<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14301" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/14301?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T05:50:10+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45407">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/2ef09426252e569fc1dc6001fb9e6170.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8aff91c381b6f8cb0d578424c6e28e61</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44664">
                  <text>' .

'lburlldayi ~~ 8, 11182 •

:P:~::~N-::Th::e~D:wzy~· ~&amp;:n:dn:e:l----------------------~P~mne::;~~y--~MR=M==~~~~ri~,~O~hl~o~--~--------~--------~----·--~~-.~--~;

Consu·m ers' couniel issues utility hike warnJJig
'
'
to file a series of rate IncreasE: requeSts In advance of a new state
law which restructures the PUCO.
The measure also bars utfiltll!s
trom f1llni more th&amp;ll . one nonemergency rate case at a tlrile.
"I am afraid ulllltles wfil press
every advantage they hav41. before
the new law takes ertect In January," Spratley said. "Maybe the
utDlty Industry wants to get In whlle
they know what the regulatory cUmat.e Is."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP,) - Consumers' Counsel wnuam A. Spratley says the $1 b11110n liSt of utility
rate hikes pending before the PubHe UtilitieS Commission of Ohio
soon may be growll)g.
Spratley said Wednesday that.
some electric companies could face
financial problems because of construction budgets which translate
Into larger rate requests.
He said alSo that utDJtles may tr"

Hatfield &amp; McCoy
said bankrupted

.

'

Mayor ends cases

Venezuela threatens
to break OPEC pact

Common
Court by Chemical
Mortgage Pleas
Co., Columbus,
against
Paul D. Laney, GallipoliS, et al.
In other court action Dora Arm
Kirby was granted a divorce from
Joseph L. Kirby.

EVERY SATURDAY
9 to
...,_.~ NIGHT
THURSDAY NIGHT 9-1
LADIES DRINKS

Lessons offered
Tennis lessons will be offered at
the Syracuse courts beginning Monday, July 12 and wllllast for a period of three weeks.
· The cost will be $10 and checks
should be made payable to Syra·
cuse VIllage Park Fund. ·
Lessons will be taught on Mon·
days and Wednesdays as follows:
held from til&gt;glnnefs
8 a.m. tglessons
9 a.m.;will
adult
be
children's
beginner lessons from 9 a.m. to 10
a.m.; adult lnt ermetldate lessons
wlll be from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
To sign up, persons are to call
Janice Lawson at 992-7351 or sign
up at London Pool. No payment Is
necessary untU lessons begin at the
coutts. Instructor will be Joy
Bentley.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~

I

~

CLOTHING
fOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY!·
'
..(

I

.WOM·EN'S WEAR CLEARAN.CE
t

SUMMER
IS
HERE
AND LIFESTYLE HAS THE FURNITURE

-JR. TOPS
.-JR. SHORTS
-DRESSES
-SUMMER 8~0USES
-SWIMWEAR
'

SAVE 20%0N WROUGHT IRON

'

Veterans Memorial
Veterans Memorial Hospital reponed two admissions and live dis·
charges Wednesday .
Admissions--Charles Grueser,
Minersville, Sheila Clark, Dexter.
Dlscharges.. Carlos Harris, Bertha
Dutton, Eva Sha!ler, Allen Black. wood, Melvina Davidson.

'

Infect,ions prevalent in smokers

-BOYS SHORTS .
-SUMMER JACKETS
-DRESS SHI~tl$ '
-DRESS.SLACKS '-

-SHORTS
-SWIM TRUNKS
-SUMMER CAPS
-BOYS SHim

PATIO AND POOLSIDE FURNITURE

. .' &lt;

' .

y

l

'

.I '
.

.

. •~;::.'

CHILDREN'S WEAR C~EARANCE·· .
I .

.-TOPS

.\

Emergency runs

..-SHORTS
.

Heny Duty, Triple c.tH ill Ylllillf
or Yelllw- Stilet, 2 C'-itull4
Table. Rea. $211.

Lifestyle

..

SALE

= ·

· COUEI Of .ntiiD IIIII OUIIE. UI.UPOUS

~-,

'225'

•..PEIW
«&lt;DUS · ·

SMITIIVILLE, W.Va.- Two workers were badly burned early
today In a fire at a well site near this small town In rural Ritchie
County; a dispatcher for the county rescue squad said.
· The dispatcher, who did not want to be ldentllled, said members of
the squad who responded to an emergency call about 7: ~a.m. were
taking the Injured worker,s to St. Joseph's Hospital In Parkersburg.
He did not know ~ condition of the victims. "All we know Is that
thefe are two bum victims, burned badlY.'' he ~ald.
:

MEN'S WEAR C~EARANQE
..

'

Shown:

Twq ;W/lt~ers· bur11;ed in well fire

.

-SPORTSW£AR
· . .;(
:: -SUMMER.$ :""~.
-PRE-TEEN SPQRTSWEAR, I)
-~ATERNITY ~R
' 1,
-SLACKS ..
.I

~

-DRUSES ·
-SPoRTSWEAR .
-SLEEPWEAR

'·I

-'

CHICAGO - Cigarette smokers are more likely to get more
serious soorHenn respiratory Infections than non·smokers, and
· ·
stay sick 25 percent longer, a new study sbows. ·
The study, In which the participants' average age was 31, also
showed cigarette smoking Is more common In patients with acute
resplr~tory lllness than In those wltpout the sickness.
,

'

•

I

.Winning Ohio lottery num6.e~

CLEVELAND - 'lbe wllmlng number drawn Thu~y n!,ght In
the Ob1o Lottery's ilally game '':The Number" was 229.
, •Ill the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the wtnntng number was 3873.
The lottery reported ellllllpp rt $532.n8.50 on Its dally game. The ·
earnjnp. c:ame on sales of $927,163.50, while holders of winning
tickets are e11tltled to Share $394,435, lottery offtdals said

W eath~r forecast
• Partly cloudy kinlelll '\VIth :D percent cbance of IJIUnCierstorln.
Lows 6'10. Wlndi liloutlleuterly 10 rqib 01' • • Saturday, parQy
c!pudY.With :IO,percent cbance rt thulll':ti illlir • Hflbi In the

...
I

.

I f Ia
•

'I

p

....

. W: ?rr I
1'111'IQl
waa . . lhw

t OMt I'll•••
t

I _...,8

.

.., . . Tt tl;........................ . .

mill:·

.

.

'l).,alrat.-

•.'

.

'·

faciUty will o?ler the same services offered by larger
banks. A ?oait officer wiD be at the SyracUAe Branch
two boun a day. ne bank wiD have three teUer wlodows and the houn will ·vary to accommodate the
pub?lc. nere will be parking space for 12 vehicles.

WORK ON SCHEDULE - Work on the new
SyracUAe Branch of the Home Nat?oaal Bank, Racine,
Is oa acbedule atcOI'dlq !G Tom Wolfe, president.
been placed on the exterior of the building
Brick
and dry waD Is being completed on the lnlerior. The
bank will open on Sept.l, according to Wolfe. The new

ba'

~

Conditions upset
Syracuse council
By KATIE CROW
Syracuse VIllage Cou~ Thursday night expressed lt.sd!Japproval
of conditions In the vUiage causing
unnecessary problems for rest- ·
dents due to the fact that Ontario
PII?lelne Co., has failed to complete

Drunk driver hits 40 cars

.~· J~.

.

·-

COLUMBVS, Ohio - An assistant Franklin County prosecutor
says he haS "f!'iery reason !0 believe" a private audit of the state
tre&amp;sun!!:'li offlre will show !.hat nearly..&amp;ll- tbe mtoiog.'p IJ\IIUOn •• • wo.t'lc~llli ttwJJp~tton Qt.
was eiiibi!zzled.
the sewer lines.
Council toured the village to view
Davld L. Johnson, the prmecutor conducting-a grand Jury lnvestl·
gatlon Into the missing funds, said the Price Wateroouse &amp; CO. audit
the paving that has been done by
will be the last m!ljor Item he needs to take to the grand Jury to seek
Ontario and the damage caused to
residents homes and yards by On·
Indictments.
Fred B. Miller, senior partner of the auditing firm, said be expects
!arlo's failure to reclaim land that
was tom up when lines were laid on
the report to be presented to the State Controlling Board-on July 19.
But he said' It might not be completed until Aug. 2 If "all the pieces
private property.
The basements In several homes
don't fall together."
were flooded because of a lack of
proper culverts and ditches that
should have been dug out rather
than~ tilled In and land reclamatiOn.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A 61-year-o!4motorlst who couldn't decide
Mayor Eber Pickens agreed to
which way to go struck about 40 parked cars, pollee said.
contact Commonwealth Eng!·
Rlc~d J . Funk was charged with drunken drMng, hlt·sklp,
neers, and the contractor concern·
failure to control and dr!vlng the wrong way on a one-way street,
lng the problems.
police said.
Pickens wUllnform t.he engineer·
Officers sald ' Funk was drMng west., the proper direction, on
lng firm and contractor of the sltua·
Gates Street Wednesday night when he began running Into autos
Uon and give them the choice of
parked on the north side of the street.
reclaiming the land, replacing
Funk: s auto spun around after one or the collisiOns and he began
danuiged culverts and cleaning
drlvtng the opposite direction, strlldng more cars as he went, pollee
plugged culverts (IS well as ditches,
said.
or have the'vWage do the work at
Funk finally turned off Gates Street onto another avenue: drove a
their costs.
iew hmidred more feet and crashed Into several more parked cars,
. It was noted that private citizens
pollee said.

.
1

I

.

}~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~;;~~~~~

•PATIO GIIOIJPS

NEWARK, Ohio - A rural Johnstown woman who was killed In
what Licking County SherW Gerry BWy called a "vi!Fi blatant
vicious act,'' had phoned lawmen for help only a short time before
she was ldlled, authorities say.
Jeffrey Wayne Thompson was charged Wednesday with aggra·
vated murder with death penalty speclflcat.tons In the rape-slaying
of Elizabeth A. Hendren, 22.
amy said Mrs. Hendren had telephoned -Johnstown pollee and
theil the.sherltf's office abQut 6 p.m. oil !lie night she was kllled.
She asked for a deputy to come to the home so she could talk to h1nl
about a man who was "harassing'' her. But the sheriff said there was ·
no urgency Indicated In Mrs. Hendren's voice when she called.

Audit will show money embezzled

I

1.-

GR(IUPS

Viptim had phoned sheriff

·ELBER.FELDS ,I·N POM

'

SERVING

~I fliNG

.

CLEARANCE PRI·CES ON·SU"'lMER
::.:.~•.
.

PIUA SHACK

SAVE 011:

CHICAGO- The tlrsttlme 13-year-old Jeff Pederson drove a car
was a Jlfe'saylng trip of up to 75 mph rushing hls bleeding older
bro~ to the hospital, hls father said.
Scoh Pedersoll, 19, had falll!!tl tllrough a .glass storm door of the
family's l)ome In Glenwood, a suburb south of Chicago.
· "His c!Bt?. ripped open to the rib cage by Jagged glass and the
nervi!S~filndons'and artery In hls right arm pit were severed," said
the father, Frank Pedersoll, who was at work at Internat.tonal Harvester at the time of the accident a week ago.
Jeff, barely over 5 feet tall. helped hls bleeding brother, a strapping &amp;-footer, to the family car and took off on the five-mile race
against time through beavy noon-hour traffic. ·

"'

%PRICE .

Meigs County EMS reponded to
several calls Wednesday.
At 2 p.m., Rutland transported
· Paul Montgomery from his Rt. 124
home to Holzer Medical Center; at
5:27 p.m., Rutland EMS·took responded to a motorcycle acc,ldeJ~t;· l
taking Rick J1'ldemoJ;e (rori) Corn
Hollow Road to Veterans Memorial
'llospltal; at 8:46 p.m:, Pomeroy
squad toolt David Hardwick trom a
residence on Mulb!!rry ('&gt;.vl!!tlue to
VMH.

13-year old has life saving drive

BAHR .CLOTHIERS

.

Mon.-Thurs.

1 Section, 12 Pages
1 ~ Con1s
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 9,1982

Refund
problem
forseen

Summer c·lea.rante Sale·..

DANCING

enttne

Tournament "nnoufice(f

f~R~u~tlan~d~Fire~~Dep~~t.=====~~~====;=::;:;:;::::::~:=~~~~~~

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

•

aty

. .I

VoUl,No.46
C.pyrllhled 1912

Page 12

•

•

e

MEN and WOMEN

a

spoke
a special meeting of an said
of unfair
Imports
OPECafter
committee.
wouldelimination
r.esolve nearly
all their
dl1!1·
AIJ13 OPEC ministers are sche- cullles. Baldrige has said the u.s.
duled to meet Friday In a special steel Industry could lose up to $1
session t.o consider the committee's bllllon In each remaining quarter of
recommendation that. they main· th
taln the current total output ceiling ...--e...:y_e_ar_.
of 17.5 million barrels a day.
Addressing the problem of the depressed U.S. steel lndustzy, Com·
merce Secretary Mal co lm
Baldrige told reporters that the
economy and low productivity not Imports- are mostly to blame.
Baldrige. however, left for Brus·

t; "'( :

Livestock reports

Page 4

O!

'

..'

.Ue~ander bOmbed,
~-Yankee brass upset

Page~ ·

SEE US
FOR THE
FINEST
WEAR·ING
APPAREL
FOR

Mayor Clarence Andrews con·
ducted Mayor's Court last night. In
•. Pomeroy.
Fined was Ronald Arms, Chester, $363and costs for DWI. ForfeitBy LORRAINE CICHOWSKI
sels, Belgium. to discuss with Com·
lng floes were Margaret
AP Business Writer
mon Markel officials the problem
Amberger, Syracuse, $51), assured
clear distance; Art.le Roush, Levenezuela's oil minister Is threat· of European steel being sold In the
enlng to break OPEC's production· United States more cheaply than
tart, W. Va., $43, assured clear dis·
sharing agreement if other domestlc companies can produce lance; Robert Burson, Shade, $47,
countries continue to violate a pact lt. The Commerce Department speed; Richard Kent, Gallipolis,
to produce no more than 17.5 mil· ruled last month that seven Euro- $49, speed; Darrell Wood, Ravens- Fire' de8troys home
lion barrels a day total.
pean countries were subsidizing ex·
wood, W. Va., $43, assured clear
Meanwhile. a top U.S. olflclal ports to the United States In distance.
Salem TOWJ!Shlp Volunteer Fire
says foreign steel Imports can't be violation of U.S. law.
Thomas Beasley, Scott's Depot, · Dept. responded to.a fire last night
blamed for all the problems facing
"Imports are not the chief cause
W. Va., $49, ~ H~Mc:e~ which ~troyed the home of Dick
the domestlc steel Industry.
of the steel lllllustry's problems,"
~~o!~~- Bld,.;e~. $55: s~ Lambert, Briar Ridge Road. The
Humberto Calderon Berti, the Baldrige said. "They are one con·
!Ire s)arted about 7 p.m. and lireVenezuelan oU minister, told repor· tribut.lng cause. The chief causes
(lghters battled the blaze until apters Wednesday that at least three are the generally bad state of the
proximately 11:00 p.m.
members of the Organization of economy and low productivity."
Court action8 filed
According to Fire Chief Larry
Petroleum Exportlr\g Countries
Steel Industry officials declined
MontgOmery, soort In theelectrtA suit In t¥ amount of $29,763.ffi cal wiring was the cause. The Sa·
are violating Individual production to comment on Baldrige's statequotas agreed on last March. He ments, but. In the past. they have
has been filed In Meigs County Jem Fire Dept.. was assisted by the

. '

Justice Department·d~all~ws
several reapportionment plans

.

equity higher tJian the~j:e"naUonal average of 12.6
t. .
Return· on equity to, Cll!velan~.
Electric illuminating W,as pegged- .
at 12.7 percent; Da~~ Power an~,
Ught, 14 percent; Old&lt;{ Edison, ~4.~
percent: Ohio:. POwer~ 13 percent;.
and Toledo EdisOn. U.S pei'CI!IIt. ·'
"Gas utlllty retu~on equity fot
198lareconsldereda eragetor~·
!lrst.ttme In four year . Collll11bla
Ohio showed a 12.2 ljercel)t return
on equity and East .flhlo G"e;f 12.6·
percent," Spratley
He said the com Y wltjl the
highest. return on eq)llty of a1l rna~
jor·utWUes In the st~te was Unlteq
Telephone at-14.6 ~Qeneral.
Telephone's return- rose ·14:1 per;
cent.. Ohio Bell's . was Iup .11.9' •
percent.
~:'
· ~
1

cult than he tbooght to find fi.
•
r·
•.,. : .
nancers .or the reopening attempt. ·
: .
"ThlslstaklngaUttlelongerthan
companybycompany,aretoohlg~
A men's USSSA C&amp;D sottball-'
I had boped," he said.
compared 10 what we would have tournament wiD~ held July.).7,an .,
He said a cleclslon on whether to
liked.t.o have seen;" Spratley said. 18 &amp;:. Hadley Field, Mar~!pi· Thi!~
reorganiZe W1l1 probably made . .. (But) 1 don't. think they are as ex· tee Is $75 for the double-eUrr\lll'~tlon:
next. week.
cesslve as we've seen 1n the past."
tournament.. The top two teams InAttorneys for Hatfield and
Spratley sllld therateofretumon each class wUI advance td ' state.~
McCoy did not appear at Wednes- equity, reflecting the amount of motournaments. The ·C toumamen(
day's hearing to oppose the bankney available to holders of common wUI be held In Toledo; the D t.oU,ma-•
ruptcy petition.
stock, 1s another Indicator of a com- ment Is In Dayton. For more·lnfor ·
Flowers ordered Hatfield and
panfs financial health.
matlon, contact Enos
a
McCoy to prepare a list of Its credlHis review showed five of seven 3744322or
tors within live days. He named
electric utU!IIes reported returns on at. 373-5266.
Huntington attorney Kirk L. Fran- .----------------:------;4p;;--;";:
kel Interim trustee for the
company.
Creditors wUl meet. In Huntington
on July 26 to name a permanent
trustee and to discuss other business relevant to the bankruptcy, according to attorney Richard J.
Bolen, who represented the three
creditors.
The creditors were the FlrsUI\Intlngton NatiOnal Bank, Huntington
National Bank and the Times Co.,
Inc. of Marietta.
Hatfield and McCoy's nine stores
closed their doors on June 13. In a
prepared statement released later.,
President J . Michael Hale blamed
the closings on "sharp sales declines" brought on by "high unemployment. and high Interest rates."
Hatfield and McCoy employed
about 120 persons.

Hatfield and McCoy, Inc. was declared bankrupt Wednesday by
u.s. Bankruptcy Court Judge Edwin Flowers.
Three companies had tued suit
June 16 against. Hatfield and
McCoy under Chapter 7 of the Federal Bankruptcy Act. They claimed
.the firm owed them over ~.OOJ.
Meanwhlle, a former Hatfield
and McCoy official who Is attemptIng to reorganize the company said
the decisiOn shOUld not have a major effect on hls efforts.
Paul Speir, former• vice·
president of advertising for the
tlim said "we are stllllooldng at"
reopening four of thechaln'sstores,
Including one In GaUipolls.
"The ruling won't help a lot," he
said, but. poor economic conditions
arf" the most. seriOus obstacle to
reorganization.
Speir said It has been more dlffl-

EMBASSY DAMAGED - A Syrian army truck drives by the Soviet
Embassy In West Beirut Wednesday, hours alter the building was
damaged by IKraell artillery. In Moscow, the olltclal Tass news agency
claimed that the Israeli shells had scored "several direct hits" on the
trade mission and service buildings In the embassy compound. (AP
l:.aserphoto)

His forecast came as he released
1981 profit fleures for the state's 13
major utilitieS bas~ on reP&lt;&gt;rts the
companies gave the PUCO.
They show that, with the-exceptlon of the natUral gas Industry,
ohio .Ulllltles earned an average of
~percent more than In 1!8l.
He said ut.Wtles overall reported
anlncreaselnnet.lncomeof$214.2
rnDJion, or 22 percent over 1!8l~
Ohio Edison reJ)brted the largest
gain among electric companies
with a dollar Increase over 1981 of
$62.5 million.
East Ohio Gas Increased Its prof·
Its by 17 percent. Ohio Bell led the
telephone companies with a 00 per·
cent Increase In profits over 191n
Ohio Power and Columbia Gas d
Ohio showed percentage declines In
1981 net Income compared with the
previous year.
"These figures 1n some cases,

•

have had to put up with too many
unnecssary problems. CouncU felt
It was time that. the situation was
changed and necessary work to
avoid further problems be done
Immediately.
.It \\!as Indicated by several res!·
dents iJt ..attendan~. that. Onl;l~IO
Pipeline had been notified regardIng the problems but had failed to
take any action.
Robert Wingett, grants administrator, spoke to council about mak·
lng an applicatiOn for Community
Development. Block Grant funds
through the office of the board of
Meigs County Commissioners.
Wingett said the deadline for submitting appllcatlons under the program was past but that councU
could possibly make application lor
neKt year, to which council agreed.
Meigs commissioners wUI receive approximately $100,000
through the Community Development Block Grant funds. Of the
$100,000, It Is believe that. $75,00lls
ellrmarked for the ,new county
landfill.
The commissioners this week received six appljc;~tlons for use of
the balance of the funds .
Council authorized Wingett to
contact Buckeye Hills Hocking Val·

ley Regional Development for tech·
nlcal assistance In preparing plans
for a marina.
CouncU, In other business, voted
to advertise for 8JO tons, mor·e or
less of hotmlx for paving. They also
agreed to prepare specltlcatlonS to
advert~;foP \lids to~ painting of the
'
Municipal Building.
Mayor Pickens was given the au·
t.horlty to remove two trees on
Third Steel and one at t.he former
St11te Park.
Council signed an easement with
Ohio Power Co., to place under·
ground cable to the left station and
signed a mutual ald agreement
with Tuppers Plains· Chester Wa·
t.er District and the Pomeroy Water
Department.
Gene Imboden, fire chief, reported that the annual firemen 's
pool party wUl be held July 24, from
8 p.m. untU 10 p.m. Council
members were Invited to attend.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Janice Lawson, clerk: George Holman, treasurer, MUton Vartan. pollee chit!!, W!Uie Guinther, John
Bentley, Mick Ash, Jack Williams
and Kathryn Crow, council
members, Wingett and ·Jim
Teaford .

Fovmer page stands behind·
story regarding sexual acts
WASIDNG,I'ON (AP)- Former
House page LeRoy WUllams, who
maintains he arranged an appoint·
ment for / a senator with a male
prostitute and .himself engaged In
sexual acts with a congressman,
stood by his story today even
tboogh he flunked an FBI Ue detec·
tor test.
WDlta,ms told an Arkansas TV
station Thursday after the test that
he had gtven the FBI the names of
three House members and a
senator,
But the examiner who conducted
the test, , W~ said on NBC's
''Today" show, "stated that I flat·
out flunked the test, that he felt Uke
I should right 'then tum my story
around and tell the truth." He said
the examlller w:as "biased."
· ,!,sked on NBC wbether he had
.beEn lYing, Wllllarna replied: "No; I
was not." Wllllarna said he was still
ready to testlfy under oath to the
Houle ethics committee, which Is
&lt; lnvestJ&amp;atlng the alleptlons, or to a
lflllld jury, ·
· ,
In 1111 lntemew 11iuraday with
Uttle ROck's KARK·Tv, WDIIams
repeated the IUIIIII!I of three conIP'fUIIII!II and iiae aenator but they
were deJ eted from the aJr: He did

sex with a member o! Congress and
set up the meeting Involving the senator "because] felt r was afraid of

STANDS BY STORY - Former Capl~ Hill page LeRoy
W?Diaml, 18, wllo ,..YI be

muaett u

appomtmevl for ·•

1rHb •

leDalor
aad n~PCed

Dtale pnllflute
IIi ICIIII8I acll blm-

aell w1t1a a ~ appeared • NBC New~' "TJdlly"
...., ll'rldlly .... repeatal bll
not 111e the llllliB In today's
lllaty, delpHe r.oiwl n .FBilJe !
lnfRWW . .
detector lat. (AP 1 ampbotG ).
~ 111114 today tbat. he had .

.

.

the consequences If I said, 'No'."
On Thursday. Rep. Robert Dor·
nan said he Is pushing for a second
congressional Investigation Into the
allegations tluit some lawmakers
have been Involved with Ullctt sex
and cocaine use.
Doman, a Caljfornla Republican
who allozed hls congr esslonal office
to be used by an undercover narcot.·
lcs agent, also says his sources tell
hlm that seven current members of
Congress - six In the House and
one In the Senate - have been lm· '
pllcatC!I by others as drug users.
The seven lawmakers, along
with two former members of Congress, have 1Jei!n named as cocaine \
users by three separate Investigative sources, Doman said In a letter
to Rep. Leo Zeferettl, O.N.Y.,
chairman of the House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and
Control.
'Three of the six current House
members are from California, one
Is frQI!l New York, one from M~·
chusetts, and one from a state'ln the
District of Columbia mett11poUtan
area, Doman said. He did list the
state of the senator, I'IOr the states of
the two former congressmen.
Dornan also said allegatiOns of
homoseXual activities w)lh con·
gresstonal pages have been made
against two of the nine

HUNTINGTON: W.Va. (AP) Customers of a chain of appliance
stores that closed without warning
last month may have difficulty rec·
overing deposits they placed on undelivered merchandise, says a
lawyer In the case.
Kirk Frankel, a Huntington lawyer appointed as an Interim trustee
to supervise distribution of the
assets of Hatfield and McCoy Inc.,
said he doubts whether retatl customers wDJ receive anything for their
deposits. But Frankel, who was appointed In a hearing Wednesday,
said It may be possible for some of
the company's assets to be
distributed.
Lee Mltmann: a lawyer representing the company -which oper·
atE:&lt;! eight stores In West VIrginia,
Ohio and Kentucky - said commercial creditors wDJ be easy to
trace. But consumer creditors wUl
be harder to trace, he said.
Commercial creditors will be
given first priority, according to
Mltmann, followed by deposit credt.tors who made deposits or up to
$400 and who rue a proof of claim
with the bankruptcy court.
The Hatfield and McCoy chain
suddenly closed Its doors last
month, surprising customers and
employees alike. Many of the
firm's 100.plus employ~ report.ed
for work, only to find the stores'
doors locked.
In Wedneiday's hearing, U.S.
Bankruptcy Judge Edwin Flowers
declared the chain, based In Hun·
tlngt.on, bankrupt. The company
6perated stores In four towns In
West VIrginia, three in Ohio and
one In Kentucky. It Is chartered In
all three states.
Deputy Court Clerk Sheila Hud·
son said Thursday that Flowers
told officers r1 the company to com·
ptle a complete llsJ of creditors by
Tuesday. However. an attorney retained by the company said It might
take longer to write the list.
The bankruptcy dectslon was
made In response to a petition fUed
by three creditors- the First Huntlngt.on National Bank, the Hunting·
ton PubliShing Co. and the Times
Co. Inc. of Marietta, Ohio.
In the pet.!llon IDed with Flowers
on June 16, the creditors claimed
that Hatfield and McCoy owed
them almost $350,00).
On Aug. 2, Flowers wUI consider
a second petitiOn flied against Hatfield and McCoy of Charlest.on, Hatfield and McCoy of West VIrginia,
Hatfield and McCoy of Ohio and
Hatfield and McCoy or Kentucky,
all subsidiaries of Hatfield and
McCoy Inc .. according to Lee Mit·
tman, a lawyer representing the
company.

Four face char@e8
in Raverfwood
Preliminary hear lngs have been
set July 14 In Ravenswood for four
Rt. 2, Racine men arrested on
charges of possession of marijuana
with Intent to deliver, public !ntoxl·
catiOn .and carryl!1g concealed
1 weapon.
The men, Dean V. Hill, 22, James
A. Alley, 24, Carl R. Alley, 22, and
Fred MUler, Jr., 27, were apprehended In a car near the lnterectlon.
of lfenry and Sand Streets by PU.
Stan Johnson.
According to officer Byers, the
pollee had received complaints that
the quartet • had been driving
through Ravenswood making obs·
cene gestures and trying to entice
young girls Into their car.
According to the arrest report,
Prl. Byers estimated the men had
approximately a third of a pound of
marijuana In their possession. The
co.ncealed weapon charge
sternrrwid trom a four-foot. wooden
club and a butcher knife found ' In
the car.

a

They were treed on Sl.OOl bond "
after being arraigned before mag-

Istrate BW Reynolds.

�•
. Pag•· 2-The Daily Sentinel '·

Commentary

Pome10y-Micldleport, Ohio

. Pomeroy-Midd~. Ohio
Friday, July 9, 1982

Harrisonville

Lightning strikes twice, Pittsburgh
pounds Home, Price for 9-8 victory

! .

12:00
Saturday
Rutland

The next ene~gy.__c_n_·_s_i.;;..s__~--R~ob~e~rt~W&lt;~al-te:--rs

"

J'he Daily Sentinel
Ill CltU rl SlrHI
Pumer11y, Oh lu
114-Ht-%15f
Ot.:VOTEO TO lltE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS..MASON ARF.A

ROBERT L. WINGETI
PubiiKiwr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

AstlilllaRI PubiiJht&gt;rfCuntmllrr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N~••

Editor

A MEMBER nt Tht Anul'l11ted Prn~ . Inland Dtll}'
Amrrlf'.llln Nt"WIPIPt'r Publillht'nl AIKIK'IMlinn.

Pr~

As.od11tioo 1nd thr

. IETt'ERS QF OPINION a~ wtolrnmt'd. Tlwy ~ houkt bt le.1 thaD 301 wurd1 lunK. All
are •ubjttt to ~ltlng and mull bt •IJ(nnl with namt, 11ddrn. and klrpltonr
number. Nn utllltt:aed ~lte111 will bt publh1twd. Lttk&gt;n 1hwld bt In Kood CMMte, a(klrTQinl(
lr-11~111

i111111n, IIIII ptn.ol\lllltil"IJ,

Of acres and guilder
Contrary to the impression some of us may have gotten from reports of the
intense foreign interest in American real estate in recent years, the United
States is in no inunedlate danger of being bought up acre by acre. ··
Very much to the contrary, according to the Agriculture Department's
latest survey of foreign holdings. As of the last day of 1981, these came to 12.7
million acres, which is just short of 1 percent of all la~d classed as
agricultural in the country.
Even that overstates the actual extent of foreign control since it includes
properties of U.S. corporations with non-American ownership participation
that can be as little as 5 percent. Such multinational corporate ownership accounts for 64 percent of the total - more than 8 million acres - and a quar·
ter of that is accounted for by a single enterprise, Scott Paper Co., whtch
became 20 percent French-owned in 1981.
More on nationalities, just five account for four-fiftha of the total foreignowned acreage. Canadians are far in the lead with interests in 4 million
acres, followed by the usual big-time operators - the French (2 million),
British (1.8million) and West Germans (I million).
Then comes a surprise - the Netherlands Antilles at just under a million
acres. The Caribbean islanders are not direct owners but agents, however.
Their advantageous tax and banking secrecy laws provide an "identity
haven" through which other foreign Interests that for their own reasons
prefer to remain anonymous can channel investment funds into the United
States.
Agreater surprise is the minimal role of oil money. Saudi interests are involved In only 13,701 acres,the Kuwaitis in 3,793.
And then there is the Soviet interest. No cause, however, for panic in the
State of Defense departments. It comes to a grand total of 80 acres, all of it
held by one elderly immigrant in the Dakotas who has never acquired U.S.
·
·citizenship.
Other points of possible interest:
More of the foreign-owned acreage is in Maine- 21 percent of the total, 2.6
million acres, almost all forest land held by three tiinber companies- than
in any other state. Ten states clustered in the South and West - Alabama
Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, California, Colorado, New Mexico'
Oregon arid Washington- account for almost half the total. Rhode Island i~
the only state with no reported foreign-owned agricultural land.
Although on the basis of the figures foreign-ownership appears to be no
tlireat to the American way of farm life, 30 states are taking no chances.
R~trictive laws are on the books and eight have tightened regulations in the
last five years.
American land wiU still remain attractive to foreigners, however, par·
ticularly West Europeans. Despite the continuing depressed real estate
market that has affected farmland as well as housing, an investment in U.S.
acreage can look like a very good deal when price tags are comjJared. They
can run in West Germany, for expensive example, from $6,000 to $9,000 an
a¢re.
:Which suggests that it might pay a creative financier anxious to unload a
few acres on the current soft market to start thinking marks and francs.
Or Antilles guilder.

Letter to the editor
Superintendent responds
This letter is meant to express my
appreciation for the position the
paper took in the editorial entitled,
GDC: no simple solution available;
which appeared in the July 7, 1982
issue of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
The position you took shows a
!(real deal of empathy and understanding concerning the sublety
of the issue confronting mentally
retarded people and their families .
The many clients who have moved

successfully into t~e community and
have become contributing members
of society certainly applaud the
assertion of their rights as you expressed in your article.
· Again, and on behalf of the people
we serve and will continue to serve I
thank .you for your affirmation :X
their rights to live as normal a life as
is possible.
Robert K. Zimmerman, Ed. D.
Superintendent

Today in history
Today is Friday, July 9, the 190th day ot 1982. There are 175days le!t In
the year.
. Today's highlight in hi~tory: On July 9, 1971, the last u.s base guarding
the demUitarlzed zone between North and SOUth Vietnam was turned over
to South VIetnamese troops.
Also on thi~ date: In 1882, the British Royal Navy bombarded Alexandria
In Egypt.
In 1947, the engagement of England's Princess E:llzabeth to Lieutenant
PhUip Mountbatten was announced.
,
In 1978, Israel rejected an E&amp;YPttan peace ptan calllng tor Israeli withdrawal !rom the West bank and Gaza Strip.
And In 19!ll, President Jimmy Carter and China's Premier Hua Guofeng
held their first fonnal talks In Tokyo, with the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan topping the .agenda.
·
· Ten year~ ago: the provisional wing otthe IriSh Republican Anny ended
a cease-tire In Northern Ireland after two weeks, It hilppened when shOot·
tng broke out In Belfast l!etween IRA and Britl9h troops.
Five years ago: a.Soviet commentator denounced a proposed American
neutron bomb as inCOnsistent with President carier•s stand on.human
rights.
One year ago: It was announced that hundreds of thoul181lds ot iertJJe
Medl~ranean fruit rues, thought to be sterile, had been releued tn California the'month before, posing alljreat to the state's$14-blllloll produ~

crop.

.

•

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (NEA) Those who classify the crude oil
shortllges of 1974-75 and 1979-80 as
"energy crisis" could be rudely surprised by the magnitude of the
problem when the world's emerging
nations begin clamoring for more
fuel.
The approximately 125 less
developed countries currently serve
as home for about 2 billion of the
world's 4.4 billion people, but more
than 90 percent of the planet's
projected population growth within
the next two decades is expected to
occur within'those LDCs.
Thus, even if per capita levels of
energy use as maintained, the LDCs
will require substantial increases iri
fuel supplies In the next century but nobody knows if the resources
and technologies will be available to
meet that demand.
That quantitative population
growth Is likely to be accompanied
by a qualitative shift In economic
develoment, with the LDCs insisting
upon accesa to a proportional share
of the ~orld's available energy to
support thair growing commercial
and industrial
That trend ill already underway.
During a five-year period in the mid1970s, energy demand grew at 6 percent annually in the LDCs compared
with only 1 percent in Western
Europe.
Yet per capita energy con- .
swnptlon in the apPrOximately 80 iJl.
duatriallzed nationS of the world
reniains nine times higher than in
theLDCs.
Those themes were stressed
repeatedly when a select group of
almost 50 energy experts from
across the globe gathered here
recently for a three-day in·
ternational energy symposium held
·in conjunction with the 1982 World's
Fair.
Among the participants were
representatives from industrialized
countries including the United
States, Germany, Japan, Italy,
Australia, France and Great

Britain&gt;major oil producers such as
Venezuela and Saudi Arabia;
Easern Bloc nations Including
Yugoslavia, Romania and Hunga'ry;
and LDCs such as Mexico, Peru and
The Philippines.
Dr. Armand Hanuner, board
chainnan of the Los Angeles· based
Occidental Petroleum Corp., war·
ned those attendees:
"The evolving countries find
themselves In desperate straits.
They continue J o pay such exhorbltant prices forimergy that there is
not enough money left bi the national
treasury to buy fertilizer, seeds and
farm equipment needed .. . to feed
their populations.''
Michel Carpentier, deputy director general of the Conunission of the
European C mmunlty, offered
another, equally gloomy perspective
on the situation.

''In many regions of the
developing world, the energy
problem -is compounded by the
growing scarcity of firewood , the increasingly acute problem of
deforestation and the scarcity of fertilizers because fann wastes are
used as fuel."
The rapid escalation of crude oil
prices ,has had an especially
deva~talinf!! effect on the economies
of many LDCs because they lack the
resources to pay for a community
which has increased almosf 20-fold
in price during the past decade.
Tlle-LDCs' debt has 5011red from
about f!OO billion In 1970 to an
estimated $600 billion this year and
in recent years those countries have
been forced to earmark more than 40
percent o( their total export earnings for oil purchases.
' They increasingly find themselves

Addaville
I P .M.

sunday ·

in a "Catch 22" situation where
energy availability is indispeQ88ble
to economic development yet they
cannot obtain adequate fuel because
of a lack of economic resources.
With the exception of the Persian
Gulf cOWJtries and a few Latin
American nations, most LDCs hav.e
no significant indigenous suppls of
crude oir, while only India and Korea
among the LDCs have substantial
coal resenies.
There are, however, vast untapped energy resources in the .~
Cs, especially in the area of
hydropower and biomass conversion
- but the pace of their development
must be quickened to ·serve rapidly
emerging demands.
If not, tiM! Sympoaium participants
warned, there exillla the terrifying
prospect of a world in which too little
energy is available to serve the
of too many people.

S•turday

Pomeorv

Albany
Dodgers

Saturday

6 P.M.
7:l0 P .M.
Friday

Middleport

JP.M.
Sunday
Green

4 P.M.

Saturday

'You COU~ CA~ IN
A~~tS~\~ L.\'i:i

~~1?...

•

Middleport Pony League Tournament
Sta~ Friday- Saturday· Sunday
HOSTS TOURNAMENT- Middleport will be hosting a Pony League
TOW'IIIIment starting toalpt nd concluding on Sunday. Teams from the
Big Bend Pony League will meel team from outlylag areas lo a bid for
tbe tourumenl champlollsblp. Middleport will take on tbe Galllpolls
Dodgen toalght at 7:30 p.m.
·

going
distance
the victory.
Barber_theand
Carseyforcombined
for
eight strikeouts and 13 walks for the
losers.
Pomeroy hitters were Lee Powell
with two singles, .Rex Haggy a
double, and Chris Kennedy, Vince
Knight each a single.
· Albany outhit the winners, but
couldn't take advantage as itscattered its eight hits over the course of
the game. Woodgerd doubled and
singled twice for Albany, while Car·
sey doubled, Chapman doubled and
singled, Brooks singled, and Barber
singled. Albany took a 2.0 lead in the
first Inning, but after two innings
trailed ~2 before again resuming the
lead with three runs in the third.
With the score 1).3 at this point,
Portleroy gradually pulled away to
take the win.
· Pomeroy right fielder Joe Fields
gave the fans a thriU when he droye
a fast ball into right-center field just
short of the 343 foot mark. Albany's
centerfielder Allman made a great
play on the blast· and hauled it in
with a running catch. The damage
was already done, however, and the
locals took the 13-5 win.
RemaiDIHot
In other Pee Wee action around
the area, the Middleport Mustangs
remained hot with a narrow 2-1 vic. tory over Pome~oy-Suga~
Ashland. Each team hai:l just c1ne hit
in the pitching battle between P. J.

Center, also proposed by Rhodes.
For the past several weeks, the
controlltng board had refused the
agency's r,equest tO take the
SlOO,IlXl from tile emergency fund.
Aronotl and others had Insisted all
along that the center could be
funded with existing
appropriations.
State Rep. Wllllam L. Mallory says
Ohio's · local governments can
make tax dollars go further with
better communication with each
other.
He has Introduced -a bill which
.would create In each of the 88 counties a "maximum tax dollar utlllza'
tlon councll," made up of county
officials along with those from cit·
les, townships, school districts, and
other local government entitles.

They would exchange !ntonna·
liOn on ~tow to make better use of

buUdlngs, equipment, and space,
whlle also coordinating and consoJI.
dating prgrams.
Mallory, D·Cinclnnatl, says
''there Is presently no tonnal body
where local units can work !Ogl!ther
with other units in their county." .
Sen. Oliver - Ocasek, O.Akron,
found a way to deal with the
hecklers pol,ltlclans Inevitably encounter when rldlng ~ parades. .
He said he takes along a handheld "liberty bell" whtch he.rtngs to
droWn out the malcontents' voices
when groups of them, usually
small, show up from time to time.
The tonner Senate presklent
used the bell In the parades \le rode
In over the Independence Day weekend. "It worked very weD," he .
said.

mess the braelis are creatin~ in . various fields that the economy is same time." (Detroit, 7/16/80).
Lebanon. I wouldn't want to tell headed up any time soon. Quite the
These are ·only a few of the hunthem either if I had been the man contrary. I get the opinitm that we dred of promises made by Reagan
who appointed Haig in the first are a long way •from the pie in the as he sought to "Clean up the mess"
place.
' sky as promised nightly by en- in Washington. As you can see by the
Reagan couldn't let a press con- thusiastic Reaganauts that dates of ~ i'~II!~~rn_enljl, he Was
terence go by without reminding the prosperity is indeed around the cor- selling the American· P:WPle the impress ~ and thereby the world- of
ner. ·The Great White Father possible even before he became
the "mess" he had inherit~ from promi~d, di@'t he? That's good !!resident. He has been doing it ever
Jimmy Carter. I have hea!-d it at enough for them . If they said any dif· sint!e he became president. If you
every press conference televised. ferent, they would be out of a job. ·would care for the complete fanYou:d think he would be happy to Here are a few other Reagan cam· tasies of Ronald Reagan, aend f5 to
have the "mess" back' Unem- paign promises on the economy:
the Democratic Congressional Cuni:.
ployment at 7.1 percent i~tead of
·~emain committed to full .ern- paign Conunittee, 400 N.' Capitol St.,
the present 9.5 percent. We were on ployment." (ColUJI)bus, 8127/80).
N.W., Suite 319r Washington, D.C.,
speaking terms with the , Soviet
"Not stand by while Inflation and 20001. You wil.! be surprised 'what a
Union instead of building up Civilian joblessneSs destroy~ dignity of the man )VIII promise to get, elected
Defense. We had the ·respect of our American people." (New York City, presidentoftheUnitedStates.
·
Latin American neighbors instead of 11/13179).
I!! · vi,ew of recept statistics
being a dirty word. School children
"Put back to work millions of the showing-more than 50 percent unem~ot milk, welfare mothers adequate eight
million
unemployed ployment among black youths, I
nutrition and young people had Americar\s." (Greey Bay,l0/2/80).
would like to quote orie more
CETA jobs instead of roaming the
"Not use unemploynient to cure · ·promise:
~1reets: What kind of "mess" wiD . in!)ation." (NewYOrkCity,6/5/80).
:.'Improve the conditions of all
the fli!Xt president inherit?
"Reduce the 13 _percent unem- Americans, • especially those Of
I am a nightly viewer of the Me- · plyment faced by steelworkers." Black Americans. Pursue a policy of
Neii·Lehner Report on Public TV. A lCydQPSSteel Mill,l0/2/IP), ·
·ensuring equal rights and of opening
good part of their evening programs
"Puniue a hwnalll! economy." up new and expanded job op.
consis_t li studying the national (TV Address, 101241110).
• • portunities · through .economic
economy. No time do 1 get the bot·
"Balance the budget, cut taxes ~rowth. (Policy Statement,l/31/80).
and
at the
~ises, promises!

Blake had the lone Mustang hit
which was a triple. Robbie Fields
also had a triple for the PomeroySRA team. Middleport is now 11-4
while SRA is 3-8 on the season.

Wlollo
hpplloo

NOW~

LIK

®

ZI·FL Ptw1r T•

W~h

positive toggle lock to
hold %·ln. yellow blade
firmly. Black markings lor
eaay readability. Durable
Cy&lt;:olac• caae.
MMP325

Will to

--

ST.'!in

11111111*1' Ill
Two 3-ft. steel channels
como w~h o aet of attach·
menta: 2 utility hangera
and a tool caddy.
HS·3

"Hang• Up" on Any
Flat Surface

Save
S1()07

Only 7" lona, yet feature-packedT AutoRedial, tone ringer.
FCC registered . White
Mist, #43-284. Dark
Brown, #43-285

Automatically switches to batteries if
AC power is interrupted. AFC for driftfree FM, 3" speaker. slide-rule dial , tone
control . With earphone. #12-{368 BaNarieo

Long-Range Radar Detector*
Road Patrol

XK by Microntatl

Save•4o

(t~~~­

159951:S~5

BAUM TRUE VALUE

~~~ll~W~.~M~A~IN~ST~.ii~~~~~iiii~~~~~~~

$l00and$1!lli.ii. . . . . . . .

#22·1603
With mounting bracket , self-sticking tape
•May be unlawful in some areas - check with authoritie.s

. Superheterodyne circuit reduces "falsing;• greatly improves sensitivity. Even
works around corners and over hills!
Select buuer and/or wa1rnin•n

Metal Speaker 10%
Offh.linlmustl-7 by Realistic

Save4495
•s .

~~!!d~~~ 0 1
mounting hardware

Reg. 169.95
12 watts per channel for superb sound!
Bass and treble controls, loudness
button, lock1ng fast-forward/rewind.
Compact DIN-stze fits in dash of most
cars. #12·1888

25-Range Multitester ·
By Micronta

Cut 22~/o

Eech
Reg. 49.95 Each

21

88 Rag.

27.95

Gre'l!t workbench addon! Measures AC/OC
vofts, DC amps, resistance, decibels. With
test leads. #22-202

I

PAl HIL~
FOR~, l."e.
.s:lriiAN.,
Ohio

'

t:

¥

Reg.
139.95

ET -100 by Radio Shack

Jtiddltport,

f

95

Save *10- Mini
Pushbutton Phone

COLUMiltTS; bl\io (AP) -Steak
Knife, driVen flY Dlfu Ater, won the
teahlred eighth race at Scioto
Downs Thursday night to pay $8,

,

~

Save•40
Twin speakers deliver wide response.
Record directly off-the-air, or "live"
with built-in mikes. Auto-Level recording, tuning/record-leveVbattery meter.
AC/battery operation. #114-805

Scioto results

'

'

29% Off! Portable AM/FM Steneo

Stereo-Wide"' Circuit
Expands Stereo Image

RDAILPRICE

.

iowlno:.Ojlver lo score. Carter then
scored""'fom second on a sacrlflce
fly by Wall ach as cenler fielder Ken
Landreaux crashed Int o the fence
making Ute catch. Landreaux left
the game wlth a bruised right
shoulder.

SCR-2 by Realistic"

r-.;;;~:~=~~;;;;;;~:~~~~;;11

Bright red, 1.6liter engine,
and vinyl seat trim, rear window wiper/.washer.
automatic transmlssion ••deluxe seat belts, w!lite sidew~;~ll tires, hi -back reclining
bucket seats, power brakes anq steering, bumper rub strips, AM/FM Monaural
radio, dual remote sport. .mirrors, front vent windows, wheel ring_s, vinyl insert
ngs.

•

East , dropping them one game behind St. Louis. Jones homered In
the first Inning, Salazar singled a
run across In the fourth. Templelon
homered In the fifth and Salazar
connected In the eighth, an Insidethe-park smash high off I he center
field fence.
Expos 7, Dodgers 3
Warren Cromartie drove in three
runs. two with a double I hat broke a
3·3 tie in the fifth Inning, as the Ex·
pos ended a lour.game losing
streak. Wlth two out ln lhe ll!th.
Gary Carter singled and Tim Wall· .
ach walked off reliever Alejandro
Pena. Cromartie, who had an RBI
single In the second Inning, lhen
sliced a double that fell inches In·
side the lett field foul line and
scored both runners. Mont real
made It 7-3 in Ihe seventh. AI Oliver
walked and Cat1er' s double got
oast left [!elder Rick Monday. al·

Ughtnlng struck In Pittsburgh
tor the second night In a row, t&gt;ut
this time the Pir!ltes replied wuh
some thunder of their own.
On Wednesday night, the Clnclnnall Reds had pounded Pittsburgh
relief ace Kent Tekulve tor five
runs In the top of the ninth Inning
Glanls 9, Mets 7
and snapped a nine-game losilig
streak by defeating the Pirates 6-3.
Chili Davis rapped out four sin·
They appeared to have done It
gles
and drove In two runs as the
again Thursday night when they
handed the Mets their slxlh
Giants
scored six times off Manny Sar·
consecutive
setback. Davis' RBI
mlento and Tekulve In the Inning
single
keyed
San Francisco's fourand took an 8-4 lead Into the bottom
run
fourth
and
he also singled home
of the Inning.
the
first
of
three
runs In the eighth
But the Pirates jumped on Tom
tha
t
opened
a
!1-3
lead . Jlm Wohl·
Hume and Joe Price tor five runs
ford
drove
in
three
runs lor the
on Willie StargeU' s two- run pinch
Giant
s
with
a
sacrlflce
fly, single ·
homer and Jason Thompson's
and
double
and
Reggie
Smilh
also. :
three-run double and pulled out a
three
RBis
wilh
a
pair
of
had
~8 victory.
4
singles.
"!t's like being down tor a dinecount, getting up off the floor and ~----:---------------------------------7knocking the other guy out," said r
Manager Chuck Tanner.
The rally made a winner ot Tekulve, who yielded a game-tying
single to Wayne Krenchtckl, a tiebreaking two-run double to Eddie
MUner and a two-run homer to
Duane Walker.
Dave Parker hit two solo homers
tor the Pirates and Madlock one.
Cardinals 5, Braves 2
Tom Herr greeted Atlanta relief
ace Gene Garber wtth a two-run triple to key a five-run St. Louis
eighth-Inning uprtsing. Atlanta's
Rick Mahler was working on a two-

In Big Bend Pony League action, Gibbs and Jason Wright. Gibbs
the Pomeroy Royals stunned Albany 1 posted the win with 12 strikeouts and
13-5 behind the fine pitching of just one walk. Wright suffered the
Jackie Welker. Welker registered loss despite fanning .14 batters and
six strikeouts and five walks while walking only one in a great effort.

Promises, -~
promises
.
Lowell Wingett
~~~~------------~--~~~

'

hit shutout entering thhe eighth
when Ken Oberkfell singled. One
out later, singles by pinch hitter
Dane Iorg and Lonnie Smith produced a run.
Herr then ripped his triple, putting the Cardinals In front 3-2. Alter
Willie McGee grounded out, Keith
Hernandez was walked Intentionally . George Hendrick tolled the
strategy with a double that scored
McGee and Hernandez. Bob
Horner homered tor Atlanta. his
18th of the season ani! seventh In the
last eight games.
Padrm 5, PhWies S
Ruppert Jones slammed a tworun hOmer and Garry Templeton
and Luis Salazar added solo shots
as San Diego posted Its fifth consecutive viCtory and moved wlthtn 2~
games of flrst·place Atlanta in the
NL West. The s,et.back kttocked the
Phtllles out of the lead In the NL

Summer league baseball results ....

·I

i

Saturday

Racine

PtL 992·2196
DALE ~· SAIIDER$-Gen. Mar.

.

•

8P .M.

New Haven

· Today' s lilrthdays: King Hassan ot Morocco L• 53 years old. Actor 8Dd
former footl'all star O.J. Simpson is 35.
'I'IIOulht for tllday: we are here; and It 18 aaw. Fur1her than tlult, all
. humiD JaKMtledge Is moOnshine. - H.L. Mencken, American DeWIIIWI
(].88).19!!6).

5 P.M.
SundeW

Gallipolis

tM~·~u~es'

would provide assistance to federal
officials tn processing more than
3,000 loan' applicatiOns from Ohio
farmers.
Department officials rejected
Aronoff's suggestiOn. that the money could be found elsewhere. But
under questioning they conceded
they had not been asked by Rhodes'
budget officers to look Into their
other baJik aecounts.
•'The tact that you were not asked
Is Interesting," said Aronoff, the
board's ranking legislator. He had
the request deferred for two weeks .
and told the department officials to ·
search again.
At the same meeting, the depart·
·ment said It had come up with
$100,1lXl to help launch what eventu·
ally wUl be a prlvately·operated
Ohto Technology and Product.lvlty

President Ronald Reagan and
Nancy are spending their quarterly
vacation in California. Members li
Congress ar~ .home on the1r July 4
break explammg to the home folk:l
' why . they have or have not been
chasmg pages through I~ halls_ of
Conl(ress. The lobbyiSts are dom~
whatever ~hey do d~ng a .t~m­
porary lull m the Cup1tol s actav1bes.
The members of the media are busy
catching up with their pencil shar·
pening. The r'st of us have a few
days' vacation from worrying about
what asinine legislation our leaders
are· ~oin~ to spring on us next.
Peace, it's wonderful!
Before he left the White J{oUSE
President Reagan held a press conference. He told the reportets the
American people had been told all
they needed to know about the Haig
resignation. All they needed to
know, eh? The inference was that
the American people didn't haye the
intestinal fortitude to face the tn)th
that the Reaganites are skating on
thin ice with•their Eliropean buddies
over the Soviet pipelllll! sanctions.
Or that the administration is being
blamed around the world for the

1 P.M .

F.. astern

Aronoff upset with state administration
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -:: ARepublican on the State Controlling
Board Is at odds with the GOP ad·
rnlnlstratJon over what he calls Its
attempts to abuse use of Ohio's
emergency funds.
,
Sen. Stanley J . Aronoff, R·
Cincinnati, charges that some ot
the departments under Gov. James
A. ·Rhodes are trying to use the money as "a slush fund."
Instead of ustng· their own bud·
geted money tor contingencies and they can In many cases - the
agencies seek emergency funds
'when there Is no emergency, Aronoff Insisted.
He was highly critical this week
of a development department request for $167,000. It was sought to
fund a new prQgram, proposed by
Rhodes, In which the department

, By A.Modated Preu

tO A.M.
Saturday

!Ut'S.~OW._.....

sectors.

Th41. Daily Senlinei-Page- }. :

I'
. I

I

'ji

.
tf~

DiscoUnt

REBATE .

25' Modular Extenalon Cord
Modular plug
4~.
us on each end.
Hill Prlce.l Plug Adapter

'7.261.0Q

250.00

7,011.00
250.00

EC·259 by Radio Shack

.

N279-385

49

2

Converts 4Rea. prong to mod.
.4.11l plug.

30' 4-Prong Extenalon Cord
Flexible cable
• with jack and

2!

plug.

31%
Off

10'5·
. 1515

Square root and percent
8-digit disbattery. case.

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 9,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard
_...._

Majors

-Dtw- ....
'W

L

&lt;8

'""'""
Milwaukee

"

31
311
J9 J9

t)

""""and
Toronto

Jll
31

Kansu C1ty
Callmmla
Chlcaro
Seatt)to

w......f7 -

3t

46
C3

:n

Teul

.!7
3:1

48

a&amp;

I

.532
.513

6

·~

u y,

.B

-

.562

......,..,.,.• o......

.«ll 121,1,
.310 22'n

ICarltmll-7!, In)
St. 14118 !LaPoint 4-:ZI

Pet.

l'tllladetphla
Pltlstlui'Jh
Montr8l

.,.,. .,

New YoTk
Oticago

:ttl
33

(I

PITCHING Ill Dr!dllonll: Gladly, New
:'fli, 3.5.1; CludJU, SMilie, 8-3.
Ut Vu.IIO¥idl, Mllwaullef, liJ.I,
.na. lilt. Gura, K&amp;nw ary, »4. .n4.
3.!11; Zalvl. c.tlforrU. .... .102. 3.lll:
B wr n • , O*'co. IH, .15"7, 118:
r .Bannilter, SNN~. 14. .an, tlllc
D.Mirtbl.. Balllmn, 9-5. .143. 3.1).

YCI'k. &amp;3.

:m.

aueaao

:rr

Stante,

v.. ~

!ll; o.r~c«.
Ofovfland. ~!; F.dcfl't~,' Bl»ton, 82:
Dtn~. OIMiand. 1).

Transactions

at Houston

Grady Reunion

IMIEMLL
_..._

Ctnctnnall at ChktaO. 2
U. AnteM!tat Plilladelptia. tnl
San Diego at NN Yorll. 1n1
San Franc.Uco at Monfrtal, In I
PUtsbur"" at AtJanta, lrll
51 . Lwil at Hwllon. In!

NEW YORK YANKEES-Acth'ated
DoyW A~txandel, pllche', ud optioned
Andre ~1100. illfleldrr, to Columbl.&amp;l
Of thf InternatimaJ Lea&amp;\'!'.

~.o

Steve Senlf!!MY, pitcher . to syral_,ue ol

TORONTO BLUE JA vs-Acnvat«&lt; Otto

Vefez.

....

d8~tfd

hlHer, and optiOned

......... ..._ __ _

thr lJiternatlonal Le,.-ut.

BRAYES-Recalled

ATLANTA
Srnll"- nrat

bNeman-GJtfteldn',

l&lt;mb'om

Rkhmond of the lilternaUona.t l.eaiUf
and placed Te-rry HaJl)ft'. Ol.ltftflder, on

Atllllll

IUIIIIJ!:I'ILU.L • - ••
IMI A...:::W6111 NBA·Named fUctlard Dortmtn vk-t
presldent·vkteo of NM Propenlfl.
NEW YORK KN!CI&lt;S-Nam&lt;d Mll!e
Na&amp;a..~••ll

Leaders
AMERICAN LEAGUE

BA'M'ING 1)75 at balst : w.wu.on.
Kansas City. .:WO: Bonnell. Toconro, .336;
Ha1 rah, Cleoveland. .311: Hl'bek, Mlnneeota, .ID, Yount, Milwaukee, .JZ.

Frat.UO and ~it Adubato wllt&amp;nf

"'"""·

RUNS: R.Htndeuon, O.kland. 76; Har·
"nh, Clewland. m; Molitor. Mltwau~.
M; Evll'IS, Bolton, ~T; Brffl, Kansas

Ctty, 56.
RBI: McR.af. Kansas CITy, 7li: 'Jbom.
tm, Ckoveland, 67: Cooper , Milwaukie,
66: Lutmld, C'hlciiO. 61; Hrbek, MlnllfiiOta, 59.

HlTS: H11rah, Clr'mand. 103; Garda.
Toronro, 10J; Vwrl , Milw1ulliee; 9!1;
Mcfll&lt;o. Kanw City. !1!1: Cooper, MU·
wauklee, 9l
DOUBLD: Wlllte-, Kansas Ctty, 23;
~ Selll ~. 2t; Evana. lbton, 2li
1Qm. C&amp;Worn1a, :n: McRIIr. Kansas

011

... •·~
·
'
"
"
'' ~
J7

r .BtMIIter,

Sl'fUICIX)lTr.t

tot GuJo1o)&gt;. N&lt;w

the 15-da,y disabled lilt.

&amp;~..,..a.._.

St~la

Garda, Toronto. 20.

St. L.,o,llat HouJton

Ollcqo II TI:Jrooto
Minnesota at EQ I~
Kansu City at MUwauket
NN York at Clllbrnia
Ball lmlrP at Oeltland
CltYe-tand at ~all1e
()eotrolt at Tnu, l nl
NATIONAL 1£\GUE

L

R.-""'· Oak·

srotEN BASES:

San Fr anctsco at Montl'fal
San Dteao II New Yo:k
t..c. An~ at Phll~h!a
ClncinNIIIII Chicago

....

-Dtw-

D of A

larld.lh; Wathall, Kansu Clry, ~ ; LfF.
.... ~ 23; J .C.UZ. S..rtlo, 23;

SahlrdQ"IOam.

Pln~rlflat

.!100

I

311

.5]9

02

.CIII
.3118

Oty. n.

•

.

HemOOn. Detrott, 8: Yount,
MUwauW, B; W.Wilwt. Kansu City, 8:
1RIP~:

8~

Gallipolis, Tuppers Plains, Cheshire
advance in LL Tournament

FOURTH PLACE TEAM- Flnllblng fourth In the
recent Powell's Uttle League Tournament were the
Middleport Braves. Team members were, first row,
;left to right, Mike Trash, David Smith, P. J. Gibbs, B.

J. Richmond, and Susie Cassell. Second row, Ed
Crooks, Chris Davis, Jason Bosh, Chuck Pullias and
Steve Cassell. Absent were Jeff Nelson, Ed Baer, Luke
Burdette and &amp;ott Melton.

Alexander's
effort upsets
Yankees
.
.

.

,
By Associated Press
;.oakland's Mike Noms lost llls
00-hlt bid against the New York
Y;mkees in seventh Inning. By that
ttme, Doyle Alexander had lost
more than that.
: Nonis, making llls first start af.
ter spending 21 days on the disabled
list, pitched no-hit ball for 61-3 innings and wound up with a fourti(t.r.er as the A's posted a 6-3 victory
over the Yankees Thursday night,
giving Bllly Martin his l,OOlth victory as a manager.
:·New York's first hit was a checksWing single to center field by Os·
Gamble wlt.h one out In the

car

~enth.

:"I laughed," said Norris of the
hit. "I didn't take It that seriously.
)lou don't ever go out antlclpattnga
nb-hlt!er."
.· The Yankees weren 'I laughing
about Alexander's performance.
; The right-hander. who had been
$the disabled list since early May
\flth a broken bone In llls pitching
hand, lasted lust 11-3 Innings, glvlitg up five runs, including four In
tile first Inning when Tony Armas
itoinered and Jeff Burroughs added
il two-run single.
,: The outing angered Yankee offl·
l!)als because Alexander, who suftred his Injury by punching a
ctugout wall in Seattle, refused to
f.emaln wit.h the team's AAA farm
~lub at Columbus to get into shape.
:. "What Doyle Alexander did to llls
~ammates II\ Oakland tonight was ,
disgraceful but typical of the self·
~hness of some of t.he modern-day
~pla~rs," BUI Bergesch, the

Yankees vice president of operations said In a statement .released
after Alexander was yanked.
''Here Is a man earning hundreds
of thousands of dollars to pitch and
then fiat refuses to get himself
ready. He then goes out tonight and
proves to the world that the coaching staff and manager were right, "
the statement went on.
Alexander, now 0.3, felt he hadn't
let the team down but added, "I'm
ilot looking for a verbal war In the
press with these guys."
Yankee Manager Gene Michael
said Alexander, who has a $2.2·
million, lour-year pact' would be
assigned to the bullpen for occa·
slonal duly.

Thistledown results
NORTH RANDALL, Olllo ( AP)
- Gabby One, guided by David
Placke, won t.he eighth race feature
at Thistledown Thursday night
Gabby
the$4.00
six furlongs
in
1: 112·5
to One
pay ran
$7.00,
and $3.20.
Second-place· Just Plain George
paid $7.00, $4.00, and Ginger Boy
returned $3.40 to show.

Slo pitch event set
.

'

The Parkersburg Depot plant
wUI hold an open men's slow-pitch
softball tournament In Parkersburg at Waverly field, July 17 &amp; 18.
The entry fee wUI be $55 and two
balls. Call Steve Perry at :1)4.8636469 for more Information.

SIMMONS

Rickey Henderson had his &amp;lth
and 81st stolen bases of the season
for the A's, while John Mayberry
hlt a twG-run homer for New York
In the seventh and Gamble added a
solo homer in the ninth.
In other AI.. action, Chicago
nipped Detroit l-2, Minnesota shut
out MUwaukee l-0, Toronto edged
Kansas City 5-4, California defeated Cleveland 5-l, Seattle outlasted . Baltlmqre 4-3 and Boston
blanked Texas 3-0.
Angels 5, lndllliiS 1
Fred Lynn cracked a t.ie·
breaklngl three-run hOmer in the
tlllrd Inning and knocked In another
run with a groundout In the fifth as
California snapped an eight-game
losing streak by beating Cleveland.
Brian Downing lilt a solo homer
for the Angels, while Dave Goltz
and Doug Corbett, who posted his
lOth save, held the Indians to six
hits, one of them an RBI Clouble by
Andre Thornton in the first Inning.

SYRACUSE - The Gallipolis reached on an error that confused
Tigers, Tuppers Plains Tigers, and the opposing defense allowing twQ
Cheshire little league teams ad- runs to score. The final rested at :i-3.
vanced to s~nd round play Of the
In a cl011e and well-played finale,
Bill Hubbard Memorial Little Cheshire broke away from a 2-2 tie
League Tournament here Thursday to claim a 7·2 win in extra innings.
evening despite a conatant threat fi Mike. Bradbury in relief of Elmer
rain. The event, sponsored by the Spaulding "'took the win with 18
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Depart· strikeou!B and seven walks. Jeff Mcment, was highlighted by three fine Call relieved Jerry Garza who was
ball games.
charged with the loss aftet fanning
In the first contest, the Gallipolis 15and walking seven. ,
Tigers clawed out a 1().0 victory over
For Cheshire, Spaulding and Billy
the Chester Chieftains. The five in- •Loveday each tripled, Bobby Gordon
ning contest saw Jason Thomas pick doubled, and Bobby . Lucas, Bradup the win with eight strikeou!B and bury1 and Mike Holland each
no walks.
singled. Jerry Garza had three
Davis suffered the loss despite singles for Murray City while
posting 11 strikeouts.
Mickey Smith added a double.
Leading the winning attack were
Cheshire scored five runs in the
Mike Hanson with a double and seventh inning when Gordon
single, Jason Thomas two singles, reached on an error, Gilbert walked,
Tim Neville two singles, and Greg Reese reached on an error and BradRoderick a double.
bury singled. Spaulding was safe on
For Chester Maxson singled, an error, Loveday 'tripled, Holland
Reynolds singled, and Holley was hit by a pitch, arid Gordon
singled.
doubled to produce live gameTigers Win
winning runs.
•
In the second game of the evening,
Racine's Reds advanced
to the
'
another group of Tigers claimed vic- next round via a forfeit by the
tory in
hard-fought game with
Nelsonville-Blackburn as Tuppers
Plains posted the :i-3 win. Bryan
Durst in relief of starter Eddie
Collins picked up the win, while
Kelvin Warren suffered the loss: ·.
Brent Bissell had a two for three
night including a triple and home
run, Eddie Collins doubled, while
Bryan Durst, Jeff caldwell, Larcy
Spencer, and Jamie Mayers each
singled.
For Nelsonville Doug Mac Combs
and Brian Bruce each had singles,
the only hi!B allowed by T. P. pit·
T. P. po~'ted the win in the fifth
ching.
when it broke a ~ deadlock. Bissell
led off the inning with a triple, Spencer walked, wtufe tne next batter mt
into a 1-3-2 double play that barely
edged Bissell at the plate. fripp was
. intentionally , walked, and Fitch

Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 9
Silfurday
'
.fto 5
·.

RlTI'LAND - A dance wU be
held Frida)' from 8 to U: :llp.m.
at Rutland Civic Center. Cost
.
'
will be $2 for singles and $3 for
couples. Music Unllmlted will be
entertaining.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter
255, Order of the Eastern Star,
will have a bake sale at Kroger's
on Friday beginning at 9 a.m.

r------------

r------------1

a

Calendar

•

Albany Reds.
Tonight's action includes games
between Bidwell and the Middleport
Indians, and Gallipolis' Yankees and
Buchtel. The Masoo Rangers have
forfeited to Albany's Fanners thus
advancing the latter to theI next
roun)i.

.

SA-TuRDAY
NEW OFFICERS will be installed for 'Meigs Chapter, Order
of DeMotay, Saturday night at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
and installation will be at 7':ll
'p.m. All masons and Order of the
Eastern Star members are invited to attend. &amp;heduled to be
installed are Jeff Elliott, master
councilor; Brei. Howard, senior
.councilor; and · Adam Martin,
junior councilor.

The Daily Sentinel
IUSPSI-1

A Dl•llloo ol HIIIU-Ia, r...
Published every afterpoo:1. Mondly thruu~h

Fridoy, ll1 Court Stniol, by the Ohio VMII•y
PublilhlnK Company • Mullitnedll, lnr ..
Pomeroy. Ohio 157611, 1112-21M. S...'llllil d11111
po!i(aJtep~.ld at Pomt!roy, OhiG.
'
Member: The AluAA:kded Prt!&amp;t, Jnli111d Dai- '
ly Pr~ Anoci•Uon and the American '
Neonpiper Publ~ra Aasuciltlun, NaUonal · !

.

AdvertbtlnM

Represenlative, Branham
NewspaJM' Sales, 711 Third Awnue, New

York, New Yorlt 10017.

~R ' Send add""" lo The Daily
Sentinel, lll Court 51., Pumeroy, Ohio ~761.

LONG BO'ITOM - An Ice
cream social wUI be held Saturday at 4 p.m. at Red Crispins
Corner In Long Bottom, at tMe
corner of State Route 124 and 248
across from the Methodist .
Church by Long Bottom Community Association. Besides five
.flavors of homemade Ice cream,
there will be hot dogs with sauce,
:pie and cake. The program wUI
.Include square dancing, and en•tertalnment by several vocalists
and local bands. Prizes will be
.gtven.

SUBSCRIPI'ION RATES
By Carrier • Moter Reute

flnto Wt!t!k .....• , , . , , , .. •... , , . ... . , $1.00
OneMonlll ........ . .............. 11.10
One Year ... , . .............. .... .. $52.10
SINGLE COPY

'

PRICES

Daily . .. ................. .. .. 15 Cenlg
Subt-M.Tibcn~ not tkslrinM

W PIIY lbt: t.'Mrrit:r
may retnlt in a.dvll'k."t dira.i 1o 1'bt.- Dally
&amp;ntlncl on 11 l , 6 1M' 12 month btltd$. Cit.'dlt
Will bt• l!iv~n c~rrlt!r t!lll'h monUt
No subseriptiotW by tnt£il JWnnitt.ed in low~
~~ hom~ carrlt.'f' .!!CrYkt! la1vaiblblt!.

MAIL S~IISCIIIPrlONS
IIWidelllllo
13 Weeb ........... . . ... ... . .... 114.04

:Ill w......

sz w. ~..,

......................... 111,311

.... {A
,q:.&lt;l ..
uuliKWOhlu
~

13 Wt'l'kli ..... , ... . .
2fi Wt&gt;t'ks ....... ..

52Wt"L-k.li ..... ..

SUND,,AY

1 ..... .. t;t.ll
.. .. $15.!1

FAITH Fellowship Crusade for
Christ wishes to announce the
:new church opening at 1 p.m.
with special singing by the Fair·
; view Five;·• spealter Rev. Paul
, Dickens from Q~eland, Ohio;
1 and picnic on the ·grounds at Oll!o .
338, Antiquity, Ohio. Pastor, ReV.
~ Frank Dickens.
Everyone
. welcome.

. .... 129.14
.. ... 116.11

t~~~~~~~~=;=~=;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;~;

I'liiiii(ii~;!~~~~--;iiiiiiiii!!liiiiiiiiiiiiiili~

.

"

'Rio stats revealed
.

I

".

~ IUO GRANDE ' -

More credit

· iioun have been taken this summer
at Rio Grande College and eoni.
fnunity Co~e than in 1981, actcJrdlng to statistics released. today
by Loredith Lowe, Assistant Direcof Admissions and Records.

2 dr., ·HT, 4

1976
··•·····························•···•······ $1695
4 Dr .. Auto .. PB, PS.
1976 GRAND PRIX ..................... :.............. $1795
2 Dr.,

Auto;, Pa, PS. BUilt in CB.

.

1976 PINTO ., .......................................... $1495

-

.

$1895

MODERN

TORINO STA. WAGON .......... :................ $895
OLDS ••••••••.••••••••·.: ••.••••••.••••••••••••
$&amp;95

SUPPLY

I •••• I.

308 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Oh.
OPEN:

committee.
Chest~r
Clarice Allen ~as pianist. for the
meeting. Others attending were
A flag to fly over Chester EleMarcia Keller, Charlotte Grant,
mentary School was presented to a
representative of the school at are- . Ada Neutzllng, Ada Morris,
Thelma White, Leona Hensley;
cent meeting of Chesler Council
Margaret Amberger, Mary K. Hol323, Daughters of America, held at
ter, Carolyn Holley, Ada Bissell,
the hall .
Lora Damewood, Alta Ballard,
Accepting the flag which had
flown over th&amp;Capltal for the school · Betty Christopherson, Nettie
Hayes, Inzy Newell, Mae McPeek,
was Dorothy Myers, custodian.
Goldie Frederick, Laura Mae Nice,
BettY RouSh. deputy state counct•
Ethel Orr, VIrginia Newlun, Zelda
lor. made the presentation to Mrs.
Weber, Sadie Trussell, and Vlrgl·
Myers at the altar where she had
nia Lee.
been escorted by the flag bearers.
The charter was draped In memory of Ethel 'SteWart.
Read at the meeting by Margaret
The descendants of A.M. and
Tuttle, recording secretary, was a
thank you card from Evelyn Lucke, Mary Grady held their reunion at
daughter of Mrs. Stewart, thanking Portland Park July 4th. Several
the council for till! red, wldte and ·friends and relatives attended the
blue flolvers and extending appreci- holiday event, including:
Hazel and Manuel Grady, Bel·
ation for those who came to the funpre; Roscoe and Rachel Knight,
eral home.
Dorothy RUehle, councilor: pre- and Elizabeth, West VIrginia;
sided at the meeting, attended by :ll Dickie Myers, Ricky Myers, Leo
nlembers. It was noted that Susan and Louise Brannon and children,
Cleland Is in Veterans Memorial Janet, Elliott and Mary; Lee Ann
Hopsltal, and that Zana Gainer, a Banlg, Bridgeport; Ronnie and
member living at Hebron, broke Alza Duckworth and Danny; GaU ·
her arm. Keith an!l Emma Ashley and Jean Shaffer, Mineral Wells,
have a new daughter, It was re- ·w. Va.; Dave and Suzie Stull and
ported. Erma Cleland, trustee, Aaron and Ada(n, Parkersburg;
Harrison and Ruth Smith and
read the audltbig report.
A meeting of the Past Councilors' daughter, Penny, Racine; Eugene
Club for July'.l~-at the ,lodge hall and Pam Smith and daughter,
was announced ,. 11,1lP Frederick Toni, Florida; Kenny and Maxine·
and Pauline Rldeiiour wUI be the Smith and Dale, Letart; Cultls and
hostesses. Members sang "Happy Sandra Smtih and children, Christy
Birthday" to BettY Roush, deputy and Brian; Jane Lew, West Vlrgl·
state counctlor, and Esther Smith. nia; Carroll and Irene Smith, Ra·
cpalrman of the Good of the Order venswood, W.Va.; Kim Smith and
committee, on behalf of the CouncU Jtmmy Cumberlldge, Sandyville,
presented her with a gift. Cookies W. Va.; Jtm and Eldeana Smith
and tea were served by the and daughter, Pam, Ormond
Beach, Fla.; Michelle Fogel,
Smyrna Beach, Fla
·
Scottie and Esther Smith, Ches·
ter; BUI and Connie Ralston! and
daughter, Carrie, Chillicothe;
Johnson and Emma Scarberry and
FRIDAY

RUNS: C.Thomat, Mltweu)jee,

!Ryan &amp;81, In!

Otfron IT ~. 2. ll·nt
Chk:aao at Toronto, tnt
Kansu City at Mllwaukee, lnl
N.w York at California, fnl
C\e'Vtland at Seanle, (nt

w

'15~
18~

San Frandlro l'ttammak~ ~5 1 at Mon·
1~11 ' " • " lo--31, lnl
PlinlbUrjlh tft/XIdtll 5-71 at -'tlan.1a
IWilk 7-61. lnl
l..oB A~ IReua 9-61 at Phladelpbla

Cleveland IOeni\Y 5-!h at Seall1e 1Ban·
nlster 1--41 . 1n1

Nick King, Terry ·Fiel~, BID Gilkey, Shane Simpson,
Keith Mattox, Jeff McElroy, Duane Joluisoa, &amp;ott
Powell, Ron Bachtel, Joe HaD and BIUy Brothers.
Coaches Mark TaonehiU and Don HUDDel.

....

••HOME

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Daily

Meigs County area happenings

Upthaw, Toronio, &amp;: lht1. KIIIIU City.

21; lb:lrntoo, Cle'Yftanll. I); Cooper, MU·
wauEf, 1': ot!Jvlt, MUw•\IMI!o, 19;
RoJocUon. Calllolnla, I&amp;

31.2, lnl

11, 2, fill
C'hlcaao 1Buna ~~at Totonto Ileal S.
7L 1n1
MIMriOCI fVk)l.a :z..&lt;lt IT Bolton !Ed:·
en~kt.lnl
Kansu Ctty l~ltl(l'ft' 1·5! II Mll·
waukef (Caldwtlt Mh . tnt
NfW York !Jot. 5-61 at California
(~lvl .. l.lnl
•
Balllmorf' 1McGrfiUI ,_.61 at Oaklatl:l
IKeouJIIT·JOI. In I

THIRD PLACE WINNERS - Powell's Giants
finished lblrd In the recent Powell's Utile League
Tournament. Team members were, (no order given),
Brlall Talllieblll, Don Dorst, Art HUDDel, Brent Zirkle,

21\
7
12

INo&amp;et ~7 1
San 1MQro 1Wtlsh ~3 and Ek~brraer
6-!h al New York !Puleo 6-5 ud Lyrd\ 1-

P'ltii.Q'aOam•
Detroit !Underwood 3-5 a!Kt Puhnlek l·
'!I at 1'Px.u IMatt.ck i-5 and Schmidt 1-

~·.o

.m

.310

•~

HOI.lltCil 3

~.o

41, Balllrll;n 3

Minnesota at Bolton
Balllm:n at Oakland

·'""
.!l!l

.m

47
!10

Clndnnlll tSNrlt)' 2-61 ••

Mlnraora 3. MUwaukft 0
ChiciiO&gt; l Detml 2
Tm&gt;nto 5. Kansas City 4
Bolton 3. Texu 0
Cail.,rnla 5, Oeveland 1
OekJanjj 6, New York 3
sean~

jO
~

-

Plillaburgh 9, ClnclnM.III
St. Louil ~ Alllnta 2

.a. u

"
!i8

31

«&lt;

.617

Monrret.l 7, t...c. An~HM 3
San Frandlro t, New York 7
San 01et0 5, PhU~tta 3

2
3
3

.»t

II
C1
!I
32

QUcaao ~.

1
·~

.&lt;81
.144

31

,.....,..o.m.

Ctndnnall

.!63

.sw

36
l1

«t

Oakland

Houston

-

.!00

"..

San D1e1D
....
An.....
San FrandtlcO

oa

31

..42

Ball .....
De!""
New York

MlnnttOta

,..._

~

Allanta

ANDII&lt;'AN LMOIJE

9,1982

Astrograph.

children. Rusty and Steve, New and Mrs. Floyd Stout, Mrs. Mae
Haven; Lawrence and Barbara VIneyard, Mrs. HettY Chevalier,
Scarberry and daught.e r, Karen,
Mrs. Richard Thomas and hosts,
Henderson; Cathy Logan, Galllpothe Gorrells and daughter, Linda.
lis Ferry; Sue and Teresa BonECUt·
After the meal, the honoree led
ter, Henderson; Patrick and BettY the group lesson from Ruth, chaJ&gt;Ktmble and children, Jason and tertwo. Mrs.EvelynSpencer,pres·
JessiCa. Mattawan, Mich.; wendy !dent of the adult class, conducted
Powell, Racine; LUI!an Weese and business. .
daughter, Melanie, Racine:- Tract
Mrs. Unda Damewood read a
and Don Casto, Racine; Cheryl and poem and sang an original song
Greg Wood and children, Aymee,
written to welcome the n\inister for
Abby and Emlly, Marlon; Don and
another year. Several Bible qutzzes
Slllrley Shively, Joni Terrence and
were guessed and, following sing·
Greg Chambers, Rara Vest, Tony
tng by adults, the children also
and Angle Crouch, Groveport;
sang. The plano was played by Mrs.
Luda Amott, Belpre; Don and ,_ Chevaller. The evening concluded
Peggy Arnott and children, Jeff,
with a trlendsblp circle.
Darren, Mark, Jason, -Adam and
Jeremy, Belpre.
Traveling the farthest distance
A Father's Day dinner was beld
were Mr. and Mrs. Jtm Smith and at State Rt. 33 roadside park rePam and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene cently w«h several In attendance.
Smith and Toni, all of Florida. The
Attending from Pomeroy were
yollllgest was Adam Stull, Parkers- Mr. and .Mrs. Dores Arnold, Mr.
burg. Having the most children and Mrs. Roger Jeffers, Rhonda
were Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Smith, and Bobby. Mrs. Debbie Drake.
Racine.
Christy and Jamie, Mr. and Mrs.
The day was spent visiting, tak· Norman Hysell, Terry, Norma
ing pictures and playing ball. The Jean and Steven, Mr. and Mrs.
reunlon next year wUI be held In the Bruce Hysell and Samantha.
same place at the same time.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim King, Robert
and Pam Lawrence, Mr. and'Mrs.
Robert Arnold, Andy and Angle
Grueser, Minersville, Mr. and Mrs.
The Sl. Paul United Methodist
Henry Arnold, Gene and Vickie,
Church held a welcome lla.Ck picnic
Klni Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Rober1
for Its pastor Tuesday at the home
Arnold, Angle and Teresa. South·
of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Gorrell.
side, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Rober1
The Rev. Richard 1bomas has
GUiesple, Penny'811d Robin, Mr.
been assigned t.o a seventh yt!ar on
and Mrs. Manuel Francis Jr., Mary
the Northeast cluster.
Jane and Melissa, Long Bottom,
Following grace by the Rev. ThoMr. and Mrs. Manuel Frances Sr.
mas, a picnic dinner was served to
and Sewle, Robert, Reatta, Ronnie
Mrs. Doris Koeing, "Mrs. Edith
and Chester , Canton . Mandy
Harper, Mrs. Edna Harmon, Mr.
Smith, South Point, and Teresa Coand Mrs. John Damewood, Mr. and
sey, Reedsville.
Mrs. John c. Rice and sons, Mark,
Gifts were presented to Dores Ar·
John and David, Mr. and Mrs. Cat I
nold for the occasion. Jim King and
Barphill, Mr. and Mrs. James
Bruce Hysell received birthday
Stout, Mr. and Mrs. Don Harris and
gifts and Samantha Hysell, a new·
daughter, Missy and Mindy, Mr .
born gift.

Father's day dinner

St. Paul UMC

Cancer Answerline gives insight
A rgular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to help
save your life from cancer.
QUESTION : Is a crust on one's
nipple a sign of cancer?
ANSWERiine: Any abnormal con·
dillon that persists should be
checked by a doctor. Besides a lump
or thickening, other changes in one's
breast that should be checked are
5welling, puckering or dimpling,
redness or persistent skin irritation.
Be alert to changes in the nipples or
the dark ring surrounding them, a
whitish scale, distorted shape, in·
verted nipple or nipple discharge.
Pain and tenderness should also be
called to a doctor's attention.
QUESTION: What is the
significance of a lump under one's
ann?
ANSWERiine: Only a doctor can
decide what a lump anywhere on
one's body means. Most lumps are

benign, but any should be investigated promptly by a physician.
QUESTION: Is it safe to use saccharin?
ANSWERiine: Evidence to dale
suggests that if any current cases of
human bladder cancer can be at·
tributed to past saccharin consumption, the number must be very
small. Nevertheless , evidence
showing saccharin to cause cancer
in animnals, even at very high
doses, cannot be ignored. It's stiU
difficult to accurately extrapolate
risks from animals with short life
organisms
and longer
spans.
spans
to humans
withlifedifferent
Present knowledge suggests that
when artificial sweeteners are used,
they should be used with caution and
moderation, · particularly by
children and pregnant women.
QUESTION : Does pollution in
large cities increase the risk of get·
ling cancer'

thought that there is a greater cancer risk in polluted areas. However,
as yet there have been no large-scale
studies to confirm this. Although the
lung cancer death rate is higher in
cities, the difference is relatively
small.
QUESTION : What is a preca ncerous lesion?
ANSWERiine: It is an abnormal
condition that might turn into cancer
il neglected. Typical indications are
white patches in the lining of the
mouth; moles subject to irritation;
and mouth sores that do not hea l.

July lD, 1118%
You should do very well In your career or chosen fiel\l.IIJis coming
year, provided you can subdue your -restless desires for ~nge. Build
upon your present position and make yourself more valuable.
CANCER (June Zl.July 22) This will be a very enjoyable ilay lf you
treat' whatever occurs philosophically. Know in your mind that
everything will work out fine in the long run.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your gifts to research, probe or detect are exceptionally keen today. If there's in!onnation you'd like to ferret out,
you'll have no difficulty doing so.
·
VIRGO (Aug. ~pt. 22) Persons with whom you deal on a one-IGone basis today will predicate their actions upon the way you treat them.
If you are cooperative they'll be so, too.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It's important to involve yourself in worthy
projects today. If you fall to be industrious and productive you'lllater feel
guilty about wasting your time. J
SCORPIO (Oct. U.Nov. 22) It will help your romance considerably If
you are more demonatrative today with the one you love by letting him or
her know how you really feel.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) This is a good day to have a few •
select friends over to your place. You'll know how to entertain them so
that everyone will have an enjoyable evening .
'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You need a change of pace today, but
try to select fun things to do which are more mental than rqanual. Do
nothing related to your usual work.
\\
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21)-Feb. 19) Don't let your income and ex(ienditures
get out of balance at the time. See to it thatthe items you buy don't exCeed
the surplus you have on hand.
PISCES (Feb. :!~).March !0) You won't do so unless you feel it's
necessary, but if you tlllnk your leadership is required you'll take change
in a manner none will find objectionable.
ARIES (March 21·Aprill9) Don't letthe manana 'syndrome take over
today. Fight tendencies to sweep responsibilities under the rug or post·
pone what needs doing daily .
TAURUS (Apriii!I).May ZO) Select companions today with whom you
feel comfortable. If you choose types you feel you have to entertain, they
won't be much fun.
GEMINI (May 21·June ZO) You're capable of major achievementS
today, but you're not likely to put forth your best efforts unless you feel
~'trongly motivated or challenged.

1

OU degrees earned
Ohio University has announced
the names of several students in the
area who have achieved degrees.
Graduating with honors were
Tamela Murphy, Coolville; Opal
Grueser, Pomeroy; Betty Ann Jewell, Pomeroy; Lance Oliver,
Pomeroy.
Others graduating were Brian
Taylor, CoolvUie; Cather ine Blaet·
tnar, Kellle Smlddle, Randy Dud·
din g, Racine; Suzy Samuels,
Pomeroy.
Eleanor Blaettner, Pomeroy,
was awarded an MLS degree, a
Master of Science ln Liberal
Studies.

531 J.toCKSON PIKE · At.3S WEST

- -··11241
IAROAIH WATIHRS ON SAT. SlM
AU. SEATS JU3T J 1.00.
ADMISSION EVERY J'UE'SOAY U .oo

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY I

Y9 thru

AVELY TRA TOR
SALES &amp;SERVICE

"

,. , EI

\1\11 It 't
I ll ., I

'UH\ If

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Oh .

•
II'

1 ' 1,

I lol'
1' 1

•

I
'

J
I

\1

I

'

'

~h~l)!t ~~:{·t~~5

New Spring &amp;
Summer Hours
Mon.- Fri . 9:00 to5 : 00
Saturday 9: 00 to 1:00
1011
A'
v
11011
"""'Y I . T

GR

lEI

7s:Jl.oo~fu;rth~e;r~inf~orm;a~t~ion;c;a;II~992~-J!;;;;;;;~---~~~~~~y~=~=~~~~~~~~~
r~~F~

HARRI fARM

PH. 843-2693

Portland, Ohio

Open 9:00 till 8:00
FROM POMEROY: TAKE 124 EAST

ANSWERliae : Generally it . is

TOMATOES

$274A

GREEN aEANS
HALF RUNNER
BUNCH BEANS

69~B.

BASKET

1'0°/o OVER. OUR. COST ...
WINDOW

,

.

~

'

'

""'"""·

..

.

.

AIR CONDITIONERS

SQUASH

SWEET CORN

20~8.

$}75

DOZEN

CABBAGE

ALL SIZES.
6,000 BTU .
TO
28,000

16~8.

WE ARE ..LOADED" WITH WINDOW AIR..CONDITIONERS DOE TO THE COOL MAY &amp;
. JUNE. ENJOY THE HOT DAYS THAT ARE
SUR~ TO COME.. ..THIS YEAR AND THE VE- l
ARS AHEAD AT· BARGAIN PRICES.
'· ·

POTATOES
IOLB.

BAG

'$239

PEPPERS

5

$2''
BANANAS

99~ ~

'.

' ,..,

FOR $100

. 99~ .3LBs: .

INGE-LS FURNITURE
.

6

WATERMELONS

·. CANTALOUPES
,
MIDI)LEPOIT, OHIO
PH. 992~2635

~ CUCUMBERS

'-

�...
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Jt ly 9,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.......

Friday, July 9,1982

The .Daily

Ohio

Registration open for ··school
of Homestead Living classes ·

TIIAR SHE PULLS- "Alfie," the Brookfield, IU.

Zoo's female African elephant, easily walks off Wednesday with 19 Zllll employees In tow during a tug-of·

RIO GRANDE - Registration is
still open for etght courses being of·
fered at the School of Homestead
Living by Rio Grande College and
Community College in conjunction
w1th Bob Evans Farms, Inc.
The courses still open include
"Wool Spinning," "Introduction to
Stained Glass,"
"Advanced
Blacksmithing," "Tole Painting,"
"Introduction to Weaving," "In·
troduction to Antiques - No. I," and
"Introduction to Antiques - No. 2."
The School of Homestead Living
provides an opportunity for in·
dividuals to learn early American
Homestead skills. According to a
group spokesman, some of the
re~ion's finest, expert artisans have
been selected to leach in the school.
Wool Spinning, offered July 19-23,
is an introductory course on
techmques m cardmg and spinnin~
wool. Spinning wheels and sheared
wool will be provided; however,
students who own spinning wheels
are encouraged to bring them. Wool
cards are required by the student
and can be purchased if needed at
the school.

war contest. The elgbt-fllllt-lall pachyderm who exercises by moving boulden and logs around the elephant
outdoor exblblt area, had no problem pltUng her threetons against her keepen. (AP l.aserpboto).

Introduction to Stained Glass is of·
fered the week of July 26-30 and
a~ain Augw.1 16-20. The course is a
working introduction to the tools and
techniques of the st.ained glass
m.ed1wn with emphasis on the copper foil method. Students will com·
plete several project.&lt; with individualized attention .
Advanced Blacksmithing, offered
Au~ . U , will be a review of the basic
techniques presenll&gt;d in the begin·
nin~ course. The student must have
some prior blacksmithin~ ex·
penence. This course will provide a
more •rHiepth study and apphcallon
of !urging skills to more intricate
forging desi~ns . Several projects
will be presented as well as some
tune spent on mdiv1duai problem
areas.
Tole Paintin~. offered Aug . U,
Will be a, course m which students
will learn surface preparation, pain·
ling, and fimshin~ techniques. Em·
phas1s wi)l be made for the beginner
w1th strokmg techniques and the
proper use of colors. Students wiU
lake horne several finished produc·
ls.

Introduction to Weaving, offered
Aug. 9-13, is an intensive in·
troduction lo weaving through the
use of harnes frame looms and har·
ness floor looms. Students will make
a finished producl by learning sur·
face, tapestry, and lace weaves.
Looms and limited colors of yarns
will be provided.
Jntroduclion to Antiques - No. 1,
offered Aug 9-13, is,for those with a
new interest In antiques and collectibles. The course focuses on history,
identification, and care of the major
categories - china, glass, silver,
textiles, and more.
Introduclion to Antiques - No. 2,
offered Aug. 16-20, is an advanced
course with a major focus and concentration o( developin~ iden·
tification skills.
Each of the courses offered
through the School of Homestead
Living carries a fee.
For additional infonnation on fees
nr registration, cont.act Bernie Murphy, ASl&gt;istant Dean-continuing
Education, Rio Grande College and
Community College, Rio Grande,
OhiO 45674. Or call (614) 24~ .

Instrumental education slated
Cambridge hosts arts, craft.,.-·
to improve at Meigs High School
Private instruction lor the nearly
50 instrwnentalists in Meigs High
School Band was started this week
by the new band director, Marilyn
Goodnite.
Hour sessions have been
scheduled lor all of the m·
strumentalists and once all have
been heard and coached by the new
instructor , additional private

lessons will be g1ven with the objective being to improve the band in·
strumentally before fall .
"Each student will be helped with
his or her unique problem," com·
mented M1ss Glllldnite, before group
practice begins.
Goodn1te comes from the Pike
County Public School system ,

Pikeville, Ky. where she was music
teacher and band director. She holds
an undergraduate degree from the
University of Kentucky and a
master of music education from
Boston University. She has been per·
forming with the Lexington Philhar·
monic Orchestra, Lexington, as
bassoonist.

Youth choir forms for fair
A youth choir to sing at the Aug. 16
opening service of the Meigs County
Ministerial Associaton at the Meigs
Count:y Fair is being organized by
Ed Harkless.
The youth choir is open to any
Meigs County girl or boy, eighth

grade and above and including those
in their first or second year of
college. Harkless emphasized that
youth are not required to have par·
ticipated in vocal music during the
regular school year to sing with the

choir.
The first practice will be held at
7:30p.m. on Monday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. Ad·
ditional practices will be scheduled
after the first meeting.

By Dale M. Stoll
Meigs County ElteDBion
Home Et!onomilt
Steaming corn on the cob, cnsp
new potatoes, thick slice~ of fresh
tomatoes and crunchy green onions
lots of delicious garden
vegetables for summertime meals!
Lucky you if you have your own
garden full of piwnp garden
ve~etables! But if you aren't able to
grow your own, you can still enjoy
fresh veggies by purchasing them at
local stands or fanners markets.
Check local papers for ad·
verlisements for pick-your·own
product, too. Many fanns are of·
ferin~ corn, beans and tomatoes, as
well as fruits, on a ptck-your-own
basis. This type of fal}n allows you
to buy very fresh produce. Beware
of garden produce that is sold from
stands that are located right out in
the hot sun. Vegetables and fruits
should be handled with care to
preserve fresh flavor, texture and
nutrients.
One of the least expensive garden
veoetables available in this area 1s
Q
cabbage.
If you're tired of cole slaw
or sauerkraut, trY this way of ser·
vin~ cabbage. Cabbage, combined
with zucchini, tomatoes, cheese and
hamburger makes a super summer
casserole. It disappeared very
quickly at my house and a casserole
that I gave to a frJend vamshed in
short time!
GARDEN CASSEROLE
\&lt;, head cabbage, chopped
1 mediwn zucchini, sliced

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Roush and son, Randy,
Syracuse, have returned by plane
from a trip to visit Dr. Herman
Rickard and family at San Luis
Obispo, Calif. They visited Chewing
Gum Alley, Morro Bay, SequOia
National Park in the Sierra Moun·
tains Madonna's Inn, Hearst Castle,
and 'spooners Cave during their
vacation trip.
Mrs. Bob Miller and son, Scott,
have returned from a week at the
World's Fair in Knoxville, Tenn.
Thursday, the Rev. and Mrs. Bob
Miller and son visi!ed relatives in
Circleville.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Eblin and Mrs.
Emma Fox visited Mrs. James
Gilmore at Camden Clark Hospital
in Parkersburg, W.Va. Wednesday.
Mrs. Eblin remained at the hospital
with Mrs. Gilmore during her
surgery that day.
Mrs. Walter Fowler of Cambridge
spent several days here visiting
.Mrs. Phil Jenkins. Mrs. Fowler's
husband was a former pastor of the
Laurel Cliff Church.

Stiversville News
Notes
Mrs. Ruby Bryant and Debra

Cheryl Raines, Racine, and
Larry Fox, Middleport,, were unl·
ted in marriage in a recent Satur·
day afternoon ceremony at
Freedom Gospel Mission at Bald
Knobs. Roger Willford performed
the ceremony ·
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush, Ra·
cine, were Wednesday evening
dinner guests at the home of Leot.a
Birch.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stamper,
Dayton, spent Independence Day
weekend wlt.h Mr. and Mrs. John
Prater and famlly.
Gary Wells, Cleveland was the
weekend guest of his father, John
M· Wells · Great Bend·
Mrs · Daisy Van Meter •·
"' spend·
ing the week at Pataskala willl the
Joe Allen family .
•.
Mrs · Pauline Sears • Parker·burg • Mrs · Margaret Burk ·
hammer, Jtm Ritchie, and Tom
Durst, Pomeroy, Mrs. Mike Evans
and Matthew • and Leola Birch • all
of the Stiversvtlle cornmunlty vt·
sUed last weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Durst.
Mrs. Joanne Dobbins, Columbus,
was the recent guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Kerry Dobbins and other rei a·
lives in the co!TilTiunlty.
Mrs. June Selderman, New
York, and Mrs. Kathleen Bissell,
Long Botlnm, visited last Friday
with Mrs. Fannie Durst.
Mrs. Ella Scarborough returned
home Sunday from Veterans Mem·
ortal Hospital.

Cleveland, and seven from Cin·
cinnati. In addition, small towns and
rural areas across the state Will
provide exhibitors, including II
from the Cambridge area and 19
from other Southeast Ohio communities.
Prior to this year, the Salt Fork
Festival was limited to Ohio artists.
But this year, 17 exhibitors from.
Pennsylvania, Indiana, Michigan,
West Virginia, Colorado, Wisconsin ,
South Carolina, Missouri, and
Florida have been involved.
Veteran Festival favorites such as
Frederick Graff, watercolors ; Am·
brose Kern, dulcimers; Joe
Wemgarten, s1lver and gold sculpture; Joyce and Chuck Berty, puppets; and Lonnie Blackley, pen and

spent the Fourth of July weekend
with Mrs. MrytleLewisandfamlly,
Buffalo, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex MUls, Steu·
benynle, visited several days last
week with Mrs. Nell Mlddleswart.
Jason Scott, Olympia, Wash., is
vacationlngherewithMr.andMrs.
Denver Curtis.

Binhday celebration

·•
Carl Stewart, Hobson Road,
celebrated hiB birthday on July 4at a
surprise cookout at the home of h1s
son, Paul, Langsville Road.
Joining them for the celebratiOn
were his wife, Martha, and Lester,
Sgt. and Mrs. C. R. Stewart, Wright·
Patterson of Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Menfee Blevins and Meiodi,
Pomeroy·, Mike Beach, Xema ·, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Reynolds and
Beth, Mason, W. Va.; Mary Wise,
Rutland·, and Mrs. Richard Jacks,
Langsville.
Stewart has been a shut-in piatient
for a number of years due to a
paralyzing stroke.

r------------------------1

SEED AN
MILLING
.
.
.HEADQUARTERS

I"&gt; cups bread crumbs
I pound hamburger

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

pastel art, will be returning along
with new exhibitors such as Lee
Brandon, aquagraph ; Paula Burke,
handwoven baskets; Terri Harper,
photography, and Sue Hinkle,
quilting.
The Salt Fork Arts and Crafts
Festival is sponsored by the Ohio Ar·
ts and Crafts Foundation with
assisU!oce from the Ohio Arts Council.

Other features of the three-day ad·
missioin-free event include contmuous entertment, a Youth Arts
and Crafts Festival, and craft
classes. Cambridge is located at the
intersection of I-70 and 1-77.
For further information, wnte :
Salt Fork Festival, 910 Wheelml(
Ave., Cambridge, Ohio 43725.

~reen and

free from insect damage.
- Tr1m leafy vegetables
sparingly. Be sure to use the dark
outer leaves - they are especially
nch in nutrients.
-Rinse cabbage under running
water. Drain thoroughly . Store in
the crisper or other moisture proof
container in the refrigerator.
-If a vegetable Is cooked
properly, it will keep the bright color
of the raw vegetable. Vegetables
should be cooked in as little water as
posSible to avoid losses in vitamins
and minerals.
-Mo~'l vegetables should be
cooked only until they are crisptender. They will still have a little of
their original crispness. At this
stage, flavor and food value are at
their peak.
For your free copy of another
delicious cabbage casseroie,,contact
the Me1gs County Extension Office
at99U696.

4 medium tomatoes, peeled and
cut into eighths or I large can
tomatoes, drained and chunked
!large onon, chopped
11'.! cups cheese, shredded
2 cups tomato sauce
IT. parsley (optional)
Salt and pepper
2 Tablespoons butter or margarine
Cook chopped cabbage and zucchini in a small amount of boiling
waited water about 5 minutes or.un·
til tender-crisp. Drain and set aside.
Brown hamburger and onion. Drain
and set as1de. In a greased 9xl3 pan,
place enouKh tomato sauce in the
casserole to cover the bottom. Place
cabba~e · and zucchini in the
casserole. Top w1th hamburgerunion mixture. Place tomato chunks
on top of hamburger, distributing
them evenly. Sprinkle with salt, pepper and parsley. Top with shredded
cheese, t~en bread crumbs. Dot with
margarine or butter. Bake at 350 r - - - - - . ; __ _ _ _ _ __
degrees until hot and bubbly, about
30-45 minutes. This casserole may be
prepared in the microwave oven.
Here are some ideas to help you as
you choose and use cabbage:
dl,/1.
~One pound of fresh cabbage will
· •PomtiiiJ
provide 4 to 5 servings of cooked,
· flower Shop
drained cabbage, ~ cup per serving.
"The Wrr America
-Chq,use heads that are firm
Sendsi.M"
heavy. Outer leaves should be fresh,
992·2039 or 992-572I

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0 .

104 W. Main
992-2311 Pomeroy

@nab~puiy
. MILLING DIVISION

Seecls · Bird Seed1 • Oyst.r Slleill and Grit · Fertilizers • Lime • Ce-

ON THE FARM COOIUN"~
AT ITS BEST

ment and ·Mwtar • StO!:It Salt • Water Solltner • Remedies • Salt •
l lllers • IIKcine • ROOfltll • Paints • Reel Brand Fohclng • later a lid
Iinder Twine· Spro~s ·Gates· Hay· Straw

Mi:d dlepQ.r t Book .S tore
Olf'.
j

-··

t'

Ave.

RUN 'MILLS·
'
y

7·30p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN , Roger

Mlddle)orl, Ohio

Watson. pastor . Crenson Pratt. Sunday
school supt. Murning worship . 9:30 a m .
Sunday tchool. 10.30 a .m , evening ser
vice, 7·30.

K&amp;C JEWElfRS

MT

J(eepeakr

Oh.
TRINITY CHURCH , Re•. W. H. Perrin,
pastor; Debbie Buck ,

Sunda~

school

supl. Church School, 9:15a.m.. worsh1f
service. 10·30 am Choir raheorso .
Tuesday, 7.30 p.m . under direction of
Allee Nease.

POMEROY

CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE : Corner Union and Mulberry ,
Rev. VirgiiByrer,r.•tor . Glen McClung ,

ant . pastor. Cly • Henderson . pastor
emeritus. Sunday School, 9:30 a .m. ,
Glen McClung , supt.: morning worship .
,10:30 a . m.; ,evening service, 7:00: midweek service , Wednesday , 7·00 p.m.

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN . Wor·

ship Service, 9 a.m .: Church School ,
10:30a. m.

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN. Church

School , 9:00 a .m., Morning worship .
10: 15 Bible Study Tuesday , 10 a .m .. Bi·

ble study. Thuroday, 7.30 p.m
SYRACUSE
FIRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church. Church S&lt;hool ,
10:15 a .m .. mormng worship , 11 30 a .

m.: Bible Study, Tuesday, 10 am .
Junior and Sen ior H1gh Youth Group
Sundar. 6 p.m.

Wednesday iamlly warship, 7.00 p.m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Near
Long Bottom , Edsel Hart , pastor Sun

day school , 930A.M.: Worship 10 30
day.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST Cor·

ner Ash and Plum, leshe Hayman
pastor . Bob Grubb , assistant pastor
Sundar School. 10 a.m .: Morning Wor st,ip. 1 a . m. ; Wednesday and Sotur
doy Evening Service•. 7.30 p.m.

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHOOIST CHURCH

School, I0:30a.m. Sunday schoolleoder.
YPSM, Eloise Adams. 7:30 p.m.,

BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHAPEL, Route 1, Shade. Bible school , 7
p .m. Thursday: WQrthlpservice, 8 p.m

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee

POMEROY, Sunday School 9·15 am

Wor~hlp

service

.o.m. Cho•r

10:30

rehearsal. Wednesday, 7 p m. Rev

Robart McGee. postor.

.

ENTERPRISE, Wotshlp 9 a m Church

School 10 a.m. Richard Rothem~eh
pastor.

music. Sunday worst,Jp , 10 a.m. ; Bible
study, 11 a.m .; wonhlp, 6 p.m. Wed·
nesday Bible sludy, 7 p.m.

a . m. Warship service,
Richard Rothemlch , pqstor

school, 9:30 a .m., Mrs. Worley Francis,
auperlntendent. Preaching services first
and third Sundays following Sunday

School.
GRAHAM

UNITED

METHODIST ,

Preaching 9:30 a.m ., first and second
Sundays of eoct, month; third cmd fourth
Sundays each month , worship service at
7 .30 p.m._Wedn ..day evenings at 7.30.

Prayer and Bible Sludv
SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST. Mulberry

Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Mike

P1onkawskl. Sabbath School
Superintendent, Rita White. Sabbath
School. Saturday aflernoon at 2:00 with
Worship Service following ot 3· 15..

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSister Harriett Worner, Supt Sunday
School, 9:30 a .m .; morning worship

10:45a.m.
' POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, David
Mann, minister: William Snouffer, Sun·

day school supl. Sunday

~thool .

o .m.; morning worship 10:30o.m.

' FIRST SOUTHERN

BAPTIST,

9:30
2B2

,Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy . Hershel Me·
Clure, _Sunday School Superintendent

Sunday S&lt;hool, 9.30 a.m.: Morning

Worship . 10.30 a . m.; Evening Worship
7:30 p. m. Mld· week prayer service.

7:30p.m.
MIDWAY

COMMUNitY

•
CHURCH ,

Da.ter Rd., Rd ., Langsville , Rev. A. A .

Hughe1, Pallor. Sunday School 10 a.m .
Sorvlc., an Tuesday. Thursday and
Sunday, 7:30p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bailey
Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson ,
pastor. HonCIIay Dunn, supt. Sunday
school, 10 a.m. Sunday evening service

7:30; Blblo leaching, 7:30 p.m. Thurs·

~YRACUSE

MISSION. Cherry 51 ..

Syrocuse. Services, 10 a.m. Sundoy
EvenlnSotervicea, Sunday and Wednes·

Of CHRIST IN
lawronco Manley.

tots, eager
funlor astronauts,
:£:,.\:lor
Ql1d -lor high BYF; chair
. 1:30 p.m. Wtdnes day: prayer
~s .

n-t!ftll and llbie ••udy, w~ .
7:30p.m.
• CHU11C1t Of CHRIST, Mlddlopart. Sth
•4nd Main lob Molton. mlni1ter, ScoH,
.....,...,,' onodote
mlnlstw. Bible
s.Mol, 9:30 a.
momlng wonhlp,

..,"'It'll _.,leo, 7:00p.m.,
Study and yOuth

struggle with words Most of us are Inadequate
when it cor'Tles to descnbmg someth mg Im portant

So, the llnle girl senSH a kind of mhlde.

even If she cant put it Into WOfds No one can
b@ prKi~ about miracM But the Church can
lleip you to better undentond

The waterfa ll IS very Im portant. not on~
Is ~auti ful bt.Jt be&lt;:GUse it shows

bKau~ 11

God 's workings

In 11 ta nglbl~

form The water

ROCK SPRINGS. Sunday School 9:i5
m

10 o

FLATWOODS, Church School I0 a m

Worshtp 11 a.m .. Rtchord Rothemich
pastor.

MlDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH , Church School 9 30 a m
Worship 10:30 a.m. UMYF b p.m.
Robert Robinson , Pastor
RUTLAND, Church School 9.30 am
Worship
pastor.

11.00

o m.

SALEM CENTER

Robert

Rider ,

Worshop 7 p m

Church School 9:45 a.m. Robert Rider ,
pastor.

PEARl CHAPEl , Sunday School 9.30

a m. Worship IO:OOa m.

..

SNOWVILLE, Sunday School . q.30

a .m . Wonhlp900a.m.

SYRACUSE CLUSTER

R...., Stan ley Merrlfied , Minister

FOREST RUN : Worship 9 a.m. Church
SchooiiO a.m.
MINERSVILLE, Church School 9 a.m.
Worship I 0 a m

ASBURY: Church Schoal 9:50 a.m.
Worlhip II am . Boblo Study 7.30 p.m.
Thursday. UMWII11Tu01day.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. Jomos Clark

Rev Herbert Grote . pastor Frank Riffle ,
supt. Sunday School. 9 30 o. m Worshtp
servtce 11 o .m and 7 30 p m Proper
meeting , Wednesday . 7 .30 p .m

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST CHUR

CH RB\1 Robert Miller , pastor Lloyd
Wnght . Otrector of Christian Education
Sunday School. 9·30 a . m . Morning Wor
sh1p. 10.30 a m .. Choir Practice , Sun
day b.30 p m , Evening Worshtp , 7 30
p m Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study
'7 30p. m

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST Chatles

Russell Sr . mtntster , Rick Macomber
sup! Sunday school. 9 30 o m worship
service, 10 30a m Bible Study. Tuasdoy
Brown, pastor Sunday School. '9 3U
o m , mormng wonhtp 10 •5. youth
serv1ce 6 "5 p m . evening worship .
7·30 p m prayer and praise. Wednes day . 7 30p m .

PAUL , (Tuppe rs Plams ) Sunday
School 9 00 a m Mormng Worship a t
10.00 o .m Bible Study . 7 30 p m
Tuesday
ST

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST 01o•er

SOUTH BETHEl (Solver Rodge) Duane

Swain, Superin tendent Sunday sdllbol
9 30 every week

Sydenstncker
Sr
pastor
Sunday
School. 9 a . m , Morning Worship , 10
o .m , Youth Serv•ce, Sunday ot 6 p. m
and Sunday Even ing Worship , 6 p. m
Bible Study Wednesday 7 p m

HOBSON CHRISTlAN UNION Sunday

School . 9 30om e vemng servtce . 7 30
p m Wedne~day prayer meetmg 7 30

pm
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIST. Re• Mor·

vtn Markin pastor . Steve Little Sunday
school supt. Sunday school 10 am .
morning worshtp , 11 o.m Sunday
eventng worshtp . 7 30 Prayer mMting
and Bible studv Thursday. 7:30 p m ,
youth meet1ng Wednesday ot 1 p m
CHRISTIAN FEllOWSHIP CHURCH . 383
N 2nd Ave Middleport .Sundoy School
10 00 a m Sun. ' Wed. Evening Services
7 30pmpm
LIBERTY Chnslion Church, • L1berty
A~;e . Pomeroy. Sundav School 10 am .
Worship 7.30. Wednesday Service 7 30

CHRIST, Duane Warden . mm1 ster 81bla
class 9 30 a m morning worsh1p 10 30
am ., e vening' worshtp . 6 30 p m Wed nesday Bible study , 6 30 p m

NEW STIVERS VILLE COMMUNITY Chur·

Re"tC. Robert McGee ,
Interim d~racfor

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W. Main 51 . '1'12·5235 Vocal
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHUA·
CH, Rov.Ralph Smith, pastor. Sunday

httle girl wotchts, lronsfbted U:tter, If someone
asks h~ haw she liked the weterfoll. she II

RUT AND CHURCH Of GOD. Paslor,

a .m .; Prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m Thurs -

&amp;0ivalion meeting. various speakers and
1
music specials. Thursdoy-10 a .m. to. 2
p .m. Ladles Home league. oil women In·
vited: 7:30 p .m. prayer meeting and
Bible study-. Rev . Noel Herman. teacher.

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .

cDSCades down O'ier rocks. seeking union k't
the: pool at the bottom In tum. that pool will
spill Into a brook and the brook willl'nefge with
anwr and the nver with the teo h'a o kind o'
mastrr P'&amp;n thllt Is m1nd -bogghng In itS scope

T}l(' morning SlJOI ~ht catches the cescDd
tng water and bands it with rajnbow colors The

Main St. Nail Proudf8ot, pastor, Bible
schoot 9:30 a .m .; morning worship ,
10:30 a. m.: Youth meetings , 6:30 p. m ..
evening wonhlp, 7:30. Wednesday night
prayer maeflng and Bible study 7·30
Ave .. Pomeroy. Envoy and Mn. Ray
Wining, offlcan In charge. Sunday·
hollne11 meeting, 10 am .; Sundciy

Vtncent C. Waters , Ill , minister , Hermon
Slack , superintendent . Sunday School
9·30 am.: evening service 1 p.m .. Wed ·
nesday Btble Study, 1 p .m

director ; Harold Johnson , dtrector of
education .

Rev John Evans. Sunday school , 10
o .m.: Sunday worship, 11 am ..
Children 's church . 11 am .. Sundov
evening service, 7:00p. m., Wednesday
evening young ladles auxiliary , 6 p m

p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY, liS Butternut

Tom

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH Of CHRIST

Main St. , Pomeroy. Sunday services Holy
Communion on the first Sunday of each
month , and combined with morning
prayer on the third Sunday. Morning
prayer and sermon tm all other Sunday'
of the month . ct,urch School and nurs•ry
core provided. Coffee hour in the Perish
Hall immediately following the service.

. POMEROYCHUI!CHOFCHRIST. 212W

UNION BAPTIST. Rev

Dooley: Joe Sayre . • Sunday School
Superintenent . Sunday school . 9 45
a .m.: eventng wonh1p , 7:30p. m Prayer
meettng , 7·30 p.m . Wednesday .

212 E. Main Street
992-3715, Pomeroy

·

Racme 949·2550

Forest Acre Pork , Rev Roy_ Clevenger
pastor . Sunday school 10 30 am . wor ship 7·30 p m.Bible Study. Wednesday
7.30 p.m. Saturday night prayer ser vice

r
.
0 --.

992-3911

p,a:stor; Mra. Russell YounsJ. Sunday

COLLECTION OF
AUTHENTIC.AMISH
' RECIPES FROM
DIIS DUTCHMAN
ESSENHAUS RESTAURANT

Pomeroy

RANKUN"

Syracuse

GrocenesGeneral Mercnand1se

Mtddleport·
Pomeroy, 0 .

a EN

Mill Work·
Cabinel Miking

5&lt;hool Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m
EVening worship, 7:30. · Wtdn ..day
po:ayer mooting, 7:30p.m
,'MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,
RociM- Rov. James Sottorfield, pasta&lt;.
Morning wonhlp. 9':&gt;15 a.m.: Sunday
Khool, 10:~5 a.m.: o•onlng wotShlp, 7.
Tuosday, 7.30 ~·1'1·· lailios ' proyor
tMOting: WtdnnikiY. 7:30p.m. YPE.
MIDDlfPORT FIRST ·BAPTIST, Corner
Sl•ih and Palmer, the Rev. Mark Me·
Clung .. Sunday sdloal, 9:15p.m.: Dan
\!Yhlto, 5o!n&lt;!aY SchOOl, 'l'porlntondont.
JOhn Reibel, Sr .. oall. 1up1. Morning
Worship, 10:15 a.m. Youth meeting,
t'30 p.m. Wodnosdoy. including woo

COMPILED ay,
BOB and SUE MILLER

John F. Fultz, Mgr.
Ph. t9l·l101

_,

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

lHE DAILY
SENnNEL

MEIGS nRE
\ ~ CENTER. INC.

PlANING Mill RAil'S

CHRISTl~ , UNION,

'

-~ .

t1··11 ft%1
U' 'i

~~~E"PCl\ir CHURCH

AMISH COUNTRY
COOKBOOK
-.

MARK VSTORE
Middleport
Phone 992·3480

•

---What's cookin'?:....___ _

Meigs County correspondence
POMEROY··Mr. and Mrs. Ches·
ter Knight entertained Saturday
with a get together honoring Mr.
and Mrs. George Doolittle and
daughters. Krist! and Connie and
friend, Rusty Gold, Berea. The
Doollttles were visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Lambert, Middleport, at
the ttme.

Art1sts and craftsmen from all
over Ohio and from nine othtr states
have accepted invitations to the 14th
Annual Salt Fork Arts and CJ'IIfts
Festival, Aug. 13-15 at Cambridge.
Over 200 exhibits were selected
through the combmed efforts of
professional jurors and a local standards committee under the chair·
manship of Dr. James Mitchell of
Cambridge.
The Akron-Canton area will be
sending the largest delegation of 30
exhibitors representing painters,
l1ber and stained glass craftsmen,
wood, metal, and leather workers,
photographers, and potters.
Most metropolitan Ohio areas w1U
be well represented with 19
exhibitors from Colwnbus, 14 from

This Message and Church Directory Sp&lt;,nsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

ch . Sunday School serv iCe . 9 45 o .m ,
Worship serviCe 10 30 Evangelis t•c Ser·
ViCe . 7 30 p. m Wednesday , Praye r
meet.ng. 7:30, Thursday

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·

Harrisonville Rd . Robert Purt e ll, pastor.
Bill McElroy , Sunday school supt Sunday
school , 9 30 o m , worship servtce 10.30
am , Sunday worship ser vice , 7 30 p m.
Monday and Tuesday evenmg se rviCes
7 .30 each even mg.

pm
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD. Re• R E.

Rob•nson , pastor Sunday school . '1 30
a .m . worship serviCe II om evenmg
serv1ce, 7.00; youth servtce , Wed nesday . 7 OOp m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pone

Grove The Rev . William Middlesworth,
Pastor Church se rvices 9 30 a .m Sun·
day School10·30 om

LANGSVIllE

NAZARE~E . Rev . James B Kittle . pastor .
Norman Presley. Sunday School Superin·
tendent Sunday school 9 30 a .m.: mer ·
mng worship , 10·30 o . m
evangelistic
serv1ce . 6 P m Prayer and Pralle Wednesdoy. 7 P m .. youth meettng , 7 P m.

RACINE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE.

Rev Thomas H. Collier , pastor . Martha
Wolle. Cho.rman of the Board of Chns·
t1on ltfe Sunday School. 9 30 a m .
morn1ng worsh1p 10:30, Sunday even·
.ng worship 7.30 p. m. Praye r meehng
Wednesday. 7·30 p.m

Don

CHURCH.

Robert E Musser poster Sunday school ,
9 30 o m Paul Musser supt : morning
worship 10 30, Sunday evening serviCe .
7 :00. mid week serviCe , Wednesday . 7
CHURCH
OF
THE
p 'SvRACUSE

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry

P•ngley. pastor Sunday school , 9 30
am , morn1ng worship . 10 30 a .m
Wednesday evening scrv1ce. 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev . Earl Shuler.
pastor Sunday school 9 30 o.m , Church
serv•ce. 7 p m., youth meeting . 6
p m Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p m

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST

CHRISTIAN

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
Elden R. Blake, pastor Sunday School 10

7 30p.m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Por·
tland Roc1ne Rood William Ro'u sh
pastor, l 1nda Evans. church school d•rec
tar. . Church school , 9 30om .. morn•ng
worship . 10 30 am .
Wednesday
even1ng prayer servtces. 1 30 p .m .
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev Earl Shular
pastor . Worship serv•ce t.. 9 30 a .m . Sun
day $Chool . 10 ·30 o. m tsible Study and
proyerservtceThunday . 7:30pm

CARLETON CHURCH , Kingsbury Rood

Jimmte Evons , pastor. Sunday school .
9 30 am , Rolph Carl , superintendent .
ev&amp;.(ling worship. 7 30 p m . Prayer
meeting , Wednesday. 7·30p m

LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN

Tom

Richoson , pastor; Wallace Damewood ,
Sunday School Supenntendent. Worsh1p
service ot 1'1 am Bible SchooiJO a m

HYSEll RUN HOL1NESS CHURCH. Re•

Theron Ol.(rhom . pastor. Sundoy Schoof
at 9:30a .m... Morning worthip ot 10 30
a m Thursday services at 7 30p. m .

FREEDOM GOSPEl MISSION al Bald

Knob, located on County Root! 31 Rev
lawrence Gluesencamp. pastor, Rev
Roger Willfooss•stant pastor Preaching
serviCel. Sunday 7 30 p m , prayer
meeting , Wednesday , 7 30 p m , Gary
Grtffith. leodeYouth groups Sunday
eveing 6 30 p m . w1th Roger ond V1olet
Willford os leoders Commun•on services first Sunday each month .
WHITES CHAPEl. Coolvtlle RO R~v
Roy Deeter . pastor Sunday school 9 30
am .. worship servtce , 10 30 am Btble
study and prayer service Wednesday
7 30 p.m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST , Eugene
Underwood . pauor, Herb EII!OII , Sunday
school supt Sunday school 9·30 o m .
morning worsh•p and comunion 10 30
0

m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH

om • Robert Reed, sup!. , Morning ser
Amos Tillis, pastor Donny Ttllts Sunday
mon . 11 a . m. Sunday night serv1ces
School Supt Sunday School . q 30 0 m
followed by mornin~ worsh•p Sunday
Chnst1an Endeavor, 7 30 P m . Song ser·
v1ce 8 p m . I reoct,ing 8 30 p· md Miden tng ser\1 Ice
00 p m p royer
7
week Prayer meeting , Wed nea oy ,
...eetin Wednesda . 7 00 p m
p m . Alvin Reed , lay leader
AUTrANO cHLRCH
OF
THE
CHURC+l, OF JESUS CHRIST . located at
NAZARENE, Rev . lloyd 0 Gnmm , Jr
Rutland 6n New l•ma Road next t2...._ - pastor, Sunday school , 9 30 0 m wor ship 1ervtce 10:30 a .m young peoples
ser&gt;~ice . 6 p m Evangelistic service 6 30
om Wednesday serviCe . 7 ()Op ,m

l

Walker , Pastor Robert Sm1th . Sunday
school supt . Sundoy school 9 30 o m ,
mornmg worshtp, 10 40 a m : Sunday
even•ng worshtp , 7 30: Wednesday
even1ng Bible study. 7 30

DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Re• R D

"·

SOUTH~RN BAPTIST" Corner ol
Second. Pastor Frank Lowther Sunday
school , 9 •S a m . worship serviCe , I 1
a m ond 7 30 p.m Weekly Bible Study
Wednesday , 7·30 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Moll eo
St . . Mason. W Va Eugene l Conger ,
minister . Sunday Bible Study I 0 a m
Worship 11 a m and 1 p.m Wednesday
Bible Study, vocal music . 7 p rT)
liFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 Nor!~
Third St Cheshire. Independent. fun damental services Sunday even•ng 7 30
p m. Pastor Rev . Dr . Robert Persons

' FIRST

Rev . Carl Hicks

BETHANY 1 (Dorcas), Warshop 9 00

am . Churcn School 10 00 am. Bible
study, 1st, 2nd, 3rd and Sth Tuesday'

7 15 p.m. : youlh fellowship, 2nd and 41h
Tuesdays, 6 :00p.m .

CARMEl and SUTTON (Worship, Sun·

day School and most other eventa held

jointly.) Sunday Schooi9:4S and Wotshop
II :00 at Sutton firs I and lhlrd Sundays

and at Carmel aacond and fourth Sun-

days. Blblo Study socond, fourth and Iii·
th Thursdays. 7:15 p.m. Family Noghl

Fellowship Dinner third Thursday. 6 30
p.m.
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School 9 30
a.m. Wanhlp 7:31] p.m. hi ond 3rd Sun·
days : Prayer meeting Wednesday 1 30
p.m. Fellowship supper first Saturday 6

' MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Duddong

lane Mason, W 1/o . Rev Ronnie B.
Rose' Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a . m ..
Mornmg Worship 1I o m El!en1ng Se~ ­
v1ce 7:30 p.m .Wednesday Women s
Mtnistries 9 a m (meeting and prayer
Prover ond Bible Studv 7 D m

p.m. UMW 2nd Tuosdoy 7:30p.m.
EAST LETART,- Church School 9 a.m.

Worship service 10 a m. Prayer meeting

7·30 p.m. Wtdnosday. UMW second
Tuesdo¥ 7.30 p.m.
"And the Lord sent Nathan to David." (11Samuel12:1)
RACINE WESLEYAN -Sunday school
k Prof') · C
"
·tt b th late
H.ARTFORD CHURCH 'OF CHRIST IN
10 a.m.: worship. II o.m. Choir practice,
The beat-selling boo "
I es m ourage ' wrl en y e
CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev William
Thursdar. a p.m.
President Jolm F. Kennedy, contains the stories of certain key figures
Campbell, pastor. Sunday School. 9 30
LETART FALLS... Worship setvice 9
in u.s. history who spoke and acted courageously in critical tlmes.
a . m .. James Hughes . supt ., evenmg ser·
a.m. Church SchooiiO o.m.
·
tba t f · d of Am enca
· · one
vice. 7 :30 p.m. Wednesday evening
MORNING STAR, warship 9:30 o.m. :
The book stresses again and again t a rue nen
IS
prayer meehng, 7 30 p m Youth prayer
Church School10·30 a.m.
who stands up for the truth despite the cost.
servtce each Tuesdoy.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Lelarl, W.
MORSf CHAPEL, ·Chutch School 9:30
In the Old Testament we have the narr:tive of the prophet Nathan
Vo ., Rt. 1 Mark Irwin. ~stor. Worship
a.m. Worship 11 o.m.
I' Kin (The
PORTLAND. sundav School 6:30p.m..
who demonstrated tremendous courage in facing Israe s
g.
services, 9:30 a .m , Sunday school . 11
Evening Worohlp; '7 :30 p.m. Youth
account is found in ll Sall')uel12: 1-15 in your Bible.) Nathan risked his
a.m. ; evening worship, 7:30 p m .
Fellowship,
Wtdnosdar,
7 ·30 p.m.
Tuesday cottage prayer meeting and
NORTHEAST
CLUSTER
very life•b)' telllng King David a para ble that revealed the enonnltY of
Bible study, 9:30a.m. Worship terv•ce ,
Rov. Rlchafd w. Thoma•
his sins. But in so doing&gt; Nathan acted as a true friend. The story of
Wednesday, 7·30p m
Du~t;".::r:!~· Sr.
David's crimes, coupled with a forecast of divine judgment, moved the
John w. Dautlla•
king to confess and ask God's (orgivenesa.
FAITH
FELLOWSHIP
JOPPA, Worship 9:00 a.m. Church
(\true friend tella us the trut!t when we need to know II,- even when
CRUSADE for Christ, St. Rt . 338,
0
Antiquity. sunday morning, 10
~s~~ w':;...tp 9 a.m., Church
he knows we may not appreciate it. Conver:sely, we demonatrate sina.!".; Sunday evening, 7:30; Thur·
ScOOol 10 a.m. Choir Rohoar10l 7 p.m.,
cere friendahlp when we relate to our friends the trutb about themsc:tay evening, 7:30. Paslor, Rev.
Thursdayl.llble Study, Thursday•.
selves. True friendship does not consist of simple teillng folks what
Franklln.Dickens.
~~lONG BOTTOM. Sunday School at 9:30
they want to hear. Truefriendahiplsamatterof"speakintheltuthin
g
·
ci.m. Evening Warlhlp Ot ~:30 p.m. Thur·
Jove." (Epheslans4:15)
·
OUR SAVIOUR lUTHEAAH CHUIIC.H tdavlliblo~•. ~~p.m.
,.,..., may bel p ua be a true friend by
IIIEDSVI~~ School 9:30 a.m.
Let ua ,.__.
""".,.ore pray that """
Walnut and~ Sts., -wood.W.
va. Tho Rev. Go«'" C. Welt~.cla';""sar .
sbowlDg.~·llke love, in bolh.word and deed.
. ,
7~~~.' :Je"$~~;~
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.;
- ·
oodaPaat7 30
'
•
. ' -Sulnlitted by: Richard W. Thomail, ~
ship, II o.m.
_ ......
nALFREo. ~·School at 9:•5 a.m. ,
NortheutCiusterUnltedM~Ciufches,
CALVARY 11a.1 CHUIICH,
.......
, -~.:.;""" a) 1'1 9.m. Youth. 6:30 •
Tuppers PUIIIIB, Ohio 67113
an Pomeroy Pike. CAtuftty .... - · P:m·.~
N,..t P. .r r.,;;;;;,;.._-~;....-~.._' ..;'\;...._ _..;;,.....;,_ _.._;,..;;,.~ Flatwoodo. R~. llockw0od, po~IQr. Ser·
~.7: .p.m.
~~
_ ...

=

)

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH

INC - Pearl St , Middleport Rev
O 'Dell Manley , poster. Sunday school ,
9 30 am . , Mornmg worship 10 30 am .
evening worsh ip 7 30 p m Tuesday,
12 30 p .m Women's prayer meetmg:
Pr;rer ond pra1se serv1ce . Wednesday.
7

RlfhAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elder James Millor Bible

study . Wednesday 1 30 p.m . Sunday
School, 10 a .m. Sunday n1ght service,

7·30p.m
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS -

Harrisonville Rood, Earl F1eldt , pastor,
Henry Ebl1n, Jr . Sunday School Supt
Sunday School 9:30 a m , Morning War·
ship 11 o m . Sunday e11en1ng service.
7 30 m . Prayer Meettng Thursday , 7 30
p m.

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH Of GOD -

Not Pentecostal Rev George Oiler
pa stor Wors htp serviCe Sunday. 9
a .m . Sunday school i1 a. m .. worah1p
serv1ce, 7 30 p m. Thuraday prayer
meeting 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Untied Brethren in
Chri i t Church Rev Robert Sanders.
stor, Dan Will , lay leader Located In
,.;os Commun•ly oft CA 82. Sunday
school. 9 30om . Morning worshtp serv iCe . 10 4S a .m . evening preoching ser·
vtCe second and fourth Sundayt , 7 :30
p m. Chnshan Endeo't'Or first ond third
Sundays . 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
meeting and Bible study . 7 30 p.m

•5

r.

JEHOVAH'S W1Tl'lESSES, 3?319 Stale

Route 12~ !One m1le east of Rutland ).
Sunday . Bible le£ture 9·30 o m Wat.
chtower study . 10 20 o m . Tuesday ,
Bible study , 7 30 p .m . Thunday ,
Theocrottc School , 7 30 p m.. Service
Meeting 8 20 p. m

RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church -

Solem St . Rutland Donald Kgrr . Sr .
posfor . 8ud Stewart supermtendent
Sunday School 10 a m . evening wor dup , 7:30pm Wednesday e11emng ser vice 7 30p m

CHURCH OF GOD of Prarhocy. located

ontheO J While Rood of h1ghwoy 160.
Sunday School 10 o m Supenntendent
John Loveday . F~r s t Wednesday n•ght of
month CPMA services second Wad·
nesday WMB meet•ng , thtrd through fifth
youth serv• ce George Croyle, pastor

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - S70 Gtano

St , Middleport. Sunday School , 10 a . m .
morntng worsh•p . 11 a. m even ing war ·
sh1p , 7 p m Wednesday ewen1ng B•ble
study and P.royer meet•ng , 7 p m . Af
fil•oted w1th Southern Bopltst Con vention
BRADFORD CHURCH Of CHRIST ~
R1 cky Gilbert pastor . Steve Ptckens .
superintendent. Sunday School -9 30 o .
m . Church Serv~ees . 10 30om

JUBILEE

CHRISTIAN

CENTER

-

George's Creek Rood Rev . C. J Lemley .
pastor , John Fellure, superintendent
Church school . 9 30om . morning worship, 10:30. evenmg servtce. 7 p m . Bible
Study Thurs . 7 p m Clones for oil oges .
Nursery prov1ded for worship services .
ST PAUl lUTHERAN CHURCH . CotnOt
of Sycamore and Second Sh ., Pomeroy .
The Rev Wil liam Mkldleswartt, Pastor
Sunday School ot 9·45 a .m and Church
Servtces 11 a m

SACRED HEART, Re• falher Paul D.

Welton . pastor Phone 992 2825 Satur day e 11 en1ng Moss . 7:30, Sunday Moss . 8
and 10 a.m , Confeuton. Saturday. 7 7

30 p.m
VIOORY BAPTIST - 525

N 2nd S1 .
M1dd leport James E Keesee . pastor .
Sunday mom1ng worsh1p, 10 am .:
evenmg servtce , 7, Wednesday evening
~orsh1p , 7 p m , ViSitation . Thursday ,

b30pm

TRINITY Chnstion Assembly . Coolv•ll•
- Gilbert Spencer , pastor . Sundoy
school , 9 30 a m . morning worship . 1)
am Sundoy ev entng serviCe 7 30.p m .·
m1dweek prayer servtce Wednesdcy ,

7 30p.m

Rev. Mark Flynn

Rev. Florence Smith
.

vtces on Sunday at 10 30 a m ond 7 30
p m w1th Sunday school . 9 30 o m B•ble
study Wednesday 7 30 p m

\

'

MOUNT Olive Community Church
lawrence Bush pastor . Mow Folmer Sr:
Superintendent Sunday School and morn•ng worshtp, 9 30 o.m Sunday evening
servtce. 7 p m .. Youth meetmg and Bibl•
study Wednesday 7 p m
UNITED fAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Rev Robert Sm1 th , Sr .,
pastor . Rev James Cund1ft, osstStont
pastor Sunday School, 9 30 a m morning worsh1p 10·30 o m . Bll&amp;ntng wors h•p
7 30. Women ·, Feilowsh•p
Tuesdays , 10 a m ; Wednesday mght
prayer serviCe 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPliST Church, Ma son meat
at United Steel Workers Unton Holl .
Ra1lrood Streel . Mosan Morning worship 9:30am Sunday School10 30om
Even•ng Servl£8, 7 p m Preyer meeting
Wednesday . 7 30 p m Mid -Week Btble
Study , Thursday, 7 p m

FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Re• Nyle

Borden . pastor
Cornelius Bunch .
supenntendent Sunday school 9:30
am .. second and fourth Sundays war ·
ship service at 2 30 p .m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main St .. Middleport Rev Cal vtn Mar
nls, pastor Mrs El11m Bumgardner .
tupt Sunday school . 9 30 o m .. worsh•p
service . 10·.45 am

BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTlST

CHURCH. Route t . Shade. Pastor Don

Black. Afiiloaled wolh Southern Baptlll

Convention Sunday school , I 30 p m ..
Sunday worship , 2:30 p m .~ Thursday
eveni,ng B1blestudy , 7 p.m
PEfiTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY . Roclne ,
Rout•124 , William Hoback , pastor Sun day achool , 10o. m.; Sunday evening ser ·
viCie, 7:00 p m . Wednesday evening ser·
vlceat7.

CARPENTER 8APTIST. Dan Cheadle.
Supl. Sunday School, 9:30a.m. Morning

Worship, 10:30 a . m. Proyer Ser&gt;;"ke,
a! ..mat. Sundays.

MIDOLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Thifd

Ave., the Rev. Clarlc. BQker . pastor. Corl

NoHingham, Sunday S&lt;hool Supt. Suh·
day School 10 a. m. - cla11n far all
ogos; Evening 1ervlc01, 6:00. Wed·
nftcloy Stu&lt;;. 7:30 p.m. Youth sorvlc'n,
7:30p.m. Frodav.
ECaESIA FElLOWSHIP, 128 Mill 51.,
Middlol)ort. Po1tor Is Brother Chuck Me·
Phenon. Sunda~ School 01 10 o. m. Sor·
vlcot Sunday """"'ng at 7 p.m, and Wed·
nosdoy at? p.m.
•
\

�\

Page-8-The

'"'~
. f¥ay, July 9; 1982;,.,'
t

Pom..oy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

reapportionmen~

Record number of
By Allsoda&amp;ed Press
WUson says the reason plans are
Twenty-two states need federal
being rejected Is simple: "They dis·
government approval to reshape
criminate agatltst minorities."
all or part of their congressional
Under the Voting Rights Act, ex·
and state legislative dlstlicts to con·
tended for 25 yeats In a White
form to the 198lcensus, and the Jus·
House signing ceremony June 29,
lice Department has rejected or
areas found to have discrlmJnated
forced changes In these electoral
In the past must have Justice !)e.
plans In record numbers.
partment approval of election law
Georgia and Mississippi have
changes before they can go Into
sued In federal court for t~e right to
effect.
draw their own congressl6nalllnes
The preclearance provision, deafter their plans were turned down
signed to prevent states from Umlt·
under provisions of the recently relng minority officeholders through
newed Voting Rights Act -or 1965,
gerrymand~ lng or by makJng It
and many other states are clashing
hard for minorities to vote, covers
with the federal government.
aU of nine states- Alabama, Geor·
"So far In this review period, we
gla, Louisiana, Mississippi, South
have rejected more than we dld In
Carolina, Texas and VIrginia In the
the complete review In the '70 cen·
South, plus Arizona and Alaska sus - and we're only haltway
and parts of 13 others.
through," says Justice Department
According to Carl Gable, who
spokes'man John V. WUson.
tracks reapportionment cases for
Some st11te officials say there Is
the Justice Department In Wa·
contusion about what the Justice . shlngton, as of this week new conDepartment's standards are, but
!lresstonal districts have been

approved - In sdme cases after
challenges and negotiation -In AI·
abama, Arizona, Louisiana, North
Carolina, New York. VIrginia, New
Hampshire, California, Connect!·
cut, Florida and Massachusetts.
Georgia and Mississippi are appealing the' Justice Department
challenges to federal district court,
and federal judgea redrew district
lines following ch11Uenges In Texas, ,
South Carolina and Colorado.
A review of Hawall's proposed
lines Is pending. Michigan and
Idaho have not submitted plans;
Alaska, South Dakota and Wyom·
lng wW have only one congressman
each, elected at large.
A decade ago, only Georgia and
NeW York saw their Congressional
plans scrapped.
The situation at the state leglsla·
ttve level Is even less settled, ac·
cording to Gable; with approval for
bothhousesofthe~Iafure,agaJn
followlng objections in some cases.

plans get rejection

achieved In only nine states:
Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut,
South Dakota, Georgia, North Ca·
rollna, New York, VIrginia and
Arizona.
"The states and jurlsdlctlons are
reflecting the mood of the times,
making efforts to dilute black vot·
lng strength," said Joseph Lowery,
president of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference. "The Jus!lee Department Is reacting to
this."
Frank R. Parker, director of the
Voting Rights Project of the Lawy·
ers' Committee for avn Rights
Under Law, gives the government
crEdit fof\"dolng a more effective
job of protecting minority voting
rights."
"During the Nixon admlnlstra·
tlon, the Justice Department was
deferring to the district courts on
thQse decisions. Now the Justice
Department Is malting an lndependent review of all the plans sub-

_,ling to give In on congressional ·..,.
mitied," he said.
wmtam Bradford Reynolds, ·as. redistricting In Atlanta, where tile i•
slstant. attorney general for clvD Justice Department says a district ::
rights, said the department has putting bjacks. In a slight majority, ::
found little evidence of blatant, In·
nonetheless discriminates against• ••
black voters: Some clvU rights ad· •",
tentlonal dlscrlmlnatiori.
"In most Instances, the leglsla· vocates believe minorities should. :;
lures did not set out to draw dis· · make up 70 to a&gt; percent of a dis~ : ;
criminatory districts," he said In a trtct to assure election of a mlnorl""
'r ·
•·J
recent statement. "However, In candidate.
,,
,.
many cases, the legislative pr~s
"
resulted In plans that had a dDutlng Surgical patient
""
effect on minority votJng streng.
'•
!h... Almost without exception, we
Envoy RBy VIning of the Salva· , ·
have found state authorities 1.0 un· tlon ArrnY Is a surgical patient at.~ :
dersland our concerns and be wD· the Veterans Memortal Hospital. {
ling to meet them."
- •' .
He Is In room 136.
A major Issue In the Voting
'.
Rights extension battle was
""
whether a ·plan could be thrown out Friday dance
. ''
If Its effect was discriminatory, or
There wm be a dance Friday, · ':
whether Intentional discrimination
would have tobeshown.TheSenate July 9, 8-ll::JJ p.m. at the Rutland '
.avtc Center. Singles are $2. cou· ; .
agreed to the effects test.
In Georgia, state Attorney Gen· pies, $3. Music UnUmlted wiD p~ : ·
•·
era! Michael Bowers was not wD· vide entertainment.

INSULATION
VIIIYL I
AI.U.IIIUII SIDIIIG

.

........

1 Cilrd of

ThanJ~;;s

(pcltd tn ildvanceJ

'2 Citrd of Thanks (Pa•d '"

r~dv;m ce)

3 Announcements

21 Busoness OpporruM ~

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

I

51 Household GOOds
52·CB , TV &amp; Radio Equopmenl
53 Antiques -

22 Money to Loan
23· Professtonttl Servtces

4 Gtvea way
5 Happy Ads

'

8 Public Sa le

32 Mobile H omes for Sa le
33 Farms for Sa le
34 Business Bu•ld•ngs
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 RP.a l Estate Wanted

&amp; Auctton

9 Wanted to Buy

~

· · ·· ~ ··

..'

41 Houses for Rent

13 Insurance
14-Business Tratn1ng

44 Apartment for Rent
45·Furnlshed Room s

16 Radto, TV &amp; CB Repatr
17· Mtscellaneous
18·Wanted To do

84 Elecrical &amp; Refr•qerat•on

~~ BUILDINGS
Sires from 4 to 6 and All
wbod bulldtngs 24x36.
Insulated Oog Houses

. New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling
• Electric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs .
•Roofing Work
. 14 Years E;•peroence

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Greg Rpush

Utility Buildings •

Rt. 3, Box 54
Recine,Oh •
Ph. "4-143-2591
6·1Hfc

67s-Pt. Pleasant
451-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882- New Haven
'9s-Letart
937-Buflato

85·General Haulmg
116 M .H. Repair
87·Uphol slery

''
·l
'.

·:

-- -

. 53 OU

Up TO 15 Wor ds

. 54.00

I Aver age 4 wcrds per Ii ne)

YEARS EX P .
• Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio

'.
' ''
,,

"' .

NOTICE TO
TAXPAYERS OF
THE RIO GRANDE
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE DISTRICT
COUNTIES OF
GALLIA ·MEIGS
JACKSON·IIlNTON
Notice is hereby given
that two copies of the
proposed budget
and
estimat e of
cost
of

opera t1on of the R10 Gran

de Community Coll ege
01strtct. Counttes of Ga nt a,
J ac kson, Meigs. end Vin
ton , State of Ohi o, including
the cost of operat ing the

Community Coll ege of said
d1stnct for the f1sca t year
1983, are on fil e 1n t he office
ol
th e
und e r s tgn ed
Secretary
Treasurer of
th e Board of Trustees open

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

I
I
I
I
I
I

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I
Write your own ad and order by matl with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.,

-- -

Nam•-------------------Addreu---------

,.....,____:::::::::i;:::::;;;::_____..,.J

I )Wanted

1 )For Sale
( )Announcement
( ) For Rent

J, _ _ _ _ __

~· -----5.
_ _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __

7. - - , - - - ' - - -

8. _ _ _ _ __

9, _ _ _ __
10. _ _ _ _ __
11. - - - - - 12. - - - - - 13. _ _ _ _ __

24. - -- - - 25. --...,--- - ' -26. - - - - - 27. - - - - - 28. - - - - - 29

15.
16.------

35. --~---

14. - - - - . . . , . . - -

TOOLS - FURNiTURE
COOKWARE
MISCELLANEOUS

22. - -- - - 23

30. - - - - - 31. - - - - - 32. - - - - - 33.
34.

'

AUCTION

19, - - - -- 20. - - - - -21 . _ __ _ __

1
2.

•

17.
1$.

SATURDAY, JULllOthAT

I

I·

Mall This Coupon with R .e miHance
The Dally Sentinel
111 court St.

L-'----~~':':.~~0::..4~~·-------·
•

7:00 P.M.
AT

Corner of Depot &amp; Main

Rutland, Ohio

S&amp;KAUQ.I ON

I

,.

3·1J.tfc

mo

TOM HOSKINS

Ph. 9~9·2160 or 949-2322
NO· tfc

Free Estimates
4·20·1fc

DABBLE
SHOP

. •·

CHECK OUT OUR
BIBLE SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
Pac·Man Party Packs
and Cake Arailable
6·21 ·1 mo

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

'
,•

Rut Eatata - a-r;ot

EUGEN~ .LONG

Phone

54

1-(614)·992-3325

¥111)1 &amp; Aluminum

Complete Iutter wott,
complete remodelina,
IOOflna of 111 types.
Wot1ed in home 1111 20

your wiring
~eds;
furnaces
''pair service and
.rnstallation.
n
~esidential
&amp; Commercial

MID SUMMER
SAVINGS
,·oN-

II

_REMNANTS
EN·o s· OF.ROLLS
GRASS CARPET
AND SAVE $2 ·~ $5
ON SHAG

608 E. MAIN
.
PDMEROY, OHIO
PH.992;2259
PRICE REDUCED- A split entry, three bedroom
home with 2lf:J baths, family room, full basement,
garage on app• . one acre land. Reduced to k5,900
Own~r financing available.
•
, ·r
ASSUME THE LOAN- On this two bedroom home
with 11'2 acre lot In Rutland with u ,130 down 28'h
y~ar. term at ll'lf. Interest, payment~ at
$337.00/month on a renialntng betance of $26,870.62 •.
for a total price Of

m .ooo.

LAND CONTRACT- Beat the high Interest rates
with 10'11. owner financing on !lois neat three
be&lt;jrool'(l, one floor plan home in Pomeroy on large
tot with garage. With
down and$286.78/month
for ten year term for a total price of $25,700.

s.c.ooo

SYRACU~E - • Three bedroom ' home ~tv

remodeled on double 101. FUlly i~sulated. Assume
toan witH $5,293 down at 10'12% Interest for 27 years
$213.00/montt\ payment for a totat price Of $25,000. '
FARM -

LONG B,OTTOM -

Appr&gt;C. 71 acres ·
remodeled three
bedroom home, new vinyl Stdll)g, Insulated. NeW
two car garage. Asking $55,000 or
will sell
house. garage and smelt acreage separate.

wooded acreage with newly

""'net'

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI •• , •••.•••••• m,t1tl
Dottie Tumer . . ...... .. .. . &gt;.• ...••..•.
J"!!n Trussell ... . ........ . .. .... ... ... : •~
Office • ••••.•• ~ •.•• , . • ... .• ••••• ••••• •
I2Jt

:..tt-un
m.

NEW LISTING 3
acres of wOOds woth
T.P. water on hard
road in Racine SChool
Dtslriclfor iust55,000.
NEW LISTING' - Ux65
Kirkwood mobile home
and 2 lots. Central air·
heat. nice equipped kit·
chen, cbain -link fenced
yard, 2 car garage·
shop. Nice for only
S32,SOO.
-

• Stainless Steel
• Fiberglass
• V•nvlliners

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

yean.

1·30N7H64
C. L. Kitchen
Mason, W. Va .
6· 20· 1 mo

F"' estimltes
call 843-3322
5-12·2 roo. pd.

Call74'1· l1!1S

''

WE POOL
TOGETHER

Superior Sidin&amp; Co.

For all

VIRGIL B. SR .'
316 E. 2nd 51. '

"

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL

•I

'1

,•
r I

.'!

,,
,.
::
•1
'.
'I
''
::
,,

CHEAP! E . - 6 room
frame, bath. gas heat,
stove,
refrigerator,
~carpeting and view of , '
river. Asking116.000.
r'
CHEAPIE
3 ,'',
.·bedrooms, gas rurnac:e._L
carpeting, new
l:!asement, near stores.
usiS17AJl!lt; l ,
· "
8 ACif:IN .!... Good ' '
'.
ace " lllf "" ~lldren. 3 , .
drOQI\ft, ~ bath, full. r:
basement with garage, : i
Ohio Power and gOOd • 1
financing.
Asking
j $25,000.
'

~

t HORSE FARM - Lots
Of gOOd grass. wOOds·
and fl(nces. 2 bedroom
home, large mod:ernbath, T. P. water, fur·
nace and
$.12,500. BUT.. .
CHEAPIE- Almost
acre, ~ bedrooms. "."'n·-1!.
full basement and
ly
pa l nted
1
1$17,500
· ~ HOUSES- Bat~ . ci ·
tv .water, gas · heat,
storms, nice large
yard, near stores in ·
Racine . Only $37.500.
COMPLE.TE·\ T ~· will
reduce the pnce of this
one under renovation, if
taken soon ..
LOVELY ·- 3 bedroom
1With 2 rentals.
hOI water heat. 2
baths, full base·•
ment, nice carpeting,
and neat as· a pin. Ask·
ing only' $65,000.
8UILDINCO SITES ,
We •have several,
drop in and see. "
WILL ' TRADE take J"oblle 1\ome on,
or sell this 11 room
trome with 2 rentals for
$25,000. :
WE
ADVE~TI5E
YOUR PLACE S ot , ,
Ttt,)ES A MONTH. '

2 Famoly Yard Sa l e First
house on right commg Into
Thurman Thurs , Frt &amp;
Sol. Clothing &amp; mosc .

BASEMENTS!
PATIOS
DRIVEWAYS
.PARKING LOTS
CEMENT FINISHER
,.' RICHARD GARF!ELD
985·4464

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail of all ages
available up to 8 Weeks
in any quantity
Eggs Also Available
ctetl LaBonte
36061 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom, OH.
45343

6·Ul mo

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

Woth in one day ot each
Conveyor- 24"•50'
T ores .,- 9 :00K20
other but a couple of miles
Brakes - A1r ;
apart · one hound dog, one
Screen
Plant wilrl collie shepherd-husky type
rec•procating plate f eeder;
mixed, tri colored with
Dozer Trap;
some apparent medical•on
Fixed Posit1on Trap on ears Call 30~ · 675 · 2169
Wing Wal l;
anytime and identify.
Radtal Feed Control
Ga te;
Engine Platform and Reward 2 fox hounds.
female. black . tan and
Ladder;
Trough1ng Idlers,
wh ite; male brown and
Power Hydraule c L 1ft white 304-675·5365. 304-895·
Oeck ;
3419 or 304·458 ·1565.
Sc r ee n s
V 1br a ting
60"K 10' .
To be deltvered and set 7
, ____,Y_,Ac:.rd
,_,
S:::A!!
Ie:...__ _
up at the Meigs County H ig hway Garage . Th e Four Family Yard Sale
, front of the envelope July 9 &amp; 10 Higley Barber
enclostng the btd must be Shop. New women &amp;
· mark ed "Sea led B•d . ch•ldrens cloth mg.
Oesande r Plant" Bidder
1 to furn 1sh ·their own bid
Garage Sale July 9 · 10th, 9
torm
'
AM to 5PM 101 River 51 ,
The Board of Metgs Kanauga,Oh .
County Commtsstoners
may accept the lowest bid,
Sale
Starling
or select the best btd for the Vard
intended purpose , and !O:OOAM Sot. July 10, 501
reserve the roght to reject Jackson Pike. GalhpoiiS.
any or all bids. and/ or any 112 mile past fiospital. 4
port thereof .
HP Johnson outboard
MEIGS COUNTY motor. dehumidifier. b&amp;w
COMMISSIONERS TV, doors, bicycle, mise
Mary Hobsletter, Clerk
17) 2. 921c
2 Family Yard Sate 1804
Chestnut St. Friday &amp;
Saturday. Rain cancels

COLEMAN'S

Vard Sale Sal. 10 tol ? 614
lsi Ave • Galt ipotis

Corne~~~~~- 2nd

110 Chillocothe
Rd. New &amp; used items . Fur
niture, clothes, dishes, od
ds &amp; ends. 9 to 6, Friday
July 9th to sunday eventng
the 11th.

lllllOLEPORT
~lllitt01 &amp; llajol
Auto &amp;Trudl Repair
ofree Estimates
•Reasonable Ratn
Open la.m.-6 p.m.
Mon. thru Sal

Vard Sale 1910 Chatham
Ave., Gallipolis. Smeltzers
&amp; Halls. Furniture, dishes.
CB's &amp; misc . Sal. 10 AM.

614-985-434~
612~/lmo

Yard Sale Sat. 10th, 40 Neol
Ave., Gallipolis . First time
ever . Sweeper, sewing
m ~c hine . children school
clothes, toys, couch &amp;
chair,
clothing
for
everyone. some new items
&amp; much more.

''

I

PULLINS )A

L~~VATIMG

a

l -'- Bac~hoes
, -oumpTruct&lt;s
' -LCio Boy
: -Trencher
• -water
: '- Sewer
1- Gas Lines
: -septic svst\!ms

:

'IOiert:lysell

J&amp;F

GARAGE

CONTRACTING
~

St. Rt.124Pomeroy, OH !
\

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
\

Also Transmission

Large or Small J~bs
PH . 992·2478
•
6·27· 1 mo Pd

PH. 992·5682
or 992-712L
3·24-tfc

13

Announcements

I' ~WEEPER

•uckhoe
•exc1v1ting
septic systems
•Awater, sewer
&amp; gu tines
•dump truck
•limestone
•

•

and sewing
machine repa ir , parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
!delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mite up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
«6 · 029~ ..

I

Ucensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992·7201

3.29 •11 c

Golf
Lessons .
John
Teaford . Chester, Ohoo.

.:- ---------t----------lf----------·l ~ick

own gree-,;oeans·
half your
runners
.
$5 .00
bu. Dallas Hilt. 247· 266~ .

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

Custom

6· 27·1

and

plumbin~o elec:lric, sidlna.

276 Sycamore Sl
': Middleport, Ohio

,.

kitchtll

bathroomL Rtmodelinl,
add-ons, new homes,

Call992·6259

"'

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

'

mo.

· FREE
ESTIMATES ,
PH. 992-6011

CANDLELIGHT INN

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Electrolysis
St. Rt. 7-Between Mid- 1
Center A .M A . approved,
dleport &amp; Cheshire, Oh.
.Doctor referats, by ap·
PROUDLY PRESENTS
f'lntment only . 304·675·
Tue s.- Lo~llits Nltltt 1-2·10
Weds .-• .cerlry Dr•ft
1.234.
NJittt 1-2: J0
rnurs.-Poot Tourn •2 :1a

Fri. &amp; sat. LIV E BANDS
1Or ink I Drtwn eactl night I
THIS MONTH'S BANDS
Wf'CI. 6 Tttun

•

MARSHAlL TENNANTt· l
Fri &amp; So~t
LONE WOLF 11-l
we 11.lcUy o~'hftounce tNt ••en
nitftt Ol ftll IIIMI Wt Ollet"

j•

Giv~away

TINY female calico kitten.
found on 1·77. Call 30H95·
3629. We wilt deliver.
&amp; groy

3 famtly, Sat . only, Hub
bard St. Syracuse. Fur
niture. glassware, clothing,
antiques. toys , many other
items
Huge yard sale, July Blh ,
and 9th 9·6 Wolfe Pen Rd .
Charles King residence.
3 famoly . July 10 and 11.
beyond Hilchin Post. Rl. 7.
Pomeroy. Playpen, tur tatns, mattress, baby and
toddlers clqthes, avon,
tapes, jeans, remanent
pieces. snow ttres, truck
tacks, fresh produce,
more.
July 8·9. 9·5. July 10 ·9·12.
Rust1c Hills June St .
Syracuse. Nice clothing,
girts sizes 10· u. womens
clothing, 12·16, Barbie
stuff. toys and games,
chltdrens encyclopedias.
and books,
2 good
matresses and box springs
with frames, 10 sp. bicycle,
20 in. bicycle, several other
nice items.

dr.nk 11td drOWft. Sctme *ll'lts

DUGAN'S
ALIGNMENT
&amp; ELI!CTRONIC
•
'

SPIN WHEEL '
BALANCE

' ' BHr Freat·End
~ce

bependable,
guar ·
tntwed Work. 9 yrs. Ex·

rechlced durlft9 bancl
Ot.lr Hrs. M..-.-Frl.t: ...2:»:
sun. 4·2 :M. c•rry ·Out
8"r IMI Wint Av•i..ltle It

s.t. •

Mll'rimu..f Prkn-TM!low"t.
PHONE ,.HIJ

711mo.

TWO kittens, 7 weeks old, 1
blond, 1 calico, . both blue
ey..s, :IJJ.·675·7677.

YARD sate Friday &amp; Satur·
day, 21U Monroe Ave., Pt.
Pleasant. 9 a.m . until!? .

11 BOXES &amp; 6
sale goods, 1
Jericho RD.,

h-----'------JI Thompson •. · •.
, FOU Ft garbage bags of
good lleed clothing, :IJJ.·675·

' 7354.

2 family yard sale. Monday
July 12, 9 a.m . 487 So. ~th .
St. Middleport, Oh.

.

YARD .. le, Frl~~y &amp;
Saturday, Ptvmate Rd.
Gallipolis Ferry. Chltdrens
&amp; adults clothes, new· born·
size 11. misc.
FIVE family yard sate,
9, 10. 9 a.m .·? 21u Blr·
Ave. Pt. Pleasant.
Clqtttes, toys&amp; misc.

--~------~--~--- · ··

'

V ard Sale rain or shone.
Sal. &amp; Sun . July 10 &amp; 11 .
Time 9:00 to 5:00. Route 35
across trom Ga llia Auto
Sales. Watch for stgns
Tools, clothes, f ishing
equip , and mtsc

Yard Sale Wed Sa t 10 7.
Roush Hollow Rd Clothes,
__ _ . _ . _ .
992·5932
anyttme.
bales . 61&lt;·992·5265 or toys, tools, dishes and baby
Public Notice
Items.
. -. - -NOTlCifTo - - ..
Losi· Female goal with
HE AVY EQUIPMEN T
chain and collar. 6U·985· Yard Sale July 8 &amp; 9. 402
DEALERS
4291 .
3rd . St.. Kanauga Ratn
1n accordance with Sec·
cancels
lion 307 .86 ORC seated bids
will be received by the DOG gOOd ch1l ds pet, phone
Meigs County Board of 304-675·4333
Garage Sa le Thurs .·Fri.
Commissioners. en their of·
9AM
lo 5PM . B i ll
fice, located in the CourWooldridg
e
restdence .
thouse, Pomeroy , Oh 1o
Good mdse.. 4 mi past
Lostand Found
45769, unttl 12 noon on July 6
20. 1982. and opened at 2 LO'S:r Diamond ring 1 1/2 Holttr Hospital SR 160 N .
1 P M . on July 20 and read
aloud fQr the fol lowing cara t , size 7. REWARD vard Sale 911 Thtrd Ave
letha
Young ,
equipment; each b•d to 5500 .
Friday J uly 9, 9 3 .
meet the conditions and Pleasant Valley Rd ., Rio Womens, gtrls, young boys
Gran~&lt;
.
Oh
.
Call
61045·
spec ificat•ons as follows .
clothtng , household mi se
One used portable o esan· 5092
der Plant ;
1-------1979 or newer with
Found·Mens glasses tn
max• mum of SOO hours;
-Pomeroy . Sentinel office 8 --- -- -PuDitc
Sa le
Diesel Engine;
992 ·2156 .
&amp; Auction
Feeder Hopper (7)
Cubtc Yard

Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992·2063

'.

----------..

Public
--- - -Notice
- - - ---

may be held. As to any ac ·
t• on, •ncluding receipt of
verified complaints, any
person may obtain notice of
further actions. and ad·
dit i onal
information .
Unless otherw1se provided
on notices of particular ac ·
tions. all communications
shall be sent to : Hearing
Clerk, OEPA. P.O. · Bo•
10~9. Columbus. OH . 43216.
Ph . (614) ..U·6037 . Consult
Commission.
ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC
The Public Utilit 1es
Chaps . 3745·47 and 3766 5
Commissoon of Ohto
for requirements
Secr ~ tar y Treasurer
By : Oavtd M. Polk,
Final approval of plans
July 8
Secretary are speciflca tjons
PubliCN-ot.ce- - (7) 2. ~ . 6, 7, 8, 9. 1171c
Chester
Tupers Plains
- - - - --- - - --Wager District
.,-'- -- -1 Reedsville, Oh.
PUBLIC NOTIGE_ _P~_b)o~ ~O!t~e
Notice ts hereby given
Effective Date 07/ 01182
that on Saturday. July 10th,
This final action not
1982, atlO:OO a.m . a public County: Metgs
preceded by proposed ac·
sale will be held at 105
PUBLIC NOTICE
lion and is appealable to
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
The followmg were EBR . Rural Water
Ohio. to sell for cash the rece ived/ prepared by the
following collateral :
Ohio
Environmental
1978 Ford, 2 Or Sedan, Protection
Agency
Mfr .' s
seroat
No . !OEP,Al last week. Ef·
8W81LI81298 - Model fective dates of •final ac
Granada
non~ ~rd (ssuance dates of
The Farmers Bank and proposed
' actions are
Savings
Company, stated . Final
action may be
• Pomeror, Ohto, reserves appep:led, tn writing, within
·-Public
- ··--- Notice
- --- . the righ to bid at this sale,
and to withdraw lhe above 30 days of the date of 1s
to
I he
En ·
IN THE COMMON
~eh1cle prior to sale. Fur· not1ce ,
PLEASE COURT,
!her, the Farmers Bank vironmenlal Board of
and Savings Company Review, Rm 101, 250 E.
PROBATF. DIVISION
reserves the nght to reject Town St., Columbus. OH .
MEIGS COUNTV,OHIO
any or all bids submitted .
43215. Notice of any appeal
IN THE MATTER OF SET ·
Further. vehi cles are shall f&gt;e filed with I he dorec· T L EM E NT 0 F A C ·
sold tn the condition they tor Wllhin 3 days. Proposed
COUNTS,
PROBATE
are tn w1th no expressed or actions Wtll become final
COURT, ME IGS COUNTY,
1mplied warranti es given .
unless a written ad · OHIO
judical•on hearong request
Accounts ~nd vouchers of
(7) 7. 8. 9,3tc
is submitted within 30 days the
following
"amed
df the ISSuance date; or the fidl clartes have been flied
Public Notice
director rev1sesl.withdraws
in the Probate Court, Meigs
the proposed action Any
county, Ohio, for approval
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilit ies Com· person may submit com - and settlement:
CASE NO. 23560 Final
miss1on ,..~ Ohto has set for ments and/or request a
public hearing Case No . 82 · meeting re9arding any Account of Robert C.
769·GA·GCR to review the non·final actton within 30 PaYisen, executor of the
gas cost recovery ·rates of days of the date indicated . Estate of Clara L . Paulsen,
Deleased
the Syracuse home Utilities "Action", as used above
CASE NO. 22298 Final
Company,
Inc .,
the does not include receipt of
operations of its purchaed a verified complaint. If Account of Calvin Oliver,,
Executor Of the Estate of
Gas Adjustment Clause signocant public interest
e•lsts. a PUblic meet•ng
Bessie Oliver, Deceased
8- - --=
P-u;-'
bl:,.ic-1' s"'a"''1~
' :..__..
CASE NO 23654 Final
&amp; Auction
Account of Robert Riggs,
Administrator
of
lhe
I'
Est.a le ol Hobart F . Riggs,
Deceased
CASE NO 23348 Final
Account of Paul' J. Gerig,
Administrator
of
the
Esta.te
of
Ceil · 1. ·
Longstreth, Deceased
CASE NO. 23375 F irfal
Acount of Manning D. Web·
sler , E•ecutor of the
-Estate of Elsa j! . Kimes,
Deceased
CASE NO. 23~21 Final
Account of Beverly A .
Ridenour, E•ecutrix Of the
Estete Qf Charles S. Beller,
·Deceased ·
•
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, said accounl1
will be for heartng before
said Court on the"~ day of
August, 1982, at which lime
safcl accounts will 'be con·
sidered and tonflnued from
day to day until finally
disposed of. •
Any person interested
may file written exceptions
to said acc011nts or to mat·
. ters Dlrtalntno to . 111e
SHERMAN TILLISl OWNER
txecutlon of the trust, not
less than five clays prior to
LONNIE NEAL: AUCTIONEER
the date set for hearing.
Robert S. Buck
TERMS OF SALE: CASH OR CHECK
Judge
Common li'leas Court,
WITH POSITIVE I.D.
Probate DIY Ilion,
Meigs County, Ohio
' '
(7) 9 lie

"Beautiful, Custom
Buill Gueges"
Call for free siding
esttmetes, 949·2101 or
949-2WI.
No SundAy Calls

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

247·3534

'.

'''.

-- _ _P~bll£.~!1c_e _-­
and related maners. ThtS
hearing Is scheduled to
begtn at IO :oo a.m on
Thursday, August 5, 1982.
at the Offices of the Com
mosslon, 375 South High
51 . Columbus. Ohto 43215 .
All interestea persons
will be p•ven an op·
portunity to be heard. Fur
ther information may be
altai~d by contacting the

BISSELL
SIDING·CO.

insertton .... ...... .$7.00

47 Wonted to Rent
4R·Equlpmenttor Renr

to mspec hon ol the public
pur sua nt
to
tile
requirements of law.
A publoc hearong on the
proposed budget for the R tO
Gra nd e
C o mmunity
College Dtstro cl wt II be held
at All en Hall201 . Roo Gran·
de, Ohto. on Jul y 13, 1982. at
12 .00 noon .
RlO GRANOE
COMMUNI TV COLLEGE
DlSTRICT
Box 326
Dr Herman L. Koby

6 II I

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of ott types
.Siding
• Remodeling
• Freeesttmates
e20 Yrs. experience

16

~----------------------------------------------._----------------------------------------~~ : 1
------- -

Ph. 992-7583
or 992· 2282

'O'Brien Electric
Service

:

.

Up to lS'Words . On&lt;' o~v insertion

46-Space for rent

-Public
- - - Not1ce
-

&amp; Aluminum
SIDING

'Siresstarttrom 30x24"

49 -For L ease

-- ·' 'PublicN.otice

Vinyl

'

'.
446-Gallipolis
367-Cheshire
:188-VInlon
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dist .
643-Arabta Dis I.
379- Walnut

367-0~1.

~c:=======::;:t==========m;:::======~::::=G1--:-:-:=:::-:-:--::-:-:-:---1300

~

•

Meigs County
Area Cod0614
992-Mtdateport
Pomeroy
985-Chester
343-Porttand
247-Letart Falls
949-Racine
742- Rulland
667-Coolvllle

Mulll Family
Saturday
Only . Ut ility trailer . chi na,
cubboard, 2 chatn saws. 3
air cond .• pictures. 2 wOOd
stoves, storm windows, nlc
nacs. much more. Mtdway
on old Rt. 7 In Addison, 6U·

Hay· cut your own. FIat·
wOOds area Approx . 200 to

following telephone exchanges. ..
Galloa County
Are,, Code614

-~· -

Border Collie 2 yrs. old,
female to gOOd home. Call
614-379-2703 .

:: ALL STEEL

Mason Co., wv
Area Code 304

--·--

- - -·--- -

I

91 Home Improvements
82 Plumbing &amp; Healong
83·Excavatong

61 Farm Equtpment
62 Wanted to buy
63 Lives toe k
64 Hay &amp; Gra .n
65-Seed&amp; Fertilizer

43 Farm s for Rent

1S Sc hools Instruc tion

t on~•

-----------

Brown sofa. Call «6·188'1
between Band 12AM.

Classified pages cover the

&amp;epvlees

42 Mob tle Homes for Rent

Ltcens.id a Boftdld
Phone 94t·22fS
or94N417
3·3-lfn

.

1 female, spayed, half
Dachshund and half
Beagle, 7 yrs . old . Moving,
needs good home. Call 61~·
245·9502.

- -~-

Garage Sole Thurs., Fri. &amp;
Sat at brick house, corner
Of Berger &amp; Chatham Ave.
(5 Family) . dishes, jars,
curtains, toys. coffee &amp; end
tables, TV. childrens
clothes&amp; misc. items

2 kirtens ro gOOd home. Call

"

Trucks for Sa le
73 vans&amp; 4 wo
1• Motorcycles
75·Boals &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts&amp; Accessones
77 Au to Repair
78 Campmg Equ,pment

Rentals

11 Help Wanted
12 S•tuat•on Wanted

••

71 Autos for Sale

55·Buildong Supplies
56 Pel s for Sal e
57 Muscia l Instruments
58 Fruits &amp; v egelables
59 For Sa le or Trade

31 Homes lor Sa le

"

n

54-M isc . M erc handise

6 L os t and Found
7 Yard Sa le f patd '" r1dvanr l')

.... . .. ... ...
.......
.. .
&amp;erwlees

It

vice, w1ter, sewer, pon--

ds,
foundations,
reclematton.

• , trained. Call «6·0467 .

··~-

.1.-' I•

100

•SEAT COVERS
•VINYL TOPS
•CONVERT! BLE TOPS
•CARPETS
•A Gomplete Line of
Automobile Upholstery
7-1- 1 mo. pd.

I · ~ kitte;s-:&amp;;~old:- iiti;r

:·

-·

PHOtft 992. 2156

'"

....

U.S. Rl. 50 East
Guysvttte, Ohio
Authorlzld Joi)R Deere,
New Hollana. Bush Hilt
Farm Equipment
Deeter
Farm Eq'uipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·Hc

I

Yellow killen, blue eves.
Call ~· 3428.

6 puppies. 3 male and 3
female. Cali6U·388·8155

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classtfled Dept.
111 Court $t., Pomeory, Ohio 4.5769.. • 'J ~

~

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Dour .. blckhoe .., • .

3 bdr. brick, great location.
1 112 bl from park . full
basement , extra
lot ,
fireplace, mod . kitchen.
carpeted Ca ll 446·A826
- - . ..
FOR SALE BV OWNER
Small house. rural water
and electri c. no ba th J S
miles from town with gar
den and storage bldg.
From Rt. 218 first hou.. on ·
Kriner Ridge Road . For
quick sate 56,900 tncludmg
septic t ank permit. Call
4~ 2917

- ··--~----·

'

''

.

.... .

BOGGS

.. ..

The Daily Sent~nel

... ..._, ... .,

C&amp;M
DCAVAnNG
AND •
CO{fSTRUCTION

302 Mechi ntc St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH . 99HSO.

•tnsutatton
•Storm Doors
•Stoi'm1Windows
•Repfatement
Windows
•New roofing
Free Estimates
J11mes Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

:j

.-------------~-----------------

. .

'DAN'S ·
AUTO TRIM

Rick
P earson,
Ex
pertenced AUCTIONEER
Estates, antiques. farm,
household. Licensed Ohio
WV. Buying antiques 304
773 5785,773 9185
Auctton every Fri. n1ght a1
the Har tford CommunttY
Cenfer . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Consigments of new and
used merchandtse always
welcom e
Rtchard
Reynolds Auctioneer . 275
3069.
EMMA Bell Auct•on Ser
vice Sale each Tu esday , 7
p.m . Mt Alto, accephng
consignments Tuesday 10
a.m . until sa le ttme
Buying and sell tng estates.
Free estate appr aisal, 304
428 8177
9

2 bdr , FR. LR, ktlchen.
bath, 1 car garage unat
Attention RN'S Pomeroy tached, 20x40 new out
H.C c. now has opening for build i ng .
nt ce
lot .
full and part lime RN for 3 Evergreen, $28 ,000. Call
to 11 and 11 to 7 shifts. 61~~446 · 7 476 or 614·446 362~
Upgraded salary and shill
di ff e rential ~ contact Nanc y
VanMeter direc tor of Nur· 5 rooms and bath. utti iiY
room . large patto, garage
song 614·992 6606
and work shop. Total elec·
tri c. well insu lated and
easy to heat. Complelly .
remodted. 539,500 614 742·
ll
Silua1ions Wanted
2211 or afler 5, 614 742·2201 •
v acancy for elderly Room Close to sc hool. Good
a nd board and laundry 614 locatiOn
992 6022 or 992 67411
3 bedroo~
hous ~ tn :J
...
Vinyl S1ding, ·•
Block lagtng, barn roofs Pomer oy
...
painted , fences built, sma ll ftreplac e. ntce 1oca t1 on
:
ca rpent r y
1obs
Free Pr1ced to se ll. $24,000 61.4
992 7446
•
esl tmates 304 895 3338

••

.

W;mted To B_uy

WANTED TO BUY Old fur ·
ntture and Antiques of all
ktnds, call Kenneth Swatn,
446 3159 or 256·1967 •n the
even ings.

--

For rent or sa le 3 bd room,
13
1 bath , family room large ":
SA NDY ANO BEAVER In yard, fru1t trees, '"
surance co has offered Pomer oy $250 month 614
serv ices for fire ins urance 992 5228
'I
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century 8 room house. Double lot, ,..
Farm, home and personal double garage 680 S 2nd
property covera ges are ave
Middleport, Oh
available to mee t '" 516,500 Call614·992·2602
.: ;
d1vidual needs . Contact
Neal Insurance Agency ,
Ill hea lth. Must sell 4 i
agent., Phone 446·1694
houses, 1 a double All ren
ted, plus 5 lots, all 1n one
block on Oh to nver in
15
Sctlools lnstru ct•on
Reedsvtlle
Water, ctty
Karate th e ultt mate tn self gas. 1st 529,000 lakes all
defence all pnvate lessons, Call614-378 6221
M en, women, &amp; chtldren.
lnstruct1on thru bl ack belt
Also avatlable Karate HOUSE M eadowbrook Ad
unrforms puchtng and dtloon. 3 bedrooms. l am tiY
kiCking bags, and protec · room wtth ftr eplace, cen
ttve equipm ent
J erry tral a.r, basement, phone
Lowery &amp;
As soc 1a tes 304 675 1542
Kara te
StUdlO , 143
Burltngton Rd , Ja ckson. Ftve room house. bath,
Oh Call614 286 3074
ftrepla ce. In town $ 11 ,000.
Phone 304 675·5652
17

MISCellaneous

Repatr and reftnt shing of
anttQue furniture. 12 yr s.
Quality
work,
ex p
resonab le rates 614 992
2851
AUTO MECHANlC New
restdent from Florida
Honda , auto, cer tifi ed
mechanic w1th own metnc
tools. Have 6 yrs standard
auto r epair and body wo rk
ex p er 1ence .
BOB
TAYLOR 614 949·2766

Lawn Mowing no yard to
big or small Reliable and
dependable For estimate
call 446 3159 after 6PM 256
1967
Trash collection &amp; haultng
Ca ll 446 4480.

Lady would like to clean of
BEDS IRON , BRASS, old
Can gove references.
furn ttur e, gold, stlver 1«&lt;1·3551
dollars, wood ic~ boxes,
srone IBrS, ant 1ques. etc .•
Complete
households
Write : MD. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992 7760.
21
Bustness
- Op~o!l!'n.."y
Go ld, silve r , sterling,
jewelry , rings, old coins &amp; DEALERS wanted for
currency Ed BurkeH Bar· reveluttonary household
ber Shop, Middleport 992· ftre ext1ngu1shers. Opera1e
your own bustness &amp;
3476.
recetve unltm1ted income
For details call Ed Rahall
OLD FURNITURE . beds. at30~ 253 3320
iron. brass, or wood . Kit·
chen cubbards of all types.
22 .. _M_!J!!_e_y !_o _!.~a!'. __
Tabies, round or square
Wood Ice bo xes Old desks REFINANCE or purchase
and boOkcases . Will buy your home 30 year fi xed
complete household . Gold, rate wva . &amp; Ohio Leader
silver, old money . pocket Mortgage. 77 E. State 51.
watches, chains. rings, and Athens, Oh. 614 592 3051
etc Indian Artifacts of all
-- -- - - - - - - - types Also buying baseball
Professional
cards. Osby Martin 992· 23
Services
6370.
-- -- -------C&amp;L Bookkeepong
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
OLD wocker furnoture , old
for all types of businesses
quills &amp;' linens. call 614·245
Carol Neal
«6 3862
9448.
~--= ~-=~-

--=-=--=-=-

Real Estate

EfRPIDtflltHf

&amp;er"IEes

ci£ - - - - - - - -

3.: ~!'--

Looking for women tn
Athens, Gallia, and Meigs
or others who would like to
get free th ings or who
l ike to become a
for Friendly Home
PariiE!S. Or have parties at
hOone.mt no cost. Call Frten·
ma~ager at 614·
W.l·l541 for more info.
LADIES· CAREER
OP
PDRTUNITY need AREA
SUPERVISOR to hire ,
train, manage toy·glft par ·
ty demonstrators. No In·
vestment, ttextable hours,
work at home, ground floor
opportunity. Call Betty
collecttoday, :IJJ.· 744·0'124.
WAITRESS, maids, bar·
tenders &amp; clerks wanted .
qualifications &amp;
phone • number to: Job
Placement, P.O. Box 102,
Henderson, wv 25106.

.

'

••

FOR sale or trade, 3
bedroom house. all electric. 2'h acre ground, rural
water, 131 ft frontage, 1'11
m11es out Crab Creek Rd
Cal l afler 12 00 p m 304
675 3329
J'l

Mobile Homes

- - -lor
- --Sale
- --- TRIS TA TE
MOBILE
HOMES . USED MOBILE
HOMES. CARS, TRUCKS
GALLIPOLIS
CHE CK
OUR PRI CES CA LL 446
7512.

Wanted to Oo

Buytng
Go ld.
Stiver.
Plattnum , old coms. scrap
ring s &amp; silverware. Datly 1ns1de &amp; outside parnt1ng
quotes available. Also tree est1ma1es Call 446
coins &amp; coin suppl1es for 9499
sale. Spring Valley Trading
co., Sprong Valley Plaza. Inter ior &amp; extenor patn
t1ng
Reasonable rates.
446 8025 or 4~ · 8026 .
Call lor free estimate, 446
We pay cash for late model 4173.
clean used cars
Babysttttng tn my home
Frenchtown Car Co
Call 446·8264 , Addavtlle
Bill Gene Johnson
School Dtstroct
446 0069

il - -itiipwaiite.t__ _

••

-- ·--- ·- . ..
Insurance
- -- - - - - --~

18

.

~

HOI!f~~rS_!!! __
Lovely 4 bedroonr, 2 112
bath home. Garage, family
room . Walking distance
from Holzer Call 446·0025.

For sale nearly new 3 bdr
house on Rt. 160, 2 112
miles. north of Hospital,
large lawn and garden, 3/4
acre . $32.500, at 10'11. In·
terest , same down
payment. Call «6·0157.
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad ·
dition, 3 bedrooms, family
room with flfeptace. cen·
trat air. basement. phone
304·675·1542.
WILL rent or owner finan ·
ce 3 bedroom house in one
Of Mason Countvs' nicest
residential areas. Rent
$350. month or owner tlnan·
ce at 10% with J!i,OOO. down.
Payment approx. $395. a
month. 304 675·4506.

'

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUA L ITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES , • MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 4~ · 3868 .
1980 Windsor U x70, new
cond. Delu xe kitchen. large
ltvong room &amp; bath, f
bedrm. Hidden uttl . room.379 2310.

1980 BAYVIEW OE L UXE .
central air, fireplace, gar
den tub , underpinntng wtth
or w1thout appliances. Call
446 6211 or 388·9916
For sale 1970 Elcona
tra 1ler, 12x6S, total electnc
with wOOd burner Call614
379 2124
1963 L tberly 10K55 with 8ft.
LR expando. 54,500 Call
614 256 1613 or 610 256·6215
Near Ches1er . 2 choice
acres and 1980 3 bd .room
14•70 mobole home S2t ,ooo'
Call614 949·2639
12• 65 Gregor'y 2 bedroom .
Atr cond un1t. porch, gas
heat. Lot also available
614 992 6093 .
1970 Schultz. 2 bd room . air
cond underptnnrng, porch ,
gOOd cond 3 motes above
Chester on Rl 7 $5.000
USED MOBlLE
576 2711 .

HOME

MOBI LE HOM ES MOVED :
L tcensed &amp; .n sured Ca u'
304 576 2711
1973 14K70, 3 bedroom '
mobile home, large rooms, •
304 882 2820
•

13

F.1r_ms for

S a~

142 acre farm near A;f. I
Grande
Good hoos.-, ,
butldtngs and barns, tOble' 1
co base &amp; ltve stcx:k C4ft ;
446 2599

'
West Columbia , 62 acres, 4 •
bedroom house. 304 713· '
5693 .

TWO acre lots·150 fl road •
frontag e,
city water,:
behond 84 Lumber. call 304 •
675·6873, 675 ·3618
Two acres, bla ck lop road,
corner Greer Road . Phone
304-675· 1198.
•
28 ACRES. tobacco allot·;
ment, mineral rights. no •
buildings. $10.500. 304 675 ,
6851.
- --~- ---....: .

_,_

'

ONE acre, drilled well, ;
septic tank, 25•25 un· '
finished block buit.dtno. 1
U .500 . 304-675·2949.
'

- -----·---.

~-

.

�,.
Pag1
3S

10-The

Sentinel .

LOIS &amp; Acreage

()talo

They'll Do It Every Time

1 •

1 acre on Rl. 160, S4,SOO
assumable loan. Ca ll 614388·8437 .

54

Handmade maple
Caii61H45-9132.

. ·- .

in

Pom eroy.

Panoramic view. Will consider land contrac t. 614·992 ·

6254 .

~~~~

1

."'

41

desk.

.

4 CYI ., Lincoln gas welder.
Call614·«6·7476.

Prime 2 acre resi dential
lot. Utilities. overlooking

r i ver

Misc. Merchlndlce

I

DOZER
55
IN ·
TERNATIONAL
TD6
WITH WENCH, $2,500. 77
PLYMOUTtf«&lt; ENGINE .
CALL 61056-1288, AFTER
6,

· ~··'~

.

by

'N' CARLYLE'•

Instruments

Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land contract in town or
country .
Ca ll
Strout'
Rea lty, «6-0008.

3 bdr . house gOOd locaTion.
2 bdr . apt, HUD e•cepted .
A-One Real Estates, Carol
Yeager Realtor. Ca ll 304675·5104 or 675-5386.

l'olotorHome •

1976 23' Coach!"an m91or
nome, -new cona. Call 614256· 1267.
~

Frui t
&amp; Vegetables

'

YE-AH. C' MON 1 wE-'L.L. ~ o w

11

()

0

•

PrOduce, tomatoes, sweet
corn . Wholesale and retail.
Andrew Cross larm-247·
2852
or 992·3734 Aaron
Sayre, 11-43·2064.

llacine. Rt. 1.

3 bed. river view home,

Unfrunlshed 2 bdrm . apr!.
in Crown City. Caii6H-256·
6520.

clean. Some carpet. Full

Brick, air conditi on house

for rent on

1•

42

Furnish 2 rooms and bath,
clean, no pets, adults only.
Dep. requ ir ed. Call WI·
1519.

acre farm

within 2 miles of II)Wn.
small barn and pond.
adults only. S450 month .
Phone 304-675-6276.

TWO BDR . apartment in
Crown City, S175. Ca ll 256·
6495.
4 room unfurn ished apt. all
carpeted, utilities paid,
adults only no pets. Call
Wl-3.07 .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobile Home, Eureka. 1
Bdr., furn., r iverfront lot,
ref . &amp; deposi t. Adults, S100 Deluxe 2 bdr. apt. Partially
furnished ,
off
Street
mo. 1-643-26«.
12K65, 3 bdr. , mobile home.
Clean, air cond .• furnished,
good location, ref. req. Sec.
dep. req . Call «6·8558.
Air cond., adults only, no
pets. Beautiful riverview
in Kanauga .
Deposit
required. Call «6 -1602.

FURNISHED mobile home
In city . Central air . One or
two adults only. Call «6-

0338.
For

rent

trai ler space,

located on Georges Creek
Rd. Call Wl-3666.

parking ,

Second

Gallipolis.

Call

Ave .,

614·256·

6506.
Modern 1 bdrm. apartment
between hospital &amp; town .
Security deposit, S155 plus
utilities. Call Wl-2055.

First (loor, 2 bdr., unfurnished apt., downtown
Gallipol is. Call at 631 4th
Ave., Gallipolis.
F lrst floor furnished ef·
f iency apt .. no pets, adults,
utilities pafd, plus deposit.
Call «6·0957, 729 2nd Ave.,
Gallipolis.

2 bdr. furnished, wall to 3 room furn . apt. for rent.
wall carpel, in Gal,llpolis, $250. a month, Including
private lot. Call «6-1409, utilities. Inquire at Meigs
Inn in Pomeroy .
between 4 to 8.
2 bdr., part. furnished, gas
and wafer paid. $200 per
mo .• S100 deposit, no pets.
Call after 4:30, «6-4745.
3 bdr. mobile nome com pletely furnished . Call Wl9669.
2 bedroom trailer. Real
nice, adults only . Brown's
Trailer Park, M inersville.
614-992-332.0.
Mobile home for rent on 6
acres . $225. month with option to buy. 614·742-2266.
2 bd.room fn Middleport.
Furnished, prefer adults
only, no pets. S150. mon·
thly. 992-7841 or 992-6510.
Two bedroom mobile
home, nice yard . phone 304·
675·3885.
TWO bedroom, furnished,

carpet, air conditioned, 1/A
mile out Sandhill d., $200.00
month p lus deposll. 304-6752195.
'I• Ml LE out Sandhill Rd,
304·675·3834.

TWO bedroom mobile
home, partially furnished,
S~- month 304·675·4154.

45

Furnished Rooms

3 bedroom, all electric,
14x70. S200. monthly plus
electric . GlenwOOd. 304-576.2441 or 304·576-9073.

44

Sofa, chair and loveseat.
$275 . Sofas and chairs
priced from S285. 10 S795.
Tables, S38 and up to S109 .
H lde·a·beds,$340., queen
size. $380. Recliners, $175.
to $295., Lamps from $18. to
$65 . 5 pc. dlneltes from $79.,
to S385. 7 pc. , $189. and up.
WOOd table with 4 chairs.
$219 up to S495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and SJ75.,
maple or pine finish .
Bedi-oom suites · Bassett
Cherry, S795. Bunk bed
complete with mallresses,
S250. and up to $395. Captain's beds, $275. complete.
Baby beds, S99. Mallresses
or box springs, full or -t win,
sse.. firm , $68 . and $78.
Queen sets. $195 . 4 dr.
chests, $42. 5 dr. chests,
$54. Bed frames, S20.and
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
SJ50., dinette chairs $20.
and $25. Gas or electric
ranges,
$325 .
Baby
malresses, S25 &amp; SJS, bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; S30. Used
Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges and TV's. l miles
oul Bulavflle Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am
to5pm, Sal.
446-0322
WHIRLPOOL apartment
size washer, S90.; G.E; .
·washer, extra nice, $110.;
Maytag coppertone dryer,
5100.
All guaranteed 30
days.
Call 256 -1207
anytime .

- --

-- -

Rooms with cooking, cable.
air, $40 a week. 304-773- BEMCO mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, S58. 6
5651.
Piece Naugahyde heavy
wood living room suite
46
Space for Rent
$695. Pillow arm sOfa &amp;
Acre lot for trailer, Rt. 141 chair $375. Roll top desk,
at Gage. Rural water &amp; dark &amp; light, $189. Bunk
septic. $50 month, S100 beds, complete, include
mattr ess, $199. Complete
deposit. Call614·245·9492 .
water bed shop with ·10
bedroom suites on display,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home starting price $299. up to
Park, Route 33, North of S2SOO. Big daddy cocklall &amp;
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call end fables SSO. Wall -A-Way
992-7479 .
recliners $169. and up. LaZ·Boy recliners in stock .
Offi ce space for rent. 2 nice USED FURNITURE 5 pc.
rooms , $175. mo. all &amp; 7 pc . dinett sets, studio
uti lities paid . Also 2 couch &amp; chair, bedroom
bd.room Apt. in Pomeroy. suite Hollywood style, bunk
S200. per mo. Call Clealand beds, glass front bookcases. Flair Furniture &amp;
Realty 614-992-2259.
Design . Gallipolis Ferry ,
WV Open 9·6. Phone 304Small trailer spaces . 675-1371.
Mason . 304·773·5651 .

===========--

47
Wanted to Rent
Sleeping room needed . 614 . 54
Misc. Merchandice
99~ - 5375 .
Plastic Septic Tanks. Slate
===::::;=:;====::"'·'land county approved. 1,000
For Lease
gal . tank, price $340. Other
49
sizes in stock. haul In your
ch
beautiful
stone
f ireplace, wrap around
deck. lovely 6 acre selling,
near Green School. Call
Wiseman Agency, «6·3643.
2 bedroom unf . apartment
overlooking cily park, $115
mo. Call PJ's «6-1819.

Apartment
for Rent

ll4ereftandlse

2 bd .room , furnished,
utilities inc . S205. plus $60.
deposit . Middleport . 614992-7177.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. cnair, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, (extra
heavy by .Frontier), $685.

1 GE auto $90, 1 Whirlpool
Furnished Room. $125. auto $110, late model GE
utilities paid, 919 2nd ave., $120. All washer reconGallipolis . Single male. ditioned and In mint shape.
share bath. Call U6-«16 af- «6·8181 .
ter7PM .

For lease 2 bdr. , cedar ranTWO bedroom trailer $185.
month plus utilities, plus
deposi t . 304-675-6512.-

51

CALL Robert Harper ,
distributor of Meadow
Fresh Products, 304·675·
1293.
Two electric hospital beds,
with mattresses S50. e•ch .
Phone 304-773-5873.

RAWLEIGH PRODUCTS
See your fr iendly Rawleigh
Dealer a Krodel Park Flea
Market, July 8th. &amp; 9th.
8:00 a.m .-5:00p.m. Wilma
&amp; Dale WOOd , Distributors,
304·675· 1090.
.
WOOD for sale. 304·458·
1833.
AWNING . . camper; 1973
Bonanza , 35x8 . Space
Masfer mobile office 12x54.
Boat, motor &amp; frailer . 1970
Cadillac. 304-675-«24 .
CERAMIC
greenware .
Je richo
Road,
Pt .
Pleasant. 20% off all green·
ware. Some 50% off. 304·
675·2039.

50 CAL . muzzle-loader.
never been shot. Brand
new, must sell. $100. call
304-675-3631 .
Riding mower 8 H.P. 810
Vi 8nd St. S250 .

55

Building SUfi~ ~

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call614·245·5121 .
Metal sheets for all
building purposes. Flat
porcelian enamel coated.
4x8 thru 4 x12. Price•, $7.00
IO $9 .60. 614-667-3085.
56

Pets for Sale

~--'-"-''-'-'"--"=­

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 facllilies .
Also AKC Reg. Dobermans . Call «6·7795.
POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 61067·
7220 .

- - --- - - - -

Sonia's Professional Dog
Grooming, Call614·388-8547
and ask for Sonia.

Case

RATLIFF'S POOL CEN TER Pools sale, supplies &amp;
installation. &lt;OJ 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis, Oh. Call «66579 . In ground·Ablove
ground .
TaKing orders for antique
solid oak reproduction fur·
nilure. Claw fool round
table 48' $250, corner cup·
i:l6ard SJOO, curved glass
china $275, wash stand with
mirror &amp; bowl &amp; pitcher Included $75. Plus more
wholesale to the public.
Call Wl-3759.

PI. · ·brass head bOard beds SJS, Reduce safe and fast
APARTMENT
In
-bookcases,
smoker
Pleasant, 614·«6-8221 .
· GoBese Capsules
Hoover spin
washer, Vap "water pills",
·wringer type
hutPha~macy. -.ch, coal &amp;
televisions,
Of all kinds,
- - - - - -- - - .sflverslone cookware.
I. . 446·3159.
SMALL furnished ;.;
J
ment, references, 30

59
1980 Bolins 14 h.p. tractor.
Wllh 36 in. culling deck .
Will trade lor boa! Of equal
value or $1,800. 614-992·
2772.

-· ...... . ...
-- .............

Grooming services for
pets. Will clip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer's. Reasonable.
For appt. 614·992 ·7342.
TWO Silver ll)ale pups, 304·
882-3672.

57

Musical
lnslrumenl$

.,jrjp, ...

A

ulos 1or 51 1e

1965 Chevrolet Mal ibu
super sport, conv .. new top,
tires, 6!i,OOO miles, 283 auto,
lair cond. Call614·388·9342.
For sale 1950 Olds 88 all
orgfnal. gOOd condllion.
Call «6·01'18.

, 72

Truck's for •ale-

•

1976 F-250 custom, auto,
PS, PB, 86.000 mi.. lair
cond., price reduced. Call
614-318·9342.

----'--.-- - - - - -

72 112 ton pickup Ford, 3
spd.. 302, .o good radials,
camper,. 4 gOOd rims, $500.
Call «6-.0229, between 4 and

5.
1978 orange Gremlin auto.,
$1 ,300. Caii6U-245·9502.

75 Ford Gran Torino. Call
Wl-3479.

1972 Chev~ pickup $300,00,
1974 Ford Gran Torino
$500.00. Call 304-576-2174 af·
fer 5:30p.m .

Farm Equipment

-~

Freilch City Painting
residential ' &amp; commercial,
Interior, exterior, ,paper
hanging,
&amp;
textured
ceilings. Call 614·367-1784
or 614·367-7160.

TWO registered Alpine
dairy milking goats, 304·
458 ·1825.

Logue

t.

otJ:c

.

-.--------- - --

&amp;

CAPTAIN STEEMER Caf·
pet Cleaning featur~ by
Hafleit Brosthers Cu_stom
carpels. Free - estlrilateS.
Call «6·2107 .
~~
:

ii-- - vaiisi 4 w::o-:--

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

64

Rool ~ng

Spouting. 30 yea~ ellperlence, specl811zlng (n
buill up roof. Call 614-3889622 or 614-388-9857. _,1

-·- "- -- ---------:-

73 Granville Pontiac runs
good, gOOd rubber. Caii6U·
256·6255.

BUS FOR S ALE 1tsi
4104 Coach 32 passenger,
' SUMMER SHOWDOWN'
gOOd body , gOOd fires and
Jividen's Farm Equipment 76 Fireblrd AM-FM S- seals. Runs QOOd . Rio
track, auto., PS, 35«1 Cal Grande College, Rio Gra'n ·
446·1675
Long tractors, Vermeer 614·256-1484.
de, Oh 4567.0. 614-245-5353,
balers &amp; hav equipment,
exl.217 .
•
bale movers, wagons, 197~ Pinto wagon, S800 or
rotary tillers, disc, post best offer. Call «6-826-ol.
1965 J_
eep CJ5 . Cal1614·«6digger &amp; drivers, seeders •.
7476.
rotary cutters, blades,
gates &amp; front end loader. 1980 Eagle limited, loaded,
And see us to gel your parts E.C .. $6,500. 1974 Datsun, 1979 Ford Bronco, -40,000
260Z, 6 cyl., 4 Spd., $2,500. miles, new tlre:s. SS,AOO.
&amp; complete service!
Call «6·8050.
USED EQUIP :
304·773-5826.
IH Hydro 70, 2000 Ford, 550
Oliver, 70 Oliver, MF 65, 1965 Chevy Malibu Super
rotary tiller, disc ., plows, sport Convertible, new top, 71 = -Molorgcles:-:=::::
cultivators, JD manure auto, new .tires. 66,000 1976 Honda_sop T, new fork
spreader, Ford 501 mower .
miles, $700. · Call 614-388- mount ferrlng, padded
We buy used equip.
backrest with 8,000 miles.
9342.
$850.00. 256-1298.
1978 Long 360 diesel farm 196-ol Chevrolet Biscayne.
tractor, like new, best of· Runs, $100. Call 304·675- 1975 750 Suzuki, full
fer. Call «6·4042.
1551.
.
dressed. 6,100 miles. $1 ,300.
Call «6·0935 or 614-256-&amp;694
John Deere L tractor 19-40 Plymouth Coupe. Call or 614-256-6704.
cultivator, plow &amp; blade. 614·«6-7476.
Call614-256·6494.
_ - - - - - - - - - - · 79 Honda · CB 650, 8,900
Two 1939 Chevrolet 2 door miles, $1,600. Call «6-8632.
52 International tractor, sedan. Caii614·U6-7476.
· -- - - --- - - - - wide front end, .o pieces of - - - - - - -----·--- · Honda 70 motor bfke. gOOd
equlpmenf. Call 614·388- 1966 Ford Fairlane 500; 289 cond., S275. Call «6·2300.
9892.
engine, 3 spd . Call «6-6632.
------ - - - - - --1978 400 Hawk Hondamallc
6l
Livestock
69 Cadillac, 2 door. New exc. cond . with win tires, muffler, and pipe. djammer, 6,409 miles. $995 .
Caii614-245-S873.
·
REG. QUARTER HORSIOS $695. 6U -992·7177.
Training ,
showing ,
breeding, sales and boar·
1979 Honda CR 125 Of rt
ding. Contact, Dan Beam, For sale. Dodge Charger, b'ike. Good cond. $600. Also,
340
rebuilt
engine.
GOOd
Gallipolis, «6-0183.
1978 Suzuki PE 250 Dirl
cond. 614·992·6362.
bike. S450. Caii614-~-746Z:
Reg. Pure bred and part
bred Arabian for sale. Also For oale - 1975 Buick 1968 Honda 350, very gOOd
second calf Holstlen cow LeSabre 4 door. Equipped cond. $395. 614·667·3085.
tust fresh . Call 61~·367-0493 with new tires, a Lafayette
CB, and air. Has 51.000
after 6.
miles . Contact - Ralph 1976 Honda 125. 3.400 mi.
Pratt, 121 7th Ave. Mid- 1475. or best Offer. 614·992Simmental cow with heifer dleport, Ohio.
7663.
.
calf at side, rebred . Call
614-367-7727 .
1977 Plymouth station 7.0 Honda 350, $375; or be~!
wagon. 6 cyl., auto. tran- Offer. Phone 304-576·2010.
Registered and grade hor· smission . .4 door, eMc. cond.
ses, excellent 4-H projecl. $1.695. Accept trade. 614·
1978 Harley Davidson, low
English and western sad· 667-3085.
rider. Can be seen al 2211
d.les ·
everything
JBckson Avenue , Jack
imaginable in horse eq'ulp·
men! lind supplies, also 73 Chevy truck. 3 quarter Hudson, Point Pleasant,
·' .
riding lessons and frail ton. Good COnd . $800. 614· $3500.
'185-4392.
, rides and horse training.
Ru,l~ Reeves, Hoof Hollow.
1979 Honda XR 80 SJSO.
614-6'18·3290.
1977 Thunderbird, -45,000 PhOne 30H75·303i .
'
actual mile~, extra gOod
Massey Ferguson B h.p. cond: , 400 engine. Phone 75 HONDA 360, good shape,
lawn tractor. Good cond . 38 614·247·2841 after 8 p.m.
$675. 304-458-1926.
fn! CUI. 614-985·4105.
HARTS Used Cars, New 65 HARLEY Davidson
Young brown laying hens. Haven West Virginia. Over Scooter, 304-675-4106.
· 20 less expensive cars fn
614·992·7713.
stock.
61

PAINTING · Interior arid
' exterior, plumbln!J ,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs·. exp. Call 6U·388·
9652.

~~~=~~~;;~~;~~~~;;~~~;;;::l' Marcum
11

For sale-bunch beans-you
pick. 6 bu., p;, m iles below
RavenswOOd bridge on S.R .
338 . PrOfltts produce- 614·
8.0·2183 afler9 p.m .

BLACK &amp; White 23" TV.
ca n be seen at2312 Madison
Ave. Pt. Pleasant.

450, dozer · Drawl rabb its and large
tractor, 1.900 hrs., very breed mixed rabbits. Three
gOOd cond .. $14,900. Call Beagles SIS each. Call 614·
388-9823.
«6-4537 .
1975

dressers, hall trees, bedsr

175_I.::::::-:----:--;:::-:----.:-;:-

Kenmore wringer washer
SIOO. Maytag auto. SSO. Call
742·2352 .

INE RIDGE COLLIES
pickup truck. Call 614-286· AKC Registered Collie
5930, Jackson, Oh . RON pups. Call 614-256·1267 or
446-2107 .
EVANS ENTERPRISES

Household GOods

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
One bd .room. unfurnished, Gallipolis. 9x12 linoleum
ready for immediate oc· rug $22. 3 piece living room
suites couch-love seatcupancy . Call614·992·2094.
chair $199, 2 piece living
room suites from Sl40
1 bd.room furnished apt. love seats from $70
614-992-5.04, 992-5914 or 304- maple dine! sets from
882-2566.
lo $199, wall huggers
recliners
$80,
rna
Two 1 bdr. apls. for rent. 1 rockers S-09, bedroom
ground floor, I upper. suites $150, variety Of table
Private porches with each. lamps, marble lop stands
Full use of large yard, very SJO and up, twin and lull
nice· ,part. furnighed . Call box springs &amp; maltr.Ss
992-5880.
(new) $100, several utility
cabinets, kitchen cabinets
wOOd &amp; metal, baby beds, ·
Apartments. 304·675-5548.
cnesls Of drawers $25 to
$60, 3-way recliners SIOO,
APARTMENTS, mobile gas &amp; electric ranges,
homes, houses,. Pt . refrigerators, wash stands,
Pleasant and Gallipolis. · bunk beds compte!~ wjth
614-«6-8221 or 614-245-941.
bunkles $170, uveral -

1365.

Home
1m provements

1182.
Hydraulic oil 10 W Texa co
no. 32, Radco 55 gal.
drums . $80.00 ea . 614-667-

19&lt;19 · ~!57'9
Y'osl
bu . .ear'Gene
corn. $2.50
bu.,

basement .
Deposit.
references. 61.4·992·3090.

OVEP:. I'LL INTRODUCE YOU
TO THEM.

STUCCO. PLASTERII:fG , ·
textured ceilings -; com mercial and res ldenllal ,
free estimates. Call614·256·

11

Cl . .

2 bedroom house. Nice &amp;

1"

Over 1,000 ceramic molds,
kilns, and supplies. 614·742·
2925 or 742·2085.

3085 ..

DR. L LR , ""w remodeled,
SJOO. Call614·367-0461.

•.

1972 20 ft. Starcraft ' cant
per, self contal.,.,d, el(.
cond., SJ,ooo. Call· U6-o935
or 614·256·6694 or 614·256·
6704.

Pick your own ~alf runners
S6.00 bu . Bring container.
Open 6 days a week . Closed
WedneSday, 'evenings and
Sundays. Raynors. Peach
Orcahrd ; Rt .7, Lower
River Rd., Gallipolis, Oh,
«6-4807.

Home grown sweet corn.
Charles McKeon Farm,
Fairfield -Centenary Rd .
For sale·Cablnets, gas· Call «6·9442.
water heater, doors, In·
eluding •tiding oak door. TOMATOES
&amp;
other
misc. items. Call 614·992- veg atables wholesale or
6254.
retail, 304-895-3400 .

Houses for Rent

rhe Daily

t C111lpers

TWO Bundy flutes, 1 SIOO ..
1$25., 304 ·882·3~?'"58

Ohio

Custom hay boling. Square
or round bales. Call «6·
6566 or «6-4036.
·
Hay. $1 .25 bale in field. 304675·2254 or 304-675· 1302.

SPACE CENT£R1WHILE I

614-388·
·'

.

CA.TCH UP ON M"Y Yo.OR~ HERE ?

-----------'

CHRIST I AN'S 'CON STRUCTION .
Constr .,
·rOofing, siding, spo~llng,
·~ fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
cleaning. .046-2000, call
before 8·and after 5: 30.
OLYMPIC STAIN .
In
stock only, m.oo ~r
gallon. Pl. Pleasant Paint
anci'Wallpaper, lrcint of the
,PostOfllceonMalnSt. _.

Ves1~unt Lil!
Wou10 IPU like

tRooflhg, gullers, blow·in
lnsulalion, siding &amp; pain'fing . Call «6·3330 or 61.0·
388-9919.

to see them?

- - - - ··--- -

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenilh an~
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or·U6-2454.

_.________

F &amp; K Tree :rrimming,
slump removal. 675-1331 .

-

,

..

NO, THEYRE CH!CKING

- 'f

~~e&amp;o~~~:ic.c¥~~~~~!!'

Pumps Sales •nd So!r~ice.
304-895-3802.
·''
.,
- -- - - - ·

-- ·- --'-r

ADVANCEv
)eamless
Gu tter-Doors . Offerin'g
continuous
guttering,
seaml115s siding, roofing,
garage
doors,
free
estimates, 61.0· 6~·8205.

~ni~w~~~~l~ti~-~---------------------

-·

-

STARKS Tree Trimming
and Lawn Service. Shrubs
trimmed. Phone 304·576·

FRIDAY

0:00 •

(1)

N.-

ct&gt; •

Ill ® • llZ

of genetic engineering and
what It may actually de·
liver. (60 min.)
9:30 (JJ lnaldo Buolnau Today
'The Record Business is
not for the Big Guys.' A recording
anlst(producer
tellt what it takes to · ~
8 record mogul.
10:00
W (IJ McClain' a Law
McClain and Gates try to
saVe DeNisco and Cross
from two convicts holding
them captive . {R) (60 min.)

Ill&gt; Over Elly

e

8:30

CAR,[~~~:..t~.'iJ~ING

(I) (IJ NBC Nowa

llli!IO.OOO Pyqmld

y--

Ill F - K,_. Baat
(I) Muppet Show

Cor. Fourth•arid Pine
Phone «6·3888 pr «6-4477

e(I) Ill
fl!l CliB Nowa
Dr. Who
-

.

,

'

eIll ~®'l'IC Toe
Dough 1
MacNel-lAhrw

-; -~

Auto Parts
&amp; Ac'c•ssorles

., {

fl!l NtWI

'

'

,,

Motor , trans. , drive train,

1973 Ptymolith S&lt;;amp. 6
·cyl. auto. trans. 2 door.
motor rusty, runs QOOd.
$395. 614-667-3085.

Ill

Ufo

,,

1

'

boihood,

TThe Grut

- M~~

Ill MOVIE: 'Fort Apache,
thllltrvnx'
(J) GeOgraphic
[Cioood

~ "'
Hogg-

w--

._..· to frame the Ouku. (R) 160

u,·

~

..,.. •

i"'•

min.,

Ill&gt;
· (J)
,...._

w~

hUll buke hoat1

at top W~on jo&lt;lmal·

. . , =...nvr ~ - -··
1:10 •

.
~ MOVIE: 'Tho

Ill (!) a.to.go .,.,..,

=
( 1 it:-.'!':.~=
IJDcttin 001.......
""''"'' In
car-;

~
the

ol • drug - - (R)

onaw-

l)t MOVIE: 'The Bbw..,.., ~
• ,. flllahtlfno

.
I 2:00

Ill MOVIE: '8.0.8.'
(]) Bumo • Aflan
f]) 11182 World

GiNN .......... flO min,,

f.:"'' 'ea- "'.•

-WWbi'+i~
ol - and In-mlttere.

(I)
8how
(I) Frtd8ya Tonfgftt'o host

.-a.nnw

Rooa

ffi MOVIE: 'Children'

9:30 Ill She~ock Holmeo
10:00 D (1) (IJ NBC Magazine
CD TBS E•enlng Newa

·

claims

f]) ESPN Sporto Center

GD

Mystery! 'Malice Afor·
ethought,
Part 1.'
Dr.
Bickleigh silently suffers
the contempt openly dis-

played by tis overt&gt;earng
wife, Julia . '

dog. (R)

(I)
WM'IMOVII:
l"'llnt"

· - a1
112
"'""'"
Cup
Ou rtettl;wl
..........
l.Oul.- U8A va. Swap an
{)) MOVII: •opa;alkan

-·
"

(J)

I I K J
,_Print tlllaw•r here:

,

e

(II T-,-o FBI The
streu ol wcrltlng undor·
cover begins to 11f'n ct the

(J)

and Warlng
27 Belng (Sp.)

28 Bumlng
29Defamed

7·9

One letter ai.ftply 1tanda for anOther. tn thle u mple A b
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Sln11e letters,
apoatrophet, the len&amp;th and formation or the word• are all
hints. Each day lhe code )etten are ditl'erenl

(J)·ESPN llporta CentatflD In tho Know
illlllnelk I'Nvle... Hooto

.--~­
rich-··

Yesterday's Answer
28 Gave a hand
my mind .. ."
party member 30 Splash
10 Vegas
24 Away
31 Humming
employees
from camp
sound
16 Scottish
Z5 S.R.O.
:15 Before fLa t. i
queen
customer
36 Remunerated.
19 Polish city 28 Duffer's
38 Shrew
20 Rich cake
shout
39 Not cooked

23 Wedding

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
AliYDLBAAXa
Ia LONGJ'ELLOW

()I ....... Gold

eumrner movtta .

80Uord
ritual
9 11 lt never

Bo Derek

7:30 · ~~~

eCil!!l.._.• ....._

Sergio 7 Alder tree

33 Viva
torero!
34 Jail
sentence I sl. )
37 Fabricated
39 Barrett
40 Unwilling
41 Opposed to
42 Lacked
43 Tobacco
DOWN
I Talk
z Tennis tenn

fl!l HOIWW'I .Arlo

\

3 Asswned name
4 Performed
5 Classify
8 Director,

32 Nwnber for

r:..

Robon Eben end Gone Slo·
kt4 tllktl 1 took at the new

work

window"
Zl Lellover
ZZ Hebrew
measure
23Cow
26 Allen

grind. (R) (60 min I !Closed

u-e.....,. .

•

5 Wlnged
1l Hindu
festival
12 Tranquil
13 Athirst
If Musical

Cap tioned]

10:30 Cil MOlliE: 'Raggedy
Ill Gl tn Love Boat
Man'
!CloSed-Captioned!
W Short Feature
GD Matinee at the Bljou
(JJ Roc:k Church Pro' lost City in tha Jungle.'
Starring • Johnny
Mack
Brown and Beth Mation .

ACROSS
l Garbed

15 Collation
II - Dieu !
17 - Aviv
18 11 Bay

(1) MOVIE: 'Agatha'
Ill Judy L nri Show
(IJ • Ill
How
(IJ
Walk
(I) ClrMt Ral~ Jour·

z·•·~=-t!~··

.__ lUI.
llie ..,. ::":'- l y ...

Diana

Masterpiece Theatre 'Bad

~~-~·,(
loy THOMAS JOSEPH

Company.· Brian is har·
assed by his senio r officer
and discovers the majOI'
has a very personal BK to

-·

Cup

e

SRO:

jCiosed·CaptionedJ

I!) Ill ® CBS Reports 'A
Time to Die.' Tonighl's
program takes a look at a
called
'Omega '
group
which deals with the many
aspects· · of death and
~ing . (60 min.)
(I) Danger UXB from

&lt;ll e&lt;D Now•
Dill Concom
fl!l CliB Nowa
•
7:00 D (1) o.nc.i Favitr

·

hOot Ia lob
with
_ii!Oill the .....
t-. 1111 I"" min.) : ' .
12:30
(I) (IJ . _ Nio!lt-

ffi

Diana sings and dances in
this special from Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas.

(JJ Gl tn Fantaav Island
A singer wishes for her
lead gui1arist back from the
dead and an English pro f essor wants to meet King
Ar1hur.
Guest
starnng
Lind a Blair
and
Tom
Smothers. (AI (60 min .)

e

Btfck

H: · 8amt· Ff1111
Match ~ ~~ . . . . . .

Stella leads the city work·
ers on strike. (AI
9:00 D
(1) (IJ Noohvllle
Palace Host the Oak Ridge
Boys are joined by Johnny
Lee, Hank Will iams Jr. and
the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders. {60 min.)

(90 min .)

8:00 D ClleiiJ ® Newo
(1) VIdeo Jukebox
(])Traveler' a World
Ill Chomplonahlp Wrutllng
(!) God Hu the Anawer
Ill Claoolc Country
Ill&gt; MOVIE: 'The Crowd
Roars'
8:30
Cll CIJ NBC News
(1) MOVIE: 'Star Trek -!he MOlton ~lcture'
Ill Pn&gt; Cofebrlty Golf

'

loc:cer

Petticoat'

GD Cla11lc Country
8:30 D (1) (IJ Hiorper Valley

EVENING

Bennett

eCriel.(])

son's classic 18th century
novel. {2 hrs.l
(I) MOVIE: ' Operation

(IJ NBC Newo

SATURDAY

e (])

· teem.

•ir"rl'' fl!l

Mra.

from Robert l ewis Steven·

- 7/10/82

considers him the rigtnful
property of one of her five
unmarried daughtera. (60

e

a.n-,

3:45
4:30

' Pride and Prejudice.' First
of 6 pans. When Mr. Bingley comes to the neigh·

Ill (IJ '--Ia and Cialk
Koll'( and Jooio both toy
oot lor 1ho c-eding

r.,.

3:30

illlNIIWII-ch

.
Olio:) ICia..d CeptionodJ '
11 :00'. (lliiJ (IJ .Ill fl!l •
()J flltwo
.
(])NahvftleRFD
·,
f]) ESPN . _ c-.,
'
(JJ o.v. Allan • Larva
1 t :30
(IJ Tonight Show
(])AnotherUfo
(JJ MOVIE: 'Good Ntigh·
bar Bam'
(JJ Benny Hill Show
·
MOVIE: 'Night

(1) MOVIE:

·1.

Julia. (R) (60 min.)
Ill Edward the King

~· a record mogul.
eTon~gtrt
(JJ Entertainment

"

3:00

raaume his marriage with

cording
ertiat(prod~Jcer
tells what It takes to be·

,..
;

e

10:30 (JJ Sfng TMit America
(JJ TBS Evening News
Ill&gt; -terptoce Theatre

8:00

2:30

come

- ball: Pltt.burvh at Atlanta
(I) • 1IJ ftmffy F1111d
(IJ l,avtmo and Shl~ey
(I) Buolnno Report
fl!l Richard Blmmono
. ilJ)Inaldo BuoiMN Today
• 'The 11ocord Buslneoa is
not '"'the Big Guys .' A re·

oot•

2:15

performance of an agent.
(AI (60 min .j
I!) Ill ® Walt Dlonev
'Kidnapped .· Classic adventure drama adapted

tn Newo

Overnight
Cil MOVIE: 'Sooma l,.lke
Qld Tlmoo'
Ill Bacholor Fother
(f) Genealt In Concert
Ill Atlanto Braveo Roploy
Ill Ufo al Riley
Ill ESPN Spano Cantor
(1) MOVIE:
'Hooveno
Above'
lll700 Club
(IJ Newo
Ill 1982 Davio Cup
Ouelterllnal from
St.
Loulo : USA vo. Sweden
(1) MOVIE: 'Goo'
Ill Rooo Bagloy

Ton)' Cumson returns to

Ill Major Laague a-.

1972 Toyoto pick-up· parts.
door's, etc, Fit' 1970 thru
1976. 614-667·3085.

.

I~:..~ It

¥, 7:30

-~

. ,Lawrence S'idenstritker
Bac~hoe Servi ce.
1 675-

5580.

~

.,.

II

D Cil

" 2:00

(1) MOVIE: 'Wollen'
(1) MOVIE: 'A ClockOnonfo'
f])
978 Britloh Open
Golf Hlghffghta
•
(JJ fl!l Fofoon Creot

(!)~.,..,.

JAR Construction Co. Oil·
14 fT. ('.lumlnum V hull ' oher, ' backhoel ·and dozer .
fishing boat, 10 HP Johnson F09ters, o~s· lines, ~ater
motor, !Ill trailer, new con · lln.es, Rutland, ,Qtllo. 614.742·2903.
'
dillon, 304-675·2651 .

(90min.)

Ill I Married Joan
Ill My Uttfe Margie
® MOVIE: 'Macabre'

1:00
1:30

deeth has a devastating ef·
d ocl on J.R. (R) (60 min.;
(I) Noxt OuMtion
Ill&gt; Splice Of Ufo Bill Kane
looks at the bold Promises

Ill Etactrtc Company

Plumbing
_ __,&amp;c.:H!!t,lll'!f_ _ _

Ill MOVIE: 'Rich

D Ill ® Dellao Jock·s

y..,
·QJ•AIIf; N.- tB I
.. 7:00
(I) ~.M . ,M.ijpzl"" ,
j"
Ill BUll' a Eye
.·
IIJWIM8tl
Ill Entertainment TOnight

76

2571 . .

Kldo'

(1) MOVIE: 'Hawmpe'
Ill Mv Thrae Sono
Ill ABC Nowo

- ~-==
-' ==

is Bob Balaban with musical guests the Blasters. (R)

Ill 700 Club
(I) •

EVENING

BUILDING , rem~ling,
carpentry, roofing, plumbing, ~oncrete ~ork , 304675-2«0. '

n

9:00

7/9/82

2~10 .

I' ------4-

81 FORD ES&lt;;ort, power
steering, power brakes, air
conditioned,
AM - FM
stereo, $5,700. Call 304-675·

YOUTH
DIVISION.
IT'S DOING
VERY WELL.

-· .- ~------,

Ill&gt; Ullao,

~

YE5, rHE

fiERf , A NON· RESIDENT
FROM. COLOMlliA I

THEY SUSPECT OF
liEING AN AliEN.

I

1977 D/'IT$UN 200 SX, 4
cyi., 2 door, approximately
30 mpg, smooth running &amp;
r iding, $2650. 304-675-7301 .

MR . FARLEY. WE'VE GOT

THE 1. D.'S OF ANYONE

RINGLES'SSERVI CE e*perienced mason, ··rooter.
.cBrpenter , elfctr'iciar;'l,
general repairs an.d
remodeling. Phone 304-6752088 or 675-4560.
_,1
I~

1972 Jeep, 304·675·6153.

Torino wagon,
condillon,
N. Main Sf.

keep them here
in 1114 bottom
drawer!

Gene's steam carpel
Clean-Scotch Gaurd-Fr")'
estlmales·sprlng speclai~­
Gene Smith, 992·6309. ,

Hay ~_!!rain __

wanted to cui and bale hay
for percentage Of hay. Call
«6·8381.

WHY DON1T YOU SHOW OUR
OtSTINSUtS..-E'D GUESTS THE

1.

Yts.terday~a

I

' , (-.aiomon'owi
Jumbles: CLEF! ORAMA ENlYME BRANDY
Arfswer; Presumably kept oool white performing 1 hot
numllel-THE FAN DANCER
·

lmr$!·~-::~uo,.....,S!te~=:el

CIIYPTOQUOTES
RKLLBN
BL
-B L

BL

APWPQI
R K _L L B N

OYCWABXR .
RKL-LBN .
ACT P

HJU

YBLUKWI
LOCXTCQ

U P T B K ·J L

Ai&lt;W ' CQBUI . - KLOCW

HI

DBQTP ·

Yeotadoifi Cllflaquoloi TO _!NVITE A GUEST IS TO TAKE

THE RESPONSmiUTY OF HIS HAPPINESS DURING IUS
STAY.Ul-IDEROUR ROOF.-BRII.LAT.SAV,u-.rn
I .

,·

. . I·

I

�,.

Friday, JUly 91 19-'2

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Reagan halts
freight strike

The Eastern Athletic Boosters
will sponsor a little league baseball
tournament July 19, at Tuppers
Plains.
Those whO wish to participate are
t.o contact Jim Ca.ldwell at. 667-3li44
or George Colllns at 667-3484.

Receives
scholarship

l~hnd CIM·I"-·• 311).000 It...

Tnmda: Vool .;:'~p18"'"chor:_l-rcat-

.

Ue,'::li.':=lnd ~JI018Itlllbll.

~ads kept busy

To sponsor tourney

v.u., IJ)'tllock c..
llo~ """I, . .

Meigs Count happenings ••
The Meigs Co. Emergency Medl·
cal Service reported several runs
overnight Thursday.
Tuppers Plains took Steve
Browning from CR. 50 to St. Joseph's Hospital at 5:12 a.m.; at
10:42 a.m., Middleport EMS too!Q
Patricia Cleland from Langsville to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
·

_..,... .

-

.SANTA BARBARA. Calif. (AP) freight movement In the United
- By Invoking his power to tempor- States.
arily avert a nationwide freight · The contract dispute between the
sll Ike, President Reagan Is hoping engineers and 10 rail lines centers
a settlement can be reached In the on pay, work rules, and working
dispute between 40,000 locomotive conditions, Speakes said. Mediaengineers and the railroad tion elfm1s began last December
Industry.
and ran through May, he said.
Reagan Interrupted his vacation
"A strike by the BLE (Brothera1 his mountaintop ranch 20 miles hood of Locomotive Engineers)
from here Thursday to sign an ex- threatens substantially to Interrupt
ecullve order creating a presiden- Interstate commerce to a degree
tial emergency Qc&gt;ard to Investigate such as to deprive a section of the
country of essential transportaUon
the Issues.
The president's action, taken servlce," said a written statement
three days before a threatened Issued by White House o!flcials In
strike, triggers a 00-day coollng olf California with the president.
period. Any walkout during that peThe president Is expected to
riod would violate federal law.
name the three members of the
The president's power to forestall tact-finding board next week. They
a slrlke Is part of the Railway La- would have 30 days to study the
bor Act.
Issues and develop recommenda"It was the president's view that Uons, and the union and Industry
a railroad strike would have an Im- then would have 30'days to consider
mediate Impact on the publlc," said the board's findings .
The engineers had scheduled a
White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes. "He considers walkout tor 10:30 p.m. EIYI' Sunthe railroad Industry crucial to the day . Before Reagan's action, Bill
Wanke, first vice president of the
U.S. economy."
Reagan signed the order short.ly union, said the union "absolutely"
alter the National Mediation Board would abide by the no-strike ban
sent him Its findings that a st.rlke and the accompanying coollng o!f
period.
would virtually shut down rail

Emergency

reports~ ..

Market

Pomeroy squad transported Alva
Will from Nye Avenue to VMH at
12:43a.m.; at.2:~p. m. , Middleport
unit took R.lchard Fink to VMH•
At 4:31 p.m., Pomeroy squad
transferred Linda Frenchman
from Union Avenue to VMH; at
5:27 p.m., Middleport EMS took
Bill Fry from Logan Street to
VHM; Tuppers Plains unit transported Loraine Osborne from
Reedsville to St.. Joseph's Hospital
at 11:45 p.m.

judgment sought
A suit. In the amount of $3,415.50
has been tiled In Meigs County

Common Pleas Court by the Racine Home National Bank against
Robert R. Wood, Long Bottom, Catherln Wood, Long Bottom and Jess
W. Wood, Long Bottom.

Additional benefits
may be available

David Haggerty, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Haggerty, Middleport,
Is the recipient of the Carl T. Nessley Memorla.l SchOiarsh.lp, Ohio
It appears a trade adjustment alloUniversity announced today.
The award Is given annually to wance tiled by Kaiser employees
the senior man or woman who Is the with the Depar1ment of Labor will
most outstanding In terms of scho- be certified.
Third District Congressman
larsh.lp, personal characteristics,
Nick
Staton said Tuesday he was
and service to the University, the
"cautiously"
optimistic that the beSchool of Hea.lth, the Physical Edunefits
will
be
forthcoming. Under
cation and Recreation Dept.. and
a.llowance
the
trade
adjustment
the community. The award was
program,
employees
who
lose their .
presented on behalf of Dr. Lavery,
jQ.bs
because
of
foreign
competidirector, the faculty of the School of
tion,
may
apply
tor
additional
beHPER artll the Nessley award
nellis.
Flna.l
determination
a5
to
committee.
which
of
the
several
types
of
benefThe award Is In memory of Dr.
Nessley tor h.ls contributions to the Its would become available will be
made by the labor department,
Physical Education program at
Staton noted.
ou.

·~•.\bo' l!liolt-!OOol~.ftil a~., ,. ,-~"'·

fl.-; 1111118 ttiD 1111. -.It; 1111 10 IMOIDII. lifo

110; 110101011 tbo. II-; 101110 711 tiiii. IHUG;
7011 to 1011k1Wl; IIDilld owrll.-.
Feederllellen: GoochndOloictJIOtoJIIOibo.
-·~ 1110 104Gtlbo. .._, ...... lbo. f!Wf: 100 to 1110 lbo. -~ • to 711 lbo. fiJO.
51.10; 710to.tbo.l7-lf; ............~! .
Feeder BWII: Good end Olc&gt;ke 110 to 110 lbo.
~I ; 31111181111lbo.INUI; 111118100 lbo. tl-67;
!GO to llllbo. fW'I.IO: 1011 to 710 lbo. f7-M.IO: 700
to1011 I!&gt;I. f1.61; 10111nd over 661.10.
Holll&lt;ln Steorund lluliJ, IIIII to 1011 lbo. fT.II0-

to halt the Capitol

2

15.

Bullll,IIOOibo. and up 11-64.15.
Sllughter Cows, 11tilltla 41.56-M.&amp;O; cannen
and cutlerl41 down.
Veal Calv•, ehoiN 1nd prime 7UI. •

DONATIONS- Ac!eepllac a total ol $!,. Ia deaad- fMD lbe
Modem Woodmen of America, Alfred Camp, were, left to r!Jill, front .
row, the fire cblefs, John Coen, Coolville; Terry Deem, TapPen Plalnl;
Roy R. Christy, Chester; alld Helen Doni, buiJIII'er, Tllppen Plaw
Emergeacy Squad. Olber firemen pictured are, secolld row, John S.
Wickham, Dorsel Miller and Charles Weber, and third; row, Joe Owens,
Colema a Galllgber, Charles TbollD, Steve Holland and Lamace Balzer·

Sorin.cet Cowii'IHIII.
c'owMdC.HComblnaUon-.

B Dail
·"' tnme •
ey
•

Winnie Blanche Dalley, 92, Rt. 1,
Racine, died Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Dailey was preceded In
death by her parents, Lewis and
Lula Pondot! Johson . and one
brother, Emil Johnson.
She Is survived by her husband,
Omar W. Dalley; tour daughters,
Mrs. Thomas (Marie) Autherson,
Rutland; Mrs. Thomas (Faye)
Czech and Mrs. Ralph (Tbelma)
MOler, East Liverpool and Mrs.
Frank (Ruby! Ludwig, Cleveland;
two sons, Floyd Dalley, Racine,
and Lawrence Dalley of East LIverpool; 17 grandchildren, :Kl great
grandchl.ldren, and live great great
grandchildren; one sister, Mayme
Manning, Syracuse, and one n.lece,
Ruth Johnson Bradford, Racine.
Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at Ewlrlg Funeral
Home. Burial ~ill be In Letart Fa.lis
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Saturday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Veterans Memorial Hospital reported the following discharges and
admissions Thursday:
Admissions-Ida Young, Rutland; Patricia Cleland, Langsville; Alva Will, Pomeroy; Ray
Fischer, Pomeroy; Joseph Proffitt,
Racine; Richard Fink, Middleport.
Discharges-William Hysell,
Sheila Clark.

JULY

.

~

Copyrllflted 1912

~~~""
.;

'l'lma SetHDJ lltaft .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis prisoners are once
~ being accepted at the Gallla County Jail, the
· result of a tentative agreemen\.fC&amp;Ched Friday by
City and county attorneys.
.
").think we have reached a declson that will satisfy
both parties," City Solicitor Wllllam Eachus said after fb!! meeting.
· The .agreement ends a one-week stando!f between
the city and county In which Sherltt James Montgomery refused to allow city pollee to place their prison·
ers In· the county jail. Pollee were forced to take
prlsollers to Meigs County.
··

SHOP FRIDAY TILL I, SATURDAY TILL S
;

Elberfelds,ln Pome·roy

By .JtJLJE BRIENZA
~ SWf

GALLIPOLIS - Employees of
Sc:ptte~ puton TobaC&lt;,"O Co.
have 'been CleB!Iing·.tlleir, !Qck~
alld kiO)IInatol'newjobsstnce'IUeS\
day ;Jmen' oftlelals told them ~~
'plant wouki be closing down.
Details of the announcement are
still sketchy to both employees .and
t.he ·P'!bllc, _but' prod)l~tlon superlntendeitt Stanley Drongowski sa.ld
sale ot the ~mpany was In the proc!ess last Friday. But otflctally he
said he does not know It that transact.lon Wa§. completed.
"We're lllJ really out of work.''
said 12-year-emp!oyee Florence

(TOJAL MARKET COVERAGE)

the

RIGHT
.
ON TARGET
-

-

MEIGS
COUNTY

,MASON·

By 'lbe A8Bocla&amp;ed l're88
Syria told the United States today
It wUl not accept the PLO guerrillas
trapPed In west Beirut and detnanded Instead that the Israeli tor- ·
ces besieging tliem pull out of
Lebanon, Informed sources In Damascus said.
'The sources, who requested anonymity, satd .Syrla's position Wllll
conveyed to the deputy assistant~
cr~ ·ot state, Moms Draper, by
Forelp Minister Abdul Hallm
J&lt;hlddam In Damascus.
Drape!' was sent to Damascus by
U.S. presidential envoy PhUip C.
Habib, whO has been negotiating
outside Beirut tor the past three
Wl!ekii to get the gUerrillas out before l!rael loses Its patience and
storms the Palestine Uberatlon Or•ealllzatlon enclave.
HJtblb and Lebanese Prime MinIster Shafik Wazzan on Frlll11y dlscuSIJI!!I bl!!iblg the estimated 8,000
euerrlllas and their families to Sy-

'

..•..

TOTAL t
,,_~ ,M4RKET :.
-COVERAGE

GALLI A

t

COUNTY

~

&gt;&lt;

••'

Mr. Adve.rtiser:

••

.'

Local car. ·

•

a-c bucket seats, auto,
on floor, red-white vinyl
root. A real sporty cu.

'5495

'4695

'79' PONTIAC

'80' cHEVROLET
CHEVmE

LeMANS COUPE
Small v.a, a-c, auto
trans. ps, pb, II. blue,
blue cloth Int. None
Nicer.

. '4"5 .

4 dr., 4 cyl . .4.

sp.

am
radio. Local one owner.

ONLY

'4295

2 dr. V.

miles,
around.

By utilizin.g

vinyl root, low
nlcost one

'3495

··. Oh.io

.Valley . ...
•
Publishing .. CO.- you
can-.now .reach
.
•
28,800* · househol.ds 1n
the Jri'
County area.
'
For more. information
.

'

.

'

2. dr., V·li a.l
6 cyl. auto. trans. a-c,
Quadntrac with low · squire
roilt r~ck,
'tinge, tilt wheel, 1·
II!UII - thll one. .

pk,.

o-r.

•3M5

'4995

Inc. Newsp.a.,.r .

Eachus sa.ld he and County Prosecutor Joseph Cain
decided which city prisoners will be accepted at the

county jail. Details of bow much the city owes for
prisoners housed laSt year and terms of a new contract. still have to be worked out
Eachus said city and county officials will meet
Monday to formalize the agreement
Under terrnsnf the pact, the sheriff will accept city
prisoners Involved In felonies or crimes of violence.
aly pollee will IssUe summons to many of those
accused of minor crimes, Instead of jaUing these persons, Eachus said.
It was. agreed t.hat, whenever possible, city pollee

will charge those arrested undec municipal codes
rather than stat.e codes, Cain said. Under the Ohio
Revised Code, the city only has to pay tor prisoners
jailed under city codes.
·Cain sa.ld the county "dld not feel It was fair" that
the city charged prisoners under stale codes when
there were similar municipal codes.
One Issue to be decided Monday Is how much Gallipolis owes the county tor prisoners housed last year.
- Montgomery has claimed the city owes about
$4,000, while City Manager Chris Mon1s has been
willlng to pay oply $2!\!1.
Eachus said he and Cain wUI go over each Individual but Monday and agree on a figure.

Cain said officialS will also work out a co11tract for
housing city prisoners In the future. The city and
county have been operating without a contract since
March 17.
Qty Manager Chris Morris had said previously he
would not agree to any contract because It b not
required by law.
Friday's agreement came just In time to avert a
city threat to tile tor a writ of mandamus forcing the
sher iff to accept cjty prisoners.
Eachus said before the meeting that It no agr~
ment was reached, the city would file tor a writ
Monday.

call:
-

ria, but the Damascus government, vernment today It agreed In princiwhich had been excluded from the ple to par.t.!clpate In a
talks, qulck.ly rejected the Idea.
disengagement of guerrilla and IsIn h.ls meeting with Draper to- raeli forces around Beirut but said
day, Khaddam reiterated Syria's nothing about evacuating the PLO.
refusa.l to take the guerrillas, deTbe French position Is that any
claring the Issue was not evacua· evacuation must be part of a
tlon of the PLO but withdrawal of broader pact that would give the
Israeli forces who Invaded Le- PLO some political voice In future
1;)8!19n June 6.
dealings with Israel - something
Habib also has proposed evacuat- Israel rejects.
Israel Invaded five weeks ago to
Ing the PLO with either French,
Canadian, J'!elglan or Greek navy crush the guerrillas and rout the
· escott· If tile guerrillas Insist on 30,000 Syrian troops sent to Letheir refusa.l to evacuate under U.S. banon six years ago to pollee the
6th Fleet escort, sa.td Informed Bel- armistice that ended the Lm 76
rut sources .. who requested Moslem-Christian civU war.
anonymity.
However; the Syrian "peace~!dent Reagan o!fered to dekeepers" had Increasingly atploy up to l,OOl combat troops as tacked Israel's Lebanese Christian
part' of such a force. U.S. 6th Fleet mil!Ua allies, and after bloody bat·
ships with ·1,1100 Marines are 50 · tles with the Israelis In the first
miles ott Beirut - roughly three weeks at the Invasion most of the '
bours cruising time It ordered to go Syrians regrouped In eastern LeECHOING
- At midday Friday the
ln.
banon's BekaA Valley, cut o!f from
only sign of Ufe In thl!i empty contdor ol. the ScoUen
· DUJon Tobaa:o Co. was a placard encouraPilg
France told the Lebanese go- ·their guerrilla allies In Beirut ·

workers to
Itt! prvdud ~thea the compSI
tors'. The local tobacco company haa apparently IMtN
out leaving about 30 employees jobleu,

'

able to routinely make long gtstanee phone calls to help clients
tne,ls~tomalntatnthepresmake medical appointments, but
ent level ct services pllrtlcularly In
will
Instead provide the Informaa . . . wblch tOIIk 591nany ye- vtew of t~~e expected turt~~er cuts 1n
· ari lo build, IIIII betlln to crumble federaliiiOIIey.
·
..._ ·
tion and telephone numbers so that
they can make their own arrangeaway," 'la.rne!lted Fl'ank Petrie,
Currently the Departm,ent operments, acconding to Petrie.
As of Sept. 30, the Heath DepartMote'~ iltatmlaal folioltlecl )lis the Mel&amp;ll County,Budget Comltllf
I '
.
•
'
'
ment may lose another person.
c;cio•••-~» on c~uu~~ra ~en~~cea ilon, w110e the relnalnde( 1s 1n ted;, . ,
_Funding tor the WIC (Women, Infants and Children) c&lt;lordlnator,
·. , PI'GI*:IJIIB beiDa Ml!uiltated . enJ ttuta..
,
.
.ltiYJidruftlllldldlleto,lhedefeetci
Alreldytw~~PfOII'IIIIIhavebeen lnstltuta;l pr~am o( .charges.
ihOse attending the well child clln- Gloria Palkovlk, Is only set up until
. all• hal( miD operallag letyla t,be • pblled out hecailte ol. flrndlne, 1be Vacclaes for pollb, dlpthela- tcs held at the healthdepartrnenhll' that time. She currenlly b working
. Jlml pt1mlry 1114 tile mltlmllal ~ Jll'llll'&amp;lll COIIClicted pertlllll&amp;-tetaDUI, aDd teWIUS are forthelmmUnizatlonsandJabwork with Annie Moon and Debbie La, *«m• Ill iederal fiiD1•
ovwalelleralyeen'perlodb'fNlta admlftiJtered at a cllaral! or $2 performed. Et!ectlve·JWy 1, liow- ValleY, R. N. on the program which
: J1t ,r.portad, llowevR', that Wlmlld, R. N. W11 clltiWidllwed In each. w101 the 11111I11p. vacCine, ever, there Is a c~ of S5 per b totally federally fundEd for ad· ...... Col.,.,...•wllllllivea'.muee Mlrdl blcaute af dldldll'al cuts, meulel-rubella, aud measles- . chl.ld plus lrnm\UIIZ&amp;tlons, plus· ministration and generates about
· ID...,. 1111 tile oae-blllll)ln Jelly for aDd aa Julie 31 tile )ll'e-lllltal pro-· rnuJ11111 alid rubella at S5 each, Pe- urlne ·CUltures, plus llematocrltes $50,000 In food coupons for those
. the departmitllt IIIID Ill the No- 11'1111 wb1cb abe handle' ·was nlcJllln, hematpcrttll aDd ~rlne , tees. ~ slune,. charges wtU be' qualliylltg tor the supplemental
·,........ 8l*llhl d ciiDiL ·
dropped. allocluetotbelacltolmo- ~lturis are S2 u areJtlood pres- made for the examlnaUons on the foodprogram.
·
· 'l1ie Melp Oulllily ~ o1 aey..... WinJIIdllaolaalel'wlth . IIIJ't~FIIubotathllyem:wUI &lt; Head Start children ' p~ ' Norma ]'orres, nursing supervi· ..........kt llrdlo. . \lll.. ' tbldlpilbl•t..
,·.
. bei81Dri1 doUiutlll!llhavebeeb ·thn!u8htbe 'clepar~t. ·
· sor, advises tbat awroxlrnately 681
......... ............. .
lit .... to a6!etll0di, ar ~ lilpnvtauayears.
..
. AsanotherBJet·as'\(jngrneuure, Meigs CollntJanl.wi!re aerved In the
' ..... ,_- 1111* • tilt !IIIIDL . ' 61d!Wolea
. bR, PwtrWonJ\Ilf 1· II! U..JIIII' t~~erewunocbargeto .· tile' department .wfll no lqnjer be pr•BITi \\oh!ch has as Its gOal 'to
BJ CIIARU!:NE HOEFLICH
u• ..lliWf ,. ·
POMEROY-"It'sasbametosee

.,me. a
.m

That amount, according to Pe-

·=:u:~.:= . ';::'~
.
·
111

·•

Currently, the Department of
Health fuids itself in a situation where
occasionidly it's necessary to "rob Peto pay Paul," says deputy health
oomlnissioner ·Fr41nk Petrie.
·

:r: ~~!,.~;= ter

a

•

'GAIUPOUS

DAILY TRIBUNE
446-"42

Could not be reached tor co ~
· nt
throughout .the week becau
ey
were out of t9W11, acco
secretarles at the plant.
1 ~J.'
·
Dronaowsk.l said m e d~talls
:&gt; GO!haidsald the employees were shoUld be available M' day when
!Jiformed ol the U,MI temporary' ' Peters Is expected to retu m to the
summer' sflut-doWit 'schedule llllt:• ' plant. .
'.' "
then were told they would be layed
Gothard sa.ld she and a few oth. ott.
ers are supposed to go to work MonThe Ohio Bureau of Employment d.ty also; but added, "I don't know
Services has been taking appllca- what we'll be doing.
Uons for unemployment a.ld from
"I haven't gotten over II yet beseveral of the plant's workers, of- cau~ I liked It there. It seemed like
flee manager Evelyn Scarberry we were one big tamUy."
said. ·
Scotten DUlon Co. Is owned by
·Plant manager Roger Peters and National Home Products wh.lch Is
other top management otflclals based In Buffalo, N.Y.
Gothard, 'estimating the pljl!lt employs about :Kl workers. "l knew It
was coming, but I tllooght we had
., l!t least six f1l0nths. It's just a.

~,-~~igs.'County u ·ealth Department faces program cutba~ks

•

.

SAVE

Multim~dia

.Syria· rejects PLO; ~emands
Israel pull out·of Ubanon

COUNTY

HIC£2'
~ij f : ..

sp. am-fm
rack, new radial

10 Sections, 74 Pages 35 Cenh

A

Scotten .Dillon closing
down; details sketchy

f

4 cyl. 5

entittt

.

'r

'78' FORD LTD II

Buablesl ................ , • c.e
Classified .ds .. .. .. .. . .. . 1).3.7
Editorial .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. A·Z
Farm ... ................. c-7
Local .... _, ............. A+ll
State-National. ............ D-1
Sports -.·................. C..l·5
Take-One .... _. .. .. .. .. l118ert

Middleport-Pomeroy-GalliPD!!s-Point Pleasant sunday, July 11, 1982

By JEFF OJI,o\BMEIER

=

........... 8-1-8

Area deaths .. , ........... , A-5

City, county
reach
agree:q~ent
on
jail
.

;

SUMMER
FAMILY

The name of Mayor Clarence An:
drews was orn.ltted trom Sunday's
newspaper account of the wedding
of VIcky Koste Hysell, Racine, and
Saleh All El-Dabaja, Berult, Lebanon, who were wed June 27.
Mayor Andrews performed the
ceremony.

Along tbe

Vet. 16lle. 21

CLEARANCE~~~~~~E

Performed wedding

Meets Monday

Veterans Memorial

tmes

.

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

Portland PTO will meet Monda~
at 7 p.m. at the school.

•

'

Checks totaling $2,606, proceeds Coolville Fire House. Nwnerous
from the three-week matching funds drawings were held with prizes
drive sponsored by Camp 10900, ·going to Delbert Morris, Athens;
Alfred, Modern Woodman of Thomas Wolfe, Racine; Robert
America, were presented to Unamln, Reedsville; Rollo Blair,
representatives of the Chester, Coolville; Lois Gerlach, Tuppers
Coolville, and Tuppers Plains Volun- Plains( Steve Holland, Coolville;
teer Fire Department and Emergen- Jean Frederick, Tuppers Plains,
cy SquaW!.
and Dennis BurreUie, Coolville.
camp secretary iB Ralph C. HenThe matching funds drive of the
Modem Woodmen was culminated derson, Coolville.
with a potluck supper at the

u t·

meet

Qlester TWIJ,. Trustees wUI
In regular session Tuesdily, July~.
at 7::Kl p.m. at the town hall.
...

Topllop1101811tlbo.- .IO. ,
Boan4J..42.10i' Sowl4«1 lbl. ud liP UJ0-6$.\ l\ ·~
· SowoiOII tbo. and up 13.141-11.
P!u b)' the heod - ·

Checks presented

I Area death I

·Meigs (:ounty resident Rich Haggerty
has built a house • a round house.••B-1

Tuesday 8e88ion 8et

BabyColYH,-.

RIVERSIDE V .W .-AMC-JEEP

dr.

pressure
drug probe•.• A-

,i

POMEROY ,
OAILYBTINR
992-2156 .

.

.

.

.

.
I

I

'

provide better nutrition to~ Pret-'
nant women and young children, as
well as to teach and train families
In nutrition, with the goal beifle
health.ler boys and girls. ·
Petrie credits money from tbe
March of Dimes and Its b!r tll defe&lt;;ts program with keeping WJC Intact If that COI)trlbutlon had not ,
come thr~gh, then 011e emjlloye ot!'
the . program· would have been
dropped, the health ·~mmillsiOnet
explained. WhUe the ·atate omc:el
hal ·. encouraged taklng . ..
from administration and puttJni
them

IntO Plilll'am&amp;, Pett!e uid

there Is only so tar an agency clilt 111
In doing that
•.
There has been' a decided decrease In Uterature distributed to
the public, and achool ·bealth pre&gt; ·
jlrams•are expectEG to be reduc'ed .
tbla tall.
• . . . .
(Contlltiied on Page A41 ·

II

•

t

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="166">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2756">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44666">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44665">
              <text>July 9, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1390">
      <name>dailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
