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                  <text>Pag•

12 The Dally Sentinef

M~igs

'Economy
not
robust,
but
growh
n.g
. "'
By ROBERT nJRLOW
A-.dated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.

economy Is growing for the first
time since last summer, the government reported today. But the
gain so far can hardly be Clllled
robust.
New Commerce Department figures litdlcated that the broadest
measure otAmerlcan economic activity -Inflation-adjusted gross national product - rose at an annual
rate or 1.7 percent In the just-ended
April-June quarter. It had fallen
sharply In the previous two
quarters.
Earlier government reports
sllowed such Important economic
Indicators as Industrial production
and retail sales falling again In
June and many analysts had said
those reports showed recovery
from the recession had not begun.
But the second-quarter gain In
"real" GNP was bound to be read
as an encouraging sign that at least
some recoVery may be very close.
Two big contributors to the gain
were an Increase In Americans'
personal consumption spending
during the second quarter and a
slowdown In selling oft business
Inventory.
Inflation-adjusted personal
spending rose at an annual rate of
$7.2 bllllon, up from $5.7 bllllon In
the first quarter.
And the value or business Inventories, again adjusted tor Inflation,
dropped at a rate or $6.9 billion

•.

I

rather than the steep $15.4 billion of
the first quarter.
The big January-March decline
In production destined for Inventories had been the.most Important
!actor welglt!ng down total GNP Cor
that quarter.
AU or the figures In the report
were adjusted for normal seasonal
variations.
Today's Commerce report also
said lnfiatlon- as measured bY the
broad-based GNP Implicit price denator- roseata5.3percentannual
rate In the second quarter of tltls
year after rising at an annual rate
of 4.3 percent In the January-March
. period. The first-quarter rate had
been reported earlier at3.8percent.
' Total GNP, wltlch Is an estimate
of the market value or all goods and
services, rose to an annual rate of
$1.477 trillion In thesecondqyarter,

Continue...

Edward C. Myers, 69, Audabon
Road,, Columbus, died Thursday at
Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus. He was a.Carmer Meigs
County resident.
Mr. Myers was retired from
Grant Hospital maintenance department and a 17-year veteran or
the Columbus and Southern Oltlo
Electric Co.
•
He was preceded In death by ltls
parents, Sarah and Noah Rhodes
Myers, one daughter, four brothers
and tour. sisters.
SurviVors Include ltJs wife, Florence Rhodes, sons, Ray "Bud" Myers, and Ronald and Mike Myers,
Columbus. StqH:hlldren surviving
are Carol Ann Payne and Jim
Rhodes, Columbusr and Gerald
Rhodes, Orient. Four grandchildren also survive, with these sisters,
Mrs. Lula Shaffer, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Marie Roy, Racine; and Mrs. Jane
Hobart, Wallace, W.Va.
Funeral was Monday from the
Schoedlnger Funeral Home, Columbus, with burial In Somerset
Cemetery, New Rome.

(Conunuedt~mpagei)

'

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··~

· Patrons f1 the Salem Center School have organized and retained attorneys apparently to proCeed with Utlgation or other·action against the Meigs
Local School District Boa:rd oC Education.
ApproximatelY 40 perSons met Tuesday night at the Salem Center fire
hOuse to dl.!cuss possible action against the board which P,roposed earlier
the transter.ci fifth and sixth graders to the Rutland Elementary School,
tliereby ellmlnaling the need for constructing additional classrooms at the
school.
Elected olflcers or the Salem Center School group were· Gary Aspln,
president; Charles Jones, vice president, and Sandy Garnes, secretary·

f

A marriage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Charles Otis Nolan, Jr., 19, Sl Joseph, Mo., and Lisa Kay Wltltlock,
ro, Syracuse.

S~ks

'

Main St., Pomeroy, to Veterans additional lnfonnatlon call Jlni •
Memortal. Rutland at U:-59 a.m. Caldwell at 667.,'l644 or GeoiJe Col-,
•
.• ,
took Warren Stearns from county · !Ins at 667.,'1484.
road 60 to Veterans Memorial and
Racine at U : 49 a.m. took Chris· · Mayor cond~ets cOurt
topller Hadley from Letart to VeteI
rans Memorial and early Racine
Mayor Fred Hottman condu,cted
took Harold Jelfers from Bow- Mayor's Court Wednesday hl8ht In
man's Run to VeterllnS Memorial. Pomeroy.
·
~
Four persons forfeited bonds; •
Gerald Dill, Minersville, 53'751;•
Suit filed
DWI; Jlmfny Morrlsoll, Middle- }.
A suit to quiet title was filed by port, $100, disorderly manner: curl-::.
Robert G. Ashley, Middleport, tis Gilbert, Gallipolis, ·$50, exp~..;
against Mary Leifheit, Columbus, ucense tags; Mike H!Ddy, Mlcldle- :.
port, $225, assault.
.
·
et.al.
Fined were Steve Gillispie,
, ford, $275 and casts
~hree davl&lt;-~
Eastern tourney
In jail, DWI; Randall MHun • .MJJIJ'
The Eastern Atltletlc Boosters dleport, $10 and costs~!:!,~~:j
will sponsor a boys' pony league drlvlngwlthllghtsolf:
tournament beginning July 29 Middleport, $250 and costs, -- ---"'
· ·
days In jail, DWI. and $100
through Aug. 1.
Entry ree 1s $al and two balls. for costs, driving ~er suspeaslF,

Apply for license

•

divorce

Kathy Jean Reed, Pomeroy, filed
suit lor ·divorce In Meigs County
Common Pleas against David
Allen Reed, Pomeroy.

MI!Yor's court
Mayor Clarence Andrews condueled Mayor's cou~ Wednesday
night In Pomeroy.
James Styers, Columbus, owes
$47 f or speed; Gerjl)d Willis, Cool. ville,
owes
$48 for speed;
Knight,
Ravenswood,
owesDreama
$53 ror

s~rleltlng

Prime...

- ~~e~~~o~~~7~=

treasurer.

I

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SUMMER HOURS

.•

Wallace, Athens attorneys, to Investigate alternatives for the school, In·

,.

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EBERSBACH
110 W. MAin St
992-2811

enttne
1 S•clion, 12 Pag•s
15 Cents
A Multimedia In(. New1pap•r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 22,1982

•

AUCT

THURSDAY, JULY 22
7 p• M•
MASON v·oLUNTEER FIRE
DEPT. '
·
NEW MERCHANDISE BY BOB STODLER

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·Body mistakenly identified

•·

PERSON, AUCTIONEER

1 •

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E'LBERfELDS IN POMEROY

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0.~·
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BALLERINA AND SCUFF-STYLES ' IN PINK,
BLUE, BEIGE AND WHITE.
·SIZES S-M-L-XL

..
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Pedestrian dies in cable collapse
NEW YORK - Construction workers early today secured the
boom or a crarie that dangled "Uke a broken Tinker Toy" 44 stories
over a Manhattan street after collapsing atop a new skyscraper,
killing a pedestrian.
Warren F. Levenberg, 31, was struck and killed bY a piece of
detds as he tried to outrun the hall or granite, glass and metal
lalocked loose Wednesday morning when the i37-foot crane gave
way on top of the Contlnental-Dllnols Ceater on Madison Avenue two
,,. bl~ no,r!h, or St._Patrick's Cathe4fal, witnesses and pollee said.
·Sixteen oqters suffered Injuries, most or them minor, and only one ··
perSQh remained hospitalized overnlghf.
A :D-toot; one-ton section or the boom damaged when the crane
collapSed hung_ suspended by a single piece of metal tubing over the ' ' ·
norrnally busy street until workers finally secured It with cables
about 2 a.m. today.
Pollee said the block would ·remain closed untO the crane Is dlsmailtled and removed.

REG. '5.00 &amp; '6.00
'
Special _$

.

SAN lGNACIO, ·Mexico - Relallv~ r1 a brlcll,layer who djed last
February said Wednesday they believe ltJs bodY was the one unearthed !rom the cemetery In tills western Mexican vUlage and
.mistakenly Identified as the corpse Of missing University of Colorado protesso.r Nlcltolas Schrock.
,
The relatives sald they discovered Monday that the grave or the
bricklayer, Jesus Valenzuela, 64, was empty alter hearing the news
that pathologists had determined the body sent to Denver, Colo., was
not that or Schrock, 42. The professor was a native of MAssillon, Oltlo.
"We noticed last week that the cross was ll)lsslng and that the
ground appear~ to have been dug up, " said Alfonso Alarid, the
bricklayer's brother-In-taw. "Then after hearing )he.news from the
.United States, we dug up the ground and found the grave empty."
Investigators have said six of the seven policemen jailed In connection with killing and burying the man who was driving Schrock's
tnlck had pointed to an urunarked grave where they said they burled
tbe victim.

·'

SLIPPER SPECIAL .--

'

299··

ELBERFELDS I.NPOMEROf; .

..

Impersonators soliciting funds
OBERLIN, Oltlo- U.S. Rep. Donald J. Pease, D.OberUn, says
·people are ap#ently Impersonating members or ltJs ~taft In an
elfort to solicit' funds.
Pease said Wednesday that several constituents have told ltlm
that they've received telephone calls !rom people claiming to rep res- ·

ent htm.

··

.

According to Pease, some of the callers say they are taking an
opinion pall for Pease and are calling collect because ltJs office Is
short of funds. Pease dented any such shortage and saY.S anyone
receiving such a call shouldn't accept It and should contact ltJs office.
Pease said the .callers also say they are In lh.e area or Pease's
coqgresslonal district and are willing to pick up any contributions
lnimedlately.
Pease said no one from ltJs office makes such solicitations.
' ·~ ' ''

Officials seek to _end impasse
"

HARDWARESINCE 1929
Pomeroy,

11-S

. 't'OLEDO, Oltlo - The Toledo ~lty administration has agreed to
.accept mediation by tHe'Laoor-Management-Cittzerrs Committee In
IJII effort to resolve an Impasse In negotiations with two unions
representing more than l,!IXl city workers.
ComQ-llttee director Louis 'Thomson Jr. said he expects a meeting
later tills week or early next week between city officials and the
urftons, 'Teamsters Local al and the American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees Local 7. ·
Both unions hav~ rejected the city's olfer, wltlch Included a virtual
pay 'freeze With a \\::!llle reopener In January. But they have continued working under dally extensions or the agreement that expired
June:.!. ·

....
BACK TO N01111NG - A Lebanese Cbr!Jtlall wbo left hll home In

Damour (jaat South ol Belnlt) In 1975 wben the Palestlu.lani forceably
toot over the town rellll'llll to wbat used to be hll bome, and starlllto go

deltroyed In llgbllng between the Palesllnlans and Lebanese CbriJUana
In the late ' 1011 and then In llgbllng between lsraeUa forces and
PalestiDiana In early June this year. ~ AP Wirephoto).

througb the ntbble In aearcb ol the front door. Tbe city was totally

l~raeli
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forces

~ttack

guerrilla posts

'

·JERUSALEM (AP) ' - Israeli
forces attacked Syrian and Palestinian guecrtlla positions along the
entire length of the eease-flre une In
eastern Lebanon today, the milItary command said.
,
A military communique said the
Israelis attacked following repeated violations of the cease-fire
bY the Syrians and the Palestinian
guerrlUas In their ranks.
.
"The Israeli goverlllJlent wtll not
tolerate a sltu!l!lon In wltlch Israeli
soldiers are killed and tltls sltua tlon
. Is called a cease-fire, .. the communique said.
'
In !3elrut, there were repOrts that
Ismell jets dlvebombed guei-rilla
positions In the western half of Lebanon' s capital.
,
·. Five ISraeli soldiers -wen! am.
.
'
bushed ahd killed In eastern Lebanon Wednesday, near the village
of Mansoura, six mUes·southeast of
the Beirut-Damascus highway.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Is-

raeU warships, tanks and artUlery
furiously pounded Palestine Liberation Organization enclaves In the
MoslemsectoroftheLebanesecapltal today, Imperiling a U.S.·
sponsored cease-tire.
Jets Ut up Beirut skies with flares
as the barrage erupted at midnight
and raged without letup until daybreak, when pollee said lighting tapered olf Into sporadic exchanges.
PLO guerrillas fired massive
barrages from Soviet-made multiple rocket launchers on Israeli positions on the lt1Us south and east of
Beirut and at gunb!&gt;ats blocking
sea escape routes for PLO chair·
man Yasser Arafat's8,000 trapped
guerrillas.
There was no Immediate word on
casualties In the blitz t~t pollee
said endangered the truce arranged 12 days ago bY U.S. special
envoy Philip C. Habib.
The bombardment came as Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Begin met wtth ltJs Cabinet In Jer·

usalem for a special session amid
heightened pessimism about chan· ·
ces for a diplomatic solution to extricate the guerrillas.
The early morning two-hour Cabinet session followed a meeting
late Wednesday between Begin and
U.S. Ambassador Samuel Lewis,
who reported the latest U.S. efforts
to persuade the PLO to evacuate Its
besieged fighters.
Israeli newspapers and radio
quoted government sources as sayIng Wasltlngton had made no progress In finding an Arab country to
provide sanctuary for the encircled
PLO, and the Cabinet had to weigh
a U.S. request for more time
against Its own repeated threat to
u·se military Coree In Beirut to rout
th~ guerrillas If diplomacy failed.
In a speech after the meeting
with Lewis, Begin 'told an Amerl·
can Jewish delegation that Israel
"wUI have to take care that all the
terrorists leave Beirut and Le-

Elzanna Dri!!COII

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Associated Prll!IS Wrtler
COLUMBUS, O)Jlo (API - Cit-

Ing profits and credit standings
below the national averagei Ohio
electric •utilities have mounted a
drive to disconnect parts of' a rate
reform bill pending In the Iiouse.
Economist Robert E. Wayland,
speaking tor the Ohio Electric Utu-

tty Institute, told a public utUitles
subcommittee Wednesday that the
financial condition 'of electric utUI·
ties has been deteriorating and Is In
danger of more erosion.
And Edgar H. Maugans, a Cleve·
land Electric Dlumlnatlng Co. vice
president, said credit ratings of
Oltlo utrUtles have dropped more
than thelndustry'sratlngs In recent

years.
Both argued against a proposal
tightening restrictions on how
much the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio can allow In a utulty's
ratp base for plants helng buUt but
not operating.
Wayland, a fanner chief economist for the PUCO, Is now a senior
associate with Temple, Barker &amp;

- ..,, i.·.·

GAHANNA, Ohio - To avoid the cost or a spectal election, the
Gali.aima City Council bas decided to put UJe recall vote over Mayor
John.Breen on the Novell)ber general e)ectlon ballot.
'
Breen, 36, came under fi&gt;e last month alter being Involved In an
early morning fight.
·
· A rew days later, a• recall petition signed bY 2,~ voters In the
Columlius
. suburb was delivered to the city clerk.

A rwgul.lr '3'' w1lue

APLUSH ANIIAL*
WIT~ EACH Sln,NGI.

.

Color l'ortrlilt P.agge lncludet:
·
Two I xl10., ThrH &amp;x 71, flltwn Wlllell.

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o••..
••••r~c.n
,J.
~rllllciton ' · . 1

Ohio lottery winners

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• Bellrtlful blci!GrolniiMillble

• All! llbout our Daccnlor l'alnlll
·At 11"'- of ontme ,...

iwd11~

Dates: July 20 lhru .
· .· J~IJZ4 , , J
. Tu....,.Sitlrday
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· O..EVEWD (AP) - The winning number drawn Weilnesday
night In the Ohio·Lottery's dally game "The Jl!utnber'' was 413.
The lotterY repartee! a los&amp; r1 $1.7,681.!!0 from the,wagering on Its
dallY game. The loss came on sates or $878,305, while ~lders of
wiQnlng tickets are .~titled to snare $1,025,986.!!0, _lottery ~als ',
said
' "
" . . .
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*'" - •coupon

for a ,CUCICI'Y pluah animal by~~

Siale weather f~recast
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Partly cloudy tonight: Lows In the rnld-EOB. Winds northeasterly
-,round 10 mpll. Friday, sunny. Hlglls In !be ~- . · , ·

w 0111o JJ'wW rt · Saturdartbrwih Mooday: talr ~tur­
day aDd, a chance o1 Uu;;a s and tlmudei Alii 1111 SuDday aDd Man~- ~ In
60s. Hlgbii In the mid, to IIPP" Ills.
•

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Sloane, Inc., a Lexington, Mass.,
consulting firm .
"The financial condition of Ohio's
electric utilities requires that the
commission have the tools to meet
Its objectives of ensurtng adequatp
future supplles and compensating
justly the Investors who take the
brunt of the risk," Wayland said.

TV pioneer
Garroway is

Gahanna mayor to face recall
'

banon. None of them will tJe left."
Begin said "there Is a problem.
We shall solve It soon."
It was not clear touched off today's heavy duel In Beirut, which
Israeli Corces have ringed since the
early days of their June 6lnvaslon
to crush the PLO's Lebanon power
base.
A PLO communique said the Israeli bombardment was directed
mainly at the Fakhanl n~&gt;lghbor­
hood that houses the PLO' s administrative offices and Ararat's
command headquarters as well as
the Palestinian camp of Bourj EIBarajneh near Beirut's paralyzed
InternatiOnal airport.
The latest lighting followed an
announcement by the military
command In Tel Aviv that five Israeli soldiers were killed In a guerrilla ambush early Wednesday
near the village of Mansoura, six
miles southeast of the BeirutDamascus highway.

.Qhio it_tiliti~s assail ,.ate reform bill

\

Elzanna M. DrlscoU, 67. of Columbus, dl~ Tuesday In the Oltlo
State University Hospital,
Columbus.
She was born Dec. 1, 1914, In Columbus to the late Walter G. and
Anna E. Roush Kelling.
Her husband, Thomas DrlscoU, ·
preceded her In death.
Surviving .are three daughters,
Mrs. Anna Barker and Mrs. Mary ·
Hay' boll) or Columbus and Mrs.
Eizanna Hughes, Mt. Gilead, Oltlo;
one son, Thomas DrlscoU, Columbus; one sister, Mary KeU!ng, Colvmbus; three. brothers, Fredrick
Kelling, Nevada,.Ohio, Frank Kel. llng, Centerburg, Ohio, and Robert .
Kelling, Colurnbu,s; 18 grandchlldI'E!II and two greet grandchlldren.
1
Fulleral services wm be held at
ibe FOileeoo&amp; Funer.t Home In ·
Muon on Thuraday at 1::.! p.m.
w1th the Rev. John Campbell olfl- 1
clatfnc. Bw1al wW foUQw In the
GriiWn Cemetery. .
Fl1endl may call at the fUneral
bllrile at 12110011 oa Thul'!lday.
•

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• 'I

Now there's zesty
nacho cheese .and
cruncHY toasted corn
baked together In
one delicious
cracker. They're
so tasty you'll ·
eat 'em by the
handhJI! ·

•COLD PACKERS
•JAR LIRERS
*BALL JARS

at y

r-p;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;::-:;:-:::~~:~;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~iiii~~

The new .natho
cracker
...
for the mucho.
··
munchln' $rMCker.

GAUGES, SAFID FU~ES

lng that she will make the formal request.
At the last meeting or the board, the Issue was discussed briefly alttx&gt;ugh
It was voted by the board not to ·add the matter to the agenda. Robert
Snowden, board member, reported at that time that he had met with
parents and other Interested Indlvlduals and that It was their consensus of
opinion that "the board has a moral obligation to uphold promises of the
previous administration to Increase classrooms at the school." Snowden's
reference was to the river $1 million bond Issue (no cost to the taypayers)
passed In the district In June, 1981. At that time, two additiOnal classrooms
were listed among the district Improvements to be made with the money
derived !rom the bond Issue.
Since then, the board has proposed the student transfer to eliminate the
need Cor additional classrooms.

•

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Voi.31,No.55
Copyrightod 1912

•neorn1Dihs

*PRESSURE CANNERS *ll-...:-.
•REPAIR
SUPPLIES
SEALING RINGS, STEAM

eluding possible Utlgatlonagalnst the school board as weU as the posslbUity
or transferlng the.school into another dlstrtct.
The proced'ures for transferring the school were outlined by the attorneys who advised that efforts will be J118de by them to get the Issue on the
agenda ror the next meeting of the Meigs Local Board or Education.
Another meeting was scheduled for Aug. 4 at 7 p.m. at the fire statiOn at
Salem Cent~. AU concerned citizens are urged to attend.
Salem Center parent representatives and Ms. Gwtnn and Wallace attended the July 14 meeting of the board of education, but the Issue of
student transfers and additional classrooms was not added to the agenda
at that meettni. The board.at that time recommended that a request t9 be
added to the agenda for the next meeting be made In writing to the
superintendent or schools. Ms. Gwtqn advised at the Tuesday night meet-

e

COMPII II

HOME CANNING SUPPLIES

·

It was decided during the meeting to retain Susan GWinn and James

~~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~;;~ ..'

Lillie Gheen
Mrs. Llllle E . Gheen, 79, Racine,
died Tuesday at Veterans MemorIal Hosplljll.
Mrs. Gheen was a daughter or the
late Wllllam and Dora Gatten. She
was also preceded In death by her
husband, Carl 0. Gheen, and a
brother, Clyde Gatten.
Mrs. Gheen attended the Racine
Baptist Churcq.
Surviving are six sons, Sanford
W. Gheen, Bellaire; Floyd M.
Gheen, Riverside, Cal.; Franklin
D. Gheen, Middleport; Carl V.
Gheen, Pomeroy; Manuel E.
Gheen, Raymond A. Gheen, both of
Racine; two daughters, Carolyn M.
Glananagel, Bellaire, and Delores
J. Burton, Pomeroy; a brother, Bill
Gatten, Bridgeport. Also surviving
are 23 grandchlldren, 16 greatgrandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
' Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Racine Baptist
Church with the Rev. Don Walker
olflclatlng. Burial will be In the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Ewing Funeral Home
after 7 p.m. this evening.

Both figures were worse than
Commerce had estimated 'earlier,
with the fourth-quarter decline earller reported at an annual rateof4.5
percent and the first-quarter drop
at a rate of 3.7 percent.
There had been a slight decline In
the second quarter of 1981 and a
slight Increase In the tltlrd.

·County happenings~..

and blow right In the air - the bo- spokesman said the cancellation
bonds were Wllllam
dies, the Instruments, everything," was due to the removal of a wisdom
said one wllness, Ronald Ben- tooth last weekend, not the
Arnold,
$53, disturbing
the peace;
Alan Brlckles,
Pomeroy,
$48,
jamin. "There were mangled bo- bombings.
speed; Carl Tennant, New Haven,
dies all over the deck chairs."
$44, speed; Dale Wilfong, ReedS·
The Hyde Park blast shook the
ville, $45 speed; Keith Musser,
windows at Buckingham Palace
. (Continued from page 1)
half a mUe away, a palace spokes..
woman said.
Economists have been . counting
••• speed;
Tonia Ash, syracuse, ....,,
The queen, who was In the palace
Douglas Smith. Mason, $48, speed;
at the time, went ahead with a pa- on a pickup In consumer spending
Michael Dalley, Portland, $44,
lace garden party Cor 9,000 people to pull the economy from the grips
.
ot
recession.
They
say,
hOwever,
speed;
I;Wbert Scarberry, ,Peinelater In the day, but she cancelled a
~
roy,
......,,
s
; a
er,
visit tonlgltt"io the Royal Interna- that as long as ml25 stay high, con..... peed $44,
D v1d
Carpent
sumers
will
stay
away
rrom
the
Parkersburg,
speed;
John
'
.
llonal Horse Show at Wembley. A
stores.
. perStitt,
dlsorderiy
The Commerce· ..report ¥}d
manner.Columbus,
.
sonal COllSumptlon spending feU .•
$10.5 billion Ips! month to an annual , Emergency runs
rate or $195 trillion. Americans'
..
.
Robert Kimes
personal Income rose 0.3 percelll-ln
Local units answered five calls
June to an annual rate of $2.56 Tuesday, the Meigs CountY EmerRobert E . Kimes, 22. New
trlUion.
genCY}·Medlcal Service reports.
Haven, died Tuesday In St. Josephs
;'
Pomeroy at 6: 22 p.m. took EulaHospital In Parkersburg. . -·
. ·''ita Webster from the Pomeroy
He waS born August 8, 1959, In
Health Care Center to Veterj!RS
Police probe wr~k
Pomeroy·.
Memorial Hospital and at 11: 21
He was a former employee of the
a.m.
took Randy and Rhett Friend
Pomeroy pollee reported a oneIrby Con5tructlon Co.
from
the scene or an.-··
accident on W.
car accli:lent Tuesday ,on· West
Surviving are ltJs parents. Archie
.
Main, near the Save-More station. r-------------1
J. and Cora M. Parsons Kimes,
Randy Friend, Long Bottom,
New Haven; four sisters, Mrs.
Tammy Chapman, Point Pleasant,
headed east, was atemptlng a ium
•
Rose M. Kimes; Ronda L. Kimes
Into the station when he hmmed
and Mary Darlene Kimes, all at
Into a IJOie on the right sld~. of the · .CAKE DECOlA TING
oome; two brothers, RaiJ(!alt L.
road. He was taken to·tllelfeterans
-,
SUPPLIES
Kimes, Chester, Oltlo aJ}d David W.
Memorial Hospltal.-'I'IiE! matter Is
under Investigation, pollee said.
Kimes, at home; maternal grandmother, Mrs. Geneva Parsons, Lettergap, ·w.V.; paternal ' ~pital news
grandmother, Mrs. Nora VanMeter, Mason; and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
the Foglesong Funeral Home In
Mason Friday at 11 a.m. with the
Rev. George Hoschar olflclatlng.
Burial will follow In the Evergreen
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday !rom 6 p.m. until 9 p.m.

Area deaths

Edward C. Myel'S

after adjustmentror gains due only
to Inflation, today's report said.
Before such adjustment, GNP
was estimated at an annual rate of
$3.017 trillion, It said.
Real GNP had fallen at an annual
·rate pt 5.3 percent In the October·
December final quarter or last year
as the nation dropped Into an unmlstakeable recession, then had
sUd at a rate or 5.1 percent In the
first quarter of 1982, today's report
said.

·saJern C~nter ·resldents organize, plan action

w

Porneroy-Middlepoit, Ohio ·-

'

•

•

gun VICtim
SWARTHMORE, Pa. !API · Dave Garroway, who first brought
the "Today" show Into Am,erlca's
homes at breakfast, launched new
stars In the young television medium but then Celt It had no use for
bim, friends said after his suicide at
age 69.
"He remarked to me once, 'Nobody wants me anymore. I'm old
shne, old hat. Nobody cares for old
Dave anymore,' " recalled Frank
Blatr, who broadcast the nPws for
years on "Today."
Garroway, who killed himself
Wednesday with a shotgun blast to
the head, left "Today" In 1961 and
never achieved the same success.
His .last TV appearapce came earlier tills year on a retrospective for ,.,
the show.' s 30th anniversary.
His son, Michael, said Garroway
had been suffering compljcatkins
·
' (Continued on page 12)

�.

C9mmeritary
The Daily Se_ntinel
UJCt.urtStret·l
Pumt&gt;rny, Ohlu

614-!9!·1151
ltt-:\'ftTt:DTO TilE INTEREST Of Til E !\o1F.IGS.MASO!'i Attt:1\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
t&gt;uhlisht·r

PAT WHITEH EAD
,\ -.si~la nt

ROB HOEF'UCH

f&gt;uhlisht'r/fulllrulh ·r

r;,·m·1111MatUII(I'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'~ li

FAlllur

A MEMBER uf Tlw As~tH ' iHit"d l 1rn;s , lnbwd O!lil\
·

Amt•rinltl Nr1o111paprr Puhlh;ht'r'tl: A!!J'ou•hlt lnn.

p,,...,~

A s~ ·~ · i11Uu11 » ltd tht•

UTIERS OF OPINION Wl'l' Wl"lrumt'd . Tht"V Hhuuld ht- Ia&lt;~ lhHn lOO ~nrd s Inn,.: . All
ll'\h•r!oo Hrt' suhjt'c'l lu l"dilin,M autd must ht· sl,chrd with namr, uddrrs~ 1111d h'lt•phunt·
numht&gt;r. Nn uft81)C~ lt'l ~·ni ""ill bt· puhllsht"d . IA' Itt'OI s hntlld bf in ,~tuud htl'lt'. udd rt"l&lt;~ illf.!
itos Ut'll, 11" 1 ~l'ttlltiHIUit:!l .

No trade-off
"Over the past seven years. the United States and the Soviet Union have
expanded their economic relationship, particu)Jlrly in the field of trade.
"Increased trade with the U.S.S.R. benefits the United States through
higher employment, an improved balance of trade and access to v.aluable
raw materials. It also increases contact between our two peoples, ~1ves the
li.S.S.R. an incentive to relax its traditional isolation and play a more nor·
1~al role in the world economy, and adds an element of stability to our
poUtical relations ... " .
. .
Well times change as do administrations and pohcJCs, as that passage
f~om a siate Department swnmary of U.S..SOviet economic relations dated
December 1979 evidences.
The current administration takes a much different view of the
American.Soviet relationship and the benefits to be realized, as its vehement
opposition to participation of the allies in the projected pipeline to bring
Soviet natural gas to Western Europe evidences.
That opposition is based on the simple principle that the West shquld not
do any business with the Soviets that serves to strengthen them, that the
Soviets are vulnerable economically and Western interests are best served
by applying pressure rather than offering incentives.
That principle has picked up some support from an ~nllkely quart~r the Census Bureau. A just-released report on the Sov1et economy fmds
dependence on foreign trade much hi ~ her than previously thought. The 1982
estimate is more than 30 percent.
The revision is the result of what the analysts say is a mdre realistic
Jllethod of figuring the domestic value of imports and exports, rather than
according to the officially fi.xM and artificial conversion rate of the ruble. It
significantly changes the traditional picture of the Soviet. economy as
minimally involved in world markets and VIrtually self-suffiCient. As the
report concludes, "The Soviets are far more vulnerable to economic sane·
lions than many people realized."
The report is the product of an eight-year study by the Census Bureau's
Foreign Demographic Analysis Division. Its release at this time, its authors
assure. is purely coincidental.
.
Whatever. it is a. welcome assist to an an'\i·pipeline argwnent under
· critical fire at home and ~ejected by the Europeans. The West Germans are
going ahead with credits to the Soviets that could reach a total of $1.6 billion
for the purchase of Gennan equipment for the pipeline's construction.
.
On the other hand, the report also comes at a potenhally embarrassmg
point for the administration, faced with a decision ~n grain sales to the
Soviets. The existing five-year pact, obligating the Sov1ets to buy SIX 1mlhon
: to eight million metric tons of American wheat and corn annually . exp1res
· Sept. 30. American producers, anticipating another bwnper crop and moun·
ling surpluses, urgently need some of the business.
Precisely, the Europeans can add.
Agriculture Secretary John Block maintains grain sales and the pipeline
are "completely different" issues, but it's hard to buy that If Y"U accept the
conclusions of the Census Bureau study. If the Soviets are economically ·
: vulnerable anywhere, it is in agriculture. Food and grains represented
: nearly 30 percent of imports last year.
. .
It is argued that the United States would only be hurtmg Itself by
refusing to sell grain because the Soviets can do their shopping elsewhere, as
they did after the Carter administration restricted. sales in retaliation for the
'invasion of Afghanistan. True, but not as ctlnvemently and ad~uately. No
other single supplier can meet the immense Soviet demand.
.The American grain connection is definitely an asset ttl the Soviets otherwise, they would not be involved in it..
. '
·- .
So the administration has a problem with its own principle on wh1ch
there can be no acceptable trade-off as to what Americans and Eurtlpeans
:can and cannot do. It 's either OK to do business that benefits the Soviets or it
isn't.
It's a lesson in the complexities of economics, politics and internationa l
relations, particularly when all combine.
,
An unwelcome lesson, however, for an administration that would prefer
to keep things simple.

Berry's World

-..

~'

.

Page-2-The DallY, Seiltiriel ,
Pomeroy-Midd~porf,

01119

Thunday, July .22.1982

ERA

Racine, Buchtel advance to
finals of Hubbard tourne:;·

'

afterthougc.:h==ts=-----.......-~1-am--:e~~J=.K-:-"ilp::-.a::-:-:-tric:-::-k'

WASHINGTON
Militant
proponents of the Equal Rights
Amendment have done themselves
no good by their spoiled-brat
behavior since the ERA went down
to defeat three weeks ago. The un·
written rules of politics demand a
certain level of good sportsmanship
- cheerful face. a generous
statement of concession. The sulking
and vindictive spokeswomen for the
ERA have been not merely bad
losers; they have been rotten \£.sers.
My own mail reflects not only a
vengeful spirit but a curioW!
ignorance also. Two themes con·
sistently appear. The first has to do
with political retaliation: The ladies
are out to get every state legislator
whu dared to vote his convictions
against the ERA; they demand that
a boycott be continued against the 15
states that refused to go along; in
each of the non-ratifying states, a
"dirty dozen" legislators will be
targeted for defeat. A $3 million war
chest has been raised for this purpose.
Very well. The ERA's proponents
assuredly have a right to support
sympathetic candidates and to elect
them if they can. But the net effect of
their venomous attitude surely will
be to spur the opposing forces,
skillfully led by Phyllis Schlafiy, to
mount a countercampaign of their
own. If we are to witness a match
between thequic!Je.and·Volvo crowd
on the one hand, and the apple-pieand-pickup-truck folks on the other,
we can expect some black·gwn-andthunder collisions.
A second theme has to do with a
couple of illusions much cherished
by the proponents. They truly seem
to believe that a grave injustice has
been done. They should have won,
they contend, · because "a clear
majolity" of the people support the
ERA. ·They also believe that
ratificatiOn of the ERA would have
produced, almost overnight, . a
milleniwn in terms of the equality of

men and women.
It may be in order to remind the
losers, who so constantly quote the
Gallup and Harris polls, that constit uti ona l amendments have
nothing on earth to · do with
•'•majority rule. " It is immaterial if true - that Sl percent, or 60 per:
cent, or 66 percent of " the people"
support the defeated amendment.
The Cons tituti on requires
ratification by three-fourths of the
siates. If account is given to the five
states . that rescinded their
ratifications, it is evident that the
proponents fell far short of the
mark.
Under its own terms, the ERA
'would not have become operative
until two years after ratification.
Moreover, the · amendment would
have reached only to official acts d
discrimination. The ERA, in and of

itself, would not have produced
sexual equality in executive suites.
'It would not have rewritlen thousands of state and federal statutes that
now contain "sexist" tenninology or
provide for different treatment of
men and women. It would not have
equali~ed insurance premiwns or
pension contributions. Such refonns
willy-nilly would have required
litigation or Je~islation . More than a
century has passed since the 14th
Amendment was declared part of
the Constitution in 1866 ; we still are
litigating and legislating over its
provisions.
The ERA now has been reintroduced in Congress. My own hope
is that the resolution will slay bot·
tied up in committee until this
session ends in October. We need a
breathing space. Passions ought to
cool. Constructive efforts at both the

state and federal level should be
given time to work. Litst month file
Department of Justice filed a
detailed report on • 113 Jederal
statutes that still contain gender dif·
ferences. Ofthese, 44have ~o do with
the armed services. Another 20 lnvolve Social SecuritY benefits. Ten
provisions deal with Indian tribal
law. e.g., "White man may not
acquire right to tribal property by
n1arrymg Indian woman."
.
It is encouraging to learn from the
department's report 'how · many
discliminatory statutes in recent
years have been repealed, 01' have
fallen to court decrees under the 14th
Amendment.
· ·
A time may come when absolute
equality is demandCII .- w~en the
fact of sexual differences y1elds to
the. fiction of law. when the law will
view men and women identic~lly but that!~

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS -Middleport claimed Ita
thlnl straight league champloaablp Tueldly evenlog
by defeallug Pomeroy's Royall 9-! In tbe Melp-Mason
Pony league cbamploaablp playoffL Mlddleport was
tbe E111tera dlvliloo cbamplon aiM! Pomeroy claimed
tbe Westera Utle. Members of tbe Mldclleport team are
froal, left to rtgbl, Nick Blllb, Scott Mcltllmey, Dooald

Stela;- Domlle Becker, Jeffrey Hood, Cbucll Oblinger.
Tim CuaeU aad Max Blalle. Back - Assistant Coach
Gene Wise, Trey Cassell, Rick Wise, Danny 'Thomas,
Tony We~b, Paul Duff, Sc!ott Gheen, Coach Perk Ault.
Absent were assistant Coach Frank Gheen and Davis
Hoover.

ByTOMSEPPY
Assodated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- TheNa·
tiona! Football League Management Council's meeting with the
NFL Players Association continues
amid published reports that the
owners will lock out thE&gt; players
prior to the regular·season openers
if contract negotiations do not go
well.
A majority of the owners favor a
lock out, The Washington Post rE&gt;ported today.
It quoted an unidentified source
as saying: "We have learned by
what happened to basebaii .... By let·
ttng the baseball players have part
of a season. the baseball owners al·
lowed them to build up money to
·prepare for a strike. If we let them
WESTEitN CHAMPS - The Western division
mart:· Pldured are, fronl, Todd Hysell, Rex Haggy,
go three or four games and then
cbamplou.s of tbe Meigs-Mason Pony league, Pomeroy
Greg'Fieldl, Donnie Fry, and VInce Knight. Back have a strike, we'll be, In reality.
Royals, bowed to Middleport Tuesday t-2 in tbe League
Assistant Coach Tom Hysell, Joe Fields, Jackl•
funding a strike. too."
playpff. Pomeroy ended the season with a fine lo-3
Welker, Charles Knopp, Lee PoweD, Rod Roush, Chrts
Jack Donlan, executive director
Kennedy, and Coach Jack Welker.
of the Management Council, dE&gt;clined to comment on how many
owners favor a lockout.
But, according to the Post. Dolan
did say that a "lockout Is a possllr
end of the 14th round 132·131 on the Illy because the owners are con·
.
NEW YORK (AP) - "I am a tough.
Sanchez badly hurt Nelson with a card of judge Al R!ed. The other cerned about the undermining
boxer, not a street tighter," says
Salvador Sanchez. But the World left hook in the seventh round. two judges favored Sanchez effects of a strlke."
Boxing Council featherweight Then, during an exchange of Tony Castellano ~131 and Alite
Ed Garvey, executive director of
champion needed more than box· punches, be dropped Nelson for. .a Aldala 134-131.
the players association, was quoted
··
ing ability and experience to beat five-count.
A21llll8h Nelson . .
Nelson also was shaken several
He also needed street-fighter times in .the eight and ilinth rounds
toughness.
and had ·a two-stitch cut ripped In
Nelson, a · 24-year·old from his upper Up.
Ghana, went into the fight Wednes'"l'he refePee was too la)e in stop.
day night at Madison Square ping the figllt," said Sanchez. "He
Garden with only 13 pro tights. As a should have done It earUer. Nelson
substitute for the injured Marlo Ml· was swallowing ,blood."
raoda, ~e WBC's top-ranked elm·
It would have saved a lot of .wear
tender, be brought with him the and tear on the champion if referee
gtmmlck nickname of "The Ten1· Tony Perez bad stopped the fight In
ble Terror."
one of those rounds.
The nickname drew snickers and
But he didn't stop It Iintll only 1: 11
the ~foot-5 Nelson was quiCkly remained In the match, and by then
tabbed "Half Nelson." That drew Nelson had battled back with conlaughs.
stant press\li'e and several solid left
But It was cheers not laughter hooks. He outpunched Sanchez In
'that Nelson got from the Garden severIll·· exchangeS In ·rounds 11
tlirough 14.
'
.
crowd.
.
Nelson wasn't Sanchez' toughest
"I , thought I was winning the
fight, according to the champion tight, but in the 15th I wanted to
knock him out," said Nelson.
~m MeJC11:0. But he .was plenty
CO.CHAMPIONS - The Tuppers Plalll8 "A" Tee Ball team
He was wtnntiig the fight at the
celebrated 118 c&amp;-e:bamplou.shlp season with a picnic recently at Hickory
Lakes In Tuppers Plalils. The Tuppers Plains team shared the Tee ball
ebamploDBhlp with the Racine "A" team. Tuppers Plains, going Into the
final game with a &amp;-1 record, beat the previously und.efeated Racine A
.
team 13-11 to tie for tbe league champlonsblp wllh Identical '1·1 marks.
. MOBilE, Ala. -Arthur Lan'ham, Arabia .
Pictured are front, left to rigbl, Jobnlly Lantz, CbriB Rood, Jessica Crites,
In 19 years of coaching basketball
former head basket~ll ~ch B!ld
Jalm• WilBon, Rickie Causey and Chad Savoy. Back, left to rlghl, John
athletic director at Rio Grande in Rio Grande, Lanham posted an
Collins, Pat Newland, Robert Reed, Wes Arbaugh, Roy Reed, Jr., Jason
College, has been selected as on~ of overall recor:d of 258-175, coached
Carleton, Brian Lantz, Coaches Jack Rood and Roy Reed, Sr.
live project directors by .the Uruted. four of his teams to conference titles
States Sports Academy for its over- and was named tlie Conference
Coach of the Year five times. He is a
seas projects in Saudi Arabia.
.
1959 t:fad~te of Union College in
Kentucky and a 1964 graduate of
A resident of Rio Grande, Lanham Ell*tern K,entucky University.
is a veteran of U.S. Sports Academy
The ·United States Sports
overseas service, having served as a Academy is a special mission non·
project director in Indonesia an~ ,as . profit graduate institute of sports
a director of · coac~, p!lys1Cal 'dedicated to sport and sport
education and recreatioo in Bahrain. education around , the world. The
in Saudi Arabia. He will head up one projeq Lanham will supervise
of five USSA programs afbases of typifies one of a valiety of USSA ef·
the Royal Saudi Air Force in Saudi forts towafd that goal.

WASHINGTON - Even as Iranian them to funnel their petrodollars to
troops renewed their attack upon Hu8sein; though no friend of the .
Iraqi forces last week, secret in- moderate Arab slates, he was regartelligence assessments had con: ded as a necessary evil to thwart
vi need some American analysts that Khomeini's revolutionary ambitions
Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's throughoutthe Persian Gulf.
days were nwnbered.
The Saudis have Spejlial reason for
A classified intelligence report, concern about Khomeini : Their
quoting Iraqi sources, claims that 'Shiite Moslem minorit,y is con·
Hussein 's principal financial centrated in the country's vital oil·
backers, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, producing region .. In two years. the
have cut back the flow of funds that Saudis alone spent $20 billion to ·
prop up his shaky regime. If the .bolster their Iraqi buffer.
report is accurate, this would mean
The importance of this financial
that . wealthy Arab nations are aid was obvious. Hussein had pretty
heding their bets in case the well wrecked Iraq's economy, by his
Ayatollah Khomeini succeeds in his costly and disastrous invasion of
avowed determination to oust Iran two year~ ago.- But to prevent
Hussein from power.
widespread dlscont~nt in the wake of
What worries the Saudis and his anny's hwniliating defeat, he
Juwaitis is the prospect of could not afford to cut ~ck on
Khomeini's Shiite Moslem militancy government . spending. Like the
spreading into their own Sunni · Roman emperors, he had to offer the
Moslem territory. That's what led populace bread and circuses to buy

their loyalty .
U.S. analysts have begun to
reassess their lnngsuffering faith in
Hussein's political survival skills.
Administration sources told my
associate Lucette Lagnado that the
prevailing intelligence assessment
was that Khomeini .would carry out
his vendetta against Hussein with an
invasion, which would succeed in
ousting Hussein.
Like Saudi Arabia, the United
States has been motivated by coldly
practical considerations in its hope
that Hussein would survive yet
again. Certainly no one is arguing
that the Iraqi dictator is a desirably
ally. Even 11mong Middle East
tyrants, he acquired a reputation for
brutality. He ruled by the gun - and
reportedly was not ave•se to using
his own pistol to dispatch his
enemies.
The Reaga n adminis'tration 's .

followed by a fiy out and steal play
that allowed the ru n to score.
Rutland scored on a trlple lilY
James Norman and an error to
knot the score at 1-1.
Racine took a 2-1 1ead In the third ,
but Rutland came right back in the
fourth to again tte the score at 2·2.
In the fifth inning Racine produced
the garrie-winntng run on a leadoff
single by McWilliams followed by
Shannon Rllfte and Amburgey wh?
reached on errors. Donnie Rllfte
then walked to force home the wtnnlng run.
Amburgey fanned 12 batters In a
great game and walked five enroute to the win. Michael Bar·
trum suffered the loss despite
striking out 14, while walking just
six.
Racine hitters were Amburgey
and McWilliams with the only two
hits for that club. Quillen. M. Wails,
and Bartrum singled for Rutland.
while Norman rapped a triple.

Nelson receives cheers from fans

.. worst-case scenario" in Iraq has
Hussein being replaced by a regime
of Shiite Moslems, who make up the
majority of the population. ·Allied
with Khomeini's Shiites, the new
Iraqi regime cou)d sp~d • Its
revolutionary vio£ to Saudi Arabia
and other moderate Arab' states in
the Persian Gulf. This scenario
spells disaster for U.S. interests in
the region.
Footnote: I reported on July 5 that
"factions in Iran want to mount a
military invasion to punish t~e
Iraqis for the devastation they
wrought in Iran," that this "conflict
could. go up in flames, with consequences more dangerous tha~ the
chaos in Lebangn" and that
"revolution could spread to the
neighboring Arab states." Time
magazine reported the same story a
full week later and wa~ credited by
the wire services with predicting the
Iranian. invasion.

.Back in 't he neWS;::z.,._____---,-_.;__·L_aw...-e_ll_W_in....;;;.g_ett
unless the Reagan administration berger and Secretary of State reliable reports are available. Tile
goes far out of its way. The United George Shultz are fonner high of· struggle seems to be a see-saw affair
States has not had diplomatic · ficials of the· Bechtel Group. Big for the control·of Iraq's on.ly seaport,
. relations with Iraq since 1967 and business must be protected at all · Basra. at the head ~f the' l:&gt;ersian
diplomatic rela\ions with Iran were costs. I am sure the reigning triwn· Gulf. Both annies are using ·a(r
broken when the hostages were . virate, R agan, Weinberger and str.ike5 oil the ·other's cities. The
taken November 4, 1979. Therefore, Shultz, would be the last to admit main battle thj!atre seems to be th~
.
·
television ,studios here. :Both Iran
'the adminil;tration .cannot claim the this is so.
As long as Kohmeini keeps his and l~aq diplomats. to the United
two countries are "good friends" as
it did in the case of England and l)loody hands away from Saudi Nations have been talking to the air
Argentina. We had been buying oil Arabia and the Bechtel Group, he . waves to get th)!ir stof!t;;~ before the
from Iraq without diplomatic will no doubt be free of interference public. Two especiall~ attractive
relations until the war with Iran from us. There will be the usual flii'Uil15 have been Nigh!iine on ABC
limited the supply and if we have periodic appeals fyr peace which and the McNeil-Lehrer Report on
purchased any Iranian oil it has not will fall on deaf ears. To Khomeini PBS.
One rep'ort, made by an Iraq
been made public. In fact, I think the the United States is still tile "Great
American Jletlll!e will view any fur- . Satan" and is not much more highly diplomat, is believable, '' knowing
ther · businessCI!ealings with Iran regarded in Iraq. Right now tbe two Khomeivt·~ . past history. He Sliid
with a jaundiced eye for many · forces seem to be about equat Iraq tliat the Iranians are .using ~n army
years . .
has more soldiers but they are not so of children to advance before the inThere is one way the United States ' well trained or conditioned as the fantry to locate booby traps and land
might get involved, and at the revolutionary anny of Iran. Iraq is mines. A child killed by a land mine
present time that · does not seem armed with Soviet weapons while is not so great· a ·loss as an adult
probable. If the Iran-i~aq war Iran is· armed with American arms soldl~r.
shQuld involve • any of the neigh- sold the Sh8h before the revolution.
An Iranian dipl~t talked lofii~
boring stateS, Saudi Arabia,' Unllecl Both armies are short of spare parts of winning over Iraq, forcing the
Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar, · for their planes 'and tanks, Iran for overthrJIW of Iraq pre~ent,' Sad'Oman or Kuwait, it might provo'ke a obvious · reasons and ·Iraq . because dam Hussein; then pre8sing on to
military response from the United the Soviets have 'shown little in· Jerusalem and aidinlf the .pw i~
States since tlio8e are ·the states in clination to be inwolved in the con- · their struggle With the ls.aells.
l
which the Bechtel Group, lf\c. has flict.
Maybe Khomeini wiD welcome thei
The world news media is not ' PLO to Iran. Good! They deserve
huge construction · projects.
Secretary of Defense Gaspar ~ein- allowed in the war zone so no each otherl
·
~

In the second contest Buchtel
downed New Haven 2-lln a thriller
in which all runs were scored in the
last round.
•
New Haven took a short·llved 1·0
lead in the top of !he sixth on singles
by Davis and Grimm and walks to
Fisher and Scarberry, forcing in a
run. Buchtel came back to post the
win on a walk to Russell, singles by
Savage and Bullock, and a walk to
Young. Day was hit by a pitch to
force In the winning run.

Savage was the winning pitcher
with 10 strtkeouts and five walks.
Fisher was the lOser with 9 strl·
keouts and five walks.
New Haven hitters were Davis
and Grimm with singles. Savage
and Bullock claimed the only two
hits for the winners.
·New Haven will meet Rutland tonight In the consolation game beg innin g at 6:30 with th e
championship tilt to follow .

as saying, "The scenario ts that,
prior to a lockout. they would place
on the table an offer they'll label
their takE&gt;-lt·or.Jeave-Jt.package.
The lockout would force us to take
it."

representatives of the players'' association got together with commit·
tee members on Wednesday.
Ear lier this week, the NFL
owners said they won't sign a
co ll ectlv~·bargainlng agreement
without a provision for drug testing.
If drug testing was the only issue
rema tntng, Donlan was asked
1\Jesday. would the owners refuse
to stgn a new contract. "That' scorrect. That' s true. That wou ld be a
stumbling block." he sa id.

Two other issues have been
raised In recent weeks tn addition to
the traditional contract bargaining
of basic wages. working conditions
and pensions- drug-testing and In·
dtvtdual player negotiations.
Meanwhile, It was learned that
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle
and baseball Commissioner Bowie
Garvey called the owner's stand
Kuhn, as well as the players unions. "a public-relations ploy ," and said
met this week wtth members of the It never would come down to being
House Select Committee on Narcot· the turning point in achieving a new
lcs Abuse and Control.
ag-reement .
Rozelle and Kuhn met for about
an hour each on 1\Jesday and the , . - - - - - - - - - - - -

Ladies golf results
Pomeroy-Ladles day was held a t
Jay Mar Golf club on 1\Jesday. Af·
ter a short business meeting 18
holes of golf were played with
prizes going to Margaret Follrod·
Low Gross and Low putts; Garen
Snyder·low net; Low team net·
Velma Rue and Gar en Snyder. All
area lady golfers are invited to at·
tend each session.

SHOES FOR
THE ENTIRE FAMILY
AT LOW, LOW
PRICES
HEAR THE Rl:DS ALL
SEASON LONG Or I

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Name: Lanham·.to"post

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for 1 high rate of lntereat on uvlnga, don't
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IN Tll.f,dillm U£A

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PIZZASHA~K
II NOW OPiN POl LUNCH
· SUIIS_,SI'Mttml

"A/1' how would you folks 1/ktJ thiJm 'Tsx Cut
Sf'6Cisl~.' on rye or wfllttJ?"

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Our ·pharma~;ists are qualified
through years of training and
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The Tr:I·Cou,.ty

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Member FDIC

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• •· 't

1

SYRACUSE·Racine and Buchtel
wUI meet tonight in the champion·
ship game of the BUI Hubbard
Memorial Little League touma·
ment after posting respective wins
over Rutland and New Haven Wednesday evening.
Two quick. but hard-fought
games highlighted the semt·final
round as Ractnels Reds edged Ru·
tland 's Reds, 3-2, and Buchtel' Lit·
tie Bucks squeezed past New
Haven, 2-1.
As action began It was evident
that four fine teams were on hand
for the evening's battle; Racine
and Rutland being the first two.
Two of the area·s finest little league
pitchers in David Amburgey of Ra·
cine and Michael Bartrum of Ru·
tland engaged In a fine pitching
battle.
fjoth pitchers faced shakey starts
as both allowed one run In the first
frame. Racine scored on walks to
Shannon Rllfte and Mark Porter,

NFL owners favor lock out

The wrath of .Khomein.._i______;._J_ack_A_n_de_rs_on

You have heard of him before. He
is the old gentleman with the long
whiskers, the benign face, the cold
eyes and the heart of a buzzard. He
is the world's most powerful
religious fanatic, a cold-blooded
killer and is once more making
headlines around the world. His
name is Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini.
Somehow men like Khomeini
never leave the world scene after
they have had their first taste of
power - and of blood. The wholesale
slaughter of his own countrymen af·
ter he deposed the Shah of Iran gives
some measure of the monster the
revolutionary forces in Iran let loose
on the world. Since the American
hostages were released March 20,
1982, the Ayatollah has been in the
news only when he executed an ex·
traordlnary nwnber of his countrymen wpo disagreed with his
policies or wMn groups of his own
party were assassinated in
whpleilale lots. Now he is in the news
· again as his revolutionary army
~ks to·invade Iraq with whom Iran
lias been at war since September 20t
1980.
,.
This is a war which I can see no
possibility of us getting involved

Ohio

, ji
.,

.

r ,

-'

I '· I

I

�Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Taste testers prepare
4-H'ers fair projects

Nixon hopes to make Reds
'
.

CINCINNATI tAP ) - Russ Nixon, elevated to his first maJor
league managing job, s ays his top priority ts to spice up the Clnctn·
natt Reds . style of play.
" I think we're very uninte resting." said Nixon, named Wednes·
day to replace J ohn McNamara as manager. "I think pellple wUI
come to see us lf we go out there a little rocky and Interesting."
Cincinnati was beate n by the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-2 Wednesday
night In Nlxon· s debut .
· Reds President Dick Wapner didn't mention whether he, too,
found the team boring Wednesday when he fired McNamara. But
Wagner made no secr ei tha t he wasn't pleased that the clubwlththe
best record in the major leagu es in 1981 has the second·worst record
this year.
"The bottom line In this case Is that I feel we are better ballclub
tha n our record of 34 and 58 indicates," Wagner said, In announcing
McNama ra' s firing. "We have 70 ga mes re111allilng In the season,
and our work.ls cut out for us. I'm not going til say much more than
that:·
McNamara, 50, led the club to the NL West Utle In 197!1, his first
year In Cincinnati after taking ove r tor Sparky Anderson. The club
finished third and second the next two years. The Oop tills year
followed an off-season overhaul by Wagner that changed starters at
five positions and sent George Foster, Ken Griffey, Dave Cqlllns and
Ray Knight to other clubs.
The new· look Reds - buUt with an emphasis on speed, pitching
and defense - never panned out, and McNamara ended up con·
stantly shuffling his lineup to find a .winnlng combination.
The Reds' lack of run production and power persisted, and the
team has not been able to wln more than three straight games this
season.
"We didn't put a winning ballclub on the field, and I'm responsible
for that, too, maybe more so than other pellple, ' ' said third paseman
Johnny Bench, batting just :m.
"It' s not been a good, productive year for several pellple. When
you 1~. the end result is there are a lot of people to blame," Bench
said. " The guy who gets most of the blame Is usually the man In
charge on the field.

a

HALL OF FAME CONGRATULATIONS- The new manager of the
Cincinnati Reds, Russ Nixon, Is congrarulated by former pitching grea~
and Hall of Farner Walle Hoyt, prior to the .tart of Wednesday night's
game against the Pittsburgh Pirates in Cincinnati. Reds' president, Dick
Wagner, announced at a news cor.tferenre Wednesday that John McNamara bad been fired as the team's manager, and Nixon, the former
third base coach, was being given the job. f AP Laserphoto).

a'n d

WL

Pcot.

~

.17

. ~3

Boston

M

.1R

.587

Balttrnon:•
Detroit
N('W York
Clf'\'t'la nli
Toronto

411

'I

f6

M

.\19
.:\11

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&lt;W

'~

f4

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WrSem DlvMkln

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47:1

flel dl&gt; r . OUI r iR hl to T id P'Wa lf'r o f 1hP lnt Pr ·
nal lona l U&gt;aguf'.

~""

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11

40

.570

4:l
U

-~

~ '·~

Sl&gt;attk&gt;
Oakland
Texas

411

~ :I

. ~16

~

SS
S:l

421

14

.'li

,41}9

Ga rr y Ma ddo x , o u!llt'ldt:•r. o n t ill• 1 ~ - rl ay
dl!lllblf'd 1 1.~ 1 rt&gt; t ro a r t lvr t o ./ 1.1lv 18
an d
·
Lf' n
Ma t uszrk.
ln(lf'l de r.
rf'ra llt&gt;d
from
Okl a homa C'l !y o l !Ill&gt; AmNican As~OC' I
11 tlo n.

~'II

FOOTRi\l.L

H'•.•

N•Uoaal t~ooth•ll Le&amp;lflll'
LO U IS
CA R D I NA I. S-C'u t

22 '"J

.; ~l:l

ST .
./ amPS
Mal lard. Wldf' f ('{"f'I VN .
Unlt r d Stat e~ Foolhall Lupt
B I It MI N C II AM ST ALLIONSAo ·
nounr('d lh P rc~ IRn a t lo n o f J am l'!!l
M
Co11ld , prf'S idr nt a n~ Rl' nt'rat m anPR t' r,

Wednf!l4ay'N Gatnf!!l
T rxas G- 1, Ebton 3-G

KallSas Clry 9, Toronto 7
ChlcaRO 9, [)(&gt;trolt .1, 1:.! lnnln i!:!i
Oakland 6. CI('V('Iand 4
BaJI\Il'l()r't' II, CaJHornl a 7
Sf:&gt;att lt&gt; 6. New York 5, 12 lnntnKS
Mllwa utuor 10. M l n~La 4
'lbundi,)''A Gamno
TPx a.~ 1Burctwr 0-11 at NPw York
1Ertdl!on 7-71. tn t
Toronto +Col t 1 -~1 al ctucago 1Burn.&lt;1 94 1. 1n l

..

bl:•rom t• !'l t&gt;nlo r viet• p rt's iCWnr to r fln a nC'f'
and u d ml nl!'l tr a tl o n of W n~ hln~ o n

f ootba ll P a rtnt'rs a nd prrsl df'nl of l"a plutl
Cit y S po rt~ Mana,Q: t'mr&gt;n t . till&gt; RM ·
rral
pa 11 nf' r o f ltw Wa s h l n ~on U~ F'L IPum
WAS HI NGTON-t-in m l'd D ir k M y·

Frkla.v'• Game~~
TPxas a t l)(.'t rol t . 1n1
Seallk' at {'\('Vt'llllld, 1n1
Dakland a t Baltimore, m l
Callfornl.a a t Nt'W York. t n t
T OI"'OIIO a t Chlt'"J{O, 1n1

r rs
JtP m•r a l
prt•sl-

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mr n, to trre a t!'f•nt C'Ont ract s .

Leaders

"
.15
""."".. '
.4l6

·.548

AMERICA1"1' l.EAGlJE
11.-\TTING t190 at batu : W.WII 5Un.
KM!IIL!'I Citv . •\48: Ga ntllf'f', Mllwa ukrr.
..'l\.1; Hrtx&gt;k. Mln ~it , .:U..,: Harrah.

6

Clt'Vt'laml. .l1J; Younl , M\Jwa ukl'f', .:t.'9.
RU M;: R.Hefl(k&gt;non, Oakland. K2: Moll·
tor, Ml.lwa ukl:&gt;l&gt;.• 73: Harrah. Ck"'-t&gt;land.
1'l; Evans, Boston, 64: Oowninf(, CRI IIornla, tit.
'

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,~ ..1

41

" "' '"'

21

Wedru:'llda,y'A[O&amp;me~

RBI: McRae.

I

P'l!l sbu ~ h
St . Lou~ R.

:1. Cloctnnatl 2
AUanta 0
Philadelphia 7, San Dlf1(0 I

Montroal 4, Loll

An~le5

1, 11

lnnln~

11tul'lday'8 Gam e~~
~ · "Ganlt'll

AUanla a t P ittsbu rgh. lnt
Chlc a,:to a t Cincinnati. +n l
Hou ston 11! St.Loulo;., IRt
NPW York at San DI!W. I RI
Pllllad!&gt;lptLIII at Ll'l'i 1\nj!;f'\I'S. I Rl
-Mont i'Nil a t San Franclsc."'. In\

Transactions
BASEBALL
Leaxu ~&gt;

BQST ON REO SOX- Ac ti va te d Car

~ins ford ,

third basl'm an. from thP

d oy
diJablt&gt;d

1 1~1.

Plarf'd

1 ~­

Rt' ld

Nl r ho ls.

fltldN . o n ttll' dlsa tJIM list.
Nl&amp;tiOrtal Le!lA'IH'
C HI C AGO C UB~ -Sr nt

ll rc r or

OUI ·

Cruz.

ou t fl{'idrr . to I ow~ o ft IV' A m f' r !rt~ n A SS+I
!"\ atlo n. Opllo nPd To m F' l\('1' . p il l' hl'r
10

Io w a
Artlv at t' d
olt r hN

Clry, 83: CoopPr.

l'lty . l~.

No ~~: am('S srht'dllt'd

Amerlun

K.ansa.~

Milwaukft', 71: Thornton. Clt'v£&gt;1and, 70:
Luzln skl. Cltk.'ago, 116: Yount . MUwauk.t.&gt;,
64 : O~rllvlf'. M\tw'a ukct", 64.
HITSc C art'la, To ronto. 111 : Ha rr ah,
O t'l'tiWld, 116: Yo unt. M\JwaukC\', 11:1;
C'o«J('r. Mllwaukl'r, 11:.!: Mc RaE', K ansa:o~

Nl'W Yor k 6, Sa n r n nrbco 2

R on d y

MlH IZ.

THE JUDGING- Project judging makes every 4H'er a little nervous and Donia Crane was ao exception
a8 she revl~w~ her project work and displayed her

OOUBL e-i: Wh ltr. Kansas City . 2fl:
Ly nn. (illlfornt a , '.!ti: 'loont , M~w a ukt'f' .
zi: E vanli. Ebto n. 1~. R lplu&gt;n. Raltl mort'.
21: Cooprr. Mllwa uk((', ll
,
T R I P L ES : Ht• r nUun. Dt1 m ll . 9:
W.WU!'; ori. Ka nsas C'ltv. 9. You nt . Mil
waukrc&gt;, II: GrtHin. T ()l'(l nto. n: Up:ha w.•,
Toconto, 6; Br« t. Ka nllas CIT~. 6; CU'o''·
m !. !)(&gt;attk&gt; . ti.
HO ME RU NS· Thornton. Clw l'lund. !l:
~llvk- . Mllvmu kl'l'. 2'1. G. Tho ma,, Mll
waukeE', 22; Rl'..Jackson. Ga l\fornta, 22:
Cooppr . Mllw a u k('(•. 19
!-."T'OLF.N BA~ t-:S : R.HPnd« w n. 0.1k·
land, Ill: G arcl tl, Tul'untu, 2ti: Wtlth&lt;VI,
Kansas City, 26: J .Cruz. St&gt;allll'. :.!!~ : LA&gt;F'·
ton&gt;. Clllc aRQ, 2-1 .
PITCiii NG !1 2 O.XI.:'iion..~ • - Vu kovich.
Mllwa ulu&gt;P. 114 , .714. :1.12: i'.ahn, Ca lllornlll. 10-4 . .714. 1 19: l 'aurllll . Sfoallll'. 10-4.
714 . 2.13; C uldry . \l('w York. !1-t. .692,
J JK: Burns, C'lll('ago. 9-4 .. lit2. .l7 1. Bark·
t'l". Clt'Vf'land. l fi-~1. ~7 . .l.T7 : Clf'ur. fuo; .
lon, 8-4, .f£1. :1.0\: F . BannL~ t t'r, !;(-J IIIP. ll:1, .64.1. 2.~.

order for his 15th ~ve and his third
In as many,nlghts.
"I think he (Tekulve) Is throwing
as well has he f!ver has," Tanner
said. "He's been so·effective- the
most etfectlve since I've been
even the year w,e won !he pennant. r
thlilk· he's . mbre effective this

year."
The Q~ily Sentinel

CLEVELAND (AP) - Manag· , could use one of them. I just deers BUIY. Martino! the Oakland A's
cided Kingman was the one I
wanted."
and Dave Garcia of the Cleveland
Indians tossed aside the percen·
tages and played hunches. Martin
Loser John Denny, 6-11, held
became the genius.
Oakland hitless through the first
With the outrome of the Wednes·
four innings. Then he walked Jeff
day night American League game
Burroughs and Davey Lopes with
in doubt, Martin brought Brian
one out In the fifth. Mike Heath's
Kingman, struggling as a starting grounder forced Burroughs at third
pitcher with a 1·7 record, out of the
for the second out, but Fred Stanley
bullpen. Kingman did the-relief jo1J
blooped
a single Into short left
In the A's &amp;4 victory.
to
tie It 1·1.
. field
"That's my first major league
Rickey Henderson singled Heath
save, and the ball's still In my
hometoput0aklandahead2-l.and
mitt," Kingman said in the
Dwayne Murphy walked to load the
lockerroom.
bases. Rel!ever Ed Glynn then surStarter Tommy Underwood, &amp;4,
rendered a two-run single to Danny
yielded four runs· on six hits over
Meyer, giving Oakland a 4-1 lead.
the first six Innings before King·
Tony Armas capped the burst wtth
man, worklng out of the buUpen for
another RBI single.
the first time this season, came on
to Umlt the Indians to two hits over
"lt·was very early for me to take
the final 2 1·3 innings.
John out of a ballgame," Garcia
"I had three guys, normally star· said. "He was a little u~ with me
ters, ready for relief - Kingman, for doing It, but two runs were al·
Matt Keough or Rick Langford,"
ready In, the bases were loaded and
Martin said. "I just felt in the situa- they just had not hli theballoffhim.
tion, with a day off tomorrow and .It was that he didn't have his
Underwood Into our rotation, I control.'~

Cleveland, which had gotten a
second· Inning run on Andre Thornton's 22nd homer, scored again In
the the fifth on Larry Milbourne's
grounder. Underwood gave up a
single and· two walks to load the
bases In the seventh. MUboume got
his second RBI with a sacrifice fly
oft rel!e\&gt;er Dave Beard and Toby
Harrah singled In another run to
cut Oakland's lead to 5-4.

•Pryor'sattomey,Edward&lt;;l'Connell, argued that the boxer was
tFalning and alxstalnlng from
lrlg, parties and alcohol durin&amp;
·
tllne he IS suppo8ed to have fa- .

thel'ed tbe chUd.

The taste test to everything frdm
"sni cker doodles" to storied
manicotti was g1ven by home
economic agents and teachers
Tuesday at the first of several 4-H
judging sessions scheduled this mon·
thin preparation for the Meigs Counly Junior Fair, Aug. 17·21.
The judging took place at the
Rutland Civic Center. In each of the
17 categories of the food judging,
grand and reserve champions were
selected and presented rosettes by
Meigs Extension Agent Dqle Stohl.
Several honorable mentions In the
various categories were awarded by
the judging staff, who not only tasted
the dishes prepared by the boys and
girls, but also judged them on menu
planning, nutrition, and general
project work.
Before the day was over, the ·
judges also selected seve! 4-H'ers to
comp;!te at the Ohio State Fair.
Their names will be announced
later .
The judges were Bettie Clark ,
Gallia County Extension Home
E conomist ;
Judy
Ferguson,
Lawrence County Extension Home
Economist; Brenda Stricklin,
Athens home economics teacher;
Dr. Margaret Harding, Lawrence
County; Dara Hulbert, Logan home
ectinomist; and Diana Eberts.
McArthur, hornemaker and fonn er
extension agent of M~igs County .
Winners in the various categories
and other participants include :
Foods to take and share category:
Melissa Miller, grand champion;
Kelly Douglas, reserve champion;
Amy ,Warth and Kristen Heines,
honorable mention; Janet Stiltner,
Patrece Circle, Lonnia LeMaster,

. lUSPSlU.MII
A Dlwi1IJa uf MIIIUmrdt.,lac.

I

Publi~hl!tt

t&gt;toery 11ftt&gt;moon, MondMy throuMh

Friday, Ill Court Street, by the Ohio V•lky
Publish In I( Company • Mulllmet.lla, {l'l.' ..
Pt'llnt!ro)', Ohiu 45769 , !)92..2156. St.&gt;t.'Clnt.l d'ws.s
posl.a]!ttl paid at Ponwroy, Ohlu.

Mt!mbt!r: Tht.&gt; Msoci.llll'd Press. Inland Dlli·
Pre!!~ As:wchltlon 11nd Uw Americ»n

ly

N~pt~per Publl:shen~ A:iwciation, Natiunttl

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Repres~nlative .

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POSTMAsTER : Send 11ddn!~ to The Dllily
Sentinel, Ill CourtS\., Pomeroy, Ohlot$769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrkor ~o~r Motor Route
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01\e Month .......... ..

GRAND CHAMPIONS- Rosette wlmlen pictured
here are Klla Young aod Beth Ritchie, wbo tied for
grand ·cbamploo lo ~special breads class, BDd Uoda
Riggs ID plain, breads; seated, lelt to right, and stan-

. . 11.00

.

14.40
.. $52.M

·Oni!Vt!CU .

Billy Martin {.genius' in A's 6-4 win

TOP OF THEDA Y- Among the 4-H'ers receiving
grand champion rosettes at Tuesday's food lodging
were, from the left, Melissa MUler, Eight lJ Enough
Club, Chester, with her mlnJ..meal project, cherry cobbler; Melaole Mankin, Flatwoods Flyen, with ber

Here,

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
. . IS Cents

Dllily .

chHfon ple; .,Jayue Ritchie wlth crunchy birthday
treats In tbe "Do Your Thing wltb Foods" category;
Delaol Baker with a cherry cobbler; and Amy Hager
with her "mysteiies of microwave" coocodlon, s\Uffed

Subst.-ribt·~ nollksirin)l to p11y OM! c11rricr
-IIUI)' remit in advance tJirt.'Cl to Till' Daily
~..nl i nt•lun t1 3, 6 or 12 tnunltl basis. Ct·~it

will bt· ~ivt'n CIIITicr each munlh.

Nu subs.t·riplinruc by tnAtil pt.!nnittt:-d in lowm
wht•n •htlttlc l'tlrricr llei'Vil-e i:t IIYMih1blc .

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS '
hwldtOhkt
IJW~k.~

114.01
. 127.:wl
. . ... $5U3

26 WL't.'k.~
52Wt•l•ks .
OulllldrOhit1
Jj Wt •t ·k.~ .

. . $15.21
. $29.114
. .. $56.21

26 Wt&gt;t·k.~ .
!i2Wt•t•ks .

r;:;~~~~~~;;;~;;~~~;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

·SALE CONTIN·UES .

- ALL WHitE SHOE$ -

Billy
Bailey,
Harden,
Alice Sherry
Parsons.Deem, Sandy
Mysteries of microwave : Amy
Hager, grand champion; Pam
Whaley, Tara Hwnphrey, Angie
Chapman, Terri 'Stout.
Magic of microwave : Becky Lee,
grand champion.
Do your thing with food : Jayne
Ritchie, grand champion; Pam
Riebel, reserve champion : Beth Ar·
baugh, honorable mention; Susan
Wolf, Debbie Brooks, Teresa

PAY YOUR COLUMBIA GAS BILLS AT:

EBOX
~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:~;;;rT!;~~~;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~

THE

Deniescharge
.CINCINNATI fAPl- Boxer Aa· l
ron Pryor denied Wednesday that
~ Is the father of a 9·year·old boy
c;JRsplte results of a blood test 'that
sllowed a 95.7 percent likelihood
tbat Pryor Is the father.
The blood test was entered as evl·
dence ln. a trial that began Wednes·
di!Y and Is scheduled to continue
Thursday in Hamilton County
Juvenile Court.
Debbie Elaine Harris claimed In
a 198&gt; suit that Pryor, the World
Boxing Association iunlor Welter·
weight champ, is tlle father of Ant·
wan Harris.
Ms. Harris, Tl, said Pryor fa·
thered the child while they were lS.
year-old high school students In
Cincinnati.
Ms. Harris' attorney, '!J'oll)
Flynn, Introduced the blood test, a
1974 marriage license that Pryor
abd Ms. Harris had filled out but
ulled and
frcm Ms.

ability at setting a iable as well as preparing food for
Sara Hulbe~ Logan High School teacher, one of the
judges.

'

nesday. Although the .. Reds lost
Tom H urns, 2-6, got a 1·1 count and
then threw a breaklng ball that
their sixth straight game,. suffered
Stargell drUied Into the seats In
their 21st defeat In their last 25
right field for his uitrd homer, all of
games, and ten to 34-59, Nixon was
pleased with .h is team ' s
them as a plnch·hltter.
performance.
"It means a lot because it means
you're making a contribution to the
"I know we got beat, but I think
ballclub," Stargell said. "That's
the guys played their butts ott'."
what I wanted to do this year ."
Nixon said. "That's all we're ask·
Pirate Manager Chuck Tanner . lng of them."
said he still marvels at Stargell's
Berra's solo homer oft starter
ability in his 20th fuil major league
Bob Shirley gave Pittsburgh a 1.0
season.
lead In the third, but Reds' rookle
" He said he'd know when the
Paul Householder hit a two-run hotime was to retire, and this is that
mer In the fourth.
time," Tanner said. "He'd like to go
The Pirates tied the game In the
out with a bang."
seventh
when Bill Madlock led ott
Stargell' s "bang" Wednesday
with
an
Infield hit, stole second,
will go down In the record books for
two other reasons: It tied him with . took third on a ground out and
scored on Tony Pena·s two-out dou·
Stan Musial's 475 career home
ble off the letHield wail just over
runs, 14th on the all-time list, and
the reach of a leaping Eddie
gave Cincinnati's Russ Nixon his
Milner.
first loss as a major league
Larry McWllllams, &amp;-4, pitched
manager.
the first seven Innings to post the
Nixon, formerly a Reds' third
victory for Pittsburgh. Kent Tebase coach, was named to replace
kulve retired the last six batters In
the fired John McNamara on Wed·

J L,J

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42

Chi c~

St r 1· r

d l'ft'n!!\Vf' lin I' cour h
HOCKEY
N~oUonaJ Rock f'?" Luk1Jr
NEW
Y O HK lt AI"GE R S-Si)l; rwd
C'hr lll
tl P n au d
a nd
S tl' vr
Rtc h mo n d.

·"'' ""

Wf!ltf-m DI"IAioe

Cincinnati

•

'

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP)- This Is the
way Willie Stargell would like to
take his final bow ln ballparks
across the country .
"If you could sft down and say
just how you'd l!ke to do It, tllls Is
the kind o! thing you'd like to do in
every ballpark." said Stargell, who
slammed a game-winning, pinch·
hit homer Wednesday night In his
last game at Riverfront Stadium to
give .the Pittsburgh Pirates a 3·2
victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
"It doesn't always work out tllat
way. In Houston, I struck out
twice."
On the day when the moribund
Reds made a managerial change of
course to try to change their for.
tunes, Stargell pulled himself even
with one of the game's greatest
hitters.
Stargell, 41. who plans to retire at
the end of the season, came off the
bench with one out In the eighth In·
nlng and the score tied 2·2. Reliever

nl'!l!l,

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l.os AnltPIM
San F r ancbro
Houston

s1•nwr v lr P

PHI L A D E LPIH A-SitwNt

NI\TIONAL U:A&lt;ilJE
Eutem Dlvl!lkln
w I. P1t.
Philadelphi a
st. LouiS ~
•t
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Plumurah
522
Monlroal
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Nt'W York

Olea£~

and

F'ur -

Boston at Mlnflf'SOi a, tn t

AUanta

m a nagPr

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MIIW&amp;IIIki!e 81 Ka nsa~ Ci t)', +Ill

Chlc-

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PHI LADE I.PIII A

Pi aced

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dlsa blf'd lis t and ~rnt Ph il Ma n kows kl. ln·

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'"Broo lu. third b uem an, fro m 1M&gt;

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Mlni"'E"S'Sa

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A m alfi ta no, C"oar: h.

California

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Nixon, roach, to f('piiiCf' hi m f lr t"d Jol'

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RE: O ~- Firf'd

C I NC I NN A T I
John
MrNa m ara.

81 'l'tM! A..ot:Wrd ~
AMDCICAN LEAtiU E
F.a&amp;l!m Dhlllbt

San

sCot' ThOml}!'on. oulfleldt&gt;r . from l hf'

diAabit"d 1\SI.

\

Willie Stargell spoils ~Nixon's debut, 3-·2

Scoreboard ...
Majors

"I think Mac tell It (the flrtng) was coming, ·that It was not~ far
• away durtng the last t~ days."
,
'
Mc!)lamara would riot talk to reporters Wednesday. Hels tJtthlrd
major league manager fired this season, along with MUwayllee' s
•
Buck Rodgers and the New York Yankees' Bob Lemon.
"A manager Is only as good as his players," said Andersm;
' man·
ager o1 the Detroit Tigers. "He' sa kind of a watchdog. He has have
control over hiS club, but he can't win ballgarnes. This 1s n
ack
mark against John McNamara."
.
·. •Nixon, who has spent 12 years In the Reds' organizatiOn as:~r
league manager ancj a third base coach, is considered mol'~! of a
dlsclpllnarlan than the soft.spoken McNamara. He promised ~more
wide-open style of baseball.
·
.
· "Creating a different atmosphere Is going to help," said N~_47.
"I want toappf!13ch It that we get back sol)lesemblanceof"a ~puung
atttttude. In doing that, yoo've got to be forecetul about thingsgamble, take chances, run 'em tW they tag 'em out."
Nixon added, "They (the players) are going to have to realize
mistakes shouidn't happen over and over. They're In ~big
leagues."
'
Considering their bad record, the Reds' players said they weren't
surprised by McNamara's firing.
·
·
"NOthlBg surprises me now, at this point," said second bjlseman
Ron Oester. "I don't think it's aU Mac'sfault. But you don'tt!rea1125
players. The manager 1s the one.who gets lt.
"It's unfortunate, because he Is a great man. I liked hlft:l. and I
don't think there was a player on this club who didn't Ukj him."
&lt;&gt;ester played for Nixon od the Reds' Tampa farm crub of the
Florida State League In 1975. He expects a different style bf leader·
ship from Nixon.
·
i
"Mac was the type ot manager that when he got mad, he'd hold the
anger In too much, I think," &lt;&gt;ester said. "Russ won't dQ that."
Nixon described hlmself.this way:
'
"I'm weU-orgwilzed. I organize myselfandtorganize tile ballclub.
When It gets out of those bounds, then I ralse some hell."
· Oester also expects a more ·gambling style of play under the
fOfJTler major leaglie catcher.

MORE TQP WINNERS - Displaying tbeJr grand
~::~~;~. ribboDS bere are, from left ia right, Usa
:1
In Making It with Meals; Kevin Napier In All

SUN DRESSES
SUMMER DRESSES
MISSY PANT
SUITS

rttUIIr •:r~ V.lue

'

A PLUSH.ANIMAl*
WITH EACH SlniNGI.
.

1

h PRICE

'

Color Portrait Pecblgelncl.._\·
·
Two 8 X 10., Thrae ~X 71, Pilllen Wlllttl.

OTHER,ITEMS
AT CLEARANCE
.PRICES THROUGHOUT
THE STORE

Oi~Y·····. L

•

, • Poles out llleCUOit
• a...ttful ~ ... lillie
• Nfl(lbOut
our lllcomior
Porttalt
\

.

~

'• *At tlrne Of alttlno you will recel'8a coupOn
rad••~~lble for a cgddl~ ~ulh animal by Au11,.

.

'

.

...~ ..!

Date$: ~uiJ 20 Tfiru
July 24 . . '
. Tulsdiy,Saturdly
'

'

.

'

Hours: Tlll1:, Wed., Sit. 1..0-1, 2-6

· ThiiiS.. Fri. 111-1, 2-5:30
6-8 ,
t.unc~~uo 2

•'

American Foods; Paul Riggs with International
FOods; Donia Crane with Preserve and Serve I and
"Fit It All Together," and Carrie Karr with Preserve
and Serve II.

Story ·and photos by
Charlene Hoeflich
Senti£?.~1 staff writer

,.

'

.

PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
WE CARRY A
FULL liNE
OF
PRESCRIPTIONS
AND
.HEALTH·&amp;BEAUTY
. AIDS......
STOP 'BY.TODAY
VILLAGE PHARMACY ..
•

I

N••2ndAve. ·

fth.

I

•

spaghetti pie In the category of tasty meals; Trl8ba
Spencer uf Eight is Enough with her hotdog dish,
"angels on horseback" in the outdoor cookery
category ; and Robyn Pitzer of the Merry Maker Plus
Five Club of Long Bottom, with her project dish.

Guthrie, Amy Shrivcrs .
Fit it all together : Donia Cran e.
grand champion ; Pan 1 Riebel,
reserve champion; Mike Parker .
Carolyn Elam , honorable menti on;
Pam Whaley, Tara , Humphrey.
Serena White , Crystal Kaylor, Lisa
Riggs, John Brickles, Apr&lt; I
Brickles, Melvin VanMeter .
Making it with m e~ls: Lisa
t&lt;rymyer , grand champion ; Renee
Kaylor, reserve champion .
Quick meals : Delani Baker,11rand
champion ; Missy Calaway, reserve
champion; Kristi Hawk , Amy
Berkhimer , Amy Ritchie , honorable
mention ; Leah Sanders.
Tasty meals : Melanie Mankin ,
~rand champion ; Joe Parker. reser·
ve champion; Ann Diddle, Melissa
Scarbrough .
Sandy
Harden ,
honorable mention; Lisa Frymyer .
Angela Collins .
All Ameri can food s: Ke vin
Napier, grand champion ; Betty J o
Hunt , reserve champion ; Joe
Parker, Robyn Barnett , Carrie
Karr, Belly J o Hunt, Jo Ellen Crane,
honorable mention; Traci Castn.
Sandra Whaley .
Outdoor cookery: Trisha Spencer.
grand champion; Scott Starcher .
reserve champion; J oe Parker,
Kathy Paher, Lisa frymyer. Karl
Smith , Tom Pullins. hnnorabie men·
lion; Traci Casto, Jim Parker , Mike
Parker , Sandra Whaley. Pam
Whaley , Alban Curtis. Rose Ann
Baltey, Keith Karschnik.
Outdnor cookery II - Robyn Pit·
zer, grand champion: Kila Young,
reserve champton: Terrie Starcher ,
honorable mention .
Teens entertain : Kila Young.
grand champion ; Belly Ann Loftis.

rt.'srrve champi on; Jenn i Burke,
Nichdle Wilson, honorable mention :
Vicki Wise .
Bread, plain : Linda Riggs, grand
dmrnpion : Sherri Mye rs, r eserve
cha mpion; Heather Finlaw, Donia
Crane, Synthia White, honorable
1nention; Michelle Wibon, Jodie
Schaekel.
Bread, special : Ki la Young, Bet y
Ritchie, ~rand champiuns; Tammy
Calawa y, rese rve cha1 npi on; Kathy
Parker. Sherry Myers, honorable

lllention.
Jntern atinnal Foods: Paul Riggs,
grand champwn : IMh Ritchie,
reserve champion: Ljsa Collins ,
Renee Trussell, hnnorable 1nention ;
Kathy Parker. Sherry Mye1·s.
Preserve and serve I : Donia
Crane. g rand champion: Tract
Castn. reserve chan 1pion: Alice Rit·
chic. honorable mention; Lisa
Frym yer, Angela Collins , Donna
Curtis, Becky Rife, Angie Spence r,
Synthia White . Robyn Pitze J n Ellen
Crane, April Brickies.
Preserve and serv e II : Carrie
Karr. grand champion: Pat Riebel,
reserve champion; Robyn Pttzer.
Donia Crane, honorable mention;
Kathy Parker , Donna Curtis,
Mi chelle Capehart, Angie Spt:ncer .

Your "Ex tra Touch "
Floris t Since 1957

~~LORIST
u..

PH. 992·2644

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

r•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

*Y2 Price
of
Y2 Price

SALE
*ALL SHOES NOW MARKED HALF PRICE
·WILL NOW SELL FOR HALF PRICE OF THE
HALF OFF PRICEI
ALSO A GROU~ OF SHOES
FOR '2,-•3 and '5

H.ERITAGE HOUSE

'

'

'OF SHOES
MIDDLEf'OR1, OHIO

Middlepor1, Oh.

..

•

�•,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~Oliver!'

brings

By SALLYANNE HOLTZ
Sentinel staff writer "Food, glorious food!
Hot sausage and mustard!
While we're in !he moodCold jelly and custard!
Pease pudding and saveloYS
What next Is the question?
Rich gentlemen have tt. boysln-&lt;11-gestlon! "
With such catchy lyrics opening
the Ohio Valley Summer Theatre
production or "Ollver! " how can
you go wrong 7 The play-musical is

Play review

The Artful Dodgers (Brian Clark) lets OUver (Kevin Perotti) know he
can "consider hlmseU at home," during tbe Oblo VaHey Summer Theatre
producUon of "Oliver!" in Athens.

Angina: pain in the heart
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Professor of
FamOy Medicine
Ohio Unlverilty CoUege
cl Osteopathic
Medicine
QUESTION :
What is angina
pectoris?
ANSWER: Angina pectoris is the
medical term for
chest pain caused
by heart disease.
SCHRECK
Often called angina, the pain is a
result of the heart muscle not
receiving enough oxygen and is often described by the patient as a
pressure or heavy sensa tion located
behind the breastbone. The pain
may also radiate to the left shoulder
or arm or into the neck or jaw and
can be mistaken for indigestion . A
person suffering from angina might
also experience "heart flutters"
when the pain strikes. Usually
brought on by physical activity and
relieved by rest, the pain ean also be
triggered by emotional tension or by
eating a large meal.
QUESTION : Why does the heart
not get enough oxygen?
ANSWER : Oxygen is carried to
the heart muscle by the hemoglobin
in the blood. The blood flows to the
. heart muscle through blood vessels
called coronary arteries. If these arteries are narrowed for any reason,
not enough blood will reach the hea•t
muscle when it is needed. It takes
about a 50 percent narrowing of the
arteries to' significantly impair
blood flow to the hea rt muscle. By
far the most common abmorrrality
· causing narrowing of the arteries is
atherosclerosis. More common
known as hardening of the arteries,
atherosclerosis means there is a
build up of fatty deposits in the
coronary arteries. The basic cause
-&lt;&gt;f atherosclerosis is not y~t fully~.
known. However, we do ~now that
certain fa ctors such as smoking,
high cholesterol levels, high blood
pressure and a family history of
coronary artery disease accelerate

the rate of hardening of the arteries.
QUESTION : How serious is a
diagnosis of angine pectoris? Will it
prevent me from leading a norrral
life and will it shorten my life span?
ANSWER: Thanks to modem
medical therapy and depending. on
the severity of the coronary ·artery
disease, a person diagnosed as
having angina pectoris can expect to
live for many years. In fact, ·many
victims have lived as many as 20 or
more years without any se rious
problems. Likewise, the severity of
the disease will deterrrine the level
of therapy or surgery required. The
medica tions most commonly
prescribed are nitroglycerin and
drugs called beta-blocking agents.
These drugs act to increase the
blood supply to the heart and to
reduce the heart's need for oxygen.
In addition to these medications, a
physician might also suggest that a
patient with angina lose weight and
participate in a regular physical
conditioning program.
Generally if the recommended
therapy is followed there will be no
restriction involving normal work,
family life, leisure ,.or sexual activity . If chest pain becomes ·a
problem during any of these activities, it should be reported to the
attending physician.
QUESTION: Do the chest pains
get worse•
ANSWER : This question is best
answered on a personal basis in consultati on with the attending
physician. A recent study found that
40 to 50 percent of those diagnosed as
having engina for 10 years eventually lost the symptoms of it.
others reported no change in their
symptoms and they remained on the
same medication for years. Finally,
another set of patients had in'
creasing diffi culty with their
angina~ and they required different
medication ami/heart surgery.
Regardless, the reassuring fact is
that today a patient with heart
disease has many options available
and does not have to give up a norma iH~.
·

upbeat. It's exhilarating. It's a
wonderfUl "Twist" on an ordinary
evening out.
The performance, obviously
based on Charles Dickens' novel of
the same name, Is an experience of
organized pandemonium, with
singing, laughing children everywhere. There are children's voices
ringing from the stage, from the
catwalk above the stage and from
the aisles suri'O)Jndlng the stage.
The mere feat of organizing so
many children Into such a creative,
talented performance deserves a
standing ovation itself.
The chtic:lren are the delight of the
first part oftheplay, with the voices
of more than 50 "orphans" ringing

Ladies

~Twist'

Days in a nursing home can be tons of cigarettes, two cases of fruit,
long.and monotonous.
two boxes of candy bars, three car. Arid it was after a holiday visit to tons of gum and three cartons of
the Arcadia Nursing Home more ,,- snack items along with numerous
than a year ago that the American game prizes, and refreshments for
Legion AtiXiliary of Feeney-Bennett the party.
Post 1.28;'' Middleport, decided that
Each month it costs the AtiXiliary
something they could do to make life between $150 and $160 to get it all
less humdrum was to give monthly together. Feeney-Bennett Post conparties for the patients.
tributes $50 a month to the project,
When the parties first began about and the rest of the money is raised
half of the 60 or so patients were thro"gh varioUs projecls and acveterans. In the past year the nwn- tivities.
ber ofvet~rans have decreased to t6 .
At the parties the birthdays of
While · the Americlih Legion patients are observed with each one
Auxiliary i.'l a veteran-orien.ted having a birthday during the month
group, the parties have always been. being given special recognition
for all the patients.
along with a dollar in a card .
Since January of 1981, the fourth
Fupding the parties isn't always
Monday of each month has been easy so a few months ago the
designated as ."party day" at Ar- Auxiliary meJllbers decided to make
cadia by.the AtiXiliary members.
and sell crafts for their project fund:
Twocarloads travel to Coolville Every third Wednesday at the
taking along each trip several car- legion hall is craft day and members
meet from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. to

1Tf

CRAFt' DA V- Crafts to lake to tbe Jmlientnt Arcadia Nunin&amp; Home and to sell to raise the $150 to $160
a month needed lor monlltly parties at tbe facility are
made by lbe American Legion AtWIIary of FeeneyBennett Post 128. Shown Wednesday as IIIey made yam

Randolph

. .BANK ONE .v.- -..

•'

placemats and polbolders, and room deodorizing
hangers are, from lbe lett around lite table, Etta wm,
Gerry Parsons, Becky Tyree, Sonja Wayland and
Peggy Caton.

Davis, Diane DeHainaut,
Nolan; Graham Stanley, Tammy
Swisher and Greg Wilson.
The Service Recognition Awards
ceremony was one of several events
at the annual picnic attended by
about 125 employees, physicians,
families and guests. After a buffet
dinner, Benjamin Franklin IV
presented his very popular magic
act. Other ~vents lbcluded a dunking
machine to raise money for the
"Jaws of Life" device, wagon rides
around the park, prizes for all
children and door prizes for the
adults.

-------------------------,---------------.----.------1

ar's "On Golden Po~," a Theatre
35 producUon. He pJaYsMr. Brown·
low, a rich ~ in search of a
grandson.
It you liked 'the charm of "Annle," you'D 16ve "OUver." So, "Conslder yourself part of the family! "
and don't miss this chance to see
Uve Dickens. The $4 Ucket price Is
truly money well spent. Tickets for
the July 23-27 and :JJ-31 pertormances- at 8 p.m. in the fol'flln Theatre - are on sale at Kantner Hall
box office or by calling 594-5010.
The dinner theatre "Romantic
Comedy"' also opens this Friday at
8 p.m. at the OU Inn.

THURSDAY
1WIN CITY Shrlnettes will
meet Thursday, 6 p.m. at the
westbound park on Route 33.
Those attending are to take a covered dish and their own table
service.

SPRING &amp; SUMMIR

CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES
............. lui .....
-~-

. FO(ftE~!O!l~-~ ~ILDR!!

M~RGUERITE
SHOES .
. " '
..
''-The Mldclji-Stloe Store In

ftle M'-dll Block"
POMEitOY,OHIO '
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

. 61~/992·2133 .

'·

Friday and Saturday, on the
church parking lot. The sale will
begin at 9 a.m. each day.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, Thursday, picnic, westbound park on
Route 33. Take covered dish and
town table service, 6 p.m.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Dance Friday, 7
to 10 p.m. at Meigs Seni~r
Citizens Center, Pomeroy; admission, $1; music by the String
Dusters.

· NTH BIR11JDAY - Henry Roasb will be booored on biB lttb bil'
lllday Ia lbe cboreb leUowablp room Sunday, July %$, from W p.m. He
requests no gUts.

Warden
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Warden,
Racine, announ&lt;;e the birth of a son,
Derek Mitchell, June 17 at the
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens. The
infant weighed eight pounds, 11 ounces and was 21 inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Warden have a
daughter, Stacy Ann, two. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mril. Bob
Warden, Racine, and the greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Matthews, Marietta. Mrs.
Helen Matthews, Marietta, is a
great-great-grandmother.
Maternal grandparents are- Mr.
and Mrs. Charles R. McGraw,
Charlotte, N.C., and the greatgrandparents are Mj. and Mrs. Eli
Vance, Lantana, Fla.

SATURDAY
BASHAN - Ice cream social,
Saturday, serving to start at 5
p:m. at the Bashan Fire Depart·
ment, sponsored by the Ladi!s
Auxiliary and · the Firemen. Ice
cream, hot dogs, cakes, and pies.
Muilical by local talent.
MEIGS Fish and Game Club
will sponsir its annual children's
fishing derby, ages one to ·16,
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. ;
location three and one-half miles
west of Chester on West Shade
Road. Brinl( own bait and fi shin g

Warden
Harris ______________
The 82nd birthday of Lewis Harris
was observed 'l',i.lb a potluck dinner
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Harris.
Attending besides the hosts and
.their sons, Dave and Kenny, were

Mary Crosson, Mr . and Mrs. George
Harris, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. George
Harris, Jr. and P.J., Mr. and Mrs .
Thomas Harris and Jamie, Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Rice and BilL

Astrograph

pole; limit one pole per child ;
frees and refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Car
wash wiU be held Saturday-beginning at 9:30a.m. at the Sohlo
station in Tuppers Plains. The
event is sponsored by South Bethel Youth Group.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - All students,
grades 9 through 12, who will be
playing football for the Southern
Tornadoes are to be at the football fi eldhouse at 2 p.m. Sunday.

MONDAY
POMEROY- The Izaak Wal·
ton Club wlll have its annual picnic for membership, family, and
friends, Monday evening, with
supper beginning at 7 p.m.
Members are asked to bring a
covered dish, beverages, and
eating utlnsels.

TUESDAY
OIDO ETA Pffi CHAPTER of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Hawaiian pool party, Tuesday,
6:30p.m. at the home of Jenelle
HaptonstaiL !98U3 pledges to be
there.

Racine L.A.
Racine Ladles Auxlltary held i:,
regular meeting July J..'l with Ruth
Shain, president, presiding. The
meeting opened with Sharon Johnson giv lng the pledge and Teresa
Johnson having prayer.
The AuxUlary Is making three donations: $25 to Southern H.S. for It s
football building; $25 to Southern
Junior High for Its new parking lot;
and $50 to the coaches of the Racine
(B) T-ball team to help pay for
trophies.
The Auxlllary has a new c-ement
walkway at Its building and has received the new fl ags for deceased
members . Badges lor new
members have'been ordered.
Th~ Auxlllary has new curtains
and Is to purchase a new coffee pot
and fOQd chopper.
July 4th celebration thanks were
given to all who gave support.The
group will celebrate the "auxiliary
coming back" during July.
A new member is Sandra Patterson. Door prize was won by Teresa
Johnson. Mrs. Shain served r!.'freshments to Aggie Boggass. Jean
Johnson. Boo Arthurson. Mae Cl!.'land could not attend .

Amateur artists

trait frnm life, still life, marine
study, flower study, animal study
and modern a•·t.
There will be a best of show with a
SP"cial premium awarded in carh nf
the four ca te~ories.
Pat Thnma is chairman nf the
shnw and Lul~lle Leifhe it is SUP"rintendenL Entries must be registered
by Aug. 13 and artist.'; are allowed
only one entry P"r class. No tube or
number painting is P"rmitted and all
entries must be original and the
work of the exhibitor.

Haggerty shower
Mrs. David (Mary) Haggerty
was recently honored by a layette
shower held lor her by her friends,
Mrs. Reta Sheets and Mrs. Danette
Mealge at Mrs. Sheets' home in
Gallipolis.
Attending the shower were Mrs.
Judy Davis, Mrs. Merrill Brtggs,
Mrs. Brent Saunders. Mrs. Leon
Saunders, Mrs. Ronnie Saunders.
Mrs. William Pegg, Mrs. Jotm
Mark Haggerty and Erin, Mrs.
Fred Blaettnar, Mrs. Jotm Wllllam
Blaettnar. Mrs. Jack Sater!leld,
Kat hy Blaettnar, Mrs. Chr istine
Napier. Mrs. E lmer Caldwell, Mrs.
Lu c ill e Hagger ty and Mrs.
Meaigc's son, Jesse.

Meigs County artists an· bl•in g

AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXILIARY, Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Joint
meeting of juniors and seniors.

urged to take t n lheir ease ls in

Crafts shown

preparatinn for the annual amateur
painting ecunpetitinn of the Mt!igs
County Fair.
Premiums will be paid to the top
two entries in fnur ca tegories nf

HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens, regular meeting,
Tuesday, to\vnshouse, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments. Members urged
to attend.

work including oil , acrylic, water
n)lur.s and a gt·ncral other media
eatcgory indUtlin~ penc il , J}l'll, pink.
r&gt;astelor tTHyon. Each cal cJ{nr y has

st•ven areas of the111c and thc~c in·
l'l ude lHntls(·a pr frtlJl1 nnturl'. pnr-

JACKSON-Craftspersons Interested In participating in the Craft
Show and Sale at Jackson, Nov. 6
and 7 at the Lick Local Scl)ool buildIng, at the west edge of Jackson and
Rt. 35, are asked to contact Martha
Walburn, 286-2519 or the Jackson
Chamber of Commrce. 286-2772.
Ask for an application.

Consumer reports: solar heater tips given
By the Edlton
fired . Currently, natural gas is ton when fully loaded.
snlar alt ernative more attraetive.
of Consumer Reports
cheap and elect ricity too expensive
Water conservati on efforts ,·nuld About half the states add a tax credit
Switching io solar could cut your
for a solar water heater to make cut your fan •ily 's water usc by a nr other incentive onto tile fede ral
water heating costs by half to twl}much of a saving over a gas-fired third. For an average 450 gallons subsidy . ·
thirds, if you now have an electric water heater . (Solar water heaters rcdueed to 300 gallons, a week's usc f~j[iij~ij~ij~~~~
water heater and if you ignore ijle
do use electricity to ope rate pumps, nf water heated 85 degrees (fr om 55
initial cost of the solar water heating controllers and back-up heaters.) to 140 degrees F ). would produce a
system.
Unless you pay more than 75 cents saving of about $115 a year, at
Among the · five tested by Con- per 100 cubic feet of gas (one thern1l awrage electricity rates (6.75 cents
swner Reports engineers, Revere and less than five cents per kilowatt- pt•r kilowatt-h our I
Solar System 70043-3 was the top perhour for electricity, trading a gas .- Swikhing to a solar water I1Catt•r
531 JACKSON PIKE ·At . 35 WEST
PhOne 44ti· 4524
former in · riljOrous winter con- water heater for a solar heater would save an additinnal $185, even
IMROAIN
MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ditions. Second in the tests. the Solar
would be a poor bargain.
in a \ow-sun area where it heats nn ly
AlL SEATS JUST S 2.00
Processes 1121-3-120, was not quite
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 2 OU
Energy prices aren't the on ly 55 percent of the water used.
as efficient as the Revere but cost
variable to consider. You also need
But to obtain solar sav ings,
nearly $900 less ($2,640 versus
to weigh the use . of solar energy rcmc• nber, you have to spend up$3,500).
against other fonns of ehe rgy con- ward of $2,000 for the solar water
Still, that's a hefty price to servation. By reducing the amount heater, plus an additional $1,000 or
recover. In addition, figure on a
of hot water you use or how much it's mor e for in stallati on. The
$1;000 installation fee, dependin(l on heated, you can save on your water " payback" period for the system local labor rates.
· heating bills, and do so at little or no the length of time it lakes tn pay for
Even assuming that you cut your expense.
the equipm ent with the saving it
water heating costs by half, would · For example, you can: install low- provides - would be very near the
switching to solar save you enough flow shower heads, take short er hoped-for life of the equ1pment.
' ' \HU It "t
money to make those initial costs showers, do the laundry with warm
Federal tax cred1ts I 40 percent nf
111 \ 1
\tU\ It
•
t
worthwhile•
nr cold water, operate the dish~ the cost of an adive solar in" ' " ..
/Ill I \ J
Not if your water heater is gas- washer and clothes washer only stallation, up to $10,000!, makt• the
J'(;
/JII/i/ ..,1/il l/

July 23, 1982
Don't discount any bright ideas you get this coming year for new in·
ventlons, methods or products . There may be broad uses for that which
you conceive.
LEO (July :&gt;.3-Aug. 22) you continue to be in a rather fortunate cycle
for things which could spell personal gain. Without being greedy or
selfish, focus on ways to add to your resources.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) YoU're likely to come out better today with
things which you originate 9r initiate than you will in taking the ideas of
others and trying to build upon them.
LIBRA (Sept. 23,()ct 23) Stay in control of things today, but strive to
do so without calling too much attention to yourself. You function besl as
the power behind thtHhrone.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Unusual conditions could prove to .be
beneficial for you toliaY. Be alert for a unique opportunity that may
enable you to fulfill a secret ambition.
·
SAGITTA1UUS tNov. 23-Dec. 21) This should be a day of
achievement for you, but your route to success mi ght not follow the course which you originally laid out for yourself:.,. .
.. CAPRICORN (Dec. :n.Jan. 19) Be helpful today to persons you are
fond of in managing situations they can't handle on their own. When the
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. ·
final score is tallied, you'll gain on a par with them. ,_.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am trying
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZCI-Feb. 19) Measures can be taken today to
to adjust our diet so my husband and
strengthen a relationship with a friend whom you de~ '" to be important to
I will not get a heart attack or worse,
you,•:You'll know how to cement better bonds.
a stroke. We are eating a lot more
· PISCES (Feb. ZCI-March 20) If you feel your work warrantsit, this is a · fish and less red meats. I understand
.
good day' to talk to those In authority about -some additional benefits.
fish have less saturated fat than red
Bring yoUr record to their attention.
meats. But ·what about the protein
•
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9) You'll be resourceful in your work habits
content - is the protein in fish as
:: today: Equally as important, you'll know how to generate enthusiasm in _ good as the protein in beef?
co-workers to bring out their better ideas.
.
And if we eat fish instead of red
TAURUS (April ~May 20) Don't undere~iini'ale yourself today by
meats will that decrease our
•: · being afraid to gamble on your talents and abilities. You can do what you
cholesterol intake? I have heard that
set your mind to, even if it takes untried techniques.
shellfish are high in cholesterol? Is
~··
. GEMINI (May. 21-June 20} It's important today for you and your
there any danger In eating hilS of
::: . mate to be hi complete accord on important domestic issues. Where harfish that we should be aware of?.
DEAR READER - .Changing
• mony prevails, success is likely through collective efforts.
;~
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don't delay or postpone situations today
your die! to include a reasonable
• which could be of benefit financially. In fact, doubling your efforts should
amount of fish in your diet is a good
afford success before nightfall .
idea. I don't think you need to ex:
.: L-----------------------------------------------~ elude red meats as there are many
I
•
lean cuts such as the separable lean
of round sleak. It is true that about
half of the fat · in red meats is
saturated fat and it contains little
•
WILKESVILLE - The Wilkesville
polyunsaturated fat compared to
.· I Towns hi p Volunteer Firemen's
Association will hold its 26th annUal
fi sh. About a third of the fat in fish is
TheHani~Wnyille Honor Girls met July 8 ctt the
fish fry on Saturday, July 31.
polyunsaturated fat and only about a
horne of Pauline AlkintJ wi th four memben and
The activities for the day include a orfr Mdvilur atltndihl( . Judl(inl( was discussed third is saturated fat.
The protein in fish is complete
water battle at 2 p.m. and and boob were checkt'd. A demonstration was
,~ti ven on makin j.j com hWik flower~ fur Cn!ative
••::•• firemen's
a street dance from 9 p.m. until mid- Aru. 'llle f1ext rneelif11!t: will bt&gt; July 15. - Carla protein and is comparable to other
K.auff, neW¥ reporter.
animal sources of protein, 'including
~; night. Anyone interested in par·
:;&gt; ticipating in the water battles should
red meats and poultry. Lean fish
The Coutttry Cousins nll!l July 15 at the home
: : .eontact Ralph White at 669-4343 or of Lori Burke with nine members, two advjlsons such as haddock are low calorie
and o~ v~U or in atlendanL&gt;e. Jud)!.in,ll! was
·::. Dean Burns at 66~224. Games will d ~~&gt;d . Del!um!df,~~ Uoos were )liven by the foods because they contain so little
~ arb w1th c:ookm~ pro~ on aeUinM the laDle.
fat and about 80 percent,.of. the ~aw .
:"~ · be offered during the afternoon and
Ref~nenta wen~ served by the ,ll!ir ls with
weight of fish is water, compared
;.• prizes will be awarded.
cootin~ projects. The next meelin~ will be
••
August 2 •t the home of Tum Evl'fett. - Lori to about 70 percent lor raw red
~-·
.
.
Bllttt, new• reporter.
meats.
The Mountainetrs ~H Club met hru time¥
There is a lot of confusion about
. ,.
. u·
~-·· The central Regiontil office of St. ~ Tb-st _meetinK WBs July Hi at the RlgJUS shellfish. Some of the older reports
~ Jude Children's Research Hoepltal -resldtnr-e With eight mernbera and two advisors about cholesteJ:Ol conteilt were
attendlnf!. !1le members clilc:twed alartlng 4-11
...._. announced tod!IY lbat the following meetlnKs
ba$11 on me8Jiurin~ techniques .tha~
for next ye~r in SeJUmber. Dilnn)'
RltC(J_save demonstr;ationa on archery and u~
-:::~ · individuals · in Meigs · County have dl
Riga pve one oo breadl. Refreshments
•: :ap-eed to ch8ir the '111112 Bike-A- •• ,.. llei'Ved .., the Rl([p.
,......,.._Un~wululy tt attheJoh.....,
~.; i'i*\a In their COIIIIIIWIWell.
ho-ne with ebr.ht members and tWo advisors at·
:::; Mrs. Melva EbUn, for ~tltlaild, tftldlr~~. C.rOfyn Elam pve a demmltraUoo on
~ ....... projtct. Ref..................,.....
:~:- alld Mrs. Marlene · Putnam, tor 1 n..
in&lt;ellng will be July 21 at 1 p.m. 95 .
.. •, :Reedmne, wm' ·each run lleJI8I1lle Karen11011
Lomberi, """' reporler.
.PAIR
• - ~.\·'lbonl this fall to benefit the
· · •• Internationally recogQized research

. . EI
.

Fish vs. meat for heart attacks
measured other substances besides
cholesteroL So oysters are not high
cholesterol fond but actually low
cholesterol foods. Scallops, crab and
clams arc also relatively low in
·cholesterol but shrimp contain about
twice as much cholesterol as beef.
· Fish fat tends to lower cholesterol ·
which is good. Too much may increase your bl eedin g tendency;

I

\

.

Greenland EskiJJius whu cat lot s nf

salmon are pnme lo serious r1ost:

bleeds.
You'II need some exacl fi gun•s so I

alll sending you The Health Leit er
nwTibcr 11-12, Fish and Shl'lifi sh as
Health Fonds, with tables un fal an d
c holcst~ru! cn ntcnt of L'Oil 'l! lo ll fi sh

Sta rh Friday
RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK
'T H E BE ST LITTLE
E HOUSE IN TEX

and shellfish.

-.

'•

:: Fish fry to be held

-..........

=

conrurEg

Meigs 4-H
news notes

0

PONY SHOES

''21

Service· note

\;:: boipitaL
• I
$t. Jude Children's Hoapltal, f0un!.:-· ~ b)' eatertalDer Danny 'l1loinas .. Navy Electr~cs Tecbnlclari
~ ~ . IICIIHiiBcrimlntory, Second Clall Robeit R. Tollln, 1011 of
. :.: ·IIIII providll .kltal medical care.lor B81t11a P. H~ rl271 ~. P'rlll(
•'"-. ,..., . . . pallenla tram 111!1'0111 the . st., Middleport, bal. repart8d fof
tltdr at Naval Air statiCIII NGrtb

I'

!.

.

: . J.

" .

.~llalll)l"o.

•

,,

.JoggefS
PonyStyle .
I' r,

. '2.88 pt.
pr.

"-99

,,

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I::IWI::IL...=..IL..=JI.oJioll.oJ····

!:

·: : ;~!-tlllllllll~~
r

Area .announcements

RliTLAND Church or God
will hold a yard sale Thursday,

Lib.rary trustee
attends convention
Emelyne Ely Reed, Londond~rry,
president of the board of trustees of
Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL),
Wellston, joined library trustees
from across the United States for
meetings at the American Library
Association's 101st Annual Conference, July 11-11, in Philadelphia.
Reed is a member of the American
Library Trust¥-e Association's
(ALTA 's) task force on membership, task force on literacy and
the education of trustees committee.
Reed and other members of
ALTA, a division of the American
Library Association (ALA), attende&lt;l more 'than 35 meetings and
programs, including a major
preconference on assessing the
sl)ace needs of their local libraries.
other programs covered such topics
as intellectual freedom, leadership,
organizational 'planning, volunteers,
fund raising and new technology.
A total d 15,000 librarians,
publishers, writers, trusiees,
educators and library supporters attended the conference and meetings
held at the Philadelphia Civic Center
and in hotels· throughout
Philadelphia. More than 700 exhibits
displayed books, library furniture,
computer hardware and software
and other library-related materials.
ALA is the oldest and largest
library association in the world. Its
4(),000 members represent all types
of libraries - state, Public, school
and academic, special libraries serving government and other · in'stitutions. ALTA is interested 'in the
develbpment of effective library service through developing competent
personnel, providing adequate
financing , passing suitable
legislation and encouraging citizen
support for libraries.
·
Reed has represented the
Chillicothe and Ross County Public
Library on the board of OVAL since
the Libfary Cooperative organized
in 1973, and was active during its formative years. The Meigs .County
Public Libra,:y is an OVAL member
library:
· -·

The Daily Sentinei-PSge-7

Calendar

;:... To chair bike-a-thons

MANY BARGAINS

,

·Birthdays cel~brated

.

Fifteen Holzer Clinic employees
were honored with service awards at
the Clinic's 8th Annual Picnic, held
recently at the 0. 0. Mcintyre Park.
Robert E. Daniel, administrator,
and Oscar W. Clarke, M.D. , chair·
man of the executive conunittee,
presented a certificate of appreciation and savings bond to each
employeehonored.
·
Recognized were : 30 years: Eva
NorlhupandNorrna Jean Wiseman;
25 Years: Cookie Stebbins; 10
Years : Roger Carter, . Robert
Daniel, Millie McCarty, Carolyn
Taylor, and Naomi Worthington;
and Five Years: Tjm Betz, Donna
- ·..

Spec. 4 Carla J . Hayman,
daughter of John E. and Florence R.
Hayman of Route 1, Leon, W. Va.,
has been decorated with the U.S. Army Conunendation Medal at Fori
Riley, Kan.
·
The Army Commendation Medal
is awarded to those lndivicluals who 1
de monstrat e
outstanding
achievement of meritorioUs ll~rvlce
in the performance of their duties on
behalf of the Arrry.
Hayman, assigned with the 121st
Signal Battalion, is a 1979 graduate
of Point Pleasant High School, W.
Va.

make a variety of items - such
things as doilies, placemats, recipe
card holders, tissue box covers,
wreaths for all seasons, and special
holiday decorations.
Besides the items they make for
sale, the Auxiliary also creates
items to take to Arcadia. Just recently they provided crocheted
deodorizers (or each patient's room .
Fake fur flower arrangements were
made for the dining room tables, and
16 bud vases were provided for the
facility.
This swruner the Auxiliary and
Post members also donated four picnic tables for the nursing hom e
patients.
The project is costly and time conswning, but for those who make the
trip to Arcadia month after month,
and work diligently to raise the
needed money, there is- personal
satisfaction in doing for others, a
reward well worth the effort.

•.

Teresa Randolph of Kennard r!.'cently graduated from Mt. Vernon
Nazarene College with a Bachelor

Army commendations

chlld 'tn the cast- and easUy, the
most talented performer in the
group. I overheard a fellow actor
note that Winters changes his character slightly every night. That's
the 'mark of a true actor - never
getting stale. And one can never tm·
aglne Winters being stale at anything. It you find only one reason to
go see "Oliver," make Winters lt.
The second most notable performance is given by Tony Coleman
as Mr. Sowerberry, who turns the
character of the fUneral director
into a bent, lecherous-but-likable,
hen-pecked souL The audience was
laughing so enthusiaj;tlcally at his
antics, 1t was hard to hear the
dialogue.
The .voices of some others In the
cast bear mentioning, 11 only because they are strong and can
carry their parts effectively.
Nrulcy, played by Sally Brookbank,
does a fine singing job until she hits
"He Needs Me," which is out of her
limited range. Playing the part of
dreaded Blll Sikes, John Henry
Gamber does an adequate - and
quite loud, fortunately- job of portraying the unsavory character in
In his booming baritone. Also in the
play ts veteran 'actor, Herbert S.
Taylor, who won an award for
"Outstanding Actor" from the
Ohio Communtly Theatre Association for his performance In last y!.'-

'
Your Headquarters
For Western
~ear and Boots
. ForThe
· ~ntlre F,a mlly

Clinic gives employees awards

.

to summer. theatr~ .

'.
..

Pomeroy::-Middle~rt, Ohi11

.. Thu!'lday,. July :p,1982

monthly parties

.Graduates summa cum laude from college
of Arts degree. She was salutatorlal
of her class and was summa cum
laude and Phi Delta Lamlxla. She is
the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs.
Curtis Randolph,Cable, and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bissell. Long Bottom.

,,

to the ratters or Forum Theatre.
The votce oflead Kevin Perott~ as
Oliver. comes across as strong and
weak, alternately. Certain phrases
of his songs are difficult to hear,
while others ring out clearly. His
acting Is just about what one would
ex/lect of a 13-year~old boy, which,
under the circumstances, suits hts
part perfectly.
Other children in the play Include
Amy Wails, playing Bet, who was a · ·
runner-up in the nationwide search
for "Annie," and Bannister Murray, 8, the youngest in the cast.
Some children's roles are doubl!.'cast due to the age of the actors.
The part of the ArtfUl Dodger Is
delightfully cast In Brian Clark,
who plays the gamin tblef with wit
and sly charm. His voice Is strong
and when he teams with Ollver to
sing "Consider Yourself At Home, "
the theatre comes alive with the
sound.
By far the most notable; all-star
performance ts turned In by OVST
director, Robert L. Winters as.
Fagin. Finishing his 20th yel!r at
OU, his portrayal of the endearing
pickpocket Is at once delightful and
touching. His many years of acting
culminates In what surely must be
the crowning role of his career. He
prances his way through the evening with more energy lban even the
chllc:lren display. He Is the oldest

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�!P~a!A•~!8~T~h~e~D~a:il~y2S~e~n~~·n:e~I----------------------------------~Po~m~ero~y:!M~i~dd~l~e~~rt~,~O~h~io~--------------------------------------'~h~u~nda~~f~J~u~7~22._,.198~2• '/•

Meigs County property transfers ...,__________________,
Charles Ivan Salser, Betty Salser,
Grover C Salser, Jr , Dortha Salser,
Enuna Salse r , to Douglas C Sands,
Cmdy J Sants, Part Sl6, Sutton
Frances Folmer, deceased, Scott
!"ulmer, Aff1dav1t, Salisbury
Anna R Baker, deceased, Clero
M Baker, Aff1dav1t, Middle port
J Robert McElhumy, deceased,
LoUise McEihmny, Ce1t of T•an·

to Bank One of Pome1uy N A ,
Shenff's deed Cheste•
D1ana Sue Belcher to Rnge1 G1bs&lt;m, 10 34 acres Columbia
Betty Jackson Foresman aka Betty Ja ckson Mendenhall, Earl
F'm esman tu Cle1 o M Baker. IA&gt;t
357, Middleport
Sharon D&lt;lllllda Narde1 , Anthony
M Norde1lo V1cl01 C Young, J1 .

Hele n J effers, Reed Jeffers, Cert
of Transfer, Sc1p10.
Glnna Jean Manue l, Roger
Manuel, Ed 1th E Manuel, Jo Ann
Wilford, Gary W11ford, John Man~el.
Megan Manuel to Donald
Manuel 4'~ acres, Letart
R Gene Brasel tn Herald 011 and
r. 8 s Compa ny , Right of Way,
Rutland

w

1

• Gertmde E Lehew, Nonnan L.
Lehew.
d ecease d,
Aff1da v 11,
Lebanon
George J . Lowther, deed., to
Kathryn L Spencer, George
Douglas Lowther, Cert of Trans ,
Colw11b1a
Rober! R Cremea ns, Catherme F
C! ellll'ans tn D1a11111nd Savmgs and
IAlan Cn111pany,iA&gt;ls,Pmneroy.

nka Rutland Church of Christ, Inc.
by trustees to Robert E. Miller, Parcelli,Rutland.
Methodist Church of Rutland,
Ohio, nka United Methodist Church
of Rutland, Ohio by trustees, to
Robert E Miller, Parcels, Rptland.
Frances Yeauger to Marvm
Yeauger,0.22acre,Salisbury.
Noel D. Young,LeonaL. Young to

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

s.

And HomeMIIntenance
e Roofing of all types
e Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
tiOYrs. upertence
TOM HOSKINS
Ph.949·2160or9492322
4 20 lfc

"
'•
.,••

PHONt

.,

:·

992'~2156

~

"
,,
"

..

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohict45769

C OM P l F TF

RADIATO R
SFRV IU
f"ro m th P Small est
Hcilter Core to lhc
Largest Pe~d1ator

•'

....

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____, .;''''••
•8erebanaJse

fiRaAEial
1 C.;rd of Thanks (PN•d 1n
'l Cnr cl of Thanks (pdtCltn

~ldVil n ce)

Mfvrmce1

3 AnnouncC'men ts
d GlVCitway
5 Ha ppy Ad&gt;
6 Lost and Found
7 Ya rd Sa l(' (pi" d tn,ldvan r
fl Publ•c Sale
&amp; Auct•on
9 wanted to Buy

1

51 House hold Goods
52 CB, TV &amp; Rcldto EQUipment
53 Anttques
54 M1sc Merc handiSe .
55 Butld•ng Supplies
56 Pets for Sa le
57 Musctalmstruments
58 Fru1ts&amp; Vegetables
59 For Sale or Trade

Estate

31 HomC's tor Sa lf.'
3:1 Mobile Homes for Sc1lc
33 Farms for Safe
34 Bus• ness Bu1ldmos
35 Lots &amp; Ac r c.lge
36 R('al Esta te Wcmt~d

Rentals
I I He lp Wanted
11 5 tu a llon Wnn ted

13 lnsuran c&lt;.'
JA Bus1ness Tra1n1ng
IS Sc hools lnstruc llon
16 Rnd10 TV &amp; CB Rcp,::m
17 M1 sce ll aneous
JB Want C'd l o do

61 Farm Equ1pment
61 Wanted to buy
63 L1vestock
6&lt;1 Hay &amp; Gratn
65 Seed &amp; Fert•l•zcr

Publl.£_~fl~e _ ~

PLANT MANAGER

c----------------------1

I

Curb Inflation I
Pay Cash for I
C:lassifieds and !
Savel I I · I

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Phone-------------

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Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
.111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

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Pos1tion Available

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ULTRASOUND
TECHNOLOGIST

Full time opening for
registered or trained
Medical _5onolrapher.
Sallry COIIm,nsul11e

liilh

Expe11ence.
'

Contact
OifiCtot' of Ptn01111tl
Pl~a~nt Velley

I

. llost1illl

1

Pt. PIIIIJIII~ wv 25550

(3~)_675-4340
An eq11.11 opporluni!y emplo)Oit

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&amp;..-----------~-----------·

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71 Autos tor Sale
7'1 Trucks fo r Sale
73 Van&gt; a.&lt; WD
74 Motorcycles
75 Boats &amp; Motors
76 Auto Parts &amp; Accessor•es
77 Au to Repa1r
78 Campmg Equ1pment

following telephone exchanges. ..
Galha County
Area Code 614
446-Galllpolls
367-Cheshtre
381-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dost.
'43-Arab•a D1st
379- Wa lnut

"

.......,

.

Mason Co , wv
Area Code l04
67s-Pt Pleasant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
77l-Mason
882- New Haven
895-Letarl
937- Buflalo

Me1gs County
Area Codo61&lt;
992- Mlddloport
Poineroy
915-Che51er
343- Portland
247-Letart Falls
' 949- Raetne
742-Rutland

'
"
"

:·

Up to 15 Words

"•''

S3 OU

•,•"•

S&lt; 00
Up to 15 Words

S•x day

_

PubliC NotiCC

~P~b~~~O!!~ _

=

"

"'•

S7 00

'

such would serve notiCe to
the world tha t the Pla•nt1ff
cla1ms sa•d lot and has
c la 1med sa1d lot for a
pe r. od of twe nty one ( 21)
yea rs pnor to the f1fln g of
lh1 s Complatnt , Pla 1nt1ff
says further tha r he d1d not
h(we and does not have the
perm•Ss•on of the Defen
dants to use sa •d lot m a ny
ma nner
Plamt•ff says further
that he 1s the owner of lot
456 10 the Vtllage of M1d·
dleport, formerly known as
Lower Pomeroy, satd lot
&lt;56 ad1o mm p th e tot
descnbed herein that ts the
sub1ect of th1s act•on
The prayer of said Com·
p l a u~t 1S the Pla•nt1ff's t1tle
to sa•d rea I estate be
quteted as aga,nst the
Defendant s, that Defen
da nts be reQuired to set tor
th the 1r c latm, If any, 1n
and to sa •d rea l estate or be
forever barred from ascer
t1ng the same, that any and
al l c1a1ms a t the Defen
dan ts wh1ch may be ad
verse to th e t1tle be
declared vo1d , a nd that the
Defendan ts be forever en
101ned from asce rt1ng a ny
cta1m whatever tn and to
sa 1d real estate adverse to
Plamliff's Iitie. that the
Court cause a deed to lot
138 descnbed herem that IS
the subJ ect of th1 s ac t•on,
be executed to the Pla1ntlff
and for such other further
rel1 ef as may be prope r
The a bove menttoned
part•es w1l l further take
not•ce that th ey have been
made parttes Defendant to
sa 1d Compla•nt a nd they
a re reQuJrect. to answe r satd
Comfla•nt w•th1n twe nty
eogh days after the last
publlcat1on of th1 s not.ce
be
Sa1d not 1ce Will
publtshed once a week fo r
s•x consecut 1ve weeks
The las t publtcatton will
be made on the 22nd day of
Ju ly, 1982 a nd the twenty
e1ght days for answenng
Will commence on July 23,
1982 In case of Defendants'
failure to a nswe r or ottler
w1se r ~s pond as required
by the Ohto Rules of C1V1I
Procedure , 1udgme nt by
defa ult will be re nde red
agatnst th e Defenda nts fo r
the relief demanded 1n the
Co mplatnt
Lar ry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
161 17,2&lt;!71 l.8. 15,22.6tc

LEGAL NOTICE
The PubliC Utilit ieS Com
m•ss1on of Oh•Q ha s
schedu led for heanng Case
No 81 1116 TP AIR, be1ng
In the Matter of the Ap
pltCat•on of The WestfJrn
Reserve Telephone Com
pany for Author1ty to 1n
crjf'ase a nd Adrust tts Rates
a nd Cha rges and to Change
•ts Regulat•ons a nd Prac
t1ces Affect1ng the Same
On Monday, August 9, 1982,
a public hear 1ng w1ll be
held a l 9 30 A M . a t the of
ftces of the Comm1ss•on,
375 Soulh H• gh Streel,
Columbus, Oh1o AI lhal
t1m e mterested part1es w111
be affordfd an opportun•ty
to
pr ese nt
publiC
tes t1mony

(71 22. ltc

P~b_!IC

"!_O!ICe

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
OF MEIG~
COUNTY. OHIO
case No 18214
KENNETH COZART AND
PATRICIA COZART
Plamtlffs,
·VS-

MARY A. CHASE,' The
unknown he1rs, devisees,
legatees and assigns of
Mary A. Chase, deceased
ELLA R CARPENTER,
The unknown he.rs,
dev1sees, legatees and

.asstgns of E tla R. Car
penter, deceased
MAMIE E BROWNING,
The unknown heirs,
devisees, legatees and
asstgns of Mamte E
Brown1ng, deceased
CYNTHIA E SMITH, The
unknown heirs, dev1sees,
legatees and asSigns of
Cynthoa
E.
Smtih,
deceased
ANDREW OURS, The
unknown he~rs, dev1sees,
legatees and asstgns of Andrew Ours, deceased
JEFFERSON CHASE, The
unknown heirs, dev1sees,
legatees and ass1gns of Jefferson Chase, deceased
Defendants.
case No 18,214
NOTICE BY
'
PUBLICATION
To Mary A Chase
The unknown he.rs,
dev1sees, legatees and
ass1gnsot Mary A Chase
Ella R Carpenter
The unknown heirs ,
devisees, legatees and
ass1gns of Ella R Car
penler
Mam1e E Brown1ng
The unknown hetrs ,
dev1sees, legatees and
ass1gns of Mam1e E
Browntng
Cynthia E Sm1lh
The unknown hei rs,
de v1sees, legatees and
asstQnsof Cynth1a E Sm 1th
Andrew Ours
The unknown hei rs,
dev1sees, legatees and
ass1gns of Andrew Ours
Jefferson Chase
~
The unknown he.rs .
dev1sees, legatees and
ass1gns of Jefferson Chase
You are hereby notified
that you have been named
Defendants 1n a legal ac
lion enlotled Ke nneth
Cozart e t at , Plaintiffs, vs
Mary A Chase, et al ,
Defendants This actoon
has been ass1gned case
Number 18,214 and IS pen
dmg ~n , the &lt;;ourt of Com

~-~

-

--

0

HOBSTETIER REALTY

....,.,

608 E. MAIN

rtiOK£ 7U 2003
NEW LISTING - 51
Rl 143 Approx 1 88
acres
3 b e dr a.om
Barnngton home wtth 2
baths Is land ra nge and
doubl.e ove ns 1n k1tchen
Family room w1th wood
burn er
3 s tor age
build 1ngs
Sells lor
$36,900 00
NEW LISTING - Bnck
51 In Pomeroy 2 story
home with 2 bedrooms
Gas forced atr furnace
Extra n1ce SIZe lot
Needs. s.ome mtnor
repa~r
but a real
barga1n at ONLY
S12,000 00
FARM - 48 acres With
lovely ,. bedroom home,
1 baths, fam11y room
with ftre.llace Central
stereo and vacv'lm All
m1nerals Included Call
today, we have a
REDUCED PRICE .
MIDDLEPORT - This
home reflects the love
and care II has had, 3
bedrooms, d1111ng room,
sitt1ng room, uttlity.
Everything Is In lip top
shape Close to stores
and shoppong Owner
wllilng to negotiate In
pr,ce of $35,000.00

POMEROY, OHIO

Geolp S. llohttltor 11

w •l

The follow.ng descnbed
real estate s1tuated 1n
Metgs County. Ohto, •n
Townshtp of Lebanon, Sec
11on 23, Town 2. Range 11.
a nd 1n 160 Acre Lot No 169,
bounded and descnbed as •·
r 11
follows
Beg1nnmg a t the so uth.. ,,
west corner of satd 160 acre 1,
Lot 1169, the nce North &lt;O ,
rOds, thence East 133 rods 1•
a nd 8 hnks;1thence South 40 :
rOds, lhenc'e Wesl 133 rod s •'
and 8 l1nks to the place of '!
begmning, conta1nmg 32 : .
acres, more or less
.•
You are reQutred to an · ~ •
swer the Compla1nt wtthm
28 days o'l"' the last
publication of th1 s nottce-:; .
wh1ch wtll be published on; 11
ce each week for SIX sue-~ •
cessive weeks The last '·
publication Will be made
July 22, 1982, and the 28 ·
days for answer will com
mence on that date
In case of your fa •lure to ,
a nswer
or
ot he rw1se .
respond as requ~red by thet.!
Oh1o
Rules of C1vt1 \
Procedure, jUdgme nt by
default Wtll be r e ndered
agatnst you for the rel•ef
demanded 1n the Com
pla•nt

on '

Dated June u . 1982
Lar ry E Spe ncer
Clerk of Courts
Me1gs County, Oh10
(61 11,24 I1J 1, 8,5,22, 61c

Nr W LIS liNG - Ponu' roy
An rxce11entloca t1on
a nd an outstand.nq homf' m,lkf•s lll 15 a goOd buy! 4
1
bedrooms. 2 t, baths, tortllrll d •n1 nq room, full
basement, f.n 1shed a tt1 c (2 exr ra rooms), full y 1n
sutated. v•nyf S1d1ng, pa t1 o A rei! I buy for $33,000

NF W li ~TI NG - Harnsonv •llc - A 3 bedroom
double w•de on approx 1'2 acre lot EY f catcht nq
front bay wmdow. 1'12 baths d1n1nq ropm lt v1 nq
room, famtly room , eq u1ppcct k 1tchen, frpnt porct1.
central a.r $30,000
1/-

,

NF W LI STI NG - New L1m il Roetd - Comp tr. trly
furntshed' ~seven year old ra nch w1th 3 bedrooms,
bath, full basement With family room a nd utd•t y 2
a1r cond un1ts, wood burner, back porch, 2 storrtqe
bUildmQs on 2 2'1 acres $43,500

NF F D A HOU SE that wdl almost pay for 1lse lf?
Th•s q room~ bedr~m hom e 1n Middle port pot only
has a 3 bedroom garage apt 111M could rent for $200
month, but a~lso has an ev.,.~ a~sumltbl c loan w1th
monthly payments of $287 .00, 1n&lt;:ludes taxes and
ms , with a down payment of S6.:i00 for 25 ye~r lcrm
on the balance of $28,700 Total pnce S35 ,000

j

I

FARM - Approx 82.5 acr es, 30 acres tillable, 27
pasture, 2 ponds, baro, several sheds, hetfcr bnrn
Also a n,celv•remodeled 3 bed•oom, home . 7 rooms
and bath. Insulated, G F A heal wo th woodburncr
Summer kttchen 1n full basemf' nt S89,SOO 00

'
RF.AL TOR'
Henry E Cleland, Jr .. G.R.I
Jean Trusaell .. . . . . . ....
Dof1ie Turner ...... ~ . ..•. ..
Office . , . . .

ROOFING

ut•Hty B

&amp; Service

H. L WRITESEL

I

Ul

lngs

Sires from 4 to 6 and all
Ood butldtngs 24x36.
Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt.l, Box 54
Raclnt,Oh.
Ph 6t4-t43·25P1

Call 992-6259
Sycamore St.
276
M ' ddl
Oh'ID
I
epo I

rt

'
' ' ... 992·6191
949·2660 •
. . . 9,fZ.S692
... 99~ ~IS9

:~~~~~~out s
• New or Rop.ur
• ramhng
FREE ESTIMATES

YOUNG'S

BOGGS

CARPENTER
SERVICE
'AHIMifldrtftiodtll"J
-!~}n&amp;IIMIIIJitlfiiOii
-..-nit Will

-"''"tf'"'
oltctr lf,:.'tt,,.,IJII

Ill

V. C. YOUNG
991-6215 ortPI-7114

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rt. so East
Guysville, Ohio
Author ired JOhn Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

F;~~sE:~!~::~t

1 3 tic

or

94 9•22, 3

4460294
Country
Carryout.
Kanaug,a, Oh
Trail
bologna. Am •sh cheeses &amp;
subs Beer crawlers, m1n
nows. party trays ,

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

delivery

302 Mechanoc 51
Pomeroy, OH
PH 992-6506

BALLOONS FOR ALL OC
CAS IONS Say Happy B1r
Thday t Love You, It's a
Boy or G.rls, Get Well
Anyth1ng you WISh 1n a d1f
ferent way De hver to
hosp 1tal , homes for a lmost
any occass .on Balloons &amp;
co Ca ll4&lt;6 4313

•SEAT COVERS

:~i,~'(.~1~~~LE TOPS

:~~~~~~~. Lme of

Automobile UphOlste ry

'===P:h=99:1:-2:1:7~42~2~6 ~tf~c=~~=:P:o:m=er:o:y:,:O~h~lo~~~~=========~-======7:1:1:m:=op:d~

~

01

G
f Lesson
Tealord
Chester,s Oh •oJ

9·30 lfc

'

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

Ph. 915-4269 ar915-4382
Dewayne Williams
&amp; Scott1e Smith
All makes and models
Antenna lnstallalion
t'touse calls and shop
erVice ava1lable.
781moPd

WE

POOL

TOGETHER
• Stamliss Steel
• F1berglass
• Vtn&gt;;l Liners
PERSONALIZED
POOLS
1·304-773-5634
c L t&lt;t1chen
Mason . W Va
6 20 1 mo

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
M.UMINUM SIDING
•lnsulat•on
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Window•
•New roof1ng
Free Estimates
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772
7 4 1 mo

ln Memorlam

Announcements
SWEEPER and sew1n g
mach1ne repa•r . parts, and
supp1 1es
P1ck up and
de 11 very, D~VIS Vacuum
Cleaner. one ha lf• mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

Ph. 992-2791

0

hn

~--....,.---~~--,11 Me•gs Co Game and Ftsh
club w1ll have a work
sesston Wednesday, July
21, sta r tmg at 6 p m All
members are asked to
come and help clean up for
the f1 sh1ng derby

Custom kitchens and
bathrooms. .Jiemodell ng,
add-ons, new homes,
plumbing, elettuc, Siding.

Meigs Co F1sh and Game
cl ub w1ll sponser 1ts ann
c hlldrens F 1Sh1ng derby for
ages 1 to 16 , Saturday , July
24 8 30 a m to 2 p m
Located 31f, miles west of
Chester on West Shade Rd
Foll ow s1gns Br~n g own
ba•t and f1Sh1n g pole One
pole 1S perm1tfed for each
cht ld There Will be free

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992 ·60

11

8 20 ti c

;==========;-t==:::==::====~t:==;;;~;:==~lr=~:::::::::::===~ prtzes
tor boys and g1r
ls,
plus refreshments
and
CANDLELIGHT INN
St. Rt. 7- Belween Mid·
dleport &amp; Chesh~re, Oh.
PROUDLY PRESENTS

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- Dozers

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

DABBLE
SHOP

Lost and Found

6

In Memonam of Robert 0
Dorst, one year ago today
Our hours of loneliness
Are part Of GOd'S Wtll,
For the 'good 1n my
husband'
IS ltV1ng here Still
Sadly m•ssed by Helen,
How1e, and T1m

7 14 tic

eats
The lzaak Walto n Club w111
have •fs annua l P•CniC for
membership, fam•Jy , and
frtends, Monday even1ng,
J uly 26 Supper will be at 7
p m Br.ng a covered pLate
of food, dnnks, and eat .ng
ut1nse ls Come ear ly and
en10Y the good company

LAFF· A-OAY

LOST orange &amp; whtte cat •n
v1nc •n1 ty of Roads•de rest,
Upper /H 7 REWARD
Call614 388 99'14

w~nted drummer
for
se rtous rock band, Bitt
zkre1g For aud1 t1on, call
Keith '192 3&lt;08 Mus I have
drums

FOUND sma ll
wh1te
female dog Must take to
pound 1f not c la1med Call
~~ 1927
Losl black and while 3
legged ma le cat 1n Lincoln
Hill VICtntty Close tamily
pet Nevwer been ou t of
house so very fngh tened of
people Reward 614 '192
6505 or '192 5&lt;27 After 6
pm

ll.o==c=:"==~-'

Lost
floating key rt ng
"ye llow" 3 keys and lock
304 675 2324
va rdSalc

7

H~p ""-:•_nte~

11

Garage Sale Tue &amp; Wed
Torch &amp; gauages, leather
1ackets, tape players, Fa~r
f1eld centenary
Road.
Fatrfleld Acres
Garage Sale 508 C1rc le
Ave , ac ross from Spn n~
Valley Plaza Thurs &amp; Fr~
Yard sale Saturday 24 th, 9
5 Lake Or . R1o Grande
Baby &amp; 1un•or c lothes
books, &amp; m1sc
Y'ard sale Knst1 Onve off
35 West accross from
Galll a Auto Sates Baby,
matern1ty &amp; mens clothes,
bedroom su1te, typewr 1te r .
household 1tems Fn &amp;
Sat Hrs 10 5
Carport Sale Fnday 938
1st Ave Ga llipolis Cake
pans, tab le lamp. cloth1ng
&amp;m1SC
Yard Sale Color Tv,
bedroom su•Te stero &amp; d•n
nett set &amp; m•sc Plantz Sub
d1V1 S1on 446 7721 , Fr1, 23
2&lt; a. 25
Yard Sa le 84 Garfield Ave,
Fn
&amp; Sal
10 5Pm
Chlidrens c lothes d1shes,
bunk beds &amp; mt sc
Yard Sale Bulavllt e
Townhouse Men women &amp;
c htldrens cloth1nQ
8 A
Fnday and Saturday only

W!nt~d To B~y
WANTED TO BUY Old fur
n1ture and Ant1ques of al l
ktnds ca ll Ken neth Swa1n,
&lt;46 3159 or 256 1967 1n the
even 1nqs

9

Buyrng
Gold,
Sliver ,
Plat1num old co1ns sc rap
nngs &amp; silverw are Dally
quotes availab le
Also
co1n s &amp; co•n suppl1es tor
sale Spnng Va lley Trad1ng
Co Spnng Valley Plaza
&lt;46 8015 or 4~ 8026
We pay cash for late mode l
clean used ca rs
Frenc htown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson
&lt;46 0069

WAITRESS, ma 1ds. bar
tenders &amp; clerks wanted
Wnte qualtflcattons &amp;
phone number to
Job
Placement, P 0 Box 102,
Henderson WV 25106

JOBS, cr u•se sh1ps, r oma n
ce, exc1 !emen t travel, h1gh
earn1nq s Call now 602 264
1168
Appllcat1ons are now be1ng
laken for pari t1 me cook
w;t1tress Apply at Sen1or
Commun1ty Cen te r 812
V1and St Pt Pleasan l
11

S1tuaflons Wanted

Pr 1vate room, board and
laundry Elder ly on ly 992
6022 or 992 6748
Dependable c hil d care •n
my home
References
ava 1l ab le 3204 675 2527
13

u seo cann .ng tars Cat16 14
388 81l 3
BEDS IRON. BRA SS, old
turnlfure
go ld
s •lver
dollars, wood 1ce boxes,
stone tars, ant 1qucs, etc ,
Comp lete
hou sehold s
Wrr le MD M1ller , Rt 4,
Pomeroy , Oh Or 992 7760
Gold , s liver, s terling .
Jewelry r1n gs, old co1 ns &amp;
currency Ed Burke tt Bar
ber Shop M1ddlepor.t 992
3476
OLD FURN ITUR E, bed&gt;,
•ron, brass, or wood K1t
che n cubbards of all types
Tab ies, round or SQ uare
Wood ICC boxes Old desk s
and bookcases Will buy
complete house hold Gold,
sliver old money pocket
watches c hatns, r1ng s, and
etc lnd •an Artifac ts of a ll
types Also buy1ng baseba ll
ca rds Osby M~rf1n 992
6370

1nsurance

SA NDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv 1ces tor t• re 1n surance
cove rage 1n Gall•a Count y
for almost a centur y
Farm , home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet m
d1v 1dua 1 needs
Contact
Kall Burleson, age nt
Phone 446 2Y21
15

Schoo ls Instruction

Karate th e u lt• mate 1n self
def ence all pr•vate lessons,
Men women. &amp; children
Instruction thru black belt
Also avatlab le Karate
uniforms puchmg and
k•ck•ng baq s, and protec
f•ve eq Uipment
Jerry
Lowery &amp;
Asso c1 ates
Karate Studto, 14 3
Burl1ngton Rd, Jackson,
Oh Call 6 U 286 307 4

Wh1te s School of Taekwon
Do Kor ea n Karate 426 Mam
St , Pt
Pleasan t New
Garage Sa le f r•day Only
TuE!l - lad!f!l N1ght 11 JO
students accept at any
Centenary Townhouse, 9 ,
For all your wiring
992-2063
Wecb - ' • Certr., On !I
c lass Men . women or
Nightl 2 30
Boys clothes, slee pmg bag
needs;
furnaces
CHECK OUT OUR
1 hur$ - Pool Tourn I 2 30
vases. home .nter1or Ar OLD w1 cker furn 1ture old childre n Hours Tue &amp;
Fr. I S.ll liVE BANOS
- ~ewer
qudts &amp; l1nens, call 614 245 Thur s 6 to 9PM and Sat 11
repair serv1ce and
BIBLE SCHOOL
t ar•
1Ortnh a Orown net! ntghll
lo 1 Full ltne of Ce ntur y
-C••lS Lmes
9&lt;48
installation .
SUPPLIES
THI 5MON1H ~BA ND S
Mart1al Arts suppltes also
- • c pt1c Sys te m &lt;&gt;
We are hold ing a household Garage sa le 3 famt11 es
Wed &amp; Thun
so ld Ca ll 6U 367 0480 or
Residentia I
Pac-Man Party Packs
shower for Dt ck and Bar
MA~SHALl TfNNANTf 1
July 23 and 24 9 a m to 5 1970 to 1972 Maver1ck. 2 &lt;46 3426 after 6PM
1 argc or S m .1 1t Jobs
Fr. &amp; Sil t
bara
Lambe
rt
at
Salem
&amp; Commercial
and Cake Available
p m ea day Glassware. door or Comet for parts
rH 992 2478
LONE WOLF lt-2
Ce n ter
F •r e hou se
ho usewa re s,
c loth 1ng 304 895 3568
Call742-31917tfc
6 21 1 mo
we gl.ctly o~ nnounu 1ho11 uc n
6271moPd
Tuesday , July 27 at 1 p m
Wanted to Do
18
m1sc All like new and rea l
mgtll ot lhe Bo1nd ~ offer
Anyone that wanTs to come barga1ns Joan Tewksbury
drin~ and drown Some llrlnh
Lawn Mow 1ng no yard to
~--~--------t-----------jf-----------j i S welcome G1ven by tolf Grant 51 I 855 Pearl Sl
reduced durmt band
~ Emtiiriiirent= btq or s mall Re l•ab le and
1Salem Center F~rebe lls
Midd lepor t, Oh1o
Our Hrs Mon Fn 2 00 1 JO
dependable For est•mate
-=-nn~ = .::..
s 41 t &amp; sun • 2 lO Ca rrv Out
call &lt;46 3159 after 6PM 256
s~er .Inti W1ne Av~lltltlle ~'
WANTED
BUY
PER MANENT
Ya rd sale, 21. 22. 23. 715
1967
M tnimvm Pr iun- The LoweS!
HAI
R
REMOVAL
EUGENE LONG
Sycamore St Middleport 11
HOIP_Wanted
' PHON£ "l-'t1~ I I mo
SCRAP
Professional Elec tr olySIS
Oh 9 5 Cloth•nCJ e tc
Superior Siding
Ce nter A M A approved,
H I GH
SC H OOL Trash co 11ect10n &amp; hau li ng
Call446 4480
Doctor
ref
erals,
by
ap
GRADUATES/SENIORS
( Pomerov Scro.o
Porch a nd yard sale Wed
V1nyl &amp; Alum1num
po1ntment only 304 675
You
ca
n
ea
rn
over
$550
00
Iron &amp; Metal)
•backhoe
21st thru Fn 9 4 238 Con per month while tearn1ng a
Complete gulter work, 6234
lnter1or &amp; ex tertor pa1n
dor St Pomeroy
Now ptcking up ftJn"'
•excavatrng
va lu able skill l1ke com
ltng
Reasonab le rates
complete remodelmg, roof
PIANO
auto bodies. Top proces
• septic systems
puter
repa~rer. sheet metal
Call
for
free es llmare. 1146
WOULD
like
to
arrange
a
&lt;!'zr
Aw-.ter, sewer
inc of all types. Worked in
July 24,25, Raymonds wor ker, or refr1gerat1on
~-5 TUN&amp;ING
pa1d lor auto bod1es,
&amp;gas lines
4173
nde
or
nder
to
Marshall
home area 20 years.
~
scrap .ron and metals.
•dump truck
Pag ev 111 e
b louses
P lus you wt ll have a secure
th•s fa ll for n1gh t classes
dresses, 12 to 18 lots of part t•me 10b w tth the Ar
REPAIR
1 Mole West of
•limestone
Free
estimates
Please
ca
ll
304
173
519~
Odd 1obs or yards Ca ll 446
m•sc 1tems Ra•n or Sht ne
my Nat•onal Guard after 664 1
C~llllll Ward
:t 1 ~rounds on Old
Licensed &amp; Bonded'
Call 843-3322
school1ng Beneftts 1ncfude
4
G1veaway
Mon -Fn 8 lO to •·oo
PH. 992-7201
7 16 2 mo pd
a $ 1 500 00 e nl1 s t ment
July
23
24
ch
tldr
ens
VIsa
MasJer c . 59 tfc
Ph 99 :!-656 4 •
3 29-lfc
Sma ll white female dog
clothes m1sc 1tems. some bonus, $35 ,000 life n
furn1t ure At Lar ry Wells surance and free tut t•on to
Bus.mess
Res 2 m1 West on 681 off 33 etny college or tr ade school 21
not clabe
1med
Call.ub
taken
to pou1927
nd 1f
tn
West
V1rg•n
•a
tn
Opportun1ty
a t Darw•n
tNestcd persons mily call
2 k1 ttens to 9 1ve away to a
Own yo ur own Jean
{304) 675 3950 or •n West
Jum
White
5
family
yard
sa
le
1n
Brad
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
good home Ca ll afte r 5 00.
Sportswea r I ntant Pre tee
V1rq1n1a call toll fr ee 1 800
QUAIL
bury Thursday 22 and 641 3619
n or Lad•es Appare l store
4 6 7137
SIDING
Fr•day 23 9 3
Offt;r 1ng a ll na t• ona ll y
'
LaBONTE'S
knoWn brands such as J or
Ktndt.ng &amp; wood at Rod
New Homes - exPoslf1on
Available
QUAIL FARM
Thursday and Fnday II Lanquage Oevel poment dache, ChiC, Lee Lev•.
ney Call4&lt;6 23&lt;1
tensive remodeling
Vanderb 11t, Calvtn Kle1n,
ra1n, Sa tu rday and Sunday Spec 1ahst Ouahf1cattons
Ouatf of all ages.
Wrrtng le r, over 200 other
•
E
1ectr1c
work
Br1ck
St
beSide
Mtl
l
available up to I Weeks
Oepr~r t ment of Educat1on
Free to good ho me 6 wk old Ga rages 992 5738
brands $7 900 to Sl6,500'"
•custom Pole Bldgs
'
~ in any quantity
Speech and Hean ng Ce r
PUPPieS
PI
Reg
Enqllsh
" B'"eaut1ful, Custom
e ludes
beg1nn 1ng
1n
•Rooftng Work
Eggs Also.Avatlable
t1f
1
ca
t
1on,
prefePably
w1
th
Setter Ca ll«6 25 10
Built Garages"
ven tor y a.rtare for one to
14 Ye"'rs ~llpenencc
Ya rd sa le, 927 Brownell M S P R VCII1da l10n, BA or Fash1on Center, lra•n~ng ,
Call for free sod~ng
Ave, Frtday , July 23
BS from an acc red1ted fix tures grand ope ntn g
· Clell LaBonte
os11mates, 949-2801 or •
PHONE
Greg Roush
To gtve Fvrn1ture Call 446
Ga rage door opener, exer un1 ve rs1 t y or college tn p r omot1on
36061 Bashan Rd.
949·2860.
Mr
Ca ll
0508
( 304) 273-4098
Ph. 99~: 7583
Speech itnd Hear1nq
Long Bottom, OH
c 1ser, baby clothes por
No Sunday Calls
Kos tecky (5011 327 8031
or 9'12- 2282
ta c r1b, portable heater J4 Rcsponstb lltf1 es
In
45343
d1v1dual and sma ll qroup
socket set other 1tems
614·P15-434S
3 11 1fc
7 151 1110
therapy
ass1s t oth e r OWN you r own J ean
6/24/1 mo
1 22 1 mo pd
proless1onal
1n develop1ng Sportswea r . Infant Pretee
GARAGE sale, 140 Enol osh
s
tudent
or
adul
t program n or Lad•es Appa rel Store
Rd/2482.94
plans, prov 1de 1nserv 1ce Otler•ng a ll na t• ona ll y
tra•n•nq
fo
o th e r known br ands s uc h as Jor
Wednesday
Thursday, pr ofe SSI Ona ls
pr
ov
rdes dache, Ch•c Lee, Lqv 1,
C&amp;M
Fnday, 1.4220hiOSf 95
co nsullat1on w•th paren ts Vanderbilt, Calvtn Kle1n,
and othe r staff, ma tn ta •ns Wra ngler over 200 other
EXCAVATING
brands $7,900 to $16,500 1n
Rt
2 Flatrbck, 1st brtck on approp nate records per
e ludes
beg1nn1ng
m
True value stamps 992
form
s
re
lated
dut•es
as
VIRGIL 8 . SR.'
left
past
Good
Sheptlnrd
AND
ventory,
a•
rfar
e
for
one
to
6063
ass
,qned
Sa
lary
mt
n•mum
216 E. 2n&lt;ISI.
Church Wed, Thurs Fn
St Rt . 124 Pomeroy, OH
Fashton Center tratn1ng,
$10 500 { 191 day pOSi tiOn )
CONST~UCTION
or anyth1ng else you
Phone
Ftrewood from house torn 52 Un 1vers •f Y Lane, nell t to Available 1982 83 school f.,ctu res. grand ope n1ng
AUTO&amp; TRUCK
Dorer &amp; backhoe ser·
want to do, because I
p romo t 1o ns
Ca l l Mr
year Contact Mr Dav1d C
I 1-(614)· 992·3325
down
John Krawc yzn, 300 W Va Nat' I Guard Pt
vice, water, sewer, ponhv e w1th a carpenter
Koslecky
501
237
8031
Ratliff
Pnnc•pal,
gu1d1ng
REPAIR
Broadway 99'1 2117
ds,
foundollons,
Pleasan t snow sk 1s boots, Hand Sc hool, P 0 Box 14,
Hts name 1s AI Tromm
liKI' NFW NICe ly
Also Transmission
poles. d1apers, clothes and Chesh 1r e,
rectam1t1on.
Oh 45620, SALES
carpeted one fl oor
r ec ord 1nq 1n
742-2328
2 yr old ma le husk y chow m1sc .terns Jul y 12 23 24
PH. 992-5682'
home 3 years old 3
16 14)367 0102
dustn
es
Sl 000 to S3,000
m1x
Good
w1th
children,
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Rutland, Oh
9'
bedrooms, bath elec
or 992-7121
per week comm iSSIOn
Phone 949·2293
good watch dog 949 2383
1 15 I mo pd
~eat. h1qhest b1ll S127 00
3
24
ttc
Lady wanted to stay w1th Album. cassette 99 cents
or949·2417
Severa l famil1es yard sa le an elder ly lady Mu st be au labels All new re leasF&gt;S
' last wmter Storm ftx
3 3 lfn
Cute1 cuddly puppy needs a Pleasant Valley an".lrt
tures, porc h and l ar~e
able to cook and do l1ght $30 sale you make S29 00
ments Everg reen Drtve
leve l lot for ,usl $39,500
Prov e n me thod fo r top
housewo rk Call 61 4 245
people hom
Tan
a nd whlfe
Fn Sa t 9a m ttl
oronn1zer Cal l now 602 264
gOOd
e
Just
loves
5636
m 1xed breed Wormed and
1168
OWNF I! FINANCING
v e ter•na nan 1nspected
July 23 5 p m to 9 p m
New 1nS1de. l
FO~ F
REU SE"
2 s tory house to pamt Ca ll
Hoefloc h 992 5292
b e dro o ms . modern
l
J ul y 24 8 a m 1•11 , 2935 61088
22
990'1
Meadowbrook Dr•ve . Pt
bath, carpelinq, carport
KOUNTRY
REF IN ANCE or purchase
2
small
kd t e n s
Pleasa nt
and 3 qara~es on larqe
Babys1tter needed to your home 30 year f1.:ed
housebroken 304 895 3420
, leve llol Onty$28.000
&amp; ELECTRONIC
Gallipoli s Rodney a rea for ra te WVa &amp; Oh 1o Leader
2309 Mt
Vernon , Pt
Mortgage. 77 E Sla te St ,
2
g•rls ages 4 and 3 mos
~WIMMING POOL
*PROSIIOP
SPINWHEEL
9 3 Satur day,
K 1tte ns to a good home 1 Pleasant
Athens Oh 614 592 J051
Ca
ii6U
245
5565
What else ca n you ask
WI ""' \quail lwo,
BALANCE
black and white, 2 pari boys 8 to 1.r1 c lothes, a dult
for w 1th 3 or 4 bedrooms,
lecGrt1or, Du11lop, I
Bear Front-End
S1amese, 1 gray and one clothes, m1sc
1'" baths, modern kit
ljowA•OIECIIPfMII.
All Makes
servoce
ProteSSIOnolt
Attent1on RN'S Pomeroy l3
black 304 675 2864
Serv1ces
Nat qas F A fur
•GOlf LESSONS
ewnhen
e Dish ·
Dependable,
guar
H C C now has open rng for
PubliC Sale
nace, ca rpet •nq, 2 'Car
At.LMiES •
washers
anteed Work . 9 yrs E'K
fu
ll
and
part
l
1m
e
R
N
for
3
Wh1te long earred
C&amp;L Bookkee p1nq
&amp; Auct1on
qarage and ex tr a lot
*FIELD TRIPS
e Ranges e Relrlgeral·
penence.
to 11 and 11 to 7 Sh ifts
w1th cage 304 675 6937
Bookkeeping
&amp; tax serv •ce
Upgraded
salary
and
sh1ft
S53.900
S$ Hole-ln·One n
ors
SR 124, Rutland, Dh.
_ -· __ ____ •
1Ck Pear son,
Ex
for
a
II types of bus•nesses
d•fferenltal Contact Nancy
JOHN TEAFORD
eDryers eFreerers
ForAppt. 742· 2057
k II s 30&lt;
penenced AUCTIONEER
Carol Neal
&lt;46 3862
5 ACR '• - Bca ullfu l
Chester, OH.
PARTS and SERV
7 11 mo
2 gray, 11 ,ger ' en '
Estates, ant1ques, farm, VanMeter d1rector of Nur
trees. I• ve l lond for a
773 5798
song
614
'192
6606
household L•ce nsed Ohto
Cakes for al l occass•ons,
~:~.~:~rC c1UQ WCII Wit h
- - ---- ~
wv
Buymg antiques 304
Wedd•nqs
a specta lty, 7
.-~n d _,w ater nea r
4 pupp 1es. 3 months Will be
I mmed1ate opportun1t1es yrs expenence
713 5785. 713 9185
Ca ll 675
small dogs 3 black a nd
for
Avon
representati
ves
tn
~
1571
white, 1 brown and wh1te
these
ne1ghbors
M1ddl
ep
Nf W FURNAGf .:.. 3 or
Auction every Fn n1ght at
304-67514~ 1
~bedrooms but not • b1g
the Hartford Commun1ty ort, Pomeroy , and the
home Bath, ntce k1t ..
- SERVICE
Center Truckloads of n")V Townsh•P areas 1n M~•gs
:RealE staJe
chen,' basement and
merchand ise every week . co Also AddiSon. Cheshire.
lots near pool tn M1d
'• · BARN
Conslgments of new and Spnngftels, Racoon, Hun
dlcport Ask&lt;nQ $21.1100
located at Brown 's
Lost between Racine and used merchandise always longton and Morgan Twp
Homes lor Sale
Taxidermy, cq Rd 25
Syracuse. Neutered male wel~ome.
Richard 1n Gal11a co Call co ll ect 31
16 YEARS EXP.
near Chester .
shepard m1x Answers to Reynolds Au~t1oneer . 215· 614 698 7111
N1ce hom e. 3 bdr . or tra de
T,~. and Rad1o Repa.r
• Reslclantia 1
name ot Jesse. Old fam ily 3069
for smaller home •Located
Also other E lectron1c
pet Reward. 94P 2862
•Commercial
AVON Th &lt;e people to ~e ll •n Crown C•ly, Oh Call614
Equtpment.
256 62&lt;4
AVON Call446 3358
•Industrial ·
Terry Brown
--w!:niec~ To Bui.::-_:
Technec1an
Racine, Ohio
Lost . Horse, prown, Ap
Associate degree and
paloosa pony , week ago DOLLS old, modern, pret· Someone to do pa1ntmg and 6 room house &amp; bath, barn,
247-3534
1st class FCC. license.
Vicinity : Hickory Chapel ty. ugly, big or tittle. Phone roofing . Call '192 6368 or bldgs, S acres more or less
Frl!e Estimates
, Phone 915·3364 Ave
and Jericho Road. J0.4 675 30-4 615 7182. July 21 , 22, 23 come to 241 s 3rd M1d Near ~ Eureka, owner ca rry
orUs-3133
. ~ · ZO· Ifc
dleporl
Ca ll614 256 6735
only.
6276
or 675-.999.
7 16 1 mo
hoes
-D ump Trttds
- l o Boy
-Trf'nChCr
-Wr1ter
- t lclC ~

TO

Pomeroy, OH.

PH.

--

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Co.

*

_

Wani::~~Jranl

- - Einama£--

:===================:~======7==19==1~m~o~~==================~~~~~~~~~~==~Must
ROUSH
KIRBY
CONSTRUCTION
BISSELL
SWEEPER
SIDING CO.
PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

BACKHOE
FOR HIR~

PH.992-2259

'

"

mon ~leas or Metgs Coun•' ' '
ty, Pomeroy, Ohi045769 '
:·
The ob1ect of the Com
pla1nt IS to qu1et t1t le of real
estate 1n the followmg
descr~bed r ea l esta te, to

Real E1tete - General

R..l Eotttt - Otnorat

Cheryl Lemley,
Sale5Assoc.
Phont742-3171
Velma Nlcinsky, Assoc.
Phone 74Not2
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
PlloM 742-1171
Velma Ntctnskl;j~uec.
Phot1ef42•

...
",.
....

Public Not1ce

Public
Nohce
- ---

MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, Oh

AND
'•

HARRISON'S
TV Repair·

Slits stort from 30x24"
"ld'

S&amp;WTV

667-C OOIVIIIe

83 Excavating
84 E lecr1cal &amp; Retnaerrtf 10n
85 Ge ne ral Hauling
86 M H Reprur
87 Upho lslery

Yrs E • poroe nc e
SMITH NELSON
lS

•'•'

&lt;Average 4 wvrds per 11ne)

PRO BA TE COURT
Plam ttff furthe r says
OF MEIGS
that he has c aused an
COUNT Y, OHIO
C' xam,na t1 on of th e Deed
ESTATE OF LAWRENC E Reco rd s of Me•gs County,
MARTIN
WILCOX EN, Oh •O to be made, cmd tha t
DECEASED
the deed grantmq the
Case No 23831
property descr1bed 10 the
NOTIC E OF
precedtng paragraph to
APPOINTMENT
the Defendant here•n rs not
OF FIDUCIARY
recorded .n the Deed
On Ju ly 9, 1982, 1n the Records of Metgs Coun ty,
Me1gs Co unt y Probate Oh10 and carmot be located
Court
Case No 2383 1 othe rw1se
Carol Young, 1672 Sugar
Pla1n t tff further alleges
map le Dr , Colu mbus. OhiO 1n h1s Compla tnf that th e
43229
was
appo •nted owncrsh1p o f the lot
Executnx, of the es tate of descr•bed here1n 1S e v•den
lawrence
Mart 1n ced by an e ntry 1n the
Wilcoxe n, deceased, la te of Me,qs County Tra nsfer
Rac1ne. Oh10
Record No B at Page, 183,
See~ mg a Plant Manager for a sma ll co mp any Ca n
Robert E Buck Lme 15, dated J an uary 5,
d1date shou ld have a college degree w1th some
Proba te Judge/ 1901, where1n lot 138 of
cng1neenng er penence preferred Dut1es 1ncl ude
Clerk Lower
Pomeroy ,
the
the deve lopment, •mplcmentahon of personnel
171 15.22.29.ltt
proper ty th at IS the sub1 ect
pohc1CS a nd procedures on beh.llt of a boMd, over
of th•s act1on was tran
see1ng and manflg 1ng a bustne'&gt;s ofi1Ce .1nd .1n
to
G rac e
s f e rred
Def e ndant
He rrtngton
Public Nottce
operat1onsdepartment Sa lary negotiable
here1n,
by
Samu e l
IN THE
R1dgway aka Samue l
Interested c.1nd1dil tes plet\se forward resum e and
COURT OF
R1dgeway Sa 1d transf er
salc1ry h1storv to
COMMON PL EAS.
was made pursuant to a ta x
MEIGS
COUNTY,
Plant M&lt;1 n ager
ce rt1f1cate that arose out of
OHIO
P 0 Box 380
th e sate of sa 1d lot for
Donald
H Ca ll ,
delinquent rea l es tate
Gall •pohs, Oh10 45631
Ptatntlff,
titxes
VS
Platnttff furth e r a lleges
1
Grace He rnngton, et al
thr~ t fhe transfer of t•Tie to
Defendants
Grace Her r1ngt on, Delen
Case No 18183 ditnt,ls ev•denced by an en
NOTICE BY
try 1n the Me,gs County,
PUBLICATION
Aud•tor s Duplicate
To Grace Harrmg to n. Oh10
for th e year of 1900 at Page
I
I wtlose last known address 62
, L•ne 7, show •ng that
was Sycamore Street, M1d
Herrt ngto n, Defen
dleporl, Oh1o 45760 and to Grace
rece 1ved Lot 138 of
th e
unk n own
he1rs , dant,
Lowe r
Pom e roy , th e
I
I dev1sees legatees ad prol?erty
wh1ch ts the
m•n •s tr a tors e)(ecuto r s, subJect of of
tn•s act1on'? from
a nd asstg ns of Gr ace R1dgway aka
Rtdgeway
Herr tngton. 1f deceased,
Pla1nt•ff further alleges
address unlsnown
lha t the real es tate taxes to
You a re hereby notd~«?d the
lot descnbed he rein
that you have been named that
IS th e SUbjeCt Of th iS
Defendan ts 1n a legal ac
act.on , are cur re ntly l1s ted
t1on
e
ntttl
ed
Donald
H
1
Wnte your own ad and order by mail w1lh lhiS 1
1n the name of Grace
L, Platntlff vs Grace HN1ngton , and that the ta x
1
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get 1 CAL
He
rnngton,
e
t
a
l
,
Defen
I results Money not refu nd a ble
1 dants Th1s ac t wn has been card located 1n th~ off1ce of
the Me1gs County Aud1tor
I
I ass1gned Case No 18183 for the lot descrtbed 1n
and rs pend•ng m the Court paraqraph one of th1S Com
of Common Pleas. Me1gs p l a •nt
Grace
Name
Coun ty, Oh•o Pl a 1nt•lf sets He rnn gtonl1assts
the owner of
1n
the
Compla
mt
that
for
th
I
I he IS the owner 1n fee s1m the lot
PI;Hn f1ff fur the r al leges
pie. bv the doctrrne of ad
1
1n th e Compla1nt that ile
verse possess 1on, 1n an ac
hos. by h1mse11 and h•s
tua l possess1on of the predecessors
1n 1nteres t
follow 1ng real esta te
been 1n ac tua l, open ex
1
S1 tuate 1n th e State of clus•ve,
con t 1nuous
Oh10 County of Me•gs a nd notor •ous and
adverse
Print one word In each
V1 t1 age of Midd lepo rt
possess1on of th e sa1d lot
space below E~ch In·
be 1ng Lot No 138 of descnbed
her e 1n for a
I IJtlal or group of figures
Bosworth's Addt t10n to the penod of more
than twe nty
V• llage of Midd leport. for
I counts as a word Count
one ( 21) years pnor to the
me
rlv
known
as
Lower
1 ""me and address or
f1l1n g of hts Comp la tn t, and
Pomeroy
1 phone number If used
er a lleges that the
Pla.n t1H further a lleges furth
Plamflff has, by h1mself
You'
ll
get
better
results
--+-....:.~::..:.:t-:::..:.:+-_;_; that sa•d rea l es ta te ts
I If you descr 1be fully,
nd h1 s predecessors m 1n
descr~ bed
furth e r as ateres
t, cared for mam
I give price The Sentinel To 15
follows 1n a deed from Sara
ta.ned and used the lot
reserves the right to
L Bosworth, Executnx of desc r• bed here •n th a t 1s lhe
classofy, ed1l or re1ect _T...:o...:2:.S+--t-:-F~+--! the Estate of M Bosworth, sub1ect of th1s ac t•on, a nd
to Sa mu et R 1dgewa y, has pa •d all ta)(es and
11any
ad Your ad will be
1n Volume 70.
assessments lev •ed or
put 111 the proper 1T~o~3~Sj__ _e~~~~~~~ recorded
Page 218 of the Me 1gs Coun
assessed aga1ns t sa 1d lot
I clasSification •f you' II t
y
Deed
Records
fo r a pe nod of more man
I ctleck the proper box
These cash rates.
Lot No 138, Stluated tn twenty one (21J yea rs pnor
1below
•nclude diScount
1 th e Town df lower to the hl1ng of sa•d Com
Pomeroy, now attached to p la1nt , Platnttlf further
I
I and
part of the says that he has acted as
I
I wanted
1 town become
of M1ddleport, Me1gs t he. owne r of sa •d lot, such
1 1For Sale
cou nty, Ohio
as he would no t exerctse
I
)An nouncement
17
I
over property tha t hP dtd
1For Renl
1
not c la1m, 1n a man ne r as
18 _ _ _ _ __
19,

I
I

•! :l ~ ~; w:'

81 Home Improvements
82 Plumb.ng &amp; Hea ling

AI Houses lor Rent
42 Mob•le Hom es for Rent
43 Farms for Rent
44 ApMtme nt lor Rent
d5 Furn 1shed Room s
46 Space lor r ent
47 Wcmted to Rent
4H EQuipment tor Rent
49 For Lease

Publ• c Not•ce
Pubhc Notice
NOTICE OF
1979 Dodge Club Cab
PUBLIC SALE
Senal No D27JF9C10560'1
TM follow•ng descrt bed
Terms of sa le cas h The
1tem will be offe red fo r safe se ller reserves the r~ gh t to
to the hi ghest bidder on b1d and to re tec t any and
prem1se of Band 1 of all b1ds
Pomeroy Tuppers Pla1ns,
Oh•o on the 30th day of (7) 22 23 26, 3tc
July, 1982at10A M

~:.l-1

R'itd~tltor 5pcc •illlst
NATHAN A JGGS

''
'•
'•
'•
,.
'

Classified pages cover the

71 13us •ness Opportun•tr
71 Money to Loan
13 Profc ss oonnl Srrv •Cl'5

Real

:

ALL-STEEL
BUILDINGS

---------·····'·
.... . . . . .,,. .
.......................

1

.~==============~==:j~::::::::::::~6~-1~~~~===========6:2:7:1:m:p~~~::::::::::::::::::;l

"•
•'
I-~;;....._

.-

Business services

Cooperative, Inc, R1ght of Way,
ScipiO.
Truman Grim, Betty Ann Grim, IQ....
Buckeye
Rural
Electric ·;
Cooperative, Inc., Rilj't of Way,
Colwnbia.
,
Robert
White, Dove White, by
trustees, to Ethef Fease!, 25.77 ; &lt;
acres, Orange.
•
,
Tom A. Crisp, Mary F. Cnsp t~· ;,
I.eadlng
Creek
Conservancy,;

:•f~e:'·~M::Id~tl~lc~p:o•:l~. . . . . . . .~~. . . .R~og~·e:r~R~Ie~b~c~·I,~H:•:z~li~e:e~R~:e!bc~·l~c~ta~l~.~\~'':ct~o:r~C~Y::•'u:':'g~I~II~,~u:•~ts~,:P:o~'":":"~'Y~. .~C=h:r':'t~la:n~C~h:u:r:ch::of~R:u~t~la~n:d~,O~~ruo~,~B::u:c:k~e~y~e. . .R~u~r~a~I. .~E:I~e~c~t~r~ic~.!~~~R~i:g~ht~o:f~W~a~y~,~Sal:~~n~. . .~··t.:.

The Daily Sentinel

The

Ohio

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

~=::========j~==========~~~~=======~
DUGAN'S
KLUB

I'

KEN'
S
lANCE
APPL

ALIGNMENT

1 ~:::::;:::::7:1:~:1:m:o::~::::::::::::~~~~:::::::::=::::==~~

-

_j_ -

-

-

-- -

-

O'Brien Elec:tric'
Service

,-

\

\

'

�Porn
10-The

si --=Hou~~~Go~; --.

They'll Do It Every Time

Lovel y 3 Bedroom home, 1
m in. from Gall ipoli s. Full
ba sement . Poss ible land
con tra ct . Eveni ngs 1·216·
730734.
J bedr oom home for sa le or

r en1 wi t h opt 1on to buy .
E ner gy effi cent, 2 yr s. old
1 ')n 6 ac r es, O'Nn wat er
: system, se ver al fruit tree.
Shown oy app.o infment
on ly . Call614 256 6856.

LOW HE AT BILLS 3 bdr .
b1 r ck. lower Second Ave.,
Ga llipolis . Ex t ra l ot ,
f ireplace. modern k itchen ,
full basemen t. Ca ll 446 ·
4R16
Fa nt as ti c

oppor tun ity!

Assume FH A 9 112% mor tga ge, tow down payment,
J to 4 bedroom s, modern

nouse. over 5 scenic acres.

pond, ni cely landsc aped,
c£&gt; ntr a l
atr .
newly
refini shed hardwood floors ,
fireplace {woodburner in·
serl optional) . Call 614-3888878 evenings or weekends.
________ _
8 room house . Double lot,
doubl e garage. 680 S. 2nd
St. ,
Middleport.
Oh .
SI6,500 .
614 ·992 · 2602 .
By owner beautiful 3
b edroom
doublewide
Mobile Home. 2 baths,
large living room , fully
equipped kitchen . Also in ·
eluded J room cottage with
bath. All on one large lot.
Located In Letart Falls ,
Ohio. Priced below cost .
610~7 · 3615 .

3 bd .room ranch , close to

Meigs H. S. with full
basement , 1112 bath .
Family room. fully car ·
peted, garage, over 1 acre
ground . Blended rate of 14
percent . Call614-992·5348 or
~2 · 206~ .

3 bd.room house for sale or
rent. 61~ · 99H309 .

- -·- HOUSE Meadowbrool( Ad·

dition, 3 bedrooms,· family
room with fireplace, cen·
fral air, basement, phone
3QA 675 · 15~2

---/ --

ONE mile out Of Gl~nwoOd
on Hannan Trace Rd . 3

P l us bedrooms, large
living room, cathedral
ceiling, wood beams, stone
fi&lt;eplace. stone &amp; cedar on
/otJt side, pond and 3112
atres, garage. Phone 304·
576·2587.

HOME for sale, Mt. Vernon
Ave. Under $40.000. -Call
304-67s.:!973.
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI · STATE MOBILE
H'OMES . USEO·MOBILE
HOMES, CARS, TRUCKS .
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK
OU·R PRICES. CALL «67572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
GJ-U ALIT Y
M0 BI LE
HOME SALES, ~ MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
3S. PHONE 446-3868.
1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond. Deluxe kitchen. large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidden util. room .
37'1-2310 .
~-------

197112x60 Kirkwood almost
one acres lot with com·
mercial garage. Call 61A·
256 · 66~0 .

New Moon 1980 model,
12x65 with 12' expando, set
up in local park with skir·
ting &amp; steps. Ready to
move into $6,500. Call .W.·
3547 .

- ----

IO.S5 Great Lak e 62 model.
air cond ., washer &amp; dryer,
fully furnished . Call «6·
3783.

I~~:::::::=:::::::::;:::~~~~=~==~
~
Lots &amp; Acreage
:=...- -==-=-::=="'--

35

TWO acre lots· ISO ft . road
frontage , c i t y water,
behind 84 Lumber, call304·
675-6873. 67n618.

41 _ -"H"'o"u"'
se,.,s_fc:•::r_:R
:::e::..:n:.:t__
Homes tor Rent, Lease or
Land contract in town or
covntry .
Call
Strout
Realty , 446-0008.

3 bd .room house. 1112 baths.
Family room and fire
place ,
stove .
and
refrigerator furn . Carpeting. $300. mo. dep,req.
No pels Inside . 614·992-2362
after~ p.m.

3.

'44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnish 2 rooms and bath,
clean, no pets, adults only.
Dep. required. Call «6·
1519.
4 room unfurnished apt. all

carpeted, utilities paid,
adults only no pets. Call
446-3A37.

71 New Moon, 2 bedroom
S4,](j(). 30~- 882-2236.

Furnished apt., 1 bdr.,
adults, $200, utlltles pd., I!IJ7
2nd Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
«6-.U16 af"'r 7PM.

Farms for Sale

..0 acres·, 6 rm. house and
barn, tobacco base on St.
Rt. 218, 7 112 miles from
cjty. can 614-245-9222 alter

Furnished apt., 3 rooms &amp;
bath . 7 Neil
Ave . ,
Gallipolis. $200; · water &amp;.
electric paid. Call ~46-4416
after 7PM .

6.

34 -

i!Usfness Buildings

Portable Office Building
12x«l ft. SA,OOO. ~uilt by
Sturdi House, Exc. cond. 3
offlce ·Spaces, gas heat, air
conditioned, commode &amp;
sink . Located 2nd &amp; Brown
St. In Mason, w.v . Contact
H &amp; R Block, Pomeroy . 61A·
m -3795 or Call evening 30~773·5535 afler 6.
3S

LOIS &amp; Acrtlll '

0.33 of an acre on Lincoln
Pike. Electric hook up.
Ideal for trailer, $5,800.
call «6-793A after 5:30PM.

46

Space for Rent

..... .............. .
• • •• J ......... . . . . . .

51

~.

Hou•ehold Goods

1st floor furnished apartment, adults preferred. ref.
&amp;. dep. required. Call 631
Ath Ave .. Gallipolis.

s4 ~sc.MerthanCiice-

SWAIN
•975 Case 450, dozer ·
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp; tractor, 1,800 hrs .• very
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St., . gOOd cond., S14,900. Call
Gallipolis. h12 linoleum «6-4537.
rug $22, 3 piece living room
suites cou ch-love seat·
chair S199, 2 piece living
Heavy equipment. 1 Cater·
room suites from SUO up. Pillar D·4 dozer, hydroli c
love seats from S70 up , blade and cab, exc. cond.
m aple dinet sets from $99
to 5199, wall huggers SIOO., 57,500. Caii614-6A:l2916 .
recliners
$80,
maple
Over 1,000 ceramic molds,
rockers S49, bedroom
suites $150, vari ety of table kilns, and supplies , 61H~2 ·
lamps . marble fop stands 2925 or 7~2 · 2085 .
SJO and up, twin and full
bo)( springs &amp; mattress For sale·WtJrlitzer piano,
(new) $100, several utility S500. Homelite chain sawcabinets, kitchen cabinets new·still in box,$150 . 882·
wood &amp; metal , baby beds, 3173 .
chests of drawers $25 to
-· - - - - - - S60, 3-way recliners SIOO,
gas · &amp; electric ranges, International cub cadeT. 12
refrigerator s, wash stands, h.p. with Hydrostatic drive
bunk beds complete with and lights. New battery
bunkles S170, several and starter. Has ..a in.
dressers, hall trees, beds, mower with extra blades.
brass head board beds S3S, Contact Marvin Keebaugh
bookcases .
smokers , at 985·2913 or 667-6245.
Hoover spin dry washer, $1500.
wringer type washers, hut·
ch, coal &amp; wood healers, CALL Robert Harper,
televisions, fans, new tools
of all kinds, variety of
silverstone cookware. Call
«6·3159 .

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
ref r igerators,
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest MoteL
4A6·7398 .
18,000 BTU Amana Air·
cond. Used 1 month . UOO.
949·2857 .
BEMCO mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58. 6
Piece Naugahyde heavy
wood living room suite
$595. Pillow arm sofa &amp;
chair $295. Roll top desk ,
dark &amp; light, $189 . Bunk
beds, complete, include
mattress, $199. Complete
water bed shop w ith 10
bedroom suites on disp)ay,
starting price S229. Up to
$2500. Big daddy coctail &amp;
end tables SSO. WaliA Way
recliners $169. and up. La·
Z·Boy recliners In stock.
USED FURNITURE S pc.
&amp; 7 pc. d;nette sets,
bedroomsuite Hollywood
style, bunk beds. Flair Fur·
nlture &amp; Design. Gallipolis
Fe rry , WV. Open 9-6.
Phone 304·675·1371 .

54

Misc. Merchandice

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1,000
gal. tank, price $340. other
sizes in stock, haul in yoyr
pickup· truck . Call 614·286·
5930. Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
RATLIFF'S POOL CEN
TE R Pools sale, supplies &amp;
installation. 403 2nd. Ave.,
Gall ipolis, Oh : Call «6·
6579 . In ground ·Ablove
ground .
1
Ford SOl mower tor sale .
Cal1614 JB8 -8.U3.
Clinton outtboard engine 5
112 HP, 1979,$215. Call614·
367-7412 OJ 614-367-7242 .

Sears lawn tractor 10 H P,
J6 in . mower, useded 1
season . Caii614-245-S294.
FirewOOd for sale. Caii.W.·
IA37 or 614 256-6574.
22 cult. chest type freezer ,
Sears Coldspot ex . cond .,
$275. Call ~46 · 1056 .
Selling .out 2 tandem axle
trailer, 2 welders, gas &amp;
elec ., 3 cutting outfits, 11
sp . drill press, 6" vise, tools
&amp; .other items. 7~ Chevy
Elcamino, 79 Ford Pinto,
also property for sale in
Southwestern
School
District. Call61079-2322 .

For Sale complete baby
bed like new, orglnally Sl30
will sell for $70. Call «6·
~792 or «6-2445.
Amana air cond .. 1 or 2
room, 2 yr . old, $125 . Call
446- 823~ .

14 fl. camper. Sleeps 5, 3
burner stove and Ice box. :
Excellent condition for a .
1965,
Call-4&lt;46·2510.

saso.

iI

s

THURSDAY
7/22/82

17ft Travel Mate camper, "
completely self contained,
air cond ., 12 volt or 110
electric , ref rio 03l , or
elect. , ex cond. , $2,000. Call
61.1-367·7202.

EVENING

8:00 D Cll (I) (!) D (I) ® G

JlJ Newa

Cll MOVIE: Sammy, the
Way-Out Seel' Port 2
(I) MOVIE: 'Oh Hoovonly

~y Thr.. Sons

CAPTAIN EASY
11

'

TH)5

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com mercial and residential,
free eStimates . Caii61A·256·
1182.

\

(() Eleclrlc Company
tiD Over e.av
8:30 D Cll CD NBC News
(() 150.000 Pyramid
(I) Father Knows Beat
(I)
(BI ABC News
D (I) ()J CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
tiD Ullaa, Yoga and You
7:00 D Cll P.M. Mapozlne
(I) HBO Spectel: Flaah back: Wall Street Crash
1929 Eric Sevareid hosts
this dramatized look at four
suNivors of the great
stock market crash .
CIJ Bull'a Eye
(JJ CFL From the 55 Yard
Uno
CIJ Green Acre•
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
Cil Happy Days
8 (() Tic Tac Dough
CIJ (HJ MacNeil-Lehrer

HAV!:I-I'T WE8EfN THROLJ&amp;H

Home
1mpravements

'\

a;EFO~ ? r-T A / " '

e

PAtNT;NG · interior anl
exterior , plumbing,
roofing, some r~modeling . :
20 yrs. exp. Call 61088-".

~~~~~g~~~~=r~~S~~~~~~1 ·
9652

Fresh Producofts, Meadow
30~ · 675 ·
distributor
1293 .
----_ _ _ _____ ____ 51
Fruit
&amp; vegetable•
' 1979 VW Rabbit Deluxe.
WOOO tor sale, 30~ - ~58 ·
Home grown sweet corn. A.C., am -fm 8 track. Lots
1833.
Charles McKeon Farm, of extras. 61A·7A2-2228.
DIAMOND ring, 42 point Fairf leld·Centenary Rd .
The .following described
Marquis, certified value Call «6-9.U2.
vehicle will be offered lor
$1200.00 only $650 .00 Call
public sale at 11 :00 on
304-675-5733 after 8 :30p.m .
__.
August 10, 1982 at Simmons
,,, ...,..
Oldsmobile·Cadillac·Chev·
Nmy red potatoes $8.00 50
rolet, ln·c . 308·318 E . Main
lb . delivered in Point
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio. Terms
Pleasant only . 304-8'15·3590.
of sale is cash ·1n h~nd at
l1
Farm Equipment
time of sale. Written bids
Refrigerator $35 . or best of.
may be submitted to
'SUMMER SHOWDOWN '
fer . 304-675·7677.
JIVIDENS FARM EQUJP· GMAC at 318 '/ol;iin St.
E
N
T Belpre, Ohio. GMAC reser- ==?::;;::;:;:.===:;:::==::;;:== M
ves the right to withdraw
«6·1675
S.L . Building Supplie•
Long tractor, Vermeer this vehicle from the sale.
Building rt)ater lals block,
balers, &amp; Hay equipment, 1976 AMC, Serlat number
brick, sewer pipes, win· bale movers, rotary tillers- A6A463E154738, Account
dows, lintels, etc . Claude $103'1.00, wagons, disc, post number 232-Q707-13\)76.
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . diggerS &amp; drivers, seeders,
Caii6104S-S121.
rotary cutters, blades, HARTS Used Cars, New
gates, cultivators &amp; front Haven West Virginia. Over
Metal sheets for all end loaders.
20 less expensive cars in
build ing purposes. Flat And see us to get your parts stock .
porcel lan enamel coated . &amp; complete service .
- ----~--JEEPS, cars, trucks under
Ax8 thru 4 x 12 . Prices. S7 :00 USED EQUIP :
I H Hydro 70, Ford 2000, $100 available at local
to$9.60. 614-667-3085.
Ford Jubilee, 165 MF, government sales in your
Massey Harris Pony, 70 area·:· Call (refundable) 1·
56
Pets lor Sale
Oliver, 185 AC. DA006 714·569·02AI ext. 1855 lor
DRAGONWYND
CAT - Duetz, plows, disc, JD directory on how to purTERY · KENNEL. AKC manure ~spreader, Ford 501 chase. 24 hours.
Chow puppies,
c FA mower, 19 ft. camping
Himalayan, Persian and trailer.
1971 Buick Lesabre, runs
Siamese kittens. Call .446· We buy used equipment.
good,
needs · battery .
38.U after 4 p.m .
$175.00. 30H7HJU

_..... .. .. .
-__·········'

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds . AKC
Reg. Dobermans pups and - ·- - - - - -·- ·- - '
Doberman Stud Service . 63
Livestock
Cai144&lt;P79S.
Appaloosa and .u inch
pony. GOOd riding, SAOO for
POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at614-367- both. Call614·245-9463.
7220.
REg . Quarter horse
Sonia' s Professional Dog guilding with saddle &amp;
Groom ing . Caii61A·388·85&lt;17 bridle, $900. Call 61079·
27~5 .
and ask for Son ia.
AKC Reg. POOdle Puppies . Registered and grade hor 446-0857 .
&amp;es, excellent ~.· H project.
_ - - -- - - - - - . IEngllish and western saddles everything
Male silver poodle PUP.PY · imaginable in horse equipCall388·8751.
ment and supplies, also
riding lessons and trail
AKC COLLIE PUPPIES. rides and horse training .
Lassie type. Call 614-256· Ruth Reeves, fioof Hollow.
1267.
61.1·698·3290.
7 week old, full stock
Beagle puppies, UO. Call
614 -256·9305.

For sale·6 wk . old p;ys. $30 .
ea. 614-8A3·3171.

STANDARD bred mare,
2 Re g . male Labador phone 30~ · 458 - 1917 .
Retrievers. professional
trained to hunt. Call 614- · CHICKENS,
Bantams.
388 ·8623 or 614·388-9991.
standards and lay ing hens,
phone, 30.1-675·1920.
Norweigen E If Hound pups.
10 weeks old . Call 614·256· 37 head Holstein dairy
1117.
cows, all to startfreshen in
August .
Reasonably
AKC Reg. English Springer Priced . 304-576-2510 or 576·
.
Spaniels, liver and white, 2263.
all shots, $95. Call-4&lt;46-823.1.
• goats. 304·458·1807.
Grooming services for
pets . Will clip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer's. Reasonable.
For appt. 61~ - 992 - 7342.
AKC Dachsund puppies .
Black and tan, males . S75.
992-7891.

Straw for sale. $2.00 per
bale. 61A-7A2-2632.

Brittany Spaniel AKC reg.
three years old $50, female
to gOOd home. 304·675-2749.

675- 22S~

..:. __ j _. _ _,_. _ _ _ -

Hay. $1.25 bale in field. 30A·
or 304·675·1302.

•·
Marcum
Roofing
&amp;.
Spo~tong
· . 30 years ex ·
penence, specializing in
buill up roof. Call 61A-3889622or61A-388-9857.

'

BORN LOSER

~T'S A SEVeiJ-

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet Cleaning featured by ·
Hoffelt Brosthers Custom ·
carpets. Free estimates .
Call 446-2107 .

Umef2.

~D

VJffi.l

,, ,s::&gt; IT'S f'l;.l:lBA&amp;'{ A

HMM ... L£r'S seE...
llO'&gt;~ TillfJbS

m

~D

P.,Wr'V"-L.~ ~\Q('/, .

1\lRE~'tJ's' n.l IH

1].1,AT'S f'RE.Tl'{

Report
()J Newo

UWVSUAL

e

_!ruc~_:_J

lor Sa_le_ _

76 FORD F250 'I• ton with
Lear topper $2,000. Truck
camper, 8ft., many extras,
sleeps 6, exotllent condition, $850 . Both for S28Qil..·
Call 30037-33&amp;2 or 304-e'JS·
39~2 .

-

- ~-~~~----

1973 DODGif i ton pick up,
SAOO. 30H75·5644.
7l

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

- -· -~------· --

79 Jeep Wagoneer ~- wheel
drive, AC, PS, PB, AM·FM
8·track . Call A46·102A after
5 :30PM .

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

74

Motorcycles

1980 Honda Odessy gOOd
cond., $850. Consider c'a r or
truck in trade . Call 61.1·2455575.

C1J Andy Griffith
(() D (()

F8mlly Feud
(l'J ....,_me and Shlrtey
·([) Bualneao Report ·
® Rlctt.rd Simmons
(HJ All CreatUres Groat

Masonary work, Logue
Contracting, · RL
1, .
Ewlngton, Call 61A-388 9939.

end .Smell '

e ·. ell

'
--------

8:00 D Cll CD Fame The kids
try to throw a benefit for
two
former
vaudeville
stars . (R) (60 min.)
(]) On Location: The
Third Annual Rich Utile
and the Pretenders Rich
'is joined by impressionists
Thom Brosh and Julie
Deea.
Cll MOVIE: ' Foxoo'
CIJ ChlldN11: Wortd's
Moot Valuable Reoourca
(JJ ESPN Sportaforum
(()
MOVIE:
'Mahese
Folcon'
(BI Dartuoom A

SINGS CONCRETE CON STRUCTION Specializing
in concrete driveways,
sidewalks, floors, patios,
etc. II yr. e.p. Call614-3677891 .
Painting, exteriOr, interior,
by c ontract &amp; free
estimatts. call61~ · 256 · 19~5 .

(() e

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex - ·
mason, roofer, .
carpenter,
electrician,
general repairs and ·
remodeling. Phone 304-675- .
iOBB or 675-.1560.
GASOLINE ALLEY
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes .
Pumps Sates and Service.
30~ - 8'15 - 3802 .

ADVANCED
Seamless
Gutter -Doors . Offering
continuous
guttering,
seamless siding, rooting,
garage
doors,
free .
estimates, 61A-698-820S .
PAINTING interior &amp; ex ·
terio;, free estimates, 304·
675 ·1128.
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cqr. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or A46-.U77

1978 HONDA Hawk, model
CBAOOT, 6320 miles, phone
JOA-675-6679.

1968 Harley Davidson, elecHAY , top quality, 2nd. cut- tro glide $2,000. 30A·675·
ting, July lOth. $2.00 bale. 6726.
30A-675·411J or 614-379·2697 .

e.

THAT'S RIGHT, ·SIR .
WINNIE MORTGAGED

HER HOME FOR. THE

Excavating

DOWN PAYMENT, AND
TOOK THE REST IN
-NOTES PAYABLE TO
'THI6 LITTLE ·OLD
LADY.

Gallipolis Diversified Con-:
st. -Co. Custom ·dozer &amp;.
baCkhoe work . · Special•
farm rates. Call us for free '
estimates t ~·~.

- ----- - --

biker gets a surprise in a
fun house. e hoodlum tan·
gles with a witch end a botanist
discovers
that
adultery is not always
hearts and flowers . IRI (60
min.)
D (I) (]I Magnum : P.l. A
fashion model hires Magnum to protect her. (R) (60
min.l
(() Sneak Preview• Cohosts Gene Siskel and' Ro ger Eben take a look at
. what's playing at the movies.
8:30 (J) Top Rank Bolling from
Atlantic City
(I) Good Neighbors
(HJ Moneymekera
9:00 IJ Cll (!) Dlff'rant
Strokes A Korean child
claims Mr. Drummond is
his father making Arnold
wonder if he will be a new
member of lhe family . IAJ
[Closed Captioned)
CIJ 700 Club
(I) 01 ® Barney Miller
luger tries to get · Barney
to 'handle' his mail-order
bride. (AI [Oosed Captioned)
0 (I) (]I Simon &amp; Simon
A .J . and Rick ore hired by
a jealous w~e to follow her
husband. (R) (60 min.j
(() To the Manor Born
tiD Sneak Previews Cohosts Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert take a look et
what's playing at the movies.
9:30
(f) (!) High ·Five The
owner of a black television
station operates on a
sh()f!string,
provtng
cheap4i; is bauer.
Cll MOlliE: 'For Your
Eye' Only'
(I)' g WI Police Squad
F;enk Orebin's probe leads
to a cashier who· s having
troubles with her orthodonist. (R)
C1J Up, POmpeii
' (HJ Thla Old House Host
Bob ViUa introduces us to
a 1950's Ranch·Style tract
home badly in need of elbow room . [Closed Captioned!
10:00 1J (f) Cil Hill Street
Blues Conclusion . A vice
squad cop is investigated
for
a racially-motivated
shooting
and Johnny' s
dririk ing puts Mick 's life in
danger. (R) (60 min .)
(f) MOVIE: 'Union City'
CIJ TBS Evening Nowo
(I) . . ® 20!20
liJ CIJ ~ Knota Landing
Karen meets, a widower
which sets off a crisis be·
tween her and Diana over
the men in their lives.' (A)
(60 min .)
(I) Austin City Umha
tiD Newowatch
10:30 Cll Sing out America
tiD Matters- of Ufa &amp;

~rienced

li-

~

Lawrence Sidenstrlcker•
Backhoe Service. Call 675-'

.

~-

1976 Kawasaki 100• padded
Oats.' hay. $1.75 bale. 304- backres~, 4600 miles. Ex- 84
Electrical
i,
458-1805:
cellent condition $800. 304&amp; Refrigeration
675-2195.
Clendenen Refrigeration,
, ,., ,
"
Air
Conditioning, &amp;
CM400 Honda $900. 30A·61S ·
Heating Service. Call 614&lt;1252 or 675-1293.
256-ljiA6:
1l
Autos for Sale
iioatsaliii 1978 Buick Sky Hawk
SEWING Machine repairs,
_ _Motors !or Sate
mileage 56,700, ex. cond., •
service. Authorized Singer
spd., 6 cyl. , $2,800. can -4&lt;46- 1980 Sears 12' fiberglass Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
A7«J.
fiShing boat, 7 112 HP . Scissors. Fabric Shop.'
motor, trailer, oars, life
Pomeroy. 992-228.1.
•
1977 Olds. Cutlass .U2. GOod Jackets. $900. Call AA+·A782.
condlllon. Call evenings_ ·•
~~ ~=·
HaUling _ :
«6-7781.
18' fiberglass boat with 85
JONES
•
BOYS
WATER .
HP Johnson· motor and
trailer. Call «6·0936 aff.t er SERVICE.' Caii61A·367-7471 •
197A . Gremlin good shape.
or61A-367-0591.
'
Caii61A-388-1791 after SPM. · 5 :00PM.

..... ...
...... ....
... .
·~

7s _ __

· BARNEY

KNOW
START
CL:E.ANIItll UP··UH •·

Gen!!"•'

- -. --- - -·- ·--·- ·\

1976 Pontiac GraM Prix
11111 poiNer, been hit on
drlnrs side front fender,
best offer. Caii61A·379·257~.
76 Dodge Charger, UD9d
cond., reasonable. Call -4&lt;463667 alter 5.
· '

'

washing
machine
1 bdr. furnished apt., car- Whirlpool HD, $95. Call446'
or -4&lt;46·39«1.
peted, air cond., S225 'Pius
utilities. $100 dep, req., no'
pets or children. Call 4461788.

26. ft. TroJan hard top 1970 Need something . hauled'
mint. ~w canvas, trim . away or something moved7j
tabs, regency 5500 radio, We'll do 11. Call -4&lt;46-3159 or
''
dual baneries; pressure 61.1·256·1967 affer 6.
~-·- - -.---- · ~-'
water, stove, Ice box,
heavy duty ,t railer and etc. Now Hauling llmestone-tllr
dlrt·top soll-gra~el. Free
304-675·3182.
estimates. Call 614-3677101. •
76
Auto Ports
- ·- .----·- -&amp; Acceuortu
Will haul dirt of any kiild or
Truck topper to fit an 8 fl. any drlvoway material.
bedS75. Call ~·2510.
Call .L eroy Caldwell, -4&lt;46·-l
4851 tor estl'!"ale.
:
77 ·• Auto RtPilr
- '. -- ·
SP6C I AL. C:omplete J IMS Wa"'r Service. Call ,
enamel Paint lobS from Jim Lan!ef,30H7H397, •
.
Sunroofs lnsttlled
S225. AUto Trim Ctn·
-4&lt;46·1H8.

--

..

Death
11:008 Cll (I) 0 (I)® . . (BI
News
,
C1J Nnhvlle RFO
(JJ ESPN Sporta Canter

- .

Cll Allin die Fllllllly

(!) Na~eatiMr
'CIJ•Dave Allen "' ~Ma. tiD Hltchc!lc*'
11 :30 8 (JJ (IJ Tonight ShoW
' Cll MOVIE: ·~·
i
(J) Ancnher Ufe
.
. ([).MOVIE: 'Come Fill die

'

eup·

(I) Benny Hill Show

·~-=- --

rJ r J
ICHUNAHj
rJ c

., - 1:1.

WHA"T AN

A~IRONOrYIE.R

1

MII9H"T !5E.

IMARROD±
I KI
J
Arswer: A"[

Now arrange the drcled leners ro
form the aurpriae anawer, as sug·
gesled by tile above cartoon

I I I Jl I I I I I )"
(Anawera tomorrow)

Yesterday·s

I Jumbles : RODEO

OOUSE FUMBLE NATURE
Answer: What he said when he was told to stop talk·
lng "rubblsh."- 1" REFUSE"

JumtMe 11oot1 No. 20, cont1lntng 110 pwzin, Ia n1lllbll tor S1 .t5 po~tplld
fnll'n Jumble, elo tftls ntwtp~~per, Bax :W, NCNWOOd, N.J . 07UI. Indudl 'f'O'I'
neme, addrfta, zl code 1nd mekt check•
1ble to N
.

BRIDGE
How should we bid?
By O.wald Jacoby
ud Alu Soatag
We don't know bow
today's hand should be bid.
Maybe North and South
lhould get to lour hearts. H
they did we could produce a
pretty 1ood article to show
bow North could make it.
However, this pair got to
five clubs.
Tbe defense started with
two rounds of spades. South
ruffed , led a high club and a
club to dllmmy'a queen.
Tben came a low heart with
the successful finesse of the
queen.
Now South caah'e d his last
two
to diJcard. a
beart an a spade from
dummy.
South was now ready to
try the diamonds. H they
would behave perfectly be
would have bls 11 tricks. II
they didn't, be wanted to be
In dummy after three
rounds. So be played the ace
and king and then led to
dummy's queen.
Eut, wbo bad discarded a
spade on the last trump, had
to cbuck another one to
retain protection lor his king
of hearts.
'lbe band was down to a
three-card ending and all

trumr

NORTH
T·U-t2
+10 781
.JB2
+Q82
+Q8
WEST
EAST
+AKQJI
+as2
.K 101
•ue
+10 5
+H 7 3
+75 3
+812

SOUTH

+5

.AQS
+AK&amp;4
+A K J 10 9
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer East
Soootlo

West

Obi.

Pus
PUI
PUI

i't

Pus

Opening lead:

+8

Soutb had to do was to
decide that East was holding
two bearts and one high
spade. Tben he led dummy's
last spade.
East had to win and lead
away from bls king of hearts
to give South his club game.

~-wd
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

2 West Indian

I Contend

sorcery
5 Road tragedy 3 Gelling
10 Touch
hostile
II TV actress, 4 French
Louise season
13 Hawailan
5 Trevor
chant
6 Ukea
14 Off the skiff
sore throat
151ntimate
7 Belgian town
II Gratllity
8 Doing bailie
17 Harem
9 Coolidge
• chamber
\\las bls V .P.
18 Tremulous 12 .. _ Me''
20Starmwn
(1929 song)
21 Diamond
16 Watch
nwnber
19 Fraulein's
Z2lmply
four
23 Summoned
:!5 Jargon
28 Old Irish
gannent
27 Fight site
28 One kind
of iron
29 Getting well
32 Aust bird

Yesterday's A01wer

22 Deer
23 Scottish
musicians
:U Living
25 Director
Wertmuller
27 Straighten
out

29 Smallliqllid
measure
30 Rustler's
neckw~ar ?

31 Jewish
folklore figuie
36 O'Neill play
37 Luau staple

33 ~~ - Dreamer"
34 Ukewise

35 Froglike
37 Cartel
38 Impassive

39 EngliSh river
40 Antonym
of ally

41 Detail
DOWN
1 David
and others

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to
Ia

work

It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One leller simply stands for another. In this sample A it
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's. etc. Single tellers.
apc»trophu, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each·day the rode letters are different.

•
CRVPTOQUOTI!S

RC

VTEK

UBKDK

PDK

UST

. KERVM : SPD
PCZ IKPAK . - BTDPAK
and
a. physician ·&lt;letermine
whether a senim,11s reepon- · 1
silll4 to, the deathi of Y~Ienlay's Cryptoquole: FOlJ.OW LOVE, . Ar'fD It WILL ;
• children in Latin America. FLEE; FLEE, AND IT WILL FOlJ.OW .'111EE.-QW
-. (R) 180 mi~ :) • . ·
ENGUSHRHYME

II Ill .&lt;iuinoy ~v

3 room furnished apt. $250.
month Includes utilities.
Inquire at Meigs Inn -In
Pomeroy.

1974 Flee._ Cadlliac.
Needs a feW repal.-.. 1500.

Entertainment

Tonl11_ht

CHRISTI-AN'S CON ·
STRUCTION .
Constr ..
roofing, siding, spouting,
fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
c leaning . ~A6 - 2000, call
before 8 and after 5:30.

J

I I.

~ked For It

C1J Another Ufe
(JJ ESPN Sports Center

French C ity Painting
residential &amp; commercial,
Interior, exterior, paper
hanging,
&amp;
textured ·
ceilings, Call 614-367-778.1 :
or 61A-367-7160. ·,

82

.

WI Muppet Sl)ow

7:30 D Cll You

1976 AMC Pacer. one
owner, good c6ndition,
41.000 miles, new sticker, . Gene's Steam Carpet
30H75-1708.
Clean-scotch Gaurd·Free
- - --- - - estimates-spring specials1977 PLYMOUTH, Sl200. Gene Smith, 992 -6309.
30H7S·A684,
RON'S Television Service . ·
1980 DODGE Diplqmat Specializing in Zenith and .
station wagon, 30H75-586_7. Motorof'a , Quazar, an£1-""'
hOUS!' calls. Phone 576-2398':
or
A46·2AS4 .
·.
1973 Chevy Nova, V·8, ps,
pb, auto., low mileag~,
good cond. s750. 304-895- F &amp; K · Tree Trimming .':
stump removal. 675-1331.
3496.
7_! _ _

-11

Television
Viewing

by Lany Wrlghl

'N' CARLYLE.'"

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rod.er, ot- Pressure canner used one
toman, 3 tables. (extra UO. Holds 8 quarts. Call
heavy by Frontier), $685. «6·2510 .
sa
Fruit
Sofa, chair and loveseat, - - -·- -,
&amp; Vegetables
$275. Sofas and chairs 5 HP roto tiller, $200.
priced from $285. to $795. wurlitzer accordian, $100. Pick your own bean and
Tables, S38 and up to $109. Call-4&lt;46-71&gt;49 .
tomatoes, S3 bu. each,
Hide·a ·beds,$340., queen
bring containers. Raynor
s ize. $380. Recliners , S175.
Peach Orchard, '-4&lt;46-4807,
toS295.,Lampsfrom$18.1o ADDITIONAL DISCOUN · Lower River Rd: Closed
S65. 5pc . dinettesfrom$79., T! . LIMITED
TIME Sundays and Wednesday
to $385. 7 pc., $189. and up. ONLY I THE BIG, NEW qvenings
Wood table with A chairs, AMAZING 1982 FAI'/IILY ·
$219 up to $495. Desk $110. SIZE POOLS WHICH IN·
Hutches, SJOO. and $375., CLUDE DECK, FENCE, Pick your own green beans
maple or pine finish . FilTER &amp; WARRANTY SJ.OO bu . Bring your awn
Bedroom suites
Bassett ARE NOW AVAILABLE containers . Charles
Cherry, $795. Bunk bed FOR ONLY $999. IN · McKean Farm, Fairfieldcomplete with mattresses, STALLA TION &amp; FINAN - Centenary Rd. Call 446$250. and up to $395. Cap- CING AVAILABLE . FIR · 9.U2.
lain' s beds, $215. complete. ST COME, FIRST SERVE .
Baby beds, $99. Mattresses CALL 1-800·624-8511 (Ohio), WHOLESALE tomatoes,
or box springs, full or twin, 1·800·642-3053 (WVJ.
304-675·6229 .
$58., firm, $68. and $78 . 1.;:::::;::::::::::::..1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Queen sets, $195. ~ dr, I'
chests, '$A2.
dr . . cl\esls, .
SS4. Bed frames, S20.and 0_!~~~!!?!!:!2.~~~-~-~~~~~~~~
S25 .. 10 gun - Gun cabinets, r
$350., dinette cha irs $20, .
and $25. Gas or electric
ranges,
S325.
Baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; $30, Used
Furniture · ·- bookcase,
ranges and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to7pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9~m
to5pm, Sat.
446-0322

------

Effienc y apartments lSI
floor &amp; 2nd. floor. Call A&lt;lcl0957,
729 2nd Ave ..
Gallipo'lis .

33

Furnished apt. _. rooms,
and bath, deposit, adults
only, no pets, office space
800 sq. ft . 608 22nd St. Point
Pleasant. 30H7H601 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Mobile Home, Eureka, 1 Park, Route 33, North of
Bdr., fyrn ., riverfront lot, Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
ref. &amp; deposit. Adults, SIOO 992-7479 .
mo. 1-6A3·2644 .
Small
trailer spaces .
12x65, 3 bdr., mobile home. Mason . jon73·56Sl.
Clean, air cond ., furnished,
good location, ref . req . Sec . TWO large trailer spots for
dep. req. Call «6-8558.
rent, fully equipped, s~o . a
month, 304-773-5319 .
•
FURNI-5HED mobile home
in city . Central ai r . One or 49
For Lease
two adults only. Call «6For lease 2 bdr., cedar ran0338.
Ch beautiful
stone
2 bedroom frailer . Real fireplace, wrap around
nice, adults only . Brown's · deck . lovely 6 acre setting,
Trailer Park, Minersville . near Green School. Call
Wiseman Agency, «6-3643.
6 10 - 992 - 332~.

----·-----

· ux52 2 bedroom PMC
house trailer. Best offer.
30H75·5658.

Three room furnished
apartment, adults, no pets,
Point Pleasant. Phone 304·
675·2.1$3 .

-

Mobile Homes
for Rent

~------ - -

' MOBILE HOMES MOVED
, Licensed &amp; insured. Call
304-576·271 1.

..

, -"

2 bedroom apt.in Mason .
HOUSE , references and Adults only . No pels. 30~ ·
deposit required, no pets, 675·1452 after J:
prefer couple, phone 30~ 675·3175, alter 5 :00. $250 45
Furnished Rooms
mon)ll .
Sleeping room , 919 2nd
Ave .. Gallipolis. $125,
You' ll love this 14 acre utitties paid, r ange &amp;
farm in the country with a refrig., single male . Call
pond and small barn . This 2 «6-4416 after 7PM.
bedroom brick home is
only 2 miles from down- - - -town Pt . Pleasant. Will Rooms with cooking, cable, 1
sign a year lease at USO. air, S40 a week. 30"'·773per month . 304-615-6276.
5651 .

2 choice acres near Chester
· with 1980 14x70 mobile
; home. $21.000. or $12,000.
• without acreage. 61A·949·
:2639.

HOME .

Pomeroy· -two bedroom
apartment ,
newly
remodeled . Carpeting, nice
yard . $165 mo. Deposit req .
992 ·2288, after 6 p.m .

SMALL furn ished apart3 bdr. house gpod location, ment, references, 304 -6752 bdr . apt, H U0 excepted. 1365.
A-One Real Estates, Carol
Yeager Realtor. Call JO.C· TWIN Rivers Tower now
67S·SIOA or 67B386.
renting to qualified ap·
plicants, age 50 and older.
House, 120 Jrd . Ave ., Phone 304·675-6679. HUO
Gallipolis. 2 bdr .. gas heat, assisted proj ect .
dep. req. The Wiseman - ----Agenc'(, 4.46·3643.
Two bedroom, furnished ,
carpet, air cond, one·fourth
3 bdr. home, 628 Alh Ave., mile out Sandhill Rd. $200.
Gallipolis. Call «6- ~551 .
monlh plus deposit.30A·67S·
2195.

2 bedroom mobile home in
New Haven. Adults Only .
No Pets. 30H75 -1452 after

·

--'

28 ACRES, tobacco allot·
ment, mineral .rigtlts, no
buildings, SIO.SOO. JOH7S Apartments. 30H7B548.
6851.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes ,
houses , ... Pt :
Rentals
Pleasant and Gallipol is.
61~- «6 · 8221 or 614-2~5-9484 .

Three bedroom trailer, kit ·
chen furnished, 2 car
garage, $250 month plus
deposit, 30~ - 576 · 2682 after 6
p .m .

: usED MOBILE
' 576·2711 .

-

9n5691 .

Office trailers : one 79 and
: o~e 80, 50K10, central air,
, $3,500-ea . One 7A, 10x45 with
• 3 air conditioners, S1,650.
' One 27 Camper $2 ,500. Call
614-643-2916.

' House trailer for sale . For
more information, wri te
John Greene, 1901 Bell view
. Road, Cambridge, OH , or
; call614-439-1942.

Apartment
for Rent

44

2 spaces at Ohio Valley
Memorial Gardens. Lot No .
25 Sec tion B. Call 614·256· J bd.room apt .• Middleport.
$150. mo . and Security dep .
1933.

42

1982 .

Ohio

Sentinel

The Dail Sentinel

-Mfdc!leport, Ohio

';

.

(

\

-\

'

�!

· · Page

12

The Doi

\

Senti'nel

TV pioneer••.•_·___:_:tc:.:o::nt::in::u:.:ect:.:.r:.:ro::rn:.!:pa:::g::.:·e:.:t.:..&gt;__

Area deaths

'

Bertha Reibel
Bertha Katherine Reibel, 83,
Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday at her residence.
Miss Reibel was born Aug. 13,
1898, daughter of the late WUUam
and Rosina Zelher Reibel. She was
also preceded In death by two sis·
ters, Amelia and Anna, one
brother. Walter, and two brothersIn-law, Carl Jones and James
Ogdin.
Miss Reibel was a retired em·
ployee of Elberfelds In Pomeroy
and a life member of the Trinity
Church.
She Is survived by three brothers,
Henry Reibel and Herbert Reibel,
Pomeroy and Frederick Reibel,
Columbus; one sister, Emma Og· .
din, Pomeroy; two sisters-In-law,
Edna Reibel and Alolse Reibel;
several nieces and nephews, sev·
eral great nieces and nephews and
several great great nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services wUJ be held Sat·
urday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Don Walker official-

lng. Burial wUJ be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 11 a.m. on
Friday.

AUie Stamper
Allie Stamper, 86, Coolville, died
1'\jesday night at Veterans Memor·
tal Hospital.
Mr. Stamper was born Oct. 22,
1895, son of the late Watt Andrew
and Jona Pelfrey Stamper.
Mr. Stamper was a retired em·
ployee of the AEP Power Co.
He Is survived by his wile. Bear··
trice Stamper; three daughters.
Jenette Lawson, Florida; Doris
Avis, Coolvllle, and Arbutus Wal·
lace. Dayton; 10 grandchtldren and
two great grandchtldren
Funeral services wUI be held Friday at 3 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with
the Rev. C. J. Lemley o!flclatlng.
Burial will be In Meigs Memory
Garden. Cheshire Lodge F&amp;AM
wUI conduct Masonic Services this
evening at 7:30 p.m. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 7 p.m.
this evening.

following open-heart surgery and
"we believe that he unfOrtunately
succumbed to the traumatic effects
of his Ulness."
Garroway was found dead In a
hallway In his ranch-style -home In
this Philadelphia suburb. the Delaware County coroner ruled the
death a suicide. No funeral arrangements were announced.
Garroway's gentle, relaxed
manner and his wry sense of humor
- Including appearances with a
chimpanzee, J. Fred Muggs helped point the way for the future
of tel~lon when he Inaugurated
"Today" In 1952. MUilons learned to
recognize his horn-rimmed spectacles and bow ties and remember his
singular slgn-olf: "Peace."
"I loved doing It," Garroway
once recalled. "It was a marvelous
seat to sit ln. In 10 years, I must
have talked to 12,500 exciting
people."
"More than anything else I remember his ability to communicate with an audience," said
Barbara Walters, who was hired by

MOSCOW - Soviet hunger striker Sergei Petrov said he ended his
protest fast for an exit visa on the 51st day today, deciding he did not
want to put his American wile, relatives and friends through further
pah
·
·
"I decided to stop. No one forced me. I took broth this morning, "
the 29-year-old free-lance photographer !old The Associated Press
by telephone from his Moscow apartment.
Petrov's wile, the former VIrginia Hurt Johnson of Roanoke, Va. ,
departed Moscow on Wednesday after a four-day stay on a 10-day
visitor's visa. The 24-year-old woman said she had failed to convince
him to end the protest.

Correction

EMS has one call

The descendants of Martin and
Emma Roush Sayre will hold their
famUy reunion on Sunday, Aug. I,
at the home of Paul and Evelyn
Sayre North not Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Norris as was reported. Mr. and
Mrs. North Uve at 128 South Fourth
St., Gallipolis. The event Is 1 p.m.
Persons are to please bring lawn
chairs.

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service answered no calls
Wednesday and one call early
Thursday morning.
At 5 a.m., the Middleport unit
was called to the Lazy Day Cafe to
treat a fight victim. The victim re-fused to be Identified. The man also
refused treatment.

Tractor pull July 24
There wOJ be a Southeast Ohio
Garden Tractor pull at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds July 24 at 6: 30
p.m. In case of rain, the event .will
be held July 31.
In addition to the above there will
be pulls Aug. 10 at 7 p.m. at the
Mason County Fair; Aug. 14, at 9:30
a.m. at the Athens County Fair and
Aug. 21, at 10 a.m. at the Meigs
County Fair. For additional Information. call 992-5919 or 949-2033.

Name guest speaker
Larry Haley of the Gallipolis
Christian Church will be the guest
speaker at the Bradford Church or
Christ July 25, at 7 p.m. He wUJ
speak on rock music and the affect
It has on people. The public Is Invited to a !tend.
The Bradford Church of Christ Is
located at the Intersection of
County Road 5 and SR 124.

urged to attend.

'

·

Veterans Memorial Hospltal. ·
Admls,s ton- WIIbur Hanning;
Middleport. Discharges-Paris
Hess, Anthony Heaton, ' Ruth
Bailey.
.,
"~
•

By LORRAINE CICHOWSKI
APIII-i-Wrlter

EconomlsiB d~greed over \\!hen
tJie recession might ~nd; but most
business executives were In accord
~~the outlook for prorlts.lnventortes and employee rosters remains
bleak for the nex~ few months.
They made their comments on
the day tl)e resignation of MIIITliy
Weldenbaum, chairman of Presl·
dent·Reagan's~wlcUofEconomlc
Advisers, was'announced.
Wflldenbaum, who wiU return to

t-;:;::;:~;:;;:;;;:;;;:;:;:;~::::~::==~~=~
ELBERfELDS 'I•N POME'RO&lt;Y

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"In the earliest days, people
didn't know whether TV was going
to be radio with pictures or vaudevme," Chancellor said. "Ed Sulll·
van went the vaudevUle route on·
Sunday nights, while Garroway
was able to reach through the
sc reen with a new way ot
broadcasting."
,"He became a household word aU
over the country simply by being
himself -Intelligent, curious, sympathetic, " said Reuven Frank, himself a TV pioneer and now pres !dent
of NBC's news division.

ON SUMMER CLOTHING

·''

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1.111umtn, WOMEN, BOYS &amp; JUNIORS •
'

&amp;

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ~

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NAME 8RAND$- COMPETITIVE PRICES
FACTORY TRAII}IED PERSONNEL

:Valvoline®
Motor Oil

Sohio's earnings_'slightly off

10W=40

69&lt;:

Funds distributed
, ..

Fair ticket
..
prrces are
announced

State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson reported today the July distributln of $12,738,793.94 In local
government fund money to Ohio's
88 counties and 442 cities and villages levying local income taxes
Of the total amount the Meigs
County Treasurer received $18,750.

TRUCK
OR VAN :
MIRRO

PICKUP

Hart-: Must. ()ffer positive goals

CAA board to meet

WASHINGTON - Declaring that the American people are "fed
up with attack politics," Sen. &lt;;ary Hart, D-Colo., said nJursday
night the Democrats need to offer positive programs and goals.
"The Democrats will not wlil the electlonsd n 1982 or 1984 by
opposl!lon politics," Hart, considered as a possible 1984 presidential
candidate, told a party"fund-raising event.
.
But three other potential presidential candidates making brief
appearances· at the event took crackS at President Reagan.
"Reaganomics has put our country In deep dlltlculty.'' said Sen. ·
Alan' ~ton, D-Callf. "Reagan Is\so arp,table about what he 1s
doing to the American peOple ... Perhaps he wouldn't be so amiable I(
Nancy (Reagan) had .to work 'the night shift In a texllle factory."
Sen •.Johri Glenn, O:Ohlo, said. Reagan has "passed the word" that
he wUJ ron 'agalli In 1984. .

The Gallla-Meigs COmmunity Action Agency Board will hold Its
regular meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at 'the Guiding Hand School in
Cheshire.

Budget cuts affed police recruits
COL~US, Ohio·- Becauseofbudgetcutbacks. Deputy Dwighf

1

Donations sought

MOTOR HOMES
VANS-BlAZERS

~~~- ssggs

' Anyone wishing to donate hospital equipment to Ell Dennison
American Legion Post 467 may call
992-7442 or 742-2100 or write the post
at Rutland. Anyone In need of
equipment may call the same
numbers. There wUI be no charge
for equipment.

RUIIIIIN'iJ.IRDS
RlR AIL MARIES AND

MDII£~'" Sllle!

Joseph says he can't foresee any new Columbus pollee recruits for at
least two years.
Twenty-foJU' new recrulls, Including nine wolll!'n, graduate today.
But that stiU wUJ leave the city's pollee force about~ ottlcers short of
·tts authorized manpower strength of 1,:m:
The pollee dlylslon would like to have thi-ee or 111llre classes of 25
recruits each year, but Joseph said he doesn't know where the
money would come from. He said a 0.5 percent Income tax Increase
might vrovtde sufficient funds, but the city has had a 0.25 percent
•
·
hike.
.

Walburn receives Green Scholarship
A John W. Green Continuing
Scholarship of $1,000 has been awarded to Steven E. Walburn.
By his will the late John W. Green
establlllhed several law scholarships
which are awarded In recognition rJ.
unusual ability in the general
development ol character, ambltioo
to excel "8nd lntereat in the general
development and advancement of
the ethical standards of the legal

profeeslon.
These scholarships are awarded
BIUiuallY by the faculty rJ. the
College of Law of Tennessee University to those members of the three

law classes wbo J1088!!8S to a marked
degree tholle qualities and academic
abWty and character.
.
'Walburn II Snployed by Vlrglnla
Intennont College and be and hl8
wife, Stephanie, will be moving to
Knorlllle, Tenn. In AusustSon ol Mr. and Mrs. Dale E.
Walburn lid lll'8lllilon ol Mr. and

Mrs. Rl)'mond Wllbum, ~ci­
dleport, steve was a 19'15 graduate of
Meigs ijlgb SchooL
Mr. aDd Mra. Walburn will be In
Middleport for a visit on Aug. 7 and
will attend the wedding of Barbal'll
Fultz.

Oak Hill man hospitalized after accident
An Oak Hill man Is In satisfactory
condition at Holzer Medical Center
today as the result of a single-car
accident on Greetlfleld Twp. Rd. ll
Wednesday.
According \0 the GaU!a-Melgs ,
post of the Ohio S.t ate Highway Patrol, Wilbur E . Boggs. 44, was
northboiiiid at 4 p.m. when he lost
control of his vehicle, ran off the
rilht side of the toad, went over an
enballkment and Overturned.
BqfiP was taken to HMC bY the
aa111a (',"'~~ Eme,JJ!!!~ Medical .

'

ARVifl .MIIFmRS ARE

8UAIIANTEED FOR AS LONG ·
·AUOU·OWN YOUR CAR.
'
'
' - Wl PUT IT IN WRmNG

,,
'

. NOW .IS THE nME TO GEl
YOUR SAW READY FOR FALl
WOOD CUTIING • .
BRING IT TO-G&amp;!.

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
2403rdAVE;'

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

'446-1813

.

'

1704 EASTERN AVE. 144 W. 2nd ST. .
,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO . POMEROY,OHIO
446-4204 .,
'
~·
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.,..r
.
· ,_ -Parb
'

.

. 992-2138

.

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PIUI CIU. . . . . ,, •

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottef1's !laDY game "the Number" was 900. .
In the semireekly "~ 4" game, the winning number was t:Ml.
The lottecy reported e8I'JIInis of $816,19i on Its daUy game. The
earningS· came on sales of $990,196.511, ' while holders of winning
tlcketl are entitled to share.$174.010.:.1, lottery ottlclals said.
,
, In the parimutuel "Pick 4" gAme, saleS totaleci~.:m. Holders of
winning tickets are entlpal to~ percegt, at ~.215. Any wlnnlng$1
stralgbt ticket earns $9,~. and.a,ny winning $1 boxed tiCket earns
$1117.
' .
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'
·State w~the~ forecast .
~ toolibt. LowS~. Winds DO~ to easterlY~

. I

10 mpb. Saturday, SUDPY· Highs In the mid-all.

.

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1 ' 07llo llwetliil&amp; • Sunday tl1roolh 'l'ladaf: Fair Suncllly
alii! acatfe!ed lllowerl Mopday imd ~- Jllcblln the 11181111
lows In thelia. '
•
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DRIVE
t.A flUUIIY
!,i·t ll h II: . i ill

The $3 Meigs County Fair general
admission price will cover midway
rides;· grandstand admission, and
~rking,' when the' fair begins
Tuesday,Aug.17.
Following the O{)l!ning ser-Vice to
be conducted Monday, Aug ; 16 at
7:30.-p.m. by the Meigs Ministerial
Association, gate admission will be
charged beginning at 9 a.m. each
day of the fair, Aug .•17' through 21.
Children under one year of age are
admilted free .
Rid~!&amp; '!'Ill be In qperation Tuesday
thro!~gh Friday, 2 to 5 p.m. and .6 to
11 p.m., and Saturday, 12 noon to 5
p.m. and 6 to 11 p.m.
Unlimited riding of midway a\·
tractions will be Included in gate admission, and tholle holding membership, season, or 4-H tickets may
ride by paying $2 at the ride office
each day.
Parking of automobiles and
vehicles ill free with Bllmission,
there Is a $25 charge for trailers
brought onto the fairgrounds. All
delivery vehicles mliBt pur~hase a
season ticket; admitting the driver
and vehicle.

HOSPITAUTY SIGNs-Members ol Drew Webster PO!It 38,, American . Legion, Pomeroy, ?uive
erected "welcome to Pomeroy" signs at lour entranees to the community. 'lbe signs have been placed at
the traffic U.-;ht at Kerrs Run, at the Pomeroy-Mason

Bridge, M?ddleport · PomeroyCorporatlonllmllsand
Highland Chureh Road. Shown with the sign on High?A!Ki Church. .Road are, front, George Horak; standlng 1-r, E?ui GUmore, Joe ZwUJlng and Leo ZwUJlng.

Utilities oppose proposal
By JOHN W. CHALF~
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio
Consumers' Counsel WOllam Spra·
tley and the state's utUitles have
something In common: opposition
to a drive for the election of utUity
regulators.
And even after he Issued a report
showing Ohioans have been hit by
rate hikes In the past year he described as staggering. Spra lley
stuck by his position on the ballot
Issue.
"I'm uncomfortabl e being
aligned with them (ulllltles), but I
oppose election for different rea·
sons," he told a news conference
Thursday.' "! think we've got to do
more than just change the selection
process."
Spratley said the consumer
movement should concentrate Instead on the legislative reform of
laws under which a company's rate
base, Its rate or return and other
factors are determined.
He. said a proPosed constitutional
amendment requiring election of
the Public Utilities Commission or

Ohio would prompt companies to
spend excessive amounts of money
In attempts to control the outcome.
Although personally opposed to
the Issue, Spratley said both sides
would be presented to the consumers' counsel governing board.
The board Is to decide In August
what stand, if any, to take on the
question.
"I would prefer we take a position one way or the other," he said.
"I don't know of any board member
who supports election. I am certainly more against It than I am ror
it. "

Spratley's comments followed
the release of an updated survey
showing Ohioans have experienced
Increases In average costs ror utilIty services of between 17.7 percent
and 31.5 percent during the past
year.
"I think Ohioans have endured
the most devastating utility rate Increases granted by this public utilities commission at lea st since the
1976 rate-making law and In all
prob~billty since the post World
War'II era began," Spratley said.

The consumers' counsel rate sur·
vey of eight major Ohio cities, conducted twice annually. showed that
customers of Columbia Gas of Ohio
were hit by heavier Increases than
customers of any other major gas
utUity In the state.
Gas costs have risen 27.7 percent
to 46.8 percent In Ohio over the past
year based on average usage.
Spratley placed blame for what
he callf','d the out-of-control Increases on federal policies on the
pricing of natural gas .
His survey showed costs ror electricity drove the combined price for
utUity services up more In Cleveland than In any other Ohio city.
"Telephone costs have Increased
rrom 11.1 percent In Cleveland to 17 ··
percent In Youngstown," Spratley
said. "These are the largest Increases recorded for Ohio's telephone Industry In the last five
years."

The report shOwed that Toledo
consumers pay the highest rates
for combined utUity costs - natu·
raJgas, electricity and telephone of the major cities In Ohio.

Planners

Ohio lottery winners

'

Service. He Is being treated for
lacerations.
His car svstalned moderatt\
damage.
·
The patrol also Investigated a
car-deer accident on ~ Road In
Mel$9 County Wednesday.
J!Uiles F. Butcher, 33, Racine,
was sot1thbound ·on Hill Road at
9:~ P·"'· w~hiscarstruckadeer
whlcb dartelllllto hl8 path. ·
Hill l!jll' received moderate
damage.
.•
. ,,

.·

HOMEUTE®
Chain Saw Headquarters
BV ,
ARVIN
SALES····
$21 95 ·, P.ARTS AND SERVICE

;

were

ESE LOW PRICES
lOW-30

---

1 Section, 12 Poe••
15 Cenh
A Multim.clia Inc. Newtpapef

WliCOME
POM EIWY 01110

By The Associated Press
Israeli warplanes dlvebombed
guerrUia·held west Beirut tor the
second day today, concentrating on
PLO positions on the edge of the
BouT) ei-Barajneh refugee camp
near the paralyzed International

f .11111 il,l&lt;'ltll (; iqlli}Hl11'111 1',11!·

There wUI be a Bluegrass cOncert
Friday, Aug. 6. from 6:30-11 p.m.
at Portland Elementary School.
The event, sponsored by the Portland PTO, wUI feature Ron Rigsby
and One Way Track, Sun Down.
West Virginia Mountain Boys and
others. Retreslunents wUI be sold.
Admission wUJ be $3 singles, $5couples, $1 chUdren 1-5.

Pomeroy..-Middleport, Ohio, Fridoy, July 23,1982

nerve center In west Beirut's Fak- and the Sabra quarter, .a Palestlhanl neighborhood said at least
nlan neighborhood on the Medlterthree bombs were dropped near the
ranean coast.
area .
It said the attat k began at about 1
"Barrage after barrage or anti- p.m. (7 a.m. EPTl and was stU!
aircraft !Ire was sent Into the sky going on an houl- later.
The thunderous roar of raiding
and the planes came In low and
airport.
.
slow," Anderson reported.
jets and P LO-ftred missiles shook
The Tel Aviv command said Its the whole of the Lebanese capital.
. Associated Press correspondent
jets attacked Palestl!llan tankS'aiid ' ·Lebanese state and privately
Terry Anderson reporting from
Yasser Arafat's administrative artillery positions near the airport . owned radio stations reported
r----------------------::---. many guerrilla targets were ablaze
as jets made bombing runs on the
10-square-rnUe besieged en&gt;lave.
There was no Immediate word on
casualt.W-il'LO military centers In and
around the.~ports complex of west
' ·:
~l,r.ut
seen taking direct hits.
The same block ·was hit In almost
every air rald .Israel has mounted
In Beirut since Israeli forces In·
vaded Lebanori ·June 6 to crush the
guerriUas.
Israel had threatened the Pales·
tine Uberatlon Organization and
Syria with new assaults after hit·
CLEVELAND - A huge drop In the windfall profits tax allowed
tlng west Belnlt and the Bekaa Valthe Standard OU Co. (Ohio) to report only slightly lower earnings for
ley Thursday with the heaviest
the 5ecOnd quarter despite losses In several ot Its segments, the
fighting In more than a month.
company said'Thursday.
U.S. Presidential envoy PhUip C.
Sqhlo, reported a 1 percent decrease In earnings, posting profits of
Habib met with Syrian Foreign
$473 2 riliJUon'or$1.92 a share compared with $478.7 fnllllon or $1.94 a
Minister Abd~ "Hallm Khaddam In
~ IJ•tlle second quarter Of 1981.
Damascus today _and was to hold
' · $Ate's and opera!~ revellues for the three-ll)onth period ending·
talks later with President Hafez As·
June_30 were $3.16 bUilon,•compared with $3~21 bUJion In the 1981
sad. Sources close to the negotla·
second quarter,
tlons said Habib Is proposing that
"Higher sales "{plumes of Alaska crude oll offset lower crude oil
Syrian troops stationed In Lebanon
prices, whUif ll!flnlljg and marketing operations showed significant
exercise stricter control over PaImprovement, n saki Alton H. Whitehouse. chairman and chief execlestinian guerrillas there to prevent
utive o(tlcer ot"~hlo.
new clashes with Israeli ti'oops.
"The !lwressed economy, however, continued to adversely affect
our chemicals, coal, metals mining and Industrial products businesses," he said.
Sohlo's metals mining operations, consisting of mlnl!fals operations acquired In the June 19,81 merger with Kennecott Cprp .• lost
_$34.2 million during the second quarter or 1982, primarily due to
depressed copper and precious metals prices.

for smaU businesses a fraction of
the money they spend lor outside
research, such as that done by unl ·
versltles and big ccimpanles.
-Exxon Corp. and Texaco Inc.,
two of the largest International oil
companies, blamed a sluggish
world economy for second-quaner
profit declines considered major
when compared with the second
quarter o! 1981. Exxon was down
51.~ percent and Texaco was down
45.1 percent.

enttne

Israeli jets attack
West Beirut again

ALL SALES FINAL, NO ~XCHANGES OR LAYAWA~S ;

~.

American Motors Corp. Mean·
whUe, an Industry trade journal
predicted that this year's auto production In the United Stales wUI be
nearly 15 percent behind last ye.a r's
already depressed level of 6.25
rnUUon.
•
-Reagan signed legislation guaranteeing small businesses a share
or the money the federal govern·
ment spends on research and devel·
opment projects. The legislation
requires nine agencies to set aside

•

at y

Voi.31 ,No.56

!I

.,

•

c. nehtod 1982

t:

stant nulrketbasket of goods and U.S. corporations feU In the first
quarter to "!he lowest level since
services. .
.
'
A survey b)' Dun &amp;: BrB,\Istreet, 1975. Its Index of 400 ltjdustrial corthe research unit of Dun &amp; Brad- porations averaged 4.4.'1 percent In
street·COrp .. said corporate execu- the first three months of th.e year,
tives are growing less optimistic the lowest since a4.43percent averabout the outlook for profits, Inven- age return for the S&amp;P 400s in the
tories and payrolls tor the third final quarter of 1975.
In other economic news:
quarter. 'However, more execu-The major automakers said
tives· are growing optimistic about
the number of U.S. autoworkers on
a sales Increase.
At the same time, Standard &amp; Indefinite layoff !ell1,656 to 213,502,
Poor's,Colp. said profit margins for largely because o! callbacks at

e

,.
•'

[)()lllf' ,, :

Valvoline®
Motor Oil.

teaching at Washington University
In St. Louis, belleves the president's
economic recovery program Is
working. He noted In his letter to
Reagan on Thursday, "FrOm the
outset, we have said yours Is a longterm program, unlike the quick
fixes or the past.' '
Meanwhile, the Bureau of Labor
Statistics was t9 announce today
the monthly Consumer Price In·
dex, which Is a measurement of
changes In the retaU prtcesor a con-

,.

Depend On Us ...
We're·· 'PARTS PLUS'

Concert Aug. 6
The Meigs County Deputy Regis·
trar of Motor Vehicles reminds persons with the lnltaU K or L that they
are to purchase their new stickers
during the month of July.
The license bureau office Is open
on Friday evenings between 5: 30
and 7 p.m. and on..8llturday untO
noon.

The MlddlePQrt chamber of Commerce will meet at the LaSalle Hotel
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. All members are

AUTO PARTS

Meigs County happenings•.•

'.

Hospital ne~s , ·

Middleport Chamber
will meet Tuesday

Garroway as a Wllfter. "I don't
think there Is anyone else In our
business who could do It the way
Dave Garroway 'did."
Garroway was "very, very disappointed that his career kind of
came to a halt," said Blair.
"He never again had the same
su101cess," noted Ms. Walters.
John Chancellor. who succeeded

Soviet ends hunger strike

Issues reminder

Most business 'leaders 'pessimistic'·

, Ohio

'

.

'

will

meet

Monday
The Melga County Regional Planning Commlslion will meet at 3 p.m.

Monday at .lhe agrlcult1lnli conference center of the Fanners Bank

Bulltl\ng in Pomeroy.
.
There will be a ~tion 011 a
Meigs County IJrochute,- auggestlons .·
on prqll!l'tY .tiunr p l . _ by
James Jenninp Alaoclatea,
dllcuaion On aiiUer CGI1trol project
application by ?he ~ com. ,mlasionen, lid • report 011 the '
congrepte hollllna lltatu by
~ThGmaa. -

E:ueatlve Dlnetor c. E.
BlakM'ee ~ ~· ftptoces lid
Ftink Cl"ald wiD report for the ·

h4!iJwaY- CCIIIIIIIIttee.

.'J'OURNEY AWARDII - 8peeW awaidl were
pa zated til line ~ J'll!ll?l·buebell plgen
. .,. S)ttKWelt.fa,.... Eller ~'tea. at tile _ . . . . . ol
tile Bllllblllbanl Melllll'lll tiUie Lape TGIIrilallleiit
,_..,. IIIPI. Ple?ui&lt;MI. left to rt&amp;bt, pru a?lal
• ...... Elier Pl.-.;
David Amllllrley, tbe ........
.
.

umem't Mott Valuable Player; Michael Ba~ the

t.~n~ey.'• mott Cll1ltltiiDdiDg offeulve player; and
Jllltla Herb ol lllntel, the bHt defeas?ve award.
Badltel WG11 ?he"UUZ tournament. (See stOry and acidlu-JplciltRioapegeloar.)
·

'

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