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                  <text>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

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'

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.

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Thursday, June 11,1981

.....

,.

Commentary

I

'

You'd think the children would get came out on the sidewalks on their
tired of it by now, but they never do. knees with fistfuls of dollars begging
We were all sitting in the living you to take it."
room, and I think it was one of the . "Yeh, but how much interest were
they asking?" my son-in-law wanted
girls who l)rought it up,
"Tell us, Dad, how you used to just to know .
"Five and a half percent, maybe
go in a bank and ask the man for a
30-year mortgage on a house and six if you got unlucky."
"Ah, come on, Dad," my daughter
he'd give it to you."
said,
"you're making th1s all·up. No
I leaned back in my chair, took a
bank
ever loaned people money at
puff on my cigar and said, "Well, it
510
percent."
was maybe nine or 10 years ago I'm not exactly sure. Every paper
"Ask your mother. She was there
was running these big ad·
when
I applied for !he loan. She
vertisements from the banks, and
thought
510 percent was too high for
the savings and loan compariies
were urging you to come in and 30 years, but I wasn't in the mood to
borrow as much as you wanted to shop around, so I took it."
•'And how much did a house cost in
buy a house."
those
days, Dad?" my daughter
My daughter Connie said to her
asked.
husband, ''You see, didn't I tell you
"You could get a very nice one
it was so? Dad doesn't lie."
with
three bedrooms and two baths,
My son-in-law said, "Yeh, but
and
a
completely installed kitchen
what was the ginunick' Why would
a bank or savings and loan company and recreation room on a fair-sized
want to lend you money to buy a lot, for somewhere around $50,000."
"Now I know you'remaking fun of
house ?"
us,"
my son-in-law said. "There is
"That was their business then,
no
way
anyone could ever buy a
Randy. They had money lying all
home
for
that."
over the place and they didn't know
yeh,"
I said. "Suppose !told
"Oh
what to do with it. they practically

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court SIMI
Pom~roy,

Ohio

you there used to ·be homes in very
nice neighborhoqds you !:Ollld pl.ct
up for ~.000 and no down
payment?"
!let that one sink in.
My other daughter said, "Didn't
you and Mom abnost buy a house for
$40,000 In 1963 that recently sold for
$450,00l right on the . Potoma~
River?"
"Yup. I iurned 11 down becailse the
owner wouldn't paint it, and I was
darned If [ was doing to pay • to
put on a new coat. You want to know
something? When it sold for $450,00)
it still hadn't been painted."
·
My son-in-law said, "Connie tells
me you were offered a townhouse in
Georgetown for f57 ,OOl with a swimriling pool in the back."
"I might have bought it but the
savings and loan fellow got snooty,
and said because the house was built
in 1789 he could only give me a
$50,000 loan at six percent for 25
years. I don't like anyone taking me
for a fool, so l jual told him what he
could do with his loan. Your molber
was there."
" I remember it well," my wife
said. "I still think ab9ut it very time
I drive by the house."
·
"Gosh," my daughter said. "They
must have been wonderful &lt;!ays. To
think, anybody who wanted to could
just go in and buy a home."
I took another puff on my cigar.

Judge
'·.

· Pomeroy-:-MI

.

, Ohio

Thursdavf 'J~%

'

"Let's say they were diHerent. You

see we'fellowa, who came back fronl

By Aasoclated Preis
" Play ball!" said U.S. District
Judge Henry Werker.
· But Werker's ruling, issued in
New York, could cause the 1981
baseball season to end - or at least
be disrupted - following tonight's
games.
"Hopefully there might be some
serious negotiations to avoid the
strike,'' said Doug DeClnces,
Baltimore Orioles third · baseman
and player representative for the
American League. "There is always
that possibility...
•"Damn it all •" said New York
Yankee outfielder Lou Piniella.
"This hurls us, not the owners. They
got the money."
Negotiations between the Major
League Players Association and the
Player Rel~tions Corrunittee were
schedhled to resume this morning in
New York with the-prospect of a
shortened season in the balance.
"This Is not unusual,'' said
Chicago White Sox Manager Tony
LaRussa. "Both sides talk tough and
hang tough until the bitter end. Then
they give in and cyme up with a settlement.
· "The same thing happened last
year, didn't it? It looked as bad last
year as it does this year, and there
was no strike.
"There is always a chance for a
settlement. They'll come up with

the~ big war, knew 001!' ~talk

to bankers and savinga and ·loan
people. They understood we weren't
about to pay more !hall six percent
'tor a loan, and so they didn't push us
around. But the kids today don't

·

·

.

·-

-

~~

~ l"Ki ONPIDAl'E

·

61&amp;-tH-2156

ut:\'tiTEOTO THE INTEREST OFTHEMEJGS-~IASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
PAT WHITEHEAD
,\s~hlll n l

BOB HOEFLICH

PllblisiM'f"/CutJtnlllll'l

Grneral Ma111ger

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'\H Editor

A MEMRER ul Tht· AssoC'iated Pre!is, Inland Oally Pnss Assodaticm alld thr
4mt'rkYn

Nt'lll~pitpt'J

Ptlblisht&gt;n! AssO('iiiUtm.

LETIF.R.~ Of' OPINION IIJI' wt&gt;h·nml'd . Thry ~hltuld bto kos~
l l'llt ·r~ art• .. ubj(••·t lit l'dllin~ and mu111 bt• sh:m·d ~o~· llh mamt·.

than 300 M·urds lttnl( . All
addrrss and ldt·phunt·
uumi'M·r . N11unsiJI(nt•d ll'lh·rs Mill bt• puhlisht·d . l.t·ll..r!li sh11uld ht· In Jl(mld t.aslt• , addrrssin~
~ ~~Ill ''• nut jJI'J~IIIUIIIth·~ .

Interest .rate watchers ·very baffled
NEW YORK ( APJ - lnterest rate
watchers have been studying the
gap in recent days, and now declare
they've never seen anything to mal·
chit.
They suggest that if you want to
guess where the economy is headed
you too should view the Grand
Canyon of the monetary world, the
gap, or the difference between tl)e
inflation and interest rates.
Here is one measure of its vast
breadth :
Inflation, averaged over the past
12 months or so, has been about 10
percent, but U1c current prime rate
is around 20 percent. That makes the
gap 10 points, versus a historical

average of 3 poin18 or so.
The gap ill dramatized even more
by comparing the prime Uiterest
rate with the 4.9 percent annual rate
of conswner price inflation in April.
That way, the gap comes~ about l5
percentage poin18.
Compare inflation with ne_w issues
of "Aaa" Bell Telephone bonds and
you also come up with a blg gap, in
the single digil8 but stlll much, much
larger than what might be expected
in more nonnal times.
However measured, the gap is the
"widest in memory," says Albert
Cox Jr., president of Men:JII Lynch
Economics Inc. "Something's got to

give."
Which is to say, the gap ill bound to
grow narrower. But how? More inflation? I..Anrer interest?
.
Fortunes are won and lOIII on such
guesses; but Cox, for one, lhinki interest rates will fall Al!d, in fact,
there are indications the drop may
have begun from the recent prime
rate high of 20.5 percent
"Interest rates are bound to give," .
he says, "and probably soon." He
lists tlwise reuons:
"I..Anrer monetary growth Is
necesary and that prerequialte ill
likely to be met in the months ahead.
Look also for the following relevant
riewsitems: a price'freeze by OPEC,

o,

To comprehend the incredible scope of the corruption, malfeasance and
abuse of power within the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, it's
necessary only to survey the operation of the union's various pension funds.
At the top of the Teamster hierarchy, an elite group of about 100 powerful
officials is allowed to participate in a gold-plated retirement plan that LS
heavily financed through dues extracted from the union's rank-and-file
members.
On the second level are about 8,00l officers, organizers, business agents
and other full-time employees of the Teamsters' 776 local unions and its
state area and regional conferences.
~e "porkchoppers" are the exclusive beneficiaries of another special
pension fund whose benefits are not quite as lavish but whose income also is
derived principally from membership dues.
Finally, there are the almost 2 million working men and women in ~hose
names the union operates. Their pension lunda have been systematically
bled by Teamster officials, who have diverted millions of dollars' worth ~
retirement savings into imprudent, questionable and possibly illegal
11
loans."
In ~number of instances, those "loans" were made to organized-crime
figures who used the money to gain control of this city's gambling casinos
but have never repaid it.
The Retirement and Family Protection Plan, which serves only the high. ranking international officers of the unio?•. has assets of more than $36.8
million - approximately $368,00l per parllctpant. More than $.1.1 rrullion of
Teamsters' dues money was pumped into the fund last year.
Administered by those who are its beneficiaries, the pension plan has ex·
ceptionally liberal rules. Union _officials can, for example, retire. after only
five years of service and recetve more than 56 percent of thetr average
.
.
salary in annual retirement payments.
The union's lucrative salary structure guarantees equaUy lav!Sh penston
benefits. According to Teamsters for a Democratic Union, a reform
organization, more than 50 top Teamater offlciabt currently earn $90,000 to
$296,00l annually.
.
To meet the retirement needs of the union's middle-level executives, there
is the Teamster Affillates Pension Fund with assel8 of more than $204.5
million. Last year, more than $21.9 mil\ion worth of union dues went into the
fund.
·
When the union held il8 convention here recently, the delegates were told a
, dues increase was imperative because the Teamsters had operating losses
• • · of more than $21.6 million in the five years since their last convention.
But the "operating expenses" included the diversion of more than $102.8
·million into the Teamster Afflliates Pension Fund and another Sl2.8 million
·into the Retirement and Family Protection Plan during the five years from

schedule.
House backyard and perfonned
In . keeping with the ad· their dUties for each arriving
ministration's efforts · to restore limousine.
some pomp to the presidency, the
As each ambassador met the
previously low·kef ceremony has president, the two posed in front of
been upgraded.
the fireplace in the Oval Office.
During the Carter presidency, Reporters and photographers were
each arriving ambassador, often ac- ushered in, and the president spoke:
companied by family members, was
"We're welcoming the amescorted into the Oval Office without ba.ssador from Djibouti to the United
much fanfare. Reportere and . States bere today...
photographers were allowed in, and
"We're very happy today to
the president had a few warda to say welcome the ambasaador from the
about the state of u.s. relations Republic of Uberia...
with, say, LUIem bourg.
Each man praented a large enWhen Reagan perfonned the velope tO Reagan and each received·
chore, a mllitary honor guard and from him an envelope bearing a forband were. deployed in the White mal welcome. Each remained in the

It's not ancient

decisions, his sixth straight com· He gets a little excited out there.''
plete game, and it evened his record
Nolan was asked why did he supso-guided missile. The count was 1-2, at ~- George Fosler hit a solo pose Soto was -not enjoying the
there was one out in the ninth inning, homer in the fourth in support of spotlight of his two strikeout-artist
and Cincinnati Reds right-hander Soto, and Dave Concepcion added an cohorts, Carlton and Valenzuela.
Mario Soto could think of nothing but · RBJ.single in,lhe eighth.
"I can't say about that," Nolan
His 12 strikeouts raised his total said, "but the hitters know him. He
striking out Dave Kingman.
" All I could think about was this year to 116, third in the National certainly has their respect."
striking him out," Soto said. '' I don't League behind Steve Carlton of
Foster's homer, his 13th this year.
know if that's g!J!XI or bl;td. but it's Philadelphia and FerllBndo Valen· came on left-handed Randy Jones'
the way I am. When I gel them ().2, I zuela of Los Angeles.
first pitch of the fourth inning. The
Soto attributed his rapid tur· Reds added a run and chased Jones,
want to strike them out."
Solo's 90 mph-plus fastball found naround this season to . the con· · now 1·7, in the eighth. Dave Collins
the strike zone, but Kingman fldence he gained as a reliever and led off with a walk. and he stole
managed to foul it off. Mter part-time staricr with the Reds last second. Th~ Mets had Collins picked
throwing another ball to Kingman, season, when he recorded 182 off first , but Kingman's throw to
however, Solo got the adrenalin un- strikeouts in 190 innings' work.
second hit Collins in the back.
" Mter the All.Star game last allowing Collins to advance to third.
der control and made Kingman his
l!lh strikeout victim Wednesday year, they jll,'!t handed me the ball Concepcion's single up the middle
night in the Reds' ~ victor}- over and told me to pitch," said Soto, a 24- scored Collins and kayoed Jones .
year-old native of the Dominican
New York.
Jones went 7 1·3 innings, allowing
Bob Bailor followed Kingman's Republic. "Some people said I was just five hits and two runs, but he
"K" with a single, and Solo issued pitching too much, but you have to suffered through another ga me of
his only free pass of the game to pitch to show how good you are, and nonsupport. While the Mets were
John Stearns. Mter a visit from that's what they let me do."
sconng no runs, they committed two
Solo's
catcher,
Joe
Nolan,
said
Reds Manager John McNamara,
errors. In his 46 2--3 innings' work
Solo recorded his 12th strikeout Solo's only fault was trying to throw this season, the Mels have com·
when Hubie Brooks looked at a too hard to Kingman. "Once in a · milled 22 errors and allowed 16
while, he tries to do too much," unearned runs .
~ailed third strike.
The victory was Solo's fifth in six Nolan said. "He gets so pumped up.

NEW YORK (AP)- li! launched
himself from the mound like a· not·

downward revi.lions of food price
forecaats, a string of weak economic
reports, and a tax cut compromlle
by the White Houae acccmpanled-by
lower prOIIpedlve blldget deflcltl."
And finally, "sing)Higit inflation
ill likely to be reported durin8 I1IOIIt
months of th1s year's aecond half."

· Cox will get some argwnents
about his views which, of course, ill
par for the economicl craft. There
are some, for example, who feel the
gap might be narrowed by higher
priceB, and they are prepared to
defend their views. lnfiatlon, they
say, will again i1ow like the
Colorado.

"Sixteen years after the pasaa_ge
of the Voting Righl8 Act, efforts to
dlscriminste ·against black voters
and to prevent them from electing
candidates of their choiCe have nd
abated."
That is the prellmina'ry finding ~
an analysis of a deacde-and-a·half of
Voting Rights Act enforcement and
voting-righ18 litigation in Mississippi. The study was prepared by the
respected Lawyers Committee for
Civil Righ18 Under Law. .
The report, which concludes that
"the desire to cancel out black
voting strength atiU emts in many
parts of the South,'' provides compelling evidence that b badly needed
by thole who want the Voting Rights
Act to be extended and broadened.
Many provlaions of the act ·explre in
August 11182.
.
Dpponenl8 of the act complain that
it is unfair to the South. They argue
~~~
.
that past diacrlmlnatlon baa beea
: ' Of every dollar collected from the union's members in initiatiOn fees and replaced with interracial hannony
• • dues during that five-year period,-more than 11 celita went directly into pen- and that blacks no lqer face
sion lunda maintained for the exclusive use of Teamster officers and em· barriers to full participation in the
ployees.
political pl-oceaa.
Among the rank-and-file retirement lunda, the mOlt irnfamous b the Central State Pension Fund, whose former trustees - Most of them union
executives- were forced to resign after being aued by the Justice Depart·
ment for making at leut $130 mflllon In alleplly UJ411 oper loans.
Included in that calelory were a P mi111o11 loan that enabled reputed
mob1ters to pin CCIIIIrOI of the Stardult and Fremont Hotell and two lOW·
interest loansl8tlllnc S381nilllon to the Aladdin Hotel, allecedly dominated
by underworld
In addltion,a ... hnillion loan for CGIIIInlctlon of the Landmark Hotel and
a $13.5 mllllon loan to the owner of the Dunel Hotel never have been repaid to
• thefulld. AllofU..hotelnrein LuV.....
With the fund's auets depli!led, Tlllllller olfldals hiiVll soqbt to CCII.erve the remainin8 Uleta by lllltbadlea11y ...-chiDil for logpholel that
could be u.sed todepriVll union IIMllllbln of their richtful )llllllon btneflll.
AI 1 rauit, mml7 TIIJIIItarl11111 baft llltle or 110 pellliOII to live 011 after
a lifetime of hard 11111'11- 111111 Ill* ..,.ncn In tbe aniiiD an _..s ht
they will face no IIICh prolllal.

Oval Dfflce, aometimea with
families, juat
enough for the
journalista to shuflle out and get
back in line for the nest diplomat.
Each arrival of a foreign leader
villiting the While HOUle brings a
new wrinkle to a traditional
ceremony.
The Reagan White HOUle hu
ICJIII'II(Ied the program banded out to
guests on the.South t.wn, where thi!
ceremony b held.
When Prime Minllter Zenko
Suzuki of Jap111 arrived last .-tb,
a heavy-paper, four1Jece program
was prepared in Oowing, ICript-llke
printing. The prealdent'a seal was '
embolsad on 'the front.

Summer baseball results

historytL---~~-ulia_n_&amp;_n_d

Most objectionsble to thole forces
is Section 5, which requires that any
state or polili!:alsubdivblon covered
by that portion of the act seek approval fr.om the Justice Department
before making any change In ita .
voting br eiPC!ion proced.-e.
The Continuing need fdr th1s ~
lion is demonstrated by the t.wyers
Commlt.tee's finding that "a wide
variety of techniques have been uaed
to perpetua~ white control at all·
Ieveli of govenunent." Here are a
few examples:
- Ml.uilllippl blacb ~J~Red a 14year campaJcn apinllt the election
of state leg181atora fi'OIII multirnembet dlltricta. There were four.
blacb 1n the tegta~atun when· the
litlption began; there were,17 after
the multi-member syltem wu abandoned.
- nurteen of Mlulqlppl'a counties tried to awl~ from dlatrict to
at-larse e11icti0111 for their boll'dl of
llqiii'Yieon. ~ counlles
tried to make • llmilar llritch for
their IChool boardl. And ~ towna
and citiea tried to do 10 for

municipal governing bodies.
- Fourteen lliJII!Ities tried to

Mluiisippl have suddenly chanced

polling p1lcea to make It more dlf·
diltrici.B ficult fG!' 'biadta to vote. Tile report
to exclude black voters or to notes that in 1971 - the year U.t
diminish their strength. In Charles Evers, the black mayor ol
Millilllippl, supervlsorlal diltricta Fayette, nn for the U. s. Senate also lll!t'Ve aa election dlltricta for election oiftclala in MJ.tnippl'a
county school boards, juatla!a of the larg~ county abilted :10 poWna
peace, constables a!ld county eJec. places In precinda where '-thirdS
tioo commllaionen.
·
of the blidl reglatered Votenl Uved;
·Ali of these changes were preven- the ~es were llliiOUilCed only
ted becaUH of Section I obJectiOIII one day before the election.
or UU,.tion. But new methods an
gerrymander~

contlnually be~ devtaed to keep
The t.ll}'el'l Committee's lillt
blacU from the polling place.
goea m and on.
Anneutlm o1 whits residential · n 11 a aorry recon1 of attempta to
areal baa been uaecl by several . fnlllrale the exercllle of the fran.
MiNillippl municipalities · to chile by blacb- and a devulating
pmoent blaeil vGien from bec:Gminc argument for retainiJ1c the ~
a ma.forit1. For ~. the ltate Uon that the Votlllfl RJc1ia Act hu
capital of Jacbon three Umea ez. guaranteed a peclpie who eouJd
plllded Ill boundlrlel to tab In banly vote at all in the South 211
outlying areas that were 1IIUIIBD·
pi"edominlntly while In poptlaUon.
PoUtlcal dllcrlmlnatl111 Isn't anTile 1111 addition wU 18 pereeat dent hiltory In the Soidb: .It II u
white, the lflllddltkin - MJ per- current u the reiuctlnce of the
cent wllits IIIII the lf18 addition wu Slla&amp;h'1 ...feide11 to eDad the IIICIIIl
74 . . . . wbite.
elfeetl" dvlki&amp;IU law paaed In
Scme citlel and cOulltlel In tiU c:lllluey.

something."
"We've been having deadlines and
Twice in the last 13 months, last· decisioqs and meetings and
minute agreements have staved off nothing'~ been accomplished. It's aU
a players' walkout. The National ·been a big waste of time. We should
Labor Relations Board went to court have done it last year because here
last week, presenting il8 case for an we are again. 1'
unfair labor practice complaint and
The players had charged to the
NLRB that the owners' refusal lo
seeking an injunction.
In..denying the injunction, which release their clubs' fini11icial·records
would have delayed a strike · for a viola!~ fair labor practice laws.
year, Werker said there was "no But W~rker, who held two days of
reasonable cause to l!elieve an un· hearings last week in Rochester,
fair labor practice. has been com· N.Y., rul¢ .in favor .of the club
milled" by the club owners. "The owners on every issue.
petition is therefore dismissed."
" It would seent less than for·
William Lubbers, general counsel
lhright
if I didn't tell you I am elated
to the NLRB, was expected to anby
the
judge's decision ," 'Said Ray
nounce today whether he will recom·
Grebey
, th e owner s' chief
mend . that the board appeal
negotiator.
"We went in believing
Werker's decision. Lubbers said
Wednesday that the decision "will we were right, and when a federal
have to be studied closely" before court says you're right, it can't help
the board decides whether to appeal but make you feel good."
Ted Simmons, catcher for the
the decision to the U.S. Court of ApMilwaukee
Brewers. was dismayed
peals for the Second District in New
by
the
ruling
.
York.
"What people do not understand is
Lubbers said that if an appeal is .
taken, the board also may seek a what the injunction sought," Sirn·
stay pending appeal to delay the mons said. " It sought a delay. It was
not an effort to get the books open.
strike deadline.
"This was an attempt to show that
"I hope we strike," said Min·
in
previous cases when management
nesota Twins second baseman Rob
had not made records available' to
Wilfong. "I want to get it over with,
employees, an injunction like this
and if a strike is what it takes to get
was granted . Every effort was made
this all settled, tllen I'm for it.
to show that this was not an un·
"We've been talking about this for
precedented position.
years and .years~" Wilfong said.

Soto, Reds dump Mets, 2-0

.Teamsters: evidence Ambassadors ~eceive ceremonial treatment
Jon&amp;
of labor corruption
WASHINGTON (AP) - In the
realm of the ceremonial presidency,
nothing could be much more
ceremonial than the welcome
President Reagan gives to foreign
ambassadors newly assigned to
Washington.
While Reagan was taking it easy
in April and early May recuperating
from a gunshot wound, the merry·
go-round of ambassadors kept lur·
ning, dropping new envoys into town
waiting to hand in their credentials
at the White House.
With Reagan back at work full
time, the gates were opened the
other day, and five ambassadors
were in line. A few more are on the

fav~rs

owners;
strike coUld follow

•

Page-2-ThW.:~~:t"tlnel

.•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

.'

The Mason Pirates defeated
Salem Center's Rangers, 10-4. E.
Petry was the winner.
He was relieved by R. Kearns. The
pair managed 14 strikeouts enroute
to the win. M. Shuler suffered the
loss for the Rangers, with B. Bell
coming on in relief. That pair collec·
ted 13 strikeoul8.
In Meigs· Mason Pony League action Eastern edged Albany 5-4 in
eight Innings. Eastern plated four
runs In the bottom of the first1while
Albany locked the score with four of
ita own in the fifth.
Jim Weber had a two run single idl
the bottom of the first that was a key
blow at that point in the game.
Eastern drew four walks in the bot·
tom of the eighth to score the win·
ningrun.
.
Roger Balser went three and twothirds Innings of relief to pick up the
win for Eastern. He allowed two
hila, two walks, and struck out four.
Mike Collins started for Eastern,
going four and one-third frames to
fan one and walk three. McClain
went seven innings for Albany,
allowing five hits, 10 walks, and six
strikeouts.
Jim Weber banged two singles for ·
Eastern, while Tim Probert, Larry
Cowdery, and Ray Maxson eacft,added a single. Brooks, McCiahf and
Farley colll!Cied singles for the
losers. Albany is 2-1 o~ the season,
while Easter:n dropll to 1-1.
Allo in recent Pony League action,
Racine defeated Rutland 1~ behind
the pitching and batting of Tony Rlf·

ne. Riffle had an outstanding outing
on the mound for Racine, striking
out nine and walking just one in the
shutout performance.
Racine hitters were Tony Rifne
with a home run and two singles,
Steve Fisher, an excellent outing
with two singles and a double, and
Richard Hill two singles.
Tony Deem, Dennis Teaford, and
Paul Hal'ris eactl had line ' singles.
Edwards and Pet~rson each had two
singles for Rutland, while Wise also
added a single.
In Little League action, Tuppers
Plains' Tigers rolled .over Stewart's
Lancers 10;6 behind an eight
strikeout, three walk shutout per·
formance by Eddie Collins. Gabriel
suffered the loss with four strikeouts
and two walks.
1 Brian Durst and Eddie Collins
each had a doullJe for Tuppers
Plains. Other Tiger hitters were
Caldwell, Durst, Collins, Bissell,
Drenner, Spencer, Wilson, Jones
and
Myers.
Collins
theperiod.
Lancers
hitless
over the
fourheld
Inning
Pee Wee Action
ln boys pee-wee action, the Mason
Cubs rolled to a 14-2 win over the
Middleport Mustangs. J. Henry was
the winninll pitcher with 14
strikeouts and only three walks.
Sean Glblis suffered the loss with
four strikeouts and five · walks,
before getting relief from Chri.s
Becker. Becker went one inning and
walked one batter.
Collecting hi18 for Mason were J.
. Henry with a homerun and triple, B.

Zuspan a single and double, H. Gibbs
a single, J . Noble a double , and B.
Kearns a triple a triple and single.
For Middleport Scott Neigler, Matt
Evans and Chris Becker collected
hits. Becker's hit was double.
The Middleport Mu stan gs
followed the winning trail by
defeating New Haven's Yankees 1114. Matt Baker went five innings to
fan fifteen, and walk just five. Baker
got the win , while Sean Gibbs came
on to relieve for one inning and pick
up three strikeouts and two walks.
Salla suffered the loss with eight
strikeouts and three walks.
Chris Becker and Matt Baker each
had a home run and single, while
Jay McCary, Malt Erwin, and Mike
Harris each doubled twice. P. J. Gii&gt;bs, Chris Davis, Sean Gibbs, Mike
Southern and Scott Neigler each ad·
ded singles for the winners. Herd·
man doubled and Mitch singled to
account for the only New Haven hits.

TOURNAMENT PLANNED- The fourlli annual
Syracuse Uttle League Toumamenl will be beld in
Syracuse beginning July 7. This year awards consist of
four team and Individual trophies plus trophies for best
sport, best hitter, best catcher, best pitcher, best single
game, most valuable player and Meigs County's Mr.

Little Leaguer. Entry fee is three baseballs or $10 and
must be submitted to Bill Hubbard, Syracuse Fire
Department, Syracuse, Ohio 45779 by June Z7. Pictured
with the trophies that will be awarded are, 1-r, Rollie
Stewart, assistant tournament manager and Bill Hubbard, tournament manager.

Syracuse LL tourney hegins July7
The Fourth Annual Syracuse Lit· tournament directors and wnp1 re.
If a manager wants to file a
tie League Tournament will sta ri
protest,
he must do so immediately
July 7 at Syracuse Park. This year's
it
will
be decided upon by the
and
awards consist of four team and in·
and
wnpires.
directors
dividual trophies plus trophies for
On
the
playing
field, the umpire is
best sport, best hitter, best catcher,
in
charge.
He
has
strict orders to
best pitcher, best single game, and
remove
anyone
from
the game who
most valuable player and Meigs
does not conduct himself in a gen·
County's Mr. Little Leaguer.
Entry fee is three baseballs or $10. tlemanly way. This will be strictly
enforced.
Entries must be in by June 27.
1£ any team is behind ten runs afThis is a tournament for little
ter
four complete innings the ga me
league baseball players and not a
is
slopped.
,
tournam ent for coaches and
All
players
will
run
on
and off the
managers. Each team will have a 15
man roster , and the mana gers will rield. This rule will be strictly en·
be permitted in the coacher:s box; forced.
No A 11 -Star Team s Allow ed
however, no smoking will be perA
team
must have played together
mitted on the field or in the
coacher's box. Each manager will all season to enter. If any team is a
mem ber of any league, it must enter
be allowed to have two coaches.
the
tournament with the same
This tournament will be governed
by the Little League Rule Book, player personnel. Pee Wee players

Wild animals don ~t
abandon their young
" If you feel Ike adopting a wild
animal - don't."
This is the advice of Meigs County
Ga me Protector Andy Lyles who
points out that rarely do wild
animals aba ndon the'ir young as or·
phans.
Lyles co1run ents:
'' Every year, however! young rae·
coons, squirrels, skunks, rabb1ts,
deer and other animals arc removed
from their natural surroundings and
placed in 'foster' homes to be raised
as house pets. Yet, chances are, the
molher was close by, helplessly wat·
ch ing as her babies were abducted.
Since most wild animals are a!J·aid
of people, they se ldom expose them·
selves even when their young are
be ing kidnapped.
" Young animals require a special
diet and fr eq uent feedings

Iages 11-9 ) may be used to fill out
rosters.
If there is a protest or the age of
any boy, proof must pe given to the
directors within a reasonable time.
The manager will control his pit·
ching staff.
You cannot steal home or come
home on ball past the catcher.
1£ possible, all teams should be
uniformed.
Team trophies will be given to the .
·top four teams. Individual trophies
will he given to members of the top
four teams.
Runner leaving base too soon will
be called out.
Entry fee: three new regulation
little league balls or $10.

~~,~~~~ii~i~~~~

531 JACKSON PIKE · Rt. 35 WEST
Phone 446 · 4524
BAROA/fol MA111'1EES ON SAT &amp; SUN
All SEATS JUST S 1 50
ADMJSSION EVERY TUESDAY S 1.50

ten , kicked or clawed by the once
docile creature they illegally adopted.
"Do you pick up young animals' If
the parents of the young animal
have mel with accident, then do con·
tad me. I will see that the young are
properly cared for.
"Regardless of the kind of game
animals or birds you find, it is ai&gt;solutely illegal to have one in your
possession unless it is taken legall y
during the open hunting season.
'Adopting' wildlife at any other time
is punishable by a maximum fin e of
$250 for each offense. Persons
legall y acquiring wildlife, either in
open season or from a corrunercial
propagator, must apply for a
possession pennit. "
Applications must be made
through Lyles.

throughout schedule
the day and.
This r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;•---~
demanding
soonnight.
developcs
into a chore for the well-meaning
people who thought they saved their
·pet' from death. These people have
little knowledge of wild animals;
find it difficult to induce the animals
to eat. Some animals die as a result
of an improper diet. Survivors who
become semi-lame by mingling with
hwnans are easy prey for dogs, cats
or poachers when returned to the
wild.
'
" Whe~the young animals become
older, tHeir dispositions frequently
change fron1 one of cuddly, loveable ·
creatures to that of aggressive
animals seeking to roam about
freely. People rea lize this change in
their 'pel' usually after a member of
the family or a friend has been bit·

LARGE

SAVERS
SMALL

SAVERS
WE SERVE
THEM ALL

r~~~jiii~;;;;;;~;;·····~~····il

We Welcome Your Account
Regardless Of Size. Come In
.
And See.
6-MONTH MONEY MARKET
.
14.250%

Substantial Penallt_for Early Withdrawal

•

. .BANK ONE . . -.._.,_

naun..

VILLAGE PHARMACY
2nd Ave.

PH. 992·6669

3RD ST., RACINE, OH .
Member FDIC ·

OH.

,,

""

�The Daily Sentinel- Page-s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hot Morris tops Twins; In.dians lose
J ck IJyAaoclatedPreu
Morris 1a 11"'-- roof tha1
a
•""' P
I' whenyou'rehot,you'~hoi.
"E ...thin. ba
hen
· · ve.'""'"' ·ppens w · fOU're
winning," the Detroit' rig~nder
said. "I'm challenging the hitters
.."·ll. They're
more . wl.'.to~•" mv' f·aa~.~.~a
eithe olng to hit
the , ot
~~hllme." me or Yre n ·

'·'•,

.

,,

,.
•

Right now, they're not...not much,
Mlfineaota
ht hi
anyway,
got eig '18 off
him Wednesday night- but Morrill
got hia eighth COI'IIecUtive victory •
his seventh complete game and his
ninth win of the
('- · 1h

.

•

IROUIID

BEEF

~

•'

I.

''II

II
LIIITS

,li"' ,,

seaaon - ... m e
American League) as the Tigers
Ileal the Twins 4-2.
Elsewhere In the AL it was Texas
12, Milwaukee 5; Chicago 6, New
York 5; Boslori 4, Seattie 2; California 4, Cleveland 3; Kansas City 7,
Toronto 4, and Baltimore 3, Oakland

•

1·

•.

10
COUPOIS

•I

LB
•

TOURNAMENT WINNERS - The following out-of-town women won
prizes at the Gallipolis Ladles GoH Association Invitational Tournament
held Wednesday at the Gallipolis GoH Course. Bottom row, left to right:
Dorothy Karr, Pomeroy, longest drive; Mary Adkins, Pt. Pleasant, low
gross, second flight ; Norsie Anderson, Pt. Pleasant, second low net, first
Hight; Ulllao Greene, first low net, third flight; Mary Roush, Riverside,
low gross, first flight. Top row: Joan McKay, Worthington, second low

.,

net, setoad flight; Clara Pierce, Worthlagtoo, lOw gr011, third fllgbt;
Mary Arnold, Pt. Pleasant, low putt, first flight; Dorothy Jones,
Fairgreeos, low putt, third fllgbt; Denise Rader, nearest to pin on the 11th
hole. Not pictured: Ulllan Hyer, Pt. Pleasant, low,net, first filght.

photo)

.,'

'JeffGrabmeler Photo

,.

.

Friday night hoping to get a hit off he did tonight, I'd be going for my
(Atlanta's) Gaylord Perry, or Satur- l,OOOth hit instead of 3,631."
day night against Phil Niekro," said
Ryan said he was pitching at his
the 40-year-old Rose , noting , best, adding, "If he bad got a hit, I
"They're both older than me."
would have tipped my bat to him!' ,
Rose singled in the first inning
Rose said he saw the ball well on
Thursday night during the the three strikeouts, but some of the
Philadelphia Phillies' :i-4 victory pitches he just heard.
over the Houston Astros for the
A crowd of 57,386 stood and
record-tying hit, then he struck out cheered with every pitch to Rose,
three times against one of the who received a standing ovation afgame's best fastball pitchers, Nolan ter his leadoff bit In the first.
Ryan.
But Ryan was to see that it was
Rose was happy about his latest Rose's last hurrah of.the night.
milestone and pleased with the
Rose, who described Ryan's pitPhillies' five-run eighth inning rally ching as "good morning, good afthat produced the victory.
ternoon, see you later," said he felt
He admitted, however, that he was he disappointed people who bad
disappointed with himself.
come to see him break the record.
'' I thought I would get two or three
His mother, Laverne Noeth was
hits after that first one," Rose said. there from Florida. His son and
"But if Ryan threw every pitch like daughter were there. Musial sat
behind the Phillies' dugout. And
WiUie Mays, like Musial, a Hall «i
Farner, bad come from Atlantic
decided not to take the Reds to ar- City, N.J., where he ill a promotion
bitration over one disputed day on
the Indianapolis farm club roster.
Last season, Griffey again chose
to stay with the Reds rather than
gamble that off-season knee surgery

·Griffey to play out option
. CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati

:Reds outfielder Ken Griffey says he

· will become a free agent after this
:season because be owes it to his
:family to test his value on the open

market.
"Cincinnati definitely .won't sign
me," said Griffey, unhappy that
: talks with the Reds haven't
; proceeded farther than they have.
· "They bad all winter to negotiate
: with me and didn't choose to do
anything.
"I'm thinking in terms of what's
good for my family, and that's why I
. feel I have to take a chance in the
: free agent market."
· Griffey, who is reputed to be the
: second-highest paid Reds player af: ter George Foster, will be eligible
for free agency after thill season.
Other Reds who could become free
. agents include Dave Concepcion,
: Dave Collins and Mike Vail.
• rwo years ago, Griffey came close
: to playing out his option. When the
:·Reds said he lacked one day of
: having enough major league time to
'qualify for free agency, Griffey

.,..

nt..sAT.

would
lessen bitter
his market
value. weD
The
.307 career
recovered
from the surgery, driving in a

::r-~~ ~~~~~Un~

valuable player in the All.Star

g~. Reds, convinced that Grif-

fey's knee would not be a problem,
shifted him to center field thill spring
to shore up their defeilse. But the
club traditionally has been reluctant
to outbid the free spending ownen
for high-priced players, or to offer
guaranteed contract&amp;.
"We're not going to sign with thill
organization without going through
the re-entry draft," Griffey said
Tuesctay In New York, where the
Reds were playing the'Mets. "I owe
it to my family at this stage of my
career to test my value In the open

'

'

;
~.

'

market."

\

10

lhell. ThM"e' s no

wa~ II

can com. off

Blli

REDUCES NOISE
Mttat tchOH sound and maku creak I n~ popping I'IOINS Df I~ own. It 1110
magnifies. tl'le noise of rtln and hail ortl'lt lmp11cl ol an'l' objtet. GAJ::"'
Vanguard"' ~alld vinyl sldl~ makn.

your house 1 qut•ter, more peiCeful
place to l ive In, ttven in high tr1ttlc
areas.
OTHER ADVANnGES
JUII glvalt a bltll
"'" you havt to do to etten G..,F.
Vlf19Uircr" solid lldlltg IS host It dOwn
with water 1nc1 mild deNrgnt ,

For- simple ItaiM, apply hout.ehold

dettrttnt dire&lt;lt&lt;( with 1 cleen cloth and
w ipe 1way the stain. Remcwe shltlbom

st1lns with sandpaoer and flnt slttl
WOOf , HotMing Will f'llpptn to our SOlid
vinyl. 11 you trltd that on metal. you 'd
rtmo¥t me .,tlrt tinlsn.

WNIIMr-,.... IIMII '"I·IW'Mf

II
CHNII

:
:
•

ning.

Johnson. Eddie Murray and
Mark Belanger hit RBI singles and
Dan Graham bad a sacrifice fly for
Baltimore.

r-:r:===:::;::===:::::::~

Mike Squires and Carlton Fisk
· led
·-•·•'-• .............
Vo ur " E!C tra Touch "
smg
ando.,.......,..
uuw""" to PI'I•
Florist Since 1957
eher Rudy May. Squires got caught
In a nmdown between third and
·borne but was safe at third wben
Aurelio Rodriguez miJsed the tag , a
I'LORIST
call that !lad the Yanka howUng and
PH. 992-2644
brought Manager Gene Michael out
of the New York dugout to complam
'. .
U2 E. Main, P'omeroy
Your FTD Florist
·When May uncorked a wild pitch,
Squires scored _ barely eluding i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;:::::;;~
May~s tag - ·and the YankS yelped
again. Then Nordbagen doubled to
right-centerfieldfortwomoreruns.
RedSox4, Mariners 2
Stan Musial, whose National
League record of 3,630 career bits
was tied by Pete Rose, fell a notch in
~
a lesser-known category as Carl
Yastrzemski mov.ed into fourth
place on the all-time at-bat list with
10,974, two morethanStan the Man.
y az also scored on one of Rich
Gedman's two RBI singles against
Seattle to help Frank Tanana post
his third consecutive victory.
Angels 4, Indians 3
Don Baylor drove In two runs with
a first-inning single and Rick
Why not
Burleson hit a solo homer in the
treat him to his favorite
eighth as California won its third in a
row at home for the first time since
shoes on his favorite
late last season.
gccas1cm ... Father's
The Indians, absorbing their fourth consecutive loss, got a pair of
Day!
doubles and runs ·8cored from Bo
Diaz.
Royals 7, Blue Jays 4
Amos Otill already had ripped
three bits and driven in two runs
when he came up in the eighth inning
with the score tied. Kansas City
1

I

fOil OAD1
D.4t
JUNE 21

Skippers
by

When the ·all hands on deck" order 1s given, you 'll be there in
Skippers Genuine Moccasin construction Wlth leather uppers
and no-slip bottom make this a great boating companion. And
. 1! you're like most people, you'll find Skippers are appropriate
for JUSt about all occasions , . . even 1f you don't have a boat!

By George Strode
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)- Aluminum player, compared to~ four years
hockey sticks, black-an~whlte films a~o, according to · Woods. And
and long bus trips have little 1n com- because tbe price of leather bas
mon, yet they all symbolize the risen so much, tbe cost of skates has
same thing - efforts to trim athletic gonefrom$89in 19'17 to$135today.
bodgets at Toledo and Bowling
Hikes in the price of silver, meanGreen universities. 1
while, resulted in rising costs for
Athletic departments at those in- film, leading to the Toledo athletic
stitutions, like their counterparts department'~ decision to drop
acroa the country, are trying to filming offootball games in color.
cope with infiation and federally
Four hundred feet of color film
mandlted increlllleS in the women's now costs $82.88, compared to $o41.56
sports program by cutting costs for the same amount of black-and\there poliSible without dropping in- white fibn. The comparable 19'17
dividual 8ports.
figures were $37.28 and $23.28,
That's why Toledo will be using ,respectively· ,
black-and-white film instead of color
Toledo spent $3,639 on film for
for football games this year, why football in 19'17 and is budgeting
Bowling Green teams have been told $12,049 for 1981 after turning down
to take bus trips home immediately the football deparQilent's requ~
following games and why use of for PJ,OOO worth of film.
sticks with wooden shafts bas been
BowUng Green Athletic Director
approved for college hockey next Jim Lessig said the Falcons have cut
costs by ordering all teams traveling
sea:~um shafts make the sticks by. bus to return borne the night of
cheaper because they don't break the athletic contest. In hockey, that
like wooden shafts. But Bowling means the team will 111llke the 10.
Green hockey equipment manager hour trip from Michigan's Upper
Don Woods said the Falcons' players Peninsula as soon as a game ends,
probably won't use them next season rather than leaving the next mar-

because they don't like the feel.
Woods said be spent $54 a dozen
for sticks In 19'17, but that figure has
risen to $82. Even so, "sticks are
,\
the thin " h
" cheap compared too r
gs, e
costs $650 to outfit a hockey

sa:t·

'ITH

Scioto racing results

ni~1 will accouilt for aboUt $500 In
savings in food and motel expenses
each time, Lessig said.
Dally allowances to athletes on the
road have been cut, Lessig said. He
now tries to leave Bowling Green on
the day of a game rather than the
· day before to cut expenses.

l't1lladelphia

219

St.Loul&gt;

Montreal
Pltllburgh
New York

·

Chicago

PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY, JUNE 15

CONTAC ..r&amp; ,...
ASPIRIN
., BAYER

10

'

100 Tablets
Reg. 52.89

-

ON~y

., ••

10 Capsules
Reg . $2 .89

New York
Baltlmcoro

·( !

. ~

12·HOUR
,.j COLD RELIEF

CONTAC

ONLY
NOXZEMA

MiJwa!Me
' llotroll
Oevelancl

Skin Cream

Tarooto

2.5 Ol .

Reg. $1.29

4

ROLL

PIG

nn't rot or corrode 1.. metal wllllfttwflnllh lsdlm.g-

Our 5Upl!f"·strong wlnyl

tdl or wtter In enwo wey frl)m wlna, rein,
snow or Min. AI for termltn. ottw In·
M&lt;:ft tl'ld rOdtftft, tflty' ll lUSt
lind anottwr home .

~w

AMILY CLINIC

to

David L. Carr, D.O.•

LIM(ITEOWAIIANTY
AF Venguant' 'lllnyt tldlnv Is coverld
bY I Llmlftd Wtrrerlty agalnll
manuf.cturlng ~Mttcts tor • .,. .. ,.. This
Llmltea warrentv It IVIIIIDit fr" "PPff
requnt by 'M'Itlng to GAfl Corporation,

ALLERGY

,..., ... Tnalaleat

for: lnhll1nts

lultdlnt Mtt.rials _Group, 140 Wtsf ,_
Str"t, NtwYorll , tl.¥ . 100210."'

GAF VANGUARD
SOliD lin SIDIIG

·Food . ·

' ChtMiCIIs
Shoe Dtrm ititis
Cnlnttlcs

'53''SQ.

At1l1f111 11\:

WflltE..fiEDI, GOLD, &amp;lAY &amp; TAl

••~

\'

Dan's Boot 'Shop

DERMATOlOGY .

Ta•~r~ltmoftd

Aclt

Small

301

V·8

engine, bucket
seats, till wheel,
crulle control,
road wheels, new

~~!~J~~~
DOOGE
CIIN14 DR.
llrn:;.,

4 speed, wood·
grain. rear de·
troster, prom·
lum InteriOr pkg.

Low, lOW miiH,

new riCII•II. rear
defroster.

"'"i!i!'!!!!!l. .~
ICtnnltll McCulloufll, R. Pll.
Charles Riffle, R. Pli.
Ronald Hlnnlng, R. Ph.
Mon. tllru Sit. 1:00 1.m. tot p.m.
Sunday 10:30to 12:30.and s tot p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992·2955

OHIO

I

I

Friendly Service
1 . Main

,.

"""""""'

.

·TISSUE

Could you~ me same with m~tal ?
No, ~ If you want fhl grtlltst po~s l blt
protectiOn evalnst 11,1nv obl.c:h, fal llnQ
branches, ur fencters, hailstones tnd
other kindS Of UM)tptetfll troub,le choose
GAF '"' \11f19U1rcf&amp; IOIIdvlnyltldlng.

To rt"'M stains

OURS IS SAFER
Metal siding cornluch ele&lt;:lrlclty, ~
~r ound i n g
Is essential. GAF•·
Vangu1rd" sDI Id vinyl sldi(IO dOH 1101
conduct ele&lt;trlc:lty and unlike met11.
w ill not rntertere With rldtotTV recept ion.

Pomeroy
Store
Only

H·DRI

MAXIMUM PROTECTION
.AGAINST DAM .. GE
You could take a baseball btlt and hit
GAF · Vanguar ~ a.ol ld viny l siding a
nard blow w ithout cavslng It to cs.nt.

Uk e mt~a r .

ID
LIIIT

LB

lONGER-lASTING BEAUTY

betause i t Qoct clear tt\rouoh. II un' t
llall.e, blister, chip, lade or peel like
paint, or shOw scratches and scrapn

,.
:
•
'

• STRAIGHT LEG

our SOII"d Vl·nyl Sl.dl"ng
is better than
•
' •
then aluminum siding

The f irst r@non wnv m01t people buv
tltw sidlnv Is so they' ll never ha11e to
pa int again. Yet metal sldi~ will show
man and scratches bM:auw the color Is
only Of'l the surface. It vou paint over any
deiKts, It lootts terrible .
With GAF ' Vanguard" Sot~ Vinyl
Sieling, The color Is part Of the material

1'

• FlARES

r~ma~n;fo;r~;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~
Why

m
'

Cliff

'•

OILY
II LIIITII

NEW YORK
ClOtHING HOUSE

. Jim Frey didn't have tp
Manager
think about strategy.
' Wthth
' i
e winning runs outthere I
· t · him the hi · "h
'd
JUS giVe .
t s1gn, e sal .
Otill responded by ripping a 3-0 pitch
from Joey McLaughlin for a two-run
double that sent the Blue Jays down
totheirlothconaecUtiveloss.
Orioles 3, A'• 1
Mik Ftana
· hed
e
gan pile
71-3 innings of two-hit ball against the A's
before his control deserted him.
Then Tim Stoddard came to the
. h
rescue, posting is second save
despite allowing an RBI-single by

w
. ho

Ohio
Sportlight

••

:Rose ties record.
PHILADELPHIA (AP ) - Pete
Rose tied Stan Musial for the alltime National League career hit
record of 3,630, but if the major
: league baseball strike materializes
· it may be some time before he
breaks the record.
A federal judge Wednesday
dismissed a National Labor
Relations Board charge of unfair
labor practices against baseball's
· owners in negotiations witil Jhe
• Major League Pl,ayersA!s!l'6ation.
• Unless the players and owners
• reach agreement on compensation
for free agents, the players have indicated they'll strike by Friday.
Rose said he didn't want to get in: volved with the labor problems
: although he backed the players
• association.
: "I'll be at the ball park at 8:05

POWERSWING-IIoltoa'a carl Yastnelllltl puts everything Int. a nrlq 1D the flnl iDnlag of Wednesday's game.ID Seattle. Tile baD
flew bJgb but not far euougb as II was caught for a long oul (AP Laser-

.

Homers by Steve Kemp (he also
bad an RBI single) and John
WockenfUBS powered the Tigers to
their ninth victory in II games.
Raugers 1!, Bmen 5
Buddy Bell bas hls·own theory on
wielding a bot bat. When others are
hot, he says, YI1U're more likely to
be, too.
"Hitting ill contagious," Bell said
after his three-run homer and tw&lt;r
run single led the Rangers in their
romp over the Brewers.
Jim Sundberg added three RBis
with a homer and a triple and Leon
Roberts knocked in two with a
homer and a single as Texas edged ·
within a game of first-place Oakland
in the WestDivision. ,
_,
Wblte Sol 8, Yauaees 5
The Yankees' East Division lead
over Baltimore was trimmed to two
games as Chicago snapped their
nine-game winning streak.
Wayne Nordhagen and Greg

'--"'··kihlttw~
. rundoublesan,dBI'II
.........
~
Almon homered for the White Sox,
·· had a coupl'e of close cat'•- go
"'
their' way their three-:fllll first In-

y

I

.I

Open Nights tilt

Pomeroy, 0.
v

�Page--6-The Daily Sentinel

Bush, Lawson, Souder.
.winners of ·poetry ·contest

&lt;

'

Winners in the recent poetry
contest staged at Southern High
School under the direction of Don
Salmons, teacher, and sponsorship of the Bend 0' the River
Artists Council have been announced.
Placing first in the contest
judged by Poet in the Schools
Robert Fox was Peggy Bush with
second place going to David
Lawson, and third place to J .
Steven Souder. Honorable mention went to Susan Jet! and Darla
Combs.
The contest is the first of
several planned by the Artists
Council as a method of encouraging students to participate
in the arts.
The winning poem ...
Samuel Simons and The Ant
Down the road walked Samuel
Simons one day
WhisUing a tune so happy and
gay,
When all of a sudden he came to
an ant
Making its way up a rubber tree
plant.
He laughed till he cried, forget·
ling his song,
Pondering why an ant would have
a tree for a home.
So he climbed up the tree and
waited at the top
Figuring the ant would gel tired
soon and stop.
But the ole ant was busy, you see,
Hauling his food to the top of the
tree,
So he was too happy to see the old

ASTROGRAPH
June 12, 1981
This coming year you are like ly
to f orm c loser relat ionships with
persons involved in your work or
ca r eer. You ' ll find you ' ll ha ve as
much ro share socially as you do
in your la bor s.
GEMINI

(May

21·June

20)

Business and pleasure shoul d
mix well tor you today . It you
have a proposition you ' r e tr yi ng
to swi ng, mak e your presentation
over a conge nia l lunch or di nner .
CANCER (June 21 ·July 221 In
si tu ations which you feel need
your direction tod ay, try to guide
rh ings in a support ive, rather
than author itarian , fash ion . Use
gentle nudges .
LEO (July 1J· Aug. 121 Looking
out for the interests.ot persons for
whom you feel responsible will
· take priori ty o-ver your own needs
today . You ' ll have a long, protec ·
five reach .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Take
advantage of any opportunities
yo u have rodav to strengthen bon·
ds with persns who could be help·
ful business conta cts. You'll need
them later .
LIBRA I Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Trea l
seriously any ideas you get today
whi ch could make or save you
money . Don't me re ly mull them
around . Do somet hing about
them .
SCORPIO (0c1. 2~·Nov . 22)
You ' re likely to gain greater
benefits today from joint ven
tu res, rather than from th at
whi ch you do on your own .
However, you must take the more
active rote.
SAGIHARIUS (Nov. J· Dec.
21) Be selective as to whom you
talk to tOday regarding your
tulure hopes. If vou choose me
proper conf idante, his or her
counsel will be helpful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
It' s important at th is time th at
you strive to get on a fr iendlier
basis with individuals wh o can
help furth er your ambitions .
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20·Feb. 19)
Olhers may get uplighl in sticky
situa t ions today , but you ' re not
apt to allow what occurs to ove r ·
whelm you . Your cool head wi ll
sort things out.
PISCES I Feb. l~ · March 20)
You have the ability tOday , if you
choose to use it, to see the over·
view instead of iust the im ·
mediate. You ca n use your far ·
sig htedness advantageously .
ARIES (March 21 · Apri119! In ·
veStigate t horoughly tOday any
propositions for joint ventures.
You could get lucky with a cle ver,

competent partner.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
This is a good day to resolve
misunderstandings you may
have had with coworkers. A
frank , fr iendly exc hange w ill
smooth everything out.

man
Sitting on his house he had built
byhand.
•
,says the anlto the man, "Oh, just
look what you did! "
You've sat on my house, now it
looks like a lid!!
"Where ate your brains, have
you sat on them too?
.
Oh me ...oh my ... now what will!

do?"
So ole Simons says, "Gosh, I'm
sorry 'bout that, ·
But l'U tell you what, I can loan
you my hat."
So they cut out some holes for
windows and doors,
And used the remains for a pretty
thatched floor.
The ant thanked the man lor the
use of his hat,
Then ole Simons had to go but he
said, ' 1I'll be back."

So he left with a smile and no hat
on his head,
Returned to his home and then
wentto bed.
Peggy Bush

Ami crazy
or is the world?
Am I crazy for not wanting war,
or lor not wanting to hurt
someone?
Am I crazy for not hating
everyone,
or for not wanting to fight?
Am I crazy for wanting someone
special,
or lor wanting more out of a

TOPS Club news
"For Tomorrow We Shall Diet"
was presented by Nita Wisniski of
the Meigs County Department of
Health at the recent meeting of the
Rutland TOPS OH 1456 Club. Mrs.
Wisniski presented the film and then
offered suggestions and advice on
diet related problems.
Weekly best loser was Betty
Longstreth with Ruby Fowler as
runner-up. Sherrie Darst was the
monthly hest loser lor May. Each
was presented a ribbon and a cash
prize.

The Rev. Seldon Johnson, pastor
fo the Joppa UNM Church announces there will he preaching ser·
vices and special singing at 7:30
p.m. Saturday as well as the usual
Sunday morning services at 9:30
a.m.

c.~andaonolRaclne.,

TheRev.Mr.Harrtabuserveclas

pastor of the Racine United
Methodist Charge, consl8ting ol four
chiU'Ches, Apple Grove, Eut Letart,
Wesleyan.J{e will tJecome the new
Letart District
Falls, and
the IIISistant
RacineAthens
program
and will $0 be responSible for
Camp Otterbein near Logan where
he will reside. ·
.
The covered dish dinner was
.hosted by the Rev. Richard Thomas,
outgoing pariah director, at the
Chester United .r,tethodist Church,
The Rev. Mr. Thomas will resume
lull-time responsibilities for the Northeast Cluster United Methodist
Churches, where he has served since
1976.
Table grace was offered by the
Rev. Robert McGee, pastor of the
Pomeroy Church. He will become
director of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish following the annual conference this month. Gifts were
presented to the Harris family. A
gift was also presented to the Rev.
Mr. Thomas in appreciation for his
excellent work as parish director for
the past two years.
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Robert Robinson of the Heath Church, Middleport; the Rev. and Mrs.
Robert McGee of the Pomeroy Chur-

The Song of Beauty . ·
As the .wind roars through the
trees '
the leaves seem to si11g a song.:
that only nature can bring.
It's the song of beauty
and man will never match it.
For when the song appears, Even
the
Katydids and the birds sing
together in perfect harmony.
But it seems as though man is
jealous
cutting down the trees to the dirt,
so the leaves can never sing
again
with the harmony of the Katydids
and birds.
Replant the trees with their
precious seeds
so after years go by
the wind will once again blow
and we can hear
the song of beauty.
J. Sleven Souder

.

'

The Meigs County Jaycees will
meet Monday, June 22 at 8 p.m. at
Jaycee Headquarters, over Elberfelds in Pomeroy. All interested persons are invited to attend.

cb; the Rev. and Mn. car1 Hlcil,
Route Z, Racine; the Rev. Mark
~ Southern Ollller, and bla
guesta, Wendell, Kevin and Tammy
am:, the Rev. Richard 1bomltl,
Northeast CIUIJter, Tuppera Plalne,
and the honored guest., the Jlev, and
· Mrs. David Harris 8lld 1011, N~ithan,
Racine.

OFSlJM.MER ••MDALS,
~
.
AT
SIMON'S

Gift Suggestions For Dad
'

WESTERN HAlS, CAPS, BELlS,
STRAW HAlS, HANDKERQIIEFS,
'
DRESS PANlS, SHIRTS, SOCKS,
SWIM .TRUNKS,
UNDERWEAR, JOGGING SUilS,
.
'

WRANGLER, SPORTSWEAR•.

Members attend convention

I til Noon

r----------_:_--__;:___:____________
"R~gers " .
by

Morgan Quinn®
When It comes to keeping your feet comfortable
Morgan Quinn® footwear does It bestt The looks
are right • the styling Is right · and the prices are
right. Value you can see, feel and appret:late for a
long time. Make yoFu'-r.:.:ne:::x.:.:t=a::.:lr________,
of shoes by
Morgan Quinn®, Remember Father On
Hurry In t.odayl
His Day June 21st.

Wins scholarship
ATHENS - Jana Burson of Shade
has been awarded a '1320 C. Paul
and Beth K. Stocker Endowed
Scholarship by Ohio University for
the 198!.Jl2 academic year.
Miss Burson, a sophomore
majoring in zoology/pre-medicine,
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Burson, Rt. I.

make vour basement or other
damp area more comiortable by
la~-irrg the excess moisture out of
tl"!e air. It helps protect furniture
and woodwork from the damag·
lng ettecls ol conotanl dampneos.
It retards mildew, mold, musty
odors and rust - gives your home
more living area .

to 50%

by

~organ Quimt·

BAKER fURNITIJRE

MARGUERITE SHOES

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, OH .

r--.

TER
down to earth prices

Enter the Johns Hopkins Firat National Search tor·
Personal Computing to Aid The HlndiCappedl

'

.

SCR·2 by Realistic:"

Receiver sTA·no
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Rtllltllc'

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-....... .....
Save$1 00
•

1111

"' ,,. - · '-'·"'·""'

.

cassetles AM or FM stereo every·

;,~~/e you go this summer! .Record your
ta s from radio or bullHn m1kes.
~~~o-L~el for pertect recordings every
lime. AC/battery operation . #14-005
aan•"" ,.,,.
for Added Rellllml

HaH Price! ~ssette Recording Tape Re!r.~~c:
60 Mlnutn

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•so

No dials or poinlers to mis1•ead-l
LED display !ells· you the exact
frequency tuned . Exclusiw
Magi ell fine-tunes FM slations
aulomatically. 25 W/ch., min.
B. ohms.20·20,000 Hz,O.OS'Itt
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Density 011ide tor high outpul, wide
frequency responSe, Stock up! No limit!

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$

6995

Reg. ,; • •95

h PRICE

1

111URSDAY
,
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8
: · : p.m. 'l'buraday at the hall. ·
.
FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs Chap. ter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, 6 p.m. Friday at the
home ol Mrs. Daniel 1b«nas, Middleport. Other hostesses, Mrs.
James O'Brien, Mrs. Thereon Johnson Mrs. John Rose, Mn. Larry I.
'
. .
WUey. At 5 p.m. prior to )IICNC,
there will be a memorial service for
: • . the late Nancy Reed, a chapter
: rnem~r, at the Middleport Hill
• •• Cemetery
'
t
; ' MARY SHRINE 'SI, White Shrine
, of Jerusalem, will meet Friday, 8
••
p.m. at the Pomeroy Muonlc Tern1
: •, pie. There will be potluck refreshI '

Plastic
Fencing,

21.88 ~~~7
StrinG Trtmmer

t

Culs 13" swath. o/e·
HP, automatic feed.

In Stock.

.. ...

:!

FATHER·IION

DINNER

•. • lWrliOIIvllle Ma.dc Lodge Satur1 ! day 11 7 p.m. ~tiOIII may be
t made by caDq 74Mitl or 70.2112. ,
• f r

!
'''· ~------------------,
The Daily Sentinel
'.
..
I

Our Reg.

8.97Slngte Bog, 6.971

'

35% Our

OFF
Reg. Price

Coniferous Evergreens
Hardy, readv·to-plant, coniferous
evergreens In gal . pot. Container
grown. Also Rose Bushes.

I' !.

4-cu.-ft. Contractor's Wheelbarrow
Sturdy steel barrow with seam less tray
16x4.0 0 lire. Re d Sa ve at K mmt

I

•: •
SATURDAY
::: HYMN SING, 7:30 p.m.,-Satunlay
:•: at Hylell Run Hollne8a Church.
:; : SpeclA1 slnginll of Joint-Heirs;
•:: public Invited. .
,
: • , REUNION OF Meigs High School
• : : c1u1 o1 um, a p.m. Saturday at
; ;: Royal 00 Park. 'I'IQe ~ 11.. .• !ormation contact Merrl Ault, 1192; : 5454 JDOr11lnp or Bnace Reed, 992-

,' • -eventnP
,

I

All

:•••
•, menta.

I

The perfect CB for travelers•
Priority switch gives instant
acceaa to Emergency Ch. 9and
Highway Into Ch. 19. *21-1503

A ealculator and clock-in-one that 1111 In
Ulglt dlaplly readt hourw, mlnuttt,
lndleltor. A flick of.a awltch leta you
pen:entlgel, more. Only 41ix2~bt~·.

•

Save

Reg. 1.19 Ea,

-44-6021603

.'
~ -·

Take Home a Great Soundln
Stereo System at 38% Oft! g

2for 189

' l '&gt;

.

WHILE 24 LAST

Social Calendar

_. . . .----..:::r-,.·-·

Johno Ho!$1nt ~~~~-ly It COO d 114 I ...., ldl

.. ND lu.-..,
_......,lld ... hlntll 111111-• .,
GR..
gronlll- Till , . _ - - , _
PRIZE! lio!tltld
Rldlo Shick. l - I o n lunllitl JOUI' .... ttty- ....... Hurty- do • • lot/30111 .

Fri., Sat.
Sun. Sale

The Saving Place..,

The concluding program for the
;l ~ter Conunurilty vacation Bible
. , school will be Friday evening at 7: :lO
; ' p.m. at the Chester United
, · Methodist. Church. All parents and
•; friends cordially invited to attend.
: ' Mnl. Melanie Stelhem has been the
•.. , VBS director.

Save28%

Made in U.S.A.

18, 23, 37 pt. cap.

'

;•

$1 0 000

'

.4-n Admiral dehumidifier can

Open Daily 10·9;
Sunday 1·6

..'' Program Friday

AMIFM
Stereo
Cassette
Recorder

~

Carr, Tom Lovdal,
Vaughan '~ Cardinal, R. C. Botling
Co., Superior Meats, McClure's
Dairy Isle, Heiner's Bakeries, Meigs
REACT Team, Paul and Tony's,

~rvice =-~--~--------------------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~~~================~~~~----

•

17.:s..
SATURDAYS

.

~.

•

WMPO

Mrs Loul.se Stewart and Mrs. honorable mention in children and
Eunle Brinker of the American youth programs.
Legion Auxlllary, Racine Post 802,
Mnl. Brinker aild Mrs. Julia
attended the Eighth Dlatrlct' suin- Norrl.i i1lceived framed certificates
mer conventi011 in J...aneaster Thur- · u oul.ltanding American Legion
sday.
'
AIW.liary members . ·
._11_1e_~cinertifunllt~lfvedgoalhinriJ&gt;.
Mrs . Thora Gatewood of
""''" ..ou ce
ca.... or reac g Uthopolis was elected to serve as
• 'thelrmemberhlpgoalolbothlellior the new district president Mrs.
; and junior members. Racine chair- Stewart, a past district president,
men received awards In gavegreetingsattheconvenlion.

•

•

]ana Burson

and veterans
affairs and ..
community
rehabilitation, along with an

Cut 400/o
Ka~em

JEANS,

18

PI I

P~ul

Athens; Cleland Realty, Karr Constru
' ction and Eileen Clark.
Over $10,000 was pledged to the
Me1gs
·
Ass OCla
· 1ion fo r Retarded
Citizens as a result of the hike-bike ;
· $8 000 of th )edg ha
well over
,
eP
es ve
beenreceived.

STOCK REDUCTION
SALE
ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS

'

INVENTORY
CLEARANCE

Mrs.

donated bicycles given as first
prizes and other businesses and invidiaul contributing to the success of
the hike-bike were General
Telephone Co., Mid-West Steel
Corp., Landmark, Meigs Tire Center, Racine Home-National Bank,
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
Craw's Family Restaurant, 3-in-1
Restaurant, Pomeroy Bank One,
Diamond Savings and Loan, Eagles
Club, Nancy Carnahan, Pauline
Reuter, Lewis Harris, Ralph Werry,
Tony's Carry-out, Ethel Hart, Anna

·.•
•;

' '

.

Turner, Ace· Hardware, Burger

Chef Ea 1 Auxllia
M
d
'
g es
ry, r. an

~nU:fl~ik•f~ Larry Powell

. :

18 Oilll Y
Our Reg. 30.17

18.88

Toro 50' Hose &amp; Reel
Vinyl 5/8" winds
Into a )(11&gt;c3"
storage case .

1.88

( 103)

50· Ibs. concrete
Handy, ready-to -use
bag. Just add water.
'Nt1 W1

1

'· .'

:: m~!§~rre:.~

.Timepiece by Radio
ec-a ·
Shack

Ca11y

Donald Stein, Tim CaueU, k01e Fife, Jay CliDo

r-..••~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d~;;;;;~~~~~;;:;· .

LCD Calculator and

'

Qyo~a~Maniey.Cbrllayllldomcnd, Sc&lt;lttGeyer,
BnU uw., Shannon lUndY. Mandy Hubbard,

PicK.A,of'~'11[1

~

Anooo Marie Storeher,

profflu. Janice Fetty, Dovid Fetty, Lilly KeDnod&gt;, Matthew Petenoo, Jinvny Cleland, J""
Holl, Milte Searlel, Nictcy McKnight, Janel
H,..U, -Snyder, aw Hyoeu, Mike Eblin,

i

JOGGING SHOES, JOGGING

H,..u,

.Dartene Elllln, Mlcllelle A.....,, Jlld&lt;te RobJn.
"" Mldo!y Dovil, Sltrimplin, Jell
Hood, Beeky Vanco, Amy RwM, Terry LitUe,
Kevin l'lllnert, Vk*!,Carter, Pot Bartoo, Malt

,,

$12 Off! Double-Duty

Cancel swimming

&amp;nilh, ·J ...ne

GREAT

Two-Way Radio for Safer Driving

To meet Monday

Barbara Tripp and Esther Harden
lost the most weight at the Monday
night weigh-In of the Chester class of
Sllnderella. Two new members were
welcomed. At the M8!lon Class,
Ullian Harme lost the most weight
with Beverly Condner being the runner-up. Three new members were
welcomed and Jackie Zirkle lost the
most weight with Isabel Lewia as
runner-up for the Pomeroy claas.
Cookbol*t of low calorie recipes are
for ale by Jo Ann NeWBOille, lecturer for Sllnderella, and may be
purchlaed at any of the clusel or at
the ((ultOII1 Prtnl Shop in Pumeroy.

by~IIJIJII.

'

-~

Slinderella meets

Due to a prior comrnltrnent there
will be no adult swimming this
evening at Middleport Pool.
SwimrDinl .._.. will begin on
MehJ, Jue :D. Pei10111 who are
Jntelllfed 11117 repter for leuo~~~

'

.... ... . .. .

_.,..

To have services

•

The
, mlnilterlal
' -'·".of the Meigs
·-·
Cooperative Pariah r/. the United
Methodist Owrcbes held a f8rewell
dinner fill: the Rev. and Mn. David

relationship than just ~~ex?
Am I crazy for having respect for
different colors of people,
and people with different
religions than mine.
H I am crazy send me away,
but if the world is crazy where
can I send it?
David Lawson

Observe s Per./ O C&lt;Y . :
Sunday here
Pentecost Sunday was observed
Sunday at St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy, and a chancel light was
dedicated in memory of the late
Clair Karr and the late Charles Lytle
by their wives, Mrs. Marguerite
Karr, Birmingham, Ala., and Mrs.
Thelma Lytle, Syracuse.
The chancel light wiU burn 24
hours a day reminding those who see
it that Christ is the light of the world
and is ever burning brightly. Both
Mrs. Karr and Mrs. Lytle were
present for the dedication.
New members welcomed into the
church were Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins,
Middleport, and Douglas Allen,
Whipple Road, through adult in·
struction and catechism, and David
Jenkins, Middleport, by letter of
transfer.
At St. John Lutheran Church,
William J. Roush and son, Crockett
were received into membership at
the morning service via transfer.

'

The Daily Sentinei-Pase--7

Hike-bike earns $10,000 for retarded citizens

Farewellfete·honors
.
Rev. and Mrs. Harris

'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

ThUrsday, June11, 1fll ,

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

't

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Ooolllolllt ......................... .

- ,_ ....ilicii.iiiiin .' ' '' ..

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.(104)

Our Reo. 22.18

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(105)

Our Reg. 3.27

2.47

.......,......d
Quick - growth .

Covers 750-1000
ft. Save.

~ .

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Our3.57

2.97
.....c. ••• o.t

Controla Insecta on
Wfttablll.
'

Premium Fertilizer
lnMcllpray

Pint or Super K Gro·
Oursban spray ., Save.

27·3·3 Super K Gro' lawn food tor fast
green-up. 18-lb.' bog teeds 5000 sq. tt.
"Ntlwt.

�; . Page-8-The Oaily ·Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily sentinei-Page-9

County schools give scholarships
Group
GALUPOLIS - Four seniors School and he will study engineering
discusses
received UOO scholarships from the at Ohio University, Athens.
Gallia
Education
At North Gallia High School the
Association
during
conunencement
scholarship
presented to Lynn
river history exercises held at the four attendance Staton, who was
will study education at
county Local

•

TAKE PART - StUdents of Glllgerbread House
took parliD • clreus theme program held recently at
Hea.th Ulllted Methodist Church. Twenty·three of the
students gradiUIIed. GradiUIIes were Brad Anderson,
Matthew Beason, Jason Carpenter, Trenton Cleland,
Ryan Conde, Christina Cummins, Bridget Davis, Brian

Pre-schoolers have commencement

The spirit of Marlboro in alow tar ctgarene.

TWenty·three pre-school students
of Gingerbread House took part in
graduation exercises held recently
at the.Heath United Methodist Chur·
ch.
Circus scenery and music was

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MadLon
LIGHTS
LOWERED TAR r, NICOTINE

'

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'
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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarerre Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
Lights aLights 1110's: 12 mg "tar;' 0.8mg nicotine av per cigatette, FTC Report Oec:79. Box:12 mg"ta(O.Smg nicotinu,,per cign~ lly FTC_.

r.

You can't always stop trouble
f rom comi ng through the door
But if it does, Au to-Owners can
help you pick up the pi eces.
Because we des1gn busmess

multi-peril insurance policies
specifi ca lly for you. To meet
your specific insurance need s.
So you'll be protected aga inst
losses yo u might never have
considered.
Auto-Owners Business Insurance .

It's no bul l.

Aprogram and fellowship potluck
dinner will be held Sunday at the
Dexter Church of Christ. Purpose of
the program will be to allow the
children to show parents what they
have learned in Bible school. Sunday
school hegins at 9:30a.m. with chur·
ch service followed by the program
at 10:30 a.m. The public is invited.

Business. One name says it best.

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
INC."
I.J c INSURANCE ~-:;o..§9

RECT FROM THE MANUFACTURER TO YOU GALORE

TRUCKLOAD PAINT SALE
June 11-12-13-14

Thur., Fri., Sat. 9:00-6:00
Sunda 12:00-6:00

REDWOOD STAIN

'549

25 % 'DISCOUNT

~85

~

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PRE-WASHED STRAIGHT~ •••21 oo·
PRE-WASHED BOOT•••••••'21 10

ON
. BRUSHES, ROLLERS, LADDERS,
AND MANY OlltER
PAINTING NEEDS!

$429

Spring Tone
Oil Base House
Paint

axJT JEANS •••••••••••• .'18H

''
'

me?"

Auto·Owners for
Business Insurance

Uf~. Home. Car.

STRAIGHT LfG ...........'17

...

.

-:
'

"Mind if/ bring 'Corky · in with

.Auto-Owners Insurance

FLARES ••••••••••••••• ~ ••'17

'

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Hold potluck

LEVI DENIMS

' ~,. ­

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'•

_,

provided by Joanne Robinson. The To ''Circus Parade" Bret Yoder was
program was opened with the . ringmaster I, Daniell.e Crow,
Pledge of Allegiance followed by the ringmaster II and Brad Anderson
following songs, "Good for Me", was ringmaster III. Horses were
"Sing While You Grow", "B~a Baa Kevin Whobrey and Justin Diddle ;
Black Sheep" and "Jack and Jill." riders were Dodger Vaughan and
Becky Hoffman and Shawn Ingels
was the strongman.
To "Hot Dog Stand" Matt Benson
,o
..
"'i
and
Kelly Grueser were peanut venL "''oo\..t
dors;
Ryan Conde and Chuckie
I
.Legar were popeorn vendors; CJif.
8
R "'fl''"
:..,,,,
ford Thomas and Christine CumA
mins were balloon vendors; Todd
-,.1 ,\• f
R
Russell was a ·hot dog vendor; Amy
\1 .. ~'(
Durst and Bridget Davis, lemonade
vendors; Ryan Roush and Jenni Hill
were cotton candy and candy apples.
many library jobs. Aggie Dixon, who
To "Mr. Clown" Alan Durst, Todd
has always kept the library Davis, Ann RiiOe, Trish Roush,
statistics, is particiularly good at Willie Johnson , Amity Dixon, Stacy
that. That's important in making Davis, Brad Anderson, Ton
sure that there are cards in the
O'Brien,Amanda
David Well
Car. catalog for each book on the shelf Loquasto,.
michal, CasJoCleland,
and for other small but critical and Cory Seymour were clowns and
things.
took part in the band.
Imagination helps a lot Danny Edwards aiK\,,Jenny Car·
especially when it's combined with penter were lions; Trenton Cleland,
artistic abilities. That's why trainer; Katy Altizer, and Jamie
rearranging furniture, putting up Broderick were bears and Joey
displays, making signs are very of· Scaggs was the tamer.
ten assigned to Madhu Malhotra.
To "Merry-Go-Round" Jennifer
Typing skills are a must for at Brawner, Joshua VanMeter and
least one staff members. Luckily, Crockett Roush were riders; Jason
Belinda Roush enjoys typing and Carpenter and Bart Yoder were
does it well. She gets most of the elephants ; Kathy Mitchell, trainer;
typing jobs.
Emily Heighton and Aimee Lemley
Flexibility is important in your were tightrope walkers.
libraries, too. Robbie Landers and
To "Five Little Monkeys Jwnpin'
Brian Bauer probably know more 011 the Bed," were Brian Devoll,
about that than the rest of the staff. Joanna Combs, Ellen Lewis, Dodger
In addition to the more traditional Vaughan and Tara Erwin. David
tasks, Robbie and Brian are also . Fetty was the doctor.
called upon for sanding Doors, painPrayer was given by the Rev.
ting and other odd jobs.
Robert Robinson. The school is
The last job is mine - organizing owned and operated by Sandra
everone's time, making sure the Luckeydoo. Refreshments were seroperation runs as smoothly as
h
posible, letting everyone know about ved following t e program.
the services available, making sure
there's money to pay for the Dinner June 13
libraries' needs, and generally
A father and son dinner will be
filling in wherever there's a gap .
Very, very seld&lt;rn will you be held at the Harrisonville Masonic
asked to read more than a Lodge Saturday, June 13, at 7 p.m.
paragraph if you work at your Reservations may be made by
calling 742-2768 or 742-2922.
libraries. Ther~ simply isn't time!

Rio Grande. Lynn is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William Staton, Route
2, Vinton.
Jeff Gilbert, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Gilbert, Patriot St.&gt;r Route,
Gallipolis, received the Southwestern High School scholarshi~. He
plans to attend Rio Grande College.
The scholarships were made
possible by teacher projects and
donations.

ByEileoBell
992·2342
Librarian
Middleport,
Ohio
"I'd like to work in the library
listen
to
the
Auto·Owners
John
Doremus
Radio Show.
because I've always enjoyed
reading."
c;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i.;ri~~~~
I wish I had a nickel for everyone
who has said that. I also wish I had a
good way of letting tbem know that
the only time we get to read is at lunch. Mostly, what you need to work in
a library are a love of people, an interest in organizing things, and a
willingness to work hard.
In your libraries, everyone except
the janitor is expected to answer the
telephone, greet pellple who come in,
check out books, and help folks find
what they want. When the rest of the
staff can't lind something, they ask
the professional librarian to look for
it. If it still can't be found, the
request is written down to be called
into Ohio University.
An interest in organizing things
makes some of the library tasks
more Interesting than they would
otherwise be. There are almost
always books to be shelved and carda to be filed, by nwnber or
alphabetically. When old books are
diacarded, the process is reversed.
Those jobs are a lot like dusting endlessly repeating the same action.
Reg. '7.49 SALE
But someone who likes to find the
right place for \lllngs doesn't mind;
it's a challenge instead of a bore.
Ruth Powers Is especially good at
another job which required skills
sbnllar to those of a detective. In
Reg. 16.27
Reg. '9.95
Ubrary talk, it's called reference. r-p;;;:;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
For tbe rest of the world, it's answering questions. Some questions
SALE
SALE
are euy; tbey can be answered,by
looking in World Book Encyclopedia
or an abnanac. Others may take
days or weeki to answer. Some can't
50
be answred at all. Ruth Powers
hates to tell folia she can't find an
aDI'Ifer. So, like a good detective,
50
she puts clues tocether and uses all
kinds of retiOIIl'l:etl to get an answer.
;'
Attention to detail is important in
'

.

J.

oevoll, Jasiln Diddle, Danlelle Crow, Amlth Dixon,
DaDDy Edwards, Emily Helghtoo, JeODI HUI, Becky
Hoffman, Aimee Lemley, Tony Loquaslo, Jo O'Brien,
Shawn Ingels, Ann RlfRe, Ryan Roush, KeviD Whobrey
aodBret Yoder.

area high schools.
The Hannan Trace High School
winner was Nancy Hizeley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
Hizeley, Eureka Star Route,
Gallipolis. She plans to attend Rio
Grande College where she will
prepare to become a teacher.
Shawn Thomas, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Thomas, Route 1,
Cheshire, was a scholarship
recipient at Kyger Creek High

The history of river traffic on
the Ohio River in the MeigsMason Bend area was described
by Mrs. Mlldred Gibbs of New
Haven, at a recent meeting of the
Middleport Club held at Heath ·
Church. Mrs. Gibbs was introduced by Mrs.. Ben Philson,
retiring president.
Mrs. Gibbs used research
material from her published
history of Mason County to
outline the era of boat travel and
the part played by the river in the
settlement of both sides of the
river. She said that the river was
the early settlers' connection
with Cincinnati where many of
their supplies and materials
came from the boat, first the
early flatboats ·and later the
steamers and coal boats.
She discyssed the ferry ser·
vices at Hartford, Pomeroy, Mid·
dleport; the ~howboat era, the ex·
cursion and packet boats used by
travelers, and said that prisoners
from tpe Mason area were taken
to Moundsville prison by boat.
The mail boats, sternwheelers
and sidewheelers were c&lt;immon
in the 1800's.
Guests included Mrs. Nolan
Swackhammer, whose father
operated a ferry at Mason and
Pomeroy; Mrs. Ray Proffitt,
Mason; Mrs. Gibbs, and Mrs .
Paul Haptonstall of Middleport.
There was a group discussion on
the program including personal
experiences of members and
guests on the river.
Mrs. Philson served refresh·
ments. The club adjourned until
fall.

Reg. '8.79

SALE

$710

SPICIAL ON UVI
FASHION JEANS

WHITE ONLY
Reg. 19.95 SALE

e710

Reg. 16.79
SALE

$599

ACE.

.... '20 to .'21

'5 OFF per pair

~IWIDWAM
\

POl THE lEST·SHOP

lAtta .CLOTHIERS.
Ohio

......95
SAU

$620

407 Plllt St.
Midllaport Ott.
PH.992-3662

5 Gallon Buckets
Reg. 139.50
SALE

25·

�Page-1o-The Daily S~ntmel

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

-""'

WASHINGTON (AP) -

Committees
•

wnte own
proposals

House

Republican leaders, told that some
comnuttees are skirting " the letter
or the spirit" of President Reagan's
budget-cuttmg blueprint, are
writing a progr~ of their own to
keep his austerity plan from
unraveling on the floor.
By seeking to achieve on the floor
a v1ctory that may not be possible m
comnuttees, GOP leaders would be
employmg the same strategy they
used last month to substitute their
spending targets for those backed by
the Democratic leadership and approved by the House Budget Comnuttee.
The strategy succeeded when 63
Democrats, most of them con·
servallves, bucked party leaders

and voted with the RePublicans.
Congressional committees are
scrambling ID meet a Fnday
deadline for slashing about $35
billion from the fiscal 1912 budget.
But not all the work IS to the a~
ministration's satisfaction.
. Reagan's budget ~r. David
A Stockman, met privately Wednesday evening with Republican
leaders and GOP members of the
Budget Comnuttee to discuss the
progress of the administration's
recommended budget cul,s.
After the meeting, Stockman complained about the way House committees were handling the1r budgetcuttmg chores.
" In some cases a good-fatth effort
IS not being made to comply wtth

either the letter or the aplrlt" of the
bddpt outbne approved earUer, he

beea

are
''tecllakially c:omct, but not pracUCIII."
Earlier Wecklelday, the Houtli!

.ald.

He noted the Houee Agriculture
Committee's recommended f1.4
' blllloo cut In ·the fOQd 1taJnp
program, saying It wu an ·~...,
tlflclal cut" beca1111e it merely puts a
cap on the progrun tbat can be lifted

IDAklng

cuts

that

EduCIUIID and Llbor

Committee
reliletiDIIy approVed plaiMIID cut fJ2
bUllcJn from cblld nutrition, Head

Stsrt, llChool aid, uaJatance to the
handicapped and public emN~

later.
Earlier thia month, Stoclonan said
Congresa would be guilty of
"deliberate sabotage" If it tried to
restore bllllons of dollars In budget
cub called for In the spending
guideline.
One Republican at the meeting,
who asked not be Identified, quolell
Stockman as saying tbat Democrats
who control House committees have

•

....., .._" progr81111l.

;

Rep. carl Perldna, O.Kx.• the
commi~ chainnan, said he had
~ived "lin ablolute gtj&amp;rantee•t

from Houee Speake~ Thomaa ,P.
O'NeUI Jr., O.Masa.1 and House
Rules
Committee
Chairman
Richard Bill)ing, [).Mo , "that we
wiU be aUowed aeveral votes on the
Howle Door in order to reverse some
of the worst cub."·

Yard Sale, Friday and
Saturday 9 til 3, one mile
out Sand Hill Road on lett
Clothn, used washer and
tva, craft Items Cancelled
II rain
To tlood hOme, big black
shaggy dog need~ running
space In country or on
farm Good with children,
loveable and friendly
Phone 882 3525 or 773· ~

Card at Thanks
We wish to thenk everyone
lor the prayers, cards, and
donations during John and
Jay's stay In the hospital
Mr and Mrs. Junior
Holsinger.

2

1979 Chevy Camero Coupe,
red with black lnlertor,
AM· FM Stereo Cassette
675 6395 after 5 PM
1971 Ford ptckup truck,
good condltton $700 F lrm
r.all675 3~70

3

PubliC NOtiCe

PUBLIC NOTIC E
SHERIFF' S SALE OF
REAL EST Ar E

120 Maple Street,

ruppers Plams. Oh1o
Common Pleas Court
Me 1gs County, Oh tO
No
17795 Buffa lo
Sav 1ng s Bank, Pl a mhlf vs

Mark A St1ll et a l Defen
dants
1n pursuance of an Or der
of Sale f r om sa1d CourT t o
me d• r ected I w1ll offer for
sa le at publtc auct •on aT
the front steps of the Court

House
Sec ond Street.
Pomer oy Oh10 on Satur
day t he 8th da y of August
198 1 al 10 00 AM the
foll ow ng desc r tbed rea l
estate
St tuafed '" th e Sta te of
Oh to count y of Metgs
Townshtp of Oltve and
betng tn Sec t ton 36 and
begmntng at a post on th e
Wes t llne of Sec t• on J6 at
the Northwes t co rner of the
School 101 thence Ea st
369 75 tee t to th e N ortheast
corner of satd Sc hoo l lot
thenc e Nor th 10 deg Wes t
101 5 fee t thence Wes t
361 7 teet to th e West I .ne of
sec tton 36 thenc e South
100 feet to the pla ce of
beg.n n tng bemg 83 acr e
Sa td premtses bet ng fur
ther descnbed as tallows
S•tuated tn th e Townsht p of
Olt ve County of Metgs,
State at Ohto, and known as
bet ng part of Sect ton 36 and
begtnntng at a post on th e
West line of sa td Sec t ton 36
at the Northwest corn er a t
the Schoo l 101 thenc e East
36 1 7 fee t thence Nor th 4
deg 36 West 100 32 fee t.
thence West 36 1 7 feet to
the wes ter ly sec t ton line of
satd Sec t ton 36 t hence
South a long sa 1d Sect ton
l tne 100 0 teet to the pl ace of
begmnmg accord1ng to the
sw \ley of Gregory K
wn ght, Reg tster ed sur
veyor No S 6535 of I he
Srate of Oht o da ted
January 27 1979
1mproved w1 fh smgle
tamtiY dwel ltn g
Known as 120 M aple
Tupper s Platn s
Stree t

Public Nottce

Real Estate

Oh tO
Appra ,sed al$25,000 00
Term s of Sale To be sold
tor not less th an two thtrds
of the appra tsed value,
$1 000 00 cash or certtf• ed
check at t tme of sal e
Ba lance cash or cert1f1 ed
check w ttht n th r ty da ys af
ter conf•rm at ton
James J Proffitt,
Shen ff
George W Ankney , Jr,
Attorney
t6 111 , ltc

'

T
_

IRGILB
"'
16 E Second Street

.

Phone
1-(614)
·992 3325
_.
~

Pubhc Nottce

11 2 ACRE S - Good cat
tie tarm wtth ba rb w tre
fe nces 6 r oom ranctl
type hom e, bath fu ll
basement
furnace 3
we ll s, 1 dugged barn
ttmber
and some
170 000
SM ALL FARM 31
acres of r ea l niCe lay
tngland Wtll even make
a ntce development w tth
wa fer
an d e l ec tr~ c
availabl e Loca ted on
hard road 51600 00 per
acr e
RO OM Y Large 7
roo m fam ily home 3 4
lar ge bed r ooms
11;7
baths cen tr al a ~r &amp;
hear st drs w1ndows,
and large ga r age w t th
stor age $59,900
BUI L DING LOT - 1 66
acres on Sta te Rt 124
Dril led well wt fh pump
septiC tan k and electnc
Pads fo r tra iler on
almost level land On ly
$6 500
NEW Ll5r1NG - New
home
furnt shed
3
bedrooms forced a1r
furnace ba th equt pped
k ttchen, ca rp et tn g, fu lly
msul ate d , st
dr s,
wdws, on la r ge lot Can
move tn on com plet• on
at sewage and sa le Only
535,000
NEW LI ~ TING - Han
dyma n ' s SPPC tal
S
rooms e,:n\D h F ul l
base men ~.!ru ra l gas,
c•ty wate r and leve l lor
Ask ong $3,000
NEW LI STING 53
ac r es 1n Oli ve Twnshp
wt th good old fa rm
house and outbu il dings
All mmer a ls on good
grave l roa d Want JUSt
$27 .500
NO LONGER CAN YOU
DE PEND ON MON E Y,
BU r RE AL ESTATE
WILL HAY WIT H
YOU

PUBLI C NOTI CE
A publ tc heanng will be

held on June 15 1981 atl 30
PM tn the village counc1 1
chambers 237 ~ace St ,
M ddleport for proposed
uses for rewenue sha r ng
funds tor fiscal year 1982 by
the Vtllage of Middleport
Interes ted persons ar e m
vt ted to attend and off er
suggesttons
V II age of
Middl eport
Fred Hott man
Mayor
( 6 ) 11 ltc
Publtc Noti ce
LEGAL NO riC E
Dane M M i chael, whose
last known pl ace of
res1dence tS M tch tgan, tS
hereby noftfied that on the
4th day of May 1981
Raymo nd J
M tchael
Plamt dl filed h •s com
platn l agatnsl he r as defen
dant tn t he Cour t of Com
man Pleas M e•gs County
Ohto Case No 17 834
d emandtng tor dtvor ce
fr om th e satd D•ane M
M tchael on the grounds of
gross neg lec t or duty and
e&gt;e. trcme cr uelty
Thts not tee w• ll r un once
a week tor StX consec ut tve
weeks, the last publ tca tiOn
be1ng on the llth day of
June l98\ The detendand
wtll have '28 days •rom the
day of last pubh ca t ton tn
whtch to answer sa1d com
platnt
Raymond J Mt chael
Plamt •ff
Pafnck H 0 Br ten
Artorney for Pla tn t1ff
(5) 7 14, 21. 28 (6 ) 4 11 61C

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savell I

Business Services
POME-ROY, 0.
992·2259
NEW LISTING
BeautifUl 3 bedroom
home wtth rrverv1ew,
WBFP lu ll basement
w t th gar age and
workshop garden area,
large lot , many other
featu res Assume th1 s
13%, APR, $29,800 00
loan , w ith $5,000 00
down, approx 29 years
t o pay
P &amp;
I
1300 20/ month TOTAL
PRICE 534,500 00
NEW LISTING
Southern Dtstn ct - 10
m mutes to new brtdge,
approx 12 acr es land to
be sold '" I acr e lots or
w hate ver s1z e you
choose
St a rlmg at
16,500 00 lor r oad fron
tage tots
IN TOWN - 3 bedroom
home on U n10n, full
base m ent
or1 g1nal
woodwork , scr eened
back por ch, lar ge tot
ASK ING $2 7,000 00
NEAR MINE NO. I - 3
bedroom s, part base
ment , '" tht s ranch
home on approx 2 acres
land Storage bu oldong
MIDDLEPORT - A 2
story frame home wtth
3 4 bedrooms, dtn tng
room , li v •ng r oom lar ge
k itchen, and ha s new
carpet
throughout
Home
comes
with
several rooms, full of
almost new furniture
Must see to believe
$42,600 00
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- Do some extr a work
on th•s 4 bedroom home
and en,oy the fru.ts of
your labor tor onl y
$16,000 00
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, Jr
992-6191
ASSDtlates
Roger Turner 992 5692
Oolite Turner 992·5692
Jean Trussell949 2660
Ofloce 99l-llS9

Pr.nt one word tn each

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTALS

t - card of TttafiU

~ 1 - HO\IIh !Or lien!

l-In M•mort.m

•t •a l or group of f1gures
coun ts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used wo.rd&lt;l
You ll get better r esults
•f you descrt be fu ll y
g1ve pnce The Senhnel
rese r Yes the nght to ~~+~~~~~~-j
claSSi f Y ed •t or re1ec t -·~~~~~~~~~~~
any ad Your ad wil l be:
put 1n the prope r ToJS
clastf' cat ton •f you 11 - --1--t:::::.L.--.L..- j
check th e pr oper box
These cosh r ates
below
m ~ lude dtscount

~ .lnnounctmtnll

t-Oinaw• y
J.- H.Jppy Ada
t-I.Oitand Fo1md

1- Yud Solie
t- Putlllc sate

RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radoator
R adtator Specoallst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Vrs Expenence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, OH
992·2174

Ph

s7 tf c

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings
S•ze.~

" From 30x30"
SMALL

Utility Buildings

S1tes trom~4x..6"to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Ractne, Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 tfc

s.

U Rt. 50 East
Phone 614-662·3121
'Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
f arm equipment dealer

Farm Ponds -Land
Clearmg ·Roads.
Call:

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

liM' • ..,,
44--Aplrtmtnts tor R111t
0 - FurnlsMclltoems
4f- 5~Nt c:t tor Rent
0-WuiHto Rent
u-Equ lpment lor Rent

eMERCHANDISE
Sl - HoUNhold GMds

17
18
19
20

lt - HeiPWintH
I1-Situatacl Wutecl
IJ- Insur.nct

»-Bulldlne Suppllts

61- Fum ECIWI,mtnt
62- W•ntlldtolur

61- l..lwntodt

•REAL ESTAT E
1_ Homn to, Slit
12- Mobil• Hom11

........

JJ-F ~rmalor 1111
14-lulhlftl lw11411nts

28

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

7:1- Tr ue Il l tot' Slit

Services

26
27

TRENQIING
SERVICE

u-Petl for lilt

a FINANCIAL

2~

25

REESE~

Mtr~M I It

21- •ualflllll
Dppor1untty
22-Money to L Oin
n-Pr ofusionll

23

So4-MIK

611mopd

Tro~ lnlnt

16- Ridlo, TV,
&amp;CI Jte,. lr
II-W1ntH To Do

:22

S2-C I , Til, Red~ ECIVIPmttll
U - Anflqu•

15-Schoofllnstructlon

21

992·2478
or
Blam Milhoan
985·3965

Homn

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

IM- HI'f &amp; Grl ln
n-snct 1 Ferttllltr

Water Sewer· Eiectroc
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hool&lt; up1
Septic Tank•
County Certofoed
Roush Lane
Chtshtre, Oh .
Ph 367· 75'0
7 I tic

•TR4NSPORT4TION
71 - Aut.s tor 1111

P'ullllc Nolin

7J- VIfll &amp; 4 W 0

74-Motorcycltl
75- Aute.Po~rh

M- Rtll EatattW•nt.t
lJ- IttlffOrl

Went· Ad Advertising
_ --~•edllnos
M....._, ~ lt • lltunNv

31 _ _ _ __
32!. _ _ _ __

1 11 - -- I 12
33 _
II 13.
3~'· -~-1 14.
35•. _ _ _;___ _
1 15.
I 16
I
I
Mall This Coupon wtth Remittance

Tu..Oy "'"' Pr!Nv 2 ltl P M

"" .. , ....,. "llktlt.
SUINlayJ Jt PM .. riHy

'"'"'"'mtfl"
P-Ptu ......... I
.....,.......

....

t-----~~m~:~~o~~~~-----~J

ts-GtNrll HIUU~
tt-MH

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbong and
etectrocat work
!Free Esttmatesl

17- U-Itlty

.....,.

·~--------------~

Let George Mtller check
your present electrtcal
system
Restdentlal
&amp;Commercsal

GARAGE
- Auto and Truck
Repa1r
- Transmiss1on
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m.-5:30p.m.
10 1 tic
KIH Ttlil Acl for Fwlurt Reltrtnce

Call Ken Young
PAIHSAND SERVIC E
ALL MANES

•Wa stltts

•D ls po&amp;~ il

• Dry ttn

1 OiU'IWoll f'llt l

oR antes

tHo! Wi ttr Tanks

ATTENTION LADI ES!"
Help pay off those un
wanted b i lls working
evenings from 1 30 to 10 30
p m. as a fashion st ylist
Earn $8 .00 to $10.00 per
hour proftt
Ideal for
homemaker with family
Call992 39411rom 9 6
car Wash Sat , June 13 at
Pomeroy Fire Depart
ment Proceeds going to
Meigs Band Percussion

The Meigs Museum, loU
Butternut Avenue, will be
open Fridays from 1 3 for
the sum mer months

AlHENS SPORT
CYCLES

Stims•on

Athens,

Permanent Hair Removal
Professional Electrolysis
Center A M A Approved
Dr
referrals
By ap
polntments orily 675 62J.I
LONELY
Chrlsllan
Singles
Meet Christian
singles tnyour area Wrtle
SOuthern Christian Singles
Club, PO Box 1823, Sum
mervllle, sc 2'1ol83 or calll
803 871 9850, 2~ hours
PIANO Lessons Lucy Jane
Bulmer Hartford, WV 882·
2395

KOUIITRY

JIICKSON County Horse
Club Inc Is having an open
show, Sunday June Wh,
1981
Cottageville, wv
Show starts 1.00 p m
Everyone welcome

llUB

-

PITI1IC I

4

CMIP'P. CIUIS

,....,,11114GII£~)

M&amp;S BUILDING

CONTRM:TING
• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Sepllc Systems
• Water. Sewer &amp;
Gas Lones
eDumpTruck
• Trencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded

PH. 992-7201

949-2101
No Sunday Calls
581 mo

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
411 types of roof work,
new or repeir gutlers
alld downspouts, gutter
clunlng and Pltlnllng.
All work gueranleed.

EUGENE LONG

FrH Estomates
Re11on1blt Prices
Call Howltrd
H9ZN2
949-2160

Free Estimllts
Call COIIKI
Ph 143-3322

2 4 tfc

14

MIK. MttrShandiH

'

RfDUCED
PRICES

Kotchen cabonets, IIIIth
remodeltng, rootong &amp;
gutter, siding &amp; plumltong &amp; eledroul, con crete, storm windows;
wood burners tnstalled

CALL :
PltUI Sogma......,992·2914
Pat Motchell-742-25'2
6 71 mo

Quality Buill
Economically Proctd

REESE BUILDINGS
Gerages - Buildings
- Barns-Equipment
SMds
POLE BUILDINGS
15'•20' upto40'kl00'
PORTIIBLE STEU
STORAGE
BUILDINGS
(4'xl, 1, l'xl 1 , l'x10',
10'xiO',IO'XI2' &amp;up)
Any stZ• buill to vour
speciflcollons. MoRis
In Meigs, Gallie elld
Mason Caunllts
FREE ESTIMATES
All BUildings
Guerenllld

PH. 367·7671
or 367·7560

INSRD

· ·=

1 female pt. German
Sheperd pupqy, 2~ 6345
Lovable kittens to good
home, 1 calico female, I
black &amp; white mole, litter
trained
H6 9H9,
Gallipolis
3 Angora Kittens, 7 weeks
old. Call ol.46 9535 .
Kittens 318·8591
Kittens 1 black male, 2
greym 1 male, 1 female
367·7257
COLLIE and
Puppies. 992

Coonhound

mo.

silver and turquoise
ring, large stone,
initi al N on Inside of
band
Between
!polls Clinic and Cllf
wv, Of senllnmental
1.~:~~~ lt"'ant Call collect,

7

Rewerd boys' 20 Inch Hut
ty Pro Thunder Ill bicycle,
red &amp; white EMCellent con
d il lon 992 3560
Lost light brown male
puppy with black mask on
face 3 months old, jumped
from the truck between
Rutland
Hardware &amp;
Smalley ' s
Grocery,
Rutland No collar, An
swers to the name of
Chester Call 992 70~ or
142 2667 tl seen

1a m1IY yar d sa le, Bob
Eads r es td ence, Sa lem St,
Rutland Frtday , June 12

I

2 klllells.
.1027.

JMeks ald. 446-

i--------,3 111111 gray kHtens 446L-111 Dlut Mllllllll
OwMn . ""''""

1-241 mo.

4 FAMILY yard sale 2911
Jackson Ave Pt Pleasanl
June 11 &amp; 12, Thursday &amp;
Frtday 10 4 Clothes 7 lo 16
glassware &amp; etc
YA RD SA L E 3406 F r ankl on
A ven ue Wed , Thur, Frt If
ra 1ns cance lled
FOUR F AMILY yard sale
2317 Jeff er son Avenue 8 ttl
1 Thursday, Fnday, Satur
da y
Ju n e
11 , 12 13
Cloth ing a ll s1zes Lots of
misce llaneous
GA RA GE SALE 168 Mayo
Ortve, New Have n Satu r
day June 13t h 10 to 5 pm
Rat n or shm e

Yard sale 3,000 Ann iston
Dr , Pt Plcasa nl, behond
V1111 age P1na
Wed ,
Thurs , and Fn 20 m gtr ls
b1 cycle, cham sa w lots of
clothtng and toy s, 675 4631
Thursday and Frtday June
11 and 12 Andy van M aire.
Cl oflon Boy s and gtrl s,
tadoe s and m en s clothtng
Mt scell aneous
GARA GE SALE t hiS Satur
day 9 lo 5 34 WarwiCk Rd
Clothong ,
d ish es,
ap
p!tance s l tght!ng ft )( tures,
househOld goods

Carport sate, Thursday and
Frtday 101 Engltsh Road
10· 4
J eans,
l awn
mowers. bik es, tewerly cl e
an baby clothes, afncan
v1ol ets, clothing and olher
•tems

:whtta Poodle . Call446-7901.

PH. 304-77M518

UPST AIRS gar age sa le
Pec ks True Valu e, 521i
Matn , PI Pleasant Frtday
121h &amp; sa turday 13th, 8
a m 5 p m Ant1que har
dware,
cu rre nt
mer
chandt se, un be lteveab le
garage sa !e pnces

While Poodl' Call ol.46·790fl,
Gallipolis

·- - - - - -

01 DUlY DAILY

Y ard Sa le
5 f am ily,
Fnday J un ~ 12 &amp; Satur
da y, June IJ at the Paul
Sm1 th home on Sl Rl 124
1ust east of Rac1 ne, Oh 1o 9
? Sma ll orga n ru by &amp; pmk
dtshes m1sc, clothes lawn
mow er s, shad ow box ,
mot or c ycle
h e lm et,
Chil d r en s clo1 hes
and
tfem s to g tve away

Four f am il y yard sale
today, Fnday and Sa tur
day place Wanda Bush,
Galltpo!ts Ferry

5000

,o~.

:------.--10
•

full biiiOcMd

lhePMrd

ill. ,.._ 773·ft.

r:',t.l,lellriA

111111 piiYIMIII· PhOnt 675-

1113.

?

Yard sate, June 12 and 13, 10
ttl dark, Mason , w v Hnr
ton Street, close to B &amp; B
Market ,
"Lawren ce
Foremans Res1dence

Btg Garage Sale 41fl lle out
160 from Holzer Hospofal,
Gallipolis We&lt;J, Thurs ,
and Fr•
Dish es and
everylhtng

YARt... SALE MOVING
Friday and Saturday June
12 13 208 Oak SlrMI 882
3332 LOIS , of hOuHhOid
ttems, clatlltng, toYI, . . -

41

Lots &amp; Acreage

Y a rd Sal e 9AM JPM June
11 12, 78 350 Honda, $700
dresser, old k 1tchen cup
board, couch ch at r, 4x6 ft
louvered w•ndows, storm
door games, 128 Sl al e St
Ga lltpOitS

Por ch Sal e Sa iUrday June
13, 20 Vonl on Sl , 9 to ll ?
Clothing and household
1tem s

3 Fam ily Ga r age Sa le 374
Debb y Dr , Gal ltpOl iS, Rt
141 F rt &amp; Sa t 12 13 9 AM
Ya r d Sale 81 0 S Second
Sl • Mtddleport, Oh June 9
13
Beddt ng, cloth•n g,
linens, d•shes small ap
pltances, turnttur e, St ive r
stone, toy s, collecton of
Avon, loot s, paon t lots of
mtsc kntves Co me see •

Yard Sa le Frt &amp; Sat, 12 &amp;
13 277 Ma on St , Mod
dleporl 9 4 Lois of niCe
thtngs
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auct10n

Neals Auction Hogsett,
WVA Rt 2 Every Sat 1 00
PM .
I cons i gnment s
taken) , (will buy furnoture l
Lonnte Neal367 7101
9

Wanted to Buy

SCASH 1
FOR YOUR FURNIT\;JRE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
CDMETO
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL
ol.46 m5
OPEN 9TO S
WANTED to buy J unk cars
with or wllhout motors 388
9303
CASH for your doamonds,
gold and sli ver, class ri ngs ~
wedding bands, Sliver and
gold cotns
Tawne y
Jewelers, ~22 Second Ave ,
Gallipolis, Ohio
WANTED TO
BUY ·
GOLD ,
SI L VER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING
C 0 I N S,
R I N G S,
JEWELRY, MI SC ITEMS
ABSOLU T E
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEED
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHI0992 ·3~76

HARLEY DAVIDSON, pr
eferably older model, but
will conStder new model 11
reasonable Must be In
good condition, In the $1500
to $2500 price range Call
992 5006.
BEDS IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, si lver
dollars, wOOd Ice boxes,
stone Iars, antiques, etc ,
Complete
hou•eholds.
Write M D Miller, Rt ~.
Pomeroy, Oh Or 992·7760
Old furniture and entlques
of all kinds Call Kenneth
swain, Gallipolis, Ohio 2~
1967
I

Old furniture, copper and
brass, kettles, spilt hickory
basket"' •tone tars with
nemes 446 3915
HARPER
HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO , 11th and
Viand SlrHI, now buying
metals (copper, brass,
aluminum, lead, stainless
steel , batteries and
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, catnip and sassafras).
10 am to 6 pm dally. Also
Flea Markel on Seturdays
CAII675-5868

~: playpen Phone 675-

se , bli! ; te \ eras

.......
..... " . " " ..
11

H•lp Wan'"

Hav• lmmecllallly opening
for 0111 experienced gym·
nal11n Instructor. Apply
tmmedlat•ly
at
the
Gelllpoll~
Municipal
Building, 511 Secood A'Vt

Sllllr lllldld In my
tractor , Mini Ml&lt; thlln llamt, 5 clliYI Melt 7 10
saw, work bench, rldlll ~:311. C11f 446-29., afltr

5PM.

Houses for Rent

M odern house close to
Gal ll polts, yard &amp; garden,
a ~r cond , stove &amp; refrl g,
rug s &amp; drapes furnished,
r ef &amp; dep reg ol.46 0239
18

Wanted to Do

31

Homes for Sale

D J '5 LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Netgh
bOrhood Rd , all makes ser
voced SpeclaltZing on Lawn
Boy
Blades sharpened
Call 446 .U25 after 5 p m
Pock up and del1ve ry
available

Pat to Sale Thur , Fn , and
Sat 9 !til 6 Brtek School
Rd Lois of mtSc 367 7269
Yard Sa le baby bed
clothing, and other tfems
Frt 12 00 noon toll 5 OOPM
Sal 9 OOAM ttl I 5 OOPM
132 State Sl , Gall, pol os

Real Estate
Wanted

HOU SE Wtlh special on
sula t•on, cent air, 3 bdr ,
LR, family room, d1ning
rm , l aundry rm , 2 baths,
w w carpet , dtshwasher
Ph 4 to 1 p m ol.46 1-409

Mochlgan Yard Sale 50 Net I
Ave, Galhpolts Wed June
10thr u1 7 9fo?

bl. .. hitch for Sears lawn

snow tires, 1uto ramps

35

Two cemetery lots, B
graves, Graham Station
Cemetary above New
Haven Phone882-2619
Se
b2,felar32

IMM E DIATELY
2
bedroom house, '" good
condition, 1 floor plan,
close to stores 675 3098

Huge Yard Sale Texas Rd
Gallipolis, 11th house 10 11
Bow &amp; Arrow, playpen
&lt;lolh•ng , clawfodt table
lamps, to much to mentton
Chea p9k&gt;5

-------- Yard Sale, Friday June 12,

9 tot&gt;? , 10 miles outroute 2,
house at end of Bud Chattin
Road Womens sizes 20'1&gt;
to221h Womenulzn 7 8 to
flO

1

36

Fro &amp; Sa t , June 12th and
13th, 9 till 5 101 Rov er Sl
Ka nauga, Oh

tam ti Y yard sal e, 549
Beech Street, Mtddleport
Thur sday, F rtd ay, and
Saturday, June 11. 12. 13th

Mobile Hames
for Sale

2 Family Yard Sale Thur ,
Fro, &amp; Sat June 11, 12,&amp; 13
2 miles out Slate Rt 775,
Galllpolt s
Chtldr ens
c lolhong &amp; mt sc tlems 9 to

Sa le June 11.12 13
9 4 Off Sl R I 143 on
Pen Road Ratn can

Giveaway, clothing and
lntsc Items 25 boxes or
more Must furnish own
transportation 985 ~70.

jPups and mother doll to
give away, 245-5516 or 2-15·

32

Yard Sale

Sale June 12 13,
9 4 p m at the Pat
r es •dence, ftr st
tn Rae me on Rt 124

White Poodle Call ol.46·7908

,BEAUTIFUL dark gray
lkltten, 6 &gt;yeeks old, call 304
675-to4U alter 6 Jean
Gaskins

7

GARAGE SALE Ram or
Shtne, Fr. and Sa t 9 to 5
Orange brtck hou se behtnd
Btdwe ll Gra de School
Toy s, ch old s k1tchen se1
hob by
horse, dtshes,
clothes, 1ea ns, and etc

Yard Sat e~ FnCiay June 12,
9 hi,., I 10 m•les out r oute 2,
house at end of Bud Chatt •n
Road Womens stzes 20 111
to 221J7 Womens stzes 7 8 to
910

Cute puppies that are part
collie 6 weeks old 378 6255
Reedsville

Bag at stuff-suitable lor
yard sale, 381·8UI

-MD

.._

Giveaway

ANY • PERSON WhO has
anything to give away and
does not oller or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column There w ill be no
charge to the advertiser

CH

OIAU.
ROSEIUHS

Lost: 2 Bass boat seats,
between 1 Syracuse and
Ravenswood on Rt 12~; fell
from the back of th~ boat
Call sheriff's office or But
chArms. 992 7639

Yard Sale, table saw, k tf
he n
s t ove,
w 1n
Traders Day Sale, June 13, 1o•&gt;w,, , ho useh ol d
11e ms
Co Rd 32, watch for signs Glen Bt ssell res tdence,
Trade or sell anything: tor Bashan
Information call, 949 27.U,
9~9 2320, or 985 3957 or see Yard Sa l e, 4A2 S 6t h Stree t,
Bob Clonch.
M•ddleport Fnda v from 9

,.. Mobil e Homtt Pl rln

J&amp;F

FOUND Bicycle , Between
Chester &amp; Pomeroy on Rt
1. Cell &amp; lde~tlly 949 2051

4

,.. Rt nt1l Propert1 ts

GLENN BISSELL

Cllltldl ~11111'1111111
.....It

6 8 1 mo

'---•.
. ,•;,"''SHtill
:"::::'",;,';;''";::'
:';.:
;, """::..---Ill U .,. - FASI' SEMI
r
Ratn For'

For Silver Dollars

Ptlllllfllll Yanl ...,.,.

Ca II 949·271 0

Loshnd Found

Lost, red pig In Mill Creek·
McCulley Rd area. 4467795, Gallipolis •

I PAY
highest prices
possible tor gold and sliver
coins~ rings/ 1ewe1ry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

RllllL

12'1' to Sllr

EVERYBODY

Now Takong Enrollment
for Summer Classes
In Pomeroy &amp; Rac1ne
Ages3 and Up

APPUANCE SERVICE

5

Sldong
Rooltng &amp; Gutter
Remodeling
servong Your Arel 1or
20 Year1

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

6

City Cab, ofltce 39 Slate Sf
Galllpolos, open 5 30 till
11 30PM 7 days 446 0451

" Beaut1ful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call lor free sodong
estimates. 949·2801 or
949-2860
No Sunday Calls
3 1l tf c

992·5682

SILVER &amp; GOLD
COINS

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

BISSELL
SIDING 00.

2 8 lie

HYSEll'S

NEW GARAGE OPENING
Automatic transm issions
and all sorts of mechanical
repair and major and
minor auto body repair
See James Smith or Tom
Masters or call ol.46 7757

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Cal1742·3195
or992-76BO

BUYING

-~t.
.........t . S

11, lie

For all of your w1r·
'"9 needs.

... Apl HOUst OWI'I I JS

OIIICII

(6)

Mlu.ER ELECJRI
SERVICE

992-6215 or 992 731 4
Pomeroy , Oh.

,.,, c.........

........ TM l'lltll...,. wiH ..... ,..,........... ..,. - -

4 9 1 m o pd

V. C. YOUNG II

Mlddlepart, OH.

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

Effechve 4· 6·81
MON . thru SAT.
9 to 5
Closed Thursday

... coin Ll unclr,••

COIIEICW
PIOPEI'IY

a.-r

STORE

17 ttc

FOR LEASE

~I Cfftt Ctllrtt ....... c.JJ'IIII ... llfiMier t• CIN It fttt

--

~

I KCUIII"'

tntiltrlnMrtiM
""" Uy lnllttltft •
IIIIIIYi iftNrliofl
f Awttlftf..,..,., Hftt~
Meel.. Ho~n• llltl aflll YM111Nitt lrtttc_,.. Ml'f wta Clift . .

•

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·5016
or 992·7505

P'orLHII

IJ-E XCIWIIIttl
M-a _,.kll

Rates and Other Information
UptolswW••
Up to 15 WOnll
UJto ll W.,.I

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

WAIT AD WAY

.SERVICES

,, _ Holtlf

Don1t wa1t Contact Ohio
Valley Plumbmg for
sewer ltne connect1ons,
and any 1n house
changes that have to be
made Ba ck hoe and
doser servtce ava1lable
992-2036
5 20 1 mo

Shops the

1 •cc•sorle•

77- Auto Re,..r

U- loftl ACrtltt

30

RACINE-SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS

DOZER WORK
CATD-U

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh10

631

SALES &amp; SERVICE

5 u I mo

&amp; Auct ion

11- IUIIMII

The Daily Sentinel
Box 729

~2 -MOOIIe

OONSTRUCTION

BAILErS SHOES

New Homes • ex•
tenstve remodel·
in g.
• Electrtcal work
• Rooflng work
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

COMPLETE

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

space be low Each tn

110 :...
• ----

Rt. 1 Stde Holl Rd.
Rulland, Ohio
PH 742·2455
5 11 tfc

Hollltnd round hay
~lers, borh In ex·
cellenf condiloon.

or Wrote Dally Sentmel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

Phon~-...-----------

':·

LEO MORRIS

PHONE 992-2156

INam•------------------1IAddreu,_________

I
I
I 2
I l
I ~
I 5
I 6
I 1
I

HJ 50"- 2Q-30 ~ P '
HA 60" -25 60 H P
HE 60" -45 80 H P
All Models Avatlable

$32,000 00

WANt AD INFORMAnON

I

) wantea
1 For Sate
I Announcement
l For Rent

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS.

2 USed No 850 New

II

I

General

Housing
Head uarters

wnte your own ad and or der by m at ! w1th th 1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
r esults Money not refundable

J

Real Estate

ousing
Headquarters

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

1

General

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hall mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Cell
oi.46·0m .

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
~

In Memorlom

IN MEMORY of our
precious Donnie 11 who
would have been 28 tOday,
June 11th. To have, to hold
and then to part, Is the
greatest sorrow of our
heart We love you Your
mom and dad The Two
Hills

Two day couches with mat
chlng table, like new S125
Phonem 1622

The. Da11y

Ohid

Thursday. June 11,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$185 OOto$500 week ly doing
mailing work
No ex
AP
perlence requ ired
PLY Corcle Sales, P 0
Box 224 D, Richmond Htll,
NY 11418
GET VALUABLE t raon lng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gtfts as a Sen
ttnet route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on
the ellgobtllty list at 992
21~ or992 2157
BE A WINNER' Beat on
flat1on• Work your awn
hours
d emonstraltng
MERRIMAC toys, gilts,
and home decor Items We
need party plan demon
strators '" thiS area Ht gh
c ommiSS IOn
No
'"
v estment, no dellvertng , no
colleclong Call toll free
now • 1 800 553 9077, or
wr it e MERRIMAC 801
Ja ck son Sf , Debuqu e,
Iowa 52001

BUY lh1s 7 room energy el
flc,ent home 1n Addison
and forget about high tn
terest We'll finance ot at 10
percent' Bar gam prtced at
$35,900 P1ck lhe pl an th at
sutts your ftnances S2,000
down $350 00 monthl y
payment
$5,000 down
HAVE YOUR Hoover $300 00 month l y pa y ment
sweeper repatred at Em $10,000 down $250 00 mon
ptre Furn tture, call 446 thly paym ent For mor e
1405
delat ls call 675 3240 days,
367 7536 ntgnts
Auto Paontlng &amp; Sand1ng
$250, tree pickup &amp; deltvery NEW CABIN or small
on Galltpalos area, Ham home, complet el y fur
mond BOdy shop 379 2782
n1 shed, $3900 Ca ll446 0390

To do babys ttttng '" hom e,
Spr i ng
Va ll ey
Ar ea ,
Galltpolls, Oh 446 6574
Ca ke
D ec o r at 1ng ,
spec oaltzes Weddtng cakes,
675 2588 or 675 1553, PI
Pleasant, WVA

Want to do babysttt.ng, tn
my home, up to 6 yrs old
Inqu ir e at 1622 Chatham
Ave between 9AM &amp; 5PM
Galltpolts

HOU SE FJ) R SALE 3
bedroom lull basement,
immedtate possess ton 446
3748 or 256 1903 In city
lim its Gall tpolts
NEW 3 Bdrm home w
base ment and garage '"
Pl antz Subdovtston $45,000
4460390

House wtt tl acreage for
sa le 3 or 4 bdrs fully car
peted 2 barns, 379 22se or
379 2343, after 6PM

Wtll d o ba by Stltlng on m y
hom e 256 1763

1 mtle f rom HMC , up on hil l
behind Foodland, 1 yr ol d,
ELECT RICAL Plumbtng 3 bdr 2 ful l bat h, bmk r an
and Heattng Servt ce No ch, fu ll basmt 446 7709
10b too small 10 years ex
Opportuntty •s yours 1ust
perlence Low rates Ph By owner 1 yr old 3 bdr
lor the askmg Ask y our
992 2533
FR.
LR Wt l h ston e
Bee line stylt sl and she woll
f treplace, large k•tchen,
be happy to help you 101n
the \ Beelin e world of Will do ba b~ Stlling tn my dintng are a, 2 b at hs, utl l
f a shton and success Phone hom e tn Syra cuse Good room, carpeted thru out,
992 3941 between the hou rs r efer ences. very r eltable dou ble garage, heal pump ,
barn 23 acr es, fr u 1t tr ees,
Phone 992 3110 or 949 2791
of9 6
ctty schools, J m ls to
Conema, 3 ml s t o 0 0
R E SIDENT MANAG E R HAUL gr avel , ltmestone, Mcintyre Park , $115,000
coal, etc Dencll Dunlap 379 2196 for appotnfm enl
COUPLE PART TIME
small apartment com plex, Phone 675 5215
Galltpoi!S
Mtddleport area No ex
penence necessary Wil l Tr ee wor k wa nted, woll do
tra tn Apartment and a ll p ru nntngl topp1n g, and House for sale 5 rms &amp;
bath , carpeted lhru out,
utthttes
plus salary
take down s 675 6682 and cent atr , 1 car gar age/ 1
Looktng lor mature ol.46 1735
good out butldmg, 1/ 2 m 11e
married couple Excellent
from Sliver Bndge Shop
opportunity for rellred or
446 4752,
pong Center
semi retired loo~lng for ad
F lnanelal
Gall
ipolis
dlltonal
tnc dille
No
ch ildren or pets plea se 1
61~ fl6.4 7186from9 ~on l y
MOd1f oed A fram e W1lh 3
21
Business
bedrooms, 2 ba th s car
, Opportunoty
pet ed , stone c •rcul ar
NEED so meone to m stall
PACE SE TTER FASHION fireplace, sptral sta trs,
carpet Must have own
off ers a highly profotable utility r oom Pn vate 8
tools Call675 1317
and beautiful Jean and acres 992 7741
Spor tswear shop of your
Babysttt er , shtfl w o rk own Featuring over 100
L ar ge 3 bedroo m home, 3
Phone675 1940
bra nds Lev1, Calvtn Kl e1n, llvtng rooms for m a l dtn tng
J ord ach e,
Le e, Ch oc . r oom, 2 bu il t .n k ttchens, 2
m or e baths, 1 wolh shower Al l
Need someone to stay w1 th Wran gler manv
elderly lady on weekends, $16 ,500 00 onc lu des tn fully carpeted
L ots of
Fnday eveni ngs 5PM to ventory, Install ed f1 xtur es paneli ng Large swtmmmg
Sunday evenong 5PM Call and tn shop tr atntng Can pool on back Seen by ap
open wothon 15 days Call po1ntment only 992 2404 af
6754 1061 or 615 283~
any hme for Mr Hartl ey at ter 4 p m L ar ge recrea tion
214 937 9876
and laundry r oom
Now takong appllcattons
for tractor trailer dnver s
22
Money to Loan
Phone 773 se25 alter 5 pm
Beau l1 ful three bedroom
FHA VA Convent1al Home r anch bnck hOme 1n Raum
Loans, Columbus F ir st AddtltOn, Pomeroy, Ohio
12
~~...=_
St._.,tu
~a~t~
oo~n~s~W
!:a~n._.,t~
ed
~
M or tgage Co , 463 Second Gas heat, cent ral atr Call
R epatr or r ell)Ode llng Ave, Gal ltpOitS, Oh , ol.46 985 4145 992 2571 or1 687
work1 floor .ng, doors, wall 1112
64 29
panel ing, ceil ing or floor
t ile, Sldtng 992 2759
Reduce d from appra tSa l Of
23
Profes stonal
$45,700 3 bedroo m , 2 bath,
Serv1c es
Woll do roofs, good ra t es,
total electric, ca rpeted
free esltmates Call after 5 COMM ERCIAL and tn lar ge k 1tchen d1 ntng and
du strl al
photogr aph y li v ing rooms D• shwasher,
at 992 5825
Phone ol.46 2909 or ol.46 7226 lot s of cab inet s and closets
Bog mast er bed ro om .
Have room and board and afler 4 p m
garage, 10x2 6 r ear porch,
laundry and care In my
pr ivate home, for the IN COME TA X AND AC 112 acr e Lowufil tttes Clean
and top cond Leav tng st ate
elderly, 992 6022
COUNTING SERV IC E
Call 446 7068 for a p $39,500 992 570~
po1ntment anyt1me
13
Insurance
THRE E bedr oom house,
SANDY AND BE AV,ER In
Ptano tuni ng and repa ir / famil y room woth f oreplace,
surance Co has offered Love your ne ighbor lune full base ment, all ap
serv ices for f ire Insurance your Pl ano Btl l Wa r d, pltances and dr apertes
coverage In Gall la CO)Jnly Wards Ke yboa rd ol.46 4372. 675 1542 after 5 p m
lor elmO!! a century Gal it poll s
F arm, home and personal
Two Story House and lot on
property coverages are
Broad Run Rd No land
PIANO
TUNING
and
ser
ava il able to me'et In
contra ct but wtll take a
vtc
e,
all
make
s
and
dlvldual needs
Contact
deed of trust 882 2407
Kall Burleson, your neigh mOdels Call Bob Grubb at
ol.46 4525 Formerly woth
bor and agent
Wards Keyboard
5 room hom e, ba t h, all etec
tr lc, 2 ye ars old, 5
AUTOMOBILE
IN
Bud Chatton
su RANCE been c an GA L LIA Cleantng and acres,$26,500
Road, PI Pleasa nl 675
Rent
A
M
aid
Serv
tce
Inc,
celled?
Lo st
your
operator 1S L icense? Phone Free Estimates, bonded, 1828
onsured, phone 245 923~
992 2143
Cleaning by the week , mon 2 STORY house 30 X.W
thor contractual
garage, new septic syslem ,
M t Alto Call895 3540
15
Schools lnstructlon
FOR all your photography
SUMMER SCHOOL IN
needs go to Tawney Studio, HOUSE, 5 bedrooms, llv 1ng
STRUCT ION
Does your 424 2nd Ave, Gall lpolts, room, dlntng room, kit
child need extra help? Ohio
Passports, family chen, large lamoiY room
Review
program
for photos, weddings, and com Park Drive $49,500 675
reading
or
math
mere tal photography
2885
Presbyterian Church Call
446 4052
Prepere for
c &amp; F Cleaning Systems 209 PAR K DRIVE
2
c lasses now I
Offices, re!ldent lats, car bedrooms, f am tl y room 15
pets, Upholstery, w indows. x 21 , dlnlhg room , kitchen
_===:::::::
R= =d = :::;
T::
v= =
16
1 10
floor , and general cleaning and bath, all completely
I CB Ropolr
o1.46-2783 8 to 5 PM .
remodeled Phone 675 2782
or675 3272
RON'S TV SERVICE
Sp•ctallzlng In zenith
Permanent hair removal
HouH Calls. Now Hrvtctno Professional Electrolysis
Motorola Quazar. Call 1· Center, AMA approved,
30H76·239t or ol.46 2454.
Dr
referrals
By ap u
Mobile Hames
polntment only 675-623.4
lor Sale

s

11

wenteclto Do

carpentry and remodeling
and roofing 57.. 2919.

HORSE shoeing, 304 675

3137

-

WORK wanltd·Cerpenter
lo roof work. houH pain
tlng
Free •sttmllel .

Phont Mason, 773 5'121 .

.. ·-·--- ......"

-~

31

Ham"torSal•

5 ROOM house,
6~
ChilliCothe Rd., lllliY 13,500
Cai1446-4031 or .....,1615.

12x65 gOOd , 2 bedr oom
mob ile hom e 3,950 446
1339
34 acres w tth 14x70 v ,c
tonan Tratl er, A/C, rural
water. good barn Wtll sa te
tr atler or land sepa ra te
Ca II 446 6253
10•55 expando LR, 2 bdr
a ll l tnes go w1th 11 $2,000
Ca ll446 6240 , BtdWell, OH
1973 Cr own Haven, 14x65,
three bedroo m, new car
pet, 1971 Camer on, 14x64,
two bedroom. new carpet
1972 Champ 1on1 12x60, two
bedroom , new carpet 1976
Cameron
12x60 , two
bed rooms bath &amp; 1/2, new
carpel 1970 PMC, 12x60
two bedroom. new carpet
B &amp; Sat es, Inc, 2nd and
V tand Street, Pt Pl easant,
WV Phone 675 .U24

s

8x45 2 bed r oom trailer
Br ow n s Trailer Par k,
M tnersvtl le Oh 10
12x52 unfurniShed Shul tz
M obt !e Home 3 bedroom, 2
added on, 12x22 l 1v1ng
r oo m ,
new
ca rp e t
throughout, n1ce leve l lot
wtth utt llty bu1ldmg on E
M atn St, Racme 949 2191

1976 W~n dso r Hom e 14x70
In r eal good cond Call992
5533
1974 Baron mobtle home, 65
x 14, $15,000 00 843 3011 fo r
appo 1ntment

1968 12 x 40 mobile home, 1
bedroom ve r y good con
dtlton $4200 00 985 41 33
USE D M obtle Hom e 576
2711
1971 Daroa n 12 x 65, 3
bedroom s 1972 Crown
Have n, 14 x 65 Wtlh 8 x 10
expando, 3 bed r ooms 1973
utop1a 12 x 65, 2 bedroom s
1972 Inv ader 14 x 7ll 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau , 1.f
x 60 2 bedrooms B If• s
Sates, Inc 2nd and Vta nd
Si s Pt Pleasant WV
Phone 675 4424
1974 Mobi le home, 14 x 60
located at Two C s tr ailer
park Call 882 2456 or 88 2
3338
S e , b 2 , 1 c:le132

14 x 70, 2 expandos, 2
bed rooms, 2 ba th s, fu lly
furnished. on r ented 1h
acre lot ~ bea ut1fu l lawn and
garden, c 1t y water and
sewer , all electn c wtll hold
mortgage w tth r easonable
down payment 675 6704

I

3 bdr house I mtle f rom
Rto Gr ande Deposot &amp;
r efer ence r equ ired Phone
245 5329

House for re nt, 908 Second
Ave, Gallt pol ts ol.461377
3 bedroom, 1 11 2 ba t h, 1 car
garage, garden space, air
cond , unfurnished on Rt 7
over look 1ng the Oh• o
R1v er 367 7270

2 bdr home un f urn~ Lower
Rl 7 No Pets, dep req,
2561 413, Gallo poiiS
3 ROOM house, '" Mason,
s1m1 furnished, $150 mon
l h 614 992 7352

OR LE ASE Wllh optton to
1,921 sq
fl , 3
buy
bedroom. 2 baths, earth
brown and brt ck, large
famtly r oom wllh pool
tabl e, all elect roc, heat
pum p, ktt chen butLt tn, Hot
po1 nt appliances tncludmg
d iShwasher , l ar ge lot,
prt va te, parltally wooded,
200 ft fronta ge, on Rt 2
close to Ka tser, assumabl e
loan owner wtll f• anance
second mortgage, mtn1mal
1nler est 273 2021
42

Mob1l e Homes
for Rent

Mob home w1th ga rage
and garden
furn , tn
clud •ng wa sher and dryer
1/Sth mo le from North
Gal lta Htgh School on Rt
160 Has to be seen to be ap
prec1 ate d 388 8436

2 bdr trader furn•shed, gas
&amp; wa ter furn tshed, no pet s,
$225 m o, S1oo dep , ol.46
4745, Ga lltpolos

For Rent Tra•ler 12x60, 2
bdr, new carpet a.r cond
gas heat, bea uttful nver
vtew 446 664 2

2 bdr

mob tle hom e on
Kerr Bet hel Rd call o1.46
310 1after 6PM. GAIItpolos
M obt le home lor rent, 3
bdr , completel y turn , 446
9669, Ga lltpolos

Tr atl er fo r rent contact
Car r y Out on Cheshtre
2 bdr tra ol er turn1shed.
$275 Gas and wat er furn ,
$100 d e p
446 6583 ,
Gall1 poi1S

2 bdr M Ob tle Home new

1971 thr ee bedroom tra iler
1'12 bat hs, n1ce cond1t1on
Phone 675 6230

capl Dee ' s Adults onl y, no
pets, sec dep and r ef ol.46
2491

197 4 M ob tle home, 14 lC 60
located at Two C's tra 11er
park Ca ll 882 2456 or 882
3338

2 bdr mobtle home ne~r
Cap Dee's Adul ts only , no
pe ts sec dep and r ef o1.46
2491

14 M 70, 2 expa ndos, 2
bedrooms, 2 ba ths, f ully
furntshed, on rented 'h
acr e lot beauttfull awn and
garden, c1ty water and
sewer. all electrt c, Will hold
mortgage wtth reasonable
down paym ent 675 670~

2 bdr mob1le home Call
44 6 1052
a f ter
5PM ,
Gall lpo lts

33

Farm s for Sale

By o wner 55 acre fa r m
With 9 r oom ho use, barn,
and mmera ls
M ornt ng
Star Ar ea $65, 000 9~9 2630
eventngs
1971 th ree bedroom t ratler
l'h ba ths, ntce cond1t10n
Phone 675 6230
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS Real nice campstte
on Raccoon Cr eek, aU
ut•l ttteS avatlable, $300
down, owner will f inance,
ca ll alter 3 p m , 256 11413
Beauloful &amp; level lots, Fatr
f teld Churc h Rd , approved
sub d1V tS1 on, ci ty school 1
rural water, 3 3/ 4 acres,
$10,000 1 1/ 4 ac r e $4,500
owner w ill f inance, 10
down 379 2196
For Sale by Owner 2 acre
building site nea r Tuppers
Plaons 667 3484

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on appro~ 1 acre
L i ve In one, rent others to
make' your payment Can
be converted single home
City water, will consider
PRICES REDUCED used land contract 675 1883 9-5
mobile homes and travel p.m
trailers
T R I STATE
MOBILE HOMES ~ALL
LOT, Greenbrie r Estate,
ol.46-7572.
acres call 304 6753244
5pm
5 mob homes, wtll sell one
or ell, already set up In
park underpinned, and lot Two cemetary tots, 8
lsavallallletor rent Priced graves. Graham Statton
II 13,000 to 18,000. 1 216- Cemetery above New
3251, In Jackson, OH
• Haven Phone 182·2619.

t

3 or 4 bedroom house tn ctiY
Wtlh prtvacy $225 per mon
th
Sec urtty depoStl
r equtred Ca ll446 4729

2 bedroom tra 11er for r en t
Brown s Tra1 1er Pa rk '192
3324
For rent, 10x SO 2 bedroom
m ob1 !e home Rac1 ne area
992 sese
2 bedroom Uttl tftes pa1d
A dults
only
Deposot
r eq u.red 2 m oles out on Sl
Rt 143 992 3647

6 r oo m house for r ent on
Nye Avenue S150 per mon
t h, sso de post! : - 781 1

2 bedroom turnt shed trailer
on Crab Cr eek Rd, ulthltes
furnished $225 month 675

3682

2 DR mobtle home tn New
Haven. adults only, no pets,
675 J.l52 or 675 1'196 after 3
2 BEDROOM trailer, 3
moles out Ashton Upland
r oad $1 SO 00 per month
plus ultlllles and deposit
30~ 675

.wee

44

APltr1ment
tor Ront

SMALL house lor rent , 57
Oltve St 1 bedroom, un
furnished, no pets, depoostt
required, S170 mo. -446
7886 After 5 ol.46 ~
FURNISH E D Efficiency,
$135 Ulllltles pd Share
bath, ol.46 .U16aller 7 p m
FURNISHED Apt, 2 BR ,
SISO Water pd One child
acceptable 44&lt;1· 4416 after 1
p.m
1 Bedroom apt all utilities
paid 675 511W or 675-5316,
PI Plea5ant

I

�Page-12- The Daii',~ Sentinel
51
2 bdr. partially turn. apart·
ment, $175 mo., State St.,
Gallipolis, across from
park. Dep. req., ret., water
paid. 446·3919.

l

Pomeroy-Middleport; OhiO

Housellold Goods

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Ap·
pllances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., 446·7398.

54

Misc. Merchilnlse

required, no pets, children

welcome . Cai1446·2572 .

EASY credit available now
WOOd burning furnace to to purchase furniture,
add to your fuel oil fur· televisions, or appliances.
nace; cuts your oil bill Village Furniture 2605
about 90 percent. 985·3538.
Jackson Ave., 675·1773.
Gas

stove,

'
by Larry Wright
A · 16·5's, !llhlte spoke
wheelS, 1200 ftres, 8 lug,
stiS on Ford truck'. · S125.
985-4133.

German short hair pointer
Phone 675-5833 alter
6PM 675-6750.
.
Sa,bi,feler'S6
$50.

17

. Auto Re11111r

RdBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr. wrecker
service. "Big or small" We
tow them alii 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
· 446·2.US or Night . . .
4792.

Boxer puppies, 2 male, 2
female, call 576-2919 or 5762673 after 4:30PM.
German short hair pointer
Phone 675·5833 ·a fter
6PM67H750.
$50.

Home
lmprovtmlllfl
Gene's Carpet Cl4an1ng, · · •
deep stream extraction.
Free eattmatea, reasonable
rates. Sco!hguard, 992-6309.

II

E &amp; V WELDING Paint &amp;
Body Shop, Georges Creek
Rd. Gallipolis, 446-9304,tor·
mally with Gallipolis
Motors, 3 years.

good

•

Television
•

JIIN! 11,11181
7:30 Cl) e BULLsEYE

~ ANOTHt!R.LtFE

Clle(J) -ER'8W1LD
Jil HOLLYWOOD 80UARI!S
(jl). FACE THi! MU~

LOCKSMITH
Sarvtce.
Reslden!lat, automotive.
Emergency service. Call
882·2079.

7:58 (I) C8N UPOATI NI!WS
8:00 (I) • CIJ NBC Mf.GAZINE
.WITH DAVID BRINKLEY Ttl Ia
weekly aeritl onere a blend ot
current new• atorlea, topical
reporteandprofilea.Ho:ltDnid

Brinkley ia JOined by contribul·

Wll've e1v8N

YOUR

ing reportera Garrick Utley, •

O~I'!IU

Jack Perkina, Oouglaa Kiker,
and Belay Aaron. (60 mine.)

l.OT Of' TIIOU6HT. .
Mei&lt;J!J,

PRIORITY
ONE
INTERN ATIONAi.
(J) lftle MORK AND .NDY
With Mindy depre11ed t~bout
losing a scholarahip, Mork tries
to Cheer her by bringing home a
friend who clafma to be'"' real

Peter Pan . (Repeat)
8Cil@ITKEWALTONSArob-

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

_..........

.A.-1

'""

bery results in Walton'a IT!OUR·
fa in's only storekeeper going
out of buslneaa. (Repeat; 60
mine.)

.......

,

IJ

I

\MC:II!JII.E AC.Glt:'ENTZ

ll ( (J

Play' To take Tom's mind off Michael, Anne lnviteahlmawaylor
a weekend lnthecountrytovialt
her friend l&lt;ar8n. (80mina.)
@ ~UNNING BLIND

BORN~ER

Yesterday's

I

(Anawor1IOmOIIOW)
Jumbles: DOGMA FINNY TRICKY BEAUTY
An-: What the )udge said It had beenA TRYING DAY

- - No. IS. -.lnktg110 ~II 1¥11-lor 11.75 poatpa111
ham .hnbAI,
M
loi 34. Marwood. N.J. 01141.lftcludl wour
lfp malio - . poyllblo to

:s•r,

c1o..,..

B:30 Cil SOUND OF TRUMPETS
C1J (Jil Gl BOSDM BUDDIES

When Amy gets the romantic
heave·ho tram a congrealional
a asislant, Heniy,Kip and Sonny
plunge into an outrageous
scheme to get revenge on the

I

.z

Now ananga lhe circled loners to
form the aurpriM answer, as suggeslad by lhe above CIIIOOn.

.&amp;r.(IIIIII)oF(IIIJ

Cll OMEGA FACTOR 'Chlld'a

N_,.-..

BRIDGE
Vanderbilt Cup play

two·tlmer. (Repeat)

l

8:58 (I) C8N UPOAT£ NEWS
11:00 CII . CIJ THURsDAY NIGIIT
AT THE MOVIES 'The Adven· ·

;

z

lure a of Nellie Bly' 1981

j

Cll 700CLUB
(!) MOYIE ~COIIEDY)" "UI·
tla Darli!!lll" 1880
·
(I) lftl •
BARNEY MILLER

i

I•

0

Miner'a crew fears that the fun
ol handling typical neighbor·
hood crises has passe.d them
lore~er when lnapectorluoer.
th inking he Ia doing them a
favor, haa them designated a
' specialty squad.' (Part one of a

ANNIE

two -part episode.) (Repeat)

(Cioaad·Caplloned)
0 (I) !lDJ MAGNUM, P.l.
Against the ad~ ice of her uncle.
AdelaideMalonehireaMagnum
to un co~er the source of extor·
tion threats. (80 mine .)

~-·· ·

.I

-

WHA'T'5 EVEf.l eETTEFI:
THAW P'REeENCE OF
MINt:' IN AN AU'TO-

(I)

-

•

•

VIewmg

, RIN.G LE'S SERVICE:
complete
building,
.remodeling, repairing,
largo or smell lobs done el·
llctently. Phone 675-2018 or
675-4560.

tree NEED several items of furH &amp; 0 CONSTRUCT.ION .
con- niture, appliances, Bo•er puppies, 2 male, 2
Remodeling, and repairs.
3 bdr. clean carpet, un- dition. Reasonable. 675·
Commercial and reslden·
televisions. Big discounts female, call576·2919 or 576·
turn ., upstairs apt. Private 5323.
!Ia I. Phone 675·6357.
for quality purchase . 2673 alter 4:30PM.
entrance, parking off
Village Furniture 2605
78
Camping
street, dep .• adults, no-pets,
Jackson Ave. 675·1773.
Equipment
QONTINIOUS no leak gut·
112 util ites pd., S175. Call
57
Musical
Antiques
.
erlng, custom made tor
446·0585
or 446·3310, 53
lr~struments
TRUCK
TOPPER ; tyour
home. For free
Gallipolis.
ATTENTION :
(IM · BIG discounts for cash and
with
sliding
win·
fiberglas,
estimates,
call ADVANCE
PORTANT TO YOUl Will carry at Village Furniture Lowery Organ, $.500, 446·
dow for 6'h II, GMC or SEAMLESS
411
7508,
Gallipolis
.
GUTTER
2605
Jackson
Avenue,
675·
Furnished
Apartment . pay cash or certified check
Chevy truck, Sl25. Call 388· AND DOOR. 614-698-8205.
9334 alter 6 p.m.
$200. Utilities pd, 1 bdr .. fir- for antiques . and collec· 1773.
58
Fruit
st floor , adults, 446-4416 at· tibles or entire estates.
&amp; vegetables
Nothing too large. Also, Spring Special
for
ter7PM.
~,,..,...,...
1977 BONANZA travel HARPER Halstead, lawn
guns, pocket watches. and upholstering furniture .
mower repair and shar·
Strawberries· plck your ~========:;=========~trailer, 35 fl. lpog, a.c., lip· penlng service, 10 a.m.·6
coin
collections.
Call
614·
Richard
Mowre~
Sr
.•
Furnished Apartment,
out room. New awning,
own Mon . thru Sat. 9AM to
owner. 675·4154.
$150. Utilities pd . Share 767·3167 or 557·3411 .
deluxe Interior, full bath; p.m. 675-5868.
RPM . Closed sundays.
71
Autos tor Sale
bath, one child accepta~e,
cell388·~.
sorry no checks. Happy
,
~·· · ·
54 Misc. Merchandise
DAVE'S appliance repair,,
446-i1AI6 after 7.
MASON County's largest Hollow Fruit Farm,
72 BUICK $200.00 see at
dryers, plum·
of line handguns : Gallipolis Ferry, WVA, 576Cochrans Te•aco.
1978 Puma Camper, fold· washers,
RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER· selection
bing,
electric,
general han·
Colt,
Smith
.
&amp;
Wesson,
2026
..
down,
like
new.
Call
446Furnished 2 bedroom up· VICE. in and above ground
11
Autos for Sale
dyman.
576·2921
or 675-5689.
At
Ruger
and
others.
stairs apartment. Adults pool kits , immediate
77 OLDSMOBILE, Cutlass, 7230.
only , no pets. Middleport. delivery and complete in· Health Aid Pharmacy, STrawberries pick your 1976 Chysler Cordoba, low one owner, 350, V ·8, air,
miles, gOOd cond., till cruise, radio, tape, call 304· Camping Equipment 1978 Lawn mower repair . 675·
992·3874.
own, bring container 2.45·
stallation available. Also New Haven, WV 882·2005.
wheel, cruise, priced rlght, 675-3165 alter 5 p.m .
all pool supplies and ser·
5&lt;110.
29' Cruise air motor home, ·6416.
446-8661. Gallipolis.
OLIVER diesel, 1969
sleeps eight, IU11 bath, dual
3 room with bath apart· vices for existing pools. 88
ment in Pomeroy . 992·5621. For details and directions Volkswagen. 882-3239.
Strawberries· pick your
1976 Ford. Torino with air AJC, 6500 KW generator, Stark's Tree Trimming:
to local display, 446·1324.
own, Claude Winters, 24.5- 1970 CHEVY Caprice. 367· and speed control, good all options. $15,300. 446· Yard Work Insured. Phone
7824.
MACHINERY and TooL 5121.
576-2010.
condiTion. Price $1500. 7265.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furn ished
New
lngensoii·
Rand
5
HP
K'ICH·ALL
portable
metal
Phone
675·5312.
c partments. 992·5434 or 992buildings, sizes 4ft.x1011. to air com pressor on a 60 ga I. Pick
Fiberglass Travel Trailer. RON'S Television Service.
5914 or 882·2566.
your
own 74 AMC Sportabout Station121t.x401t. GallipoliS Block tank . $1245 . Call collect 304- strawberries·S.6S quart, wagon, 6 cyl., p.s., p.b., 1942 Studebaker
13
II. 950 lbs. tully equip· Specializing In Zenith and
Sedan.
co., 123V:r Pine St., call 446· 76H244.
good cond. 446-1452.
ped,
sleeps four, excellent Motorola, Quazar, and
Call245-5482
after
5PM.
SIOOO.
675-1654.
1 bedroom apts. available 2783.
condition. 773·5420 alter 4 house calls . Phone 576·2398
at River side Apts . Equal
GALVANIZED "Cu lvert,
pm.
or 446·2454.
1968 Fireblrd 400, good 1971 Ch
11
Opportun ity Housing. Call
For Sale or Trade
$2.35
f.'. up. Bridge, etc. 59
256·6776.
eve
e,
gOOd
con·
hape,
Call
WONDER
STOVE
mfg
.
S
992 772 1.
dilion. S500. 773·5438.
by Un ited States Slove Co .. Steel , IOc lb. up. 925·0884.
NEW FLEA MARKET
Due to Illness. 23 11. 1975 COOK'S Television SerwOOd and coa I burner with
NORTH
GALLIA 74 Road Runner, many e•Aristocrat
camper, many 'vlce, Hender?on . WV
APARTMENTS . Fur · blower, Gallipolis Block 1970
TRADING POST Buy-Sale- tras 367-0107 or 446-0648 at· Beautiful dark gray kitten .. extras. $40011 or best offer . Phone675·2250.
INTERNAT
INAL
nlshed or unfurnished . 675· Co., call446·2783.
6 weeks old. 675-4002 or 6f5· Glenwood. 576-2720. ·
SCOUT · 4-W·D, $1800., also Trade We have something ter 5.
1371
day s, 675 -3812
6414afler6 PM.
for everyone. Bu i lding sup·
5
acres
up
Rt.
35,
Three
F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
Sa,b2,felaro41
evenings.
Rebounder·total health e•- mile Rd ., $12,000 . Call 576· plies tor the man. Small ap· 77 Trans Am, near loan Sa,b2 , fcler8o4
removal . 675-1331.
stump
pliances for the lady and
cersize
446 -3358 . 2984.
toys for the klddies. Come value at $3600. 446-1136 72
2· BEDROOM apartment,
Trucks for Sale
T and R building,
uti lit ies paid, adults ·only,
and browse e miles from 9AM·8PM .
CLARK
forklift
truck,
1211.
12
HP,
two
wheel
Gravely,
remodeling, also papering,
no pets. 675·1883 9-5 weekHMC on 160 open dally
65
Dodge
pickup,
3/
A ton,
model , new, $500 below list. 6,000 lift . 304-675-1371.
carpet Installation, and
days.
197
4 Mustang II hatchback, 1974 Chevy, 1972 Mercury 81
Home
Outdoor Equipment, Jet. 7
general
home
lm ·
Sale or Trade . Adult auto, radio, $650. Phone 379-2123, Patriot, OH .
· Improvements
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. 446- Hall Jersey and half
provements. 675-5689, 675APAR TMENT S
AND 3670.
Bassett hounds or Ch i, will 446·1323, Gallipolis.
Holstein milkcow gentle trade for elect. or gas
MOBILE HOMES 675-4130.
1977 Dodge 'h ton stepslde 6 FOR BEST In Carpet 5304.
S500. 8 ft . topper S175. Call
range or wringer type 1970 Ford Mavrlck 100,000, cyl., 4 speed, 6 II. 49,000 , Cleaning · Call Smeltzer' s
For sale Glass showcase (3041675·2536 Alma Ran· washer . 675·2019, 586·2995 body exc., car doesnot run,' miles. P.S.. am·tm 8 track· Steamway. Call 614·446· 12
Plumbing
ONE bedroom apartment, $150. Cash register $125. dolph .
2096.
&amp; Healing
Pt.
Pleasant.
·
good
tires.
$1,800.
949·2288.
make
offer
.
Ph
.
379·221&gt;0.
Henderson, $150.00 month . Store shelves, chest type
Phone 675·1972 after 5 p.m. freezer , yard roller $40. JUNE SPECIAL . Buy
CARTER'S PLUMBING
STANLEY STEEMER
AND HEATING
........... _,,.' ... . . .
78 Black Camero T·top, air 1978 FORD 'A ton ~ · wheel
White shingles, wood bur· fishing reel al regular
Carpet Cleaning
Cor. Fourth and Pine
cond., I&gt;.M-FM stero tape drive, 675-1121.
2 BEDROOM apartment, ner cheap . 379· 2196, pri ce, gel rod of equa l
446·4208
&amp; Lhl estaerc
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
· player. 446·4002, Gallipolis.
utilities paid, will consider Gallipolis.
value ha lf price. Matched
one older child. call 6751979 FORD F150, 6 cyl. 4
rod and reel combos, I!J off
1883.
. 14 acres of pulpwood,and regular price. Rod or reel 61
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
Corvette 1978 silver an - speed, radial !Ires, AM·FM PAINTING - Residential
Farm Equ'ipment
only 25.percent off regular
AND HEATING
nlversity edilion L82 loaded c~ssette, many extras, and commercial. Interior
green couch 367·7634.
and exterior, mobile home Route 160 at Evergreen
price. Jri County- Sports 79 Massey Ferguson 200 D. with extras, very low pfione 304-675·6438.
45
Furnished Rooms
roofs. Free estimates. 17 Phone 446-2735.
Bulldozer diesel, 7 ft . mileage, e•. cond .. 367·7560
Shop. 675·2988. ·
yrs. exp. with references
SLEE P! NG ROOMS for Moving Sale : Maple book·
blade, wench, 151 hours. or 367·7671.
1962
Ford
pickup,
$200
case, bed &amp; dresser with
call367-7784 or 367-7160.
rent. Gallia Hotel.
Cai1256·1345.
firm . Phone 675·1534.
GENE-PLANTS
Building Supplies
almost new foam mattress 55
AND SONS
Scirocco, exc . cond .• 4 spd,
and box spring, 17 cub. ft . ALL TYPES of building
Front end loader wilh large 40 MPG, alloy wheels, new Beautiful dark gray kitten, JIM MARCUM Roofing · Plumbing · Het!lng · Air
SLEEP! NG ROOMS and Sears upright freezer , ex .
light housekeeping apt ., cond . Meat slicer, loveseat, materials, block, brick, tilt bucket. Has own pump, radial tires, cassette radio. 6 weeks old . 675-4002 or 675- spouting and siding. 30 conditioning. 300 Fourth
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
years experience . Free Ave. Ph . 446-1637.
Park Central HoteL
two lounge chairs, and tels, etc. Claude Winlers, heavy duly, gOOd cond., 446·9500.
6414 alter 6 PM.
estimates. Remodel ing .
I
easy on &amp; off. $500 call 379·
misc. Best offer, cash and
Rio
Grande,
o
.
Call
245·
Cai1388·9857.
2196,
Gallipolis.
SLEEPING room , $75 . carry . After 3:00 446-3294,
SOUTHERN SERVICE
71 Formula 400 Firebird 73
vans&amp;4W.D. .
5121.
Range, refrig ., sing le male Gallipolis.
with 68 Chevy engine, lots '- '---===c::.=- CO. · Heating · mobile
Hydralic loader with 5 ft . ol extras . 4~6 - 1223, 1980 JEEP CJ-5. 6·cyl., 4· CALL 446·2801 for ' termite, home furnaces, electric hot
preferred . 446-i1A16 aller 7
541
Pets
for
Sale
p.m.
bucket,
for farm tractor, Gallipolis.
spd., exc. cond., call ~- roach, bird , rode~t. water tank repair . Call ot·
J pc. canopy bdr. suite, 20
spiders, fleas and other flee, 446·3001 night,
like
new
$600.
Phone
992·
1211 .
gal . aquarium wi th all ac- POODLE GROOMING .
small Insect control . Free emergency no. 367-713~.
46
Space tor Rent
cessories, Midland Base Call Judy Taylor at 367- 3921.
1979 Mustang Laser II, 3
estimates
given. A local
CB with D·104 micro., 7220 .
dr., V·6, auto, PS, PB, air, 1977 JEEP WAGONEER ,
locaed
In
Sec luded private trailer lot ground plane , 100 ft .
Four 15,00 gallon tanks low miles, extra sharp. Call 42,000 miles, air, PS, PB, company
J &amp; P Plumbing&amp;. Healing,
Gallipolis
area
.
Bill
ln wooded area. Ideal for KOAX . 446-4413, Bidwell,
located above ground at 367·7481 or 446·0817.
rear window defogger, Thomas.
Rl. l GalliPOliS, 367-7853.
DRAGONWYND
CAT · Athens
that summer outdoors. OH .
, Ohio . $3,000 .00
power rear w i ndow, 4
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Con tact Brown's Tra i 1N
Chow Chow dogs. CFA each. Phone 1-304-422·2781 . 1970 model 442 Oldsmobile, wheel drive, exc. cond.
Pa rk , 992·3324.
STUCCO PLASTERING · D. C. Contractors Plum·
Call368·9334 alter 6pm .
SNAPPER 8 HP elect. Himalayan, Persian and
convertible
446 · 9818,
te•tured
ceilings, com· bing, electrical, heeling,
start riding mower 30 in. Siamese cats. Chow P!JP· New Holland Hay Baler, Gallipolis.
mercia
1
and
residential, roofing, aluminum and
COUNTRY MOB IL E Home cut, list S1218 ·sale $1050. pies
are here, white Per · Model 67. $450.00 GOOd
MUST
SELL,
Make
me
an
estimates. Call 256· vinyl siding. 675-1240.
Park, Route 33, North of Ouldoor Equipment . Jet. sian &amp; Himilayas kittens. working conditon. Helen
offer 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, 4 tree
1182.
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call Rts. 7 &amp;. 35, Ga llipol is. Ph. Call446-3844 aller 4 p.m.
1980
Pontiac
F
i
rebird,
Ebersbach, Middleport.
spd, low mileage, canvas
992·7479 .
yellow bird edition, tully top, will trade, call446·1211
13 •
Excavating
446·3670.
equiped, low miles, e•. or 446·3594.
SANDERS
CON
·
·
DOZER
· backhoe, dump
HILLCREST KENNEL · Gravely riding tractor, 8 cond., 446·4160 alter 5PM,
TRACTING, Carpentry truck. Call446·4537.
TRAILER spaces for rent. Canoe 17 II. fiberglass,
Boarding all breeds, clean hp. $600. 773-5438.
Gallipolis.
work &amp; painting, concrete,
southern Va lley MObile S175 . Call992-3921.
Indoor-outdoor fa cili ties.
For Sale 1975 Dodge Win· landscaping, 446·2787.
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
Also AKC Reg . Dober· 62
dow Van, 9 passenger, 318
DOZER work · excavating,
wanted to Buy
992·3954.
1979 Ford Granda , 256 cyl., ci.,
V -8,
runs good ,
land clearing. Call 446·0jl51 .
Canoe 17 II. fiberglass, mans. Call 446·7795.
fully
equiped
.
Ph
.
446·2432,
INSTALL fireplace lacing
WANT TO BUY Old fur·
automatic, Cail992·7723.
$175 . Phone 992·3921.
GAllipolis.
TRAILER space 3 miles
or chimney, dry wall,
AKC Reg. puppies Bassett niture and Antiques of all
plaster, stucco, free est. c &amp; v Inc ., Backhoe serfrom town i unc1ion 2 &amp; 62 at
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
1970 vw Van, new tires, Slmulaled brick or stone, vice. 985·35.49 or 9.49·2822.
1980 model Sears Kenmore hounds, $150 and up, 256·1967 in !he evening.
old Y,675· 3248.
1976
Oldsmobile
station
engine overhauled. 304-675- ,Greg Burdette, call 675·
washer and dryer heavy Schnauzers, $100 each, toy
wagen . 1969 Camero Z·29. 6866.
duty, large caps, can be Pomeran ians, $200 and up.
6357.
COMPLETE SEWER IN·
m -3647.
MOBILE home lot, apply in seen at Gold Van Lines, 47 One rare chocolate 63
Livestock
STALLATION &amp;. backhoe
person, marr ied couples Sycamore, Gallipolis.
Pomeranians, $350. Also
74
Motorcycles
HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE service for the Racineonly . Everette Schwartz,
adult Bassett hounds, $50. Fryers for sale, $1.25 each. 1972 Plymouth Fury ,
446·3824.
Contractors
· Build, siding, Syracuse sewer district.
Rt. 1 Locust Rd. Pt.
automatic, radio, body 1978 Yamaha 500CC stngle
675·2019. Pt. Pleasant.
HAY FEVER SUF ·
Pleasanl, WV.
good, tires lair. $150. 742· culinder. 2,100 miles. Exc. remodel, concrete, roofing, Dozer work If needed. 949·
FERERS Avoid expense of
For Sale Reg. Polled 2282.
cond. $1,200. 667-6569 alter 5 tree estimates. Call cot., 2m.
the needle, English family AKC tiny toy male poodles, Hereford bull, 2 yrs. old.
614-259·2814 ask tor Charles
p.m.
47
Wanted to Rent
2 female poodles, 446·6310.
tradition for centuries. It
or Mike.
'EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Call 446-3228, aller 6, 1961 Corvalr, $175.00 or'
wanted to Renl 2 or 3 bdr . works . For more In:eozer
Service. Specializing
Gallipolis .
make offer. 985-4244.
1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON
home, reasonable rent. formation send today sell Reg. male Doberman Pin·
In septic tank. 675·1234.
I.
DUTY
&amp;
SON,
Home
A.
SUPER
GLIDE,
all
Middle age couple will addressed s tamped en· cher very gentle with Slmmentai·Angus heifer
bu ilders, specialize l,n
446 · 4659,
1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675· custom; also a 1973 small convenlenl homes,
maintain and do mi ner vel ope plus Sl.OO to S. R.A. chil dren .
BACKHOE Service. Larry
reg
.
Simmental
bred
to
HARLEY
DAVIDSON
Co
.
,
P
.O.
Bo
x
284,
Gallipolis.
2722 or 675·5571.
repairs, wil l give reteren·
bull. 367·7727.
ELECTRA GLIDE, needs plans available, moderale Sldenstrlcker, 675·5510.
ces and dep., call after 5 Gallipolis, OH , 45631.
price, free estimates, 614·
pinon shaft. 992-6281 .
any time on weekend . 388·
AKC registered Springer1977 DODGE pic kup. slant
256·1352.
14
Electrical
8746.
1 Whirlpool trash com· Spaniel pups. 4 months old. Herford bull. 949·2368.
6, automatic, PS, PB,
&amp; Rtfrlpratlon
pactor, like new cop· 1 female, 2 males. Liver &amp;
51,000 miles, 4 tool bins, 74 CB 360 H6NDA, low INTERIOR and exterior
mileage with sissy bar and
446 -2605, white. Call Harlan Webb, 2· Two week old calbes. 675·2318.
wanted to rent or buy pertone .
Cooling and
pad, 2 matching helmets, painting, Mark White, call QUALITY
Mansfield, OH at 1-419·589- S200. firm . Hall polled
mobi le home lol446·6318 or Gallipolis.
Healing
Service,
call ;188·
245·9561.
excellent condition, S6SO.
7024 anytime.
hereford. 949·2179.
446-4009.
'1098.
MORRISON'S Auto sales. Phone Buffalo, 937·2463.
54 squ . yrds·. of used gold
Henderson, wv. Phone675·
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
carpet, e•. cond ., call 446· AKC German Shephard 2 year old heifer, 900·1000 1574 or 675·2881 .
48 Equlpmentlor Rent
SEWING MACHINE
1975 Suzuki dirl bike, ••· pet Cleaning featured by repairs. service, all makes.
0633 in evening, Gallipolis.
pups, good ternperment, pound. 985-4275.
cellent condition. $400. 675· Hallelt Brothers Custom 992·2214. The Fabrlc Shop,'
J:NDLDADER
and
excellent blOOdline. 1·3041979 Chevetto, good con- 2848.
Carpets. Free estimates.
backhoe. $80 per day . 1973 Dodge motor home gd. 675·2415 .
Pomeroy . Authorized
FOUR year old gelding, dillon. Call after 4PM 675Cali44+·2107.
Operate yo urse lf . Ray
Singer Sales and Service.
cond., make offer. 446·3243
galled, $600. 304·458·1816, 5115.
peegle, 895-3841 .
1979 Yamaha GT BO. GOOd
we sharpen Scissors.
after 5, Gallipolis.
THE FISH TANK and Pet Leon, WV.
condition . Price $350. Call WOODSHOP · Cabinets,
'
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
1979 Pontiac Formula Sun·
picnic
tables,
porch
JACK'S
REFRIGERATIO·
Sterling Chain• ~·.• U .OO, 675-2063, Pt. Pleasant . REGENCY Inc. Apart· bird, 4 cyl engine, 4 speed 895·3488.
I
swings, most wOOd produc·
18" $5 .00, 24' w..oo. ,;dd Sl.OO Guinea pigs $7 .99 and 10.99, men1s, $200 . month , transmission, posi!ractlon,
ts. 101 Court St., Gallipolis. N. air condition service,
1979
Yamaha
GT
80.
Good
.
51
Household G~
commercial, Industrial.
postage &amp; handling. Cash, ParakeiS $14.99, Zebra Fin· uTilities p~rtially paid . 2 low miles, 675·1420 or 675·
condition . Price $350. Call Call 446·2572.
Phone882·2079.
check, or money order to J . ch S12.95, Gerbils $2.98. Bedroom, superior neigh· 2940.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
895·3488.
Daniels, 15 Evans Hgts. , Open 11-4.
borhOOd . 675-6722, 675·5380.
SOfa, chair, rocker, ot·
WEATHERALL CON ·
General Hauttnt
CRETE
· quality and ser· 15
:toman, 3 tables, S500. Sofa, Gallipolis, Oh 45631.
1.:========:..1..:;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:~ 1977 Mus lang II Ghla, e•· .::
;::::==::=;::::=::==
~
cellent condition, 31,000 75
Boa lund
vice, call675-1582.
chair and loveseal, $275.
LIMESTONE, gravel and
miles, 304-675-220.5 after 5
Motors tor Salt
Sofas and chairs priced Two month spring special
sand.
All sizes. At Richards
tor,
upholstering
furniture
.
They'll Do It Every· Time
)rom $275. to $695. Tables,
pm .
liNN'S LANDING has a PAINTING - Interior and and Son. upper River Rd.,
$38 and up to $109. Hide-a· Ric hard Mowery , Sr.
nice selection of clean used exterior, plumbing, Gallipolis, OhiO. Cell 446·
beds,SJ-40., queen size, $380, Owner. 675-4154.
1972 Volkeswagen Super RunabOUts S500 &amp; up. roofing, some remodeling. 7785.
Recliners, $165 ., $295.,
Beetle, · runs good, new Gallipolis.
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.
l:.amps from $18. to $65. 5 SWIMMING
POOLS :
paint. $1400. 895·3911 ..
JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
pc. dinettes from $79., to PRE ·SEASON SALE :
liNN'S LANDING has 2 BING'S CONCRETE CON · water delivery. Call 256·
}365. 7 pc ., $189. and up. $999.00 INSTALLEDIII
1967 XL Ford hardlop, 2 Chls·Cralts, one 1977 25 II., STRUCTION · SpecialiZing 9368 anvil me.
/Wood table and 4 chairs, Above ground pool COM·
door, 4 spd . trans, $.500.00. $14,000. One 1979 21 11. twin In concrete driveways,
$350 up to $495. Hutches, PLETELY INSTALLED
engine wllow hOurs, sidewalks,
Call895·3879
•
patio •. NOW HAULING housecoat
$300. and $375., maple or starting al$999.00. Price in·
$28,000.
Stop In or call tor bastment, garage floors &amp;
pine finish . Bedroom suites. eludes pool, deck, fence,
llmntone for driveways.
. Bassett Oak, $649., filter , liner, and In·
1980 GO·CART, 6 months more details and In· and etc. Frn ntimates. 11 Call for estlmatn 367-7101
formation
.
Gallipolis.
years experience. Call 367·
old, $300. 675·6475 .
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk stollatlon under normat
7191.
bed complete with mat· ground condition. Free
DILLARDS WATER
11
Auto Parts
tresses, $250. and up to shop at home service. Call
DELIVERY Servlci. Call
HANDYMAN needS work,
&amp; Acgssorlft
BRICK, Bt.OCK, AND 4&lt;16-74114.
'$350. Captain's beds, 1275. 1-800·624·8511 .
piKJne 304-451·104:1.
--"'~-""-==~·complete. Baby beds, 589.
STONE WORK, 256-6735,
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Crown
City, OH .
Mattresses or box springs,
72 OLOS 18, sllel btlted Auto parts, auto repair,
JONES BOYS WATEr
lull or twin, $55., firm, S65. BURIAL lots lor sale.
wrecker serv1ct, buy
redlels,
66,000
miiH,
S750.
SERVICE,
call 367-7471 o•
and $75. Queen sets, $185. 5 Beautiful, perpetual care,
eutomobllft, racllaton tnd DoH your need 1 367·05'11.
304-675-6245.
dr. cheSts, U9. 4 dr. chests, uprlghlt monument per·
face lift? Or Just a little'
batleriH. 4&lt;16·7717.
142. Bed frames, •20.and .mltted . Forest Hill
mekeup? Call me •· I'll
1976 MONTE CARI.O Len125., 10 gun · Gun cabinets, Cometary Rt. 2 NOflh.
hive
II looking your ••in Molltlt homu moved
4
Goodyear,
polvglett
diu, good condition, 51,000
'$350., dinette chairs 120. Phone 675-5548 (James H.
In
no
lime.
Will do e .. IYPII ttcenstd, end IIOnded. 5n
radial tim, pUS, 70xl5 lOr of· Interior -"1
mites, cell 304-112·3311.
and $25, Tappan gas or LewiS I
paneling, 21111W 576-(191,
Corvette, whlll nlltd Itt· callings, flooring, tic,;
e lectric ranges, S215.
plus
uSED
.
Ranges, ALL types of granite, mar·
exterior ·work, roofing, ll
1977 FORD GranMte, tour llr,llttMW--7711'.
Upl!!!!!!rY
-refrigerators, and TV's,
thlngling, any llzt . end
door, all lht emea. ex·
ble, and bronze memorials.
.!J miles out Bulavlltt Rd. Display
302
Faftl
motor
and
auto
lhape. :10 yHrs r.r::;~tnce
cellent condition. U.OO.
TRI STATI
lot on Main St. Pl.
open 9am to 7pm, Mon. Pleasant Granite Com·
tncH
UPHOLITIItV IHOP
304-615-1.497 before 4:30 frl!llm ... lon, ·ga. cond., In C*Pflllry. It
muslltll. ,..9CNO, VInton, provldad upon Nqlllt. f91· 1113 lie. "'"'·• Gallipolis.
,thru Fri ., 9am to5pm, Sat.
p.m.
pany. Pllone675-554,
OH.
446·0322
6293.
4&lt;16·1133 or &lt;146-111:1.
.

refrigerator,

frost

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

3 house trailer axles with AKC
Dachshund,
tires and tongue. 9.49·2368.
Pomeranian an Poodle
pups 895-3958.

26' TROUTWOOD travel
trailer and. camp site on
Raccon Creek. Close to
Apartment tor rent, unturn ., 4 rms .. utilities pd., Davenport, chair and Ohio River. S500 down.
no children or pets, ~- stereo with tape deck. see Owner will finance. 614·2561216.
3437, Gallipolis.
at 102 High St, Pomeroy.
3-br . Apt. at 103 Court St., .
Gallipolis with cabinets
and stove, 2 baths. $215 per
month. $100 deposit, ref.

56

Thursday, June 11,1Ydl

(I) @

SNEAK PREVIEWS

Hosts Gene Siskel and Roger
Eben review the new mov.iea In
town, and show scenes from :
'TBke This Job end Shove It'.
' Outland', 'The legend of the
Lone Ranger', and more.

11:30 (J) lftl Gl TAXI The cabbie&amp;

lo~e working forlouie a along 11

Letkakeepsthemsuppliedwith
chocolate chip cookies, but
Jim's experienced taste buds
re~ea l that the goodies contain
somal hing more potentthanthe
usual

oa tmeal.

(Repeat)

(Cioaed·Captloned: U.S.A.!
ill GOOD NEfGHBORS
®
THIS OLD HOUSE
La ndsce pearchitectl om Wirth
give a a Ieason In brick paving
a ndBob Vii a inapecte thacabln ·
eta and the plastering work.

(Cioaed·C.plioned; U.S.A.)
10:00 Cil TBSEVENINGNEWS
(J) lftl Gl 20-20 Hugh Downa
anchors ttlla weekly maGazine

By Oswlld Jacoby
ud AJu Sentag

NORTH
KJ 87

B-11-81

.9
t

The ;932 Vanderbilt Cup
was won by the team of P. Hal
Sims, Wlllard Karn, Harold S.
Vanderbilt and Waldemar von
Zedtwltz.
Waldy, who is now 85 and
won the event in 1930, is one
of the four of five greatest
players of all time. His eyes
have made it impossible for
him to play serious bridge
now. His last great success
came in 1970 when he won the
world's mixed pair champion·
ship with Barbara Brier.
Here is the most Important
band in the 1932 Vanderbilt
The other table bad finished
some time back and It was
known to the other players
and the press that the Sims
team was 310 points behind
coming to that board. Sims
and Karn had picked up 100
points by beating a four-spade
contract two tricks, but Vanilerbllt and Zedtwitz had to
bid and make a game to win
the match. They did both.
West led the king of hearts
and shifted to a low spade. A
trump shill would' have
cooked Waldy's goose.
He played dummy's jack.
East took his ace ·and led a
trump. Waldy thought several
minutes and finally won in his
band. He ruffed a heart,
played dummy's ace of clubs,

t K8 S
.AK651

WEST

EAST

tQ93

t A10 4

.AKQ2

'10 8 7 4

t74

t109 6

•to s 7 3

.Q92

SOUTH
.6 52

.J

•J&amp; s 3

tAQJS!

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Wesr Non• East
''

Dbl.

Pass
Pass

••
Pass

Sootll

Pass

Pass

z•

3t ·

Pass
Pass

st

Opening lead:'K

ruffed a club, ruffed another
heart with dummy's king of
trumps, ruffed another club
back to his hand, cashed his
last two trumps, entered dummy with the king of s padei:
and mpde the final two tricks
with dummy 's remaining
clubs.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

profiling noteworthy events in
news, science and entertain·
ment. (60 mins.)

0 00®1 KNOTSLANDINGSid

GASOIJNE ALLEY

How«Jout
40urstick?

Rover doesn't

w~to
do~­

thinq!

Have 4&lt;JU tried
offering him a
pu1JP4 bi10cuit?

Fahgate Is atunn'ed when a
teenage hitchhiker. whom he
thought he was rescuing !rom
harassment, goes to the police
and accuses him or attempted
rap e. (Part one or a two par1epl·

aode) (Repaot ; 80 mina.)
BLACK FRONTIER
!1V NEWS
10:28 (}) CBNUPDAT£.NEWS
10:30 (l)·
JOHN ANKERBERG
SHOW
(l] MOVIE ~ADVENTURE)"
(J)

"Mount•n Men" 1180
(jj) OUTER LIMITS

10:&amp;8 !ll C8NUPDATENEWS

" :oo m • CII m o CII ®lftle

NEWS
l1l THE LESSON
[f) NIGHT GALLERY
(JJ DAVEALLENATLARGE
1I :28 (l). CBN UPDAT£ NEWS
11:30 mltclJ THETONMlHTSHOW
Guests: Billy Martin, Peter

WINNIE

Z MUST NT lf/P
OF 71PI"''.'HE CAN
~ /W)11fiN(i; fOR
MY CAREER A'jl7
HE'S 8ECOllliNG

~1'06SE861VE!

Cook . !80 mlnaJ .. .
(l) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
({)
MOVIE
·(SCIENCE·FICTION) •••
"War Ollila World•" 1853
(J) BENIIY Hill. SHOW
0 (1) CBSLATEIIOVIE 'THE
JEFFERSONS: George , Tho
Philanthroplal' George's &amp;lid den generosity appeera to be
merely an attempt to blat ovt 1
competitor lor the black bualn·
euman'a award . (Repeat)

'HECRAMSEY:DeodHeof'Doc
Cooganperlormunautopayoo
a 25yearold ranch foremanwho
suddenly died and hi a findings
show the yOtJnQ man died of •

hoort allock. (Repeal)
(J) ABCCAPTIOIIID NEWS ·
(IGi IIOVIE ~ADV!NTUIII)
•• "' "Merec:ailto" 1018
!lite ABCN!WSNlGifTliNE
Anchored by Tad Keppel.
12:00 (J)Iftle CHARLIE'IANGI!LI
Sobrina, Jill, Kelty and Boaley

.....
BARNEY

I · ~ER

PULlCMR

I~~E

go undercover in a large holpi-

FIRST, THAR
NOW, ·
WAS'X.CARS·· THEY GOT
THEf-4'K'CARS·· • Z"CARS

tal to find out why nura11 art
being attacked and by whom.

(!!opoat: 70 mlna.)
.
12:20 rn STANDINGROOIIIONI.Y:
TOPIAIWIAIURLI!IOUIAn

ASLEEP

ell·ntw production of the

Broodway claolic 'TOll so....

o: tea luring Jock Coner, Ecle

Adamo and Herb Edalmlftln 1
.t&gt;urlaoqvoprodtctlooconoplalo
with baggy panle comedy ,
IIUCY atripltllllftd nKIIic bf

· Joltnoy Marcer. S,ecloil-1

~~~·•"til"
br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

41 Italian

I Use sandpaper river
7 Concerning 47 "The
11 Cowardly
Scarlet

12 Name for

a Dalmatian
U Modem
14 Rude
15 Lamb
11 Jeanne d' li .Printemps' ·

lollow-i!p
1t I love (It. )

2t Hellespont
swimmer
2! Patcll
Z4 Biblicll

land
25 Looi of

contempt
2'1 One of Ule's
neceealtlel
•Galle to

"
DOWN
I Sluieks
! Ship's
complement
~Get excited
Yeslerday'a Allnrer
(sl.)
10 Web-footed !8 Heighten
4 Callgula 's
manuna1 %9 Hunting dog·
greeting
17 No genUe- 31 Twaddle
5 Of
men they 33 Claw
punishment !I Lopez's
34 Eat away
I Adml8sion
theme song 35 Century
7 Snake
Z3 "- Purple" plant
I Name lor •
(1939 song) 41 Ir. rebel
buHtealer !t Rex or
group
t Rich deuert Oltver
43 Townsman

- (old)
URi~ put

Flonilce
33Pa!ntlng

tecmlque

• "The Windy
Qty"

t..-+-+-1-

17 Nleeriln
tlltlve
• Like (II.)

•auc~Jnuty

.French
writer
U Unoceupled !r.:--il-t-+14 IniGOd (repallble)
li Sl1ow
..._..._..._..._

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Hert'a how

appurancet by Steve Ala11 ,

It

Merty, Allen, Rote Warie and

to

work It: .

AXIDLIAAIR
LONGFILLOW

Ont letter aimPb' atandl lor tnotber. In thi1 samplt A It
ultd lor lilt !liNe L's. X lor tbe two O's, ~tc. Sln11e leltero,
IFIIU.,._, 1111 lenllll and formation of the wordl are Ill
!Iiiii. 111:11 d17 llle fOde letters are dllerent.

PIWM'I ·

.,

catPJGtUOTI8
NMUSA
DBO

CVM

NBFF

KUAVC,

uc

WBMFS'C
BSID

JCQLM
XQLMF

NBFF. - XUICBS XMCP
y_..,.,CVM
Ol¢sc&amp;ls~ A MAN IS ALWAYS 8TRONGEft

DBO

. . ..
'·

WHIIZ liE IBIIAIING ARBPlrl'ATION THAN HE IS Arl'Eft
ITISMADE. JOEBIWNGI

e1• 011....._1;: a

·

. Me.

�..

--· --··- --------,.--

•
;

.Meigs County happenings.

Village funds
. at $441,987

·President says comprom'ise out

·.•
.,
I

Stolen truck found
A 1977 Datsun truck taken from
the Smit)).Nelson Car Lot on May 20, ·
was recovered oo June 91• ·. in
Gainesville, F1a., the Meigs Coimty
Sheriff's Department reported;
Robert Hart, Dexter, repilrted
that sometime since Sunday
someone had throWil several pi~
of limestone. through a picture window and glass in a door at his
property located in Salem Township.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt suggests
that persons use the SR 7 Bypass
during sewer construction in upper
Pomeroy.

•
.
.The balanee Ill all Middleport
Village funds was of May 31 totaled
$441,987.74, according tQ the· report ·
of Middleport Village Clerk Jon
Buck. ,
.
Recetpts and disbursements from
each lund durmg the month and the
balance in each fund at the end of
May, respectively, follow: general
$23.,507.00, $12,411.96, $22,549.97;
street Ught, $4,617.~, $1,139.411,
$10,988.09; cemetery, $1,494,54,
·
·
$1,288, $574.42 deficit; fire equi~ Firm seeks judgment
men!, $1,394.61, $827.23, $1,213.91
A judgement in the amount of
deficit; swlnuning pool $1,548.65, $9,728.01, plus interest, has been
. $1,4116.45, $2,833.08; fire truck, filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
$3,396.87, $87.51, $25,645.12; planning Court by Peoples Banking and Trust
commission, no receipts, $5, $246.73; Co,, Belpre, against William L. and
street maintenance, ,1,018.60, Rebecca Hoover, Coolville, and
$6,309.33, $7,848.26 deficit; street George Collins as treasurer.
levy, $4,167.64, $118.51, $9,126.41;
Filing for divorce were Cynthia
federal revenue sharing, no receip· Ann Bing, a minor by her next
Is, $1,342.61, $3,889.88; HUD, $65,000, friend, Uncoln E. Smith, Mid·
,
$63,569.68, $3,464.04; general bond dleport, against James M. Bing, Rt.
&lt;
'
retirement, $1,292.77, $32.66, 1, Long Bottom; Mary Sue Nelson,
GRADUATE FRIDAY..., Twenty Holzer Medical Ceater Scbool 'or
$17,505.67; sanitary sewer, $6,236.61, Reedsville, against Robert L.
NursiDg studeal&amp; Wll111'8duate Friday eveaiDi durloc ceremoaiN at ·
$9,732.52, $8,670.11; sanitary sewer Nelson, Mansfield.
Grace
Uolted Me~l Cburcb.
. Members ol t 1981 clan are flnt
escrow, no receipts, $548,
row,
left
to
rtpt:
Teresa
Balmer,
lroalon; LIDdll Bamett, Por$157,665.19; water, $9,825.34,
l&amp;mouth;
Velvet
Swilher,
Middleport;
.Jeoalfer DayluiGff, Utlle
$7,452.30, $41,054.23; water meter
Hocldug; Karea Wrtp~ South Polal; Kim Slddmore, TbllnD8D and
trusts, $225, $412.36, $7,851.57; water To end marriage
tank, $5,l65, no disbursements,
Driver has injuries; car heavily damaged
$140,134.24.
RhondaBarnhartProffitt,aminor
Receipts for the month totaled by her mother and next friend,
A car was extensively damaged Moore, Pomeroy, struck a. utility
$129,340.88 while disbursements Bessie Marie Barnhart, Pomeroy, and its driver injured in an accident pole on Butternut Ave. Moore was
totaled$100,743.58.
filed for dissolution of marriage on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, at 3:20 taken to Veterans Memorial
against Mark E. Proffitt, Pomeroy.
p.m. Wednesday. Pomeroy Police Hospital by the Pomeroy ErnergenRROURCe COUpon
said the car driven by Herbert F. cySquadbutwunotadmitted.

WASH!l'iGTON (AP) - President
Reagan, reJectiDg DemoCratic complajnts that his tax-c~~t plan does too
UtUe for low-income Americans, is
slamming the door on further compromiae:"l've dug In my heels," he
says.
, 1be statement, relayed by a press
aide, apparenUy 8llllured ·an all-out
· batUe when a tax-i:Ut bill reaches the
full House later thl8 year.
"I can't retreat from the 25 per~t, aciu&amp;-the-board" cut In per•

\.

:·I.

'

Vol.lO,No,41
copyrighled 1981

:•

.

A

pick-up

lleblllallloa, Jackson. Secod ,. , - .Dully Mil.-,.Porto-"'; · ;: ·
Tema Cola, Wellllon; lArl Yo~mg, Tuppen 1'111111; Pllty Bane, ,
WeU.Ioa; ElleD Wa•p, Galllpolll; Manila Garrett, Sudyvllle, W.
Va., ud Rboadl Dudull, PortomoadL Tblnl nnr - Oler)1 MaNeD,
OU Hill; Jlllle Sallllllen, Bidwell; Patty Schroeder, MeArllnlr; MINI •
Hudl011, Pl Pleuut; Jaclde Yeaq, New Manbfleld, ... Sue- · · :
WU.Oa, St. Mary's, W.Va.
·
·

ti' ·

S mspec on
A voluntary motor \rehicle ~
spection will..be held on Route 124 at
Minei'IIVille from 8 a.m. to 1Z nooo
SaturdaybytheOhioStatePatrol.

P

Veterans Memorial
Admitted··Katbryn

Oliver;

__.roy. ; Barbara Smith, Mid;

.,.....

•

schedule'~~E~LB~E=·~F=EL=-=D
· ~s=-·.~I.N~P.~O~~~~;;;;;
WEEKEND·SPECIALS

Meigs Countians who are to pick
up July and August WIC program

couponsattheMeigsCountyDepart·
ment
of Health are to do so on the
following schedule based on the
initial of their last name: A through
C, Friday, June 19, 9a.m. to 11 a.m.;
D through H, Monday, June 22, 9
a.m. to 11 a.m. only; I thorugh M,
Tuesday, June 23, 9 a.m. to II a.m.
only; N through R, Wednesday, 9 to
11 a.m. and I to 3 p.m., June 24; S
through T, Thursday, June 25, 9 a.m.
to 11 a.m. only; W through V,
Friday, June 26, Friday, 9 to 11 a.m.
only.
Make-up day is July 9 from 9 to
a.m. only.

Emergency calls
Four runs were made by local
emergency units Wednesday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
reports. At 3:21 p.m., the Pomeroy
Unit went to Butternut Ave., where
Herbert Moore, Pomeroy, had been
injured in an auto accident. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 1:31 a.m., the Pomeroy
Unit took Kathryn Oliver, Mulberry
Ave., to Veterans Memorial. The
Racine Unit at 5:21 p.m. took Otis
Bailey, Racine, to Holzer Medical
Center, and the Tuppers Plains Unit
at S:03 p.m. took Willoughby Hill
from Route 2411 to Holzer Medical
Center.

SALE
Lln~l

SALE

BOYS' SHORTS

REG. $3.50
REG. $4.25
REG. $5.50
REG. $8.00

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

Special Agent Daniel 0. Toban,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil 0 . Toban
of Rt. 2, Pomeroy, has graduated
from the U.S. Air Force Special In·
vestigations Academy at the Pen·
tag on.
Toban will now serve at Hili Air
Force Base, Utah.

:1

Hospital news
HOLZER r.tEDICALCENTER
DISCHARGES JUNE 10
Nellie Allie, Lyndeburgh Arnold,
Sandra Baer, Giann Barker,
Dorothy Boggs, Eleapore Donnley,
Mrs. Anthony Evans and son,
Thomas Goheen, Kasena Grueser,
Carrie Hayes, Deborah Hill, Brian
Howery, Matthew Ireland, Brett
Jones, Joyce Jones, Avis Leedy,
James Leitch, Cberyl McCoy, Leslie
McDaniel, Unda Morris, Droxie
Mulllns, fa rol Polcyn, Tllffillly Pennington, Mrs, Tim Petrie and
daughter, Anna Schmidt, Brad Sex·
ton, Mrs. Robert Shamblin and son,
Ruthie Sbulaw, Gloria Snyder,
Kathy Spencer, Samuel Thompson,
Ralph White Sr., John Wllaon, eyn.
thia Will, Tamara Wood, Ruth
Wood, Joseph Wright.
Bmms
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Allen, son,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Greg Foster,
daughter, Wellston; Mr . .and Mn,
Greg Smith, son, Rodney.

Not insurance agent
DaYid Jenlllns, 24, S)'I'IIcuae,
charted with aexual impoeltion in
Jacboll County is not David E.
Jentinll, 32, Middleport; ct the
JenldnllnaurlnceA,ency.

~peclal~~ession set
~Jyrac.- vm.,e Council wlll
.... Ill llllflt' ..ton 'I'hunclay,
J111111, at 7:•p.m.

'Cool' summer weight terrys, poly/cotton
.. blends •nd knits.
.Sizes6 to2~ mos., 2to~, ~ lo6X, 7to 14.
REG. $3.50 .•. • .•... • .• S,!I;LE $2,79
REG. $4.25 ... ...... .. SALE $3.39
RE;G. SS.50......... ..
$(l9
REG. $8.00.. .. . .. • .. .
$6.39

SALE $2.79
SALE $3.39
SALE $4.39
SALE $6.39

Save 30% this weekend on our entire stock of
misses dresses.
Casual and dressy styles. plain and printed POlYesters or
REG. $16.00 .....................
REG. $23.00. , , ..... .. . .. .... , • , .
REg. $32.00 ............ , .. , .. . ..
Ri:'G. $44.00 .....................

SALE $11.19
SALE $1'6.09
SALE $22.39
SALE $30.79

Pullmans, overseas, carryons, totes, · cosmetic cases,
garment bags, shoulder bags and weekenders. Buy now
for your summer vacation!

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
Jerseys, tank tops, knits, placket fronts and
others. Great Father's Dav · Gifts~n sizes S·
M· L. XL·XXL.
REG. $5.95 ....· .. ................ SALE $4.76 '
REG. $9.95 .............. , .. , ... ; SALE $7.96
REG. $12.95 ................... ,, SALE $10,36
REG. $16.95 .. ; . ................. SALE $13.50

SALI

'YJPRICE .

FRASCATI, Italy - A 6-year-old boy with heart trouble' grew
steadily weaker today in a IO.inch-wide well as firemen desperately
drilled through more than six feet of solid rock blocijng a parallel
rescue shaft.
Alfredo Rampi, who stwnbled into the artesian well Wednesday
evening, spoke whole sentences to his would-be rescuers Thursday
night. But by early t~y ,liis only words were sqft cries of "Mamma ,
Mamma, Mamma," ecboing up through a walkie-talkie that had been
lowered to him.
The doctors said the boy was weakening, and ordered an Increased
now of oxygen through a tube that was passed down to him.

$ALl

JUNIOR SLACKS
Quality slacks by Wrangler, Lord Isaacs;
Harvest Time and March 1.
Polyester garbardine In an array Of colors!
.
.
Sizes 3 to'20.
REG. $12.00 . ".' ' ... ... ....... , SALE S9.59
. R·EG. $15.00 ... , .. ............. SALE $11.99
REG. $18.00 • .. :. , • ; .·..•••.••• SALE $14.39
REG. $25.00 ...... ; ..·: . ..... • . SALE $19.99

Parishoners want guidelines
HUDSON, Ohio- Some 100 parishonen of St. Mary Cathollc Church
showed up at a school board meeUng, qemandlng that guidelines be
established for sex education in the district's schools.
·At issue was a tape produced by the Public Television System that
had beeV shown to high school biology clallaes from 1977 unW
February. Some Interviews on the tape extolled the merita of birth
control.
•
The school withdrew use of the tape when It was deemed un. nec:euary for use In the reproduction unit of the biology classes.

SALI

MEN'S·DRESS SLAC,KS
Solid colors in poly/cotton blends. Also seer·
sucker. ..
·
Sizes 29 thru SO

.

(

REG. SIUS ....... , .............
REG. $17.95 ............ .. .......
REG$21.95 .....................
REG. $24 195 ................ ......

SALE SH.21 ?
SALE $13.41
SALE$16.41
SALE $11.71

.

••

Wants probe of labor practices

j

'
JACOBSBURG, Ohio - An Ohio coal company has asked the
National Labor Relations Board to 'investigate labor practices by
striking constructfon ~t!rntlio have forced the shutdown of one of
ita mines.
'Ibough United Mine Workers miners setUed their strike with the
BituminouaCoal OperatorsAaaocia\lononJune6, they have refused to
CI'08B picket lines aet up by UMW COf!SintcUon workm at North
American Coal CO. Mine No. 3.
, Thl! COIIItruetion worbn are under a separate contract from the
mlnei'B, whoM contract calla for a 37.5 percent pay ralae over the next
40 months, bringing ~r wages to about $lll a day by the end of the
·pact.
.

PIN4L TWO DAYS

Cross Your Hearf ·

SHEERS
Special group of sheers in sizes
36 inches to 90 inches. Celery
green.

·Six year old grows weaker

20% OFF,

SALE

SUAVAE• SALE

•

SAtE 2K • Amerif:I'J Flllite b. ..lhe C.
Your Heart StJia

20% OFF .

.

Winning Ohio lottery number

SATUIDAY

PLAYMATI

ICE CHESTS
- Extra large 15 qt. CIPICity, will hold 18
beverage cans.
-Tough and durable for veers of use.

SPIQAL

•1911

· CLEVELAND - ,The nwnben aelected Thursday night In the Ohio
Lottery's daily game "The Number" aJ¥! weekly "Pyramid" and
"Pick f".pmea are:
The Nwuber- m
l'yran)ld- M; 3$2; 1187 .
Pickf-2401
The IGUeey repurtetl eamlnca ol $ff8,118.110 from the wagering on
the dally ~ 881111 drawinl. LaUery olflclala aaid aalee prior to
the drawlnll t""led ...,,• .iiO,IIld holden of wlnninc ticketl are entitled to~~tareeu••·

WOMIN'IILACKS
Slz11 314 to 20 and 31 to 4. Doug in Marc, Levi
and Wrangler qu1lltv. Pull·ons or fashion 1.

cu11.

.

R.G. sa.• ............ / ....... SALI 16.39
· 'RIG. IU.II, ................... IALIM.:rt
•••• 117M .................. SALIIIUt
·.RI•• JMM .................. SALit19.19

•

enttne
1 Section, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 12,)981

One stipulation in the letter was
that cable entertainment will pur·
chase only those cable systems
whose franchises penni! their
assignment to the new company.
Since the village is one of the few
whose frknchise does presenUy need
approve] by council for assignment
and encwnberance, council voted its
approval.
The letter further stated that once
the sale is finalized all personnel
presenUy employed by the Cable TV
Division of Midwest will transfer to
Cablentertalnment.
The fact that the business is being
sold will not In any way affect the
service presently being offered according to the the letter.
Malcolm Guinther met with council concerning a culvert being placed
in froJ\t of his property. Council in·
formed Guinther that it was the
(Continued on page 12)

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper .

•

MAKING PLANS- Members of the Meigs County
Jaycees, which is sponsoring the 17th aooual Big Bend
Regatta, are maldog plans for the event which will be

short

OF LUGGAGE.

MISSES DRESS SALE

$103 tax cut; the $200,000.a-year per· said, most Americans at all income
son would get a $20;300 reduction.
levels would get enough of a tax cut
The plight of the under-$5,000 to offset those factors.
worker In that example is
"I wonder how in good conscience
exaggerated somewhat by the fact
that 3 million couples and iJt. you can ask this corrunittee to vote
dividuals at that income · level for ...a tax cut" that so favors the
wealthy, Pease said.
already pay no tax.
Chapoton admitted Reagan's plan
Such a measure is necessary,
would not wipe out effects of iJt.
Chapoton
said, to increase saving
flation and rising Social Security
and
investment
and put the economy
taxes in 1982 and 1983. But when the
onto
a
path
of
stable
~rowth .
program is fully effective in 1984, he

held In Pomeroy June ZS.28. Shown 1-r are, Paul
Gerard, general chairman, Bill Young, lrog jump
general chairman and Brian Conde, an officer of the
Jaycees.

Ohio energy department may get axe

SAVE.20% ON OUI.INTIRE STOCK

SLEEPWEAR SALE
JGc,wns, pajamas, robes, shorties, and sets. Po·
... . ly/ cotton blends, terry and plaisse.
Sizes NB to 24 mos .• 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.
REG. $5.00 ...................... SALE $3.99
REG. $7.00 .. ......... ........... · SALE $5.59
REG. $11.00 ............. .. , ..... SALE $8.79
REG. $15.00 .. . ... .. ............. SALE $11.99

•

LUGGAGE SALE

CHILDREN'S

sheer materials, sundresses and iacketed styles.

Toban graduates

GIRLS' SHORTS

Sizes 6 to 24 months, 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.
Terry, Poly/Cotton and Knit.

at y

By KATIE CROW
at 9 a.m. to survey the area.
Syracuse Councll Thursday night
Council approved the resolution to
approved a resoltuion to again apply re!Ue Ute grant application, but ~
for Bureau of Outdoor Recreation dicated it was not in favor of
grant funds to build a marina.
building the marina with a high wall
MeeUng with council concerning that would be in the vicinity of the
the grant application waa Robert parking lot beside Louka Field.
Wingett, village • grantS ad·
fn the end, it was agreed that
ministrator. Wingett explained the council has.four options: (1) ·abanappllcation Is for a 51).00 grant which don the proposed marina project en·
.. would cost the village • ap- til-ely. (2) build the marina with the
proximately $44,000 over a period of high waD. (3) purchase additional
two years, if approval is given.
land. (4) acquire the land through
Wingett told councU it has four op- legal channels. No action was taken
lions regarding property on which on any of the options.
the marina would'be built.
A letter was read'from Richard P.
Councll, it was pointed out, needs Newell, regional manager of Midadditional land: In order to build the • west Corp., Pointview Cable TV
marina without leaving a high waD which stated that the Midwest Corp.,
on both sides of the proposed proper· was in the process of having its cable
ty near the mouth of the proposed TV systems purchased · by Cablen·
facility.
tertainment of W. Va., with its
A representative of the corps of Opjlr&amp;ting arm located in Zanesville.
engineers will be at the site Monday The sale is to be finalized by June 30.

:

. d
. !Pome

Dl5charged-Emrilett~c.

Rep. Donald J. Pease, OOhio,
cited estimates by Treasury Depart·
men! and congressional experts in
an effort to prove that low-income
families ·will lose under the
president's plan. '
If Reagan's bill is enacted, Pease
said, Inflation and l)igher Social
Security taxes will force•an average
taxpayer earning between $5,00o and
$10,000 to pay $42 more In federal
taxes in 19112 than In 11181. Aperson at
the $20,000 level would end up with a

Syracuse village to
re-apply for grant

...

OSP Jan •

He told J olm E. Chapoton,
IL'ISistant treasury secretary for tax
policy, that the adminiatration's bill
is faulty because it does not Increase
the earned-Income credit, which
benefita woi'klng families with iJt.
comes less than '10,000, or the standard deducUon, which helps mainly
those making leaa than ~.ooo.
As a result, Rostenkowski said,
"people in those brackets will be
paying more tax" even if Reagan's
tax cut is approved.

•

e

~'

!. .,.&gt; .
~

sona1 tax &amp;tea, Rea~ told a group
of labor leaden Thlll'!lday at the
White House.
Democrats on the House Ways and
Means Conunittee, meanwhile, were
telling one of the president's chief
tax advisers that the aC1'088-theboard concept - meaning the same
rate cuts for rich and poor - is not
acceptable.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, o.m., the
committee chairman, led the
charge.

.

.

.

Weather
Vll'lallll daudk n• and Wll'lll -.tth 1 cllanl:e It ~ or IJiun.
dli I&amp;GIIIlllbriJuiiiBalurdiJ. IAnni toni8b' illlllld to 111111" 1111. Higha
8atuldaJ In mid to IIIII* •. a.nce ol rain tD Jlll'lllll toni~~&amp; and
llltlftiY. Wlndnautl u It baroanci,IDq;ll ........

..

• 1 ' I Ollie Ftrulll- IIIIDdiiJ III'OIIIb TtllliiiJ: a.nce of
n J I&amp;Giwlldullf.Hat•ll•ll6d a..,, t1w1 tur. . . . ...,, l1r IIIPIID ......Iolow.IUiy,lntllelll
II ' J ... lllld 'Ill Ill low. Tu IE NS', IAnni In tile Ill Sundt¥ and
.. ••='«•llllow•tu ••.

* ••••

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - !ltio's
of its goal. Other spending men! and its plans for a high speed
energy department and a batch of • areas were being explored for rail test track in northeastern Ohio
state agencies will be eliminated if possible cutbacks, Aronoff said.
would be junked, at a savings of $1.1
Senate Finance Conunlttee budget
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R· million.
amendments are pennitted to stand. Ashland, offered the long series of
Minority Democrats were voted
Majority Republicans voted Thur- amendments which eliminated the down repeatedly as they sought to
sdsy to axe the agencies as the panel energy department and delegated save the various programs. Alter
continued to whack away at a its statutory functions to the being told by Republicans no
proposed, one-year spending plan, economic and development depart· program could be retained unless
which reportedly is $220.9 million out ment. Research programs in the vital to the state, Sen. Charles L.
of balance.
energy agency, which he called un- Butts, l)..Cleveland, ahd others were
Chairman Stanley J. Aronoff, R· necessary, would be transferred to outraged when the GOP adopted an
Cincinnati, said he plans to reduce the Ohio Board of Regents under the amendment adding $1 million to the
the House-passed document by that amendment.
Ohio Arts Council budget.
amount even if the conunittee has to
van Meter estimated savings at$3
Butts said the GOP was playing
work into the weekend.
million, with about $750,000 more power politics at the expense of
The committee targeted welfare realized from the abolition of the Ohio's leaa fortunate citizens, a
and public education programs for children's commission, commission charge the Republicans denied.
reductions today. About $50 million on Spanish-speaking affairs, enVan Meter said reductions in the
was to be cut from welfare and $25 vironmental board of review, office operating and equipment subsidies
million from primary and secondary of lakelands administrator and which hit every agency in nearly all
education.
emergency board. The Ohio Rail • cases were arrived at the same way
Even if those cuts were approved, Tr~portation Authority would be - giving them the same funds they
the oanel still would be $32 million put into the transportation depart·

had this fiscal year with an additional 5 percent to meet buill·in
salarY increments.
Using that formula, the panel cut
$11.1 million from the economic and
community development department, $3.2 million from ad·
mlnistrative services, $389,277 from
agricuiture, $2.9 million from the
Environmental Protection Agency
and $5.3 million from natural resour·

ces.

,

Van Meter said $10 million would
be saved by an amendment
requiring the administrative ser·
vices department to dismiss 1,500
state government administrators
whose jobs are not essential. Other
amendments ordered a $1 million
slash in state printing and limited
each department to one public
relations employee, the latter action
saving $2.6 million, Van Meter said.

Coal firm officers
face .23 indictments
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- An counts of wire fraud.
Ohio coal company and ita president
U.S. District Judge John T.
and vice president have been con- 1 Copenhaver Jr. set sentencing £or
victed on 23 counts of a 52-count July 21. He also scheduled another
fraud indictment, court officials said trial for Sept. 28 to resolve 24
today.
remaining charges on which the Jury
Larry Hunt, 38, !i Worthington, Could not reach a verdict.
Ohio, and Paul Welsh, 4S, of Wester·
Midwest could be fined up to
ville, Ohio, were found guilty Thur· $36,000, while Hunt could be fined the
sdsy by a U.S. District Court Jury, Sll{lle amount and sentenced to 55
officialssaid.
·
years In prison. Welsh faces a
~tors idenUfied Hunt as muimwn sentence of 30 years In
president of Midwest ConBolidated prison and a '14,000 fine.
CQa1 Co. Inc. and Wel.lh aa vice
According to prosecutors, about 3S
president of the company. They investors were bilked in ·the tax
alleged that the pair defrauded in- shelter operation.
vestors in Ranger Mining A.uociates
fnc. of $1.86 million between August
!978 and June lt'78.
According to proeecutors, the
Ranger Mlnlng investors were
allowed under tax laws In effect In
1978 to defer taxes on nearly twothirds of their initial investments In
NIOOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - . Re!cue
Mldweat'a coal development worken reported finding 500 bodies
operation.
. in the ruins of a major earthquake In
.ActinB U.S. Attorney Wayne Rich southeastern Iran's Kerman provinJr. sUI Mldnlt onrsteuded it· ce, the official Iranian news agency
self, but pve lnwllon 110 lodi~tion Pan said today. The Red Crescent,
ol the company'• precariOul ftnan. Islamic equivalent of the Red Croes,
claiDOiillcnHellldlbecollapleof said the death toll ~bly would
the fulhelter dell opens the door climb to 5,000.
for the lnterDa1 ~ Bemce to
Prime Mini1te1 Mohammad Ali
coU.a up to f'l.l miUIGnin tuee that Raja! flew today to the region to ~
were , defer reel under the , apect the acene of the destrucUon,
llTIJICIIIIIIIl
.
Telvan s.tt~o reported.
CGIIrt nlflclala llld Hunt and MidPlnaaid reecuelll(lld were stU!
Wilt Oitddilted .... fouad IUiltY diC8iDI out dead and inJured from
I t - C!OIIIIIt CCIIIIplrrtcr, two COUI)o lbe ruins from 'l'!uwlay rnorn~Jlg's
II It ftl!n• lallnlate ll'mll for qullke. n Ilk! the tremGn flattened
tile purpGIIIt fraud and Ill eoanll 16 pen:enl ol the bulldlnp In Go!
It win fraud.
Blab. • city olfii,DIO people Mlr the
prwlnclal capital Kennan, 500
Wellb - tuund piJtJ ol a
COUDt It Jnlerltate lra'fl( ud fvur miles IOUtheMt vf Telvan.

Find 500 bodies
in 'quake ruins .

A WINNERS' SMILE - Jalllu Zllbl, MIA Nortll CelltraJ Ollie, aDd
Delft Gtlmberl, MIA FnBiiD CeuCy 111are l1lllles after receiviD&amp;
prellmlauy annll Ia die MIA Oldv ScbolarUip Pal-lia Mulfleld.
Mlu Zllba, a II year old Ollie Stale U..ftl'llty iltlltBI, .... ber way to I
taletd award. IIIII Gtmbert, 1 CoJamlw •taw, t~~plllred lop hlaon Ia
IWba llllt eampetlll&amp; Tbe - - ' nud II e....,.,utl.. wDJ be .....,..
wftll MJa Oldo Jla beiiiC CIGWildllatllrdaf. Tile '"-r wiiJ advaDce to
!tflaAIIIerlt~~lalleptelllber. IAPLuelpltuto).

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