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•

at y

e
Vol:at,No.u
Oopyrtchtecl 198%

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enttne
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 1, 1982

I

1 Section, 12 l'aKe•
15 Cents
A Multimedia lm·. Nt•wspa per

Reagan sees·no change
in. . . . ,_u_,._, .S. fo~e~gn policy
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres Inot done anything to warrant being
charged with a crlme, even though
dent Reagan says he calls the shots
the prosecutor said there there
on fore1gn policy and "there Is golng to be no change" despite outgowere "a disturbing number" of
lng Secretary of State Alexander
links to undenrorld figures.
M. Halg's charge that It Is off"I think It would be the most uncourse.
fair thing In the world for anyone to
"I think we are progresslllg very
think he has been anything but unwell w1th what It Is we are trying to
fairly and unjustly accused, •• Reaaccomplish," Reagan said Wednesgan said of his labor secretary ..
day night during his first televised
He also said he wUI fight for connews conference In seven weeks.
gres~lonal passage of his proposed
But the president again declined
tax credits for parent.~ of children In
to discuss thf reasons for Halg' s reprivate schools. "lt' s simple falrness" to give them a break since
slgnat1on la~t Friday, saying the
they also such also pay taxes to supAmerican people had been told everyt.hlng about It that they needed
port the public school system. he
to know.
~ld.
.
Reagan disputed suggestions
The president said the nation wa~
that the United States knew In ad- A "fortunate" that former Trea~ury
vance of Israel's Invasion of Le- 1J Secretary George P . Shultz has accepted his nomination to succeed
banon and approved of II. "I've
given no green light whatsoever" to
Halg. He said Shultz "Is a man with
the lsrae!L~. he said.
great experience and a man of unHe also made clear he Is giving
questioned Integrity."
serious thought to running for a seIn an obvious response to Halg's
cond term In 1984 because "It would
crltlcl~m that Reagan has wanbe unlike me to think that I would · dered from the policy course he es·
walk away from an unflnL~hed
tabllshed when he took office, the
job."
president said he L~ satisfied he l~
While he said It L~ too early to
meeting his goal~.
make up his mind, he joked that he
"There Is going to be no change In
has advl~ his aides "they should
policy." he said. "Foreign policy
not waste their time reading the
comes from the Oval Office and
help-wanted ads."
with the help of a fine secretary of
Reagan said he was "~ticking
state."
with" Labor Secretary Raymond
While sources close to Halg are
Donovan after a special prosecutor
saying he feels he was forced Into a
found Montlay that Dononvan had
(Continued ori Page 7)

'

WILL REMAIN - President Ronald Reagan said Wednesday night
during his press conference In Washington he was "sticking with" Labor
Secretary Raymond Donovan found inQocent Monday of any wrong
'·
doings.

THAT WAY- President Reagan points to a questioner during a news
conierence In the East Room of the White House Wednesday evening. The
president said the resignation of Secretary of State Alexander M. Halg Jr.
h~s not Impaired U.S. foreign policy and added "there Is going IU he no
change" In course because of that resignation. ( AP Laserphoto)

•
Fedetal tax cut effective today; state tax hike ts
too
~

Ohto· treasury will benefit
most /rom ·;82' taX 'reduction
,.

,., I

.. .

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S049

so 74

$8 00

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99

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17~

1600

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21 20

24 60

1.82

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~2

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46 40

3.68

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200

3 R4

I.

76

.-~

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SO.I5

400

6 16

10 14

8270

14 10

4.62

~

9 46

14 19

11140

106 20

5.87

600

12 16

18 24

1~4

40

141 10

6.62

$100

S042

S063

$2~

$2 10

SO.I9

~~

87

I 31

~90

8 40

1.06

200

I 37

206

300

3 ~3

400

6 38

9

~

9Q8

600

700

II 20

II

~0

5.01

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33

~0

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2.81

13 62

8~

20

17 40

3.26

II 78

17 .67

116

~0

104 40

6,21

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23.07

·~-80

137 40

5.71

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62

93

4~

380

.39

I 12

168

II~

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.64

300

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2180

26 30

0

400

H~

8 48

49 40

4~

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1.37

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74 40

6180

2.43

600

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104 30

94 00

4.78

700

14 63

2201

)37

~

124 60

-.

TAX CHANGES- Much of the lnc'ome tax cut given to taxpayers by
the federal government
be eaten up by a 50 percent increase In Ohio
taxes as shown In the chart. (AP Laserphoto)

will

\

---··

... ......

SIOO

300

.

,_,IT_
., ...__...
$760

~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Much of what the federal government gave
back to taxpayers In an Income tax cut todal(., the state government took
with a 50 percent lncrea~e In Its Income tax rates.
The U.S. tax cut averaged 10percent. For the average married taxpayer
with two children who earns just over $24,1m annu(llly, the reduction wUI
work out to about $6 a week, federal official~ said.
The federal cut Is the second Installment of a multi-year tax reduction
that wUI have trlmmed Individual tax rates by an average of 23 pen;ent
when It becomes fully effective In 1984. The first cut took effect last Oct. 1,
and the third Installment Is scheduled for July 1, 1983.
In Ohio, meanwhile, the state Income tax rate was boosted to help make
I!P a $13 billlon deficit that had been projected for the state government's
budget by June 30, 1983.
Beginning today, IndividuaL~ In Ohio will pay 50 perc;ent more on Income
through at least March 1983.
The Increase actually Is 25 percent for all of1982 and 12.5 percent for 1983.
. But to collect that amount during the last half of this year and the first three
months of next year, the state's employers have been Instructed to withhold the ad~tlonal 50 percent.
In addition to the surcharge, two new upper Income brackets were
created for 1982 and 1983. For people earning $!ll,OOO to $100,1m, the tax Is
$2,300 plus 4 percent of the amount above $8(},000. For people earning more
than $100,000, the tax Is $3,100 plus 5 percent of the amount over $100,1m.
The current tax bracket~ stop at $40,1m and a 3.5 percent tax.
According to state tax officials, the new surcharge and the new brackets
are expecteft to raise about $510.8 million by June 30.
The state has made a number of other tax changes. The sales tax Is
dropped for the end product of home repairs and remodeling. A reduction
In the utilities excise tax rate frorfl4.5 percent to 4.25 percent wa~ postponed until 1983.
The -corporate franchise trigger tax, a 5.75 percent surcharge, L~ extended through June 30.
Meanwhile, the number of newly unemployed Ohioans filing their first
claims for jobless benefits dropped during the week ending June 26, the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services said today.
A total of 31.~5 _people !Ued for ~ne!lts under all programs, state and
federal, down 6.1 percent from .the previous week's total of 33,243, said
Gary E . Stein, bureau admlnlstrjltor.
-

-

F..,IITIHI

.

.

Reagan officials believe extra
money should spark recovery
WASHINGTON (API- Paycheck.~ are a little faller today as workers
start collecting I he second Installment of the largest tax cutin history. If
the Reagan admlnl.~lratlon·~ fort&gt;Casts are on target. the extra money wUI
spark a recovery from the worst rece-;slon since World War II.
The reduction In the tax withheld from Individual paycheck.~ wUI range
from 40 cents for the $100-a-week earner to $13.40 at the $700 level and
higher. The Treasury Department flgu~ a ty pical married worker with
typ children and the median family Income of about $24.1m a year will
lake home an extra $6 a week.
In many cases. the higher Social Security taxes that beganJan.1 and the
effect s of Inflation, which nudg~ workers Into higher brackets a~ their
lncom~ rl~e. wUI leave taxpayers no better off than they were.
But President Reagan' s advlsers are counting on that extra money and
the 7.4-percent Increase In Social Security benefits taking effect today to
set off a consumer buying spree that would quickly work It s way through
the economy. firing up Idle factories and slashing the high unemployment
rate.
As he often do~. Reagan promised to defend the third In~! aliment of the
tax cut -scheduled for July 1, 1983- from effons to change II. "These tax
Incentives must be preserved. They are essential to l a~li ng economic
recovery." he said.
As for So!:lal Security, Reagan referred to his campaign pledges of 1900 ·
that "we'll protect those benefits and we will protect the Integrity of Social
Security. We are honoring these promises."
Despite hl~ stalement, Reagan's aides circulated budget-cutting proi\os·
als among congressional leaders at private negotiations ear lier this year
that calletl for delaying the Social Security co~t-of- llvlng Increase until Oct.
1. and limiting It to 4 percent.
The administration expected some of that economic recovery to happen
Ia•t year when businesses began receiving Ulelr s hare of the tax reduction
retroactively. But business Investment Is lagging far behind what had
been anticipated, and lor the tax cut to produce the hoped-for results w1U
require consumers to do what bu slnes~ did not do.
The new tax reduction Is• the second Installment of a multi-year cut
enacted last year that , when fully effective In 1984, w111 s lash Individual tax
rates by an average of 23 percent. Taxes were cut by a bout 1.25 percent and
withholding rates reduced by 5 percent last Oct. 1. The third stage wUI be a
]()-percent reduction In wlthholdlngs onor/uly 1. 1983.

Commis·sion. leases county property
The Meigs County COmmission·
ers decided Tuesday to lease .
county . prope'rty OJ) Mulbefry
Heights 'to the Metis ·eoonty' Elderly H~sjng Corpora~. ,
.· The Elderly HQUslng Corporatlon, a non-~ftt organlzat1on,
plans on bulldlng 46 housing units
for eldefly and harjdlcapped per· .
~~ on the site.
.
•

Housing and Urban Development.
: Under the l~:ase, the corporation
must renovate and feitore the old
• Children's Home building on the
11lte while keeping Its current arch!tect.ural design.
.Exact terms, Including paymepts and length of the Iea~e wtU
be drawn up by the count¥ prosecu. tor and approved by the
Commissioners mllde the lease commissioners.
·
.
'
contblgen~ on approval of a SectiOn
In other action, the commission
loan by the · DePartment of awarded a bid for bltlrnonlous

:m

materials to Asphalt Materials Co.
of Marietta. One other firm entered
a bid for the materials.
Paul Barnett, . &amp;um Addition
Rd., was .named by the commissioners to serve on the county's 648
Board. He will Ill! the unexpired
four-year term of Paul Kloes. His
term end~ June 30, 1985.
'
Judge .John Bacon and judgeelect Charles Knight discussed the
1983 department budget request for
. (Coatlaued on Page 7)

Police' p·robe
$3,000 s-hoplifting .th.ejt,
.

Pomeroy ,P ollee are otlerlng are-.

to anyone tirerlng lnfonna·
t1aa Jeadlna to the arreet llld
ward

convtcUon of

~

Wbo . lto)e

• $3,tm WUrth of jewelry Tueiday
from KI&amp;C Jew E'en, 212&amp;. Mala St.

Chief Georae Stitt saki

·the
a slick IIIIOpllftiiJi
ICbame. AD Ulllalolm !IIQIIber al

thleW!s

~

u.t

l!lltered the _stpre 'nles-

•

' clerk busy,
djly. While' one kept the
anothel' shopllfted the jewelry, he .

s8td

A ladles' rq With a blue sappblre setting and ~ dla·
monda was taken,
illued at
appniilmately fl'illo. he said ,Alao
missing are twelve blue sapphire
rtnp, valuedat~$100
eacb, ' a1Qna wtth ~ auld
challll.
.

All ' Information glven to .pollee

wUI be keF confidential, Stitt said.
The amount _of the reward depends
~n the-lnfonnat1on offered, he said.

The pollee also reported that a
concrete saw. belonging to · the
Plillllp-Binaclo Constroctlon Com~. working at Krogers, ·was

stolea__overnlgbt. Both matters ue
under Investigation.

· '

f1101~ -FIRST PHASE-Workers on East · tlon bi fomer-Oy. The spok81maa for &amp;be ....... laid
Mallllla'eet yfllterday were flnlshln&amp; up CC)DI&amp;rucllon ...., work on the firM phMe of the syltem II Jlelrilc
oa p.n oUhe seweuystem cUrrently lliiCl!!r lnlt•lla..
complet~.
·
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Commentary

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Ohio

8Faves; rally frQin .6-5 deficit;
·Giants-topple .Reds again, 7-6

- ' ·I
'i
Page-2-The Dally~ ~

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, -ohio .:
' Thursday, July 1, 1982
-;.

.

. '-:
...~

Bad law, wise policy_______.-:.J;.;;,;a.;.;.;rn.;..es..;.j_.K_t....."lp_at_ric----t~.:

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Coort SlrHI
PtJmeruy, Ohio

Ut-BIZ·ZlH
[)EVOTEDT01'HE INTEREST OJ.' TilE M•: IGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publlt Mr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A»Jillan l Yublhthet/fuatrullt'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
~ewsEdl lor

.

A MEMBER of Ttw A!&gt;t~lK'Ialt'd Pret~~. lnlund Dally Prn,~ AM!ludatlon .nd tiM
Amerk1111 Nnnpa!JU Publi~hen Ax~ociallun .
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION an' wt'l('umrd . Tbey lihould bt:-IW tlulo 3tO wtmb luta«. All
lelkn are 11ubj«l lu edltlfl!i: •nd mu11 bt: Nlj!:nt"d with u..mr, addrn11 tnd teltpltont
numbtr . Ne urula:necllt't~n will bt publiJiht-d. Ultrn Khould b.. in good la111te, MddRNSirq,!
ls!i\n, IUJI ~ullalllln .

Assumptions wrong,
goals remain same
The Labor Department made an effort In 1970 to look Into the decade
ahead. As any forecaster must, It based Its forecast on certain assump-_
!ions, any one of which could trip It up.
'
One did: "Fiscal and monetary pollcles will be able to achieve a satisfactory balance between low unmployment rates and relative price stability
without reducing the long-term economic growih rate." ·
On reflection, several morals can be drawn from such Innocence, one
being that youI can possess more data than a confetti factory ha~ bits of
paper but If your assumption Is wrong Uten so Is your forecast
It happens ~ryday. No forecast can be made without assumptions,
and In makln
assumption~ the forecaster'.• bias almost Inevitably
Intrudes. Ask Ron d Reagan's advisers.
The president and his staff assumed that spending and tax cuts would
spur the private sector of Ute economy, reduce the size of Ute govefnment
and put more pecple to work rebulldlng Industrial America.
So far It hasn't happened. The private sector has shrunk, the publlc ha~
continued to grow. Unemployment has soared. Private lndu.~try bas I&lt;iwered rather than raised Its commitments to new capital project~ .
Difficult as It ls for the president to realize his goals- not to say that he
won't succeed - It Is that 12-year-old assumption by the Labor Department that best Indicates the nation's frustrations.
Fiscal stabWty remains just a goal. Monetary stablllty continues to be
elusive. Unemployment Is near record high levels. The stability of prices Is
debatable. Economic growih has actually ceased.
'
In short, the assumption~ made back In 1970 have all turned·out to be
wrong, although they hav~ been the top economic goals of every admlnbtratlon - Nixon, Ford, Carter and Reagan - since then. Dressed differently, the major economic problems of 1970 are the same loday.
It goes back before Uten too. Lyndon Johnson's Great Society depended
on all the a~sumptlons made by the Labor Department 11 Johnson failed to
accomplish his goals, Ute failures can be related to the fl'!Cal-monetary
war that broke out during his administration.
John Kennedy fared better; some headway toward economic stability
was achieved, but economic historians tend to say that Kennedy Inherited
an Ideal situation, an Indolent economy wafting to be spurred after three
~stons during the Eisenhower admlntstration.
Defenders say Reagan has the answer. They say his goal of redirecting
funds to the private sector, stlll not fully Implemented, will provide the
answer. But, Increasingly, critics ask when.
Critics argue that so far the Reagan formula hasn't resolved much, that
for example ls has merely exchanged Inflation for unemployment To
w111ch Reagan's defenders reply: When the private sector begins rebuildIng, unemployment will come tumbllng down.
Delaying that rebuild!J)g, however, are some of the most persistently
111gh Interest rates Ute nation has ever known. So high, In fact, that an
Investor can earn more by buying bonds than by building a factory.

I

WASHINGTON - To read- the
Supreme Court's opinion In the
Texas school case Is to hear the
clocks ticking backward. The same
words and phrases that 28 years ago
both flawed and illumined Brown vs.
Board of Education are echoed In
this month's Plyler vs. Doe. The outcomes are Identical: bad law, wise
pollcy.
In the historic school segre,satton
case of 1954, _the question was
whether the 14th Amendment
prohibited the states from maintaining racially separate public
schools. On ~e demonstrable
record; the framers of the 14th never
· had intended any such thing . . in
states both North and South, and in
the very capital ,of the nation,
segregated schools had been
operating for 88 _years 'Mth judicial
approval.
But the Supreme Court of 1954,
speaking throilgh Chief Justice Earl
Warren , looked at school
segregation and said this is immoral; therefore it is unconstitutional. Proceeding from that
non sequltur, the court found
humane reasons - the importance
of education, the hearts and minds &lt;:l
the children- to Justify judicial intrusion into political decisions that
until that moment had been regar·
d~s the_responsibility of the states •
respectively.
The more things change, etcetera,
et cetera. In the Texas school case
· on June 15, the question was whether
the state could deny pubic education
to the children of "undocwnented"
aliens or impose tuition charges for
their schooling. The state advanced
the rational argument that persons
who are present in texas unlawfully
have no claim upon the lawful
residents of the state. Moreover, the
tax funds that must be spent on the
children of illegal aliens thus
diminish the swns that might other·

ThaT Ttle &amp;c~OoL&amp; Thac~
CReaT;o~ iSM, I-I ave CIIRi~liaN
"ThxTBOOK~

PRA~,

aMD ORGQNiZeD

we Doti'T NeeD a GHtJRCI-I!

.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Budget
Director David A. Stockman says
he's trying hls hardest to hold down
costs around his own office. But
what can you do when the landlord
keeps raising the rent?
These are hard Urnes, It seems,
even for budget cutters.
Stockman seemed apologetic In
explaining to Congress why it will
cost more to run his Office of Management and Budget next year
than thl~ year.
The budget official was asked by
a House Appropriations subcommittee to defend his request for fiscal year 1983 for $36.1 million - up

high over Cincinnati Redll Rafael Landeltoy !lfter completing front end of
double play In fourth lnntag Wednelday nJgbt In San Francisco. Sularz
fielded Reds' Dave Cooeepcton's bard grounder near. second and threw
him out at first. (AP Laserpboto)

WASHINGTON (AP) -Pity the

~oday

in history

· Today Is Thursday, July 1, the l82nd day of 1982. There are 183daysleft
In the year.
,
.
Today's hjghllght ln1llstory:
On July 1, 1969, Britain's Prince Charles was Invested as the Prince of
Wales.
.. -....,..
On this date:
In 15:1), Sir Thomas More was tried for treason In England for retuslng
the Oath of Supremacy.
In 1962, the Atran states of Ruanda and Burundi gained their
Independence.
.
In 1968, the United States, Britain, the Soviet Unton and 58 bther nations
·signed a treaty ID curb the spread of nuclear weapons.
·And_ln 198), West Gennan Cbanceiior Helmut Schmidt ended talks with
Soviet INde' Leonid 8Jftnev Without galnlnf a pledge of Soviet troop
-wltbdrawal.s from Atghanlsi$J1,
·
.
·
·
Ten yeats ago: Former Attorney General Johit Mitchell, who bid
stwPed down ID become President Nixon's re-election camp&amp;lgn chief,
resigned from that post to re-enter private law practice. . ·
Five years ago: ln an addi'efis ID the NAACP In St. Louis, Secretary of '
State Cyrus Vance saki that U.S. refatiOIII With South :Africa would continue to suffer unless that nation look 11ep1 to end 'radalllelli'ecatlon.

t'.

economic times are bad, the poilUclans pummel it When Urnes are
good, lhli politicians Ignore lt.
These days, the nation's central
bank Is not being Ignored. But don't
feel too muell pity for the Fed. At
least, its members dOil't have to defend 111gh lliterest rates and UDf!!Dploymentbeforethevotersthlsfall.
The fee!lng around Congress Is
that the bank makes an !ileal whipping boy. It's convenient ID pick on
and dciesn'fttght back.
By law, the Fed acts ·lridependently of Congress an~ 4he White

~

last. They' are both "difficult," but
she was difficult on the right side
(for the right wing) . The two could
not last on the same team; so Haig
had to go.
Over a year ago, in April1981, I
wrote: "The same Reaganite~ who
hwniliated Kissinger at the 1976
Repbulican Convention in Kansas
City are ac111ng to bring down Haig."
At that time, the right-wingers' campaign had the paradoxical effect of
promoting, briefly, another rightwing bogey, George Bush, to the
non-existent post of "crisis

manager."
This time, by a similar irony, one
irrunediate effect of the right·

wingers' campaign is to remove a
supporter of Israel at a crucial
moment when old foes of Haig like
Ambassador Kickpatrick and jour·
nalillt William Safire need ·all the
help available to counter Caspar
Weinberger. The irony Is underlined
by the fact that, in the middle of the
Beirut crisis, Haig and Safir bad a
long-delayed and cordial luncheon
on the day before Haig was fired .
Such immediate disadvantages
seem worth it, to the Right, for the
chance of punishing Haig as "soft"
on Taiwan, m ai11\B talks; on .
economic reprisals lagainst tbe
Soviet Union and on partnership
with Europe. An administration in

which AI Haig is considered a
dangerous leftist has gone so far
right as to be off the map- literally.
We have moved away from our o~
allieS, in Europe, in Japan, in China,on the. assumption that this.
strengthens us. Haig, whatever his
flaws or inconsistencies, did
recognize that real strength lies in
our network of world friends111ps, 1\11
of which are endangered · by the ·
policies he opposed.
Haig was, by all reports, hard to
get along with. But it will be even,
harder to get along without allies, a
lesson Ronald Reagan seems ..incapable of learning. And who, . if
Reagan wanted to learn .it, is left to·
teach ·him now?

from the $33.8 million of the current president's 1983 budget he's been
fiscal year, which e!ld~ Sept 30. , distributing,
"Unfortunately, reductions in
Aiia he's been holding the line on
other OMB expenses wUI be wiped travel expenses.
out by Increases In rent," he griped.
Stockman's written budget exThe General Services Adinlnts- planation breaks travel Into two
tratlon, the government's landlord, \,.clear-cut categories: "'n·avel and
has boosted rent In the Executive transportation of persons,
Office Building from $13.48 per $370,00!," and "transportation of
square foot to $29.34 per square things, $2,00!."
foot
The qext energy c~~sts may be
That, Stockman observed, is on closer than we think.
the order of a '118 percent lncrea~e.
At a Senate Governmental AfStockman said he had tried his fairs Committee hearing tile other
best to cut corners -like squeezing day, Sen. Carl Levin, D·Mich., was
some workers Into smaller quar· criticizing the Reagan admlnlstraters and reducing the number of tlon' s plan. to dismantle the Energy
free and hardbound copies of the

Department and make further ,
spending cuts In energy programs.
"There has been a catastrophic
drop ... ,' Levin began.
. ,..
But he was Interrupted mld~ent·
ence by a temporary power failure
as the ceiling lights In the hearing ·
room blinked out - as if on cue.. .
"There ha~ already been a catas-.•
trophic drop," he said. "Energy al'
ready has dropJl!!d."
By the time
the
audience
had
;
.
stopped laughing, Ute lights llad •
:
lllckertil back on.
"I never used to believe In ESP," :
Levin said. "I may change my ~

CINCINNATI (AP) - Johnny
Bench, at 34, l~ going through his
first hardship year In the major
leagues, and only hls second poor
season In 14.
"Sooner or later, I know I'm goIng to get my batting eye b~k."
satd Bench before the Cincinnati
Reds opened their current West
Coast tour.
The former All Star catcher, now
pi'Sytng third base, was hitting only
.'Hl with 18 runs and five home
runs.
Manager Jotm McNamara said
tllat Bench has to 111t If the team l'
going anywhere. They were tied fo'r
last place in the National League
West, 14'n games behind the
Atlanta Braves.
'"I don't resent his saying that I
tlrtnk Mac feels very·strongly that
l'r'n an integral part of the team.
EverybodY has to do it But someone-like me bas to show the way,"
said Bench.
·• On the general critlclqm of his
tlilrd base play, he said: ·
&gt;,"I never said I'd be Brooks Ro))lhson, or even Ray Knight, when I
made the switch. I feel that I've
made the adjustment. I've made
plays I'm pleased with," he said.
The Reds traded Knight to Houston to make room for Bench, who
llas given up catching.
"I can't call what I've done an
etnbarrasssment. If you 111t, the
other things aren't noticed. This
hu been a learning experience. it
still Is. I realize pecple look at m~
more critically than others,:•Bench
said of his seven errors, one a

B A8110Ciated Press
From ythe time the pitch- left
Shane Rawley's hand until the ball
reached the plate, Gorman Thomas had a radical change of mind.
With the score tied 7-7 and Cecil
Cooper on first base 1n the 12th Inntng, the powet-111ttlng Thomas intended to lay down a bunt to get the
winning run to second base.
throwing error that lost .a,p extra
In the fraction of a second it took
Inning game.
the ball to reach him, however, the
Bench said he doesn't II~ ten to tile Milwaukee center fielder decided
booS.
to swing away, and the result was a
"Hey, I've been booed before. Re- two-run homer that gave the Brewmember 1971 - after I asked for ers a 9:7victory over the New York
my first big contract The big figure
Yankees Wednesday night.
wa~ $500,000 for three years. I
"Sure I wa~ looking for a bunt,"
asked. I didn't get it The word got said Thomas, whq now had 19 hoout and they let me have It," said mers thl' season. "I -thought I
Bench of the fans .
mlgllt lay down a drag bunt with
Bench said he has no regrets t.he situation Ute way it was."
about giving up catching but would
Thomas said titat when he saw
go behind the plate If tile team Rawley's mediocre fastball, "I was
needed him then:.
surprised. 1 was looking for a
"Really, I don't ever want to , breaking ball. When I saw the fastcatch again. I don't even· have ball, I just had to swing away."
equipment any more," he said.
Rollle Fingers, whO had gtven up
"The coaches use my glove."
a walk, two hits and sacrifice Illes
"I couldn't have taken It physi- by Willie Randolph and Dave Wincally. My legs couldn't have taken field tn the bottom of the ninth, got
It My arm probably would have credit for his fifth victory in 10 dec!required surgery. That would have slons. Jamie Easterly got a save,
required a year for rehabilitation." holding tl)e Yankees scoreless In
Bench said he would consider the 12111 after they loaded tile bases
early retirement If things continued
to go badly.
"Nobody would have to tell me.
I'd volunteer. My contract runs
through 11ll!5 but It's not guaranteed
TORONTO (AP) - You know
for that long. Why would I quit?
It's
not vintage Sandra Post simply
Three possibilities: poor health,
•
by
reading
the list of leading money
poor performance, or obviously,
winners
In
women 's pro golf.
tile club's request," he said.
Consistency
had been her forte
&gt;Bench said he was hopeful that
for
13
years
on
the Ladles Profes·
t)le Reds would turn around as a
Golf
Association
tour. She
stonal
team this sea~on.
was
one
of
the
toP.:
20
money
"Everybody ha~ to start playing
winners
from
1974
fo
1981:
reaching
up to hls full potential - and that
hasn't -happened," he said. "We're a peak In 1979 when slle pocketed
using a · lot of people. You watch $178,750, second best on the tour.
But the 34-year-old native of Oakthese kids ·mature, but tHey have
ville,
Ontario, hasn't been making
their off days," he said.
the shots thl~ year. Slle has won just
$10,764 In 14 starts.
Post has been hitting the ball well
thl' week, however, In tunlngupfor
the start today of the $Dl,&lt;XXJ Peter
We:MemDivWH
Jackson
Classic, the lone Canadian
45 29
.ID3 ATlanta
·.u 32
.~
J
San Diego
stop on the LPGA tour. A field of 112
41 · n
.526
6
'-""
contests the 72-hole event at the
~
42
.450 11 ¥.!
San Frlllehco
31 44
.Ul H~
Cincinnati
.par-72, 6,071-yard St George's Golf
31 4-4
.413 H~
Hou~IOII
and Country Club course.
Wednea4Q''a Gamel
Plttflburgh 7, Chicago l
JoAnne Carner, the all-time leadMontreal 4, New York 1
Ing
money winner with career
Philadelphia 6, SJ . Louis J
Atlanta 5, HOUlton 4
•/
earnlngs,of more than $1.2 million
/AI A'ill"" 1&gt;4, San D..., H .
and top performer this year with
San Frandsoo 7. ClnclnrwtU fi, n in·
· $162,588, was the pre-tournament
n.ndaJ'• G.IIDlm
favorite to cop the $30.~ winner' s
Pittsburgh /Baumaarten O.lJ at Chtcaao
(Bird 4-81
share.
New York tScon :HiJ at MoruruJ
Her chi~ rival~ could be long-ball
(Sandl'!non 6.!'!!, tn)
&amp;
Qn1y J&amp;mel ,.mectuled
111ttlng Pat Bradley, a three-time
f'rtllay'a GU'MII
winner this year, and hot-shooting
Montre&amp;l at Pllt0Jrgh. tnJ
ctndrmatl at Atlanta, !nl
Jan Stephenson, who carded a 68

with one out
Tigers 12, Red Sox 3
Detroit, which had won only one
of Its previous 15 games, blasted
first-place-Boston for 17 hits, lncludlng three-run homer and a runscoring single by Mike Ivle.
Lance Parrish added three RBI
with a double and a single for the
Tigers, while Jim Rice and Reid
Nichols accounted for Ute Red Sox
run~ with homers.
Rangers 5, Angels 3
Texas defeated California, the
West Division leader, on Bill Sam·
pie's two-out, three-run homer in
the bottom of Ihe ninth Inning.
Don Aase, 3-3, was only one out
away from hl' fourth save when the
Rangers started their winning
rally. Mike Richardt hit an Infield
single and Bill Stein walked before
Sample's game-winning blow_over
the left-center field fence.
MlU'Iners 10, Blue Jays 4
Rlc111e Zisk hit two two-run homers and Dave Henderson blasted
another two-run shOt as Seattle
overpowered Toronto.
AI Cowens went 4-for-5 for the
Mariners and Jim Beattie went the
distance, allowing nine hits.
"I put more pressure on myself
than 1 shOuld. But If thls ballclub Is
going to be near tite top t111s year.

three runs in the eighth and one In
tile ninth.
EKpos 4, Mets I
Tim Wallach and Gary Carter hll
bases-empty home ruru; off Pete
Falcone and Bill Gullickson com·
bined with former Met Jeff Rear·
don for a five-111tter that gave the
Expqs their triumph over New
York:
Gu llickson gave up all the Mets
111t s and fanned 10 bailers before
leaving in the eighth Inning. Wllh
the-base-; loaded and one out, Reardon got Wally Backman to hit Into a
double play, then brccz&lt;.'d through
the ninth for his 13th save.
Dodgers lH, Padres 1-6
Dusty Baker' s grand-slam. a
fifth -inning.homcr wttlrh just ma nag&lt;.'d to make it over the railing
down the left field line, gave Bob
Welch and the Dodgers a victory In
the opener, then Ter ry Ke nnedy' ~
three-run pinch-homer a nd Broder·
Irk Perkins' solo shot enabled the
Padres to come eway with a spilt.
Rick Monday of the Dodgers hll ho. mers in hl&lt; lir' t two a t-bats aga inst
winner Eric Show before San Diego
began it s co meback.

mind. "

House In setting monetary policies tone and the Fed marches to the
that have a crucial Impact on lnfla. tune," says Robert Weintraub,
tlon, lnierest rates, unemployment chief Republican economist for the
and the nation's overall economic JolntEcpnomlcCornriutteeofConhealth.
gress and a long· time Fed watcher.
But by custom, the bank doesn't
Officials at the Central bank disget too far dllt of step with the pres~ · agree, conteninng the bank is not
dent or the Congress, w111ch can under the thumb of a president or
shorten the ban If's leash whenever Congress. But the bank is not free of
It wishes. The polltlclans don't repolitical: tethers, either, they
omlnd voters of this fact when the concede.
Fed's policies produce economic
"There's !I limit to which the~
pain, whether tnten)tonally or can go within the political syS!em,"
tnadverdently.
says one bank official, wllo did not
" Some monetary experts believe want ·hls name USEid. "If It goes too
the ootton of an lndepeiulent Fed Is far, Congress will do something
a myth. ''The White House~ the about 'it,'' he said, adding that the

Majors
'By The hlodatd rn.
.\MERifAN IJ!:AGUE
F.u&amp;oem DlvWott
WL
Fd.GB
44 2!1
.11)3
Bo§ton
U 31
.m 2
MilwaukeE'
:IIJJ
.5.'!}5
Ballln10rt'
'J1 33
.5~
5Y.r
l)
36
.501
7
Clevdand
l1 11
.m sy,
New York
3140
.mu
Toronto
W«*nDtv. . .

~

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"""'"

.
Fed ,may now be testing where tbat ·

limit Is.
I
In the meantime, the politicians ;
arehavlng'ltbothwaysandtheFed '
comes up a double loser. When ~
things work out, the White }louse ;
and the Congress take the credit; :
when things sour, It's all the fault of •
the bank, w,hich ts personal~ ;
through Its ehalrman, currently .:
Paul Volcker.
·
:
Ever since 1'\Qoald-Reagan came .;
to town, the Fed bas been folloWing ·
hls wish to fight Inflation With a :
tight-money P!llicy whlcli means ~
slowing down the growth oi money •
and credit In -the economy 10 bring ;

r----------, r--.....:..---.-----.r==::--,;._---.:::ou:;t more,stable wages and priCes. i

a

I've got to have a ·better second Chicago for the second night In a
half," 'aid Zisk, who Is hitting .T/5 ro~v:
with seven ?omers and 22 RBI.
. flm Laud~er and John Cas tlno
A s 4, Royals U
had 1 un- scorm ~ doubles to highMall Keough blanked Kansas light the Tw ins thr ee- ~n fifth InCity on seven hit s and Joe Rudi
n ~ n g. and Bobby Cast illo got the
twice knocked in the~y Rickey vtctory wtth relief help from Ron
Henderson for Oak land.
.
Davl,.
Henderson singled tn the ftrst, , - - - - - - - - - - - - stole his 73rd base in 78 games, advanced to third on a groundout and
scored on Rudl' s •Ingle. Henderson
scored again In the third on Rudl 's
short fl y that Royals second baseman Omx Concepcion caught with
531 JACKSON PIKE ·R1.35 WESl
Phone 446- -4524
his back to the infield. '
'·
BAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
Indians 9, Orioles 0
All SEA TS JUST S UXJ
Von Hayes drove In three run'
with three 111t s and Rick Sutcliffe
allowed four hil s In seven Innings of
shutout pitching to lead Cleveland
over Baltimore.
Sutcliffe gave hils in the fifth and
sixth innin gs and two more in the
seventh before leav ing the game.
Ed Whit son finlshed with two hit less Innings for lite Indian,.
Hayes singled home a run in the
second, completed a four-run outburst. in the seven th with another
ltt \UHH '._.
IllS I
RBI single and.added a run-scoring
\Uillt
•
•
double in the ninl h.
,.....
1111 / \lll•
1"1;
/ I /(/(/ """ ll
Twins 4, White Sox 3
.
Minnesota won only it s 20th game ·
In 76 starts this season by beating

. . EI
.~.

Consistency is Sandra Post's forte
~;:.,_''"

Wednesday In a pro-am event.
Post. who was rookie of the year
In 1968 when slle won the LPGA title, Isn't expe&lt;;ted to be a contending factor off her r-eCent play.
But she Is back and playing after
ml•slng four ;the last six tournaments. She lnt nd&lt; to play tite next
three weeks, I .
"I just needed some tlme off,"
she explalned. '"When you're not
playing well, I suppose that's on!'
way of trying to remedy the
problem."
Post Is reluctant to talk about

what's wrong with ller game, but
she admits 'he' ll continue play ing
regularly until she gets cont rol of It.

WE WILL BE
CLOSED
JULY 5TH FOR
INDEPENDENCE
DAY

Scoreboard...

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13%

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25%

,3;3

Seal! If )(), Torooto t
Cl~and fl. BalUmort 0
Detrott 12, Bolton 3 .

~·

......

Transactions
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KANSAS CITY KINGS-Trlded Jlm
Jotw.tone-, cen.tB, to thf!.Atlanta Hawks
tor a 1984 aecond-round l!nft ciK!ke.

Martin&amp;:. 8-f,), (ril

' Ml.lwautet Hlaat ._.1 at Ntw York

'-.! • :J.!I), (nl

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ST.LOUIS CA RDINALS-Signed

·

Detroit

('I'Utlor s-6) II

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Atha. plac. k..IC-Ur. to" it. .. ~year CMtnct.
SEA1TLE SEAHAWKS-AMcunced tile

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New York at ~d. (n ..
l.:lo8lon at ftl:llwaullet,
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retu.nent of $e'Vto Raible. wldt ~­
Kelh 8\IUtr IUld Cralr' Al&amp;5tin,
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LIMIT ONE ROLL WITH COUPON EXCLUDING
PORTFOLIO 35
'

·couppn must
accompany 11rder.

WHALERS-

. tht rttnmeat cl Dive ICaiD. ceter/
NEW JERSEY DEVU-Nomed BillY
hMil ClOICII llldl .-en&amp; min,
..... lad .... lltN8b 'fkeP.Idant ol

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and COLOR PRINTS

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In The Heart Of
. Pomeroy

---~----~~-oe-~..;....,._'::~~!!!'!.!~!!~~9~.... --"'l'-_-•

Sicned

__
·--.. -,•

Seattle at C'tlic&amp;IO. IDI
c.H~om• • KansU City, (ft)
'foro._o ai MDoeeota. {D)
Batttmore l t Dftlol. tal
Tau at OU1ud, ,.,

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FOOTBALL

, (May 1·2 or Morgan 2-41, In!
CaUiorria (Witt f.ll at Teds (Tanana

!J' · Elio8ton

WE HOPE ·~
THAT EVERYONE
HAS ASAFE
AND HAPPY
,JULY 4TH
WEEKEND

PhUadtlphla at NeoN York;. tnl
at San DiegO, (nl
Ollc110 a! St. Lou~. tnl
fk!u•m If Loa Angt&amp;es, IRI

,
'ftu.l"'lllQ'• Gama
Chicago (Burns S.31 at Mlftreota (Redfern J.8)
seanko ( Pmy S-71 at Trnlnlo ILeal S.
5) • .·.
••
Cleveland (Barker &amp;-41 II B&amp;lUmore tD.

•

**************

~ r.rand.~

•·

,..

WE HAVE
SHOES FOR.
THE ENTIRE
FAMILY
SALE PRICED
SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR

.........

Mllwaukee 9, Ntow York 7, 12 innlnp
Texas ~ C&amp;I110rn1a 3
o.kland 4, Kansas City 0
MJ.~a t, a.lca&amp;O 3,

(I) ,

by
'G.fyTrudllau

regaining the lead by two percentage points over St. Lou Is after
Larry Christenson pitched and batted the PhUUes past !he Cardinals.
Christenson gave up 13 hits before giving way to Tug McGraw in
the ninth Inning - but he had one
big hit, a two-run double In the
Phlls' titree-run second Inning.
Bob Dernler, who had four hits,
scored two run~. drove In one and
stole his 32nd ba•e, got the single in
the second Inning that drove In the
decisive run.
Ghmts 7, Reds 6
Charlie Lelbrandt' s wild pllch.
the fifth wild pitch of the game, allowed Johnnie LeMaster to dash
home with with two outs in the hot ·
tom of the 12th lnnln~, givil\g the
Giant s their victory In four hours,
nine minutes.
Tom O'Malley led off wit h a single but wa~ was ttu·own at third on
LeMaster's single. LeMaster took
second on the throw, later swiped
third on the fronf end of a double
steal and came home when Leibrandt' s wild pllch skidded 25 feet
be111nd the plate. Each learn scored"

Thoma,s changes mind, unloads two run homer

Ben·c h's prolong
slump_hurts Red~

When times bad, politicians pummel it
~r Federal Reserve Board. When

Carlos Diaz, a reliever making his
By Aa!oc1a¥ Press
"
Atlanta's booming bats have the major leagu:but. His single to
right gave th raves a 5-4 victory
,
Braves cllcklng again.
The pa9t two games, theY've ' and made !lever Carlos Diaz a
found that special something that winner In hl~ major league debut.
Invariably turns defeat Into victory .
Plrate8 7, Cubs S
On Tuesday night, they rallied
It had been a while between
irom a 5-0 deficit In the sixth inning home runs for Willie Stargell - alto beatHouston6-51n lllnnlngs. On most two full season.q, to be exact
Wednesday night, things got a bit And In thl~. perhaps hls final seamore Improbable.
son, he spent enough time on the
Down 4-1 going Into the bottom of bench to warrant a few friendly
the ninth, the Braves got pokes from Pittsburgh's pitchers.
:'They had said, 'Why don't you
consecu\lve-pltch homers from
Dale Murphy (hl~ 22nd, tops In the pul on a toe plate and get In the
majors) and Bob Horner (his se- rotation. You might get to hit
cond of the game and 13th of the more,'" he recalled.
sea.son) , And down In the bullpen,
But In his 33rd at-bat this year Blff Pocoroba began stlrrtng.
hls 32nd game of the year - Pops
"Once Murphy and Horner ho- silenced those kidders, pluulot of
mered and Rufino Linares singled, Cubs fans, too, with a three-run
1 ktltd of saw the situation develOpplnch-1111 home run In the seventh
ing," h~ said, :'So I started getting Inning to help pull the fourth-place
loose.'' '
.
·
Pirates to within one game of .500
Chrl~ Chambliss also singled,
and within five games of first place
chasing loser Bob Knepper. In In the NL East.
came Randy Moffitt, who ·got
Phlllles 8, ClU'dlnals 3
Bruce Benedict to bunt Into a forPhiladelphia, which sampled
ceout at third. But lle walked Larry first place In the NL East a couple
Whisent.on to load the bases, bring- of night~ ago, got another taste of It,
Ing up Pocoroba, who batted for

DOUBLE PLAy FRONT END- Glantl short stop' Guy Sularz goes

Stockman claims he'll hold costs down
'

WeLL,ie I.PNG, Pa!&gt;ToR. NOW

wise •be expended on children constitutional argwnents; these are operating scljool budget In 1!181~:
lawfully on hand. The state also ' legislative appeals. Supreme Court came to $5.7 blllJon. The illegal;
argued that such federal social justices, said Chief JUBtice Burger, children represent precl!ely I pet;
programs as food stamps and aid to have no authority to strike doW!f cent of these figures - 29,11®'
the blind exclude illegal aliens from state laW!! "because they do not ...illegals, $57 milllon to stale and 1~
various benefits. Why should a dif- meet our standards of desirable taxes. Texas can afford the ~;.
ferent rule apply to the states?
social policy," To-do so is to convert even though we must acknowledg~~
Buy, ah, said the court's five-man the court into "an omnipotent and as Justice Powell remarked, "~
rnajority, speaking through Justice omniscient problem solver." A exasperation of responsible cltize~­
Brennan, children are different. It corollacy effect ill to weaken the and govemrnent authorities ·lili
was the Brown reasoning all over legislative branches by taking Texas and other states stmllar~
' ted •"
~·f
Sltua
,
.,.,
again. To deny the alien children an responsibilities from them.
.
The
majority
went
.to
some
pain!;:
education "imposes a lifetinle harIf the dissenters were right as a
dship on a discrete class of c111ldren matter of law, the majority had the as I read the opinon, to empllaslie,
not accountable for their disabling better case in equity. To deny the that its ruling was limited to ~
status. The stigma of illiteracy will Mexican children an education is plight of "Innocent childrell." Pel'mark them for the rest of their lives. palpably unkind and inhumane. suasive argwnents, said Brennan,
By denying these children a basic Such a policy does not even offer support the vtew "that a state may
education, we deny theni the ability realistic economies, for illiterate witllold its beneficence from tholle
to live within the structure of our children grow up to be eostly bur- . w~ very · presence within the
United States Is the product of their
civic institutions, and foreclose any dens on society.
realistic possibility that they will
In my_own view, there is less to the own unlawful conduct." We need not
contribute in even the smallest way Texas case than at first seemed to asswne- yet- that last week's bit
to the Jlrogress of our nation."
meet the eye. The state bas 2,922,000 of bad law will be extended to social
programs beyond the publlc schools.
A8 the four dissenters properly children in its public schools. Its
pointed out, these are not judicial or

Haig's ouster_____________...;;.G.;;..ar~rx.._·W___;,_ills
Right-wing hatchets finally chopJl!!d him down. Haig's ouster is being
analyzed in various contexts - as
part of the structural clash between
the State Department and the
National Security Council, as a
reflection of his own personality or
pollcjes, as a setback for Israel (or
ftr European relations, or for
serious disannament tallts) .
But what the dismissal shows, fist
of all, is that Reagan does in fact
belong to ·the eJrtremlsts In his own ,
party, who have been after Haig for
a very long time. it should have been
obvious, when Jeane Kirkpatrick
was not fired for criticizing her own
administration, that llaig. could not

The '

I \;,.,.

.

12, 1982

-

~-----VILLAGEPHARMACY

NEW YORK RANGERS-llll&gt;ed ~

___

1 , .'/ ~ ·
1 ·:K-•
1

!

-~l:J/

JRO ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

.......... "" """"'

' •.

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-.
•·

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�The

1

JToday$

Cancer answerline -'

- Sports World

A regular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to help
save your life from cancer.
Question : Do young people. get
bladder can~-er?
ANSWERiine: Cancer of the bladder may occur at any age, but it occurs most frequently in persons
aged 50 to 70. Four out of five bladder patients are men. The incidence
of bladder cancer for while males is
twice that of black males.

a, wm ar~a~~~ey
AP CW1wp 'rat

i~r

HEALTHY CUT - Meigs American Legion player Kent Wolfe goes
one of his two hits against visiting Marietta Tuesday at Syracuse.

Ki~g

WIMBLEDON, Englanii '(AP) - Wimbledon Is a lady. She has to be.
She wears basic green and garlands of roses In her hair. The whole world
knows she lovEil strawberries and cream.
When she first came into being more thaplOO years ago, she iva., an pld
lady then . They called her "The Old Lady of Walpole Street."
Apparently, the expansive green lawn~ of the All· England Lawn TennL,
and Croquet Club ran alongside a thoroughfare called Walpole Street.
Heaven knows where the street Is nowNow, Wimbledon, with It, courts, moss-covered green stadium, mu· .
sewn and clubhouse structures run along Church Road.
ThL, year, the ladles have stolen the show.
·
.
People from all the world - 750 overall, according to pi'I!SS chief Roy
McKelvie - are here for the annual event, and who llave they been
straining-their adJectives over? BUUe Jean King, that's who. BWie Jean.
And, Chris Evert Uoyd. And Martina NavratUova. .
Not to mention a lass named JoAnne Russell who, whlle she's not going
to take llome any trophies, Is delighting the press corps with her headlinecatching Interviews.
.
One day; she Is talking about all the kook, who follow the ladles' tour,
write letters and make obscene phone calls. The next day, she Is U!lllng
how, In acityfrooen by a transit strike, sheha.~ to Uedown lnthemlddleofa
busy London street to hitchhike to the court, where she Is late for her
match.
All the raindrops that have fallen on Wimbledon the pastlO days are
nothing more than tears shed by the heavens !or the great men players
who are not here· =-BJonr ·Borg, the five-lime winner who refused to
qualify; Ivan Lend!, the C=h with the year's best tournament record, and
such other such stars a~ Guillermo VIlas and Juan Louis Clerc of Argentina and Amertcan DavL~ Cupper Eliot Teltscher.
John McEnroe, the erstwhlle "Superbrat," Is wandering around the
premises, his arm, loaded with rackets. SoL, JLmmy Connors, the puglllstlc middleweight who missed his calling. Vita.~ Gerulaltls, better !mown for
his Roll~ Royce-disco lifestyle than his tennis triumphs, Is staying alive in
the absence of his Idol, Borg, and some of the other Top tenners.
But so far 'they have been merely bit players.
The redoubtable BWie Jean King has almost dominated the headlines
since playing In her lOOth match last week. As she continued stroking her
way surprtstrigly past younger and higher seeded players in her bracket,
attention on her has escalated.
"Old Lady Day" streamered one of the London tabloids.
"Queen BUllE' Rolls Back the Years."
On Wednesday, when she upset third-seeded Tracy Austin with a remarkable performance on Center Court, she had the attention of everyone. ,
Although McEnroe wa~ playing on the a&lt;\jacent No.1 court, most ofthe
International Journalistic corps deserted . Illm to squeeze Into the tight
Center Court om;&lt; flf'W&lt;.

Meigs woo theoullog by an 8-lscore. Atfar rig~ with back to camera, Is
Meigs first base coach Homer Smith.

shocks Austin, goes to semi finals

MBLEDON,

~

England (API Bll Jean King, the oldest Wimbled n semifinalist In 62 years, is an
op ist.ic realist.
"It's very gratjfying,' · the 38year-old tennl~ player said Wednesday after upsetting third-seeded
Tracy Austin 3·6, 6-4, 6-2 and moving into the semllinals. "Anything
now is a bonus."
Even John McEnroe, at 23. the
defending champion and seeded
first In the men' s singles at the AllEn g land Te nni s Club, was
impressed.
"I'd be !ar away from a tennis
court If I were her age," ·he said.
"But why shouldn't she still be playing If she' s enjoying it so much."
U Billie Jean' s victory was a surprl'E', McEnroe's fourth-round win
over fellow American Hank Pfister
_was expected.
After his most serious blowup so
!ar tn thL~ year's Wimbledon championships, McEnroe !aced his

toughest challenge today in a quarterfinal ma t&lt;~~! against fift h-seeded
.Johan Kriek.
The confrontation was a replay of
last year'~ quart erfinal, won by
McEnroe in straight sets en route to
hll singles crov.:-n. McEnroe has defeated the South African In seven of
the(r nine meetin gs, but he
warned : " Krlek 11 capable of playIng some tough tennls."
Other quarterfinal matches today pitted second-sezded Jimmy
Connors against No.6 Gene Mayer
and third-seeded Vilas Gcrula ltl~
aga inst No.l2 Mark Edmonson of
Australia.
On the women' s side, 13th-seeded
Anne Smith and 11th-seeded Bet·
Una Bunge disputed the last semlff.
nal berth_ The winner faced the
tournament' s top- seeded woman.
Martina Navratllova. ·
King wlll take on defending
champion Chris Evert Lloyd \11 the
other semifinal. Both semL' wlll be

played on Friday with the final•
scheduled for Saturday.
'\
Pr ior to the victory over Austin.
King advanced by upsetting sixthseeded Wendy Turnbull o! Australia and ellmating Tanya Harford of
South Afiica and Claudia Pasquale
of Switzerland.
"! felt I could play three more
sets," King said after her match
with Austin.
King, playing in her 103rd singles
match at the fa bled grass court
championships, dropped the first
set to the 1!1-year-old Austin, who
had won their five previous
meetings.
King won her first of a record 20
Wimbledon titles - the women' s
doubles with Karen Hantze in 1961
- the year before Austin was born.
Her first of six singles titles came
when Austin was 4 years old.
Austin said King had been une o!
her childhood Idols. She recalled
that when Kin g visited her tenni'
club, she wrote a composition about
the experience.
" ! was mad because I received
only an A-minus," Austin said.
McEnroe, !acing a grueling schedule of a singles and doubles
matches through Sunday's singles
final due -to- !J!,~ t week' s ralnouts,
was given two mL'conduct warnings Wednesday, his second and
third of the tournament.
The first, which came during hl~
victory over Pfister, earned him a
penalty point !or angrily slamming

the ball across court after mi~ slng a
volley.
The second came In a doubles
match In which he and Peter Flem·
ln g narrowly defended their men's
doubles title in a second-round bout
with Rod Frawley o! Australia and
Chri~ Lewis of New zealand.
In the third set, McEnroe first
disputed an out call by a linesman.
Later, he Insisted one of Lewis'
serves had clipped the net and began Instructing the net)udge how to
hoJd his hand on the tape.
When McEnroe persisted, he wa.~
warned for "delay o! the match."
The Center Court crowd roared Its
approval.
In the next game, McEnroe
served a double fault, and again the
crowd cheered - considered unsportsmanllke when a player
double-faults - and McEnroe diS- .
guste&lt;tiy joined In the clapping.
On a bright summer afternoon,
only the second day of play during
the tournament tbat has not been
interrupted by rain, another young
American was a surprlo;e cl!llmant
of a !ourth·round berth. Tim
Mayotte, 21, o! Springfield, Mass.,
who turned pro only la~t. year,
ousted fourth-seeded Sandy Mayer
3-6, 6-7, 6--4, 6-2, 6-4.
A round behind the other men,
Mayotte today faced 15th-seeded
Buster Mottram, the only remaining Briton in singles play, for the
other quarterfinal siot.

Leaders
AM~I CAN

J..EAGUE
BATTING 0~ at bat'\ I: Ha rrah. Ck-v..,.
land. .~: EkrmeiL Toronto. .:m: Cooper,
Mllwauki!t&gt;, ..l'l'l; W.Willllln, Ka nu,CII)'.
.:1.10; Hrbck, Mln ntsolll, .:QI.
RUNS : R.Hendl!rllon, Qakl anll. 67; Har-

rah. C1('Ve\and. :il: MoUtor. Mllwauket&gt;.
55; 11\ornton. CI(IV('iand. 52: Bemazard,
Chicago, 51; Bl'l'lt, Kan.q11 City, n

RBI: McRae,

K ansa~

City, Iii; Thornton,

Cl£'\lelan d. 6.1; Luzlrukl , ChlcallQ, 58:
Cooper, Mllwau ket', 57; Ogllvk', Mil ·
waukee, ~.

HITS: Harra h. Oeveland. 97: Garda.
Toronto, 94; Coopcf, Mllwaukre, 92:
Mc Ral:', Kan.'ia.'i City, !10: Luzl ns ~. CtlJ.
('8.2(1,

Ill.

OOUBLES: Cowe-ns, Seall le, 22: Ly nn.
Callfornla, 21 : Eva ns, 8J5ton, 20. MrR&lt;Ir,
Ka nsas City, &lt;11: While, Kansa.' City, 19.
TR IP ~: H er ndon. Det roit, II; Yoo nt,
Mllwau kt.&gt;t', 8; W.WIIsoo, Kan ~ City, 8::

Upshaw, T oronto, 6; Brett, Kan !1.8!1 Cl1y ,
6.
HOME RUNS: Thornton, Ck-.·clan d, 19:
~livk:-,

KING WINS TOURNEY - Billie Jean King shakes hands with Tracy
Austin after she beat her 3-6, 6-4, &amp;-Z in the Wimbledon's Women's Singles
championship. It is the first time she has beaten Austin. (AP Wirephoto)

Mllwa uktot&gt;, t~; G. Thomas, MU·
wa ukl.&gt;e, 19: CooJX'f, Milwa ukee. 16:
Hrbeok, Mln nc.&gt;sola, IE.
STO LEN BASES: R. Hendcrson, {)a): .
land. 73; Wat han, Kansas Clry, 25: LeF·
lorf'. ChiraRO. 22: J .Cruz, S!&gt;all le. 18;
Hay~ Clrvcland, 16: Molitor, Mllwau kff,
16; Ga rda, Torooto. 16.

PITCHJNG !10 [)ecl~lo rl'H : Vukov!clt.
Mllwau kl&gt;lo, 9-J, .'1!10, 3.40: Zahn, Callfor

The Toledo
Blade
reported that
McHugh
and Jim
Zak, the Kenyon
basketball coach, were both ·In·
formed on June 1 last year that
their )ooo would la~t only through
the 1982-83 school year . ·

nla. 9-:1.,_ ."~. 3.03: Guidry, New Yor k. 8-J,

.7n , .lSi; BurM, Chkago. 8-3,

:rn. H I;

C a u d Ill, Seattle, 7-3. .700, 1LQ;
D .Ma r1 1net, Balt imore, IH, .667, 3.73:
Bark£'1", Cle.,.elan e!. IH, .fin, J.I6: GW'B:,
KlMllll City. S-4 . .66'1, ,.aJ.
STRU{EOUTS: F .Bannls trr, Sea tr lr, 101;
Guidry, NI."W Yor k, !10: Barker, Cko\lelanel.
BoRton, 76; [){'nny, Ckvt'llll'ld, 76.

NATIONAL LEA.GUE
BA'1"11NG
11.2S
at
balsJ : McG&lt;e,
SI.Louts, .:MO; T .Pt'na, Pll!sburgh, .n 1;
Franrona, Monlreal , ..l'll; J .lbompson.
Plll 'ibu rgh, .319; Oliver, Monlreal, .318;

Landreaux. 1..o&lt;1 AnRl'lel• .318.
RUNS: LoSmilh. St.Louts. 62: DawtOn.
Mont real, 57: Muf'l)hy, Atlanta, ~7;
Ru .J one\, San Diego, :!(); J .Thompson,
PIIISbU!"Rh . 48.
RBI: Murpily, Allanla, 59; Ollv• r . Mo ~
trea~ 55; T.Ktn nedy, San DIE-go, 51: Mat· ,
Thl'w!l, Phllacletptda, :!0; Guerf'ft'O, l...&lt;:fi
Angell'S. ~HITS: Sax, loR .-\ngt&gt;les. 94: Knlghl ,
Hwston, ~1 ; Buckner, Chicago, ~
J .Ray, PITTsbu rgh, llr. Dawson, Monll't'al,
118: Lo. Smllll. Si.Loub, 88.
DOUBLE!S: T.Kennedy, San Diego, ~ :
Daw.wn, Montl"f'aa, 19; Lo. Smith.

19;

Carner,

Houston.

AP Sports Writer
OAK BROOK. Ill. (AP\ -Ed Fi·

ori chastises the media for calling
the field for- the Western Open a
poor one.
"You guys hurt the tournament
when you say it's not so tough," the
defending champion ~aid Wednesday on the eve of this $350,(XX) PGA
Tour stop that began today at
Butler National Goit Club.
"Don't knock it becau se Nicklaus
and Watson aren'-t here, " he said.
"We've got 150 guys who can play."
Nonetheless, tournament sponsors are unhappy over those who
are Missing - Craig Stadler, Tom
Kite, Ray Floyd, Lee Trevino,
Jerry Pate, Arnold Palmer, Nicklaus and Watson.

With the game' s glamour names the DaQny Thomas Memphis Clasabsent. what. Fiori was asked, are sic three weeks ago and could not
his chances of repeating? .
play In the U.S. Open a week later.
"Slim. Real slim," he replled He missed the 36-hole cut ·at the
quickly. "The state of my game ls Wes tchester Classic last week.
poor. It's been a little ratty lately."
"I've been fine for about a week
His major problem l' a hand in- now. I can practice as much as I
Jury he thought at first wa~ want. I'm on large amounts of astendinitis.
pirin though," said Flori. the
"It turned out to be a muscle pull winner of almost $70,000 this year.
between my thumb and first finger
Fiori believes his ll·under·par
of my left hand. I hurt it hitting a lot ?:77 score here last year wlll be
of practice balls," said the 29-year- beaten by this field that includes
oid Texan.
PGA champ Larry Nelson, British
The II,ljury ha• dulled what had Open titleholder BUI Rogers, Hale
been an excellent 1982 start for Fl· Irwin, Lanny Wadkins and Bruce
or!. He made the cut In his first Lietzke.
eight tournam!'nts, winning the - "It wouldn't surprise me to see
Bob Hope Desert Classic In a somebody 14-15 under par it the
playoff.
!airways dry out. You can grow the
He was forced to withdraw from rough a.~ high as you want. The

r~==========:,
The Daily Sentinel
IUSPSI-1
A Dtvilioa of M11IUmedllt. lat.
Pu_bli:dled every t~tlt&gt;moon, Mondltty tht~h ·
Fr11~y . _ 111 Court Stn!et. by theOhiu Valk.•y
PubhshlllK Company - Multimedia Jnc
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S789, tn-21~. Set.-ooc'i i:JW
JltWKt! l)lllid 11t Pouwroy, Ohio.

Mcmbt:r: The ~ociated Preas, Jnhmc.l Dai·
ly Pr~ A.ssuctatlon and the A.rnerican
NeW.!Ip.ll~r PubliHher.!l AuodaUon National
AdvertlsinJo: Repre:sentative, Br11nham
Newsp..l)t'r Salt&gt;J, 733 Third Avenue, New
York , New York 10017.
POSTMASTER : Send 110c.lr~ to The Daily

•

a

In other IL action, Dan Logan's
two-run homer In the top of the
ninth proved to be the dffference as
the Rochester Red Wings took an
8-7 victory over the Syracuse
Chiefs.
Logan hit the first pitch oft reliever and loser Jeff SChneider, 0.2,
over the 400-!oot mark In right·
center !leld. Logan's homer scored
Mike Young, who got on with a oneout single. ·
ln·the only other IL game of the·
night, first ba.,eman Steve Balboni
belted his second consecutive '
bases-loaded • home run .

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

19;

_ siNiii.Eciii&gt;v --

. Nu ~ ubsl'riptioru by lllltil pennitli..'tl in lOwll.!l
wJwrt' hmnc earricr ~~~ervi t't! is av¥ih•blt.&gt; .
MAILSUBSCRIPriONS
llllldoOI&gt;I&lt;!
I:IWt.-elt~ .. .. . .. . .. ..
.. .. .... $14 .04

CLOSED JULY 4-8
FOR VACATION

26 Wct•lrs
~2 Wt•t•k1 .. . . .. .. .. . .. .. ..
--. .
O.bldt'Ohin 11:
13 Wt ·t·k.~
...............
26Wt'l' lt'i .... . ........... , .... . .
~2Wt•t• b ... .. ....... ....... .

BAILEYS SHOES
1;1 1JI\I1 Jll

I

15~nts

wtll bl• J,l iwn l'arricrc.at'hmonth
I
I

SJ595 TO S3Q~5

man who wins here L~ going to hit It
tn the fairways . The greens are In
excellent shape," he said.
However, Flori stUI carries enor·
mous respect for these 7,007 yards
that make up Butler National In
suburban Chicago.
"It's one o! the live mostdffflcult
courses we play every year," he
said He listed the others a.' Muirfield VUiage, Hilton Head lsland,
Riviera and Tournament Players
Club.
Flori refuses to be dL=uraged
over his slump and his Injury.
"I have highs and lows. Hopefully," he said, breaking Into a
smile, "I'm coming out of a low."
A first prize o! $63,000 Is at stake
In the 79-year-old tournament, oldest reguLar stop ori the Tour.

..

Subst-ribt!n ·no4 dt!1irin~ W pay tht! c~rrier
tr'lliy remit in ~tdv~trk.'e tlirat to The Daily
&amp;_·nlirk'l on a 3, 6 or 12 mooth Wis. Crl"dit

OXFORDS

18; Knl(l:hl, HO.ISTOII, 18.

,d,

121 JO

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151.43
$15 .21
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$56.21

TIMEX WATCHES

Complete Stock
thru Sunday
'

Open July 4th ....
10:30 to 12:3~­

and ·

~qQ to _
9:0Q ;
·CLOSEP._m~r-~~--

·

RA

·, JULY 5th.AT.1:00

SlUISHER LOHSE
'

I

I

'

·--··,.
Jt,a.PII.

~atflll,a , l'tl .

·~·····

.....
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Mill........
.... tcai"IOid •
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'•'I
~

Que&amp;lion: Does difficulty in
swallowing indicate ca ncer?
ANSWERiine: Difficulty in
swallowing may be an early sym!&gt;'
tom of cancer of the gullet or
esophagus. Weight loss is also a
symptom of this cancer. There
should be no delay in reporting such
signs and symptoms to one's
physician. This is very important
since there is a period when e~·
tensive local spread lakes place
before metastasis or spread to other
organs via the blood and lymph
system.
For furth er information call 9927531.

VACATION

.TIME IS HERE!
Come In and Take
Advantage of Our

.

'"\'

' '

''

..
'
....··•
'

been named. Athens wm be with
the Zanesville circuit.
Dittes, wllo has served for lllh
ye;u-s In the ministry In Toledo, and
west central and southeastern
Ohio, hopes to work in church public relations.
" ,
The Dlltes were llonored with a
farewell party at the church recently. A cake, decorated by Patsy
Spires was served with
refreshments.
Sabhilth school superintendent,
Rita White, presented Pastor
Dlttes with a gilt on behalf of the
church.

Astrograph
July 2,1982

Ahobby or a'vocalion in which you're interested looks like it will be tur-

ned Into somelhing profitable this coming year. You will lind a co-worker
who wiU help make this possible.
CANCER (lune 21-July 22) Your productiveness can be enhanced
'
-today if you don't lock yourself in on tedious methods and procedures.
Look for new ways lo do the job better. #C
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 U you are getting together with friends for a
social activity today, try to steer them away from going to their usual
haunts. New places will be more fun.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If your house is a bit cluttered today, it's best
to put things in order early. Unexpected dropins could disrupt what you
planned to do.
.
LIBRA (Sept. Z3:()cL 23) You're likely to be rather restless today, so
try not to Involve yourself with things which tie you down to a fixed base.
You'll be happiest moving abou( freely.
•
SCORPIO (Oct. Zt-Nov. 22) Should you decide to go shopping today,
take along a little extra cash. There's a possibility that you could spot an
unusual bargain.
.
·
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You're fun to be around today,
because others won't know what to expect from you. You'll keep them
guessing and entertained.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Follow your impulses today if you feel
. an urge to do something which you believe could be of benefit to you finan- ,
clally of careerwise.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Selectrompanions today who, like your. self, are free spirits and are not looking for involvements whicll e too
lightly planned or .structured. '
.
·
-PISCFJi (Feb- !0-Marcb 28) Somelhing opportune could deVelop now to .
help you f'urther -your worldy ambitions. Akey person wllo never noticed .
you previously is beginning to pay attention.
AHlES (Marcb ,tl-Aprl119) You grasp quickly today, but you may lack
· the patience to probe them In depth. This could cause you proble1T18 where
more than surface kpowh!dge.ts required. .
.
·
·
TAURIJ!! &lt;4prji211-MayZO) A venture in whichyou'reinvolved could be,,
subject .to same sudile:'l and unusual changes today. Be flexible. Be
prepared to move wilh ev~nts.
·
·
GEMINI (May .Zl-Juoe 28) You are blessed wilh the ability to size
things up quickly and make snap judgments. Today this ability will be .
even more emphasized, and utilized adVantag!lOU8iy.

30%
DISCOUNT
ON ALL

SUMMERWEAR
INFANTS TO SIZE 14
OPEN MON.- SAT .
9: 30· 5: 00

KIDDIE SHOPPE
111

w. 2nd

Pomeroy, Oh .

r~c~er~?;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Calendar
11-IURSDAY
POMEROY - Evangeline
Chapter, OES 172, wUI meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday during
which 25-year pins wlli be
awarded. Officers should wear
chapter dress. Guests wUI be
Joyce Davis, grand electa, Mar·
jorie Karth, grand conductress,
Faye Turk, grand ada.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Fox Cha~ers
Association will meet Friday at
the shanty, Eagle Ridge Road.

ROCK SPRINGS - An ice
cream social wiD be held Frid ay
at Rock Springs United MethodL't Church, off old Rt. 33 just
pa.~t the fairgrounds. Serving
begins at 6 p.m. Homemade Ice
cream, cakes, pies, soft drink&lt;
and coffee will be sold.
,,.

'lrmion

SATURDAY
POMEROY -Royal Oak Ballroom Dance Club wm meet
from 9 p.m.·I a.m. Saturday at
Royal Oak Park. Music by Gentlemen Three.

WELCOME HOME

BOB
CHARLENE &amp; JAYNE

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'
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In d!lrk and regular. ·

-_ 7

-·· · · ·~i~;~F!'I(NIC · -.
~EMOTE- BROADCAST

"' · ''Sity. He has been pa.'tor at the
churches for live years.
A native of" Portland, Tenn., he
-. -- received his undergraduate degree
·~ .· at Southern ML~sionary College,
I
Collegedale, Tenn. He took seminary training at AndrfWS University, Berrien Springs, Mich .
Dlttes said the church Is being
redistricted with the Pomli!'OY
church placed in the Bartlett. • Marietta district. A pastor has not

I

. ... .$4.40
... . 152.80

· absence to work on a master's de-

.. r

e. ' 'gree in journalism at Ohio Univer-

I

One Monlh
One Ycu

Dittes ·takes leave of absence

Pastor Albert Dlttes of the
... · Pomeroy-Athens Seventh-day Ad·
ventl~t churches Is laking a leave of

SUBSCRIPfiON RAT&amp;'!
By C.~rorMo&amp;orRoult
One Wl!'ek . . . ... . ... .. .. ....••..... • 1.00

PRicES

O.Smlth. St.Loul&lt;l, 18; Cedeno, ctnclnnall,

;· ,

'

Charlies blast Mud Hens, 10-4, Clippers win
CHARLESTON, W. VA.- Larry
Littleton's two-run double highlighted Charleston's six-run fourth inning and gave the Charlles a 10-4
International League ba.~eball vic•
tory over the Toledo Mud Hens.
Angelo LoGrande and Tim Nor:
rid hit home runs !or the winners,
who got 17 hlts off !our Toledo
pitchers Wednesday night.
Charleston sent 10 hatters to the
plate In ihe fourth Inning to over.
come 4-2 deficit.
Toledo took that' lead wlth ' four·
run second, which lDcl1lded a tworun homer by Harry Saterfght.

By Dale M. Stoll
to make the sauerkraut involves a
County extension agent
short-eut technique where shredded
cabbage is packed into a jar, a
Home ecollomlcs
teaspoon of salt is added and the jar
,_ , l'heUmehascome,
is fiUed with cooled, boiled water. He
' . thewah:ussaid
jar is sealed and allowed to ferment
To talk of many things
on the shelf with no further
Of shoes, and ships, and
processing.
· sealing 1wax
This techniqueis not recom.., Of cabbages and kings.
•. Lewis Carroll may not have been mended for several reasons. First,
the salt may not be evenly
·~ - • . thinking about sauerkraut when he
, ... wrote about cabbages, but that's the distributed, resulting in decomposition of Lhe cabhage. Food
hot topic now in Meigs County.
I've ba~ a nwnber of calls from poisoning hacteria may thrive in
frt~~~trated him canners who are exsome instances. Second, flavors and
periencing spoilage with · textures are highly variable by this
sauerkraut. A little detective work method. Last, without any further
.· has discovered tbat the method used processing the kraut will continue to

5entinet, lll CI.'IUrtSl.. Pomeroy, Dnio-45769.

Dai ly ............... .

Several big names missing from tourney
By GEORGE STRODE

"

It said that Phil Morse, who was

head coach and athletic director
when McHugh Joined the staff as·an
a.~slstant.coach, had told McHugh
he would ·be placed on "tenure
track" if hired.

Question : What are the symptoms
of bladder cancer?
ANSWERiine: Blood in the urine
is the most important and often the
first sign. It usually appears suddenly and without pain. Blood may
be present in the stream throughout
voiding, or may appear only at the
end of a clean stream. Repealed a!&gt;'
pearance of blood in the urine is the
single most characteristic symptom
of bladder cancer. It is usually
painle:ss but at limes may be accompanied by some discomfiture
and _increased fr equency of
urination. Sometimes blood clots
may form, causing painful muscle
spasm in the bladder. Bloody urine
however, does not always mean canto sbow their support for the now defunct equal rights ameddmenL (AP
cer.
Other conditions, such as inLaserpbotu)
•
. fection, benign twnors, or bladder
stones, may be responsible. It is imperative that you consult your doctor in the event of bloody urine or
crock or jar. Using a wooden spoon any other unusual urinary condition.
decompose.
Just the threat of food poisoning is or tamper or your hands, press down
Question : What are the symptoms
enough to scare me from using this fiimly until the juice comes to the
surface.
Repeat
the
shredding,
of
thyroid cancer?
method! Many homemakers find
salting,
and
packing
of
cabbage
until
ANSWERine
: A lwnp or mass in
that their jars rl sauerkraut
the
crock
is
filled
to
within
3
or
4
inthe
neck
is
usually.
discovered first.
prepared by this method are oozing
ches
from
the
top.
Any
noticeable
lwnp
should be
or taste bad. Some have asked me if
A
five-gallon
crock
will
hold
about
examined
by
a
physician,
parthe jars of sauerkraut can be
35
pounds
of
prepared,
salted
~air
licularly
if
it
begins
to
increase
in
reprocessed or saved in some way .
bage.
Cover
cabbage
with
a
heavysize.
In
most
cases
there
are
no
signs
Unfortunately, my motto is "Whenin
doubt, throw it out!" and I do not weight, water-free plastic bag that or symptoms of'the thyroid cancer.
recommend reprocessing the fils snugly against the cabbage and However, there may be a swelling of
sauerkraut or eating sauerkraut agains the sides of the container to one side of the neck near the
prevent exposure to air. The bag "Adam's Apple" and, if a malignanprepared by this method.
-should
be of heavyweight, water- cy has been present for some lime,
What is the proper way to prepare
light
plastic
and intended for use there may be a history of persistent
sauerkraut? Here's how:
with
food.
Store
at room tern- hoarseness or diffi culty in
SAUERKRAUT
perature
(68
deg
.
to
72 deg. F.) for swallowing .
(Yield: lUo 15 quarts)
three
weeks
while
cabhage
is ferQuestion: Do men get thyroid canCabbage, about 50 pounds
Salt, pure granulated, 1 pound (I 'h
To process:
Heal sauerkraut to
cups)
:nenling
.
Remove the outer leaves and sirrunering (185 deg, to 210 deg. F.).
many undesirable portions from Do not boil. Pack hot sauerkraut infirm, mature heads of cabbage; to clean, hot jars and cover with hot
discard. Wash and drain remaining juice to one-half inch from top of jar.
cabtiage. Cut into halves or quar- Adjust jar lids. Process in . boilingters; remove the core. Use a shred- water bath : 15 minutes for pints, 20
der or sharp knife to cut the cabbage minutes for quarts (start to count
into thin shreds about the thickness processing lim~ as soon as the hot
jars are placed in the actively
ofadime.
In a large container, thoroughly boiling water).
Remove jars and complete seals if
mix 3 tablespoons salt with 5 pounds
necessary.
Set jars upright on a wire
shredded cabbage. Let the salted
rack
or
folded
towel to cool. Place
cabhage stand for several minutes
to wilt slightly; this allows packing them several inches apart.
For additional information on canwithout excessive breaking or
ning, freezing, drying or storing
bruising of the shreds.
Pack the salted cabbage firmly food, contact the Meigs County E~­
and evenly into a clean, &gt;gallon tension Office at 99U696 .

ANSWERiine: Thyroid cancer occurs almo&lt;it twice as frequenUy in
- women as in men, and more
frequently in whites than in blackS.
II also occurs more frequently in the
older age groups.

.:., .Preserve and serve: avGid spoilage of sauerkraut

verbal assurances and commit· 1
ments from agents and employees_
of Kenyon College that hl~ po!litlon,J
with the college would be permanent in nature. "

Athletic Director Jeff Vennell
confirmed that the two men have
"been given contracts for tills comIng school year, but wUI not be
given future contracts."
He refused to confirm that they
had been notified of the termlna·
lions more than a year ago, and
declined further comment. Kenyon
President Phllllp Jordan declined
to discus.~ the matter.
The complaint In McHugh's law· ·
suit said that when hired In May of
1967, McHugh "received numerous

81; R!Rtlettl Nf'W York, 71; F.dtenley.

SI.L..ooh ,

FUNERAL FOR EQUAL RIGHTS -Through rain, ball and thunder
more than 300 people marched through downtown Denver on Wednesday

Coach files lawsuit
GAMBIER, Ohio (AP) - Tom
McHugh, who was named football
coach o! the year In the Ohio At·
hlellc Conference last season, has
flied a lawsuit against Kenyon College over the impending loss of his
job after the next School year_
The suit, flied in Knox County
Common Pleas Court last week,
contends that McHugh, an em·
ployee o! the school since 1967, had
been a~sured when hired that he
was laking a Job leading to tenure.

nagy Sentlnel-Page-li

DAN'S BOOT SHOP
....
1

MIDDLEPORT,
.
. . . OHIO
. .....

'

.

�The

33 ,school districts ·8ubinit ..income tax requests

Thursd·ay/People

'

By The Asloclated ...-ees .
So far. 33 school districts in Ohio

Anton on probation ·
WS ANGELES (AP) - Actress Susan Anton has been placed on
probation for 36 months and ordered to take 'Part in an alcoholrehabllltaUon program after pleading_ guilty to &lt;!runken drtvlng.
The
Miss Anton. star of the movie "Goltlen Girl" and the
short-lived "Cliffhangers" televL~Ion series, entered
the plea through her attorney trtday. She had been
scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday.
In addition to the probation and rehabilitation program, the judge fined the Beverly Hills resident $390 ·
and restricted her to driving to and !rom work tor 90
Mtss Anton was arrested June 3 after cras hing a
owned by actor-comedian Dudley Moore Into a
oarKea vehicle. Tests· Indicated she had a blood alco- .
hoi level of 0.17 percent. The legal maximum level for driving In Call!ornla ls 0.10 percent.

Great Park plans deadlocked

lt
.li
MR. KIND -Irving Cohn, 84, lotuses his Polaroid camera. He works
at a jewelry store six days a week but spends Sundays at hospitals with

his camera, laking pictures of peopte'and giving them to them. "It makes
them happy and I like to see them smile," he says. lAP Las~rphoto)

Resigns after ban on women continued

Helen help us
An educated guess is .this guy has been dumped
By He leo and Sue BolteI
I've had it with dames! They are
unpredictable, fickle, demanding,
spoiled,
jealous,
two-fa ced,
imgrateful , vain, self-seeking witches, and I agree with Cato the
Elder who said " If there had been no
women in the world, the gods would
still beliving among us."
I challenge any female to prove
me wrong. - DISILLUSIONED
DEAR DIS :
One will - someday - unless your
.., sour attitude keeps her from trying.
Don't judge every apple on the
tree by the few you've picked. HELEN
DIS :
So you were dwnped. So you'li
recover - if you don 't continue as
bitter as Cato the Elder, a henpecked old Roman who hated all
women because his wife was a
shrew.

i According to some history books,
he also beat his servants and played
around with female slaves, so
maybe she was entitled. )
~re you entirely blameless here?
-;f;UE

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I am a professional " new wave"
rock singer who resents being called
a " Devil worshiper" by s~alled
Christians.
I was taught that true Christians
do not persecute anyone and only
God has a right to judge. Wouldn't
these condemners be surprised if
God'sstereo plays rock 'n' roll ?
Rock music appeals because it's
fun . · It's entertainment only and
listoming to it ( backwards or forwards) will not make anyone worship the DeviL - CANDY
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
This answes the middl ed-aged
man who wonders why heavy

metalists would resort to Satanic
backward messages when they can ·
say anything they want up front
nowadays.
If they said things· about Satan
straig ht out, people would pass over
and reject thern . The key is the subconscious rnind . "Backwards
messages" introduced there. which
people aren't even awa re of. are
never erased, and ma y lea d to
changes in cha racter.
Have n't yo u ever heard of
subliminal seduction in advertising?
Those backwards messages by
rock and roll groups are very
dangerous. - BEWARE
P.S. Despite your pooh-poohing it,
Helen and Sue, I'm sure KISS is
aware their name stands for
"Knights of Satan Society."
RAP :
I'm 13 and think this flap about
heavy metal mck music and Devil
worship is silly. I'm not hooked on

the sound, but I don't believe it's
" dangerous."

Playing a .tape backwards doesn't
prove anything. I read that the
run1or about Paul McCartney being
dead started when someone played a
Beatie tape backwards and thought
it said; " I killed PauL " The words
tu rned out to be "Strdwberry Jam"
with an English accent
When kids listen to rock they are
not worshiping Satan but instead
having a little fun ,- JUST A KID
DEAR EVERYONE :
And the controversy goes on ...
and on ... and on. We think it's a tern·
pest in a tease-poL - HELEN AND
SUE
,
.
(Got a problem?) Or a subject fnr
discussion, two-generation style'
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Hottel - or b~th, if you
want a combnation mother-daughter
answer in care of this
newspaper. l

•

Meigs County. and area meettng notes
Harrisonville ·
Golden Agers
The Harrisonville Senior Cit izens' Golden Age Club held Its quarterly birthday meeting at Forest
Acres Park June 22. Six members
were honored.
The birthday eake was baked by
Kathryn Chapman and served to 19
members and two guests.
The next meeting will be July 13
a t the townhouse from 10 a. m . to
noon. The senior citizens' club will
leave at 8:30a. m . Friday, July 2
from the upper parklng lot In
Pomeroy for the arts a nd crafts
show In Ripley. W. Va.

Ruth
Missionary Society .
Ru th Missionary Circle met at
the home of Emma Adams with 13
members.
~
Barbara Gheen read a letter
from Wilda Allison, president of
Woman o( the Rio Grande Associa-

Uon, informing the group of a picnic
Mason cla55.
July 8 at the parlsh of Temple Hills.
The dlet and exercise cia's will
The club will donate $10 to t he
ll,OI be held for the next two weeks.
parish.
' Cla•ses wlll resume July 19·20. For
The program was by Marjorie
Information contac t Jo Ann NewGrimm. Readings were given by
some at 992-3382.
Doris Hensler, Phyllis Bailey, Martha Beegle, Naomi Stobart, Mary
K.cYost, .Fern Dolby, Nondus Hen&lt;!ricks, Emma Adams, Barbara
Drew Webster Unit 39, American
Gheen, Garnet Ervine, Marjorie
Legion
AuxUJary, representative lo
Grimm and Be~lah Autherson .
Buckeye
Girls State, Susan bight- ·Refreshments were served. The
loot
,
has
returned home. While
next meeting will be July 15 with
there,
she
was
elected county engihostess, Marjorie Grimm. Garnet
neer
under
the
National party. She
Ervine wUI have the next program.
wUI give her report to the local unit
July 27 at the. Legion hall. BGS wa~
held at Ashland College, Ashland,
Oh.

Drew Webster

Siinderella

The Slinderella Classes of Ches·
ter and Mason met this week and
reported weight losses a nd sche:
dule changes.
Candy Milhoan lost the most
weight and Sharon Swain wa"
runner-up a t Chester. In Mason,
Lois Reitmire and Pat Mo,sman
tied for the most weight lo~t . New
members were Inducted lntn th e

ATLANTA (AP) -A deadlock has developed in a $110 mUilon plan to
develop a northwest Atlanta park that would Include the presidential
library of Jimmy Carter ... and it came after the former president had
reiterated his support for the proposal.
The City Council's ~ansportation Committee Wedn~day deadlocked at 2-2 over Mayor Andrew Young's development plan lor the
Great Park, sending the tssue to the full council July 6. .
In a handwritten Jetter , Carter urged the council to Include the tourlane, 2.2-mlle parkway the mayor had proposed along tile length ot the
park.
Neighborhood leaders have opposed plans lor the four-lane road
through the pa rk.

Weight clubs
Area weight loss classes met recently and reported losses in weight
and gains in membership.
Sllnderella in Mason Inducted
three new members. Top weight
losses were:
Pat Mossman, Ilena Van Meter,
tie, most weight lost; runner-up,

Alma J effers. Another meeting
saw Alisha Holsinger as champion
in the weight loss class and Beverly
Smith, runner-up.
Rutland TOPS, 1456, met recently. Best loser was Cindy Hartenbach; runners-up were SanJy
Sergent and Ollle Hill.
Information about meetings or
. on working on the July 4th parade
noat may be obtained by calling
742-2233.
·

Star Grange

Star Grange members were
asked to participate In the July 3rd
Rutland parade when the group
met recently for its June meeting.
Any member wishing to take part
in the parade should arrive before9
a.m.
.
. Members also decided to have a
meeting July 24 to work on lair
booth materials. Rick Macomber
reported the projects on which he
has been working lor both the state
and the county are progressing
well.
A potluck dinner was served at
the meeting.

HONOLULU (AP) -Mayor Eileen R. Anderson quietly resigned her
honorary membership in the exclusive Pacl!ic Club alter the membership retained a ban on women as full members.
~
Mrs. Anderson was made an honorary, member of the club when she
was elected mayor in 1981.
She resigned las t April aft.er the 103-92 club vote.
The res ignation came to light Tuesday.
In 1963, then-Gov. John Burns declined an honorary
membership in the club because at that time itdldnot
admit men of Asian ancestry. The club s~equently
changed that pollcy.
The 131-year-old Pacific Club has a by-invitationonly membership of about 600 men, most of them
lawyers, ban~ers and h"""""' executlves.

(

On the light side....
Fisherman breaks 'whopper' tradition
ANDERSON, S.C. (API -Don Hughes has violated the unwrlllen
code of the fisherman - )le told the t ruth about a whopper.
It seems that Hughes, of Cleveland, Tenn .. came back !rom a day. on
Lake Harwell Jugging a JS.pound striped bass.
But instead of regaling hi&amp; friends with an epic tale of a battle royale
between man and fish, he was honest.
Hughes admitted to his buddies that he stumbled across the'big bass
struggling to breathe In shallow water. Hughes tossed aside his pole,
waded Into the water and snagged his catch with a pair of pliers.
"To tell you the truth, I would have lied If I was him," said Mark
Dickerson, owner of the small grocery store where Hughes took his
L(:vlat nan to be weighed Monday.
"I would probably have made up something better than saying I
caught l1 wlth a palr or pliers. But that's how he did U," Dickerson said.

Correction

.,.. Tennis tournament begins today
The Middleport Pool and Park
Board l~ holding Its !lrst tennis tour·
nament July 1-4, beginning at 5: 30
p.m. Thursday.
There will be five divisions of
play- men's singles, men's Intermediate singles, men's doubles,
women's singles and mixed doubles. Trophies wW be awarded for
the flr5t and second place in each
;divLslon.
' Qut-()f.tOWn players e)\~ to·be
on hand tor the event, which will
also take place at the Syracuse
courts. The semt-ftnals and llnals
/ : will be at Middleport. So far, players are expected from Galll!le11ls,

Pt. Pleasant, Raenswood, Vienna
as well a~ Meigs County.
Friday, games begin a t 5: ~
p.m., wtth matches Saturday and
Sunday to be played !rom 8:30a.m.
·
until dark.

Your " Extra Touchu
Florist Since 1957

~~~
FLORIST
PH. 992·2644

BALL
SAT., JULY 3rd

Mason Fire Station
9:00P.M. TO I :00 A.M.·
B. Y.O.B.

Swim Trunks

25%' 0H

BuY one lamp at ttie
regu!M price lind
get the 11111Ching
fof 'h price.

la!np .

0

0

$19~95 to

CLEVELAND -The winning number &lt;!fawn ~esday night In
tbe Ohio Lottery's dally game '"The Number" wa.' 225.
The lottery reported earnings of $3Zl,745.50 from the wagering on
Its dally game. The earnings came on sales ot $891,000.50, whUe
holders of winning tickets are entltlecno share $570,305, lottery offt.
cillls sald.
·

Clear and cool tonight. Lows !10-56. Wind~ becoming light and
variable. MO!Itly !IIIMY and warmer Friday. Highs 77-82.
E~cled Ohio Forecast

Satunlay throuJil MOIIday:

Scattered shoWers and thundertllerms ~ and Sundll,}',
Hlr.ely endlllg M.-ctay. mps In the . . the weekenll and bun
the mld-1118 to the IDw 808Monday. Linn (!'om arouDd 60 north 10 tile
mld-608 80Uth.

Meigs County happenings
Annual barbecue
slated July 5
The Eastern Atble!lc Boosters
wm hold their annual barbecue
July 5 regmntng at10 a.m. at East·
ern High School.
Dinner will be $3.50 and the public ts invited.
A ladles softball tournament, a
horseshoe tQurnament and a pitching machine wUJ be fj!&amp;tured at the
barbeque.

Parade lineup
Une-up for the Rutland parade
Saturday wW be at the lower end of
Depot and Brick Streets. The CB ·
club will assist. There will alSo be a
short nag- raising ceremony before
the 10 a .m. parade, offlctals report.

Eastern Local Te.:bers ' Assn.
wUJ meet tonight with theboilrd at 7
p.m. at Eastern H.S. to discuss finances. All members are urged to
attend.

To drape charter
: .cnester Councll.323, D of A, will
!!rape the charter in memory ot
Ethi&gt;l Stewart Tuesday, July 6.

·15 WORDS USE THE BlANK
BEUM TO WRilt YOUR AD.

1 Name

Georgia ). Weekley
Georgia Johnson Weekley, 71 ,
Parkersburg, died June 27 at St.. Joseph' s Hospital, Parkersburg. She
was a former Porlland resident.
She is survived by a son, Paul.
Franklin. N. J ., and ·the following
brothers and sL,ters: Seldon Johnson, Toreh, Oh., Ray, Parkersburg,
Ralph, Arningion, Mlch.. Hnery.

=·
ttutch and

·. ~

~.

llew 5 IIC- woiid Dlftette '

) WANTED

( ) ANNOUNCEMENT

) FOR SALE

) FOR RENT

or group of f ,gures coun1s
as a word . Count name and
address or rnone number 1f

Couple files $80,573 damage suit
An $!ll,573.74 suit was flied
against a Pomeroy woman In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Wednesday .'
James M. and Paulette Farley,
Martella, allege in thesult that Far·
ley was Injured July 15, 1981 whlle
working on a house I railer owned
by Mamie Stephenson. 39520 Union
Ave.
· Farley claims negllgence on the
part of Stephenson caused the
injury.

I

I

CASH

The sutt states Far ley was work·
tng on a ladder which Stephenson
was holding. Stephenson then left
the ladder, which became un, table.'
causing Farley to fall .
Farley L• permanently disabled
In one knee and has accumu lated
$4,437.74 In medical expenses be·
cause of the fall, the su it sta tes.
It also says he has lost wages totalling $13,600.
Hl.s wife Is asking for damages
for loss of companionship.

used

,

ONLY!

Mail or Bring
In Person.

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Area death _

Weather forecast

j)letween

--. _.New Maple

25'%
dH
.

'2"

Winning Ohio lottery number

resignation by the Wlllte House,
Reagan said nothing ·crltlctal of
Halg and didn't mentloR any policy
·differences.
. Instead, Reagan praL~ Haig for
: "a superhuman job" or trying to
: prevent the war in the Falkland Islands. "His service to his countcy
and his' service to the ldmllllstra: tlon have been all that could be de. sired," he said.
:~ Reagan decltned to answer qui!s: tlons m the pqress r1 the negotla·
;lion~ to end the war In Lebanon and
&amp;ave Beirut trom tunJift' fighting
Israel and the Palestine
•lJberation Organization.
•
• While he !!81d some Arab nations
lfn&amp;y think Washingtoll knew of lsltael's plilns, It did IIQt. ''We were
:~ujht u_mucb by' Slll'plise. a.•
1)11yme,'!Jie said. "We w111ted a dl- ·

Lamp Sale

Swimwear .

Reg. '3.99

employment rate in the ~tate- 6.8percent - during May, theOblo
Bureau of Employment Services says.
The highest unemployment rate in the state that month, 19.5 percent, was In Men."'''' County, officials said Wednellday.

3 LINES ARE APP IIMAmY

9. __:..-------10.- - - - - - - - -

Spokane, Wash. , Lumen, Minerals
Wells, W. Va., Mrs. Freda Sucns.
Parkersburg, Mrs. Lucille Applin.
Sunland, Ca .. and Mrs. Cleo Fergu·
son, Huntington. W.Va. •
Funeral wUI be 11 a.m. Friday
from Bethany Unlled Methodist
Chu rc h , Parkersburg. Calling
hours w!U be one hour prior to serv i·
ces at the chu rch or from 2-4, 7·9
p.m. at , Levllt's Funera l Home,
\
Parkersburg.

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13. - - - - - - - - 14. - - - - - - - - -

15. - -- - - - - - -

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Charges Wednesday:
Admlsslon~-Willlam WL•e, Mid·
~rt; Ella Scarbough, Lo115 Bot· · '
tO'tn, Pauline Derenberg er,
Pumewy . Discharges--Georgi a
Swauger, Eddlth Fultz, Pauline
!Rrenberger, Grace Jividen. Homer Clark, Brian Justis.

Will sell ice cream
The Meigs Rowdies 4-H Club wUJ
be .'lelllng homemade lee cream,
ca1te1 and pie~ acros.~ from Meigs
Mu!!ellm, SAturday, July 3, rtom
~: ill a.m. untO goods are gone. The
~seum will also be open from 10
a:m.-2 p.m.

Don't doze off on this one! Our ,!lQ.t July Dog Day
.
Specials sale can put you on the scent to track down the best values
at the lowest prices in town' Treasures like these are more
precious than one of h,is old buried bones!

Confined to home
Cllarles E . While. Middleport, ls
conttned to his home and would apprectate hearing from ftrend,, His
address ls 22.1 N. Fllt!'.

lines

Emergency runs
The Meigs Co. EMSreported~v­
eral runs over die past 24 hoUrs.
'The Pomeroy squad took Ke.-mlt
GOkey !rom his Kingsbury Road
home to Veteran• Memorial Hospital at 2:11p.m., and at 10:27 p.m.,
tlley made another trip to VMH,
ti'IIL~porttng Pauline Derenberger
trom her Mechanic Street rest~- In two1110f'1111lgruns, the Rutland EMS took William RiciDnon
from WUils Road to Holzer Medical
Center at 7:33 a.m. and at 9:46
a.m., they trall8ported Joan Banks
tti Pleasant Valley Hospital.

(15 Words)

Days

1_ _ _ _ _ __

LADIES' &amp; GIRLS'

Beach Towa·ls

have moved toward adoption of a
ne-W School Income tax that could
becOme a ·complexity lor some
empioyers.
. Ronald A. Mucha ot the Ohlo Department ot Taxation said he expected the total to reach 40 school
districts. The deadline L• today 'for
school diStrict.~ to adopt resolution•
for the tax. which would be subject
to a vote of the people.
Under the new school district Income tax measu·re included tn the
major appropriatiOn bUI passed by
the Legislature In November. each
distrtct could have Its own tax rate,
calculated by the s t ate tax
comrrilssioner.
Employers would have to deter·
mine the sch(191district of each em·
ployee a nd-check It against a list of
the state's income tax rate&lt;; for dl•trlcts, Mucha said.
If an employee Uves in a school

.

boards by Aug. 1. School officials schools on the ballot In November.
with Income taxes, lhe emthen have until Sept. 1 to decelde The collection would begin in Januployer must withhold the correct
ary, If approved.
amount for that dL,trlct and for- · whether 1_?, put an Income ta x for
ward the a mount withheld to the
sta te, along wlth amounts withheld
lor the state personal Income tax,
Mucha said .
The tax department then would
distribute the tax to the school dis~
trict and retain 3 percent as a collection tee.
Employees could lace four layers
ol income taxes, including federal.
r----~------------------,
state, clty and school.
I
·
I
School dL~trlcts could roll back
property taxes. but few Included a
statement in their resolullons sayI
I
I
Ing they planned to trim some real
(
estate tax, Mucha said.
·
The tax ~ominlssioner would
I
have to arrive at two sets oft ax rate
I
(
figures lor each di•trlct - one on
(
I
Income of individuals and the ot her
I
on property to raise the amount requested by the school dis trict .
Pnnt one word in each
Rates must be certified to the
space below. Each in1tial

dl~trlct

Reagan _..:.:rc:::o::.:nt::in::ued:.::,;jl.ro~m....:.5111...::~;,_1

Price
BOYS'

Pickaway _C ounty has lowest rate
' COLUMBUS,-Oblo (AP) - PlciUiway County had the lowf'll un-

Veterans Memorial Hospital had
the following admL'!Sklns and dls;

¥2

class presentations were:
Nursery -" ! Love J es us";
Kindergarten-"I Learned of J esus"; Primary· "Jesus, Our Friend
and Savior" ; Middle-"Jesus, the
Child"; Jr.-"Jesus, My Hero and
Helper"; Teen· "God and Friend."
Clo,ing prayer was by L~oyd
Wright .

CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.- Col\lffibla, _a one-of-a-kind spaceship
no more, reached midpoint In tts ftnal tesl flight Wednesday. A ball&lt;;y
door latch marred the shuttle's near.tlawtessday, llut a flight dlrec·
tor said It will entn-comrnerctal serv1ce as scheduled In Novembl!r.
Astronaut Heruy Hart:lfleld cellibnted his 25th wedding annlv'!r·
sary by saU!ng 1G times around the world an Cduriibta. and Ills
partner, Ken Matt111gly made himself a hero to nine young people by
hotwlring an out~~mmlsslon student experiment and making It
work.
·
·
,
NASA took deliVery of Its second space cargo carrier, the Chat·
Ienger, !rom shuhk!maker Rockwell International. Tht: new ship, a
modernized clooe of Columbia, l~ to make flight 6 next January.

Veterms Memorial ·

Laurel Cliff hosts Bible school
The Laurel Cliff Freewill Methodist Church held a Bible ~hool
June 14-18, with an average dally
a ttendance of 96. The closing program was June 1n with Brenda
Haggy as director.
The opening prayer was by the
Rev. Robert Miller, wit h several
pledges to tte nag following. The

Col~mbia . enters mldpoint of flight

Will meet tonight

Amber Danlelle Blackwell is the
daughter of Steve and Shari Blackwell and not Steve and Shari Russell as was reported earlier. Names
omitted from the birthday celebratlon were Laura Hall, Anthony
Young, Davy Park, David Carmichael and J .R. Blackwell. Joshua
Young won the door prize.

.

Papers

ptomatlc solutloa and bellrved
there could )law been one."
..But be was not otherwio;e critical
Israel's actions, and he seemed
to accept Israel's explanation that
it launched Its Invasion to defend
Itself against artWery and rocket
·attacks trom PL() units in swfllern

or

(during month of July) ~

\6allipoli~ ·iiJaUu

l!fihnnt

The" Daily Sentinel

POINT PLEASANT REGISTER.

LebanOn.
Reagan said the PLO had.been a
government within a government
in: Liibanon and had "Pl!mled aggression themselves across a
border by way rOcket ftln8 and
allleiy lltu'rllfiS."
• • said .hls administration wa.•
bljestlgatlng wllether the Israell,
lilid used their u.s.-supPIIed mil.liar)! equipmen&amp; tor justlftable defeillve pu~ Ill' ~enstvely In
vlolltiOn r1 . retrtctton.•.'

-D.ollars

or

'

u.s.

.

.

•

(Sl.OO Savings)

CASH ONLY

...

Rt~-'269.95

J

$13595

~

352 (:.Main, Pomeroy

FTD Florist
I,

- -- -·- ·--- - .,--

.. ~ ---

--

-~ -

t.

I

-. i. -~

-

,.

�)'

Sentinel

•

Busm·' ess Qe....Tllces
·A.

C

1

~.a

t::==::=====::!1~===:::::::::===in:==~;;~~==:;d

21,
Admln lslratlve
(lode,Ohio
to routinely
monllor

5~unt indictment la~t November
of ' receiving thousands of doUars
worth of cash and merchandi'le in
return for disregarding blatant
sales of drugs on Chicago's West
Side between 1977 and 19111.
A star government wltnes~. MUton Kelly, co-chieftain of a curbside
heroin operation that ran around
the clock, testified that his ring was
so free of pollee intervention he was
able to offer "bonus bag days" on
such holidays as Chrl~tmas and the
Fourth of July.
Said Kelly, "On Father's Day
and Mother's Day, If someone
could prove they were a father or
mother, we would !leU them two
bags or heroin for the price of one."
Kelly, Green Smith and Charles
"C. W " Wilson, aU convicted &lt;ktg
bosses, stood out In the parade of 55
witnesses at the trial. Their te&lt;Jtlmony portrayed olflcers who took
bribes, stole m oney from arrested
people, wrote faulty arre.~t reports
to permit dope dealers to go tree,
and returned confiscated drugs to
dealers.

all," said an officer in the Marquette dl~trtct, where nine or the
defendants had been assign~. He
refused to be ldentllled by name.
Webb, ,..ho led the three-man
prosecutlon team, said the trial
showed both the community and
the pollee that authorities wtll put
a nyone who can contribute on the
wit ness stand to obtain a
conylctton.
Deputy Pollee Superintendent
James E. O'Grady said t he 10 office rs would be Immediately suspended pending filing of charges
with t he pollee board seeking their
dismls&lt;;al from the force.
U.S. District Judge John F.
Grady scheduled sentencing · for
Sept. 8. The defendants remained
free on bond, and attorneys for four
of them Immediately promised an
appeal.
The most serious c harge - aidIng and abetting - carries a min·
!mum mandatory sentence or 10
years' imprisonment without parole, and a maximum term of Ute
Imprisonment and a $100,000 fine.
The officers were accused In a

~~~~------~--~~~~~~~~0~~~~~~~---~~~~~~
e __ ..
LAFF·A·DAY

pouautNoTtcE
P'ubllcwatersuppllesare
required
by• Stale
', lllegulatton, Rule 3745-81 ·

10 ·cops face prison terms
CHICAGO (AP)- Ten Chicago
policemen face a minimum of 10
years behind bars for accepting
cash and merchandise to protect
two multlmUUon-dollar drug rings
after a trtal that relied heavUy on
testimony from convicts, criminal
bosses and heroin users.
"There was a feeling that these 10
officers could never be Convicted,"
said US Attorney Dan K Webb
after the gullty verdicts were returned Wednesday. "This case is a
warning to other pollee officers that
they cannot take graft a nd corruP'
lion from any segment of society,
Including dope peddlers."
The U.S. District Court jury deliberated 3!1 hours over live days
before finding the officers gullty of
r•~keteerlng, extortion. and aiding
and abetting a continuing criminal
e nterprise.
The key prosecution testimony in
the 12-week trial came from convicted narcotics deale rs and heroin
addicts - whose statements were
attacked as unreliable by defense
attorneys.
"Bunch of scum testified, that' s

'

, l'*l'lllcrobiOIOOlcal quallly
~ lftelr dlalrlbvtlon system
· oraer to enfUre that safe
Wiler is being s uppli ed to
'' "~s~r:Oe of Mid·
, ~~ Is required to
cellect and examine a
minimum Of three (3)
microbiological sam ples
eech monlh Two (2) sam pitH we .. collected and
...alyzed for the month of
May, 1982. All of the sam·
· Jiles that were collected
• and analyzed during thai
period ShoWed that wafer

DUGAN'S

o··N'S
n

'"I

. ' Ill .,.. drinking water In

AUTO' TRIM

FOR

ALIGNMENT

APPUANCE

&amp;ELECTRONIC
SPIN WHEEL
BALANCE

302 MeciNinic St.
Pomeroy,OH.
PH. 992·6506
•SEAT COIIERS
•VINYL TOPS
•CONVERT! BLE TOPS
•CARPETS
•A complete Line Of
Aujomoblle Upholstery
7·1·1 mo. pd.

KEN'S

USE"

•

All a IS

Bear Front-E nd
Service
Dependable,
guar ·
anleed Work 9 yrs Ex
penence .
SR 114, Rulland, Oh
For Appf. 742-2057
7·11 mo.

The water department

any occas on

- L ............ ,.

~""

Nllfltl·:l lO

Th~rs .-PoeiToum 12 Jt

.,, • ,,, LivE •••os
10
" "' •MONTH'S
o•own "BANDS
'" "''""
THIS
w... • "'"'

PENA

MARsH~~~ ~~:,N•Nrt,

AMBROSE
LOWERY
HAlLAUER
lerprlse. 1bey were WOllam Guide, Jobn Desimone,
CHICAGO COPS FOUND GUILTY- Tea Cblcago
FraDk Derlngo, Detmll Smealek, Rebert Eatman,
poUcemeo acc111ed of prolecUug lwo city drug rings
James Ball8uer, WUJlam ,lfass, Curtis Lowery,
were fOUDCI guilty Wednesday nll!bl on federal charges
Thomas Ambrose, IUid Joeepb Peu. (AP Luerpbolo,
of aldllll! IUid abettlog a coatlnuiD« crimlDaJ eo-

nee d S;

Built Garages"
Call for free sldtng
esflmates, 949·2101 or •
949·216,1).
No Sunday Calls

can

3 11 lfc

DABBLE

CARP.ENTER
SERVICE

SHOP

4 _ _ G1veawa'i_ _ _

CHECK OUT OUR
81 BLE SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
Pac-Man Party Packs
and Cake Available

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-30-lfc

6 21 I mo

1 Card of Thanks (patd tn advan ce )
2 Cilrd of Thanks (patd '" ildv~ncel

23 Professtonal Servt ces

6 Lost and Found
7 Yard Sa le ( pa td madvanct• l
8 Public Sale
&amp; Auct10n

31 Homes to r Sa le

32
J3
34
35

9 Wanted to Buv

58 F r utts&amp; Vegetables

Mobile Homes for Sal e
Farms for Sa le
Bus1ness Bulid1ngs

Lots &amp; Acreage

...... -.........
·······. . .
-········

•

&amp; lihe

11enta1s
42 Mob1l e Homes for Rent

14 Busmess Tra1n1ng
IS Schools I nstru ct1on

44 Apa r tmenttor Rent

&lt;11 Houses for Rent

45 Furn1s~ed Rooms
46 Space for r ent
.t7 Wanted to Rent
48 Equ1pment for Rent
.49 For Lease

18 wanted To oo

Public Notice-·- -

Pubhc Nohce

J ul y 12. 1982 a t 7 00 PM tn

The V1ll age of M•d
dleport will ho ld a publ1c
hear.ng on the 1983 village
budget
and
Fed e ral
Revenue Shar1na budget on

the VIll age council cham
bers
Fred Hoff man. Mayor
Vd lageof M 1ddleport
Ju ly 1

r----------------------Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Case No. 18114
KENNETH COZART AND
PATRICIA COZART
Plaintiffs,

MARY

A

CHASE, The

rods, thence West 1J3 rods
a nd 8 Ionks to the place of

begtnnln9. containing 32
acres, m~r e or less
You are reQu~red to an·
swer the Comota1nt w1thm

28

days

Up to 1S Words
Up to 15 Words

publica t 1on of thts notice

Oh1o and cannot be loca ted
otherw1se

wht c h Will be published on·

Plaontlff further alleges
1n hts Complain! thai the

each week for s1x sue
cessive w,eeks The last
pubh ca t 16r1 Will be made on

J uly 22, 1982, and the 28

Ohio

Rules

devisees, legatees and
assigns of Mamie E.
Browning, deceased

Cynlhta

E.

ANDREW

OURS,

deceased

Smith .

Dated June 14, 1982
Larry E. SRencer

clerk of Courts

Me1gs County, Oh1o
(61 17, 24, m 1, 8, 5, 22, 6tc

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Donald H. Calf,
Platntiff,

949-Raclne

742-Rulland
667-Cootvttte

and d•ning room

with 2 fireplaces, equtp
ped kttchen. break fast
room, basement, 3 car

garage . This brick two
story sits on 3 acres w•lh
a magnificent view Calf
'oday
FAIRVIEW HTS .
Near Me tgs Htgh. 3

6 14 1 mo

$3

tnsertton

ou

he~rs,

devtsees,

legatees and
ass1gns of Mary A Chase
Ella R Carpenter

The unknown he.rs,
devisees, legatees and

asstgns of Ella R

Judge
By carolyn GF Thomos
d eceased , late of said CounDe uty Clerk
ty, were filed In this Court !71 I. 8 2tc
of

of th1s action, was tran

Grace

ANI Eotote - General

aka Samuel
Sa td transfer

was made pursuant to a ta&gt;&lt;
certificate that arose out of

608 L MAIN
'POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

the sale of said tot for
de l tnquent real estate
taxes

Platnltff further alleges
that tho transfe r of title to

Grace Hernngton. Defendant, 1S ev1denced by an entry 1n the Meigs County,
Ohto AUdiTOr's Dupl iCaTe

2
3
4

5
6
7

8

v
_ _ __

Grace Hernngton, Defen

E

NEW LISTING - Nea r Pome roy E le mentary, 3 4
bedrooms, huge tam tly room. full basement, ntc e
level lot Good buy al $31,900

16

-1..------~-----------·-·-··.-~··" ·
~"

I

/

·A

"•'
;

.,

-Sewer

Water Line Hook-ups

' o

Beagle pup, female
675 777 1

Call

7 week old k1tfen, black and
while male. see 501 Bur
dette Sh Pomt Pleasant
Phone 304 675 6311
One Female dog, part Ger

man Shepherd, part Satnt
Bernard,

months

9

old

Phone 304 675 1385
Pupp1es 6 weeks otd Call
614 256 1265

Seplic Tanks
county certified

Large or smatt Jobs

PH 992·2478
6 27 t mo Pd

1&gt;13 2nd Ave , Galt •po lts
Thurs &amp; Frl July 1 &amp; 2 7
YardSa.lo
BW TV, ctothtng , odds &amp;
July 1,2,3 9 a m to 6 p m
ends 9AM to ?
K•ngsbury Rd ofl Rt 33. 4
'"
Yard
Sal e
Lots
of fane Follow s1gns
glassware. Oepress10n &amp;
new Items Mon July 51h, 9 July 1.2,3.4 9 to 6 778
Middleport
to 5 South 2nd Sf , Ol •vcr St
Rec ord cab1ne t, glass door
Cheshire. Oh
f1re screen. gold sw•v el
oc ker, g1rls c lothmg Lots
Yard Sale
Lots
of rmore
ttl
glassware Oepress1on &amp;

new Items Mon July 5th . 9
to S Soulh 2nd St , 5 fam ily Men lues Ju ly
5,6 Household , ch1ldrens.
Cheshire, Oh
Yard Sale July 2nd &amp; 3rd
Kn1fe , funny

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

OONSTJUCTION
Custom kitchens and appliances,
custom

bathrooms, remodeling,

Call 992·6259

plumbing, electric, and
healing.

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

Doberman &amp;

2 blue &amp; wntte and 2 snow
wh1te k1ttens Ca ll 614 388

ofree Est1mates

9909

675 1144
Patio Sa le Dan Evans In
surance Blvd on Mam St.
V1nton Fr.dav 9 htl? Spon
ser Sunsh•ne c lass at

United MethOdiSt

Kemper Hollow Rd for 1
m• 9 to 5 July 1 I 2 8 HP
lawn tr actor , lawn mowers,
cha1nsaw, TV . LX R Honda .
baby clothes. m1sc r
Rummage Sale Park Cen
tral Hott el on State St July
2,3, &amp;-tfh
Yard Sa le Fnday July 2nd ,
9 to ' Three miles be low
Eureka Ctoth,ng, small
appl•ances, m •sce lleanous

Open 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon. lhru Sal.
PH. 992-7762

Jack Coleman 6 21
&amp;Tim R011sh 1 mo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•backhoe

10

wks

old

Hea lth y &amp; wormed
614 256 1505
Black

&amp;

brown

Shepard, approx

Call
mc,lc

5 mos

7~2

old614
298
1
Mulberry
Trees

304 675

5349
Part Doberman puppy 304

6752041
Beagle pups to g1ve away
c a II '-16 9525

• ex'cavatlng
• septic system s
*A water, sewer

2 ttger grey k1ttens. litter

&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

Pupp 1es

tratned

Prefer

they

go

together Call 446 3897

.

licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201
3 29 tfc

8-20 tfc

1-----------+-----------+-----------f

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

6

Lost and
- -Found
- -~

July I, 2, &amp; 3 Cancel •I
Estate Sale 810 4th Ave
July 2 &amp; 3 Ant1que tron
beds .
d1shes ,
rad1os ,
rock1ng cha •rs , t.nens, cur
tams, c lothes, m1sc

Mutt1 Fam11y Yard Sale
Sa turday . 9 00 to 3 00. 179
Brentwood Dr Baby 1tems.
f1 rescreen ,
back pack .
b1cycle, turntable and
speakers. chi ldren &amp; adu l t
cloTh1 ng

July

1,2,3

Old

Rt

7,

Chesh1re
Furn1tur e.
ctot h•n g, m •sc Cal l 614 367

7209
Por ch

sale

Mtc hae l's,
P o m e~oy

at

Max1ne

Laure l Cltf t,
July I &amp; 2

01 sfl.es ,
wh a t nots ,
clothing, m1sc

3 family

Clothe s, toys ,
some ant1Ques July 1 &amp;

stan d, brown tweed
platform rocker, large can
ner. elec m1xer on stan d.
Iowrey magic gen1 e 88 2

ke yboard organ, games,
books, bnc brae. chttdre ns
clothtng 6X and up
Womens c lothong, 10 a nd up
and much more-. 614 992

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to
largest llad1ator

...."
.,,••

the _

Radtalor SpectaliSI
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Expenence

'·

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

'·

:·

,..-

Pomeroy, Oli.
Ph. 992·2174
' 2·26 tic

..•'
,,.

mbo Bob White
QUAIL
LaBONTE'S'
QUAIL FARM
Qual! of all ages
avatlable up to 8 Weeks
in any quantify
Eggs A!so Available
Cletf LaBonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bollom, OH.
45343
614-985·4345
6/2ol/1

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION'
New Homes - extensive remodeling
•Eiecrr.c work

•Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roottng work
~

14 Years Expenence

Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
or 992·2282
611 I mo

'·t ,

July 1. Thursda y. 4 m 1 out
Bulav•lle at tog house Ant

7567

rocker. color TV, 10 spd

2nd and'3rd 10 to? ?,

b ike. st roller, baby tfems,

2nd Ave Middleport

m aternttv . p1llows, truck IAtnl ic&gt;ues. pocket watches,
topper, d•shes, and more clocks. rayo tamp, 011 tam
446·097B
ps, stone 1ars, guns,
baskets, kmves, wal nut
tabl e, rockmg cha •r. wall
Neighborhood Garage Sale telephone, toys, clothes,
Tara Estates, Fnday 8· 30 hum1d1her, V W gasolme
to 4 00 B tk es. baby 1tems. hea ter , kerosene heater,
turn , and much mgre
sleeptng bag, blue drapes,
rain or shtne

Street Sale Friday July 2,
in

Kanauga

Highway Inn .

tn

front of

II,

::

122 Unton Ave. July I and 2.
9thru 4

.'

t'
,.,.

,,••

.

''·
'·:·,.

,..,,.r,d.

,.,.
,.

/ / . )1 ,

~
I•

All ,

••
'·

,f/)(/

.

l f · •,lllrli i&lt;lfll.'fS

e Roofing of lillypes

•Residential
•commercial
•I ndustria I
Racine, Ohio

. aii'cr'

~:Niiill·fii~mts. Hn.

1 •-

'·

And Home·Malntenance

16 YEARS EXP.

zb·- .

eSiding
·
e R•modeling
• FrH eslimlltl
e20 Yrs. experience

. TOM HOSKINS.

247-3534

1I: ·Free Estimates

I'

Ph. 949-2140 or 949·2322
HCHfc

(•

'

-

I

I

~ JIO..t,'l. •f I

I
I'

,.

I' I

I

Yard Sale 119 &amp; 122 4th
Ave., Gallipolis Fri &amp; Sal.
July 2 &amp; 3rd LOIS of Thursday. Fnday. and
Saturday. July 1,2,3 From
goodies
10-5 on Co Rd 5 in Brad·,
bury.
Yard Sate 2nd house past
Bidwell school on 554 July I and 2. Long street.
Rutland. Furniture, ntce
Thursday and Friday.
clothing, misc.
Garage Sale Furniture,
games, etc. This Friday_&amp; 5 fanllly. Thurs. and Fn .
Rock street. Pome,oy
Saturday, 9 to 5. Pleasant
right turn off of' Spring
Estates
near
Follow sign'S.

1ron. bra ss. or woo d K1 t
chen cubbards of all types
Tabl es, r ound or squar e
Wood te e bo xes Old desks
and book cases Wtl l buy
com plete housenold Gold ,
s11ver old money, poc ke t
wa tches. cha•n s, n ngs. and
etc lnd1an Ar t1 facts of all
t ypes A lso buy1ng ba seball
car ds Osbv Mar1 1n 99 2

6370
F r on t benct1 sea t for 1968 69
Ch ev elle 2 door , good

~ ment- ­

Sefll££1!£:=
Help Wanted

11

FOUR fam1ty yard sa le
near the South Fork Jul y

lsi , 2nd , 3rd 9 t•ll 3 If

' ' Ju ly 16, 1981

???')')')

rams w1ll be 1nS1 de
YARD sal e. ant •ques. TV
eQuipm ent , CB r ad1os.
m 1sc
1tem s M a1n Sf ,
Leon , wv 1111 Se l lou t
YARD sa le

Fn day an d

Sa turda y, Jul y 2 a nd 3 9 7,
904 Moss man Circle

FOU R famil y ya rd sa le,

July 1 and 2na . 2107 Monroe
Ave Po1nt Pleasa nt , above
Harmon F 1el d Cancel led 1f
r a1n
Baby c lothes, storm door .
truck , nms, d1shes. m1 sc
Past Post Off •ce, Gal li polis
F erry wv Thu rsda y and
Fr.day
1

Thursda y and F n day 9 1111
4, 2nd Lane Pl y male Road .
Ga llipoli s F erry , WV
292 1 Meadowbr ook Dr 1ve
Po1nt Pleasant Fnd ay and
Saturday 9 AM 1111

Ga rage Sa le, Barga.ns, Ap
pt1an ce s, book s, lapes,
ster e o Items
btk es
c lothes
From Tlfftn s
Storeroom tool s New elec
tron1 c parts. copy mach1ne,
otfrce m ach •nes, Upper
End Marquette Ave Po1nt
Plea san1, Frtday and
Sa turday 8 30 AM 1•11 400
PM
Ratn Sh1ne,
no t
r espons •ble for acCid ents

Unh m1 ted 1ncom e for sa les
mmded 1nd1V1dua l
Wtll
tr a m
Cont1dent 1a l tn
t erv• ew call Rum ley In
sura nee Agenc y .446 3320
Par t t 1me clea n1 ng person
for bus1ness est abli shment
Send nam e, rtddr ess and
pho ne numb er to box 603 , 1n
care of Ga ii •POIIS Dall y
Tnbune, B25 3rd Ave
Ga ll ipOl iS, 0 11 11563 1

DIS PLAY ME RC HAN D IS
lN G Ex pand •ng , muS"f be
able to star t 1mmed1ately
Beca use of our un 1que ex
pans 1on prog ram we are
h1r~ng
tn the Ga1 11 pol •s.
Pom eroy area
l Startt1 ng sal ary of Sl ,OOO
month , ba sed on per
for m ancP f or th ose who
qual dy
2
We
off e r
pa1d
hos.p•ta l •zat .on and pr of 1t
shar1 ng
3 No l ayolf s no stn kcs
4 M an ag em ent pos1f 1ons
ava •l able
5 H1gh school educat 1on
and car r eQu ir ed
F or conflden l •al 1ntcr v •ew
call Jul y 2 or 5 bE' tw een 10

a nd 4 446 2096
12

S•tuat1ons Wanted

Room . board and laundr y
for elderl y Reaso nable
614 991 6748 or 991 6022
W ill do babysi tt ing m my
home 6 1.4 992 5801
Clean Hom es or Of fi ces,
Ref erence s
Dependab le

Phone 304 67 5 6043
Insurance

13

Yard Sale, July 2,3 lhree
tam111es. 10 Mil es Nbrt h
Po 1nt
Pl eas ant,
ne ar
Ro lltnSV IIIe 1972 Pontiac ,
truck nms cobra base
stat1on , c ast tron su)k , front
of a klf c hen c ab1n et.
c loth1ng chddr ens an d
adults sm all and some 16
18, al so new Avon Produ c

ts

SA ND Y AND BEAVE R In
su rance Co has off er ed
serv• ces for fi re 1nsurance
cov era ge tn Ga ll1a Count y
for al most a cen tu ry
Fa r m, home and pe rson al
pr opert y coverages a r
ava il ab le to m ee t m
d1v 1dua1 needs
Cont act
Nea l In sura nce Age ncy,
agent Phone 446 1694
15

Publ1c Sale
&amp; Auct10n

8

I

Rt c k
P e a1r s on , Ex
penenced AUCTIONEER
Estates. an t iQues, farm ,
household L1 ce nse d Oh to
WV Buy tng antiQues 30.4

773 5785 773 9185
Auct 1on ev ery Fr1 n1ght at
lhe Hartford Commun •t y
Center Tru ckload s of new
merchandt se every wee k
Cons tgments of new and
used mer chandiSe alway s
welcom e
R 1c har d
Reyno lds Auct 1oneer 275

3069
EMMA Bell Auct1on Ser
v1 ce Sa le ea ch Tuesd ay 7
p m Mt Alto, clccept.ng
cons1gnments Tuesday 10
am
until sal e t1 me
Buy1ng and sell1 ng estat es
Free estate appra•sal, 304

428 8177

__,_

July I and 2, on North Mam
St 1n Rulland Sears Scroll
saw. Remmgton Elec
chatn saw. 614 742 2777 or
742·2648.

OLD FURN ITUR E. beds,

The Ga l ll il County B o~ rc1 of
M ent al Retardai 10n and
Dev elopm enTal D•sabll lttrs
1S c ur r en tl y acccpt 1n g
pr op osa l s for
Speech
Ther apy ser v1ces f or th e
m ent all y re tard ed and
d E? ve lopm entall y d1sabl ed
per sons r es1d 1ng 1n Gatll a
Cou nty Age nc1es and per
sons 1nter es ted tn sub
m1111n g pr oposa l for con
tr ac tm g ser v tces may ob
t am proposa l and ap
pl• ca t• on gu1deli nes from
th e Gall1 a Cou nty Boar d of
M ental Re tardatiOn and
Deve lop mental D•sab1ll tes,
P ,O Bo x 14 , Cll eSh1re, Oh 10
45620 Ap phca tton deadline

Dr ,

Spnng Valley 9 00 AM to &gt;
Sat July 3

Shepard Approxomatelv II
years old Answers to Poo Basement PafiO sa le July
Lost 1n Rutland 614 742 1,2,3 361 Grant St . •n back,
Mtddl eport
Oh
Mtcro
2942 Reward SlOO.

basement with

Avon coll ection s Ram can
eels Teaford Hall Lawson

YA RD sa le Ju ly 1st a t
Gallipoli s F err y, across
tram Jordan Cem eter y 9
til l 3

family Fn , Sa t , Sun 133
Butternut
Fur n tt ur e,
FOUND
Ma le Bassett sew1 ng mach1ne. bedd1ng,
Hound Very well kept gas hea ter , tool s, f1shing
Beautifu l dog Yesterday rods. d1shes. rugs , a1r conct.
wardrobe, lawn mower,
6U 992 6204
type wnter . lu ggage ,
ttect1ables
lOST
Part Beegle l!o

Yard Sate

guage , toothptc k holde r &amp;

Garage Sa le Fa1rf 1eid Cen
tenary Rd Fa.rf •eld Acres

-4

=-- =- -- -1- = 0

Water St , Syracuse EK
large s1ze men &amp;
wom ens c lothmg, di Shes,
sal e, pepper shakers, Avon
(cheap) , Model A l•re

tra

501 FirSt St Jul y 1St &amp; 1nd

FOUND Male white dog J ul y 2 At McClung's store
w1th brown collar Rt 7, buldtng. New Haven, W V
nea 256
r Raccoon
Bndge Call
614
1525

7

~

•terns

Yard Sa le off
N e1gh
borhood on Bellany Lane

3476

s hape 304 67 5 5791

810 S S~Kono ~ Mi ddl eport
July 2 thru 10 Bedd.ng
qu•lts 9AM Froday &amp; linens , d1shes, furn•ture,
t1 an ce s. Si lve r stone,
Saturday on ly Kelton Rd app
toys, tool s, 1ew elry, pots,
JUS I oft 160 Call 446 0929
pan s, kn•ves, m1sc Com e
See I
Garage Sale Old route 7,
Addison. Oh Ju ty 1. 2. 3 B1g Yard Sal e Near Me1gs
from lOAM to 6PM 2 Ga
lha line Jul y 2,3,5 Iron
r ad1os, records, tapes,
womens c lothes s•zes 12 18 pots, glasswar e, rock1n g
chair S, milk. ca ns. tots
1/2, some chlldrens 1tems
m ise
and lots of m 1sc 1tems
Yard Sale R t 160 turn r1ght

Go l d , sil ve r , ster lin g.
1ew el ry , t 1n9s , old coins &amp;.
currency EN Bur ke tt Bar
ber Shop, M idd lepor t 992

LARGE Ya rd Sa le July 3

Yard Sale 3 F am1ly Some
an t iQues, toads of g00d1es.

Yard Sa le 49B Oa k

deasonable Rales

Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·7560
I 7 ltfc

C. R. MASH

Reg

She phard Call 614 379 2617

men &amp; woen' s co mplete
wardrobe 9 5 Mulberry
He1ghts. Pomeroy

books , otd Iron bed. lools.
dishes, 1n pack wrench 2
miles out Jerr 1co Rd NoT
respons1ble for acc1dents

FREE pupp&gt;es 7 wks old
Part

Write M D Moiler . Rt 4,
Pome roy, Oh Or 992 7760

and jeans

rams

•All Minor &amp;MaJor
Auto &amp; Truck Repair

~==========:t=========i;:========:;l

I

black &amp; tan Call 6t4 379
2780

MIDDUPORT

Roush Lane

•'

I

U3
I

Gas Line-Cliches

- Gas L1nes
-Sep11c Systems

.,•

MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful older colonial Wtlh ~I I
mOdern features Including a new swlmmmg pool,
WB FP, central air, etc .. etc , $11,900 down, balance
at 14% interest, 20 year term, S59 91/month.

.

Mall This Coupon with RamiHanca
The Dally Santlnal
111 Court St;-:" Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

.,

POMEROY- Ntcely remodeled 3· 4 bedroom home,
level lot, excellent neig hborhood - want $27,500,
SS,500 down, balance at 13% -tnterest, 20 Yea r s.
5257.75/month
.
"-

•
REALTORS
·,
Henry E . Cleland, Jr., GRt . • , , .. , . , , , , .. 992-61'91
Dollie Turner : .. ............. , , .. , ...... 992-Hh •
Jean Trussell ....... .... ...... : . .... , .. "49·2"'
Office , ........... , • .-..... , ....... .... Jt2-2259

35. ,,_ _ _ _ __

home,

4-46

~-

garage and 2 porches.
$45,000

,,

MtNERSIItLLE- Nice lhree bedroom home with
full basement and riverview. $5,700 down, balance
of $29,800 at 13% lnlerest, appx. 29 years term
· remaining, S330.20/monlh

34. _ _ _ _ __

Cornet M•in lo S. 2nd

LOOKS LIKE NEW Age 5, has 2 acres, welt
drained and cared for 2
bedroom
insulated

,.

RUTLAND .o-REA- Assum'1.10an, $5,?00 down, includes assumption expenses, bblance Of $26,960.47
at 12% interest, appx 28 yea• term remalnJng
S278.2ol/mohth . Nice' home on appx. 1'1&gt; acres witH
storage bulldmg, elc.
•

33. _ _ _ _ __

COLEMAN'S
GARAGE

1-( 614)·992-3325

· RACINE - Seller financing, nice three bedroom
home on a good stree1- wants $29,900, $7,500 dow?,
12% interest, 20 years to pay balance of $22.400. •f
S2-16.Wmonth will negQiate, - or $10.000 down, 10%
interest. $19,900 balance 20 years al$192.04/monlh

~

4 cute ktttens to good home

BEDS IR ON, BRA SS , old
fur n 1tur e, go ld, St i ve r
dollars, wood 1ce boxes.
stone 1ars, an11ques, ,etc,
Compl et e
hou se hold s

S Family Yard Sole July 1
&amp; 2 I mi. out Georges
Creek, on McCully Rd Cur
talns, childrens ctotnes.

9AM 1111 ?

, Wa'!Jed _!€'Bu ----

700 1,000 solid old bricks,
any color Call '-16·2192 or
~-16 9171

4 Family Yard Sale at Eno
General Store Thursday,
Friday &amp; Saturday 8 til6.

Frt &amp; Sat 2nd &amp; 3rd

acre lot House

CHESTER AREA - Ten
e mtnt farm, lhree
bedroom home wants 535.
- $7.000 down, balance al U .S% interest, 20 year te
, S36-4.8o&amp; monlh.

32. - - - - - -

•L-- - - - -

1!::~

c L k •tchen
Mason, W. Va .
6 20 I mo

Phone

NEW LISTING - Wrap around porch , l lf&gt; baths ,
four bedrooms, full base ment, large paved park ing
area, storage bulldmg, and appx
1s n1ce at $32,500

1-304-773-564

Llcen•ecl &amp; Bonded
Phone 949-2293
or 949·2417
3·3-tfn

SERVICE
Water-Sewer-E leclrtc

VIRGIL a: SR. ;
216 E. 2nd Sf•.

house All moner als 548,000

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

1

rectamallon.

-Dump Truck s
- Lo·Boy
- Trencher
- Water

AU STEEL
BUILDINGS

balan ce •n fenced pasture Large pond and an old

Larry E , Sf1encer
Clerk Of Courts .
(6) 17,24(7) 1,8, 15.22,6tc

31

13

ANI E8tala - Ganaral

Barns, equtpment sheds, cribs,
and garage are all 1n good condtf1on on this 89112
acre farm. Appx 40 acr:es •n hay and crops, with the

dan!, received Lot 138 of
Lower
Pomeroy,
the
pt'bperly Of WhiCh IS the

foundations ,

NOW OPEN

-Backhoes

NEW LISTING -

for the year of 1900 at Page
62, Lone 7, showing that

ds,

6 27-1 mo

INTEREST RATE FEATURES

17
18
19, _ _ _ _ __
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27.
28.
29
30. _ _ _ _

aforementioned,

Herrmgton ,
Defendant
h e re1n ,
by
Samu el

Public Nolice

1

the

Car·

penter
Mamte E Brownmg
The unknown heirs,
legatees and

Mamte

peted and drapenes.
basement w1th wood
burner, healed doubl ·~
garage. Owner w•ll con·
~der some fmanc 1ng
ACR EAGI! - 14 acres,
wtth 6 r.:oom house in
need of repaor, Situated
oul Pomeroy, just off
1tt. 7. ASitmg$10,000.
RUTLAND- On 51 Rl
124
Extra nice 3
bedroom ranch home,
large· living room with
fireplace. modern k1t
then, garage, patto, on
'h acre tdeal 1ocat1on
-for only $36,500
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·3171
Velma Nlcinsky, Assoc
Phone 742·3092

Dozer &amp; backhoe •••vice. wller. sewer. pon·

- Dozers

enclosed sunporch, co"

Sa •d Inventory without Ap
pra•sement will b e for
heanng before th1S Court

Appraisement of the esta te

Ridgway aka Ridgeway .
Platnltlf further a lleges
that lhe real estate taxes to
lot described heretn
is lhe subject of this
re currently It sled
,-.·•• ;~·~,,,~name of Grace
H
tax
of

Case No

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Mary A Chase
unknown

e:

Rtdgway
Rtdgeway

_

TOGETHER
• Stamless Stee l
• F1berglass
eVmyt lmers

EXCAVATING

room with bay window,
mOdern kitchen. glass

Ohio. v1z : - the surv 1vinq1 on the •19th day of July,
spouse, the next of kin, th e 1982, at 2.00 o'clock P.M
benefle~anes under will ,
Any . person des ~ring to
and to the attorney or at
file exceptions thereto
torneys r epr esent1nq any of mvst fil e them at lest five
the aforement 1oned per
days pnor to the da te set
sons
for hear1ng
Myrtle M Durst (Case
Given under my hand
No 23814). Syracuse, Ohio. and sea l of sa1d Court, thts
You are her eby not1f1ed 28th day of June, 1982.
that the Inventory Without
Rober! E Buck

ced by an entry on the
eigs Counly Transfer•
ecord No. 8 at Page 183, I'"""'""'
ne 15, dated January 5,
1901, wheretn lot 138 of
Lower
Pomeroy , the
property !hat is the sub1ect
to

!'~ b_!i ~Notice _

WE POOL

s

over I acre . Ble nded
.,; 'tale. Asking $49,500
MULBERRY
AVE
\.OCATION Large
two story home. 3
bedroorm;, 2 baths, big

$7-00

_

Public Noltce
are reSidents of the State of

ownersh1p of the lot
described herein is eviden

sferred

Ktttens to good home Ca ll
4-16 4173

old, part Walk er and par'

ent w1th fam lly room,
rec room and garage,

SA 00

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND '
CONSTRUCTION

Garage Sale 9 ,00 to S:OO,
Thurs. &amp; Fri . Sal. till noon,
112 prlcos Fairfield Acres
Subd ivision.

3 Coon Hound PUPS 12 WkS

bedroom ranch home,

One daY mser t10n
Three day 1nsert•on

m1n1strator · of the estate,
to such of the follow1ng as

subtect of. th1s action, from

Defendants.

B~~~i[~~of

be rendered

Jl'!J bJI ~ N_O!ICe

The

unknown hetrs, dev1sees,
legatees and assigns of An·
drew Ours, deceased

The

Civil

aga1nst you for the rel1ef
demanded tn the Com
plain t .

CYNTHIA E . SMITH, The

unknown he1rs, devisees,
legatees and ass1gn s of

w~ll

of

judgment by

Public Notice

the deed granting
property described In the
preceding paragraph, to
th$ Defendant herein IS not
record ed in the Deed
Records of Meigs County,

last

defaull

unknown h'e1rs, dev1sees.
legalees and asstgns of Jefferson Chase, deceased

)Wanted
JFor Sale
l Announcement
I For Re nt

the

Procedure,

JEFFERSON CHASE , The

These cash rales
Include discount

after

assigns of Ella R. car·
MAMIE E. BROWNING,
The
unknown he1rs,

Address-----------------

\

Pomeroy

98s-Chester
343-Porlland
147- Letart Falls

up to 15 Words Stx day

Public N0t1ce

The
unknown heirs,
devisees, legatees and

CARPENTER ,

penter, deceased

Nam•-------------------

PubliC NOtiCe
-------

days for answer will com mence on that date
In case of your flulure to
answer
or
a.therwise
respond .;~s reqUired by the

ELLA R

coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

I •

room

Area Code 304
67s-Pt Pleasant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773- Mason
812- New Haven
89s-Lelarl
937-Buffalo

alr·conaii!Oned, basem ·

86-M H Repatr
17 Upholstery

ce

·YS ·

unknown he1rs, devisees,
legatees and ass1gns of
Mary A. Chase, deceased

Wnte your own ad and order by mall w1th this

· 1

83 Excavatmg
84· Eiecnc'al &amp; Rt?fr1qerat•on
85 General t1aullng

Mason Co. , wv

Metgs County
A rea Code 614
992- Middleport

(A verag e,. wGrds ,_r line)

Public Nohce

PUBLIC NOTICE

•

.....

PIIGII£ 742-ZGOl
EXECUTIVE HOME Approx. 3000 sq ft .. 3
bedroorn•.2 full ba ths,2
IN!lf baths, huge ltving

Jlvtng room wtth
fireplace. huge din1ng

-- ----

15.

ell

61 Farm Equ 1pment
62 Wanleo to buy
63 L• ves tock
6.4 Hay &amp; Gram
65 Seed &amp; Ferf!ltzer

43 Farms for Re nt

17 M1scellaneous

,.

5tF.IEtS
81 Home I mprovements

II Help Wanted
12 S1tuat1on Wanted
13 Insurance

10
11
12, _ _

446-Galllpolls
367-Cheshlre
318-1/inton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dist
U3-Arabia Dis!.
379-Walnut

82 Ptumbtng &amp; Heating •

16 RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repair

!..l

Area Code614

59 Fo r Sa le or Trade

36 Real Esta te Wanted

(
(

Gallta County

BASEMENTS
PATIOS
DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
RICHARD GARFIELD
985-4464

Ceotao S. Hlhltll11 Jr.

following felephone exchanges.

74 Motorcycles
75 Boats &amp; Motors
76 Auto Parts &amp; Accessor• es
77 Auto Repa1r
78 Campmg Equ•pment

56 Pe ts for Sate
57 Musctal Instruments

PERSON who has

4210

HOBSI EllER REALTY

Classified pages cover the

72 Trucks for Sate
73 Vans&amp;4WD

53 Anti ques 54 M1sc Merchandtse
55 Butldtng Suppli es

Real Estate

''

71 Au tos for Sa le

52 CB. TV &amp; Rad•o Equtpme nt

4 G tveaway

5 Happy AdS

'

s 1 Househo ld Goods

22 Money to Loan

3 Announcements

............. ...···•·. . . . ....
.......

· - • • ~

ANY

anything to give away and
does not offer o.. at1empt to
offer any other thmg tor
sale may place an ad tn th1s
column There witt be no
charge to the advertiser

-------- r::========:i;:=========i==========~ Call- -614- -379- -2585- -orANI E8tato - General

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

~ackson

YOUNG'S

olecttlafworl
1ft" Estllll.lllsl

..
';

&amp; Paci_Dg ASSOCiatiOn Inc
is sporfSoring a horse show

be
racking,
pac1ng .
walking horse and English
classes

::t=.-=r'"'""
_,....,...,

I'

MOUNT IAN State Rack&gt;ng

ds, Cottagevttte, WV Will

Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-2063

9

E lectroly s•s

Center A M A. approved,
Doctor referals, by ap
pomtment only 30~ 675
6234

Juty 3 at 6 p m at

'U..IIMtllledollol

5 9 tfc

21 Business Opportuntfy

Do

County J untor Falrgroun

71 1 mo

PHONE 992-2156

"Bea utiful, Custom· ~

&amp; Commercial

LONE woLF'~'

Or Write Daily Sentinei'Ciassilied Dept.
1.11 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

..... .

a oons

1

Profess1onal

f urnaces

repair service and
Installation.
Resldentla I

We tt.dly .tnnounu ltt.al uc h
nlthl ot- lhl' B;utd ..... otter'
dr~n k and drown Some dr.nlts
rMuud durlnt band
Ot.lr Mrs. Mon Frl 1 00.2 lO r
S.l a Sun. 4 2 Jt . Carry Out

..

•••• J.l

Control hunger and Ipse
weight with New Shope
Ole! Ptan and Hydrex
Water Pills Fruth Phar
macy .

Y

The Daily Sentinel

f IH3Htl31

~ 1very, Davis Vacuum
~ •
•
Cleaner, one half mtle up
Georges
Call
0294 Creek Rd
'-16
·

hosptlal, homes for almost
l~===~===~=:t~=========~~======~~~~ ferent
way
to
1 . Deliver
B II
•
· l;:, ':~~ftsn:gnft~~r~~ CANDLELIGHT INN
MILLER
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
~o- ~a~~ ~ ! __ ~. ~1-rbee. performed In !he
ELECJRIC
SIDING ,
Gotf
Lessons
John
'""'
Sf. AI. 7- Be!Wetn MidBISSELL
Teaford Chester, Ohto.
J~~ 30 • July 1• 2
dleport&amp; Cheshire, Oh.
SERVICE
PERMANENT
PROUOt PRESENTS
HAIR REMOVAL
To••
SIDING
co.
wefs.-•.cortry
For all your wiring

Minimum Prins- The Lawes I
PHONEHJ tfl:l

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

machine repair,
su~plles
Pllkparts,
up and
and

• 8 Wuher s
• Dish ·
w..htrs
BALLOONS FOR ALL OC
8 Ranges • Rtfrlgeral· , CAS
ION S S• y Happy B1r
ors
thday, I Love You, II'S a
• Dryers • Freezers
Boy or Gi r l. Get Well
PARTS and SERVICE
Anyln•no you wish 1n a dtf

quality was being provided
g ood microbiological
• of
lolhepubttc.

Beer •net Wine Avalll bt. at

_,,,,,

3- -.--Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing

~:_:-:_)~~silo

9

S cho ~l s

ln struchon

K ar ate the ult•ma te tn se lf
defenc e a ll pr 1va te lessons,
M en. wom en, &amp; children
1nstru c t10 n thr u b lack belt
A l so av ailable Kar at e
um tor m 5 puc h1ng an d
k1 ck1 ng bags , and prot ec
t 1\IC equ•p ment
Je r ry
L ow ery
&amp;.
A ss oc 1a t es
K ar at e Stu d 1o,
1 43
Bur l 1n gton Rd , Jack son

Oh Ca ll614 186 3074
18

Want ed to Do

Lawn M ow1 ng no y ar d to
b1g or sma ll Rel •abl e an d
d ependa bl e For est.ma tf'

ca ll 446 3159 afl cr 6PM 156
1967
Tro sh co ll ec t •on &amp; haul•ng
Ca ll 446 .4480
I ns1df' 81 ou iS.•dc pa.nt. ng
f ree E'S f•mates Call 446

9499

-

W_anled To_ Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old fur
ntture and AntiQUes of all
k1nds, call Kenneth Swa1n,

I nstd e Ouf s•de pa •n.,tt ng ,
Home r emodeling, repa 1r
and Plu mbi ng, reasortab le

Phone 304 882 2987

446 3159 or 256 1967 •n the
even1ngs

Bu y tn g

Go ld,

Solv e r ,

~!'CJ. !O l '!a!!._____

Platmum , Old cotns, scrap
rmgs &amp; Silverware Da1ly

22

quotes

your home 30 year f 1Xed
rate WV-a &amp; Oh10 Leader
Mortgage, 77 E Sta te St ,

availab le

Also

coins &amp; co'" supplies for

sale. Spring Valley Trading
Co, Spring Valley Plaza.
4-46 8025 or 44&lt;! 8026
We pay cash for late model

clean used cars

Fren~htown

,.

Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson
446·0069

REFINANCE or purchase

At hens. Oh 614 592 3051
- --- ·- --·

23

- ProfesstonalServices

c&amp;

LBookkee ping

~

-

Bookkeeping &amp; ta&gt;&lt; service

for a ll types of busme5ses
Carol Neal
446 3862

�Ohio

Sentinel
Real &amp;state
Jl

l~

They'll Do It Every Time
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers ,
refrigerators ,
ranges . Skaggs
Ap ·
pllances, Upper River Rd. ,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·7398.

Homes for Sale

142 acre farm gOOd house
and barns. Cal l446·2599.
Attrclctive 4 bedroom bi
lev~l , walking distance to
Holzer Hospital. First tim e
off~red . Call446·0025.
3 b~r . horne 3 miles from
, c ity on Rt. 141. carpet, new
vinyl ·siding, nat. gas, FA
furnance, birch cabi nets.
several closets, 2 out·
buildings. Call446·3897 .
3 bedroom brick. ]6 year
old home, P / 2 baths,
fireplace ,
garage ,
basement. One acre . First
tirtle of.tered for sale.
Bulaville Road . Ca ll 614·
245·9210 or 614 ·992 3905.

--·--- ----·--.
__Mile.

-

Mer5~d.!~

-

_

Rest. equip. tor sale.
Tables, booth's, ice cream
freezer and othtr assort.
l t~ms . Building for sale or
rent In . downlown · Mid·
dleport. 614 -992·3142 or 742·
2820 . .

3;

bedroom
house in
Pomeroy . Vinyl sidi'ng,
fireplace , ni ce tocafion.
Phced to se ll. $24,000 . 614·
992 ·7446.
Super loca tion, close to
Meigs High school. 3
bd.room , brick front, ranch. l'h baths . Fully car·
peted. Full basement, with
fam i ly room . Farage .
utility and work shop. Over
1 acre. Asking $49,500. Hob·
stetter Realty tor in·
formation . 614·742 ·3092 .
Assumable 71t• perce nt
loan, 4 bedroom, 2 full
baths, all electric 75xl00
corner lot. 1·304·882·2319.
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad ·
dition, 3 bedrooms, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air. basement. phone
304·675·1542.
.
.....,----

-·-

---

-- - --

2 bedroom home . Phone
304-675-3675 after 5 PM .

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI -STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . USED·MOBILE
HOMES , CARS, TRUCKS .
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK
OUR PRICES. CALL 446·
7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALI.J.,Y.
MOBILE
HOME ., SALES, 4 MI .
WEST , GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868 .
~·

.....-

1980 Windsor l.otx70 , new
Goi:\d. Deluxe kitchen, large
llvlng room &amp; bath, 2
ti~drm . Hidden util. room .
:179-2310.
~~ ----

-----~

lJi&gt;l Vinedale . Cal l 446·7427
bilfore lOAM or alter 7PM .
~ ----- ----

l970 12x60 Buddy mobile
Horne . Call between5and9 .
(lall446· 1213.
+--r-- - - - - - - - Near Chester . 2 choice
acres and 1980 3 bd .room
14x70 mobile home. $21,000.

ser

2 lots F irsf to t is 3 trailer
space tra i ler park . Second
lot is 200x200 . Loca ted in
Mercerv ille, 446·4684.

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential,
free estimates. Call614·2561182.

COLORED TV, black &amp;
white TV, baby bed, oc·
casionat antique table. Call
304·675-6010.

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call 614-388-

1 acre on 160 S4 ,500
assu mable loan . Ca ll 614·
388·8437 .

Rentals
4~-=-~0uses ~~~~--=
Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land contract in town or
country .
Call
Strout
Rea lly , 446·0008 .
3 bdr. house good loca tion ,
2 bdr. apt, HUD excepted .
A·One Real Estates, Carol
Yeager Realtor . Call 304·
675·5104 or 675·5386 .
House, 120 Jrd . Ave .,
Gallipolis. 2 bdr ., gas heat.
dep. req . The Wiseman
Agency , 446·3643 .
For sa te or rent with option
to buy . 3 bdr ., 638 Jay Dr ..
Gallipolis. $350 per mo.
Ref. 8% assume loan. Call
446 · 3919
or
446 -0021 ,
evenings 446·3189 .

Apt. for rent, furnished in
Racine . 614 ·423·8257 lor ap·
pt., alter 4 p.m .

-- _,_ ---· -

- -----

~~~~~~~~~~~ff;~§~~~~~~~
'.! _ _t:_arm ~ciiiif&gt;m~f ::_

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses.
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or614·245-9484.
APARTMENT
in
Pt .
Pleasant, 614·446·8221 .
MARSHALL Students. One
block from Student Center.
1,2 and 3 bedroom apart·
ments
available .
All
utilities paid . Jim Tat·
terson 304·776·8345 alter
4:00p.m .
APARTMENT for rent in
Pt . Pleasant . Phone 304
675·5968 after~ p.m
Three room furnished
apartment, adults, no pets,
Point Pleasa nf . Phone 304675·2453 .

4 rm . house &amp; bath, ref . and

4~ _

dep. req . Call446 · 3~58 .

Furnished Room . Sl25.
uti l ities paid, 919 2nd ave ..
Gallipolis . Single male,
share bath . Call 446·4416 af·
fer 7PM .

Myrtl e
Beach
r eso rt
located south of Myrtle
Beach SC. Brand new
lu~uriou s
condom i nun ,
ocean front for rent by day
or week, 2 bdr ., 2 baths,
completely furnished , 2
pool s, tennis courts &amp; 24 hr.
securily . Call 614·367-0480
or 446 -3426 after 6PM .
4 room &amp; bath . Full
basement. 614·992·3090.

_.E._u!nished

~oom!_

_

Rooms wifh cooki ng, cab le,
air . S40 a week . 304 -773·
5651.

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

~ - __s~~~~f~r_R!_I!.! _

COUNTRY MOBILE Horne
Park, Route 33, North of
Pon1e'i-oy. Large tots. Call
992· 7479 .

Furnished. 4 rooms and
bath . Racine Ohio. 614-949 2619 .

Small
trailer spaces.
M ason . 304·773·5651.

Mod t~ rn

49 -- - ---- For Cease ----

3 bedroom
miles back New
References and
required . Phone
2686.
42

- - -

house, 5
Haven,
deposit
304·882 -

Mobile Homes
Rent
--for -·-------

-·---

------

-----

For lease 2 bdr .. cedar ran ch
beaufiful
stone
fireplace, wrap around
deck, lovely 6 acre setting,
near Green SchooL Call
Wiseman AgencY. 446·3643.

-·

Mobile Home, Eureka, I
Bdr .. turn .• riverfront tot,
ref . 8. deposit . Adults, $100
mo. 1-643·2644.

For Lease, The Sitver
Dollar Club, Henderson .
Phone 304-67510@0.

Clean 12X60, 2 bdr . mob i le
home. Furn., convenient,
good neighborhood, air
cond., sec . dep. req . Caltaf
fer 5, 446·8558 .

Merebandlse
~1 - - HOUseh~old GoodS -

--- - - - - - - - -

5~ _ Mis-C.~:i~hancff~ -­
.Piastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved. 1,000
gal. lank, price $340 . Other
sizes in stock. haul in your
pick~p truck . Call 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

1975 Case 450, dozer·
tra cfor , 1,800 hrs., very
good cond ., $14,900. Call
446·4537 .
RATLIFF'S POOL CEN ·
TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
installation. 40J ·2nd. Ave.,
Ga llipol is, Oh·. Call 446·
6579 . In ground· Ablove
ground .
-

Building materials block ,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call614·245·5121 .

REG. QUARTER HORSES
Training,
showing,
breeding, sales and boar·
ding. Contact, Dan Beam,
Gallipolis, 446-0183.

===-=-p;T.f~r 'fa'j~- -=

DRAGONWYND ' CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL . AKC
Chow
puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. call 446·
3844 after 4 p.m .
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call446·7795.
POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at614·367·
7220 .
Son ia's Professional Dog
Grooming. Call614·388·8547
and ask for Sonia .

12 inch BeiSaw self teed
pla iner , 9 sets molding
knives, 1..- shaper , several
extra knives. Call446 -9285 .

PINE RIDGE COLLIES
AKC Registered Collie
pups. Call 614·256·1267 or
446·2107.

39 yds. carpet, humidifier

Grooming

services for
clip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer's. Reasonable.
For appt. 614·992·7342.

8. air cleaning machine . pets . Will
WEDDING dress, size 14,
$50. 304-675·1349.

Ferguson front end loader
with pump for Freguson
135. $1 ,200. Call 614-6432803.

•l=

~

Call614·245·9587.

For sale Oliver hay baler,
gOOd cond., 614·256-6038, af ·
ter I 2: 30PM.

AKC Registered Pari black
Woodburner warm mor- &amp; &gt;white Cocker Spaniel.
ning stove &amp; warm mor- $75 . firm . Also poodle pups.
ning gas heater. Call 614· 614·992·7102 .
256·1768.
POODLE
pups,
AKC
Depression, carnival, pat- registered. No Checks, 304·
tern &amp; pressed glass . 895·3958.
Moped, ex . cond. Call 614·
367-7169 .
BOXER, 1112 years old,
registered, female, 304·882·
8ft . pool table. Call446 ·8502 2449 .
after6PM.
New ·Z-ealand white rabbit,
New H B Smith Com· c~n be regfstered, mixed
mercia I coal fired boiler &amp; rabbils, 8 weeks old. $3 .00
stoker, still
crated. each . 304·576·2725.
3,300,000 BTU's per hour.
Stoker handles 200 lbs. coal ss - - -- - -- r=ruil - · - per hour, if needed . All
- -~-V_&lt;!lJ~f!'!!_!!! _-pumps, gauges, electrical
&amp; wiring equipment. Call
Pick your own sugar pod
614·245-9181 .
peas, bring containers.
$6 .00 bushel! also have cab·
Moving away Sale Tractor. bage, cauliflower, ...
bush hog. blade, molding, broccoli. In another
John Deere riding mower 5 1/2 runner beans, same as
112 H P, fuel oil tank, pop last year $6.00 bushel.
machine, one double wide Raynors Peach Orchard,
refrigerator, one antique Rt. 7, Lower River Rd. Call
dini ng room suite. Between 446-.4807.
Porter &amp; Cheshire on 554.
Sale Fri ., Sat. &amp; Sun. Call
614·367·7869 .

~ .=-uveSiOtk--~

Yea,:;-i;;-g Ches~n~t Filly
Morgan . Call614-379-2168.

i12

---

-----·- ·---

For sale Sheep. 12 Suffock,
ewes$65 each. Call614 -256·
6752 .

- - --

----~- '"--

Jersey cow with call, $550.
Call61079·2574.

~~~~~~~~~=~--=-"""'~~~~~~~·
"'ft""'•

- --~ - --

(~ =!~~~lorSa~=

72 Chevy 112 ton pickup,
PS, PB, auto., reasona.ble.

Stock Bull. Artif . Bred,'"
Hereford 1/ 2 Ayshire, 2
years. Wt. 1400 lbs. Phone
304-773·5466 .

~ ~::=-~~~J'&amp;:G!.a~= =-:
Wanted 10 cut and bale hay
tor percentage of hay . Call
446·8381 .
Hay. $1 .25 bale in field. 304·
675 ·2254 or 304-675·1302.

- --

----·

~-

--

-· ---

1975 Monte Carlo $1,000.
Call446·0924.
1979 TransAm extra clean,
tul ly loaded . $6,995. Call
446·9285.

---

-- - - - , -----

1966 Chevy Capri station
wagon. 396 motor, fair
cond., make offer. Call .t463594

1980 VW Rabbit, 2 dr., hat·
chback, 4 spd., air cond .,
AM·FM cassette, rear window defroster, new radial
tires, one owner, new cond.
Call446·0515 anytime .
1971 ~ dr .. Skylark gOOd
cond., $450 or best offer.
Call446·6615 or 446·1780.

Til' Wt0E6T I{)INT!

CLIMATIZ"'D
CONTROL
STATtON HAD
A POWER
OUTAGE!

•Az

NOW, IF YOU'LL JUST STEP
J'HE CHAMBERS, WE'LL GET
TI-llS OVER IN NO Tl MEl

,.,
GASOUNE ALLEY

I'm onlij trljinq
to help 401.1,
Junie!

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

STAR"KS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Service. Shrubs
trimmed. Phone 304-576·
2010 .

You've no idea!

But ijOLI need
quidance! The
cit4 isn't safe
for yQunq qirls!

Terrible thinqs
can happen!

I know, Aunt Lit!
We watch TV down
in Hoqlot, too!

8~ :. ::::: :: Pl~mbfn~ :::::;=
.. ___ &amp; Heating

·

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

1976 Honda with faring .
19,000 miles. $400 . 614·992·
5673 .

83

·-- ---Excavating
-·--

1

• ·

- ~

- --

____.._

1978 Tomos Moped for $225 .
caii30H75·4359.
~

is =::. = =.~~~;;-.~n,~-=- ==­
- _ -· '!'~I!'~ f~r ~~!. _ _
1974 Chrysler 16 fl. boat
and trailer. 1975 Chrysler
HP motor, $3,000. For
detail call446-9285.

-:·-

YOUR MR. KOLINGER
ASKED FOR ...

For water lines, sewer
lines, septic tanks or leaky
basements call Hayman
The Hoennan. 614·992·2618.
JAR Construction Co. Dit·
cher, backhoe, and do~er.
Footers. gSs l ines, water
lines, Rutland, Ohio. 614·
742 -2903.

:oo u m o

120 HP lnboard·outboard
Mercury Cruise, Dorsett
Boat with trailer, 304·675·
6286.

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992-228'4.

- Elicirica"i' - ·

i6 -"=" Alito ~i'rt~==
.

MAW1 DID 'IOU FERGIT
TO WATER 'lOUR
GERANIUM?

at Wimbledon .
Another uta
(I) MOVIE: 'Gemeo'
Cll Benny Hill Show
(J) Quincy Quincy is
concerned for the health of
a high school football star.
IR) (BO min.)
(J) Captioned ABC News
® MOVIE: 'The Vetican
Affeir'
()JI Nightllne
11:46
CD Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE: 'S.O.B.'
12~00 (I)Bumo lit Allen
(!) 1982 World Cup
Soccer
112:
Second
Round Metch from Medrid, Spain

CII

JONES · BOY'S WATER
Cajl614-367-7471
·o r 614· 367 ·0591.
Need something hau led
away or something moved?
We'll do it. Call 446-31S9 or
614·256-1967 after 6.
1

a

e .Cil

N;..-~~~·i;;,;-iim~stori;:rnl dlrt·top. soll, gravel. l"ree614·367·

Camping_ __
J IMS Water Service. Call
' Equipment
Jim Lanier·, 304·675·7397. _ ,
197'1 17' Wl_lderness cam---.--·- ping trailer. New cond. , ····- ..
Tamden axels, self contained, carefree awl\ing.
' Reese hitch $4,500. 614·992TRISTATE.
.
2363.
· Ufi10L.5TERY SHOP I
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.'
446· 7833 or 446·1833.
,

.

•T:. =-" ..Y.e~x_ =-=;
'

--

1r1.l

.\WWREYS UDilOiaifr.t
1 Box 124, Pf. P~WJUnt, :J94-

67H154.

,

... '

·

71

--

3.

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

~Nd.,t.f
by ,THOMAS JOSEPH

AI;ROSS

4% S-shaped
DOWN

1l.Dw
5 CaUed
10 Amertcan

1 Foundation .
2 Spike of

soprano

flowers

3 Rescue (sl. )

lZ Peerless

4 Before

13 Cut
14 Champion-

ship

15 Anglo-Saxon

5 Snack
I MUBllm name

7 Spare no

kiJ18

pains (sl.)

11 One of ten
18 With it
It Filched
Z1

Dream

8 Invigorate
9 Become

Yesterday•• Aawer
21 Perch
llll!dlan q U Equlllbrlwn 113 "zs Spanish
~"
hone
:ta Scottish

profound
(Fr .) II Main highway Zl Negligent

alder

17 Yoko -

Z7 Manhandle :111 However,
!81111bankment M Obliterate
for short

ZZ Famed

fiddler

23 Actor,
Reginald UMultitude

25 "Big Bad -"

b-+-~-+-~-

ZI Demolish
Z7 Sp. doUar
~European

liver

29 Part
of Prancer
3% Roomey 's cry

33 Grain beard
34Epoch
35 Peruvian

370neofthe

Aliens
39 Derision

40 "~Were
the Days"

41 Medicinal
herb

1-

a

SERVIC~.

Call

m

reports on developments

- ~ :: ~.;';;~r~i'ti;~J;~~~ _

estlnnates:
7101.

su..t

CII Nashville RFD
(]) ESPN Sports Center
(I) All In the Family
(!) Newo/Sports/Weather
(I) Dick Cavett Slybini the
Magician is the guest .
(j)) Hitchcock
11:30 D (2) CD Wimbledon NBC

BARNEY

_ &amp; ~e!rigerllf!!'n

•

Hill

try'

Lawrence Sidenstricker
Backhoe Service. Call 675·
5580.
14

CD

lead on the murderer of the
public defender and Coffy
is surprised when he an·
swers a dorllestic calL (R)
(60 minn .)
CIJ TBS Evening Newo
(I) 01 (121 20/20
(I) Auotln City Umits
ill) Newowatch
1 0 :16 (2) MOVIE: 'Hiotory of
the World' Part 1
1 0 :30 (]) Sing out America
ill) Matters of Ute &amp;
Death
11
Cll
CIJ GJ
()JI
News
.
(2) MOV1E: 'High Coun-

LI5T5 YOUR ~THER'5
.1\0ST IMPORTANT CUSTOMERS,
5UPPLIER6, COPI E5 OF H 15
MNK STATEMENTS,
RECEIPTS , EVERYTH,I w • . /

~ERE'S THE iNFORMATION

----·---- -

26 ft. Sklllcratt. 1972 1·0 .
Sleeps 6. $6,000. Like new.
614·992·3402.

o:oo u m

Bluea Captain Furillo gets a

........

Gallipolis Diversified 'tonst. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work. Special
tarn\ rates. Ca ll us tor free
estimates. 446·4440.

1951 HARLEY Davidson,
comPletely overhauled,
gOOd condition, $1500. alter
5:30 caii304-675·11BO.

(])
era'700 Club
•
(I) II ()JI Barney Miller
!Closed-Captioned!
U (J) ® MOVIE: 'My
Old Man'
(I) To the Manor Born
(j)) Sneak Previews This
wpek ·s
movies
include
'Megaforce'
and 'Blade
Runner' .
9 :30 D
Cil CD Diff'ren)
Strokes
Tootle,
from
'Facts of Life.' visits Kimberly . IR)
(J) II (121 Pollee Squadl
(J) Up Pompeii
(j)) laat Chance Garage
Brad· Sears visits the shop
of an engine rebuilder to
determine Whether rebuilding will make a good used
car.

-::-=-= ==--- - -

KAWASAKI KE 100 en·
duro. Like new, excellent
condition, only 924 miles.
$600. 304·675·4831.

Duality Autobody &amp; .Paint
work. Professional custom
lnt work on nnotorcyclea.
Trim Center, 446-1968.

1'/E
AG qooo
AG 60T OlR.
MITT6 ON 'EM!

SORRY. .. OUR

ADVANCED
Seamless
Gutter-Doors . Offe'rlng
continuous
gutrerlng,
seamless siding, roofing, .
garage
doors,
tree
estimates, 614·698·8205.

1978 1h RM250, runs exc .
Must sell by Thursday .
$400. 614·992 ·6362.

~=~= Auto Rel_lj !_ =

AT

PA'Tll ONLY

ALLEYOOP

Wafer wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895·3802. •

18' Mark Twain tri·haul
boat, walk t~ru windshield,
canopy, 188 HP Mercruiser
inboard QUiboard motor,
tilt trailer, exc. cond .,
$3,500. Call446·4042 .

1976-1 ton Chevy Rear end
4.56 gear ratio, 1978-1 ton
Chevy rear end 4.10 geor
ratio. 614-843-4945 atrer 7
p.m .

LEAD6 10 lli' llfV£fl.,,

RINQL-ES'S SERVlC£ ex·
per(l!nced mason, roofer.
carpenter , electrician,
general repa irs and
remodeling. Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675·4560.

1974 Kawasawkl ·400, gOOd
cond, only 3.000 miles, call
614·256· 1786 after 5.

----·--- - · - ----

... ~' THAT

F a. K Tree Trimming,
stump removal . 675·1331.

1974 KAw. 2'1E 900, 15,000
miles, $1,400. Cil11446·0208.

&amp; Accessories

TH' CtlY Pt1711 OF AllY
K.IND IG THIWUGH THERETH' ~EGT 0' TI1' WOOD5
IG TOO TllNftLEO/...

~·

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446 ·2454 .

78 JEEP Renegade, .;!4,000
miles, $3800. firm . 304-675·
3628.

------

ANNIE

Gene's Stearn Carpel
Clean -Scotch Gaurd-fjitee
estimates-spring specialsGene Smith, 992·6309. ·

---- -- - - -- ---- -7_4 ___ !\A~I~r~Y_!I!$_ _

1j =~-~~·for S!i!_ __ ::_

.

•••s

+e?Ssz
----

Roofing, gutter, blow ·ln in·
sullation, sidi ng &amp; painting .
10 yrs. experience. Call446·
3330 or 614·388·9919.

1975 AMC Jeep 54,000
miles. Metal top, roll bar.
$2,300. 614-742·2594. 4 wheel
drive .

•usn

•az

c &amp; R Paint Center
Professional
painters,
commercial and residentiaL Insured. 41 Court St.,
Gallipolis, 446·9458, no answer 446· 1758.

1971 Chevy Blazer with
37,000 mi. Radio, a.c., p.s.,
p.b., oufs!., tint glass. 10 in .
rally w~~els with 10 x 15
Land trac tires. $1,700. 614·
992·7539.

I I I ]

a

STRUCTION .
Constr. ,
·roofing, siding, spouting,
fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
cleaning. 446-2000, call
before&amp; and after 5:30.

1976 Chevy 1 ton Cab 8.
Chassis, long wheel bese,
V·8. 4 speed, new tronr
tires. a.c ., am ·fn'\ ·8 f(ack
stereo. Phone 614·843· 4945
after 7 p. nn .

I I I ]

a

(i&lt;i(lsTIAN'scoN ·

Call614-388·9367 .

J KJ

I

Masonary work, Logue
Contracting,
Rl.
1.
Ewington. Call 614·388·
9939.

1976 Ford F250, automatic,
P.S. Runs gOOd. 388·9342 .

() [

.(1) MyTh""' Sono
(J) ABC Newo
(J) Electric Company
(j)) Over Easy
WHAi A BII':I&amp;H'T
6:30
(I) CD NBC Newo
(I) 160.000 Pyramid
6iUC7!NT 161!~C.TI!D
Cll Fether Knowo ·Beot
'TO DO WHEN
(J) Muppet Show
'THER!.'5
,I.N exAM.
D (J) ® CBS Nowo
(J) Dr. Who
()j) Ullu, Yogoo end You
Now arrange lha cir~ lenora to
.8 ()JI ABC Newo
ICNTn the eurpriM answer. as aug7:00 D (I) P.M . Magulno
gelled by lha above cartoon
(I) MOVIE: 'Ruloo Of The
Game'
(I) Bull' a Eye
THROUGH THE(
(]) International Racquet (An.-rs tomorrow)
bell
(I) Green Acres
Yesterday's Jumbles: ABOVE SNACK NUMBER INFUSE
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Answer : Could be the result of everyone wanting to
ClJ Happy Oayo
get Into the act-A MOB SCENE
(J) Tic Tee Dough
(J) (j)) Mac:NeiHehrer
Ju- No. 20, contolnlntl110 pualoo, ltlo•ollable f«IU6 poolpold
Report
,__,clothlo-po&lt;, llox34,N-N.J.071U.Includo,Nmt, ldchll,
code lnd m8.1 chec::k1
IbM to N
1.
® Nowo
II (121 Muppat Show
7 :30 • (1) You Aaked For It
(I) Two in the 8o• Shields
and Yarnell combine comedy. dance and original
mime performances.
(]) Another Ute
(]) ESPN Sports Center
(I) Andy Griffith
Cll
(J) Femlly Foud I
NORTH
7+11
ClJ Llveme and Shirley
+KID 8 I
Cll Buslno11 Report
• J8
® Richard Simmons ·
ill) All Croeturoa -Groot
+K 108
and Small
WEST
EAST
Ill (!21 Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 D (I) jlJ Fame Dons beHQJIII!I
friends a teen-age runa+QJ842
+A7U
way . IRI (60 min.)
(I) MOVIE: 'For Your
North had responded two
SOUTH
Eyeo Only'
no-trump to show weakness
+AQJ
(]) Notional Geographic
and then bid live hearts to
•uQ1otu
~ial
·
invite a slam and South had ·
(]) ESPN Sportafonum
+o
accepted .
(I) MOVIE: 'VIctory at
Vulnerable: Both
wes\s failure to open a
Sea'
(J) G ()JI Dori&lt;room
-diamond had Indicated that
Dealer: South
Ill (J) ® Magnum, P.1 .
he just did not hold a diaWetI
NorUt Eul
Magnum is hired by a commond to lead.
puter magnate to investi·
South had been careful not
Pus 2 NT
gate lha theft of valubla
Pus
to cover that queen of clubs
Pus
codes. (RI (60 min.l
Pus Pus Pass
lead with dummy's king.
(J) Sneak Preview• This
You also know that South
week 's
movies
Include
must hold the ace-deuce of
'Magaforce'
and 'Blade
Opening lead: +Q
diamonds among his collecRunner' .
tion of good cards. What is
8:30 (!)Top Rank 8o•lng
the rest of his hand?
Cll Good Neighbors
ill) Media Probes ' The FuProbably no clubs ar all,
ture .' Futurologist Peter
him to get an eventual dia·
but possibly just one. Then a
Schwartz hosts this look at
mend discard on the club
long
heart
suit
headed
by
our ~growing communicaking.
But that discard will
ace-king-queen and almost
tions technologies such as
merely be giving him an
surely
ace-queen
and
some
interactive computers, caovertrick.
other spades.
ble TV and video discs .
!Closed Captioned!
Now that you have
As it is, declarer held a
singleton club. You get your
thought like the declarer you
9:00 D
(I)
CD Diff'rent
put your ace of clubs. on your
club ace and give your partStrokeo An Indian leader
insists Mr . Drummond stop
partner's queen. If declarer
ner the all·important diadigging on a burial site. IR)
mond ruff.
ruffs you may have allowed
!Closed-Captioned!
(1) MOVIE: 'The Wander·

AnsweR(

French City Painting
residential &amp; commercial,
interior, exrerlor, paper
hanging, , &amp;
textured
ceilings. Call 614-367-7784
or614·367·7160.

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

1979 Firebird, automatic, 5
Radials, Ann·FM . Call
atter6 P.M . 304-675·7599.

::.::.

SWAIN
Taking orders for antique
-- - -~---~
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
USfi'D MOBILE HOME . 2 bdr . trail er , nice locafion PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St ., solid oak reproduction fur on private lot in Rodney . Gallipolis . 9x12 linoleum niture. Claw foot round 6_! __ ~.!:_m E~~men!_ __
1977 Monte Carlo 65,000
576·2711 .
Call614·2459170 .
mi. ; nice, $2,495. 1977
rug 522, 3 piece living room table 48' $250, corner cup·
' - - - -- - -- - - - Granada 2 dr, auto, 6 cyl.,
'SUMMER SHOWDOWN'
suites couc,h -love se~t ­ board $300, curved glass
:.M..PBILE HOMES MOVED .
china $275, wash stand with Jividen's Farm Equipment 79,000 mi, $1 ,900. 1964 Cor·
chair
$199,
2
piece
living
2
bedroom
frailer
.
Real
. Licensed &amp; insured. Call
vair-Georgia car, ex . body
446-1675
nice, adults only . Brown's room suites from $140•up, mirror &amp; bowl &amp; pitcher in• 304-576·2711
.
Trailer Park, M inersville . love seats from S70 up, cluded $75 . Plus more Long tractors, Vermeer &amp; mech cond ., 51,000 mi. ,
- - - - - - - - ----maple dinet sets from $99 wholesale to the public . balers &amp; hay equipment, $1,600. 1978 F -250 Ranger
614·992 ·3324.
~ 12 MOBILE horne, 14x70,
bale movers. wagons, XLT, 4 Wd, AC, 4 Spd.,
to $199, wa l l huggers $100., Call446·3759.
rotary tillers, disc, post $3,800. 1976 Gran Torino
· 8x10 expando, 3 bedrooms,
SBO,
maple
2 bedroom . furnished , with recliners
digger &amp; drivers, seeders, AC, 72,000 mi., VGC, $1,650.
~Crown Haven . $7300. on
garage
and
patio . rockers 549, bedroom Truck camper, sleeps 6, rotary cutters, blades, 1979 Chev. 4 WD, SWB, PU,
, rented lot . 304·675 -5762 ·
suites
$150,
variety
of
table
will
sell
cheap.
70
Oliver
Syracuse.
614 · 992 · 2282 .
gates &amp; front end loader. 36,QOO mi., exc. cond.,
~-- ------- - - - $150. per month . Utilities tamps, marble top stands tractor, .46 model extra
And see us ro get your paris $5,500. Eurell Auto Sales,
$30
and
up,
twin
and
lull
good
shape.
1
Dodge
Van
74
1
not included .
Rt. 160&amp; 554, 614-388·9754 or
bo&gt;&lt; springs &amp; mattress modeL 1 king wood or coal &amp; complete service!
horne 614-388·8769.
~: BusineS. 8Uifiiln-gs ::cnew&gt; $100, several uti l ity burner, warm morning woo USED EQUIP:
MOBILE tfOME
FOR cabinets, kitchen cabinets burner . Call614·256·6569 .
IH Hydro 70, 2000 Ford, 550
:;$mall Bar Business tor sale RENT WITH'OPTION TO wood &amp; metal, baby beds,
Oliver, 70 Oliver, MF 65, 1965 Chevrolet Malibu
'In ~omeroy . 614·992·9905.
BUY, setting on loi halfway chests of drawers S25 to
rotary Iiiier, disc ., plows, super sport, conv., new top.
between Huntington &amp; Pt. $60, 3-way recliners $100, 3 older 10 ft . wall display cultivators. JO manure tires, 65,000 miles; 283 auto,
I - -- with
sliding
glass
and
cases
I
Pleasa nt, 304·576·2711 .
gas &amp; electric ranges, doors at top, drawer and spreader, Ford501 mower. fairccond . Call61l·388-9342.
I
refrigerators, wash stands. cabinets at bottom. Cl arks We buy used equip.
r
--------- --' 35
Lots &amp; Acreage
1982 Nashau tor rent wlfh bunk beds complete with Jewelry Store, 446·2691.
. -~-- -~--- -- -- ---l - - -- -·
1974 Monte Carlo, gOOd
$170, several
~Price reduced. 2 lots with option to buy, 14 x 70, with bunkies
cond ., many other options,
dressers,
hal
l
trees,
beds,
NEW
Holland
haybine
&amp;
7x20 expando, 2 bedroom, 2
, rural wa fer c lose to city
brass head board beds $35, Over 1,000 ceramic molds, baler, hay rake, Kelly $900. Ca ll 614·379·2729. -,
; lim it s. $4,-450.00 . Call 446- baths. all electric. $300. bookcases ,
s-mokers, kilns, and supplies. 614·742· backhoe, box blade. Ex·
month, deposit &amp; referen·
,1294.
·
2925 61 7 2 20
cellent condition cal l 304·
Hoover spon dry washer,
or 4- 4 . 85.
895·3503, 304·697·2527.
11 VW Fastback $200. Cash
ces, 304·576·2706.
i' - - - - - -- - - - - - wringer
type
washers,
hut·
~.:
:.=
-:==
~====:J[.;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;J
Sale, 614·388·8133.
·
~.(~
atres bollonn land ,
ch. coal &amp; wood heaters,
wooded area, good location 44
Apartment
televisions, fflns, new too ls
-- -- on 325. Sell cheap. Ca l l 614·
tor Rent
1 1980 Dlds .
ot all kinds,
varietyCaofl l ~
Cutlass
Silverstone
cookware.
Brougham. 30,000
miles,
388 8437
1st floor 2 bdr. unfurnished 446·3159.
new radial tires, loaded.
E"'. cond . $6,800. 614'992· '
apartment, util. paid,
TWO acre lots·l50 ft . road downstown Gallipolis. Call
2881.
.
frontage ,
city water , at6314th . Ave. Gallipolis.
BEMCO
mattresses
or
box
behind 84 Lumber. call304·
1975 Buick LaSabre . Saleor
springs, fUll or twin, $58. 6
675·6873, 675·3618 .
trade for motorcycle Qf
Furnished apartment, 1 Piece· Naugahyde heavy
equal volue. 614·247-2605.
bdr ., $195, utlities pd., wOOd living room · suite
PNE ace, drilled well, sep· adults, 607 -2nd Ave .• $695. Pi llow arm sofa B,
lie tank 25x25 unfinished Gallipolis. Call 4464416 at· chair $375. Roll.- top desk,
1977 Buick Regal, exc.
block building $6,500. one· ter7PM .
dark &amp; light, $189. Bunk
V·6, au1o. 1 p,s., p.b.,
cond.
half mile off ehd Greer
beds, complete, include
a.c., other extras, One
Road, 304·675-2949.
0111ner. 614·992-5834.
Unfrunished 2 bdrm . aprt . mattress; $199. Complete
in Crown City . Call614-256· water bed Shop With 10 11111_ . .
bedroom suites o"n display,
LARGE river lot on Rt. 2 at 6520 .
HARTS Used Cars, New
starting price $299, up to
Glenwood . GOOd well &amp; sep·
Haven West VIrginia. Over
$2500. 'Big daddy cocktail &amp;
tic system, cheap, 304·516·
20
tess eilpensille ·cars · ;n
Furnish
2
rooms
and
bath,
end tables $50. Wall -A-Way
2866.
stock.
·
clean, no pets, adults only. re&lt;liners $169. and up. La·
Dep. reQuired. Calf 446· Z-Boy recliners In stock.
122 acres farm, Mason 1519.
USED FURNITURE 5 pc. :
67 Chevelle, 283 Automatic,
County,WV . 6 outbuildings,
dlnett serg, studio
. black on black. PhOflll 304·
plenty water, mineral
.
I
,
, 675-4181 ,
·
chair, bedr&lt;ionn ·
rights, Tribble Road. 304· Large 1 room &amp; bath ·
flciency
apartment.
M!)Stliy
·J
bunk
4511·1820 or 937·2375,furnished SlOO. a
'1974 AMC Meledor been
plus dep. 614-992-5692 .
wr~ked, cen be fixed or
Two acres, black top r0&lt;1d , .
·used for ·parts. SJOO, Phone
corner Greer Road. Phone
304·675-1349.
Apartments. 304·675-5548.
304·675-1198.

.

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

72 Mustang, 6 cyl .,
automatic, new tires, ex·
cellent mechanical con dition, cheaj), 304-576-2866.

()JI

J I K

----~

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. JO years ex·
perlence, specializing in
built up root . Call 614·388·
9622 or 614·388 -9857 .
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haflelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call446 ·2107.
-

Registered and grade horses, excellent 4-H project.
1972 Chevy pickup $300.00,
English and wesfern 'sad· 1974 Ford Gran Torino
dles ' everything $500.00. Call 304·576-2114 af·
imaginable in horse equip- . fer 5:30p.m.
ment and supplies, atso
-- - - ----- ---riding lessons and trail
73
:.:.~
=~isJ.~KD;
rides and horse training.
Ruth Reeves, Hoot Hollow. 1979 Dodge Van 200, J/4 ton.
614-698·3290.
auto trans., PS, PB, e)(·
cellent cond., $3,700 . Call
4~ · 0511 .
Nice 8 week old pigs to-r
sale. 614·843·3322. 72 Blazer 4 wheel drive,
Polled Hereford bull, 3 good bodY &amp; engine, V·8,
PB, PS, $1,500. Call615·256·
years old . Phone 304·895·
6091 .
3833.

:::~;:-1-"-·-~· --- -- - - - - - -

~

CHEVY Luv, '77, 304·675·
1513. u

e Cil CD II Cll ® e

N•a

9652.

lcS::._:_::~~iiiding~~£!je~ --

~~

1:00

-- ---------

Five 100 Ft . tobacco beds,
Morgan Woodlawn Farm,
Pliny. 304·675· 1286.

2 bedroom furnished apt .
Utilities included . No pets.
$205. plus deposit . Mid ·
dleport. 61&lt;-992-7177 . .

lEes

CALL R'o bert Harper ,
distributor of Meadow
Fresh Products, 304·675·
1293.

Ram Golf clubs, J through
9, and pitching wedge, ex·
cellent condition. 304-675·
5856.

~~t:all614 · 949 · 2639 .

12x65 Gregory 2 bedroom .
Air cond . unit. porch, gas
heat. Lot also available.
614·992'6093 .

---- - - - - - '

11
Home
____ _!!!!_!!rovements

Dealers welcome. Phone
items reduced 50 per cent .
304-·675-·20
_3~. __ __ _ _

,

1976 Tee fold down camper
with electric &amp; ,gas ref.,
sleeps 8, $1,500. Call 614379· 2430.
..

Sears Kenmore wringer
washer $100 . Maylag
automatic washer S65. 61.4·
742·2352.

- --~--

2 bedroom hoUse in
Harri sonville. $6.500. 614
928·4417 .

8 tt. slide in truck camper,
exc . cond., fully eQuipped.
Call614·388·8801 .

-ll

'lbe Dlilly SenUnel-P

Pomero -Middle l't Ohio

Motor Home
7Compers

79

Genuine RedwOOd long
!able with 2 long benches.
$65. 6U · .992 -2961

Ceramic Greenware sate, J
miles out Jericho Road,
Point Pleasant , Some

Ill health
Must se ll. 4
houses ( 1 is a double widi'l
all rented, plus Slots. al l in
one block on Ohio. River in
Reedsville. Water. ci fy
gas. First $36,000. takes all .
D ia l614·378 ·622 1.

by Larry Wright

CARLYLE'"

KIT 'N'

PEANUTS

.

•
WOE TO THEM Tt:IAT ARE
AT EASE IN ZION"

WELL, THAT RUINS
THIS DAY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTK- Here's
II

e

to worlr. It:

One letter aimply atanda for another. In thla aample A II
used for the thref L'o, X for the lwo 0'•, etc. Sln&amp;le letten.
a~trophea, lhe length and formation of the worda ore
biall. Eaeh dey th•.eode letten ore dllfe~ent.

an

.

'

CRYPTOQUOTES

Cll

Nlghtllno
(J) PBS Late Night
()JI Vega$ Dan competes with a !annale, detective to find the murderer of
three private eyes. Guest
· staning
Gary
Collins,
Rhonde Batao and Heather
Menzieo', (R) (BO min.)
12:30 Cll J8Ck Bepny Show
(J) Vega$ Don compete•
with a female detective to
find the murderer' of three
-private .eyes.

how

AIYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

ADHDLADLMA HUO PLGO HPLOWLADA
- DQO,R NLPP DOADLZR
ALYO.
. Yesterday's

ZLSUOPPS
CryptoqUGie:

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zsu
PH

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BJHUYLH·

A WEED IS NO MORE 'l1iAN,i.,

FLOWER IN DISGUJSE, ... IF LOVE GIVES A
EYES.-J.R LOWElL

MAN

�..

--

______________ _______-""---:-------__:._--"'-------:"-__.,_

--

·-·

4

_:__

Thursday, July 1,

Poineroy-Mlddieport, Ohio

Page-12-1be DaUy Sentinel

~

..

ELBERFELD$ IN-POMEROY
SUMMER CLEAR.ANCE· SALE·

.

Racine fn-emen

the futtire is now.

finalize holiday

Page 3.

BIG SAVINGS ON SUMMER·WEARING APPARAL FOR WOMEN -CHILDREN ~ MEN - AND BOYS.__ QU·ANTITIES
.
ARE LIMITED- ALL SALES FU~Af ~_NO-EXCHANGES . OliREFUNDS ·
·
.
GIRLS'

HANDBAG SALE

SHORTS and
TOPS SALE

I

•

SUMMER SLEE.PWEAR

at y

Reg. 7.00 ••..•... SALE 4.90
Reg. 9.00 • • . • . . . . SALE 6.30
Reg. 12.00 • • • • • • . . SALE 8.40
Reg. 16.00 . . . . . . . SALE 11.20 ·

Reg. 3:00 . . ... . SALE 2.10
Reg . 5.50 ., .... SALE 3.85
Reg. 8.50 . . ... , SALE 5.95
Reg . 11 .00 . . .. . SALE 7.70
Reg . 16.00 .... SALE 11.20

LITTLE BOYS'

VoUl,No.U
Cop,yrlfb&amp;ed 188%

SALE

SPORTSWEAR &amp;
'DRESS SALE

Reg. 3.00 . . . . . . . . SALE 2.10
Reg. 4.50 ....•... SALE 3.15
Reg. 7.00 • . . • • . . • SALE 4.90
Reg. 10.50 . . . . . . . . SALE 7.35
Reg. 15.00 . . . . . . • SALE 10.50

SWIMWEAR SAL~

MATERNITY WEAR ·

and

Reg. 6.00 •...... : SALE 4.20
Reg. 12.00 .... .. • SALE 8.40
Reg. 16.00 .. .... SALE 1qo
Reg. 24.00 •.. . .. SALE 16.80

Reg. 9.00 . . . . . . . . . . . SALE 6.75
Reg. 15.00 .••..•.•., • SALE 11.25
Reg. 21.00 • • • . . • • . . . SALE 15.75
Reg. 29.00 . . . . . . . . . . SALE 21.75

SPORTSWEAR SALE

TOPS &amp;SHORTS
Cool summer styles and
colors.

Reg. 10.00 • . . . • . SALE 7.50
Reg.14.00 . . . . . . SALE 10.50
Reg. 18.00 . . . . . SALE 13.50
Reg. 28.00 . . . . . SALE 21.00

Complete stock including Hang Ten!

Reg. 7.00 ·. . . . . . . SALE5.25
Reg. 11.00 . . • • . • SALE 8.25
Reg. 17.00 • . • • . SALE 12.75
Reg. 24.00 . . . . . SALE 18.00

lor fumlture; $1.500 lor field trlps; $16,000 by chang·
lng kindergarten from the half-day to full-day program on an every-othel-- day bast'; $10,8Xl from
actlvlty positions which Included the supplemental
coaching contracts to be picked. up by the Athletic
BoOsters; $6,!81 by deleting a study hall monitor;
$4.000 by suspendlni professional worksbops; along
with unspecified amounts lor cutting Overtime for
employes, limiting band trips to three otbel' than football games, and cutting dball and baseball to' 2ll
games.
MUIII borrow flmda
The problem It whether the cuts will see the dlsll1ct
through the 1982-&amp;1 school year was discussed with
Supt. Roberts proJecting that oo further cuts will
have to be made. He said the dlstrlct will have to
borrow $ll0,000to get tllroogh the year, but funding to
pay that llliiCAlnt back would be available at the end or
the year. He further stated that Ills not legal to carry
CNer bWs from one year to another.
Roberts spoke of the decline In students and noted
that Jess student&amp; means less money from the state.
He said that up until last year the dlstrlct has been
growing but In the 1981-82 sch011l year there was a
decline of allOOt 25.
The question ot the recent purchase of a computer
as a justifiable expenditure In view of the cuts was

The concensus of opinion of the approximately 75
..!
parents, teachers and other Interested residents at·
tending a publlc hearing on the Eastern Local School
Dlsll1ct's money trouble Thur!lday night was that
another try lor an·operating levy should be made In
the fait
The three mill levy !ailed by approximately 150
votes at the June primary election. Since that time,
the board has Instituted a program It cuts to makeup
lor the loss It about$72,000expectedfrom that levy, in
addition to the about $«1,000 lost In state aid had the
levy passed.
.
Speaking to the group on the money'problern., of the
dlstrlct, Supt. Richard Robert,, noted the last district
· levy'j)a.'sed was In 1977. It was a: 10 mW levy tor ooe
year and was passed only after the school had clolied.
Roberts said he projected when he came to the
di'trlct three years ago, It would run out al funds by
late 1982 wltllout a levy. The operating levy !ailed at
the 1981 general election along with a building lm·
provements fund levy. Slate aid Is also declining as
student 'population declines, Roberts noted, before
reviewing ihe cuts made by the board .
The approximately $60,000 In cut, made by_ the
board Includes $10,000 In textbook purchasel, $5,000

JUNIOR and PRE-TEEN
•

JUNIOR

Pre-teen and Junior Sizes.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCR

Nice selection of summer maternity
wear.

All summer dresses
coordin-ate sportswear.

Reg. 7.00 •• : • . • • . • • • SALE 5.25
Reg. 12.00 • • . • • . : . . . . SALE 9.00
Reg. 17.00 .........• SALE 12.75
' Reg. 25.00 . . • • • • . . . • SALE 18.75
..LADIES'

LADIES

_SLACKS SALE

SWIMWEAR SALE
Complete stock Extra Sizes. ··

Open Stock · Many Colors
Reg. 12.00 . . . . . Sale 8.40
Reg. 19.00
Sale 13.30
Reg. 25.00
Sale 17.50
Reg. 30.00
Sale 21.00

CLEA~ANCE!

MISSES

' 'f.'

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

SUMMER BLOUSES

15.95 Slacks . . . . . .
18.95 Slacks . • . • • .
22.95 Slacks ·. • • • • •
24.95 Slacks . . . . . .

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

-

CLEA

MEN'S

BOYS'

3.57
4.77
5.97
7.77

SWfM TRUNKS

Good selection in all sizes.
Reduced 40%.
'
8.95 Swim Trunks • : • ... · 5.37
9.95 Swlm .Trunks ••• • • , 5.97
10.95 Swim Trunks •••.. 6.57 .
12.95 Swim Trunks .. ... 7.77 ·
•

- ,~sizes ll to'llf. - •. ·

·6:15 Swim Trunks' . . . • . 4.17
8.95 Swim Trunks • • • • • 5.37
-

MISSES SUMMER

,1 .

Reg. 11.00 • • • • • Sale 7.70
. .Jtee. 16.00 • • •·• Sale 11.20·
Reg. 22.00 . . . • Sale 15.40··

.

....

~

, ~;...·'1·

.

-.,

. Bov.s "

.

.

.

.: •. --·.

SUMMER
SHORTS
.
Save 40% ·noW on our entire

stock. Knits, denl.ms 1
blends. Sizes a to.20.
•
. 3.95Shorts .. .1......... 2.37.
~ 95 Shorts
•77
7.95 Shorts ••••••••••• ,. 4.71
I. 95 Shorts ............ 5.37
,...

•

&lt;2.69 Caps .... .; • 1.35 .
.J 2&gt;.95 Caps . .. . • .. 1.48

I

I

0

0

0

I

I

I

I

I

I

o

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JUN.IC)R

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Lltfle !!iris one and 'tWo :Quality Brand names R,educed 40%1 ·
Piece suits. Little boys swim Reg. 12.00 ••••••.••••••.. Sale 7 19
trunks •
· ....... , .. .. _.. Salel3.19
·.
•
' R eg.22.00
· Reg 6 00
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Sale 4 20 Reg. 27.00 .............. Sale 16.19
Reg:a:oo ::::::::: Slles:60
00 .... _... , ...... Sale20.39
, R... 12 oo
Sale 1 40
v.,. ·00 , ..•... , ...... Sale 26.39
Reg. 16.00 ••••••• .Sale 11.20

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. ~~IMWEAR SALE DRESS.CLEARANCE

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.ELBER~EtDS -·IN ROMERO¥
.

~.95 Caps

· sAu

·'

·JUNIOR SLACKS
..Many colors. E!xcellent -stylIng.

' •

_

.... .12.80, .....
Sill 1.00 ~
.... Zl,ll ..... , .. .. • 511115.75
........ , .... , .... SIII1L75
31.11 ....... ' ... Silt Z2.5G
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Band director hired
The Meigs Local School Plsh1ct gtlta newbBnddlrectorThursday
nllbt wfllin.tlle board met In special session.
·
Marlly,JI Goodnlte wUl - - - her dulles Immediately 8s band

director and Instrumental mulllc Instructor at Meiall High Schoo~
;·
Goodnlte comes tromlhli PlkeCountyPI!bllj:Schoolsystem, l'llceVIlle, J&lt;Y., WhereshewaS,muslliteac~!lJ!d ~directOr. Sheholdcl
an untlergraduate degree from 1J1e Unlverlllty of Kentucky and a
,Muter's of Music Eclucatkln from Boston University, BOston. She
hal been perlomalng with !hi! l..exlngtoa Plllihannonlc Orchestra,
I..ex1q1on. as bassoonilt.
·
!
. 1 The Board went spent part ot the rneetlnit:ID-~tlve ~~e~~sloJl,
clai:uiiiDa personnel, fiDances and neaottatmDs. The next regularly
IICbeduled meeting II Tuelday, J~ 13.

IICCOl'dlnlt to Supt. Dan MorriS.

.

.

· W~her forecast ··
•

Ilacr-111&amp; ciouda and Widely -~ lijlowers fnillbt

Lows

Sevalty ~t cbaDce It
..,.•• an~~ tbundtnlllrml Saturday, KIN 78&amp;

8581. .WJIIds IOUfllerly. about lD ,

Bfln'uiOMoFw•

' n na la4Tan~llt. . .

. '

boo!Jten bad earlier IIMIIImoualy
apeed lo pick· up lbe llOIIt for tbe
IUJIPiemrllry a&amp;bletlc coaehiDg
coab'acta.

He reported that currently the
·boosters have $l,lX&gt;ln their treasury, that Fourth of July activities
wlll bring In about $1,000, $3,10lcan
be expected from the Ml!lgs County

an

a statistic reported by the government every three months. The
number ot di'ICOIIraged workers
rose by 18l,OOO !rom the first
quarter.
The department's Bureau of LabOr Statistics attrlbuted the steady
unemployment rate to the process
ot se&lt;lSOIIal adjustment; by which It
·.adJusts raw unemployment data to
to account lor such routine, predlc·
table variation.' as school closings
and .the weather.

'lbe jobless rate nonnally rl'ies In
June with the liltlux of school-age
job-seekers, but' bec~use far !ewer
youths entered the latxir force than
expected the overall ad)ll!ited rate
held steady. '
The labor Ioree actually shrank
by 475,000 last month. The number
of people working derllned 353,~
and the' number of people thrown
out of work fell by '122,000, more.
than ottsen~ any tightness In the
labor market that wruld have oth-

erwlse driven the rate up turther.
In advance of today's report, several prtvate analy'IIS said unemployment Is certain to remain at
post-war record levels through the
summer. The economist, said they
doubted the 10 percent cut In In·
come tax rates or the 7.4 percent
boost In Social Securlty benefjts
that took effect Thul'5day woold
produce enough of a spurt In con.qu.
mer spending to cut Into the unem·
ployment toll.

governments.

Carl R. Hysell, )uvenlle ottJcer
ot the ptogram, satd
the youth have \Y()rked three weeks
at 20 dltferent job sites In the
county. .
•
They have worked for vUJage~~,
townsbtps, schools, the COIUIIy guage and the county COiirlbJuJe.
types of jollB have been _ulllptd.
• from wash!Dg windows,to pilntlJig
buses, to~ roads"'-llttilf.
Hy.II!U. Uld agenCies, ~
and townsbtps In the cquaty have
been very cooperative In finding .
work for the youth and supporting
the prog:ram. The yooth, In tum,
have done very well In their asslgried work and have received
many cotnplltJJI!IIts from tile super,
visors 8lld general public, he said.
The proerarn luted tbree weeks
· and finished at the end of June.
Hysell IBid the )IWtbl were ri!c- •
naJted by CODtactlaa the three
COUDt:y 8cbool c11atr1cta 8lld asldng
pilnclpals wblch lludents were
malt dl!lerviD&amp; ot the jobl. lle l8ld
lie allo clae ~ ci the youth. .
, Ttie JlllltPMI was fllluced
throUatt a II'IDl o"'i"¥"' Irani the
Oblo [lepartmeat ot Yootb Serv\cee, IJyleJl said.. 1be a)Uiity reand dlrecior

NJ

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MeetiDJ..-..Ibe board memben

Ill special Ull I NJ io dlal;ulllbe,»hletlc eoachiDI problem; wu
lll!llry lleaaley wbo rejloltecl tbe

Fair con~slon stand, and about
The agreement between the
$2,700 will be raised at home loot· board and the boos~ wa.• that
ball and'baskelball games.
should the money become avaUaHe noted the only commitment ble tor payment of the supplemenwhlch the boosters now have Is the tal contracts through regular
$2,000 for erection of
athletic • school funds then the boosters
buDding which waf !)!Ire~ by ' 9/0U'Ilt 'tle relieved ot their
them and Is already paid for, and
obligation.
about $a)() lor tables and t-shlrts.
On the recommendation ot Supt
Hesaldnonewequlpmentorun!- Roberts, the board voted to accept
torms 1\ad to be purchased '\,y the the proposal of the Boosters and to
boosters this past year.
put back Into place the run sports
Supt. Richard Roberts reported program and coaching staff. It was
there Is money In the athletic de- agreed, however, that any propartment fund to take care of such gram can be dropped should there
expet)Ses this year, along with be In adequate student
transportation cosls lor the team.
(Continued on page 12)

Thanks to a state grant and the
MeigS County Juvenile Court, 72
youths who might otherwise be unemployed have been paid to do pu~
llc service work thiS summer lor
various area agencies arid

Some 60,000 atres of unneeded tedera:I prilpefty across the country
are up lor sale.
··
Brownsalddetallsofhow, when and wheretheparcelswW besold ·
have not been ~ven to his otrk:e yet

'

last week to review what had to be
done to trim the budget after the
!allure of the three mW operating
1~ In till! June primary.

72 youths work on public service jobs

I

.1.95 Caps • .. .. • .. ~98

-- ..

OPEN FRIDAY TIL'I....:. SMCIRDA Y TIL 5 ·
.

Adjustable size. Good
; selection of styles and col ors. •12 Price.

)

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
A tu11 coaching staff for bot!\ the
Junior and senior high schools of the
Eastern Local School Dlsll1ct was
a'sured Thul'!lday night when the
Board of ~atlon accepted an
otfer~Of tile Eastern Athietic ~
ters to provide the needed $6,8Xl lor
the supplemental coaching
contracts.
All of the roaching positions In
junior high, one assistant varsity
football coach, the freshman basketball coach, two track coaches,
and an assistant baseball coach
were Included on the list of cuts
made when the Eastern Board met

WASHINGTON (AP) -The na·
uon's ~pJoyment rate held
steady at 9.5 percent In June, but
the number of Americans who gave
up looking tor \YOrk because of the
tight job market set a record, the
Labor Department said today.
Although the Jobless rate was un·
changed from May, the number of
people out of wor~~ally teU from 10.5 million
.4 million.
But 1.5 million people !ell Into the
"discouraged worker" category - .

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SUM.MER CAPS .

Sizes 8 to . 20 Entire
Stock"_SCIVe 30%.
Boys 9.95 Jackets . ..• 6.96
Boys 18.95 Jackets . • 13.26
Boys 19.95 Jackets .. 11.97
Boys 24.95 Jackets •• 14.97

4.16
5.56
6. 95
9.06

. 11.95
. -11.. 77
. ' 14.97
• 17.97

Roberts said that more work does need to be done In
that area. He commented to a question on dropping
vocational units In business education on the lack of
students resulting In loss of state funding and the need
to send those students to the Meigs Local School
Dlstrlct
.Parents talkEd about theoldtextbooksandtheneed
for updating with Supt. Roberts again pointing to the
need lor passing a levy to provide the tund~ tor pur·
cha'lnl! new books.
One teacher a,ked kbout cuts In the teaching staff
and the response trom Roberts was that no further
cuts ·are anticipated. He said that before cutting the
staff, he would recoinmend addUtlonal athletic program cuts or across the board cu L~ for all the staff. It
was noted that teachers are now paid at the state
minimum for the dlsll1ct size.
Questioned about the money raised by students lor
such things as the Junior-senior prom and the senior
trip, Roberts said use of the money wruld be determined by the students. Class advlsOI"' were among
th~ cuts made by the Board and without advi,ors
such activities cannot take place, Roberts adv~
Henry Hensley representing the Eastern AthletiC
boosters reported It was the unanimous oplnlon of the
Boosters at a meeting this week that the levy should
(Continued on pa~e 12)

Unemployment rate holds steady in June

Both sites were selected by the corps as unneeded, Brown said.
Operation ot the locks and dams wm not be affected.
The corp hi! planned to use the Long Bottom parcel tor a rea-ea·
tlon and boat launching area The other site was also to be used lor a
public access to the Ohio River.
The ex~ demand tor these proJects lii!Ver materialized so the
land has remained undeveloped and unused, Jlrown said
He said -the money collecte!l from the sales will be put In the
federal governm4111t' s general account, to be used to reduce the
natlonal debt. The Meigs wcels are among about 242 acres or
federal land tor sale on the Ohio River In Ohio, Kentucky and West

CI.IARANCII
MIN'S. ~

· SUMMER JACKETS.

for

~MSR33R

Sizes 36 tci' 50. Excellent
styles and colors. Save
30%now.
Men'Sl9.95 Jackets
Men's 22.95 Jackets
Men's 24.95 Jackets
Men's 29.95 Jackets

Rutland, were spotted on the RL 7 by·pau and taken Into custody.
The eouple allegedly took gasoline from vehicles at Ben Tom
Corp., across from Meigs H.S., and gas caps elf the cars parked In
the subdivision behind Salisbury School.
Deputies . Jlmmer Soulsby and Paul .'Rowe handled the
lnvestfgatlorl.
· The Sherlfl's Dept. Is al'!O Investigating vandalism to the door at
the flllh and game buUdlng, West Shade. the window In the main
door was shot out, according to the report. Investigation Is
continuing.

Two parcels ot "excess" federal land In Meigs County are up lor
sale, according to WUllam Brown, public affairs otflcer tor the U.S
Anny Co\-p of Engineers at Huntington.
.
The land Is surrounding the Racine Locks and Dams. The locks
and dams wW remain Iinder the operation of the Corp of Engineers.
Brown..sald one parcel;·approxlmately 'll ~es,ls, Jocated at the
mouth of Shade River near SR 124 at Long Bottom. The other parcel,
approximately 33 acre~, Is located at the mouth of Old Town Creek

SUMMER-JACKETS

BOYS

CI.IA_RA .

MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS

NOVi

Ret 8.00 • . . • . • Sale 5~60

\

CI.IARANCif

CI.EARANCII

BOYS,

. SHORTS SALE.

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CHI LOR ~-N'S

CUARANCif

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Federal land goes on sale

CLEARANCE!
MEN'S

S, M, L ani:i'
Sizes.
Terrific selecotion . Tank
tops included. Reduced
35% . .
•
5.95 Knit Shirts .. . ... 4.16
8.95 Knit Shirts .. .. .. 6.26
12.95 Knit Shirts ..••• 9.06
14.95 Knit Shirts ••. • 10.46

Short Sleeves Buy
school wear and save 35%.
Boys 5.95 Shirts •....•••••
Boys 7.95 Shirts ..........
. Boys 9. 95 Shirts ...•.•....
Boys 12.95 Shirts •• .•• .. •.

Bermudas - Some denims,
knit shorts, jog shorts, not
all sizes. Reduced 40% .

..

I{NIJ SHIRTS~&gt;

KNIT SHIRTS
Sizes 8 to 20. Big selection -

SUMMER SHORTS

/

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"X'L: ·

CUARANCEI

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13.00 Shirts,. . • • • • • . • 8.45
17.00 Shirts •••••.' ·• • 11.05
18.00 Shirts . . • . . . . . 11.70
19.00 Shirts • • • • • . . • 12.35

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.CLEARANCE!

10.95 Sports Shirts ..... 7
12.95 Sport Shirts . ..... 9.06.
15.95 Sport Shirts •. .. • 11 .16
18.95 Sport Shirts ..... 13.26

i'

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11.16
13.26
16.06
17.46

· MEN'S

All sizes - Western shirts
are included . Save35% now.

..

VAN HEUSEN
DRESS SHIRTS

I

Save 35% Short sleeve.
styles, sizes 14V2 to 17V:lo SIDolids and patterns.
' .

CI.IARANCif

SPORT SHIRTS

SAVE ..o·~.

,

CI.IARANCII

Sizes 29 to 50 - Solid colors
and patterns - Entire stock
- Reduced 30%.

Reg. 11.00 . . . Sale 7.70
Reg. 15.00 . . Sale 10.50
Reg. 19.00 . . . Sale 13.30
Reg. 26.00 . . . Sale 18.20

5.95 Shorts .... .... . ...
7.95 Shorts .......... ..
9.95 Shorts ............
12.95 Shorts .... .... ...

8.00 . . . . . . .

Reg.
Sale 5.60
Reg. 12.00 . . . . . . Sale 8.40
Reg. 17.00 . . . . • • Sale 11.90
Reg. 24.00 . . . . • . Sale 16.80

Sale 12.60
Sale 17.50
Sale 25.20
Sale 30.80

~)

A Rutland couple have been charged with petty theft following
their arrest early this morning·at Rocksprlng!, according to Meigs
County Sheriff J~ J . Protti~
According to the ~rt. the s~lfl' ~ omce was notlfll:d at approxi..........--~,1Jyil a:m: ttiAt-two per!OIIS' were seen near vehicles' at Meigs
high school carrying gasoline cans on CR 25. When deput~ arrived,
the pair were not found, but their car was Impounded lor partially
blocking the ro8d and having expired tags.
At approximately 6 am., Kevtn Runnion, 23, and his wife, Ethyl,

· 11,1\isses and Extra Sizes.

Misses and

Reg. 18.00 . . . . . .
Reg. 25.00 . . . • . .
Reg. 36~00 • • . • . •
Reg. 44.00 . . . . . .

' Coqple charged in theft

SUMMER TOPS

asked by one of the parent, with Roberts explaining
that the actual expense to the district was $3,500 and
that the ef!lclency factor will save the dlsll1ct money
In the long nm." He comm4111ted on the computer's
value In helping the dlsll1ctmake short·term Investments to get the most Interest Another parent questioned the recent employment It another clflce person.
but the superintendent stated It was a tempoi'III'Y
1 sitUation.
,
'lbe dlsctpllne problem which Supt. Roberts described as ''not any more extreme than at any other
school" along with needed academic lmprovernenb
was d!J(:ussed clurtng the meeting. Roberts said his
prlme concern now on the academle side Is securlng a
new .prlndpal and ~ a l!clence teacher. He said
. that the board had Interviewed two extellent science
teachers, but both.liad declined after looking at the
science lab.
ACIIdemlc qiiOIItlonl
Roberts responded to questions about education In
the dlsll1ct with the comment that teSt scoi'e.'l are the
highest In the county and thaUI2 percentofthlsyear's
graduates are going on to )llgber education. He
further noted that the average class size In thedlsirlct
l~ 21 students after one teacher complained about the
lack of time lor Individual stUdent atter.tlon.
A~ for the lack of !ICholarshlps lor Ea~ternstudents;

Athletic boosters to .help board

Round Meigs County
MISSES

1 SectiOn,' 12 l'areo 15 Cenl a
A Mu1Umedla Inc. Newopapor

Pomeroy-Mlfdleport, Ohio, Friday, July 2, 1982

Eastern board told to seek tax levy

LITTLE GIRLS'

TOPS AND SHORTS

Survey reveals meat
prices rise in-June
Page 8.

Page 12.

CHILDREN'S

SUMMER

Canvas, Leather. Vinyl
and Cloth Sty les.

Reds bos8 says

celebration plans.

BEGINS FRIDAY, JULY 2nd-9:30A.M.

Reg . 6.00 . . , SALE 4.20
Reg. 9.00 ... SALE 6.30
Reg. 14.00 .. . SALE 9.80
Reg. 23.00 .. SALE 16.10

I

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:

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PVBLIC IIEBv.:E. 'l1lele WGI'Iuli'lll'eiiDI!III'D

•
c:rew jldwed, . . . wort.8d Ollllllllii&amp;Y ...... pldrlnJ
liP liter, ltrllildt o.n. ........, Grea Bunem, M» .
. diem ~, 11 "· ..".'" Ql!llal• lllld llllawD . . . . • -

. . . . ., . . I II .tile rtflllll!;i IIIII .. . \tW• .....,.
~ CIMd aaooDarurt. ~tlll.IW
Allo ......... ~&amp;brei,. a Juveajie.C..It &gt;'•
ot wblcb ... I!Jiel!t (II tile ~ ' piii! ,IIK,... a .._ll'llllt ~ ot ~ flinlllolee.
- ..
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•

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