<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14592" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/14592?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-11T10:34:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45699">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/d2039ed11840c4ce4d78d431d5369617.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1fd050fffdfccdf78ba837a7d1ec75f0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45538">
                  <text>-

----~- ·--- ·---~

Pap-lo-The Daily sentinel

I

Area deaths

Russell G. Bailey
RusseU G. Bailey, 86, Route 1,
Middleport, former busine~n.
died unexpectedly Monday at his
home.
· Mr. Bailey was hom Dec. 31, 1~
in Meigs County, a son of the late Edward F. and Melissa RusseU Bailey.
He was also preceded in death by his
wife, Bessie Gardner Bailey in 1980,
four brothers and four sisters.
A member of the Bradbury Church of Christ, Mr. Bailey was a
veteran of World War I and belonged
to Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion. He was a retired
farmer and for a number of years
had operated dairy shops in both
Middleport and Bradbury.
Surviving are two daughters and
sons-in-laws, Lois and Kenneth
McElhinney, Middleport, and Fauna
and Keith Nelson, Pickerington; a
son and daughter-in-law, Joseph R.
and Mildred Bailey, Route I, Middleport; two grandsons, Russell
McElhinney, Orlando, Fla., and
David Nelson, Pickerington; three
granddaughters, Kathy Hood, Middleport, and Terri and Usa Nelson,
Pickerington, and three greatgrandsons.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
the Rev. Phillip Ling, Columbus, officiating. Burial will be in Middleport Hill Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime.

VoUO,No.st

.

Board has lack of quorum

Controllers denied an attorney
(Continued from page 1)
them usc the controlling board to general's proposal to hire a Columexhaust what's left in their bus law firm for $15,000 to complete
budgets," said Aronoff, head of the title searches for property in ADen,
Senate Finance Committee. Such Van Wert and Mercer counties to be
savings are needed by the panel, acquired by the Ohio Rail Trantrying to offset budget deficits stem- sportation Authority. They also
ming from lower-than-anticipated rejected an Environmental Protection Agency request to spend $45,1Dl
state tax receipts, he said.
Two other requests were rejected to continue a contract with a con·
suiting firm lor a Great Miami River
by the board Monday.
study.

'

(,}allipolis residents Glenn and
Charlotte Preston Christy, Is from
&lt;?U'cleville and will be handling
features, spot news events Uke the
Big Bend Regatta. and the Meigs
County Junior Fair, as well as some
duties on the Tribune lifestyle section, This Is her first experience in
the news field.

coal in 11174, the coal h8B been trucked 11 miles to a
clean COil ailo at the Meip No. I Mine, and then loaded
on an overlalld conveyor that leads to the General
JameiJ M. Gavin generating plant of Ohio Power Co.
near Cheshire.
Olarlea A. HeBer, president of Ohio Power, said
rehabilitation of the C&amp;O ran line should assist Vinton
County coal operators by giving them a more efficient
method of moving coai to their markets.
"Ohio Power Is committed to the use of washed, consistent quality Ohio COli! which meets the appropriate
environmental standards," Heller said. "In looking to
Center. .
. the future, the company, . through its subsidiary,
· He explained that since the mine began producing
Franklin Real Estate Co., has optioned land near Dun-

.,

.

•'

' &lt;

·

Reagan derails plant plans

7

NEWARK, Ohio - Plans for a $60 milllon alcohol fuel plant have
been sidelined because of cuts in the Reagan adnlinistration's federal
loan guarantee program.
Charles L. Knoop, president of Agra-Fuel Group of Worthington,
said the construction project would be delayed up to two years to see if
money eventually becomes available.
Federal mlsg!vinga about financing such a plant, combined with uncertainty about alcohol and gasoline prices, led the adnlinistration to
withdraw the funding, Knoop said. Without federal funding, $30 million
In equity would be needed for the facility, be said.

.Police probe murder case
'

l•

GRDNIIBURG, Pa. ..,. state pollee are lnvallt!ating the death of a

man whole mutilated body

wu found near Nonnalville In Fayette
CoUnty.
The dei:apilated body of Richard A. WWard, 20, of Indian Head, was
found Monday night In Springfield TOWIIIhlp.
PoUce aald the victim's head and anns had been savered. They were
recovered In Salt Lick Township In Fayette County.

Banks receive official approval

Meigs County happenings ••

WASHINGTON- U.S. banb have received approval to establish intemati~ banking facilities In the United States In an effort to attract
foreign banking~-

OURIUT

The facilities, authorized Tuesday by the Federal Reserve Board,

LOWWSTRE

wtll be free 11 domestic Interest rate ceilings and reserve requlrementa but would be able to aceept only foreign deposits and ellend credit

Our Reg. 13.96•v•- ( 1)

896

The state's proposed highway plan
from the new Ravenswood Bridge
Into Meigs County is a "total waste
of money."
This was the charge leveled by
Fred Crow, past president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
during Tuesday's chamber meeting
at the Meigs Inn.
Crow said be had directed a letter
to David Weir, director of the Ohio
Department of Transportation. In
his letter Crow asked, if the
legislature passed the gasoline lax
what could Meigs County expect to
receive in the way of highway
projects or improvements?
Weir's answer to Craw's letter was
read at the meeting. The letter read
as follows: "If the legislature
provides a substantial increase in
highway revenue the department

: .. •ei'J#{!J::~F;;

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Former Gov. Ray Blanton was convicted
Tuelday nlgllt of conspiracy, extortion and mail fraud charges In connection with liquor license kickbacks, just hours after the federal jury
convicted two of his onetime aides.
Blanton sat In stony silence as jury foreman Hubert G. Murren read
the verdict, finding the fonner governor guilty on one count of extortion, one COWJt of conspiracy and ntne counts of mail fraud.

WED., THURS., FRI., SAT.

THE. SAVING PLACE

•'

former governor

standing throughout their degree
program.
Miss Bush's high school activities
included the National Honor Society,
scholarship teams, Who's Who
Among American High School
students, French ClUb and candidate
for girls' state.

I

(3)

......,
RAT lAlii

Our Reg. 6. 96 Easy to

apply, no painty odor.

Meets Wednesday

The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
Two divorces were granted and America, will meet at the hall at 8
two others were di~solve~ in Meigs p.m. Wednesday. Opal Hollon and
Dorothy Myers will be hostesses.
County Common Pleas Court.
Crystal S. Jewell was granted a
divorce from Pearlie F. JeweU, Jr.;
Meet Tuesday
Mary Bates from Ralph Bates.
Marriages dissolved were Unda
CHESTER--Chester Township
Jarrell and Archie Jarrell; John Trustees will meet Tuesday, June 9,
Paul Hood and Kathy Sue Hood.
at 7:30p.m. at the town hall.

·E nd marriages

.

only to foreign banks and co!l)Ortations.

Senator says to hold money

•

Faces
murder
charge
PINEVILLE, W. Va.- Joey Hall,
'!1, Ewington, Is being held in the
Wyoming County JaiJ. here in lieu of
$50,000 bond on a murder charge.
According to wire reports, HaD is
charged in the April 23 shooting
death of James Laxton of Ocesna,
W. Va. Also charged is RusseU
Greene of Man, W. Va., who is free
on $20,1Dl bond.
Luton's buUet riddled body was
found In a car along W. Va. Rt. 10
near Campus in Wyoming County.

plans to actively pursue reconstruction of SR 338 to the bridge. The
project would upgrade the facijity
by improving the existing alignment, grading and widening for load
carrying capacity."
It was Craw's opinion .along with
those attending that tne proposed
plan was a waste. Members felt a
new highway should be constructed.
that will connect with U. S. 33 or SR 7
at Five Points.
A meeting with Weir, a representative of the highway department at
Marietta and a representative of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,( it owns land in the area of
the bridge ), wiD be held to discuss
the road to the bridge. Date and time
of the meeting will be announced
later.
A highway to the bridge has top
priority'as far as the Meigs Regional
Planning Commission is concerned,
Thereon Johnson, a planning commission member said.
Attending the meeting were Crow,
Jim Frecker, president;, John An·
derson, Ted Reed, Bill Quicke~
Susan Baer, secretary; Phil KeUy,
Dale Warner, Pat O'Brien, Don Matthews of the the Columbus Dispatch;
Ernest Wingett and Frank Cleland
of Racine; Ralph Welker and Ron
Ash of the Ohio Power Co.

Applications available
Applications to apply for a
Carleton CoUege scholarship are
available to residents of Syracuse
who plan to attend coUege this fall.
Applications may be obtained by
contacting Milton Varian, secretary
of the Carleton CoUege Board d
Trustees. The deadline for submitting applicationss is June 23.

WASHINGTON- Sen. Robert Kasten, R-Wis., liys he has a ~to
get govenunent agencies to curb waste and fraud: hold back some of
their money.
Kasten and II other senaloni are 8pOIISOI'inc a bill which would
. withhold 2 percent of an agency's budget at the a1art of a fiscal year.
To get the funciJ, an agency would have to present Congress with a
plan to save an equal amount by eilmlnallng waste and abuse.

Soviet Union will buy~
LONDON - 1be Soviet Union will be aUowed to buy from the United
states an addlti~ 6mllllon metric tons of lll'Bin to be shipped before
Sept. •. U.8. offlcialll8id Tuesday. ~Y said the Soviets will be able
to buy "reuc11111ble" amounll of grain after that dale.
The 1111l01111Ce11lt II the U.S. Embusy here followed nearly two
da)'l 11 talb between a U.S. team lead by 'Undenecretary of
Agriculture Seeley G. Lodwick and Soviet Deputy Foreign Trade
Mlnlaler Borta ~· The laiia were held II the Soviet Trade
million In London.

ELBERFELDS

minlllartolclaqllllll_.atanewacellf--..eTueaclay.
,
...U Uf*11111d the deltructlon of the W t reactor outsldeBqhdadSundaydldnotputanendtotheArabnuclearpotential.

SEE OUR SEUCTION OF FATHER'S DAY CARDS
ON THE 1st R.OOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY .

the......,.

.. ....., ..., T!ullday.

Pldllldllltll ....... ~.ew~.-.
J11111i II tlllllllr 11JL a.... Gll'llll. Jill

1• II• laM IIIII II jlil(lll1&amp;

1\a..,, .......1 HtlllitllllllOIIIItki , . , . . , . 5 ,,

I I ? IOMtPa

to O'Bleneu Memorial HOIIpltal,
Athena, where they were both
treated and released for cut. and
brullel.
lllmace 1fll moderate to both
vellldel and PUllen was cited Cot left

.

Weather ·
'

.

rl- rrtdlrll•-atillllill_l!llr- hlrFftdl1

::.:::·:::., I

-~··fraU.._

Although Dr. Lewis D. Telle,
surgeon, recently resigned from his
duties at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, the hospital still has the
general surgery services of Dr.
Johnny A. Brawner.
Dr. Brawner joined the medical
staff at the local hospital about a
year ago. He is a graduate of the
University of the Philippines and
completed a two year residency in
obstetrics and gynecology at the
Philippine General Hospital before
completing a rotating internship at
St. Vincent Charity Hospital in
Cleveland.
Following this, he served as a
fellow in graduate training in
general surgery at the Cleveland
Clinic where he eventually served as
chief resident. He then served an additional year as a feUow In general
surgery research at the Cleveland

4,Ptmeroy.
Injured in the accident were
Fisher and a paaenger in his auto,
Stephanie Snyder, '!1, Pomeroy.
Both were taken by private vehicle

ClEVELAND - The l11ll11ller lelected 'l'llelday night In the Ohio
Lalh1'7 'ldallriiiiJII "Tbe Number''ll•
'l'llllro~MrJ ....,an.d - - ".17,174.10 fram
Cll1
the ....... L«ttrJ all!c!el" llld ... prier to tbt dra~ tolaled
...... IIIII bolda; crl •bike tk1bU are Gltled to share'

.......

VMH still has
general surgeon

Two persons were injured In a twovehicle aCcident in Meigs County
Tuesday, according to the GallaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
·
The patrol said a southbound
vehicle driven by Kimberly L.
PuUen, 23, Marietta, repo~y slid
sideways on a steep grade of Columbia Twp. Rd. 13 at 2:15 p.m. and
collided with a northbound auto
driven by Michael L. Fisher, 30, Rt.

Winning Ohio lottery number

.' '

Dr. Johnny Brawner

In June, 1976, he completed a year
of fellowship in surgical metabolism
at Lutheran Medical Center in
Cleveland devoting most of that time
to research work in critical care
medicine.
The local surgeon was awarded
first. pri~e in the clinical research
category in the yearly surgical
research essay contest sponsored by
the Cleveland Surgical Society. He Is
licensed by the Ohio State Medical
Board and is certified by the
America Board of Surgery.
Dr. and Mrs. Brawner have .. :'
children, Jennifer and Johnny, Jr.,
and reside in their new home near
Royal Oak Park in Chester Township.
Dr. Brawner's office is located in
Veterans Memorial Hospital with office hours from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.

Two hurt in Meigs accident

TEL AVIV, llrael- Prime Minister Menachem Begin warned that
the llraell altadl on Iraq's nuclear reactor will be repealed if the
Jewllh natiCIII.ll threllened qaln by an enemy Arab nation' a pla1111 to
dneloplllclear-..-.
.
"Inel wiD not· tolerate any enemy to develop weapons of 111818
deltruetiGn aplnlt the peGple of larael," the 87-year-old prime

'

(

~Clinic .

More attacks may come·-Begin

~
...

larger than the existing plant and will enable the plant
to improve refuse handling, wash all extremely small
pieces of coal known as "fines" and improve the consistency of the clean coal quality. At·the same time, the
plant's capacity will be increased from 600 to 700 tons
of raw coal per hour.
Lester said the new addition will enable the
preparation plant to yield a higher percentage of clean
coal. A special circuit is being installed to clean the
small or fine coal.
He also noted the improvements are necessary to
minimize the cost of preparing coal and delivering it to
the power plant and could aUow for possible expansion
ofthe mine in the future .

Chamber· upset
with proposal

Jeff, 20, is from the Toledo area
and began working as a contributor
to the OU Post, the campus daily,
last year. He later joined the staff
and wiD be the Post city editor when
he retlli'I)S to school in the fall.
Jeff will handle the police beat and
some of the city and county govern- •
ment functions fo: the local papers.

Miss Bush wins scholarship
Peggy Bush, daughter of Charles
and Marie Bush, Racine, bas been
named recipient of a Rio Grande
CoUege scholarehip. The in district
scholarship which p&amp;Yli full tuition
for the entire four yeare is valued at
$7,1Dl.
In order to maintain the award,
students must meet high academic

.
das in Vinton County, near the C&amp;Q line, whic)J would
be the site of a coal preparation facility, if justified by a
feasibility study which is currently being carried out."
Le~ter sajd the Raccoon loadout will be able to fill
rail cars at the rate of 2,000 tons per hour and
estimated that more than 50 care could be loaded In
three hoUI'!I. Company officials anticipate one
trainload of coal being delivered from Raccoon to
Gavin each work day.
At the S81,1le time, Lester pointed out the Raccoon
plant will have a major addition to its coal preparation
facillties which wiU result in a more consistent quality
cO&amp;! for the Gavin operation.
Lester noted · the 126 by 104-foot addition will be
.

SOuthern Ohio Coal CGmPan~. 11 sulieldlary 11 Ohio
Power CGmpany, today II1IIOIIl1cecl a $31 million 1m- ·
prvvement JII'OIII'8IIl for the Raccoon No. 3 Mine In Vinton County. .
Harry Lester, vice president arid general manager 11
Southern Oblo Coal, said that program Includes construction 11 a railloiadout and a major addition to the
mine's COil preparation plant.
Lester saki 'I:Gmpletion 11 the kiadout and upgrading
of the rail line by the C&amp;Q Railroad will ellmlnate the
need to move aome 110 loaded coal trucks each day
ICI'OIIII State Route 124 through Wilkesville and Salem

Controlling hoard

Gifts, gift wrap and thoulZhtful Father's Day
cards by Hallmark. Put tfiem all together .·
with your love to make Sunday, june 21
·
your Dad's best Father's Day ever!

15 Cenl5

Coal .company plans major project
OVP news departmen·
. .t ·h as
•
summer mterns

Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion will meet Tuesday, June 16.
Members will vote on new col)stitution and by-laws and there wiD
be installation of new officers.
Dinner will be served at 7 p.m.
with the meeting to follow at 8 p.m.
All members are welcome to attend.

1 section, 14 Pages

At Raccoon No. 3 ·mine

Fred McNabb, 79, Amanda, Ohio,
died Monday mornirig at Lancaster
Fairlield County Hospital.
Mr. McNabb was born June 14,
1901 in Mason, W.Va., the son of the
late Zern and Mary Jane Nicholson
McNabb. He was preceded also in
death in 1974 by a daughter, Ml'!l.
Jean Cox.
Mr.McNabb owned and operated
shoe repair shops in Lancaster, New
Lexington and Amanda 18 years.
He is survived by his wife, Eva
Johnson McNabb; two sons, Dallas
G. McNabb, Lancaster, and Ray R.
McNabb, Laurelville; three ·
daughters, Mrs. Audrey Balthaser,
Two new faces wiD be represen- ternship as part of the Ohio VaUey
Lancaster; Mrs. Homer (Eleanora)
Stewart, Amanda, and Mrs. Everett ting the editorial departments of the Publishing Co.'s internship program
(Donna) Blauton, Ringgold, Ohio; 21 Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Pomeroy- with its three daily newspapers.
grandchildren, 28 great grand- Middleport Sentinel, Pl. Pleasant
The interns are EDen Christy, who
children; one brother, Joe McNabb, Register and Sunday Times-Sentinel wiD be a junior at OU this faD, and
Pomeroy; one sister, Mrs. John this swruner.
Jeff Grabmeier, who wiD· be
The two interns, both journalism graduating from-the Athens campus
(Laura) Berry, San Diego, Calif.
·
Funeral services will be held Wed· majors from Ohio University, wiD be next year.'
nesday at I :30 p.m. at the Taylor covering various aspects of the
Ellen, 20, the daughter of former
Funeral Home, Amanda with the newsroom operation during their inKatharine Fischer
Rev. John DeMint officiating. Burial
Veterans Memoria.l
Word has been received of the will be in Floral Hills Memory Gar·
death of Katharine Fischer, Cran- dens, Lancaster. Friend may call at Will turn off water
Admjtted-Robert Lewis, · Mid·
berry, N. J., Monday, June 8, after a the funeral home at anytime.
dleport; Edna Parsons, Racine; EtThe water in lower Middleport, ta Mae Ellis, Pomeroy; Carl Hobart
beginning at Mill St., will be off for a Rairden, Hartford; Steven Stout,
period of two to three hours for Middleport; Laurence A. Richie, ·
A special meeting of the Meigs group concerning a disability lear- necessary repair this evening begin- Portland; Leon Gray, Mason.
Local School District Board of ning class in the district last school ning at 10 p.m. according to Ann
Discharged-Winnie Daii~y. Paul
Education scheduled for Monday year were scheduled to address the Bailey an employe of the Middleport 'Burns, Scott Denney, Bertha Diehl,
Robert Lewis.
night failed to materialize due to the board. The board also was scheduled Water Co.
to act upon several resignations.
lack of a quorum.
Those appearing for the meeting
On hand to explain and demon·
were
Carol Pierce and Larry
strate services received by the
OPEN DAILY 10.9; SUNDAY 1-6
'
district were several represen· Powell. Board members not ap'
tatives of the Southeastern Ohio pearing were Dr. Keith Riggs,
Voluntary Education Cooperative Robert Snowden and Richard
and representatives from a parental Vaughan.

CPR classes will be given by Tuppers Plains Emergency Squad on
Wednesday, June 17, and Thursday,
June 18 at the f1re house in Tuppers
Plains beginning at 7p.m.
The classes are free of charge and
arc for anyone wishing to learn life
saving measures. Those who wish to
register for the classes are to call
667-3941 or667·3&amp;14.

entine

-- •c••~v·r~•·~ht••~·~H~I-· ----~~----~~~----~-~~---~~~-~~--~-~--~·-~P~o~m~e;r~o~v~.M~I~d~d~le;p~o~ri~,;O~h~io~·~W~ed::n:es:d:a~y~,J~u~n:e~I~0~,1!98~l~-----~--~------------------_:A~M:u:•':•m:":•:•~•·~·~-N:•:w~sp:•:P•:_•

Fred McNabb

Meets June 16

at y

e

long illness.
Mrs. Fischer was the daughter of
the late R. D. and Uly Theiss Brown.
She is survived by her husband,
Herbert B. Fischer, two sons, Herbert and Frederick, two grandchildren, Christopher and Susanne,
aU of New Jersey; one sister; Mrs.
M. G. Simon (Lena Brown),
Albuquerque, N. M.
Local relaties Include cousins,
Mae Mora and Faye Wildermuth.
Funeral services wiD be held in N~w
Jersey.

Offer CPR classes

•

11center.
Mr. 8111

11111 patrol invlltipted a OIIHir
Cl'llh In Gallil County 'l'llelday 111111'-

U ., ... a,ucselalhl

report, Garland
L. 8helll, .. Rt. 1, RaVeiWwoud,

Itt
...............,_..... ...,......,.Bill __
., ......

....

110 PLAYTHING-....., ... AlP 111111, t

=·=~~:laP
Plea •lsal

llfllll. . lll):

IIIII

t

CnntiO In,_» C

. . . . . . .,
tllllr,au PP .......... Oe rhl.

1 II

t v-pi I ........c'' URIIJQe.

nlnc·
Aceordin&amp; to the

the right side of the road and overturned on its top.
Sheets was not injured and his
auto was moderately damaged.

Devrick wins
mayor's race
Cecil F. Devrick won the Mason
W.Va. mayoral race Tuesday.
'
Devrick, who ran on the Citizens
Ticket, defeated two challengti'S
Charles R. Blake, of the Peopl~
Ticket, and Jackson F. Fowler of the
Progreaaive Ticket.
Dm'ick received 135 votes, Blake
got 84 and Fowler received 51 yotes
In the colmcil race ~ ·
.Raynes and H. Ross ~ of th&lt;
Plopiw Ticket and RuueU H. Bll rton, Richard Ohllnger and T&lt;·rry M.
Heney 11 the Cllilena 'l'i ·•et won

111111.

All Incumbent councilmen who
ran for re-election were def•ted.
W.VL, was lutbound on .CR I at
RecOI dw Loll Test WQ1 re10:10 a.m . ..., Ilia vehicle went~ election.

j

�I

Wednesday, June 10,1981

Commentary
•

-

'

,.

...

5

The rich according
John KeMeth Galbraiui, whose
memoirs are receiving the acclaim
that is their due as a literary and
anecdotal festival, has just
published his 823rd attack on "the
rich," though I confess there may be
some around I haven't read. It is
called "The Uses and Excuses for
Affluence." It makes, really, only
one solid point, but it is a point worth
examining.
'
Mr. Galbraith gives us, first, a lit·
tie history, The social philosophy of
the 18th and early 19th century
proceeded on the assumption that
some people were simply supposed
to be rich, as were their firstborn
sons. The principle of primogeniture
had prevailed for many years. But
it, of course, was upset by the industrial revolution, when it transpired that anybody could be rich. All
you had to do was strike oil or invent
a better mousetrap. I leave out as
irrelevant, though Galbraith does
not, the accumulation of wealth by
such legal and illegal larceny as
bribing legislatures, robbing banks

and ownlilg monopoly television
stations in Austion, Texas. There
evolved what we know as the theory
of Social Darwinillm, the notion that
tn be rich was to be a biologically
superior being. That qusint theory
hadafiingattheturnofthecentury,
but was neatly punctured by experience, and most deftly buried by
the aphorism of Chesterton, to the
effect that 11 men start digging
simultaneously, and the one that
strikes coal becomes Lord Northumberland.
During the New Deal, Mr.
Galbraith remarks, there evolved
something along the lines of a
philosophy of a debt owed by the rich
to the poor. That's when our great
foundations flowered, and one thinks
of such names as Carnegie, MeDon,
Rockefeller, Harriman, and so on.
What is now happening, says
Galbraith, is that these rich are
dying out, and the new types are
asking that economic policy be reordered in order to a) help the poor, b)
revitalize industry, c) end unem-

J-------------------------.
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cuurt S tr~t

Pumt'roy, Ohio
ll~lff.!llt

OfVOTF.DTOTHE INTEREST OF THE: MEIGS-MASON AREA

~rb

tS:m~ ~._.,..I"'"""

qjv

o:: t. =

ROBERT l. WINGETT

production of pornography. That he.
wants the defense bill because be is,
loaded with airplane stocks. And
that he Ia only interested in the clean
air bill because he suffers from asthma.
But the misanthropic view of
human motives is not reaDy reliable,

not even in a sinful world. I can
product a Carthllllan monk who haB
given away all his worldly gOOds,
and Ls .in favor of Kemp-Roth. And to
desire that everyone should be
relieved of the eldBtlng heavy burden of taxation Ls not to uk Congress
for s~ial f?eiJefits merel)l for one's ·

self. No one overhearing
bargaining seuloo between Mr. ~
Galbraith and his pubillhen WOUld ,
justifiably conclude that Mr.
Galbraith puts forward his ~ ,
with other inotlvatl(lll8 than those
consl.stent with healthy, and Donna!, ·,
appetites.
·
~
.

.

.

.

BOB HOEFLICH
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt&gt;ws Edllur

A . MEMHEH nl 11w A:o.sudah·d Pn·~~. Inland Daill Prt'ss A~Mif'i.atiun and th l!
Amt•man Nt' "'"llllpt'r PultliNhrrs Assufia tinn.

I.E'ITf:R.'\ ~)F OPIM~J:~ wrt· l'tkumt·d. Thry shnu ld tw lt•ss th:.n .100 " 'ttrds Inn". All
li'ltt·r~ art· .~uhJ.t'l"l ln nhttn~ . and mu~ t tw Nifllnt•d vtlth nllmt·. .11ddrt~s und t~lt'phnnt•
~111m~·r. Nu unstjl[nt:d. hih·Mi 14'111 h.· puhll.~ht-d . Lt•Ut•rs ~httu!d tw in ~uod la!ilt . addrno.,in,~t

I.~~Ut ' '· llltljll'l"'iltllllhltt,.,

But how much will
it cost the states?
While President Reagan Ls deftly fitting a noose around the neck of each of
the country's governors, the intended victims are celebrating the forthcoming hanging as a major advance in federal-slate relations.
That's the most appropriate way to describe the governors' reaction to the
White House plan to transfer from federal to state government the responsibility - but not adequste funds - for adminl.stering scores of domestic
social programs.
What is euphemistically described as "the federal-state partnership" has
in recent decades been based in large measure upn a lopsided arrangement
under which the states have only a token role in running programs
established, regulated and financed by the national government.
The slates "administer" those programs in the same fashion that most
people "adminl.ster" medicine to themselves: They carefully follow the
directions on the label and are terrified of any deviation from the doctor's
prescription.
With a history of being pushed around by the federal government, the
governors were understandably jubilant when Reagan aMounced plans to
consolidate many "categorical grant" programs into "block grants" given
to the slates with far fewer restrictions.
Because the governors (and state legislators) have been clamoring for
such discretionary authority for years, they lunged at Reagan's offer without examining the price tag.
The White House proposed to consolidate 84 "categorical" programa, funded this year with $14.7 billion from the federal tr~a sury. into six "block
grants" that would receive $11.2 billion in financial support from
Washington next year.
The governors always have claimed they would gladly accept a 10 percent
reduction in funding in return for flexibility, arguing that compliance with
irrelevant, misguided and trivial federal regulations costs at least that
much.
The Reagan proposal embodies a cut of me than 30 percent, however,
without even adjusting the figures upward to compensate for inflationary
pressure on the economy.
Even the National Governors' Association and the National Conference of
State LegislAtures have belatedly recognized that "the administratioo has
proposed a substantial cutback in the federal involvement in intergovernmental domestic programa in both the near and long term."
Mayor Richard Hatcher of Gary, Ind., expresses the same view in pithier
terms when he warns of "deep budget cuts dressed up to look like block grants and sent to state capitals."
The programs being folded into block grants involve many of the nation's
most delicate social issues - including elementary and secondary
education, health services and preventive health, nutritioo, social services
for the elderly and emergency assistance for low-income families.
The two new proposed health-services block grants, for example, are supposed to cover migrant health, drug abuse, alcoholism, child Immunization,
rat control genetic disease, hemophelia and a host of other programs.
Other block grants cover activities such as educational aid to disadvantaged and handicapped children, energy assistance for low-income
families, child abuse and foster care.
Since all of those programs cannot be maintained at current levels with
drastically reduced funding, state offlciala will have t.. either eliminate
some entirely or; scale down most of the activities.
The Inability to adequately fund chlld immunlzation programa in Los
Angeles then becomes the resporisibility of the politicians and bureaucrats in
Sacramento, not in this city.
·
·
If Chicago's residents lillie most or all of their ~at-control program, the
president wlli be able to look them in the eye and say: "Don't blame me. I
gave both the program and the lunda to the governor for admintstraUoo at
his dl.scretlon."
If cutbacks in mJII'8llt-health pi'Ogrllll.!! produce outbreaks of diaea1111 In
Teus, Reagan Clll Jeclllmateiy in8lst that appeala for auiltance be directed to Austin, not WuhlngtoD.
For the govemon and the leglalatures of the lltates, acceptance of
Reagan'alow-budiet, hiP-J'IIPOIIIiblllty JII'OilOII) may well be an act of
poJltlell suicide.
.

Today in history• ..
On thladate:
In 198'7, llnelqreed to a United Nati(lll8 ceuefire with EsYPt, with
IIII'HI hoWial eITI "D4 t.rTitory four t1me1 ita own lia.
In lrlll,lt 1111t • , . . . . were tllled in I~ between govenunent
forcennd perrlllu In Jordan.
.

(

l'hilldeiPlua

Sl. Loub
PIUsburah

.,

.604
.532
.521
.347
.. MS

Mootreal

Ne)'York
Chlcqo

~

WEST

Los Angeles
ClncinnaU

35
l3

H~

28
fl
25
Z2

San Francil«&gt;
Allanll
San Diego

StORE -HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

.611

19
Zl

z

32
~

ill
21
28
28
27
33'

I
4\1
4\1
13"' •
18\1

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

.1136
.Ill I \1
.500 . 7\1
.41Z
.411
.4011

298 SEOOND ST.

Ill
Ill
13

.POMEROY, 0.
PRICES GOOD ntROUGH SAT, JUNE 13, 1981

(Reusdlel ~7)
AUanla {Mahler 3-1 ) at Montreal !GuJ.

Ucboo 1&lt;1), (n)

Holllton (Ryan , 5-31
(C.rllllll a-11, (n)

at ' Philadelphia
·

San Diego (Eichelberger 5-31 at Pittsburgh (Perez Z.IJ, tnJ
ClndMiti (Soto !Xi)

at New York
(Jones 1-3), rnJ
Los Angeles ( ~IW 4-2) at St.Louis (,SO.
rensen s-4), (n)
"1'1.-.ridly'l Games

$ 49

San Francl!co at Chicago

A~lanta at Montml, (nl
Cincinnati at New York, (n)

Ground Chuck... ~~ ..

Los Angeles at St.Louis, fn )
Only games scheduled

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W L
31 ill
30 :12
30 lol
29 z

New York
Baltimore
Milwaukee
Boston
Cleveland

21
Z9 :E

Detroit

agreed to a housing policy commission," said Smith.
But acres of empty lots and
millions of would-be homeowners
stand between commission and commitment.
Moreover, the _popular in·
volvement that made the consumer
movement an agent of change seems
to be missing from housing.
"When have you heard of a group
of homebuyers gelling together and
making an issue of it?" asks Smith,
a Fort Worth builder·Mveloper.
But that doesn't mean housing
may never produce an organized ef·
fort. It might grow a constituency.
Smith opens a hooklet, "Housing at
the Turning Point," published by the

Home Builders. He reads:
"More than 16 million new
households will be formed during the
ll)·year period ending Dec. 31, 1989,
an increase of 25 percent over the
number of household&amp; created ln the
previous decade.
"More than 41 million people will
turn 30 in the '80s, creating an unprecedented increase in the number
of first-time buyers entering the
housing market.
In other words, elements of the
constituency are there, and events
may force them Into actlvl.sm.
The consumer and small business
pei'SOn cannot survive, he said,
while waiting for the other priorities
- defense and energy, for example

-to be dealt with. To think that they
can, be said; scares him.
Homebuilders and other small
businesses are unlike many defense
and energy contractors, he
suggested, in that they CBIUlOt feed
their costs, including those for
borrowing, back to the government
and taxpayers.
"Somehow the small-business
man and the consumer (homebuyer)
has to be treated Independently," he
said, suggesting they needed protection from the current high money
CQSis if they are to survive.
Otherwise, he indicated, the kida
won't stand for 11 - for being a
generation deprived. And if you
think differently, he suggested, take
another look at those demographics.

answer sessions shown at midday on
Sundays, frequently are the plat·
forms for rival sides in the battles
over federal spending and taxes. It's
not prime lime, but it is the prime
topic in Washington.
Meese, the presidential counselor,
has made a half-dozen appearances
on the interview programs since
Reagan was elected. Baker, the
White House chief of staff, has appeared three times. They are only
two in a corps of adminl.stration

spokesmen mobilized to do public
battle for the Reagan economic
plan.
O'Neill used to decline invitations
to the interview shows, but there be
was Sunday on ABC's "Issues and
Answers," claiming the votes to
pass a Democratic tax program instead of Reagan's three-year,
across-the-board tax cut.
He's the head Democrat in the
only branch of Congress or federal
govern!nenl still under Democratic
•

control, and his style had drawn
criticism from colleagues who saw
him at a disadvantage in debating
an adminl.slration well tuned in on
the uses of lelevlslon. The Reagan
people never shunned the cameras.
So it was O'Neill on ABC versus
Baker on the CBS program "Face
the Nation"and Mees,e on NBC's
"Meet the Press," wanning up for
the tax struggle that shlfta today to
the House Ways and Means Committee.

A view f rom T ok yo'-L--.._ _ _ _ __
sensitive military relationship in
which U. S. forced provide Japan's
first and virtually last lines of defense, and It might appear that we're
concentrating on the wrong aspect of
the situation. What we really ought
to be doing, rather than viewing with
alarm, is congratulating ourselves
that the diplomats in Washington
and Tokyo are still on speaking ter·

nns.

As a matter of fact, there is one
very interested party who does
believe we do not have the
American-Japanese relationship in
the proper perspective and backs up
his argument with a number of points:
.
- Japan has made genuine efforts
to accommodate American trade
complaints, and furthermore the exchange lsn 't all that imbalanced
with Japan by far the leading
customer for U. S. agricultural ex·
ports.
.
- Japan has also been the most
accommodating U. S. ally on several
sensitive international issues Afghanistan, to name ooe - sup-

porting the U. S. position at some ·
economic cost to itself.
-As for defense, Americans may
supply the forces but Japanese supply the essential foeward bases plus
support funds oo'the order of $1
billion annually. Without the
Japanese coMection, the American
frontline would be pushed back to
Hawaii and Guam.
What Japanese spokesman argues
this case? A particularly well-placed
one-U.S. Ambassador Mike Mansfield, who Is not prectseiy a
Japanese spokesman Ls certainly a
persuasive spOkesman for Japan.
During the present troubled
period, he has been repealing with
even more emphasis than usual the
convictions he ha8 held and been expresSing since long before his appointment to the Tokyo post, r.Jan&amp;
field is an old Far East hand,,having
served there with the Marines and 1
early in hla dlJtingulshed 311-year
congreulonal career, having served
President Franklin D. Rooaevelt on
special mlui(lll8 to Olina.
So he knew the territory when he

was recalled from brief
congressional retirement in 19'17 by
President Carter, a move that was
then regarded as smart politics and
has since proved to be eitceptlonally
smart diplomacy. The Japanese
recognl2e and appreciate his ex·
pertlse and honesty in representing
not only the United States in Tokyo,
but Japan in the power centers of
Washingtoo.
For Mansfield, any differences
Americans and Japanese may have ;
as nations are manageable . and :
secondary to the interesta they share •
in jointly maintaining peace and ~
stability in the vast Pacific basin. 1
Their relationship is not only ;
special, It Is the most Important In :
the world.
.
;
When he makes the cue, It's dif· l
ftcult to argue with 11. But even he•
omiiB one of the m01tlmportant con-;
lribulions to a properly JIOiitive per- I
apectlw oo Japaneae-Americ.an 1
relations in a period of un- ,
precedented strain:
1
The presence of Mike Mansfield in
T&lt;*Yo.

Pd. GB
.610 .In l
.ii6 4

28

Tllrunlo

Don .Graff

The special relationship that has
existed between the United States
and Japan since the end of World
War II is suddenly under unprecedented strain.
The detalls are public knowledge,
plenty of headline material having
been provided by the recent rash of
unforeseen and unfortunate in·
cidents:
- The sinking of a Japanese
freighter in a collision with aU. S.
nuclear submarine.
- The cutting of Japanese fl.shing
nets in the course of American naval
exercises in the Sea of Japan.
- An act of political hari·kari in
the resignation of the Japanese
foreign minister to atone for the appearance of the word "alliance" in
the communique concluding Prime
Minister Zenko Suzuki's visit to
Washington.
- Revived controversy over U. S.
nuclear weapons in Japan.
Add to these the long-running
trade imbalance that lb.the Issue of
U. S. auto imports has achieved the
status of a crisis, plus a politically

.29
25
28
17

suspended, dllrkneu
San Diego 7, PIU.burgh 4, 1st gsme
San Dleso Ill Pll~bu11h. 2nd game,
111111•• rain
Monlrul ll, AU.nll I
Philadelphia 10, Houston 3
C!ncinnaU I, New York I
Sl.l&lt;lWs 6, Los Angeles 1
WedatldaJ'tOamea
San Francisco at OtiCII!o. completion
·&lt;Ji suapended game
&amp; n Franclsco fGMifln H 1 at Chicago

O'Neill, Meese square off on issue
WASHING TON (AP) - In this
corner , representing th e
Democratic Party, Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr., speaker of the House.
Over there, promoting President
Reagan's lax-cut plans, James A.
Baker III and Edwin Meese Ul, two
administration heavyweights.
A touch of makeup for the
cameras, and the cross-town debate
begins. O'Neill, Baker and Meese
are doing the network talk shows.
The three network interview
programa, 3D-minute question-and·

PoL~~

TuNilly'a Gamts

Young people can't afford new homes
NEW YORK (AP) - "The kids
won't stand for it," said Herman
Smith, who had just reviewed
figures showing that most young
families cannot afford to buy a new,
single-family house.
This country, he said, needs a
policy at lh~ very highest levels of
government to plan for the housing
needs of the 1980s. A policy, he said,
similar to those for energy, defense
and technological advance.
There Lsn't one, and Smith,
president of the National
Association of Home Builders, is
distressed. "We have the technology
and the ability," he said. "We should
have the concern and dedication."
Should, but dM't. "We have
proposed to the President and he has

WL

33 21

16
WEST

40

$ 29

BUCKET

.Sl7
.531

5
:till

.527
.286

51;
19

Zl
.627 12 21
.604 2
,169
4
Ch.lcago
II Zl
29 29
.100 71&gt;
California
.. Kansas City
II ill
.m 1311
.364 15
••Seattle
28 35
&lt; MllllleB&lt;IIa
.315 17\1
17 :n
Tuetdly't Games
Ookllrd 1-l, Balllmo"' Z.l
Chicago 3, Toronto 0
New York 8, Kansa.!t City S
MinnesOta 3, Milwaukee 1
~ll ~. TeX&amp;t 0
Califomla 4, Cleveland 3
Bostoo 10, Se11ttle 1
Wedaetdl''' Games
Baltimore (FianaHan 6-4) at Oakland
ll.ongfonl ~ )
Kansas City (Leonard 5-7) at Toronto
rBomDack 311, (n.l
New Y()J'k IMay +4) at Chicago rBums
f&gt;.2J, In)
Texas (Medictl 4-31 at' Milwaukee rHaas
~~. rn)
·
Detroit (Morris 1-3) at MinneJota
(Havens G-Il. In )
Cleveland 1Bl)lleven 7..1) at California
IFonch WI. (n)
Bostm {Tanana 2-4) 111 Sellttie rPam.ttt
l.SJ , ( n)
narldly'l Glmn

Ookllrd
Te,.,.

Gt'ntral Managtr

. r

NATIONALLEAGGE
EA8T .

Chicago z. San Fnncl.!co 0, i .IJinlngs,

Publi§her

PAT WHITEHEAD

For the
record. • •

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, Ju11e 10,1911

to 'GalhraithL.._______.......----,Wl_ill~iam_F._·._Buc_k_ler_/l_r.

ployment, d) make America compeUtive - all those good and enviable thlngs. But what the rich
really want, says Galbraith ,.- and it
is very in)portant when reading Mr.
· G:aibralth to bear in mind that he
(sometimes alone) knows the
secrets of every man's heart - Is to
be richer. that, really, Ls why. we all
. back the Kemp-Roth Bill, in case
you wondered: "One yearns to hear
someone admit that the added in·
come Will be greatly relished by the
rich. Or to have some Treasury of.
ficial aay this before a congressional
committee. But, except as an act of
extreme indiscretion, it will never
happen. We like to think of ourselves
aa a blunt, plain-spoken people. But
on some matters a careful social,
economic or moral camouflage is
clearly essential."
Now there is a Jot of sheer fun in
that paragraph. However, it invites
a mode of analysis the implications
of which are sobering.
"The real reason John Jones Is
backingthatcivillibertiesbillisthat
he desires to increase his civil liberties."
"The real reason John Jones is
backing that defense bill is that he
wishes to be more secure."
"The real reason John ·Jones is
backing the clean air bill is that he
wants cleaner air."
Now we can, if our mind is given tn
such inclinations, suspect that John
Jones wants that civil liberties biD
because he wants to get on with the

· The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Cube Steak......~....

!'I

Kalll&amp;s Cit)l at Toronto, f nl

TASTEE TREAT CHUNK

Frye I'$. •••••......••..~~.
CRISPY SERVE
Bacon.·.............. .'!·••
FRENCH CITY

New York at C'tlkaeo, lnt
at. MUwaube, In)
Detroit 11 Mlnnelollo, (n)
Baltimore at Seattle, In)
Boolon al Colllomla, lnJ
•Only gomes l&lt;heduled
Teu~

llc»l()~lla.............:: ..

GRADE AWHOLE

12 oz.

Wieners.~ ......... :!~·..

1\ltlday'• SporU Trauactlolll ·

BASEBALL
Amerlcu Lelpe
OUCAGO WHITE SOX-Signed Da~l
Boston, uuUielder.
oAK l. AN 0 A.'s-Opuoned Mitchell
Page ouUieldtr to Tacoma of lhe Pacific
co.si League. ' RecaUed Mark Buda.!ika ,
outfielder, from TaCOITlll .
BABKETIIALL
Nati-.IBubtbaU .U.odadoa
INDIANA
PACERS- Traded
Dudley
Bratlley, guard, tmd future cunside111tions
to tll! Phoenix &amp;Ina f~r second-round
draA picks In 1911 and 1912.
NEW JERSEY NETS-Traded Mike
Newlin, wuard. to the New York Knlcks
for Mike Wuodson, giJird.
'
PORTLAND TRAIL Bl.AZERS- Traded
Mike OMit, guard, ttl the Golden State
Warrlon~ for :teCOnd·round tlraft picks in
11182 and !11115.
HOCKEY
NaUoul Hotkey Lelpe

BOSTON BRUIN8-Signed Bruce Crow·
der, wing.
BUFFALO SABRES-Signed Jim Wie·
mer, lett wins, and Daniel Naud, ddense-

18 CT. SIZE

man.

DETROIT RED WING8-Named Doug
McKay to coach thelr ·Adirondack fann
club In the American Hockey Ltag.e. An""'"""' lhlll J.P. LeBlanc will "'lll&lt;e
McKay u COICh of their Kalamuoo,
Mich., tarm club il the lnt.emaU~I
'Hodtey Leque and wiU double u 1ctlng

Car~tal()upe ......~~

general manager.
MINNESOTA NORTH STARS-Troded
Din OUcoine, wing, to the Quebec Nor-

ROYAL CREST

dloueo for Nelaon Bwton, winll.
flEW YORK ISLANDERS-Roune! Jim

wtnt1

t~J

a multiyear contract.

·

WINNIPEG
JETS- SII!ned
Thomu
Steen. center, to a muiUyear cootnct.

.

PAR KAY.

The Daily Senti ncl
!USPS I - I
A OlvlllooooiMoolllmedlo,llc.

Mar~arille ...... ~;

CHICKEN OF THE SEA ~

Pllblblhed "'ery o!U!moon. Monday Lhrooll!b
Fridloy Ill Cllllrl Slrtet, bY tht Ohio Volloy
P\lblllditOII Cumpoony • Multimedia, In&lt;.,
Pumeroy, Ohiu
1192-215:'· Second clua
J)UI!tMge JHild at Ptxneruy, Ohiu.

Chunk Tuna ...6:e~..

•7&amp;9.

Member&lt; Tile Alltoo&lt;loted Preu,lnlard Dally rr... A~Uoo and lhe American
New.,.per Pllbill!hera Alloclltlon, Notional
AdYertlalnH RepreaenLil\ve, Branlt.lm
New.,.per.Sales, 713 'l'tdrd Avenue, New
Ylll'k. New Yorlll0017.

29

P06TMABTER: Serd ooddmo to Tile Colly
Sentinel. Ill Cllllr\81., I'Omerlly,Ohlo417• •
IUBICIIIPTION IIATI!II
B y _ ........ _

one-................... . . . .
.

'

Fruit Drinks ......~A;.

O,Vellooo uaiatlnl ~I 1111111ger. &lt;f.
fedlve Aq.l. Sll!"'" ~~~ Hallin, left

ll.Dt

OneMooth ......... .... · .... · ...... 14-:

BORDEN

Sherbert .........~~:.

Ono Yeor ... · ........ · · .. .. .... · .. 1$1.

'

SINGLI! COPY
' PIIICEI
DoilY ....... . .... .... .... " .... IICIIU

WMEDM.-

.

FLOUR

- - nol cloollri"'ll ,., Ute -

may mnll In ......,.. to 'l1lo~
Senllnel on I !, I or 12 llllllllll wtU be g-corritr eodl . - .
No lllbl&lt;ri~ bY llllll ~In­

,_ __.._.
•

IIAJLII)IItiUmOIII

..~~-~~.~ .... ,~...

.. 11""111 .... •.. . " ... ".. • ... ' ...

. . . .............. ii
..........
,.
I Yw .... JiiiiiGiiiitiiiililt .... .

.

............~ ................. .
.. ···························

-.-

89'-·
•
5LB.

. . - -..--io...U.lllo.

M

Limit One Per Customer
Oood Only at Powell's
Offer lxplrts June 13, IHI

FIAWRITE

SUGM
5LI. $139
BNi
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powtii 1S
otter Expires June II, 1-.1

KOOL·AID

CRISCO

10 QT. WI

SHORTENING

$219

3 LB. CAN

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires June13, 1981

$219

Limit One Per Customer
Good On~ at Powell's
Offer Ex pi s June 13, 1981

.

•

'

)

I

�.I

.....,

.

Wednesda , June 10,1981

NO progress :ritl).de ht diamond talks

Meigs .basetiall results. • •
.

I

.lrJ Big Bend UtUe

TWO TO GO- Phillles Pete Rose lakes off his hat as he comes from
the dugout to acknowledge an ovation during Tuesday night's game
against the Houston Astros in Philadelphia. Rose had two hits on the olght
; ·leaving him two shy of breaking Stan Musial's National League mark of
·3,630 career hits. Phlllies won, 10.3. (AP Laserphoto).

.

.

dleportdrt)pstoo-1.1 •
the whmers .shelly Stobatt hit a
Also IIi the same sOftball league, honie run and Tainmy Wright also
Salisbury posted a 1~ Win over hita home run. J~e Baity doubled
Mason. Hatfield was the winning pi!' for the winners. Tina Hendricks had
cher wjth three strlkeO!Its and no two singles for Middleport and
w~lks. M: Sisson was the l~r with Sherry Cooper had one.
four walks and no strikeouts.
--;t:::;,::;;::;:::::::::::;=:=::=::~
Leading hitteJ1 for Salisbury were I '
Harrison , with a triple and two
lllJlt\
singles, .Kiqg a double and two
·~
singles, Musser a double and two
singles, and Hatfield . with three ·
singles. April Brickles hlld.a double
and single, while Beth Blaine, Susan ·
Jones, Jennifer Couch, Rhonda
Neece, and Sisson had singles. ·
.
Leading hitters for Mason were D.
Honaker with two singles, L. Ca~p
~ith two singles, G. Phillips two
singles, L. Arthur two singles, and
M. Sisson, M. Wamsley, and T.
Wolfe with a single each,
The Pomeroy Indians claimed a
16-7 win over Pomeroy's Bluejays.
Missy Woods .picked up the wiit in
going the distance, picking up five
360 SECOND AV~
strikeouts anti no walks alorig the
446.()699
way. Angie Sloan suffered the loss 1 ~;;iji;;;i;;~~~~~~~~~
with two strikeouts and four walks. 1
Dealla Henderson, Shelly Stobart,
Tammy Wright, and Teresa Johnson
all hllinmered home runs for the
winners. Teresa Johnson added a
triple, and Shelly Stobart, Tammy
AnORNEYS AT LAW
Wright, and Missy Woods added
doubles.
Christy Sauters blasted a home
run for the Bluejays, while Sue Fry
and Angie Sloan doubled.
The Pomeroy Indians rolled to
236 W. 2nd., Pomeroy, Oh . (Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospitall
another win .over ' Middleport's ·
Midgets 18-16. Missy Woods.ttnd
HOME PH. 992-3523
OFFICE PH. 992-6624
Tammy Wright shared pi'Y'ng
duties on the mound. Pomeroy pit·
OFFICE HOURS: MON ..fRI. 8:30 TO 4:30
chers issued two walks and two
strikeouts. Tarruny McFarland suf. ~
SAT. 8:30 TO 12:00 NOON
fered the loss with five strikeoutS
·""
and one walk.
~··
Collecting hits for the winners
Evenings By Appointment
;-;:
were Tarruny Wright with a home ~~~!!!!!!!!!!!I•••I!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!==~~ •
.
run, triple and double, Teresa John•
son a triple, Heather Woods a triple,
and Missy Woods and Shelly Stobart
doubles.
•
T. McFarland hlld two triples to .
•
lead the Midgets, while Marjorie
'
Baker added a triple.
The Middleport team then came
back to pound Middleport's Dusters
,.
25-1. Tammy McFarland was the
winning pitcher with one strikeout
and no walks. Elise Meier suffered
39
the loss with three strikeouts' and
three walks. The Midgets claimed
••
the win in only four innings due to a
"Mercy Rule." McFarland smacked
two home runs for the winners, while
570 w. Main
PH . "2-2556
Pomeroy, OH.
Nikki Whitlatch, Kenda Carsey, and
·
"Located
at
the
End
ot
the
Pomeroy-Mason
Brklte"
Leanna Plants also ' hit hard home

I:.ea~e

action
. the Middleport Indians collected six
r1lll8 in the tllird li)Jiing enr()ute to a
7-4 Win over Powell's Gi!Jnts. ·
Eri.c Johnson and J. R. Kitchen
combined for 11 strikeouts and eight
walks. Lee .Powell and Brian Tannehill pfl)duced an outstanding performance, bill went down to defeat
after fanning 12 and walking just
four.
For Middleport J. R. Kitchen
. singled twice, doubled, and tripled,
wiJlle Eric Johnson added · two
singles and a · double, Jeff HOOd
singled twice, Mickey Davis singled
twice and Joey Loving singled.
For Powell's Lee Powell hit a
three run home run, Todd Hysell hlld
a single and double, Brian Ta!lllehill
singled, and Billy Brothers singled.
The Pomeroy team boosted its
record to ~ behind a !J.5 win over
Middleport's Brav,es. Dave Hendricks picked up the win after fanning five and issuing just four free
passes. Jeff Nelson walked eight and
fanned six for Middleport tiefore get·
ting relief from Donnie Becker who
fanned one·and didn't walk a batter.
Although Middleport outhit the
Pirates, Pomeroy remained perfect
at~.
.
_
Phil King had a single, Gerald
Moore a single, Dave Hendricks two
singles, and Brian Freeman had a
great night at the plate with one
single and two doubles.
For Middleport, Jeff Nelson and
Tim Cassell had three singles for
good outings, while Donnie Becker
harrunered a home run, and Steve
Cassell, Scott Hanning added
singled.
The Middleport Cubs clubbed the
Mason Pirates 11).5. Joey Loving was
the winning pitcher with seven
strikeouts and four walks, while
Scott Melton and David Smith Cl\flle
on in relief.
Joey Loving smacked a Grand
Slam home run to help his cause,
and Luke Burdett pitched in with
another home run. P. J. Richmond
and David Smith doubled and
singled, Todd Hood singled twice,
Joey Loving singled twice, while Eddie Crooks, Luke Burdett, and Joey
Hysell each added one single.
Softball Action
In junior girls' softball action,
Salisbury rolled by Middleport's
Panthers 111-10 behind an 18 hit attack. Barb Hatfield, the winning pitcher, going the distance, walked
three and one. Carrie Karr suffered
the loss.
Leading hitters for Salisbury were
Jodi Harrison with three doubles
and two singles. Carla King with two
doubles and one single, Maria
Musser with three singles, Rhonda
Zirkle two singles, and Kim Eblin
one double and two singles.
Other hitt~rs were Darla King and
Julie Sisson with one single each.
Leading the Panthers were Julie
Pierce with a triple, Carrie Karr a
double and single, and Cindy Roush,
Samantha Roush, Julie Roush, J ulle
Hysell, Kim Stewart, Belinda Fry
a,nd Marcia Smith all singles.
Salisbury is now 2.{), while Mid·

M
. EMB.ER.S

title.
To qualify for the shrine, a female
golfer must win 30 tournments with
two majors, 35 tournaments with one
major or 40 regular tournaments.
In a matter of minutes on
Tuesday, Berg straightened Carner's short irons on the practice
range at the Jack Nicklaus Sports
Center, site of the $150.000 tournament.
The 42-year·old Carner, only
$72,000 shy of $1 million in career
earnings, thinks she can win the
LPGA, but must corral her
emotions.

Ross finishes fifth in state
· · Kyger Creek's Bill Ross became
the first 11)8le athlete in the school's
,history to score points in the state
,meet by finishing fifth in the Class A
discus competition. Ross's farthest
throw was his first in the com·
petition, a toss of Hill'!" . This is also
a new school record which was
previously held by Ross, a throw of

history to reach the state meet. He
finished in eighth place last year in
the discus. Winner of the boys' Class
Adiscus was John Schldema of Findlay Liberty·Benton with a toss of
174 feet. Ross during his three years
of track set four school records (all
in the, discus), won two sectional
discus competitions, one district
134'5".
championship, and traveled to the
Ross was only the second male state track meet in Colwnbus two
athlete to reach the in the school's straight years.

..

.

Wins sixth straight

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP ) _ Sunrise
J.R., a four· year-old bay 'gelding
; :owned by Charlotte Rankin, Main; :yme, Ohio, romped to his sixth COO·
&gt;)Secutive victory Tuesday night t
' :Latonia , capturing the $1 ,100
&lt;.featuredpace mile.
~ · Winning time was 2•02.1-5 and the
f l&gt;ayoff was $3, $2.40 and $2.4{). Miss
U Uusion placed, returning $3.80 and
t $5.20, and Little Miss Whitt, was
·::worth$3.60forthird.
Mi Jo Vo and Laughing Lester
~mbined 3-5 in the double for $74.20
and the crowd of 1,088 bet $94,931.

f

; Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - J. King
Way, driven by Bruce Kirk, won the
·;eighth featured pace race by one
length in 2:01.4 at Scioto Downs on
Tuesday.
The winner paid $5, $3.60 and $2.60.
Buckeye:s Bretta was second for
te.60 and $3, and Darth Ruler was ·
.third for $2.20. •
·
The first-race trifecta, 5-3-6, paid ·
$14,316.50.
The crowd 11 4,200 wagered
p:j5,097.

among · athletic directors, head
coaches of the eight boys' sports in
which there is league competition,
and news media representatives
from the league schools. Persons are
not permitted to vote for athletes
from their own school. They select
their top three choices • for the
award, with points being awarded on·
a 5-3-1 basis.
Wilcoxon easily outdistanced run·
ner-up Rick Milburn of Jackson for
the award. Todd Nibert of Gallipolis
was third followed by Rick Conley
and Rick Teeters, both of Waverly.
Each of the 13 athletes nominatl!d
for the award received votes. Of the
total of 71 ballots cast, Wilcoxon was
picked for first on 31 and Milburn on
13.
Wilcoxon, a 6-1, 185-pounder, was
a defensive end on the football team
in addition to his quarterback duties. ·
He completed 39 of 60 passes for 588

yards and four iouchdowns in league
play with just three interceptions.
He was a unanimous pick as the
league's Most Valuable Player in
football, and was also a unanimous
first-team, all-league pick. He lettered four years in baseball and two
in basketball in addition io three
years in football.
Milburn lettered in football and
basketball for Jackson, while Nibert
earned varsity letters in football,
basketball and track at Gallipolis.
Conley lettered in football and track
and Teeters in baseball and basket·
baUforWaverly.
others who were nominated for
the award and the sports in which
they lettered were:
Brian Lavery (track, football and
basketball) and Doug Meyer (foot·
baD, wrestling and track) of Athens;
Bobby Foster (football and
baseball) of Gallipolis; Dave B;erry

STORY &amp; STORY
Steven L. Story
Karen H. Story

..

~DVEATISED

OPEN M.·T.·W.· F. 9· 5
•
CLOSEDTHUR .·SAT.·SUN.
. 113 Court St.
Pomeory, Oh.
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

992·2920

ilem,' we ~~ otter v~ ~~ choice of a comp.artble item.
vd'ltn IYI111bM1 reflecting tne same uvill~Jt or a r~incheck
~ wdltnlitlt you ta purchale the ldvertilod i1tm at thl

ldvwlillcl pnce Within ~ din.

EM8A UY

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Salad
Dressing

Every1h1ng you buy at Kroger is guerantted for '!'OUr total
llhlfachon reg~rdl.a of manufactyrtf . If you are not still · ·
1\ed, Kroger will repltce )'Our 1tem w•lh the same brartdtK 1
corTiplreiJI!t brand Of rtfund your purchase price.

AVO NDALE

Sweet

COPYRIGHT 1tt1 - THE l(ltOGU CO . ITEMS AND PJIICES

Peas ..

GOOD SUNDAY JUNE 7 THJIU SAtURDAY JUNE 13, 1911
INPOMEROV AND GALliPOliS STORI!=S .

WE rtUEit't'E THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTIT IES . NONE

SOLD TO DIALERS.

IN THE PIECE

:~:;~Me~

I

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

-

SPECIAL Of THf WlfKI

.. . "9979C
C

• d Baeon .. .. .. Pkg
i ·lb .
511ce
.

OlE CAROLINA

FISCHER'S HOT OR MILD

l·lb .
Pkg .

Pork Sausage .....

~

FISHER'S' H"MLET

.

Buffet Ham ....... ...... lb.

PllZABURGER ·····-···99~
WITH FRIES ···-···...~1
ADOLPH'S DAIRY. VALLEY

$119

(golf, baseball and basketball) and,
Jim Ogg (werestling, football and
baseball) of Logan; Jerry Fields
(baseball and football) of Meigs;
and Shane Cox (football aQd
basebaU) and Jeff Midkiff (baseball
and foothill) of Wellston.
Jeff' Montgomery of Wellston was
the initial recipient of the award,
pr-eSented for the first time in the
19'19-M school year. The award ill
named in memory of Willard Fitzpatrick, who was a longtime
educator and radio broadfcaster in
Jackson and remained active in the
SEOAL SportsWrlten and Broadbasters ~ociation until his death in ·
November, 1979.
..-......

1000 I$LANO FRENCH O lil
ITALIAN li QUI D

Boneless Boston
Roll Roast

$

Any Size Pkg. $129
Ground Beef ... .. ib .
.U.S. GOV'T ·GRADED CHOICE .
BONELESS BOTTOM

Round Roast ...... ....... lb .

~ -Ol .

o

CHOICE

IN STORE GROUND OR
CHUB PAK

Top Sirloin Steak ..... lb .
Banquet Dinner .

Kroger
GeIattn .... ,,.

99

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
BONELESS

1

. li£110A!LOW PRICI

USDA

Grade A
Large Eggs

FROZEN

c.,

'~;·$149

$229

runs.
Paula Gilkey, Lesley Carr, Nikki
Whitlatch, and Mary Butcher each
doubled for the winning Middleport
Midgets. Shannon Newsome hit a
home run for the Dusters and Tina
Hendricks tripled.
The Pomeroy Indians claimed an
11-1 win over Middleport's Dusters . .
Tammy Wright was the winner with
three strikeouts and no walks in a
good effort. Elise Meier suffered the
loss despite a three strikeout performance and nMree passes. For

11 -o t .

EMBA SSY

AVONOAll CUl

Green
Beans .

.

16 ·01. .

coo

AVONDA LE

Pork 'N' " ·'••·
Beans .... c..

K0roge~

C

TRIMMERS

COUNTRY OV EN

~:1 Food '~;~· $119

$239

KltOC Eit

Flake
Coconut .

"···· $149
Pkg

Peptr
Ctn.

by: Weed Eater

3
Orange Ju1ce. .........
12·0Z. CANS FROZE~ KROGER

Pak

QUARTERS ILUE ION NET

•

Margar1ne ........ .. ... ~
KROGER
Multi-Grain Bread.

.

UO(;I. o.s•. LOWFAT MILIC
GAl . PLA$fiC CTN . .. SI.C~

l·lb.
Pkg.
1

$2 59
Country Oven
Prehe Is ... •·••·
"•·

59 C

KEllOGG 'S

Special K 15 ·0 1 .
Cereal... . •••

2 $1 09
t~~~·

GOLD CREST

Marsh·
mallaws .. .
AVONOALI

A'ILABLE IN BOJI!
.GASOLINE AND
ELECTR'IC MOUELS•.

-----r----....1..===

•

COUNTRY CLUIICE MILK ,OI

Kroger '/, ·Gal.
Sh erb8t ... Ctn.
J

I

'

MINT FLAVOR TOOJHPASTE

.ClOle-up ..........

AVAILAIII.E ONLY IN
STORES WITH
DELl DE,S.
KOTFOODS
AVAILABLE 11om

.
511. 9

rPie~;~wtSHIONE

$129
8.2-oz.

CONDtnONEI Ol 1

ea......poo.16·ol.
Sua ve ......
111.

'
.,AIKIE'S SURE liTERS

$100

Charcoal Starters Pk~.
I

\Strawberry Pie '~r~h
~IISH MADE
Lemon 'H.UOURGER
P1e ........ .8·1nch
PI•
0

ECONOMY GRADE
JUMBO

01

lUllS AVAIIAill ONlY AI YOUI Sll VII IIIDGI
AND l'OIIIIIOY KIOOII

California
Cantaloupe

'

I~ lb .

Pear
·a• .
HaI¥81 ..... 16r.oo

49¢

HILLCREST

Maraschino
•
•.••
Ch errttl
.. Jo •
A'JONOAU

Mandarin

· o•
OraftgtS ... llCon

UOC.ER

Vienna
5·o t .
Sausage .. . c oo

$299

99"'
$;:dwich Buns .. ~ic~: · ggc

'

FBSH U.I(ED

2"X4"X8'

... 59¢

5499

FRESH MADE, WITH
WHIPPED TOPPING

79c

$139

Fried Qicken Bucket $2 '69
SLICED OR BY THE PIECE COLBY
Longhorn Cheese. lb.

99 C

Jo,

69¢

TIL 7pm

•

Tub•

,

Marshmallow13-ot .

88

w.$

C

Margarine l -Ib
Quarters .. "•

$319

GO LO CREST

2% Milk

I

39

ClOV ER VAlllY

Creme ... ..

NYLON STRING

95C

,.... .

ress1ng .. '''

43c
79c
29¢
29

~k~~·

KIOGII

lima

.
Beans ...... 16-o•
con

IIII!Dal LIW 'IICI

"

DAYno\U

~~~:~ .. ':k~~·
kROQU

Worcestershire

-ce ..... . 1....
111 . .

·-·

lll:ltOGII

Stnk
•.....
c. .. .. .. .Jo1&gt;1.... .

$4 79
89¢
99c

STUDS
'

.

ltG VALUE

Vanilla
_.

9

w•••rs ..... ...

12•01 .

KIOGfl

Tomato
.--te
·~- ......

•···
Con

O&amp;C
Otllon Rings 'c:~

'

f

l'olilt Pluunt, WV :IfNI
(

'

...

59c.

= ·~·· 59~
Oooll flO tiN

Office Houn 'by APtiOhltmllll

·

VISION EXAMINATION$
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES

ITEM POLICY

DAVID L. CARR, D.O. - OffiCI, 675-69.7
2924 JackiiGII ·Ave.

Provides Such Services As

be~ Of .theM ldvertilecl Items 11 rtquired to De
rMditv tvlilebae for Nle in Nth 1&lt;roge1 Store, except •
~ ~" ltW .:i . If .w do run out of 10 ~

ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY
What is Psoriasis?
A chronic sk in di sease that affects some 8 million people In this
country.
What Causes Psoriasis?
No one knows. Skin Injury, emotional stress and some forms of
Infections are said to trigger Its development .
·
Who Gets Psoriasis?
Men and women In equal numbers at any age, buf most-'olfen
between the ages of 15 and 35. Psoriasis has been diagnosed for the
first time In people of advanced age. It also strikes children. About
150,000 new cases ot psoriasis are diagnosed each yeer.
Is Psoriuis Contagious?
No.
What Does Psoriasis Look Like?
It appears as silvery skin patches, often on knees and elbows, but
can be found on any part of the body. The patches, or plaques, are
composed of dead skin cells which accumulate In !eyers.
Is Thare a Cure lor Psorillil~
No, but lor many victims of the dl-. control 11 poulbta. Sor!le
psorlatlcs mat have remissions of tha d l - for long periods of
lime. In rare cases so'!'etlmes.tha diiHM mtY disappear lllllrely.

Miller, executive direi;tor of the optmon, . Mlller ·said, . was
players association, said the future Philadelphia's Ruly Carpenter in an
change in the union's bargaining informal chat with his players .Mon•
·unit was inspired by what he called day. Miller said the change in
the oime~ "IIJlder)ying IISilumption negotiating s~ructilre would show
that they can seQ the· players the management "how .strongly the
.Brooklyh Bridge and I'm the only players feel on tl\e issue" of com·
one thafstands in the way." .
pensation for the signing of free
The latest owner to voice that ·agents.

GALUPOLISe OfFICE

rr:=====~=;;;=:::;:;;:===~~=rA

FAMILY CIJNIC

p\iyers the Brooklyn Bridge. Now
they will have the.opportunity to do
so," Miller said Tue$day in announeing. that, in. the event of a
strike, the players w.ciuld handle the
negotiations themselves "unless ·in
specific instan~s the playen
request! attend."
·

R. H. BILLMAN U, 0.1;),'

Stop In And
Leam HoW!

Wilcoxon receives Fitzpatrick award
:: ATHENS - Brent Wilcoxon, who
quarterbacked the Ironton Tigers to
aco-championship in football in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
this past season, has been named as
the 1981 recipient of the Willard Fitz·
patrick Award.
The award is presented annually
by the SEOAL Sportswriters and
Broadcasters Association to the perSon picked as the top senior male
athlete in the league. To be eligible
for the award, an athlete must par·
!icipate in at least two of the varsity
sports in which league competition
is held.
· Voting for the award is conducted

NE:W YOJU{ (AP) - .Baseball's
owners may get a chance to test a
theory that, if they get Marvin
Miller away from the bargal!ting
table, the legs will·fall o.ut from under .the P~Yers' positiol! and bring a
settlement,
.
·
·
"Th
. e owners and negotiators apparently · feel . they cap sell the

BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC .CENTER

$AVE MONEY
ON
MEMBERSHIP

LPGA event Starts Thursday
MASON, Ohio I AP I - They may
have been Hall of Fame lessons,
lhose eight-iron tips Patty Berg gave
JoAnne Carner fo r the Ladies
,Professional Golf Association ChamP.ionship starting Thursday.
: . After all, Carner needs only to win
;this, the first of three annual major
tournaments for the women, to
qualify for the sport's shrine. Carner
;would have a 30 tour victories, in·
'eluding triumphs in two major events. She's won the U.S. Open twice.
Berg, of course, already is in the
Hall of Fame with 41 triumphs, one
of them being the 1946 U.S. Open

The Datly Sentinei-Pa · e-s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

_ .... Ct"'·

�,

you can't do is turn y~ur average
from .195 to .300 in one night. I have
to be patient."
,
Driessen asked the Reds to be
traded earlier this year, while Be.nch
was playing first and he was 11itling
on the bench.
"It was a situation thatlsaid what
I had to ·say, and I stood behind it,"
Driessen said.
" Now that I'm playing, alii want
to think about is the ballgame. When
Bench comes ·back, I might still
want to be traded, but right now, I'm
just concentrating on ·the .
ballgame, " he said.
·
In his brief stint as a starter,
Driessen has gone 7.for-ll with two
horne MJJIS, two doubles and five
RBI. Tuesday night, Driessen went
:1-for-4 with a walk and a solo horner,
his fifth, and his two-MJJI single was

the key hit in the Reds' ninth inning.
Ken Griffey Jed off the Reds ninth
with. a walk, , and George Foster
followed with a single, sending Grif·
fey to second and~ Mels lefty
Pete Falcone, h3. Neil Allen
relieved for New York, and Dave
Concepcion pushed a bunt in front of
home plate.
Mets catCher John Stearns fielded
the bunt barehanded and, as he was
falling, threw toward third. The baD
skipped into left field for an error,
allowing Griffey to score. Foster
went to third, and Concepcion wound
up at second. Allen walked Ray
Knight to load the ~. a11d
Driessen bounced a single up the
middle, scoring two rillls.
Joe Nolan drove in the fourth run
with a shallow sacrifice Oy to left,
scoring Knight, who had gone to

' · · .. ,
third on Driessen's single~
Reliever Tom Hilme, 4-2, thii third
Reds pitcher, got the victory with
two Innings of one-nlll reli~f. Ellis
Valentine singled off Hlime in the
Mets eighth to tie the score H
The Reds scored single MJJI8 in the
se.:ond, third, fourth and fifth innings. Foster tripled in the second
and 41Cored on · Doug· Flynn's
throwing error. In the th!J;d, Fosler
drove in a nlll with a single.
Driessen homered in the fourth off
Mels slarter Greg Harris, and Ken
· Griffey reached on an error and
scored on Knight's double in the fif.
th.
New York scored three MJJI8 in the
sixth on Rusty Staub's two-MJJI pinch
single and Reds errors by Concepcion at short, Foster in left and
relief pitcher Paul Moskau.

•

fifth was decisive for the Angels.
California trailed Len Barker and
Cleveland ~ entering the inning but
Fred Lynn doubled home two runs,
his first RBI since May 23. Then
Baylor slammed his ninth homer.
"When everyone else is hitting but
you, it's tough," said Lynn, who is
fighting back from a left calf injury
that has plagued him Since the first
week in May and kept him out the
lineup from May 25 to June 5. "It's
nice to get an important hit after a
long wait."
Red Soli: 10, Mariners 1
Mike Torrez' five-hitter, three
RBI by Jim Rice and two by Dave
Sblpleton paced Boston. The Red
Sox jumped to a S.O lead after two innings and coasted.
Rice's RBI single capped a three-

ted for Clnclnnilti, ~ul af.ter retinng
the first 13 Melli, he got lllt? trouble
in the fifth and was the vlctun .of the
Mets rally in the sixth.

.

.EAR, "OSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
.

SALE PRICE

Do It Yourself
and Save.

2COLORSTOCHOOSEFROM

'•.

. OHice Hours by Appointment c)~'lly

CALL (614)-992-2104

or (~)-675-1244 .

JUST RIGHT FOR DAD

first inning and he singled home
two Bostqp runs in the fourth.
A's t-3, Orioles Z.Z
Keith Drumright knocked in the
winning runs in both games as
oakland moved back into first place
in the West.
Drumright's tWMut single in the
bottom of the ninth won the ntcht·
cap. In the opener; Drwnright got
the . game-winning RBI as Jim
Palmer walke&lt;l him with the bases
loaded in the seventh.
John Lowenstein, who drove in
both of Baltimore's runs in the
opener, provided some excitement
in the second inning of the nightcap.
After singling with one out, he stole
second and third and tried to steal
home but was tagged out a few inches from the plate.
run

Hush ·Puppies®
......,..,.,
bootwlse ·
Didn'l know we made cowboy boOts?
Well, we do - and If you think they look
gOOd. walt till you wear them. So soff
they don't even need breaking ln .
·
Delalllng with a genuine Western !ouch.
Made with qua lily to boot . An Investment In quality Is always wise. Try on a
pair. You won'l .be' sorry. ·

8 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM
Yard lllstalled

SIZES FOR THE WOLVERINE MAN &amp; WOMAN

HARTLEY SHOES. INC.

Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, Oh.
Store Hours: 9-5 Daily
Open Fri. Night til 8:00P.M.

'5 99

Installed Over Pad

.

PLAY GRASS

'3''

YARD

SQ. YARD
\

;l ·~ ~; '.!

!
~

Call

Mllste~

Buerr

f

Third Ave.

.,
Ave.

992-2156 '

..."'

IIll

l...

The June 10 meeting will be held at
the home of Miss Bernice Ann Durst
with Mrs. Beulah Strau8s assisting.
It will include a tour of the Strauss
rose garden.
Mrs. Taylor's pro'gram was en·
tilled "I Bequeaih" by Alice Leevy
Mason from the Friendship Ideals.
Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Taylor to those named and Mrs.
Lillian Moore, Mrs. Gladys Cummings, Mrs. Elizabeth Burkett, Mrs.
Daisy Blakeslee, Mrs. Jean Moore ,
and Miss Kathryn Hysell.

WVE's LABOR LOST- Chia-Chla the giant Pan- ported as a temporary mate for the zoo's female, Ling·
da sits In bls travel cage at tbe National Zoo Tuesday Uog. The match was a miss and Chia·Chla returns to
waiting with bls escort, Barbara Bingham, for the trip London without consummating his international
back IAl London IAl begin. Chia-Chla, a male, was im· romance. lAP Laserphoto ).

Lisa Collins finalist in state
Miss National Teenager Pageant
Lisa Collins, 16, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Collins, Reedsville, has been selected to ·be a
finalist in the 1981 Miss Ohio
NationaJ Teenager pageant to be
held June 20 at Wittenberg Univer- ,
sity, Springfield.
The pageant is the official state
fina1to the Miss National Teenager
pageant to be held in August, this
year. Leslie Matulin of Cuyahoga
Falls, 1980 Miss Ohio National
Teenager, will crown the new queen ,
and Melissa Bradley, Ohio's Miss
National Teenager 1900, will emcee
and will be among the featured entertainment on Saturday night.
Finalists in the state event participate in the volunteer community
service program of the pageant by
volunteering at least five hours in
charity or community services.
The state winner will receive a
$500 cash scholarship, a full tuition
modeling course and other prizes
plus an all-expense trip to compete
in the Miss National Teenager
pageant in August.
Contestants will be judged on
Lisa Collins
scholastic achievement, leadership,
poise, personality and beauty. Thece
are no swim suit or talent com·
petitions. Each contestant will recite "What's Ri ght About America." feld's, Baum Lumber , Ga ul's
a 100 word essay on the subject Miss Collins is sponsored by Elber- Market and Celia Collins.

By Robert G. Stockmal,
Joint National Committee on Delee- pressure can lead to heart attack,
lion, Evaluation and Treatment ·of heart failure, kidney failure and
D.O.,Pb.D.
Assistant Professor of
High Blood Pressure, U. S. Depart· stroke. All of these can cause suf·
Family Medicine·
ment of Health and Hwnan Services. ferlng and death.
Machine like the one you men-· QUESTION: If I take the right
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
tioned are generally accurate if the medicine will I be O.K. in a few
QUGITION : While at a shopping direcUOlJII are followed: However, I weeks ?
mall I had my blood pressure taken should point out that no one blood
ANSWER: High blood pressure
by one of those coin operated prellllure reading can detennine if treatment is usually a life long
machines. It was 160/190 and the in- you have a problem which requires program. At different times
strucllons reconuntnded that I see a treatment. YoiD' physlcial will medication may be adjusted up or
physician. What do the numbers probably want to bike several ad- down. It is very important to take
· mean and what iB the reasoning for dltional eadings on diflerent days, the medication as· directed since
this?
· before deciding if medication is making changes on your own when
ANSWER: The first nwnber is a needed. Please do see your you're feeling good gives the "silent
killer" a definite advantage.
measurement of the pressure when physician.
QUESTION : 'But! feel fine. Could Regular follow up visits to your
the heart beats forcing blood into the
arteria (systolic pressure), and the this all be a mistake? .
. physician can insure the best of
ANSWER: High blood pessure is a blood pressure control and a longer
second number reflects the resilience of the arteries in keepillg up the silent killer. Your · blood pressure ·healthier .
(Editor's Note : Dr. Stockmal can·
pressure when the heart is filling up could be elevated for years without
· again (diastolic pessure). People your knowing it. If not treated, not answer correspondence per·
with diastolic pressures greater serious damage can occur to the sonally, but letters with questions of
than 90 should be considered for body's small blood vessels: par- general interest will be answered in
treatment, along with those under Ucularly those in the heart, kidneys the column . Please address
age 35 with systolic pressures over and brain. The hUrl may also · questions to : Robert G. Stockmal,
165 or those over age 80 with systolic become enlarged beaiuse of the ex· D.O., Ph.D., College of Osteopathic
pressures over 180. These recom- , tra work load of pumping at these Medicine, Ohio University, Athens,
mendatlons have been issued by the higher pressures. High blood Ohio 45701. )

area

.

[.:iJ

Mrs. Everett Taylor, Lincoln will be installed at the Sept. 21
Heights, hosted a meeting of the meeting of the county clubs
Middleport Amateur Gardeners at association. The Middleport,
her home recently.
Amateur Gardeners will have the
The meeting opened with mer&amp; program for the meeting to IMi
bers repealing the club coUect. Miss hosted by the Rutland Garden Club.
Erma Smith, president, read
Miss Smith announced that the fall
another creed for garden club mem· regional meeting will be held on Oct. ·
bers and devotions by Mrs. Taylor . 31in Pomeroy. Meigs County garden
were on friendship. For roll call clubs will host the meeting. Mrs.
members named a favorite garden Veda Davis, Mrs. Rose Reynolds,
chore.
and Mrs. Kathryn Swanson were apMiss Smith announced the ap- ,. pointed to the nominating com·
poinbnent of Mrs. Marjorie Fetty as miltee.
Meigll County Contact chalnnan. She

Bob Evana Farm at 2 p.m. with D.
Merrill Davis of Jackson as the
Chorister. He will be accompanied
on the piano by Peg Thomas and
William Uoyd on the organ. Rev.
Gerald . Brown will ·give the invocation and there will be musical
selecli0118 by Mary Denney and
Roger Williams. A Welsh Tea will be
held on 'the lawn behind the
Homestead, served by Mildred
• Welker of Gallipolis and her ocr&amp;

rniltee.

.

Mrs. Leora Young was elected was given in unison. Offi cers' reporpresident of the American Legion ts were given.
Auxilary of Racine Post 602 at a · A letter was read from Mrs.
Lorrene Snyder, district president,
recent meeting held at the hail.
other officers named were Mrs. thanking the unit for a donation on
Louise Stewart, secretary; and Mrs. -drapes for the new Department of
Ubby Willford, treasurer. Mrs. Ohio headquarters in Zanesville.
Martha Lou Beegle presided at the She alsoannounced the summer conmeeting with Mrs. Frances Roberts ference to be held at Lancaster on
giving the opening prayer. The June 4. Registration will begin at
pledge to the Oag and the preamble noon and the meeting will comto the constitution of the Auxiliary mence at I p.m. Several from the
Racine unit will attend.

Everyone is invited to attend all or
' any part of this weekend and the adrnlsalon is free. Remember, Bob
Evana Fann. 9 a.m'. to 5 p.m. Satur·
day and Sunday, Welsh Museum
7::.1 p.m. Saturday ntcht and
Gyrnanla Ganu at 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Farm.

June 11, 1981
Befor e th is ye ar is over, you
are likely to end up with a much
larger circ le of fr iends than when
you st arted. Several of these pa l s
will have a grea t influence on
your lite.
GE MINI (May 21 -June 20) You
hav e gOod l ead ers hi p and
organizati onal qualities today .
Vou' lJ fare well in most ar eas.
HoweVer , your sk ill s may not e~e ­
lend - to ftnahc iat rea lms, so be
careful .
CANCER . (JUne 21 ·July 22)
You' re very capllble of doing
what needs doing today once you
feel the prOd 01 pressure. 1nstead
of causing you to buckle, it w ill
a-..aken your determination .
LEO (July U -Aug. 22) You ' r e
not the type to be envious of the
accompllsnm onts of oth ers .
TOday, when you learn of what
another did, it wi ll Inspire you to
oqualt"- efforts.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept, 22) Ob·

675-1333
•

Officers wen~ at the~
mert'111 of the Junior Americ:an
Legion Aulllary Ill Drew Welllter
Poll It, PwiMI\Y, beld al.the bome
of Mn, Veda Da'lia, advilar.
• Eleeted werJ Kim Patt.non,
prealdent;
pre~idtnt;

Alll&amp;a Smith, viet
CamplleU,

1\qbin

IICI'tlll')' and lnMwwl Robin

L!Dw, IU&amp;orlln: ~ llmltb,
chlplal•, and ,.... ,.., Coidl,

Wllli'l

'1:'~
....'111 '
I"Cwltll 1 ,.

1111

r.,

at 111111. 1'1111 wiD lie •

lllllllld at lbiJa • m•

of tile

i!*d
il tile
ll*ltlle

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

'

He

1\!

A report on Poppy Day was held
with Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Beegle,
Mrs. Beulah Neigler, and Betty Van
Meter of the senior unit being
assisted by Cheryl Johnson, Jennifer
Johnson and Lisa and Tabctha
Wi!Hord of the junior unit.
•
The travelfng prize donated by
Mrs. Beegle was awarded to Mrs.
Van Meter. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Young.

ASTROGRAPH

Junior:' Auxiliary elects new officers

NEW LOCATION
•••
.
241 THIRD AVENUE

i

,

celebrated at Bob Evans Farm on Churches from 12 noon to 3 p.m. on
the weekend of JWte 13 and 14, Saturday, with maps available and
higlllighted with a N08011 Lawen at people to gui,de those wbo are inthe Welsli-Amerlcan Heritage terested. '
•
Musewn on Saturday evening and a
Saturday evenings at 7:30 p.m.,
G~a Ganu at the Fannon SUnDr. David L. Mandry, past president
day afternoon.
of the Welah National Gyrnanfa
'Ibere will be Welsh craftsmen in Ganu will be at the Museum to ·greet
the Craftbarn that will be open both everyone and welcome them to the
days from q ~.m. to 5 p.m. and en- Noson Lawen (Happy Time). A
t.ertianment will include Paul aJid great program has been planned for
Brenda Neal, the Ann Trent Dan- .lhll special event that will be an incera, The Cardys, Torn Peters, Jim formal gathering with Welah singing
and Cheryl Enyart and John Ecker. and ' iome iood light hearted fun .
'l1lele musical acts will be presented Roger Williams of Thunnan will
at 10:1$ am., 12:15 p.m., 2:16 p.m. lead the singing and he will be acand 4:15 p.m. In the stage area. companied by Peg Thomas. A
Eleanor Shane ofGalllpoliB will be in traditional Welsh tea will follow.
the Genealogy booth with Jn.
The Gyminfa Ganu, a Welsh
formation concerniJ!I the Welah Sacred Song Feltival, will be held on
o1 Jacum and Gallla CounUea: the stage back of the homestead at

Old, unwanted, unneeded articles you have just lying
around the houM, gathering
dust, can be turned lntoGOLI;)' .
with a cllaslfltd ld. Your old
junk could become someone
elM's treasure.

WAYSIDE FURNITURE
1;

Get to Heaven." Speaking of their
The Rev. and Mrs. Harris sang
love and appreciation for the "Fallin Love with Him Over and
minister and· his family were 'Mrs. Over Again" and 'Why Isn't
Eileen Buck and Mrs. Karen David- Everybody Singing Hallelujah."
son of the Apple Grove Church, Mrs. • The minister sang "Rise and Shine"
,Mary Louise Shuler and Mrs. Lo.ls andNathansang "JesUs Loves Me."
Bell for ,the Letart Falljl Church •.
The Racine CliOir sang "This is the
Speaking for the Racine Chute~ Time I Must Sing."
were Bob Hill who corrunented on
A reading "God Keep Watch Betthe minister's help in building the ween Me and Thee" was given by
,new church, John Quddlng who cor&amp; Mrs. Marlene · Fisher and Mrs.
J11ented on his musical leade~p, Virginia Rees read an original poem
Betty Roush who thanked him for as a farewell tribute. Gifts were
his help on the adrninistrallve board,· presented to the couple. The Rev.
and Alene Reese who spoke of the James Clark will assume pastorate
work of the pastor with the older of the church in August.
members of the church.
Also speaking brleOy during the
others speaking briefly ·were program was the Rev. Carl HickS
Harold Roush, Frances Roberts, who will be the interim minister,
Ruth Stern, and Juanita Sayre who The groiip fanned a ·circle· joining
commented on the guidance and hands to sing "Blest Be the Tie that
assistance given her during the Binds." The Rev. Mr. Harris gave
illness and death of her husband. . . the benediction.

Welah Heritage Days will be ' There will be a lour to area Welsh

ONECOLORONLY,BLUE

2 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM

A farewell Jll!rtY for the Rev.
Davici'Harris, his wife, June, and
son, Nathan, was h\!)d 'in the Leblrt
Falls cOmmunity building Saturday
evenblg. ,
A poUuek dlru\er Wll!l enjoyed by
tne members of the Apple Grove,
Leblrt Falls . and the Racine
Wesleyan Cbui'ehes and other frieDcis of the Harris family. About 75
persons !iltended.
Mrs. Betty Roush wu general
chainnan for the party with Mrs. Et·
ta Mae Hill in ,charge of the {llnner.
1
Mrs. Marlene Fl.!!her prepared the
program.
Floral arrangements
were dOill!ted by Mrs. Chlorus
Grimm ,and were presented to tile
Rev. and Mrs. Harris along with a
decorated Cllke baked by Mandy
Hill.
Mrs. Ruth Stem was at the piano
for group singing of "When We AU

'

Welsh heritage days at
Bob Evans Farm june 13,.J4 Leora Young president of Auxiliary

Sq. Yard

SALE PRICE'l OOClq. Yard

Over Heavy Pad

.

·~

'

Middleport, Ohio

100% NYLON
REGULAR 119.95 SQ. YARD

.

High blood pressure--sile:nt ·killer

DEHUMIDI.fiERS

BAKER FURNITURE

Page-7

FareWell fete honors !Harrises

Health Review

ADM 1RAI.

18, 23, 37 pl cap.

The Bend

Middleport Amateur Gardeners meet

PLUSH
CA
MEDIUM WEIGHT

SCHULPTURED SAXONY

•3MSQ.

'

WITH RUBBER BACK

Installed Over Pad

I

I

5 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM

Sq . yard

., 0~~

.

SALE

SCHULPTURED
NYLON SAXONY

$}200

,

STOCK REDUcTION

CASH &amp;CARRY

STATIC PROTECTION
STAIN PROTECTION
REGULAR 123.99

.

NEW YORK (AP) - The Dallas sey Nets, picking third with the first
Mavericks, who won only 15 games of their three first-roilnd choices,
in their initial NBA season, opened tabbed center-forward Buck
the college draft by selecting Mark Williams of Maryland.
Aguirre, the two-time All-American
from DePaul.
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
Aguirre, a 6-foot-5 forward; I
averaged 24.5 points per game in his
three seasons at DePaul before electing to pass up his senior year to turn
pro.
The Detroit Pistons, picking
second, selected guard !Siah
Thomas of Indiana. the player they
wanted all along since they are in
need of a playrnaker. The New JerAn Admiral dehumidifier can

SAVE UP TO 50%
ANSON IV NYLON

.

Dallas selects DePaul standout

CARPET ·sALE

~ By

The Daily Sentinel
'

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., I ,,
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOS~ITAL

•

mak e your basement or othtr
damp area more comfortable by
ta kin-g the exceu moisture aut of
the air. It helps protect furniture
and ~ wooclwork from the d1m19"
ing effects of constant dampness.
11 retards mildew, mold, musty
odors and rust - gives vour home
more living areil .

•

' Frank Pastore sta. r~
Rig~t-hander

Jackson paces Twins to ·3-1 victory
By Associated Press
off the left field fence.
The Yankees bullpen has made a
Fernando Arroyo, 4-4, needed last·
habit of performing heroics all out relief help from Doug Corbett,
season. So has Chicago's Rich Dot· who earned his seventh save.
sun. But Minnesota's Ron Jackson
Yankees 8, Royals 5
has discovered the iouch just this
Corbett now has 10 fewer saves
week .
than Gossage, who leads the majors.
Jackson, the Twins' versatile in- Rookie Gene Nelson was bombed for
fielder-outfielder, has been almost five nJJIS in 11-3 innings, but
the entire Minn~sota offense the past LaRoche, 3-0, came in to check the
two ni ghts. On Monday, his MJJI· Royals + who have lost five straight
scoring single knocked in the only to New York this season + on two
run as the Twins edged Milwaukee I· hits for 32-3 innings. Griffin took
0. Tuesday night, Jackson's two-run over for 21·3 innings of three-hit pit·
double put the Twins on top to stay in ching, followed by "The Goose" for
a 3-1 triumph.
12·3 innings of hiliess relief.
The Yankees, meanwhile,· conThe Yankees bullpen has given up
tmued to get first·rate relief pitching one nlll in the last 332-3 innings.
as Dave LaRoche, Mike Griffin and
Wblte Soli: 3, Blue Jllys 0
Rich Gossage hurled 72-3 innings of
Dotson, 7·3, retired 14 of the last IS
' cureless ball in New York's 8-5 win batters in pitching his fifth complete
over Kansas City, the Yankees' nin- game this season.
thstraight victory.
The Sox got their first inside-theAmi Dotson threw his fourth park homer in exactiy seven years
shutout, tops in the American when Wayne Nordhagen lined a sh&lt;t
League. a five-hitter that befuddled down the right·rleld line a!ld circled
Toronto, which lost its ninth game in the bases as the Toronto outfield had
a row. 3-{) to the White Sox.
trouble retrieving the ball. Ron SanElsewhere, it was Detroit5, Texas to had the last White Sox' inside-theO: California 4, Cleveland 2; Boston park homer on June9, 1974.
10, Sea ttle 1 and, in a doubleheader,
Tigers 5, Rangers 0
Oakland took Ba ltimore 4-2and3·2.
Aurelio Lopez made his first sblrt
Twins 3, Brewers I
of the season and just his seventh in
Jackson, who shunped early this three major league seasons. After
'eason but has raised his average to hurling a four-hitter over six innings
.275, credits visits to a psychiatrist
+ Kevin Saucier then took over +
with his improvement.
Lopez became a starter on a more
.Jackson, who has been used at pennanent basis.
four positions and as designated hitTorn Brookens had three runs bat·
ter this season, followed fo urth- ted in for Detroit.
mn ing singles by Butch Wynegar
Aogels t,lndlaos!
and Mickey Hatcher with a double
Don Baylor's two-nlll homer in the

.

' .

Slul);lp ridden Driessen paces Reds
NEW YORK (AP) - This has
been a tough year on Dan Driessen
of the Cincinnati Reds, and he's not
letting his recent success fool him.
He'd like to think about baseball,
but the reserve first baseman knows
the time will come later this season
when it's back to square one.
Driessen has started the past 10
games for the Reds, replacing John·
ny Bench, who broke his ankle. A
starter last season, Driessen went
into Tuesday night's game with the
New York Mets hitting .189.
He drove in three runs, including
two in a decisive four-run rally in the
ninth inning, to power the Reds to
their fifth straight victory, an 8-4
decision over NewYork.
"It's been tough," Driessen said
later. "I know I'm not a .195 hitter.
But I also know that the one thing

'•

·-

srructi ons wn1 ch coul d have
deprived you ol l inanci al rewar d
or ca r ee r advancement arc likel y
to be lessened at th is time . Get
going .
LI BRA ( Se pt . 23-0cl. 2J)
Si tu ations siHlilttr to those wh ich
you' ve ha ndl ed succ essful ly in

the past mav develop tOday .
Dr aw upon your memor y. Usc
the same me thod s which wor ke d
pr evioUsly .
SC OR P IO lOci. l~ · Nov . 22)
Your intu i rion and instinc t in
business ma tt ers today could be a
m ajor cont ri bu tor to your sue·
cess . Listen to the dict ates ol
your sma ll , 'inner voice.
SAGIHARIU S (Nov . 2 ~ · D ec .
21) You may have been won·
deling lately just how loyal a cer·
tai n friend would be when the
chips are down . Today , he or she
will prove a staunch ally,
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan . 19)
It's not l ikel y you' ll be second
best in any competitil.te si tuatitms
tod ay , especi ally if they affect

yo u r wor k or ( Mcr r Run for llw
1a pc.
.AQU A I? I U ~ {J,lll . 2V -.. eb . 19)
Tr y to break owy fr orn whaT vou
deem 10 be du l l rolJl!n es today m
or d er to do rh .nq5. wh .c h nrc more
fun and cKr •l•ncr You need fl(

I I V1 t1 CS Wlln

~1

( h a nqr Of pace.

r· 1 ~CC:S

( f- e b. 20-March 20 1
Changing cond •t•o ns tend to
bene f it you "'' th is t ime, even
those wh ich you don' t per sonall y
.nauguratc. Rid e to success an
the tid e of happr nings.
AR IES (M,lfCh l t· Aprll lY )
Th is should be a generally
pleasa nt day . You'll know how to
re st o r e harMony
eve n if
Si tua ti ons do get ~ bit out at
kilter .

TA URU S I Apro t 70·M•y 201
You may ha Ve a l ew eX tr a ta sks
10 contend with today , but don· r
let this distur b you. Ac tu ally, you
stlou ld find rhc• busie r your
schedule is , the bc llcr you ' ll per
form _

�Wednesday, June 10,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
, June10,1911

Legion Auxiliary
receives awards at
Thursday dinner
Camille Swindell

]ena Welker

Award scholarships
Bedford 'Township Community
Scholarship Committee has announced the names of two recipients
of their first two scholarships.
Each recipient was the winner of a
$900 scholarship. They are Camille
Susette Swindell, 11, Shade,
daughter of Ernest Ned and Sharon'
K. Swindell, and Jena Rene Welker,
17, daughter of Jack Welker and

Sharon Welker, Pomeroy.
Both are 1981 graduates of Meigs
High School and wiU be attending
Ohio University in Athens. Miss
Swindell has an accumulated 3.974
grade average. Miss Welker has an
accumulated 3.539 grade average.
Both reciplents.had high ACT scores
and are members of the National
Honor Society.

Mason news reported
Historical Society
meets Tuesday

Awards were presented at the
Eighth District swruner convention
of the American Legion Auxiliary
, beld Thursday in Lancaster:
Local units receiving awards were
Pomeroy, veterans affairs,
Americanism, children and youth,
and community service with special
awards going to Veda Davis for her '
junior activities program, and Mary .
Martin. Others attending the conference from the Pomeroy unit of
Drew Webster Post 39 were
Catherine Welsh, Marjorie Goett,
Iva Powell, Rhoda Hackett, and
Ruby Marshall. The unit also
received a goal ribbon for membership.
The Middleport unit took firsts in
Americanism, children and youth,
veteranS affairs and rehabilitation,
and also received a goal ribbon for
membership. Melinda Thomas
received an honorable mention, for
her junior activities scrapbOok. Attending from the unit were Becky
Tyree, Erma Hendricks, Peggy
Caton, and Gerry Parsons who was
also presented a special service
award.
Representing Middleport Unit 26J,
Lewis Manley Post, at the conference were Lula Hampton and
Zuelelia Smith.
District president, Lorrene
Snyder, conducted that meeting and
appointed Mrs. Welsh and Mrs. Martin to serve on committees at the

Happy Harvesters to serve food at Regatta

SUMMER SALE!

20%, 25%, 30% OFF
ALL OVER THE STORE

. COLUMBUS, Ohio .CAP)- F~th; Reaourtei DlvWon o( WildiUe to
second time thia Yeat, a battle 18 establi4b hunting ~01111 for wild
. y be
bfl!l!ln(jlntheOhioGeneraiAsaein- animals which .already rna
bly OYIII' whether riioui'lllilg doVes takenupderfederalregulatiO!III.
·
shouldbefairgameforhanters. ·
Moumingdoves,currentlyprotecRep. I Ronald H. James, D- !etlfromhuntinginOhio,areclassed
~e, introduced in tbe' as migratory game birds by the
House on Tuesday a bill that could federal government.
make wild animals on the federal
An earlier Senate-passed bill adgame lilt nbject to hunting lg Ohio. ding doves to the liat of game birds
:If
tile meuure • would was killed after being shot down in
Natural two cl~ House..votes. Though that

Announce engagement
Mr. and· Mrs. Ellis E. Haines of
Route I, Juliette, Ga., and Mrs.
George M. Adams of Lower River
Road, Gallipolis, announce the
engagement' and upcoming
marriage of tbeir children, Ginger
Haines and Brant Adams. The
ceremony will take place on July 4,
1981 at 8 p.m., at Ingleside Baptist
Church, Macon, Ga.
Miss Haines is a graduate of
Macon Junior College and Georgia
CoUege, and holds a Bachelor of
Business Administration degree.

She is currently employed as the
manager of the Macon Mall County
Seatstore:
.
Adarns is a graduate of Capital
University and holds a Master of
Music degree from Cincinnati
College Conservatory of Music. He
teaches at Mercer University Music
Department in Macon, Ga.
The gracious custom of open chur'
ch will be observed with a reception
following in the church feJ.lowship
hall.

Public nolice is herebr
given that on the 7th day of
May, 1981 the County
Treasurer of Meigs County,
Ohio flied a complaint 1n
the Court of Common Pleas
of Meigs County, Ohio at
Pomeroy, Ohio for the
foreclosure of liens tor
delinquent taxes, assess·
ments. penalties , and
charges agalnsl cerlain
real property situated in

BUCKEYES IN MOUNTAIN STATE - Three
Obi- are alleDIIIDg National G•Jard snmmer camp
it Cuap Daeon, aear K.lllgwood, W. Va. From left,
8Ki Rober! Frame of Pomeroy, Sgt. Fin I Class Robert

Barbara Estep and Pvt. Aaron Morris

.

.

Mr. and Mrs Tom King of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Estep of Parkersburg, W. Va. are
announcing the upcoming marriage
of their daughter, Barbara Ann
Estep, to Pvt. 2 Aaron Lee Morris of
Ft. Mead, Md. He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. ROland E. Morris,
Rutland.

The ceremony wiU be held on June
12 at 3 p.r.1. at the Laurel CUff Free
Methodist Church with the Rev.
Floyd Shook officiating. The
gracious custom of open church will
be observed.
·
A reception will be held at th_!!
grange hall on the Meigs County
fairgrounds foUowing the ceremony.

KINGWOOD, W. Va. - Rain or
shine, West Virginia National Guard
unil5 conduct required swruner
training. It has been mostly rain for
Army conlbat training at Camp
Dawson nebr here since May 16. The
1092nd En~ineer Battalion with units
from six communities is now at the
Prestlm County miUtary Installation
for 15 dljys of Annual-Training. Units
include: Hq. and Hq. Co., Parkersburg; . Co. A, Gassaway; Co. · B,
Weston and; Spencer; and Co. C,
Salem and Moundsville. Elements
from the lllth Engineer Group, St.
Albans and Parkersburg and the
3664th liJalntenan~e , Co., Pt.
Pleasant are supporting tbe 1092nd's
training.
The 520 Guardsmen have an intense schedule or programmed activities l"hich started with a three
day tactical bivouac on nearby rainsoakect Briery MOWitain. Realistic
combat conditions were simulated
wit,h a constant defensive posture
enforc~d and continuous improvenien\5 made lo unit positions.
Camol!flage netting and fresh-eut

"
SOFTBAll BATS

•GLOVES
•SOFT BALLS
•BASEBALLS
•CLEATS

$10 000 m1mmum 1nvestment reQuired Interest may be pata momnty. Quarterly or at
matunty dHectly toyou or lranslerrea Into an01her 01amona Savlrigs account . Etlec!lve annual y1etd oased on remvestmenl or pnnctpal and 1nterest at maturity This IS
an annual rate Stlbtectto change at renewal Federal regulat1ons proh1bH compound·

mg ol1 nteres t and requ1re a substant1al 1nterest penalty lor early withdrawal .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Although
scaled. back from its current eommibnenl, Mexico has agreed to continue buying large quantities of U.S.
agricultural commodities through
1982.

..

1•11ILI•It'=
t· =~.
1

QUARTZ

UY003

estate and ordering the

sale of such real estate for

the satisfaction of the tex

liens thereon.

Such action is brought

against the real property

only and

'

Quart; accuracy
withallthe
high perfurmancefeatures.

20% OFF FOR FATHER.'$ DAY.

•

All MEN'S SHOES INQ.UDING DRESS,
CASUAL. WORK SHOES AND tiMJSE SUPPERS

You II know this dependable Pulsar. Quartz
watcj;l 's the right choice for you the
moment you slip it on . And you II be os·
sured ev).ry time you glance at it . Quartz
accuracy mea ns reliable on-time perform·
once that verges.on pl!rfection . And you '
never hove to wind 11. The battenes
keep it runnin~ for up to two yeors .Theres
an instant sett•ng day dot&lt;;! ca lenda'r m
. English and Spanish. Plus the convenience
of a sweep second hand. lum1no~:Js d1al
ond hands and it's water-resistant. too.
Easily adjustable bracelet in white or gold
tone. And a wide range of attractive
styles to fHld the exact hard ,working
watch you always wanted.
Pulsar · Quartz. ~I Ways a beat b~yond.

l

Doroth,y Myers u W1111es

,•

TBUIIDAY
ROat ,SPRINGS GRANGE,

p.m. 'ftlurldly at the hill.

I

. JlibAY
RE'l1JRN J-tban Melli Chapter, DIIJII!In of the Am1rican
Rlwlldloll, I p.m. friday a&amp; the
hllile !If lin. Olnlel 'l'llctmll, 1116-

W

CHAPMAN'S SHOES
...

.
=
~

. MAIN · I'OMIIOY

,.

Ollllr bert
• MrL
J - O'Brlln, ...... 'l'lllnoa Job.
... 111'1. Jalll a., lira. Llrry I.
Al • 'p.m. ... Ill plalle,
wiJIIIi I I 'Kill M flow lor
the llflt IIIIICf Reed, I ehlpler

••

"
I

a

l

.

,,

The

,

.

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Oaily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomerov. 0 ., 45769

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTALS

l - c 1 rCIIDI lfllnlll
1- tn Mtrnori •m
)- AnnO\Inc;emeAis

,11 _ HDUStsttr Rtnt
0 - Motti .. Hom n

tor Renl
fiW Rent
U - FI.Irnlstl.cl Rooms
44-A~rtmenh

••- SP'ct tor Rent
47- w•ntM to tUnt
41- Equ ipmtnttor Rent

'

&amp; Audlon

.•'

•MERCHANDISE

t-Wuttd to Bu r

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

''- "'"Winteel
Will IN

51- HoU511\old Goecll
52- CI, TV, Aiello Equipment
Sl- Antiquel
·
S4- M IU . Merchand lst
SS- B\Iill2int SOpplln
)6- Ptlllor S.llt

11-Sit~Jtttcf

,,_lnturtnct

'•

.•'

14-BUII fltU Trtining

wantea
( l For Sale
( l Announcement
( ) For Rent
( l

I

IJ.-ScltMitlllstruction
lt- lhdio, TV,
&amp; Cl Rep.~ir
11-W•nled To Do

17.
18.
19.

I. _ _ _ _:.._

2. _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ __

11- luslfi.Sii

Services

24.

1_ Homtstor Slit
1- Mobllt HOM OS
torS. It
U-Ftrrtll lor Slit
)4- lwslntn lwUdlttts
U - ltts&amp; AtrHtt

1

27.

··-----

~.

9.
10. ..__ _ _ __

11.

u-RHI Eslttt wuttd

~

31 .
32.

12.
13.

···

30.

3!1· - -

14.

.

I· u.
I 16.
,II

O...Ond-IIJtflt--.

YMI col. . - Oloke lnd prlmo INI; Good
IUM'I.II.
. . . . , _. .1•.

.........

1

r. ........ -:1»17.111.

31- ltN ttors

Wanf·Ad Advmlsing
Dead tines
MfMIN: II .. Satvrdly
T•ttOyfflrw Frtlly l : lt~ . M .
"" •• ., lttftrt ,_, ••,, •• ,...
SIHMIIY 2:• ~ . M . FrHity

Jl - AutOIIor Silt

n - vusi4W.D.
1!- At.~IO

35. - - - - - , - -

U,tou..,..s .. .......

Mill This Coupon with Remittance

Tile Daily sentinel
Box 729

&amp; accenoriu

•SERVICES
11 - Homt lmprov•menll
n - Pivmblntl E•tavttint

...•
•

.••

u- E • u nlint
14- EIKiflCtl

&amp; RtfrlttfltiDfl
U-Gttltrll Htwlint
N--M.H, lttHir
v - uptlttlttry

,,,...,.Itt! .........

'

1 • •• • •••• • • • • ••••

•

••
••
••
n ...
~ . to

M"'lt Htmt Min 1M Y.lrf ltltltriiCC.,ftt Oily Wltft C..h wiHt
""' . u C:fflt c:Nr" tw tft cerrv!ttt ...
Ctrt tt TM

rtMf'¥11"'

.•••
.•
•

17 - At.~lo Aep.~lr

Uti to uwns., .lflrHdiY Insertion .. , .......... • , .. ,,,.,,,

htltln.l .
T;ttt hMitMr

..
....•••
..

ft1rh

U, to IJWtrCIIS ... sl• ••YtlnHrftM , , , , , .•• , ... ., , , ....... , , lf.ll
{AYtrl. . 4 ..,-,,per U"tl

'

•

•
'

.••

14- MoTorcycles

Ratei lnd Other Information

l-----~~~~!~~~~~~-----~~

Pip fir~~~~- twL
............... JI.-.11.

L.iYUIOCk

•TRANSPORTATION

• REAL ESTATE

25.
26.
28.

Truchtorhlt

2J-ProltUIGIUI I

23.

6.
-_
-_
' -_7. __

' 1 - F~rm EQUipmtnt
WII'IIt'CI to lu'l'

Hul Gnir1
U- Sted&amp; Ftrtlllter

Opportunity
22-Monty ltlun

21.
22.

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

U'2UH-

•FINANCIAL

:10.

~·----5.
_ _ _ __

- ullUtioo 40o4Ut; Connon

lnd..rtni4.1Nt.
....._ .... fl1tbi-JIJ1.411.

WANT AD INFORMATION

4--GIYUWIY
J-H1ppy Ads
. -Lo" tnd Found
7-Ya rd S.te
I - Publ ic Slit

..... -; •1110.
liloaoiiUr -

· want Ad

CLASSIFIED AD I.NDEX

Foeder Steen: Good 11111 Choice :liO lbo. to ltll
lbo.lllo 72: ltlllbo. to 400 lbo. ll toll ; .al lbo. to
IOIIbo. 17 to II; ltiO lbo. to eotl lbo. IHI.lO; 1110
lbo. to 100 lbo. M~ti.IO; 700 lbo. to 1Dt1 lbo. I017.10;11101bo. ond....-4UT.
F - Hellen: Good lnd Choice • b. toliO
lbo. - : . f b i. to400 Jbo. - : ltiOibo. toMI
lbo.IJ-G,:: lilt. to •1bo. »&amp;10: IDtllbo.
to ltlllbo.
. ftllllbo. 111110 fbi. 4!-11; IDtllbo.
lnd-4UJ.
, _ Bolio: ~ ind OIOioe .. ,.... 11311
... ~j ~ ....J.. ...... · · - : ..... to
to• kii.INJ; IDtllbo.
to Ill lilt.-; llllho. to. 1bo. 41.1NJ ; 1110
IlL I I I I I - -I
Butlll,............
. -.... .... a.u.•toiiiO

' GETYOOR-W!THA

Nam•------------------

oteady to 11.141 hleher. FMdercaWo otudy.

--llld

161 10. lie

Write your own ad and ·order by mail with tnis
coupon. Cancel your ad by phOne when you get
results. Money not refundable.

'
'

personal

1 Curb Inflation.
! Pay Cash for
! Claulfleds and
1
Savalll

Agriculture Secretary John R. Block
and Mexico's Minister of Commerce
Jorge de Ia Vega. II calls for Mexico
to buy at least 4.57 million metric
tons of U.S. commodities next year,
mainly corn, sorghwn, wheat and
oilseeds.
.
llflt that represents a reduction
from the agreement Mexico signed
for 1981. Officials· said the current
pact caUs for purchases to total6.15
million to 8.18 million metric tons.
U.S. farm exports to Mexico have
soared dr81)1atically, rising to a
value of $2.5 billion in 19110 from $1
billion in 1979. As a result, Mexico
last year became the third largest
foreign buyer ,of U.S. •.tarw .Commodities, exceeded by the
Netherlands:_ $3.48 billion, and
Japan, $6.33 billion.
Although the agreement is on a
country·tOoCOU!ltry basis, actual
sales, as in tbe past, will be handled
by private U.S. exporting companies
through normal commercial channels, Block said.

Market reports

In technology. In value,
',

The Agriculture Qepartment said
Tuesday that the new agreement "is
basically a continuation of supply
agreemen\5 maintained with Mexico
during 1980 and 1981."
The new pact was signed by

member, at the Middleport Hill
WEDNESDAY
Cemetery.
POMEROY Chapter 1m Royal ArMARY SHRINE 37, White Shrine
ch Masoll8 Wednesday 7:30 p,m.
of
Jerusalem, will meet Friday, 8
- • Election ,of officers. All companions
p.m.
at tbe Pomeroy Masonic Te!TI\
urged to bring rituals for reassignpie.
There
will be potluck refreshment.
ments.
BOSWORTH Counci146 Royal and
SATURDAY
Select Masters Wednesday at 8:30
HYMN
SING,
7:30p.m. Saturday
p.m. Election of officers. Bring
at HyseU Run Holiness· Church.
rituals for reaaaigrunent.
Special
singing of Joint-Heirs;
WEDNESDAY Amateur Garpublic
invited.
deners, ·B p.m. Wednesday at the
REUNION OF Meigs High School
home of Miss Bernice Ann Dunt.
class
of 19'16, 8 p.m. Saturday at
The program wiU include a tour of
Royal
Oak Park. Those wishing intbe r111e garden of Mr. and Mrs. Arformation
contact Merri Ault, 992thur StraUSII.
·
UNITED Methodist Women, · 5454 mornings or Bruce Reed, 9926723 evenings.
' Letart FaUa Church, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Rose McDade, Middleport.
POMEROY .. MIDQLEPORT
U0111 Club, Wednelday noon, at
Melp Inn with Lee R. Cates, district
govlfDOI', to inltal1 new officers.
PAST-'-COJ,INCILORS, Chester
Councll om, Illfl8hten ol America,
will IIIII! atl p.m. Wedneaday at the
lodp hill with ()pll Hollon and.

Goid·tone.
block diol
$125

no

'udgment shall be entered
herein.

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

.

U¥004 $135

'

(

lax liens against such real

foliage hid tents, vehicles and heavy airlift.
equipment from aerial observation,
Lt. Col. Manuel G. Goble of Nitro,
while fo•holes, log bunkers and commanding officer of the 1092nd,
sandbag walsl prov\ded protection reported that the evaluations made
from weapons fire . Password for B and c. Companies were
systems and obstacles of barbed satisfactory. The 78th Maneuver
concertina wire and booby traps ser- Training Command, a New Jersey
ved to keep "enemy" aggressor for- Reserve unit which conducted the
ces out.
eyaluations, pronounced the comThese measures were all needed panies "capable of performing their
as each unit was attacked night and wartime missions."
day by guerrilla troops using
Unit Commanders include: Hq.
automatic weapons, pyr()-technics and Hq. Co., Capt. Marion Musilli, of
and searing tear gas. On the tl)ird Moundsville; •Co. A, Capt. Howard
night an atomic blast simulator was Hill, of Fayetteville; Co. B, Capt.
detonated, requiring ·immediate ac- John Bragg, of Worthington ; and Co.
lion to prevent and counter nuclear C, Capt. William Snider, of Walker.
contamination
The remainder of the battalion's
Throughout the 72-hour exercise camp will be spent on 23 projects to
critical Anny Training Evaluations improve Camp Dawson's facilities,
were being 1ilade for Bravo (B) and including roadways', buildings,
Charlie (C) Companies. Despite the weapons ranges, sidewalks and
aggressors' harassment, both unitS drainage around squad tents. Ad- lconve•ved
performed assigned missions and ditionally, engineer troops will work
tasks, including erecting an SMoot , in the town of Bayard to clear silt,
"Bailey" vehicle bridge, artillery sand and stone from a small stream
emplacements, constructing log crib running through the center Qf the
obstacles, blasting tank-impeding town. The units will return home on
road craters, placing mine fields June13.
and moving troops by helicopter

Sentinel. Social Calendar

S95

Cold -tone model

FATHER'S DAY GIFTS

"Nut To Elbtrfelds In Pomeroy"

said complaint. ·
· The ob1ect of the action Is
to obtain from the courl a
'udgment foreclosing the

Poleyn of GalllpoUa and Spec. Flftb Class 'Milford
Hysell of Middleport are members of the 3664th Maintenance Co., Point Pleasant. (153rd PA Deteehment
pboto).

Mexico will continue purchases

-

6-month Money Market Certificate ·

such county as described in

Pt. Pleasant National.Guard Unit
• •
•
• •
p~c1pates m summer tra1nmg

BASEBAU. AND

12%
14.250%

-

this as another ploy to allow the animals is an Important part of the · :
same thin
. g," lie said. "Whether It
worksornotremainstobeseen.The measure.
;
issue is still should tbe mourning
"It is intended as a pennanent.~
dovebekilled."
statement of legislative intent for:~
· The Wildlife Legislative Fund, the guidance of future state ad- ;
meanwhile, fully approved and en- miniStrations, should they . find ;
dorsed the biU Tuesday. The Colwn- . themselVes battered by future anti- . ;
bus-based group, with county panels ' hunting campaigns concerning, for .'
known as Ohioans for Wildlife Con- example, species of waterfowl," the
servation, said establishing !he right fund said in a prepared statement.

NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURTOFMEtGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE
OF
FORECLOSURE OF
LIENS
,
F.OR
DELINQUENT
LAND
TAXES BY ACTION tN
REM,
BY COUNTY
TREASURER OF MEIGS
COUNTY,OHtO

juliette Haines and Brant Adams

UY006

Current
lnteresl
Rate

Of moUrning !loves and I would view . lo hunt federally controlled wild ·:

Public Notice

tt~RDWfiRE

Eflective
Annual
Yield

nieasiire q8Mot be reconstclefed un- check showed doVea ~ crows are ·
der House rules, the new bill can.
the only anima~ affected by . the
Unllkethe8e•atebill,·Whichdealt . measure, since the · federal
only with d~ves, the · current' .·re~tiona involved pertain to
measure would cover any wild mlgtatory or rare and endangered
animal which federal law or species,hesald.
regulation authorizes taking,
Rep.EugeneBranstool,D-Utica,a
possessing or transporting; James leadingopponentoftheorlginaldove
said.
bill, said he wasn't surprlaed by inRussell L. Scholl, assistant chief of traduction of the new measure.
the wildlif~ division, said he hadn't
"My reaction would be they failed
read the bill. But a preliminary on two occasions to allow the hunting

:

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

MOORE'S
AMERICfiM

Highest Yield.
Guaranteed Rate.

·The o ·ail . Sentinei-Page-9

·R ep. R·on James intfodu~es . another wild animal bill

state convention to be held in
Cleveland in July.
Mabel Brown gave tbe credential
report which showed an attendance
of 79. Among the distinguished
guests attending and introduced
were Lancaster Mayor Keruieth
Mace; James Griffith, cormnander
of the host post; James ·Hanson,
Eighth District commander . who
presented the red, white and blue
award for the district to Mrs.
Elizabeth Young.
Mrs. Tyree reported on the district
junior conference and urged beUer
support of junior units by the senior
Auxiliary members. Mrs. James
Gatewood, Uthopolis, was elected
neiv Eighth District president.
Guest speaker was Mrs. John
Nickolson, Xenia, . Department ·
treasurer, who talked on the various
programs of the Auxiliary. Past
district presidents introduced were
Mr.!. Parsons, Mrs. Brown, Mrs.
Jane Bowles, Wilkesville; Lenora
Adkins, Crooksville, and Arree MarshaU, Lancaster.
A memorial .service for deceased
members was held. A gift and
bouquet of silk flowers were presented to Mrs. Snyder. '
Announced was the open house at
Department headquarters on July 5;
convention in Cleveland, July IG-13;
and the birthday party for veterans
in Chillicothe on July 16.

Squad held a skating party and afterwards a picnic at Mason's Park
on Sunday. Approximately 50 memMASON - Mrs. Joyce Carson was bers and guests attended.
in charge of the program when the
The group roasted hotdogs and enMason Historical Society met on joyed soft drinks.
Tuesday at the Lewis home on
Brown Street. She reported on Host fellowship
"F'Iags of Our Nation." Mrs.
MASON - The Mason Youth
Catherine Smith conducted a quiz on Fellowship hosted the Suli-District
West Virginia history. Mrs. Sarah Youth Fellowship on Monday
Spencer, vice preisdent, presided at evening at the Mason United
the meeting during the absence of Methodist Church with 47 youths
Plans for serving food during "Cooperation."
the president, Mrs. Lois Test. Two from various churches attending.
Regatta Weekend were discussed
Officers' reports were given and
new members, Mrs. Mary Roush Mason Youth F'ellowship won the atduring
the
Friday
meeting
of
the
the
rwnmage sale being held this
and Mrs. Norene Layne of New tendance banner.
Happy · Harvesters Class held at week was discussed. Mrs. Caryl
Haven, were introduced. Devotions
New officers were installed by the Trinity Church.
Cook was appointed to have
were given by Mrs. Lawrence Rev. John Icenhower , pastor of
Serving
will
begin
at
noon
on
June
devotions
for the July meeting. Mrs.
Belcher.
Good Shepherd United Methodist 25 and continue through the Cook and Mrs. Ada Holter wiU be
During the bwsiness meeting the Church and included Eric Lanier,
weekend. Donations are needed hostesses. A song and the Lord's
group voted 10 favor of having president; vice president, Barbara from members, it was noted.
Prjlyer in unison closed the meeting.
mobile homes where Senior Citizens McCr~mb; secreta ry , Lydia
Prayer by Miss Enna Smith Refreshments were served by Ruth
meet, moved to U1e back yard of the Thomas; treasurer, Kent Stevens;
opened the meeting and the group Massar and Mrs. Dessauer to those
'Lewis property.
reporter, Angie Cline.
sang
"I Love to Tell the Story," named and ' Mrs. Genevieve
It was announced the historical
Youths attended from Good followed by devotions by Wilma Meinhart, Mrs. Edith Lanning, Mrs.
society has received a flag from Shepherd United Methodist Church
Terrell who read "Paint my House" Wilma Terrell, Mrs. Stella Kloes,
Senator Jennings Randolph which of Flat Rock, Beech Hill United
from Guideposts. Mrs. Eva and Mrs. Edna Slusher.
has flown over the capitol. Thanks Methodist, St. Paul Unit.ed
Dessauer read a clipping
were extended to Mrs. Eber Roush Methodist, Heights United
for a picture of the West Virginia Methodist Church, Pt. Pleasant, and
VBS next week
Capitol which wsa given to the Mason United Methodist Church.
VBS
to
begin
society, and for books which were Refreshments were served at tbe
The Hysell Run Holiness Church
given by Mrs. Maxine Arnold.
A vacation Bible school will be will be holding a vacation Bible
conclusion of the meeting.
It was also announced a potluck
held at the Allred United Methodist school from Monday, June 15,
dinner will be held on June 20 at the Mason , area personals
Church June 22 through June 26 with through June 21, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Lewis home.
a closing program to be held on June each morning; all children are
Mrs. Lucille Schwarz returned 28at7 :30p.m. .
Attending were Mrs. Hervin
welcome to attend.
Ueving, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. home F'riday after being a patient at
Earl Ingels, Mrs. Lawrence Pleasant Valley Hospital.
r;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;i
Mrs. Sarah Spencer went to
Belcher, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs.
Delmar Alexander, Mrs. Russell Bluefi~ld , W. Va. where she atBarton, Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Mrs. tended the graduation of her grand.Joyce Carson, Mrs. Lucille Swack- da~ghter, Julie Spencer, from
All This Week
hamer, Mrs. Mary Roush and Mrs. Bluefield High School on Thursday.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Norene Layne.
(Wood &amp; Aluminum)
Edward Spencer.
Randy Lewis, a student at Ohio
Fell reunion
State, visited over the weekend with
POMEROY - Several descen- his grandmother, Mrs. Laurene
lnfantto 14
dants of Anton and Margaret F'ell Lewis, who is ill and with his parenBargains
on:
held a reunion at the Meigs Inn on ts, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith.
.J une 4.
Shorts, Tops, Sleepwear,
Attending the dinner were Mr. and
Infant Fashionwear.
Mrs. John Marshall, New Haven; Undergoes surgery
John Fell, Burbank, Calif.; Mr. and
Mrs. Martha Searls, Middleport,
Mrs Edward Burkett, Middleport; und erwent surgery for hip
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Burkett, replacement Tuesday at St. Marys
Charleston ; Mr. and Mrs. George Hospital in Huntington, W. Va. She
Lots to Choose From
.Jeans
Yolk. Cincinnati ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul . is confined to room 336A and expects
Swimwear
Einfalt, Tiffin, Oh.
to be hospitalized for about three
20%
'"'-~
While here, they visited at the weeks. Monday is her birthday and
OFF
homes of Mr. and Mrs. John Mar- friends here plan a card shower.
shall anti. Mr. and Mrs. Edward
•
Burkett.
To meet Thursday
PHONE 992·2848
The
Rock
Springs
Grange
will
124 w. Main St.
Have party
meet at 8 p.m. Thursday night at the
Pomeroy, OH.
MASON - The Mason Emergency hall.

rt, Oliio

N•"'••tr '"

ritt1t hiM It or rtite11l'r . . .._..
.Kt+MII. Uit hM/IIItr WID ftM It rft,.l'llltft ltr M_.. ....ft 11M
lftc:orroct MMf'tltft,

.'.-

.'.•••.
I,••

••
•••

••:,
•

-·

�o-The Da11y Sentmel
10 1981
Public Not1ce

Public Notice

ter OH the unknown
spouse I any whose name
Pendergrass by and
are unknown
da M
Wa ner and the address
unknown
hers
husband by deed d•ted dev sees
legatees
ad
Nov 16 1903 and recorded m n strators
executors
n Vol 95 pgs 15 and 16 of and o des gns Of
E wood
Records of Deeds of Me gs
Ne son I dec BERNIE
County Oh o
Deed Ret Vo 139 pg NELSON I I v ng whose
163 Me gs County beed last known address s
We lsv e
OH
he
Reco ds
spouse t any
JUDGMENT
5396 49 unknown
whose name and add ess
Mary J

plu s

accrued
costs of a 1 on

taxes

assessments penalt es and
CASE NO 81 DL T 42
Pa ce Nos 0 0 4 092 10
014 093 $er an NO 8 DL T
42 t t ed n the name of
G LBE RT LEE GRAND
STAF F I vng whosead
d ess s unknown
the
unknown spouse f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown the unknown

he rs dev sees

egatees

adm n st ato s execu ors
and o ass gns of G Ibe r
I dec
Lee G andstatf
WANDA LOU SE GRAND
STAFF

d ess

f v ng whose ad

s unknown

the

unknown spouse f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown he unknown

he s dev sees

ega tees

adm n strata s executors

and or ass gns of Wanda
Lou se G ands aff f dec
S tu a ed
n Sa sbu y
Twp Coun y at M e gs and
SaeoOho

Be ng n Sec No 26
Town 2 Range 13 o 0 C P
Beg nn ng at a s one nea
S E co ne of dwe ng
house now oened by wm
Moo e Sa d s one be ng at
he co ne o ands of Wm
Moo e
o hn
M oo e
E zabe h Hy se and Dav d
ones hence n a no h
eas e "' d ec t on a ong
ne o Oav d Jones and
ass ng Thomas Fork
C eek o and of Robe
H and a S s de of new
pub
oad
hen ce
fa ow ng meande n9s of
new pub c
oad
n a
wes er y d ec on o ands
of P essa E at Wood u
hence
n
southeas er y
d ec on a ong he nes of
ands o
Pl essa E at
Wood uf and Wm Moo e
c ass ng Thomas Fork
C eek fo p ace of beg n
n ng EX CEPT NG
om
above des bed
act a
pub c oad 6 f w de on
W s de he eo extend ng
f om
ne o
and now
owned by Oav d Jones o
o d pub c oad Sa d ac
be ng fu her des bed as
a r angu a s p y ng be
ween new pub c oad and
and of Oav d Jones Sa d
s p be ng
ave sed t o
g ea e pa
nea m dd e
by
homas Fa k C eek
Con a n ng wo th ds o an
a e mo e o ess
ALSO he fo ow ng ea
es a e s ua e n Sa sbury
Twp Coun y of Me gs and
S a eo Oh o and n N E
o Sec 26 Town 2 Range
13 of 0 C P bounded and
des c bed as
o ows
Beg nn ng a S w carne of
NE
oNE
of Sec
26 hence E 510 I a ong
S neofNE
oNE
o sa d Sec hence N 256 2
heneW50itoW
t
LneoNE
ofNE
of
Se 26 hen e S 256 2 I o
p ace o beg nn ng con
Ia n ng h ee ac es mo e
ess
Deed Ref Vo
60 pg
9
Me gs Coun y Deed
Reco ds
JUDGME NT
$5 3 65
p us a c ued taxes assess
men s pcna t es and costs
ac on
CASE NO 8 DL T 43
Pa ce No
PDMV 10
Se a No 8 DL T 43 I ed
n he name of J S
E C HELBERGER
I
v ng whose add ess s
unknown
the unknown
spouse f anv whose name
and address a e unknown
he s
h e unknown
dev sees
egatees
ad
m n s a a s
execu o s
and o ass gns of J s
E che be ·ge
f dec
S tuated
n Pome oy
v age Coun y of Me gs
and s arc o Oh o
Be ng Lo No 262 No 8
35~a an N
neo Frac W
of S
as same appea son
Aud or s Tax Dup cate for
yea 1947 n name of Aman
da S
A so
he
o ow ng
desc bed
ea
es t a t e
s ua ed
n
Pome oy
v age Coun ty of Me gs
and S a eo Oh o
Be ng Lo No 262 No 8
a N part of 3 a o as
sa me appears on Aud tor s
T a)( Duplicate fo vea 947
n name ot Har ey 0 and
nda S S one
Deed Ref Vo 162 ~g
452 vo 62 pg 298 Me gs
Cou nry Deed Records
U DGME NT
SJ• 00
p us ac ued t axes assess
men s pena es and cos s
o ac on
CA&gt;E NO
Pa ce
No
09 02 018
Se a No 82 DL T 44 I I ed
n he name of ERV L
NELSO N
v ng whose
as known address s Dex
OH
the unknown
e
spouse
any whose name
and add ess a e unknown
he unkn o wn
he s
dev sees
ega tees
ad
m ns ao s
cxecu1ors
and o ass gns of E v
Ne son I dec OAKLEY
NEL SON
v ng whose
as
known address
s
Ru and OH he unknown
spouse any whose na me
and add ess are unknown
he
unkn own
h e rs
dcv sees
ega tees
ad
m n s ao s
executors
and o ass 1gns o Oak ey
Ne son
dec ELWOOD
NEL SON I vng whose
as known add ess s Dex

are unknown

the unknown
he rs dev sees
egatees
~dm n sttators
executors
and o a$S gns of Be n e
Ne son
f dec
CORA
STRAUSBAUGH I I v ng
whose ast known add ess
s W kesv I e OH
the
unknown spouse f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown he unknown
eoatees
he rs dev sees
adm n strato s executors
and o ass gns of Cora
Strausbaugh I dec NEVA
KENNEDY
I
v ng
whose last known add ess
a e unknown he unknown
he rs dev sees
egatees
adm n s raters executors
and o ass gns of Neva
Kennedy
f dec VONA
CHAPMAN
t
v ng
wh ose last known add ess
s De x e
OH
he
unknown soouse f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown he unknown
He s dev sees
egatees
adm n strators executors
and o ass gns of Vona
Chapman I dec JOHN
NELSON
I v ng whose
as known address ~Dex
te
OH
the unJown
spouse f any whose name
and add ess a e unknown
he
unknown
he s
dev sees
egatees
ad
m n st ate s
execu ors
and o ass gns of John
Ne son t dec
S tua ed n Sa em Twr.
C un y of Me gs and S a e
of Oh o
Beg nn ng J rods and 1
f E o S E. co ne of Wm
C Tu ne s and n Sec 12
o Sa em Twp Me gs Coun
y Oh o unn ng th ence
0
ads n sou heas e ly
d r ec on o stone corner
hence n a southwes e y
d ec on 13 rods to ne be
ween James Ne son and
An hony Ha m an a a po n
~
ods N W of the cu ve
co ner on sa d ne hence
a nohwesey d ec
t on a ong ne to co ncr o
sad Ja mes Ne sons and
An honv Harmon s and
hence N 2 ads to Wm C
Tu ne s and thence N 7
odsaongE
neofsad
Wm C Turne s and
hence E 3 ads and 1 f
hence S
ads to p ace o
beg nn ng es ma ted a
h ee ac r es be he same
mo eo ess
Deed Ref vo 53 pg 29
Me gs Coun y Deed Re o
ds
JUDGMENT $33 5 pus
ac crued
axes
assess
men s pena t es and costs
of ac on
CASE NO
8 D T •5
Pa ce
No
05 003 019
Se a No 8 DL T 45 r ed
n he name of MAR ON
RHOD ES
v ng whose
address s unknown
he
f any
unknown spouse
whose name and address
a e unknown th e unknown
he rs dev sees
ega ees
adm n st a ors eM:ec u o s
and a ass gns of M ar on
Rhodes t dec
S tuated n Let art Twp
Coun y of Me gs and S ate
Of Oh 0
Be g i!1 pa of a a to
me y conveyed o Mary
Bake by Hannah Cook
Sa d ands be ng abou m d
way of 00 a ot No 2 8 of
Sec 36
Range l Town
OC.P
conanng 4
ac es more o ess
EXCEP T 1 a ay ng n
he N W co nc o above
desc r bed and the sa me
ormer y been
hav ng
deeded to Jona han Fa ey
ALSO
he fo ow ng
desc bed
ea
es tat e
s ua ted n Le a
Twp
Coun ty of Me gs and S ate
ot Oh o
One and one ha a o
and n Range 12 Town
and n 00 a lot No 218 and
desc r bed on dup ca e o
1886 asW endo 49 a
Deed Ref Vo 76 ~g
150 Vo 86 pg 596 Me gs
Coun y Deed Reco ds
JUDGMENT S72 65 plu s
ace ued
axes
assess
men s pena es and cos ts
of ac on
CASE NO 8 DL T 46
Parce
No
1 1 021 007
Se a No 82 DL T 46 I ed
n he nam e ot BER THA A
COOK DEC lhe unknown
spouse f any w hose name
and add ess a e unknown
he
unknown
he r s
dev sees
ega ees ad
m n s rata s
execu tors
and o ass gns of Ber ha A
Cook dec FRED CAR
PE NT ER f I v ng whose
as known address s 772
Sout h Eu eka Ave Co um
bus OH
he unknown
souse f any whose name
and address are unknown
he
unk nown
her s
dev sees
ega tees ad
m n st ato s
exec utors
an o ass1gns of Fred Car
penler f dec HATT E c
WALK ER I I v ng whose
as known address s 78 N
Cong ess S Athens OH
the unknown spouse f anv
whose name and add ess
a e unknown he unknown
he rs dev sees
egatees
adm n strators executors
and o ass gns of Hatt e C
Wa ke
I dec LOU SE
B DDSON I v ng whose
as known address s 187
E Sta e Sl A I hens OH
the un known spouse f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown the unknown
he s dev sees
eoa tees

Goods

Rutland FumRure Carpet Shop
SPRING CARPO SALE
KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
ITH PADOIN

From

From

799 &amp; up

1

Installed

12 95 &amp; up

1

Installed

Public Notice

Public NoHct

Public Notice

adm n strators executors
and or ass gns of Lou se
B ddson I dec ROLLIN F
CARPENTER If I vlng
whose lasl known address
s 187 E State St Athens
OM the unknown spouse 1
any whose name and ad
d ess are unknown the
unknown heirs dev sees
legatees
adm n st ators
executors and or ass gns of
Roll n F Carpente r f dec
JOHN E CROSS I I v ng
whose last known address
s 616 S 4th S Newton
Iowa the unkown spouse
f any whose name and ad
dress are unknown
he
unknown heirs devisees
legatees
adm n st ators
executors and or ass gns of
John E Cross
f dec
ALTA CROSS JONES I
I v ng whose ast known
address s 124 W 11th 51 S
New on
owa
he
unknown spouse f any
whose name and address
a e unknown the unknown
he rs dev sees lega ees
adm n strata s execu o s
and or ass gns of A ta
C oss Jones I dec DEN
VER D CROSS t I v ng
whose ast known add ess
s Baxter
owa
the
f any
unknown spouse
whose name and add ess
are unknown the unknown
he rs dev sees legatees
adm n stra o s executors
and or ass gns of Denve
D Cross
dec MART N
K RKENDALL I
v ng
whose last known address
s 508 N K S Muskogee
Ok lahoma the unknown
spouse f any whose name
and address a e unknown
the
unknown
hers
dev sees
egatees
ad
m n strata s execu ors
and or ass ~ns of Mar n
K rkendal Idee HARRY
K RKENDALL I
v ng
whose ast known add es"s ~!b&amp;p~
owa
th e
unk wn e s dev sees
ega ees
adm n strata s
execu ors and o ass gns of
MAUD K RKENDALL
DEC ROSS H K RKEN
DALL I v ng whose asr
known add ess s 8 sma k
M ssour
the unknown
spouse f any whose name
and address are unknown
the
unknown
he s
dev sees
egatees
ad
m n s ato s execu a s
and or ass gns of Ross H
K kenda l
dec ALL E
K McFARLAND t v ng
whose ast know n add ess
s R 1 E v ns M ssour
the unknown spouse f any
whose name and addess
a e unknown he unknown
he s dev sees lega tees
adm n str a to s executa s
and or ass gns of AI e K
M Fa an d
dec The
unknown spouse
f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown he unknown
he s dev sees lega ees
adm n str a tors exec utors
and or assgns of NELLY
K RKENDALL DEC EM
MA GARDNER f I v ng
whose ast known address
s Cov ngt on K y c o Cl f
to d Myer s he unk nown
anv whose name
spouse
and address are unknown
he s
he unkn ow n
dev sees
ega ees
ad
m n s a to s executa s
and or ass1gns of Emma
Gadne f dec HERBMc
CLELLAND
v ng
whose add ess s unknown
the unknown spouse f any
whose name and add ess
a e unknown he unknown
He s dev sees egatees
ad m n strator s exec utors
and o ass gns of Her b Me
C e and Idee
S tuated n Sc p o Twr.
County of Me gs and Sta e
o Oh o
Be ng n F ac 3 Town
A Range 7 Beg nn ng on
the W s de o pr va e road
and the N s de of county
road th ence S 81 deg 15'
aong N s de of
W 58
county oad Thence N 200
II thence N 7 deg 30 E
35
th ence N 28 deg W
257 f I hence N
deg 20
E 348 II thence s 87 deg
E 95 f
to W s de of
p vate road hence S S
deg W 570
a ong W s de
o pr va l e road o ~l ace ot
beg nn ng con a n ng 2 68
acres mo e or less
Deed Ref Vo 125 pg
600 Me gs Coun y Deed
Reco ds
JUDGMENT 5206 1 pus
accrued axes assessmen
s pena t es and cos s of

acton
Any person own ng or
c a m ng any r ghl t tie or
nrerest n or I en upon
any parce of rea estate
above listed may life an an
swer n such act on sett na
torth the nature ijnd
amount of nlerest owned
or claimed and any defense
or object on to the
Ioree osure Such answer

amount
of
assessmtnts
pen n es
and charges due and •n
Ra d on sue~ porcel
IO!Jether wltll all costs
wh ch h•ve been ncurred
n any proceeding n
stituted aga nst such par
eel under Sec 5721 18 of the
Rev sed Code Upon the
Ill ng of any entry of con
llrmat on of sale there

1

r:Hs

r;;~stu~~~):~n"e~hec'JZr~e ~~ ~~~~~,"g~urt~~~ ·~~~~

Court and a copy thereof thereafter cl• m ng any
served on the County r ght 1 tie and Jnterest n
Prosecutor on or before the or lien upon any such pa
15th da.,..of July 1981
eel shall be forever barred
I no answer s I led on or •nd to ec osed of ony such
before the date spec I ed as r ght r tle1 Interest In lien
the ast day for !fling an an upon ana any equ ty of
s-er
a tudgment ot redemp on n such
1
foreclosure w 11 be taken by
Larry E s:~~~r
default as to any parcel
Clerk of Court
1 sled n the ocmpla nt as to
ot common Pleas
wh ch nq answer has been (6) 3 10 11 3tc
I led Any pa eel as to
wh ch a fo ec osure s
Real Estate- General
taken
by
default
shall
be
I
so d for the sat sfact on of lr
the taxes
assessmen1s
penalt es
charges
and
costs ncurred
n
he
Office 742 200l
forectosure tha are due GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
and unpa d
Broker
At anr t me pro to he
f ng o an ent y of con
NEW etSTING
f mat on of sa e
any REAL BARGAIN
owner or I enho der of a Two story remodeled
parcef sted n the com
home 3 bedroom ba h
pia nt may redeem such
parcel by tender ng to he I v ng oom d n ng k t
basement
Cou'IIY Treasu e
he chen fu
N ea shopp ng for on y
Real Estate- General
$15 000 00
NE:W liSTING
E•
ce lent Com mere al
B dg large two story
br ck fu I basement
gas forced a fu nace &amp;
a r cond ton Second
f oo has two modern
turn shed 2 bedroom
apartment w th p vale
entrance Ca I for more
deta Is
RIVERVIEW - MID
DLEPORT
Two
NEW LIST NG
story
4
bedroom
home
Beau t fu
3 bedroom
some remade ng Great
home w th
ve v ew
nvestment at $26 500 00
WBFP full basement
NEW CONSTRUCTION
w h garage and
Th ee bed oom ranch
workshop garden area
sty e home ca rpe car
arge ot many o he
port s tuated on cho ce
fea ures Assume th s
corner lot $38 700 00
13% APR $2980000
SALEM SrREET oa n w th 55 000 00
Rutla nd Co2y 2
down approx 29 years
bed
oom
1
ba
h home
ro pay
P &amp;
that s com or ab e and
$300 20 month TOTAL
neat Good cond t on
PR CE $34 500 00
a so ga den spa Ask ng
NEW LIST NG
$25 000 00
Southe n D sr c - 10
UNION AVENUE
m nutes o new br dge
Pomeroy - Two sto y
app ox 12 acres and to
wei
bu t hom e 3
be so d n acre o s or
bed aoms
fu
base
wha ever
s ze
you
men ga age b g back
choose
Sta ng a
yard
or
he k ds
$6 500 00 fo
oad Iron
$26 500 00
tag e ots
COMMERC AL PRO
N rowN
3 bed oom
PERTY
Pome oy home on un on
La ge A f arne w th gas
basement
or g na
fu nace on Man St eet
woodwork
sc re ened
dea
ocat on
back po ch a ge o
S20
000
00
ASK NG 527 000 00
Velma N c nsky Assoc
NEAR M NE NO
3
Phone 742 3092
bedroom s pa t base
Cheryl Lemfey Assoc.
men t
n
h s ranch
Phone 742 317
home on app ox 2 acres
and sro age bu d ng
$32 000 00
Real E•tote- General
M DDLEPDRT
A 2
sto y a m e home w th
3 4 bedrooms d n ng
oom v ng r oom arge
k tchen and has new
Headquarters
carpe
h ou gh ou
Home
co m es
w th
seve a
ooms fu o
a mos new tu n ure
Mu s1 see o be eve
542 600 00
16 E Second Slreet
SOUTHERN 0 STRICT
Do some ex a wo k
Phone
on h s 4 bed oom home
and en oy th e u ts o
1 (614) 992 3325
'fOUr abor to
on y
516 000 00
2 ACRES
Good ca l
t e farm w h barb w r e
REALTOR
fences 6 oom anch
Henry E Cleland Jr
ype home ba th tu
992 6191
basemen
fu nace 3
Assoc ates
we s
dugged ba n
Roger Turner992 S692
and
so me
mber
Dolt e T•rner992 5692
$70 000
Jean Trussell949 2660
SMALL FARM
3
o 1 ce 992 2259
acres of r ea n ce ay
ng and W even make
a n ce deve opmen w th
wate
and e ectr c
ava abe Loca ed on
hard oad 51600 00 per
acre
ROOMY
Large 7
room lam y home 3 4
Ia ge bed ooms
1
ba hs cen t al a r &amp;
heat s d s w ndows
and arge garage w th
s or age S59 900
JNUSUAL 3 slo y A I arne 3 Bdrms 2 bah 3
SU L D NG LOT - 1 66
• e ep ace 4 sl d ng doors 2 BBQ s 2 edwood
acres on S ate Rt 124
decks 2 cemen t pat os L ar ge ga rage ru t cellar
D ed we ¥1 h pump
House s 4 vrs o d and s ts on 6 ac You mus v ew
sept c ank and elec c
th s home o see a t has o offer Easte n Schoo
Pads for t a le
on
D srr cr
almost eve I and On y
REEDSVILLE 531 500 - 3 BR emode led out and
S6500
part y ns de s ts on app ox J• ac
NE W L S riNG - New
home
furnish ed
3
FORKEORUNLAKE - 2 BR I •c 52 500
bedrooms forced a
TUPPERS PLA NS -3 BR 2ac 521 500
furnace bath equ pped
k tchen cerpe t ng fu y
REEDSVILLE
15ac 2BRwthOhoRve Vew
nsu ated
st
drs
f ee gas 527 500
wdws on argc o Can
TUPPERS PLA NS - Newe 3 BR low ut es g
move n on camp et on
very we kept Low 130 s
of sewage and sa e On y
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
535 000
Nancy Jaspers - Assoc ate
N E W L ST NG
Han
PH 14l 2075
dyman s SPPC a
S
v rg n a
- Assoc ate
rooms ~;;1\\ t\ h Full
basemen ,J~u a gas
c y water and eve ot
A,sk ng SJ 000
Real Estate - General
N f' W L SrtNG - 53
ac es n 01 ve Twnshp
w h good o d farm
house and outbu d nos
A
m nera s on good
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr Broker
grave road want IUS I
OFFICE 142 200l
S27 500
RUTLAND OH 0
NO LONGER CAN YOU
D E PEND ON MONEY
BUr REAL ESTATE
WILL 5rAY WITH
YOU

Business Services

ousing

MASO" TEXACO
MECHANIC &amp;
BODYMAN
ON DUTY DAILY
PH 30~773-9510

LEO MORRIS

Lowell &amp; Doug Halfholl
owners Operttors

5 24 1 mo

BAILErS SHOES
322 N 2nd Ave

Middleport Oh1o

NEW STORE HRS.
Effecltve 4 6 81
MON thru SAT
9 to 5
Closed Thursday
49

me p

742 2211

Rad a tor Special st
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Y rs Ex per ence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC

Ph

Pomeroy OH
992 2174

5 7tfc

For all of your w1r
mg needs

From 30.30
SMALL

Let George M I er check
your present e ect
system
,.

ALL STEEL

SIJeS

Ulllity Bulldmgs
S zes from 4x6 to 12x•o

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Res dental
&amp;Com mere al

Rt 3 Box 54
Rae ne Oh
Ph 614 14l 2591
6 15 fc

Call742 3195
or 992 7680
28

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repatr
-TransmiSSIOn
Repair
Hrs Mon Fn
9a m 5 30 p m
992 5682

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U S Rt SO East
Phone 614 662 3821
Au hor zed John Deere
New Holland Bush Hog
farm equ pmenr dealer
2 used No ISO New
Holland round hay
balers both In ex
ceflent cond t on

5 14 1 mo

10 7 lfc

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

WORK

CAT 1).6.(

Farm Ponds Land
Cleanng Roads
Call

TER~~~~:ra

eo po •
eO hill'• hr

•Ho

w~

e

•nk

PUUINS
EXCAVmNG
992 2478

or
Blatn Mtlhoan
985 3965

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
• Backhoe
• Excavat ng
• Sept c Systems
• Water Sewer &amp;
Gas L nes
• Dump rruck
• Trencher
l censed &amp; Bonded

PH 992 7201
5 21 rtc

t\ L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All types of roof work
new o repa r gutters
and downspouts gutter
c ean ng and pa int ng
All work guaranteed

Free,Est males
Reasonable Pr ces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
2 ~ lfc

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes ex
tenstve remodel
mg
• Electncal work
• Roofing work
13 Years
1=xper1ence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Water Sewer Electr.c
Gas L1ne-D tches
Water L ne Hook ups
Sept c Tanks
county Certoloed
Roush Lane
Che5h re Oh
Ph l67 7S60
1 7 1 ti c

Vmvl &amp; Alummum
51 DING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Be•ut f"l Custom
Buff! Garages
Call lor free s dong
est mates 949 2101 or
949 2160
No S•n~ay Calls
3 11 tic

IOUNTRY
KWB

AlHENS SPORT

CYa.ES

BGISTERID NURSES
LARGE ESTATE- Lovely 2 5lory brick homt Two
lull and two half balhs three spacfou• bedroom•
formal dining room and full ba5tment The •unny
breakfast room •dlo ns lhe modorn kltchon equipped w th double oven dl5posal dishwasher truh
compactor bl!lltln range and nutone food procoss
cenler Uehling throuehout tho homo Is uqulsite
The home locotect n Pomeroy has 1 brtllh-laklng
v ow of the Ohoo R ver Tilt larll well lalldKaped
lawn prov diS ample room to enjoy thfssctnfc Yltw
There s plenty ol anlc storage In th• homo Tho
three car garage also bauttfc stor111 Thlsestatt
s one of Meigs County s IIOMsl hom•• Ctll for your
pr vale showing Shown by appt only

I mmecllete opening ICV full time 11 to 7
nurse wltll experience In ICU CCU Is
preferred E• cellent benefits pension
len long term disability &amp; hospitalize
tlon
Salary commensurate with e*perlence
Contact Teresa Collins, liN

VETERANS MEMOIIAL HOSPITAL
Pomeroy,OH
Phone 1 614-992·2104

n~ leltlph

P"8"" cov•r 1h•
nt" euhanw-~

loll

I'UTIIICl-

· - IGI- (-.,)

CUll • • - FAST suva

IN STOCK

~=

6751333

"22156

I
DAY

J
OAYS

6

10

DAYS

~YS

LfSS

.

'3

IIWI
5 WOlDS
UP 111

2S
WOlDS

'4

WOlDS

'4

'7

1 Reach:
2 Convenience

3. Cost

4Results

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

'7

16
19

1

1

Cosl o
p evou

un 1d

s owe

omb nftl o

Cot ng h tt oun t
em

ye~u

e

1 - Card of Thanks
We wish to express our s n
cere thanks and grat tude
d•r ng the death Of our
father Sidney Russell to
all of our neighbors lrlen
ds and relatives for lheor
thoughtfulness
and
ass stance
The many
lloral arrangements food
and the k nd offerings are
deeply appreciated A so
special thanks to the M d
dleport Church Of Christ
the Middleport Fire Depar
tment Middleport Lodge
No 363 F &amp; AM end the
Reverend Robert Melton
Myrno L ndNy and Ruth
Hayth 'lla•ohters of Sidney
Russell

9926215 Or992 7314
Pomeroy Oh

BUYING

SILV£R &amp; GOLD
COINS

stz- to '18""
For Stiver Dollars

We wish to e•preu our sl n
cere thanks and grat tude
dur ng the death of our
lather s dney Russel to
all Of our ne ghbors tr en
dS and relat ves lor their
thoughttu nen
and
assistance
The many
I o al arrangements food
and the kind offer ngs are
deeply appreciated Also
special thanks to the Mid
dleport Church Of Christ
the Mlddleporl Fire Depar
tmenl Middleport Lodge
No 363 F &amp; AM. and the
Reverend Robert Me ton
Myrna L ndsey and Ruth
Hayth daughters Of Sidney
Russell

GLENN BISSELL
949 2101
No Sundav Calf•
5 II mo

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
S ding
Roofong &amp; Gutter
Remodehng
sen ng Your Area for
20Year5

EUGENE LONG
Free Est mates
Call Collect
Ph 143ll22

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO
Now faking Enrollment
lor Summer Classes
In Pomeroy&amp; Rae ne
Ages land Up

•

N THE MIDST Of our
sorrow we w sh to express
our thanks and •P
preclat on to our many
relatives friends and
ne ghborS tor the kindness
end sympathy shown us In
the loss ol our mother We
especially thank the Rev
Marlin Compbell
Rev
George Jonn
Crow
Hussell Funeral Home
doctors and stall of
Pleasant Valley Hosplto
tho$e who took core of lhe
grove nd vlduals who sent
flowers. food and cards
end
the pallbearers
prayers and calls May
God BlOIS each Of you The
familY ot Mary Franes
CObb
2

In Memoriam

IN MEMORY Of DOuglas
F eldS The Doys are leu
br glller s nee you ve been
gone Yet our hearts are
usured yo• ve found
peace
Sodly missed by
sister Groce and lomlly

I

Announcement•

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair parts and
supplies
P ck up and
del very Davis Vacuum
Cleaner one half m le up
Georges Creek Rd
Calf
446 0294
NEW GARAGE OPENING
Automatic trtnamlulons
and all sorts Of mechonlcol
repair end mtlor and
minor auto body repair
James Smllll or Tom
Maattrsor ca f 446 7157

see

AS

3

ATTENTION LADIES
He p pay oft those un
wanted b lis work ng
even ngs from 7 30 to 10 30
P m as a lash on slyl sl
Earn $8 00 to 110 00 per
de a I tor
hour prof I
homemaker w th lam IY
Call992 3941 from 9 6
Traders Day Sa e June 13
Co Rd 32 watch for signs
Trade or sell anyth ng for
nformat on ca ll 949 2744
9¥12320 or 985 3957 or see
BObC onch
The Me gs Museum 144
Butternut Avenue will be
&lt;;open Fridays from 1 3 for
the summer months
Permanent Ha r Remova
Professfona
Electrolysis
Cente A M A Approved
Dr referrals
By •P
po nlmenrs only 675 6234

CALL
PIUI Sllman-ft2 2f14
l'at Mllellell-r42 2NJ

471mo

-

PIANO LtiiOIII LUCY Jlnt
lulmtr Hartford. WV 112

11
HOME SEW NG
00
people n th s area to do
sew ng n he r home Good
ncome All ages accepted
Free nformatlon w te
esc Arts and crafts Dept
200 N Ma n St Corb n
Kentucky 40701
YARD SALE Thursday and
Fr day June 11 and 12 9 I
? 2314 Jefferson Avenue I
ra n followin g day
FOUR FAMILY yard sale
2317 Jefferson Avenue 8 I
7 Thursday Fr day Salur
day
June
11 2 13
Cloth ng all s zes Lo s of
m see laneous
GARAGE SALE 168 Mayo
Dr ve New Haven Satu
day June 13th 10 lo 5 pm
Ranorshne
Yard sale 3 000 Ann ston
Dr PI P easan
v I age P zza
Wed
Thurs and Fr 20 n g r s
b cycle cha n saw ots of
c oth ng and toys 675 4631

M ch gan Yard Sa le 50 Ne
Ave Gall pol s Wed June
10thru17 91o'

8

Yard Sa e 9AM 3PM June
11 12 78 350 Honda S700
dresser o d k chen cup
boa d couch cha r 4x6 II
louvered w ndows storm
door games 128 State St
Ga llpol s

AUCT ON St
Rl
2
Galflpo s Fe ry
WV
Every F day 7 30 pm
New and used mer
chand se Howard Beasley
Auct one er
773 5471
Rodgers Furn ture and
Aucl on Barn

and
Pat o Sal• Thur F
Sal 9 till 6 Br ck School
Rd Lots Of mise 367 1269
Y•rd Sale 810 S Second
51 M dd eport Oh June 9
13
Beddono
cloth ng
linens dishes small ap
pi ances furn ture silver
stone toys co ecton of
Avon tools pa nt lots of
m sc kn ves Come see
YardSae Fr &amp;Sat 12&amp;
13 211 Ma n sr
M d
dleporl 9 4 Lois of n ce
th ngs

9

Public Sale
&amp; Auct on

Wanted lo Buy

5CASH
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE P ECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL
4164775
OPEN9T05

Yard Sale June 12 13
from 9 ~ p m at the Pat
Roush res idence
I rst
house In Rae neon Rt 124

yard Sale June 1 12 13
from 9 4 Off St Rl 143 on
Wolf Pen Road Ra n can
JACKSON county Horse eels
c ub Inc Is hav ng an open
show Sunday June 14111 5 lam ly y•rd sale 5~9
1981
Cott•gev lie
WV Beech Street M ddlepo 1
Show st•rts 1 00 p m Thursday
F day
•nd
Everyone welcome
Saturd•y June 11 12 13th

WANTED TO
BUY
GOLD
S LVER
PLAT NUM STERL NG
CO NS
R N GS
JEWELRY MI SC ITEMS
ABSOLUTE
MARKE T
PRICE GUARANTEED
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP M DDLEPOR T
OH 0992 3~76

LONELY
Chr stlan
Singles
Meet Christian
s ng es lnyour area Write
Southern Chr st •n S ngles
Club PO Box 1823 Sum
mervllle SC 2'1~ orca I 1
803 871 9850 24 hours

4

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anyth ng to give away and
does not Offer or •ttempt to
offer any other thing for
sa e may place an ad n this
column There w 11 be no
charge to the odvertlser
5 KITTENS 6 weeks old
long heir 446 3067
2 FREE Kittens
female 388 9745

boll!

1 female pi
German
Sheperd P•PPY 256 6345
Lovable kittens to good
home 1 calico female 1
black &amp; white male liner
trained
446 9479
Galllpot s
3 Angora Kittens 7 weeks
old Call416 9535
Klttens388 8591
Klnens 1 black male 2
greym I male 1 female
3671257
COLLIE and Coonhound
Puppies 992 2710
cute puppies thot are port
collie 6 - k s old 111 6255
Rtldsvfllt
While Poodle Coif Aolo\ 7908
White Poodle Coli Aolo\ 7908
Gelllpotfl

Help Wanted

PART DR FULL TIME o
lease fand for o I and gas
development Pay based on
per acre eased w thdraw
comm ss on for those who
qual fy Must have car
write Stanley Energy
Development PO Bo• 328
anton Oh 45638

Want to do babys rr ng n
my home up to 6 y s o d
nqu re a 622 Chatham
Ave between 9AM &amp; 5PM
Gall pol s
ELECTR CAL Plumb ng
and Hea ng Serv ce No
lob too sma I 10 years ex
pe ence Low a es Ph
992 2533

Baby s Iter needed n my
home 5 days week 7 to
4 30 Ca 446 2959 after
5PM
1185 00 t o 1500 weekly do ng
ma I ng work
No ex
per ence requ red
AP
PLY C cle Sales P o
Box 224 D R chmond H
NY 114 8
GET VALUAB LE Iran ng
as a young bus ness person
and earn good money p us
some great g f s as a Sen
ne route ca r e
Phone
us r ght away and get on
he el g b I ty 1 s at 992
2156 or 992 2 )I

mes1one
Dun ap

carpentry and remade ng
and oot ng 576 2989

FInane Ia I
21

BE A W NNE R Beat n
at on Work vou own
hours
demons tr a ng
MERR MAC toys g I s
and home decor terns We
need party p an demon
strators n th s area H gh
comm ss on
No
n
vestmen no de ve ng no
co leer ng Ca
toll free
now
I 800 553 9077
or
w te MERRIMAC 80
Jackson St
Debuque
ow a 52001
Opportun y s
lor the ask ng Ask you
Beel ne s yl st and shew
be happy to help you o n
th e Bee ne wo ld o
lash on and success Phone
992 3941 between he hours
of 9 6

NEED someone to nsta
carpet Must have own
WANTED to buy Junk ca s tool s Ca l 675 13 7
w th or w thout motors JBB
9303
CASH for your diamonds
god and s lver class ngs
wedd ng bands s lver and
gold co ns
T awnev
Jewelers 422 Second Ave
Gall po s Oh o

FOUND Bicycle Between

fCIIchen ctblntts iNtltl
romOCielong rtollng &amp;
gutter siding &amp; r.tumb,
ing &amp; lltctrlco c crete storm wffKMwl
WOOdburntrs nllall~

Yard Sale June 11 9 to? 24
Grape St
Gall pol s
Clothes of all s zes turn
d shes tans toys sheets
shoes and m sc of •If kin
ds

Announcements

Chiller &amp; Poll1troY on Rt
7 Call &amp; Identity. t4P-2051

M&amp;S BUILDING

&amp;
Sat Raon or Shine Fur
nlture antiques c olh ng
and m sc Keys lone Rd fir
sl house on left In V nton

Yard Sa e 170 Portsmouth
Rd
Galpols
Wed Thurs &amp;Fr
John
Kennedy

"'"

Cake
Decora ng
spec al zes Wedd ng cakes
675 2588 or 675 1553 Pt
Pleasant WVA

s Fam ly Yard Sale Fr

Garage Sale Ran or Sh ne
Wed and Thurs 91o 5 2nd
house on McCully Rd ott
Georges Creek R d
Gallipolis Clothes dishes
Avon
to.ys
and much
more 416 4149

PIC ng1n ad sets e One a

To do babys It ng n home
Sp lng
Va ey
Area
Gal pol s Oh 446 6574

2 Family Yard Sale Thur
Frl &amp; Sat June 1112 &amp;13
2 miles out State Rt 775
Gallipolis
Ch ldrens
clothing a. m sc items 9 to
?

Huge Yard Sale Te•as Rd
Ga llpolls 11th house10 11
Bow &amp; ArrC1W playpen
clothing clawlool table
amps to much to mention
Cheap9to5

edw thon y one1cl

'
- ""''

V C YOUNG II

or 367·7560

1

Now ove 1 000 homes a e e•ch

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

work
- Concrete wo k
Plumb ng and
electr cal work
(Free Est mates)

Mason Countits

'11
16

'9

- Roohng and gutter

Any s ze buill to your
SllfC I catoons
Models
In Me gs Gaflla ond

1

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

- Addonsand
remodeling

POLE BUILDINGS
15 x20 upto40'k100
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS
(4 xl6
I xl I •10'
10 xiO 10 x12 &amp; up)

10

'7

ADVANTAGES TO THE ADVERTISER

4 17 lfc

Gorages - B• ld ngs
- Barns-Equipment

NEW 3 Bd m home w
basement and garage n
Plantz Subd v s on S45 000
446 0390

PRICES REDUCED used
mobile homes and travel
tralers
TRISTATE
MOBILE HOMES CALL
4467572

For S•le house and or n
V nton
Oh Re•sonoble
price
land
contract
ava lable 245 5818

5 mob homes w I sell one
or a I alre•dy set up n
pork underp nned and lot
s ava lab e torrent Pr ced
at 13 000 to $8 000 1 286
3258 In Jackson OH

House with acreage for
sale 3 or 4 bd s fu ly car
peled 2 barns 379 2258 or
379 2343 after 6PM

Yard Sale

B g Garage Sale 4 m le our
160 from Holzer Hospital
Ga llpol s Wed Thurs
Dishes and
and Fr
everyth ng

.

UP 111
l5

Trash Ptckup 1n
The Vtlla!le of
M1dd leport Oh
Ph 992 5016
or 992 7505

FREE ESTIMATES
All Bu ldfnts
Gu.rantttt

REDUCED
PRICES
ON AlL
HUBS AND
ROSEIJSHES

WORD$

n Mason Coun y

nMet C.uny

CALL446-2342

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

REESE BUILDINGS

Homes lor Sale

w

1

nG1I1Couny

and anv
n house
changes that have to be
made Batk hoe and
doserserv1ceava table
992 2036
5 20 1 mo

Sheds

St mson Ave

. ..

Cla,.lned

sewer 1 ne connect ons

Quality Built
Economoully Proced

31

,,.J

Don t waot Contact Oh o
valley Plumb ng tor

68l mo

Hoover

,,.,ed .,.

RACINE SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS

Call949 2710

~~

wanted to Do

D J s LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Ne gh
bo hood Rd all makes ser
vlced Spec a lz no n Lawn
B ades sharpened
I 446 4425 after 5 p m
up and de ve y
ava lable

Lost Rawlings ball glove
till f•lloyPublth "'f C.. looffon"'!•-llr•..,Cf..,ljl..ts.r.l,. Middleport or Syracuse
Reward U9 2065
/4 ' •dwrfi1en and I'Ndetw nf tile Tnb&amp;UU!! Serdir~el ..d RtWJ• H
Nn., ct...lfied ... pi•Cftl II lilY 0111:1 I Ill" JMI!fr8 II
all
~ost Rawlings ba I glove
lltl'l"e Rf'.. eA ftK tlf'r II OliO Itt. ma Ia J a: a11fi1N dt t Hrv e •IIH!•
Middleport or Syracuse
IC"N t Hvtn lll(elt b..th u I••• fiN MW!rd•i!n
u fftdt-n
Reward U9 2065

mo

r---------------_j----------------~
n
Help Wanted
r~~:::M:I•:c:M::~:M::M:i:H~ PH. 367·7671

Cash n Carry

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
Main St

From the Smallest
Heater Core to tile
Largest Radiator

171f'aCT 1Ji~~EXT

Lost red pig n Mflf Creek
McCulley Rd area 416
7795 Gall polls

COMPLETE

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Farm Bqjld1ngs

Housinq
Headc u.Jrten

/ - Yd

Drtve A L1ttle- Save A Lot

Rt 1 Side H II Rd
Rutland Ohio
PM 142 2455
5 11 tiC

MILLER ELECll~ld
SERVICE

SHAG
Reg $15 95

Buy Now &amp; Save $2 $6 Per Yard
25 rolls j:arpet m stock to pick from
Regular backed carpet lnstallecl free
wtth pad GoD!I selection Roll Ends Rem
nants S2 so up Grass carpet S4 99 vd
Green and Brown

ROTAVATORS

HOBSTETrER REALTY

$'799 sa

015SU~WAY
10SHUT UP

eRIPERS 1510
ASI&lt; TH~M TO

HJ 50 -20-lO H P
HA 60 -25 60 H P
HE60-1510MP
All Models Available

CENTRAL REALTY

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

11

,
""

"me

-========~

HOBSTEMR

Pomeroy- M

Need someone to stay w th
elder y ady on weekends
Fr day even ngs 5PM ro
Sunday even ng 5PM ca
6754 10610 675 2834

12

Bus ness
Opportun ty

Own your own Jean Shop
go d reef no m ddle man
no sa esman s tee Otter ng
a 1 the na ona v known
brands such as Jordache
Vanderb
Ca lv n K le n
Sedgef e d Lev and ove r
70 other brand s 513 500 00
ncludes beg nn ng
n
ventory a rfa e for 1 to our
n a ana
warehouse
t a n ng
f x tur es and
G and
Open ng
P omot ons Ca I M Tate
a Mademo se e Fash ons
70~ 753 4738

Money to Loan
FHA VA Convent a Home
Loa ns
Col umbus F rst
Mortgage Co 463 Second
Ave Ga po s Dh 446
7172

23
COMME RC AL and
n
dustr a
ph o ography
Phone 446 2909 o 446 7226
aile •P m
NCOME TAX AND AC
CO UNT NG SERV CE
Ca
446 7068 lor ap
po n ment any me

By owner 1 y
FR
LR
I replace I ge k tchen
d n ng area 2 baths ut I
room ca rpeted thru out
double garage heat pump
barn 23 acres tru trees
c y schools 3 mls ro
C nema 3 mls
o 0 0
M e ntyre Park $115 000
379 2196 fo appo ntment
Ga pol s
House for sa e s rms &amp;
ba h ca peted th u out
cen a r 1 ca ga age 1
good out bu ld ng 1 2 m e
from S ve B dge Shop
p ng Ce nter
446 4752
Ga po s

CLEAN USED MOB LE
HOMES
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOB LE
HOME SALES 4 M
WEST GALLI POLIS RT
35 PHONE 446 3868 or 446
7274
1973 Schul 2 Ira ler 12x65
expando n v ng room
cen ral a r tota e ectr c
woodburner
washer &amp;
dryer 2 bd
turn shed
51 o 500
N ce outs de
storage bu ld og separate
d n ng oom underp nned
oca1ed on a ented a1 Is
eady to move nto 446 6339
o 446 0346 alter 5PM
Ga po s

2x65 good 2 bedroom
mob e home 3 950 446
339

La ge 3 bed oom home 3
1 v ng rooms formal d n ng
r oom 2 bu t n k tchens 2
ba hs 1 w h shower AI
lui y carpe ed Lo s of
pane ng La ge sw m m ng
pool n back Seen by ap
po ntment on y 992 2404 af
ter 4 p m Large recreat on
and laun dr y room
Beaut fu t hree bed oom
anch br ck home n Raum
Add on Pome oy Oh o
Gas heat cen tra a r Ca
985 4145 992 257 or I 687
6429

Reduced I om app a sa of
545 700 3 bedroom 2 bath
ota
elect c ca pe ed
a ge k tchen d n ng and
v ng room s D shwasher
ots of cab ne sand closets
Bog ma ste
bedroom
ga age 10x26 ea po ch
2 ac e Low u
t es Clean
and top cond Leav ng s ate
$39 500 992 5704
THREE bed room house
fam v oom w th f ep a e
fu
basement
a
ap
p ances and draper es
675 15&lt;2 atler 5 p m

BY owne
J apa tment
house on approx 1 ac e
L ve n one ent others to
make you r payment Can
be conver ed s ngle home
C y wa er w
cons der
land conrrac 675 883 9 5
pm

Twos ory House and ot on
Broad Run Rd 882 2407

R=e::=
ai:=:E
:o=s=t:=a:=
re= =
3.=:,c== :::;;
wanted

5 oom home ba th a e ec
t c
2 years o d 5
acres 526 500 Bud Cha n
Road PI Peasant 675
1828

MMED ATE;LY
2
bed oonn house n good
cond t on
oar p an
c ose to sto es 675 3098

Rentals

2 STORY house 30 x40
ga age new sept c system
M A to Ca ll895 3540

4

HOU SE 5 bedrooms v ng
roo m d n ng room k t
chen arge fa m v oom
Pa k Dr ve $49 500 675
2885

HOUSE w h spec al n
sua on cent a
3 bd
LR tam y room d n ng
rm aundry rm 2 baths I
w w ca pet d shwashe
Ph 4 to 7 p m 446 1409
~

209 PARK DR VE
2
bed ooms tam y room 15
x2 dnng oom ktchen
and bath a
amp etely
remodeled Phone 675 2782
0 675 3272

Mode n house c ose to
Ga po s ya d &amp; garden
a cond stov e &amp; r efr g
rugs &amp; d apes turn shed
ref &amp; dep eg 446 0239

P AND TUN NG and ser 32
Mob le Homes
v ce
al
makes and
for Sa e
models Ca Bob Grubb at
THREE tamlly garage HARLEY DAVIDSON pr
lOx
55
expando
L R 2 bdr
446 4525 Formerly w th
sa le Monday Tuesday
elerab y older model but w I do roofs good rates Ward s Keyboard
a
1 nes go wth t 52000
Wednesday 10 to 5 at Sh rl w I cons der new model 1 free est mates Call af er 5
Ca 446 6240 B dwe I OH
Nibert s res de nee In reasonable Must be n af 992 582S
G• llpol s Ferry Second good condft on n the $1500
GALL A C ean ng and
973 Crown Haven 14x65
house on left after cross ng to $2500 price range Call Ha ve oom and board and Ren A Mad Serv ce nc
hree bedroom new car
ra road
Free
Est
mates
bonded
laundry
and
care
n
my
992 5006
pet 1971 Cameron 14x6•
pr vale hoot ~
tor the nsu ed phone 245 9234
two bed oom new carpe1
Clean ng by the week man
CARPORT and yard sa e
elder
y
992
6022
Want to buy good used
1972 Champ on 12x60 two
h
or
contrac
ua
Tuesday thru Friday 9 to 5
bedroom new carpet 1976
baby furniture Must be n
501 Map e Drive New good clean cond ton 992 13
Insurance
cameron
12 x60
two
Hoven
Heights
New 6186
FOR all your pho ography bedrooms bath &amp; 2 new
SA ND¥ AND BEAVER In needs go to Tawney Stud o carpe 1970 PMC 12•60
Haven wv B•by clothes
baby sw ng
m•ternlty
sura nce Co has offered 424 2nd Ave Ga pol s
BEDS IRON BRASS o d serv ces for f re nsvrance Oh o Passports lam y two bed oom new ca pet
clothes 36 nch storm door
B &amp; S S•les nc 2nd and
turn
ture
gold
s lve
lots Of cloth ng curtains 11
coverage n Gall a County photos wedd ngs and com
V and Street Pt Peasant
fool ullllty or lool body for do Iars wood Ice boxes for almQst a centu y mere al photography
(IV Phone 675 442~
truck hond mixer lots of stone ars ant ques ere
Farm holne and persona
households proper y coverages a e
m see laneous Items, white Complele
C &amp; F Clean ng Systems
boots and Stylett B•ton Write M D M ller Rl 4 l!Va able to meet n Offices res den als ca
Oh
Or
992
7760
Pomeroy
Corp un torm s ze 1OT
d v dua needs Contact pets Upho stery w ndows
Ka Burleson your ne gh floor and general c ea n ng
bor
and agent
0
d
furnlt•re
and
antiques
5 FAMILY Garage sa e
446 2783 8 to 5 PM
of •I kinds Call Kenneth
2x52 unturn shed ShultZ
rain or shine Mondoy
Swa n Galllpol s Oh o 256 AUTOMOBILE
N Permanent t1a r removal Mob e Home 3 bedroom 2
Wednesd•y
Tuesdoy
1967
SURANCE
been can Profess onal E ectrolys s added on 12x22 v ng
Thursdoy
and Frld•y
room
new
carpet
ce led?
Lost
your Center AMA app oved
Three mile out Jericho Rd
th oughout n ce level ot
on top Gun Club H II lllrn Old turn t•re copper and operators L cense&gt; Phone Dr
refer a s
By ap
w th ut I ty bu ld ng on E
lett I rsttra ler on left
brass kettles sp t h ckory 992 2143
po n menton y 675 6234
Man
sr Rae ne 949 219
boskets stone Iars w th
names
416
3925
MOB LE home fol apply In
15
Schools Instruction
HORSE shoe ng 304 675
1976 w ndsor Home 4x70
person married couples
3 37
In real good cond Ca 992
SUMMER
SCHOOL
IN
only Everette Schwortz
HARPER
HALSTEAD
5533
Does your
Rt 1 Locust Rd
PI
SALVAGE CO 11 h and STR UCTION
Pleosanl wv
V and Street now buying ch ld need extra help&gt;
for
metals (copper
brass Review program
1974 Baron mobile home 65
reading
or
m•th
aluminum
lead
!tfl
nless
x 14 115 000 00 843 301 for
UPSTA RS oaraoe sale
appointment
batter es and Presbyter •n Chu ch Ca I Jl
Pecks True value 525 steel
Homes lor Sale
Prepare for
radiators
ginseng ye low ~46 4052
Moln PI Pleasant Friday
5 ROOM house
64 USED MOb le Home 576
12th &amp; Saturdey 13th 8 root catnip end sassafras) classes nCYW
Ch cothe Rd only $3 500 2711
10 om to 6 pm dally Also
a m 5 p m Antique liar
C•l 416 4038 or 416 1615
F eo Market on Saturdays 16
Radio TV
dware
current
mer
&amp; CB Repair
chandfs.
•nbelfeveable CAII615 5168
BUY th s 7 room energy et 1971 Dar an 12 x 65 3
goragesafe prices
bedrooms
RON S TV SERV CE
1912 Crown
fie ent home In Add son Haven U x 65 w th 8 x 10
Speclallz ng In Zen th
and
forget
abo•t
high
In
4 FAMILY yord sale 2911
House Calls Now servicing
erest We II f nance It at 10 expando 3 bedrooms 1973
Jockson Ave PI Pleasant
Motorola Quazar Call 1 percent! Bargain pr ced al Utopia 12 x 65 2 bedrooms
June 11 &amp; 12 Tllunday &amp;
304 576 2391 or 416 245.4
1972 nvader 14 x 70 3
535 900 P ck the plan th•t bedrooms 1972 Nashau 14
Friday 1o-• Clothes 7 to 16
suits your finances S2 000 x 60 2 bedrooms B • S
glauware&amp;tlc
11
Mlsctlltnoou•
down 1350 DO monthly Sales Inc 2nd and VIand
$5 000 down SIS PI P easanl WV
Slone s welding &amp; small poymenr
engine repa r
lawn 5300 00 monthly poyment Phone 675 4424
SIO 000 down $250 00 mon
mowers chalnsaws etc
thl~ payment
For more
Nebo Rd 319 U36
details call 675 32411 days 1968 Great Lokes mob e
home 2 bedroom com
367 7536 nights
ThundiY IM FrldiY June
WantodtoDo
very
p elely turn shed
11
11end12 AnciV ven Metre
good condition S550G 895NEW
CABIN
or
small
Cllfloll. lOY 1 and girl s
TrN work wanted will do
9946
comple!oly fur
lldlt'l and mens cloflllng
prunnlng topping
and home
nlshed
S3900
Call446
0390
Mitc:el..,_.
lake downs 615 6612 and
Ftrms for 5ale
13
Hew Immediately opening 4461735
for one exporl-.d gym
HOUSE FOR SALE 3 By Owner 55 acre farm
OARAOIIIALIIIlll Satur nnllcs Instructor Apply
bedroQm full basement will! 9 room house born
.._ t ftl L M Warwick Rd tmmodlatoly a! the
and m nerafs
Morn ng
DIII~ ...J. Immedlate posHSSion 416
CIOtlllllt Clllhtl IP Galllpolla Municipal
or 256 1903 n c ty Star Area S65 000 949 2630
lim ts Gallipolis
evenings
flxturn lulldtno 511 Stcond Av•

=:=':

1981 Fa rmonl14•52 2 bdr
gas furnance good cond
59800 00
245 9283
Ga pols

Houses for Rent

2 bdr 1 bath on 39 acrea
1 m es south of Ga t po s
$200 mo wr fe W a d
Bentz Rt 2 Box 162 Crown
Cty Ohor Ph 6142566360

6 rrn

house for rent
nqu eat 918 Second Ave
Ga pols

3 or 4 bedroom house n c ly
w th p vacy $225 per mon
th
Sec u
y depos r
requ ed Ca 446 4729

3 bd house 1 m le from
R o Gran de Depos I &amp;
reference requ red Phone
245 5329

3 bedroom 1 1 2 bath 1 car
gara ge garden space a r
cond unturn shed on Rr 1
over look ng the Oh o
R ve 367 7270

3 ROOM house n Mason;
s m fu n shed Sl50 mom
th 614 992 7352
OR LEASE W th opt on to
buy
92 1 sq
tt
~
bedroom 2 baths ear"
b own and br ck laa
lam ly room w th
!able a
e eclr c he
pump k tchen bu II n Hdt
po nr app ances nclud nt
d shwasher
large lof.
pr vale part a ly Wood~di
200 f frontage on Rt 2
c ose o K• ser •ssumablt
loan owner w 11 ti~~r;~~
second mortgage n
n eresr 213 2021

2 BEDROOM
miles out
road I 150 00 per
plus utllllh and
304 675 4088

�..

--· --

---~~

June 1

'N' CARLYLE"'

"'o~lle

Homn
lor Ront
Mob. homo with garage
and garden, turn., In·
eluding washer and dryer,
118th mile from North
Galli a High School on Rt.
160. Has to be seen to be ap·
preclated 388·11436.
2 bdr . Inlier furnished, gas
11o water furnished, no pets,
S225 mo., $1110 dep., ~47.15, Gallipolis.
2 bdr. mobile home ,
B.ula.vllle Rd. ~-3437,
Gallipolis.
For Rent Trailer 12x60, 2

bdr., new carpet, air cond.,

gas heat, beautiful river·
view. 4-46·66.12.
2 bdr. mobile home on
Kerr· Bethel Rd. call W&gt;·
3101 after 6PM, GAllipolis.

SLEEPING room, $75.
Range, refrlg., single male
preferred. 446·4416 after 7
p.m.
~=::;=::;:;::::;=::=;;:::::;==
46
S!lll&lt;e for Rent
=-- --"'="'-""-'='--For Rent m.Odern office
suite,
Business
Professlonel Bldg., 4U
Second Ave., dOWntown
Gallipolis. Call or see
Morris Haskins.

Secluded private )railer lot
In wooded area. Ideal for
that summer ouldoors.
Contact Brown's Trailer
Park, 992·3324.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy, Large lots. Call
992-7479.

2 bdr . Mobile Home new

maintain and do miner trailer and cemp site on
repairs, will give referen· Raccon Creek. Close to
ces and dep. , call after 5 Ohio River. SSOO down.
any time on weekend. 389· ownerwllllinance. 614·256·

-_, .,. _

Middle age couple will

2 bdr. mobile home near

EASY credllevallable now

ENDLOADER
and NEED several items of fur·
appliances,
backhoe. $80 per day . niture,
Operate yourself . Ray televisions. Big discounts
3324.
fo.r quality purchase.
Beegle, 895·3841 .
Village Furniture 2605
For rent, lOx SO 2 bedroom
Jackson Ave. 675·1773.
mobile home . Racine area .
@8eretJaAdise
992·5858.
BIG discounls lor cash and
carry al Village Furniture
2 bedroom Utilities paid . 51
Household GoOds
2605 Jackson Avenue: 675·
Adults only . Deposit
lnJ .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
required. 2 miles out on St.
Sofa,
chair,
rocker,
.
ot·
Rt. 143. 992·3647.
Special · for
loman. 3 tables, ssoo. Sofa, Spring
upholstering furniture.
chair and loveseal. $275.
6 room house for rent on Sofas and chairs priced Richard Mowrey Sr.,
Nye Avenue. SlSO per mon- from S275. to $695. Tables, owner. 675-4154.
th, sso deposit. 367·7811 .
$38 and up to $109. Hide·a·
beds,$340., queen size, S380. MASON County's lergest
2 bedroom furnished trailer Recliners, S165., S295., selection of fine handguns:
on :crab Creek Rd, utilities Lamps from $18. to $65. 5 Colt, Smith &amp; Wesson,
furnished . $225 month . 675· pc . dinettes from $79 .. to Ruger and others. At
3682.
$365. 7 pc ., $189. and up. Health Aid Pharmacy,
Wood table and 4 cha irs, New Haven, wv 882·2005.
2 DR . mobile home in New $350 up to $495. Hulches,
Haven, adults only , no pets, $3110. and $375. , maple or 88 OLIVER diesel, 1969
675·1422 or 675·2996 after 3. pine finish . Bedroom suites Volkswagen. 882·3239.
Bassett Oak, $649.,
Bassett Cherry, $765, Bunk MACH INERY and Tool.
bed complete with mat· New lngensolf·Rand 5 HP
44 '
Apartment
tresses, $250. and up to air compressor on a 60 gal. .
for Rent
$350. Captain' s beds, S275. tank. $1245. Call collect 304·
SMALL house for rent, 57 complete. Baby beds, $89, 766·624.4.
Olive St. 1 bedroom, un· Mattresses or box springs,
furnished, no pets, depoosit full or twin, $55,, firm, $65.
required, $170. mo. W.· and $75. Queen sets, S185. 5 GALVANIZED Culvert,
dr. chests, $49 . 4 dr. chests, S2.35 fl . up. Bridge, etc.
7886. After 5 446- ~45 .
$42 . Bed frames, $20.and Steel, IOc lb. up. 925·0884.
10 gun · G~n cabinets,
FI:IRNISHED Efficiency, $25.,
$350.,
dinette cha irs $20. 1970
INTERNATINAL
S135. Utilities pd. snare and $25.
Tappan gas or SCOUT · 4·W·D, $18110., also
bath, 446·4416 after 7 p.m.
electric ranges, $285.
5 acres up Rl. JS, Three
USED
.
Ranges, mile Rd .. $12;000. Call 576·
FURNISHED Apt., 2 BR, refrigerators, and TV's,
2984.
$150. Water pd . One child 3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
acceptable. 446·4416 after 7 Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
Magic Chef gas range, cop·
p.m.
thru Fri., 'ilam toSpm, Sat.
pertone. Girl's 20 inch bike,
446·0322
very reasonable. 675·3638.
2 bdr., unturn. apartment

1 Bedroom apt. all utilities

paid . 675·5104 or 675·5386,
Pt. Pleasant.

pliances,

1918

Eastern

Ave., 446·7398.

stove, frost free
for I or 2 adult only, W.· refrigerator, good con·
dillon. Reasonable . 675·
0338, Gallipolis.
5323.
2 bdr. partially furn . apart·
Antiques
men!, $175 mo., State St., 53
Gallipolis, across from ATTENTION :
(IM ·
park . Oep. req ., ref., water PORTANT TO YOU) Will
paid. 446·3919 . .
pay cash or certified check
Small effic iency apartment

Apartment for rent, un·
furn., A rms ., utilities pd .,
no children or pets, .446-

3437, Gallipolis.
3·br. Apt. at 103 Court St.,
Gallipolis

with

cabinets

and stove, 2 baths. S215 per
month . S1110 deposit, ref.
required, no pels, children
welcome. Call446·2572.
Furnished 2 bedroom up·

Gas

for ant iques and coilec·
tibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,
guns , pocket watches, and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

3 room with bath apart·
men! in Pomeroy. 992·5621.

HAY FEVER S.UF ·
FERERS Avoid expense of
the needle, English family
tradition for centuries. It
works .

For

~ more

In ·

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furn ished
apartments. 992·5434 or 992·
59U or 882·2566.

formation send tOday self
addressed stamped en ·
velope plus Sl .IIO to S.R.A .
Co ., P .O. Box 284 ,
Gallipolis, OH, .15631.

1 bedroom :apts. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call
992·7721 .

Two month spring special
for upholstering furniture .
RIchard Mowery, Sr.
Owner. 675·4154.

APARTMENTS . Fur·
nished or unfurnished. 675·
1311
days , 675 ·3812
evenings.

SWIMMING
POOLS:
PRE -SEASON SA~E :

3 ROOM aparlmenl,
utilities paid, 675-5104 or
675·5386.
2 BEDROOM apartment,
utilities paid, adulls only,
no pets. 675·1883 9·5 week·
days.
APARTMENTS
AND
MOBILE HOMES675·4130.
ONE bedroom apartment,
Hender11011. 1150.00 month.
Pholie 67~1972 after 5 p.m.
2 BEDROOM apartmenl,
ulllllln paid, will consider
one older child. call 6751883.
sa,b2 J fclar7

45
Furnlstwcl Rooms
SLEEPING ROOMS for
rent, Gall Ia Hotel .
SLEEPING ROOMS and
llghl hoUHI&lt;NPing apt.,
Park Centre I Hotel.

Half Jersey and half
Holstein mllkcow gentle
SSOO. 8 ft. topper $175. Call
(304)675·2536 Alma Ran·
dolph .
JUNE SPECIAL. Buy
fishing reel at regular
price, get rOd of equal
value half price. Matched
rOd and reel combOS, v, Oft
regular price. ROd or reel
only 25 percent off regular
price. Tri County Sports
Shop. 675·2988.
55

washer and dryer heavy

stairs apartment. Adults

only, . no pets. Middleport.
992·3874.

CLARK forklift truck, 12 fl.
6,0110 lift. 304-675·1371 .

Building Supplies
A~L TYPES of . building
materials, block, brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
54 Misc. Merchandise
leis, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0 . Call 2.151980 mOdel Sears Kenmore 5121
.

duty, large caps, can be
seen at Gold Van Lines, 47
Sycamore, Gallipolis.

$999.00

INSTAL~EDIII

.Autos for Salt

firm. Phone 675·1534.

radio,

air

56

Pets for Sale
POOD~E GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

improvements

FOR BEST In Carpel
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
1980 JEEP CJ·S, 6-cyl ,. 4· Steamway. Call 614·446·
spd., exc. cond ., call 446· 2096.
1211.
STANLEY STEEMER
carpet Cleaning
1977 JEEP WAGONEER,
~-4:zpl
42,1100 miles. air, PS, PB,
rear window defogger,
power rear window, 4 PAINTING · Residential
wheel drive, exc. cond.
and commercial. .Inferior
Call388·9334 after 6pm.
and exterior, mobile' home
roofs. Free estimates. 17
MUST SELL, Make me an yrs. exp. with references
offer 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, 4 call367·7784 or 367-7160.
73

1968 Flreblrd ~. good
shape, Call256·6776.

2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown' s Trailer Park. 992-

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·

many , extras,

Vans&amp; 4 W.D.

1974 black Monte carlo,
fair cond .. with air cond.,
AM 8 track, PS, PB, with spd, low mileage, canvas
cralgers, $850, Call «1&gt;·7668 lop, will lrade, call446·1211 JIM MARCUM Roofing
after 4, Gallipolis.
or~·3594.
spouting and siding. 30
years experience. Free
WONDER STOVE · mfg . 74 Road Runner, many ex· For Sale 1975 Dodge Win· esllmates. Remodeling .
by United States Stove Co .. tras 367-0107 or 446·0648 af· dow Van, 9 passenger, 318 Call388·9857.
wood and coal burner with ter 5.
cl.. V·B, runs good,
blower, !&gt;alllpolis Block
aulometic, Call992-7723.
Co., call ~-~783.
CALL 446-2801 for termite,
77 Trans Am, near loan
value al $3800. 446·1136 1975 Volkswagen Van, 7 roach, bird , rodent ,
Rebounder·lotal health ex· 9AM·BPM.
passenger, In gOOd shape, spiders, fleas and olher
cerslze
446 · 3358 .
58,1100 miles, $28110. 895- smell Insect conlrol. Free
estimates given. A local
1974 Mustang 11 hatchback, 3652.
company loc aed In
Gravely, 12 HP, two wheel aulo, radio. $650, Phone
Gelllpolls area .. Bill
mOdel, new, SSIIO below list. ~-1323, Gallipolis.
1970 VW Van. new tires, Thomas.
Outdoor Equipment, Jet. 7
englne ·overhauled. 304-675·
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. W&gt;·
6866.
1970
Ford
Mavrlck
1110,0110,
3670.
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
body exc .• car doesnot run,
textured ceilings; com·
74
make offer. Ph. 379·2280.
Motorcycles
mercia! and residential,
For sale Glass showcase
SISO. Cash register $125.
1978 Kawasaki motorcycle, free estlmales. Call 256·
Store shelves, chest type 78 Black Camero T·lop, air 11100 LTO, 4 cyl., call 675· 1182.
freezer, yard roller $«1. cond., AM·FM stero tape 5079.
While shingles, wood bu~­ player. 4-46·41102, Gallipolis,
SANDERS
CON·
ner cheap. 379· 2196 .For Sale 1975 Suzuki Molor· TRACT I NG, Carpenlry
Galllpolls.
Corvette 1978 Sliver an· cycle new faring, ex. cond., work &amp; painting, concrete.
, nlverslty edition L821oaded 6,1100 miles, call 2.15·5039, landscaping, 446·2787 .
14 acres of pulpwood,and · with exlras, very low Bidwell, Oh.
green couch 367·7634.
mileage, ex. cond., 367·7560
INSTALL fireplace facing
or 367·7671 .
1978 Honda 750 exc. cond., or chimney, drY wan.
plaster, stucco, free esl.
Moving Sale: Maple book·
~ miles, $1.8110 call 379·
Simulated brick or stone.
case, bed &amp; dresser with 1969 Dodge liar! GTS.~ 2411.
Greg Burdetle, call 675·
almost new foom mattress Engine. Asking $1.850. can
6357.
and box spring, 17 cub. ft. anyllme al 949·2123.
1978 Yamaha SIIOCC single
Sears upright freezer, ex.
cullnder. 2,1110 miles. Exc.
cond. Meat slicer, loveseat, 1976 Oldsmobile station cond. $1,2110. 667·6569 after 5 HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
two lounge chairs, and wagen. 1969 Camero Z-29. p.m.
Contractors · Build, siding,
misc. Best offer, cash and 992·3647.
remodel, concrete, roofing,
carry . After 3:110 446·3294,
free esllmates. Call col.,
74
CB
360
HONDA,
low
Gallipolis.
1978 .. CUTLASS Salon. 675· mileage with sissy bar and 614·259·2814 ask for Charles
or Mike.
.2722 or 675·5571.
pad, 2 matching helmets,
3 pc. canopy ·bdr. suite, 20
excellent condlllon, $650.
gal . aquarium with all ac·
937·2463.
cessorles, Midland Base 1977 DODGE pickup, slant Phone Buffalo.
A. I. DUTY &amp; SON, Home
'
6,
automatic,
PS;
PB,
CB wilh 0 ·104 m_icro.,
builder,, specialize In
51~1100 miles, 4 tool bins, 1975 suzuki dirt bike, ex·
ground plane, 100 ft . 6~5
smalf convenient horiln,
- 2318 . .
cellent condlllon. $400, 675· plans available, mOderate
KOAX . 446·«13, Bidwell,
2848.
OH .
price, free estimates, 614·
MORRISON'S Auto sales. --===:;;::::;;::=:::;=== 256·1352.
Boats and
canoe 17 ft. fiberglass, Henderson, wv. Phone 675· i5
1574 or 675·2881.
Motors for Sale
$175. Call992·3921 .
INTERIOR and exterior
painting, Mark White, call
ZINN'S
~ANDING has a
1979 Chevette, good con·
selection of clean used 245-9561.
58
Fruit
dillon. Call after 4PM 675· nice
Runabouts
$5110 &amp; up.
&amp; Vegetables
5115.
Gallipolis.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
Strawberries-pick your
pet Cleaning featured by
own Mon. thru Sat. 9AM to 1977 Gran Prix. $3000.
Haffell Brothers Cuslom
liNN'S
LANDING
has
2
8PM. Closed Sundays, Phone 675·5075 before 5 pm.
Chis-Crafts, one 1977 25ft., Carpets. Free estimates.
sorry no checks. Happy
$14,1100.
one 1979 28ft. twin Call 446·2107.
Hollow Fruit Farm,
1970
Chevy
Impala,
350
engine w/low hours,
Gallipolis Ferry, WVA, 576·
autometic, good condition, $28,1100. Slop In or call tor WOODSHOP · Cabinets,
2026 ..
$500. 675-1714.
more de1ails and In · picnic fables, porch
formation .
Gallipolis. swings, most wood prOduc·
STrawberries pick your
IS. 101 Court St., Gallipolis.
1979
Ponllac
Formula
Sun·
own, bring container 2.15· bird, 4 cyl engine, 4 speed 76
Call
~- 2572 .
Auto Part~
5410.
lransmlsslon, positractlon,
&amp; Accessories
low miles, 675-1420 or 675Strawberries-pick your 29~.
CHARL.IE' S SALVAGE
own, Claude Winters, 2.15·
Auto parts, auto repair, WEATHERALL CON ·
5121 .
wrecker service, buy CRETE · quality and sar·
1977 Mustang II Ghla, ex· aulomoblles, radlalors and vice, call675·1582.
cellent condition, 31,000
Pick
your
own miles, 30-4-675·2205 alter 5 ballerles. 446·7717.
PAINTING · Interior and
strawberries·$ .65 quart, pm .
plumbing,
4 Goodyear, polyglass exterior,
Call245·5482 after 5PM.
•
radial tires, p255, 70xl5 for roofing, some remodeling.
1972 Volkeswagen Super Corvette, white raised let· 20 yrs. exp. Call381·9652.
59 ·For Sate or Trade
Beetle, runs good, new ter, like new~- 7709.
Sale or Trade. Adult paint. $14110. 895·3911 .
BING'S CONCRET9 CON·
Bassett hounds or Chi, will
302 Ford molor and auto STRUCTION · Specializing
trade for elect. or gas 1967 XL. Ford hardtop, 2 transmission, get cond., In concrete driveways,
range or wringer type door, 4 spd. trans, $500.110. must sell. 388·9060, Vlnlon, sidewalks,
patio,
washer. 675·2019 •. 586·2995 can895·3879
basemen!, garage floors
OH.
and etc. Free estimates. 11
Pt. Pleasant.
years experience. Call 367·
1980 GO·CART, 6 months Two 14 Inch Cragars and 7891.
..
..... ,,_,, ,,.,,
old, $3110, 675·6475.
tires $75. Four 14 Inch
Rallvs $75. Wrecked 1975
'
''
--.
1974 DART swinger, 61,1100 Old• Cutlass S200. Phone Does your hoUse need i
lace 1111? Or i~tl a lillie
miles, $995.00.Call alter 5, 675-1701 .
makeup? Call me &amp; I'll
304·AS8·1728.
61
Form Equipment
have If looking young again
77
Auto Repair
In no lime. Will do .all typn
79 Massey Ferguson 200 D. HANDYMAN needs work;
of
Inferior work; flllntllng,
Bulldozer diesel, ~ ft.
ceilings, flooring, etc,; plus
blade, wench, 151 hours. phone 304·AS8·1042.
exterior work, roofing,
Ca II 256· 13.15.
shingling, any size and
72 OLDS 88. Sleel b&amp;lted
shape. 3Q years experience
radials. 66.ono miles, 1750.
Fronl end loader with large 304·675·6245
In carpentry. Referoncos
.
lilt buckel. Has own pump,
provided upon request. 992·
heavy duty, good cond ..
6293.
easy on llo off. SSOO call379·
2196, Gallipolis.
Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deeP stream oxtrocllon.
Hydrallc loader wilh 5 11:
FrM osll mates, reasonlble
bucket, for farm tractor,
rates. Scolhguard, 992·6309.
like new S600. Phone 992·
3921 .

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

DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Chow pup·
pies are here, while Per·
sian &amp; Himllayas kittens.
Call 4-46·38« after 4 p.m.
HI~~CREST K!NNEL
Boordlng all breeds, clean
Indoor· outdoor facilities. ·
Also AKC · Reg. Dober·
mans. Call446·7795.

AKC Reg. puppies Bassett
hounds, $150 and up,
Schnauzers, $1110 each, toy
Pomeranlans, $200 and up,
One rare chocolate
Pomeranlans, $350, Also
adult Bassett hounds, SSO.
675·2019, Pt. Pleaunt.
Four 15,110 gallon tanks

Above ground pool COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED
starling at $999.110. Price in·
eludes pool, deck, fence,
filler, liner, and In·
slallatlon under normal
ground condition.. Free
shop at home service. Call·
~:~~~~~ifr;~llocated
at
Athens, above
Ohio. ground
$31000.110
AKC
'lny loy male
1·800·624-8511 .
each. Pbone 1·304·-42U711.
21emale poOdles,
3 house lreller axles with
AKC registered Springer· New Holland Hay Baler,
fires and longue. 9&lt;19·2361.
Sflllnlel pups. 4 months old. Model 67. SASO.IIO Good
1 female, 2 matet. Liver &amp; -~lng condllon. Helen
BURIAL lots for sale. White. Call Harlan Webb, Eber~ch, •Middleport.
Beautiful, perpetual care, Mansfield, OH at H19·519·
uprlghfl monument per- 7024
anytime.
milled. Foresl Hill
Cometary Rt. 2 North.
Phone 675-5548 (James H. AKC German Shepherd
WantM te 1uy
pups. good lemperment, 62
LewiS)
excellent bloodline. 1·304o
WANT TO lilY Old fur·
ALL lypes of granite, mar.- 675-2415.
nlture and Antiques Ill 111
ble, and bronze memorials.
klncll, can Kenneth swain,
Display lot on Main St. Pt. THE FISH TANK and
2¥-19671n lhe evening.
Pleasant Granite Com· · Shop, 2101 Jtffarson
675-2063 Gulnu pigs
pany. Phone 675·5548.
and 10.99, Parakt1s1_~~b~; Q
Uvettock
2 YNr olel htlfer, 900-11100
SNAPPER I HP elect. Zebra Filii $11.95, 11
start riding m - 30 In, U.N. Open I H.
pound. •mJ.
cUI, list 1121Hale $'1050,
DaChlhUnel,
OUt- Equlpmenl, Jet, AKC
Rll. 7 &amp; 35, Galllpolll, I'll. Pomeranian an PNC~Ie
.....:y,.,
pupll95-39...

~

I

981

DICK TRACY

Television
•
•
VIewmg

.,.•,

JUNE 10,1N1
EVENING

i.

.

7:00

.

~ -

'

CONTINIOUS no leak gut·
Due to Illness. 23 fl. 1?75 lerlng, ~uslom made for
Arlstocral camper, many your home. For free
extras. $41100 or best offer. estimates, call ADVA.NCE ·
.SEAML.ESS GUTTER
Glenwood. 576·2720.
AND DOOR. 614-698·8205.

phone 304·675-6438.

'

KACH·ALL 1)9rfable metal
buildings, sizes 4fl.x10ft. to
to purchase ·furniture, 12ft.x&lt;IOII. Gallipolis Block
televisions, .or appliances. Co., 123'12 Pine St .. call «6·
Village Furniture 2605 2783.
Jackson Ave. , 675·1773.

In Vinton, Oh, on Main St.,

cassette,

288~.

Wanted to rent or buy
mobile home lot 4-46·6318 or
446·41109 .

sec. dep., 245·5818.

H &amp; 0 CONSTRUCTION.
Remodeling, and repairs.
commercial and _rnlden·
11a1 . Phone67H357.

cond., before 4:110 call 446·
8519. After 4:110 call ~-

26' TROUTWOOD travel

1216.

Equipment for Rent

Fiberglass Travel Trailer.
13 11. 950 lbs. fully equip·
pod, sleeps four', excellenl
condition. 773·5420 afler 4
pm.

trot, am-fm

8746.

48

2·Two week old calbes.
S200. 11r111. Half polled 1977 DOdge v, ton stepslde 6
cyl., 4 speed, 6 l'- 49,0110
hereford. 949-2179. .
miles. P.S., am·fm Strack·
Oood tires. $1.8110. 9&lt;19·2288.
REGENCY Inc . Aparl·
ments, $200, monlh, 1978 FORD "" ton 4·wheel
utilities partially paid. 2 drive. 675·1121.
·
Bedroom, superior neigh·
borhood. 675·6722, 675-5314.
1979 FORD FlSO, 6 cyl. 4
speed, radial tires, AM· FM

1979 THUNDERBIRD, ex.
condition, power brakes,
power sleerlng, cruise con-

Capt. Dee's. Adults only, no
pets, sec. dep. end ref . ~2491 .
Cap. Dee's. Adulls only, no
pets, sec. dep. and ref . W&gt; ·
2491 .

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Aaaleltnllal, automollve.
Emergency service. Call
882·2079.

7·
• p.s.,
wagon,
6,....cyl.,
goodcond.~·ld2.

home,

Gallipolis .

1977 BONANZA travel
trailer, 3$ fl. long, a.c., lip·
out room. New .awning,
deluxe Interior, lull bath,
calll88·11646.

71

":'74~AMAM~C~S~..._~a~bou~t~Wc~- ~1962 Ford plc~up, 12110 8.;;1: - -- -uH;::o=m:::e-- -

$275. Gas and water turn,
SlOO dep . 446 · 6583,

r&amp;nt.

lmprovtllltllll
AINGLE'S SERVICE :
compllte
building,
remodeling, repal ring,
rarge or small lobe done If·
flclentiy. Phone 675-2011 or
675-.1560.

71

47
Wanted to Rent
Canoe 17 fl. fiberglass,
$175.
Phone 992·3921 .
Wanted lo Rent 2 or 3 bdr.
reasonable

Campi ..
Egulpmtllt
TOPPER,
TRUCK
llberglas, with llldlng win·
dow for 6'1'1 ft. GMC or
Chevy tru~k. $325 ..Call 381.·
9334 alter 6 p.m.
·.

"''

Trailer for rent, contact
Carry Out in Cheshire.
2 bdr. trailer furnished,

Llvntock
71
Autos lor Sale
4 EATING sized rebblll. 1916 Chysler Cor-, low
4-16-4537.
miles, good c:Ond., lilt
Wheel, cruise, priced right,
Fryers for ule, S1.2S "~h. "*1661, Gallipolis.
«6-Je24, .
.
1970 CHEVY Caprice. 367·
7824.
For Sale Reg, Polled
Her"ord bul.l, 2 yrs. . old.
Call ~-3221, after 6, 72
Trucks lor Sale
Gallipolis.
65 Dodge pickup, 314 ton,
197A Chevy, 1'72 Mercury
Herford bull. 9&lt;19·2368.
379·2123, Patriot, OH . ·

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

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Soulhern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
Mobile home for rent, 3 992·3954.
bdr. , completely furn ., W&gt;·
9669, Gallipolis.

June

(})

Cil BASEBALL Atlanta Brevet
va Montreal Expoa
({)(jJ). FA..LYFEUD
CD WILD KINGDOM
D&lt;Il TICTACDOUGH
(JJ iljl . MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®!NEWS

CAPTAIN EASY
HOW CAN Ttlli'Y
TURN .OOWIIJ THe
PEAL'

HARPER Halstea~. lawn
mower repair and shar·
penlng service, ·to a .m.·6
p.m. 675-5868.

THEY

· I HAVI! A
fUNNY F!!liLIN&amp;

I!IOTH

WI!'~!

INVOLV&amp;O
ALRI!APY!

&amp;TIIV OUT .01' JAIL,
THeY &amp;&amp;T PULL
I!MPLOVMI!!IIJT. A
Pfr..CI!NTAGI! OF
TH! TAI&lt;I!!. IT'~
IOE'AL!

DAVE'S appliance repair,
dryers, Pl11m·
bing, electric, general han·
dyman. 576·2921 or675;5689.
washers,

Lawn mower repair. 675·
6416.

7 :30

(I). BlJ~~SEYE

(}) ANOTHER LIFE .
I}) 8 C1J JOKER'S WILD
&lt;IJ HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
([) (jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
Guest: Michael Davies.
comedian and }Uggler.
®l
RICHARD SIIIIMONS
SHOW
li2ltl FACE THE MUSIC
7:5B CIJ CBN UPDATE NEW$
8:00 .008CD REAL PEOPLE
llJ SPECIALS
(!)MOVIE~DRAMA) .. II"Gn

Tell Tho Sporllno" 1178
IIJ(j2). CHAAI.II!'SANGE~S
Twel¥8 bank a fall for the gulae
of a chameleonth ief whorlpsoff
a quarter ola million dollars of
their money, and beautiful Krla
falls lor the mastermind behind
the scam. (eo mina.)
llJ 1IJ 1mJ THE WHITE

Stark's Tree Trimming.
Yard Work Insured . Phone
576·2010.
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2.154.
COOK'S
vice,

Television
Henderson,

Phone 675-2250 .

father 's illness and the two of
thembeginlodevelopanewun·
derstanding. (Repeat; 60

Ser·

wv

mine.)
[IJ
THE AMBASSADORS
Nineteenth century Europe and

D

T and R building ,
remodeling, also papering,
carpet installation, and
general
home lm ·
provements. 675·5689, 675·
5304.

a worldly
mins.)

pariaienne.
·

(90

(l1J ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL ' Brink of Disaster'

THEM HE'G GTili
~~~ ~li!.EALLY
HERE GOME I'IHEKE
HADM'T EXPECTED A
IHE iNGTALLATIOii/ RUGGED MAN OF AFFAIR.G
MO MEED TO PANIC··
UltE OUVER.--1 MEAN,
YET!
YOU!!. "DAWY" WARBUC~G
~TO HAVe !7UCii

Plumbing
--::-----.!&amp;~H~ea':-t,_,ln,.e'-:-::~-:CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone «6·3888 or ~-«77
DEWITT'S P~UMBING
AND HEAriNG
Roule 160 at Evergreen
Phone 4-16-2735.

The outbreak of war seems far
away compared to a local out·
break of foot and mouth dis·
ease . (60 mlna .)

8:58 CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 (2)

8

CD

OIFF'RENT

STROKES Arnold gh1ea the
building 's young Puerto Rican
doorman the hundred dollars he
has saved to ' invest ' ln a race
horse running at Belmont Park.
(Repeat) (Closed-Captioned)

REFIHEMEHT··

W 700CLUB

(j] &lt;HJ ID AMERICAN DREAM

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbing · Healing · Air
condllionlng. 300 Fourth
Ave. Ph. ~-1637 .

Q C!J ®J

CBS WEDNESDAY

NIGHT MOYIE 'Uptown Satur·
day Night' 1974

@ BLUEGRASS AT WATEIIo
LOOVILLAGE
9:30 m • CD THEFACTSOFUFE
Natalie linda thai after her first
date she' s become very
popular, but she doesn' t realize
th a t it 's because the boy
spread some wary ra c y, and
v;:: ry untrue, stories about her.
(Repeat)

SOUTHERN SERVICE
CO. · Heating · mobile
home furnaces. eleclrlc hot
water tank repair. Call Of·
flee, 446·3008 night,
emergency no. 367·7131.

m LAST OF THE WilD

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Healing,
Rt. I GallipoliS, 367-7853.

fill A RAINY DAY ATV sts•. un ·
happy with her career , spends
an afternoon with hermotherfor
I he first time in liwe years when
she altends her father 's

D. c . Conlractors Plum·
bing, electrical, heating,
·rooting, aluminum and
vinyl siding. 675·1240.

funer11l.

wesligatea after a collegetrack
star dies, apparently ol a heart
atta ck, and the unpopular track
coac h' s brutal tra ining melh·
ods lead to a charge of neg ·
ligen! homocide. (Repeat; 60
mins.)

DOZER work · excaveting,
land clearing. Call «6·11051.

m MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••
"Hollywood Knlghtt" tHO
m TBS EVENING NEWS

c &amp; v Inc., Backhoe service. 985-35&lt;19 or 949·2822.

II l il2J Gl VEGAS Den Tenno

unleashes all his fury against a
murderousprocurorwhois lore·
ing beautilul girls. recently
released I rom prison, to pose
as teenage call girls in an at·
tempt to lure men into a vicious

COMPLETE SEWER IN·
STALLATION &amp; backhoe
service for the Racine·
Syracuse . sewer district.
Dorer work If needed. 949-

blackmail scheme . (Repeat;80

2293 .

mlns.)

rll MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Duchess ol Duke Street: Hon·
our and Obey' To her surprise,
Louisa is surrounded by admir·
ing gentlemen , and she is faced
with an ofler she can't refuse .

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
In septic tank. 675·1234.
BACKHOE service. Larry
Sldenstricker. 675-5580.

mlno .)
ltil NEWS

(60

10:28 13) CBNUPDATENEWS

Etoctrlcal
&amp; Refrltjertllon

t0:30

--'=="'-=='-'--

Q&amp; C'lJtllfl'SE! MARfNKP.
WILL LIVE UP TO HER
PROMiSE AND MAKE ME

QUALITY Cooling and
Healing service, call 388·
9691 .

11 :oo

m • Ill CD a rn 1!1Hi2l•
NEWS

llJ

MACHINE

992·2214. The Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . Aulhorlzed ·
Singer Sales and Service.
We sharpen SciSsors.

13] MAX MORRIS
~ll OUTER LIIIFrS

10:58 (fl CBN UPDATE.NEWS

A TOP MOPEL ...

repairs, service, all makes.

11:28
1 1:30

PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
W NIGHT GAUERY
rll DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(Tl CIN UPDATE NEWS
(2)8(1) THETONIGHTSNOW
Guest Madeline Kahn. (60
mina.)

ffi ROllS BAGLEY SNOW

(4 )
MOVIE
·(WESTERN-COMEDY) •••
"McUntoclt" 1113
ilJ IIOVIE ~WESTI!IIII) .. II
"Burning . . .n 1117 ·
[() BENNY HILL SHOW
II (JJ CBS I,ATE MOVIE

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO;
N. air condition service,
commercial, Industrial.
Phone882·2079 .

'Murder At The Mardi Grat'

1978
rlJ AIC CAPTIONED NEWS

(it).

(1\I)MOVIE ·(IIYBTERYI 0 11
"ToCommiUIIIIrdlf" 1170
AIC III!WINKlHTLINE

l'
I

Anchorocf by Tocf Koppel.

•

12:00 (J)(lJl. UWI!IOAT AlillhY
rock pertOOMr fellt in love with

'

a deaf Pittenger; Doc htlpa 1
gambler who healittle luck wtth
wordawlntt..h..rtothiabrlde ;

and tM crew Ntakent, eu·

_.:to 1 coople of plot! log to do
n~ay with Captain St•birlg.

DILLARDS WATER
Service. Call

12:30

~·t:
'""''·'
ffi
• 70
(!)
TOMORROW
COAIT·TO.COAIT Guoolt:
Burt Bacharach and Carole

llylfSago&lt;(IDmlno.)
t2:11 (JJ CIN ~TI RIPOIIT
1:00
1:10 &lt;Ill
-

maooue

......,.............
1971 Ford Torino with air
and .-11 contrOl, gooc~ ·
condlflon. Price SUOO.
Phoni67H312.

,,..1

Stuellbaklr

11000.67......

Se9A"·

-

'

15EeN •

I sr~utJ
A(

Answer here:

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as aug·
geoted by the abOve cartoon .

I I XXI )( I I ) :··lfl
.

(Answers tomorrow) :

I Jumbles: INKED

Yesterdays
.

SCARY HUNTER BANDIT
··•

shlrt-"TRIES HARD"

· ~·

.... .'.

J..,.... Book No. 15; cont.IM1g 110 puzDn, ll IWIIIabtt IOf 11.75 poetplicl

hom'""""'· clo 11111 -~~~~. loK 34, N - N.J. 07648. lnc:ludo your
name, Mldm.1, zip codt 1ncl m11k1 c:t.cka PIY•tM. to New.p~~pedloob.

. ".,
'

.....

BRIDGE

. •,

.'

Superlative Sims

' ·.

By Oswald Jacoby

ud Alu Sontag
Philip Hal Sims stood sixfoot-three and weighed 350
pounds. A giant among men
and ~ridge players, Hal was
undoubtedly the best auction
bridge player in the world and
one of the very best in the early days of contract.
He also played no trump
contracts superla tivel y and
his only real weakness was
that he knew it and bid too
many of them. In one famous
duplicate hand every declarer
except Hal.made three of lour
notrump . Hal made live, bu t
was in six . In today's hand we
see Hal at his best.
North's three-hearl rebid
was a strange one, but Nor(h
did no( want 10 pass or to get
past three notrump.
Hal won the first spade,
entered dummy with a heart
and led a diamond. East
played the kin; and Hal decid·
ed it was a bona !ide singleton. He couldn't let East in so
he had to try to find an end
play for his ninth trick.
He led a club, West played
his queen. This play made it
easy lor Hal to let him hold
the· trick . West led a second
club. Hal cashed the club and

''

NORTH
+613
YAKQ3
t53
+A K 7 5
EAST

WEST
+2

+KQJ IOSI
,862
tK
+432

'JI097
tJ9 7 4

+QJI09

SOUTH
+A 71
'5 I

..

' "

tAQi086 l

+8 6

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
East

WHI

Pass
Pass

2+

3t

Pass
Pass

3NT

,.

_____

,__

_.

...
"
"

.

heart winners and threw We~t ~
in with the fourth club.
.
West had (O lead a diamond :
to give Hal his ninth trick.
. -~·
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS N.) .

1:30 ()) IIIIOUIIROlllllll

([) ATUIITA -VII lA·
IIIAL.L . .I'UY Atlanta
lrlivt~•UaniiHIExpae

l:a CllHIIIOIItWWI~
'IMI PIIVATI WAll
1.'011
QOCIII-

..

~MW\Ur
It, THOMAS JOSE'H

47 EmlUed,
as beams

ACROSS

1 Jeweler's

tenn
• Regioo
1t Hlltltility
12 It's Tuesday
in HoUywood
13 Stymie

15 Tankard

. \

DOWN
1 Commonwealth
nation
ZType ol dye
3 Came of age
4 "-Blue?"

) I

.

.,

..,,
.. ..

(1929 song)

· "''

Alii'""

.

5 Roman
Yeslerday't
gannent
2% "- in the
30 Evil spirit ·17 Nigerian city 1 Disciple's
Money"
3% ID.fated
18 Loud noise
emotion
(1933 song) 33 Mete out
.,.
1t Nestled
7 Insurgent zs American of 34 Poet
together
8 Avoid
Japanese
Marianne · , ',.·
21 "-nation, 9 Put in a P.S . descent
35 Strange
27 Science of 31 Ann -,
conceived ... " II Play
%3 Blemish
the sitar
verse-writing Mich.
!4 Heavenly
14 Lambasted 28 Part of
4! Building
Barbara
2t Nuisance
a diver's
sectioo
!I Mulberry
(sl.l
life line
n Mauna cloth\
2t Moroccan
Berber
31 Electrical
network
33 Judge
Crater's
problem?
17 Hidalgo's
contents

11 Gen. Eaker

gold
•Card game
•Ending for
election

41Japanese
meuure
11 J.ad:Benny'slb-4--+-

therne
14 Otynear

Mclecow
U Scribble
41 Dlvulce

"' '
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it: ... "
.ii.IYDLBAAIR

Ia LONGFELLOW

?

,......

Ont letter almply otoncb for another. In lhit umple A Ia
tllld for tlte three L'l, X lor the two O's, ete. Single !etten,. - ,
opoatrophel, the lenllh ond formation of the words are all , ;
blntl. loch dt~ tht eode !etten are dlflerenl.

..

CaYI'TOQUOTBS

sue

PN

MWPHA

WA

u

PN

J

.'

Opening lead:•2

UHMUFN

PN

0 WU C

NOGECBAG

SUIPCB
WA

PN

SUTA.- QENW

U
UY0 AG

p 0 .;_

RPHHPCBN

Y. . . .;'1 0=%: TIDIE WHO NEVER QUOTE, IN
RE'I'URN .W:~llOIIQtXm:D.-ISMCD'ISRAEU ·
.'

"

Soutb

1------------------ --_;,. ,.,

0 U 0 PE C

r

~

r .' ....

Answer : Makes a great effort - to change a red

~,..,

r

WHAI THE J'U~E
&amp;AI t:' i'T HAt:'

10:00 (f) II W QUINCY Quincy In·

13
Ex&lt;IVIIInf
DOZER · backhoe, dump
truck. can «6·4537.

15
Generot Hauling
LIMESTONE, gravel and
sand. All sizes. At Richards
and Son, Upper River Rd ..
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call ~7785.

· · 10

America elsah in this drama·

tizalion ot Henry Jamea' novel,
starring Lee Remick and Paul
Scofield. Scofield is sent to
Paris to rescue a yoUng Amer·
ican fr,iend from the clutches of

1Z

SEWING.

I RICKYT
I
(XJ ()

tends his stay in New York when
he learns the aeriouaneaaolhis

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675·1331 .

84

I NYNI8 [)
II

SHADOW Coach Reevee ex·

NOW HAULING house coel
limes'- lor driveways.
for nlim1tn :MN101
11 -,, • .,,.,

.
NEW !IIBLE BAFFLE

SHOW

''
1977 FORD Graneaa, tour
- , all lhe extras, ex·
cetlant COndition. .I:NCJO.
30H75-1ol97 before 4:30
p.m.

(I). PM MAGUINE

ltMf ........., 7 1 ' Inc .

�Sentinel

1\~agan suspends Israeli shipment

_Access road construction may start in July
Construction on the. access road
from Mulberry Heights area to
Union Ave., will possibly get underway by the middle ofol'uly.
Jim Page, coru;ulting .engineer,
met with Meigs cOunty commissioners Tuesday concerning construction of the road. Commissioners agreed to advertise for

bids on the road site as soon as.
possible.
Also . meeting with the comrnissioners was Frank Blair, Ohio
Department of Tra!lllportation,
Division 10 who requested the board
grant approval to the stale to alter
four tenths of a mile ·of county road
34, Bowmans Run, in order to install

Area deaths
Nancy Alice Hall
Mrs. Nancy Alice Hall, 75,
Stewart, died Tuesday afternoon at
O'Bleness Hospital following a brief
illness.
Mrs. Hall was born in Athens
County the daughter of the late John
and Mary GO\'(!en Brandeberry. She
was also preceded in death by six
sisters and two brothers.
She was a member of the Stewart
United Methodist Church and had
been a resident of Stewart the past

. ded Training School and WOrkshoo.
'nle CMimlaalonen agreed to hold
a pl'llpOIIed IL\Ie hearing on the
pouible uses of federal . revenue
sharing lunda on June 23, at2 p.m. ·
Permission was granted to Mike
Swisher to lease a postage maeblne
lor the Welfare Depsrtment from
Pibley Bowes.

Mayor's
Court
f

17 years.
Slle is survived by twa daughters,
Shirley Ober, Miami, Okla., and
Mary Crislip, Portland, Oregon; one
sister, Mrs. Ed (Doris) Sweeney,
Stewart, and five grandchildren. .
Funeral services will be held
'J!hursday at I p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev. H. 'L. McDaniel officiating.
Burial will be in the Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
fwieral home after 7p.m. today.

Meigs County happenings ••
Registration date set

culvertil on SR 124. The. board
agreed.
.
Manning Webster, chainnan of
the Mental Retardation Baonl, met
with the colllmiasionen to infonn
them that the state cOIItrolllng board
has approved the county's request
for additional funds for the construction of the new Mentally Retar-.

Emergency calls

Registration for swimming
Four emergency calls were anclasses being offered at the swered by local units on Tuesday,
Syracuse Pool, June 11&gt;-26, will be the Meigs Emergency Medical Serheld from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Satur- vice reports.
day at the pooL
At 5:24p.m., the Middleport Unit
There will be lessons for several took Ernest Ward from Dr. James
classes of beginners ranging from 5 Conde's office to Holzer Medical
through 12 in age, advance beginner Center; at 3:15 p.m., the Pomeroy
classes and advanced lifesaving for Unit took Gloria Reynolds from
· those 15 and older. Swinuning Pomeroy Cliff Apartments to
lessons will cost $12 for the session Veterans Memorial Hospital; the
and the lifesaving course will be $20. Syracuse Unit at8:38 a.m. took WanInstructors will be Jaye Ord and da Imboden from Syracu.se to
Paige Smith Cleek.
Veterans Memorial; at 10:15 a.m.,
'
the Racine Unit treated Edward
Evans
at the fire station.
Apply for grants
Hocking Technical College and the Veterans Memorial
Meigs County Health Department
Admitted-Ellen Couch, Pomeroy ;
have applied for a total of $43,699 in
VVandalmboden,Syracuse;Glendon
grants from the Area Six Health
Eugene Faulk, Pomeroy; Virginia
Systems Agency.
The grants would be used to con- Thoren, Minersville; Helen Jeffers,
tinue hypertension control services. Syracuse.
Discharged--Robert
Newell,
Hocking Technical College is
asking for $29,640 and the health Lawrence Ebersbach, Lawrence
Ritchie, Dora Smith.
department is requesting $14,059.

Two defendants were lini!d and
placed on probation and seven
others forfeited bonds, all posted on
speeding charges, In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Robert Curry and Tim Hysell,
both of Pomeroy, were fined $100
and costs each and given 90 day jaU
sentences on destructiop of property
charges. They were both placed on
probation for six months.
Forfeiting bonds were Dale Curry,
Pomeroy, $34; Jeffrey Church,
Belpre, $29; Gary Prowse,
Charleston, W. Va., $30; Steve
Jenkins, Racine, $29; Karen Roush,
Pomeroy, $30; E. Kelly Thoma, ·
Pomeroy, $39, and Patrick Owens,
Pomeroy, $29.

Two defendants forfeited bonds
and nine others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Emmett Bostic,
Gallipolis, $150, driving while under
su.spension, and Mike Harrison, Middleport, $150, driving while under
suspension, and $350, driving while
intoxicated.
Forfeiting were Francis Pickens,
Middleport, $225 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while IntOXicated; Raymond J. Michael,
Middleport, $100 and costs, reckless

Gospel meeting sel

Homemade

.

, ,

HAM SAlAD••••• ·-·····~·······~~·. $1.39
JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••~~·. $1.79
'

operation; James · KeQIIedy, Middleport, $100 and costs, allowing prbage to accliml!late; Roy L.
Buchanan, Reedsville, $225 and '
costs and three days in jail, driving
while intoxicated, and $100 and
costs, driving while under suspension; Keith Petrie, Middleport, $100
and costs and three days In Jail,
assault; James Morrison, Mi&amp;.
dleport; Thomas F. Miller, Middleport, and Bob Black, Rutland, ~
and cOsts, each,.disorderly manner
charges. Black was also lined $100
and costs on reckless operation
charges. Steve Jenkins, Racine, was
fined $32 and costs, speeding; $25
and costs, squealing tires, and $100
and costs and was ordered to make 1
restitution on a bad check charge.

Approve GDC sale
aJLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - state
representatives have endorsed two
bills authorizing the sale of stateowned property In Scioto and Gallia
counties.
One measure, sponsored by Rep.
Ronald H. James, D-Proctorville
approves the sale of 1.5 acres of land
near the Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility to owner5 of an adjacent
farm.
His bill, approved 88-0 Tuesday,
now goes to the Senate.
·
Representatives alsll returned to
the upper chamber an amendment
to a bill sponsored by Sen. Oakley c.
Collins, R-Ironton, clearing the way
for the sale of 294 acres of land
Owned by the Gallipolis Develop.
mental Center. The property Is to be
sold as five separate parcels to
Gallia County,GOmmlssloners lor a
total of $362,001.

AUTHORIZED CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears I
Phone\192-2171

effect on large mWtary ali'ipments to
,.tlort ,cihdlflnlte IJraelduetol&amp;lttlllltlllllllth.
1'1111113
lliael violaled an · 11rae1 called ~·i deciaion
8jp'MIII8DI to use All1erlean-tnad - "Wljllll," apr1111d "deep regret
lr1lis for defenae only, ilnapending · and cllaappoin$menl" and said its
delivery ol lour F-18 ~ to deltruCUIIII o1 the nuclear facility
Iarae1 "for the Ume being.'' But for was a wboll)' JUIIIflable iCI of sellnow, 110 other repriaala are being defe~~~e to p~eveut "all bnplacable
takeiL
'
enemy" from bulidlng atomic born. Offlclala at the White Hoalle and be.
,
the Slate Departroent llllid the
IJrael's friends on Capitol Hill
superislon, following the Israeti toOt a similar line, 'l'hile othen said
bombing ol an Iraqi nuclear reactor some action,: , even lenlporarily,
Sunday, would have no lmmedlate . suspending' shipments of IUSlfour

Eckrich

There will be a gospel meeting at
the VVestside Church of Christ, 200
West Main Street, June 15 through
the 21st.
,
Bruce Taylor will be the speaker
and services will be held at 7:30p.m.
nightly. On Sunday services will be rr.;~~~~;::;::::==~
held at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.

GOODfYEAII

W~ (APj - J'ralldent

a.,.,.

.

.

·~

.

.

Voi.JO, No•• D
Copyrighted 1911

' Chef-Bov-Ar-Dee
12 oz.

·

PEPPERONI or 16~ oz. CHEESE PIZZA

•

at y

enttne

·
w/7' OFF 8f
CHILl w/BEANS
•••••••••••••••••••

PINEAPPLE JUICE ••••••••••••••. $1.19
20 oz. Del Monte

CRUSHED PINAPPLE ••••••••••••• 7'1

ODNR accepts applications

28 oz. Campbell's

PORK-N-BEANS••••••••••••••••••••• 6'1

COLUMBUS, Ohio- The Ohio Department of Natural Resources is
accepting applications from local governments through July 1 to fund
outdoor recreation projects.
The department receives money for such projects from the federal
Land and Water Conservation Fund to reimburse project sponsors for
up to 50 percent of the cost of buying or developing public outdoor
recreation areas.
The fund is financed through royalties from federal leasing of offshore oil driUing rights. Ohio has used $105 million since 1965 for 930
rec~eation Improvement projects.

10112 oz. campbell's

CHICKEN w/RICE SOUP•••••• 2/79~
160 Count

SCOTT NAPKINS •••••••••••••• ~:~; 8'1
5 oz. Armour

AHEAD OF satEDULE - Daplte the rain wortmea for Ontario
Plpelllle Ce., -lbme to lay the sewer U.S ID the village of Synuae.

VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••••••••••• 2/9'1

ACCJirdiDg to Ed Tinkle, of Commonwealth Engineers, the work is
ahead of schedule. Pictured Is work being done VVedaesday on College
Road-

House approVes 'giisoline tax

STORAGE BAGS ................... 69'
10 oz. Instant

NESCAFE COFFEE ...........~:~ •• $4.59

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Major
billa hlklnc OhiO'I paoline tax, rtlnslatlfll the death penalty and
mramplnc the juvenile justice
IYIIem have been approved by the
HoWle during the busiest day of Its
1181.-ton.
. Repmentatlvl!ll .sent the gasoline
tu: hllle, the ftnt slnca 11109, to Gov.
JIIJIIIIII A. Rhodes after concurring
M-14 With the Senate version of the

LeglalaUve leaders spect Rhodes
to allcnr the fuel tax hike to become
Ia'!' trithout hla signature. The lncreaie II contalnellln the IU billion
budll!l for the clepertmenia of tranIPOflatlon and hl&amp;hway safety over
the neltl1r0~~ ·
Rep. Frederick H. Deering, DMonroeville, said the tu: Ia expected
· tD produce U42 milDon Iii extra state

TruckOrRVI

re\.enue for highway and · bridge measure, said he would ask for it to
maintenance during its first year. It be sent to a joint conference comwould yield another f47 .6 miDion for mittee for review before final action
counties ; townsh i ps and next '!Veek.
"I'm basically fairly happy with
munlcipallties, he said.
the
bill," he said.
Under the bill, thestate'scurrent 7
Finan said he wanted more time to
cents-per-gallon tax would go up by
3.3 cents July 1, based on a formula closely examine changes, however,
refJecUng lighway maintenance made by the House in the concosts and fuel consumption. It's ex- stitutionally sensitive legislation.
Ohio has been without a death
pected to increase another 1.4 cents
ln 11.1 second year. But in no case penalty since 1978, when a previous
could ·the taX be more than 12 cents statute was ruled unconstitutional
per pllon over the nell three years. . by the U.S. SUPreme Court.
Repreaentstives, meanwhile, ' Rep. Terry M. Tranter, Ddiamllled arguments that capital Cincinnati, ·said the biU would reimpunlahment II li ' barbaric penalty poee capital punishment for .certain
that doel not deter crime and ap- aggravated murders such as those
proved 17-31 a Senate-passed bill In which. the governor or a correcUons or peace offi~r were slain. It
reinllating it In Ohio. .
Sen. Richard H. Finan, R- allo would apply In cases involving
Cinclnnati, chief spohsor of the aggravated murders that occurred

during the commission of a felony
such as rape or robbery.
Supporters said most Ohioans
wanted the legislatlon.
"Fully 85 percent of all Ohioans
across the board .. . believe capital
punishment is the appropriate
penalty in some murders," said
Rep. Michael G. Oxley, R-Findlay.
But opponents said the penalty
does not deter crime, cannot be
juslified on moral grounds aqd could
lead to the execution of an innocent
person.
Rep. VViltiam L. Mallory, 1).
Cincinnati, unsuccessfully sought
adoption of an amendment which
would have substituted life imprisonment without possibility of
parole lor the death penalty. It was
defeated when representatives
voted 5G-42 to table it.

Democrats seek _compromise support

TRUCK

71REPAIR
OfFER!
Rib Hi-MIIer
. Srrono n\.'lo

. Durable S nb cord carcau
n tread

JSO· "I.. 1
LOold Rlftlf' 0
Tubt· fyp e
Ptv\U ·'IftT

$359

'

.

..

here" for such a' "trigger" on the

sale of assets, should be reii'Oactive
third-year tax cut, Rep. J .J. Pickle, to Wednelday. Thai Idea, auggested
D-Teua, told Chapoton. "But it by Sel). !Joyd Bentsen, D-Texas,
seems like you'd rather go for was aimed at eliminating incentives
for investors to delay their decisions
~e."
Chapoton rejected Pickle 's unW Oct. 1, when the bu!k'ol the inw nent as the conunittee began dividual tax cuta would take i!ffect.
wrlllnc lis venion ol a tu:-cut bill. · Rep. Dan Rotdenkowskl, J).Dl., the
No votes were taken, although some Ways and Meana chairman, told
fliiCht occur by Friday 111 Reagan's Chapoton lbat Democrats whO COilplan for cutUna buainellll taxes by trOI IU panel 1n11st that more tax
allowlnl faster deductions for retief be directed toward the
wortlng poor. And he ~ the
blllldlnllaand machinery..
Democrats'
position that a tax cut be
Cllapoton spent I110IIt of Wedfor
a
mulinum
ol two yean.
lllllda7 aplalnlnc Relpn's reviled
Rep.
Barber
B. Conable of New
tu-M plan, tint to the Senate
York,
senior
GOP
member on the
Finance Committee, 'l'hlch
conun!Uee,
uld
the
president and
ooWIGelday.
·
1-any 11U1JP0111 it, and then to
other
Repubiicana
have
a program
Such • )II'OYIIIon, he aildld, WCu1d WaJJand M-, which doll not.
N1111M1 tlle llll1liDlJ IIIII .R elpn
The Ftaance Committee acreed "to live the American people a real
illlilll llllllt lie prcMdld for JD. ' lhat any nductlon in tu:a on tax cut - not an ill1llory - ·"
VI lllftandt.'"fl I
capltsl plnl, the pitllbl from the Conable uld an)'lllq lea than a
1
•.,...••• IGt " ........ ap

WASHINGTON t AP)
Cqreulonal Democrats are
aeeklnc support for a compromiJe
prllpOia) to Implement the final in~ ol Prelident Reagan's
lhr.ylll' tu-aat plan only II Inflation II contained.
Bit the IX aldenl'1 tu: advilen,
contend~~~~ that lhly'll get the votes
for their pedra1e linJfty, are
havial no put of ncb a plan.
"We IIOUid not 10 for any"
prllpOia) that doll~ parantee the
thlrd-)'111' nducllon Jobn E.
C)lapoiOD, aulltsnt trea1ury
llel'llary fllr tu: policy' .tpld the
H- Wll)'l and Meana CGmmlttee

00

EW

CHARLESTON, VV.VA. - Striking mine construction workers expanded their picket lines in seven states Wednesday, keeping more
than 40,000 United Mine Workers miners from working after their own
!().week walkout.
Picketing was reported in Alabama, Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia . In Washington, talks between
the strikers and the Association of Bituminous Contractors were
stalled, according to a statement issued by ABC headquarters.

46 oz. Dole

- endurng enchanfttiOnf tor a1 agesl

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Coal miners remain off jobs

.

25 Count Glad Food

101 W. Main St.
·
Pomeroy, Oh.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Wlllloms
Open: Mon. thru wect. 9-5
Thur. 9· 12, Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

f s-ettion, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 11,1981

$1.69

16 oz. Armour

.io which miliary equipment we sell ·
canbeput."
The lour F-16s, now at the General
· Dynamics eo. plant in Fort Worth,
Tex;~s, were to have been flown to
Israel on Friday by u.s. Air Force
pilots.
The United States already has
delivered 53 of75 F-16s it has agreed
to seU Israel as weU as 25 of 40 more
sophisticated F-15 fighters. The rest
are in various stages of the
manufacturing process.

••

•••

.Trres For Your

P'lvt ' Ut J El

'

PICKLE &amp; PIMENTO LOAF••~~·. $1.79

Save~ You Go ...
mth~

Tubtln"

"'

Eckrich

bill.

L.oall llilntt C

.

'

ELBERFELD$ IN

H11-15L T

..

planes, Is ~ry to drive hQme mlnlab'ation will be &lt;.'Oq~pelled by open as eariy.as ilext VVedne.!day.
thepointthatagreementsaremeant · the . evidence to co~clude that the
Se.n. Charles H: Percy, R-lll. ,
1\1 be kept.
· mission was in fact an act of sell- chafrman of the Senate COilll!littee,
The IIUIIpei1Bion '1'88 ordered Wed- defense by Israel."
said either .Congress or the adneadaY under provisions of the 1952
Senate Majority Leader Howard ministration can act on the possible
Mutual Defense Assistance H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., caUed the violation. But he avoided suggesting
Agreement, In which Israel pledged suspelllion "the ri~t decision under ~t Congress might impqse any ad119t .to use mllltary equipment the circumstances."
.
ditionilpuniahmeritofisrael.
provided by the United states "to
"I ~gree with it and I support it,"
Rep. Oement J . Zablocki, D-Wis.,
undertake any act of aggression he S8ld.
· the House Foreign Affairs chair- ·
againatanyother stale."
The chairmen of the Senate and man, called Reagan's decision
Sen . . Alan Cranston, )).Calif., H~use Foreign Affairs committees "measured and prudent" and adcriticized the action, •ying that "al- ~td their panels will consider the ded: "This decision properly
ter more thorough review, the ad- IBSUe soon. Senate hearings could upholds U.S. law regarding the use

three-year cut woUld not do that.
Meanwhile, Treasury Department
analysts estimated tbal'persons with
incomes blltween$20,000and~,ooo.
who pay 51 percent of federal taxes,
would get 53 percent of the tax cut
under Reagan's plan.
On the other hand, the 51 percent
who earn less than $15,000 but pay
8.1 percent of the taxes would get 8.8
percent of the rellef.
The new l!llllysis said Reagan's
revised plan, when fully effective in
1914, would gi)le a $1,441 tax cut to a
fOUMnem~, ~rner family
thet made 125,000 last year.
Assuming the family gets aMual
raises to offset inflation, the figures
Indicate the family's share of· income going to federal Income tax
would drop from last year's 11.8 percentto9.8 percent.

Assistance may be available
a&gt;LUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Fann Bureau Fede ration says help
may be available to farmers who lose money to weather-related crop
damage.
Executive ·Director C. William Swank said after meeting with
Agricultural stabilization and Conservation Service officials that the
current farm bill provides several forms of aid.
Individual farmers must contact local conservation service offices
to learn what aid is available and how to meet requirements, he said.

High court upholds firing
a&gt;LUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Supreme Court upheld Wednesday
the firing of Portsmouth City Manager Barry Feldman last year by
the community's City Council.
City Solicitor Richard Shisler bad protested the firing, saying coon·
cil acted Improperly Feb. 20, 1980, when three of council's five members appointed Marcillene Shepherd to a vacancy on the six-member
board. At a later meeting the same day, the council fired Feldman.

Three die in collision
WAUSEON, Ohio - Three people were killed early today when their
car was struck by a train at a crossing in Wauseon.
The Fulton County sheriff's office identified the dead as Roberto
Casarez, 20, of Defiance and Gilberto Torres, 30, and Johnny Mota, 15,
both of Adrian, Mich.
Deputies said the car was crossing the Conrail tracks on Lawrence
Avenue in Wauseon when struck by the train.

Bill cuts million from rolls
WASHINGTON - President Reagan's plan to cut about 1 miUion
people from f.ederal food stamp rolls and trim benefits for millions
more is headed for the House after gaining overwhelming Senate ap.
proval.
Fending off efforts to cut the program by an additional $1 billion, the
Republican-controlled Senate approved $1.8 billion in food stamp
reductions next year. That is even more than Reagan called for, but it
is based closely on his recommendations.
Similar legislation already is under consideration In the .House,
where Democrats hold a majority.

Brand leader as incapable
WARSAW, Poland- Olmmunist Party chief Stanislaw Kania and
his top aides were branded incapable of resolving the Polish crisis
VVednesday at a stonny Central Committee meeting that pitted fovtstomping, pro-Soviet hardliners against moderates favoring reform.
The attack was viewed as a caU for Kania and his aides on the 11man PoUtburo to resign.
Kanis propolled the !4().member committee conduct an immediate
vote of confidence in his lesdership, saying Politburo members should
quit If they failed to get at least 50 percent of the vote.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The number selected Wednesday night in the Ohio

Jail break rumors untrue
VL -

Rabies clinic set June 24

Lottery'a dally game "The Number" iB 970.

The lottery reported earnings of $8'10,553 from the wagering on th•

drawinll. Lottery oftictsla Slid sales prior to the drawing totaled
elll,IIUO, and holderl1 of 1rinnin8 tickets are entitled to share

8111,auo.

Weather
Mlltly cloud)' with a chance of showen or thunderstorms tonight.
Lon In lolr to mi4WOI. Sho'!Ven and thunderstorms likely Friday.
f111M In low ID mid-all. Chance of raln 40 percent tonight and 60 pereM! Friday. Windl mo•Uuoutherly ~10 ~tonight.
11:1:1 I 'OMI,._t- Saturdayllil'oqhMonday: O!ance
ollllaau a or u...,.. ... throngh the period. Hlgha in the 7G1 north
....... llllllh. Lon In thellll.

•

I"'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="155">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2745">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="45540">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45539">
              <text>June 10, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6561">
      <name>brandenberry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
