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Voi.30;No.~

Po"'eroy-Middleport! Ohio, M011day, ,June 1,1981

COpyi'lglltad ltll

1 Sectto~. 12 !'ages

15 cents

A Multimedia Inc. New•INfper · ·

Church iS optimistic
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Nimit% ~UlileB trauamg vorage ..

· NORFOLK, Va. - 'lbe nuclear aircraft .,:arrier Nimitz Ia back in
· training In the Altsntlc today, new planes lining ~ deck where a jet
cruh five da)'ll ago killed 14 and Injured 48 othen.
.
Vice Adm. Gua Kinnear, commander Naval Air Force Atlantic, said
the carrier should ni8urne the flight training inlelTI!Pted by the crash
either today or Tuellday.
·.
.
· 'I1Ie Nimitz wi!S off Florida last Tuesday night when a M!lrine jet on
a training flight c~e down off center, rammed into parked plllnes
and sparked explosions and fires.

Trustees suspend three officers
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YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio- Austintown township lrustee!i have SUSpended three police officers, Including the police union's past ~nd current
presidents,
,
I
,
'lbe trusteeS, meeting in special !lf!ISion Friday, cited Ohio Revised
Code aecttona governing malfeasance and misconduct in their suspension motion.
.
·
'lbey refused to make public any allegations against the officers.
Suspended were David A. Thoresen, preai~t Of the Fraternal Or- .
der of Police LOclge 1211, Richard Slepskl, past president of the lodge

.and WUJiam T. Salt.lmlin. '

.

Sheriff holds bad check
•

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:Priscilla's Pop
a;;lMMOTION?

WARREN, Ohio - A month-old arrest warrant charging retired
heavyweight bozer Earnle Shavers with l)assing a worthless r,l,875
checll at a Boardman coin ahop remains at the Trumbull County
Sheriff's department. ·
Sheriff Rlchald Jakmas said deputies have been unable to )ocate the
Mecca Townahlp resident to serve the warrant issued by Mahoning
County Court in Boardman. The felony charge was filed by the PllloU ·
Coin and Stamp Co., where Shavers aUegedly paid for gold coil)s in
December with the bad check.
··

Stumps for Metzenbaum
ClEVELAND - Actor Paul Newman has found himself cailt in the
role as cheerleader fOr Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum, ()..Ohio. .
During a news conference Sunday· at a hotel in suburban Shaker
Heights, Newman said his appearance was his first on behalf of a·
Senate candidate outside of the three states where he has homes.
"Any guy who's under attack by the Teamsters Union, the Moral
Majority and the oil ~nles can't be all' bad," he.sald when asked
why he II backing Metzenbawn. "I didn't give away my citizenship
just because I happen to have an equity card."

Weather
~and thundentonna ilkely

tonllht and · Tuellday. ·wann

·=-:=~a:::-nd~eada~~=·~rr:·
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· .Exll JeUlldeFareeaat- Wem-!aythreuchFrlday: Achan-

ce of lhowen ind thundentorms Wednesday and early 'lburlday.
Fair Friday. Highs In the 11011 Wednesday and mid-'1011 to low lls Thur·
!day and Friday. Lows from upper 50s to low 6011 early Wedneeday and
in the 108 Thursday and Frida .

By The Auoclaled Prai
United Mine Woriera Praldent
Sam Church, on i lobbying awing
through Eastern coal ~. says
he is ~c that striking miners
.wiD eridorse a proposed contract and
end a two-month walkout that 11as
seen one tentative agreement rejec-. .
ted by the r'ank and file.
"I think we got a good contract,"
Church said Sunday after explaining
the document to 100 miners in Die'.
erlingham, Ala. "I can't see any
reason why they (the miners) would
go ag~t it."
Some of the miners who crowded
into the UMW District 20 headquarters to hear Church.said they would
withholcl judgment about the contract until theY get a chance to Jook
at it. Miners should have copies by
Tuesday or Wednesday.
· Church was scheduled to continue

his week-long eontract explanation
tour this morning at a UMW raDy in
Welch, W.Va. and address a second
raDy later in the day in BeckelY,
W.Va.
The 160,000 UMW members went
on strike March 'll and rejected by a
2-1 margin the first pl'qiOSed contract arriv.ed at by union negotiators
and ' the industry. Southern We&amp;
Virginia was a center of opposition
to the first tentative accord. In some
coalfield appearances then, miners
jeered Church, caUing him "Sellout
Sam."
Miners objected to a provision that
Would have ended royalties to the
union if companies cOvered by the
contract processed non-union coal.
The royalties are included in the new
proposed Pact.
The second proposal, tentatively

agreed to last week, may be voted on
by the rank and file I!S early as
Saturday.
"People's got a little different attitude this time," said David
Vidovich, president of Local Union
5869 In West Virginia's District 17.
"They're not squabbling to get a
copy of the contract like they were
last time - but then they haven't
heard the bad things about this one
that they had about the last one."
Church was expected to go to
VIrginia and Kentucky Tuesday,
followed Wednesday by trips to
Ohio, northern West Virginia and
Pennsylvania . . Church was
scheduled to spend Fnday . in
District 17 in southern West Virginia
-the union's largest, most militant,
district.
Aratification vote has been slated
for Saturday, but the union's con-

By LOUISE COOK
Wlien sugar was not counted in the
Associated Prell Writer
totals, the average d~rease in the
Sugar prices dropped sharply marketbasket bill at the checklist
again last month, cutting grocery stores last 'llonth was only 1.3 per·
bills by the biggest amount in over cent. The average decrease since
six years, an Associated Press the stari of the year was only 2.4per·
marketbasket survey shows.
cent.
COII8umers trying to trim super·
Sugar prices soared last year
market budgets also founc:( lower because·of expectations that world·
prices for eggs and scattered but wide demand would exceed producsteep declines at the meat counter.
lion. The demand went down as
The AP survey covers 14 food and sugar got more and more expensive,
non-fOOd items, selected at random. and prices started dropping early
Prices were checked on March I, thisyear.
1973 at one supermarket in each of 13
Meat prices went down in some
citiesandhavebeen.recheckedonor cities and up in others last month,
about the start of succeeding mon- with no clear pattern. The AP found,
ths.
·
for example, that the price of a
The latest survey showed that the pound of chopped chuck increased at
marketbasket biD at the ·checklist the checklist store in four cities last
store declined by an average of 2. 7 . month, decreased ·in six cities and
. percent last montli.
was unchanged in three. Cenler'Cul
The drop was the largest since a pork chops went up in six cities,
2.9 percent decrease In April 1975 down · in sill Cities and were unand was the four!JI monthly decline changed in one ctty.
this year. When W,day's prices were
Shoppers looking fo,r ~n alter·
~red with thiiM at lhe- •
of , native1~iv!i IOiil'ce llfprotein
198i the AP found th&amp; n'larketliaBket may want to check the price of eggs.
bill ~t the cbeckllst stores deCreased The AP found the price dropped last
by an average llf U percent during month at the checklist store in 10 of
the fivHDODth period.
· The good news ~ tempered
somewhat, however, by the fact that
more than hall of the decline was
due to a drop in the price of sugar.

and assistant prosecutor, respectively.
,
Also introduced were Crow' s
brother, Richard, of Warren and
Mrs. Craw's brother, Irving Karr of
Mason, W. Va.
At the beginning of the event, Rev.
Father Bernard Krajovic from
Yorksville, Ohio, offered the in·
vocation and Frank Vaughan led a
salute to the'Flag.
Jim Frecker, president of the
Pomeroy C of C, welcomed tho6e in
attendance and Ted Reed, president
of the Fanners Bank and Savings
Company of Pomeroy where King is
a longtime director, introduced the
rnaster of ceremonies.
Crow, with a well known
l'ep!llation as a practical joker and
the granddac!dy of the Grand
croakers of the Ohio Association for
the Promotion of Bull Frogs, had his
own comeback panned to tile
recognition event.
The Pomeroy attomey llf 41 years
· announced he hlid wanted to have a
space coffin brought to the affair to
hold his funersl while he is still
alive, but that plan waa nilled by hi~

the cities surveyed.
No attempt was made to weight
the AP survey results according to
population density or in tenns of
what percent of a farrlily's actual
grocery outlay each item represents. The AP did not try to compare ac·
tuai prices from city to city. The
only comparisons were made in ter·
ms of percentages of increase or
decrease - saying a particular item

wife.

Crow, however, did present

several of his friends - a group

..-uu..

Deputies check accidents, :reports.

There will be no primary elections in Meigs County tomorrow as
. such but voters in two §Ubdivisions will go to the polls to cast ballots on
two measures.
In the Meigs Local School District, voters will have the opportunity
to pass a 2.5 mill bond issue which wiD not increase taxes in the district
but which will penni! one million doUars to be kept locally IDStesd or
being sent to the State. This money, if the bond issue is approved by
voters, will provide funds for repair and maintenance of buildings and
grounds of the district.
Middleport Village voters will have the opportunity to renew a three
· mill tax levy which provides funds not only for continuing street
. lighting but finalices street repairs in the town.
The polls open at6 :30tomorrow morning and close at 7:30p.m.

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lund tile tire1111 ~John Deere lnlclo
l.w putrid Ia till 111m. '111e ln"'W
lauadlr 1111 J'lJ Uaa
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GIVEN GOLF CARt Pomerey Attenley Fred W. Crow
.,.. pmealed a me&amp;orlled 1011
cart u aldgN!pl of llle birthday
party-nait llvft Ia 1111 ....
Su.uday evullll wl&amp;b over 2SI
per.- preaet~L Cnrw, aa at·
toraey for 41 yean, farmer FBI
11eat ml -lime Oldo Stale
Ulllvenlty footllaO lftlt. II
sbon -ted Ialiie ... carl wl&amp;ll

1111 wife, .,.._,at IIIII aide uJ

I1Uilelllldr-. Natlulel uJ
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went up 10 percent in one city and 6
percent in another.
.
The items on the AP checklist
were: chopped chuck, center cUt
pork chops, frozen orange juice concentrate, coffee, paper towels, but.
ter, Grade-A medium wliite eggs,
creamy peanut butter, laundry
detergent, fa bric softener, tomato
sauce, milk, frankfurters and
granulated sugar.

Levies highlight election

i

dreued in animal COIIturnes and led
by Charles "Frog" Waylood . .
'lbe dinner event, catered by
Craw's SteM House, allo included
group linsing ol Happy Birthday to .
Cr!llf. otben'lelllnl Yarilllll stories Rick and Canon are nanben of the · Crow on Jill eeth lirthday. Organ
about their apert~nCe~• the rwult Crow, Crow • Porter Jaw finn and millie for the OClcalion was ~
. ol theil' .-.Uon and frlendahip Meigl County
attaney ted by Amnnd Turley.

'DitJIIIIIQIIIMr811rira Dlpar- ftllldl oWned bJ Belin ...... Rt.l,

Under the new contract, the price
companies pay the union for
processing a ton of non-union coal
was raised from $1.90 to $2.33, with
the money going into the union's
health and welfare funds.
The negotiated pay raise would increase miners' hourly wage by $1.30
the first year, with four 50-cent
raises over the next three years.
"When you look at the overall
package, you'll see we made a lot of
gains," Church said. "I'm not
saying to vote for it or not to vote for
it. Read it, listen to the explanations
and make up your own minds."

Sugar prices drop sharply

·Friends roast Fred Crow
An event that was billed in ad- with Crow .were roasters Paul
vance pu~llclty as a birthday party Casco, who was a teanunate on
for popntor Pumeroy Attorney Fred Pomeroy High School athlete
W. Crow turned out to be a "Royal teams; l'lfll!llme·friend Paul Simon,
Rout" with more than 250 people on · Oscar (Panzo) Bastian! of
hand Sunday everling at the Royal .Gallipolis, Jim Ariastas, vice
Oak Part Arcbery Building to enjoy president of Bank One In Athens, law
the affair.
partner BU! Porter and. retired
While good-natured jibing of Columbus altOfl\ey ·and longtime
Crow, a one-time star end on .the friend, Leo Roberts.
Ohio State University footbBli learn
Additionally, variouaawarda were
and fonner FBI agent, was the main presenll:d Crow including a man of
COUflll of activity for the event, he distinction plaque by George Harris,
was also pralJed ellensively for his from the Pomeroy C of C, a
many contributions to the better-: resolution from the Ohio Senale by
ment of Meigs County alld mankind. State Senator Oakley C. Collins and
Rlchanl Jones, Meigs County a certificate making hhn an AmCOIIllllll8ioner and GOP executive bassador of Good WW Among All
committee chairman, ae"ed People from West Virginia
cipably and lunoroully in the role Secretary of State A. Jlllll!ll Man.
of muter of ceremonies for the ~ · chin, preRnled by Boll Wingett.
blned birthday party-l'llllt that was
A letter of cqratulaUons was
hlglllighted by the presentation of a also read from Ohio Gov. James A.
motoriJed pll cart by Jim Frecller Rhodes.
and John Aadei 11011. rep euntaUves
Maney Reed praented a medal to
of the Pommoy Ollmller of Com- Craw's wife of 40 years and read a
JDei'W, sponsorthedalr.
beautifully styled poem entitled
Amonl tbe capacity crowd "Ode to Eleanor."
~t for the ,_. were three of
Mra. Crow wu praiJed by many of
Crow'a 1elmmatea on the famed the routen for her role In the life of.
1931 BueHye srld team: Dr. Sol • Fred Crow ai !rU Jill lonltlme
Mo11'gled,left pard; Olarlle Ream, secretary,Sybll Ebenblch.
111 end and Gaft Zlmaf, AllMember~ of the Crow family InAmerican pard. Crow earned All-; troducted, lA addition to 1U wife,
American hpnorable mention ~. 1'tl'e dauchl4!r, Mn. Ted
reqn!Uon that )'tar.
. lUnda) Bl!lll1e and fJmlly of ColwnZirnaf wu a11o on the lilt of bus, and 110111, Fred W. (Rk:lll Crow
. "rauten" for the recop!tion o1 rn and fllllllJ and Cal'lllll. Both

stitution requires miners be given 411
hours to consider the contr.act after
it is explained io. them in local
meetings. If the vote is Saturday, the
miners could return to work as early
as next Monday.

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. Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, J1,1ne l,ltll

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Mr. Timerman 's confusionL·_ __,_____:________:_:_._w;_u_ria_m_E_:_.B-:--uc_k_ley...;..J.....;,r.
I

All we write, it is uncertain state, insisted that the Jews in the
. Whether the Senate committee will Soviet Union had fared better before
reconunend Ernest·Lefever for the Senator Jackson's amendment had
post of assistant secretary. for been passecl than after. 01) that pal'
hwnan rights. His offenae·is that he ticular quarrel there are I think two
believes in different treabnent for positioos.
tyrants of different stripe. They sat
While on the matter of Mr. Lefever
. there, the second afternoon 111 this two Points should be iltressed: 1)
hearing, and attempted to drag from There is a· differen(;e between the
his lips the names of non-Communist kind of tyranny practic;ed in ArgenreglmeS that violate human lights.. tina and in .the Soviet U~n; and 2)
Mr. Lefever, who by the way is an President Reagan inclines to the
intellectual and a moralist of for- ~ practice .of a particular kind of
.mldable achievement, neglected to diplomacy, aimed at the enhando the obvious thing, which would cement of human rights; and unless
have been to pick up the Freedom we are victims of the most iJl.
House annual repori, or that of AJn. credible.electoral hoax, he was elecnesty International - or, ·for that ted chief executive officer, and the
matter, that of his predecessor in of. · people who work in the State Departlice Patricia Derian of the Carter ment are supposed to wort for him.
State Department. He might have This doesn't mean the Senate hasn't
said, "Here, gentlemen. Help your- the right to reject obnoxious or
selves. All known infractions are manifestly unqualified diplomats. It
listed in these documents.' ' What he does mean the senators should come
did say was that be thought the "ser- up with a better case· against
monlzing and preaching" of Lefever than that he makes the
President Carter were ineffective. distinctions he does and under the
He believes, where dealing With the circumstances·thinks it inprudent to
despots aa distinguished from the launch a career of quiet diplomacy
totalitarians, in "quiet diplomacy." in behalf of human rights by
This is hardly a cretinous position. · cagegorical denunciation of the
It waa held even With respect to the countries he proposed to deal with.
totalitarians, for instance, by Henry
Now add this : The real star of the
Kissinger who, when secretary of day's proceedings waa neither the

The Daily Sentinel
111 Cuurl Street
Poml!roy, Oh io
il~II!I2· 215G

DEVOTED TO TilE_ INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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.,..._.._...... ,.......,.c::~, =

ROBERT L. WINGETT
P\lblisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Asttis&amp;ant PubllsherfControUer

Gentrll Mau(ler

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edltur

A MEMBER uf Thr AKsoci11led Prrsi, Inland Dally Prnli Auoclatlon and the
Amr rieu Newspaper PubUshen Association.

u :rrERS o r OPINION are wrll'ttmt'd. llley shtluld ~ IeitH th1n 300 wurds lunr:. All
ll'llt•n art' !iUbjr rl tu rdllinK and mtUII bto N i ~ nt'd 'tlrdtll n~~mr . JM!dri'U and trleph(lltt'

numlwr. Nu Ul\liltcnt'CIIrners will tw publi H ht"d . l .t&gt; llrr~ ~thuuld tw Ia t(IMid La s le , aaddr~s ln~t
·

lssUt'l'l, nut p!• nm~t~llll l·~ .

Reagan's blast
at Wall Street
It has long been a relatively safe thing for a U.S. president to attack "Wall

Street." In President Reagan's case it was a very safe thing to do, and he
surely must have known it.
Safe because Reagan is a Republican seeking passage of a tax cut that
critics say favors the rich. To attack a symbol of both Republicanism and
wealth, therefore, would seem to earn him popular support.
• Moreover, his questioning of Wall Street's understanding of economics ;"I have never found Wall Street a source of good economic adVice" ...,
; suggests that opposition Democrats and bankers tend to think alike.
· But regardless of these factors, Wall Street is an easy mark. Nobody really
: knows what it means, tiut when it is used in a certain context almost
: everyone think it stands for power and selfish, vested interest.
: In its most limited definition, Wall Street is the name of the street on which
·the New York Stock Exchange resides, but by extension It also means
· LaSalle Street in Chicago, Montgomery Street in San Francisco, State Street
· in Boston and financial streets every where in America.
· It means stock and bond houses, brokers, bankers, analysts, letter writers,
· economists, and portfolio managers for pension funds, mutual funds and
•private trusta. In short, those who influence investments.
• And It means a segment of the public that trades regularly, and whose
members read the financial pages and in general derive their views of the
· economy from the incessant opinionating of "the street."
· It is "the market." Whether it is a market that represents public opinion is
· debatable, because trading today is hardly the random buying and selling of
• individuals. Inatead, it is the concentrated power of institutions, such as pen• sion funds, who first collect the money to be invested and wh~ then make
; Judgments about how it is to be invested.
: When the president criticized Wall Street in remarts last Thursday to
· state and local offlclala, it seems likely he was addressing the relatively few
. people who have this concentrated investment power.
: While generally happy about the overall Reagan program, which
: repeatedly they say is beaded in the right dlrectioo, those who make iJl.
• vestment decisions have expressed reservations about the president's tas• cut plan, fearing It could add to budget deficits and Inflation.
· Perhaps becauseofthisfear, they have often been timid to invest and ner• vous about remaining invested. Wall Street has been watching the nllillbers:
• lnWelt rates, inflation rates, savinga rates, indices of future buaine8B and
. more. After an initial expression of appl'\lVal, the Street has not given an
overall endorsement to the Reagan program.
· No wonder President Reagan let go a blaat at Wall street. With Wall
' Street's ..-rvations threatening his entire economic program he had
• nothing to loile by seeking the help of others in giving it a shove.

••

Letter to the editor
..

Alwnnus:·uJ)se.,..t·_ _ _..;;._..:..:..o-- 1'llere wtll be • mrud offered for
·•informatiGn about whoet• bllct·
'lllll'keMd lilt 21 Ucketl tlllt
·~ 10 tile Rlclne Alllnnl ror
111elllllqlllt, tbet l,lllrlllra Pierce,
.wtll .bmiiO J11Y the junior elau for
.tile dlllnln llmCI, from my pocket.
We IIIII 11wely blnquet and It wu a
·-:~J 10 hlppen, thalliHiliGIIe
•. .
•And ror the c1111ce llwu
bOmlwiid hall
to be pilei fill', llecause they were

'• .-, ..,...,we

It--

llolen Or broken to piece~ what left. I am 111 hurt about thlnp, I
haven't made up my milld If I wiD
have an)'lhlna 10 do with
year and If you think 11'1 not .wort,
try it. 1'he llllion that eome 1n
honored pes&amp;~ of the alumni and
their dlnnen plid tor. Tbe aiiiiJIII)
clears very liltle eedl year. It teak
111 12 yeara to make flOG ror • p.1.
l)'llem. - Blrbm Pierce.

chairman of the conunittee, Senator era &lt;i the Cold War and Me- Tlmennln Wlllll111 to treat Argen- year sentence. Her offe111eT
Carthyism...
tine g-.11 in • way be doeln't lflniiDil a lianner frml blr lloaeow
Percy, nor the objectofltseur!Oiity,
Mr. Lefever - but Jacobo Timer- · Now as a student al McCarthyilm, wilh 111, appareatly, to lrelt the · ~demllldlnll an all 9111.11 It
man, the Argentine J!lll!llaher who it ablolutely deleall IIlii what Mr. Brezbnen, TIIJII and Pel Poll of Ia Mr. 'l'imemiiD'I 'pOiDt that we
was savaged by the Argentine Timerman can find in common bet- this world. At thla polnl ane begins to should renounce thit Cold Wir
govenunent in demonstrations of ween the nomlnaUan or Lefever and wander whether the . torturen did whlcb' brlllclid Mill Nudel's torsadism and antl.semttism · which McCarthylat alleptiOns of sub- more to Mr. Timermln thaD IDIII91Y luntl as euctly that, who anJike .
the ' Argentines aiiO dlspoee &lt;i
·
.
tum the stomach. He bellev!!ll that verslon in government. And on the acar hil body.
he owes. his liberation to the matter or the "C!lld War" I find him
The lllllli! daJ be argued agalnst hydrogen bombs, .. but
energetic rhetoric of Patricia . entirely baffling. During the Cold . the ret1im or the Cold War, IOBII simultaneouBIY. declare a Cold War
lleriall and her ~ President Car- War the UJII!e4
was rinich .Memtelevjch participated in a caJio 011 qntiJia, at.least we C8ll !loPe
ter.
more guarded than under detente in die-lighting eeremciny a! New that the Seriate, while delerriDg .to
But listen.' Alti)ough he declined to · itli obsequies toward the most ruth- YQI'k's City Hall on behalf of Ida · lim as a hero, will reject 111m 18 a
testify, his presence waa a clear less totalitarians in the world. Nude!, a Soviet Jew
a four- . counselor.
protest against Lefever's con- .
firma lion, and be made a great stir.
To begin With, he spOke to the repor·
ters. He told them that " 'silent
diplomacy' is silence." "Quiet
diplomacy is surrender·." The
historical fact of the matter is that
not only is this questionably true, but
Mr. Timerlll!ln himself practiced
relatively quiet dipiomacy before
his arrest. He and many of his cGrejigionists belieVed that it was better to get along with the regime than
to provoke it. Better, so to speak, to ·
achieve a modus vivendi. This is .
hardly a shocking doctrine. It has
been practiced in Christendom for 30
years during which the popes have
endeavored to mulct little concessions from Soviet tyrants - a little ·freedom of religion bere, more
there - according as could be
quietly negotiated.
.
But Timerman, a gallant survivor,
trains his guns now almost exclusively on Argentina. He
sometimes sounds as though any
protest against Soviet tyranny is a
dissipation of moral energy that
ought to have been used against the
Argentines, his personal tormentors. H Lefever is confinned, he
told the press, it will mean that
"Americans are ... going back to the

m.tes

servu.

Survey shows ·decline' in inflation
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Doubledigit uination, the scollllie of the
nation's economy since early 1979,
has been declining gradually over
the past year, a survey of consumer
prices shows.
The decline has prompted some
economists to express oplimism that
the nation is coming out of a spell of
high inflation.
"I'm increasingly optimistic we
have turned the comer on inflation,"
said Allen Sinai, vice president and
senior economist at Data Resources
rnc., Lexington, .Mass., a leading
economic forecasting finns.
Thomas D. Thomson, senior vice
president and chief economist for
the Crocker National Bank in San

Francisco, said he, too, waa "fairly
optimistic" the nation has moved
away from a period of high lnflatioo.
Asurvey of Inflation figures shows
that after peaking at nearly 15 percent in the spring of 1911, increases
in the Consumer Price Index have
been steadily declining and are on
the verge of mOVing below 10 percent. The CPI is the government's
most common measure of Inflation.
Some private economists are optimistic a worldwide oil glut,
favorable weather in the Midwest
grain-producing areas, a strong

dollar and government efforts
aimed at reducing federal spending
will help keep the trend going.

Other economists caution that the perable ~the previous year.
The moderating trend waa more
tough pN,blem of lljllrallng nge iJl.
creases outstripping prodUCtivity prOftOUnced thla year. In April, the
CPI was only 10 percent over April
growth needs to be reaolveci to make
sharp and lasting reducU0111 fn iJl. 191Jl, marldng the lowelt year-t~
year change since the U percent
flatioo rates.
A look at the year-to-year in- rise of February 1m over February
creases in the CPI abowll that iJl. lrll.
flatioo reached a peak in Mardi llld
Tbe
ment - made of inApril of 1110 when the lndu jumped ~ . in the CPI; IJellnnlng Ill
14.7 percent above the same months Janua,ry lml. Corilparlnl the
changes from ane manth to the 11111e
the previous year.
Tbe rate of inflation then started month the following yar flaltelll
declining last May when it slipped to any buJ&amp;es or dlpe that may show up
in amonth-to-month an ment.
IU percent above May lml levels.
The CPI Ia a meuure al the
It went up 12.6 percent in both Ocaverage
change In prices over time
tober and November and 12.4 per·
·in
a
fiHd
martel
of gOOdi
cent in December over the com~
us

anclsemcea.

.,_et

Lawmakers must decide ·death· issues ~
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - &lt;Jiio's
lawmakers will decide whether
damages should be awarded in
wrongful death cases for anguish,
bereavement, loss of love and other
noD«&lt;nOmic pfoblems placed on
survivors by their famlly member's
death.
After heated debate among
lawyer-members last week, the
House approved and sent to the

Senate 77·17 a proposal that would .
allow juries, under the Instruction of
judges, tomakesuchawards.
Currently, Ohio operates under a
statute dating back almost to the
tum ~ the century which says the
only kinds of awards that can be
made are "pecuniary," or those tied
to the actual economic 1018 to the
family.
But Rep. Edward J. Orlett, [).

Daytm, llong with Rep. Dana
Deshler, R-(:olwnbus, aay It 11 time
to bring Ohio up to date. Deshler
aays the current statute waa bued
·on common-Jaw practice which
dates liack well into the 18008.
Rep. WiWml G. Batcbelder, RMedina, was the lllOII vocal opponent of the bill, of which Orlett Ia
chief sponsor, during House debete.
The Medina County attorney at.

Flaws in Reagan's taX
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Among
come preswnably not 8lllleeJitlble to
being diverted into acquisition or
the numerous deficiencies in
conslliller goods or payments on
President Reagan's tu-eul proposal
are two potentially fatal flaws : It II earlier purchases.
But Reagan's approach inequitable and unfocused.
Notwithstanding the president's drastically slashing marginal tas
perst.stent claim that
have tried rates at the upper end of the Income
to he 18 fair and even-handed ... as scale while reducing those rates only
waa humanly poaalble," the White modestly for those who aren't rich House package Ia unmlatakably goes a long way toward destl oylng
skewed in favor of the natioo's the eplillriln tradiUan of a
wealthiest taxpayers.
JH'OtP .mve Ia syatem under which
There Ia, in fact, no way to avoid the wealthy bear. large pert of'the
that bias as long as Reagan penists . country's personal income-lu biJr..
in embracing the untested "aupply- den.
slde" economic theory, which holds
Despite the prealdent'a penona1
that increased capltal _formatioo Ia
the key to the country's economic popularity and hll daallnc IAICcell
in pining Initial CCIIIII'IIilanel .,.
renewal.
of reductlona
Beca111t many low· and middle- provil for hil
Income families either are Ill debt or in the federll budcet, lhl •llan'a
popuJiat prociiYIUes provide conbarely able to meet their current u·
.,.-, the IDDit lotlical aource of tinuing
to Relpn'a unfresh invatment Clpital Is the balancedtu ...........
·wealthy, for wham 1 Ia cut would
A natloawldt pubUe-aplniGa poll
CC1Imlllllaned
-u.r IIIIa ,... by
provide add!Uanal dilereUOIIII'J
in,

"we

Jll.,_

1'"1•-

r

,_. ·.

Commentary
..

.'
'

pl~

'

tacked It on lleVeral IJ'OUIIIIs, lecbnlcal an11 wNc:b he asld wouicl
cauae major problems for the court
ts. For ane tbing, under the bil1, he
said that when • cue II COIIIIIdered
"there Ia a presumption tluit a 1011
hasoccurred.".
'
It sbou1d be up to the plaintiff to
prwe that I lOBI hu occurred, llld
there Ia no WI)' this can be done due
to the lmmeuDI'Ibleldnda all011es
. envillaned by the bill, be uld.·

Robert Walters

the Loa Angeles Times, for eumple,
found that 48 pereent of thoi!e surveyed believed a tax cut lhould be
designed to·help thole earning leu
than'10,000annually.

Another 40 percent favOt;ed relief
for mldille-income tu:payen those earning f!O,IGO to tii,OIO
year1y - while on1y a percent
preferred a plan that woUld help
those eamlng more thaD
per

•.aoo

year.

But when asked which lncune

group they believed wauJd, Ill fact,
beneftl IIIOit from the Reapil Ia
JX'GIII'IIIII, 12 percent al thGie in-'
teniewiid !dMttfl«&lt; tha Wllllby
(over -.GOD), D fllcenl llid the
middle dl8 ltlD,OOO to ..,,008) and
only 4 percent asld the poar (leal.
thlnflD,OIO).
Altlloqh the Rtqan ,· aclmlnlllntlOII repe~ttclly hal
bemalllld the nlatmlf low rate rl

.... ...,

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

..... ill tile UniW
'

'

·'
~·

'

.

,.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(1~lt,Oil
very
nasty,
.
.
C~dinals fall, 6.;l '
.

'

'

. sai(j, "but 'I dan;t kn.ow aboul his · homestand. .Kingman now has 121
By.u-lated~
'Ole word "naaty'! pi-obably best ·domll1ation Of us. He 'dominates RBI and five homers in those six i
games.
.
.
describe\! the way left..h8nder steve quiteafewt8ams ... becanpitch."
The
Pi\illles'
Pete
Rose
had
two
Randy
Jones
went
&amp;l.a
inninga
~or ,
Carlton treated the St. Louis ·Carhits;
Jeavillg
him
15
short
of
Stan
.
his
first
win«
the
l1e880il
after
five
:
dinals.
Musial's
major
league
record
of
losses,
and
Pete
Falcope
earned
his
Carlton poated his eighth victory
·
··
first.save.
'
without a lOBS this year, tosatpg a :3,600 career hits.
KlngJJlllll's RBI do~ble .snai»Ped ai . .
five-hitter as the Philadelphia · ·. "I know people don't believe me
when
I
tell
lhilm
I'm
not
excited;"
1-1
tie in the fourth ·inning, arld his .
Phlllles beat the Carda 6-1 Suru:IIIY.
Rose
said
of
the
prospec;t
o!
passing
homer,
a 420-foot shot to center field, :
The victory was Carlton'~. 10th
··.Musial:
"But·
I
tiiink
lt:s
,because
I
came
with
two out in the sixth off •.
straight against St. Louis, dating
know
It's
going
to
happen.
I'm
not
Cubs
right-hander
Rick Reuscliel, Z. ·•
back to early in 1979.
ruhning
out
of
time.
T!lat's
why
I'm
7.
Hector
Cruz
hit
a solo homer off ·
Since Carlton never speaks to
·
not
really
concerned
about!
I."
Falcone
to
lead
off
the
Cubs eighth. ;
reporters, St. · Louis' Keith HerElsewhere· in the league it was
Padres 5, Braves I
·
11811dez waa asked to explain
Montreal 5, ·Pittsburgh I; Los
Broderick Perkins dtove in two ;
Carlton's mastery or the Cardinals.
"Who do we have to blame for Angeles 16,.Cincirmati 4; New York runs, and Juwn Elcbelberger shut
that?" Hernandez asked. "We had. 3, Chicago 2; San Diego 5, Atlanta 1, out Atlanta for six lrininga. Both of
Pertins' bits scored Ozzie Smith,.
the guy and traded him ( ln l!i72.) His andSanFranclsco6,Houston1.
Espo1
&amp;,
Pirates
1
·
who also picked up an RBI with a .
slider was WOrking today. It was a
Right-hander
Steve
Rogers
tossed
suicide
squeeze bunt in the second
nasty pitch.
" That g'uy never makes a six-hitter, and Gary Carter drove inning.
ill a pair of runs for Montreal. Andre ; Eichelberger, 5-3, yielded a nm- ;
· mistakes."
l&gt;aws.Jn
contributed a first-inning scoring single to Rafael Ramirez in ;
Carlton walked three and struck ·
solo
homer,
his 12th of the season.
the seventh, and left for a pinch hit· out six, yielding a third-inning run
Rogers,
6-3,
walk!!&lt;~
one
and
struck
ter In the bottom of the inning. ·
on Tom Herr's RBI aingle that gave
out
seven.
Pittsburgh
starter
Luis Salazar, who dtove in one run '
St. 'Louis a 1-:0 lead.
Pascual
Perez,
2·1,
retired
10
in
a
With
a double, became the first
Catcher !,lob Boone gave Carlton
row
before
Chris
Speier
hit
a
one-out
Padre·
to get four hits in a game this •
the lead In the ·fourth, however,
single
in
the
fifth.
season
when he tripled in the seven- '
when ·be capped a three-run rally
Mter Rogers' sacrifice, Tim th.
with a two-run single. Gary MatGiaDta 1, Astroll.1
UP IN SMOKE - SeatUe MariDers right Helder Burrouglui out at home plate early In second inning arRaines
was intentionally walk!l(l.
thews also dtove in a. pair- of runs
Mike Sadek doubled home two
Jeff Burroughs (5) slides Into the waiting arms of tionaiArllngtonStadfum. TheMarinerswentontowln
Rodney Scott scored Speier with a
with two sacrifice flies.
runsintheGiants'fourthlnning,and
: Te:p~s Rangers catcher Larry Cox (20) wbo tags the game 5-3. tAPLaserpboto).
The victory waa Carlton's ninth double, Dawson was walked instraight, dating back to last season, tentionally and Carter drove in two Houston right-hander Nolan Ryan ·
and kept the Phillies one-half game runs with a single.
Rogers said the performance was
ahead , of M!llltreal in the National
now has issued 1,774 career walks,
.
his
best oflhe season.
League East.
,
one
short
of
the
major
league
record
NEW
YORK
(AP)
_
Negotiators
market
value
of
free
agents
and
cy
is
having
on
the
teams'
financial
Meta 3, Cubs Z
St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog
for major league baseball club restricting their mobility by forcing status.
..
Dave
Kinginan
drove in two runs of Early Wynn.
wasn't 'beying any theories that
Sadek's
double
broke
a
1:1
tie
and
owners and players resumed a club signing certain of them to,-------__;__;__
With
a
solo
homer,
his
11th,
and
a
Carlton had singled out the Carmade
.a
wmn~r
of
_Tom
Griffm,
4-3,
·
discussions today in what was to be a make a player available from 1ts
double
as
the
Meta
won
their
fourth
dinals for punishment.
game
in
six
to
complete
a
~h~
y1eld~
~1ve
hits
and
struck
out
renewed effort at settling the strike- own roster. In t?e past, only an
"He's pretty tough on us,'' Herzog
SIX m 62-31DIUDgs.
threatening free agent com- amateur draft cho1ce served as compensation issue.
pensal!on.
If the injunction is denied by U.S.
District Court Judge Henry Werker,
531 JACKSON PIKE ·At . 35 WEST
Representatives of the owners and the players could walk out within 48
~446 - 4524
players
went
back
to
their
talks
with
hours
of
his
decision.
Should
the
inBARGAIN
IIIAf iHEES
the loth. He scattered nine Boston snapped four-game losing streak. federal mediator Kenneth Moffelt
By Asaoclated Press
AU SEATS JUST
junction
be
granted
the,
thorny
free
I
While the Baltimore Orioles and hits, including Rich Gedman's The Blue Jays had won four in a row after having agreed last week to ex· agent issue would be put off for
before
the
loss.
second
homer
in
the
third
iMing,
to
Milwaukee Brewers are separated
tend the May 29 strike deadline.
Damaso Garcia highlighted a While the walkout scheduled for another year, as it was last year
by just two games on top of the improve his record to 6-2. ·
"Mter yesterday, this looms as a four-run fifth Inning for Toronto with Friday was averted it remains a when the two sides agreed on
American League East standings,
everything else in their basic
their Sunday bests are as different very blggle. Our bullpen was shot a tw()-run single, and the Blue Jays threat.
agreement.
and we needed a complete game," took a 5-4 lead into the ninth. But a
as tatters and tuxedos.
Should no compromise be reached
The Brewers improved their Su&amp; said Rodgers. " It was a good pick· walk, a single by Rickey Henderson,
a sacrifice and a wild pitch by
lf the disagreeme~t over the at the bargaining table, the owners
day record to ~ with. a 1&gt;-2 victory me-up, a plus game all the way." '
RJNC;Q SWill ·IIMIWIA 1INJt
The Brewers' bats were perking reliever Jerry Garvin tied the score. degree of compensation required for would be permitted to put the comover the Boston Red Sox as Jim Gan1st WEEK : 7: 10 &amp; 9 :10P .M.
pensation
plan
back
into
their
consigning ranking fr ee agents
SAl &amp; SUN M.AllN[[ S 1: 10 8 ] ; I0
tner belted the game's second piteh too, pount;ling 15 hits off Boston pit- before Gross' sacrifice fly.
Indlana7,
Yankeea2
acquired in the re-entry draft is not tract with the Major League Players
ching.
for his first homer, Marshall' Ednext February. The
Mter the Red Sox came to within · Len Barter fired a six-hitter to resolved at the bargaining table or a Association
wards drOVe in two runs and Pete
players
would
then have until June
Vuctovtch picked up his sixth vic- 3-2 With a run in the seventh, win his first game for Cleveland sin-' federal judge does not issue an in- I, 1982 to strike.
junction sought by the National
!OI'f. ~the month of May. . Milwaukee scored two in the eighth ·ce his perfect no-hitter May 15.
On another front, the NLRB's
Barker,
4-2,
allowed
only
one
ear·
Labor Relations Board, the players
· "I hope
can keep it up - on to clinch the victory. Mart Brouhard
complaint
of bad-faith bargaining
Sundays, Saturdays, every day,'' beat out an infield hit, Edwards ned run to lower his league-leading; may strike within 48 hours of the against the Owners is scheduled to be
Milwaukee. Manager Buck Rodgers followed with a triple, his third hit, earned run average to 1.93 and gO\ . conclusion of a court hearing heard in New York June 15 by an adstrong hitting support from Alan scheduled to begin Wednesday in
and caine home on an infield out.
said.
ministrative law judge. The heart of
Bannister, who singled, doubled and. Rochester.
Tlcen 5, Orioles t
Meanwhile, the flrst11lace Orioles
that
case is the players demand to
Mter Jones' double In the seventh homered.
lost for the eighth time In nine Sunsee
the
clubs' financial records.
day outings as the Detroit Tigers gave Detroit the lead, hot reliever .
The
hearing
is
on
the
NLRB
The
owners
contend those records
Aqell7·1, w~~ Sox 4-2
captured a 5-4 decision in Baltimore. Kevin Saucier took control.
request
for
an
injunction
agains.
t
the
are
irrelevant
to the compensation
Carlton Fisk crossed up California
Saucier, who has not allowed a run
Scott McGregor had beaten
owners
which
would
rescind
the
question.
The
players
say they need
Detroit six times in a row, but it iii II of his last 12 appearances, with a hit-and-run, run-scoring
dlda't help the Orioles' Sunday jinx recorded his filth save while pit· double in a bunt situation irr the bot· free-agent
plan last
im· r~it~t:o~de:te:rrru:·n~e~th~e~e:ff:ec:t~fr=ee~a~g:e:n·i~~~~~~~~~~
plemented compensation
by the owners
aa Lynn Jones' twG-run double in the . chinK hitless ball for the final22-3 iJl. tom of the 10th to give Chicago a February.
tw'inbill Split.
'
seventh inning for the Tigers sent niRgS.
Mike
SqUires
drew
a
walk
leading
He
induced
pinch-hitter
Lenn
Baltimore to Its 11th loss ·in 17 day
The players have maintained that
games this season. The Orioles are Sakata to hit into a double play after off the loth off loser Don Aase, l-1.'
replacing
Auretio
Lopez,
Z.l,
with
Fisk
faked
a
bunt
on
lhe
first
pitch
the
owners will be reducing the
22htnight.
and
then
doubled
down
the
left
field
In other American League games, two runners on base in the seventh,
Oakland edged Toronto 6-5, then retired sluggers Ken Singleton line, scoring Squires from first.
Juan Beniquez gave Gene Mauch
Cleveland downed New York 7-Z, and Eddie Murray after Gary
MIMesota trinuned Kansas City 5-4, Roenlcke wafked in the ninth and his first victory as Angels' manager Four length victory
when be drove in four runs with
SeatUe defeated Texas 5-3 and moved to second on a sacrifice.
three
hits in the first game. .
CINCINNATI (AP) - Star of
After
the
final
out,
Saucier
C&amp;lifomla and Chicago split a
Twins
5,
Royals
t
Monaga,
with Mary Jo Eyennan
jo)tfully
bounded
off
the
field.
doubleheader, with the Angels winDanny
Goodwin
hit
a
two-out·
aboard,
challenged
for the lead on
A'• I, Ble JaywS .
ning 7-4 before the White Sox came
single
in
the
eighth
inning
to
break
a
the
final
turn
aDd
sprinted
to a four· Wayne Groes, who had slugged a
back to win Z.lin 10 Innings.
H
tie
and
give
MJMesota
t11f
viclength
victory
Sunday
in the
Vuckovich provided a badly twG-run homer earlier, hit a
Well, you voters of the Meigs Local
tory
over
Kansas
City.
·
featured
race
at
River
Downs.
needed complete game to rest sacrifice fly to cap a two-run rally in
Goodwin's second hit of the game
The horse, covering 51&gt; furlongs in
School District have the opportunity
Milwaukee's relief corps, which was the ninth inning to pace Oakland
came
off
Dennis
Leonard,
5-6,
and·
1:00
1-li,
returned
f8,20,
$4.80
and
over
Toronto.
battered Saturday when the Red Salt
at the Tuesday, June 2 Election to
The victory vaulted the A's back made a winner of Jack O'Connor, z. $3.80 for the victory, while More
rallied for five runs in the ninth iJl.
keep some of your money at home.
ning and added the winning run in into f1Tst place in the AL West and 2, who pitched the final22-3lnnings. . Haste paid f4.60 and $3.20 for place.
, Grand Time returned f2.80 for show.
You will have to pay four mills
The 1&gt;-5 daily double combination
• of Sharon's Rival in the first race
bond issue taxes for the next nine
and Roman Decade in the second
I
years. However, by supporting the
"This wl8 a big day for the Z paidf81.
Monday
and
the
rest
of
the
Los
A
crowd
of
7,489
wagered
$899,895.
.. LOS ANGELES (A~) - They call
bond issue· at tomorrow's election,
Squad," Monday aaid after the
themaelves the "Z Squad." They are Angeles Dodgers not considered Dodgers trampled Cincinnati 16-4 i n - - - - - - -- - - - !
you can keep 2.5 mills of that millage
Pepe Frias, Derrel Thomas, Rick regulan.
Sunday's game.
in your district. This amounts to
The Daily Sentinel
"Ot;rrell made a big play at
second bile and knocked in some
iVSPSI-1
ONE MILLION DOLLARS for
A lllvltloo tl Mod-.....
runs, Pepe !mocked in a couple and I
maintenance of buildings and
was fOrtunate enough to hit one out,·~
l'llbllahed every aflemOOn, M-y thr&lt;utlh
C...ot Str..t, by !he Ohio Voll&lt;y
outfielder Monday said.
I FrioloJ,lll
l'llb1llllln&amp; Company • ltlultlmedlot,· Inc:.,
grounds in your district.
Tbe victory, the Dodgers' second
Punon&gt;y, Ohio 46111. 11111-21141. Second cluB
-paid ott.......,.,, Ohio.
·
We can't miss this opportunity to
in the ~game series with etn!
_
, The Asooclotled Pms, lnlotnd Dal·
cinnati, e1111bied them to open a 5~
keep our money at home for the
ly Prell AIIO&lt;illlon and !he American
game lead over the · Reda in ~
N-por l'llblWoeri "-iitloo, NaUonol
benefit of OUR schools and OUR
Natianel League ytest.
j Adnrtislng Reprnentatlve, Br~nhlm
N~ S.les, 'll.'l Third Aven.at, New :
Sunday's Dodger. StadiUm Cl'O'lfO
Ym,NewYn!'klOOI7.
·
students.
of 41,411 )HIIbecl the home •t-;
Pll81'MASTER:
Sood
addreol
to
The
Dally
So ~ .tomorrow, let's hear a big
tendance over the 1 milliOn mark to
Sentinel, 111 Court Sl .. Pomeroy. Ohio 46711.
1,GJI.721• only the Did home dati
"YES" to keep some of our money at
IRJB8CIIIPTION MT!II
· -the earlie~hny baniJIU lillm 1111
a,c.m.r --llooto
iWdled that pllteau.lt IIIII waslhl Q l e - ... ""' .. '"' "" "'"." 11.10
home.
Month ........ ......... .. ...... lUll
Doclcen' loth llraJCN llllout, and Qle
Qle Year ...... , .................. 101.111
lhe 11th in I I'VW is lonJibt wileD•
IINGIJ!: IJOPY
PIUCD
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apinlt .... Atllnll an-.
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.......... oMroo:t to The DaOr
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LfliAilltill ........ TamlMorda,,
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" ' - Da-1 I !aft waa 11ft aff No -•ipll• b)' ..0 peuuttlod In towno
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~ thll from the Redl.
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negotzators resume ta s

Orioles, Brewers tough Sunday
a

we

TIRED OF SENDING
YOUR MONEY TO
COLUMBUS?

'Z squad' rolls over Reds, 16-4

V.._.

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tY• .................... ....... $~~..

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Paid for by the Citizens
Comminee for the Meigs
Local Bonet Issue.

..................
..........
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'

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�I

The Daily Sentinei- Page--5 1

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio ,
.

QUEENOOfojTBSTANT APPUCATION

~b·names--------------------------------~------~~

Two Mason County residents are
Named to this honor are Karen ·
President's Scholars for the spring. Brown of Mason, a cumputer.science ·
semester at Parkerslx!rg Com- major, and Betty Harper of 4?JK
mlinity College.
Lucan Road, New Haven, a .
To be . eligible for this honor, secretarial science major. '
students must attain a 4.0 grade . - - - - - - - - - - - point ·average while carrying at
least 12 semester hours.

Ed~tiM--~------~--------------~--------------~~-----

OPSEto meet

"~~
· --~~--~~----~------------~-----

OPSE Chapter 453 will meet at
Southern High School Tuesday, June
2,.a t7p.m.

Cooleltant'aNIIIII---------...------------"-:-:--'--~

~~------~------~--~~------~----~~----~--~
. ·t .
.
.· i&gt;hoOe ....... . Date of birth
. il't .·

.

..•.•' , ..' Age ....••••.

'

· Clubl,orga!lizallona _

__;;.._.;..___;_________..,...._____~----------

FAMILY CLINIC

.hins, alllbitiOO., goals · -,..------,..--.....-:---"""'--~---------------~

David L. Carr, D.Q;
.

·. Employnieni--,..:.:.:.._...:....:--"'~---------.,--,;_-~-------------:­
·. . . . I .,ve read the Guld~llnea for this contest and ~ to be a
WINNERS- Flnl place wlllnen ollbe bunlhall
foul sboollq eoDtest held by lbe Shade River Jaycees
on Memorial Day were, left lo rlgbt, over 18 division-

RUN'NERSUP- Seeond 8lld diJrd plaee wlilnen
ollbe Foal SlloeiiDI colllell held by IIIIi Sluule River
Jayteet were; kDeeiiJic, JIIOD Baullden,lectllll place,
elpl 1o l! dlvllloo; Jim NeweU, .aecoDd plaee U.U
dtvllion; standing wu Jeff SaWiden, jhlrd place 11-)8

Jlm Hubbard, l! lo U yeai1 oldGlial, lllo
18 yean - RDger Blllell, 8lld elgbllo l! yar division
-Suzie Elcblnger.

.

'

dtvllloa; Breal Norloa, third place, elgb'-l! ~; .
Charles ElcblD«er, lblnl plaee, over 18; David
. Hawtbonle, lhlrd place iHJ dlvllloa. Ablellt wen;
GeDe Cole, wbo was .-ad Ia lbe 1..18 year bnleket,
aDd Roy Holler, B«&lt;Dd Ia the over 18 category. ·

.

'

Contestint; I agree to abide by the GUidelines to the best of my ability.

.

Appllcant•ssignatk·~. _;__.__ _..:.~--------------------------,------Parenta: !18118tUre _____. ; _ _ . . , . . - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

' application to:
Please return

Meigs' diamond teams continue season ·
The local Syracuse Little .
Leaguers recently posted three
straight wins over area foes.
In the first contest, Syracuse
edged New Haven 3-1 as pitchers
Mike Kloes and David Amburgey
combined for 12 strike outs to help
Syracuse roll to the win. Hitters for
Syracuse were Doug Owens with a
home run and double, Shawn Arnott
a single, Chris Baer a single and
Todd Lisle three singles.
Hitters for New Haven were
Weaver with a single, D. Johnson a
triple, and L. Gandee a single. Winning pitcher was David Amburgey of
Syracuse.
Mike Kloes collected to win as
Syracuse defeated the Middleport
Braves 5-0. Hitters for Syracuse
were Mike Kloes with a single,
David Amburgey a single, Doug
Owens a single, Shawn Cunningham
a single, Shawn Amott a double and
single, and Chris Baer a single. The
leading hitters for Middleport was S.
Donald with a single.
Syracuse players scored 26 runs
for a 26-4 win over the Middleport Indians.
Pitching for Syracuse was Mike
Kloes, Amburgey, Cunningham, and
Baer. Kloes led Syracuse with three
singles, Amburgey two triples and a
single, Owens a home run and
single, Cunningham a triple and
double, Arnott two singles, and Baer
a single. For Middleport Johnson
tripled and singled, while Hood, Kitchen, and Broome each added
singles.
LL Action

In Big Bend Utile League action
Pomeroy Pizza Shack team rolled to
its third straight win by defeating
Salem Center's Rangers 2U. Randy
Hawley went the first four innings

I

W L
21

Levi's

• STRAIGHT L£G

STRAWBERRIES
Pick Your Own
Happy Hollow Farm
Gallipolis Ferry, W.va.
10 miles south of Pl. Pleasant on Rt. 2.
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
Ph. 304-574·2026
Sorry, no checks accepted.

NEW YORK
a.oTHING HOOSE

.------------------------L---;-j..:...---'-----..1..-------------'

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.t'hl ct~~o

WEST
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Milwaukee !Lerch 3-4) at · Detroit IWiiCOit ~J . (n)

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' Chic:a~o tO, New VCJri: 3
• CincinnaU 9, LOs Angeles J

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• Colilarlllo (Fandl
•taleb Ul. 1nr ·

Rlchlrda, San Diego, 5.

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PIUtburiJh, 8oe, 1.000, U3; fbltoo, 1M
Angela. 7-1, .171. 2.11; Camp, Allanta, tI, .113, 1.116 : S..vor, Clncln111tl, $.1, .Ill,
1.111: .va~nuera. Loo
•1. • ·
IM ; Ruthwn, Pl&gt;iladelpl'!l', '&gt;1, .711,
4.01; Sondenon. Mmlnll, ri-1, .714, lM.
STRIKEOUTS: C.rllon, PhllodejpiU,
&amp;'I ; Voleoauell, 1M Allteloo, It; 5010,
Clnclnnoll. 13; [Van, - . . ., II; (lol.
JI&lt;Uon, Monlrtal, 4l.

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and Mary Carolyn w· ey, ew
Haven, '!f. va.; Robert and Ha2el

Alwnni and guests danced to the
music of "The Boss Groover" of
Athens Ioilowr·ng the banquet.

· The WU1Ing
Mllllonary
Sodety ol the Ftnl Chureh of God,
Syr8aile, wiD JIIGI- • 1'18111l11&amp;'
sale WeckleldiJ and TIU'Iday, t
a.m. 1o Sp.m. ~Idle buemellt ol the
Ma"""c Tllftllle Ill Middleport.
On n.u.lly, there wiD be I bike
ll1e and • baaar table. Items fCII'
the 111e are to be liken to church
'before "-I and lo the buement at
the temple on June 2, betwWII and
Sp.m.

Holld111 1111 keepq on

..

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1

diet

wu tile tapli: ~ad b)' memberl .
. at tile Ct tar dul Clf IIIIDa
JllondQ i1111L
AI 1M dill
"s

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M're your nomtiOWn POWW COIIIItlftY.
aut we·re.IIIO Pll't Of AIMI'ICII1 lllcb 1e POwer,
one Of ttlt l\'iOit trfiC\IIIt IIICIIIC IYI•i•ln
the COUIIII'V.
wnen vou tum on:=:ltCfl, ., .,
dOn't CIN

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aut wt en. DICIUit 1111 COlt Of 11111111n0

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Tesling and Trealmeot

Test for: Inhalants
Food
Chemicals
Shoe Derm ititis
Cosmetics

The Liberty Christian Church, 4
Uberty Ave., Pomeroy, has changed
the tinne of service to Sunday School
10 a.m., Sunday evening worship
dWedn sd 7 30
7: 30 p.m. an
e ay : p.m.

DERMATOLOGY

Tumors Removed
Acne
Psoriasis
Exzema ·
All Skin Diseases
GENERAL PRACTICE

Office 675·6971
Office Hours by Appointment
.... Jackson Ave.
•••
pt, Pleasant, WV 25550

Ginther,Cmwm~.
~~~:::::· ::::~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-.-.,
Peggy Lewis Darst, Zanesville; 1
SHOP AT MASON FURNITURE AND $AVE!!!
\

I

Early American
TABLE COLLECTION

Colonial charm, country warmth ... by
. I ..

'.

48"xl8"x!S"

. ' ·.'"'

... in
Dark Knotty Pine
finish
All
3 Pieces
25"x20'd9'

Sllnderella meets

Ant••·

Wlllrt ct1t lllttltltf comes rrom. Aslonllalt

I

~~~- Cll)' -,..o.'· .
:•' Cllllomll
7·1, CIIICqo
lnd prne 10

~ndi,Toranlol

12;

lllctr k IPPIIInCI. ¥OU

.•' -Qllc:qo '·
t, Olllland
Calll&lt;lrnla$ I
Soaltle

~;

Continued from page 7

leiand Crans, Cincinnati; William
McCool, Kettering; Patricia Kloes,
Bidwell; Walter Smith, Colwmbus;
Leah Riley Parker, Canton; Gamet·
Schaefer, Colwmbus; Wanda Doone,
Colwnbus; Bill Reichman, Chat·
tanooga, Tenn.; Mary Schleicher,
· Panna; Charles Rickman, Colwnbus; Edward and Ruth Tewksbary,
Wellston; Sally Sauer Ellingworth,
Phoenix, Ariz.; Irene and Max Lambert, Coiwn~; Sue Knight Halley,
Colum~; Jane Welker, Gahanna;
Dan Fanner, Vandalia; Mary and
Gordoo Harris, Columbus; Marty
Nicholson, Belpre; James Buell,
Knightdale, N. C.; Marjorie Diles
Mitchell,. Athell8; Larry Vance,
Gallipolia; Phyllis Jividen, Athens;
Melissa Vivian, Woodman . Hills,
Calif.; David Wiley, California; and
Lois Smith Roaenbaum, California,
. both recognized for having traveled
the farthest.
The orange and black colors of
Middleport High School were
carried out Ln the table decorations
with flcrral alftiiCIIII'Iel' of orange
and black pompons. The invocation
preceding the dinner served by
Evangeline Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Stat, waa given by L. W.
McComas. :tbe 1981 officers iJ1.
traduced were Mrs. Johnson,
president; Carolyn Hicholson FrenJW)NDAy
ch, vlee president; Peggy McKinney
MEIGS COUNTY . SALON 710, Wood, secretary and Carolyn Wilson
EIBht and Forty, picnic at the home r._G_I1Jelle
__
r._treas_u_r_er_.- - - - - 1
ol Mn. Loretta Tiemeyer. Take
covered dish, own table service;
meet at BurRer Chef, 8 p.m.
SUNDAY
UBERTY Christian Church, 4
Uberty Ave., Pomeroy. Sunday
School10a.m., Evening Service Sunday 7:30p.m. Wednesday 7:30p.m.

worten

Puhl, Houston , It; O.&amp;nith, San Dlelo,
tt.
PJTCIDNG
II
o.doi.,.) : Carlton,
Plllladelphia, ~- 1001, 111; Rhoden,

aa

: New Vorl&lt; I, a.v.land t
, Bootm 7, 1111.-.- I, 10 iMll\gl

• Delloli I, -

Sl.t&lt;Nil,

Konkrighl, .Baltimore; Eugene
Scheaf, Colwnbus; Ken Murray,
1\forgantown, W.Va. ; Janice Childs
Falkner, Birmingham, Ala.; Gladys
De~! Stewart, ·Mason, W. Va.;
Beverly Perrin llixM, Pontiac,
Mich.; Loll Diles BUBh, Colwn~;
Alfred Scarberry, Thunnan; Clarice
Allensworth, Mason, W. Va.; Bill
Diles, A~.
Virginia Mayes Covert, Rio Grande; Joyce Redman, Mason, W. Va.;
John Dixon, South Charleston, W.
Va.; Mary Williams Wal.burn,
Powell; James Bowles, Point
Pleasafll, W. Va.; Richard
Swackhammer, Madison; Lynn
Buchanan Kitchen, Mason; Carol
Anderson Painter, Colwn~; Jerry
Davis, Galllpoll.s; Esther Aleshire,
Dayton; John Lengen, Colwn~;
Mary Jackson, Colwnbus; Janice
and Ronald Evans, Colwnbus.
Emestlne Ashcraft,' Ellzabeth W.
Va.; Orville Chambers, Montgomery, Ala.; . Wlillaln Saltez.
Columbus; William Broughton,
Fainnont, W. Va .; CJnda and Gene
Abbott, Carroll; Dennis and Doris
Walburn, Beverly; John and Gloria
Cue, 'Columbul; Marlene Knapp
Yeauger, Be!levllle; VlrliniA 8eb,
lflliHard; Ec!Car · and Kathi'Jil
Tuckerman, Athens: Ray Tw-ner,
Grove City; Fred and Linda Cline,
Patriot; Don Payne, DayiM; Larry

ALLERGY

Time change set

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

Rummage ~ale set

HOME RUNS: Sclrnldt. l'lllladolphJa,
14; Dawson, Montral, 12; KiniJnan, New
York, II ; Foater, Clnctnnoli, 11; Cey, 1M
Angeleo, t : Guorm&lt;, Llle Anael.., I.
S1UlEN BASES: llalnea, Montreal. Ill:
North, Son Fnncilco, 22; R.ScGU, Mont.rul, 19; Durham, Chicago, li; MOMO,
Pilllllw'gh, 14; CoUi111, Cinc:innoU, oM;

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

·Cleveland
' NewYorl&lt;
' Boolon
.llolrotl

Hemande!,

..

·Middkport.

ATHENS- A Health Educatioo
Workshop M Heart Health and
Healthy Uving Styles will be offered
at the Athens Clmpus ol Ohio
University, June 18-19, from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. by Or. Freda Phllllps.
For more information, write the
Workshops Office, Ohio University
45701, arcall (614) 59f.a51.

OlambliN, Atlanta, 12; Garvey, Loa Angeleai 12 ; Ru.JOI1ef!, San Dietlo, 12.
TR PLES: Reynolds, Houston, 7; Herr,
St . Lou~ 6; Templeton, St.LouLo, I ; Dur-

Montreal al Sl.Louia, In)
Hoosllln at San Diego, (n)
Atlanta at Los Angeles, (n)
Cincinnati at San F'ranci!ICO, In)

M
19
11
21

13;

DEADUNE FOR ENTRY: JUNE 1,1981

· Health workshop

36 ; Gt~rvey , Loe Angeles, 38; Buc,ner,
Chica"o. 31 .
HITS: Rcoe, Philadelphia, illl; A.Howe,
llowiton, 59: Garvey, Llle Aniele~ ; 511;
Cullins, Cincinnati, 5e; Griffey, Clncinnoll, 56: Herndon, San Francilco, 56.
DOUBLES : Buckner, OliCBf!O, 18; C....
cepcton, Clncl""-'1, 15; Wul\lnl&lt;tGn, Al-

. Otica11o at PitllburJh, (n)

21
'll

City

BAmNG 11011 al be~l : A.Howe, lJou&gt;.
lun, .369; Yoolll!blood, New York, .361;
Madlock. Pll1abu!'fh, .342; E&amp;aler, Pilbburgh, .331; ~crkins, San Diego, .333.
RUNS: CoUtns, CincinAIU, 37; Schmidt,
Philadelphia, 35; Ralllell, hbllrul, 31 ;
R o 11 e , ' Philadelphia,
31;
Hendrick,
St.Louis, 30; Garvey , Lol Angeles, 00.
RBI : Concepcion, ClnctnnaU, 37 ; FOio
tcr, Ciflcinnatl, 37; Schmidt, Philadelphia,

-··~
:' New York al
Philadelphia. (n)

~ Milwaukee

at Cleveland (Gar-

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NAnONALLEAGUE

' Houston 9, San Francisco S, 14 innings
: Philadelphia 10, St.Louis 2
, San OieiO II , Allanta I
Sollly'• Games
• Montreal 5, Pllbburgh I
Philadelphia 6, SU..oui.!i I
• New York 3, Chicaa:o 2
: ~ Angeles 16, CinclnnaU t
• San IJiello 5. Allanla I
, San FrandJco 6, Houston 1
M..Uy'JGamet
N•w York (Zachry 5'5 ) al Phiiadelphia
ICilrllllenllon 1~1 .. (nJ
Montreal (Lea 4-1) at SI.Uluis (Martin
)•1), (n )
• AU&amp;nl.a (8oKgB 1·7) at Loll Angeles IValenmia f.!) , (n)
• Cincinnati ( Berenyi 4-2) at San Frandace !Almnder S-3 ), (n)
Only Jill""' IICheduled

W L

).(I J

1-41 at Kansas
ISplittorff 1-4 ), tnJ
Only games ~ehcduled
'hesdiJ'J Gimtll
C&amp;lifomia at Toronta, {nJ
Boston at Cleveland., (n )
&amp;ltimOre at New York, (n)
Milwwukee at Detroit, inJ
Oakland at ChiCIHO, In)
St.attle at Ka115H!I City, (n)
Te ~tas at Minnesota, {n )

n

17
ill
11

24 24

}lo11~ton

New York IBird

45760

Ohio

Social Calendar

'

Pd. GB
land 3-t ), (n)
.S87 -,L
~ttl e (Abbott

II

re

St. Louill

r,... '·

singles, Roberta Greene with a triple. Elise Meier was the losing pittriple and single, Tracy Beegle and cher .with two strikeoutS and two
Lori Adams with five singles each, walkli, while also giving up 13 hits.
Melinda Hill with lour singles, Karlt . - - - - - - . : .·- - - - Smith three singles, Alana Lyons
two singles, and Mandy Hill and
Angie Hayes each a single.
'
Monica Hill, Crystal Hill, and
Christina Cooper each plated runs
for Letart. ·Gena Follrod led Middleport with a . triple and two
doubles, Melissa Downing had a
double and a single, while Shannon
Hindy, and Amy each had one
single.
The New. Haven Angels heat the
Middleport Dusters for Its thinl
straight victory by an 11-3 score.
Dana Draper, now 3-0, struck out
The original heavywe[gh
three and walked one. Hitting lor the
un-washed Leiv jeans.
Angels were Wendy Barker with a
· home run and double, Tanuny Mc• FlARES
Peek and Melanie Fields each a
horne run, and Sissy Cook with a

.

Major League Baleblll
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

-Pt~Uadelrhia

•· Baltimore

Scott Melton itched one inning to
give up three runs, two strike outs,
and fou.r walks. Dave Smith pitched
the last round and gave up one run,
two strikeouts, and walked two.
Rick Kearns started for the
Pirates and took the loss. Pirate pitchers had seven strikouts and seven
'walks. The visiting Pirates had two
hits on the night; a single by Robert
Klein and a long triple off the bat of
Dariil Young.
For the victorious Cubs P. J. Richmond, Todd Hood, and David Smith
had two sing!~ each, Joey Hysell
had a single, and Luke Burdette and
Joey Loving provided some extra
fireworks . Burdette had a single and
three-run home run, while Loving
had two singles and a Grand Slam
Home Run. The Cubs have four
home runs in their three games this
season, while posting a 3-0 mark
against Mason's record of ().2.

win, was ·the big bat for the Cubs.
PEE WEE AC110N
Smith
went for a perfect night by
The East Meigs Pee Wee League
baseball season opened with ~eking a home run, triple and
Keebaugh's T. P. Indians of Coaches single. Todd Hood had three singles,
Don Fitch and Ken Caldwell taking a Mike Frash and Luker Burdette
each had a pair of singles, while
~victory over Letart. Pitchers for
the Indians were Kenny Caldwell Scott Melton had a single. Hutton of
Rutland had the hardest hit of the
and scott Fitch.
Scoring runs were Dan Tripp, Jen- game which fell for a triple. Hutton
nie Myers, Jason Myers, Jeremy tripled and singled twice, B. Johnson
Blake, Toby Cortis, Brad Powell, singles twice and doubled, while J.
Theresa Lambert, Jason Hager, Jay MitcheU and Walker each singled.
Tuppers Plains' Tigers won a 13-7
Blackwood, Chris Adams, Fitch, and
Caldwell. The Keebaugh T. P. In- contest over Racine. Drenner was
dians scored its second win over the winning pitcher while Matt
Hawk's Pee Wees of Coaches Gary Jewell suffered tile loss. Bissell went
McDonald and Terry Deam, the four for four with three singles and a
double for Tuppers Plains. Matt
score4-2.
Pitching for the T. P.Indlans were Jewell hammered a home run for
Kenny Caldwell and Scott Filch. Pit· .the Racine Reds. Reedsville clobching for Hawk's Pee Wees were bered Racine !CHI behind pitcher M.
Scott McDonald and Shawn Savoy. Barringer. Matt Jewell suffered the
Scoring runs for the Indians· were loss. Homer pounded a home run
Jason Hager, Jeremy Blake, · and and triple lor Reedsville, while J.
Jason Myers. ~It McDonald and Johnson and Barringer doubled.
Shawn Savoy plated runs for the Reedsville is now 3-1, while Racine
drops to 0-3.
Hawk team.
Softball
The Middleport Cubs rolled to al2Visiting Letart rolled to a 23-5 win
8 win over Rutland in local pee wee
action. Joey Hysell started for the over the Middleport Wranglers here
Cubbys striking out four, walking six recently in girls' softball action.
Letart Is now 1.0. Melinda Hill
and hitting one batter.
David Smith came on in relief picked up the win on the mound for
during the second inning and picked the Letart girls with one strikout and
up the win with nine strike outs and only two walka. Dawn Thomas sufsix walks. J. Mitchell in a losing fered the loss with one strikoul and
cause had eight strikeouts and six 12 wallur. Leading CoaCh Chuck
free passes. David Smith, in addition Michael's Letart team were Carol
to coming on in relief and getting the · O'Brien with two doubles and two

For the record. ..

tlontrea

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for Pomeroy, while Scott Barton
came on for a fine relief performance. Barton struck out all six
batters he faced. Mike Shuler suffered the loss and was relieved by
Ben Bell. Shuler got the lone Ranger
hit, which was a single. Ronnie
Bachtle and Jell McElroy made fine
catches in the ootfield getting
Hawley out of trouble in the third
and fourth innings.
leading hitters .for Pomeroy were
Todd Powell with two doubles and a
single, Hawley, Zirkle, McElroy,
and Keith Maddox with singles.
The Middleport Cubs posted its
third win of the season by romping
Mason's irates Ui-5. Joey Loving
picked up his second win in as many
starts. Loving went four innings
aiowing one run, no hits, seven
strike outs, and issuing four walks.

Paul Gerard
,
527 NlirthSeeond Avenue
Middleport;

IN WHO'S WHO - Kathy ·
Pooler, daughter of Mr. and Mn.
Emerson Pooler, bas been selected Into "Who's Who Among
Amerlean Hlp Sebool Sludenb."
A 1981 graduate of Eu(fm High
School, she bas• been acUve 1D
FHA, the Student Council,
Buslaesa Office Education Club,
the baud, the yearbook staff, and
the NaUonal Honor Society. Sbe
is a member of the MI. Hermon
United Brethren Churcb and Is
employed by Bank One ol
Pomeroy.

Even these days it dOOsn 't cost a lot to bring country warmth
and flavor to vour home with this fine collection of
storage ond dlsplav tables from Cosord
Available in dark knotty pine vinyl fi nish on all wood producls.
Br:JSS hardware. Mar and stain resis tant
A beautiful wav to decorale vour home .

Insurance Package
Do·. ou own or operate a
small or medlum·slze
retail store, office, CIIPart·
ment .:~r church?
Then- you may qualify
for ' State Auto Mutual's
,SERIES ONE Business
Polley ... ·11 mocler:Jl·as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and ilablli·
tv cover19e5 required to
safeguard your opera·
. tlont. All ~or a ve~~y attractive, aHordable premium,
Let us explain the
superior feetures. · of
SERIES ONE .. , the siiOrt
' time we sper'!d. together
could prove Interesting
and rewarding to you. ,

Stop By And See Our Storewide Savings,
Now Is The Time To Save.

Just 11111 us a cell or
mall ttlt handy coupon •
DALI C. WARNER
INSURANCE

I.W.... fft-2141 ''l""tr•O.
srara·

- " " • AUTOMOIILI
MUTUAL
.. I NIUaANCI
COMPANY

FAMILY GROUP, SOLID PINE 7 PIECE GROUP ALL NYLON COVER, JUST AS SHOWN ABOVE.
0.
Rea, 11195,• On Slit For OniJ

'995°

�·-----......rPage 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Monctay,J

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The Daily Sentinel

By Tli.e .Bend

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Monday, June 1,1981
·Page-7

~~~~--~--~~----------~------3~~~----~~~--~--~----------------------------··•"''._------------~--~~~~~~~~~~~~·~·
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lJJepartment of Labor makes
presen~tion to ar~a educators

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~I petaonnel from Gallla,
.M~, and Jackson Counties f")entb' .attended a noon lllllclleon. iJI.
aervic~ •preaentatlog 'entitleil
"stucllnt'l!:mployeea and the Law"
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Special 1111~ speaker for the inservice w'u MatY E. Duvall, ·Inspector fOf the Ohio Department of '
lndllllriil 'RelaU01111. Mts. Duvall's
preaehtaUon lncluded such areas of
c:oncefn aa: State law revisiOns as
they pe_rtain to student employees;
New atate . mlnJmwn wages; A
queaUon/anawer period on local
student labOr problems/placements; Distribution of· related informational materials.
·'
The J1U111011e of the inservice was
. to uallt all school ~el who
deal with •udent job placements in
some capacity to better Understand
Cllfl'ellt State labor laws for minors.
It also attempted to enhance the
uniform application of said
regulationa.
Coor)llnating the event were workstudy coordinators Mary Bason,
Meip Colinty LQcal, and Lance Clif.
ANSWERS QUESTIONS- Mary E. DuvaD,I~tor for the Depart·
ford, Gallipolis City Schools.
meat of .IDduatrlal RelaUODS, Division of Women and ' Mlnon and
Educators attending the in· MllllmiUII Wage and Prevailing Wage, during queslion/aDSwer period
fOI'IIIIUon program included:
on the topic of Studeat Employees and tlie Law.

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GllllpOIII Cll)' Sdlooll: SaUy ar.ball!!h, J0o11
Mud, lloonno Cook, Mary Houl, John Dunn,
Emll)o Kemp, Ba-. N. lllcllanll, R"l!er
~ llo,mond~-Gillaple,

Golllmllh, O.rloo M-,IMictCUIIonl.
_ . , . Hl1ll Canor Collier: Jodt Rlchanll,

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Dick Detty, Jean Bal.rlock, Bonnie Crabtree;
Jeannine Ctmningham, Deniae Shoct.ley, Neil
MO!TIIOII, John R. UJoaley, Max Lawaon.
Gallla COWIIY Local Schools: AI Scarberry.
CununWllly Actioo Aaency:
George Amutt, Joo Buci, Roy

Wel~tonHIHh Sclloot : Tom &amp;k.,,
Meigs L«aiSchooill: Ronakt P. t.ogan , Janle!i
A. Duhl, &amp;lm Crow, Fenton Taylor, Mary Bacoo,
Otis Knapp, Thom., Kelly, Richard Robena,
J~ullt!ti Page.

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MERIT
Ultra Lights

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REMINisCING - 1'llree Gl Altol'lle)' Fred W.
cr-'1 teemm•lel 011 the ~amed Im 08U loolbiiU
llqUIIue illltnnl ..W.C witll Cmr IIIII retired Colum._ AiwWJ 1M Rober1l darlq the blrtlldly .-rty·

rout liven Crow Sunday eveolng. Pletamllrom left
are Dr. Sol Maggled, wbo was a guard; Cb8itle Ream,
wbo played the end positioa opposite Crow; Roberts,
Crow and Gull Zanlaf, All-American guard.

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PRIBNDI- Ala t&lt; 'a *Ill the bb1Jio
..... lll!adaJ Ia llellall Gl
P i 11
Pled Cnw, we;•al "•almel frld.
ti' lllulned II)' the llaa "· Alltm, Mmeaae
...~. u ........... ..._
Ill Maner "
11

Ceremaalee Rlcllard J -. Seated le the rlgbt of Crow
ue "r.aten" Frmlt W. Perter, Jr., Crow'• law
aer Gill yean; OSU .Ali-AIIIerlcau Gurd Gldt Zarul,
Jtm ~-me prelldeat "Ill* o.e.tn Ata.;
Cohuallal.AttaneJ Leo Roberts ami Rev. Father Berlllrd Krajovtc.

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:.Tiemeyer presidef!t _of auxiliary .

Wafning: tha Su~aen Gana111 Hn o:.tlrmiiiad ·
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The scholarship rules specify that a
parent or parents must have
graduated from Middleport High
SchooL
Miss DeWeese plans to attend
Franklin University where she will
study management sciences; Kitchen will go to the West Virginia In·
stitute of Technology where he will
study electrical engineering, and
Cline will be studying secondary
education at Ohio University
University.
Ann Criner Johnson, president of
the Alwnnl Association, recognized
Mrs. Bailey for her "unselfish·
assistance in promoting a more ·
desirable high school program, her
friendly nature, her willingness to
share the burden of responsibility
and work, and her kindly counseling" and presented her with a
plaque.
A plaque was also presented to
Wilkie Holman who has served as
janitor for the banquets over 25
years. William DUes was master of
ceremonies for the banquet with L.
W. McComas giving the invocation.
While no president was elected,

other officers for 1981-82 named
were Cinda Sauer Harris, vice
president; Kathy McElhinney Hood,
secretary ; and Carolyn Wilson
Grueser, treasurer.
Recognized and presented gifts
and flowers were William
Broughton, Fairmont, W. Va. of the
class of 1916, the oldest male alwnnus attending; and Grace French,
Middleport, class of 1917, the oldest
fe1nale alwnnus attending.
Reunion classes recognized were
1916, 1921, 1926, 1931, 1936, 1941 , 1946,
1951, 1956, 1961, 1966, and 1971. Mrs.
Bailey annoWJced the resignation of
Mrs. Nan Moore from the Susan
Park Scholarship board of trustees
and announced that Mary Lu Hartinger Boggs of Middleport has been
appointed to'the position.
AIUITUli returning to Middleport
for the banquet from out of the county included Edward Schaeffer,
Colwnbus ; Rosalie French, Worthington; Charles Reed, Knoxviile,
Tenn.; Frances Drenner, St. Albans,
W. Va.; Sandra Darling, Ostrander;
John Bacon, Jr., Westerville; David
Continued on page~

BY HELEN AND SUE llpTI'EL
.
Special correapoadeat
DEAR HElEN AND SUE:
I'm an 18-year-old going to
coUege. It's my first time away from
hOme and boyfriend. I really love
him very much, but we're 300 mUea
separated and the telephone doesn't
do much except take money we can't
afford.
He says he's true to me. I've not
dated so far, but sometimel I'm
tempted to go out and have fun. I
keep wondering if our three-year
love wiD be enough to lui four years
of college. Am I- WEAK?
DEAR WEAK:
No, you're human!
It's a rsre high school romance ·
that lasts through four years of
coUege - even when the principals
aren't separated. I won't be sur-·
' prised to hear you're ·both dating
others before the year Is over, HElEN

you graduate, and (hopefully) finish
your education afterwards. - SUE '
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My wife of a year left me for
another man- several men, in fact.
Whenever she breaks up with a
''friend," she calls, comes to see me,
-we go to bed, she swears she loves
me, but then she's off with a new
guy.
She says she's not made to be
monogamous, but she loves me best.
Last night she told me she'd come
back if I'd allow her two affairs a
year, guaranteed not to be serious. I
asked her if I could do likewise, and
she didn't like the idea because she
says I'm an intense person and
might reaDy faD.
What do you think of this? -

LUKE
DEAR LUKE :
We think you're better off single until you can find a wife who Isn't on
the double standard. - HELEN
AND SUE

father fishes a lot, and when I watch
him string a worm on a hook, I feel
terrible for the worm. Just because
it can't scream and cry, people think
it doean 't hurl. How would a hwnan
or larger animal feel, getting a
sharp-hook jabbed into its body? The
way the worm lashes around, I know
it's in pain.
I think there ought to be a "Save
the Worm" group like the "Save the
Whalea" organization. Don't you? SOFT-HEARTED
DEAR SOFT:
Sorry, we don't do worms, either
on fish hooks or ris a cause. HElEN
P.S. FROM SUE : Shouldn't your
worm worry extend to fish? They
also get jabbed by hooks and die
slowly.
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
for diScussion, tw~generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)

SCEO endorses Tuesday bond levy

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Three $1,000 scholarships were
awarded and special recognition
was given to Mrs. Mildred Hawley,
Meigs High School teacher, at the
Middleport High School AIUJII1li
banquet held Saturday night at the
Middleport Elementary School gymnasiwn.
,
· Approximately 300 alwnni and
guests attended the banquet. Mrs.
Bailey, longtime member of the
Susan Park Scholarship committee,
reported that the fund to date stands
at $26,702.13 after deducting ·the
$3,000 for this year's scholarships.
She noted that only the interest from
the fund can be used for the scholar·
ships and the amount invested is in·
creased annually as alumni
donations are added.
The recipients this . year were
Richard Cline, son of Maida Roush
Long, Pomeroy, Route 3, an Eastern
High School graduate ; Karen
DeWees, daughter ti Clarence
DeWees, Grove City, a graduate of
Grove City High School ; and Todd
James Kitchen, son of Charles and
Lynn Buchanan Kitchen, Mason, a
graduate of Waharna High SchooL

WEAK :
Unless : 1) Your b.f. transfers to RAP:
your college, or 2) You marry before
This is a sort of different topic. My

1~.

That Cigarene Smoki!l Is DIJ11t~llf1P Yoa~tltllt~..

Middleport High Alumni
Banquet honors Mrs. Bailey

Should college .coed date others?

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Now the Merit idea.has been
introduced at only 4mg tar-New
Merit ULTRA LIGHTS. Amilder
Meritfor those who prefer an ultra ~
low tar cigarette.
· .
New Merit ULTRA LIGHTS
bsgo(ng to set awhole new taste .·
standdidfor ultra /(MJ tarsmoking.

Richard Cline

Helen Help Us

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Karen DeWees

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Todd Kitchen

Gl the other elected delegates. Mrs.
Knapp wtll illv attend.
Initiation of new members wiD be
held a&amp; the June meet1nc at which
time !Aura Smltll, ~ Glrlll
Slate will nport. and Mn. DIYII
and the juniCI' Aulllal7 members
will be holllll'td.
.
A bulletin frllm ~ SnJder,
lancullr, auwiCtd the unmer
CCIIVIMiOn to be beld JUIIt • with
J'lllltrl&amp;lan Ill IMiiiD at noan. Mn.
Wtllll, Mn. 'l'llmQ•, Mn. Mlrtlll,
liln. Drill,
and Mn.

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NtJwlll altead.

lllri. , . , . . Mn. Pvwell ...

.... rerr.llnenla.

The Salem Center Educational
Organization meeting recently at
the achoo1 endorsed the two and onehalf mill bond ilaUe to be voted on
Tuellday in the Melp Local School
District.
Principii Olarlee Holllday spoke
on the bond lllue noting that
pasaage wtll not ~ tuea but
will permit the dJFk'l le retain
nearly a miWon dollan to be used
for repair, renovation or addiUon to
emt1ng faclllUes. 'l1le orpniJaUon
voted to contribute .. to the
steering committee to help )II'III!IOie
the lllue by better ~ the

public.
Of!icen'for the 1981~ school year
were inltalied by the principal.
They are Kathy Rhodes, president;
Lee Shenefield, vice jl'eSident;
Paula Haynes, secretary; and
Gloria 011er,lreUurel'•

Awvrk day 111'81 scheduled to paint
and repair the school and
playground area. The new carpet
purdlaaed for the library by the
orglllilaUon has been delivered and
lliltaUIId. ApprOVal waa given to the
~ of a new coffee pot, and
a110 for 10ft drinkB for the students
on field day.

Following the meeting a talent
night was held by the students.
Taking pari were Renee Young,
Laurie Shenefield, Tracy McKinney,
Krtsti Haynes, Brandy Sweat,
Margaret Rhodes, Erin Anderson,
Michelle Barr, Crystal Brown, April
Napoper, Lora Cleland, Annie
Cleland, Yolanda Van Cooney, Tammy JeweD, Penny Hensley, Teresa
Phillips, Marcie Hale, Tracy
Birrett, Jody Levingsaon, Cathy
Hobl!tetter, Lois ROle, Dlwn Bing,
Angle Miller, Tammy Gardner, Uncia Smith, Shawn McGuire, Jon Bell,
Paul Council, and Ricky Hale. .

Photography workshop to offer pointers at OU
photography, journaii.sm,.and other
fine aria, 81 weD u advanced high
arts. ·
In llddlliOII to regular claAroorn school students, ue I!IICOIII'qtd te
leetarw, students wtll have the op- participate in either the fint ftve
porlllllity to photo1raph per· week 1 Lon f• ftve houri of CNdit,
lormallcea on and oft campu11 Uling or bclth ftve WMk .-10111 lor 10
Ohio V.lley SUrMJer Theater, the· houn of Credit.
Enrollment Is limited, and
!lunu.- ~ Worllahops,
l'llllstraUon
~ date II June a.
millie prGII'IIIII, belld _ . . and
~llta"
now
for · a 1llllqle opother-.... ,.. ..... uuevenportunity
to
cleve!Gp
lldlll .........
ta.
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.
tlerltandln8
nee
ry
fllr good
College students in the
photoRraphy of the perfcJnnlrw arb.
p~~otosraphs

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of perfonnances in the

�Pa

June1,1911

Public Noloce
NOTICE OF
ELECTION
Notice IS hereby aiven· l
that pursuant
a
resolution adopted by the
Board ot Education of the
Meoas Local School
District, County of Melasl
Ohio, on the 16th day b
Februar-y, 1981, there woll
be submitted to the
qualifoed electors of said
school dostrlcl at the elec·
toon to be held on the 2nd
day 01 June, 1981, at the
regular places ot voting
thereon, the questton of
ossuing bonds of saod board
of educatoon on the sum of
$1,000,000, lor the purpose
of
construct• ng
renovations,
irn·
provements and addlloons
to school bUildongs and
providmg equipment, fur
nlshlngs and site develop·
ments therefor, and 01
levying a tax to pay the
pnnc1pal and interest of
said bonds outside of the
ten mill constitutional tax
lomotation Imposed by Secloon 2 01 Artocle XII, Ohio
Constotutoon.
The maximum number
of years durong whtch the
bonds will run is nine (9)
years and the esttmated
average additional tax
rate, outoode of the I~ 111111
ltmttation, to pay
e m·
terest thereon and t retire
the same, as certified bY
the county auditorh will be
two and live tent s (2.5!
molls per dollar (It 00) 01
tax valuatton,
whiCh
amounts to twenty-five
cents 110.25! tor each one
hundred dollars (1100 00! of
tax valuatton
The polls woll be open
from 6 30 am to 7.30 p.m
on satd date
BY ORDER OF THE
BOARD OF ELECTIONS
OF THE COUNTY OF
MEIGS, OHIO
Dorothy M JOHNSTON
Otrector of
Elections
Ernest A Wtngett
Cha trman
Pubhc Nottce
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
•
LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby goven
that 10 pursuanrP of a
Resolutton of the Counctl of
the Voltage of Moddleport,
Ohoo, passed on the 23rd
day ot Februarx. 1981 ,
there wtll be submttted to a
vote of the people of sa1d
Vollage at a Special ELEC
TION to be held on the
VIllage of Mtddleport,
Oh 10, at the regular places
of votmg there• n, on
Tuesday, the 2nd day of
June, 1981 , the questton of
levy mg. tn excess of the ten
mt/1 limttatton, for the
beneftt of Mtddleport
Vtl!age for the purpose of
Current
Satd tax bemg a renewa l
of an extsttng ta x of 3 0
m111s to run for ftve years
at a rate not exceedmg 3.0
mills for each one dollar of
valuatton, wh1 ch amounts
to thtrty cents for each one
hundred dollars of
valuatton, for ftve years
The Polls tor sard E lee
fton wtll open at 6 30
o' clock AM and remam
open untol7 30 o'c lock PM
of saod day
By order 01 the Board of
Elections, of Me1gs County ,
OhiO

.....,

Public Notice

Ernest A WingeU
Chatrrnan

payable to the Director
!lldders must apply, on
the proper forms, for
qualification at lel$t ten
d'ys prior to the date set
tor openinG bids In ac
cordance w~h Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised COde.
Plans and speclflutlons
are on file In the Depart·
ment of Transll!&gt;rtation and
the Office of the District
Deputy Dlr.ector.
The Director reserves
the right to reject any and
all bids~
DAVID L WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev.8·17·73
15! 26, (6) 1, 2tc
Public NOtice
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities commission of Ohio has set for
public hearing the ap
plication of Columbia Gas
of Ohio, tnc . lo amend company tarllls regarding the
furnishing of gas service to
be used In con1unct1on with
or auxiliary to electric
space heating, the rateo to
be charged lor such service
and the reasonableness of
segregatong such service
from other general service
categoroes. The hearing In
Case No. 81 -586-GA ATA
will be held on the Commission's Offices at 375
South High Street, Columbus, Ohio at 10 00 a.m ,
EDT, on June 22, 1981

Pubhc Notice

(6! 1. lie
Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE
DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF AC COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers 01
the following
named
liducoarles have been flied
on the Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
and settlement
CASE NO. 22,698 Fonal
and Dostrobutove Account 01
Freda
Frank,
Ad
minostratrox of the Estate
01 Charles Henry Frank,
Deceased
CASE NO 22,701 First

Rii'ecjlorpl !~}~~~~;~r.~:~J::~;I Annual
Accountof of
Jane
Eilts, Guardian
Edtth
A
Hayman, an Incompetent
person

;,~!~~j~~;~~~~;::;J{i~;~

day
day until finally
diSP9sed of .
Any person Interested
may tile written ex~eptlons
to said accounts or to matters pertaining to the
execution Of the trust, not
less than live days prior to
the date settor hearing
Robert E. Buck
JUDGE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBAlE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO$
(6) 1, lit
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTR.tiCTDRS
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
May 22, 1911
Contract Sales Legal
copy No. 81-566
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
HE$·1(68)
Sealed proposals will be
receoved at the off tee of the
Director of the Ohio Depar
tment of Transportation
Columbus, Ohio, until 10 00
A.M, Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, June 23, 1981, lor
ImproVements In:
Me1gs County, Ohio, on
Sectoon MEG-7·3.55, State
Route No 7 on Salisbury
Township, by grading
widening, resurfaclng 1 and
furnoshlng and onstallong a
traffic flasher so gnat.
Pavement Width
varies
Protect Length 1,600 00 feet or 0.303 mile
Work Length - 1.700 00
feel orO 322 mole
The Ohio Department 01
Transportation hereby
notolles all bidders that it
will affirmatively insure
that on any contract en
tered tnto pursuant to th1s
advertosement, monoroty
business enterprises will be
aflor~ed full opportunoty to
subm1t bids in response to
this lnvotatoon and woll not
be dtscrirninated agamst
on the grounds of race,
color, or national ongtn tn
cons1derat1on
for
an
award
"Minimum wage rates
for thiS project have been
predeterm.ned as re.qutred
by law and are set forth In
tne bod proposal "
"The date set for com
pletoon of this work shall be
set forth in the brddong
proposal "
Each bodder shall be
requtred to fde wtth hts bid
a certofled check or
cash1er's check for an
amount equal to fove per
cent of hts bid, but tn no
event more than fiflh
thousand dollars, or a bond
tor ten per cent of hos bod,
payable to the Oorector
Sodders must apply, on
the
forms, for
least ten
date set

and
D1stribut1ve
Account
of
CASE
NO.
23,096
Final
Sleven
L Story,
Admlntstrator of the Estate of
Lako Dull, Deceased
CASE NO 23,211 Fonal
and Dostrobutrve Account of
Chester Haddox, Executor
of the Estate of Herman w.
Haddox, Deceased
CASE NO 22,963 Fonal 0
and Oistrlbuttve Account of
Jeanne
E
Hines,
24 Executrix 01 the Estate of
Freda R. Grueser,
~r·~!1:!_a!~d_1Work Length Deceased
5-49 miles.
Unless exceptoons are
set for com· ,
work shall be fried thereto, said accounts
tn the bidding 1 wtll be for hearing before
said Court on the 30th day
-~~:.c.::.'"
.,_,,,.1_._
b'/a
of June, 1981 at which time
1
said accounts woll Qe con·

Business Services
i

SILVER I GOLD
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INVEST - Buy !hi. one,
paint, then sell for a pro·fll 6 rooms. wood
cabinets In the kitchen,
has natural gas forced
atr furnace. porch,
garage wotn storage.
Level lot near shopping.
Only $18,500.
Large
CHESHIRE level lot on the Ohio
Rover 7 rooms, well
burl! hOme. 4 bedrooms,
mOdern kttchen. natural
gas forced air furnace,
full
basement and
enclosed porch for your
flowers. Askong $.15,000.
21 ACRES Near
Re•dsvolle with gas
well, lots of locust for
posts, overlooking the
rover valley Fresh air
ancf privacy lor an A·
frame
BARGAIN - 3 bedroom
home with bath, city
water, natural g~s~ 2
porches, large utility
building on level lot
near stores. Has been
116,500 but what will you

From

608 E. MAIN

$799

12.95 &amp; up
Installed

v. c.

Main St.

ROOFING '·

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept_
111 (:ourtSt., Pomero.,, 0., 45769

All type• of roo! work,
new or repair gutteu
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

J-AIIftOYf!UmtRII
•-Ot"tiWiy
S- HI,PY Aclt

eRENTALS
U-HOUitl fw l o t

...,..

,.......,
44- A,.rtmenl for

Effective 4-6-81
MON. thru SAT.
9to5
Closed Thursday

eBackhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
ewater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Lines
eDumpTruck

3
ROOM
apartment,
utilities paid, 675-5104 or
675-5386.

eTrencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded

PH. 992-7201

491mopd

41- Wifttld fl Rettt

41-hulttmtnt lor Rtnt

eMERCHANDISE

eEMP1.0YMENT
SERVICES

51-HMSthOicl Gaoctl

52-CI, TV , R"'olwl•ment

,,_ Help w111t.a

D-Ar~t-..n

12- l ituat.. Wlnltt

54- MIIC. Mlrcheri•IJI
~1\lltcllnt IIIPJIIII

... ,.......

13-IMUrHU

,._,

14-letlftHt Tr~lnlnt

lf-ldiMitl•ttrucH_,.
It Idle, TY
&amp;CI • .,.,,
11-Wintti Tt Dl

16-

e FARM SUPPLIES
I LIVESTOCK
61-fllrd'l . . .,,...... ,

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

11-W.,....ttluy

22-MOMyr.LNn

.,._H.yiGrtln

e FIN.tiNCIAL

n-Trvcbterl•le

t21·1fc

6t- , ... I P'ertlllltr

:d-l'rotfllltnal
lerYkll

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

•

7,~..... ,.,.

"'....

JJ-III1rwt1 fit left
.....
.......... ..,.......

Slle

71-VIM I 4 W D.

HIMft fw IIIII
ll-- Me.Utftffllts
;

.

SU~~~eR.!

BISSEll
SIDING 00.

PRODUCTS
Siding
R ooljng &amp; Gutter
Remodellnt .
Serving Your Area lor
21 Years

"Beautiful, Custom
Butlt Garages"
Call for free sodlng
estomates, 949·2101 or
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls
31111c

EUGENE LONG
Free Esllm~tes
C~ll Collect
Ph.143·3l22
5·8·2

MASON TEXACO
MECHANIC &amp;
BODYMAN
q~ DUn DAILY-

PH. 304-773-9521
Lowell &amp; Doug Holfhill
Owners-Opera ton

Call742-3195
or 992-7680
2 8 tic

5·24· 1 mo.

fOYARD
ROTAVATORS
HJ 50"-20,10 H,P_
HA 60"-25-60 H.P.
HE60"-45-IOH.P.
All Models Avall~ble

u ,.,.. ere•
'!-' ..........
...

,._

~

SALES I SERV~
U.S. Rl. 50 East
Pllont614-642-3121
AuthOrized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
farm equipment dealer

Box 65, Portland, OH.
Ph.l43·4912
Monthly
Serving the following
townships: Lebanon,
Sutton, Letart, Olive,
Orange, Salisbury, Bed·
ford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio, Rutland and
Harrison

u.oo

UO MORRIS

2 UIICI No. 150 Now
Holland round hey
balers, both In OX·
cellenl condition.

Rt. 1 Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742-2455
5·11-tft

GARAGE

PWMBING

Covered or cool' The choice os
yours woth thos quock-easy outlot.
few pattern parts IDr the drll$$,
dotto for the ;acket Choose thrrlty cotllln-Oacron blends
Pronted Pattern 4789. Mosses

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m.-5:30p.m.

Srzes 8, 10. 12. 14. 16, 18 Size
12 (bust 34) dress 2\1 yards

$Z.OOIIr,aptlln.WII50$

Pllllnt.,..

ZIP, Sill, IIIII

mu •..._

We strearnloned the sewrnc to
sm 1011 tome so J011 CliO sm

HEAnNG
12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
A9ytlme

992-5682

.. ... Pllllnl "' ......
IN h•••l SIN II:
.........
1'Jl
~43 IIIII 17 Sl, IIW , ... ll
·10011. Pritt lUilE, MIIIIUS,

AND .

5-6·1 mo

OOZFR WORK

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

CATN-C

Farm Ponds ·Land
Clearing· Roads.
Call:

PUWNS

mOMJ' Send now fof NEW 1981

SPRING-SUMMER PATIERN CATALOG. I00 styla, low 111111rn

'

Farm Buildinp

'Sizeslltilr
Buildinp
from 4x6 to 12x4t
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Boo 54
Racine, Dh.
Ph. 614-143·2591
6 15-tfc

RADIATOR
SERVICE
FrOm ,the Smallest
Heater ·Core to the
Largoat Radiator
'

Raclloter Specialist
NATHAN I lOGS
15 Yrl. ExporltnCI

992-2471

u ...

or

lW:.=*=GIIIItllll
u..s...... 1'::,-JI.!I(

Blain Milhoan
985--3965

l~falrT~

Pomorov, OH,
"2-2174

Ph.

5·7-lfc

RACINE.SYRACUSE

AREA
RESIDENTS

EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances
VIllage Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave., 675 1773

10,500 BTU air conditioner,
S150. 446·9380

.--------,--

:~;;;;;;:;:;;;:;... .... '" ".
51

HouHIIold Goods

' L-AYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, c:helr, rocker, ot·

tomln, 3 t•bln, 1500. SOfa,

I)On't wait. Contact Ohio
Valley Plumbing for

s1w1r line connections,
and any In house
changes that have to be
llltcle. Back hot Inti
doser servictovailable.
"2·20M
5-20·1 mo.

QNIIty lutll
•-lcally Prlctcl

REESE

•chair and 1 - t , $275.
•Sofas and cllalrs priced
:trom $275. to 1695. Tables,
•S38 and up to 1109. Hide-a·
!bldLDotD., queen size, $310.
. Roellnen, $165., S295.,
:Lamps from $11.' to $65. 5
,pc. dinettes from $79, to
•$365. 1 pc., $119. and up,
:wooc1 table and 4 chairs,
,$351) up to $495. Hutches,
' $300. and $375.• maple or
'plneflnlsh, Bedroom suites
__ Bassett Ook, 1649 .,
--- c~- $765· Bunk
r a_ .. ,,.rry,
' bed
com:,t;,t.. , and
with upmat·
trto
; $350. Captain' I bedS. 1275
C . B il beds S89
,
1com
· 1 ~
'
Ml or !Win,or
sprlllll,
w .. firm,
$65,
•otull
: and 175. QUlin sets. 1185. 5
1dr. chelll. $49, 4 dr. cllesll,
; 142. led Ira,.,..., S20.and
, $25., 10 gun • Gun cablnell,
•1350., dinette chtln $20.
, and $25. Tappen on or
' electric ranges. $285.
: usED
.
Ranees,
ref~l,..-ators. and TV's,
3 mllll out BUllville Rd.
Open

Bools tnd Call~ - lldd 25C

Used Slate 446·3171.
Rebounder· total house ex·
cerslze
446 · 3358

..... 1

1

4-17 tic

6·1-1 mo.

Ping Pong table675 1194 af·
ter 5.

I

and
day.
Ray

1967 VOLKSWAGEN
Beetle, $550 1973 2 ton
Dodge hay truck $3500.
sears Kenmore port. dish·
waaher, 2 yr. warranty
5210. Queen size bedspread,
2 prs. priscilla curtains to
matchSSO.
Two month spring special
tor upholstering furniture.
RIchard Mowery, Sr.
~r.675-4154.

SWIMMING
POOLS :
PRE -SEASON SALE:
sm.oo INSTALLEDIII
A~·
nd
1 COM
uuve grou
poo
•
PLETELY INSTALL-EO
starting atS999.00. P~lce In·
eludes pool, deCk, fence,
filler, liner, and In·
stallatlon under normal
ground condition. Free
shop at home service. Call
1·800-624·8511 .

54

Misc. Morch1ndl11

11

HtlpWanflll

tam to 7prn, Mon.

.POMEROY

Wtnt-Acf Allvertlaint
QtHIInH

.,_,........,.IICIYifl"'
_..

-M.IIIftH

ROSE 8USIIs.

__........,
.........
,., ........

-. ··-117-u-..,Y

...,

HILP WANfiD
Medical TecllftOlolllst- Male or Female
Accepting a""tcatlens for full time 1111"'
mantnt Tecllnot•l•tl , M. T. (IIIIIMe

ASCP.) MLT (MIW), laii,.Y cem"et;
IUI'ate wltll eKperilftelo lftyme can Ill
matted to: w. s. Lvila. Admtntstrater,
vtttrans Mtmll'tll ....,...,, lu 74f,

MUIIIIrry Htllllta. ,_..,., OM. 41169.

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

"""'' 614-ftt•llM. lctllll ~

t

AYI.,oW-73111.

'

,,

!Classified Ads

r••

GALVANIZED Culvert, Ditch Witch Trencher R40
$2.35 11 up Bridge, etc. with 140 backhoe corn·
~ 5 ••••
blnallon 367·7560.
Sfee,
I 10c lb .up ...
~55

1972 MF 165 Diesel, 8 spd

Building Supplies

14600. John Deere 14T hay

ALL TYPES of building
materials, block, brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
lets, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0. Call 2.155121.
56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor at 367
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TER" • KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
H!malayan, Persian and
Siamese ~ats Chow pup·
pies are here, while Per·
sian &amp; Hlmllayas kittens.
Caii446·3U4 alter 4 p.m

JUST opened The Fish
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2101 Jet·
terson Ave., PI Pleasant,
675·2063 . Rabbits $4 00,
Parrots $89 95, Gerbils
$2.98.

Spring Special
tor
upholstering furniture .
Richard Mowrey Sr .•
owner 675-4154.
AKC registered Springer·
Spaniel pups. 4 months old .
MASON County's largest 1 female, 2 male• Liver
selection of fine handguns: while Call Harlan Wobb,
Colt, Smith &amp; Wesson, Mansfield, OH at 1 419 589
Ruger and others At 7024 anytime.
Health Aid Pharmacy,
New Haven, WV 102-2005 .
AKC German Shephard
pups, good temperment,
8000 BTU EMMERSON •excellent bloodline. 1-30-1·
Quiet Cool air conditioner, 675-2415.
anltque oak bedroom suit,
other antiques, 675·6167
THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave
10 OLIVER diesel, 1969 675·2063 Rabbits suo,
Parrots S89.9S, Gerbils
Volkswagen 882·3239.
52. 98. Open 11 -4.
4 TICKETS to Mason City
Dachshund,
News
Cover
Awards AKC
telecast, Nashville, TN. Pomeranian an PoOdle
June 8, 1981. Grand, Ole pups 895-3958.
Oprv House, 112 each, 895·
3606 or 195·3812 .
AKC Bassett hound pup
pies, 5175 Robertsburg wv
1 HP deep well pump , '36 586 •985 1.
gallon tank and all wires ====:;::::=:==:=== '
and 115 fl. Of 1" plastic 57
Musical
3 years old
•
Instruments
Plr.' ~
A ter 5:00p.m . 675-6986.
For sale Spinet console
Plano Bargain
HORSE BUGG¥,576-2345.
WANTED: Responsible
party to take over low mon·
2 AIR CONDITIONERS: thly payments on spinet
1- 200 BTU, 1 room 241h II plano. Can be seen locally.
camper trailer. GoOd con Write credit manager
dillon. Call 882 2449 alter
MidWest Music Co., PO
or675 4553.
Box 537, Shelyvllle, lnd
46176 ..
MACHINERY and Tool .
New ;ngensolf-Rand 5 HP Plc~lng up a plano In your
air compressor on a 60 gal area, looking tor respon·
tank. 11245. Call colleCt 30-1· slble party to take ..,..766·62.W.
paymenlt, ask lor credit
man-r
lor details, call
collect
592·5122.

a.

-.oo.

OR TRADE, 77 Chevy
pickup, v 8, standard short
bed. Sharp 52700 73 LT
Camaro 350. auto 1800. 675

30-14.

b125 Allis Chalmers Power
Unit. 8A3 3421 alter 5 30.

1974 DART Swinger, good
shape, 61,000 miles. Call after 5, 458·1728

Four 15,00 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. $3,000 00
each. Phonel-304·422·2781

FOUR Daytona G 70 14
White tetter tore and three
super sharp mag wheels.
675·4359from 5·8 p. m

4 14,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Oh . $3,000 each. 1304-422·2781

72

135MF tractor. 675·6625
62

Wantecj to Buy

lilwnl'f-5121.

,,

CHARLIE'S SAlVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
banerles . .w6·7717.

vol.or

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker
service. "Big or small" we
tow them alii 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
- 446·2445 or Night - 446
4792

78

camping
Equipment
T R UC K
T 0 p p E R,
foberglas, with sliding won
dow for 6'h 11 GMC or
Chevy truck, 5325 Call388
9334 afler6 p.m.
1977 BONANZA travel
trailer, 35 fl . long, a c., tip
out room. New awning,
deluxe interior, lull bath,
call 388·8646
1969 truck camper, 10 It,
1700. Also 1975 Dodge
Diplomat &amp; 1978 DOdge
truck. 742-2025.
1966 Wildcat camper 12 II.
pull type, 2 burner gascook
stove, sink, tee box Sleeps
6 $500 667 653.1.

Trucks lor Sale

1975 Ford 3/4 pickup, all
heavy duty, 8 ply teres, PS,
PB, air cond., new paont,
real good shape. 51250 446·
2459.

13 '
CAMPER,
self
contatned, sleeps .4·5. Verv
good condition, well equip
ped. $795 895 3953

servlees
81

1973 Jeep Wagoneer, needs
transfer case. Also 1974
Jeep Wagoneer, no motor.
985·4300.

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleanong · Call Smeltzer's
Sleamway Call 614 446
2096
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446 4208

Reg . polled hereford bull
with papers, 2 yrs old 446·
3228 alter 6.

1975 Chevy 1h ton pickup,
long bed with topper, Scottsdale 10 350 engine, atr
pow•r radio CB, custom
cab, hogh tork Iran
smiss1on, heavv duty rear
springs One owner, ex·
cellentcondllion. 675 2137

Twin nanny goats, 4 me
old 388 8835.

1978 FORD
ton 4 wheel
drive, 675-1121.

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth swaon,
256·19671n the evening.
63

Livestock

100 fryer sized chickens,
52 00 each. 245 5286.
3 Black Angus Springe hef·
lers 245 5348

... . . . . ... ·-· ····
... ..

'I•

1968 INTERNATIONAL
Dump truck. 51200 1945
DOdge 8 fl. dump truck
$350 Alter 5 p m. 675-6986

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding . 30
years experience. Free
estimates
Remodel tng
Call388-9857

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1980 JEEP CJ-5, 6 cyl., 4
spd ., exc. cond , call 446·
1211.
\
1977 JEEP WAGONEER ,
42,000 miles, air, PS, PB ,
rear window defogger ,
power rear wondow, 4
wheel drive, exc. cond
Call388·9334 after 6pm .

MUST SELL, Make me an
ofler 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, 4
78 Camero, black, !·top, spd, low mileage, canvas
AMFM stero tape player, top, will trade, call446· 1211
446·4002
or 446 3594
71

Autos tor Sale

78 Camero, black, !·top,
AM·FM stero tape player,
446·4002

Home
1mprovements

PAINTING · Resodentoal
and commercial Interior
and extenor, mobile home
roofs Free esttmates 17
yrs exp. W1th references
call367 7784 or 367-7160

13

1978 Ford Custom van, like
new, 388·\1991.

'77 Dodge Ram Charger,
1980 vw Diesel Pu , Exc. exc. cond., low mtleage~
Cond ., Call after 6 367-0694. 52900. Call245·5453

CALL 446 2801 tor termote,
roach, bird , rodent,
spiders, fleas and other
small insect control Free
estimates given A local
company
locaed
on
Gallopolis area .
Boll
Thomas.
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com
merc1al and residential,
free esttmates Call 256
1182.
SANDERS
CON
TRACTING, Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446 2787
INSTALL fireplace lacing
or chtmney, dry wall,
plaster, stucco, tree est
Somulaled brick or stone,
Greg Burdette, call 675

6357.
Must sell 1972 Opel 2 door 74
Motorcycles
station wagon, good tires,
good running cond. First Honda XR 75, rebuoll eng,
$700.00 takes II Call 388· $275 446·3987.
8140 after 4·00 PM
____.,.....:__ __
1978 Kawasaki motorcycle,
75 Mustang, 4 cyl., auto, 1000 LTO, 4 cyl , call 675goOd cond., 58,000 miles. 5079
Ph . 446 4886.
1973 Yamaha 205MX Dort
bike.
5400. 985 4133.
1979 Trans AM 6.6 Litre
Engine, 403 Cu. ln., auto.
trans., PS, PB, AC, AM· FM 1978 HARLEY DAVIDSON
8 track stero, Excellent Sportster. GoOd condition .
cond. Priced to sen at 12500.00. 992·3191 '
SS80o.oo. Call after 5PM
245 5612.
1978 Yamaha SOOCC single
cullnder. 2,100 miles Exc
1976 Ford Elite. Local cond 51,200. 667·6569 alter 5
owner New trans., am·lm, p. m
8 track, all·tllt. Good tires,
excellentshape 12,100 949·
1977 Honda 350 XL dirt·
2880.
street, 2300 moles, very
good condition. $700. 882·
19&lt;19 Z28 Camero 992 3647.
2012
As Is 1971 Mazda Station Honda mini trail 50 Can be
wagon. Rotary engine. In seen 112 Pleasant St. after 5
QOOd shape. Needs a little pm
repaor. 992·7653.
Harley Davison hard tall
1980 Eagle 4 wheel drive with Springer, soo Honda
station wa~on . 13,500 miles. motor cycle l1275.01l 576·
Exc•llent condtlon, 985 219&lt;1.
1978 Kawasaki motorcycle
1000 LTD cylnder 675-5079.
1978 XL 350 Honda, 3200
miles, dirt or street, red
and black, like new, price
$950, Call alter 6 pm 675·
6372

WEATHERALL CONCRETE, Quality X service, PhOne 675·1582
CONTINIOUS no leak gut• .
terlng, custom made tor
your home . For frH estlmates, call ADVANCE ,
SEAMLESS GUTTER ·
AND DOOR. 614-698·8205.
HARPER Halstead, lawn ·
mower repair and shar·
penong service, 10 a.m. -6,
p.m. 675·5868.
·
Paonting, plumbing, car·
penter work $4 hour. 675- .
2222.

carpentry, remodeling,
room additions, garagn
ALL SMALL ga!ollne and cement work 675-5022. _
motors repaired
Lawn
mowers, roto tillers, etc
DAVE 'S appliance repair,'
Work
guaranteed
Prec1slon engine service, washers, dryers, plu,._.
544 Upper River Rd ., bing, electric, general han~ .
dyman. 576 2921 or675-1529.
Gallipolis, call446 2096

1973 Chevy ptckup Runs
goOd. Danville $500 742·
3035.

4 mo. old Rl120 ·Luxmon 3560.
receiver with Bosse
speaker JVS turntable 388·
1969 DOdGe Dart GTS.440
82,jQ
Engtne. Asking $2,000. Call
anytime al9-49-2123.
Picking up a plano In your
orea, looking lor responcars,
trucks.
sible party to take .,_ Jeeps~
PiiYIMflls, Ilk tor credit Available thru govarnment
managor lor di!talls, call au~tlons In area. Many sell
for under 5200 Cell 602·941c:otled 592·5122.
1014 ext, C796 tor your
directory to gurchase .

Jtrawlllt'rlas· plck

•

baler $650. 446·1900.

Moving, must sell out ken- Quarter hourse, 1250 pnds,
nel, ACK Reg. poodles, 2 mare . 367 7533
adult mates. 1 adult
female, 1 adult female with GOOD JERSEY and Guer
3 puppies. Woll sell very nsey milk cow, just fresh
reasonoble, 256·9301
For sale or trade for cow or
calf of equal value. 4462 Black Doberman pups, 1 100-1.
male, 1 female, exc .
pedigree, $150 each, 256- 64
Hay &amp; .Gr~fn
1269.
JOhn Deere1207 Hay bine, 7
Lovely &amp; lonely Gordon 11. width, gOOd cond., 675
Setter, medium size, one 3963.
year old. Also shepard
collie mixed breed puppy ,
'" ~··~ ....
Humane Society, 992·6505.

51110-

brlna
'.
Utfl 'illll
for
.
~ tiiiPJllll IPttlt

I

BIG discounts lor cash and
carry at VIllage Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.
'

Form Equipment

1978 DATSON 280Z,
automatic, air condotoon,
AM·FM radio. Call 675

1910 Harley Davison FLT,
fully dressed, Includes AM·
FM cauette stero, 1600
1971 CUTLASS Solon. 675· miiH, txcellenl condition,
Strawberrltl·plck your 2722 or 675-5571 .
675-6545.
own Mon. t11ru Sat. 9AM to
IPM. CIOHCI SundeyJ, 1m DODGE pickup, slant
19t1 HONDA 10 ATC. 675ton"Y 110 clloetcs. HlfiPV 6, 8Utomltlc, PS, PI, 6515.
Hollow Fruit Farm, 51.000 mites. 4 tool bins,
Olllilll!lll Ftr1'Y. WVA, 51a- 675-2!111.
75
...... nd
:111»-Meiers lor Salt
STrewtllrrlel pick yovr
own. bring container Z&amp;

iGDOO
USED
A!'·
PLIANC:I&amp; · walhlrl,
' dryert,
retrieer•tore,
·rlftlll. lkllll. Ap·
:p111ncn, 1911 !estern

HllpWontW

NEEDseveralllemsoffur
nllure,
appliances,
televisions. Big discounts
tor quality purchase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675-1773.

They'll Do It Every Time

446-0322

11

STRAWBERRIES, fresh
picked. Jerrv See516·2853. 61

~::::::::::::::::::.L;::::::::::::::::::.j

•tllru Fri., t1m 1o~,Sat.

eacfl 101' pcilblp and llalldlln&amp;

54~....!M~i!!sc=·!!M~e:!:rc~tuo~nl!!se!:__

BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS . Boarding and
grooming. AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniels Call446 4191.

Secluded prlvoite trailer lot' I' BIII'flliin.
In wooded area. Ideal for
that summer ou!Qoon.
on
Contact Brown's Trailer
be seen
Park, 992·3324.
la&lt;oollv, Write credit·
manager : P.O. Box 537,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Shelbyville, Ind. 45176.
Park, Route 33, North 01
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call Antique chest of drawers,
992·7479
Car trans., 545. An·
desk, S20. 4 car tires,
New •colorburst
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Soulharn Valley Mobile camera, 130. 256-6345.
,Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
!192·3954
Early Americ an color TV,
stero combination, Rock·
'
:rraller lot lor rent, Hen well table saw with stand,
:derson wv ph. 675 4638 or upright sweeper, card
table, oil window furnace,
~75 3995.
new 7 WO 3 fl. X 8 fl. Red WOOd gates, other Items
i"' Equipmtnffor Renl 245·9132.
:E NDLOAOE R
•backhoe. SIO per
:operat. yourself.
, Beegle, 195-38-41 .

l

26' TROUTWOOD travel
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek. Close to
Ohio River . $500 doWn
owner will finance 614-256
1216.

:;::::;:::.::::::::;:;:::::::;;::;=

SMillt NELSON
MOTORS lilt.

IN"-'-111976 PLYMOUTH RV Van,
39,000 miles, ac, ps, pb,
electric
refrigerator,
cruise-a-malic, 4 speakers,
AM·FM 8 track stereo, 1
owner, new tires, double
battery and charger, sink
and water hook-ups, can be
L-:::::::::::::::::::::::::~r;~;;;;;::~;;;~;;~rl
seen at Tu Endi-Wel Park
1
or call675 970-1.

:;;::;:!J.-::;,...-------=~.,.

Reduce sale and fast with
Gobese Tablets and E·Vap
water pills at Fruth Phar·
.macy

Sizes
' ' From 30x30"
SMALL

Trash Pickup In
1 The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph: 992•5016
or992-7S05

EXCAVAnNG

coupon. ($2 Value). Calllai $1.
All CUlT 1001$' .

1977 MONTE CARLO,
34,000 m lies, gooc1 con
dillon. 675·2226.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
1ndoor-outdoor lac II Illes.
Also AKC Reg Dober·
mans. Call-4-46·7795.

~3733.

Sp!ce for Rent

,

IWJFPS

$800. ~75· 4293

675·6245.

by the

For Rent Office or small
Business space on State St.
446·3432.

ALl. STEEL

5-14·1 mo.

ROGER HYSBl'S

71 VOLKSWAGEN Beetle

12,000 BTU air conditioner,
used two summers. 5160

SOME of Elliott's everyday
low
prices • Litton
week, kitchen, and microwave oven 1299.,
television lounge. Carryout Whirlpool 2 spd washer,
store and restaurant within sm., RCA 131n color T.V ..
1299. Elliott Appliance, cor·
500 feet. 992·6370.
ner ot Pine and 3rd . Call
Sleeping rooms;

.....

HAS AWIDE
Sfl FCIIOI Cf

•SIWYICIS

11-H. . . IM.,..,.......,..

....

Furnished Rooms

Auto Parts
&amp; Accesaorles

OR TRADE- 1968 CaiTferQ
convertible, fair condition,
396 engine, lor mor• In·
!ormation m-5014.
77

Vegetable plants. 75 cents
per dozen. 675 3056.

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER·
VICE. In and above ground
Immediate
pool kits,
delivery and complete In·
stallation available. Also
all pool supplies and ser
vices tor existing pools
For details and directions
to local display, 446-1324.

SLEEPING room, 175.
Range, rtlrlg., single male
preferred. 446·.W16 after 7
p.m

COMPLETE

J&amp;R
_TRASH SERVICE

17-.IVttlfJIIr

._
....-w.....
,_•.,,..,..
I .M ...M Dli•f¥
IINIIItll.....,

:-----------------•APARTMENTS 675 4130.

SLEEPING ROOMS tor
rent, Gallla Hotel.

eTIIANSPOIITATIDN

eREALISTAT!

...

2 BEDROOM apartment,
utilities paid, adults only,
no pets. 675-1883 9-5 week·days.

61-l.iwtlllelll

Offlll"fVtllf'r

H-LIIIAAcrHII •

Rtnt

46-SPICI ftr Rlflt

ll.ll(:tiOII
~wa~o.Buy

'APARTMENTS.
Fur•nlshed or unfurnished. 675·
1317
days,
675 , 3812
evenings.

4S

The Daily Sentinel

U - MIOIIe Htmts
.,_~

t-L.t1t and Pound
, _ Yttdhlt
t-P'w•llc hit

I

NEW STORE HR

Free Estomates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
2 411c

4S.rnch, tiCket 1\1 prds

REALTOR
HENRY E. CLELAND, JR. "2-61f1
ASSOCIATES
ROGER &amp; DOTTIE TURNER "2·5m
JEAN TRUSSELL 949-2660
OFFICI! "2·2259

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

J&amp;f'
CONTRI4:TING

742-2211

eANNDUNCEMENTS
t-Cirtlof TMnld
1- t"Mtmlftlm

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. 992· 544 or 992·
~14 or 882·2566.

5386.

II

Let G-ge Miller check
your present electriCill
system.
Residential
&amp;Com mereta I

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Mortgago Interest R~t• Available AS Low A- 14%.

'

REGENCY apartment now
available. 675 5:183 or 675-

For all of your Wlr_ing needs.

Cash·n·Ca

DIGITAL
ORO 2001
Realistic 16 channel scan- ALL types of granite, mar·
ner, 1150. PhOn, 882·2483.
ble, and bronze memorials.
Display lot on Main 51 Pt.
Pleasant Granite Com·
53
Antiques
pony. Phone675-5548
ATTENTION:
(IM·
STRAWBERRIES. Pick
PORTANT TO YOU) Will your
own. Monday· Satur·
pay cash or certified check day.9a.m. to8p.m.Ciosed
lor antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire estates. Sundays. Sorry no checks.
Nothing too large. Also, Happy Hollow Fruit Farm,
guns, pocket watches. and Gallipolis Ferry, WV 576·
coin collections. Call 614· 2026
767·3167 or 557·3411.
Dlgetal PRO 2001 Realistic
16 channel scanner. $150.
Antique china cupboard Phone 882·2483.
5200 Antoque buffet 1175.
675·5690 after 3 pm
Pick
your
own
strawberries from Larry's
patch daily Tuesday54 Misc. Merchandise
Saturday 8 am Ill dark.
BURROUGHS Bookkeepin- Sundays alter 2 pm.
g macnlne, 150. Call 446· Located 6 moles out on
2342
Jerry's Run Rd from Apple
Grove, WV. Check In at
2 MONTH Spring Special house across from Wat·
lor upholstering furniture. terson's Grocery Taking
Richard Mowrey Sr . orders also lor picked
berries. Ph. 576 2574
owner, 6754154

Furnished 2 bedroom upstalrt aportment. Adults
only, no pets. Middleport
992·3874.

SERVICE ' ,

Mlu.ER
SERVICE

Sq.'
Vd.

I

3 ROOM furnished apart
ment, adults. 675·1302 after
4p.m.

Two-Ways Pretty!

Drive A Little- Save A Lot

' NEAR THE NEW BRIDGE - Approx 13.76 acres
and an older home. Noce lay log land and some fruit
trees Owner will help finance. ASKING $11,200.00
TUPPERS PLAINS - Approx. 4 yr. Old ranch with
an acre lot, 3 bedrooms, wood burning stove, lots of
closets, garage, and a large kitchen. 134,900.00.

.
. tRENCHING

H. L WHITESEL ·BAILEY'S SHOES

sweet potato plants
available Monday Dwight
Spencer W. Shade Rd.
Phone before coming 985·
3838.

FURNISH!:D Apt., 2 BR, 40 CHA~NEL Carrier
S150. Water pd. One child Conqueror 400 base C.B.
acceptable. 446·.W16 after 7 S200orbeslofler. 773•5013

'

-Addonsand
remodeling
-Roofing ~nd gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
lllactrlcal work
I Free Estlm~te•l

MORRISON'S Auto safes.
Henderson, WV _ Phone 6751547 or 675-2881.

I

REESE .•

Housing
Head uarters

Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Goocf selection Roll Ends Remnants $2.50 up. Grass carpet $4.99 yd.
Green and Brown.

NEED ROOM FOR
1
woll fool you on how bog ot really os It has 4
bedrooms, kitchen, lovong room, 21onoshed rooms In
basement, laundry room, work room, and l'h baths.
owner leavong area wants to sell ASKING
528,500.00
SOUTHERN DISTRICT - Approx 1.25 acres
suotable lor a traoler lot or lor a hOme REDUCED
TO $3,000 00.
RECENTLY REMODELED - One floor frame
home with 2 bedrooms, front porch, screened in
back porch, garage, storage buo ldlng, and 1 118
acres that os partly fenced tor farm animals. Close
tomones ASKING$24,90000.
NEW LISTING - Good location In Middleport, 3
bedrooms, dining room, 1'12 baths, basement, level
lot, garage, carpeted and in goOd condition CALL
TODAY 124,900.00
NEW LISTING . - AT THE EDGE OF TOWN W1fh approx lt. acre and a 1'/:z story frame home.
Energy eflicoency os what os nice about thos home,
with a coal and woOd furnace and full onsulatlon.
There are 4 bedrooms and a noce sitting porch .
$28,500.00.
GEAR UP FOR SUMMER - Wotn central air condi
tlonong on thos neal3 bedroom, 7 room home. Lots of
closets, full basement, water softener, 2 car garage,
and low utilities ASKING $42,600 00.
SMALL AND ON ONE FLOOR ~ Large living
room, dining room, equipped kitchen, and 2
bedrooms Some paneling and a part basement
JUST$11,000.00.
WANTS A LAND CONTRACT - Approx 5 acres
wrth a pond, garden, and fruit trees. Also a 12x70
Schultz mobile home woth an addlloonal room, cen
tral air, dishwasher, redwood front porch, and,. car
garage. S26,900 00
·

'

p.m.

45 ACRES Near
Rutland on goOd country
road woth the mineral
roghts. Leading Creek
water and electrlo
available.
POMEROY - Perma·
stpne 3 bedroom home
with new bath, full base
ment w1th f1replace and
lamoty
recreatoon,
garage and 3 lots out 01
flood area . Asking
$45,000.
ANOTHER ONE SOLD
LAST WEEK. IT
MIGHT PAY YOU TO
SEE US TO SELL
YOURS.

Reg. $15.95

1

POMEROY, OHIO

388-83M.

12 11.
aluminum
fishing
and traoter.
Good ahape. 992 5565.
76

Reduce aate &amp; fast with
ADM) RAL 15 cu . In GoBese Tablell a. E·Vap
refrigerator, like new. Call ''water pills' Nelson Drug
675·382• before 9 a .m.
weekdays and weekend.

TWO 2 bdr. iiPUiments,
nice, ref , roq. plus deposit.

5-6·1

SHAG

From

'7.99 &amp; up

(

Free Estimate
James_.Keesee , -.
Ph. 9Y2-2772

QIVe

Printed Pallern

•tnsul111an '·
•Storm J)oon
•Storm'WindoWS
•Replacement
WindOWS

Home
-~;.:;
1 m.e.rovements

Pinto, 4 cyl, $195.

AO channel carrier
Conqueror ADO ball CB.
$200.00 or beat otter. HO.I
773·5913.
•

2 BDRM. . Gar11go Apt,
Burkhltrt Lone, llep. req.,
no pots. oW-3432.

' VInyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

'

'

2
Rubber Back

CARPET

pt[ 992-2259

COINS
' $1211 to SIP,

Phone
1-(~ 14)-992·3325

DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR

KITQIEN

'

small apartment-tor
po,.n Catl446-1571.

Rutland Fumiture Carpet Shop
SPRING CARPn SALE

Real Estate- General

'•

bY !.my

'N' CARLYLE "'

Mil&lt;• Merchlnise

WONDER STOVE · lntg!
by Unlltcl StatH Stove Co.,
wood lind coal bur~r with
blower, GaiiiPQIII BlOCk
co., can -ll6·2783.

2 BDR. ai*'!OMnt, KrhlghWay frcim HCinda Shop. ·
5200. mo. plus dep. call446-

46

.,,c,o· ___,

54

-""""'

9380.

t~~~~~~~~~~j~~til;n; 5525
ac

Dorothy M Johnston
Dtrector
Dated May t, 1981

·44

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
Contractors Build , siding,
remodel, concrete, rooftng,
free estimates . Call coL,
614 259·281A ask for Charles
or Mike
A. I. DUTY &amp; SON, Home
builders, spec Ia I ize in
smell convenient homes,
plans available, moderate
prtce, tree estimates, 614
256 1352
INTERIOR and exterior
painting, Mark White, call
245-9561

Save dollars and have your
odd appliances or lawnmowers repaired by Moun·
tain State Repair Service.
675·3376
Lawn mower repa or. 675-6416
Stark's Tree Trimming. "
Yard Work Insured . Phone
576·2010

RON'S Telev1s1on Serv1ce.
Spectahzmg m Zen1th and
Motorola , Quazar, and"
house calls. Phone 576-2398
or 446 2454.
'
COOK'S Television
v1ce , Henderson,
Phone 675-2250

Ser·
wv

F &amp; K Tree Tr1mm1ng,
stump removal 675 1331.
T and
R bu1ldtng,
remodeltng, also papering,
carpet tnstallatton, and
general
home
tm ·
provements 675 5689, 67~
5304

SERVICES ·
Harper'S
Adult
Care
Center.
"Provtdtng the personal
care your elderly need in a
home·like atmosphere.''
Call Robert or DorothY
Harper, 675 l;r/3
Plumbing

82

&amp; Healing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Ptne
Phone 446 3888 or 446-«77
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbong Heatong Air
condttJOOIOQ 300 Fourth
Ave. Ph 446·1637.
STANDARD
Plumbmg Heatrng
215 Thord Ave , 446 3782
SOUTHERN SERVICE
CO. - Heatong
mobllt
home furnaces, electnc hot
water tank repair Call of
lice , 446 3008 noght,
emergency no 367 7131
WILL do plumbong and
heatong In Gallipolis or
surrounding areas 13 yrs.
experience, call 367-0498
D C Contractors Plum
b1ng , electrical , heating,
roofing, aluminum and
vonyl sidong 675 1240.

83

Excavating

DOZER backhoe, dump
truck Call446 4537
DOZER work excavatont:
land clearong Call446-0051,

c a.

v Inc., Backhoe sel'
voce. 985 3549 or 949·2822 . :
EDWARD'S Backhoe a"\1
Dozer Service Specialitlnl
in septic tank 675 1234

BACKHOE Servoce. Larry
Sodenstrocker. 675·5580.
84

Electrical
I Relrogeration

ELECTRIC WORK
CaN
256 1748. 15 yrs. ex·
perlence.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car
pet Cleaning featured by
Hallell Brothers Custom
Carpets Free estimates
Call oW6 2107 .
· Cabinets,
tables,
porch
sw;lno's. most woOd prOduc·
St., Gallipolis
Call446·2572.
WEATHERALL CON
RETE - quality and ser
vice, caii675-1S82
PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumb1ng,
roofing, some remOdeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652
BING'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION Specllllllng
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
basement, garage floors
and ole. Free estimeles. 11
ye~rs experience. Call M7·
7191.

JACK 'S REFRIGERATioN air conditton ser\llct~
commercial, Industrial,
PhOne 882 207Y
85

General

H~ullng

LIMESTONE , gravel and
sand. All sizes. At Rlchardl
and Son, Upper River Rd.,
Gallipol is, Onlo Call 4467785
JIM' S
DEPENDABLii
water delivery Call 2569368 anytime
NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone lor driveways.
Call for estimates 367 7101
DILLARDS
WATER
DELIVERY Service. Cali
446 740-1.
JONES BOYS WATEII
SERVICE, call 367·7471 Of
367·0591
Mobile homes moved,
licensed, and bonded . 57•
2111 or 576 2065.
11

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 sec. Ave., Gllllpalll.
446-7133 or 446-1133.

�!' 'J

.Page-:-Jo-Tile Daily senti.nel

''

..

..· P.dmeroy..:..Micldleport, Otlio

...

',

. ..

·

'.

·,

...

.MOnll.r.,June l,ltJI .

.,

Pomeror-Mi~leport,

·The Daily

Ohio

·Television
•

•

VIe~
JUIIIt, 1111
IVINIIIQ '

.,.., .
I

e:oo til • (tJ • til IIi em •

~OR BAGLEY SHOW
(CON11NUID

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

_

·
Yard Sale

7

9

YARD SALE·, THurs., J une
3
Announcem.ents
. 4 and Fri ., June 5, 9a .m. til
Davis residence; Rose
SWEEPER and sewing ??
Hill
,·· Pomeroy . · Men ~
machine repair, parts, and 'women
and children' s
supplies.
Pick up · and
toys, tools, metal
delivery, Davis Vacuum clothing,
Cleaner, one half mile up stepstool and many n1isc.
Georges Creek Rd. Call items.
.U0·0294..
Gigantic Yard Sale: Monday through Saturday June
NEW GARAGE OPENING lsi to the 6th, Dishes, new
- Automatic transmissions and used tools, clothing,
and all sorts of mechanical shoes, wooden wagon
repair and malor and wheels, children's riding
minor auto body repair. toys, baby crib, bucksaw,
See James Smith or Tom crosscut saws, hers collars,
Masters or caii.U0-7757.
single trees, Avon soap 20
years old, and many other
TURN YOUR LIVING items to numerous to men·
ROOM IN T·O A GREEN tion. 2 miles west of
HOUSE Possible to in· Gallipol is on Rt. 141.
crease all plant production
91% Free report. Theresa Porch Sa le at 1939
Price, Rt 1, Cheshire, Ohio Chatham Ave. , June 1st
thru June 6th from 910 5.
-456U
I PAY
highest prices
possible for gold and silver

Contact Ed Burkett Ba rber
Shop, Middleport.

MOVING, GARAGE SALE
Starts J une 3 until
everything Is sold. Ra in or
shine. Antiques Of all kinds,
drapes, spreads, rugs,

Permanent Hair Removal.

clothes all sizes, furn iture,
appliances, tools, and

coins, rings, jewelry, etc .

Professional Electrolysis misc . Take 554 to Bidwel l,
Center. A.M.A. Approved . brown house beh ind Bid·
Dr. referrals . By ap- well Post office. Ivan
Morehouse
pointments onl y. 675·6234.
LONELY
Christian
Si ngles. Meet Christian
singles lnyour area. Write

Southern Christian Singles

prize 5500 cash. Tr i County
Sports Shop, Rt. 1, Pt.
Pleasant, 675·2988 . Stop In
for deta ils.
PIANO Lessons. Lucy Jane
Bulme r. Hartford, wv 8822395.
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has

4

anyth ing to give away and

does not ofler or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
column . There will be no
charge to the adverti ser.

household

articles,

and

misc.

YARD SALE, Rhubarb,
baby clothes and Items.
C.B. radio, 8 track tape
player and radios, coflee
and end tables. shotgun.
antique dining room table
with chairs, coffee grinder
and cloc k. Wed . 3 thru 4,
113 Vinton Ct .
HUGE Yard Sale June 2
thru 5 at Ed Martin's Farm
on Moore Jerico Road, 4'h
miles

f rom

Addison .

Ike 1!. Mike, twin short
haired, black , male cats,

Follow signs. Books, toys,
dolls, clothing, whal·knots,

good pets. Mousers 3792597.

Come and see.

Ike . &amp; Mike, twin short

items too numerous to list .

Follow

signs.

Yard Sale: corner of Pearl

haired, bla ck, male cats.
Good pets, Mousers 379- &amp; Ash Streets In Mid·
dleport. June H from 9·5.
2591 .
Ch ildren' s clothing, toys,
and misc .

Yellow Ang ora Kitten 25&lt;11398.
yard Sale: June 1-2 9·5;
third !railer past Meigs
Kittens part Si amese, on

fairgrounds. Baby items,

Debbie Or . 446·4824.

ra in cancel s.

Pupples-3 Male, 1 Female.
Call2-45· 5516 or2AS·5000

Yard Sale : June 2-3 from
10·?. County Rd. 5 across
from Bradbury school.
Clothes &amp; misc. Items.

Free puppy-pt. Coll ie &amp;
s neperd.' 10 wks. old. Exc.
farm dog or chlldrens pel. LARGE Yard Sale. June 25. Middleport, corner Of 2nd
. 379·21 39.
a. Hamilton . Clothes,
dishes, housewares, tools &amp;
4 kittens, 2 black 1!. wh ite, 1· more.
while with black . I tiger .
992·2587.
3 family garage &amp; yard
. 2 white long ha ired female
kittens. 949·2270.

sa le. June 3, A, 5. Rain or

shine. John st .. Syracuse.
Oh. Turn left at Post Office,
left at school , 4th house.
Lots of gooc clean clothing,

PUPPI ES, 1h Collie and 'h
; English Shepherd . 675·2586. Jr. misses and men's. Baby
clothes, wringer washer.
': KITTE NS , 695·3472.
clock radio, floor scrubber,
polisher, pizza oven, lam·
ps, bed spreads, bathroom
. cOLL IE a nd Coonhound scales. Ma ny other Items.
9·4p.m.
· puppies. 992·2770 .

'- - - - - Lostand Found
Lost; male red ti ck hound .
·.No collar. Raclne-Bashan
Road . $200 reward. 949·2573
.J im Ci rcle.
6

Yard Sale. June 2-3. Rain
or shine. On Rt. 248. No.I to
s ummertields Rest. 9-4.
Yard Sale. 748 High St .•
Midd leport , Oh. June 3rd.
9·4.

Lost·2 la rge black dogs,
Wanted to Buy
between Rt . 2 and old 9
Charleston road. 675·1798.
GOLD. lOk, 14k, 18k, dental
gold and gold year pins.
Found · Male Brittany Caii675-J010.
Span iel, 2 years old, to give
away to anyone who wants
SCASHI
it. Good natured. Ca ll 615- FOR YOUR FURNITURE
&lt;-139evenlngs.
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
Male. Brittany Spaniel ,
420LIVE&amp; SECOND
ora nge and white, no
OR CALLcollar, answers to name of
.U0·4775
' Ranger' . Ch ild's pet. 675OPEN9T0 5
2039.
WANTED to buy·Junk cars
~~~. or wlt~out motors 3887

Yard Sale

Yard Sale Tuesday June 2, CASH for your diamonds,
10·2 pm . 105 English Road, gold and sliver, class rings,
Pl. Pleasant, WV.
wedding bands, silver and
gold coins . Tewney
TWO FAMILY Yard Sale, Jeweler., 422 Second Ave.,
2904 Maple Ave. Tuesday, Gallipolis, Ohio.
June 2. 9:00 a.m . 10 5:00
p.m. Clothes, t.levlslon, Wanted : Swarms of Honey
. bed! preads, draperies and . Bees call -"16-2142 or after 5
lots more.
and weekends 245·5055.

3 FAMILY yard sale below

Jordan
cnurch at
Gallipolis Ferry, Tuesday,
Wednesday , Thursday,
Frlday, June 2, 3, 4, and 5. 9
105.
4 FAMI ~ Y basement sale,
June 1, 2, 3. 99 Burdette Ad·
dlt/on.

GARAGE SALE 1911 Jefferson Blvd, rear. June 2
and3.

FATN!JIKNOWSBEST

~E ·

·
DON'T IUIOW WHAT
WI I'IOIILD'VI ~
1P IT WAIN'T JIOit
YOIJ,DHMOND.

·•\

Gloria Swanaon. Hoata : Hugh

TAI&lt;I TIIIM
5TRAI6HTTO
THit MOLtiTII:II.

nL 81 ·~1BHT

OVIR TO PRIH

~

.. .... '" ..........
.......
-..

1'-!l_ __,_H,e"'lp,_W=ancel.:::ed:..___
WANTED - Lease men, to
lease oil and gas proper·
ding counties. Inquire to
Great Bend Oil Inc., 269
Lower

River

Rd . ,

Gall ipo!is. Caii.U0-4285.

LIAS, YOGA AND YOU
AIICN!WS
UPDATE NEWS
Pll MACIAZINE

8:118
7:00
;·

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gilts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at m 215&lt;1 or 992·2157 .
Wanted : someone to board
cats for the Meigs county
Humane Society while
homesaresoughlforthem.
Cases , litter boxes,
medication, food, and litter
are supplied. You need
good draft free clean
building or room, where
YOU can show enlmals to
prospective owners. Must
be In the Middleport·

15, Schools lnstr.uctlon .
SUMMER SCHOOL INSTRUCTION - Does your
child need extra help?
Review program for
reading
or
math .
Presbyterian cnurcll, Call
446-4052 . Prepare' for
classes now I

Offices, resldentials, car-

pets, Upholstery, windows,
floor, and general cleaning.
446-7783 81o 5 PM.
Permanent hair removal
Professional Electrolylls
Center, AMA approved,
Dr . referrals. By appointment only 675-6234.

...... - .. '
~

Radio TV

16

-~~&amp;,_,c,a'-'R,_,e,.pa=lr_ _
RON'S TV SERVICE
spee 11 11 z1ng 1n zen lth ·
House Calls. Now servicing
Motorola Quazar. Call 1·
304-576·2398 or .U0-2-4.54.

11

.

•noo
a""

Mature lady to live ln.
Room • and boerd and
to care lor tldtrly
P ' - 675-2111 or

(Atwwera tomonow)

5aturday'a l Jumblol: FROZE BRIAR ORATOR SUBDUE
AnMW: Whallll did when he got the bill for the
ralters- RAISED THE ROOF

UIWINOUNCI!D

3 bdr. home In Centenary.'
S250. per, month, reference
and dep. required. One
child accepted. PhOne .uo-

~

(I)

1fu

• • .,

• • ""9' . . . .

31
Homu for Sale
5 ROOM house , 64
Chillicothe Rd., only 53,500.
Caii.U0-4038 or .U0·1615.

AUTOMOBILE
IN · 111 klnct 9o your -..Tuni
Off ....
SU RANCI! b11n can· , _ 'lano
eel i'td? LOll your prlcl tl1ru
101
operafOr's ~~c~? Phone Ward, Wtrll'l. KMGII'II.
(614) .....472.
992-21G

In Plantz Sub
Division, price $4,850. Call
.UO·I294.

Lots for sale-Rt 2 north at
Flatrock. warner Hills
Estate·one third down
payment 'requlred·balance
financed by owner at 1296.
Lower rat. for Vietnam
Veterans· LOt lilt one acre
or larger. Call 675-12-48 If- ,
ter tlve for appolnment.
BY owner, 3 apartment'
house on appro~&lt;. 1 acre.
Live In one, rent olllerl to
make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
City water, will consider
·land contract. 675-1813 9-5
p.m.

• Iii

'

7:68
8:00

.. .

about himae!t loa pen pal in a

ANNIE

OH, gy TIE Way-

dlatant city, unaware that she is
a paraplegic who ia also

ltCI11.L'I'i' HOW

atf8tchlng the truth in her re·

pll.,. ,(Repeal; 60 mina .)
oaod-Capllonod : U.S.A.)
AMERICAN CATHOLIC
MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) .. 1'1
"Jouth P~Hic" 1858
(J) ll2l •
ABC COMEDY

"DilbtT't"' A6f&lt;.fP IF Nitel TW. HIM
YOU10 LIK.e T' COlt!!! l't' !Ml'OY
Mit FOtt DINNER,
VE:ItY

ffi

SPE~IAL

m•
Cll ~ BILLY GRAHAM
C!IUSADE

(J) GREAT PERFORMANCES
'The Gi rls In Their Summer
Dreaaea' and Ottler Stories by
Irwin Shaw. This dramatization
or three of the author'• beat·
known s hort stories alaa in·
cludea ' The Monument' and

'TheManWhoMarriedaFrench
Wife' , filmed on location In Par·
ia. (90 mine .)
(]j) SOYA WANNABE ASTAR
Two local Seattle banda on the
brink of atardom, Ira Allen and

..

ALLEYOOP '

the Palom inoRidera and lee

Rogers and the Stampede
Pus, a hare their hope a and
~ nlry aoundo. (80 mlna.)

8:30 W NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
ll!tOW
(J) ill) •
MONDAY NIGHT
IAIItaALL
8:88 I]) CJN UPDATE NEWS

Oswald: "F.M. Hargreave
has a regular article in 'International Popular Bridge '
about the 'Frenzied Four' who
play hilariously bad bridge at
a British golf club. Here they
are at their 'best'."
Alan: "You can't faull
South's opening si• notrump.
He had read that 33 high-card
points were enough for a
slam, and he held 33 points."
Oswald :
" Hargre av e
describes how South cashed
four spades to start proceedings and continued with the
ace and king of diamonds. He
didn 't really count, but he did
notice that East had shown
out on the second diamond so
he stopped to cash the ace and
king of clubs and ace of
hearts. He had noted that the
queen of clubs had not· fallen,
so he led a red 10."
Alan: "South had led the 10
of diamonds by mistake. West
played his jack and South
asked, 'Don 't you have an?.
· hearts?' East replied, 'I don t
have to answer that question'
and eventually South saw
what he had done."
Oswald: "Strangely enough.
the slam was now cold. West
had to lead a diamond to
South's queen and poor East
had to throw the queen of

df,u•"•"

napped end held for a million
dollar ranaom. when a drug
duler Intent upon vengeance

ACROSS

I Playing or
calling 5 Carried on
10 Winglike
11 Prairie wolf
1% MoDycoddle
13 Webster
or Cato, e.g.
14 Candlenut
tree ·
15 Big -,

punlaheadoublecroaaingSher·
iff Tilua Sample. (Repeat ; 2

hro .)

·

(1) 700CLUB

(]) MOVIE &gt;(COMEDY) ••

M~ pleasure. Mrs.

"Ho~oodKnlghta"

• CIJ illl) M.A.S.H.

Bump, I assure... !

1080

aD MR . ROOER8TALKSTO
PARENTS ABOUT COMPETf.

TION Suaan 9tamberg joins
Fred Rogera for allvelydiacu a·

aion on helping children to cope
wllh J!le need lo bt lirol.
8:30 • CIJ (jJ) HOUSE CALLS
Charleydlecoverathatheiaone
of Ann 'alandlordllndhe ia turn-

Calif. ·

horaumanl. (Repeat)
(I)
CHARLES
M.
SCHULTZ... TO REMI!MBER
yeer mark s the 30th In·

ctltbratoa wll h a look ot

.(I)

Chartea M. Schultz, the creator
· ol tilt ~mou1 comic atrip.

AT THI9 POINT, YE9.
~·r )O(J SEE!'!
HAVE 10 MAKE

10:00

!!Ill LOUGRANTThehor-

rOf ot evetYday crime iabrought

hometothechvroominlahock·
ing way whtn one o f the
Tribune ' • own reporters Ia

SOMETHING OF

!JPed. !Reptsl; eo mina.)
l1J CROSSROADS: SOUTH
AFRICA Made w~hout tho ap-

MY8F..Z

6e

proval or &lt;l Orlltrll of South
Alrlca'a oovemment, th ia

powerful dooumtntory peraon. aNzH the laaue of black relia·
lance to South Afr lca ' a atate
enforced eyatem of racial dlacrlmlnation (apartheid). (80

tO:H
10:30

mmln=~POATINEWS
IS Till UFI

D
mws

:~:: A~L.

,
'
;

I GOT SOME

C5000 GOSSIP
FER VE,.LOWEEZY

•
•

.,''

PULL OP
A CHAIR
AN' SPILt..

SO SAIRV SAYS
TO ME,SHE SAYS,
SAYS SHE

....... .
'

NI!WLY

REMODELED
21111. floor ttl, ..,..,,, ICIUIII.
only, 110' Ptfl. Clll 446 tw57, ,
72Uecorid Ave.
·,

t A K Q 10
+AK 10

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wes1 Nortb East

6 NT
Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+2

clubs or unguard the queen of•

hearts."

:

Alan : "However, South still
went down . East threw his
queen of clu bs, but South had
forgotten that the jack of
clubs had been played from
dummy, so he tried unsuccess-.
fully to cash two more hearttricks."
·

·(

cottonwood
3 Moroccan city
4 Evaporated

5 Fret

I Indian tiUe
7 Recovered
8 Of an EngYeslenlay's Alllwer
llsb school
!Z Johnny
Z9 Greek island
9 Make Insane
30 Papal crown
Reb's foe
11 Hoopster's
Z3 Superlative 31 British
in grammar composer .
Z4 From
3! Laughing

Caesar's era 37 U.S. air ann
!5 Menu item :18 Ferriale
n Specter
bear

Ramble on

Heroic tale

• Al&amp;erlan city
41111111p city
U stin problem

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how to

work It:

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utll!d for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Single lotten,
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(abbr.)

(J)
MOVIE
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"It• TrK · The Mo¥te"

11 :21
It :30

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!5 French river
fl N.C. college
!7 Mapline

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WEST
• 9532

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game
enforcer
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• ·Fly

NIIIOII:WINITONCHURntll'tWAftWAR
OUTIIILMYS

S+8t

DOWN

11 "Swinging
hardwood
- Star"
15 Signet
17 Fund-ralslng 18 Law

ing her apartment into a con·
dominium, and when ahe flndt
out, ahe atarta a campaign of

niveraary oi 'Peanut a'. and PBS

NORTH
• 8 7 61
'IK9 7 6 1
tl2

by THOMAS J0$1PH

Conetance Carlyle are kid·

.•
tot rent, 57 1
un· 1~

frilly I
, IIIUIII only,
• · •~ crelllt
no •
ref,,
lnqutreet lef fill AVI.

By Oswald Jacoby

and Alan Sontag

Honeymooners Fielding and

2 BR lurnlshed trailer on ,,
crab Creak Rd., utilities
furnished. S225 month. 675:Ntl2.

'

Bad British bridge

0:00 ill. CZJ FLAMINGO ROAD

1

.......

FACE THE MUSIC
UPDATE NEWS
• LITTUHOUSEONTHE
PRAIRIE Young Albert lngallo
~BN

lea rna the joy of love, and the
pain of Ilea, wl'ltn he braga

THREE
BEORO.OM '
trailer, $165 morith 1
references required plus ,
deposit. Galllpolll Ferry .
675-6851.

u.oo

J-.

and his aon, ChrietopharO'Am·
bloae, dancers. Part I.
(1m
RICHARD SIMMONS

T~ l

133 ACRI!S of 'Woodland ad•
lolnlng Cdrnatalk 14,000.
lftw 5 p.m. 675-6916.
~

BRIDGE

ANOTHER LIFE
G.I!T SMART
.
• Cll JOKER'S WILO
MOLLYWODDSOUARES
(fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW

Guests: Jacquea D'Ambioae

m-5158.

43
'"''" tor Rent
2 BOR .. 1 111111 turn., farm
house on Jh~res. 11 mlln
South ot GalliPOlis of Ol!lo
Rt. 7, 1111r Gallipolis klckl.
12011 mo., plul utll. , Write
Willard lltntz. RI. 2 Box
162, Crown City, 01145623.

·
IIIACNEIL·LEHRER

ws
• BULLSEYE

7:30

2 bedroom trailer at
Gallipolis Ferry. S120 month plut utilities and deposit.
Cleared lot, reasonable, 1 675--4886.
tenth of an acre 2.15-5158.
2 bedroom trailer and
4 grave sites at Pine St. small furnished apart- ; .
Cemetery. Cecil Rice -"16- ments In Letart area. 882· •
1192.
3137 or882·3551.
Porlerbrook Sub-division
Restricted . After 5 446-8628 .

- - .... 11; . . . . . . . 110 , . _ , .... , - 10111.75 poe1peid

· NASHVILLE ON THE

PORT

2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
35
Loll&amp; Acreape
furnished,
adults
LOTS - Real nice campsite preferred . Deposit. m ·'
on Raccoon cr~k. all 2749.
utilities available, S300.
down, owner will finance, For rent, lOX 5() 2 bedroom
call alter 3 p.m., 25&lt;1-6413.
mobile hOme . Racine area .
4 LOTS

ALL_lN Till FAMILY

~~ TIC TAC DOUGH

BORNLOOER

12 • 65 mobile home &amp; lirge 3 bdr., 2 bath hou!le,
lot In suburbs of Racine, In- Gallipolis City SchOOl diS!.,
cluding stove and near HMC -"16-2957.
refrigerator. dinette set, all
new
wiring,
storage
I house In Eureka, fuel
building. $11000 Call 367furnance, full basement,
7811.
garden plot available. ~6547 .
.
1973 Crown Haven, 14&gt;&lt;65,
three bedroom, new carpet, 1971 Cameron, 14M64, FOR RENT: 3 bdr. fartwo bedroom, new carpet. mhouse on Rl. 160 near
1972 Champion, 12lc60, two HMC. NO pets, Will accept
bedroom, new carpet. 1976 children, air cond., yard
Cameron, 1b60, two and small garden
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new available. Ref . and dep .
carpet. 1970 PMC, 12x60, $200 mo. Call446·1527.
two bedroom, new carpet,
a &amp; s Sales, Inc.. 2nd and 2 bedroo'm h·o use,
VIand Street, Pt. Pleasant, basement, garage. No
WV Phone67H424.
children or pets. Deposit
ana leaoe required. S225
month. 614-678·:1513.
1980 mobile home 14 x70 3
bedroom , 1 '"' baths,
fireplace, all electric, 3 ton 3 BEDROOM hou!le. Phone
Amana air conditioner. 1- 675·3318 . .
372·4'1'16.
4 Bedroom hOUse between '
USED Mobile Horne. 576- Stauffer &amp; Goodyear .
2711.
Larile garage and yard .
576·2581 , 675-251.9.
12 x 65 3 bedroom furnished, good condition. 3 ROOM tumlshed cottage,
U500 . .U0-2660.
adults, no pets, utilities furnished, 675-2812.
'
1971 Darlan 12 x 65, 3
'
bedrooms. 1972 Crown HOUSE~ on 30th Street. '
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10 Adults preferred, live
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973 rooms and basement.
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms. Phone 675-&gt;1386.
1972 Invader 14 ·X 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Na5hau. 14 42
Molllle Homes
x 110, 2 bedrooms. B 11• S
tor Rent
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
51!. Pt. Pleasant, WV. M«J. home with garage .
Phone 675-4424.
and oarden, turn., Jn·
elUding wiSher and dryer,
1/lllh mile from North •
33 • Farms fOr Sale
Gallla High School on Rt. ~
FOR SALE · 6 acre farm. 160. Hat to Ill seen to be apwith houoe and tobacco preciated 388-8436.
base. 12x60 trailer In Crown
City area. $15,000. Call 25&lt;1- MOBILE HOME, no pets, •
6:»7 .
ret. required. 675-311110 bel·
ween 8:30a.m. 6:00p.m.
40'h acre Farm on stale Rt.
218. $49,000. Ph. Aller 6 For rent : furniShed apart·
Fowlers 245·9222.
ment, 1 bedroom; 2
bedroom mobile home with
BY owner 55 acre farm utilities paid. 1 child acwith 9 room house, barn, cepted. John ShHII, 3 and
and minerals. Morning one half miiH south of MidStar Area. S65,000. 949·26:» dleport on Rt. 7.
evening! .
2 bedroom trailer for rent.
100 acre farm Chester. 985- Brown's Trailer Park. m ·
4U6or667-6129.
3324.

1

I X] r I I ]

PrtntiJIIIwerhMe: (

PROGRAM

llllW FAMILY FEUD

I

I I (

WILD WILD WORLO OF

(J) MOVIE &gt;(COMEDY) •y,
11
WhoHy lloiH" 1180

BUY this 7 room energy efficient home In Addison
Miscellaneous
Pomeroy ar ea, salary Slone's welding &amp; small and forget about high Innegotlonable. Phone m · engine repa ir, lawn terest. We'll finance It atlO
percent! Bargain priced at
5427 alter 5:30PM.
mowers, chalnsaws, etc. 535,900. Pick the plan that
Nebo Rd ., 379-2636.
suits your finances. $2,000
Wanted lady to live ln. m ·
down S350.00 monthly
3704.
.
payment. SS,OOO down
SJOO.OO monthly payment.
18
Wanted to Do
SIO,OOO down $250.00 monThe Galli a-Meigs CAA Ceta
Program Is accepting ap- WANT to build tobacco thly payment. For more
plications for openings on barns, free estimates on detells call 675-3240 days,
the Ceta summer youth size. Call after 6 p.m. 25&lt;1· 367·7536 nights.
ployment program. 6307.
Economically disad NEW CABIN or small
vantaged youth between D.J .'s LAWN MOWER home, completely fur-.
the ages Of 14 and 21 who REP.AI R - On Neigh- nlshed, $3900. Caii.U0-0390.
are Gall Ia or Meigs County borhood Rd. , all makes serThe Gallia·Melgs CAA residents are eligible. Par- viced . Specializing In Lawn
CETA Program Is ac- tlclpants In the program Boy. Blades sharpened. Arkanas Traveler wishes
ceptlng application for will work 40 houro per week Call, .U0-4425 alter 5 p.m. to . sell Homestead on
openlngsontheCETAsum·
earn 53.35 per hour . Pic~ up and delivery Georges Creek Rd. 3 Qdr .
quality brick home,
mer youth employment
more Information, con- available.
basement, 2 fireplaces, gas
Elaine Armstrong at
program . Economically
disadvantaged youtn bet·
Gallipolis Ceta Intake HAVE YOUR Hoover heat, 2 car garage with approx. 'h Acre lot and barn.
ween the ages of 14 and 21
4171h 2nd Ave., or
repaired at Em- (SQ'sl . Serious inquires
who are Gallla or Meigs call .U0-2038, or contact sweeper
pire Furniture, call .UO· may call collect (501) 942county residents are Angle Grueser atthe Meigs 1«15.
7447.
eligible. Participants In the Ceta Intake Office, 117 w.
program will work «l hours
Pomeroy or call
Concrete &amp; Block laying, HOUSE FOR SALE 3
per week and earn $3.35 per 1992-2222. EEO Employer.
we do good work. Steps, bedroom, full basement,
hour . For more In ·
formation, contact Elaine Need experienced car· walk ways, driveways, por· Immediate possession 446Armstrong at the Gallipolis penter lor Interior and ex· ches, Patio, basements, 37-48 or 256-1903.
Free
CETA Inlake office, 417 1/ 2 terlor work on new home. garage, etc .
estimates, references call
2nd Ave., or call .U0·20J8, Phone &gt;158·1749.
2 bdr. home, modern kit.U0-3637.
or contact Angle Grueser
chen &amp; bath, on Rt. 7,
at the Meigs CETA Intake
priced In the S20's. 25&lt;1· 1413.
office, 117 West · 2nd St. , NEED someone to install Painting-Exterior, Interior
carpet.
Must
have
own
Pomeroy or call m ·2222 .
experlenced·379-2723 .
NEW 3 Bdrm. home wEEO Employer. Call to set tools. Call675·1317.
basement and garage In
up an appointment and
I will do day care services
time.
APARTMENT manager. In my home. week days and Plantz Subdivision. $4.5,000.
675-5104 or 675·53116.
day shift. I have a degree In
SWIM INSTRUCTOR The
child development. I live 4 Modified A-frame with 3
0 .0 . Mcintyre Park Babysi tter In my home, 112 miles past HMC on Rt. bedrooms, 2 baths, carDistrict Is now accepting days. 675-2275.
160 N. 535.00 week SSS.OO for peted, !lone circular
applications for a summer
two or $2.00 an hr. call .UO· fireplace, spiral stairs,
utility room. Private. 8
!wimmlng Instructor. In05&lt;16 •.
acres. 992-7741.
structor must nave a
current W.S.I. !Water Satley Instructor) card . Ex- 1!.!2'--...:S!!It!.!u~a!!tl~on!!s~W!!:a!!!n!!ltd~­ BABYSITTING In my 2 bedroom house, Iaroe lot,
perlence in teaching swim Gallla Rent·A-Mald Ser· hOme during summer men· lull size ba!lement. m -7791
Live close to GDC.
lessons is preferred. The vice for weddings, parties, ths.
weekdays after 4.
Phone .U0·2316.
instructor Will teach SWim etc. 245-9234.
lessons at the Kyger Creek
HAU L gravel, limestone, Six room house, basement,
Pool beginning June 8th
Repa
ir
or
remodeling
coal,
etc. Dencll Dunlap. garage. 1.2 acre!. Rose
through July 17th. Lessons
Hill. Upper forties. 614-678floor
ing,
doo·
r
s,
wall
work,
PhOne 67H2t5.
will be from 9 to 12 noon In
2513.
the morning aM 7:00 to paneling, ceiling, or floor
7:45 In the evening, Man· tile, siding. 992·2759.
Will do remodeling, pain·
day through Thursday with
tlng, plumbing, all work Large 3 bedroom home, 3
Friday as a ralndale. The Will do roofs, good rates, guaranteed, free estimate living rooms, formal dining
room, 2 built In kitchens. 2
classes will be offered to free estimates. Call after 5 675-~6 baths, 1 with shower. All
water babies, youth, and atm·5825.
fully carpeted. Lots of
adults. For more In·
and remodeling paneling. Lirge swimming
formation and to obtain an Will baby-sit In my home. Carpentry
and
roofing.
576:2989.
poQI In back . Seen by ap·
application, stop by the Racine area. 949-2891.
polotment only. 992-2-104 af·
Park District office located
INTERIOR ,and exterior ter 4 p.m. Large recreation
In the old Library at State
Street and Third Ave. or Will care for elderly In my pa inting, drywall, textured and laundry room .
private home . Good .ex· ceilings. Phone675·1573.
caii.U0-4612, ext.76.
perlence, reasonlble rat.,.
Beautllul three bedroom
ranch brick home In Raum
LPN'S/ RN'S Need per· Call667-6329 anytime.
Addition. Pomeroy, Ohio.
manent or tempory help In
Gas heat, central air. Call
our OR/ RR units, ex· Will do baby!lltlng In my
992-2571, 98H145 orl-687·
perlence In these home In Pomeroy. Child
specialized needed. MUst will have good care. Call
6429.
take calls. Pleaoe contact 992-6312.
21
BUIIntll
Personnel
Off l ce,
Opportunity
Racine, 2 plul bedrooms,
O' Bieness Hosp., Hospital Alterations · work guaranbath, storms, choice
Dr., Athens, Ohio 45701. teed. Reasonablo prices. LOG HOMES, Factory location, out of high water,
Deelershlp garden,
E.O.E.
Mary Tnabet, 1-304-773- Direct ,
workshop.
available,
Investment S30,ooo.oo. sttown by appt.
5651 .
required, unlimited Income 1-614-:135-6569.
GROUND KEEPER, Call
potential. Cell Mr. Walton
.U0·3615 between 1 p.m. and
1-800--1311-9528.
Sp.m.
THREI! bedroom hOUse,
family
room with fireplace,
Maney9oLoan
Insurance
tun lllument, · au ep$185.00 to l5llO weekly doing 13
mailing work. No ex· SANOY AND BEAVER In- FHA-VA-Cortvenllal Home PIIanctl and dl'aperlll.
perlence required . AP· · surance Co. hu offered Loanl, COiumbua Firtt 67H542alttr5p.m.
PLY: Circle Sales, P.O. Mrvlces for fire Insurance Mortgage Co.. 463 ~
Box 22A-D, Richmond Hill, coverage In Gallla County Ave., Gallipolis, Oh., -"16-, N - home, Glenwood,
NYlWI.
.
tor almost a centurv. 7172
wv. 736-517111ftwr 6 pm.
Farm, home and penonaJ
ProltlsiGIIat
Got some free time? Start property _coverages are 13
Mtlllle
""""·
your own buiiMM. Start available to meet In- --___,!lit~v~tce!!•=--.- :n
let lite
!lelllng Avon. Be your own dlvldual · Contact bOIS. Set your own hours. Kall Burlnon, vour ntltlll- COMMERCIAL and iil- PRICES RI!DUCI!D - UNCI
dull rial . photography. 1'11011111 ' - and tr~l
The lllrder you _.k, lilt bor and lflllll.
Phone • • ar -"16-7216 trelltra. Tlti · ST-.TI
more you' ll eern. For
MOIILI HOMIS. CALL
details, call 742-2354 or 7&gt;12· IF. YOU a,.. I non-smoker lftw4,.m.
....7572.
2755.
you may quality 10r IPICial
d 1acounta on your INCOMI TAX AND AC·
BabySitter IIHded In my ~ policy. Call COUNTING .RVICI •
hOme. 949-2897.,
or - Ray Hawk Call !446-7HI tor ap·
polntmentenvtlmt.
far
Mtlmate.
LICENSED PRACTICAL
NURSE RECEIVE FULL
PAY WHILE RECEIVING
APPROVED PHAR MACOLOGY TRAINING
Full·time positions for
L.P.N.'s. Excellent starling salary .... ~.82 + .40S
per hour plus. fringe
benefits (20.8%) . In se r vi c e orientation
follow ing employment.
CONTACT :
Personnel
Department, Galllpoll•
Develemental
Center,
Gallipolis, Oh -4.5631,
Telephone 614·.U0·1642.

IPIOi ~UNN,;I~N G!E~.)

CIJ&lt;III CIS NI!WI

·'

AN

1HII:OU6H iHE

AllllY GIIIFFITH 8HOW

'

C:HAR.HI

C &amp; F Cleaning Systems.

.........
...... " ...........

SOUN~ LIKE

THAT GIRL

3897.

TOBACCO PLANTS; &gt;1581524.

.•

OYDIIIAIYGuoot:Actroaa

. Downo ond Frank . Blair.
.
~~C.ptli&gt;nod; U.S.A.)
8:30 I.(Z) NICNEWB

GALLIA !;leanlnQ and
Rent-A-Maid Service Inc .•
Free Estimates, bonded,,,
Insured, phone 2.15-9234.
Cleaning by the week, month or contractual.

Old furniture, copper and
brass, kettles, split hickory
baskets, stone Iars with
names. .U0-3925.

ties, Gallla and surroun·

Garage Sale 924 1st Ave.,
June 18. 2. Bedspreads,
clothing ,
antiques,

-

.PIANO TUiifiNG, ant~ service, all makes' and
mOdels. Call Bob Grubb at
-·11 -"16-4525. ·Formerly wltn
Wards Keyb!Nird.

Old furniture and antiques
of all kinds. Call Kenneth
Swain, Gelllpolis, Ohio 25&lt;1·
1967.

clothing, doors, windows,

refrlg., storm windows,
babybed, misc. Off 141 on
Neighborhood Rd. 1 mile,

',

Prof[tlsiOnal
Services .

WANTED TO BUy :
GOLD,
SILVER,
Pl-ATINUM;-· STERLING·
COINS,
RINGS,
JEWELRY, MISC. ITEMS.
ABSOLUTE MARKET
PRICE GUARANl'EED.
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10 992-3476.

Yard Sale-Wed.·Thrusday,
June 3-4 9tlll? Furniture,

Club, PO Box 1823, summerville, SC 29483 or calll white house on right.
803·871 -985(), 24 hours.
Ground hog contest , first

Wanltd to Buy

· FIIOII

"*"' 1'111_.
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~P:•::::2::T:h:e:D:•:il:y:s:e:nt:in:e:l::::::'::::~~~::::~~--.;--~~~~~~ii~;p~iiiiii~~i8~~~::::~~~~~~~~----~~~~J~u~nt!!~. _
·Marrtqe lic.enses .
U:rp pa888p. . .
.rl·.
Mlrrlll• ll:&amp;u• .... lllued ~~~
.
.

Area
. d.e.a·.ths ._
].·
.

.

'

Robert L. King

. " ,'

Robert L. King, 'lill, Shade,' died
une:rpedediy Saturday morning at
O'Bleness Hoepital, Atheru!. .
Mr. King was bom at Pratts For~.
SO!) of the late Holley arid Mary Burson King. He ·was also preceded in
deathbyonebrother, ClaireKing.
He was a graduate of Shade High
School; Navy Veteran of the Korean
conflict; graduate of O.U. with a
B.S. degeee · in lndustrical
technology. He began his emplo~ent at O.U. in 1967. At the time
of his death he was director of the
physical plant division at 0. U.
He is survived by three brothers,
Dan and Dewey King, Rt. I, Shade;
Uoyd, Rt. 2, Po~eroy; fiancee, Kay
Walden, Athens; nine nieces and
nephews and three great nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Hughes
Funeral Home, Athens, with the
Rev. Cecil Cox officiating. Burial
wiU be in Burson Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
anytime after 4 p.m. Tuesday.
Military services will be conducted
at the cemetery by Athens Post
VFW.

Netta E. Mapes
Netta E. Mapes, 90, 163 Morris
Ave., Athens, died early Thursday
morning at O'Bieness Hospital,
Athens.
She was born at Cheshire,
daughter of the late Perry and Emma Jane Mulford Mapes. She was
also preceded in death by four
brothers, Charles, Lester, Jesse and
.Clarence Mapes and one sister, Ann
Shoemaker.
She graduated from Cheshire High
School in 1001; graduated from
Athens State Hospital School of Nursing in 1912; retired as supervisor of
nurses from Athens State Hospital
after 47 years of service.
She is survived by one nephew and
four nieces.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at I p.m. at the Hughes
Funeral Home, Athens, with the
Rev. John C. Free officiating. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7
to9.

Edwin H. Davis
t!dwin H. Davis, 74, Route I,
Langsville, (Danville) owner of a
bus dealership lor some 40 years,
died unexpectedly Saturday at the
Holzer Medical Center follOwing a
brief illness.
Mr. Davis was born Aug. 14, 1907
in Danville, a son of the late Onm

J - Jl!lellb Jlfhrl,ll, 0 1hl--e,
MJddleport village offlcllla urge
. . iDd BMda 1M H1Nl1. D. Mid- . ·re&amp;ldetlls' tD ,upport the' Ill! ee-mm
· dleport: .~ Jey Millet, u_ , current eipenae levy at the, electk!!\
Itt. J. a.llln, and Oatryl ~ · torn9n'Olr. 'I'hiiJ.mr,illllld .to pay
.. Lefebre, 21, ·Pt. Pleumlt; Deryl, for atreet lighting ariel.street l'eiUJ'
· Al1aa Wood, If, Ravennoood, and facloa.. ·
'
Jmet lAI&amp;hBolley,lt, Ravenawuod •.

.

and Sadie Mahoney Davis. He was
marriedDec.Jq, l927,inPomeroyto
the fonner Elnora Overly who survives.
' '
Also surviving are a aon:· and
daughter-in-law, Robert E. and
Dorothy Davis; a .granddl!ughter
and her husband, P~la and
Douglas Jude; a grandson and his
wife, Fred E. and Judy Davis, aU of
Danville. Four great-grandchildr'en
alsosurvive.
'
Besides his parents, Mr. Davis ·
was preceded iri death by two sisters
and a brother. .
He had been a member of the Dal!ville Wesleyan Church for :a! years: . .
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday at the Danville
Wesleyan Church with Dr. R. D.
. ..rr-.
Brown officiating. Burial will be In
""""' 'I l
the Danville Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland anytime after 2 p.m. today
untilll a.m. Tuesday when the body
will be taken to the church to lie in
state. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 2 to 4
PRESENTED A1TRAcrJVE GIFT- Fred W. Crow, -ted, wu
presented a haw!made waWug sUek, made frvm 11111ple, by Eugene Fluk
and 7to 9 p.m. today.
of Rutlaad. Fred Is plannlq to Die die beaatjlully dOIIe cane oa.- ~
about town. FIDk make&amp; aU sizes aad lllapee at waWug 1Ueb, iome oat
Budd Junior Darst
of maple, blckory, wUd cherry ud dogwood. Price olllls euea l'Uie
Budd Junior Darst, 50, died Satur- · frem $50 to $35. Fillk II DOt reJpGIIIible for tbe sale 411 any of tbe Clllel, bat
has given away live dozen. Crew wu mot:e tllan pleued with die glf18Dd
day at his Middleport Route I, home.
It couldn't have come ala better Ume IliaD oa bla birthday.
Mr. Darst was preceded in death
by his mother, Gertie Ellen Ward · - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Darst.
She is survived by her husband,
Surviving are his father, the Rev. Allen Hartley; a son, Kenneth. W. BlackwOOd, Rt. t, Pomeroy; one .
daughter, Esta Taylor, Tiffin, Ga.;
Budd Lawrence Darst, Cheshire; sill
Hartley, Pomeroy; three grand- one granddaughter, Kristina, Tiffin;
children, Lawrence Eimer, Mid- children , Kenneth G. Hartley,
one sister, Evelyn Thomas, Aman-.
dleport; David Len, ~omeroy; Hex
Pomeroy;
Suzanne
Hartley,
Denver,
da, Ohio; one brother, Jack Warner,
Allen, Langsville; Steven L. Sayre,
Colo., and Lorena Mikesell, Jackson.
Rutland; Mrs. Pearl (Patricia
Lynn) Smith, Pomeroy; Mrs. Bob Youngstown, and several nieces and . Graveside services will be held
Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. at Wella
(Ellen) McClure, Pomeroy; nine nephews.
Funeral
services
will
be
held
W
eclCemetery
with the Rev .. Ray Price
grandchildren; five sisters, Mrs. Ernesday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel officiating. In charge of services is
shel (Katie Ellen) Curfman,
Cheshire; Mrs. Burdell (Dorothy) with the Rev. W. H. Perrin of- the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Rife, Ridgeway; Mrs. Roy (Annie) ficiating. Burial will be In Beech Albany.
Lemley, Rio Grande; Mrs. Ebner Grove Cemetery. Friend may call at
(Mary) Sigman, Cheshire, and Mrs. the funeral home after 7 p.m. Mon- Practice session set
day.
Dayton ·(Sarah) Spencer, Chester,
The Voices of Uberty will hold a
and several nieces and nephews.
practice session at' 7:4S p.m.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Gladys W. Blackwood
Tuesday night at the Pomeroy
Tuesday at the Freewill Baptist
United Methodist · Church In
Gladys Warner Blackwood, 83, preparation for a concert to be given
Church in Middleport with the Rev.
Harrisonville,
'died Saturday on Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
Noel Herrmann officiating. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. evening at Veterans Memorial
Friends may call at the Ewing Hospital following a lengthy Ulness.
She had been a patient at Crest- •
Funeral Home anytime.
view Nursing Home, Lancaster, for Veterans Memorial
two years and for the past year had
Saturday Admissions-Bertha
Evelyn J, Hartley
been a resident of Pomeroy Health Diehl, Pomeroy; Kenneth Lawson,
EVelyn Julia Fennimore Hartley, Care Center. A native of Mei&amp;' Syracuse.
T/,121 Union Ave., died this morning County she was the daughter Of the
Saturday
Discharges-Dora
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
late Ernest and Emma Gotchall Smith, Angela Van Cooney.
Mrs. Hartley was the daughter of Warner. She was also preceded in
Sunday Adnli.-lon.-Ciyde Henthe late Harry and Barbara Zeisler death by her husband Robert S. denon, Pomeroy; Ruth E~ ·
Fennimore. She was also preceded BlackwOOd.
Portlal'ld; J. J. Cremeana, Mlcfin death by a son, Robert R. Hartley
She was a member of the dleport; Evelyn Hartley, Pomeroy;
and a brother, Carl Fennimore.
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church Lu1a Phlllipe, Pomeroy.
She was a member of the Trinity and the Pomeroy Senior Citizens.
Sunday Discharge-Ruth Bailey.
Church and Pomeroy 0. E: S.
She is survived by one son, Cecil L.

p

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'

•

••

•

•

.

'~-

.

--.

- -~

'JUNE

'

·EUREKA

~~ - - ~..--

,.

SALE ·sTARTS
TODAY
'
.
'

... .

.
.

While quanti!lea la1t. Quantity rlghti reserved . We ore not
~lbi• for typog,a,hlcal errors. Sorry~ no dealars.

*The.Ideal Vac for the
wOrn~ who care$
about her carpet.
*Great for people with
back problems and ·
phySical ailments

'

'

.

.

. NRION'IIIO, nAt

SA VII

'5000
Reg. '217•
Model ·
5040

A Spectacular
Value Only ...

'169'

5

•Original

Blend

Come In for a free
·

4LII.

npwl

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

-$

''

NILION'IIIO,

•ut

'

IRIVY TRill·

WALL. TO WALL

liliES-,

IURIERS

MONDAYI JUNE 1st -

SATURDAY1 JUNE 6th

The
Farmers Bank
is The Place ,.
for .all of
•
your savings
needs.

.....

NILSON'S 110,
NILSON'S IIG.

WAFFELOS·
.\

l"'tot!'IIIO, S1M
'

•S. ....ned with !Jfflflclai
Maple Syrup flavor •

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REGULARLY PRICED. MERCHANDISE STOREWIDE.

NO LA Y·A·WAYI- ALL SAUl PINAL

POIIEIOY, OHIO

Farmers
Bar.i&lt;
Your Community
Owned
Bank
.
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TRUT

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36 OJ.

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ADDITIONAL SAVINGS OF UP TO 50%
ON SELECTED ITEMS.
SHOP .NOW and SAVE

TillY

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NILSON'S
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