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"

"I

Simulate·d explosion
'.
Knight, Ryan snap ·will highlight probe
.Reds' winning ways of movie accident

Ohio's PVCO has Sin taxes: an easy
,high approval rate way out of a bind

•

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at y

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: Vai.31,No.59

1 Section, 14 Paget
15 Centa
A Multimedia lne. New1paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 28,1982

; Copyrighted 1912

'·.

Award
school
bids

iODOT okays
:p~oj~ct . ~tudy
.-4

KM.Special

;

Meigs County Commlssloners
Tuesday awarded bids for movea·
ble eqlpment lor the new Carleton
School.
Awarded bids and the amount
were Contlnentel Office, Columbu~.
(office equipment) $34,440.32;
Beckley Cardy Co, Worthington,
(audio-visual and athletic eq\IIRment and miscellaneous furniture)
$8,184.95; IBM Corp., Charleston,
(two typewriters) $1,752; Sparkle
Supply Co., Gallipolis, (Janltrolal
equipment and supplies) $3,304.35;
Gravely Tractor Sale, Pomeroy,
(tractor-mower) $6,724.25; total oJ

·

.

Fiberglass Belted Radials
Our Reg. 48.97
P155/80R13
Plus F.E.T. 1.51 Ea.

•

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• An agreement has been reached between thi! Ohio bepartment
!btf Transportation and .an. E'nglneeling _consultant to prepare a /
Istudy for the PPSSible relocation Qf U.S. 33 throilgh a corridor from
:Pomeroy to the Ravenswood bridge oVer the Ohio River, State
t~-:-t:lalre "Buzz" Ball aJIJIOIIJICed today, '
.
~ - The study by Woodnl1f Inc. of Cleveland will determine the
'
~Jeasjblllty of extending U.S. 33 through the rugged terrain and fiat
! plains of the Meigs County boot, formed by the big bends of the Ohio
:River bordering West VIrginia, sald Ball. ·
.
.
:i our plann~rs visualize a highway sweep11Jg ~~and southward
:around Pomeroy, then southeastWard north of Syracuse and Ra·
'Cine, some of It on portions of existing roadway, to the Ravenswood
:Qrldge. The bridge provides a connection to 1·'1'7 a few ml.les from
:the Ohio River.
·
·

"Mfr. Treadwear Rallng 120- Estimated 36,000 Miles

$54,405.87.

"Our Best" Bias Ply Blackwalls

26.97.0

Our Reg. 35.97
600x12
Plus F.E.T. 1.43 Ea.

·Mfr. Treadwear Rallng 80 - Estimated 24,000 Miles

All Tires Include Mounting • No Trade-In Required - All Tires Plus F.E.l. Eo.

Guardsmen called in at.·strike site ·

·.

DAKarA CITY, Neb.- Riot-equipped National Guardsmen took
up positions TuesdaY,, at the gates or a beet processing plant and
slaughterhouse where state troopel's have clashed repeatedly '1\'lth
rock-throwing strlkt:rs over the past week.
Mllll!UW helicopters brough! to the area were ready to fly It
needed; as arll'IQred peraomli!l carrlernumbled Into this northeast
Nebraska town of 1,700 to help protect noll·ltrlkers at the plant
owned by Iowa~ Processors Inc.; the nation's largest beef processing company.
Theoperajlon was stnack Ina wage'dlsputeJ~~~~e7 by members of
Local222 of the United Food and Commercial Workers. The processIng facUlty resumed operations July :11, and slaughterhouse crews
began reporting for work Mondl!.y.

Sale Price

Sale Price

69.88

23.88

A,~

'
CLEVELAND -Achlld'sbodytouridtnagaragetnruralHolmes
County was positively Identified Tuesday as that of 11-year-old
Krista Lea Harrison, a WayneCountyglrlabductedJuly 17, theFID ·
said
••....Holmes County Coroner M. Robert Huston signed Krlsta:s deatli
certificate after results of tests on her body were received Tuesday
from the Hammon County coroner In Cincinnati. FBI spect;U agent
John Dunn said. 1
Dunn also.said articles of clothing found near"the body Friday
' night had been examined by the Bureau of Criminal Investigation In
Columbus and have provided authorities with some new leads.

porll onciMIIVCl!l wt'IIC!l

'

Flood death toll reaches 275
Kmo~

Rebate

•

Our~.10.97

7.97
PluG

lpartc

7mm wire tor many
U.S.• cars. Sav~ now.

WE HONOR

on

Wire let

Thank You For
Shopping At K marf

..

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v

Second .quarter mOst p~fitable

~
0
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...z

DETROIT - The second quarter of 19112 was u.! most prditable·
for the domestic auto lndustly In three years, but analysts say profits
dpn't reflect ·&amp; sales recovery - Instead, they're tied to layoffs,
concessions from workers and lwnuy cir sales.
Ford Motor Co..011 Tue8day reported It earned $:11f.9 rnllllon In the
three:month period'ending June 30, pushing lndust!;Y profits for the
perlojl to $1113.1" mUllon.
'
The total Is the best a1wJw1ni linl:e U1e second quarter of1979, when
• the companies made $1.51 billion u ear sa1e1 bit record levels.
General Moton Corp. and Clrylller Coi'p. aJao reported plU!ts for
the second quarter. Ame!'r&amp;P -Moton Corp. was the only U.s.
maker remalnlnJ In the red.
· ·

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•

car·

-

Winlrlng Ohio lottery number
ciEvEx.ANo - The wt:ntng niunber c1rawn tn the 0b1o Lot- •

!ely's dally game ''J'IIe Numlli!r'' wu 215.
,
In the lei'IIIWeeldy "Pick 4" game, the wlriiiiJ!liiWllber- ~
· The lottery reported a loll 1\lslay niPt of f18,318110 on sa1e1 of
$.838,Tr/.50. Holders of wlnDbtg dcteU II"! l!lltlt!at tosbardlll17,0'.16,
lottery ofllclals said.

, Weather foreeut

.
'Pvtly cloudy wttb •lll&amp;bt """"""of lllillftn llld·u.."""' lb'JIII
tm1pt Lon5Nl ~ -lbll'ly to -••alieri.Y 5-:10 JqJb.
Thu~, moet1y IUIIIIY lild p'nea"' BIIJis '1M\

I . . . Pa6CIIiil&amp;
.
..._. ...... , In
lq II uda•ae•U P I -I'IWir.-dl I' ..... hlr
1 ,,.,........ . _ . . .
•

1

I

Parties in power
have money edge

Th~ee

wrecks probed

van

TOKYO - The death ton from·flooding and landslides In southw·
estern Japan reached Z75 Tuesday and rescue workers searched
throogh mud and rubble for frT other people missing and presumed
.dead. .'
•
Seven bodies washed up to the waterfront at Nagasaki harbor.
They apparently had been carried out to sea by rivers swollen by
rain•that fell at a rate of 4-Ginches an hour Saturday.
A total of 16-22 Inches r:i r$ tell Kyushu from Friday night to
earty Saturday, ending a 4Q.day drought with lightning quick flash
flooding and mud slides throughout the hUly area.

2 • 00

Meeting with the commissioners
was Phil Roberts, county engineer,
who discussed various highway
SECOND SESSION OF LESSONS - One ol the pictured with their mothers were really taklng their
projects.
clauet In the second seulon of swiiiiJillng letiso01 at" lesso01 1erlously. Most of the students enjoyed the
Two bids were received for purLondon Pool in Syracuse, was the mother-child class. lessoDll, however, some were a little hesitant. Allin all,
chase
of bituminous materials for
for yOUDgsters one month to five years of age. This Is the lessoDll went very well. At right is instructor Paige
the month of August. Submittlng
the -ond week of lesso01 for the class. The children Cleek.
bids were Asphalt Materials Co.,
Marietta and Mr·Zane, Inc.,
ZanesvUie.
It was approved to accept the low
bid of Asphalt Materials Co.
The board also discussed the proposed route of the access road to the
new landfUI site. The county engineer Is In the process of preparing
the necessary descriptions and
easements.
Eber Pickens, chairman of the
emergency
medical services board
,.
of trustees, meeting with the board
publicans now enjoy In the Senate. outlined a job description lor a new
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The group with $35,783.
Reports from both groups were EMS coordinator.
They picked up $12,600 from a
parties In power In the House and
flied
with Secretary of State AnSenate have the financial edge over fund-raiSer In Columbus, plus conThe trustees wUI advertise for ap.
thony
J . Celebrezze or the Franklin pllcatlons for the position In the
their opponents heading Into the tributions of $1,500 from the Real·
campaign for control of the Geil· tors group and $l,roJfrom the Ohio County Board of Elections.
near future.
Meanwhile, records show House
Dental Political Action Committee.
era! Assembly.
Democrats have a $186,786 bank ac·
Expenditures Included contribuPost-primary campaign finance
reports show majority Republicans tions In behalf.of four senatecandl· count In ~~e early stages of the legis·
latlve election campaign while
In the ~ate and majority Dem(). dates. The largi!St single amount,
Republicans ha~e a balance of
crats In the House have the largest $3,(0), went toW. Scott Gwln In the
29th District. He was unopposed In
$5,171.
financial war chests.
One accident and a theft are
The November balloting will deThe Republican Senate Cam- the primary but wUI face lncum·
under
Investigation today by Pometermine whether majority Demopaign Committee says It has a bal· bent Sen. Thomas Walsh, R·
roy
pollee.
crats retain or expand their 5&amp;43
ance of $155,177. compared with Canton, In the faD.
At 1:45 p.m. Tuesday, Carol Sis·
hold on the lower chamber.
Democrats wUI be trying to trim
$35,783 for Leadership •82, the Deson,
Pomeroy, was parked In a
mocrats' campaign group In the or reverse the 18-15 ed~~:e which Reat Lasley·Butternut
driveway
upper chamber.
Ave.,
when
Clarence McDaniel,
GOP offld'als said they added
Rutland,
drove
his car came
$84,283 to an amount brought foraround
the
curve
of
Lasley, across
The Gailla-Melgs post of the Ohio
ward ·ofSU4,629. Expenditures tostruck a car driven by Terry 1.. Butternut and hit the Sisson car.
taled $43,735.
.
State Highway Patrol responded to Martin , 23, Stockport, Ohio.
There was moderate damage to
The largest single contributiOn In three auto accidents Tuesday.
There were no Injuries or
both vehicles. McDaniel was transthe ·Republicans' latest report was
A single-car aCCident on Ohio 141 citations.
ported t&lt;t Veteran's Memorial
the repayment of a $35,roJ"Ioan pro- east of CR 12 at 5: 15 p.m. caused
A car driven by Glennard F. Da· Hospitill.
vided td Sen. Thomas A.
Me- slight damage to a Patriot woman •s vts. 28, GaUipolls was slightly dam·
Pollee charged him with reckless
ter. He was unsuccestul In his bid car.
aged In an Incident on Ohio 7 near
operation.
Mary L. Barker, 18, was west·
for the GOP gubernatorial
Addison Twp. at 1:02 p.m:
Phil Ohlnger reported the theft of
bound on Ohio 141 when she lost
nomination.
Davis was northbound when a
a
yellow,
10-speed Concord bicycle
Other large contributions In· control of her 'vehicle, went off the fire extinguisher fell off a trailer or
to
pollee
yesterday morning. The
eluded $3,(0) from the Savings and rlgbt side of the road and hit an a southbound vehicle, striking the
bike
was
stolen
!rom his Mulberry
Loan Political Action Committee; enbankment.
left rear of hi• car.
Avenue,
Pomeroy,
residence. The
$2,(0) from the Beer PAC; and
Two cars were slightly damaged
The driver of the other vehicle is
police
are
Investigating
the matter.
$1,500 from the Realtors PAC.
In a coUislon on CR 10 at 1:25 p.m., unknown.
The·report filed by Senate Demo- according to the patrol.
crats reflected an amount brought
Steven M. Bennett, 17, VInton
forward of $ll,553 and total new was rounding a sharp curve went
contributions of $11,509. Expendi- he went off the road, hit an enbank·
tures of $12,280 left the Democrats ment, came back onto the road and

Police cite driver

Girl's body positively identified

ti"'\\be~ . areatextlacost

Sale Price
Less Factory

Page 2

Page 2

Page 10

Page 3

Thieves' strike three
G:allipolis businesses
GALLIPOLIS · Three break·lns,
two Involving thefts, occurred
within two h011rs early this morn·
tng, according to the Gallipolis City
Police and the GaUia County Shertf!' a Department.
The !lrst was discovered at 3: 30
a.m. ·at Smith Buick-Pontiac, 19U
Eastern Ave. omcers 011 routlne
patrol noticed a window was 1111locked at the car dealersblp. On
fUrther tnvestlgatiOn, a back. door
' wai fDund ajar.
•
· Pollee found no one lllllde cln'lng
an lnapectlon of the building. As ot
tills mornlu. Police a8ld siX t1ies
,bave been reported mlsllng.
'Ibis II the secoDCI time ID leu
tbaD a week lbat the car dealenbJp
wu ~ A car llld too1a
wwe talreD ID a bn!ak·ID July 21
'l1le car llld nat of the too1a ba\!11

' - .l'ec!ollend

Slleillra cjeputlel reiPQII"'ed to
ID 1J1mi It Frutb Plllrmacy, 36t
Jadrloll PIJre, at a:110 a.m. 'J'bree
city policeman altO nulled to the
SCBII!.

Upon arrival, deputies found the
gla8s front door had been smashed.
The pharmacy was searched, but
no one was found.
The manager has Inspected the
pharmacy' but found nothing misslng, according to reports.
At 5:19a.m. onty 30 minutes af·
ter till! pharmacy alarm was triggered, an·alarm went off at Spring
Valley Trading· Co., 5211 Jackson
Pike. ·
Sberlf:t's deputies also found the
front door of the trading company
smashed, apparently with a

crowl!ar.'

,

Inside, several glass display
cues were broken Into. Employees
are aWl trying to determine exactly
what was takeli, but according to a
lberlf:t's ~t spotesmail.
fllllll, colDs alid gold are m11111ng.
Two bral!d·new crowbal"s were
left on the floor of the trading

' company;

,

IIM!Itlgators ate trying to deter· .

mlnelfthel,woJacksoll~break·

Ins are related.

·

NEW CONCESSION BOOl1i- Workmen are bard at work on a aew
conceolea booth and pre~~ lloJt earreally Wider co•tnidlon at 111e
General HartMer Park,"lUddleport. The booth Is aeartnc ~ .
and abeald be opea for buslneu ICIOi

•

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The

.••..., u~s· . speed to, defeat .old mates

Commentary

HOUSTON (AP) - HOuston·A&amp;ti'Oillrat baseman Ray Knight has
been I'I)UCb mal!,ned .lor his lack of

Rickover of

.The Daily Sentinel
Ill fuurt

Several months ago there was
reason to point out that many
American professionals who have a
high enthusiasm for public
education are in fact more taken
with its being public than with its
being education. Put two schools
side by side, one of them public, the
other private; document that they
cost identical swns of money to run,
that the students are of similar
background and intelligence, that
the private school Is getting better
results by a factor of two than the
public school - and for reasons not
easy to justify, you will find a lobby
thai gets mad at the private school,
·and wishes to deny it support.

sm-.·t

Punu·ru~· ,

Ohin
,,.. ,9'l-2JS.
ut:\'OTt:U TO TifF: INTERt:"T IIF TilE 1\U:IC.S.i\1.\'sUN AIlEA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Puhlisht·r

PAT WHITEHEAD
A !o&gt;!l i~Uinl

ROB HOEF'IJCH

Puhlh;hrr/funtrullt•r

r:rnt•OII

Mmul~t·r

DALE ROTHG_EB, JR.
Nrw~ t-:dli;lr '
A MU18t:R of Tltt• ASHtK'iult'CI Prt'Hito, lnluutl llaih l'rt·~.~ AssudHihm iiUd tht•
Amt·rinUJ NrW~JIIIIM'f PuhiiMhrnJ AIIStN'illlllln.
·
l.t:Tft:RS OF OPINION ~I'\" "'d•·umrd. Tht-~ !~i huuld ht· 1~., lh•n 3118 "11nts 11111~ . All
h· llr11i wn• subjt'C'I In niUinJt aMI muHt IM• itoi)lm-"d ._.ilh lutmr. 11ddrt'l'IN 111d lt•lt•phtmr
numht·r . Nn UDIIIr!ntd ldh•rs will bt• puhll~ht-d . IA •Itt'ni should b.• inl(1111d lJI!IIt• . Mddn•JOI"in~

speecl," but lit Uled It to defeat tliP
Clnclmlatl Reds.
ICJ!llllt ICOred.the winning run In
·thll lii!Jth Inning Tuesday night
from aei:ond base 011 Terry Puhl's·
·' 't)Vo-oUtiDIIeldslng!etolielptheAstl'lll Po!lt a .~2 w1n and give pitcher
Nolan Ryan his. 200th career
victory.
"1 have some trouble getting out
ot the box, butl can go pretty good
when I get started," Knight said.
"With two outs In that situation, I
am IQing all out."
Pub!' a line drive up the middle
was deftected 111gb In the air by rellelpltcherJimKern'sglove.Short·
ltoP Ron Oester llelded the ball 011
the fly and threw ID first baleman

Alg~e_b_;_·_ra
_____w_iu_wm_F._B_uck_le:r_Jr.

which we like to think of as
congenital. So John Saxon set out to
find the calll!e of this creeping
illiteracy. And ' lis one would expect,
he did find it. The fault lay In the tex·
tbooks ~ing used universally ln the
United States.
'
These, his researchers revealed,
were the result of the panic of 1957,
when the Russians got up there with
their Sputnik, and President
Eisenhower bwtituted a crash
program designed to hype American
interest and skill in engineering. The
difficulty arose with the preeminence then given to the
theoretical mathematicianB. These
are gentry who do not relate their

work to any particular problem that is for the physicist to worry
about. They were the dominating Innuence in the creation of a set of tex·
tbooks bUghted by jargon (John
Saxon's English Is a model of
precision), Indifferent to practice,
and rather snobbish about utility,
The result !las been that Johnny
would be introduced to a diffiC\IIt
concept today that tomorrow he
could be counted on to forget.
ln a demonstration that is
bringing the textbook establishment
to Annageddon, Saxon has revealed
that students who U8e his own text·
book outscored oth~rs who U8ed the
conventional iextbooks by 159 per;

cent in -20 Okl8homa schools tested.
Moreover, second-year algebra
students were bested by Saxon's fir..
st·year algebra students when tested
in those fields !hey had both studied;
byanastonlshlni!200percent.
In 1980, Saxon mortgaged his
holll!e to produce hi8 textboolt (the
publishers had refused him). It will
sweep the country. By the end of this
year, he will have finished his
second-year textbook. It will predle!ably do the same. H you care about
· mathematical literacy, get those
books and bring them to the attention of your school board. They
are: Algebra I, and Algebnl n. '

ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY

Sin taxes: an easy
way out of a bind
Around state legislatures, tobacco and liquor taxes ellen are called sin
taxes, which helps to explain why they are such Inviting sources when
governments need more revenue.
Taxing people who smoke and drink can be an easy way out of a budget
bind.
In Congress, the terminology Is more refined. At least It usually Is.
"I think we act like state legislators when we sit around here trying to
find the easiest thing to tax In order to raise money," said Sen. David F.
Durenberger, R·Minn., as the Senate debated the $99 bllllon, three-year
tax lhcrease that now awaits House action.
He noted that excise taxes, such as those on cigarettes, are among the
revenue sources President Reagan envisions leaving to state and local
governments as part of his program to shift some federal programs to
them.
One of the things that would be taxed more under the Sinate bill Is
clgaretles, 16 cents a package Instead of the 8 cents that has been the
federal take for ll years now. But raising It wasn't easy. The cigarette tax,
which Is supposed to bring In an additional $5 bUllon over the tllree-year
perkld, could have been the undoing r1 the whole bill.
The tax bUI passed 0047 after two tobacco state senators who had said no

on the first call of the roll switched their votes to support the big package of
tax Increases. Without those reversals, the bUI would have been rejected,
494, cigarette tax and all.
So the tobacco IndUstry Is not at all pleased with Republican Sens. Jesse
Helms and John East of North Carolina, normally two of Its leadlnll' allies
In Congress.
Uquor apparently was quicker to put Its Washington lobby on guard
againSt an Increase In the federal excise tax on alcoholic beverllies. There
was no Increase In liquor taxes, which added to the rancor cl the debate.
Tobacco state senators lost every vote until Helms propoaed a com·
promise, allowing the cigarette tax to revert to the current !kent level on
Oct. 1, 1985.
That was approved, although Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D·Mo., said the
modlflclatlon was from outrlght greed lo petty thievery.
East took olfense at such rhetoric, saying he was sometimes tempted to
launch "a Vl!lldetta against the ll!!er Industry," whtch Is big In St. Louis.
"The whOle world knows beer Is the beverage of modentlon,'' Eagleton
countered. "Remember what made this country what It Is today. Rednecks, white sox and Blue Ribbon beer."

The price illusion
A!l measured by the federal government, consumer price Inflation has

been falling persistently - from 12.4 percent In 1980 to 8.9 percent last year
to 5.1 percent In the first six months of 1982.
Good news, yes, but troubling too. If price Increases really have been
tapering oft, why haven't retall sales picked up and why haven't Interest
rates !allen, as you mlibt expect from a decline In Inflation?
Before you answer, please realize that several dozen explanations have
been of1ered In congressional testimony, academic papers, Political polemics and business analyses, and at least 100 times that number In tavern
arguments and oth~r forums were such matters Ill"! considered.
Rarely, however, Is an analysis as clearly stated as It Is by Albert
Sindlinger, consumer researcher and economic forecaster. Sales lack zip
and Interest rates stay high, he says, because tnnation persists.
No matter what the numbers say, "Inflation lives," said Sindlinger,
whose !lrm, based In Media, Pa., keeps In almost constant ·touch with
American. by telephone, sounding out their views, the state of their flnan·
ces, the prices they pay, the things they buy- and do not buy.
Sindlinger claims the CPI shows a low overall Inflation rate because
prices of discretionary Items have Indeed dropped. Bu't, he said, many of
these Items aren't being sold -and so, aren't cost-of-living Items.
Such as automobUes. he said. There was no way cars could be sold In
great numbers without of1erlng' rebates, said Sindlinger. And for a brief
time, those temporary rebates helped lower the Index.
"Most ))ouseholds aren't lucky enough to have expenses concentrated In
discretionary categories," he said. "Utility bills, services, medical care,
housing expenses are running double-digit or close to it."
Add In taxes, "which remain a burden even with the Income tax cut,"
and you find that the things people must pay for, that they cannot avoid
buying or using, are running far above the CPI, said Sindlinger.
The key to understanding, said Sindlinger, Is that people aren't buying
the discretionary Items, which causes their prices to drop, but they are
buying the high-cost Items because they have no other choice.
Historically, the spread between Inflation and Interest rates has been
about 3 percent to 5 percent. That Is, It Inflation lsat5, thenprlmeml&amp;htbe
around 8 or so, making the "true" lilterest rate about 3 percent.
"People with money to lend don't beneve the figures,'' he said. ''TheY
know from their own experience what their costs are."
He contends thatthosewhohellevetheCPIIs a true refiectlon of Inflation
are looking at a rainbow. From a distance the rainbow looks real, salq
Sindlinger. But lend~rs get up close and take a hard look. "They know It's
an Uluslon." he said.
"Do you think &amp;!lY lender would be dumb enough to malnWn a lO.polnt
spread just to be ornery?" he asked.

. HOUSTON (AP) - Houston Aspitcher Nolan Ryan, Who has
belin flln&amp;lnll' fastballs at 90-plul
mph since he was a sophomore Ill
high school, figured he would be
tending to his ranching buslDess
and dabbling In banldllg In nearby
Alvin by his 35th birthday.
. · Fastball pltchi!l"s past ll years cl
aae are rare In major lellillt baseball and most OIJPOIIIng bitters and
manaaers agree Ryan Is one of the
ti'QI

rarest.

The two gentlemen are teJno
peramental clones. U It ever occurred to Hyman Rlckover that IJe
was wrong about anything, one must
assume he lay down untiliJe got over
it. It is so with John Saxon, a
graduate of West Point, a decorated
veteran, a fonner test pilot, who
when he retired from the military,
took up the teaching of al~ebra .

nat!

STANDING
PINE TIMBER

a

Amounts granted were higher In
the other states, but stll! below·the
Ohio figure. Michigan cominisslol)·
ers approved 56.9 percent of the total sought, whtle In Pennsylvania
the amount was 61.6 percent and In
Indiana 77.8 percent.
"Appointed commissioners In
the same region can come up with
lower rates," Spratley said.
He offered those flgilres to dem·
onstrate that a state need not abandon appointed commissions · In
favor of electing members of such
panels In an attempt to cap soaring
utUity costs.
Spratley opposes a proposed con·
stitutlonal amendment, expected to
be on the November · ballot, that
would require PUCO members to
be elected.

He favors a drive ampng consumer groups•for ~latlve reform
of iaws which govern what ~an tie
Included In a utUity' s rate base, the
rate ot return they may earn and
other factors.
Spratley said the climate 1s right
for seeking adoption of reform
measul"('S.
"I think we have the public
aroused," he said. "I think the Issue
Is looming as big as taxes."
· Spratley outlined the reason for
lhlit Interest In a study which
showed Ohioans were hit by Increases In average costs for utUity
services during the last year of IJe.
tween 17.? percent and3L5percenl
He called the Increased costs
"staggering ... devastating." .
And more may be on the way,
especially for telephone customers.
"Telephone costs have Increased

from 11.1 percent In Cleveland to 17
percent In Youngstown. These are.
the largest Increases recorded for
Ohio's telephone ll)dustry In the last
five years," Spratley said.
But stm to be decided are two
Ohio Bell rate cases. seeking $2!10
mllllon In hill'her rates.
Not only have Ohio commission·
ers approved a higher percentqe
of utUlty rate requests than sui'
rounding states, there are more
new requests pending In Ohio this
y(!ar.
,
Consumers' counsel reports
pegged the number of C8$es pendIng in Ohio as of May 1982 at 13,
worth $1.2 billion If approved.
Pennsylvania ranked second,
with nine cases seeking a total of
$840 mllJlon. Four pending cases,ln
Kentucky are worth only $105
mUllon.

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CHOICE.

Psychol~gical bagga~
. . . . e---:--___
.
A_rt_Buc_h_
-wa_;_.ld
"This is ridiculous," said Tabash,
as he read The New York 'rimes on
the beach. "It BBys here that the
toughest time for couples is when
!hey go on vacation• .The rea{!On
seems to be· that the couple is
together for an uninterrupted block
of time. The huband and wife have
fantaales of what It will be like to be
together, and many times these fllntaB!es don't C!JIIIe true, SO' they get
angry and pick fights with each
other over Uttle thlnga. One doctor in
the
article
calls
it
'paychologicalbaggage.'"
fenton laughed. "Barbara and I
don't feel that way.':
Fenton's wife BBt up angrily and
said, "My name Isn't Barbara. It's
Bernice.''
·
"Barbara - Bernice, what's the
. big ~eal?" Fenton asked. .
"After 11 yean cl marriage you
could get my IIIIIJII rlglt.'' .
"Now you're getting picky," Fenton said. ~'Barbara Ia my secretary,

and every once In a while I get !hem "You can't have a good time if you because you~re having a guilt trip
mixed up," he explained to the rest have no idea what they're doing in about your parents."
of u.s."
the shop while you're away. , My
"Keep reading, Tabash," I told
"It's an honest mistake," I
clients don't pay me to sit on the him. "I think you're ~king 0!11'
agreed. "A guy can't remember his beach all day long. I notice you call SUIIUDer."
wife's name ALL the . time. That's the house-sitters every day.~ '
Tabash said, "The arti~le says
why lal)'ays call mine 'Honey.'" ·
"That's different. It's my house, !hey did a study at the University c1
"What else does !he article say?" andiftheydon'thearfrommedaily, Minnesota and ·found more couples
Fenton wanted to know.
!hey'U think I don't care wh!lt they fought with each other during the
Tabash referred to his pall!lr. do to the plac;e," Astrid retorted.
SUIIUDer than at any otl)er time in
Dobler turned to all o( ·u. ','J the Ye~~r.''
,
"People who take vacations are full
of guilt. They feel guilty about not
couldn't go on vacation if. I didn't
"It figures,'' I BBid. "That'.a when
wprking. They feel guilty 'about ·c!Mick in with ~ office. One lousy they're . atuck with each other's
taking a vacation their pal'l)nta can't call ·a day doesn't make you a neuroses for the longest period c1
. · time• "
~ •
afford. Gliilt leads to dlahannony in workaholic. ••
•
t
••
the couple- and ultimately ·~polls
"You've never known how to take
"What n'"'roses?" my wife wan!heir vacation.'' · .
·
a vacatiOJi, . because your parentS ted to know. , . ,
.
,
"I don't feel guilty about not never took one," Astrid Said. '
"I'm not talking abOut ul," •I said."·
"They never had the money to I'Beaides I thought you were •
working," said Dobler. "I'm enjoying every moment of it."
take one," Dobler shouted.
sleeping."
•
"Rigllt n~ they're ~ell in an · Sliethrewabluefiahatme.
•
"Then why a~"t you on the phone to ·
~office every ~y?1' Astrid Dobler
"What am I supposed to do "With
lkpartmentin Brooklyn all sununer.
· It glvea me heartburn every time I this?'.' I sputtered.
asked.
'
."Because I have to know what is • tl'iink about it."
· ·
"Stuff · it in your peychologica]
going on," Dobler replied ·bitterly. • .Astrid said, "I'm not resJionsjble baggage."
~

'

Gallon

Kem.
INtERIOR LATEX•

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Elich. cellon. 88-840t-Mt4

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

. I!Xi.IRIOR LATEX•

Today in history
' 1'oday Is Wednesday, July 28, the~ day of 1982. Thereare156days
·
left In ihe year.
. Today' s hlghli&amp;ht In history:
.
On July 28, 191'- World War I !Jeian when Austrla·HIIIIPI'Y declared

Into suceess this season. He lost his
first four decisions when neither his
fast ball nor his curve was working.
But he's won six of his last seven
starts and fanned 10 or more bat·
ters In six of hi&lt; last eight o,utlngs.
Ryan got an Insight Into h1s fu·
ture as a 15-year-old schoolboy at
Alvin when a scout told him he had
a major league fastball .
"!didn't start out to be a fastball
pitcher, It was just the talent that
was given to me," Ryan said. "It's
just like a power hitter. he didn't
start out to hit home runs. It was
just the talent that was given oo
him. "
Ryan's talent has led him to five
career no-hitters and a string of re-

Ryan couldn 't list them he tried.
rJco~rds~~too~n~u~m~e~riou~s~to~m~e~n~tl~on~.!~~~~~~~~~~~

r;========;;;;j

Ohio's PUCO had highest approval rate

It was the highest percentage approved by uWty commissioners of
any of the states which surround
Ohio.
UtUity regulatOrs In Kentucky,
for example, granted just 47.7 percent of the amount requested dur·
lng the same perbl." In West
VIrginia, the figure was 5:1.2
percent.

Ryan threw 123 pitches Tuesday
night, 78 for strikes and was more
effective as .the game progressed.
His fastball was clocked at 94 mph
early In the game and It was still
humming In at 92 mph In the ninth
Inning.
Swaggering over to h1s dressing
cubicle after a performance, Ryan
will predictably give credit to his
curve ball for his success, talking
slowly In his Texas drawl.
"I am a lot more effective when I

Salisbury gals win two games

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Pub- ·
·lie utility regulators In Ohio and Its
border states are all appointed, not
elected. But ,there Is a wide difference In the way those panels react
to utll!ty rate hike requests.
Consumers' Counsel Wllllam A.
Spratley BaY/' the Public Utilities
Commlssk&gt;n •of Ohio granted 81.1
percent of the rate Increases requested by natural gas, electrlclty
and telephone companies Iii 1981.

any pitcher who could throw with
his velocity at the same age," VIr·
'oon said. "After the first Inning tonight he was as consistent as he
could be.''

"I 'think we should have a different leaglie for that gily to play In,"
Clnclmlatl Manaier Russ Nixon
saki after Ryan won his 200th game
,;, · RYAN
.
- Houstoo Astral' plldler Noju Ryu deltren
In a· J,-2 Houston victory Tuesday
o· the pitch In the ninth Ianing of the Astral' 1-! wiD over the Cilldlulallflecla
nlibt. "We ran Into a buzz saw
~esday night In the Astrodome. Ryautruelt out U ba~n ftll'GIIIe to
· didn't weT" .
· his 200th career victory on the mound. IAP Laserpbote).
newsmen,whohavelongagomemmy curve ball over,'' he'Usay to
Ryan, who struck out 13 Clncln· get
batters, said hethoughtlmvle- ·orlzed the line.
Despite the repetition, it Is true.
torles would be out of his reach.
hopping and
IJI Ryan's case, batters peer out When his fast
Ryan
toward the pitcher's mound ll(lth a h1s curve Is hitting
Is devastating.
twlilge of fear .
Salisbury raised ,its already line
Ryan, 11·9, Is turning disaster
In Junior girls' softbaU action
Ryan has prepared well for h1s
record
.to 11-3 against Racine, 18-5.
savsbury claimed two big wins, a 2().
eventual
from
baseball.
1~route of Harrisonville and an 111-5 Susan Jones agaln"picked up the vieHe owns retirement
two ranches
and
during
tory,
while
Crystal
Hill
suffel'ed
the
tombing of Racine.
the · past Cllf-season entered the
WANTED TO BUY
Against Harrisonville Susan Jones loss.
banking ~· In Alvin.
Salisbury hitters were Marla
picked up the win with seven
But a pastoral retirement attepdMusser
with a triple and two aingles, lng his catqe apparently will have
strikeouts and two walks.
Salisbury hitters were Maria Carla King a home run and single, to walt while longer.
\
Musser with a single, a triple and and Trish Davis, Jennifer Coueh;·c
Ryan has 3,401 career strikeouts.
home run ; Rhonda Zirkle and Mary Rhonda Zirkle and Lynn Chase,"each 107 shy of Johnson's 3.ro8 record,
McARTHUR WMBER
Miller with two singles each, Carla singled twice. Sue Parsons, Tamrni . 143 l~strlkeout·plus games and 24
&amp; POST CO.
King a home run and single, Sue Eblin and Susan Jones each singled. . other major league records, plus
Call
Toll
Free in Ohio
For
Racine
Brlgett
Bing,
T.
AnP;il'sons, ·Jennifer Couch three
the admiration of Astros Manager
1·800-282·2166
derson
and
C.
HUI
each
sin~led.
sihgles ea'ch and Trish Davis 'a
BID Vlrdon.
.Out of State Call
single.
"It's very rare, I CBII't remember
614-596-5880
~

What he discovered shocked him.
And anyone who shocks John Saxon
should be prepared to take the consequences. ije found himself
surrounded by a generation of
algebraic Illiterates. The math
scores were going down, down,
down ; and there was no obvious
reason why. Americans had not lost
!heir basic mecha!rical intelligence,

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J UJO

Ryan fans 13 in 3-2 victory

It Is so in the world of algebra
teaching. Pennlt me to introduce
you to John Saxon, a ~year-old
mathematics teacher who practices
in Oscar Rose Junior College, in a
suburb of Oklahoma City, Okla. He
will probably figure as prominently
in the history cl mathematical
pedagogy as Hyman Rlckover in .the
history of the development of
nuclear submarines- and for much
the same reason.

is~ IW!I. nut pt"rMoulitW,. .

since jollilng the Astros before the bottom or the first when Dickie
Thon slngl~ pH loser Charlie Lei·
198&gt; season.
The effort also extended Ryan's brandt, 3-6, stole second and scored
,
major league record of career on Tony Scott's double.
Scott. who singled and went to
games wtth 10 or more strikeouts to
143. Ryan has reached double !lg· third on a stolen base and Trevino's
ures In strikeouts eight times this throwing error In the third Inning,
scored on a double by Knight to
season.
After allowing five hits the first make It 2·1.
Cincinnati tied the game 2·2 in the
five Innings, the Astros righthander
setlled down to retire the last 14 top of the fourth when Paul Householder singled and Oester doubled.
Reds, eight by strikeouts. Ryan's
fast ball was clocked by radar as . - - - - - - - - - - - - fast as 94 mph and was stlll hitting
92 mph In the ninth Inning.
Ryan had his troubles In the first
Inning, giving up an unearned run
as the result of his own error. Eddie
MUner walked and went to second
531 JACKSON PIKE ·RI . 35 WEST
on Ryan's wUd pickoff throw, scorPhoN 448- ·52-4
Ing on Cesar Cedeno's double.
SAROAIN WATINEfS 011 SAT. $UN
Houston matched the run In the
ALL SEATS JUST J 1.00

Dan Driessen, too late to catch
Puhl.
.
Driessen whipped the ball to the
plate, but catcher Alex Trevino had
J10 chllnce at the sliding Knight.
· "I've done that all my lite,"
l(Dight said. "The other team has
• only messed up .two Urnes In that
si)Uatlon, and I've scored both
times. I know lftheydon'tmakethe
play at first, I'm going to score."
Knlll'bt also gained some per·
sonal s,atlsfac.tlon In beating his
former teammates. "It's a big
thing for me, even though our team
18 not playing well," Knight said.
"You-like to beat the team you
came !rom.''
.
Ryan, 11·9, held the Reds In
check, tossing a five-hitter and
strlkiiig out 13, the highest whiff total for him since 1979 and h1s best

Second A"venue

DON &amp; EDNA WILSON-OWNERS

PH."2-5515

�Sentinel

Ohio

'

Brav~s sweep second place Padres
By A880Clllled Press
Atlanta second baseman Glenn
Hubbard was hurting, but not
enough to stay out of the second
game of a crucial doubleheader
with the San Diego Padres.
"!had to talk to him a little," said
Hubbard of Atlanta Manager Joe
Torre, who had not listed his second
baseman In the lineup alter a slight
muscle pull In Tuesday night's 9-2
opening-game victory over the
Padres.
It obviously didn't hurt him
enough, though, to keep him [rom
hitting a tw&lt;rrun homer In the lOth
Inning to provide the Braves with
an 8-1i victory and a sweep of the
doubleheader. The two victories
boosted Atlanta's lead over the Padres In the National League West to
seven games, their ·biggest of the
season.
Dale Murphy, who had a homer
for the Braves In each game to
boost his major league leadership
to 26, helped set the stage for Hubbard's winning hit In the second
game when he reached above the
center-field fence to rob Ruppert
Jones of a tw&lt;rrun homer In the top
of the lOth.
Murphy belted a tw&lt;rrun homer
and Bob Walk hurled a five-hitter to
help the Braves wtn the opener.
Murphy's homer off Tim Lollar, 105, came In the third Inning following
a walk to Hubbard.
Walk, 9-7, also had two hits, Including an RBI double In the fifth
when Atlanta also scored three
runs. He walked tlve and struck out
·
two.
In the nightcap, plnch-hltter

Jerry Royster opened the Atlanta
lOth with walk off Gary Lucas,
:J. 7, and following a sacrltlce by Rafael Ramire-z, Hubbard drilled his
seventh homer.
Expos 4, Cub8 3
Gary Carter· s three-run homer in
the first inning powered Montreal
over Chicago. Carter's 21st homer
came off Ra ndy Martz, 4-7, after
Andre Dawson and AI Oliver had
singled. The Expos scored their
eventual winning run in the second
on Tim Raines' RBI single.
Steve Rogers, !he major leagues'
earned run leader wllh a 2.13 mark
going into the game, had a shaky
start but posted his 13th victory
against only four losses. Rogers
gave up slx hits and two runs in the
first three Innings a nd then retired
15 in a row before Bump Wills
doubled In the eighth. Wills eventually scored on Leon Durham' s
double.
Cardinals 9, Meta 4
Darrell Porter homered, doubled
and singled to lead St. Louis over
New York. Porter' s tw&lt;r run hDmer, his sixth of the season and first
since June 11, keyed a 13-hit attack
as the Cardinals extended their
winning streak to five games.
Clinging to a 4-3 lead, the Cardinals erupted for five runs In the
slxth to put the game away. Porter's homer off Terry Leach, the
third of five New York pitchers,
capped the rally.
Porter. who had been booed regularly bY Busch Stadium crowds
while in the throes of an extended
slump, was accorded a standing
ovation following his homer:

a

Three Tigers ejected
By Associated Press
For It's one ball. two balls, no
strlkes ... and you're out of the old
ball game.
Unfortunately, that variation of
the traditional baseball ditty will
never make the Detroit Tigers' hit
parade.
New York was cllnglng to a 5-&lt;1
lead over the Tigers Tuesday night
when Jerry Mumphrey, who
singled ahead of Oscar Gamble's
home run In the tlrst Inning and hit
a three-run homer In the fourth,
opened the Yankees' seventh with a
double. Gamble walked, Dave Win·
!leld sacrl!lced and an Intentional
walk to Gralg Nettles loaded the
bases.
The first pitch from Jack Morrts
to Rick Cerone was a ball and, according to umpire Mark Johnson,
so was the next one. Catcher Lance
Parrish had a different opinion and
was asked to mind .his own business
- ott the premises. One out.
"He was was trying to show me
up," Johnson said. "He ripped his
mask off and got in mY face over
balls and strlkes. It he had stayed
down, we could have had a good

•

talk about II."
Morris charged off the mound
and eventually was ejected for
kicking dirt at second base umpire
Dave Phillips, who had joined the
discussion group. Two out.
"I ejected him for his actions
away from the mound," Phillips
said. "! tried to get him back to the
mound and he lost his cool and used
bad language and kicked the dirt
and refused to go back to the
mound. You like to keep a pitcher
In, but we couldn't keep him ln."
That brought Manager Sparky
Anderson rushing from the dugout
and ... three out, agaln courtesy of
Johnson.
New York, however, still had
only one out. When play resumed,
Cerone hit a sacrl!lce tly off Dave
Toblk to producewbat tutnectout to
he the winning run as the Yankees
held· on to win 6-5.
In other American League action, the Milwaukee Brewers
trounced the Texas Rangers 8-2,
the Toronto Blue Jays downed the
Boston Red Sox 3-1, the California
Angels njpped the Oakland A's 8-7
In 13 Innings, the Kansas City Roy-

Pirates 4, PhWies 0
Larry Mc Williams and Rod
Scurry combined on a three- hitter
and Jason Thompson knocked in
two runs to lead Pittsburgh oVer
Philadelphi a.
McWilliams, 7-4 this season and
5-1 s ince coming to the Pirates from
Atlanta In a trade on June 29, retired the first 11 Phlllles and didn't
a llow a hit until Gary 'Matthews's
one-out single in the seventh Inning.
McWilliams struck out a careerhigh 10 batters and walked two In
seven innings.
Philadelphia second baseman
Ma nny Trillo set a major league
record for consecutive chances
without a n error . Trillo handled his
459th straight errorless chance In
the seventh inning to break the
mark set by Baltimore's Jerry
Adair in 1964-1965. TrUJo also
pla yed in his 86th consecutive game
without a n error to break the NL
record set by Ken BosweU of the
New York Mets In the 1970 season.
• Dodgers 7, Giants 3
Right-hander Joe Beckwith, recalled from the minors last week,
didn't allow a hit in 52-3 Innings of
relief and Ron Cey belted a two-run
homer as Los Angeles beat San
Francisco.
Beckwith, 1-0, took over for star·
ter Vicente Homo In the second Inning alter Romo left the game with
a knee injury. Beckwith faced 18
batters, retiring 17 before leaving
for a pinch-hitter In the seventh.
Steve. Garvey drilled three hits
and knocked In twD runs for the
Dodgers.

6-5 defeat
als whipped the Cleveland Indians
8-1, the Baltimore Orioles shaded
the Chicago White Sox 5-3 and the
Seattle Mariners outslugged the
Minnesota Twins 9-7.
The home runs by Gamble and
Mumphrey gave the Yankees a 5-0
lead, but Detroit chased Roger Er·
lckson with four runs In the fifth,
Including Larry Herndon's tw&lt;rrun
single and RBI · hits by Lou Whl·
taker and Mike Ivie. The Tigers
scored their final rwi In the eighth
on Alan Trammell's double and a
single by Whitaker, but it was too
little and too late.
Royals 8, Indians 1
Lee May and George Brett hit
tw&lt;rrun homers as Kansas City
heat Cleveland for the seventh Ume
In eight meetings this season. Dave
Frost, making his first appearance
since coming off the disabled list,
gave up one run and seven hits in
five Innings, before Mike Armstrong and Dan Quisenberry finIshed up.

ScorebOard
Majol'8

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53

SlUR£ HOURS:
Mon •.sat. 8 am·lO pm

5
11 a;,
17Y,

.615

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Sunday 10 am-10 pm

9

.475 13 ~
.dl 17
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POMEROY·, 0.

Mmtre&amp;l 4, Olkaro 3
Atlanta s.s,· San LMeao 2-6, 2nd 1ame 10

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Houstor! 3, Clncln.Mtl 2
La. Aftcelel?, San Francl3c() 3
W......,..aGamM
MontiNI (G.&amp;llkUor! 7-81 •• Chlcqo
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PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH JULY 31, 1982

HAWAII

F'tllladetptda jChrlatmam Ml at PUt.

burp (Rbotien 6.81 , (n)

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Pl.ttJblrafl at NeW York. (II)
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marker whtch stales "YOU OUAUF'Y FOR GRANO
PRIZE DRAWING. II you obtam one ot these
markers you are elliJible to enter the Grand Prize
Drawtng s and the chance to w1n one ot s•• lnps kx
two to Hawau or $3.000 c~ Two Grand Prize
Drawings will be httld All val1d entnes received by
May 27. 1982 w11t be ehg1ble for the first drawtng on
May 28. 1982. Three Grand Pnzos will be g•ven
away at this time AU vahd entfles recetved withtn 14
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_

lloolon
Bolt .....

A CASE IN POINT - Detroit Tigers' manager
Sparky Anderson Is held by umpire Greg Kosc as he
shoves a finger at rookie umpire Mark Johnson while
arguing durtng Tuesday's game with the New York
Yankee!i at Yankee Stadium, Anderson, who was

T&lt;&gt;ootA&gt;

"""""''

Summer basketball league unde..w . -..
'

•

MIDDLEPORt- A newly fonned
swruner basketballleage is starting
to thrive Monday through Thursday
nights at General Hartinger Park
here in Middleport.
Adults can take part in the Senior
League which plays on Mondays and
Thursdays, while local youth take
part in the Junior League· on
Tuesdays and Wednesdays of each
week.
There are currently six learns in
both the Senior and Junior leagues.
According to program coordinator
Rusty Bookman, "The Senior league
is doing very well, while !he Junior
league is beginning to gel stronger
now that the kids involved with
baseball are ending their season."
"Every participant in both the
adult and youth lea~ues reeeives a
shirt that bears a spensor's name.
Sponsors include Th.e Village
Pharmacy, Brogan-Warner Insurance, Smith-Nelson, KC's Club,
· Print. in
Cleland Realty, and
the adult league.

('l ~ ·l1Hrh1

sponsors are &amp;'ars in Pnmerny,
Powell's, Central Trust, General
Tire, Custom Print, and DowningChilds Agency.
AI the end nf regular season play a
lournament will be held for the
teams in the league. Below is a Jist of
team records, players, and
averages:

16 1: Jtorry Mt•Kituw~· I 21.

Jut•y Hal l 121.
Pu"·en:. jO.ll

•

Sll'wart ( 141 : Stcvt· Cassd l i 12 1;.. l.ukl•
Bunll'lh• 16 I; H1•H lh Rklm •ond 141 .
J.~·s l t· t

CentrHI TruHI 10.11
Dm t Bt&gt;ckt•r 1111 : SllSann Dill'lt•ll tiOl : P. J.
c:i bhs/61.
Custum Print IG-1)
Rtd H&lt;trriSPII 1101 : Chris lk't·h •r j61 : Mikt·
s,~u tl w r u 161: Cha:&gt;t' Clt'lhuuJ 12).

Adull (Aoagut
\'lllape:r Pharmat•y 14-0 t
B. Dtii.Jsun 116.31 ; R. B1H1kllla ll tl!i . ~l : H.
Ft 'O!USIIIl I 12.61 : R. De~~:ll'r 112.51 :· R. Gilkt·y t9 1:
Fl. Mcllt•IIIS.Sl.
Cleland Rtalty ll-1 1
C:t•tw Cult • 12UI; C. Bntul'r 1161: M. M11n·1
I 13.51 : Gn·}! Cult• f'l.51: G. Taylor t61 .
·

The Daily Sentinel

Publ illhi n~ Compa ny · Multimetlbt, l~l'.,
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769, 992·2156. St!t:ont.J clii!!S
poslu~t! pctidat Po1nt&gt;rtly, Ohio.
'

Member: The Associall'd Prt.'S.'l. Inlant.l Oai.
ly Prt!!I.S As!iOClation untl l~ Americ~:~n

New~iJM!per Publiahtr~ AasuclaUon, N11tionaJ
Atlvertisin!;! Repre se nto~~tiv e, Brlln~fm
Ne~~per Sal~~. 733 Third Avt:nue,

rvw

York, N~w Yllrk 10017.

~

.
to The DAily

POSTMASTER : Send addre~
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio45789.

Gn&gt;~

&amp;•t:kcr Ill) ; Rusty Bnllkll~&lt;~n IIS.SJ: Dux.h·
Will terN114.3l,
·

SUBSCRIM'ION RATES

Juninr Lea~ue

By Cllrril'r or Motor Route

Ouwnlni(.Chi\dji 11-01
Jt·ff HtHd 1201; Jdf Nt·I!Slm/ 181 ; Eddit· tn~t 1k :;

Ont• w~l'k . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... Sl.OO
One Month .. , . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . .. .. $4.10

Ont• Vc1:1r .
:

.. SiNCiE OOPV .

. .. S52.M

PRICES

Dllil y .

. ... .. 15 Cent.-;

Sull.~ rribt•rs nut tlcs i r in~ tu

.OOWNI_~G-CHILDS
INSURANCE .
AGENCY

pay the carrit!r
lllCIY rcm1t 111 atlvllnl'e dirL't'l ln Tlw l&gt;.!iil)'
&amp;mtint•l un &lt;t 3, 6 m· 12 month bilsi:s. Crt.'llit
will bt· l.!ivcn carricr l'&lt;:4l'h month.
Ntl Hub&amp;·dplinn.'! by mt~il pt.onnith.'t.l in towll.'i
wllt.n' hnn1c l'a rrit•r scrvlt'c isavaii.Yblc.

Mllwaukee 8, Teo~ Z

Calll:)mla 8. Oak.lan4 7
Sea«le9 . ~4

Mlnrtei(J(a·~·Gunm
tCuUJlo 5-7) at Sean~ !Per·
ry &amp;-8) , In I
Ttronto (SUeb 1().10) at Boltm (Hunt
3-41. (II)
Chlcqo 10otsm l-:101 at BaltimorE'
(McGrepw 11·71. tn)
Karwu Ctry (Spllnm"tr 7~1 at Cleveland
(Sutdttfe 7-CI, (n)
Dil'lrolt (Pastmdt: 3-JJ at New York
(lbtw..,. &amp;.51 . (nl
Mltwauker (McClure 1-3) al Telw

--·-

(Keoogtl 7·14) •t California

btcm at CNcqp, (nl
Baltlmcn at Kansas City, lnl
Setttlil! at CalllonU, (nl

MlMesocl:
Oakland,
OnlY _at_
.... (n)

· Transactions
BASIU!.'TIIALL
Nll&amp;ktal Bulletball A•och1tlon

WASHINGTON

BULLETS-

Sipecl
Sttve l.lnpnfelter, forward .

FOOTB.U.L
NalloMI Football Leape

BUFFALO

BILLS-Rfl~ued H~rb Men.·
tlardt, kicker, and Jim Budness, linebacker.
GREEN BAY PACKERS-ACQ\IIred An·
relo Fields! otren•tve tacllh!, trom the
HoUston 01 era ror a third· n&gt;und dralt
choice In 1983.
HOUSTON OJLER$-Cut Robert DavIs
and Wet Phillips, tll(ht ends: Randy Her·
tel. quarterback; Ken Jacll1on, r unatn11:
back: Cui McGee, Kurt Phomix. and
Todd Volkart. linebackers; and Walt ~&gt; r
Dt.nlela, wt!ie recelv~r .
NEW YORK JETs-Waived lAnce Siseo, UJhl end.

BATTING 1210 at batJ ~ W. Wlllon. KaJI·
. . City, .30: Yount, MllwauW. .:o6:
Hrbek, Mblnesota. .331; Harrah, Ckow-

. 15'1.48
Outsidt' Ohiu

13 w~·t•k .~ . . . ........ .
26 Wt•t•k..~ .. .
52 Wt~k:; ... .

PH. 992-2342

. . $Ui.2l
... . . $29.64
. ' . t56.21

Round Steak ......
.
'
.
$ 29
Ground Beef.......L~
49
Ground Chuck... !';~.
L:.-•••

.••

GRADE AWHOLE FRYERS
BUCKET CUBE STEAK
FRENCH CITY WIENERS
I

director.

-:!S'Wt•t·k:; . . .

52 Wt'l'ks . ..

$ 99

COLLEGE

.Leadel'8

. $27,.10

USDA CHOICE

MISSOURI-Named Steve Miller assist·
ant football coach.
WAGNER..!. N•med Mark Collins assist ·
an't football coach and anLitant athletic

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lruJid~ Ohlu
13 Wt!ck.~ ... .. ...... , ... '., ... ... . $14:04
. . . . . . . . ..

• •100 • •10 • •s ••z

-·-

Oeveland at Mllw•ukee. tnt

Publisht.&gt;d e\lcry 11ftemoon, Mondlly throol!h
F'rh.IHy, Ill Ctlu rt Slrt!el, by the Ohitl V11llt·y

Gt~m· Cuh ~ 12UI; Phil H11_rrist1n 118.5) ; Bub
Ashlt!)' f17.51 ; KL'Vi nS11 1i(h 116.81 : Brill Dud:~un
fiCI.JI; Cl1ip BrauL•r fl61 ; VatU!hn Smilh 1161 :

Kenl~y

s.at~ 5, Chk:aeo 3
Kansas CIIY &amp; Develand l

(Tanana ,..101, 1n1

IUSPS IU.9101
~ DM.slon ofMultlmeilll,lnr.

•

115 N. 2nd Ave.
Mi~~l,port, OH.

7'
9
Ill\\

IIIIQntl Inc\

Sd1«1ulild lemunatllt1 data ot lh!S promohon 1! Jut~ 18. 1Qr82,
hclweY&amp;f Fabulous Fottune ot ?rttes othc!SIItj! ends when IN
g.ame t!dl.ets are ~·at nbutl'd

Toronto l. Bostcrt 1

Olk1and

B. Ashlt•y 117.51: G. &amp;'l·kcr fl6 1: D. Walkr s
t14.31; C. Jut.h:c 191 .
Brug11n-Warner 11-31
S. Rllnth tlph 1131; M. Meadows fl2.31 ; N.
Knichl I 11.81 : S. J.ilt l!• I 1J .J I: R. Built'}' 1 9.J 1.
KC'toCiubiJ.3J
P. Hurrbwn 118.51: T. W~:~lt crs 1121 : J . Sandt ·r.~
t:i.61; D. fifL' I91.
Quality Print 11-31
K, Smilh 116.81 ; V. Smith 0 61; R. fi'I' ~ U.~u n 1 13 1.

1121 : Jctr St llnt· 16J: r~~~~~ Ht ~ ttl u '·
Sea no l l-01
F.d Kildw11
I; Mik1· Frash I

.511
....
.471

(Zahrl1().5 ), (n)

SmllJt.N.-ltion 12-21

Leading Sc:urtrw

Min-

51 ·

.sn

2
6

0001 v•rv Oflpen&lt;11ng 011 trte number ot G&lt;lme TICkets you
OOI&amp;Ifl Tl'le n'OI&amp; 'fOU cottect. tlltt t:leM&amp;r fOUl C:tlanctl ot
wtr'lnlng Odd's to OOiaJfl Grard Pnze Oraw1ng mark&amp;!' and QUalify
for draw11'1g(sl are I m 52 Odds to ww Grand Pnze [)'aWinQ(I)
wtl Oeoend on the numbef oJ Ollal~~&amp;rs
Fabulous F0&lt;1ur.e ol Prtles Seroea IW'-452 '' be'"'jl J)l•yed 111
I 59 stOleS located Ill Qtio:;J. IIIOflnl. M CI\IQ&amp;A. \lif91A11 . Wut

New York 6. DetraU 5

G~nt~ rul Tfrt' 11-GI

Hut'}' .Easun fZ81 : Stlawn Gibbs 1161 \ Ti1 11

C~ts.~ t ·ll1 6l;

~-

Ooltllllld

I!

....

5I tJ
.561
SJtJ.!il521
~
47
.110
5
Sl t8
.510
5
41 :ill
.Ill) 15
.11 57 . .«o Ci 'f.t
:w m .3&amp;3 21 y,

ChJcogo
Seattl&lt;

-r....

-

.sn

f1

46

Kansas C1ty

.

.!113

40
II

...."'........_

New York
a.v.Jand

'tossed out of the game, was upset after his battery 'of
pitcher Jack Morris and catcher Lance Parrish were
ejected by home plate ump Johns9n over Johnsoq's
ball call on Yanks' Rich Cerone with the bases loaded.
Yauks won 11-5. (AP Laserphoto),
'

08·

"56
!!3

CASH

Simply punch out the pertoral od socttons on the
game ticket to reveal lour game matkers to play on
your colleCtor card Some game l1ckets conta1n a

OnlY--

W L

s.J,OOO.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Get a tree game
ttcket and collector card at any parhc1pating store
You ma)' also recetve a tree game ticket and/or
collector card (please spoc1t)' ) by mailing a self·
addressed . stamped envelope to Fabulous Fortune
of Pnzes. P 0 Bo11 26272. &amp; rm1ngham, AL 35216 .
Umtl one hckct per request, one request per person
per day. Each rO(luost must be matled separat&amp;l'fi

Ctndnaau ' tSoto B-El at HOI&amp;Itca
(J.f.6ekro9-7), (n)
New York. !Gatf Ml at StLoull IAndu·
Jar S.t), (n)
Ia " " - ' (Stewan s.6J at san Fran·
dlco IBrftnla &amp;.3), fnl

--....

WIN A TRIP
FOR TWO TO ol\

LB.
0

0

I

I

LB.
0

I

•

•

•

a

$249

•

12 OZ. PKG.
•

49~

•

•

99e

_..._

land.

.m. Gantnl!l'. Mllwaulrle. .326.

RUNS: R.Hentlnc:ta. Oakla.~d. II!: Molt.
tor, MDWI\1\oee, 7,; KuTah. Cleveland.
7l Yount. Mltwaukfe. 69: Downlrla. call·
fornla. 00.
'
RBI: McRae. KansalJ Qt)', M; Cooper.

n:

Mllwaui:l!e. 7~ Thondon. Oev~and.
Lw:lnltd, Olicaao, 10: Y0t1nt. MUwaukee,

.

1111.
HrJ'SGarda. Toronto, 125: Yount, Mll·
waukee, tu; Harrah, Cleveland. 121;
Coc:Pet". MUwaukee, UB; McRae, Kansas

'

City, us.
OOUBL&amp;'J: Whit~. Klnsas City, -" ll:
Lynn, California. :18; Yount, MUwaukfe,
:5: Evana, Bolton. 25: ~-· Batt~.
at; ' [)e(ln(ft, .catifordl. 3t; Cowens.
!;e.anlf!, 24.
TRJPUS: fterrljo11,
Detroit,
10:
W.WilN:I. KIU!Su Ctly, 10; Yount, MU·
waukee, 9; Grtmn. Toronto. 6: Upe:baw.
Tort!CilD, 6; BrtU, Kanau Qty, 6; Cow·
ent, Seanr.t. f.
HOME •RUNS:G.TIIomu. Nllw&amp;ukee,
z: Re.JadtJQQ, Callfotnla. 25; ()giMe,

./!t

• •'1,

•

,, .. f

WilL PASS OFF - Brian Tannehill, left, gets ready to paiS off .
during Junior League Basketball action Tuesday night at General Hartinger Park In Mlddlepert. ScoU Wolfe photo.,

CooPe-r.

- · -Mltwaulrele.
· 23; Tmr11
..... O.Velond. 23; .
STOLEN BASES: R.Het~dnon. Oakland.
"; Gat'dl. TOront~ ll; watnan, Kanau
CJtY·, ,;.; J .Cruz. SeaHie; LeFkn. &lt;:'bJ·
CliO, '" ·

Pri"CHHNG

t
JUMPING EXERCISE- Jeff Nelson (11) and Joey Loving appear to
be in a jumping exercise during acllon at Tuesday's Junior League
basketball at General Hartinger Park In Mlddlepert. Adults can participate in a summer league on Mondays and Thursdays whUe local youth
· play on Tuesdays and Wedoesd~ys.

!12

Declslonal: VUIIwtdl.

MlJwaukee, 11-4, .713. 3.12; ~. Qlio
taCO. XH • .nt, Ul; C.udW. Seattle. »
•· .m. 2.07: Gulch. Nfw ,Ycrk. 9-4. .882,
3.!11; Zollo. Collhola. 165. . ..... 3.51;
c 1 e a r , 8oltm a-t, .(Ill, 2.87;
J.McGiaU.ghlbl. Torolto. &amp;4, .fiS1, 3.16;
P&lt;try, Oou'Oit. n.._ .647, 1&lt;ll.

STRIKEOUTS-F.Barlmter,

Seat·

....
.
123; Bltlalr', OeYeJitML D. Gulei'Y. 'New ,

.........
•••m
,..

YO.... 1111; EckoNioy, 9eltUe. 96.

'II;

-le.

CHARMIN

$. 09

Toilet Tissue::~~:!:·.. '

, ,_

JOHN A. WADE, ~.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAl HOSPITAL
EAR; NOSE &amp;THROAT

GENERAL.A~ERGIST

..
·-•

HEINZ

•••••

COMING: •• ONE bAY ONLt :..

(ALL (614) M2-2104
·' ~~rJ304) 675-1244

BANANAS . . . • . • • . • . . . . L~. 29C
FLAVORITE MARGARINE
~B. 3/ 5 1
GRADE ALARGE EGGS •... ~~- 59-c;
BANQUET FROZEN TV DINNERS 11 PZ·59C
I

•••

I

wtNESDAY1AuaUsr 4, .TilE: ZP.M •.ti17 I.M;

WITHLUCITE
OUTSIDE HOUSE PAINTS
.,
.

Office
Houn by ApPointment
Only
.
.
I

Vinegar.... •••••••••••••

GAb--

.
89

'Av•ll•bleln
. White
. and
. All Colors

FRUTH PHARMACY

I

· ' 364 JICbDrr Pjb ...li •.•CIIKpalis
PILUS ,
SATURDAY, ~ 1; nME: 11 Ul. tH 4 P.M.

VAUGHN'S CAROl NAL
F.OOO MARKET
~ P..tlllcat Sis -111-li~tlhport
I

•

•

•

HYLAND CHUNK

·DOG·fOOD
25lB.BAG $329

s'uGAR
5LB.BAG

$149

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer·Eipirn July 31,

�•
Wednesc!Qy. Ju~ 28,1942

CREST

2%

ILK

*15!
KRISPY
SILTIIE CliCKERS

3111 ,,.

11

oz

THill IOU

FIIIL TOUCH

IZ

~$12

PEPSI
DIET PEPSI
MOUITIII DEW

11~0Z $129PLIITU

IIEPISIT

BUllER
I ILL

liS.
FILBERTS

OR

s

~10

~oz

F~~::H
WIENERS

$188
·
UCI

ISSORTEII
FLIIIEL·IiCI
FIICt YIIYL

LUSTROWIRE

TilLE
COVERS

WASTE
BASIEl

·$222

*33!

UCI

'

FIIIL OLURIICE
IRO.UP
lEI'S IIOYS

SOllER
CLOTH Ill

so~OFF

COSMETIC PUFFS

FLIP·TOP

67!.

DALE ANDERSON, naturalist
at Forked Run State Park, wiU
present a program on · amphibians and reptiles at the Middleport Library, 2 p.m. Thursday. He will discuss amphibians
and reptiles and their place
history. The program is open to
all children.

47~
I

11wm

GOOD
IEWS
uz•s

YUSIC
HAlBUR&amp;

DILL
CHIPS.

YDIR OIOICE

PUmc

STICII STORE

·TilLES

TIIEE ,SnLES

50~ OFF

JAMES l. SCHMOLL, O.D.
DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY
443-C Locust St., Middleport

ONf fOtiPON Pfl RfQUIRID .. u • .
fHAU . N011 lO OfAlfl : JHr uth r nt•·
pon yflU ,.., .-pi .,... our •uthmi11od "'~'''"' ·
.,..,. wtK pol~ vnu th.• l..ct• uh•• tl4 thio.
1 oupon . pit" 1t h•ntlif!~ 1 t~ .. ,."". ptn ·

DOUBLE UP

.idt-Jt Tllll.nd VU\J I Ill"'hWT'It' " hA•I• ttHn ·
piWd •ith ltwtt•rm\ttlthh ulln Anv otht•r
•pplir•t•nn r un ,Jitut~' h•ud . tnwnh '''

AND

\howinA vuur pou """'' ul ~diM N•nt \ltM t.
lo 1 nwf'f •" r uupon' mt"l ~ · "''"""" upun
rf'QUf"l, \\Md wtwu• ptuhihihod. 1411-rl 111
r .... trilllod. 'fHIIf I t"kJftM'I mt"l p.tt 40~
uoquiwd .... k.., 141 . ( 4-.h ••liM• II XI ul I.
lr-r~Hm hw m4ilint: l u ; llw (cMA·fnl•
( nmp.tn~ . P 0 Bm IW. ·flintnn . kuu
o; 17 14. Ollo•r ~~: r~o~l4'4 nnlt in"'"' ' .. -rwtt h~ ·

SAVE!

49000 40318)]5

(()UPON flPIRI~ · SEPT. 30, ,g&amp;;IOf'riiiY
ONI COUPON rtR RIQWICID t'l/1 ·
C'"HMf . l'lo()Tf TO OfAifR : lm '''"h ""''

pnn ~uu

SAVE 50¢

oM

u •pt •• um o~uthnr i 1t'fi

•••·nl.

"''' w1N p.!~ ~'"' lht• 1oM t' ultH• ul thi&lt;ro

. tnupun, plu• 7f h.mdlin-. th""-'''· prn·
~tcil·&lt;l ~uu •net ~um • '"lnrnt•t• h•~•· 1 nm plttod with tlw ll •rm~ nil hi• uUt•t. An~ ut~ ·t
•pplit o~liun tnn•lituh•• luud . ln~uit ,.,
"'towin~t wm pure h.. .,.. nl •11IIK M·nt "'- ..
lu tuwl'• ..ntnup•m mu•l h.· • hnM n ltpun

WHEN YOU BUY
A6-PACK OF
COKE or TAB
IN CANS
TRAOfMARk•

lt'Cfl""'l. Vukt who•u• pmhihih'fi. l.o-.'11 nt
rt-..ht. h"ff . ..."" I ll'll&gt;fTH ' f '"'"' Jlolt '""'

wqulfl'rt ..,...... ••• · ( ••h ulnt· I JXI t tl It .
ht ftlolilitlk lu : Ow
(nmp.om . P'. 0 . ""' I'&gt;CW, rlinhlf'l , lot'IU

a•...tt..-m

c.H .. -r .....
~rr W. Otlrt "'""''toni, in .. ,. ... ..,.,.,.rf h, ,

TRAIJfMARk '

FRIDAY

4 PICI
li.E. IISIDE

FROSTED

STORE COUPON

'11era's 25¢
To Get

The· Edna Chap;;I Church on
Teens Run Road will have a song
fest 7: 30 p.r... · Friday. The Unroe
family will sing. Everyone Is wei·
come to attend.

L'IHT BULBS
11·11-110 wan

Slatad"

Save
25¢
~R81SIN

BR8N'

RUTLAND - A dance will be
held at Rutland Civic Center 8-11: lJ
p.m. Friday, with music by the
Iton1c Sounds. Admission Is $3 per ·
couple and $2 for singles.

Tt ~~ rtltlltr G!n!ral Foods Corp 11 111 re•m
burse you lo1 the lace value ort ~•scou o on plus 7t
101 nan~ 1rn g rt vo u rtrerve •I on the S61t ot 1111:
s pecrtreo prOduct an!l •I upon requesr you subm•l
ltfldtna! or purchne r ~ereo t sahs lactor ~ ro Gene•ll
F{)()jjs CorQ Coupon ma) no I be: ass•gned transfe rred or r e~rO ·
duct!l Cujtomt• musl PiiV 1ny !.aleS Ia• \lord w~ ert proii, Mad
lii•ed o• restr•cled by 1.1w Good onry ,n U S A Puerto Rrco 1nd
U S Gov r '"Still C~s11 vJ iue I 20c Coupon wrll not be liOn
ore-d •I prtseMe&lt;t tllr ouo~ ouhrdt auenc•es b r oil er ~ ~· othe rs
ilji\O 11t nat ret a.l d•sh rbutors or our merchandrs.e or specrhcall'j
authOrrJed b"J us to present coupons 101 redtnrptron For re·
dtmpt ron or proprrly rer:e1ved ~nil ~a1dled coup011 mil rl to
{ie'ltral Foods Corp P 0 IJo r IDJ K an~il kl!t tl 50!102 Tn rs
coutHln QOOd only on pu,cn~st ot oroducr riMirnrell An ~ oilier

Good on any size

use cnnsfotu tt~
llmll -

one co1.po•

lt~Uod

p11 pyrchne

()Her uplres Jwly 31. 1983

SG04pb300

A songfest will be ' held at the
Silver Run Freewill Baptist Church
Sat~y beginning at 7:30p.m. The
Gabriel Quartet and the Mount
Union Choir will be featured.

PI ITO
BEAlS
4U
Ul

SUNDAY

99•

REEDSVILLE - The annual
Weber fmally reunion wll be held
Aug. 1 at the ReedsvWe LockS ,and
Dam picnic area. Each family Is
asked to bring a gift
for I the door
.
prize drawings. The dinner will
begin at 12: 30 p.m. All friends and
relatives are Invited to attend. '

FIUL
CI.UUBE IRHP
IF

The Eichinger !amUy reunion
wUI be Sunday at Meigs' County
Fairgrounds. A basket lunch will
begin at noon.
Area bowhunters are Invited to
attend a 30 target safari shoot Sunday at the Rutland B0wh1!Dters Association club located on New Uma
Road, two mnes north of Rutland
'. to 2 p.m.
Reglstratlol! Is from9 a.m.
Refreshments will· be sei'Ved llllci
~elty $hoots will be held
The Izzak Walton Club will b8ve

LIWI I iiRDEI
SUPPLIES

~OFF
CIEII-E ,
UIIUIIIIU

See apeclally marked
packaael for details
of mall-,ln offer.

Here's20'
to get started!

•••••••••••••

day. ., 1s strtct1y primitive. No

SWIIWEAR

scopes. There will tie bench alld orrhand shooting.

SO~oFF

~Missing

.

names·

·=·
""":":!;,--····
··- ........ --"_,........
.....-·----·
. . . -...................... t.-r---.........--.
~= torrne race vakil of tlls coupon Plus 7t
JI!IIIIIIM. 11 Ill ... Olltlt
. ,roctuc1 nt it upoollQIIISI yov sut1mr1
pdLsl
.-...rytoGnrllfoodsCorll CouplniTII'f~kiSIIplld .
_ . . . . . . . . . ~IIMIPI"''111JIIIn1P YDidWheti~ Ia* eN
Goo'l, .... " " ' - " "

t l • ........_ • ....._MhlriJICI byusiOpmft eaUtrn lot

c... P.l. ...

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I·

.

Save2o~

........,.__,..c..,...
....

Nama omitted from tile Ger·
triKie and IlK! tale J. Doyle MlUer
ramlon Ill~ JuJyU, were
. Euplle, Della and Tim MDlier and
~and Gary Paaet, Tucson. Artz.

•••

STORE COUPON

a pr!fllltlve weapops muzzle.
loadln&amp; target l!loot 1: ~ p.m. Sun-

-~

..

...

*·
on
-~~--""-""""·""'"
c..i. ll ~ Tllll CIIII4IDII good OifY

Dltld'tUt o1&amp;MOMI

Uool---.. ..-.

GENERAl fOOO&amp; CORPORATION
----~~·-·

I
I
I
I
I

BIB

·SATURDAY

IFOR$1

SUMlER CLOTHIII

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

COUPON llii'IRI§·SEPT. 30. 19820Nl'f

· All girls In grades 9-12 Interested
In playing volleyball at Southern
High School this fall are asked to
meet at the high school cateterla 3
p.m. Friday.

*1•! *15!

'SWIRL'
ICE TEA
TUMBLERS

UDIES' I CHILDREI'S

Alexander the Great,"

s\'75

Eastem Athlete Boosters will
sponsor a boys' pony leaguetouma·
ment Thurmay through Sunday.
Entry fee Is $21 and two balls. For
additional lnfonnatlon call Jim
Caldwell at 667-3644 or George COllins a 667·3484.

11 GUICE
LillEY ILISS

FIIIL
CLUUICE

u

"Cleopatra," "Who's Afraid of VIr·
gtnta Woolf," "The Taming of the
Shrew" and "Equus."
He entered the hospital on July 21
and was released Tuesday mornIng, said the spokeswoman.
·

to

TWIN CITY SHRINE CLUB,
Racine, 6:30 p.m. Thursday for
the annual visit of the potentate
and his entourage. All shriners
and their ladies are invited for
dinner and companio!l9hip.

7 •

3
CT.

PETILOYE 300 COUll

28 QT.

THURSDAY

FRYER
PARTS

24 CT. CIPSILES
10 CT. TIILETS

chel,''

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)Actor Richard Burton, who entered
St. John's Hospital last week for reexamination of a chrome lower
back problem, has been released, a
hospital spokeswoman said.
The 55-year-old WELSH ACfOR

·sAVE

The chairs In tt)e gymnasium at
the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School will be painted In two even·
lng sessions this week. Those who
can help are asked to be at the gym
6 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday
with elthel' a wire brush or a paint
brush or both. All patrons of .tbe
school are encouraged to help.

%99

:69• :~*1••

UNDERWENT SURGERY IN
AprU to correct the problem, which .
forced him to drop out of a revival
of the musical, "Camelot."
•
Burton has starred In numerous
ntms. tnctudlng "My cou'stn R.a.;

with hls two climbs of Chicago skyscrapers. He scaled the llO.story,
1,454-foot·tall Sears Tower, the
world's tallest building, as well as
the llJO.story John Hancock Center.

Reynolds in real-life punch-out?

'IUIE I
iiiED

LIGHT TOll

-

CHICAGO (AP) ...,. Human fly
Dan Goodwin wW travel to Cara"I was afraid but I had read her car, some 12 feet away, where cas, Venezuela, to scale two skysWHEAT RIDGE, COlo. (AP) enough about buffalo to know they her daughter, Loyanne, was walt- . crapers In his "first legal otficlally
Wes!.!!rn sculptor Jan Searle re.
sanctioned climb," according to
qulred 200 stitches 011. one hlp after - might sense my fear and attack lng. The daughter drove her to an promoters.
again, so I did the best I could to emergency clln1c In Evergreen.
she was gomj by a buffalo she was
Mike Powers of Jam Produc·
change that emotion," she said.
Ms. Searle said she Is anxious to
photographing for an art project.
tlons,
which handles publicity for
Atu!r lying stW, the buffalo lost begin 'her next project, a sculpture
Ms. Searle, 43, of Lakewood, was
known as "Spider Dan,"
the
man
Interest In her. When the animals of a buffalojlancer with a buffalo In
recovering In Lutheran Medical
said
Goodwin
wW be paid an undisturned away, shequlcklymadeltto the background.
Center In this Denver suburb on
Closed amount to climb one buUdTuesday after being gored and
Ing SATURDAY AND ANOTHER
tossed In the air Saturday In a pasON Aug. 6.
ture near Evergreen.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A freelance photographer from New York Is
Both
are about 50 sto"I had wanted a good picture of a
rtes
tall,structures
Powers said.
suing Burt Reynolds for $1 mW!on plus expenses, clatmlng Reynolds
buffalo's head and when he lowered punched his face and flung his camera 100 yards In a confrontation outside
Goodwin, 26, won fame last year
It and came toward me, I thought,
tlie actor's Bel·Alr home.
'Isn't that accommodating? Just
Attorney Jerome COhen said he filed the suit In Los Angeles Superior •
what I want,' " she Said from her COurt Monday on behalf of Russell C. Turiak, 37. COhen wouldn't discuss
hospital bed.
the case except to say his client was "Injured" In "a misunderstanding."
"He was a bull and he was big,"
Turiak told pollce.he was waiting outside Reynolds' house last AprU 26
she added.
CAKE DECORATING
when the film S\81' drove uiJin his RoUs·Royce with Lon! Anderson, the
The rest of the herd surrounded blond 'IV actress from "WKRP In Cincinnati."
SUPPLIES
her after she was gored, Ms. Searle
Pollee Ll George Remlng quoted Turlak as saying Reynolds got out of ·
satd, "and they were a little testy." his car In the driVeway and attacked when Turlak began taking pictures.
The photographer said he retrieved his camera and left after the Incident, which Remlng said Turtak reported to West Los Angeles pollee later
TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
that day.
Turtak didn't require medical assistance, Rernlng said.
.
9 5
The actor never was charged In the Incident, pollee Detective Howard
CLOSED SAT., SUN., MON.
Leader said Tuesday.
WEDNESDAY
HOBSON- Hobson Church of
Christ In Chrtstlan Union will
have a guest speaker Wednesday at 7:ll p.m. Rev. Dorothy
Whittington wUI speak.

ICE
CREAl

=*3''

3 DIIIOIDS

Names in
the News
.

EFFECTIVE JUNE 1, 1982

IC

IIIPIIIILE

~~99•

People in the .N ews------- I
She got what she wanted and more

I Calendar I

Ll

JUU RITE .

SILID

ot·

liSTliT
COFFEE'

FI~LIII

*179

$

· The Daily Sentinei-Page-7-

Middleport, Ohio

SUMMER HOURS

'IESCIFE'

CHERRY PIE

FABRIC
SOnEIER
84

59•

41
CT.

Pomeroy

....----------1
ANN'S

TEIDER
LEIF
TEl IllS ·

SUISIIIE

,

SG04B6i!300

I

•
I

�. -!P~~9!8~!8::T~he~Da~il~y~S~e~nt~in~a~I------------------------------~~--!P!om~~~y~M~i~dd~l~ef~~n~,~Oh~io~----------~----~------------------~·W!td~n~•~•d~~~Y~·~Ju~l~y22~8~,1~9~82~;

4-H news

Tht• Mt'I).(S 4·H l'h·u:otun · HK.it'rs md Ju ly 19 ;r t
tht! Farr)! ruumJs . Al!t•mhn g U!t! Hn•l'llnj.( W(•n•
fuur i! tlV\$1r~. 12mc n rbt·rs and 13 '' is iltlr:i. Itt·• n'~

The Hillbillies 4-H Club met July 19 at tht&gt;
horne of Betty Ann Loftitl. Attending t he mcctin)(
were three

adv~.

member.~

five

cmd four

visitors. Items of bW~in ~ LliscWLSI!ti includt'll

putting lhe flnhthlng touche:~ on 4-H projects, ~cl­
Ung 4-H T~lrts and preparationl:l for a fair

booth. Demonstru tloru; and reports were

Bill

~lven

Dyer and Betty Ann Loftis, respcctw~ ly,
oo Re-entry and E~ prOOucUon : Teens En~rtaln ; I..tt's Explore the Outdoors II ; Howw

b)'

Planbs, and Creative Arl:i. Rcc n:t~ tion ws enjoyed by playing Atari. Refreshment.'! Wt'rt• !!erved

by Alberta and Betty Ann Loftis. The next

flleeting wlll be Friday, Augul:ltl3, at U1e home of

Tara Clark. at 7:30p.m .- New~ Reporter ~tty
Ann Loft~ .

of bus i nc:o..~ dist'US.'il'tl Wl'rt! prujl'Cl books bclllt.:
n•lurrlfll . Four mcmbt&gt;rs ~o~·n rkl'll with Uwir ilur·
!&gt;\'~ un showmanship 11nd lhrrt&gt; ll ll'llli&gt;l·rs wurkt-d
with . their hur.~a~ on hoOieman.~;h ip . NL'XI
IIIL'l't l!lg

wi ll

~ AUMUYt

9at the Fal rj,( rountl~ . -

News Reporter Jdf Arnultl .

The Ht!hm' t~ H el pt?rt~4- H Club met J~l y 15 011
He len Ho l ter ' :~ home in Ra ei n ~. Allcnd in.: ttw
mcl'linl( Wt!rt' twn atlviStlrs and i'lil mcrnbt&gt;n
It ems of bwin\.~'! discws..·~ were pn:paratitlw;
fur the fall" booth. 4·H Pf'l.IJ«'\:i. The members

tl iSt'tl~!ll'&lt;l l·uoi. in l( and ~i n~

projcl'ls. Rcfr~·s h·

menl:J wen: servt.'t.l. Patriccc Clrdt · .scrvt·d
hruwnics Hnd Helen Hultt•r m•rvt'd pop. Tht• rwxt

rnl't!tinr.: wil l bt&gt; sntlll'till lt' beftlrc tht• fe~ ir al tlw
horne of Helen Hulll'r. - Nl'W:I Reporter Radu:J

Rt•ibcr.

Laurel Cliff News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Hennan Kasper,
Dayton, spent several days with
Mrs. Kasper's mother, Mrs. Bertha
Choir members pl'esent were 12.
Rev. Miller has returned fnu 11 Parker.
Wyatt Schaefe r, Mt. Vernon, spent
confer ence and has been assigned
severa
l days with his parents, Mr.
for anllther year.
and
Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs and Mrs. Edna
Mr.
and
Mrs. Tony Mosley spent
Faulk were able In attend ch urch
the
weekend
with Rev . and Mrs.
Sunday.
Miller.
Mr.
Mosley
was the ~uest
Seldon Backer has been reported
minister
at
the
loca
l
church.
ill .

Attendance at the Fret• Methodist
Church on Suhday, July 18, was 110.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibson and
Robin, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Katzer,
Columbus, were recent Sunday dill'
ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Alkire. Robin stsyed for a weekend's
visit with her grandparents.
Mr. ana Mrs. Mike Epple spent a
weekend in Zanesville visiting their
children.
Mrs. Vera Lyon of Bum, Wyo.,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lyon and
Miss Kathleen
and

Mrs. Julie Stevens and friend of ·
VIrginia , Mr. and Mrs. Felix Alkire,
local, and Mrs. Iva Johnson, Wolf
Pen, were recent {Iunday dinner
guests of Mrs. Stella Atl\ins and
Ruby Diehl. Afternoon callers were
Mrs. Gloria Riggs and children.
Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son,
Logan, were recent Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
McGrath.

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY ·
Elch

o f thtN ldvertiled rtemt "
rtQUWtd 10 bl rtldity avli&amp;lb6e for Mit

in MCh Kroger Stote, IJI.ctipt a IPIO· ,

r.c.ety noltld n mil ed. If we do run
OUI of 1ft ICMrttlld ittim, 'Nt Wll otter
you vow• choice of • eOfl'OIJrtble rtem1
wr.n •'l'lileble, rtftecting the Nme
UYingl Ot • reincheei which ..wt entitle
'IOU 10 purchue the tdventMCI item
It the ICMt'tiled pOet within]) dlys.

Kroger .

Welcomes
Your .
Federal .

Food
Stamps

COPYRIGHT ,.12 · THI KIIIOGU C:O . IJIMS AND PIICU
GOOD SUNDAY JUlY 25 THROUGH SATURD.V . JULY

the
best of

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

nter Blade Cut
Chuck Roast

the

prtce!
ChubPak

Kroger
White Bread

Springdal~

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48

I

Ground Beef

20·01.

Lvs.

Y-v ·

CALL-:.._
lOam ,
~ TIL 7pm \

Whole Ripe
Watermelons

NEW
DIAL·A·CHICKEN

15c
Santa Claus 59c
Melons ........

Yellow
Sweet Corn

88

20% OFF

Call the Kroger Deli to order any
12 to 21 piece bucket of
Wishbone Fried Chicken 30
minutes before you want it, and
we'll guarantee fresh fried
chicken ready to eat d
OFF REGULAR

Ear

CRANSHAW , CANARY OR

Each

Walburn, Clara Conroy, Rose Rey· .son repm:ted on visitation to Arcadia
nolds, Martha Haggerty, Dorothy Nllnjlng Home. It waa noted that the
Baker and guests, Delc\e Forth and .first' visitation had the Rev. Richard'
Francis Roush, Mlldred Riley Dale Stoll, Meigs County extension Thomas as leader.
Plans were made to asslf!/1 serving
and Clarice Erwin were named tb a agent, who had the program.
for
each meeting. Thelma Hencommittee to honor the octogenar·
derson had the prayer calendar and
tans of the Middleport Church of
U
Christ at a recent PhUathea Club
Linda Hubllard of Syracuse hosted chose Le 'Grande Smith, Saito,
meeting..
a recent meeting of the Chatter Uruguay, a leader in church
Named to the committees for the Club. Games were played with development. The society signed a
· father·son banquet coming In Sep. I prizes going to Tina Stewart, birthday card for him and get-well
: tember were:
Dorothy Roach and Doris Wilt. Ruth cards for Charlotte Van Meter and
Kitchen-Ciyda Allensworth, Young won the door prize. Refresh- Helen Woode.
Martha Poole led the Jllogram en: Regina Swift, Nora Rice.
ments were served.
titled "Women Political Prisoners."
.: Dining room-Dorothy Roach, •
All members took part in reading
: Mitzi Saltsman, Farte Cole, Betty
and di.scwlslon. Questions diacuBsed
· McKinley, Francis Roush, Colleen
'
. van Meter.
A donation of $100 to the church coni:emed the sale of anns to other
··.. Clean-up-Thelma Boyer, Ella improvement fund was made by the cOuntries, the attempt of the Unite(!
Mae Daugherty, Reva Beach.
Alfred United MethodiJt Women States to force . other COWitries to
. Program-Mitzi Saltsman , when the group met recently at the give better hWIIBn rights, and the
role the country should 'take to help
Becky Loving.
church.
Attending aside from those
Genevieve Guthrie opened the women political prilloners. The
named were Mllded Hawley, meeting with prayer and there waa UMW concluded that helping
Grace Pratt, Grace Hawley, Beu· group singing of "II is Glory Just to through church organizations is the
lah Roush, Mary Bailey, Mabel Walk With Him." Gertrude Robln- best approach.

Philathea Ciub

Jane Huffman and George MJJier,
Middleport. Paternal grandpar·
ents are Mr. and Mrs. Dick Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Maternal great ·
grandmothers are Mrs. Hilda Har·
rls and Mrs. Juanita Miller,
Middleport.

. before you go out use a strong sun
screen that contains PABA. The
higher the number the better the
protection. Then cover your skin \
well with Vaseline or some other
physical blocker. Finally, use
clothing, hats or whatever, to your
best advantage. Wear gloves and try
to stay out of the strongest sun
period ofthe day.
You should read The Health Letter
nwnber 7·10, Your Skin; Sun, Aging,
Spots and Cancer, which I am sell'
ding you. Others who want this issue
can send 75 cents with a long, stamped , self-addressed envelope for it to
me, in care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Recently I
read an article about· things you
could do to improve your health. The
article mentioned cutting clown or
quitting smoking, alcohol, sugar,
nitrates and also white flour.
"Please tell me what the problem is
witll white flour?
DEAR READER - There is
nothing wrong with white flour other
than it contains a lot of calories; if
you need to watch calories you
might need to watch your intake of
foods made with white or whole
flour.
White flour has lost its bran. If you
were !laking cakes that would be fine
and if you want white bread that is
fine, but there is a lot of evidence
that our diet must inclu~ a
fea~onab!e amount of bulk. ,Bran
fiber is an excellent source. The
problem then is what is missing
from white flour, not what it contains.
And that is not always bad. Too
much fiber may decrease absorption
of minerals during the digestive
process.
Finally I would say the article
should have reeonunended quitting
smoking entirely rather than cutting
down.

~

Fre$h Baked
Apple Pie

Chopped Ham

88

88

number of unusual and interesting people. One In particular will figure
prominently in several areas of your life.
LEO (July %3-Aug. 22) Gambles you take ·with intangible things
' should work out rather well for you today. However, taking risks in
material realms might not)&gt;e too smart.
·
VIRGO (Aug. !Wept. 22) Be alert for a sudden shift in conditions
. today which IJ¥iY ~nable you to finalize something you've had difficulty
. ·tying down. It co!J)d occur in the afternoon.
·
.
LIBRA (Sept. '%3-0et. %3) Several good ideas could suddenly pop mto
your mind today, but don't mere!)' memorize them. Write them down.
There's 11 chance you could forget them when they're needed. ·
· .
SCORPIO (&lt;let. U.Nov. 22) The nextfewdayscould be extremely tmto you, careerwise and financially. Good things call!ng for quick
action will be developing,
.
SAGfnARWS (Nev. %3-1*. !1) 'Ventures or enterprises you
originate or conceive at this time have a better-than-usual chance for success. Make them COWit fot something.
.
·
:'
CAPRICORN (!*•.!Wm lt) Give vent to yo\Jt c011lJ1!1881onate .iml puiBes today if they direct you to be helplul to aorneone le88 fortWJate than
~ yollrseH. You'll be glad you did
··
_
·
•
AQUARIUS(Jaa. zt.Feb. JJ) Yourpraencewill~a welcome ad: dillon to any group or gathering todaT· In fa~ pel'liOill wlio meet you for ·
~: theflrsttlmewlllbeeagertoknowyoubetter.
'
. ·' .
•
· PISCES (Feb. zt.MIIftb •) Yliu are now ln. i l!ood achievement
~ cycle, 10 cjeVIlte your time and talents to
wblch really count for '
~ IIOI'IIetblnl! once they're attained.
•
• •
,
1 AIUJ!2) (Mardi D·Aprll It) Your faltb .In princlplel you hold dear
· ~· could be put to the test today. You'll .!lot CGIIll! up ·~ They'll JJI'IM!
1,
W111tbf of your bellefa. ·
.
. .
'
.·
~
TAURilB (April....., .) Your allility to lllllre lillp J""CPWIII In
• c;umneadalmatten II Vf/I:J 8ood todq. llouNINIIC quite m•IP"!"I*I

•SOOPII COSY cmns
Everyday low Prices 'on
pantry stapl~s : Save up to
40o/o on Sooper Cost Cvtlers
compared to other brands
at Kroger. (For some Sooper
Cost Cuters no other
..comparable brands ore
stocked.) Check the yellow
price list of the over 400
Sooper Cost Cutter pantry
staples, I only at Kroger.
.
~·

...

•

au

•lOYAL SAnsfAOIII HAIAIIIII
Everything you buy ot Kroger is guaranteed for your lotol ilolis·
faction regardless of manufacturer. If you ore not satisfied,
.Kroger will raplqce your item with t.he soina brand or a compor·
able brand or refund your purchase price .
.
'

•YAIIIIY
In Every deportm~nl. You con salacl from over 10,000 items and
over 200 kinds and· cuts of meat, Including .lomb, .Vaal, Fresh
SeafOod and 7 kinds of Ground Meat. You will also find one of
the widest selections of fresh fruits ond vegetabln, plus a
Oalic~-n. International . foods sectior;~, gourmet and diet
foods, inatitutlanol"sizes and more.

'
. •CIIhilld
. .AIR I

'

'...~

'

low prieer O!' quality guoronlead produds, doy ,in ond day•oul'
Over~lOO, dlff-nt Items. 1'\'oducts with a nome you. can trust o,nd •
o quality grade you can count on. Products you ca,n daP.nd ,on I
every day and priced aalow '01' lower than, ''no noma foods" at .
Krog&amp;f you know exC!Cfly what you're getting when you buy It ·,
not when you open it. And each and avery "Olst Cutter" item i~- •
backed by Kroge~'a Satisfaction Guarantee.
·
· ,
'

..

• CGIIId dti elep,relllllrinla fait ''Jtl" or "110,"''

,!

•

lll;r._~wlloi"'CllllllJd'JIIIMid

• .

·

·

ltli IIIIINIIed todq
out to lll·e belpfaJ

ca._...
-.you.

GDJOO (llaJIWal.) YOUI!IIf Ill pin
:· .............. to wbom ,ou'Ye.neverfelf

J..

T~e University of Cincinnati has
announced that Elizabeth Perrin of
Pomeroy has been named to the
dean's list for the spring qlljlrter of
1982. This list represents high
academic achievement of over a 3.5
average on a scale of 4 points. Miss
Perrin is a sophomore at the univer·
sity's college of design, architecture
and design. She is a daughter of Rev:
and Mrs. W. H. Perrino! Pomeroy .

Cardiac patient
Leslie Price, Pomeroy, Is In the
cardiac care Wilt of Mount ciumel
East, Columbus. His address Is 6001
E. Broad St.. Columbus, 43213.

.

_.....·-:?.';:-.-·~~~··,..........

..-'

'.

.,

CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

.

THE fl NANCJAL CENTER

This account not insured by FDIC

I~

·

T ~ (~ 1W111J D) Daa't Wliill' Ill apedllllllt will nn,
·' n. . . . or .-.rid today If J011 feel they can do a better job. NotJUc

·~,·.,;_.-....__";:;,..·''......
o:--":"._plned;.__ _..;.
.,, _..,_
· __;._

Mrs. Robert Amold, Forest Run.
'Helping the couple celebrate
were Mr. and Mrs. Danny Smith
and Mandy, South Point; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Smith and Sabrina,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Karl Russell, Kenny and Melissa, Scott's
Depot.
Mike Smith, stationed at a Ma·
rlne base In Albany, Ga., was un·
able to attend.
Calling In the afternoon were Mr.

Presenting Central Trust's improved Money Market Account. Now you can
invest as little as $2,500 for as little as one day and earn htgh money ~arket
• rates. You can take your money out (part of it or all of tt) whenever you d
like with no penalty. All with the comfort of knowtng your m~ney IS ~00%,
secured by an obligation of the U.S. Government or tts Agenctes. So 1f you re
looking for a short-term investment that's long on returns, look to our Money
Market Account. You don't need to open any other kind of account to take
advantage of this high.rate. For complete details; stop by any Central Trust
office today. It's the ktnd of mnovat1ve.
·new service you've come to expect
rrom the b~nk that's working to be
your total financtal center.
,
. .

.'Portant

The Kroger

Named to dean's list

Mrs. Eloda Webb Is now at her ·
hOme In Middleport after tlve :
weekS at Holzer Medical Center.Mrs. Webb wUl observe her 93rd
birthday on Aug. 3.
Robert Jr. and Margaret
Warner, Oberlin, spent the weekend wtth his mother, Mrs. Robert
Warner Sr. Other recent visitors of
Mrs. Warner were her daughter,
Mrs. Clarence Stratton and Theodora Heideprlell, Oakwood.
' Mrs. Helen Hayes, Great Bend,
h~ returned after amonth'stourof
Greece.

THE
FINANCIAL
CENTER
OFFERS A
NE.WMONEY
MARKET
ACCOUNT
WITH
MATURITIES
OF ONE TO
89 DAYS.

. July 29, 1912
This coming year you are going to meet and make friends with a

Deli

.

nored on their 35th anniversary
wttha picnic at the home of Mr. and

Personals

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

·Astrograph

lb.

SLICED

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith were ho-

County

and Mrs. Charles Werry 1 Mr. and
Mrs. WUJard Hines, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Werry, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell, Mr. and 'Mrs. Carroll Netgler,
Mrs. Floyd Weber and Mr. and
Mrs. Harly Smith.
A two- tiered cake and refresh·
ments were served after gifts were
passed out.

Arnold anniversary

Alfred Methodists

: • By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
· DEAR DR. LAMB - I am 43 years
old and a year ago I had a complete
hysterectomy. Since that time my
skin has aged at least five years,
especially around the eyes and down
the cheek bones. Until about a month
ago I was laking honnone shots and
now I take Premarin.
I realize age has a lot to do with
the skin drying out, but I know other
women who are much younger than
·:1am and they are having the same
problem since they had a hysterectomY,.
:. I live in a very dry desert area
which I am sure adds to the condition. I have tried almost every
kind of moisturizer cream on the
jnarket and nothing seems to help.
..•. Is there anything I can do to help
; keep my skin from getting worse? It
· is very heartbreaking to see yc Jr
: ~n become like a dry river bed.
· I:&gt;EAR READER - Don't be so
sure . your hysterectomy· has
·anything to do with your skin
changes. Since you are taking hormones I preswne you had your
ovaries removed, too. This is not
always the case with a complete
hysterectomy.
A little girl's skin doesn't show
these changes hefore she produces
quantities of female honnones. The
areas of skin not exposed to sun and
'wind don't show the changes you
· now see on your face either. One
illustration of how weather affects
the skin is the observation that a
. weather-beaten old cqwboy often
has good skin over his buttocks - I
presume saddle sores don't count.
,. Your women I friends who are
"much younger than you" may still
: )iave their ovaries, yet still you see
:·\ he same changes. No doubt they are
•:au exposed to the same desert
'climate.
·The best thing you can do is
protect your face from sun and wind.
In the morning at least an hour

Me~gs

in

Attending tile meeting besides
those named were Clara Follrod,
Ne!Ue Parker, and Nina Robinson.
Next meeting will be Aug. 17 at'the
church with Neute Parker as
program leader and Gertrude
Robinson and Genevieve Guthrie as
hostesses.

Chatter Cl b

-· .

The Paily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

announc~

:Bysterectomy
ruled out as c~use
.&gt;•

38

1ncludlnU

28

.

Area happenings

Mary and Joe Jeffers announce
. . the birth of a boy 1 July 22 at Holzer
~ . Medical Center. He is named Chris~ iopher David.
He weighed nine pounds, tlve
ounces and was 22 Inches long. He
has a brother, Ryan.
:1 Maternal grandparents are Mrs.

fOI

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES ,
MOUNTAIN DEW .

I

---Jeffers birth---

31 1911 . IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY.
WI RUIIVIE THI liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIIS . NONf
SOLD TO OEAlUS .

'

Pom~y-Middlepon,

Wtdnerl:lay. July 28,1982

Harrisonville Social News

--~------------·

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'

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Feds will simulate ·explosion
LOS ANGELES (API- Federal
Investigators plan .to simulate explosions used as a tum's special e!fects In an attempt to detennlne If
the blasts caused a helicopter crash
that killed actor Vic Morrow and
two children.
Morrow and one child actor were
decapitated by the helicopter's
main rotor and another child suf·
fered fatal Injuries during the accl·
dent last Friday during the filming
of a Vietnam war scene tor the tum,
"The TwUlght Zone."
Seven-year-old My·Ca Dlhn Le,
and 6-year-old Renee Shinn Chen,
were l)uried Tuesday. Morrow, 53,
was burled Sunday.
National Transportation Safety
Board Investigator Don Uorente
said a Federal Aviation Administration bomb expert, Walter Korsgaard, would lead the group
simulating the explosions. He did
oot know when the tests would

'

'

SERVICES FOR CHILD ACI'OR- Di~lor John
· · Landis and his wUe, Deborah, place flowers on the col·
"·; fin of slx·ye&amp;J"'id Renee Shinn Chen Tuesday during
funeral services at Forest Lawn's Church of the
Recessional in Glendale, CaiU. Renee was one of two

occur.
children ldlled Friday with actor Vic Morrow during a
sboollog sequeoce for the movie "The TwWght Zooe."
Landis was dlrecllog the shooting at the lime of the accident. lAP Lase111hoto1.

::Gloomy forecasts plague farmers
"

"From viewing the turns, It
seems that the aircraft was exposed to the second, third, and possibly the fourth shot, but we don't
know what effect the explosions
had," Uorente said Tuesday.
A Warner Bros. spokesman, Robert Friedman, said the safety

...
,..

~"

A,Ithough total wheat use - ln·
eluding exports - Is expected to
match the record level of 1981·82,
.. ·, wheat Inventories when the next
' .. marketing year begins on June I,
1983, are expected to rise to about
·• .,1.;!:i bUIIon bushels from 1.16 billion
laSt June 1.
World wheat production Is ex:' peeled to be about 2 percent
• ~ smaller than 1981-82, due to crop
deterioration In Australia and the

Soviet Union. Thus, because ot
But elsewhere, the faclllty said
greater demand In many countrtes,
Tuesday, corn was reported In
world use of wheat could rise
"fair to good" sha(ie.
slightly above output. resulting In a
In the major producing states,
"modest drawdown" of global corn was sUklng on 48 percent ot the
stocks by mid-1983, the report said. acreage and had reached the dough·
" For the United States, which . stage or kernel development on 12
wtll have large exportable supplieS, percent, compared to 59 and 9 perexports In 1982-83 seem llkely to cent, respectively, 11 year ago.
match last se;15on' s 1.77 bllllon buIowa's corn was reported :JJ pershels, " It said. "China Is expected cent s1lklng against 81 percent a
to Increase Imports and the Soviet year ago. Illinois, on the other hand,
Union may Import near-record was shown to be 90 percent In the
amounts. The two nations are the silklng stage, compared to 79 perleading customers for U.S. wheat." cent a year ago.
Given the wheat supply situation,
"Soybeans were In mostly good
farm prices are llkely to average condition," the report said, albelow the regular loan rate of $3.55 though "progress generally lagged
per bushel through harv.est.
the average development for this
date."
.·
"Beginning-season prices were
Progress
generally
lagged
bethe lowest In lour years, often :JJ
hind
average
In
the
West
North
cents a bushel below last season's
opening of $3.70," the repOrt said. Centrat states while early planlltng~"
"The 1982-33 season average prtce tn--•ihe East North Central region
Is projected to range !rom $3.00 to caused rapid development, the re$3.80 a bushel, compared with last port said. Seventy-five percent of
the soybeans were blooming In the
year's $3.65."
eastern
'legion, compared to only 34
The report noted that In mid·
percent
In the western region.
July, the USDA announced the 19SJ
wheat piOgram, which calls tor a 20
percent reduction In acreage, comWASHINGTON (AP) -The Agrl·
pared to a 15 percent cutback In culture Departn,lent says China has
1982.
bought an additional W,OOO metric
Wheat growers wUI also get an tons of U.S. wheat- about 4.4 mlladvance payment when they sign llon bushels - for delivery In 1983,
up for the 'program this fall, equal the thlrd__year of a grain supply
to about-half ofthelr1983detlclency agreement.
payment or an estimated 25 cents
Officials said Tuesday the new
per bushel for their nonnal yields. sale raised to 270,~ tons of wheat
"The early announcement and that China has ordered for 1983. It
the advance payment could raise also has bought 90,000 tons of corn.
grower participation slgntrlcantly
A metric ton Is about 2,205 pqunds
higher than tor the 1982 program," and Is equal to 36.7 bushels It wheat
the report said.
or 39.4 bushels of com.
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
China has bought about 6.1 mllcorn crop was In " good to excel- llon tons ofwheatand98.'i,OOOtonsd
lent" condition In the eastern Corn corn for 1982 delivery.
Belt and Southeast as or late July,
The agreement callS for China to
according to the government's buy at least six mllllon metric tons
Joint Agricultural Weather of grain rrom the United States
FacUIIy.
each year.

· The state Department of Industrtal Relations has subpoenaed re- I
cords and scripts from Warner
Bros. In an attempt to find out wby
the chlldren were working at 2: :1!
a.m. when laws prohibit them from
working after 6:00 _p.m., and why
!here was no teacher-ooclal worker
on the set, as required by state labor regulations.

None of the sources would permit
use of their names. .
The Issue, which has been actively before Reagan for several
weeks, Involves tangled !oretgn polIcy and pollticallmpllcatlons more
than agricultural considerations.
The current grain agreement expires Sept. 00.
"They want to be very careful in
how this Is perceived,'' said oneRepublican congressional aide.
Administration otflctals fear an
appearance of tiypocr!Sy If the Unl·
ted States stlikes any kind of deal
with the Soviets while pressing Eu·
ropean allies not to trade with the
Russians.

WASHINGTON (AP) - AI·
though the details remained unclear, Prestden t Reagan bas
decided to keep alive a U .S. grain
trade agreement with the Soviet
Union, congressional sources said
Tuesday.
White House sources said It was
likely that a !ormal announcement
would come on Wednesday. But
there were widespread reports on
Capitol H111 that a decision already
had been made to extend the current grain agreemen! for at least
one year, probably with higher minImum purchase requirements than
In the current agreemen!.

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail of all · ages
available up to 8 weeks
In any quantity.
Mature Quail A vallabte
Re~dy to Turn Out
Clell La Bonte
36061 Bashan Rd .
Long Bottom, Oh. 45631
614-985·4345
7·28· 1 mo.

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(;J.ui(U'd /MI('N

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• backhoe
• excavating

• septic-systems
• Awater, uwer

&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

licensed &amp;Bonded

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YOUNG'S

·.- ~ .

recovery.

She made her comments after
prl!dtctlng red Ink of $140 bUIIon to
$Ui0 bUUon annually for the next
three years.
, Ettorts to reduce the deficit
•· · • should be across-the-board, she
~· ; S!lJd, "notexcludingdefensespendlng, not excluding the entitlement
programs - Including Social Secu'rlty not excluding" tax
Increases.
At the White House, depuly press
"'.. secretary Larry Speakes said Mrs.
. ·. · RJvlln was "unduly pessimistic"
·;;:,:. ,a.bout the recovery and also "un:,.,.:· d!lly pessimistic about the Impact
of a successful budget resolution on
the recovery."
· &gt;' • ' But Speakes said that "whatever
.,,,, i/lew Is held," It underscores the
. Qeed to make !lie spending cuts that
·~- .. were mandated In the budget ap~n. proved last month.
. The Senate has approved a plan
to raise taxes by $99 bUllon over
I"'"'•',tJjree years and cut spending by
..:.,;; about $17.5 billion. A second blll to
.?·: cut spending by an additional $12.2
·;;,, .~ Is pending ln.!he Senate, and
. 6oth tlioae me~~Sures are awaiting
. action In the House. ·
r

NEW YORK (AP)-A television
series designed to lntrodu&lt;:e 8-to-12
year-olds to science and technology
wUI be back on the air In 1983.
Forty new half-hour programs
are scheduled to start production
this summer.
The second season or "3-2-1, Contact" wUI be produced by the Child·
reo's Television Workshop,
creators of the TV series, "Sesame
Street."
The Public Broadcasting System's 28&gt; stations wUI air the p~
grams beginning In the fall of next
year.

Thunderstorms prevail over nation
By The Asaodated Pi-eis

the western GuU Coas,t region, ,

Showers and thunderstOrms prevailed over much or the country
overnight, dampening parts of the
Northei!St, the Southwest and the
Midwest.
It rained over much of the Texas
Panhandle, northeastern New
Mexico and eastern CoJorac1o.
Showers and thunderstorms also
were scattered wldeJy across central Mlssourt and Into central Indl·
ana, with rain over most parts of
the Northeast and scattered shOw·
ers til Florida. Louisiana and

North .Dakota, the upper Missis-

Kentucky.
Skies were generally clear over

sippi Valley, the Paclflc Coast and
southern Arizona.
,
Today' s forecast callS ·for scattered showers and tllunderstorms
from the Atlantic Coast states
~h Okl~ · and mrthenl
Tl!ltas to. the. eastern Plateau region, with rain acrosS the mrthern
half or the Atlantic COast and !hun·
derstonns from theup-OhlaValIey to the lower ~slsllppl valley,
ovw Florida B!ld Utah. Skies were
·to ~~IIIIIIY over the rest of tlie

COOJilry.

• : .

'

Rt. 3, Box 54
thctno, Oh.
Ph. 614-8~3·2591
6· 15·ffc

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

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-PUbliC ,;-;o-t i'Cc

Public Not1ce

or

(7)

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE Public
Notice for Dark Diamond
Coal Corp.. Shade, Ohio
.&lt;!~i:f.ac~e_~-145776 . An application is at
the Meigs County RI!Cor·
der' s office for a strip mine
operation, Frac . 3; T·2N;
R· 13·W; Salisbury Town·
ship, Meigs County, Ohio.
71. 28, (8) ~ . 31C
t nterested people can see
these forms and maps at
the Meigs county Recor·

V.l!xJIM-B
Mll'lltWM!NJf
Ftool Eatoto - Oener•l

.

MID SUMMER
SAV,NGS
ON
REMNANTS
ENDS OF ROLLS
GRASS CARPET
AND SAVE_$2 • $5
ON SHAG &lt;:ARPEJS

· VIRGIL' B. SR. RWTOit '
211 E. 2nd~!Phone
BID ,
INVITATION
Seated bids will be accepted until 12 noon Thur·
sday, August 5, 1982. by the
council of the Village of
Syracuse, Ohio, for 800

1-(614)·992-3325
2 ACRES b~droom

with

Nice 2

modern home

bat~.

basement

and garege in the coun-

try on good hard road.

tons, more or less, of stat~
specification 40-4 asphaltic
hot-mix in place on various
streets of the town. Cauncil
reserves the right to reject

ONE FLOOR 3
bedroom ranch hom~
with modern bath, nat.

Janice Lawson

gas furnace, carpeting,

any or all bids.
17)

·

Clerk

28, 181 4, 21c

U.S. Rl. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorlled John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deater
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
t ·J ·tfc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

garage or

't(hatever .

Asking

$23,000.
5 FAMilY VAJlO SAlE

In Pacinl' Nslde Post Office
JULV2t,lO, ll
THURS., Fill . &amp; SAT .
n~ c:lotl'les &amp; usee
1JgS, Pilnls 11-11,

~Nomen' s

13· 14, Skirts.

_ __

_!.~uctl~n __.:::.:__

I

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., JUL \'31ST AT 10,30 A.M.
CHESTERHILL, OHIO ON ST. RT.l77
BETWEEN CHESTERHILL&amp; PENNSVILLE
Take 51. Rt. 60 to McConnelsville, cross river
through Malta; on to St. Rt. 71 West lor three mites,
turn tell on to St. Rt. 377 at top of hill. Stay on St. Rt.
377 through Pennsville owards Chesterhill to the

ttc. sw, at@",

dren.es. ShDu (.~til stJes) , boys·
&amp; qirls' new &amp; used Nby
clotnes, siJn 0 n months, b&amp;by
furniture , nri119 cradle, new
carrlu, new I ustCI bltllnlleti, 1
re!Celvtng btankth. Ntw coati
worn 1 time. Gtrls' clothing in
900cl condition, 2 yr to ' yr. 1
shots and new coats. Meft's

clothing, au sill's,

p.~nts,

shlrtl,

etc . Oishwue, uten1111, ctOklnt

pans, ilppll•nces. toys, ek. Air

conditionrr -

anything

arM!

&lt;! Ve rylh1n11

2 HOUSES- Rent will help you pay. A tamity
cold divide. All utilities.
Large home and a
$n'latter one. Baths and
city water. The price Is
negotiable
Asking
S37,500.
INVEST- in these side·
by-side houses and have

a

business

location.

Both for $21,000.
'

ousing
Headquarters

Ftool Eatate - Genll'll

Selling tarm machinery, tractors, antq. furn.,
dishes, tools, c:ar, truc:k, old items and misc.

PHONE

FARM MACH . : twoA.C. W.O. farm tractors; three
hay wagons; two sets of pull type discs;
cultipacker; New Idea 7 fl. mowing machine (putt
type) : elevator (~ay or grain); two pike -tooth
harrows: International mod. 46 . hay bater; side
delivery rake (on rubber); manure spreader (liar)
Case earth master.
HORSE DRAWN EQUIP.: grain drit r (fcir parts);
potato planter; cultivators; hay leader.
CAR' 196-4 Chevrolet Malibu 4 door, 6 cy,t., auto.
TRUCK' 196-4 Chevrolet pickup hall ton, 4 speed,
w/39,000 miles.
.
MISC. TOOLS, AN DOLO ITEMS' a lot of horse har·
ness; pulleys; rope &amp; bloCk; hand corn sheller:
block &amp;P tackle; grease guns; chi~ken trates;
wheal cradle; barrels; ladders; tog chains; rO)M!·
shovel~; pipe; wrenches; hay hooks;
screw tacks; axes; pitch forks; spud bars; come
a longs; vises; pipe cutters &amp; dies; 'hammers: fence ·
charger; hog feeders; platform scales; gas tank
w/stand 1 wool Iter; neck yokes; single &amp; double
trees; cement blocks; three ox yokes; grass seder ·
Incubator; hay knives; cream separator; Wluard
ro!oflller; sausage grinders; apple butter stirrer;
lanterns.
.
• ..
ANT. FURNITURE &amp; MISC.: Walnut flat wll cupboard w/pie front, (over 150 ~ears old); treadle
sewing machine; settee &amp; chair; Iron bell; quilt
frames; sq. oak table; antq . wooden beds; walnut 5
teo table; gaslights; stone jugs&amp; ian, somew/l)an·
dies; copper kettle; yarn winder (needs repair)·
dinner bell w/hanger; comforts IIi linens; razors;
shaving mugs; flalwall cupboard; oak library
-table; some antq. gfass &amp; china; several boxes o1
misc.
,
THREE GUNS'
Many otller Items· too numerous tel mliltiell.. Not
"-Sible for 'ICCiftniJ, Nolllln• . . _ 11ef1n
ClaY of nte. Terms: Cllll or ciMdr w/PIIIIflve t.D.
Lunch SIII'Yed lw Toekl. GrlnJII, Pel'llll!flllfMN,
OWNI!it: MRS.IERYL NlliWJ'ON
,
AUCT.: I ILL JAMES &amp; AIIOC.
PHONI i14-117•1411

wedges;

7·22 1

vice,

water,

sewers,
foundtions,
reclamations.

beautiful lir&lt;!place, den, big utility room and two
porches . Home is in excellent condition with e~ery
rbom carpeted and tots of ctqsets. $65,000.

LAND CONTRACT - OW!Ij!r will finance this four
bedrolim home In Pomeroy with a coal and wood
furnace ~nd approx . "" acre"af ground with $5,00Q
down for tS. years at 12'1(, interest with monthly
payments of $282.05. Sate priu$28,500.
·
OWNER VIILL F'fi'IANCE- This 21acre farm that
ts all tented. spring water. big barn, implement
shed, and a. tour bedroom home that has recently
been rem.led throullhOut. Stop In and ask about
,t his one. $39,900.
'
LOTS one acre t~ 27 acres. As many acres a• you
would like. Water and electric available. Startil)lj at
. $1.51111.
•
I

REALTORS'
Henry E. Clelalld,Jr.,GRI, ............. f92-6191
Jean Trus•ll ...... : .......... .. ...... , f4t·IUO
DGitle s, Tumer .. ,. : . .. . ....... .. ..' , .. ft2·J't2
OffiCII .................. .: . ... .. : ..... 992·2259

• Gutters
• Oownspol•ts
• New or Repair
• Painting

Dependable,

We Specialise In

at 1:30 p.m. It is stri ctly
pr imitive. No scope s. ~en
1

ch and off hand shoaling
Everyone welcome .

Professional

Sewer Hookups

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

O'Brien Electric ~
Service
EXP .
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio

guar

appointment, 304·675·5115.
Would like to arrange a
ride or rider to Marshall
th is fall for night classes .

Please call 304-773·5794.

__

Collie female oog.
spayed, ails hots. 5 mo.oto.
pari hOund. 446·8180 or 446·
0568
'h

Free Estimates
4 20-ttc

3 cats. 2 fa male calico and 1

mate yellow . 1 male dog,
good watch dog, black &amp;
brown . Call 446·9542.

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Caii74?-11Cic

PIANO

Ntghtl 2 :30
Toum . l ·2 .l0
Fri &amp; Sat LIVE BANOS
( Drink &amp; Drown ~.ach nightl
r HIS MONTH' S BANOS
rn~.~rs . - Pool

7 11

mo .

CE~TRAL
NEW LISTING -

REALTY

Located in Syracuse. Th ,s home

has an extra large lot and 5 possibl e bedrooms The
dining room and kitchen are spacious, kitchen is
ful1y equipped including diShwasher . Asking

Can be used as add·ons, small

business, or construction office . 2 trailers &lt;asking

54500 &amp; SS500) are 10x50 w1th 3 rooms each. Furnace
&amp; central air. One has 112 bath &amp; hot water heater.
The third is 1Q)(35 {asking S3500) w1th 2 rooms, fur·
nace, cehtral air, 1h bath &amp; hot water heater .

HOME on approx . 2 acres, Basham &amp;· Eagle
Ridge . Needs handyman . Asking $25,000

Liv•ng room has

RENTALS:

' Brick home for rent in Letart, Ohio

$275 .00 a month

Small apartment in Racine, Sl.SO a month, furnish -

ed.

1

Female black toy Poodle.
13 yrs . otd. good tempered .
Moving must leave her.

Pomeroy, Oil.
Ph. 992·2174
2·26 tf c

----------11 ,......-::--=---::::-::-=::-:--,•

1

S&amp;W
GUNSMITHING
STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
CLIP AD AND GET
20% OFF ON R E·
BLUING.
7·26·1 mo.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
add·ons, new homes,
plumbing. electric, siding.

Custom

kitchens

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

Ave ..

Call 446·4719 or 614·256·
6265 .

PUPPIES, 304·675·6233 .
· part German
Shepherd and collie, 30~8
00
~~2_
~-~v_oe~ngs. ___ _

Kittens. black and white,
one male, two females,

liter trained, 3210 Howard
Avenue , Point Pleasant.

3 bags of clothes, all dil·
ferent kinds, must take all

bags, 304-675·6518.
K itlens, phone

Two fema le puppies, nine
weeks-old,
registered

OLD wi cker furniture, old
&amp; linens , call 614·245·
Yard Sale Boys clothes.
Avon. baby clothes. Thur·
condition . Call after 5 p.m .

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VIIIYL &amp;

Roger Hysell

Yard Sate One m1 1e out Lin·
coin Pike from Centenary .
Thursday and Friday, 9·6.

GARAGE
AUTO&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Also Trc,~,nsmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121 ·
3·24·1fc

•Storm Windows

LOST balck &amp; while pony
vincin1ty of Teens Run·
Providence Rd . Reward.

Windows

Call 614·256· 1473 or 256·
6805.

•New roofing

Free Estimates
James Kees~
Ph ' 992 •2772

f-1:=========:::::+~=====7=·4:·:1~m~o=.~

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND

, New Homes - extehsive remodeling

CONSTR~fl;TION
Do11r &amp; blockhoe str·

vice, water, sewer, ponds,
foundations,
reclamation.
Licensed &amp; Bondld
Phone 949·2293
or94H417
3·l·Hn

Electric work

•Custom Pote Eitdgs.
· •Roofing Work
14 Years Experience

K·EN'S ·

.
•
.
.......
APPUANCE

\

•Wnllerl

• Dish·

'
• • ....,.. • Relrl,.r•t·

'"
•Dryen
PARTS.n••:[;~;~~~~ ­

rest,
upper
1. 7.
REWARD
. Call R614·388·
999~ .

Yard Sale 2 mi. out 588, see a S1.500.00 en I istment
sign on right. Wed . thru ? bonus. $35 ,000 life in·
Dishes. furniture. 3 pc. surance and tree tuition to

bedroom suiJe, warm mar· anv college or trade school
ning heating stove, con . in • West Virgin 1a. In·
piano. bathtub, lumber. terested person~ may call
elect
appllitnces, other (304) 675·3950 or in West

items. Call 446·4497 .

voroonoa call toll free 1-800·
6-42·3619

Yard Sate Fri. &amp; Sat .. July
30 &amp; 31. 9AM to 5PM. Baby R IO
GRANDE
items, 2 cribs, stroller, COLLEGE / COMMUN IT\'
bassineffe, carrier / car COLLEGE
Cor ·
seat,

etc.

Mens,

ladies,

dinator/ lnstructor Dieselprogram
pets, drapes, chair. Lots of leading
to
Asso ci ate
misc. items. Everything in Degree
in
Diesel
good condition, some new . Technology . Effective 9·1·
Rain postpones lot Aug. 6. 7. 82 . Minimum requirements
No sates before 9AM . 435 are Bachelor' s Degree, or
Lew1s Dr, across from equivalent demonstrated

Slate Highway Patrol on by license. certificate, or
Rt. 35
education ; plus 3 years of
practical

LOST black female Ger·
Shepherd

near

Butaville· Por·t er
Wearing

orange

Rd .
collar.

Call 446·3228.
Lost · Horse. brown , Ap·
patoosa pony 1 week ago.
Vicinity Hickory Chapel
and Jericho Road. 304-675·
6276 or 675·6999 .
7

Yard Sale

3 Family Garage Sate

Thurs., Fri., Sat. Baby
7·;:,;15-;.:l:..::.::::...tl items, sm . appliance~.
.__ _ ___._....;.,

. KOUNTRY.
· KWB

*PRO SHOP .
••

rwo, .

. . , • S&lt;itllrt

IICCrepr, lhoolop,
....... ~•uL

t GOlf LESSONS

&amp;

clothing,

misc .

Rodne~

Village 11 . 245·9535.
.G arage Sale Friday and
Saturday Debby Drive,
McGuire Subdivision. Fur·
niture, violets, appliances,
Tv. and encyclopedias.
Yard Sale July 28, 29, &amp; 30.
Good clothing, etc . Bradley
Herder,
Route t60,
EwtngtO!'·

MI. IRS

*' AEI.O
TIIPS
SS ttofe-ln-Dne

$$

JOHN TEAFORD
Che$ter, OH.

.

7·14·1

experience

tn

Friday only . diesel· auto or related area,
Baby bed, accessories. other than teaching . Salary
clothing, kitchen fable. 5 for full -time position on
faculty scale. Apply to
miles North of 35 on 160.
Yard

Sate

dlviduat
l&lt;all

needs.

Confact

Burleson,

agent.

..

Phone 446·2921 .

Also available KaPafe
uniforms puching and

ki cking bags, and protec·
five

equipment .

Jerry

Lowery &amp; Associates
Karate Studio , 143
Burlington Rd., Jacj&lt;son,
Oh . Call 614·286·3074.
White's School of Taekwon
Do Korean Karate 426 Main

st.,

Pt.

Pleasant.

New

students accept at any
class -Men, women. or
children . H011rs Tue. &amp;
Thurs. 6 to 9PM and Sat . 11
to 2.. Full line of Century

Martial Arts supplies also
sold . Call 614 - 367 · ~ or
446·3426 after 6PM.
17

Miscellaneous

House painting, exterior
and
i nter l or :
gutter
cleaning, roof painting, re·
point chimneys, trash
hauling, lawns mowed.·m 7~19 .

=-----~:=::==

Wanted to Do
Lawn Mowing nq yard to
bog or small . Ret iabte and

18

dependable. For estimate

call 4441·3159 after 6PM 256·
1967
Trash collection &amp; hauling.

Call 446·4480.

Coordinator of Personnel,

Three tam11y garage sale
at Denver Weber's residence in Reedsville, July 30
and 31, 9 a.m . to 6 p.m .
Furniture, dishes, baby
items , jewelry , men and
women 's clothing in all

sizes. misc . 378·6293 .
House moving sale. Fur
ntture, tools, clothing, an·
tiques, and misc . Margaret

Rio Grande College, R'o
Grande, Ohio 45674 . Ap·
plications

received

until

position filled .

Ad-m~ ;,·;~ ~;:- fo;---;;,~
proximately
tOO bed
SNF/ICF nursing fa cility .
Excellent salary and
benefits. Send resume to

P 0 . Box 1088. Gallipolis,
Oh ~5631.

above

Runs. 949-2687

Bowman's Mature women to stay with
elderly couple, room ,

.
----

Sal. July 31 -al Nationwide
office 804 W. Main St.-nex t

Avenue ,

YARD sale, t; ,. mile out
Sandhill Rd .. first road on

Odd jobs or yards. Call ·446·
6641.
Would like to do painting,

interior, exterior &amp; roofing.

Call anytime 614·245·1763.
Room, board and laundry,

elderly

or

Carpener

flnanelal

sonnell Office, Holzer
Clini c, 385 Jackson Pike,

Henderson, Crab Creek.
Mils tone . 304 576·2742 .
Attent 1on

RN'S· Pomeroy

VanMeter director of Nur·

Work,

remodeling or repair. Wall
paneling and ce&lt;t 1ng · tile.
Phone992·2759.

9PM . Apply in person , Per·

needed, Redmond Ridge,

diSfbled

preferred . Have reteren-

Registered Nurse, Ohio
Lic ense to work part time
2-3 evenings per week, in
evening clinic . Hours 5·

right past Pleasant Valle y H.C.C. now has opening for
Nursing Home. Thursday &amp; full and part time RN for 3
Friday .
10 11 and 11 to 7 shifts.
- - -- - - - - Upgraded salary and shift
YARD sate 2217 Jelferson dolferentiat. Contact Nancy
Ave ., Pt Pleasant, Thur·
sday &amp; Fndav . 9·? Floor
model stereo, clothing ,
household &amp; misc.

4173.

ce's 446·8.542 .

Vard Sate, July 29 and 30. Gallipolis, Oh ~5631
glassware. c tothes, toot s,
furniture .
small
ap· AVON
representative,
pliances, 1 m11e out Jericho
Road, Point Pleasant.

Interior &amp; exterior pain ting . Reasonable rates.
Call for free estimate, 446-

board, plus salary . Call 6U·
379·21109 or 614·379·2593 .

21

Business
Opportunity
LOOKING for people who
want to earn between $500.
and $50,000. monthly
through this "newest and

tastes! growing company
in the nation" . Call 30H751293.
22

Money to LaM-

REFINANCE or purchase .

sino. 614·992-6606.

vour

Immediate

rate. wva. &amp; Oh 'o Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St .,
Athens, Oh 614-592·3051.

opportunities

for Avon representatives in
man

for aImost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in·

FOUR family yard sate, 29 these neigl1bors·-- Middlep·
&amp; 30, books. records, ort, Pomeroy, and the
clothing, mise Neal Road, Township areas in Meigs
behind Krodel Park .
Co. Also Addison, Cheshire,
Springfiets, Racoon. Hun·
YARD sate. July 29, 30. Ex- lingt.Pn and Morgan Twp.
tra size cloth es, organ, in Gattia Co. Call collect
misc. Midway Drive, New 614-6?8-7111.

home . 30 year fixed

·=======-

ii - -Professionat- Services

C&amp; L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service

lor all types of businesses.
Carol Neat
~46 - 3862

Haven . Rain or shine.

HOMEMAKERS DREAM!
8

Public Sate

You control hours and in·

come. Demonstrate toys
and gifts. NO Investment.
Rick Pearson, Ex · NO experience. Also
perienced AUCTIONEER. booking parties. Call 992·
Estates. antiques, farm, 5603 or .write TOY LADIES
nousehotd. Licensed Ohio- PARTY PLAN. Johnstown,
wv. Buying antiques. 30.4· PA 15904.
773-5785. 773·9185.
Wanted--drummer
for
Auction every Fri. night at serious rock band, ,IIIII·
the Hartford Community zkreig. For audition, call
Center. Truckloads of new Keith, 992·3408. Must have
merchandise every week. drums.
Consigments of new and - - - - - - - used merchandise always Lady to live in with elderly
welcome. '
Richard woman. t nterested parties
Reynolds Auctioneer. 275· call
992·3727 for more tn·
3069.
formation.
&amp; Auction

Greg Roustt·
Ph. 992·7583
or 992·2282

t;:::=:;.::::;,:;::~r.::===;iiij;====~
FOR FUTURE USE"

LOST Orange &amp; white cat
in vincinily of Roadside

services for fire insurapce

coverage in Gallla Coeihty

Men, women , &amp; children.
Instruction thru black Dell.

puter repairer , sheet metal
worker, or refrigeration.
31 . 178 Brentwood Dr 10 .00 Plus you will have a secure
part time job with the Ar·
AM lit 4:00PM
my National Guard after
schooling . Benefits include

2631
Lincoln
begins 10 a.m .

•Replacement

SAND\' AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered

defence all private lnsons,

cycle, lawn mower, much
more. One day only, Julv

Two standing trees for
firewood, you move. 304-

~----

•Insulation
•Storm Doors

emplaymeat
ser.lees

Help wanted
&amp; ends .
HIGH
SCHOOL
GRADUATES/ SENIORS .
112 mite from Jones Boys. You can earn over $550.00
Sweeper,
washing per month white learning a
machine, stroller, motor· valuable skill like com-

675 4154.

AWMINUM SIDING

st. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

Insurance

13

15 Schools Instruction
Karate the utttmate tn self

Yard Sa te Friday on Rt .
160, 3 miles from hosp1tal. 11.
Gun, knives, several odds

to Boat sates

ONE small breed puppy,
304·675·5822 after 4: 3Q.
- -·---6
Lost and Found

12
Situations Wanted
The etoerty Is my concern.

304-675·1336.

blue heater
mother, 304·675·2178 .

--~---;;.B·.:.20;;.·,;;1f.:.c..JI Austrian

main ·

667·6329 or 667·3402.

Johnson . Route 124, 3rd

304 · 675 · ~365.

and

tainance couple for 25 unit
apartment building In New
Haven, WV . Send resume
to John Hunter % Ci'DC,
380 South 5th St. Suite 1,
Columbus, OH o43215.

and bookcases . W•tt buy
complete household. Gold,

silver , old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
July 30. etc. lnd1an Artifacts of all
Trailer types Also bu ying baseball
Ave .. cards . Osby Mart 1n 992·
c lothes, 6370.

'Y ard Sale Fr iday ,

manager

I have one vacancy In my
private home. Very oood
e)(perience. $470. per mo.

9·00AM to 5:00PM.
9 to ? Johnson's
Court, Ea st ern
Gallipolis School
misc. items.

PART lime matntatnance
person or resident

Tables, round or square.
Wood ice boxes. Old desks

&amp; Fri.

houise

!-

Sec ono

10~1

Porch Sale, Wednesday 28,

$32,000 .
3 TRAILERS -

Registered Great Dane and
mother minature Collie.
Sweet tempered, wormed

t----------+----------1 Puppies

Re-Biue and Re-Finish
restock, Parts, Etc.

Reel Estate - General

3 puppies 9 wks old, father

35 Y rs. E xpenencr

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Complete
households .
Wrote : M.D. Mil ler, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992· 7760.

girts clothing &amp; coats . Car· Automotive

Call 446·7417.

NATHAN i\ l(,f,S

Ph. 949·2160 or 949·2322
4·20-lfc

AND CUSTOMIZING

Masttr c. 5·9-tfC

R,l diiltOr Spec1ahst

TOM HOSKINS

Wed I Thun
MAIHHAlL TENNANTf· l
Fn &amp; Sa t
LONE WOLF 10.2
Wt: glilctly •nnounce lhilt each
n•ght 01 ttte B•na we olfe11
dr•n~ and drown. S om~ drinh
reduced during !Hnd .
Our Hrs
Mon · fri .1:GO 2 JG ;
s"' &amp; t;un • · 2: 10 Carry Out
Bee r •nd Wtne Av• olable •t
M•n•mum PriCeS- Thi! Lowest
PHON ! 1f92·"1l

F,.om the Smallest
Heclter Core to tne
litrqest Radiator.

And Home Malntenante
• Roofing of all types
eSidlng
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs. experience

Weds.- 1 . Certrv Craft

44~72

Visa

OHIO VAUEY
ROOF!NG

r ues.- l iidle5 N1ght t · 2: JO

Seller pups. Black . 8 wks.
old, very prelty. Call 614
379·2134

COMPLEH
RADIATOR
SERVI CF

dollars, wood Ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,

GallipOl iS. Thurs

Family .

623~ .

4_ _

247 ·3534

just but of Centerville. Fri.
L ots of things, 3 Fam ily at
Shirley Arrowoods.

Electrolysis

--- ~ eaway

16YEAR~

SR 124, Rutland, Oh .
For Appt . 742·2057
P -1 mo

Phone 992·2293
7·28-lfn

DEMONSTRATE toys &amp;
gilts, home party plan .
August to December. No
collecting; delivering or
cash Investment Free kit,
Free tra ining. 614·992·7046.

sday , Fri. &amp; Sal. Sm,th Rd .
oil Butavllte Rd . Three USEO wooden desk . good

Center. A.M.A. approved,
Doctor referats, by ap·
pointment only . 304·675·

7 14-ltc

anteed Work . 9 yrs. E)(·
perience.

Racine &amp; Syracuse

Sorghum chain mitt , 446·
1052.
I

operation. Frac . 3; T-2N ;
R· 13·W; Sollsbury Town·
ship, Meigs County , Ohio. Yard Sate Wed. 7·28 lhur
Interested people can see Sat. 7·31 . Rain or sh ine. An· Gold, silver, sterling ,
these forms and maps at tiques. collectables. clocks. tewelry, rings . old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Ba r ·
the Meigs County Recor· c loth i ng,
houseplants , ber Shop, Middleport. 992der's Office anytin'le.
books. m i sc . tools 2341 3476.
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
The tzaak watton Club wo 11
have a primitive weapons Garage Sale Thur and Fri OLD FURNITURE. beds,
muntetoading target shool O.J . White Rd . Look for 1ron, brass, or wood . Kif·
chen cubbards of all types.
Sunday Aug. lsi. starling yellow signs . No tunk .

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992·2791
or 949.2263

• woodburning fireplace, 11h bath, hardwood floors,
well constructed and insulated Ask ing 535,000.

~;ew~~~~~~-2:.Ab~;r~~~~i~~g~~~i~g-r:;~ f~~[t,

the Meigs countv Recor
der's office for 1!1 strip mine

mer owner of LAMAR
Beauty Salon. has returned
to work at Helen's Beauty
Shop . 860 E .. Main St.
Pomeroy . Oh . Weds ..
Thurs., and Friday . Starling July 28. Call 614-9'122890.

H. L WRITESEL

Bear Front-End
Service

ponds,

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME -

.

Automobile Upholstery
7·1·1 mo. pd.

&amp; ELECTRONIC
SPIN WHEEL
BALANCE

Do1er &amp; backhoe ser-

3 FLAT ACRE!i. - In Racine, Ohio. Owne r will help
fonance . Asking16.500.

NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT - Neat two story
frame home wilh three - four bedrodms, dining
room with fireplace and bar. New carpet_lng
·
·
throughout. $31.900. ·

•A Complete Line of

ROOFING

DUGAN'S
ALIGNMENT

ML
CONTRACTING

trailer also. Asking $35~000 .

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

' •SEAT COVERS
•VINVL TOPS
•CONVERTIBLE TOPS
•CARPETS

All makes and medels
Antenna Installation
&lt;ails and shop
lse•rvi•ce available.
7·8· 1 mo. Pd .

Close to Route 7 out of Mid·
dlepart . 3 bedroom newer home on 2 acres. Rental

608 E. MAIN

PH . 992-6506

Dewavne Williams
&amp; ScoHie Smith

NEW LISTING -

Jesse Newton Farms.

Pomeroy, OH .

Ph. 915-4269 or 915-4382

St. Rt. 7-Between Mid·
dleport &amp; Cheshire, Oh.
PROUDLY PRESENTS

STORAGE BUILDING
- Plenty .of parking,
~

302 Mechanic st.

or 985·3833
7·16·1 mo.

CANDLELIGHT INN

REPAIR
Calli Ill W1rd
'
Wlrd'S KeyiiNrd

electric .

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
Chester, Ohio

( 304) 273-4098

women ,In·

WAITRESS, maids, ·bar ·
tenders &amp; clerks wanted .
write qualifications &amp;
phone number to ' Job
Placement, P.O. Box 102,
Henderson, WV 25106.

BE-Ds~R&lt;&gt;"N-:'6RA'sS.otd
( :::..:.._:::.-v&gt;Nisi••-_::.:.:._ furniture
, gold, silver

Coat
Shade, Ohio
~5776 . Corp..
An opplicolion
is at Yard Sale on Route 279,

-- - ·-- - - - - - + - - - - - - + - - - - - - 1 - - - - - - - - l Part
Border
Colli e· lrish

~~TU~ING

Ideal for

'l'ardSate

SALES &amp;SERVICE

garage. carport and
large yard . Just $27,000 .

water , and

7

BOGGS

~AFORD(B

der's Office anytime.

PUBLIC NOTICE Public
Notice tor Dark Diamond

----------t----------+----------+-----------1 owner &amp; operator. Call for

, ,_,.._C.·-·

,.,_._
..,. c_ ....

7·15· 1 mo pd

. L . . - - - - - - - - . . 1 1 NOW open New Image
Hairdesign . Barri Westfall

111-&amp;.....

.................. ,.. ..... -·-

" Ul"""''''.

Assoctate degree nnd
l stctilss ~cc license.
Phone 985·3364 1&gt; ve.

111- ,., " " -

.., ......... . "' ,,..... . ............

. . y " . ..... t

....... .. &lt; .... , ..

l('ChRICI.lR

7·16-2 mo. pd.

992-6215 or 992· 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·1fc

., ,.,,,...,,..,,._ e, "'

- -- -- - - - - -PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTV, OHIO
ESTATE OF ZUELELIA
SMITH, DECEASED
Case No. 23761
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
July 16th, 1983, in the
Meogs County Probale
Court, Case No. 2_3?~1. Lui a
-·

,.._c_...,.

•-w,.t-11,.0•-

Also other r lectronic
F (luipment.•
Terry fi rown

tor

we pay cesh for tate model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bl 11 Gene Johnson
446-0069

742·2328 '
Rutland, Oh.

r Mddcrmy, en. Rd . 2S
n&lt;'•1r Ctlester .
! . V . •1nd Radt o Rep.1ir

,,._._l .....

tn-M ........ I

live with a carpenter.
His name is AI Tromm .

SERVICE
BARN ·
I nciltcd at Br own ' s

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Complete auller . m,
complete remodeling. roof.
ing ol all types. W01ked in
home area 20 Jti"Free estimates
Call 843-3322

(Foot lslimottl)

U . W \'

want to do, because I

3· 11 ·1fc

(_

lt6 1- ( -lloft

6-U-.t.r-Dtu
)

iflll Wlfh

Show returns

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

KIRBY
SWEEPER
PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

oledricol won

. ... ...

-

..... c_.. ,

..._ ,u,..,.ot

0 ,., ..., .. ..... .. ... ·•' "'

.~ ::.--..:.~~.· ~~~.

~

'""'7''"""

-

~.

1\ I ••• ; _&lt;I II OIM'

1611 ""'" •• 1 Cft

fi• Ho.oC-

• • NC- 611

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

'\ '

Tax increases will ·not lower deficit
can plan to save $2 billion over
three years, and voted to claim
credit for $3 bllllon In savlilgs from
bUts the panel cleared several
months ago to aid thrltt Institutions.
They also called for $5 million In
savings through cuts In Treasury
and Housing and Urban Development administrative costs.

Insulated Dog H011ses

"Beautiful. Cullom
Buill Gorages"
Colt for free siding
estimates, 949-2101 or
949-2140.
No Sunday Calls

;:::::::::::::::::~l.:==========~t:::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::i ~;rie-Mil-le_r _H_ou~e-r.-f-or·

"'

She said enactment of th~t legislation w1ll "arrest the Increase" In
deficits, which would be "not rising,
but not declining."
Mrs. Rlvlln appeared before the
committee as House Republican
Whip Trent Lott accused the Democratic leadership of seeking "nickels and dimes" In savings Instead of
the $6.5 bllllon called tor tor 1983 In
the budget Congress approved last
week.
"I think It's nigh time we bell this
Democratic tom cat and Its wUd,
· midnight spending sprees on the
town," he said.
Lott spoke as:
-The tuU House voted 400-0 to
save $sal mUIIon from veterans'
programs over three years, largely
by Imposing a 0.5 percent mortgage
fee on most VA·backed loans. The
bU! sailed through because It also
contains a 7.4 percent cost of living
Increase lor veterans' compensa·tlon and pension programs.
-Democrats on the House Bank·
lng Committee balked at a Republl-

Sizes from 4 to 6 ind oil

3·29-lfc

-PiumloinJood

tlaf!'

-·. .. _, ----··-

,, '

~

II''" I• L ~' &lt;o I "'"'

~.,..,

Or anything else you

wocclblllldi~gs 2411.'16.

PH. 992-7201

==~·::.rti wort

fullu"'illlt leleplaon,. t'.rrluftlfe" ..

-~

WASHINGTON ·" (API - The
· good news from the ()&gt;ngresslonal
Budget Office Is that nearly $130 bll·
non In tax Increases and spending
cuts being debated In Congress
would " arrest the Increase" In
triple-digit federal budget deficits.
The bad news Is they won't do
much to lower the deficit from year
"· · to year. Another round of tax hikes
~: '· . l\fld spending cuts In 1983 may be
:.n • needed for that.
·; · .. • · CBO director Allee Rlvlln told
· · the Senate Budget Committee on
Tuesday that "It wUI take another
look at the whole budget" to force
" , . detlctts down and help create a ell·~ .. mate tor a robust economic

Utility Buildings

r-:::::::::::::::::;-t;:========~t::=;;;;;;;;;;;;::::=~;:::::::::::::::::::;l

·~dolons ond remodtlinJ

PHONE 992-2156

Sizes start from 30x24"

V. C. YOUNG Ill
'(,

LOOklno

terested In earning $20 to
S60 or more In one evening
having toy parties. Work
own hours . Call Friendly
Home Parties Manager,
614·992·3561. Also booking
toy parties. If tong dlstan·
ce, call coiii!CI.
·

QUAIL

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Or Wtoll I&gt; l ily ltt"onel (II U thH 0.111
Il l Court Sl., ,...,tory. Olllt '~"'

)I M..,M .. ODo&gt;O&lt;t"o ' ''

LAFF·A·DAY

_, , ,,

•

'

Grain agreement kept alive

aazu:i:;

. ......
........·····
. . ....... .....

1

director refused to speak to news
'reporters at the Services.

board has videotaped the films
taken by five different cameras to
view them trame by frame.
A cameraman who was In the helicopter has accused the director of
the movie segment, John Landis, of
ordering the helicopter pilot to fiy
lower to the ground - and to the
tlrebombs.
·
·
Landis, attending the chlldren's
funerals, ,was out of his ctflce Tuesday and unavailable for comment
on the report, a secretary said. The

The ' Daily Sentinel

_ '!.

T..

Ohio

.
.
·- Busmess servtces

I

.

WASffiNGTON (API -Despite
• , Indications of another bumper
harvest, wh~:at farmers continue to
be plagued by gloomy economic
forecasts by the Agriculture
Department.
" '' · "The 1982-83 whe at marketing
·;;:., ~ar wUI be shaped by a banner
' . pf9p, record supplies, prospective
~ ·.:· strong exports and continued rela·
' '" lively low prices," the depart. • . ment's Economic Research
, • . Service said Tuesday.
.. .. ~ . "As of mid-July, the U.S. wheat
· crop was projected at over 2.7 bll·
Uon bushels, only 3 percent below
"• 1981's record harvest."
The analysis said that production
of hard red winter wheat- and the
•• · klnd In greatest abundance - wUI
~ more than otfset an expected
:: .. }!'laller harvest of hard red spring
~
wheat.
" ·.
' 'Unfavorable weather reduced
harvest prospects for soft red win·
ter wheat and cut yield prospects In
soft white wheat areas, pointing to
•: . a cutback In 1982 pastry wheat pro; ductlon," the report said.
· "The 1982 pasta wheat (durum)
. ·.: harvest may be about one-third
lower thar. a year ago because of a
sharp dellne In planted acreage."
The huge crop, combined with
., ·· the largest beginning Inventory In
';. : f91,1r years, means a record 1982-83
'"'· to!al U.S. wheal supply of more
than 3.87 billion bushels.

... .

28,1982 .

Weclnftday, July 28,1982

·: Pape-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

-

MOving Sale 128 State
Street. Wed. and Thurs.
9:00AM until 7:00PM. Fur·
nlture. crothlng, 'and much
more.

31

Homes lor Sate

LOW HEAT BILLS 3 bdr .
birck, lower Second Ave.,

Gallipolis .

Extra

tot,

fireplace, modern kitchen,

full basement. Call 446·
4826 .

4 bdr. colonial, 2 fireplaces,
all the extras. Shown by appointment. Call 446·7802 .
27 acres with house near
Vinton for sate or trade.
Call 446·8615'.
3 ·or 4 bedroom modern
home by owner. · over 5
acres, pond,

assume91/~

mortgage, low dqwn·
payment, many s~lal
features. Call evenlhga,
weekends.61H..' II71: ·

�982 .·

Sentinel
3~Homes tcirsaie ---

They'll Do It Every Time

water, ges, electric, septic
tank. Call 611-992·2602 .
Mayrlce DYrst. 4 E . St.
Pomeroy, Ohio.

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, c hair , roc ke r , ot·
toman , 3 tabl es , (ex tra
neavy by Frontie r! . S68S.
Sofa, chair a nd loveseat,
S27S . Sofas and c hairs
priced from $285. to $795.
Tables, $38 and up to $109 .
Hlde·a · beds,5340., queen
size, $380. 1 Recliners, $175.
toS29S. , Lamps from $18. to
$65 . s pc . dinettes from 579 .,
to $385. 7 pc. , $1~9 . and
Wood table with 4 chairs,

Mlddleport·S2S Broadway .

basement,

garage. Robery Wlnn, ~HO
Crone Rd ., Zenia Ohio.
~S .

TuppersPtalns, Oh . By
owner. All etec. 2 bd.room,
Family kitchen. finished
basement, with garage,
vinyl
siding. 1 acre. Mid
1
«l S. E)(C. cond. Owner
financing available . 614·
667-6172.
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon , 3 bedrooms, family
room with fireplace, central air, basement, phone

304·675· 1542.
HOME for sale, MI. Vernon
Ave. Under Wl.OOO . Call
304-675·2973.
FOUR bedroom, excellent
neighbOrhood, huge family
room, bar &amp; wet sink, 304·
675-3729 between 5·9 p.m .
Beautifully restored Vic ·
to~lan, s bedrooms, lour
fireplaces, ornate carved
woodwork, air cond ition,
in¥~1ated, owner financing,
304-675·6999.
Lovely

remodeled

bedroom home,

3

ba~ment,

fenced backyard, carpeted,
sided, storm windows, near
schools. 3o4-67S·4338.

.

ONE bedroom home, Hart·
lord, on two lots, phone 304·

113·5215.
Mobile Homes
lor Safe

32

TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . USED -MOBILE
HCilMES, CARS, TRUCKS .
GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK
OUR PRICES . CALL -446·

7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35; PHONE .W.- 3~
1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond . Deluxe kitchen, large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm. Hidden util . room .
379·2310.

N~w Moon 1970 model ,
12lc65 with 12' expando, set
up In local park with sktr·
tlng &amp; steps. Ready to
move Into $6,500. Calf -446·

3547.
10x5S Great Lake 62 model,
air cond., washer &amp; dryer,
MIY furnished. Calf 4-46·
3783.
1* NashYa 14x70 expando
dlhlng &amp; living room, 3
bdrm .. 1 1/2 bath, central
air. Would like to sell on
land contract. Calf -446·8335.
1979 Liberty Liberator
51J.soo . contact John
Myers, Ohio Valley Bank.
c 1 11 -w.-2631.
19Bo BAYVIEW O£LUXE
ce,t. air, fireplace, garden
tub , underpinning with or
without applia. Call -446·
6211 or 614-388·9916.
14x65, 1981 2 bdr. , Ventura,
ex . cond . Moving must sell,
513,000. Call -446·4719 or 614·
256·6265.
12x60 BuddY mobile home
in·e)(cellent cond. Washer,
dryer. stove, new refrig.,
nice furniture. Patio, built
on utility room . Call 614·
992·2684 alter 5 p.m .
Chester·14x70· 1980 Mobile
home, 512.000. Rent 2 acres
with it. Will sell all lor
$21.000. 614-949·2639.
USED MOBILE
f76·2711.

HOME .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
l.fcensed &amp; insured. Call
?04·576·2711 '
71 New Moon, 2 bedroom
$-4.300. 304-882·2236.
1973 Ux70 Grandville has
large rooms plus laundry
r 00m, must be moved. 304·

882-2820. '

fwo

bedroom mobile
I)Ome, 304· 675-4045.
F . . mslor Sate

«J acres. 6 rm.

hO(r5e and
ISarn, tObacco bas. on S.t.
Rt. 218, 7 1/2 miles from
clfY. Call 614·245-9222 alter

' :.:
FARM for sate, 65 acres on
· Fees Branch, t:tannan
District. Mason County,
call JoH76·2$68.
.

uP.

~~~~;;;~;;;:;:~:~;;.~~~~ $219
up to 5300.
$495 .
Hutches,
Lots &amp; Acrea11e

lS

28 ACRES, tobac co allot·
ment, mineral rights, no
buildings, $10.500. 304-675·
6851.

'I&gt; AC'IlE w ith mobile
home, located 3 miles off
Route · 2 on M illstone Rd .
Land contract. Phone 304·
516·2219,

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. hOuse gOod location,
2 bdr. apt, ·HUD excepted.
A-One !real Estates, Carol
Yeager · Realtor. Call 304·
67S·Sl04 or 67S·SJ86.
House, 120 3rd . Ave .,
Galllpol'-. 2 bdr. , gas heat;
dep . ""'· The Wiseman
Agenc~ • .W.-3643 .

Desk S37S
$110.
and
..
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Cherry, 5795. Bunk bed
Furnished efficiency , 5135, complete with mattresses,
ut iltles pd, share bath, 701 S2SO. and up to S39S . Cap4th . Ave., Gallipolis. Call lain' s beds, S275. complete.
446·4416 after 7PM .
Baby beds. $99. Mattresses
or box springs, fvll or twin,
1st floor furnished apart· sse., firm , $68 , and $78 .
ment, adults preferred. ref . Queen sets, $195. 4 dr .
&amp; dep . reqyired.- Call 631 chests, $42. S dr . chests,
$54 . Bed trames. S20.and
-4th Av.e ., Gallipolis.
S2S., 10 gun · Gun c abinets,
5350.. dinette chairs 520.
3 room furnished apt. and S2S. Gas or electric
Deposit &amp;
references ranges,
S32S .
Baby
requireo . No pets, adults matresses, 52S I S3S, bed
only . Inquire 602 4th Ave., frames S20, S2S, I $30. Used
Gal.lipolis after 4PM.
Furniture ·· bookcase,
ranges and TV 's. 3 miles
Apartment partially fur - out Butaville Rd . Open 9am
nished, utilities furnished, to7pm, Mon. thru Fri .,9am
adults. Call 4-46·3733, eve. toSpm , Sat.
-446 -0322
-446·0171.
4-4 - - - Apartm-en- t - - lor Rent

- - - -----

Fvrnished 4 rooms &amp; bath,
clean, no pets, adults only,
dep . req . Call 4-46· 1519.

Gen . Elect. 2 spd., avac odo
washer . extra
nice .
Whirlpool apartment size
washer. S90 each . Call 614·
256· 1207.

Misc. Me•rct1an,dic•e

GUN S: Colt, Ruge r, S &amp; W.
Pi s t o ls
a nd
R iffl es .
Rea sona bl y pr iced . Call a l·
ter 5, 614 ·367-0482 .

1973 Ali a 23ft. pu ll c amper,
good co nd . Call 614·388·
8437 .

For sa le· Us ed R 40 Ditc h
Witch tre ncher . 614·694·
7842.

81

-- - -·-----·-__._I

FirewOod .$25.00 p ickup
toad at farm . goat milk,
S3.00 gallon, 304·895·3395.

Good vsed bedroom suite,

•
7· ll'

complete SSO., also electric
fireplace 'with blower, $40;
1 tot yard sale Items 520.
304-6756535.

________ · ~· _ ___1,!:=:=:========:;::===========:!.1

RE-ESE trailer hitch &amp; 2
extendable mirrors, $100.
phone 304·882· 2303 .
5} =Buitding~j&gt;l~~=
Building materials block,
br ick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grand e, 0 .
Call 614-245·5121 '
Metal sheets lor a II
building pyrposes. Flat
porcelian enamel coated.
4X8 thru 4 x 12. Prices, 57.00
to$9.60. 614·667 ·3085.
Four round wooden colum·
ns, 7 ft. by 10 in. diamete r .
SSO. or best oiler. 614·992·
3952 .

Cl• M21&gt;J .....

. - - · ----.
58
Fru it
&amp; vege f.!' bl
______
. es
Pi c k you r ow n bean and
tomat oes, $3 bv . each,
bring contai ne rs. Ray nor
P each Orchard, 446·4607,
Lowe r R;ver Rd . Closed
Sundays a nd We d nesday
eve ning s

-- _...,._.

HOME grown tom a toes, 10
lb . bas ke t o r bus he l. Ph one
304·882-2361.

or

-------

___

-

__ -

-----

=

2 bedroom mobJte home in
New Hlven. Adults Only.
No P«!L-·304·675·1452 alter

·~·

3.

04 mite out Sandhi! Rd.
Phone 304-675-3834.
F,OR ,r•int, house. trailer,
304·675-39$.4 alter 5 p.m.
,

Apartment
tar llent

51

81 Cheliet~e. 9 mos. old,
10,000 mi tes, it . blue,
deluxe Int., $4,850, firm .
Call -w.-7053.

Household Goods

GE dryer1 white mint
shape, ~90 , Whlrtpoof
pertone auto washer,
nice, S110. Call .W.-8181.

luslneu Bullclfnps .

.,._w,.r.:

..

Good USed Llvinll Room
Suites, 1·2 piece and 1-4
piece. Caii4-Ul·7719,
(

H ARTS U sed Cars , New
H ,;~ven West Vi r gi nia _ Over

.
20 less expe ns1ve
cars ·,n
s tock .

--. -·

Pick Your own tomatoes,
half runner or lim a bea ns,
56.00 bY, corn $1.00 d oz .
Raynor Peac h Orc ha r d ,
Rt . 7; Low er River Rd .,
Gallipolis. 446·480 7.

-----------

--------·-

s a 1~

J E E"PS, cars, tr uc ks under
$100 ava ilabl e a t loca l
govern m e nt sal es in yo ur
Cor. n Silve r Quee n, whi te. a rea. Ca ll (r efund able) 1·
For freez ing $1.00 doz ., fo r 714·569-0241 ext . 1855 lor
freezing a nd can nino . Ca ll directory on how to pu r ·
614·256· 11 57 .
c hase . 24 hou rs .

sale-- -- -- ----

- - - -------

~ uto~ tor

71

i97~ 1/2 "Pi;;,~;h- Duster,
slant 6, 3 spd., economical,
37,000 miles, PS, PB, AM·
FM stero, ziebart, ~w
radials, air cond., super
clean. Call -446·2847. • ·

1968 F ia t , good s ha pe, 304·

675·3476.
1980 Ford Mustang, turbo
charge, lo ur s peed, $5,900 .
Phone 304· 458· 1858.
197 1 Ford s ta ti onwagon, v8, ni ne pa sse nger , 70,000
mi les, accepti ng bes t offe r ,
304·675·2675.
1972 Buick LeSabre, good
ru nn ing, has cu r re nt WV
s t ick e r . $300, 304 ·773·5082
after 5 p. m .
1973 C HEVY Ca pris Es ta te
Sta ti on Wago n, excell e nt
condi t ion, full power, AC,
AM· FM stere o t ape pla yer,
ai r s hoc ks, $1095. See a t 309
71h.St . Ne w Have n, wv .
P hone 304-882·2303.
G R A ND P r ix, low
m il eage, AM· FM, S·t rack ,
phone 304·675·4526 .

17

12 ---_ T~£k~~f.Oi ~aJe __
1974 Chevy. p ;ck·Yp, 6 cy l. ,
a uto .. tr a ns miss ion . $8QO .
Be see n at 400 Las ley St .
Pome ro y
1979 Che v y 4x4 . load e d.
$4200 or $500 and assy m e
pay m e nts, 304-458·1833 or
4S8· 10S2.
~

.

- Van
- ·-s-&amp; 4 W. O.

73
-·· · - - --·4-WO Chevy Surbu r ba n
AT, P B, P S, Sl,600 OBO.
Ca ll 446· 1927.
79 Jeep Wago neer 4·whee l
d r ive, AC, P S, P B, AM· FM
S-trac k. Ca ll 446· 1024 afte r
5:30PM .
1~ .

- .. -· -

---

- ----

2·1981 XR200 Honda dirt
bikes a nd he lme ts. Ca ll614·
245·529 4.
1980 Honda CM400E . Lik e
new. Mu s t se ll . 614·742·
2025 .
Kawasa ki 1980 K E440.
$1200 o r bes t off e r . 992-7039 .
CM400 Honda $900 . 304-675·
6252 o r 675·1293 .
1976 Ha rl ey Davidso n
Sup e r G lid e, r e c e ntly
r ebuill, fat bob tanks ,
m any ex tra s,304·89S·3326.
1979 Ho nda CB X, 304·675·
5851 '
1974 Kawa s aki 750 Mech
Ill , low mil ea ge, good con·
di t ion , $1,000. Ca ll 304·675·
7462.
1975 Honda XR 15, $250.
Ca ii304-675-S152 .
73 HARLEY Davidson
Spors ter, 52,300 . 304-675·
6122 a fte r 5 p.m .
7S

=-=- ::.-:. :::.=.::.·-

~

-·-· --

Boats and
Motors for Sale

·---·-- ---- - ---

Sea rs 12 ft . fibe rgl ass
fi s hing boat with trail e r
and oars. $495.00 . Phone
446·0418.
1974 Sta r Craft fr i· Haul s k i
boat, 12S Evinrude engine,
e xcell e nt cond . 446·0276.
Fishing
~oat
12ft .
aluminum , exc. cond., S300.
Will Include 7 11~ HR
motor, ·oars. 2 t ueuanks.
Cail614·367-7891. · · -

11

ft . · atumii1Um boat,
trailer, 18 HP Johnson
motor. Call -446·7504.
-·~ - -----~--

Boat lor sate-1976 MFG 16
ft. trHjaut. 1976 75 h.p .
c~ryster, $~5110- ? 61~·992·
2679.

''

7!i VW Delher, 2 dr . ." GT, 4
spd . , excellent cond . .'
$1,575. 76 VW Rabbit, A dr .,
Ford 4 spd. 'tr-. for a 3MJ
4spd., S1,100. Call .W.-7322.
truck. Gall.(.lfto02l6.
1974 Fleefwood Cadlfl•c.
Needs a lew repairs. S500 .
992·5692.
'
1978 Ford L TO 11. $2500.
Cll)f 614·992·3373
, n~~

J:.~_J:~~~~~~~~~~+.!~~::J.:t!]J P_._m_.--~--'-..:.--

"D'D ( I XI I

...

---- ..

F r e nch City
P a in t ing
res identi a l &amp; commerc ial,
in ter io r, exterior, paper
hang in g,
&amp;
t ex tur ed
cei lings . Ca ll 614·367 ·7784
or 614-367-7160.

AR6 'iOJ EVeR BOII-I~R~D
,IMf'l\()ffi! 1\0JbHTS ~

BRIDGE

MATT6R OF 1'1\LT, I SORT' OF
15€T A. KIG!&lt; aJT OF lHW. .

.
~

!
!

A problem hand.

••o

ANNIE

SETTER ...BOT I CAH'r HELP
THIH\UH' flB&lt;X)T ALL Tf'llGE

BIN GS CO NCRETE CON ·
STRU CT ION Spec ia lizin g
in conc r et e driv ewa ys ,
s idewa lks, fl oor s, patios,
etc . 11 yr . exp. Call614·367·
7891 .

POOR. AHMALG 'IIHO OION'T
ESCAPE TH' LAB'RATORIEG.•
THOGE EXPERift'IEHTG
DONE ANY GOOO-:'

--- ..'••.

•i

--THE 11REGEnKCH 140PEilHIZnTIOH ncr»
WO!X..O HIIJE EHr:oRCEO THE USE OF

If

THEGE ALTERNATII/EG l'fiERE THEY
PfWVED TO BE 14~ VM./0 .1 BUT..
C.ONGREG5 DIDN'T Pfl5S Tt€ ACT..

I

If

THEY

Ge ne's St ea m Car pe t , •
Cle an·Sc otc h Gaurd· F ree ~
est imat es-spr ing specia l s - ·~ ~
Gene Sm it h, 992·6309.
.,••

F &amp;

K Tree

I+

..

--- - -------- -·---

t·

Trimming,

st u m p r emoval. 675· 1331
RIN GLES'S SERV ICE ex ·
per ienced m ason, roofer,· '
ca rp e nt e r . e lec'trician ,/ :
ge n e r a l repair s anP•
rem od e lin g. P hone 304 · 675 ·~ ~
2088 or 675 ·4560.
~.

----·--·~

-

;:_..

-

Water we ll s. Comme rcia l' ·',I
an d Do m es tic. Test hole s.
Pum ps Sa les ttnd Serv ice.
304·895·3802 . .
·-.

--------

-·--

-

!t

A DVANC E D
Seam less · :
G u t t e r · Doo rs. Of fering ..
c o ntinuou s
~ utt e rin g,
sea ml ess s iding, roofing ,
ga r a g e
doors ,
fr ee
estim a tes, 614·698·8205.

shots for a bathcataloq!

I

ST ARK S Tree Trimm ing '·
a nd Lawn Service . Shr u bs :
tr immed . P h6ne 304-576· .,
2010.
Plumbi ng
·- ~ .tteati ~g
CA RTER 'S PLU MBIN G
AND HE ATI NG ·
Cor . Fourth and Pi ne
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

82

()) a

83 ___ __'_ _§~ C_!~~~-i~ ~ ..
Gallipolis Diver si fi ed Co n,
s t. Co. Cus tom dozer &amp;
ba c kh~ w o r k . Specia l :
fa rm rates. Cal l us fo r fr ee
~s timat es. 446·4440 .

WINNIE
I DID, BUT OUT OF
THE CLEAR BLUE SKY
I GOT THIS CALL FROh\
BARNEY McDONNELL,
THE PRODUCER,.,

Lawrence Sid.e nstri c ker,
Backhoe Service. Ca ll 675·
5580.
84
El e ctr ica l.
__ - ~Refr!JI~al fE!! __
Cl endenen Ref r ige ra ti o n, .
Air Conditionin g , &amp;, •
He ating Se rvi ce. Cal l 614· .,..·
256· 1446.
::
.. - ~- ~-:....._- -:_ .,
S EWING Ma chine rep;&gt; irs,
sery l c~. Authoriz ed Singer
Sate s &amp; Se rvice Sha rpen :
Sc issors . Fabric ·shop , ;
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
•
·

-

- ....

:. ::-.=:....~:.:.. ==:-z..- : -- :r ::---- .
85 · General Hauling
-:·- - - ' - " --

...,.· ...

"7-~·

......

JONES BOY S WAT E·R ·
SERVI CE . Ca ll 614·367'147 1·;
0&lt;614·367-0591 .
•
'

--·-·--- -

-- - . --

BARNEY

8/llLS o•·FIRE!!

SNUFFY!!

YONDER COMES TH'
SHERIFF !! I 60TTA
•·
THlNK
FAST··

\fOU'RE UNDER
"ARREST

I MUST BE GITTIN'
FRITTER MINDED-THAT SHQRE AIN'T
SNUFFY!!

. UH--

Need someth ing . haul ed
away or something mov ed? ·
We'll do it. Call 446·3159 or ,
614·256·1967 after 6.
~

- -· ~

+·---.. . ,...::...,_. ~

Now Havling limestone·fili ;
d irt-top soil-gravel. Free ~
estimates, Call 614·367 1 ~
7101..•
-+ · ... -..---it~..;.-!-

1_ ....

\

Will haul dirt ol any kind or
any drlveway maleriat,
Call Leroy Caldwell, 44648511o~ eslfl!'ale.

Jlly\~- ;;.;,-;~ice.

-c;t
J im Lanier,30H75-7397.

_____-

PEANUTS .·

~

_.,.._.
-- ..'
...
-·----·
~
Upl!fllstery - - - .,
....

~

-

_......._ ,

1 T1'1J STATE

.

· j\

UPHOLITI!RY ,SHOP &gt;
11.:1 ·Sec. Ave., Gelltpoiis •· •

•7133 or 446-1133.

--·

MOWREY$

U~t.,-y

.

i

Ri:;

l 11!01112-t Pt. P-.nt, JOt~ ;,

. . ...,..,

I

IMSA CT
GT Race from Uma '
Rock,
t- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (J) ID 1D The Fall Guy
Coh sets out to rescue an
ex-panner. (R) (60 min .)
llll Sylvia Fine Keye'-s
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Musical Comedy Tonight
ACROSS
3 To be (Fr.)
II A star-studded cast joins
host Sylvia Fine Kaye to
411 1 Biblical
re ~create
moments from
brother
Miserables"
four American musicals. (R)
5
Lasso
5
Of
recent
(90 min .)
9:30 II (]) (l) Love, Sidney 11 Birdhouse
times
Sidney goes to work for an 12 "What's on
6 Indian city
ad agency executive who
the
?"
7 Prepare
pries into his privBte life .
I3Shrewd
8 Neighbor
(AI
1 0:00 II (]) (l) Quincy Quincy
bargainer
of Ill.
tries to prove a killer smog
Yesterday's Allllwer
(sl.)
9 Fruit drink
caused the death of two
IS Nancy's
tO Seaman
Z4 Classic
36 Part ,,
people. (R) (60 min.)
ID Oynaoty Blake
14
Ham
it
up
summer
fan dancer
a foot
tries to test Krystle while I6 Drink
17 Pock mark
%7 Shirley
37 Bare
Colby plots to gain access
19 French
Temple film 38 Victim
to the Denver Carrington 17 Ward heeler
I8 Eli stronghold
parish
files. (R) (60 min.)
Zll Sulla's
39 Fairy queen
()) Paper Chase
22 Uncommon
priest
hail
40 Grape-like
1 0:30 (I) Slnp out America
thing
20 Feral abode 30 Backed
fruit
(]) All·Star SporuChal21
Being
(Sp.)
25
Forbid
with cash
41 Allow
lange
()) TBS Evening Newo
26 Egg-shaped
22 Cheap cigar 32 Watchful
42 One of the
® Newawatch
27 Poor Clare's
(sl . I
35
Abstract
leagues
11 :00 II CD (J) II ()) (1J Ill (J2)
2.1 Athirst
lltlire
being
(abbr. )
News
(]) MOVIE: 'Teas·
29 Bowler's
(l) MOVIE: 'McUmock'
target
(I) Nashville RFD
:w
Stringent
(]) ESPN Sparta Center
(l) Newo/Sporti/Weather 31 II Duce's
()) Dave Allen at Large
daughter
®Hitchcock
33 Allegiance
11 :30 D (]) (l) Tonight Show
34 Top role
(I) Another Ule
38
Devilkin
CIJ All In the Family
()) Benny Hill Show
39 Early .
Ill ()) MOVIE: 'Portrait of
western
a Rebel: Margaret San·
character
ger'
43 Unwilling
()) Captioned ABC News
&lt;ID MOVIE: 'Stowaway to 44 Israeli port
the Moon'
45 Hit, as a
ID Nlghtline
baseball
12:00 (I) Bums
Allen
(])
Woman's
Tennis: 46 "-All
19B2
Federation Cup
Laughed"
Final from Santa Clara,
(1937
song)
CA
CIJ MOVIE: 'The Four DOWN
Feathers'
I Yearn
()) Nlghtllne
2
Footwear
()) PBS Late Night
1D ID The Love Boat A
'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
couple
celebrates their
40th wedding anniversary,
AXYDLBAAXR
Doc ia ·accused of improper
Ia
LONGFELLOW
advances and a man tries
to spy on his girHriend. (R)
Qne letter oimpl¥ otands for another. In thio sample A Ill
(1 hr. 10 min.)
" uied for the thr"' L's, X for the two ·o·s, etc. Single lellers,
12:30 g (]) (l) Late Nlpht with apNtrophea, the lencth and formation of the words are •II
David Letterman
hiDU. Eaeh doy th tode letters are dill'erent.

6&amp;tWM~tut'

Ma4be he's doinq

P AI NTIN G interior &amp; ex · '.
te rior, fr ee es t imates, 304 ·
675·11 28.
·- ·----

'

a ())

BORN LOSER

----,--

C H R I S TI AN'S
CO N ·
S TRU CT ION .
Constr ..
r oolin g, s id ing, s pouting,
fe nc ing, pa inting , repa irs &amp;
c lean ing . 4.46·2000, ca ll
before 8 and after S: 30.

)' "

I

Masona r y work , Logue
C ont ract in g,
Rt .
1.
Ew ing to n. Ca ll 614·388·
9939 .

RON ' S Te levision Service .
Spec ia lizi ng in ZeniJh and
Motoro la, Quazar, and
house ca ll s. Pho ne 576·2398
or 446·2454.

ILABERV±
I I r J I

a ()) em

----

__ ~~~'!'~Ys tes__ _

) I rJ

WELL, ISN'T THI5- !70METHI~6 f
HUH, PEOPLE:" TALK AOOUT
YOUR EI&lt;.C ITE:Mt;;NT!

THf HOlMe&lt; TRIED TO ~'"'""'o~
ME ACK05-5 THE: LAKE,
WHEN EAS·Y GOT IT- 1 TRIED
TO VEU. TO YOU, fA5i. YOp
COIJLDN'T HI!'AR ME--

M arc u m
Roof ing
&amp;• •
Spou t ing . 30 .ve~ ~s e~· ~
per ience, spec1allz1ng 1n ~·
built u p roof . Call 614·388· ·:
9622or61 4·388·9857 .
.• .
r•
_____ _____ _
CA PTA IN STEEMER Car·
b ·:
pet Cleani ng featured Y
Ha ff elt Brosth ers Custom
.
Ca rpets . F r ee es1•ma 1es.
Ca ll 446·2107 .

tJ

()) My Thm Sono
()) Electric Company
1lll Over Easy
8 :30 II (]) (l) NBC News
(]) Race for the Penn11n1
Barry T ornpkins and Tim
McCarver host this look at
I
the past week' s baseball
action.
(I) $50,000 Pyramid
(J) Father Knowa Beat
Now .,..nge the circled toners to
()) ID ID ABC Newa
fonn the ourprioe aqower, •• sugCBS N-•
geoted by the above cartoon.
())Dr. Who
()!) Ulla, Yoga and You
7:00 D (]) P.M. M~~~~tZine
Prlnfenswerhere:
(I) HBO Sneak Preview
(Anowers tomorrow)
Host' Leonard Harris takes
a look at upcoming mov ~
Vesterd ay .s Jumbles TOXIC HUSKY INDICT MEADOW
ies. spons snd specials.
Answer: WhaUhappened when the electric bill
(I) Bull' a Eye
arrlved?-HE WAS SHOCKED
(]) ESPN Sporulorum
()) Green Acres
Jumb.. Book No. 1t, containing 110 puzztel,ls•walllblt tor 11 .15 po~tpeid
tn&gt;m Jumble. clolhlo ,_,poptr, Boa 34, Norwood. N.J. 07141. lnciUdo your
()) Entertainment Tonight
name, lddn11, zl coH .nd m1kl chectt1 pay•bte lo N...pepelbooka.
(l) Happy Deyo
Tic T ac Dough
()) ® MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
·
&lt;1D New•
1D ID Muppat Show
7 :30 D (])You Asked For It
(]) SRO: Diana Ro11
Diana sings and dances in
this special from Caesars
By O.wald Jacoby
Palace in Las Vegas.
ud Alu Sontag
(])
MOVIE:
'Med
NORTH
1-28·82
Wedneedey'
tJ8
Here is a real problem
(I) Another Ute
• AK8 4
hand. South gets to three no(]) ESPN Sparta Center
t962
()) Major league Basetrump and West elects to
•
K Q 10 5
bell: San Diego at Atlanta
open the 10 of bearts. South
''
()) 11 ()) Family Feud
WEST
EAST
wins ill dummy and counts
(l) Laverne and Shirley
tK
93
tto
n
2
to seven winning trickl only.
()) Buolneos Report
.QJ 6 2
How can be get to nine?
9
&lt;ID Richard Simmons
tAQJ84
t753
® VIctory Garden ·
+843
South sbould start by
.97
ID ID Entertainment
deciding that West is almost
SOUTH
Tonight
sure to bold the king of
t A Q6 4
B:OO II (]) (l) Reel People Tospades as part of his vulner·
.7 53
night's show features a
able diamond overcall. Tben
tK 10
flying lawnmower, e marthe play becomes easy. He
.A J 8 2
riage with a monster moliff
comes to his band witb a
Vulnerable: Both
and a chimpanzee that
club and leads a spade
practices karate. lA! (60
Dealer:
South
toward dummy. If West
min.)
rises with the king South bu
Wost
Nortll Eat I
Soul•
CIJ National Geographic
nine sure trlckl, but West
Special
tt
wlll play low. Now all South
Pass
It
(]) Auto Racing 'B2: The
Pass
Pass
bas
to
do
is
to
cub
dummy's
3NT
Brltloh Grand Prix
Pass
Pa35
other blgb heart and run off
()) ID 1D Greatest
four
club
trickl
to
come
American Hero Ralph res·
down to a ali-card ending.
cues a ~nle girl and be·
Opening lead: •10
West will make one discomes the target of the
IRS. (R) (60 min.)
card an~ any South player
D ()) &lt;ID MOVIE:'BIInd
good enougb to make that
Ambition' Part 2
fine spade play should bave
()) Wey They Were
no trouble to decide wbetber
® Henry Moore Today ' s
to end play West in diaprogram is a ponrait of tha
monds or In spades. Or If
sculptor and his work . (R)
West makes the brilliant
but one that any very good
(60 min.)
play of unguardilll the spade
9:00 D (]) (I) Facto of Ute
plaler should find. Soul!!
king, South can afmply play
Tootle l"istakenty becomes
Jus takes the top bearts aria
ace and queen of spades.
involved with a teen-age
all four clubs for sev'll)
Why did we earlier call
prostitution ring . (AI
trickl and then must decide
Ibis a real problem band?
(l) MOVIE: 'Seems Uke
whether to drop the king of
Because the play If West
Old Tlmeo'
spades or to throw West tit
elects
to
open
the
queen
of
(])MOVIE: 'Foxes'
with a diamond.
diamonds LS also difficult,
(I) 700 Club
(]) Auto Racing '82:

tNENKLEl

CAPTAIN EASY

PAINTIN G
inter ior and
e x t e ri o r , p l umbing, \
roofin g, some remode ling .
20 y rs . exp . Call 614·388·
9652.

--

IVGLI

e:oo ID
• rn
mma mem a
Newa

Home
__ lmprov e~~nts

~

~(
)~j~I1\7~t==
·.::&amp;;:::-........ - ..

EVENING

STUCC O PLA STERING
tex tv r ed ceilings com ·
mercia l and residential.
free estima tes. Call614·256·
1182.

sale, 304·458·

lour ordfnaly - . ..

7/28/82

serinr-es=--

I, •

Uo,..•nbfll " - lour Jumblel,
ona - 1 0 IIICh lqUAN, 10 faml

WEDNESDAY

1976 Starc ralt Starmaster
·8, $1.500. Ca ll 446 ·2240.

13 ·

"fljl~fi}ft ~ 'IMATIC'tu•1 mWOIID OAME
C!l ~ ~~· byHerwt Amofdlltd Bob 1M

Television
Viewing

66
cond .. $4,500. Call 614·388· ~8747.

T EXACO HYDRAU LI C
OIL N0.32 . 10 we ight 55
gat. d r ums. · E a ch $80 .00.
614·667·3085 .

ALL ceramic greenware,
25% off, Friday and Satur·
day, Jer in Ce ram ics,
Road ,
Point
Jer ic ho
Ple asant, 304·675-2039.

_ ~~ &lt;;.!!!HP.ers . .
cor lez motor home, exc ..

by Larry Wright
,____:...;.:..:..:.:.:__ _ _ _ _ __ _.;.._.;.._;.,

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

WOOD for
1833.

ta,. Daily Sen~l181---9age

, Ohio

'Ju

79 -- Motor Hom e

'N' CARLYLE••

Furnished apt., 7 Neil Ave ..
Gallipolis. 3 rooms, $200,
s6 - - - Pets- for
4 bedroom home, living water paid . Call446·«16 af· ·King size bed, mattress
S9 -- For Sale
T.!:_~~ --room , dining room &amp; ter 7PM .
and spr ings, headboard . DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
1979 30ft . Coach m an Camfamily ·room, city schools.
Dresser with mirror , $215. TERY · KENNEL . AKC
p e r , s lee p s 6 , r ear
Call .w6-1323.
Antique
dining
room
set,
Chow
puppies
,
CFA
Furnished effic iency , $150,
bedroom , trade for van,
utilities pd , 919 2nd Ave .. oval table with S chairs and Himalayan, Persian and $11 ,500. 304-576·222 1.
Unfurnished house, 3 bdr ., Gallipol is . 2 rooms, single buffet. S700 . 614-992·6537 .
Siamese kittens. Ca ll 446·
Rodney Village II . Ref. mate . Call -446·«16 after
38« after 4 p .m .
req ., $200. Call 446·«16 af - 7PM.
BEMCO mattresses or box
ter 7PM.
springs, full or twin, sse. 6 HILLCREST KENNEL ·
'
Small furnished house for 1 Piece · Naugahyde heavy Boarding all breeds . AKC
s room house, 661 Third Qr 2 adults only . Call -446· wood living room svlte Reg . Dobermans pups and
SS9S. Pillow arm sola &amp; Doberman Stud Servi ce. 61 --F.r.n· Equ~ffil =
Ave., aJt new kitchen, new 0338.
chair 5295 . Roll top desk, Call 446·7795 .
vinyl sldtng, gas heat,
' SUMMER SH OWDOWN '
deposit required . Call alter 3 room furnished apt. $250. dark &amp; light. 5189. Bunk
beds, complete, inclvde
JIVIDENS F ARM EQUIP·
6 :00, «6·2396 .
month includes utilities.
POODLE
GROOM
ING
.
mattress, $199. Complete
E
N
T
Inquire at Meigs Inn in water bed shop with 10 Call Judy Taylor ot 614·367· M
446·
1675
Pomeroy
.
3 bd . r~ house. l'h baths.
bedroom suites on display, 7220.
Long trac t or, Vermeer
Family room and fire
starting price $229. Up to
place,
stove,
and 3 bd.room apt ., Midd leport. $2500. Big daddy coctai t &amp; Sonia's Profess ional Dog ba ler s, &amp; Hay eq uipmen t ,
refrigerator turn . Car· SlSO. mo. and Security dep . end tables 550. Watt ·A·Way Grooming. Call 614·388·8547 bale m over s, rotary til lers·
$1039 .00, wagons, d ;s c, post
peting. $300. mo. dep .req . 992·5692.
recliners $169. and up . La· and ask for Sonia .
digge rs &amp; d ri ve rs , seede rs.
No pets inside. 614·992-2362
Z· Boy recliners In stock.
rotary cutte r s, bl ades ,
alter 4 p .m .
3 room furnished Apt. in USED FURNITURE 5 pc . AKC COLLIE PUPPIES. gates, cultivators &amp; fron t
Middleport. S225. per mo. &amp; 7 pc. dinette sets, Lassie type. Call 614·256· end loaders.
Very nicf 2 bd.room fur · Utilities Inc. 614·992·3190.
bedroomsuite HollywOod 1267.
And see us to ge t you r pa rts
nished house, overlooking
style, bunk beds, Flair Fur·
&amp; complete se rv ice.
the rl•.,. . Adults only .
nlture &amp; Design. Gallipolis
USED EQUIP :
Apartments. 304·675-5548.
Miners~llle. 614·992·3324.
Ferry, WV. Open 9·6. AKC Reg . English Springer
I H Hydro 70, F or d 2000,
Spaniels,
I
iver
and
white,
Phone 304·675· 1371 .
Ford Jubil ee, 165 M F,
all shots, $95 . Call 4-46·8234.
Massey Harr is Pon y, 70
2 bd.room house in Mason. APARTMENTS, mobile
houses, · Pt .
Oli ve r , 185 A.C. D4006
Fully carpeted. Big yard . homes ,
AKC REg . Cocker Spaniel
Duet z, pl ows, disc, J D
$115. per mo. and utilities. Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·-446·8221 or 614·245·9484 . S4
pups. Call 446· 1262.
Misc. Merchandice
manvre spreader, Ford 501
614·949·2619.
mowe r , 19 ft . ca mping
Plastic septic Tanks. Slate
trailer
.
Three
room
furnished
Registered
Doberman
AKC
You'll love this 14 acre
and county approved . 1,000
Pinc her , rust, mal e, 1 yr. w e bu y used equip ment
farm irt the country with a apartment, adults, no pets, gal. tank, price $340. Other
pond and small barn . This 2 Point Pleasant . Phone 304· sizes in stock, haul In your Old, $100 . Call614·379·2617.
bedroom brick home is 675-2453 .
pickup truck. Call 614·286·
63
Liv es tack
-·-·-on Iy 2 miles from down ·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
Grooming s ~ rvices for
Re gi s te re d and gr ade her ·
town Pt. Pleasant. Will TWIN Rivers Tower now l.c'"•'S ENTERPRISES
pets . Will clip English
sign a · ~ear tease at S4SO. renting to qualified ap·
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp; ses, e xc e llent 4·H p roj ect .
English and weste rn sad·
per mollth . 30H75-6276.
pticants, age so and older. 1975 case 4SO. dozer · Schnavzer's. Reasonable.
dies
·
e v e rythi n g
Phone 304-675·6679 . HUD tractor, 1,800 hrs., very For appt. 614·992· 7342 .
imaginable tn horse e quip·
HOUSE for rent, 304-675· assisted project.
good cond ., $14,900. Call
ment and supplies, al s o
3017 .
-446·4537.
For sale·long hair Ham· riding lessons an d trail
2 bedroom apt.in Mason .
sters. S2.SO eacn . Call 614· rides and horse tra in1og .
Ryth Reeves, Hoof Holl ow .
·MODERN one story, two Adults only. No pets . 304· RATLIFF'S POOL CEN · 882·2030.
bedrOOflll house located 2'h 615· 1452 alter 3.
614·698·3290.
TER Pools sate, supplies &amp;
miles from downtown
installation. 403 2nd . Ave .• Registerd Cocker Spaniel,
Gallipolis on route 141 . Fur· THREE room furnished Gallipolis, Oh. Call 4-46· SSO. Also Registered 3 -mo. 4 goats-. 304·458· 1807.
nace h!at and air con· cotfage, utilities furnished, 6579. In ground ·Ablove old toy Poodle pup. Black
ditiort,
range
and adults, no pets, 304·675·2812 ground .
mate. 614-992·7102.
Pigs , call 304·882· 3448 .
refrigerator. $275. month , or 675· 1580.
$100. deposit. Reference.
ADDITIONAL DISCOUN · REGISTERED, 2 year old,
304·675-3655.
LIMITED
TIME Redbone Coonhound, mate. Pigs , call304·895·3486.
Fvrnished
apartment, T !
adults, 304-675-2257.
ONLY! THE BIG , NEW Sell or trade, 304-675·5646.
42
Mobile Homes
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY ·
,t!___ !:I '!'I_&amp;_Grain
lor Rent
MT . Vernon Ave., garage SIZE POOLS WHICH IN · Six
months-old ,
part Hay suo bate . Call 446·
CLUDE DECK , FENCE, Labrador, $30, 304-773·5078.
Mobile Home, Eureka, 1 apartment, 2 bedrooms, att
6641 or 446·8381 .
FILTER &amp; WARRANTY
Bdr., tvm., riverfront tot, carpeted, washer &amp; dryer ARE NOW AVAILABLE
ref . &amp; Cll!posit. Adults, SlOO hook' up, newly painted, ex·
Purebred beagle pups, 304· Hay lor Sa,le. Sl .25 per ba le .
cellent condition. S2SO.OO FOR ONLY $999 . IN ·
mo. 1·1t43·7UI.
895·3938.
446-0373.
&amp;
FINAN
·
STALLATION
per month, plus utilities.
. _......_
- .Deposit and reference CING AVAILABLE . FIR ·
12x6S, 3 bdr., mobile home.
ST COME, FIRST SERVE . ONE
male Yorkshire Ha_y. $1.25 bal e in l ie ld . 304·
required
.
Phone
304·675·
Cle,n, 1ir cond., furn ished,
CALL 1·800·624-&amp;Sll (Ohio), Terrier, 3112 months, all 67S"·2254 or 304-675· 1302.
.
gOod tocetion, ref. req . Sec . 1962.
1·800·642·3053 (WV).
shots &amp; wormed, reduced
dep . req . Call -446·8558.
price, 304·675·3638.
TWO bedroom apartment,
HAY, top qual ity , 2nO. c ut·
For sate used Ditch Witch,
304·67S·404S.
ting , July lOth . $'1.00 ba te .
f1
-Musicii
___
_
Beautiful 2 bdr. mobile
2200 trencer. Call 614·694·
304·675·4114 or 614-379 ·2697.
nome on ·the O.J. White Rd
7842 .
Instruments
Furnished Rooms
·- -- ··
with ,jllrden and out· 45
--.-Wurlitzer organ, Super
buildings. Sl50 mo. Call -446· Steeping
Sears best 25,000 BTtJ air Sprite. $800. Call446·8224.
room,
S12S,
3727.
utilities po, 919 2nd . Ave, conditioner, window model
·Gallipolis. Single mate, coots 5 r . house, energy ·
2 traiiH"s for rent Air range &amp; refrig, 5200 . Call SliVer, exc. cond., used ap· Conn Trombone for mar- ii _ AU!!&gt;!..i! r]aie _
cond ., completely fur - 446· «16 after 7PM.
prox. 2 mos. Call 611·245-- ching or beginning band
members. Good cond . .$125. 1977 Olds. Cutlass 442. Good
nished,
very
clean,
9252 alter 5PM.
condition . Call e venings.
or best offer . 304-773·5679.
beautlfql riverview, in
446·7781.
Kanauga , very safe Rooms with cooking, cable, Central air conditioner .
a ir, $40 a week. 30073location to live, adults onty, S6St.
Call 61079·2702.
no pets, deposit required .
1976 Malibu Cla ss ic, 4 dr. ,
Call .W.-1602.
PS, AC , S6SO .' Catl 614·256·
46
space to~ Rent
6743 .,
2 bedroom frailer . Real COUNTRY MOBILE Home
-· - .- -"T--..,. - - '- ---.:.
nice, a«&lt;tts only. Brown's Park, Route 33, North of
Trailer · f&gt;ark, Minersville . Pomeroy. Large tots. Call
614·992·3324.
992· 7479.

Goo used living room
Furnll!l2 rooms and· bath, suites. 1·2 piece and 1·4
Business for sale. BIG.! cteen, .n. pets, adutts.onty. ·piece, Caii.W.·77~.
MAPLE in CheShl,... 19 W: ' Dep. ,..,Ired. Call -w.1519.
Mal~. 614-992.-2969. ·
Early American floral LR
suite, broWn swivel rocker,
4 room llllfurnlshed apt. all maple Ethan Allan dough- Y..-JI
Lots .&amp;Acrea. .
carpe!W; utilities P.aid, boy end tables, cOffee
tot. 110 x 262. 1'2· lldullt l!!'fY no pets. ·call table, tamp, hard rock
maple dtnene set, dry sink,
4
·"'
\
· delk. Call 614-245-9132.
M

54

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · wa s he rs ,
dryers ,
refriger a tors,
range s .
Skag~s
Ap ·
pliances, Upper R1Ver Rd .,
bes ide Stone Crest Mote t.
446·7398 .

2 bdr . hoYse with garage.
Two OYI bYildlngs. River
view , beautiful lot . 9492687 .

rooms,

_ ~o_u ~ei!_otd.Goods

SWAIN·
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gall ipolis. 9x12 linol eum
rug $22, 3 piece living room
suites couch · lov e seat·
chair $199 . Call 446·3159.

8 r:oom house, dOUble tot ,
double garage, 680 S. 2nd .,
Middleport, Oh. $16,000. No
resonable offer refysed .
About 1 acre lot in Brad·
byry Ohio, trailer hook· Yp,

5

Sl

Wed

11

\

IS THIS JUST AN EXCUSE

TO TALK TO ME, SWEET
IIASSOQ711AVE WU REALLY
CAI.l.ED TO ASK ME TO
60 ·11&gt; THE' MOVIES ?

ill

a.

(I) Jack

()).The

llellfiY Show

Love Boat .A C!Xh
pte celebrates their 40th
wedding anniverury, Doc .
is ecculed of Improper
advances and a men tries
to opy on his girlfrieltd., IRI
(1 hr. 10. min.), l' .
-1 :00 (]) MOVIE: 'llkiw· Up'
(I) I M8qled .10M

e()JNew.

1:30

e

(I)

NBC

News

~Margie .

CKYPTOQUOTES

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Ymerday'a CryptGquote: JUST STAND ASIDE AND WA~"

YOURSELF Go BY, 11UNK OF YOURSELF AS

STEAD OF "I. "-8TRICKLANDGIWGAN

•

"HE" IN- 1
'

�Court actions filed

of Marietta;

The annual Long Bottmn Com·
munlt)l homecoming wUl be Sunday, Aug. 1, at the Long Bottom ·
United Methodist Church.
A basket dinner wUl be served at
noon, followed by a program atl::ll
p.m. The public Is Invited to alti!lld.

Three suits for moi)I!Y, suit for
support and a suit for dlvoreewere
ftled , In Meigs County Common
Pleat Court.
RObert Imboden, Rutland and
Charles H. Knight. Pomeroy, !lied
suit In the amount ,of $7,291.34
agatnst Noah Chasla1D. Rt. 1, Middl,eport. et al. The suit Is for failure
to pay a prior Judgment.
Lucllle M. Murray, Pomeroy,
llled suit In the amount of $6l,!Dl
against Midwestern Indemnity Co.,
and Mld·Amerlcan Fire and casually Co., MUlford, Ohio, for loslll'S
Incurred by a tire.
Mansfield BuUdlng and Loan Assoclatlon, Mansfield, !lied suit In
the amount of $46,748.50 against
Charles A. Smltb, Pomeroy, et al.
Audrey! Lynn Grindley, Pomeroy, ftled suit for divorce against
Roger Edison Grindley, Qublln and ·
Linda Lee ThOmas llled for support
under tile Reciprocal Agreement
Act against Lawrence Fredrick
Scarberry, Jr.

roy, not Vll'llni;O aJ waJ reportedit
Money pro•ee.. topic .\•

A chicken barbecue will be held
Saturday, July 31, at the N~
Haven Fire Station beginning at 11
a.m.
The menu Includes ·Chicken,
slaw, baked beans, rolll bot dogs.
pte, and cake. The event II being
sponsored by the ladies auxiliary ct
the !Ire department.

Board meet.B ThW'!Iday

Area deaths
Homer Junior Clark

Emil 0. Elliott

Homer Junior Clark, 55, New
Haven, died Monday from InIuries
suffered In a car accident.
Born April 'll, 19'11, at Graham
Station, son of the late Homer E.
and Annie Dorothy McCloud Clark,
hewasanoperatlngenglneeranda
member of Union Local No. 18,
Columbus.
He married Mary Virginia Kay·
lor, who also preceded him In death
In 1981.
Surviving are three daughters,
Jean M. Hart ol New Haven, J udlth
A. WUis of. Baltimore, and VIrginia ,
A. Schneider pt ColumbUs; twGnephews.
sons, John D. and James D. botll of.
Funeral services wUI be held at Columbus; four sisters, Olga
11 a.m. Thursday In the Foglesong Yonker of Pomeroy, ·EUa Marie
Funeral Home, Mason, with the . Kerns or Canton, Elda McFarland
of LaGrange, and Leona AUce
Rev. John Campbell oftlclatlng.
Burtal will be In Graham Ceme- Roach of WeUston; two brothers,
tery. Friends may call at the fun· Charles of Mason and Harold of
era I hom e from 6 -9 p . m . Cheshire: eight grandchUdren and
a great·grandcbUd.
Wednesday.
•...· Funeral services wUl be held at l
p.m. Thursday In Foglesong F'lln·
S OUrt eral Home, Mason, with the Rev.
John CampbeU officiating. Burial
Mayor's courts were held In Mid- will be In Broad Run Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
dleport and Pomeroy Tuesday
home rrom 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
night, with Mayors Fred Hoffman
EmU 0 . EUiott, 75, New Haven,
died 'ful!sday In Fairview Manor
Nursing Home In Beverly, Ohio.
Born April 21, 1907, at Graham
Station, son of the late Everett A.
and Mary Pool EUiott. he was a
farmer, U.S. Army veteran and a
member of. the American Legion In
New Haven.
Surviving Is a brother. Roy of
VIenna, W.Va.; four sisters, Mrs.
Minnie Lyons of Leon, Mrs. Marie
Roberts, of Rt 1, Long Bottom,
Mrs. Gladys Lewis of Harmony,
Pa., and Mrs. Laura Gerlach of
Cheshire; and several nieces and

'
C
ayor
M

several
fines and
forfeits.
and Clarence
Andrews
handing out
Middleport Court with Mayor
Hotrman-Bzyan Shank, Pomeroy, forfeited a $49 bond for speed.
Fined were WUllam Tiemeyer,
Pomeroy, $250 and costs and three
days In Jatl, DWJ;.·NI'arkDavls, Syr·
acuse;· $250 aild costs and three
days In jail, DWI; Michael Dorst,
Mtddleporf. $100 and costs, res\5t·
lng ·arrest, and $50 and costs, dlsor·
derly manner ; Don Love tt,
Middleport, 15 days In jail, dlsor·
derly manner: John · Willia m
Smith, no address, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner.
PomeroY Cour t with Mayor
Andrew!!-forfeiting fines were Ed·
· gar Wails, Brownsville, Oh., $44,
speed; Mark Beegle, Racine, $45,
speed; P.F. Justis, Racine, $44,
speed; Dennis Lavendar, Middleport. $45, speed; Marlene Johnson,
Racine, $46, speed; Russell Roush,
New Haven, $43, no ii5Sured clear
distance; Krlsty Oatley, MiddlePort, $46, speed. Fined were Ken·
neth Mitchell, Langsville, $363 and
costs and three days In jaU, DWI:
Mark Slater, Pomeroy, $363 and
costs and three days In jail, DWI:
Joseph Reiser, Pomeray, $363 and
costs, DWI.

Meigs Co. Emergency Medical
Service answe:ed several calls
overnight Tuesday.
At 8: 26 a.m., Pomeray squad
took Arthur Hoyt from the Pomel'oY Health Care Center to Veterans
Memortal Hospital, and earUer,
Pomeroy also transporte&lt;l Lucille
Lewis from her residence to VMH;
Racine too~ John Wood to HMC at
· 8:6a.m. ; Pomeroy took Ray Win·
1ng to VMH at 6: 58 p.m.
Earlier In the day at 12:23 p.m.,
Middleport took Ray Thompson
irom GUbert's Exxon to VMH; Syr·
acuse took BW Morris to from MaplewoOd Lake to VMH at 4:21p.m.,
and agaln transported Cel Jenkins .
trun an accident on Rt. 124 at Ml·
nersvUie to VMH at 10:42lastnlght.

Veterans Memorial Hospital an·

DouDced the following dlscbarges
aDd admissions Tuesday.
Admissions-Lucille Lewis,
PuiiM!i o,y; Wilma Eynon, ReedsYIIIe; Sadie Carl, Pomeroy; Mary
A11n Ne.aei.road. Pomeroy; Ruth
..a.sar, Pomeroy; Ann WOes~ Ra·
clae; C1arel1ce McDaniel Jr., Ru·
tlalld; WWJam Morris, Racine; .
Ray Willing, Pomeroy; ~lcen·
'JIIMW,

MiddlePOrt.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - The
Ohio Bureau ~ Emplayment Servl·
cesestlmatesthatthousandsOilpeopie wUl apply for about 500 jobs at
the Ohio State Fair In the next two
days.
MorethanllOpeoplewerestand·
lng In Une at daybreak Tuesday to
apply for joi18 at the lair, and some
2,(XX) appUcatiOns were processed
by day's end.
"We lust want a Job," said-Ron
Gibson, 16, who with a nelgbbor ar·
rived at the fairgrounds 11ate Monday afternoon and spent the night
outdoors.
They were among several people
who spent the night to get an early
spot In line fo,r 8 shot at temporaJII('
work. The fair runs from Aug. ·lf.'22.
and the Ohio Bureau of Employ·
·ment Services has opened a special
CM!'nter On the grounds. Doors
opened at S:OO a.m.
People are applying for such Jpbs
as shuttle bus attendants. ticket

and waltreslll'S.
Not au the applicants were teen·
agers. Therewereunemplayedfac.
tory worirers, a housewife wanting
extra cath and carnival people who
are uaed to the seasonal work. •
Last year, 4,ll0 applications
were llled for fewer than llO jobs.
. "You can't find a Job anywhere
else," said Marjorie lJkens, 39, Dl
Columbus. The mother ct fOur said
sllewantstosuppleQientthefamlly
finances, ·
"It's just good to have so many
peoptebehlndmelnsteadoflnfront
d. me," isald SteveRyah, :IS, of Ceolumbus, a former schoolteacher
,who Is . trying to , re-enter the
profession.
· .
Although people hll;d gathered
overnight. the line dldn t !orm until
6 a.m., Wile!!.somebociY 1101 up and
stretched,.;'
...
"~one person stood up. eve.ryblii!y did," said Tony Greene, 16,
Gibson's companion.
,.·

On dean's list

,.

Named to the Dean's Llstfor the,
University of Clnclnnstl for sprint•
quarter Is ELizabeth Perrlnj"
daughter ct Mr. and Mrs. W. Per-~
r1n. Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
'

Committee to meet

'

Tile ways and mean comrnl~
of the Eastern Band Boosters wl\l
meet Monday, A1!i. 2, at 7: 00 p.m.•
at the home o! Max Elclllnger;
Correetion
All band booster members !ll'e Ill·
vlted to alti!lld. The food booth at
Attending the reunion of. the late the Meigs County Fair wUl be dis·. ·
WWJam and Lydia Matlack were · cussed at weD as plans for the coni·
¥&amp;r1DR. Flo and Sara Kim not Kl1m · tng school season.

CLOSED THURSDAY, JULY 29

FOR INV_ENTGRY

.

.

\loi.31,No.60
Copy~ghtod

1912

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
American pubUc, still suffering the
pains of a year-long recession,

must patiently endure a "tough,
·slow" journey toward economic
·prosperity. But when It comes, It

'

I

POINTING PRESIDENT- President makes a point duriDII b1s East

ROolli ileWI coaference Wednesday at the White House. Reagan said that

Under hla program oi ~~ Cll'bs aad blcome tu cuts, "slowly 11114
surely we're worklq our way toward proeperity." (AP Laserpbolol

·· '

...... ..., .·

'

•.

HAM SALAD

;~.••. '1.49

1'111. New

1LII.Biue8onnel

O"IONS ••••••• ~~~
H3_!:;P.Unf C.IIIOrnla
·
ORANGES . •..•.•

MARGARINE
I Oz. 12 Slice Kraft

18 Lb. California Long White
1

PimentO Singles

P~ed

POTATOES •••• ~~· 2.19
3LII.hgWintup
APPLES • . •••• ~·! 11.39

$139

CHEESE • • •~k~· 1

8 PACK BUNS ·· ~

...

Bob ·Evans Steakhouse
is a cut a~ve. the rest.
When it comes to choice cuts
At Bob Evans we do ttie serving.
the competition just can't cut it. Starting with the friendly hostess
As a matter of fact, they don't
to .the waitress who makes sure
even sell it.
no meal is complete without a
Lots of our competitors serve
nic;:e big helping of country
only standard cuts of beef. Bob
hospitality.
.
Evans serves only the choice cut.
So. if you're looking for great ·.
It's part of our old fashioned
beef, not something t~ beef
farm values because when your about; come on down to Bob
reputation Is at stake, you're
EvanS"'Steakt1ouse and take a
particular about everything on
step back In time to the gQOd
the menu. So along wltl:l the
· old days. The Steakhouse is .
choice cut you'll get Blue Lake . • locat~ at 1530 Eastern Avenue
in Gallipolis. ·
'
green beans. Dinner rolls made
from scratcn every hour and
served piping hot from the
oven. Freshly chopped cole
slaw and farm fresh baited pota. toes complete with a country
helping of real sour cr~m. And
these are just a few of our favorites being served dally.
And we do mean serve .

.

.

fldence that his economic program
His only regret, be

·w6Wd work.

said, Is . that people continue to
year," he said Wednesday night suffer from hiii'II times and that
But he refused to say It would be a progress Is toQ stow to suit him.
robust recovery, as be had In the
Reagan also renewed his call for
past.
a constitutional amendment for a
Reagan told a news conference balanced budget, saying the
that the early signs of Improve- ameooment "could have a Very .
ment already are evident. It was an profound effect" In hastening a
upbeat projection, more so than recove.ry. .
many Independent economists are
He said u,e measure, now being
delivering. But even Reagan said considered by the Senate, would
the gains wtll come slowly and not have a postlve psychological effect
without further pain.
on the !lnanclal markets. which are
"It's tough, slow work and It's go- keeping Interest rates high because
Ing to require enormous effort and they fear giant ,budget deficits and
palti!llce from every one of us to rekindled Inflation In the future.
correct the problems we inherited,
The amendment "would Indicate
but slowly 'and surely, we:re work· the government Is reaDy deter·
lng our way back to prosperity," he mined to end this kind of runaway
said.
sJlj!ndlng and have some !lsc!ll In·
"Evidence of a recovery bas tegrlty and common sense," Rea·
been sighted but It's only a begin- gan said.
ning," Reagan said. "I think there .•· He refused to back down when
are a number of signs that Indicate asked how he could endorse the
.that things are better for the people amendment after drafting the larg·
~ they should be able to see
est budget deficits In history .
(them) ," he added.
· "The budget deficits I don't think
The eventual payoff !rom his eco- can be laid at an lnd!vldual's.do6r,"
nomic policies, Reagan promiSed, the president sald. Jtecontended he
wUl be"'more or less a permanent"
would be presldln£over smaller derecovery rather than the short· ficits bad congressional Democrats
' Uved booms of the past.
given him all the spending cuts be
wanted and the full tax cut, which
Spurning watnlngs by.. critics of he said would have fueled a
his policieS that dire times are
stronger recovery rrom the
ahead, Reagan expressed total con- recession.

1001.

HOT DOG SAUCE · w/Meat
••••

I

.2/89'

I

trtct Board of Education has voted
to place a three-mill levy before dis·
trtct voters In the November
election.
Clerk-Treasurer Dennie HW reIJI&gt;rt8 the three mlU levy, If approved, wUI not Increase taxes In
the district. There Is a: three mill
debt service levy In the .dlstrtct
which Is going off residents tax bUis
so the new three mill levy , which
would provide general fund money,
wUl not Increase the diStrict taxes.
The . board accepted the reslg·
nated of John Costanzo as title I
coordinator. He has accepted a position In the Meigs County Superln·
tendent's office.
Mary Findley and Rex Roy were
named substitute custodians and
VIrginia Davis was emplayed as
head.cook at the junior'high school.
Bids accepted for the 1982-83
scbQ()I year-the lowest submitted
In aU cases .Clerk-Treasurer Hill
reports--Include heating oU and
gasotine, City Ice and Fuel; motor
oU and transmission grease, Ash·

land OU; antl•freeze, G.&amp;J. Al.lto
Parts; cafeteria food, Standard
Food Service; ~laked goo(Js, Betsy
Ross: maintenanCe of office rna:
chines, Best Office Machines, Bel·
pre; tires jlnd tubes, Meigs Tire
Center; coal, Walton Coal Co., WeD·
ston, with WendeU Ervin, local, to
do the hauling; fire extinguisherS,
' Brown'e Fire and Safety Equip. ment; dalr products, VaDey BeD.
·At the request of Portland resl·
dents, it was agreed 10 name the
Portland gymnasium, the Hubert
Price Gymnasium 1n trtbute to the .

Closing time for all open class entries of the Meigs County Fair bas been set for 4 p.m. on Friday,
Aug . l3.
Exceptions lo the closing deadline are the horse show, which closes at 6:30p.m. on August 19, and
the horse pull has no closing time.
Fair board personnel will be at the secretary's office on the Rock Springs Fairground.&gt; from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. on both Aug. 12 and 13 to accept open class entries.
Exhibitors must delennine for themselves in what class or classes !hey will make entry and
exhibitors will fill out their own entry blanks.
AU exhibits must remain in place until4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 21. Any exhibit removed before that
time will forfeit any prerniwns awar:ded. False statements regarding entries or interference with
Judges shall be sufficient grounds for exclusion from competition and forfeitures of any prizes a war·
ded.

late Mr. Price, a former principal
at!d dedicated worker for the Portland School. TI!e board agreed to
Join the computer system hookup
for schools thl'ough Nelsonville.
The financial statement, activity
fund accounts report, minutes ot
th~ last meeting and bills Were
awroved.
The meeting was recessed untll7
p.m. Monday. Attending were aU
board members, Susie Grueser,
Charles Pyles, Don Smith, Denny
Evans, Roger B: Hill, Supt. Bob
Ord, and Clerk·Treasurer HW.

Democrat-controlled House
agrees to Senate tax plan

Controversy surrounds silver haze
CINCINNATI (API -

Officials

who measure poUutlon say the
sUver haze that bas enveloped the
city Is just humidity, but a spokes·
man ror the American Lung Associ·
atlon of Southwest Ohio says he
thinks It's small particles that are
dangerous to a person's health.
Robert Shaw, s(iokesman for the
Southwest Ohio PoUutlon .Control

Agency, said standards for ozone,
nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide
were weD below unhealthy levels
on Wednesday. The particles of pol·
lutlon In the air were measured at
62. The health hazard warning level
Is 101.
Shaw blamed the haze that has
blanketed the city for days on high
levels or humidity.

10 oz. Vienna

;HOG ooo ·SAUCE. W/Meat ,
I

. Vienna .

..

8

I

Can

I

I

I

I

.

BEE,FBARBECUE
Vienna

PO~K

BARBECUE

IOOz, Can
I

I

I

I

1.501.

'

STYRO FOAM CUPS
46 Oz. Stokely

I

I

I

'1.39

•

!f~ou~n•. • ~k··69'

·oRANGE JUICE
16 u! Campbell's

By Jltl LUTHER
Awoc:teted Pre8jl Writer
. WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Democrat-controlled House, un\\!11·
Ung to write Its own tax-Increase
bW In this election year, llas agreed
to accept the outlines of a record
$98.!&gt;-bUllon plan written by Senate
Republicans.
The House, rejecting complaints
of con5ervatlves that the Constltu·
Uon was being trampled, voted
Wednesdl!Y night to permit a
Senate-Hollse conference commit·
tee to work out a compromise bUI.
The vote was 201-197, with 164 Democrats and 44 RepubUcans supporting the move. Sixty Democrats
anill37 RepubUcans opposed lt.
The .Conference committee wiU
beglil work early next week; the
- final compromise could he ready
for President Reagan's signature
within two weeks.
Leaders of both parties emphas·
!zed that the House delegation to
the conference wUl attempt to
~several changes in the Senate

bill whtle still raising ihe $98 billion
that Congress mandated In an ef·
fort to cut the federal deficit.
The compromise " wtll not be a
simple rubber-stamp of the Senate
bill," promised Rep. Dan Rosten·
kowskl, D-IlL, who will head the
House conferees.
Heading the list of promised
changes Is the Senate-passed provi·
slon reducing the tax deduction al·
lowed for medical expenses .
Current law aUows a deduction for
expenses that exceed 3 percent of
gross income: the Senate bUI would
raise that threshold to 7 percent.
But RostenkowskJ and his Senate
counterpart, Sen. Bob Dole, R·
Kan., favor a threshold of no more
than 5 percent.
The process that the House en·
dorsed Is highly unusual because
that body, which Is required by the
Constitution to originate all tax
biDs, did not even write a· bW this
time. The House preferred Instead
to let the GOP-run Senate take the

blame for any tax Increase.
In part because of that political
consideration, House Democrats
are eager for some version of. the
Senate bW to become law. But
many conseJVatlve Republicans
want no tax Increase at aU- even
though Preside nt Reaga n has
caUed for one to help cut federal
deficits In an effor:t to reduce Inter·
est rates.
ConseJVatlves based their fight
Wednesday on the constitutional requirement tltat the House originate ,
revenue bills.
To send the Senate-passed bill to
a conference committee without
even trying to Improve It "is a total
cop-out," argued Rep. J ohn Rousseiot, R-Callf. "You are totally
abandoning the Constitution."
As for the constltu tlonal'questlon,
several members noted that often
In the past, Congress has winked at
the requirement by allowing theSenate to attach major tax legislation
to a minor House-passed bill.

,

PORK·ff·BEANS ;
10Countlv~y

PAPER PLATES.
4\'toz.Prlntlel

A WARNING - Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, appearing
before the Senate Budget Committee Wednesday, warned thai rising
budget deficits may lead to higher Interest rates. ~ AP Laserphoto I

Closing date set for fair entries

. issue won't_increase taxes
The Southern Local School Dis·

15 Cenu

A Mwltlmedlo Inc. N•w•poper

.

I

.I

.I

I

I

··Swimming accidents spawning fears

•e

.

• • '· • • .~.. ·3,

LONDON, Ohio (API -

Two

State PArk Reservoir this summer
have spawned fean among local
resldenla tbat 1101111!tbln&amp; deadly Is
lurldn&amp; belleatl1 the $Urlace ct the
wa~. say otflctals who dismiss
lucb rumors.
'• ·
A Colurnblll woman drowDed•
,ud an A~ 9blo, lloy Jlell'bl ·

Incidents; lOcal people have questl·
oned the lake's safety.
The woman who drowned was
swl!nn)lng In an unguarded area of
the beach, officials said. The hoy
who bad the near-fatal accident
was supposedly a good swimmer,
but apparently went Into water too
deep 'for him, he said. The hoy rematnslnacomaatUnlversltyHos·

. mlngi!l
.owned

Jil,taiTI!ere,
Colwereumbqsre.ports'

tiWinirntDr accidents at Dl!er Creek

POTATO
CHIPS
~ • • • • • •can
•
140L
HUfiTS IElQIUP ..... Bo._
.•

.
IP ' , 3 1M . ... . . . . • &gt;
.. - , 1 0.0. N

..-

,.

wUl last, says President Reagan.
"I think we're going to see an lm·
provement In the second bait o1 the

Southeijl~ l)o8rd seeks levy;
ECKRICH PACKAGED WIENERS •,_L~. ~I(~'· '1.79
ECKRICH JU~BO BOLOGNA •••••• L~. '1.89
SUPERIOR BULK WIENERS •.•.• '· .L~: .'t59
SUPERIOR BOiiflfttAM . • • . •..- .. L~. '2.69

1 Section, 12 Pag•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Th~nday, July 29,1982

..

,_.
The famUy of Charles E. White, ·
Middleport, wJ!Pdledyesterday, requests donatiOns be made to the_,
heart fund ln.Jieu of flowers.
.

•

•

ary enttne
e
Reagan sees recovery

·TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR
LOW, LOW CLEARANCE PRICES
_. ON.SUMMER CLOTHING./
. ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY .
.

'

I.

..

Heart fund donations

'

.

SHOP FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

takers. program sellers, walters

Page 8

Page 6

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.

11182 Bob

Dl!charges.,-

VIral~!· .Michael,. Wllllam
~·Jimmy Graham. '

Thousands seek jobs at fair

..

Page 3

&amp; Saturda

12 killed in
Texas air crash

Johnson replaces Roush chosen as
Zimmer at.T~xu top senior citize~

J

1be Eastern Athletic Booltel'l
met recently to diSCUSS !!!Veta! mo.
.ney maklni proJect&amp;
.
Among them are a new 200 club
and a yard sale, set Aug.6 6 . 7.:
Anyone with ltellll to donate', c81l:
Sally Caldwell, 667·aGU, Rutb•
D\lfSt, 667:a291. Becky .Drummer,
985-(138, or Betty Nevell, 985-3351.,
pJ8ns were alsO discussed lor the
upcoming Meigs !air. ·
.•
Tl!enextmeetlnglsAug.9,,8p.m.

r-;::=====================::!~~~~;;;;;;~;;~~i
.
c
Evans Forma, Inc,

Emergency runs

Veterans Memorial

The Eastern Local Board of Edu·
catiOn wtll meet In f'l!lllllar session
Tl!uraday, Juty 29, at 7::11 p.m. at
the high schooL .

Pomeroy Merchants Side wa lk Sales Frida

rilck and UWatt Kim'
110t Kllm r1. Collmlbull 1114 vlrld'
and Belt Matlack )toullh cl
"

Homee(;lning is Sunday

Saturday barbecue .

: LOOKING FOR A JOB - Hundreds of people Uned . )obi ranglq from Uekel taken, to walten aad
up to fUI out applications for temporary work at the wallrelses are available for !be 17 day event starting
Ohio Slate Fairgrounds Tuesday morning. A variety o1 AUII· 6 eliCIIng Aug. ZZ. (AP La.erpllolo I.

1

hapP¢nin~•.

·Meigs County

,.,

~

W1 d nd y. July 21,1912

Pomeeor Mlddltpe:t, Ohio

14-The Daily Sentinel

·I

'.

.._"

.

.,.,.. -

5 I I ..... . ,

•

I

......!_twols t~te

awlni-de

the hoy h"d.

a.:u...u a u"' man-ma
,..,
, ' Iaiiie Iii Fli)'ette Co\lilty. SIDce tllitle · become tra~ beneath .some.

'

'•

·~ .

I

....

thing In the water. Dorlnsky said.
But divers who searched the area
found nothing. The ranger said be
bad. talked to a physician attendinl{
the hoy and was told there were no
marks on the body to suggest be
was trapped beneath the water.
BIU HugheS. resource manager
for the U.S. Army Corps of Eng!·
neers at thli lake and one of the dlv:
ers who searched ·the area wheJ"!l
the youth was tound, said there WaJ
nothlngtn the' water. ·
•;
'

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