an ice cream
social anti auction to be held at a
later dale.
Mrs . Gaul invited the Socrcly to
her home for Uw next meeting, a picni e on Thursda y, July J, at noon .

DAR
The 1.5 mill operating levy for the
Carleton School to be voted on
Tuesday in the primary election was
endorsed by Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, during a meeting held
recently at the Racine First Baptist
Church.
Mrs. Chris Layh, assistant administrator with the Carleton
School, used a slide presentation to
show both the school now and the
new facility which will be open for
classes in the fall.
During the meeting conducted by
Mrs. Clyde Ingels, regent, it was
decided to place an ad in the special
edition for the celebration held last
weekend honoring General James
Hartinger.

Mrs. Robe rt As hl ey, Mrs. Pa trick
Loc ha ry, a nd Mrs . The reon Johnson
we re named to a cmrunittee to
decide on ad ve rti s in ~ to be placed in
the September/ October issue of the
DAR maga zine. Plans we re also
disc ussed for the Diamond Jubilee
whi ch the chapter will celebra te
next spring. A tentati ve dale of Mar·
ch 20 was se t for the celebration .
Four new members were selected
for mcmberhsip. They are Mrs.
Cecilia Hale Belus , Mrs. E mma
J ean English Ashl ey. Mrs. Norma
Lee Tassian, and Miss Frances !hie.
Mrs. E ula Wolfe. presented by the
program committee chairman , Mrs.
Jun e Ashl ey, spoke to the group
about planting a seedling from the
Logan E~n 40 years ago in the sc hool
ya rd allhe Letart Fa lls E lementa ry
School.
Precl•din g the opening ceremony
by Mrs . Cla ren ct• Struble, c haplain ,
the hostesses, Mrs. Ge ne Yost, Mrs.
Hobert D. Ashl ey, Mrs. Edward
Fosler , Mrs. Lillian Hende rso n, and
Mrs. La wrence Smith serv ed a luncheon .

Meigs Pioneer and
Historical Society
The Ha rd es t y a nd La rkin
histori cal reprin ts continue to be
av aila ble a t prc~publi ca lion prices
CIL'l'O rdin g to a deeision ma de at a
mcelmg of the Meigs Count y
Pronec r a nd Hi stori ca l Society
trustees held rece ntl y. The two
reprints published tn 1883 and 1908
and sponso red jomlly with the Mei gs
County Ge nealogieal Society may be
ordered by mailing a eheck for $20
and $16 respecti vely to Histori cal
Heprinls, Box 145, Pome roy.
Tw o wee ks ' noti ce will be given of
the cha nge to posl-publi ealion pri ces
wh ich will be hi gher . At that lime
checks will be held and people
nolifted of the hi gher price required .
Books may be mai led for a $2 additiona l fcc eac h.
In other business, the society accepted with tha nks th e cann on
don ated by the Paulse n family rn
memory of George Paulse n and the
donation of the Stillman Carter
memorial picture by Thelma Barton
Campbell.
The group recommended Patrick
A. Foltz, director of The Mon·
lgomery County Historica l Society
and president of Ohio Museums
Association as the consultant for The
Musewn Assessment Program . This
project is funded by a grant from the
American Association of Museums
through th e Ohio Arts Council.
The society ag r e~d to a ga in sponsor the Ameri ca n History Contest
which is a rran ged by Ohio Univer·
sily . This will be the fourth year of
sponsorship in whi ch a Meigs County
Htstory, 1979, has been donated to
the county winner with certificates
to the winner in each high school.
Belinda Salmons of Southe rn High
School was the county winn er in the
fall of 1981.
In other business, it was recommended that a committee be named
to establish policy in the use of the 72
cubic fet of old Metgs County
newspapers- 1870 to 1943 - recently acquired by the Society from the
Ohio Historica l Society .
Nancy Reed, director, reported
that plans are progress mg rapidly
for He ritage Sunday on June 'l:l in
connection with the Big Bend Regal·
ta.

Eastern Star
The annual inspection of
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, was held recently
with Gracie Wilson, deputy grand
matron as the inspecting officer.
Guests for the inspection were
from Marietta , Harris on ville,
Glouster , Stockport, Guysville,
Athens,
Albany,
Pomeroy,
Macksburg, Racine, Lowell and
Beverly Chapters.
Maxine
Kesterson,
worthy
matron, and Robert Kuhn, worthy
patron, presided at the meeting and
welcomed the members and guests.
Distinguished guests presented were
Roberta K. Mindling, grand matron;
Mrs. Wilson; grand representatives,
Lena Smith, Arkansas in Ohio; Bar·
bara McKibben, Alberta; and Joan
Mahaffey, Vennont, and Clayton

Smtlh , hon ored Mason.
Vi s itin g
worth y m a tr o ns
recognized we re from Athens, Ruth
Btttema n ; Ba rtlett, Leo na Me·
Cutcheon ; Harrison ville, Pa uline
Atki ns; Marietta. She ryl Conry' a nd
Macks bu rg, Wilma J ordon. Vis rlin g
worthy patrons recogni zed wen • Lou
Crow, Alba ny; Clayton Smith ,
Minear ; a nti Keith Ba te ma n ,
Athens.
Past matrons of Eva n12eline Cha pter presented wtre Jcn Chesher ,
Rosemary Lyo ns, Gra ce French,
Evel yn Lewis, Etta Mac Norton ,
Glenna Cris p, a nd Ka thryn Wn ghl.
and past pa trons, Lee Mt·Co ma s.
Bob King and Bill King.
Naomi Kin g was pro-tem offi cer 111
the sta tion of treas urer in the absence of lla Darnell. Mrs. Wilson
sa ng " He" in the abscnec of Linda
Ma ye r, sc hedul ed solois t fo r th e
evenin g_ Bill King was the ~sco rt
Paul Da rnell was reported confin ed
to Vetera ns Memonal Hos pita l.
Mrs. Keste rson thank ed the o[fi ct•rs for the corsage presl'nted to
her anLI also thl' corrunittees fur Uw
L'Vemng. Inspections announ ced
were June 10, Bartl ett Chttpte. tt nd
Jun e 14 , Athens Cha pte r.
Hobe rt Kuhn . worth y pa lron.
tha nked those who ea mc a nd gav t•
the tabl e J,! rttce before refreshments
of sa ndwi c hes, c hips, ca ke, punch
and coffee were served by Bt•a
Kuhn , Gl enn a Cri sp, Belly Va n
Malre, and Na omi King.
A patriotic theme w&lt;:~ s carri ed out
in kee ping with the Memoria l Day
we eke nd and cc lc bra lttln for
General Jarnes Ha rtin ger.

Chester Council
A report on Memorial Day acti vities was give n at the rned1n g of
Chesle r Co un cil 323, Daughters of
Ame rica, held recentl y at th e ha ll.
Belly Hous h, deputy sla te councilor, thanked a ll those whu look
part in th e paradt• for Ge nera l
James Hartinge r a nd th ose who
ma rehed to the cemetery at Chesler

I

1 .~ fur LIH' ("JT Y 11 1; 1\lh~ ·y play 111
r IS furll w INTE HEST thn· I T~ ·u k
N 1.~ for NATI ON AI. tht• k&lt;ii.! ut"t hn ~I
111
( ' I~ fu1 ttw C'ONCEHN \hall s-~'' 1-!t:t.a\
I ~~ fur tlw JNN IN(; S that th~ -~ Pli:l.l 1' a 1 h e mtu ·
N 1.' f1u t hr · NU MB F: RS ;rnd f,,r tlw1r NAMJ-:S
N 1.~ it h" [ttl NUTI"Y ih&lt;~ l t s whilt ~·· · Lm,, .11o·
A IS fur AI .WA YS tho· pl;lyt't'S 1\ o' 11'111 ;ulort ,.
T 1.~ fm TEAM ! hit!' ~ wha l tl \.til ~ i wul
I b ftrt IOOI.I ZE uf wh ~t · h ttwro · t ~ no1t/t•ubt

('

!'I\" '""

H • ~ fm HOOTEHS tu shout ;mo l hit lwo·r
E 1~ fur EVE HYON E 1\ hu fHlh1w.~ lht·m 1,,. ·h
\O 'it l

l111 11EDI&lt;"A TION ho1 \h th~ · , uurlt .tlhl ttltl
S ,, fur S lH 'C'F~c:;.'i \tl h.a 1 1· and It• huld

i1 "

Put llwm ;tll tu ~.: d ht·r thq spdl BASE BAI.I . and
tlw TEAM tha t lllt ' illl ~ th1· WOHI.I I tu 1r u[ AI U I.~I ' (; 11 111&lt;1 1\'
1' 1 11 1\ t ' r"~

PHOMIS ES AND

MEIGS Band Bnoslt'rs, 7 p. m.
Monda y "l hi gh school.

~

/ lt~\'1 '

\IIU ..

PEAHI.'\ OF llARK NF.'\S
Stars I1/l a tr utlnrc ht sk1
r .1k1' Jlt'ilrb un bhwk su·,.,J,-:
Hut IIMI I' II IIl ~ wrllt'\Jirlt' qu w k l ~
I. 1k~ · a fu·rr s tu rm t'ILo.;!;n •t•d
I II!' qull'll y t'u n\t·lllplalm t:
Tho· wur ld HUlslth-lu lw nwt :
Ho" I wtsh fur \lw st lt•llt'l' of d ;H' klll' ~.~
And th• · J'k'&lt;h 't•fulrw ss of sunsd .

Hut dilwn pwn ·t·tllll}' mmtl
As lht' [Wads l&gt;t·.c tn lu huk IIW H~
Tht· fi ery ,;lunn1 s utl us.
Th·· dawn nf ,~t ltlnuu s da y
- Tt·rt·sa Basham. Mt•li.: S f..t~e ·al Wntt-r's

("Juh.

Wlwnlht• jil eka l"s ni.c ht 1s twn•.

POME HOY Chapte r 00 and
Bosworth Councrl 46 will mee t
Wedn esday . Tht're will be elect
ron of offi cer. All York ri le
Jn asons invi ted.

~ It ' ll

bd nnrt

MIDD LE POHT Ama teur Ga r·
tl e ne rs. 8 p.m. Wedn esday at th e
h~tl lll' of Mrs. Arthur Stra uss.
South Third St.. Middleport. Miss
Be rni n• Ann Durst will be the
Clssis tant hosll'ss.

RACINE - Bibil' srhool will bt·
lll'ltl at Ra eine United Ml'lhotli sl
Chu rc h, Junl' 14-18 from9 Cl. ln . to 11
a.m. The theme. ··Com•· Follow
J es us" wil l be used a nd a ll rhiltlrcn
C:ln' til\' I led to Clt!l'ml. The re will bt•
C'l asst's fnrbl'l--!.inners. primary, nllllti ler anti junwrs.
' wna Ill·
forll\ation ma y be obtained by

:':f.:_:;::,..':

/' I.
!·

I

of t ho · Jill'k&lt;t l
J, tit• uwht uf th•· full ll l•"'ll
Who·u tlw "md ~ ~ b lt~ \j,' ll l : .

Mother-daughter banquet in Rutland

l
•

RUTLAND -- Recognition of
mothe rs and a program featuring a
pantomime of the lives women lead
highlighted the charge mother da ughter banquet held at the Ru·
lland United Methodist Church
recently .
The program followed a potluck
dinne r with the Invocation being
glven by the pastor. Congregation
slnglng and prayer opened the progra m presented by the Salem Center Church. Catherine Shenefield
read "Why God, Dtd You Create
Mothers." Debbie McGuire Introduced the pantomime which Included rea dings and music. In the
various scenes were Pam Colwell
a nd c hildren, de pleting mother and
lnfants ; LINDA Vaughan and
chlldre n. lea rning at mother's
knee; Connie Jones and daughers,
the first day of school; Regina Eriewine and daughter, schooldays; Dl·
ane Molden and daught e r ,
graduation; Lue Shenefield and
daughters, leaving home; Denise
She nefield and Jason Pierce, marriage; Mrs. Grace Colwell surrounded b y he r daughters ,

J
.I

',·;-, J
1(\1.'

I,
·,

~\:' \

;;&gt;
~~,t, ,.,",';,._,. , '
~\Jt:i) ~ ~
lO t h wrr~: · 7:15 &amp; 9 : 10 P . M.
..... _ ....,

By HELEN BOTIEL
DEAR READERS ;
Today , I CIJn going to ask a fi::l vor of
you . It l'oncerns Cl man I mentimll'd
brit-&gt;fly 111 a Chrisllll&lt;:~ S l' O!UIIlll
St'\·eral yettrs ago, but now I want 1!'
tt&gt;ll you IIHWl' 1:1bout him .
This lcrrifi r fellow - th e ultimall'
Gmxl Samaritan - will be 83 ''" J unc
12. A shower tJf birthday wis ht•s.
sayin g in Olll' wa y or another. " Hey .
you're a Wlllldt•rful hwnan bl'ing; wt·
applaud you !" WtJUitl bt• the best gift
lw could possibly reeein• .
Ht• doesn't want or need anything,
he says, but I know that nat ionwide
appreciation is something lw would
l'ht•rish alwa ys.
Ht• loves people, dot•s Frank
Engl ish who lives near St. Peter·
sburg, Fla ., and those who know him
i indutling his sprightly wife, Nellie I
lovt• him in return. Here an· a few of
tht• many reasons why :
Whelll' Vt'r he learns about
somt•onc inrwed. Fr&lt;Jnk is there with
rheerin g words and a rhcck fur as

All lwwitt t'.
r ~" ·&lt;~ l

Wtll t·• ·,

f"l uh.

.liUI Uill ~ 2J. 1982

\ ' 1\I.FNTI N f&lt;~ 'S OA \'
O;r _l ~ ~ ;r -~ fiC 't'litl da _1

[ \ \ I IIIlO' wh t'll j'l!'oplt•·" ·nd )u\ I ' Ill

Tht·n ttwn _,JH'I' Iitl " a _1
11 ·, " 11 11w f11 t lm ,.
t\nrt; tlllllt'fol j11_
1
I t · ,.~ da 1 f1 1r 1·1tTl 1 11I a n•I ht&gt;\
. T•ll;~ Hi! Wk . Ml'l l!.' r ~lt al wlllt·r 's ('luh

Delores Graziani will be the
speaker at the Thursday night
meeting of the Pomeroy Chapter,
Women's Ag low Fellowship, to be
held all he Meigs Inn. The doors will
open al6 p.m., dinner will be served
at 7, and Ms. Graziani whose family
has pioneered churches in Raven·
swood and Cottageville, will speak
alB p.m.
Reservations are to be made by
Tuesday with Sarah Winters, 4467444; Gloria Johnson, 742-2442;
Joyce Hoback, 949-2325, or Billie J.
Dawson, nJ-9123.
Daily vacation Bible school will be
held at the Silver Run Freewill Baptist Church beginning June 14 with
classes. to be held from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m.

IT'S YOUR FUTURE
MAKE IT THE BEST
ATTEND

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IT WILL COST LESS AND
YOU WILL

GET ON THE JOB SOONER

. SUMMER QUARTER
CALL NOW - 446-4367

LEO B. MORRIS

APROFESSIONAL COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
CAREER TRAINING

- Republican Candidate For -

YOUR SUPPORT APPRECIATED

529 JACKSON PIKE
GALLI POLIS,.OHIO

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

APPROVED FOR TRAINING OF VETERANS
. FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE

COMMISSIONER, MEIGS CO.
Pd. Pol. Ad by Cand., Box 2!2, Rutland, OH . 45775

RUTLAND- -Vacation Bible
school at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene will be held June 7-11 at
the church, Main Street, Rutland.
Clas.'le!l will begin at 6: 30 each even·
lng and the theme will be "Jesus
and Me." Fern Grimm Is the
director.
1be dally schedule provides a
time lor crafts and recreation as
well as a learning experience with
the Bible. According to Mrs.

ENROLL NOW!
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

O\·er the years. his ,·ont tnU!n j.! ktn dnt·sst·s ha ve aidt·lL

Dllt' of many operatiuns lw will fact •
thruugh lift•.
A young couplt·. laid off frorn work
a nd t•xpcl'!mg their lhtnl ehtld .
A middlt·- a ~1 t ' d wn111a n perl n ancntl~ · confinl'tl to a rt·sl ho!IH '
lwrause of illunobil izi n ~ lll ult iphs,·lcros is.

1\ wheel l'hair \" idirn who now he~ s
an t•ll'rtril' l'hair . thanks tn p&lt;Jrt to
Frank's efforts on her bt'half.
In adLiilion , ht· makes re~ ular
dun&lt;Jtinns to lcssl'r-known l'llarities,
1:1nd he publicizt•s their fint' t•Hnrls
A ftH"IliL'r polict•man . paralyzed , \' ia letters to govl'rnment offi cial s
frnlll an accident. whost• famil y
ami f ricmls.
stru g~ led for sur\'i\·al.

A blind man anti his wifl', bt•sd by
tTushin g financial and rcrsonal
prubleins.

A bt•rcaved mother whosl' youn g
dit•d folltJwin g a long, unm·
surd hospitali zation .
A Iilli•• boy, born with a crippling
tided. who may us e Frank's
n•gular check to h,•lp with his
college education - or perhaps for
dau~ hter

Rutland hosts Bible school

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION-DEGREE
EXECUIVE SECRETARIAL-DEGREE
ACCOUNTING-DEGREE
MICRO-COMPUTER ADMINISTRATION

ftiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

much as ! probabl y IIHln' Ulan! he
L'CIIl afford on his small rt'l lrt:'ment
inronw . In addition , lw sends dozens
nf warm friendly. oftt•n humorow.;
Idlers each mnnth tc1 loiwl y peoplt·
,.,·,·rywhcr"t' .

Grtmm, the goal of this summer's
vacation Bible school Is to belp
children develop the splrttual dl·
menslon ot their lives. This will be
accomplished through a study of
the Ute of Jesus.
Rev. Lloyd Grimm, pastor of the
church Invites the public to take ad·
vantage of the summertime adven·
ture with the Bible. Further
Information may be obtained by
calling 742-2202.

,DON R. HILL

St. Rt./175-02-04728

t

ON ALL

BEDDING PLANTS
&amp;
GERANIUMS
'/2 PRICE
Open Dally 9 to S, Closed Sunda y

Vge loaf*(-.ti AI

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OH.
PH . 992 · 5776

Won't you plt·ast· sl'nd birthday
to Frank En ~ li s h . Apt. 4H. Towt•r lsi!' Condo. 17400 Gu lf
Bi n i. . North Rt•din l'lon Bei::tch . Flo .
:13708 . He t•njuys surpnSl'S as lll UI'h
rls llt· l'njoys t• n·ine of hllllSt' lf tn
l' rt · t · lill J.!~

ntllt'I'S.

Thaok you 1 - HELE N

Gnt a probkn1 ? An adult subjC"d
f1 11" ·lisl'uss wn ? Yt~u cC:In talk 11m t'l
ill lwr t'oiurnn if vou write to Helt •ll
'Botkl . can' of thr.~ nc ·wspapt'l':

Fr&lt;:~nk' s bt'lll'fit'li::lries li vt• i11 all ~--------------1
parts of lht• country . Ht• smnt'11ow
Otuo. Del)lrtmertl oiiMutaoce. Celtlateol Comohanu - The
manages to help t.hem 1:111. t:&gt;illwr per- Staleol
und«llfllfd, Supe~rntenden1 of ln511f..U ol tilt Stile ol ()fuo. llfi'Mr,
certrlte11hl1
sonally or by inspiring ass1stann• iNTtGON Uf( lNI COMOUT10N ol Wll'llmti·S.IMI. Slllt or
C.roltlll. /Ia compiled .-rlh 1M lm ol tins Stile •Pilka'* to II
from nlllcrs . In fact, this is hnw I Horttl
llld IS Mlfhorlled dtllllll the CU/rll!l\ Yell ti!JIIIs«:1lflll\ls stat! rb tp·
PI'DI)flllt bu51ntU ~lmsurtnee Its nn ~nCIII CGndibon IS lhown by Its
" met" him stHnt• 23 years a~~ o : he annUli
sbtllftlttlllllhl't't bettles lolbwun Oecfmberll. 1980 Adl!i rl
wrnll' to my l'Hiumn ttsking readt•r •d auets. U70.0l0.976.00. llllllllbls, SJ.4U91.1lt00. SinpltA,
'J~21l. •9o. ooi. ! nco~n t. '110.536.071.00. [1ptnd 1tu•u.
mail for a lillie heart patient who I i :M~.lll~S.OO. Nt nset1.12l6J9,740.00. C¢1. $6.356.25000
IN Wl~[ SS wt(I!£Cf. llllwt he~~ subscnbed my lllmt lnd
rwedt.'d an inet•ntivt· tu li ve. (Sht• is cwwd IJiy sal to be altluida tColutDbul. OM!. thrs illy lllddlte lklbrrt
L lbldtlord .If . Supt ollnwrltlce ol Ohto
ISMI lo421
now a healthy young W1llllCin I. Latt•r
Stile ot0fl10. ~f\meflt ol ln"rrtnce. MfatroiCompiiiiiU - Ole
we lllt'l in person , when he flfw from uf\Ot!Stan-:1. Su))trtnleMenl ollnlt..nte ottllt Stale ol Otuo. lltftby
11111
Florida to attend our daughltT Sue's certmn
NATIONAliNVUTOitl Uft INI CO ollJttll Rock. State o1 Af.
hnus. has complttd •ltlt the IIWS ol thrs Sbte I))JIIraltlt l(lrt~nd IS
wt·dding . Our family counts him and aulhorlttd dunn11N Cl.flenl pelf to \JIIlSKI 11 this stile .ts ~opr~ll~
biniMSS oiiMUI'IIICe. Its f"IIIIIICIII conditiOn IS lftown 11\o ib ..nua1
Nl'ltie amon~ our clost•st friends, rt•lement
1t1 lint ~ ts 1o1o&lt;1-s on December 31, 1910 Ad!Mted
ustts,
$234 G48.21 1 00; Uebrllllti, 1211,527.177.00: Surplus.
all hnugli we nnly know Nellie, his uo s20l39j
00; Income. Sli5.486,614.00, Elp•ndituru.
12. 7$1.00, Net wets, S22.520.39l.OO: CIP'bt, $2,000,000.00
OOish bride of some half-dozt'n years, $48,IN7Wl'rHESS
WHEREOf'. I lint hereunto subscribed.,, l'llme end
ctused m,wl tobuffned etCollllllbul. Ohto.IIIIS dly Hlddllt. R1lbef!
by telephone.
L lbtchlord Jr . Sclpt ollnwrenee of Olllo
fSell4651

DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE

PETE
COULADIS
FOR

REPUBLICAN
STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEfMAN
lOth CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT

•young
*hard working
*dedicated
* Republican

SOUTH CHESTER
COMMITTEE PERSON

YOUR VOTE
WILL BE
APPRECIATED

THANKS!

CLOSEOUT SPECIAL

ii g l't't' .

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER

f

nice Garnes, Catherine She ne field,
Na n Ha rde r , Ruth E rlewtne, E dna
Mae Swick, Dlna h Stewart, Clndl
a nd Jon, Regina E rle wlne a nd J e nnie , Sheila Erlewtne a nd Meliss a,
Charlotte Erlewlne, Anna Ha Ulday, Linda Vaughan, Crystal and
Bridge tt , Ca the rine Colwell, Lue
She nefield , La urle a nd Denise,
Maye Gibson, P a ula Lucke tt , Ve ra
Luckett, Jane t Morris, Mae We ber,
Robert Williamson, Jamie and Sta cie, Mrs. Fred Willia m son, Mrs.
Rick Willia mson a nd Mic hae l,
Da rla Willia mson, Che rie William·
so n, Dia na Wlllla m so n, Dia ne
Molden , Tlmothy Molde n, Tlna
Molden, a nd Te resa Molden.

Wt• cttl i this fint· gt•ntlt·man ont• of
tlw world's j.! re &lt;:~tcsl s mall-sl'alc•
human itarians. antl Wt' think you 'll

REPUBLICAN_CANDIDATE FOR

· *Lifelong resident of M'eigs County
*Farmer in Letart Falls
•serving 13th year as Letart Township Trustee
•Married .and has 3 children _
*Member of Racine Masonic Lodge
•Member of Amerlhn Legion
YOUR VOTE AND INFL.UENCE APPRECIATED
.
Pd. Pol. Adv .

da ughters-ln-la w, and granddaughters, the golden years.
Corsage s were presented to
Grace Colwell, 92, the oldest; Mrs.
Rick Wtlllamson, the youngest;
Ann Forbes, who came the farth ·
est; Allee Reeves and Bernice
Games, the most c hildren. The
group sang ''Faith of Our Mothers"
a nd there was a closing song,
" Mother's LOve." Marcia Denison
a nd Mrs. Shenefield accompanied
the slnglng.
Attending we re Janel Wtlllamson , Marcia Denl'iOn, F aye Saue r ,
Mary Kelly, J oy Sauer, Marjorie
Rice, Ann Forbes, Keith and
J ere m y, P a m Colwell, Bryan and
Scottie , Vlvian Pie rce and Jason,
Carolyn Chapman a nd Kimberly,
Allee Reeves, Connie Jones, Mandy
and Ste phanie, Grace Colwell, Ida
Dennison, Dorothy Bolen, Beatrice
Reinhart, Margaret Pa rsons, Jane
Wiseman, the Rev. and Mrs. Bob
Ride r and Angela, Edith Talbert,
Debbie McGuire and Patrick, Ber-

•TMWMTNJJ

Helen Help Us

Pd. Pol. AdjJyJam4!lJ67 . S.R. 338 Racrne. OH. 45 771

TlwJill·ka l • ~ hu11\t 111.!

\l;t h ' llliiH .- .~

I'
I

"Your Vote and Support Appreciated"

Tht 'll l ~ h l

l
1

~

MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

:\ ll!wwan ·.

It • ~ \h1· ruchl 1•lltw Jih ka • ·
Tu n F ra tlt'l Mo · tt · ~

who lll tt de the show a huge success.
Mrs. Carpenter a lso presented a
bouquet of roses from members of
he r three studios a nd Bec ky
Logana cre. She was a lso presented
roses from students Debbi e Werry
and Tracy Beegle.
Choreographer Tonya Da vts was
also presented roses from the three
dance class es [or he r help with the
show . Other gifts were prese nted
and special recognition given to
ollwrs helping with the Recital.

RIGHT: The 1982 Carpenter's Dance Studio Recital, held Sunday evening at Meigs Junior tngh School, was a "landslide"
perlonnance and was met with great approval by the large
standing-room-only crowd. 'll1ls group from Carpenter's Chester Dance Class danced to the tune "Landslide." Perlonnlng
were, left to right, front row: Angle Chapman, Suzanne Clay,
MlcheUe Maholtra and Kim Mcintyre; back row: JeiUilfer Lee,
Todd Clay, Cassie Sheets, Davie Gaul and Betsy Herald.
BELOW: "The Football Player and the Dancers" was perlonned by the trio of Shirley Carpenter, Tonya Davis and David
Gaul. Mrs. Shirley Carpenter was director of the recital, while
Davis and Carpenter were choreographers.

\ .l lw ll itl &lt;

AU I! U.~\19 . 1981

TH E NIGHTOFTHF. JACKAl
Tlw m.c ht vf tlw jal'kal 1s near :
Ynu t·an hc Hr his tTY fttr and wtdt• :
f.\' t ' ll tht· uu t.: hl )' hun Will hltlt•.

WEDNESDAY

Republican Candidate For

·

Aut vuu l1t·tl tu lllt··
I'l l ri•·l't' r f,u c t\'t• ~ uu lut !Ius
E 1 I'll lh ttu ch I slt ll lu1 ,, '"u
I wrll ~I \\ a IS n ·rrwn lbt·t· 1uu "lt l l r/u·
T;tttuf·~ Pt'\111. Mt·t ~.~ lA" ill Wil\ t'l · ~n ull

MIDDLEPOHT - A standing
room onl y crowd filed into the Meigs
Junior High School auditorium here
Sunday evenin g for the 1982 ve rs ion
of the Carpenter Da nce Studio
Recita l. Twent y-fi ve acts fea tu r ing
many talented youngste rs a nd
young ad ults in the a rea pe rio nnctl
in the recital. Group al'ts a nti solo
pedonnances were featured with
every student of the studio bowing lo
an Pnrore in the final e. Mrs. Shirl ey
Carpentu wis hes to thank aoo those

l-~~~~~~- ~~A~d~d;·t~-~~~- ~~~~SA~T~&amp;~S~U N~~~TI~N[~[~S~I~,I~S~&amp;~,l~~

Announcements

~&lt;'I'!IH·d

Carpenter Dance Studio's recital a success

WILLIAM R. WICKLINE

Tl w )itt" kai i~ · ;J I 1· , Ill ~ 1\ilrllllll
Tlw IJu rlt ., ,.f I fl.,~, - \ha \ lla1 1·rt
l ln ·;• u~ • · l~&gt; fa n· I lwJ•'' ka l
h ird;r n · DI·:A TH '

Monday, June 7, 1982
Page- 7

U nit e d
PO MEHOY
Methndist Women will serve election da y dinner Tuesday in chur1'11 s ocia l room ; menu inclutl t•s
rl a \e lunch of chi cken a nti
noodles, maslwd potatoes, gret•n
lwa ns. sal ad, roll and drink . Also
w gt'ta blt· soup. hot dogs, s loppy
jot•s. pi t.·. eake, oc£fee &lt;:~ nd
bt•vt•rages wiII bt•served.
HARRISO NVILL E Chap ter .
Ordt•r nf tlw Eastern Sklr , 8 p.m .
Tu t·s day. M&lt;Jso mc Tt ·lll ple .
Sta tion of MarlhCI tu bl' honored.
All past Ma rl has urgt•d ltJ all &lt;' nd .

POMEROY -- Re vi va l servlces .-"-" _ll _in_
g-94_9_-25
_89_._ _ _ _ _ __
will begin at Morning Star United
Methodist Churc h on June 13 a nd
continue through June 18 at MornIng Star United Me thodist Chu rc h.
The revival will open with a pagea nt presented by the youth of the
Pinkerman Unit ed Me thodi s t
531 JACKSON PIKE · Rl . 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
Church entitled "The P ageant of
BARGAIN
MATINEES QN SAT &amp; SUN
the Holy Altars" unde r the direcALL SEATS JUST$ 2.00
tion of Jean and Delbert Ha mm.
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 2.()()
Rev. Richard Rothe mlc h will conduc t the June 14 service , the Rev.
J a me s Clark, the June 15 service,
the Rev. Robert Robinson a nd Mrs.
Joan Robinson, the June 16th service with the message ln words a nd
music and a period for the youth
called "stump the preache r ."
The Rev. Robert McGee will deliver the msssage on June 17, and
on June 18, the Rev. Mark Flynn
will conclude the services.
The Apple Grove singers will be
presented on June 1!1

MARC
Pla ns for Sunday 's OJll' n house at
Ca rldtm School wt• re d lsl'Ussed &lt;:~t
tlw Jurw J meet ing of M c 1 ~s
Assnl'iatl!ln for Retanh&gt;tl Citi zens
hl'ld at th e lll'W S('hool.
Mrs. Hulh Carson prcs ul etl allht•
1nel'ling durin g whi ch lim t' it wtts
rl'porlt•d thai approximately $4.500
had bL•cn ra ised on the hikt· bike .
Spt•cia l ol ympi es to be held in
Co lumbus June 25-27
we n ·
di sl'ussctl . A rumma ge sa lt• set was
st'l [or Jul y 30 a nd 31 at the old
Pmnernv Junior Hi gh School.
[;'ollo~' ill '' llw mcetin•1 a tour of
th e ne w bui ldin g was take n.
Syrac
,. ust· Council also toured th e
ilurlding.

By The Bend

TUESDAY

Meigs announcements

IJIU~ AM S

All\ IIU 1'1 t' f ~d\ ' 1· lilt '
\\'1 ·i t ' il riiiiii Sl'~ i'llld d !"l'illll .~:
And lht•[l i'U IIII .WS Wt' l t' brttk l'll .
And lht · d rt' H III .~ wt· n ·n' t wha l \ht·\
Y~&gt;u sa 1d .

Ol11u

EASTE RN Athleti c Boosters
will meet Monday a t 7;30 p.m. to
discuss th e Fourth of Jul y ba r·
bec ue and the new building for
athletic equipment.
POMEROY - Le tart Townshp
Trustees will meet a t 7 p.m. Monday at Leta rt Falls.

HOCK SPRI NGS - Vaca tio n
Bible School will be held a t Roc k
Sprin gs United Methodist Church
June 7 throu gh June I I. Monday
hou rs are 6:30 p.m . to 8:30 p.m .
Thursdav through Friday 9 a .m.
to 11:30 ·a.m . For additi ona l informa ti on ca ll992·33 15.

Poet's Corner
M\'TE AI\1

MIDDLEPORT Ga rden Club
will meet a t the home of Mrs .
Doroth y Morris a t 7:30p.m. Mon·
day . Mrs . Grace French will be
co-hostess.

CHESTER Township Trustees
will meet Monday a t 7' 30 p.m. " l
Cheste r Town Hall .

on Me morial Day a nd pa rticipa ted
in the progra m there.
Mrs . Roush reported on th e 69th
ra ll y of Distri ct 7, Portsmouth.
Others going we re Doris Koe ni g,
Marcia Kelle r , Dorothy Ritchi e, E rma Cl eland . Mary E . Holter,
Eve re tt Gra nt. Cha rlotte Grant.
Mary Showalter , and Cora Beeg le.
The Pas t Councilors Club will
meet Jun e 9 at 8 p.m. at the lodge
hall . with Mary Ha yes a nti Doroth y
Myers as hostesses.
Membe rs of Chester Council ha ve
been in vited to attend the inspection
June 14 at the Golden Gl eam 254
Coun cil , marietta . At th e ne xt
meeting of Chesler Council , qua rterl y birthdays will be observed .
Keith Ashl ey was pia nist for lht•
meetin g. Othe rs a ttendin g were
Fern Morris, Iva Powell, Ethel Orr .
Lt'lha Wood , Ada Morris, Thelma
White. Co ra Beegle, M&lt;1 rcia Keller .
Margaret Tuttle , Mary K. Holter ,
Julie Hose. Opa l Hollon, Ada Bissell ,
Esther Smith , E rma Cleland . Alta
Ballard , ln zy Nc wt' ll, E mma
As hl ey , Ze lda We be r , Mary
Showalter . Ad a Neulzlmg, Mat• Me·
Pt't' k and Ll'ona Hensley.

~

RA CINE Chapte r 134 , O.E.S ,
Monda y, 7:30p.m . at the Masonic
Temple.

The Daily Sentinel

All of Lawrence, Meigs, Gallia, Fairfield, Perry,
Morgan, Muskingum and parts of licking, Guernsey,
Athens and Washington counties.
Paid for by the Candidate- 4 Kent Dr ., Athens,, Ohio

�- - - - - - - -------Page- 8

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Doily Sentinel

Monday, June 7,
Monday, June 7, 1982

35,000 supporters participate
wompn's rig ht to vote.

Ry F.RIC KRAMER
Assoclak'&lt;l l'ress Writer

At least Jo.OOJ supponers of the
Equal Rights Ame ndm ent
marched In four &gt;tate ca pit a ls. be-.
!(i nning a last -ditch thn:'f'-w{'('k
dri,·e for ra llfication. while th!'ir
Jeadf'rs ro nsidrrC'd a non•! dfort to

plac&lt;' the a mendment on the Non h
Carolina ballot.
Florida r.ov . Bob ( ;raham and
his wlfe. Adelt'. lrd 10.00.1 marc he rs
Sunday in Tallaha&gt;&lt;;('(', and N011 h
Ca rolina (;o,- _.Jim Hunt addre%ed
another 10.001 in Raleig h.
From ~,. om to H.OOO prop le
march&lt;'&lt;l in Sprl n ~&gt;fie ld . fll .. and
Cov .. lame&gt; H. Thompson - who
had lx'f'n critictzrd for "lukewarm" support of the ERA- sa id
in Chicago he would personally call
f'\'Pry ~t;.Jtr "f'nator oppoSf&gt;d to thr
amrnd m(•nt and sf't'k votPs for appro\· a I. AnothPr 10.000 s upp011t-' l~

marched in Okla homa Cit\·.
&lt;.~nd

Craharn

man~:

ot h rr

marchf'r' worr grN.'n and whitP thf' colors of th r :"Ja tl onal Oreaniz; t-

tion for \\'omen· _, ERA ca mpaign.
Whitr

Jl~:o

wao;;

V.'O rn

by

suf-

The amendment, which would
ban dl-;crlmlnatlon on the basis of
sex. nff'ds ratl!lcatlon by three
more states by Ju ne :10 to become
part of the U.S. Constitution . Five of
the 35 sta tes Cbat have ra tlfled the
ame ndment have atte mpted to rescind their ratification, but tha t action Is being challenged In the
courts.
The demonstrations were held
Sunday in sta tes where ratlflcation
is considered most possible.
In Nonh Carolina , where the Senate voted last week to ta ble the
F:RA. Hunt and key supponers
planned a meeting today with the
head of the state Board of Elections
to discuss placing the amendment
on the June 29 primary ballot .
Alex K . Brock of the sta te Board
of Elections said, however. that the
Lcg-i-;la ture would have to suspend

ll to 15 tec hnica l requirements to
put the measure on the ballot and
get voting right s approval from the
U.S. Justice Department. which
normally takes 60 da ys.
" It 's not a feas ible a lternati ve or

workable." he sa id .
Approval by plebiscite apparently would not count as rallflcallon, because the U.S. Constitution
require-; ra tlflcation by sta te legislatures lf that meCbod Is selected by
Congress. If North Carolina voters
app roved the ERA . the Legislature
would ha ve only one day to act lf II
wished to ratify the a mendment.
Betty McCain, Hunt's personal
lobbyist for the ERA, said the prop- .
osa l had merit.
" I don't thlnk even the hardest
anti-ERA per&lt;;&lt;.m would object to
letting the people cast their votes on
the issue." she sa id . " I am convinced it would win In aU 100
counties."
In Florida. Li z Ca rpe nt er.
former press secretary to Lady
Bird Johnson, promised ERA suppotiers would " let every cottonpicking, tobacco-chewing legislator
know what sexual harassment Is"
lf they didn't ratify the measure.
Graham est imated the ERA has
17 or 18 suppor1ers In the 40mem ber Florida Senate. It Is expected to pass the Florida House.

fragettes of til!' mrly 19C0s . .;eeking

Business Services
WE SELL JHE BEST AND SERVICE THE
REST

-

Illinois

St•('rt·tan' uf Statr pnlice rrmo\'t.' Mary Whitmore. 34.

St•a ttlt·, from tht• doorwa y of the state senate. Whitmore was lht· last uf thl' woml'n chairwd for the ERA to

bt- removed from the capitol around 4:30a .m. They
wen• nut arrestt"d but wt·re taken to a nearby building
when• tht·y will bt- allowed to continue their protest.
( AP Laserphoto I.

" The machine of tomorrow·TOOiyl
Soaring Ahead Nature's Way
Curta its your house dust problems .
U. P .5. Serv ice
Gallipolis 614 -446·2096
Parkersburg, W . V. l0&lt;4 · 41S - S~J4
Murdoch Av . &amp; lakeview Dr.

FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

STYLING SALON
SYRACUSt OH.

SUMMER PERM.

lJP- The framing of the new Meigs First Southern · volunteer workers from Alabama worked on the first
Baptist Church on Rock Sprin~s Road was moving unit uf the new chun•h.
right alnn~ Saturday afternoon as the first wave nf

SPECIAL

For the Month of June
Open Tues. lltru Sat.
PH. 992-3982
For Appointment
5-28 - 1 mo

'Carpenters for Christ' busy
on Southern Baptist Church
direction of David Askins. First Ba ;&gt;list Church, Albt-rlville. Ala . They
will do the dry walling and other

Saturday to work on the new Meigs

tun~.

First Southern Baptist Church on
Rock Spnngs Road .
The site was a bech1ve of activity
Saturday afternoon as the first
group of men under the direction of
Roger McElroy worked on outs1de
framin g, electrica l work and partial
roofing of the new church.

A third group of 15 people will friends are parti cipating in the
arrive al tht• sile Jul y II and will be projed as their schedules permit.
here until July 17 lo do the fim shing Landscaping will be done in the fall.
work on the building . This group will
bt- from the Grace Baptist Chu rch of
Deep wells
Oxford, Ala .
The first unit of the new church hit record high
will be 103 feel by 32 feel with the
BARTLESVILLE, Okla . (AP ) second unit , an a uditorium , to be 70 ln 1981's record-setting yea r lor oil·
by 50 feel.
and gas-well drllllng, Texas and
Included in the initial unil will bt• Oklahoma led the nation ln Cbe total
seating for 120 people , etg ht number of we Us drilled.
rlassroorns and a choir area.
Texas was first w!Cb 25,002 and
Target date for the congregation Oklahoma had 11,699.
to move into the new church is lale
Another record was set for wells
Jul y. The congregation for the past drilled below !S,IXXl feet deep.
several yea rs has met at a large
"Drlllers wUl go deeper and
house on Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy. deeper to find oll and gas," sald
1:arger Southern Baptist Churdlt's Gary Schooler, of DrUUng Specla1in Alabama are supplying volunteer tles. "That makes proper use of
trai ned labor with workers giving a drllling-fluld additives more and
week of their vaclJtion tirnt' durin ~ more Important so that wells may
lht• summer towards such projects.
be drilled more efficie ntly."

or

approximate ly

LOUJSVILLE, Ky . iAP ) -The
18th annual VICA U.S. SklU Olympics and National Leadership Con·
terence will be held hereJune22·25.
Some 5,1XXl vocational education
students, representing 50 state associations lncludlng Puerto Rloo
and Cbe Virgin Islands. will be competing ln 36 sklll and leaders hlp conte sts Inv o lvin g electronics.
carpentry, bricklaying, cosmetology, business procedure and auto
repair.
The event Is sponsored by the Vocational Industrial Clubs of America, a national student organization
for trade. Industrial. technJcal and
health occupations.

Phone 949-2293
or 949·2417
33

Superior Siding Co.

They pay their own expenses m order to participate in the ministry lo
smaller fellowships in the mission
art•as of Southern Baptist work .

Vinyl &amp; Awminum
Complete gutter work.
complete remodeling,
roofing of all types.
Worked in home area 20

Tht• local ch urch m embe rs anti

16 YEARS EXP .
•Residential
•Commercial
•I ndustria I
Racine, Ohio
247 -3534
Free Estimates

years.

Free estimates

Call 843-3322
~ 1 2-2

mo. pd

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

=-=--Em plo)·ment
ser·.·Jces
II He lp Want ed
17 S•tu a lt on Wan ted
13 ln wrance
14 Bu st ness Trittntng
15 Sc hoo ls Ins tr uction
16 RadtO , TV &amp; CB Repatr
17 Mt sce ll aneou s
18 Wit nl ed To do

Real Estate
31
32
33
34
35
36

Hom es for Sa le
Mob i le Hom es for Sale
Farm s for Sa le
Bu siness Buildings
Lot s &amp; Ac r&amp;age
Re a l Est a te Want ed

Rentals
41 Hou ses for Rent
42 Mobil e Homes for Rent
43 Farm s fo r Rent
44 Apartment for Rent
45 Furnished Rooms
46 Space for r ent
47 Wanted to Ren t
48 · Equipment for Rent
49 · For L ease

-Concrete wo

-Piumbinaand
electrical wort!
(free Estimalesl

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PROBAT E CO URT

OF MEIGS

73 Va ns &amp;4WD

Gallia County
Area Code 614

Meigs County
Area Code 614

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

sert~lces

81 Hom e Improvements
82 Plumbing &amp; Heating
83 Excavating
84 · Eiecrical &amp; Refriger a tion
85 ·Ge neral Hauling
86 ·M .H . Repair
87 Uphol stery

367- Cheshire
388--Vinton
24s-Rio Grande
256--Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Dist.
379- Walnut

Sizes start from 30~~:24 "

From
th e Smallest
Heat er
Core to the
lilrge st Rildiiltor .

Utility Buildings

Rad1ator Spec1allst

949-Racine

742-Rulland

COUNTY , OHIO

ES TATE OF EDITH N .
RARNFTT , DECEASfD
CilS(' No. 13769

NOTIC E OF
APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
On MrW 77, 1987, tn lh C'
Mr1 qc:; Cou nty
P rob ate
Co url. C.'lsc No
73769,
Wdlt illll R Bnrnc 11 , Rf 1,
B1dw£&gt;ll . Ohto wils ap
potn fPc1 E xPcu tor o f the
c&gt;s ti'l te of Ed ith N B arne ll .
dr&gt;Cf'itSf' d, lalf' o f Rl
I.
Lit nosvtllr , Oil tO
Robert E . Bu c k
Probotr Judqc/
Clerk
( 6! 7, 14 , 1 1. Jtc

Ti l(' fo l lowtnQ df'SU1bed
d l'•ll , il
19 76 Me r c ury
MonMc h, 4 door, wd I bf'
offNN1 f or Pu b l ic Sa lf' to
hiflhl's t b 1d d er on lllf'
prl'rniSI'S of Bitnk Onf' of
Po--nrro·(, Court ilncl Sr
ro n cl Sts .. Pom eroy, O tl tO
nn J un r 14 , 1981 . ilt 10 ·00
,, rn
Tcrrns of Sil lr '"
c asll . Sr tl c r rese r vrs tt1r
r1 q h l to btd , buy or rrirct
rt ny and a ll b1d s.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Eight
summer torms or exercise were
rated by medical experts for Cbeir
contributions to physical well·
being.
The scores received were based
on a maximum 189 points. Jogging
(148), bicycling (142), swimming
(140) and roller skallng (140) led
the Ust. Others were calisthenics

1617 . 8, 9, 3tc

(126). walldng (102), golf (66), and.
bowling (51).
Each sport was judged In nine
areas. Only three perfect scores (21 .

points) were recorded. Jogging and
swimming each scored 2lln stamina, and jogging scored 211n weight
control.
Other classifications judged
were muscular endurance,
strength, fiexlbWty, balance, muscle definition, digestion and sleep.

•

•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, Oh .

Ph . 992·2174
1

26 ff c

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

4S&amp;-Leon
S76-Appte Grove
773--Mason
882- New Haven
89s-Letart

st. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

937- Bullalo

Up to 15 word s .. One day

insert1on .............. SJ .OO

Up to 15 worOs . Three day

insertion .............. S4 .00

.ttlf

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Water-Sewer·E lectric
Gas line-Ditches
Water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified

Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-ff c

Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

Ph . 367·7160
t-7-1 ffc

insertion .............. S7 .00

(Average 4 words per line)

Summer activities

((ClABBiflm ADS
aure to gat mauna))

$ gg '·

INSTAllED ;

8

GOOD SELECTIOft OF
SPECIAL - SPECIAL
20 cu. ft. CHEST FREEZER
. '339.95

Chest Freezer
15 cu. ft. 1347.95
25 cu. ft. 1439.95

Upright Freezer
16 cu. ft. $379
21 cu. ft. 1439
30 cu. ft. 1520

9 ..~ME~Y .LAN~MARK

-·
~

614-992·3112

Call Bill Ward
AlWard's KeJboard
1-446-4372 4-19-tlc
Visa

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Caii742-319S
3-7-lfc

CARPET STARTING AT $12.95
Square Yard Wilh Pad. Installed

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

GIANT CARPET SALE
KITCHEN CARPET

Ov ·NfR
FIN f, N(tN G
Onr ,1 c r t• .n Rutl,ln&lt;t
l own&lt;&gt; htf) Rur.tl w,1t1 r
rltHI t' lf'l tr o( nv,l •l,llllt
On tv SJ .100 00

An

(OLI NTRY
F.n,
otrtr·r ho •n c on qoorl llrlrcl
roAc l n1•(lr rP &lt;; ! 110'11!' .n
f, On 1·
ro ncl•l 10n
)
hl' rtr oo·no;, lil "'•IV roo•11
il tl ,l ( IH•(\ (li\ f iHII
rlll(l
wo rk &lt;., t•nl"l on l,tr tH' II' Vt 'l

IO )
NA Y L OR"

997-6191

Nf W
l i !\ TING
Bu stnf'SS &amp;
butldtno
M.=~y
lcllk
frildr or
ownrr hnono 1nq

949-2660

992-569 2
992-2259

rn

(Free Estimates)

ph . 949-2609
949-2234
RACINE , OHIO

Murphy , H elen and
Bruc e Teaford , All
Rea ltor s.
Alt er
Hr s.
992 ·36 1s or 992 ·3325 .
~u c

Housing
Headquarters

REAlTOR

5 19·1 mo.

SL Rl. 7, balwMft Clttsltirt
&amp; Mlddttpoot

Hrs.: lloii.-Sun.
2:110 P.ll.-2:30 lll.
Cony Out'"'

llaii.-KqNi&amp;ltt
Tua.-Udios ol&amp;flt til drinb
rtdtlctd for 1MWltJ..Ifo Ctoll'l olliot 9-12, draft
balr ~~- '!'Jll \.........t 2 '·"'·
Thun..(lld M1lwaule Nip!, 9-2:30,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

STARTING AT $4.99 Cash &amp; Carry

BISSELL
•
SIDING CO.

RUBBER BACK_CA~PET $4~sh&amp;Car~
'

'h Centu" .Nirht.
Fri. &amp; Sal · Liw baods • drinl &amp;

tkowniiCh •lift~ 10 ~··
Sun.. Plm, ""'ilo&lt; Mlr .,..111
price. Also IIQ's oo Sull4ar llllli"'

.J....
. . s.'
· Month oll•na, Th•n.·fn.· t
11A1S1tAU TtJIRMT IAIID

"Buuttlut, Custom

'ORIVf A I ITT I [ -S AVf A I 01

Built Gar1ges"

Rutland rurniture

.,

MAIN \I

lor free ildlng
·estimates, 949·2101 or •
949-2860.
Ca II

No Sund•y Calls

-

"'· 1111. . . frilot Wt ...

hlw """ Hoor ......Sal 4 ,....

i f
I

3·11 -lfc :
I,

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

-

All Makes

• washers
• Dish washers
• Ranges • Refrigerat• Dryers • Freezers

PARTS

....,..til-.

' ,.... lloHiottiMtl ........ 4\oiJ.

PhoMH2-Hil

I

and SERVICE
45-ff c

SWEEPER
and sew tn g
machine repai r , parts, and
suppl ies.
Pick up and
del ivery, Davis Vacu um
Cleaner , one half mil e up
Georges Cr eek Rd . Ca ll
446 0294

Name ____________________ ,

Address---------

Card of Thanks

I

Swan would like to extend

Print one word in each
space below . Each in -

heartfelt thanks to ell who

titi•t or group of fig ures

helped in any way in the re·
cent loa of OUf beloved

counts as a word . Count
name and address or
phone number if used .

hUibend, 1 -end grand-

loth•. SinctiAI lhenks for
the klndn- end """' of
the Pomeroy E"-'cy
Squad, Holzer Hoopitel, Dr.
Sholtlt, nurMO In CCU,

Hunter Funerel Home, Petlbeo.-w, Rev. Relph Smith
for hie wonlo of comfort,
friendo end nelghbon. We
•ppreci•te the beautiful
-..cordi, food end ...
poclotly your ,...,.,.. end

You'll get better results

---+---+-..:..:+..:..:-11---i

if you describe fu ll y,
give .Price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
c lassify, ed i t or reject ~~~~~~~~~~~llj
any ad . Your ad will be -

--+-+-+--11----i

1

I put in the proper __..,.,JL__IL-L--..L--I
classificat•on if you'll
I check the proper box
These cash rates
I be low .
in clude di scount

) A n nouncement

l

18.
19,
20.

1.
2.

14.
15.

10.
11. - - - - - -

12. - - - - - - 13. ------'14. - - - 15.· _ _ _ __ _

I:

~

Bingo tor Charity . Rodney
Grang e Hall. Every Tu es .
&amp; Fri . Spon se red by Ga llia
Vol. Em er gency SQu ad .
4

Giv eawa y

home . Call446·2590.
Six puppies, part Beag le.
Call 446·1825 after 6:00PM .

1 1/2 old part Doberman
and Greatdane, male, gOOd
with kidS . Caii6U-256· 194S.

-----

6

Lost and Found

Silver grey toy poodle, an ·
swer to name of Nina . Call

35. - - - - - - -

446· 1607.

t
Yard Sale
I 7
I Yard sa te , Centenary
I Town House Thurs., June

t
I
. . . . . . . . . . . . .-u. .~·--·-·--·---.·-·-····-·-·----

10. Baby bed, bar stool, tan·
tern, dishes, misc .

----

Help Wan ted

Someone t o c lean house
&lt;'!n d answer telepllone at
leilst lllree days a wee k No
smoktng permt tt ed Call
PhyltSS Ha c kell a t 614 991
7444
Someone f or y.=~rd work
Cilll Hrt cke ll 's at 614 992
7444
JOBS Ov er seas btg mon ey
last Job off er s q r aranteed
17168416000 Ex f 2843
M tddlc a qed lady to lt ve tn .
Must ltv c •n . Mu s t have ca r
w •th references Phone 30 4
671 7190
Fun Job Lad 1cs
Nalton
No I Toy
G tft Party
Proqr.:'lm
Htrtnq area
supe rvt so r No tnves t men t
Weekly
c he c k
Free
tra tn1nq , supp lt es and sam
pic kl! , work a t home For
(lr t ails ca ll Be ll y co tlec t 1
304 74 4 0974

n

St! Ud tt on s Wa nt ed

Wanted Femalf' to sha re
rny home Rent frr e Shclre
ex penses Wrt l e P 0 Box
10 . GnlltDOII'l
Need mole to share tr ntler
N tce. prtva te boat dock and
1tsh1ng
N ear
Ra cc oon
Creek Call614l56 1763
W tl l care f or t he elderly tn
our home Triltned flnd ex
prr 1rn ce d 614 997 73 14

3069
BEDS IRON. BRASS . Old
furndur e, qold,
St iver
dO l lars, wood •ce boxe s.
s tonf' tar s, anttques , et c ,
Complete
hou seholds
W rtl f' M 0 Mil ler, R f 4,
P omeroy, Oh Or 992 7760
Go ld , silve r . s t er l tnq,
1ewc&gt;lry, rtnqs, old co •ns &amp;
c urren cy Ed Burkett Bnr
bN Shop, M1ddl epor t 997
3476
OLD FURN tlURE . bf'd s,
tron . brass . or woocl K ''
c t1 en cu bbard s o f nil typf'5
T c1b les. round or sq unr c
Wood tee bO)(f&gt;S O ld desks
ilnd bookc a ses Wtll buy
co mplete household Gold,
s tlvc&gt;r . old money , poc ket
wc:;• ~ hes , cha1ns , rtnqs . rlnd
e tc tndtan Artda c1s of all
types Also buytnQ baseball
CMdS Osby Mnrttn 997

6370
JU N KED car s. baseball
ca r ds.
sc rap
metal s,
a l umtnum c iln S,
I ran
smtSStons.
mo tors,
bat
ter•cs, rad1ators . stamps
and co tns Offer tnQ tra sh
ptckup sprvtce
Harper
H nls tead Sa tvoqc Co 300
Eleven t h St . PI Pleasant ,
304 675 5868
Also lir a
marke t
open
Mondily
thr ouc1h Frtdi'IY, I 5 P m
Wanted To Buy

9

WANTED TO BUY O ld

fur

ntturc and Anltqucs of all
k 1nds. call KPnncth Swatn.
446 3 159 or 256 1967 tn the
eve n tno s
CASH PAID lor clean, lalf'
mode l used cars Sm 1n1
Bu •c k Ponlid C. Ga llt pO it S,
OhtO Cal l446 1282
BuytnQ
Gold .
Stiver .
Plal•num . old co1nS , scr ap
r, nq s &amp; stlve rw are Datly
q u o t es available
Also
co tns &amp; co in suppl tes tor
sa l e Sprtnq Va ll ey Trad•no
Co, Spr.nq Valley Pl a za.
446 801 5 or 446 8016
We pay cash for la te model
c lea n u sed cars
Fren c htown CM Co
Bil l Gene Joh nson

446 0069

=. E~t

- - - - - -- -

::: :=: ~s:::

11

:

Help Want ed

The
most
success ful
d• r esc t sel l tnq company tn
th e w orld is looktnQ tor
p eopte who wan t to make
QOOd $$$ Avon
FULL

TIME&amp;PART TIME

Will do house work Hones t
and dependabl e
Please
call614992 5557
Hi1 Vf' vaca n c .es 1n my
home tor elder ly man or
woman Phone 304 675 32 88
13

In suranc e

SA NOY .1\ N O BEAVER In
Co hn s olf e r ed
scrv1 ces lor f trr 1nsurC'1nce
&lt;o vrracw 1n Gr1ll1il Coun t y
tor
almo st
a cen tury
Fnrm , home and pNsona l
property c ovN(IQf'S are
o v allitbll'
to meet tn
ncf' dS
Con t act
rJ•v•dual
NPal lnsuritll Cf' Aq ency.
,1qen t Phone 446 1694
&lt;&gt; urr~ncc

Sc hools ln slructton

15

KMa lf' !flP u ll tma tr .n sel f
df' lrncP al l prtva te lessons.
Mf'n . women , &amp; c hildren
tnstruc l ton ttlru black bel t
Kara t e
/l.lso avittlahlf'
uniforms
pu c htnQ and
k1 Ck 1nq baqs. and p r ot ec
l •vc C'Qu tprnrnt
~ f'rry
Lowrry
&amp;
A SS OCtiltf'S
KrHillf'
S tUd iO ,
143
Burltnq l on Rd , Ja ckson .
0 11 Call6l4 286 3074
17

Mtsce llilneov s

Rtde
to W orlds Fatr,
!'ll1n1mum 4 iiCiu ll &lt;;, Ex tra
room l or I c l1tldrrn 997
6719
18

Wan ted to Do

ThP Sd k H ouse (c ust om
sdk
flower s)
Com ple te
br tdal ltne. weddtnqs. and
ell I OC CilStOn S Colt 614 367

7166
Lawn Mowtnc! no yarCJ to
b•o or sma ll Reltable and
clepf'ndablr For f'S i tmate
call 446 3159 allf'r 6PM 256
1967
Trnsh co11ec t1 on &amp;
Call 446 4480

h.=~uli n g

Re&lt;; •den11al
E l ec tr 1c
&amp;
Plumhtnq, 17 years ex
pertencc . att work quaran
tef'd Call614 756 1748
Wtll do bilbY St ll1nq m my
horne Ciil161 4 388 97)5
BabySttllnq tn r11y home
Gn lltpol•s c il y l •rn• ts Ca ll
446 8/9 5

Ca ll

H tQ h Sc hool Grnduates &amp;
Se n tor s. you ca n ea rn over
$550 00 per month wh il e
lea rn tng a val uitbl e sktll
l i k e com puter r epa •rcr.
shee t me t al work er, or
retrtgeratton _ Plu s yo u wtll
have a sec ur e part tt me job
with th e Amry N a lt Of1al
Guard after schoo ltnq
Benefi ts tnclude a S1.500 00
c nl ts tm ent
bo nus ,
$35,000 .00 l i f e tns u ra nce
a nd free tu ttt on to any
c ollege or trade sc hOOl tn
W es t Virgt n ia . Inter ested
per so ns may call (3041 67 5
3950 or in Wes t Vtrginia ca ll
toll FREE 1 800 642 3619 .

Refrigera tor needs work .

34. _ ___.___ _ __

.,

Au c t 1on every Frt ntQht a t
1t1e Harttord Communtly
CP nlcr Truck loads of new
mer c handtse every week
Cons,qmen ts of new and
u sed merchilnd tse alway s
welcome
R t c hard
Reynolds Aucttoncer 175

L tttl e kool r es t, tee c hes t b y
Ig loo, travel ing refr esh
menf ce nt er $24 .00 . Sp r ing
Valley Trading Co .. Spring
Va ll ey Plaza, 446 8025 .

Call after 5, 446·0335.

33. - - - - - -

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel111 court st.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Rt c k
Pear son,
Ex
pertcnced AUCTIONEER
Es tn tes . anltque s, farm ,
t1ou sc hold Ltcensed OhtO
wv Buy.ng an l•q ue s 304
773 5785, 773 9185

446 8025

old. Nu e tard , yellow &amp;
white . To give to a good

26.
27 .
28.
29. - - - - - 30. - - - - - 31. - - - - - .'~2 - - - - - -

16. - - - -- - -

Publ•c Sa l e
&amp; Auc ti on

Someone to li ve' " wtth a 69
y r . old handi capped man .

Part Persian cat t 1/1 yr . Ca ll446 2445 or 446 1309

11. - -.

22.
23.

Garage Sale, 508 Ct r clc
Ave n ue Tu es . &amp; Wed , 9 4,
across from Sprtnq Valley
H ardwa r e
N othtn q so ld
p rt or to sa le

446 3358

anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
col umn . Ther e will be no
c harge t o the advertiser .

17.

For Rent

4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.

1 oz .999 silver Fath er 's
Day bM . $ 10.00 . Spring
Vall ey Trad in g Co .. Sprin g
Va l ley P l aza, 446 8025 .

ANY PER SON who ha s

)Wanted
l For Sale

loving IUpt)Oit Ill 0 ~
dilficu~ Ume. May God
-eochonoofyou.Your
kindNR ll'MNIIW more th8n
worda oon uy.

Save money on your In
sur ance
Rumley
In
suran ce Aqe ncy 446 -3370 .
F r ee com parison

Ni q ht craw lers $1 .00 per
doz . Sprin g Valley Tradin g
Co ., Sprtnq Va l ley Plaza ,

CARD OF THANKS
The lemHy of Wtliem R.

=:AfmUUrite:nmntE
Announcements

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundab le.

ors

RUN

r oo m IJO•np wtltl oilr rtrn
&lt;, p.=~ r ·· "
e.~ tt 1.
,111
u t lidH ' &lt;; ,.1nrt r.l rnrtrt
A•, k1 n&lt;.t 'i9.ROO Q(l b111 wtll
l rl k I ' If'&lt;,&lt;,

R EA l TOR S:
H enry E . Cl el and , Jr., G R I
Jean Tru sse ll
Dotf1e Turn er
Ofltcc

3.

&amp; Wina Anill~t

IN 9 F.T. and 12 FT. WIDTHS

CARPET At lAsT YEAR'S PRICES

Master Charge

Rt.l, Cllnlllre, Oft.

GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM

PH 1411!1 I

NfW l\ ~ rtN C.
lhbO
aor ronrtii10!lf'CI rn oh ilt
llO'll(' wtlli llcltur ,ll Clrl'&gt;
l urn(l(f' rlncl lrVI ' I fpnr 1'(1
lo t 107:w 110 ptu&lt;,
W il t
t.l kf' SIJ .OOO

MIDDLE PORT
f\ ltlrf'f' bedroom 'llOrlutM t1ornr ,
thr ee yrM s ol cJ, t wo bitlh s, W B F P , f'IN i r• c nea t ,
ce nlrill atr Lr1rqe fo•ndy room. unu &lt;&gt;Url l hull! 1r1 ktl
c hen , se pnrnl! • ult l tt y $45,500

-Addons and remodeling
-Roofing and gulter work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work

NATHAN R IGGS

Ph. 614-843-2591
6·15-tfc

667- Coolville

Up to 15 Words .. Six day

&gt;70 000

MIDDlEPORT
FantclSitc Vtf'W of l hf• RtvC'r! A
remodeled thrf'f' IJcdroorn ho•nc, torrn,11 dtntnQ
room , vfd 1!y room . IJrl:lf"fll'lll , &lt;&gt;1dC' Clf'Ck. fr ont 51!
l tnq por c h Asktnq $45 .000 Ownrr wan ts o t trr

35 Yrs . Expenence

Racine, Oh.

67s-Pt. Pleasant

Pomeroy

98s-Chesler
343-Portland
247- Letart Falls

REAU TIFUL RIVERFRONT ACREAG E '

SAVE Sl.OO WITH
THIS AD

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

Rl.3, Box S4 .

Mason Co., wv
Area COde 304

992-Middleport

441&gt;-Gallipotis

Nf Vv lt ~ TING
On t·
l toor ? bf 'Ciroo•n IJO'l1f '
(f'n t r,l l ,.11r nnrt t,r,l l
r l!v u l tltl tr&lt;; . b,l&lt;;f ' ''Wnt
~, l or•ll f l)l' l urc&lt;&gt;. ,1ncl nl 'iH
SllOP P•IlO
t or
o nt v

----------~~---------~I

following telephone exchanges. ..

74 Motorcycles
75 Boats &amp; Motor s
76 ·Auto Parts &amp; Accf.ssor teS
77 ·Auto Repair
78 Carrlping Equipment

General

proxtmately 600 ' o f trontaqr for carnp1nq, boat,ncL
h sh1nq Balun cf' of fh f' 75 acre l r1rm tS wooc!Pd rn1 d
15 acres ttllabl r Thref' bNiroom hornr. new eM
pcf tn Q, ilnd bi!fh ow ner wtl ll n nd con tr,lct $6/,000

RANDY'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

F'nf'

tn !l w
roun try on ctood t1nrct
ronn tn E ac:; frrn Sc ''OOI
Ot S!r1C t 1700 sq If ld•.t
nrw 7 roo•n llOilll ' 3
bf'clrOO 'l1C",
11J hclfi1 S,
qorMlf' tor ] (&lt;'IrS rlnrt
h£&gt;alb 11 lt "&gt;O nl yS I 7 'i011y
lf'rl&lt;;t '

PR I ( F RE DUC F. 0
ONncr wdt lnncl contrrlCI !h 1s
one floor p l an , t hrer bcdroorn hOrnf' wtlh full
bil scmr n t. qarnCJe . rxce l lrn t cond1 l 10n $75 .900

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1 3· tf c

9·30 ffc

P&amp;S-BUILDINGS

7l Autos for Sa le
71 T ru c k s for Sa le

li ~ TIN G
L1'11 tl v
ll0'11P

NFVv

Rodney United MetllOdt st
C hur ch WtdP Y Md Sa l e
June 10, 11 &amp; 12 9 OOAM
4 : 00PM
Rou t e 35 at
D eLd le's Malt Shoppe 1n
Rodney . Lawn mowers.
vt n yl foldtng door s. a •r con
dtlioners, ani1QtJP l1ght h x
tur es, furn i tur e, drapertcs.
c lo thtn g, &amp; many oth er
m t sce ll aneo u s
tf e m s
BO NU S!! You can ge t you r
ca t washed too!! (a t th e
c hur c h) Ya'll come!

8

NFW lt STING
Nt ( t'
11 76 '::&gt;Q It rn rtcll IHJ 'l lf '
1-&lt; rl". ) bP&lt;irOO'llS, jl J
ha 1tlS . ') &lt;; llOWN&lt;; , 111',11
pun1p . ( ,lrpt• ll ntt. ttw r
'll0P r1 nf' wtndowo;, nnrl
T P
w,l ! Pr
Own1 ·r o;
•n,ly
llPip
f , n,l!lf0
/l&lt;, kinq$.49 .900

NEW l i ST IN G
Are you IOOktnq tor trn rlUf'S of
1~1nd w tth a th ree IJPCiroom, one f too r p tnn flO•llp?
Par t bo sc m C' nL bC'ilutdul l ilndserlpr ! Bl1•nc1rct rntr
rlVa tlabl f' - $35.000

Rl. so East

PHONE 992-2156

Farm 5UIIIIIIes
&amp; uvestaEI!

P URl!C SALE

U .S.

992· 621S or 992 · 7314
Pomeroy , Ohio

511 I mo.

Publtc N oftce
Public Notice

New and Used
PARTS

'Addons and remocSelinr
-Roofinr and,rtter work

EAFOR

NE W LI STIN G
Tlw loc at 1on ol lht S thr ee
bedroorn . two brl l h horne wtll rnran convP n tence
l or you
Mulberry Ave E x tenStVC' re•nodf' lin q ,
eq u•pped ktiChf'n , bnsemcnt . QM,lqr . a ssumabfr
tow nltere s lloan~ $56 .900

BOGGS

YOUNG'S

Call 992-6259

Classified pages cover the

6 1 Farm EQutpment
62 Wanted to buy
63 · Livestock
64 Hay &amp; Grain
65 Seed &amp; Fertiliz er

4·20 · tf c

General

VIRGIL B. SR. IE~ro~ ·
216 E. 2nd 51.
Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

Ph . 949-2160 or 949·2322

Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer e,
New Holland , Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Real Eatate -

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

5 -27 - 1 mo pd

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

Dogs. even on leashes, must bt- at- . dog bit a &lt;'hild passing.by, the wound
tended al all times, Middleport requirin g over 70 stiteh es.
A craekdown not only on dugs runPulice Chief J . J . Cremeans warns.
Pulice warns a dog on a leash was ning loose. bul those unattended , has
bel' n ordered by Poli ce Chief
left by it s owner in front uf a ~lore in
the business section last week. The Cre1ncans.

Real Estate -

TOM HOSKINS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

8 10 tf c

tx,Aetu'B~

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs . experience

Truck, Auto and
HARLEY
DAVIDSON

Open 9 till 5
Closed Sun. &amp; Mon.
PH. 742-2081

~

tackets. dolls. qu11ts. motel
Kn1t, Crochet, EmbrOider. $1.50
AU CRAFT BOOltS. .$2.00 uch
All 8oois snd c.talot-rdd 504
uch for poslqe snd hsndlina.
135-Dolls &amp; Ctotltes On Psrade
134-14 Quick llschine Quills
133-Faluon Home Quillin&amp;
132-Quill Ori 'nsb
130-Swulll ~asltions-Si•es 38-56
128-Enlllope Palchwon Quilts
127-Aflftans 'n' Doilies
125-Peill fl!rilts
124-Eay G1fb 'n' Ornsmenls
t23-Stilth 'n' Patch Quills
122-StuH 'n' Puff Quilts
l~rochet Your Wordrvbe
11 9-Eay Art of Flower Crochet
116-Nitly Fitly Quills
115-Eay Art of llipple Crochet
113-Completa Gift 80fi
109-S.W + Knil(Basic tissue incl)
105-lnsilnt Crochet
102-Museum Quilts
101-Quilllloolt Cotlettion I

7105

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

FRYE'S

Custom kitchens and appliances ,
custom
bathrooms , remodeling,
plumbing, electric , and
heating .

Dogs on leashes must be attended too

PH. 992-7201
3 19 Uc

IIlii

free patterns mstde. 170 best

backhoe
u :cava ting
septic systems
A water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
• dump truck
•limestone

4 20 ffc

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

1ranspartatlen

Merebandlse
51 Hou se ho l d Goods
52 CB, TV &amp; ~adio Eq utpm enl
53 A ntiques
54 Misc. Merchandi se
55 Building Suppl ies
56 Pet s for Sa l e
57 Muscial Instrumen ts
58 Fruits&amp; Vegetable s
59 For Sa le or Trade

8os 163, Old Chels01 Sta., New
Yon, NY 10113. Print Nsme,
Address, lip, Psttem Number.
-1912 Neeclletraft c.taJoc; 3

•
•
•
•

Un

an:u

The Doily Sentinel

licensed &amp; Bonded

O'Brien Electric
Service

EUGENE LONG

By BOB HOEFLICH
"Carpenters for Christ" from
Golden Springs Baptist Church, Anniston, Ala ., arrived Friday and

miscellaneous chores on the strue-

licensed &amp; Bonded

Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24xl6.
Insulated Dog Houses

1 Cord of Than k s (pa•d tn etdvilnce)
7 (Mel of Thanks ( pa •CI •n advilnce)
J A nnounce m ent s
4 G tveilway
I Happy Ads
6 Los t and Found
7 Y.=~rd Sa le (pai d 1n advan cc&gt;)
B Public Sa le
&amp; Auc tt on
9 Wilnted to Buy

bedsptead colton. 9 roches rn
No 30. Pattetn 7105 dtrecttons.
$2.25 for each pattern . Add
501 each paltetn 101 postage
and han dltng Send to:
Alice Brooks
,J ·I ~·
Needleeraft Dept
·

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

Dozer &amp; backhoe ser vice, water, sewer, pon ds,
foundations ,
reclamation.

20% OFF
ALL PERMS

Or Write Daily Sentinei' Ciassified Dept.
Ill Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

21 Busin ess Oppor tunity
22 Mon ey to Loa n
23 Prol ess •onal Serv •ces

prneapple hexagon. It's 11\\ rn-

PH . 992-2478

11

FLEA Market Open a1r ,
Chil l •co the Mall Shopp1ng
Cen ter Bu yers anct Se ll er
We l come. J une 11 12 13 No
c l othtng sa les

bedspread , p1llow j,om tht s bas•c

5-10· 1 mo. pd

The Daily Sentinel

f•Aancjal

Pineapple Charm!

- Dozer s
· Backhoes
· Dump Truck s
- Lo- Boy
- Trencher
- Water
- Sewer
- Gas Lines
- Septic Systems
Large or Small Job s

RAINBOW- The Amazing Water Machine

Skill olympics

REMOVED

Ya rd Sa l e

Add nostalgiC chatm to ,ou1
home w1th thiS lovel, moltl.
Crochet scarves. ta blecloth,

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

R

A seco nd ~ roup

WOM EN

The Doily Sentinei - Page- 9

ches tn dtameter tn mercemed

12 people will bt- al the church site
June 17 through July 3 under lht•

CHAINF.D

Pom~roy -Middleport, Ohio

MowtnQ
lawn s.
qeneral
yard
wo rk . narden tn g,
clcrtntnQ o ut qr~raoes Any
odd 10b Depf'ndable. c an
turn 1shed
own
Ira n
spo rt a t •on , have referen
rr s Call N orman . 446 6306
BniJYSt tft ncl tor 5 cl ays n
wrPk 756 6476

Fif'lilDCial
21

Bu&lt;;1nes s or store room tn
Pnrk Ccntrn l Ho tel
Show milk. dr1nkers
a
pr oduct t hnt may enstly
rM n you $80 .000. w1fht n the
nrxt year Call Robert H ar
per 304 675 1793 or 675 5868
22

St50. Call Mrs . Robbins at
614·186-2890 between 9:00 &amp;
tt :AM .
1ndividual with M edical
training
need e
tor
Paramedical Examiner to
do local insurance exams .
Part time , fle)(ib le hours.

Protess10ndl
Serv ic es

C&amp;L Bookk ee ptng
Bookkeeping &amp; tax serv tce
for all types of business es .
Ca rol Nea l
446 3862
P tano t uni n g and repair
Lane Dani el s Assoc iate of
Brun tc ardi 's
Ga ll ipo l is
and Cunnt n gh am's·Athens .
747 7951 or 992 2082.

- ----- =-

':

~ :ReaTEmte":

31

Homes for Sale

Pay S10.38 to $13 .49 per
exam . Send resume to
Lifedata Medical Se r v ice.

Money t o lodn

REFINANC E or pur c ha se
your hom e 30 yea r flxed
ri'lte WV a &amp; Ohi o Lea der
Mortoaoe . 77 E St ate St . .
A thPn S, Oh 614 592 305 1
23

Can You Qualify Need 2
mature, ambious ladi es to
assist 1 me in my fa st
grow1ng
Party
Plan
bu siness in this area . 3 hr. a
day·5 days a week . $100 to

Bu s.n ess
Opportuntty

- -

2200
E . Sunshine , 142 acr e farm good house
and barns. Call446·2599 .
Springlield, MO 65804.
BABYSITTER , prefer in
my home, day shift, for ac tive 15 month old girl. 304 ·

675-4667 .

3 bdr . hou se for sa le or rent
with option to buy on Jay
Dr ., Gallipolis. Call ~46 -

3189 or 446 3919

�Monday, June 7, 1982
Sentinel

10-The
31
2

--

-

-

-

Homes for Sale

bd . room

hou se

51
1n

Harri sonvill e, S6 ,500 . 614
928 4417

WHEI&lt; 'THEY
~WSI"'G

""'Lro
SAlt&gt;
11£'( WERE

IT' s GETTIN G LATE but
you can still hav e a hom e of

7HE IIOw.&gt;T
lEAMCVER!

your own 11 you earn bet
ween $9 ,000 and $1 5, 000 _ a
yea r . 2126 hou ses will be
built 1n the stat e of Ohio un
der farm hom e rur a l
h o u s 1ng
pro g ram
th e
r emamd er of 1982 . These
hom es will be finan c ed
w1th no down payment a nd
pa ym e nt s will be low a s
S125 pe r mo11th See our
m ode l near th e Pi c Pa c
Mark e t

on

RT.

5{),

W

A then s or c all 992 7034 for
1nf o
K 1ngsbury
Home s,

1100 E . Ma1n St P o m e r o y ,
Oh
3

bd r oo m

Pom e roy ,

h o u se

1n

s1d1ng ,
fi r epla ce
N1 ce 1oc af10n
Pr1 ccd t o se ll $24,000 _ 614

v 1n y l

--nW-&lt;"'

SA4- CAS48ENE,

997 7446

~ S,E. I~"

PL.,

CAPE CORA!. ,RA,

h o u sr
1n
3 bedroo m
R u tl a nd A1 r co nd , 1 c ar
ga r age, pat io, m ocle rn k1f

chen. gas hea t, hreo lace
614 591 508 7

35

5 rooms &amp; bath W1fh wh1f e
stone w ork 1nq f1n~p la ce.
f ully carpeted. ran ch st y le
W1fh n1 ce ca rport Redw ood
sh1ng le si d1ng
Include s
electri C stove . r cfr1q er a to r .
wa sher . d ryer nnd 28,000
BTU a1r co nd1t 1oner lik e
new 7J r~crc s . Shown b y
appo 1ntrn cn t 614 992 7364
Three bed r oom hou se , 11
base m en t . 11 1 ncre g rou nd
304 67 5 317 9

Lots &amp;

Acrea~e

Pr1 ce r edu ced 2 lots with
rural water c lose to c ity
llmJtS, $4,450 .00 . Call 446
1294
For sal e on e and half acres
more
or
less,
ap
prox1mately 600 ft road
frontage
on
Cora
Centerpo1nl Rd . near Cen
terpoint $3,000 .00 Phone
682 6944
220 plus acres, 25 -30 bottom
r es t pasture and woodland.
112 mile off st ate highway
141 near Water loo . 25 miles
to Huntington , Ironton, &amp;
Gallipol1 s $78,000. 614 -643·
2803

TWO stor y, 3 be dr oom, f u ll
ba se m ent. $40, 000 $7 ,000
down &amp; ass um e loa n of
33,000 at 811 Enql1 sh Court ,
304 67 5 3585

-~-~

House. 4 r ooms and ba th ,
Hend er son $ 11 .500 Ca ll
Bett y Sur Ep l1nq 30 4 675
1070 or ow ner 675 420 3

41

Tr ade or se ll, 3 be droom 2
and one hil l! bn th s. br1 c k ,
cor n er lo t . bilSf' m e nt
bree zcwn y 304 67 5 772 3
Owner will help l 1nanc e

Small hous e, references,
de po s l! ,
no
p e ts ,
rea sonabl e Write P.O. Box
10, Gallipo li S, Oh 45631

T R I ST A T E
M O BI LE
HOM ES
U SEO MOBI LE
HOM ES , CARS, TRU CK S
GALL I PO LI S
C HE C K
OU R PR ICES CAL L 446
7572

3 bdr hou se 1 mil e from
R 10 Grand e Dep. &amp; ref
rcq . Cal1614 245 5329 .

CLEA N USEO MOBI LE
H O M ES
KESSEL'S
QU A LI T Y
MOBIL E
HOM E SAL E S, 4 Ml
WE ST, GA L LIP O LI S, RT
35 PHON E 446 3868

2 Bedroom House at 120 3rd
Ave . Ga s Heat $235 .00 mo.
plu s depos1t . Call 4-46 3643,
The W1seman Agency .
2 Bedroom Home with
base ment on Lower R 1ver
Rd Over acre . S260 mo
Call 446 3643 The Wiseman
Agency
Pom e roy 2
bd . room ,
remodeled, 408 Spring .
Carpeted, security deposit .
$100 . Rent S195 . Call after 6
p.m . 992 2288

12. 60 tr a der . exce ll ent
cond1! 10n Cilll 446 1552
Furn1 shed. a1r co nd i ti Oned,
underp1nnJnq , se t up on lot
1n M1ddl cport
Custom buill. !urn , 2
bd room mobil e home on
r ent ed r1vcr front lot 1n
Ma son A I! cle c. . ce nt AC.
w 0 . cptd por che s. many
extr as . Storaq e bldq _ w1lh
work ben c h_A 1 cond Must
see to appr cc ,ille. 304 773
5680
1971 L1bc rty hou se trader 2
bd room , qood cone! 1971
tr a il er for add on room
w1lh 5 bd room plu s 9'1.9 add
on room wilh w1nd ow s. Will
sel l nil toqcth er for $6,200
614 6¢7 6329 r1nyllmC
1974
Hill c rest
Mobil e
Home 2 bedroom $4,800
614 9913917 aflcr 5

2 bedroom Sc hultz Mobil e
Hom e in Ra c in e Call 6-14
949 2726
HOME

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobile home for rent Ca ll
446 3101
Mobile Home, Eureka, 1
Bdr ., furn ., riverfront lot,
ref. &amp; deposit. Adults, $100
mo . 1-643 -2644 .
Modern 12 x:60, 3bdr ., turn .
mobile
home . Conv.
loca tion . Sec. dep . Call at·
ter 5, 446,8558 ,

Farms for Sale

28 ACRE farm, 420 lb
tobacco allotment, running
water year round, $10,500 .
Phone 304-675 6851,

One trailer, 2 bdr ., and one
3bdr, Call 446 1052 after
5:00 PM weekdays, call
anytime weekends .

34 ~- ~~n-eS_s ~Ui1di~2_S
Night c lub for sale or lease .
Francis Jones. 304 -773·5975
Cal l morning s.

For rent 2 bdr . mobile
home. Hanerville area.
Ca ll446,3258 or 446,3888,

-------

Lots &amp; _Acreage

25 acres, toba cco allot,
barn, 2 out bldgs, com pletely fenced, located ap·
prox .. 4 miles from Drum ·
mond's Market on 775,
$10,000, Phone 446,0844,

Large house on Broadway
St in Racine . $250 . per
mon th plus deposit. Inquire
ill the Woodshed on Broad way or ca ll Teafords
Realty

Mobile home for rent Ca ll
4-46 -4225 or 446 0756.

Two
bedroom
mobi le
home, 10 x:60, 304 -675 -1452.

35

3 bd .room house, newley
redocorated, ca rpeting ,
$300. per month . Stove and
re f rig
furn . Ga rden er
turn Bath a nd 1h . garage .
Nice location . Deposit _Fire
pla ce and f ami ly room. 614
992 2362 ,

42

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; in sur ed. Ca ll
30076 2711

33

For rent 1n Rac1ne ·nice 2
bd room house . Comp lete ly
furnished, with air cond .,
a ll utilities paid . $300. per
month _949 2801 or 949 ·2860

Lovely 6 room cottage, gar den, 79 J1m H i ll Road, Hen
Ca ll 803 -886·
derson,WV
4548 . $200 per month, One
month sec ur ity deposit .

1970 Greqory
12x65,
I
bd .room , a1r cond ., front
po r c h $5,000
Lot al so
available $50 . 614 992 6093

1 2 bedroom tailer in Racine
for rent , S100, Deposit, $200,
month. Utilities not in cluded, 614-949,2726,

20 acres of standing tim ·
ber, 614-992 -6035,
TWO acre lots, 150 It, road
frontag e,
ci ty
water,
behind 84 L um ber, ca ll 304 ·
675 6873, 67 5 3618
Large lot for sa le 9 mites
north Pt Pleasant on Rt, 2
at Flatrock, All utilities !
available, Will trade for
motor home, 304-675-1248
after 5,

ONE bedroom mobile
home, air-c onditioned, on
private lot, outskirts Henderson. Utilities furnished,
S230, month, 304-675-6730,
Two bedroom mobile home
in New Haven, adults only,
no pets, 304-675-1452 after 5,
44

Apartment
for Rent

Furni shed Apartment 607
2nd . Ave . Ga llipoli s. 1 bdr .,
adu lt s. $195, utilties pd .
Ca ll446 -4416after 7PM .
Apartment, 2 bdr ., unf ., no
pets Cal l446 3937
Eff . Apar tm en t No. 5,
second floor . Reng and
deposit
Pay your own
utilities Adul ts, no pets .
446 0957
For rent a 2 bdr. duplex .
Cour t St ., Ga ll ipol is. With
refrigerator and stove. No
pets Call 446 4428 or 446·
2605.
Furn1shed Efficiency, $135 .
607 Second Utilities pd .
Single person . Share bath .
4-46 4416 aft er 7 p.m
Furnished Apt _, 2 BR, 243
Ja c kson
Pik e . S220
Util1ties Pd . 446 4416 aft er 7
pm
Par t1 ally furnished . 4
rooms and bath . 992 5908 .
Apt 1n Middleport. 2 room
effi c iency _1 304 882 -2566 .
Apartmen ts 675 -5548 .
APARTMENTS , mob1le
homes,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Ga llipOl is
614 446 8221 or 614 245 9484
APARTMENT
1n
Pleasant, 614·446·8221.
45

Pr1 cc r edu ced F or sole or
r ent
12x60 '} bedro om
m obil e hom e w1th 2 lo ts
Ga s hea t. rura l w at er
Close to cily l1m 1IS Cnll
446 1'}94

USED MOBILE
576 2711

5 r
hou se on r1ver ,
beaut1ful v1 ew. pr1vacy ,
$275 . per mo . plus deposit
Call 446 4922 after 5:30 or
w ee ]( dens
3 Bedroom House '" R1o
Grand e 446 0157

Mobile Homes
for Sale

44

Houses for Rent

Hom es tor Rent, Lease or
L and contra c t 1n town or
c ountry
Call
Strout
Rea lty , 446 0008

Ass unl rtblc / 14 per c • nt
loa n. 4 bed r oo m , 2 full
bath s, ,) II clec tr1 c 75x 100
co rn er lot 1 30 4 88 2 23 19

32

Monday, June 7, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Apartment
for Rent

One bedroom apartment,'
partially furnished in Henderson, Phone 304-675-1972, ,

Pt

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
I ight housekeeping apt .,
Park Cen tral Hotel.
Room s with cooking, cab le,
a1r. $40 a week . 304 773
5651
46

Space for Rent

COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Larqe lot s. Ca ll
992 7479
Small
trail er spaces .
Mason . 304 -773 -5651.
Mobile hom e space for
rent, 3 miles from town ,
junction 2 and 62 at old Y,
Point Pleasant, 304·675 ·
3
2
4
8
He nd erson trailer lot .
Phone 304 -675 -2881 or 304·
675 1574 .
47

Wanted to Rent

Wanted to rent warehouse,
storag e building or larg e
garage in city of Gallipolis.
Ca ll446,3159
Wanted to r ent a small fur ·
nished house in Gallipolis.
Must be in good cond. Call
Mrs. May Ru sk James, 446·
0728 ,

Merebandlse
S1

Household Goods

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa , chair, rocker, ot·
taman , 3 tables, (extra
heavy by Frontier), $685 .
Sofa, chair and lovesea t,
S275. Sofas and chair s
priced from $285 , to $795 ,
Tables, $38 and up to $109,
Hide-a -beds,$340., queen
size, $380. Recliners, $175.
to $195,, Lamps from $18 , to
$65 . 5 pc. dinettes from $79 .,
to $385 , 7 pc., $189 , and up,
Wood t ab le with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495. Desk $110 ,
Hutc hes, $300, and $375.,
maple or pine fini sh .
Bassett
Bedroom su ites
Cherry , $795 .
Bunk bed
comp lete with mattresses,
$250, and up to $395 , Cap
fain's beds, $275 . comp lete.
Baby beds, S99. Mattresses
or box: sp ring s, full or twin,
$58., firm, $68. and $78,
Queen set s, $195. 4 dr.
chests, $42 . 5 dr . chest s,
$~ . Bed frames, $20.and
$25 ., 10 gun · Gun cab inets,
$350., dinette cha ir s $20.
and S25. Gas or elec tri c
ranges,
$325 .
Baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; $30, Used
Furniture
bookcase,
ranges and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon . th ru Fri ., 9am
t o Spm , Sa t
446,0322
Kenmore 6 cycle washer,
real nice, $90 . Genera l
Electric dryer, $90 256 1207.
30 in. Genera l E lec tri c
range, gold in co lor , ap·
prox . 5 yrs . old , $125 . Ca ll
446 0307 or 614-256-9367 ,
4 cush ion sofa, good cond.,
$125, Call614-2566477 ,
H eavy
duty
Hotpoint
washer &amp; dryer approx . 5
yrs . old . Looks like new,
$150 . Call614 256,6753 ,
Dining tabl e &amp; 4 chairs,
coun ter top, studio coucheS
&amp; tab les . Tool box: for
truck . Ca ll61067 ,0639 .
Mntching chair and couc h ,
good condition
304·675 1452
54

Misc . Merchandice

Plastic Sep ti c Tanks. State
and coun ty approved . 1,000
gal. tank, price $340 . Oth er
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup tru ck. Call 614·286
5930, Jackson , Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPR ISES
197 5 Case 450, dozer ·
tr ac tor , 1.800 hr s , very
good cond., $!4,900 _ Call
446 4537 ,
RATLIFF'S POOL CEN
TER Pools sale, supp li es &amp;
install ati on . 403 2nd . Ave .,
Ga llipoli s, Oh . Ca ll 4-46 6579 . In grou nd · Ablove
ground .
174 pieces brown un derpinning for a mobile
home used iust 1 year. A
seve n &amp; one half feet by 58
inche wide multi colored,
braided ova l rug White
uniforms (pantsuits) three
different sty le s, sizes 9-10 .
Call after 4PM, 446,3065
Federal no. 6, 12 gauge shot
gun she ll s, f ie ld load s, $4.99
per box: . Spr ing Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446 8025 ,
450 Case Dozer tilt &amp; angle
blade, $8500. Will trad e for
tru ck or farm tra ctor . 614 643 2918
19 inch Sony portabl e color
TV, like new co nd ., $300.
Call446·7781 evening .
REPOSSESSED SIGN! NO
DOWNPAYMENT!
Take
over payments of $59.50 per
month. 4'x:8' flashing arrow
sign . Complete w/new
bulbs &amp; letters. Cutliff
Signs Toll Free 1-800-55 13070, Ask about REPO,
Gasoline and hea ting fue l.
Call Excelsior Oil Company. 614·992·2205 .
Vegetable plants, flower s.
.60 cents a doze n . 614·992·
7663,

54 __ MJS~_!~ ha__!!_dice

KIT

'N' CARLYLE'"

1977 Wilderness Camper, 28
full
bath, se lf ·
contained, awning, Reese
hitch, side mirrors, ex·
ce ll enf condition, $4,500.
304 675-4276,

Pets tor Sale

DRAGONWYND
CAT ,
TERY
KENNEL , AKC
C how
puppies,
CFA
Himalay an, Persian and
Siamese kittens . Call 446·
3844 af ter 4 p .m
HILL CREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, c lean
indoor -outdoor fa c ilities .
A lso AKC Reg . Dober·
mans . Ca ll4.46 -7795.

Siamese kittens w ith shots
$45 Ca ll446, 1609 ,
Juanita's
Groomi ng,
Special : $12 .50, sma ll and
medi um dogs Phone 446·
23 10 .
PINE RIDGE COLLIES
AK C Regis t er ed Collie
pups Ca ll6 14 2561267 ,
Reg . Dober man s for sa le or
trad e. Fra nci s Jones. 304 773 -5975 mornings.
G rooming se rvi ces for
pets. Will c lip ~nglish
Sheep dog s, poodles &amp;
Sc hnauzer' s. Reasonable .
For appt 614 992 ,7342,
POODLE
pup s,
AKC
register ed . No Checks, 304·
895 -3958,
Female Peekapoo puppy.
$85, 304-675,5479,
Young parakeets for sale,
304-895,3570,

sa

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Strawberr ies. Call Harold
Tay lor, 4468692 or 6142459557 ,
----- ~~-

Strawberries pi ck your
own, bring co ntainer .
Claude Winter s, Rio Gran de, 61045,5121,

- - - - - ------For Sale or Trade
59
1972 2 ton Ford truck with
stock racks , Call 614-3677533.
Carport frames of 3 chan ·
nel iron, 9"x:26' . 5)6 in. steel
post 8 fL 3 framed used
doors. 3 pair sliding oak
doors, gas water heater,
slate roofing , 614,992 -6254,
---

-

9 N FORD tractor , S950, or
trade tor motor boat or
pickup tru ck, 304·576·2670.

Farm 5PIIIIIIes
&amp;

Musical
Instruments

For Sa le Spinet-Console
Piano Bargain. Wanted:
Responsible party to take
over low monthly paymen·
ts on spinet piano. Can be
seen loca lly. Write Credit
Manager, P,O, Box 537,
Shelbville, I N 46176 ,
4 m e- . old ACK Registered
Yorkshire Terrier . Partly
hou se broken, good with
children. $200 firm . Call
446,4120,

71

Autos for Sale

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car
pet Clea ning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free es tim ates
Call446 2107

75 Chevoret Impala, 2 bdr,,
air cond., crusie control,
PS, PB , one owner, bought
new . Runs good, body in
fair cond, $1,2'/5, Call 4464223,

French
City
Painting
residential &amp; commerc ia l,
interior, ex t erior , pape r
hanging ,
&amp;
textured
ceili ngs . Call 614 -367 -7784
or614367 ,7160 ,

1981 Horizon, 4 door, auto.,
p .s., p.b .. stereo and more.
Low mileage .
Accept
trade, 614-992 ,3798,

tp:estaeiJ

78 model MF 245 diese l, 6
spd, trans , PS, 250 Hrs,,
same as new, $6,900. Bel
saw, molder cleaner, same
as new $900, 614-886,5955 ,
John Deere LA Mower·
cultivators. plows . Ca ll7566506,

AAasonary
work , Logue
Contracting,
Rt.
I,
Ewington
Call 614 38 8
9939,

1972 Volkswagen Super
Beetle, engine and body
needs some work, S250. 304·
675,7176,

Mechanical
transplanter
tor setting tobacco now on
sa le. Swisher Implement
John Deere Dealer, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, 446,0475,
New and Used Troy -Built
tillers for
gardening.
Swisher Implement John
Deere Dealer, Rt . 1,
Gallipolis, 446,0475 ,
John Deere hay bailer ,
rake &amp; mower, $2,000. 388·
8502 or61H75 -6009 ,
For sa le Gravely tractor,
electric start, with 30 in .
rotary mower &amp; sulkie, like
new, S1, 150, Call 446,4149,
N.H. bale thrower fits 273310 balers . Also bale
thrower wagon . 61-4-949·
2631,
MF 3 baler, good condition,
$1200 , 304-675-2371,
Livestock

Reg. Yearling Quarter hor·
se, Reg. Weaning Quarter
horse, Call446,3413,
450 lbs. Holstein steer. Cal l
61067-0334,

1974 MONTE CARLO, good
condition, 304,675 5773,

7:30

ANNIE

8 :00

~ANDY HA5 BEEN CtiPTUREO BY "REO"

ANO "BUll"

8:30

, F &amp; K Tree Trimmin g,
!Stump r emova l. 675 -1331.

1977
Camaro,
black,
automatic, air condition,
power
steering,
good
shape, 304-773 -5823,

RINGLES'S SERV ICE ex
perienced mason, roofer,
electrician.
ca rp enter,
general
repa1rs
and
r emod eling . Phone 304 -675
2088 or 675 ,4560 ,

Truck's for Sale
Water wells. Commercial
and Domesti c . Tes t hol es .
Pumps Sales and Service
304 895-3802 '

1979 Ford F250 31• T, HD
Pickup, V·8, p .s., p.b., air,
automatic. Good condition.
446,2641,

ADVANCE[!
Seam le ss
Gutter · Door s.
Offering
continuous
guttering,
sea mless siding, roofin g,
garag e
doors,
fr ee
estimates, 614-698,8205,

1971 chevy pick up, $600 ,
1969 Chevy van, $500, Call
61067-0541,
1972 Ford pickup, P ,
steering, P. brakes, AC,
radio, overloaded springs,
camper special, very little
rust, looks real good.
Priced tor quick sale. Call
446-1052 alter 5:00 week
day . Call anytime weeken ·
ds,

LE•IKN THAT ALLEY OOP AND A. SQUAD OF MOO VIANS HAVE JUST DISARMED THEIR ROCK LAUNCHERS,
GASOLINE ALLEY
9:00

Pull down on th'
li'l han' aq'in,
did 40U,
Rufus?

82

76 Ford pickup 40,000
miles, lots of extras, $2,000.
firm, 304-675 -2563 alter 5
p ,m,

Plumbing

!J. _H ~a_ting _

CARTER'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
PhOne 446,3888 or 446 4477
-- -

-

WINNIE

Ya'A' Wire

-

1980 Honda CB 650 custom,
1.100 miles, exc c~nd, Cal l
446-2410,

84

HONDA Passport, 1981, 300
miles, windshield, $550.
304-675-4329,

SEWING Machine repair s,
service. Authorized Singer
Sa les &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors.
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2284.

1978 Kawasaki KZ 400, ex cellent shape, 304-773 5823.

85

75

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE, Call61067-7471
or614-367,059L

••• ANI7 EVEN TUALLY

1

WRI6HT
ENTERPRISES

=

1980 Harley Davidson wide
glide, show room cond. Call
446-7781 evening ,

Boats and
Motors for Sale

- - - - - -- - - - - -·
Chris Craft Constellation
cabin cruiser. 36ft, loaded
with 40 It trailer, $12,500,
614-446-9520

Hay &amp; Grain

Lawrence Sidenstricker
Backhoe Service. Call 6755580,

~ ~e!!"!_9.~r~t~n

~encrai _Hauli~g

Need something hau led
away or something moved?
We'll do it Call 446-3159 or
;61056, 1967 after6,

BARNEY

'lORE MAW
NEVER
FAILS TO
TAKE
A DIG
ATME!!

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

Now Hauling limestone,fill
dirt-top soil-gravel. Free
estimates,
Cal l 61067,
7101,
HAULING-Limestone, gra,
vel, sand, Ph , 742-2505,

;Hanshaws Used Tires.
Lucas
Lane,
Poln
Pleasant 304-675-7360,
Eight foot insullated truck
topper, like new, Call 304675-3248. -

1976 Midget special. Call
446-4655.

4-Gen. S,B, radial tires, HR
78-15 good cond. $45, all 4,
Phone 304·675-2915 after 5
p,m,
77

Auto Rep!lr

Quality AutObOdy &amp; Paint
work, Profesilonal custom
· paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446-1968.

JIMS Water Service, Call.
Jim Lanier, 304-675,7397 ,

PEANUTS

If you need your trash
hauled away, call Harper
304-675-5868 between 1 PM
and 5 P, M , Lawn mower
repaired.

I'M TR'I'ING TO LOOK UP
THE NUMBER OF OUR
VETERINARIAN ...

8! _ _ _ ,U_!I'!_OI_st_er_y _
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis,
446-78J31or 446-1833,
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt,
1 Box 124, Pt Pleasant, 304675-4154,

CI)700 Club
(!) 19B2 NCAA World
Series from Omaha , NE ·
Game 7
0
({) ®l M•A•s•H
Hawkeye sends a personal
letter to Harry Truman . lA)
9:30 0
({) ®l House Calls
Ann is my stenou sly m1ss·
ong , (R)
10:00 llJ ([)@ lou Grant Aoss1
meets a young woman
who refu ses 10 appeal her
death sentence for murder
(R)(60 mon I
(I)
Dance
of
Two
Countries:
China
and
America Th1 s program do·
cuments the t eac hing s of
Ben Stevenson, director of
the Houston Ballet and h1 s
expenences with the Pek ·
ing Dance Academy 1n
Chona. (60 mon I

(jj) Newswatch
10:15 (I)
MOVIE :
'Private
Benjamin'
Ill TBS Evening News
10:30 Cil Sing out America
(jj) Hitchcock
11:oo
®J
News
Cil MOVIE : 'Quadro phenia'
Cil Nashville RFD
ffi ESPN Sports Center
CD News/Sports/Weather
(I) Dick Cavett
11 :15 ([) All In the Family
11:30 0 Cil (1) Tonight Show
Jotlnny is JOined by T any
Randall, Melissa Manchester and Bill Underwood . (AI
(60 min ,)
Cil Another Ufe
({) Benny Hill Show
0 ({) Quincy Quincy mvestigates the murder of a
9-year-old girL (R) (60
min,)
(I) Captioned ABC News
®MOVIE: '1 00 Rifles'
GII]J Nlghtline
11:45 Ill MOVIE: 'Target Zero'
12:00 Cil MOVIE: 'The Legend
of the Lone Ranger'
Cil Bums &amp; Allen
ffi '77 U,S, Open Golf
Hllltes
({) Nlghtline
(I) PBS late Night
GII]J MOVIE: 'Twist'
12:30 0 Cil (1) late Night With
David latterrnan David is
joined by Ian Anderson .
(60 min,)
I]) Jack Benny Show
Cll 1978 Wimbledon
Highlights
({) Solid Gold
II (I) MOVIE: 'Columbo:
Forgotten Lady'
1 :00 Cil MOVIE: 'The Inherit-

om mom

Electrical

_

My Three Sons
({)ABC News
({) Electric Company
(jj) Over Easy
0 Cil (1) NBC News
Cil $50,000 Pyramid
([) Father Knows Best
({) Muppet Show
0 ({) ®l CBS News
(I) Dr, Who
(jj) Ulies, Yoga and You
01 &lt;I2i ABC News
0 Cil P,M, Magazine
(I)
Time
Was ..
the
Seventies The final seg ~
ment of thts senes look s at
the decade of Watergate
and the Bicentennial
Cil MOVIE: 'Tribute to a
Bad Man'
Cil Bull' s Eye
ffi ESPN's Inside Base ball
([) Green Acres
(() Entertainment Tonight
(1) Happy Days
0 ({) Tic Tac Dough
Cll (jj) MacNeil -Lehrer
Report
®l News
01 &lt;I2i Muppet Show
0 Cil You Asked For II
Cil Another Ute
ffi ESPN Sports Center
Ill Andy Griffith
({) 0 ({) Family Feud
(1) laverne and Shirley
(I) Business Report
® Richard Simmons
(jj) Media Probes
G)
(W
Entertainment
Tonight
0 Cil CD Uttle House On
the Prairie A new student
in Walnut Grove 1s made
miserable by the other stu dents , (R) (60 mon I
[Ciosed -Captooned)
(I) MOVIE: ' Dog Day
Afternoon '
(]) National Geographic
Special
(])
Australian
Rules
Football
Ill MOVIE : 'Bye Bye
Birdie'
({) 01 &lt;I2i Best of the
West Elv1ra ' s old boyfnend
tnes to w1n her back .
0
({) @
Private
Benjamin BenJamin want s
the Army to change 1ts
rules regard•ng women (A)
({) (jj) Great Perform ances
·Monteverdi
Or·
pheus · First of 3 parts
Th1s
program
presents
Jea n Pierre Ponnelle ·s 1nnovat1ve productiOns of three
of Monteve rdi ·s operas
that have surv1ved 1ntact
(2 hr s I
({) OJ &lt;I2i ABC Monday
Night Baseball Oakland
vs . Chicago or Montreal
vs . St. Louis . (2 hrs . 30
m1n)
0 ({) @ WKRP in
Cincinnati F1rst of Two
Part s. The 'fn endly ' over ture s of a former recep ·
tionist have Mr Ca rl son
worried. (A)
0 Cil CD MOVIE : 'Sister,
Sister'
Cil MOVIE : 'High Coun try'

BUILDING
remodeling,carpentry , roofing, plumbing, concrete
work, 304,675-2440,

2 year old reg . quarter hor·
se, broke, 614-992 -2250,

'-4

ABCVT CAPiTAL PUI-lr5HMG~T

RON'S Television Service .
Specia lizing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
hou se ca ll s. Phone 576 -2398
or 446 ,2454.

Registered and graded hor·
ses, excellent 4-H project.
English and western sad·
dies ,
evertthing
imaginable in horse equip·
menf and supplies. a Iso
riding lessons and trail
rides and horse training .
Ruth Reeves, Hoof Hollow.
614-698,3290,

17 Large Holstein Springer
Heifers, Phone 304-273-28&lt;18
after9p,m,

PUtJISHM£1-JT.

Gene's
Steam
Carpet
Clea n -Scotc h Gaurd· Free
estimates -spring specia ls
Gene Smith, 992 -6309 .

-

REGISTERED Landrace
boar hog,
Registered
black, female, Poodle puppy.
Registered
silver
Poodle, 304-675-2288,

5£RI/f. ICCXJLD BE: MISTAKrn

Spec ial March and April
only. Gene's Deep Steam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate. 992-6309

1972 Volkeswagen beetle,
rough runs great, needs
automatic stick
tran ·
smission work . Joe, 1304·
675,6690 or 614,992-2216,
evenings.

·1972 Chevy pickup $300,00, 1aJ _ ___E~c_a'!'a!ing
1974 Ford Gran Torino
$500,00, Call304,576,2174 af, Ga llipolis Diver sified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
ter 5:30 p,m ,
backhoe work. Special
- - - - - - _,_ - 1 - - - farm rates. Call us tor free
--M_
oiO
_r_
Cy_
cles~
__
estimates. 446·4-440.
74 - _

Livestock, Jersey cow with
calf, yearling bull : Phone
304-675-5076,

OH, I'Jal,ltJ 111AT CAst-, I'LL

Roofing &amp; painting· interior
&amp; ex terior , minor carpet r y,
paneling,
etc
Free
estimates. Call 614 -379-2216
or61079,2259,

1980 Olds Cutlass, 4 door,
exce llent condition $5,300.
or assume payments .
Phone 304-882 -2546,

72

I'M A-FRAID I CAIST S!OR'J£ aJ
~eM&lt; Jl!R'/ , I CVN'T 13f;LI£V6

C HRI ST I AN'S
CON
STRUCTION ,
Cons tr ,
roofing, siding , spoutin g,
fen c ing, painting, repairs &amp;
c lea ning . -446-2000, c a ll
before 8 and after 5: 30 .

SURPLUS JEEP S $90,
CARS $89, TRUCKS $100,
Similar bargains available.
Call for your directory on
how to purchase. 602·998 0575 Ext 7965 Call refun
dable.

CARS $200, TRUCKS $150,
Available at local govern·
ment sales. Call (refun·
dable) 1-714,569-0241 Ext ,
1855 for directory that
shows you how to purchase.
24 hrs.

BORN LOSER

Creative wood decks,
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
redwood . Free es tim at e
Call 614 388,9762 ,

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven w est Virginia . Over
20 less expen5ive cars in
stock.

~~

2 Mobile Homes 12x60. 1
steel l ·beam 36x16. Roofing
shingle s,
3.00
bundle
mixed, 614-949 2195

63
57

7:00

Marcum
Rooting
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex:
perience, specializing in
built up r oo!, Call 614 388
9622 or 614 388 9857 ,

6_1____ Farm Equipment

Sonia's Professional Dog
Grooming . Call614·388 ·8547
and ask for Son ia .

6 :30

REI\IEM~ER~

'
7

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Go rdon
se tt ers,
English Cocker Span iels.
Ca ll614 388,9790,
POODLE GROOM IN G,
Cal l Judy Taylor at 614·367·
7220.

THI? 1? THE ~IG TIME NOW,
MR, WM•H TU665. WE NEED A
HI6H-POWERED PE:R'?ON TO
HANDLE All THE: PUll!. I CITY.
THAT'? JU?T NOT '/OUR
CUT OF MEAT:
ANO, BE51DE5,
YOU'RE GOIN6
ON VACATION ..,
HOliDAY ACRE?,

PAINTING
interior and
ex t erior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs, exp , Ca ll 614388
9652 .

Black pony sadd le &amp; bridle.
614,9926035 ,

56

Ill

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com
mercia! and residential.
tree estim at es. Cal l614-256
1182,

Portable Maytag dryer,
e lec tri c, avocado, ex:c.
cond,6 1H9227 17 ,

o m m o m ®J m ·1ZI

News

___ ~_proveme'!.f!_ _

1. 3" pipe c loth es line parts
w ith hardware, $50.00 pr . 2.
Porch sw ings with frames
of different types, $70.00 to
100,00 made of 2" pipe, 3,
Mail box parts made of
pipe, etc $30,00, Can be
seen on Jericho Rd. Pt .
Pleasant, phone 30-4·675·
3677

PRICE'S
REDUCED ,
Metal shee t 's fl at porcelin
ename l coa t ed, will nail,
won't rust . Ex: . material all
t y pes of building 20,24
gauge 4'x:8' $7 .00, 4'x:10'
$8 00, 4'x 12' $9 ,60, 4'x odd
$5.00. Tuppers Plains, Ohio
614,667 3085

EVENING

sl _____ HOme

--LOOK AT THIS
APERN SHE GIVE
·- IT'S TWICET
TOO BIG~!

m rw

ance'

Ill I
1 :30

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldand BobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form

tour ordinary words

1

6/7/82
6:00

fii}'\1

ftlt\}~

~ ~ ~~®

rx
·-·--.-.----

MONDAY

serv1ees

Ll K E new dressing tabl e &amp;
baby swing , 304-675,4667 ,

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintel s, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Ca ii614 2455 12L

Television
•
•
vtewtrg

78
Camping
___ Equipment __ ,

Misc. du ct work. Can be
see n at Sac r ed Hear t Chur ·
ch, 2222 Jackson Ave . Call
304-675,4602 ,

SS ___ ~u_!_~~~j~~_e_I~~ -

OICKTRACY

ft.,

GOOD
USED
AP PLIA CES
washers,
drye ,
refrigerators,
ran
s,
Skaggs
Ap plla es, Upper River Rd ,,
besi e Stone Crest MoteL
446- 398,

-2077,

Wright

ONE
Owens - Corning
fiberglass 60" tub-shower
unit st alL boxed, 10 year
warra nty. One 60" round
so lid oak pedestal table.
304-882 2804,

YAMAHA
GUITARS
SWA IN
SUPER
DISCOUNT
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
Porcelian double sink with PRICES! Send self ad,
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St,
meta l ca binet s. 614·992· dressed stamped enve lope
Gallipolis. 3 piece living 2250,
for price l ist, or send $1
room suites couch -love
(r e fundable with pur ·
sea t·chair $199, 2 piece
chase) tor color brochure
Pi
c
k
·rour
own
living room suites from
to: Studio E Music, Inc.,
Sl-40 up, love seats from $70 strawberries, new plan - P,O, Box 141, Glouster, Oh
ting, easy picking . Open
up, maple dinet sets from
45732,
$99 to $199, wall huggers daily 8 a.m.-8 p.m. except
9unday,
starting
May
27.
$100., recliners $80, maple
Location, 6 mi les off Rt. 2 For Sale-S pinet -C onsole
rockers $49, bedroom
Bargain ···
from Apple Grove on Piano
suites $150, variety of table
Jerry's Run Road. Op· Wanted : Responsible party
lamps, marble top st~n •
$30 and up, box sprin
8. posite Wattersons Grocery. to take over low monthly
From Charleston area, 6 payments on spinet piano.
mattress
&lt;new)
00,
several uti l ity cabinets, kit- mile out from Rt. 35 at Can be seen locally . Write
Pliny on Plantation Road, credit Manager : P.O.Box
chen cabinets wood &amp;
537 Shelbyville, IN , 46176,
metal. baby beds, chests of 304-576,2574,
drawers S25 to $60, 3-way 1.;;;:-_:;:
-.;-;;;-;;;-;;;-:,;::;::-:;:
-;:-:-;;;::.L:;::;::::::::::::::;:~
recliners $100, gas &amp; elec· ,.
tric ranges, refrigerators,
wash stands, bunk beds
complete with bunkies
$170, several dressers, hall
trees, beds, brass head
board beds $35, bookcases,
smokers, Hoover spin dry
washer, wringer type
washers, hutch, coal &amp;
wood heaters, televisions,
fans, new tools of all kinds,
variety of Silverstone cook ·
ware , Call446-3159,

1
offee tabnle, 2 solid
m pie end tables, very
g
condition, S35 each,
tectric lawn mower, been
one summer, $.10, Call

by

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middle rt, Ohio

Married Joan
(I) My Uttle Margie

I

KI

PUMITE

I KJ

[j

tJ

tSEATTL

I J

WHA"T IHER'E WAS
PLEN"TY OF AT "THAT
ALL- &lt;:&gt;I RL JAZZ
CONCERT.

I

Now arrange the Circled lenor s to
lorm the surpn se answer . as sug
gested by the above ca r1 oon

II

Answer here "(

r KI I I 1 X)
(Answers tomorrow)

Salurday s

I Jumbles
Answer

OPIUM COLON BELONG GOITER
What's the royal road to mam age? GOING TO "COURT "

Jumble Book No. 19, containing 110 puules.ls avai lable lor $1 .95 postpaid
lrom Jumble, c/o this newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648 . Include you r
name. address. zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperbook s

BRIDGE
Alliterations again
, - - - - -- -- - ,
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

~ORTII

+ K H 41

Alan: "You used to wnt e
abo ut vanous bridge play er s
with alliterative names like
Pessimistic Pete. Generous
George, Larceny Lou and
Talkative Ted , How about
bringing
them
back

6-7-82

9AK(/6
• AJ 9

+7 5
WEST
• J 9 6 :1

EAST
+(/ IllS
9 J H2
• ~ 4

• 10 Y4 3

• 72
• Q J 10

occasionally?"
Oswald " You left out
Ambitious AI and Car eful
Cal. Here we see AI sil ting
North and moving into a
grand slam . Poor Ca l opened
the btddtng, rebtd hts suit
and showed two aces m
response to Blackwood "
Alan "Six diamond s or
no-trump would be lay
down . With any lead but a
club South would have all
sorts of triple squeeze poss 1"
bihties to bring hom e seven
diamonds. Unfortunate l y for
his purposes the club wa s
led."
Oswald "Ca l looked at
dummy with a slightly Jaun dtced eye. He saw that he
could make the sl am 1f West
held four spades a nd four
hearts or any larger number
of cards in those two suits
Failing that hiS only hope
wa!i to ~et opponents to
make a mtstake ...
Alan "He started proceed mgs by quietly taktng
hi s ace of clubs and running
off four rounds of trumps,
He got club honor discards

+ K H ti :l:.!
Slll 'TII
+ A7

• 7s
•KQI 08 63
+A 9 4

Vulnerabl e Both
Deal er South

I.

West

~orth

E ast

South

P as~

~·
~ NT

1 \.t s~
l '.t ~s

:1+

Pass
Pass
I' a s~

/ ' .1 ~s

7t

Op e non~ lrad

~·

Pa s~

+Q

from Wes t and low clubs
from Ea st ·
Oswald .. A mi st ake had
not been made but th e ('~u· d s
were nght for Ca l
He
played ace of spad es. s pade
to kmg. ruff ed a s padl' Jnd
Jed hi s la st trump Poor
West was squee zed out of h1 s
Jack of spade s or h1s he&lt;lrt
protectiOn ami Amb1t1ous AI
had been rewardl'd ..

~~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
38 Ca ug ht a
ACROSS
I Main point
TD pass
5 He played 39 Likewise
Samson
40 D,C, group
41 Adolescent
11 Tardy
12 Gone above
13 Old oath
14 Abominate
15 Geological
period
16 - Michael
Vincent
17 Unclose

I poet)
18 Albee
offering
20 Sine qua 21 Befall

DOWN
I One kind
of club
2 "Oth ello "

Yestt•rday's Answer

villain
3 Seem lo gical 16 Exhaust
4 Actor Knight 19 To laugh

27 Draw ba ck

5 Distaff title
6 Sphere
of action
7 Wee bird

measure
:14 F:gypttan

8 Do some
headwork

(Fr 1
21 Unsubsta ntiated

22 Distinction
deity
23 _ alone
36 Ulster
!do a
so lo 1
25 Destiny

23 Classy
9 Answer
fellow (sL I 10 Covenants
24 lAve,
in Leghorn

zs " All That

29 Watstcoat
33 Medical

underground
group
37 Consum e

1:,-+-f--+-

Jazz"
director
26 "Your
Majesty"
27 Actress
Ella
28 Opposite
of WSW
29 Reach

:ro Grassy
ground

31 Chill

:1% Seraglio
chamber
35 Store
fodder
37 Esau's
country

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
AX\'DLBAAXR
II

to work

it:

L 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

One letter simply stands for another, In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Sing le letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
blots, Each day the code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTES
PZQ
FJT

WSGG

VJMQHVT
BZFB
- G,

BQ

PFJBG

BZV
PZVJ

YSJFC
QWFX

IV

PVFCBZH

VJBZXFCCWVJB
HQO

AFH

OA

SJGBFCCWVJB'

IFXUVX

Yestenllly's Cryptoquote: ART IS A COLLABORATION
BETWEEN GOD AND THE ARTIST, AND THE LESS THE ARTIST OOES THE BETI'ER - ANDRE GIDE

�Monday, June 7, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.,Page-12-The Doily Sentinel

Polls show

Pomeroy Council okays bond project

(Continuedfrompagel)

after editors of The Plain Dealer e)\amlned the ca ndidates thoroughly on
the Issues, looked at their records and cons idered their characters and
bac kgrounds, " the newspaper said.
- State Sen. William R.ess, a Republican write-In ca ndidate for U.S.
Senate , said he Intended to seek a temporary restraining order today
against Secretary of State Anthony J. Celebrezze for "Interfering" In his
ca mpaign . In a stat em e nt from his New Philadelphia campaign headquarters Sunda y. Ress c harged that Celebrezze has violated Ohio law by
IS&gt;ulng a directive prohibiting election booth workers from telling voters
th e names of write-In ca ndidates.
" The secretary of state has s tepped outside the law to c ha llenge our
ca ndidacy ," R.ess said in the state ment . "By doing so, he has recognized
that we have the best cha nce to defeat Howard Metzenbaum In the fall."
R.ess sa id Ohio law requires the secretary of state a nd boards of elections
to ass ist vote rs a nd supply any Information necessary for the voter.
Bul Wa yne Hlll, spokesman for the secretary of state' s office, disputed
thai . "Our 11lllng is quite proper ," HUt sa id . " Having poll workers participate .. . would be quile Improper. Once you get into tha t ... somebody could
be influe nced ."
- Walter Bec kj ord, A Republican candidate for the U.S . Senate, compiPied another ca mpaign lrek Sunday. I his lime from Cleveland to Toledo.
He began I he 124-mile ca mpaign wa lk Tuesday . In Toledo, he c riticized
Drmocralic Incumbent Sen . Howard Metze nbaum .
" He's been a disasle r ," Beckjord said . "He must be defeated."
HIKE-BIKE WINNERS-First, second and third place winners In the
lUke-Bike, girls and boys division, respectively were Edla Bailey and
Randy Hawley, Bonnie Chapman and Cary Betzlng, Jody Lynn Brown
and Andy White, Mary Jane Cun-y and David Might. Pictured are,

Area deaths
Alict&gt; johnston
Mrs . Allee .Johns!on . 81. formerly
of Bradbury. died Su nday evening
at Somerst'l. Ohio.
A member of lhc Churc h of
Christ . Mrs. Johnston was preceded In death by her husband,
Cush tcqt JohnsiOn ln 1961. Several
nif'Ces and nephew s survive.

Gra ves ide rites wUI be conducted
at 11 a .m . Wednesday at the Miles
Cemetery in Rulland. Friends ma y
ca ll atl he Hunler Funeral Home in
Ruli a nd from 7 lo 9 p.m . Tuesda y.

Tom Eggleton
William Harold "Tom" Eggle ton, 38, Rt . 1. Bidwell, was elect rocuted SaiUrday evening al his
dairy farm on White Oak Rd.
Born Ocl. 10, 1943, in GaU(a
Count y. so n of Woodrow and Marcella Green Eggle ton, who both survive a t Rt . 1, Bidwell, he was a
dairy farmer a nd altended the Bid·
well Church of Chrlsl.
He married I he former Sue Cre-

L ebanon Township tru stees a
discusswn wa s held concerning the

lllarking of cemetery plots within
Leba non Township.
Inte res ted partie s should be
reminded of the following rules
whtch were "dopted by the trustees
June , 1981 :
Perm ission mll5t be obtained (rom
th e township trustees or township
cle rk before graves may be opened
and closed.
A fee of $150 will be charged by the
trustees for di gging the grave.
Howeve r . tf lhe owners of the plot

sC'rvice.

desire to open and close said grave,
lhis fee will be wa ived .
No markers inay be laced ,
removed or changed except by permission from the trustees or clerks.
Any persons desiring to reserve
and mark cemetery plots should

l'nntact the trustees or the clerk.
The trustees adv ise that any
mark ers placed in the ccrncteric.s
without

permission

must

be

rl' JntlVCd .

Th&lt;· trustees also approved a one
year fire conlrad with the Bashan
Volunteer Fire Department for fire
protection .

By The A,.;oclated Press
acc ide nl s over the weekend, the
Highwa y Pa lmi said. Victims in·
eluded lwo motorcyclists, a moped
ride r and a pedestrian.
The palrol counts fatalities from
6 p.m . Friday lo midnight Sunday.
ThP dead:
SUNDAY
DEFIANCE - Alfred Howard , 22,
of Defiance. when his motorcyc le
collided with a ca r on a Defiance
slreel.
TOLEDO - Mark Gou ld, 19, of
Toledo, in a two-car accident on a
Lucas County road .
PAJNESVILLE- Leonard Denn is . 42, of Cleveland, ln a
motorcycle-ca r crash on Ohio 86ln
Lake Count y.
DAYTON- Dwaine Lantz, 48, of
New Lebanon. a pedestrian killed
while cro55lng a road in Montgomery Coun ty .
HUBER HEIGHTS- Robert E.
Bailey, 28, of Union, ln a one-car
accident on !nlerstate 70in Montgom ery County.
SATURDAY
PAINESVILLE - FrancL' Har-

vey, 47, of Painesville, ln a one-car
c rash on a Lake County road .
EATON- Hugh MooreJr.,25,of
Arca num , driver of a moped sti1Jck
by a car on a Darke County road.
FRIDAY NIGHT
ST. CLAIRSVll.LE - Roger D.
Rucker, 19, of Beallsville, In a two!
car accident on Ohio 149ln Belmont
Cou nt y.
STEUBENVILLE - David W.
Kinney, 40, of Ray land. In a one-car
accident on Ohio 151 ln J efferson
Counly .

End marriages
He nry Paul Price, Tuppers
P lains and Naomi Ruth Price,
Tuppers Plain, flied for dissolution
of marriage ln Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
The State of Minnesota on behalf
of Peggy Pridemore flied for support under the Reciprocal Agreement Ac t against Johnny Duane
Pridemore.
The marriage of Richard Caruthers, Jr., and Trtna Caruthers was
dls&lt;;Oived .

Apology given
In other matters, John Koebel of Columbia Gas Co.
apologized for the Inconvenience to residents ln the
laying o! a gas line on Second Street and for the
disruption when the water line broke. Koebel expressed his appreciation to the residents of Pomeroy

for their pa lie nee.
Koebel also reported that foreign gas has been
found at 418 West Main St., and 232 West Main. He
said property owners have been advised of the situation and told to contact the Department of Natual
Resources or the Bureau of Mines.
Koebel reported Columbia would monitor the areas
where the foreign gas Is escaping from time to time.
Koebel also dlscussed the gas rate hike that has
been proposed . Council has chosen to stay with the
coalition ( 11 communities combined effort to negoUa te lower gas rates) .
Koebel told council he could not see the advantage
of going with the coalition.
Bill Young, councilman, Informed Koebel thai
council would get back with hlm as soon as It meets
a nd studies the Issue.
Also meeting with council were Pam Callahan a nd
John Vale ntour, architects with Davled Reiser Architects, Athens.
Callahan Informed council that her firm Is Interested ln doing a study for the restora Uon of buildings

Geo rge Stilt, pollee c hief . reported his depart ment
drove 5.826 mlles lasl monlh, m ade 6.1 ar res ts a nd
spent $687.75 on gas fo r I he vehi cles . Mond y collected
from the parking mete" tola lcd $\.365.
J ack Krautter, slree t superlnte nde nl, Informed
council of his de partment 's actlvttles. He said he will
have 12 student s work ing for the vlllago- during the
summer .
Krautt er asked for a va riety of hand c ulling tools
which council a pproved.
Council also agreed to pure hasP c urvPJ1 1when money becomes available) 10 prolcct a road in upper
Monkey Run a rea.

entinel
1 Section , 10 Pag es
15 Cen h
A Multim e dia In c. New 1paper

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 8, 1982

Ohio voters in spotlight today

mon, Billy Neutzllng, Hugh &amp;ush, Mary Jane Cun-y, Debbie AUterton,
David Might, and Bett Krawsczyn, teacher; back, Timmy Harm,
David Karr, Scott Browning, Brent Larkins, and Bill Lehew.

500 attend open house
Approximately 500 people attended the open house al the Carleton School and Meigs Industrial
building In Syracuse Sunday.
Chrls La yh, administrator, welcomed those attending a nd lnt rroduced Judge Manning Websler,
long time me mber of the Meigs
Cou nt y Board of Mental
R.etarda lion.
Layh also introduced present
board members , Jeanette Thomas,
preside nt , Doug Little, No ra Eason, Nora Rice, Wilma Parker,
Grace Weber, and Roger Karr.
Teache rs Introduced by Layh
were Rhonda Stockwell, Laura
Fredericksen, Belt Kraw sczyn,
Sue Cu nningham and Orva J ea n
Holter, workshop specialist.
Also Introduced were Ann Hemsley, secretary, E lladene Watson,
cook, Dee Brown, Pa tty Pape and
Bonnie Freeman, a ides a long with
Paul Karr, consti1Jction supervlsor
and Frank Lee, architect, from
Marietta .

Janice Deem, chairman of the
hike-bike Introduced the winners
and presented gifts.
Belt Krawsczyn introduced the
special olymplcs participants .

SWW START- At 9:15a.m. only 17 residents In the Fourth Precinct
in Pomeroy had turned out to vote. Here, Mary Ann Hoffman marks her
ballot. The polls will remain open until7:30 p.m.

Plan soup dinner
The Forest Run United Methodist Church will have a n election
da y soup dinne r tomorrow starting
at noon and continuing through the
evening supper hour.

Emergency runs
The Rutland Emergency Squad
al 3:51 a.m. Monday took Emmett
Long from Meigs Mine 2 to O'Bleness Hospital ln Athens.
On Sunday the Pomeroy Unit at
7:38 a.m. took Joe Vadlsh, Pomeroy, to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and ttie Syracuse Unit took Bill Halley to Veterans Memorial at 1:57
p.m. The Racine Unit a t 7': 44 a.m.
took Albert HlU, Main St., to Holzer
Medical Center.

Motorists are warned of a slip on
Success Road 1County Road 46)
one half mlle south of .Joppa Rd. ln
Meigs County.
Meigs Count y s heriff's deputies
said the highway department has
erected signs urging motorists to
use extreme caution, but, danger
exists because of one la ne traffic.

ADMINIS'I'RATOR of the Cartleton School, Chrl&lt;l Layh Is shown as
he spoke to those attending the open house Sunday. The new school L&lt;l
located in the vlllage of Syracuse.

S~turday Admissions-- Norman
Lehew, Portland; Sally Goldsberry, New Haven; Roy Rutter,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Dlscharges-- Gre~tory
Roush, James Meadows, Thora
Blackwood.
Sunday Admlsslons--Plna Covert, Pomeroky; Waiter Green,
VInton.
Sunday Discharge-- Rev. W. H.
Perrin.

HOLDEN

SILVERTON, TEXAS · Hall and thunderstorms pummeling east
central Missouri and central lllinols fanned out today Into the Texas
Panbandle and southern Indiana.·
A tornado was sighted on the ground Monday near Silverton,
Texas, but no serious damage was reported. At Rosebud, Mo.,
power lines were clipped by high winds, and some trees were felled
at Maryland Heights and Morrison.
Golf ball size hall was reported at St. Louis and In parts of Central
lllinols.

Brazilian jetliner crashes
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - A Brazilian jetliner crashed early
today near the coastal city of Fortaleza, the office of VASP Alrlines
said. An airline spokesman said It was "very probable." there were
fatalities.
Spokesman Adll&lt;;On Goncalves said the Boeing 7TI carrying 128
passengers and nine crew members Ol) a scheduled filght from Rlo
de Janeiro to Fortaleza apparently crashed Into a hillside outside
Forta!eza at about I:' 55 a.m. EDT.
Goncalves said a Brazilian Air Force rescue team was on Its way
to the site, about 1,300 miles north of Rlo de Janeiro.

Hinckley's relationship one-sided
WASHINGTON- John W. Hinckley Jr., the man who shot Pres!·
dent Reagan, had no delusions about his one-sided relationship with
actress Jodie Foster and suspected that she considered hJm a "poor
little twerp," a psychiatrist says.
Dr. Park Elliott Dietz, a psychiatrist called by the prosecution,
said Monday that Hinckley "recognized throughout the relationship
(will) Miss Foster) was one-sided."
Dietz, a Harvard Medical School professor, testifies again today,
his third day on the witness stand.

MEIGS
COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 001. The lottery
reported earnings of $778,363.50 from wagering on the drawing. The
earnings came on sales of $1,037,162, while holders ofwlnnlngtickets
are entitled to share $258,798.50, lottery otnela!s said.

"Vote For A Capable Man
Who Cares About Meigs Co.
and It's People. A Man Who
Will Get The Job Done."

IOth District State Central Committee

Ellsworth·Holden

AVAilABLE LINGERIE DEPT., 2rid FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1. 77 million expected to vote

California's Brown favored

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The political spotlight focused on Ohio
voters today as they went to the polls lo nomina te ca ndidates for the
Nov. 2 general election.
Polls opened from 6:30 a .m . to 7:30p.m . toda y, but state elections
officials predicted that only one-third of the state's 5.54 million registered voters were expected to cast ballots - or about 1.77 mUllan.
The secretary of state's office said It was likely that I mUllan Democrats across the state will vote along with nearly 800,00J Republicans
and a handful of voters lor Libertarian candidates.
The Libertarian Party, which qualified for the ballot this year, Is the
first third-party vote In the state In 12 years.
The Democratic gubernatorial campaign, often marked by verbal
mudslinging, has attracted the most a ttention of any sta tewide race .
The office ls being vacated by Gov. James A. Rhodes, who ls barred
from seeking another term. He has held the governor's job for 16 of the
past 20 years.
Seeking the Democratic nomination were former Lt. Gov. Richard F .
Celeste, 44; Ohio Attorney General William J . Brown, 41; and form e r
Cincinnati City Councilman Jerry Springer, 38.
The three focused much of their campaign rhetoric on Ohio' s economic condition. The state, with an unemployment rate of 11.4 percent ,
faces a possible deficit of $1.5 button. As a result, the Legislature ls
considering the third tax Increase ln less than a year.
Celeste, a former state legislator, assista nt to the U.S. ambassador to
India and director of the Peace Corps under President Jimmy Carter,
has emphasized his variety o! governmental experience.
Brown predicted victory and said he wou ld have 15,00J supporters
helping get out the vote today.
Springer, who Is trailing Celeste and Brown, received national attention after airing a television ad In which he discussed his 1974 visit to a
Kentucky prostitute. "The primary will be won In the streets," he said.
The four Republican gubernatorial candidates include U.S. Rep.
Clarence Brown of Urbana; Seth Taft , 59, a former Cuyahoga County
commissioner and grandson of former Preside nt William Howard
Taft; conservative state Sen . Thomas Van Meter of Ashland; and
Robert Teater, on leave from his job as state natural resources
IContin ued on page 101
director.

By Associared Press
Ten sta les are holding primary cont ests today to selec t Re publican
a nd Dem ocratic ca ndidales to 11Jn ln I he Nov . 2 general elecl ion when
President Reagan's economic policies will certainl y be a n issue.
In Ca lifornia, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., th e st rong favorile to captu re
the Democratic Senate nomination, has a lready a lt ac ked Reagan's
economic policy, saying the pres ident Is gu ilt y of "mlndleS' abd ication
of responslblllty and leadership."
Brown, who succeeded Reagan as gove rno r, is running aga insl a field
tha t includes novelist Gore Vidal.
On the Republican side, 13 ca ndid ates, Inc luding Reagan's daughter,
Maureen, are seeking their party's nod. The pres lde nl has rema ined
ne utra l, but his brother, Neil, has e ndorsed San Diego Ma yo r Pete
Wilson .
The winner In November will s ucceed Sen. S. l.llayakawa, a Rcpu bli ·
ca n who Is not seeking rc-e!eclion to a second term .
Bes ides California, other sta tes selecllng Senate ca ndldales a re
Maine, Montana, New J ersey, North Da kola a nd Ohio. Gubernato rial
ca ndlda les wUI be selected in Arkansas , California . luwa, Maine. Ohio
a nd South Ca rolina .
ln the California governor's ra ce. Ll. Gov . Mike Curb a nd Atlorney
Gene ral George Deukrnejlan are ln a t oug~ GOP primary .
Tom Bradley, the mayor of Los Ange les, Is viewed as the easy winner
ln the Democratic gubernatorial race. If he wins in NovembPr, he
would be the first elected black governor ln the Un ited Sta tes.
New J e rsey has a spirited Republica n senalorla l race, with 72-yearold congresswomen MIUlcent Fenwick battling Jeffrey Bell, a 38-yearold conserva tive and a former aide lo Reaga n.
Nine Ne w Jersey Democrats a re in the primary race a nd a U of I hem
have criticized the president's economic policies. The Senale seal was
vacated ln March when Democrat Ha rrison Willia ms Jr. resigned
rather than face expulsion afte r his convic tion In thf' Abscam case.
In dhlo, Democrats and Republican a re picking gubernalorial candldales to run for retlrlng GOP Gov . James Rhodes' sea t ln November.
Rhodes has served as governor for 16 of I he las l 20 years.
'Continued on pagl' 101

Tornado touches down in Texas

Veterans Memorial

Dangerous slip

''

·•.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

Pd . Pol. Adv. by Cand.

Permission given
R.ev.Bob Pe rsons of Chester requested the use of
the stage on the upper parking lot twice a week,
afternoon or evenings for hymn sings. Council approved the request.
Council also gave approval to the chamber of com ·
merce to use the upper parking lot and Butternul
Ave., during the Blg Bend Regatta .
Charles Werry met with council concerning people
parking cars at the Intersec tion of Rock a nd Spring

Streets. Werry ssald It would be 1mposslble 10 get a
fire truck through I he area . Council agreed to mark
the area with a yellow line, a llowing no parking for
a pproximately 20 feel.
Bobby Mitchell who will be the ne w night watchman for local merchants Informed council that he
will begin his dulles on June 13. He wU I work seven
nights a week a nd will be paid by the me rcha nts.

I

MANNING K. ROUSH

VOTE FOR MANNING K. ROUSH

In the downtown .area and offe red he r servlces for
such a survey.
Callahan showed a brochure that she had done on a
renvovation study of the downtown bu~ln ess district
of Gallipolis prepared for the Gallipolis R.ela U Merchants Association.
Calla han al&lt;;O showed pictu res of Athe ns' restora·
tlon project.
Council voted to conta ct Ron Ash of the Ohio Power
Co., for a cost figure on a feasa blltly ' tudy to re m ove
elec tric wires In the downtown area.

he Daily
Voi.31,No.24
Copyrighted 1982

SPECIAL OLVMPIO&gt; \WNNERS-Speclal olympic winners who
took park In the olympics on May 22, in Athens were recognized SWlday
at the open house of the new Carleton School. Pictured are front, 1-r,
Rhonda Stockwell, teacher, Maurice Smith, Ben Skinner, Sarah liar-

Nine die in accidents
N inc people died In Ohio traffic

front 1-r, Janice Deem, chalnnan, EdJa Bailey and Randy Hawley;
back, Boanle Chapman, David Might, Jody Lynn Brown, Andy White,
Cary Betzlng, and Mary Jane Cun-y.

gar, who survi ves, In June 1964, In
Ga llipolis.
Also surviving are two so ns, William Craig and Benjamin Harold,
both at home; three daught e rs,
Spicy Ellen, Lizabeth Ann and Kat hleen Marcella, all al home; five
brothe rs , Richard and Ira, both of
Bidwell, Carl of Indianapolis, Dudley of Beckley, W.Va ., and John of
Da yton; four sisters, Mrs. John
(Judy) Haffelt of Crown City, Mrs.
David (Janel Setliff of Beckley,
Mrs. Larry (Sara 1 Batley of Chester, and Teresa Eggleton of
Bidwell.
Fune ral services w!U be held at 1
p.m . Tuesday In the Chapel lilii
Church of Chris!, with eva ngelist s
Brolh e r Lewis Michael and
Brolher W!Ula m B. Kughn official ·
lng. Burial will be in Campaign
Cem elery. Friends ma y call at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vlnlon, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
The body wlll lie In state In the
c hurch one hour prior to the

Trustees set cemetery rules
At the June 3 mee tin g of the

By KATIE CROW
An ordinance providing tor the issua nce of bonds
totaling $100,00J for Improve m e nts to the new village
hall by the village of Pomeroy was adopted Monday
night by Pomeroy Counc il .
Bonds will be In $1,00J de m onlnatlons and shall
bear Interest at the rate of five percent per annum.
Declaring an emergency, the ordinance was given
three necessary readings Monday night.
An application for a liquor license (carry out license) to Roger L. Prater, dba Praters Certified. 350
W. Main St., Pomeroy, wa.s de nied approval. CouncU
also requested a hearing to be he ld at the county seat.
Council has a quota of th ree suc h lice nses and three
have been issued.

Paid for

~

A trlo of minor mishaps were Investigated Monday by the GalllaMelgs Post of tbe state highway
patrol.
The rear bumper on a vehicle
driven by Gary Thlvener, 28, Gallipolis, was torn off when Thivener's
vehicle collided with another auto
driven by Stanford F. Powell, 48,
Point Pleasant.
The patrol said Powell was pulling from a parking lot at 10:40 a.m.
on Ohio 100, 100 feet south of Gallia
County Rd. 3, when a vehicle
parked on the side of the road obscured his vision.
Powell then edged his vehicle out

OlaDce of llbowen or ilnuldentorms 'l1lundar aad fair Friday
.... !IMutiQ. BJpiiD llle ... Lon . . 'DIIU'IIday aad IIIOitly In
.... lllli'Jidq aad ~.

scbobls this year.

i
•

to get a better view and colllded
with Thlvener's car, which caused
slight damage to both.
A truck driven by Edward John·
son, 34, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was southbound on County Rd. 50 (LeGrande
Boulevard) at 2:15 p.m., when the
driver faUed to see a cable being
strung from two power poles by
Thompson Cablevlslon, Charles·
ton, W.Va., and scratched the cab
of the truck on the. cable.
The patrol was also Investigating
a two-vehicle accident In Meigs
County at 9: 20 a.m. Monday, but
further detaUs were unavailable
this morning.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Classroom teachers In Ohio's public schools
were paid an average salary of $18,561 at the beglnnlng of the 1981-82
school year, the Ohio Public Expenditure Council says.
The council, a non-p8rtlsan private tax research organlza!lon,
said Monday the salary level Increased 9,8 perrent over the average
salary paid to teachers In the 1~ school year.
According to the councU, teachers' salaries accounted for $18
bllllon, or 62.1 percent.o f the total personnel cost for the state's public

lhroulh Saiurday:

M!Gs apparently we re trying to attack a n Israeli army convoy In
sout hern Lebanon.
The Tel Aviv command also sa id
Its jets downed two Syrian MIGs ln
northern Lebanon. The Syrian
command In Damascus confirmed
two of Its MIGs were downed In dogfights over Damour, and claimed
an Israeli Skyhawk a lso was shol
down. Israel denied a ny of its
planes was hit.
Another Syrian comm uniqu e
said Israeli jets and artlllery
blasted the Syrian-controlled Lebanese town of .Jezzln, k.llllng 20clvlllans ln the predominantly Christian
town . Jezzln Is about 12 miles east
of Sidon.
In another development, the Lebanese government a nnounced elec-

Palro} checks minor accidents triclty would be rationed because

Partly cloudy tonight. Lows near 00. Winds Ught and easterly.
Increasing cloudiness Wednesday. Highs 8().85. Chance ·of rain 20
Extended Oblo Forecast

tire CMdldoh, 26' l&lt;!iiiiiiWoo'ol, Athooo. Ohio.

The lnt11Jslon of the MlGs over
Galilee, as well as Indications that
Syrian artillery batteries were shelling Israeli forces lnslde Lebanon,
marked a major escalation of Syrian Involvement In the hostilities.
Israel launched a n Invasion Sunday to drive Palestinian forces out
of southern Lebanon and prevent
PLO artillery from shelling northern Israeli settlements. The Israeli
government calls the operation
"Peace for Galllee."
The flight of the MiGs over Ga illee was the first Incursion Into Israeli a irspace by Arab forces since
the 1973 war. The Tel Aviv command said the M!Gs were downed
by Israeli Interceptors, and an Israel radio correspondent said the

Average teacher salary $18,561

'11!urlday

•

By The Associated Press
Israeli jets shot down two Syrian
M!Gs over the Galilee region of
northern Lsrael today and two more
MlGs In dogfights over Damour, 10
miles south of Bell1lt. Israeli commandos battled north along the Mediterranean coastal highway
toward Damour and Israeli warships shelled the Palestinian
stronghold.
Palestinian broadcasts claimed
OO,OOJ Israeli troops were now In Lebanon and that they controlled the
50 miles of highway running !rom
the border north to Damour. U.N.
officials sald five Israeli brigades
plus commando untts were In Lebanon, An Israeli brigade numbers
about 3,500 men.

Weather forecast
.percent.

. Strong Republican Leadership

Israeli jets gun down two Syrian planes

,

the power plant In I he coastal town
of Jlye, 14 miles south of Beirut,
was bombed ou 1 of ac tion by Israeli
forces.
In London, Presldenl Reagan
said in a speech to Parliament that
"the fighting in Lebanon on the part
of aU parties must stop and Israel
should bring It s forces home. It was
Reagan's flrsl call for an Israeli
withdrawal , although Secretary of
State Alexa nde r M. Halg Jr. had
done so earlier.
The Palestine Liberation Organization and Lebanese radio stations
said mos t of the coastal highway
south of Belrul was in Israeli hands
followin g a landing during the night
by helicopte r-borne paratroopers
and a mphibious commandos who
overran the town of Saadiya t, 13
miles south of Be111lt.

Suspends well search
The search tor a dismembered corpse at the bottom of one of two
wells In Huntington Twp. was called off by the Gallla County Sheriff's Department this morning.
"At least we've satisfied the people out there," Sheriff James
Montgomery commented, who said an Investigation lnlo the back·ground of the alleged victim Is continuing.
Deputies were alerted last Friday to the possible prese nce of the
corpse, tentatively Identified as a young glrlln he r mid-teens from
the Columbus area, who may have been Uvlng In GaUia County
several years ago. The wells are located on Scott School Road,
several mUes southwest of VInton.
The VInton Volunteer Fire Department assisted ln the search by
draining one well, located on the Noah Brewer farm, and on the
other nearby well, on property owned by Mead Paper Co.
It's believed by the department the girl was living In tbe area with
a man and his wife, and reportedly suddenly disappeared. At the
time, because of the girl's transient background, the disappearance
wasn't considered unusul\l.
Reports of the girl's possible murder and her location In one of the
wells began circulating about a year ago. Concern was expressed by
area resident~. leading to the draining operation .
Despite the negative results, Montgomery said this morning an
Investigation will continue with the assistance of the Bureau of
Criminal Investiglition. Official~ Indicated a probe Into the suspected victim's background was to to get underway .

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