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at y

·e nttne
·14 die as ·tornadoes maul nation

IN:JM AND I ARE! ~IVIN~
1t:' '1t&gt;WN LA~ ~CX UP
·· · eoMI! eTUF=F . ME:..
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J.Seclion, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middlepprt, Ohio, Monday, Junel5,1981
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dead.
.
InMlnJIIIIOia, tbreetwllteraraked
aCI'IIIIIIbeMIJ!nalpoiJI.St.Piul~

P"Pie

were

ruibed to a .dozen

hcilpttall, where 14 were adinitted.
One man who had been trying to
clear 1111 yard of debris died of a

nado that ravaged· the tiny com-

"II looked like a giant came

m~Y~~ty SatUrday, ca~ destruc- throqh, chewed ev~rythlng and spit
tion that Goy. James Rhodes llllid .it out," said Midge Docken of Min-

three weeks, including two Saturday
andthreemoreSunday.
Witnesses told law enfcircement
officers two couples were swept
away SundaY after they walked out
(Continued on page 12)

!Iunday, tOiillnl can about, Cl'1llhlnl ·
was prOportionately the . worst til neapoUs.
bulldlnp.nduprolltin&amp;tr.a.Slrenl hwtattack..
.
statehlatory.
F1oodlng has claimed at l~t 20
walled acrou the bin Cities " 84 .• 11ellntlell ralila. poUred f1'orn the
About 111 bames and 29 businesses Uvea In southeast Texas In the past
•·
, • ,. , lldel over Tau at the rate of up to were heavlly damaged bY the'storm,
. · 4t' inches an bout, causing whlcb left abo\lt 1!0 ~le homeless
widelpread flooding .that ldJ¥ five tiltheCQmmunityof2,000.
people. Two olherl were ml8slng . Killed were Donald \V. earson, a !land preiUIIled dead til the raging mootboold infant who died of stonnJIIIters of the swoUen . Pedernales related Injuries; Ia Bingman,
River.
described aa belil8 in his late 60s,
In Glenwood, DL, a suburb JIOUth who died of a heart atteck; Thelma
of .Ollcago, the body of ll·year-old Olsen, 62, .who died SUnday after
Dwight Perrota ~ found Sunday, being pullled frlm wreckage, and
11 hours after he was nept off his Maxine !laMer, 67, whol!e cause of
bike In a parksu1Jn1erged In parts by death was not Immediately
available. ·
uptosldeetilfwater.
·
A 33-year-old Olicago woman
National Guard troops were caned
dJ:owned In Belinont Harbor, m., · out to help keep order and prevent
when her boat capalzed Saturday, looting. ·
· and authorities reported hundreds of
In Rolevllle, Min'l·, a twister
minor Injuries aCI'OIJII llilnois and plowed through a shopping center In
northern Indiana as floodwaters the suburb just nOrth of St. Paul Sun.
caved In basements and sloshed Into day, shattering windows and hurling
homea.
twisteCI metal and building in"We've got a mobile boat hospital, sulaUon aCI'OIIII the parking lot.
and they're laking people out to Several C\]8t0mers in a department
waiting ambulances on dry ground," store and grocery were cut by flying
said Lansing poHce Sgt. l{eith glus.
.
Smith. "The Public Works Depart·
There were no reports of fatalities
· ment ia coordinating the effort- but l'fSUiting from Injuries, but officiaia
their offices are In the flood," he llllid a man who was standing In his
said. "Thol!e guys are answering the yard when a funnel appeared collapphones standing on the)r desb."
aed and died of a heart attack.
A twister claimed livestock In
A few mllea to the southwest, In
Iowa, and hall piled nearly 2 feel aouthem MlnneapoUs, officials said
deep on some parts of Nebraska. Six another tornado, part of the same
CARRY OUT 11IEIR TIIINGS - ae.ldenu of the CardiDgiGn Arms
FLOODED-Aaelevated aeellollof 1 Fllldlay, 0Wo, partway served
Inches of rain pounded Great Bend, storm system, Injured several apartment complu carry lbelr belongiJigs out of lbe demoUsbed balldlD&amp;
· al a puldlc let u flead waten lUI clty 1tree11 Suday after heavy rallll
Kan.
others as It downed ~ lines and Sunday as tbe ~ Ohio, area began cleanup taskJ from Saturba pt llle ,.......,... River over ftoed dqe. Allaato deller, wt.e lal
Residents
In
Cardington,
Ohio,
uprooted trees, sometimes llinglng day's tornado that left lbe bwiiDesa dlltrlct and much of lbe residential
- at !lie liMe t1 tile puhaJ Clvei'J*I, meved 1111 ears to tile lifer 1p0t
surveyed
the
holocaust
left
by
a
torthem
into automobiles.
area wrecked. (AP Laserpboto).
• JIGell nten .,,. -bed. Larwe ~eeU.. vi lbe Iowa were uder five
feet of. water. (APLuerplloto).
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6ft·lea11a..t#uee .media

State seeks federal aid for
tom~do .·ravaged Cardington
f.UMI14--.:..

· lANCASTER, Pa. - When the call first came, II aouildecl Uke a
routine rescue. Ayc~~q boy had tailen Into 10 abandoned aeptic tani
and needed help aettinll out.
Blll·no one IIMw tbl!t grua cllpplngl tcued into tbe unclerground
tank for yean were !Jiving off methane gas, maklnc the tank a death
chamber that would ld1l three rescue WC!Itera, Injure three olherl and
leave 1-ywr-olcl Benjamin Walker til critical condition.
It wu after one p8l'lllledle went underground Saturday and di.m't
come out that the confusion began.

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Pickets shut down some mines

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WASHINGTON - while negot1ait0111 continued early thll morning
In 1ft effort tO end 1 .trike 'by the United Mine Workers' COIIItructlon
divillGtl, lbere were leporla that pickets turned out In West VIrginia to
lbul down IIOIDe mine openti0111.
Repleudlallwl fw the UMW construction workers. and the
Alloclatlclft of. Bltamlnoul Contractors had reswned taiU at 10 a.m.
Slnlay, and were IIIII taWnc after mlclniCht, officlallllld.
AIIIID who 'IMwered the telepholie at a Carbon Fuel Co. mlile at
WIDltrede, w.ya., said miners who showed up for the shift turned
II'OUIId and went home wt. they wen met bY pickets.

CARDING'roN, Ohio .(AP) State dllll\"'tr official~ are hliiTYinll
10 comPiete a'llllvey of"Uii"destruction frum Saturday's twl.IWir that
· demollahed the downtown section of
thll old mill tol!ll.
Gov. James A. Rhodes and federal
olflclall toured the area Sunday as
more state and local resources and
. rescue WOlters poured into the community to help with the cleanup.
Rhodes ref1Jied to say exactly how
lllfll the state's survey will take, but
·II must be completed and llllmitted
to federal offlclala before President
Reagan can declare the. town
ellglble to recel•e federal dlaaater
8811stance.
'
Rhodes said he sent a telegram
Sunday to Reagan aaklng that he
makea dl•uter declaration as 1!0011

as (JOIIIible. · ·
Electricity, gas, telephone ahd
other aervicaa have been restored to
part of the town. But officials wool
speculate on how lOIII It will take for
full aervlce to be reslol'ed.
.
Four people are dead frOm the tor-

Michigan.IDOman is Miss Ohio
.
· WANSP'IILD, Oblo - A M,lchipn
ennlled at O!Xo State

.

Of~ injured, 11 were adlilitted
to MotTOw County HoSpital and sill
othen were taken to Mansfield
. General Hospital:
Rhodes said because of thl: town 's
The American Red Cross repotted small size, the storm proporthat 171 homes and 29 businesses · lionately was the worst that has hit
were heavily damaged by the storm. an Ohio community, Including the
About 50 pecple were left homeless 1974 tornado that devastated Xenia,
in the vtJiage about 50 miles north of leavil1g 32 people dead.
Columbus. Red Cross officials llllid
Cardington Mayor Cecil Maxwell
almost all of those people stayed saldcleanupwasconttnulngSunday.
with family and friends. Only three "We're sUII making the buildings
people needed overnight shelter at safe and getting the trees off
Cardington High School Sunday.
houses," he said.

Jallanlla Zllfla, II, of Otten Lake, Midi., had WCIIl the prellmlnary
talent anrd til the Mill Ohio Scbolarslllp Paceant on Thunday for

hcilpttallled after crublng hll aircraft (llimlllar to a motorized glider)

wan.u..
U.S•.uses double standard too

A Belle, West VIrginia man was
In the I'MII1110llen Ohio River Sunday· 1i11J1nin1 at
a m. at

I

Syracaae.

WASHINGtON ·The United States II fol1owlllc the .Soviet Unloo1s

IIIJIII1It In llliiW a "~ellandard" to dllllJicullb between buman
rill* W111UcN 111 friendly 8lld WlfrlendiJ CGIIlllrlel, fclrmer Arpn-

,

The four victims were Donald W.
Carson, a 9-montJl.old Infant; Leo
Bingman, described as being In his
late 60s; Maxine Danner, 61, aU of
whom died on Saturday; and
Thelma Olsen, 62, who .died early
Sunday at Mansfield General
Hospital after being pulled from
wreckage.

Ac.cident hospitalizes

tic~ ID &amp;epternbef.

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night.

Rhodes, who went to the stormstricken village Saturday night,
returned Sunday for a ·fUtther inspection of the damage.
U Reagan makes the disaster
declaration, it would reiml!urse the
village for moving debris and
cleaning up on a cost-sharing basis,
supply temporary housing, provide
unemployment compensation,
·provide Small Business Ad·
~ation loans and private loans
for liomes, and loan up to $5,000 to an
indivldusl who can't find adequate
assistance from state and local
agencies.

llllldlllbw eltaJNe to tOUipllein the Mill America Pl&amp;eant til Atlan-

Wlmall

UnlYWIIty aa a pre-med ltDdent wu ..meet Mill Oblo on Saturday,

I

nado and 53 are listed as Injured.
About ;!0 people are aUil mlaaing, far
fewer than the 100 listed Saturday

IIDepnNWw llld polltiCil prt_. JII.'Gbo 'nnlermiD An·
'1'1'111 1111111 " aulbarl&amp;ariln IOYel IDi..U wbic:ll are friendly and
lllaald be prttected, and IGtllltariln perm.._ that 'lbOald be
. . , IICIC"I 1'
11110 hope of wiJidal their~-.
doll DOt Ol'llfDite ID the recent lllllliltlc ad•enlanl of AmlrlciD cona tildlwa," 'l1mlrmln llld Sundly. "n ,.. !lie SoYiet Union that
par.:Lidjht Idea In the- of Argentina.'' '
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·-·then

aa;,.. .lAir pToduces savings
A

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IIIII .... • ,......, Nlllf dlllallll 111 VICe
~.,.

· Acconllng to the Melp . County
sheriff's ~rttnent, Ollla D.
Wallter, Jr., 81, wu flying a twin
qlne ulli'llllbt alrcrafl ID the
vlclnlty ot the SY!'JICIIIC! ballfleld
when he !oat ponr lR the rear

hearinl the news on her police scan- ted to have been in

ner, went out to look in the river near
tempting to reacb a comfleld above the Where ·the accident occurred.
NewHaven,butwastoolow.
She heard a cry for help and saw
The aircraft hit the water near the • Walker in the river. She called a
Walter RoUib residence fu Syracuae. neighbor, Buddy Cundiff who In
The· craft, accofdlng to Tonby tum,notlfledtheSyracuseSqusd.
Deem, 14, 8yract111e, sank In' about
The squad transported Walker to
two mlnutel.
Vetel'IIIII Memorial Hospital where
Mrs. Bill Halley, Syracuse, he waa admitted. Wallter was repor-

the water approldmately 25 minutes.
New Haven, Syracuse, and
Pomeroy Squads were slerted and
each unit put rescue boats in the
water. The West Virginia State
Police and Mason County Civil Air
Patrol were also swrunoned.. Investigation was made by the West
Virginia State Police.

Due to the IIIUilber of peGple at the

Extension given
Aa eaf I Jir fl ta.e llu blea
....... fer JII,..C"- •••

........fleol.'!lllb'

c.,truaa •

1

adtlday.

Emerpncy calls

on..., ••

t:• ••· 1lie ~
.a.p.t UllllmlrlliMrleJ TQIGr .
lll!W I 117 w; It U:lt IJIL, 1lie .
M1 I 7 at Ualllllk Wlbl 'lldN!l,
~ca.k-•lllllarl' !ral
c.llr;
111:8 .... MatllliR,
to

... ...
\.:~
.......

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AI PBIA AID-....
'n t1 Ill .. Oitlelhw. \
.,... . . . I 1 9 1 9 II; ii?II .. GIIII D. (' '· ~ .. !.
:-&gt; '
........ VL, ...., . . . 1111 - " -

of Tran-

pilot

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Dep~rtment

Whetstone Creek, which runs
through the town and once provided
water for a wool carding mill that
gave the village its name, is swollen
with rsinwater runoff and choked
with uprooted trees.
An apartment complex was
heavily damaged when the tornado
entered town from the west. The
storm then headed down Main
Street, destroying a grain elevator
and smashing buildings for a block
in either direction.
EUet Adkins, 36, said the tornado
caused about $4,500 damage in
tearing off part of his roof and
breaking windows.
"I saw it coining, but we didn't
have Ume ID make it to the
basement," he said. "\l'e made it to
the basement stairs, then the
basement windows started popping
out and then it was aU over."

.... ,......., rn. ....
att- .. Gaw• ()liM, ......

WAIIIDfGToN- 'I'bllllpn aclmlnlllriiiGadaiml that~nrOIJ
f II Ill. 'atlill- ........ a potenllll Clll MIN l8'llnp of up 10
IIIIJIIIUII i I IM -.J lftinp crt 'U llll1laa to tiJ blllien

..........

9:,.
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park and pool, Walker heade\1 the
aircraft toward the river. He was at·

g~der

State

sportation workers used backOOes
and a crane to clear streets and
knock down remnants of buildings
left standing by the twister.

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Monday, June 15,198l

Commentary
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Far-off flap ' on· voting .rights~....:___:_....,;.:...._...:.:____._.;____,_._ _
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WASHINGTON - For reuons not
altocetber clear, a modest ,uproar
!lel!lllll to be developjng 'about fur.
therextenstanofthe'VottngRighiB
Act of 19'15. The ~t actdoee not
exp1te un111 Alqj. e, 1882, nearly H
months 1nm now. Thil would seem
tobealetllalativestewthatcouldbe
kept an the back 11 the stove.
·
In any event, the local papers have
taken to premature hollering on the
subject; such leading black writers
as Carl Rowan and Dorothy GUllam ·
have weighed in; and Peter RodinO:
chainnan Of the House Judiciary
Committee, has introduced a bill to
extend various provisions of the law
by seven to 10 years. The tenor ol all
this activity is that despite su~
stantial gains in recent years, bll!ck
Amer!CIIIl8 atiU lieed to be protected
by federal law against the invidioUs
shenanigans of the white power

• structure

: ~ as a Southern white boy,
: I can't diaagree with that basic
: premise. I grew to poUtical maturity
: in an era of poll taxes, rigged
· literacy lesiB, phantom registrars
: and other tricks and gimmicks in-

tended to deny the bllcll cltlleil bil
right to . vote. In a Soutll that '
profel!es Ill love for Jaw, and
especially for CGI!IIItutiDIIal law,
~ were dlsgracelul pncUc:e!l;
and beca!lle 10me YPtlgla) remnantB of the old racllm femaln In

polltlcalpowerhenandthere,IOilll!
fonn of federallegialatiG!I ~ to
·me justifiable.
But reasonably minded men may
disagree on the fonn 81iclllegislatloo
.should take, and a good case can be
made for relieving !1Je affected
states and counties li the mOlt
onerous provisions r1. the preaent
act. It is a famlllar principle ol penal
institutions that prisoners should be
granted some time off for gOod
behavior. The 'Bill: Southern statea
that are the chid 'targets of the
Volinl Rlghta Act have now been
held II) d~ vUe siJice 1965.
Because of a clWll!)' triggering
mechanlsm, havinB no demonstrable relationship to racial
di8crlmination, the 18'15 extension
also swept up lingle counties in
Hawau,. Idaho and Wyoming, along

The Duily Sentinel

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Page-2- The Dally Sll!lltlntl ,
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June1S,lfl1

wit!tU lllwnlbiJf'mNew EDallnd.
are avalla~, the Juattee Depart- Southern pollua, We have ,seen
. 'l1le 19'11 ~GIII.IIjded qew •
~objected to onlY ~ .c hqes . bllck ~~~~~YOn e1eCtecl in such eitk!l
ti!JIII related not to l'lclaimlnorltlel; In MIP1nippl, !Gecqlu"' Soutll u Richmond, Allaata, BlnniJiibam
whoareprolectedbythe!5thAmen- Clrollna, IQ only one chiDge In andNewOrleanii.Biactvotenwbo
dment, Wt . ratllel: to. laJ!8ulge .V(rginla a!'IJ North Cerollna, and In on~ were lgnqred are . now
min()rities. wl)(llle clalma to apeclal none at all 'propoeed by Alaba;rll alai~ courted. At the 18at
treatment are not ao CCIR\'Inclnc. Aa and LoUisiana.
·
CQIII!t i year 11111. Mlnl!!!lppl - of
the ~w llandl now, the
put 18 ~have :wit-. allplaces-had!l7blacjlelectedofprovtmons apply to any
or · nesaed reYOiutiCIIlll')' cban&amp;•
·fldlla. !Ia 10111 aa men Mil lesl than
political subdlvlsloo If l) It had a
Uteracy test requlnment In !Sit, or
2) lese than 50 perceot oflts volinllige populatioo f&amp;Ued to ~r or
vote In the 1964 or 1968 pl'elldentlal
elections.
·
One of these "baaic provlaioos" Is
that every~ jurladictloo molt
submit every propOsed change· involvlng a "stanCiard, practice, or
procedure" for precleirance by the
. Department of Justice. Thll "
eterclse in overkill if there ever was
one. In the past five years, the
variOWI towns, cquntles and states
have had.to come hat in hand to aik
pennlsslon to make 28,242 pnlp08ed
changes. The department has 'objected to preclaely 411 of these, or
sornetblng less than I~ pe~t.
Those figures don't tell the whole
story. Because olthe new provisions
on language ffilnorities, · a .vll8t
amount of busywork has been
generated In areas of large Hispanic
population. Texas alone accounta for
half of the proposed changes su~
mitted for preclea!'IIOOl. In 19'19, the
18at year for which complete figures

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ames---:-J._K-:--UJN'_I,nc-'--·
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angelli, 110111e l'lcilt cbicaDei'y will
uiBt in pilbllc life,. but ~ o1
denial or abridcement of a ~ to
votearetodayaceedlniiJrare.
In brief, let 111 have a law- but ,
· not a Qllnd1ess s1en111111 1!1 tbe
preaenl law. We ousbt to pat old
grievancesbehlnd,andiiJ:IIala'!a~
preiel!t ones.

an

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publbll&lt;r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

1'1 ~~ i"llilnl Publl!lhto rfCuntr•JIII!r

GeJWral Mlblj!tr

DALE RontGEB, JR.
NrwMEditor

A MEMBER nf Tlw As!J!tr lated Prru, Inland Dilly Prn~ A!ii!IQCbiUtn alii dlt&gt;
Alllt&gt;rirlll Nt• fiU p.lllpt.'r PuMisht•rH ANMIK'hllinn .
l.t:n Jo:K."i Ill'" Of' INII IN a rt• Wt' k'ttmt'CI . Tllry llllitUid lw k'l111 IU11 3M wurds l1tllf{. All
it·II.Jon. .111'1 • s •hl•"~· i U1 •-dillnJI n d mu ~ l hto lli MIM"'I tlo'IUI umr. l dclrt"MK nd trlrpftltnt·
numh..r. N11 UrL'Iijl,llt'd ll'lkrN M'ill ht• publl!ilt.'CI. IA' IL·n Mhwld ht• in M••ld t. Jilt-, IHidm;NhtK
~ ~~ IIi' "· nut JM'niMNtlilJ••s.

.Teamsters' clout
·. is overrated
Behind the facade of tough talk and heavy-handed manipulation for
which the Internatiooal Brotherhood of Teamaten has become notorious,
the union Ia hiding a dirty little secret: liB bark Is much worse than ill bite.
Stuck with a seeming unshakeable reputation 85 the CO!!I!try's leadln!!
promoters of the brasl-knuckles school of labor relations, the Teamsters
have made the best of a bad situation by cultivating the image of a unioo that

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio'J
fiscal problems could be eased a bit
if· Congress and the Reagan administration come up with federal
grants that don't have to be matched
with state dollars.
Sen. Donald E. " Buz" Lukens, RMiddletown, aays the state has some·
money set aside to match federal
dollars that it could wind up getting ·
to keep.
Lukens headed a finance subcomit!ee last week which inserted
IntO the pending stale budget bill
some language under which the
Legislature will monitor
congressional actioos with regard to
thegranta.
·
Under the panel's proposal, all
state money that would match

federal categorical granta would be
taken out of the general revenue .
fund and placed in a Controlling
Board account.
Lukens said fiscal officers still
were pouring over hundreds of grant
appUcatlons and other data, .and
could
exactly determine how
much money there may be.
However, Richard G. Sheridan,
director of the legislative budget office, aald he has projected that there
may be about $61 million currently
in the budget for the matching rl.
federal funds.
One plan 'in Congress, backed by
the Reagan Administration, calls for
a current list of 83 categorical grant
p~ms - ~ With atrlngs attached for special purposes - to be

Chill remains

not.

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WASHINGTON (AP)- What Jim- ' Manatt are IYtill)toms li the chill
my Carter aald was that the between carter and the party he
Democratic presidential primaries never could qUite call hJa own.
can get whatever it wants by being rough and tough.
and the natiooal convention had
Manatt went to Carter to aik for
"We got where we are today," one Teamater leader has been quoted as become an "albalrolls" in his un- an esplanatioo of the "albatrou"
bragging, "by being the meanest SOBa on the block."
successful bid for re-election to the statement.
That image was reinforced at the union's recent intenu!tions.l con- White House.
Carter made the remark on March
ventioo here when the delegatee overwhebniungly elected aa their president
What he meant, according to the 18 during a private l!eP!on with
Roy Lee Williams, who ls facing trial on an ll~t criminal Indictment party chalnnan, 1188 that the
Princeton University studenla.
returned 18at month by a federal grand jury In Chicago.
process "impacted in an unAfter ·a student·quoted Carter 85
But a close ewnlnation of the union reveals an unimpessive record of favorable way on his abiUty to characterising the perty aa an
achieving its political goals because it has been unable or unwilling to com- broaden his base.''
albatrou, several members of the
pete effectively With more sophisticated organizatioos.
·
11le fonner president's remark Oemocratic NatiDIIal Committee
With almOIII two million rank-llnd-flle members, the International and the translation &lt;fiered by called the fonner prelident to aik
Brotherhood of Teamsters ls ~bly the country's largest labor union Democratic Olalrman Olarles T. for ansp~tloo.
- and It ought to enjoy concomitant infl-on the government.
Yet, the officers' report to the convention bluntly acknowledged that
"we have suffered recent legislative setbacks that remind us of the need to
increase our political awareness." It described 85 one of the union's two
major problems "a failing of our own which can no longer be tolerated if we
hope to survive - our lnertiB In the political arena."
If Prelldent .' Reagan dO!lln't
Undoubtedly the unioo'a greateit setback in recent years was its f&amp;Uure revitalize the eeGIICimy, dan't blame
to fulfill a do-oN!Ie conunltment to blocking the ,en~~cbnwt of federal me. I did whatl could.
legiBiation mandating deregulation of the trvcking indutry.
I did IDdeell "act immlldlately,"
Indeed, Wllliama' indicbnent II directly related to Justice Department aa Rep. Guy Vander Jqt qed me
&amp;Uegatlons thet he ind others conaplred to bribe Sen. Howard W.Cannon, 1). todo. .•
' .
Nev., by promillng lim the excllllive right to purcllue a valuable 5.1 acre . Vaader Jaat, the aeven-term conperce1 of land here In return for delaying Introduction of the truct1ng servative'frclm Jo(lcNpn wbo cbaln
deregulatioo letllalatioo.
the National Republican
Hundreds of other organlzatioos, including scores of labor unlona, long
Cmlmlttee, reOentl7
ago dllcovered that making generous campaign contrlbutl0111 to polltidanl · wrote to me - and to tllaulands It
can be a far more effective - and legal- method ttll!eCIII'in&amp; a ~c other Americana - to tall me about
reception in CGngress.
the " GOP VlctAJry Plan" and to 'Ilk
But the fint.ln-th&amp;.nation Teamsters union maintains a poliUCat ldloo me to help mm the plln . _
conunltlee that ranked only 22nd among all unioo PAC. in term10fflnm:lal
Vllilllllr jqt d!llc:rlbl!d . . plan u
activity durlnll the IVINO election C8lllpllgn.
.
''the .u.Je IIIGit tGWptbeiiwlvwand
With 15 «her unloos' PAC. colJeded and cantrlbut«&lt;-.000 or mon pewaM JII'CIII'IIII" af J111111an
apiece, the Teamsters' political organlzatioo received and dllburled an1y ~ attaD!Itl!d ... tbe ,_.
!lllghtly llllll't tban half of that amount.
.
.dllllofbll eonrmiWU8:r-1110Although the Tllllllllen bout of having the IIKIIIIOpllilllcated comTbe plan,
"CII'IIIIIJ bllnputeM!ueddala-piOt: inc andc:mununicatloouylllm It 11171111kin In the da direct cub eGIIrlbltl0111,
counll')', lbey have failed to follow the lead of lllllller YllmGn 111"11
lve ...._.1V~iip1Jelal
labor orpnllltiona, which have used llmilar equipment to 1nodei
thalr DIWI rsiMWIIII elwi Daaw-caata'
polltleal operation~.
bit 4 dlr- . . . . • to llilllr
Tire Teamlterl' frequellt)J overrated polltical"cl4ul" Ill Wniqtoa Ia tiadlhw•a ' - rill ell and
aimolt udlrll'fel7 I functioo of Ita JIII!Cbant for lllldorJini RapeNkian canIIIIo 0111
clidar. for elletlve office - !llpeClallJ pnlident ·- wN1e oilier lillklnl are ovtraU , eiiRJIIIp pfu
lor

consolidated In ·six block grant
programs.
Although that proposal would free
some state funds for other purposes,
Sheridan reminded the full Senate
Finance Conunittee, 85 it approved
Lukens' amendments, that Reagan
also has called for a 25 percent
reduction in the amQI!Ilt that would
be available for the block grants.
Under the provialoos of the Lukens
amendments, the seven-member
controlling board could redistribute
the aet aside funda, and not
peceasarily to the agencies who
would be in line for funds from a
block grant.
.However, the board would be
limited to recommendations of two
separate Senate and House com'

woes

mittees which, Iii addition to
monitoring congre!!!loilal actions,
also would set priorities for the state
money aaved.
Sen. Marlgene Valiquette,. 0.
Toledo, wanted to go ahead lJn.
mediately and spend the $61 millioo
alluded to by Sheridan, aaylng I~
could be mootha before. Congress acts and the amount lii!IIC!IIIIbeted.
However, Luker!l said the iiBU
will be decided one way or the othef
by the bepnring of the federal
govemment'sfalyearOct. l.
Others pointed out that Cangreaa
mightdecidenottoswitdltothe
bloCk arant ll)'8lem, and with the
state 11111111)' gone.J Ohio edl 1-.
millioos In federal matcblng funds
which ex~ the state's share in
mOlt progralns.

Carter and his· party

Manatt brought It up when he and
.Garter met in Atlanta about a week
after the Princeton Incident.
The Democratic chainnan has
enOugh problems without an open
squabble with carter and he
deacrlbed their conversation In his
customary lawyer'• manner :
"Some ol the proce•~• and aome ol
the ~ventlon requirements and
some of the different delepte seleclion requirements and rul!ll and
regulatioos he felt definltely tmpacled in a neptive way oo his
ability to broaden ltl!i baae."

·~ Strike' enters fourth day; negotiations set. Tue~day
lt,;, be • •'A a •• A.- v , "We're hopeful · major league player rather than just August.
Club owners began buying the
D!COtlatingllllllioa."
of gettlllg the ~ lid!ll together an amateur dratt chol~ aa com- strike inlurance 18at fall and winter
However, one- - Edward tomorrow. (But) tbe federal penaatioo fm: lallng a free agent.
The players In turn bad the right to u • panel li players and g~
BeiiDelt WliJiarl)l of tbe Ba!tirnort · illiiCIIator hu nOt been able to make
strike
In relpo!)le to ·the owoen' 11l81118ers looted lor a compromile
Orlolel- iald be nuld be In New · arranpllllllt With both lld!ll. We
plan
anytime
before JWIIl I of th1s in the freHigent compenaatioo
MDier, •wbo ~out af the ta1b York tmicbt and TuildaJ to, "aee are itiD prepared to meet, but II
year,
'l1ley
set
a strike deadline of dispute.
Federal medlaiAlr ltauJeth Moffett . lut J'rlday u uegUtlatan nnt wlat'a flolng 011" ill tbe barPfnlng ~bly wouldn't occur until
29, but I Jaat.mlnute !leal post' aald 11 qpearec1 that Tuesday Dl()l', . throuch one laal ~ lllllli011 talb.
aometlme in the afternoon and given May
poned
any act1011 while the Natiooal
.· niDI -.ned the beat time to get the before the 1110 playen · nat· oo "I wBnt ·to talk to (COnunilaloner · 'this late juncture, probably
Labor
Relatiooa Bo8rd asked a .--- -- - - - - - - - " ·'
..ftlllOtlatora back to the bargaining strike, redlrmed bil poaltloo SuD- Bowie) Kuhn and (American tamorruwnlght.''
tableto.-asettlementofthefree day.
,
.
League President 1M) MacPhail
Theplayers~laatFridayaf- judge to 01'\Ser the owners to rescind
. qem CCJI!Ipell8ltion Jasue that
Miller, brllt1lng at clalml by aome and find oat wlat'a happening," ter la!IW\tch negotlatiO!ll f&amp;Ued to their compenaation plan oo the
~thewalltoul
clubow•••tbatbewaaaroadblocll: WllliamlaaldSundv.
feaolve the taaue of ftee &amp;!lenlcorn- ground they had bargained In bad
faith. U.S. DiltriCt Judge Henry
' "I have a conflict Mooday al- to a aettlarwit, 111!1 be wanted tbe
Ria ref.allie to the "players" in· pe!liBtiOO.
temm, but r.nuld be available . ow1aa' IICIIatiatora to • ~t how cl.11ded · Bob Boone
the · Basically at lasue 1a the com- Werker last Wem-lay denied ~
Moaday nlcht " Moffett uld. He ad: ·. . !!liqly·'tlie pllyers lelt about the PIWadelphla PhOII• and Steve penutlan awarded a team that loaes request, and the players went on
·ded, bowever: be had not been able . e&lt;'lllpli'18tl011 Iurie. Miller Sunday . Rogers ~ the ·Montreel Espol, a ·pJanr who turns free agent. strike two days later.
WUllam Lubben, the NLRB'I
to cantact Ray Grebay, director of a!IO•,&lt;OIIdldtoltreqiUQIIIIOIII! te)llll! !llllfl the NatiDIIal League, Owners want a 81H:alled "quality"
general
counaellri Wuhlngton, wu
tbe club Qlmel'll' Player RalatiODB by ownerOeorge SteinbrWUJer of tbe and . DOug DICinclll . and. Matk player In return for sucb a loee, and
elpeCtild
to announce thiB week
Cm!n11ttee to aet up a .eutoo for New , York Y - - IIIII . vice .l!elanPr. of the Baltlmon Orlollll, there II aome diiCrepancy between
whether
Werter'a
declaioo wiU be
president Arthur "Red" Pattenon ~the American League. the owners and players over the
appealed.
Principals
In the strike
~.like Tuesday~... of the California Anlela tbat be at- 'l1ley will meet either toda)' or definltionofauchaplayer. .
declined
to
diacuB8
the
pDIIIJible efuldMoflett.
·teq~negatlatioiia. Botb'Stelnbrenner tomorrow with the owners'
This controverlaallssue has . ~n
feciB
of
an
appeal,
and
Lubbera
was
Grebe)' irter ~ 'the al- · and Patte!'8011 · made the' ob- barplnlng unit, headed by Ray in a logjam for more than a year
W!Bv&amp;Uable forconmientSunday.
temooo ~th famll)' members at a JerVatlonl in televllian lntervlen Grebe)', head of tbe Players now.
Meanwhile, the business end li
movie was back ho!De ·SundaY 'Saturday.
·
Ralati0111 Committee, in an attempt
The owners and players began
baaeballlillsed
economic head.
event.;&amp; awaiting a call from Mof- But ,Miller· tUrned thole ob- tol'!liOlvethefirltmldBeaaonstrlke tocitdngforacompromlaelnthefree- The owners arei~bolstered
by strike
fett. "We're av&amp;Uable anytime
servatlons around, himself lnmajorleaguebaleballblltory. .
agent compenaation dispute when Insurance totaling $50 millioo and a
wanllltocallua,"heuld.
chutil!ng the owners for their a~
AsoflateSundaynlght.nodefinite they set up a panel in May 1!81, mutual-aid package totaling an
Don Fehr, COW!Iei to the players ~from the talks.
time waa •
to resume. the wben the two lides agreed to all eatim8ted $11 million, but this only
. Do · ou own or operate li ·
UIIJCiatloo · said bil group was . . "Mr. Stelnlienner, I have great negotlaUoos. Donald Fehr, chief other illlles in a new Basic begins paying dividends after 152
lsmall or medium-size
av&amp;Uable~l'!liWlletalkatonigllt.
iiii!peo:~ for bil abiUty," uld Miller. counael to the Players Aaaociation, Agreement. When no compromise
games
are
misaed. Then, each
htall
store. office, apartWhenever the talka resume, Mar- "I feel he lhould be there. Here are aaid he wu waiting to. hear from was reached, the agreement gave
owner will receive $100,000 for each
:ment .:~r church?
v1n Miller executive director of the these people who have never at- Moffett.
the owners the right to unilater&amp;Uy
l Then - you may qualify
union,againw!Unottakepart
tended a single negotiating sessioo · "It's fair to aay we're working on lnlplement their plan providing a unplayed game. At that rate, the insurance could last until early
for State Auto Mutual's
. .
1"---"--.w~--'- of ...._
· :· llfAIIoelitedl'rllll
.
~~-·- CJII. m ......... ....
N• . only wu 1bete no major absence by Cllll- Ollila' and ooe
1e1aue ~II over the weekend, ~dub~d•UIIlllt~:
. there_.. bo talb ajmed at ending .' 'Tire impllltliice ~ . IllY, being
.tha ··~caused by a players' · tbere~f11'81117euunfed.

..b..

__.
- ....

ooe- bu ever, attended
.I

_.,...,..,

.

I,;.----------.,

o'

·Floyd captures Westchester Classic

Ohio's ~ money

Feds could ease

T'l!e Daily Sentinei- Page--3

Ken

~~

111 cuun S&amp;tetl
Pomrruy, Olrio
I!Hit-1111
llf: VIrTED TO.THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Porn t roy-Middleport, Ohio

The chainnan said Carter did neil
use the wlird "albatroee" in their
disculllon.
TOOl Donllon, a carter aide who
waa at the ~
laid .
the "aiiN!trou remark waa part·of !I
long Cuter commentary on the
. political proceu and party reform
after he wa1 aaked about
suggeet10111 that prilidenta be elec-,
ted for a a1ng1e
term.''
The aide quoted Cuter aa aay1ng
the convention and prfmari!ll "can
be an albatroee around a Cllldidl!te'a'
neck.''
:

'
. And well he should be.
Manufacturers Hanover WestHla __, __.._,_
rl a!'..__ of
chester Claaaic, the laat warmup for
..,....,.,_.. now v u......
the 81sl U.S. Open, to be played this anyoneoothetour.
.
week at the Merion Golf Club In ArdHe jojned TOOl Watsoo and Bruce
.,..._.,_ 88 the
three-time Winmore Pa
._.._.
~....
And noyd Is among the prime nersllectedthiB -~·hisThe $72,!100 he
favorites for the American natiooal co
...-season s ear- .
champlonahip.
nlngll to • career-record $323,094,
"I'mnotpredictlngi'U'wlnit,"he aecoudonlytoWallon.
said alter bil closing round of 89 had
111a level of CG!IIistency is un.;::In~
produced a 275 total, nine shots un- · surpaaaedingolfthiByear.
der par on the Westchester Country ·
He baa ftnllhed lower than 12th
PJayersChamplonshiplnFlorlda.
leaaed ~•vonceslnceJanuary. Henowhas
..... veteran Fl""'d ----' his third Club courae, "Wt I'm very p
-~
....
., """'""'
to be la"'ftd well I'm .,...., ""' been lOth .or better In II of 16 atariB
trlwq,lloftheaeuonSundaywltha
P ,u.,. . ·
·-• -~ thlsyear.
~ -~"' _,_ in the ...... 000 tlmistlcabouttheOpen."
......,.... ·._.
..,..,
Floyd, 31, playing the best golf of
his life In bil.ltth year on the PGA
Tour, fullyupectsittocontlnue.
"I've played 'well all year," he
said. "My 88Jlle 1a very sound
mecl!anic&amp;Uy.It's where 1 want it to
be. U It gets a little off, I can feel It
and !mow immediately what to do to
correct it.
.
"I've always felt sports are played
in streab. U you're playing well,
yua lave confldellce, and you co~r
tlnue to play well."
Actually, he uld, his 1aat round
"' Sunday "waa probably the worst

.
.
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) _ Ray
Floyd let the hint of a smile play
acroa bll fa~ as he consldered the
U.S. ()pen.
"Well,"Floydsaidlnhiatyplcally
low-key leabl011, "I've won two tournameirta back to back already. I'm .
!IBI hoping this may be my year for
jback-to-backa.''

_,u

=ti;:u=;

round I've played In a month or two.
It's the kind 11 round that can get
leased that 1
away from you. I'm P ti
k
was able to keep my pa ence, eep
my composure. I'm very· lucky no .
'!bit"
~=wa~=y ciampett, Gibby
Gilbert and Craig Stadler tied for
---~ 1 """ Clam tt Iosee! up
"""vuu a ....
pe c
with a 68. GUbert, who now has been
runnerup threethe·-~in: ev~~
including
""'' o, s a ·
Stadler, a .winner two weeks ago,
had a 12•
It was two shots back to George
Burns, who came out of the pack
with a 6-under-par 65, the best round
oltheday, andwasaloneat279.
Tom Kite, In the Utle hunt until he
bogeyed three holes in a row sblrting
the back nine, tied for sixth at280 af·
terGaU7be4.rt •--" h. i. m s eIf out of it With

"""'

bogeys on thevlntwo paFr-3dhoandtea ondlthe
818 er
back nine, 1ea g 1oy
to fight for it. Floyd clinched It with
a critical, par-saving 6-foot putt .on
the l~th, then went two ahead mth
one hole to play with a 6-foot birdie
on the 17th.

•

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•

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Iii-,_..

Another pi~ for ·the GOP.....____;..;...._
Jul_isn_Borad_.·

Cqreuicilfl

lie..,.,

1.._

... "

.......... o.nocrata.

Wba11 liiGie GOP CllldldatM - llldr u Prelldent Reapn and' fclrmer
PllllkW UIIIOn - wiD, the Tlllillllln •joy to the Willie Houle
denied tolllllllolber unlona,
•
811 tha atlliiiO wi*b J11G1e ~IT IIIII . . . . . . Uji4W baa batGIW
ill nceat ...a.n ...
J1lllcl Dlpirta- rar
"'" J't, tllltpGducldtiiiiNih'h . . . WQ!Itta
111 ,

(IIWIII1•1a..

···n··

Md&amp;&amp;•tbelllllllll,.,•w nJn,....,

tbe c&gt; I 1 s ¢11• If a :~lo•, 8en. I
tbelfti! l'tiiiDedau .. npartdll
afWJI

I ,·~

.. ~ .....
V. Rllll.ll'. efD.aat,
a ............

Today in his~. • ..

a.,_ ......,.left

Today II MGIIdaf, Jall, tbe lab diJOr
llllblyear.
•
Toda)"alqbllptlabld rr:
.
Onj.- 11, WI, tbe ...... Carta .,.IIJIIIdllrllllllellll.......,
cnUc,..a NC

ll)'inlthlk¥•,_._,..,..

WeN,......

a;:~o•011.
'd ··"
II tbe nelpe, Viadlr

·

Jilt

I

.S

1111,

llllt lilt year

J
w•acauaa aAW' WJNNJR -

'

• • • ter 011 Clulle
.._..,....,., rflld, watdiPiiiiiMtQJ • • tile dirt at tile 1M
. . IIIIW$. 'Jlttbef.. die .. 0 I) OIIIIIRI ikl.. N.Y.
,.,. ... tile I WJ c I lll . . ..llder pP' II eelleet ..,.,.._ (AP

. . ...,.

Gullden has 32nd knockout'

_.In hOt

It'S a"cool pump"

�Monday, June 15,1911
Page-4-The Daily $entinel

PO!Iltroy-Midclleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-:-:Page-5

Pomeroy-'MIIIIIitjiOI't, Ollie

Caponi' wins despite~ pajn
~. Ohio (AP) - The best
~ pollilile, 8 fourth major
·~and 8 t:IUOO payday,
~the pain of Donna Caponi's old

llarlnc rib Injury.

.

".1 IIWWl(! Iii the rough at 17 and
hurt my rib cage. II was killing me

com1nc down 11. Fortunately, I
didn't Qlve any more holes after
that," said the 36-year old veteran,
wjlo first suffered the Injill')' In 1975.
' Caponi made 8Ul'e then would be
no more holes II) ~tic fashion. .
She sank a !~foot birdie putt on the
last gteen Sunday for her second
Ladies Professional Golf
Alsolcalion Cbamplonship.
The putt gave her a 1-ehot victory
and broke up a tense finish with her
· playing partners, Jerilyn Britz and
Pat Meyers. It gave Capooia1-werpar 73 for a n.hole total of 2110, HIunder for the Jack Nicklaus Sports
Center's Grizzly course.
Britz missed her birdie attempt
from 12-feet, muffing a playoff opportunity with Caponi. Instead, she
ma~hed par of 72 and Meyers' total
of281.
Meyers had eliminated herself
from contention when she missed
the green with her approach shot on
the 47~yard par 5 closing hole. She

scrambled for a Pll', ~ a f. combined~*" areen.
.
footputt.
.
tortes in their 1he-.
.
"I bit 1111 t lrlll IIIia. It bit 411 the
.Caponi played the 11tb iii II It..- · green but llu:ced rllbt."
Britz, the 1'IUIIIel'll(l to Caponi in
crl
thia major two Yelll qo, and cllnlc. She pulled her taa llllt her eolllliiJIIIaeell. .·
Meyers eacl1 eamed checb of s1ighlly Into the i'ouiiL plc!Jed - . Capaaillild ........ idiiJ pall '
112,800. . .
Into the freeway with an IUGn .ad to clllldl the ....,...Oiilblp.
Debbie Massey cloeed with a70 for Jmocked a pitdllng wedp onto the
"ll ~- ll wU
. llralgh$-ln. When It fourth place at 213. JoAnn Camer, green in regulaUcn.
two feet .
Brill chole to use a ginty, a · frtm the~·· i kl!ew it wuln," llbe .
Nancy Lopez-Melton and Beth
'
Daniel shared fifth at 214. ea.-ner . speciall)' built I~ wood, to go for said. .
and Lopez-Mellon Shot 70s and the green in two. She caught a tree,·
Tbe CaUfGrnla Vltlnn ...
skipped her ball aCroaa a lake bltll won P•.m. ~.1 CJD the ltlli!IOIIe)'
o.niel71.
Defending champion Sally Uttle, . rough In froot of the green. She thin !Ut.OO ..,_7, tbird on the all lime
.
whose 68 WBB the best final rowid In chipped to within 12feet.
lilt. Sbe . . ""'
Opena and. ""'
.
"I mlall-hit my glnty," sai4 Brltl. lJ'GA championllllpe.
the muggy 95-degree heat, was alone
"But
I
bad
lnlellded
to
go
for
the
"No,
It
neYer
lieU
old
bat,"
lhe
at 2115. Sandra Poat missed her chansaid of her lalelt major. "rm •11111
ce at a $100,00 bonus for winning a green If I bad the opportunity."
: Meyers us,ed a final-hole com- I want to wjn 10111e more. Tile ·
seond straight li~e. She finished
with 73 - 290- and settled for$1,773 bination of 3 Iron, 7 Iron and 9 Ina, majors Ia where It's al I thlllk I'm
but hit her approach shot right ollbe into them."
instead.
Caponi, Britz and Meyer came to
the 18th tee lied for the lea:d at 7- ·
Wider, setting up the most dramatic
finish in the major.
" It was like a playoff, like rna~
play, the last lew holes," said
Caponi. " It was an ·wtbellevable
feeling."
Perhaps her bl!ckgrowtd gave
Caponi the edge over her opponents.
She won 21 tournament&amp; and more
than ~.ooo Iii 17 professional
seasons. Britz and Meyers own a

•111111

u.s.

Strike causes
concern about
all star game

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grtuu1ey
AP Corm!IOIIde!ll

DETROIT (AP) - They are two
mighty heavyweights on a collision
course, and the resultant wreckage
could be devastating.
It's been a long time - certainly
not since the slambang three-match
series of Muhammad Ali and
Smokln' Joe Frazier - that boxing
could contemplate such an interesting ma~hup as that between
Larry Holmes and Gerry Cooney.
Too bad it has to get ugly. It
already is ugly and uglier it'll get as
the racial issue festers and grows
wtlil the two meet in bloody combat.
Holmes, nonnally a nice guy, has
seen nt to bring the sensitive social
problem to the fore while the coun·
try. as a whole is seeking to cool it.
Nobody knows why · Holmes
dislikes Cooney so much. Yet the undefeeted WBC champion never
INk• reference to his logical next
chlllenCer without bringing up the
color of Cooney's skin.
·. "I just don't like the guy," Holmes
has said repeatedly. "I feel that
people are pushing him just because
lie is white."
The anim061ty between the two and every Indication is that it is
gfliNlne although everybody knows
fight people often fabricate such
rivalries to hypo a gate - resurfaced last Friday night when
HolmN battered Leon Spinks in less
than three rowxls In Detroit's Joe
Louis Arena.
The tone of it was wtsettling.
In his postfight exuberance,
HolmN went to great lengths to cast
aspenlons on the good-looking New
Yorker, his next logical challenger,
while emphasizing racial dif·

ferences.

date, If it could be worke4 out."
Would the strike still affect the All- .
causing some concern that Star game If itendll prior to July 14?
DREAM Pti'IT- ~ Capool drop1 her jaw as sbe watcbes ber 15 ·
Cleveland may not host the contest it. · "That IIi something we must ad- loot birdie sbot drGp to give her the will in tile LPG~ cbamploaablp played
wanted most, the All-star game.
dress ourselves to, but we baven't
In Mlloa, Oblo Sauday. Tbe putt gave her a ooe abel lead over Jerll)'ll
For nearly a year, civic leadera made a deteimlnallon yet," Murray Britz aDd Pat Meyen who were In a three way Ue going Into the 11111. (AP
have been boosting the event; El)- · said. "We just bave to aeewhen the
Luerphoto).
thusiasm was evidenced by brlak strike Is over."
ticket sales, with a sellout 888Ul'ed.
The All-Star clash next year Is in
The game, if played, certainly WGUid Montreal and the followinl year it's
be the largest crowd ever at an All- in Chlcaso. The nUt year, a
Star game, when about 78,000 a.ta National leagUe team would play ·
are filled.
·
host. So If Cleve;and'a game falla
But the strike Friday has caused through, then the next year the city
an abrupt halt to major league can have another chance would be
baseball. The All..Star game, 1985.
Ued to victories in dramatic back·toBy Asseelated Press
however, is notwttJIJuly 14.
"There WGUld have to be a league
Andy McGaffigan hurled five back one-hitters.
Bill Murray, a representative of vote at that time," said Gabe Paul, strong inninga as the Coliunbus Clip- I:~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:
Commissioner Bowie Kulm's office, Indians' president.
pers won the nlghU;ap against
said what will happen now to the Ill' . "I never thought It would · hap- Tidewater, 9-3, after lOlling the first
n118l siDTIJYier baseball classic Is lilt' . pen," Paul said of 'the Strike. '"What · game, B-4, to remain Iii first place in
certain.
. l'tn slil'prlred at Ia lhet fNftty time the International League.
Murray was in Cleveland recen~ the owners make a propoeal, the
"I neYer thought he'd go five,"
to check on game preparations.
players say it's ridiculoua."
said Clippers Manager Frank Verdi
"Everyone here is geared up 10
The players are strikinc to stop on Sunday. "After the fourth, he 1!8id
much, I'd hate to see it sUp away," owners from forcing to114*111U011 he wanted to go bl!ck out so we threw
Murray said. "I'm quite llll'e we'd for a player who takes advantace of caution to the wind.''
do the best we coul~ to hold a 1111111e free qent statua b)' s1gn1nc witll
It na the first ganle (or McGafthis year.
another tam.
figan, 1-0, Iince .straining his elbow
"We may even look to a different
In an early Marcil spring training
game. He threw.only 56 pitches and
·dldn'tisaueda walk.
The original heavyweigh
"I wanted to throw strikes and I
Leiv jeans.
un-washed
did," McGaffigan said. "I had a
•:
good breaking ball...
.
CINCINNATI (AP) - After necollattnc wttll roar National
• FlARES
Home rwts by Brad Gulden, Marnearly two ~e~P~S, pro hockey will Hockey iAqal taJIII fir I WOI'kin8 shaD Brandt and Steve Balboni
return to CinCinnati thia fall when agreement. lleia said the team helped the Cllppera power their way
• STRAIGHT LEG
the Clnclnnali Flreblrds open their already hll IOid abiut 300 to the victory.
tickets.
Eastern Hockey League ICIIedule at
In the first game, played before a
Tbe ciiJ'• laat pro hockey team, national television audience, .
the Cincinnati Gardena.
A Cincinnati group headed by the Clnc:innllli Slln&amp;ers of the Cen- Tidewater reached Clipper pitcher
businessman Dave Gusky na awa!'- tral Hockey Lelpe, folded early in John Pacella for up seven hila and
ded an EHL franchise Sunday at the the 11'/NG --Iller lreinc lileil). six I'UIII in 4 1~ inninga. Brian Giles
bers of the dllfullct World Hockey homered and Ron MacDonald had
league meeting in Buffalo, N.Y.
A ijdesman for the franchlle, AIIIOdatioll for .wera1 years. The four hits to lead the Tides to the vicDoug Klein, said the team will play a city liao bas been hcime to fran.
tory.
chlses in the AmeriCIO and ln~game home IIChedule at CiD'
Toledo M, Prnrtuctet z..t
temal,ional hockey leaguerr.
clnnati Gardena.
Tile Toledo Mud Hena and the
Other leaml! In the league are
Pawtucket Red Sox split a
located at Johnstown, Pa., Rlcbdoubleheader as the two teams batmond and Salem, Va., .ad Utica,
N.Y. Klein said there may ba 11
·r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~
many as five more francblses added River Downs ~suits
to the league before the 11e1101t lllarCINCINNATI (AP) - Julio
ts.
.
Elpinola &amp;uided DIV«H Dude to
He also said the rirelilrdll are vietory Sunday in tba lleOIId
. divlliCJD crl the tli,Dedded Spartacua Handlrap at River Dowu.
. Tbe bone, eovertnc.- mile 011
the turf In 1:11 N, beld oft Leader
.
.
Jet to win by I neclt and retum ...JI,
suo ir1d lUG. Leader Jet paid t%.11
. IIIII P,IO for plaee, and Danlllable
jllid
for lhow.. .
.
T!Je·U dallr dluble ~
'
ol er. Delile In the first race and ·
. .
..
El '*-de In the eecond returned
CLEVELAND (AP) - The strike

of major league baseball players Is

He made snide references to Long
Island's handsome and popular
"White Hope." When he stuck in the
verbal knife, he twisted the blade.
" U he was black, he wouldn't be
anybody," Holmes said of Cooney.
Then he added: "He's a defonned
kid with only a left ann." .
As if that wasn't enough, Holmes
continued his not-so-subtle knife
work.
"A few years ago I taught at a
camp for retarded kids, and I think
he was one of them.''
Cooney has not struck back with
equal venom although he has chided
both Holmes and Hobnes' Svengall,
promoter Don King, for continuing
to insinuate that Cooney is purposely
ducking the WBC champion.
Cooney was at ringside for the
Holmes-Spinka fight and took the
Uberty to IIQueeze up to the apron to
take movies of the action. The crowd
gave him a thunderoUs ovation when
he was introduced from the ring.
At 24, Cooney II five years younger
than Holmes, at M three Inches
taller 'and at 225 !lOme 12 pounds
heavier. He is a ring assasin.
Holmes , also unbeaten
professionally with 38 victories and
28 knockouts, no longer has to prove
hia worth. He is a tough, poised and
dominating fighter who has outclassed all his )ieers.
Mter crushing Spinks, Holmes
was asked If he 1!811' anybody on the
horizon who might give him some
competition.
"None of them," Hobnes snapped.
"Nobody in the world can beat me."
'Cooney has got to be shown.

Split.helps Clippers
retain first place

Levrs

Cincinnati gets hockey team

$}750
NEW YORK

Cl.OlHING HOUSE

II

ts-•

f$7.

.

.

Acrvwdofl,. wqencl.-o1,W7.

The · Daily

Stntincl

·A - t·~-)
fMI
lo, ile.

ANNOUNCING

BAUM LUMBER IS
BACK IN BUSINESS. WE
ONCE AGAIN
HAVE A
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COMPLETE LINE OF ARAB
PEST CONTROL
PRODUCTS..

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Warning: The Surgeon G\neral Has Determined
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·~w..~···~--~--------~~----------------------J
.

�Sentinel

Students
:Resisting temptation key to diet.success f!~;t!t~Jor

.,Your .Daily Diet

.

ln your life that you !lldn't !hinil'yciu
,.....
coald doat f
Make a lilt of u- ~lvementa ;
to help you reaJlze that you cna.blft.
eDt dlftlcult taaka and come out a

By Loll L. Lllldauer

.

~Eielttb of

u....

u parll)

· U you are like the rest of us, there
is probably some food or drink that
•could tempt you off your diet. Think
about how this temptation might enter your life and what you will do If it
'does.
Here are some suggestions for
what .to do when temptation rears Its
ugly head. Add your own.
- Walk around saying "no"
loudly.
- Drink a tall glass of ice water
slowly.
- Take 10 breaths. Tell yourself
over and over that you will resist.
· - Talk to yourself. Tell yourself
that you can withstand the temptation, that you've done difficult
things before.
- Call a friend for moral support.
·Or speak with your spouse. Talk until you are again feeling that you are

·YOU ARE CORDUUY INVITED TO ATIEND

GOSPEL MEETING
JUNE 15 thru 21

!_.!:_:~:_~_:_1:~:;2__~~:2~--.J
But think of all the money you have
been saviilg by eatlng smaller quantitles of food. You deserve a special
treal
U theae goodies don't apPeal to
But low-fat plain yogurt, at 120 you, substitute one ol the past days
calories in each convenient cup, is for today. caution: Switch the whole
anapproprlateadditiontoyourdiet. day, don't make substitutions. SubToday allow yourself two cups of stltutions 41'1 a leading CBII!I ol diet
yogurt, a seve!Hlunce can of crab . failure.
.
meal or shrimp, one slice of whole!
Your('lwqta&amp;WaJI
··
grain bread and one banans.
Dieting IS difficult. But you l'lave
Crab and shrimp are high in price. probabl7accompllshed many thlnrs

promoters would have us believe,
especially when its calorie content
rises 19 300 per cup with the addition
offruitandsyrup.

with alm011t no effort at all. .:...
POU.Y
DEAR POU..Y - We have several
family members who wear blue
jeans that are very similar in size.
It's not always easy to quickly tell
whose jeans are whOIIe when folding
the laundry. lsolved thia problem by
.stitching a zig-~ag stitch on the inside seam of the pocket of each pair
using a different color thread fo;
each member of the family. MARILYN
DEAR POLLY - Many people
recommend adding aspirin tablets
to flower vases to keep flowers fresh
longer, but I've found that about a
tablespoon each of sugar and white
vinegar added to the water .worlls
even beller.- ETHEL
DEAR POU. Y - When two
glasses are accidentally stuck
together, pour a few drops of salad
oil around the areas that are stuck.
Then put the glasses in the freezer
until they are well chilled. They will

7130 NIGtmY

Sunday

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST

Has weekend guests
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Smith of
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Bush,
Fort. Carson, Colo., Gertie and
Teress Brewer, Columbus, Janel
Ray, Harrisburg, and Gay Bush,
Westerville, were weekend guesta of
Lucille Clay, Te:us Rosd.

DEAR POU..Y - Here's my
method for removing pencil marks
from fabric. The penclla we call lead
pencils are really graphite, not lead.
Turpenllne .{highly flammable)
dissolves rraphl~.
Wet the pencil marks with full·
~gth turpentine. The wet area
· will soon begin to darten. Work the
· fabric between your f~~~gers and
keep It wet. After a few moments,
the pencil marb will fade away.
Wash the fabric with detergent. FANNIE
DEAR POU..Y - .To get any kind
ol strong odor off my hands, I rinse
them with antiseptic mouthwash.
The odor dllappeen llld Ia replaced
with a fresh, clean scent. - MARY
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you lleWIIpaper coupon
clippers U she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Provlem in her
column. Write POlLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of thia newspaper.

Bruce Taylor
From Zion, Illinois

. DEARHELENANDSUE :

st ANNIVERSARY
SALEI ·
·TO Show Our Appreciation .
for Your Business, s Days of

Groceries Will Be GiV~'l
Away · Each Day with a
Grand Prize Drawing Satur·
day, -7:00. ..

Darst celebrates birthday

Counter question: What do YOIII'
sister and her husband think about
this?
If they're hapP)I with over~ conformity, rectmentaUon and (perbaJII), education-by·
rote, then our opinllllll are IAiperfluoua. - HELEN
P.S. FROM SU.E:' But Mom pve
'em anyway, and I agree. However,
it'1 the parents' deciaion. AI least
they'll probably get "little ladles
and gentlemen" out of the deal unleas the kids rebel.

MONDAY
the hlrh school cafeteria.
MIDDlEPORT OIUreb of Chriat
will holt the county wide men's
fellonhlp Monday at 7::10 p.m. Dick
Dramon will be IIMIIIl ..,.,.,•.

Ev•101•**•ew.
OOU'EL

111111in1 at

Wtlllide

OU'dl of Clll'ill, • Wtlllllin St.,
l'aiiMOJ, ............ a ·or•.
J-21, at 7:30p.m. NIMlJ,IIanday '
aervtceaatlOa.m. andip.in.

$2~.

:$199. ·cu•

STIAK

$1~

GRILL MASTER
Sib. or

CHICKEN
FlANKS

89'1LB.

PACK

I 01. Mf". Muscle

OVEN

694' COFFEE

CWNER

'

'

.

;•

' l

ASTROCRAPH

Laurel Cliff News Notes

· Attendance at the Free Methodist
Brent PliUe.,on of Rio ·GI'IIIde .' tly and Mr. and Mn. Dennia Long of
•
. Junt1 .•~1fil
Church
May 17 was 76. Rev. and
and material affairs tCiday . You
lpellt!lieweekendwithhiaflll'lllla, OldTownaiaoealledontheCirc!es. . 1·· Bqnds ' \!'Ill lie vreotjy
mig~! be ·able to find better ways
. Mn. Hicks attended the services ·
Mr. and t.frs. Jbn Patterlon and
Mr.' lllid ftlrl. Alban Grilwald and · strengthened thla year with
to Put everything In balance.
S~y at the local church.
.,._,
RD
.........
'
·
·h
J
·
v
·
sOmeone
tltlremely
lmPGr:tantto
SAGITTARIUS (Nov, Zl-Oec.
...
·
·
'5"'' ....., .-.....
·
·
daug
ter,
AJ\Jia
••n,
fi'OIIl
ienna,
1\lrs. Helen Fox, Zanesville,
.._
,
_.
.,..
you. ·8'l'ore your next. birthday, 21) D011't 1\!dge. someone In ad·
Mr· .... ....,,
·~ 0'8rten Ul · W. Va. called at the home Ill Eunie
the two of you wilt.be functioning
visited recently with Mrs. Enna
va.nce today based upon the com·
ments of other's. These ~sons
Jundlqn aty, OIDo and Ernest Brinker on 'Satu:nlay and also called
as one.
'
Fox.
may be difficult for certain pals
Qark Ill Racine catJed on Ewile on•"-'rfriendalDCanneJVall'ey·:
GEMINI CMIY 21·June 20)
Leslie and Lenora Lyons, Rock
-'-LSa ·
'
,. ~.
Your powers of R.Orsuasion are to get alone with, but not you.
B,.....,,
011 turday fl'll!lllnll. .
· Betty
Van Meter lind Sheryl John,
excopllonolly good tOjloy and you
Springs,
spent· sevel'lll days with
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Mr. and Mn, Warden Ours . of son spent Sunday eventnr at the
Should be very adroit at turning
You're likely to function better
their ~reat·grundmother , Mrs. Er·
today in a supporting role, rather
Clllller called on Mr. llld Mrs. hillne of Mr. and Mrs. Carelton 8iJd
companions around to your way
·rna
Fox.
·
of thinking.
'
than being the front guy. Taking
DoucluCircleonWedneaday.
. daughter.·
.
CANCER (June· ·21·July 22)
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell spent the
bows Isn't as important as ac·
' Wllli8lll Carelton and daughter,
Eunie Brinker called at the home
This is a good day 10 attend to a complishlng your purpose.
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.· Faye
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 19)
Angela Dawn, of 'qaclne called .at of Ernest Clark of Racine on'Sunday · serious matter which you hove
Coimlryman,
Greenfield.
..__ of E
Brink
the
~n slde·stepplng. Gt!l down to
Today you're apt to learn more
the ,..,,.,
The
Senior
Cilizens
Choir will sing
unle
. er and
evening.
,
brass tacks. FInish It once and for
from observing successful
associates tn,n you can learn
Al'lh\lr JohniOII fllllily and Betty Mrs. Robert Let! Met ·SOli,'~ . all.
at the loca.l church Sundlly evening,
LEO • (July 23· A~g . 22) You
. VanM~onSundayevenlng
from any book. Pay heed to 011e
May:il.
.
.
·
· W., accompanied ,by .,Mr. ~ Mrs.
. have fine organlz~tlonal abilities
whose style you can imitate.
The Laurel Cliff Health Club mel
·FIOI'IiriCe Circle and Mn. Uilda Arthur Otr of Oleater, spell! the
today, but you must pe careful
PISCES (Feb. 20·Marc11 201
Thursday evening at the home of.
Pattenon called on Mrs. Sylvia P!Jol Weekend with Mr. 'aild Mrs. Edward
not · to be heavy· handed in
Assume a more active role today
ofMoriilncStaron Thundiy.
N ·
and famll of Gall and
executing matters. Use a light . than you've been taking In things
Mrs;· Ann Mash. Ms. Ladonna
Important to you and your mate.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ables aild . attendedewJillll commencem~ent exonerclse.
touch.
Gihnore
was cl'hostess. Guests
VIRGO (Aug. 2!-Sepl. 221 This
Be tne·one wno sets the goals and
were Mrs. Stewart and Miss Robin
Doilglaa Circle Vilited Mr. and Mn.. of their son.
could be a very profitable 'day , timetable.
·
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
Frank Ables of Parkersburg on
and Mra nn,,d'•• Circle
provided you are materially
Campbell. Games were played , Miss
·
Mr.
• .,.,._..
motivated . If your desire is to ac· Allow yourself ample time before
Campbell, Jean Wright and Mrs.
Friday.
·
· .visitedMr.andMrs.CllntPlberand · ' cumulate, you could do 'so from
making i mportant deci si ons
Stewart
winning the . prizes. Lights
Gu.taof Sheryl LeannJohpson oli famllyofBashan on Tuesday.
two Sources.
today. Your judgment Is very
sound once you weigh all the pros
Saturday In honor of her birthday
111oae camnn at ihe home of M
. r.
LIBRA (Sept. l3·0ct 23i Your
wenl out, refreshments were served
and cons. '
·
="'
possibilities for advancing your
by candlelight.
were Dawn Roberta of Racine and and •Mra. Robert, Lee and family
self.interestsareabilbetterthan
TAURUS [April lO·May 20)
Sunday eveni ng, the Senior
MellaniiVanMeterofMorningStar. recenUy we.re Mr. and Mrs. Athur , usual lodoy. Without being un·. Tasks requiring considerable
Citizens Choir will sing at the
Mr. and Mn. Arthur Orr of .Qrr of Chester, Mr: lind Mrs. Rorer
duly selfish, pusn for what's im· concentration are the ones you
.-...~-- called 1 the a • ..__. Lee
portantto you.
are likely to perform the best
evening service at 7:30p.m. at the
..,....,..,..
a
"""""
Greuaer and family of Logan, Mr.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221
today. You should also be skillful
local church.
home on Friday evening. Mrs. OiT and Mrs. Dougills Circle, Florence
Take a hard look at your finances
at updating systems or methods.
attended the FFA banquet at Racine Circle, Sue Hager, Racine Rd.
L---- - - - - - - - - - - -- ------1 Attendance Sunday, April26 at the
'of Which Bob BW was a member.
Ray Bookman of Buchtel visited at
Free Methodist Church was 65.
· Sheryl and Patrick Jollnson called the Douglas Circle hom_e on a recent
Choir members pre~ent were 12.
· at the home ol their grandparents, Monday.
There was a quartet by Pastor
Mr. and Mn. Dc-•gla• Johnson li
Kim Follrod of Racine spent SunShook,
Sharon Wright, Brenda
By Mn. Francis Morris
Mrs. Hazel Shuck of Florida
Racine Sunday evening.
day night as a guest of Becky Lee.
Haggy
and
Karen Stanley.
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford ac- vil!ited her brother, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayward Bissell and
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Johnson of
The
WMFI
held its meeting on
grandlon .of Keno, Mr. llld Mra. Racine called at the Author Johnson companied Mr. and Mrs. Hennan Elza Birch over the weekend. .
Tuesday
at
the
home of Sharon
Carson to Colwnbus to visit Crill
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Blosser and
Glen Abl•clfBaldKnObe viii~ Mr. home on Sunday.
Stanley.
and Mn. Douglas Circle on Friday.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Dougllls Circle Bradford, Jr., a patient in a hospital son, Jason, of Flat Rock, "'ich.
Jeff Howell, who is employed in
who is improving and will soon be ~~ited Mrs. M ~bel Brace Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Bamitz and visited Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Cleveland, spent a weekend with his
convalescing ln hia home in Wor· ~g;
)
80111 Cl Kinpton, Ohio and Mr. and BiaseU of ){eno'onThursday.
tliington.
Mr. and Mrs. Orland Mitchell of parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
Mra. Hayman Barnltz of Pomeroy
Betty Van Mete~ ,spent Monday at
Allendance at the local church
Mrs. Robert Hart and daughter, Parkersburg, W. Va. spent Sunday
called at the horne of Eunle Brinker the home of Mr. ilnd Mrs. Wllliam
May
3 was 74. Choir members
Beth, attended the kindergarten with hia aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Crill
recently.
Carelton agd daughters of Racine.
present
were 10. A special song was
commencement of her grand· Bradford.
Mr. and Mn. Douglas Circle
Mr. and Mrs. EmeatJohnson, Mr.
sung
by
the
Folmer family .
Mrs. Ramona Clark of Colwnbus
visited Mr ..and Ml'l. Clinton Pitzer and Mrs. Howard Blazer of Belpre daughter, Olivia CUnningham at
Recently
the neighbors of Mrs .
Cottageville. ·
spent two days with her parents, Mr.
andfamllyofBuhanonFrlday.
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Della
Stahl
ca
me with refr~shments
Mrs. Alma WOods and daughters, · and Mrs. Raymond Snider and took
Jr. Johnson o1 Racine i:alled on Circle Wednesday.
ond surpri5ed her on her birthday .
Frances Ba,nhart of Chauncey, her two boys home with her.
Mr. llld Mrs. Arthur Johnson and
There were 30 present for Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey spent a
Delores Cleland and Betty Sayre of
Mike Hayman of Jonesboro, Tenn.
P.atonSUndayevenlngof~.
SchoolonMay31.
day
with Mrs. Della Stahl.
Racine spent several days spent a weekend with his parents,
Sheryl Johnion, Betty Van Meter
Joyce Pickens of Racine Rc:!. spent
Mrs.
Routh Douglas, Byesville,
vacationing in VIrginia, North Mr. and Mrs. Wllliam Hayman.
and Eunle Brll*er called at the Saturday afternoon with Sheryl
Mrs.
lola Howell, local, spent a
and
Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky,
Sunday afternoon guests of Mr.
horne of Mr. and Mn. Wllllam Johnson.
dav
wilh
theit·
mother, Mrs. Emma
visitlng places of interest.
and Mrs. Roy Rifne were Mr. and
C&amp;relton and daughter on Sunday · Angela Dawn and Jennifer Lynn
F•;x.
and
pa
inted
her bedroom.
Mike Woodgerd, grandson of Mrs. Mrs. John Slovak of Bradenton,
evening.
Carelton spent Saturday evening Alma Woods, a student at West
Attendance at the Sunday moming
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle with Betty Van Meter and Sheryl Point, was sent to West Gennany for Fla ., Mrs. Grace Helmick of New services at the Free Methodist ChllfBrighton, Pa., Mrs. Jean Van Horne
visited Mr. and Mn. Ray Johnson of Johnson.
.
·extra
training.
of
Beaver Falls, Pa., Mrs. Frankie ch was 74. Choir members present
~eJUdreonSaturday.
were 16.
M
cKelvey
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joe
Wood
of
Oxnard,
of Belpre.
Mr. and Mrl. Tom O'Neil and
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Curtis and.
Calif.
spent
a
few
days
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Sylvia
Wolfe
spent
a
week
in
80111, Mrs. Evelyn Ingram li Colun'l- Broken part cause
Mrs.
Otho Curtis, Iowa, spent the
Mrs.
Ralph
Badgley.
Other
visitors
Akron with Mr. and Mrs. Homer
bus apent the weekend here with
weekend with Mr. and Mn. Percy
CLEVELAND (AP) - The were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wood, Roush.
relativea.
Federal AvlaUon Administration Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Kenneth Turley was honored with Frick and Mrs. Della Curtis.
Mr: and Mrs. Faye Countryman,
Mrs. Elsie Circle and Sue Hager says a broken engine part was .Teaford, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. a picnic birthday celebration Sun·
visit!ld Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Circle responsible for the fatal May 25 Glenn Cundiff, Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. day. Twenly-fuur family members Greenville, spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
Bill Cundiff of Syracilse.
and friends attended.
at the Pleasant Valley Nursing crash of a one-engine plane.
Miss Erna Jesse, Pomeroy,
The
biplane,
which
took
off
from
Home, Point Pleasant, W. Va. on
visited
recently with Mrs. Della
an
airfield
In
Bolaford,
llOIIedlved
inFriday.
Stahl.
to
a
Welllnalon
Townahlp
farm
and
~r. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson and
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey visited
daughter, Phyllis, from Belpre illled passenger Wl1llam C. Neff, 511,
visited
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Mrs.·
Margaret
Boyce
and
George
Sunday
with Mrs. Della Stahl.
called at the hotne of Mr. and Mrs. of Strongavllle.
Russell.
Wllliam
Venoy
ol
Colwnbus
were
Pilot John R. Lovett, 84, of Bay
Douglas Circle on Monday.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Mr. Ray Russell of Washington CH
Chester Van Meter of Moming Village, wu hOIIpltallr.ed wjth a Saturday visitors of Mrs. Bertha,
Earl and Russell and other was Monday visitor of Lincoln
Star 'called at the Circle hotne recen- broilen.riglJtleg and foot. · '·' · ··
Russell, local, Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. carl McElroy of and Mrs. Walter Jordan and sons of
Colwnbus were Memorial holiday Albany.
By Clarice Allen
Mr. William Sayre of Georgia ill
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
M
r.
and
Mrs. Ed Newnan and
, Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. Paul visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. David. Galion, Mr. and Mrs. Ruger
I McElroy·
McElroy, Jr., Jeff, Joey and Charles Sayre.
Grueser. U sa, Susie and Jenny Jo,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Johnson and
any trouble finding good home&amp; for Jessica.
117illarilla c. Cnwltrcl
I "g1111, were weekend guests of Mr.
Howard William Thoma, Jr. and family of Dublin were Mother's Day and Mrs. Arthur Orr. They visited on
Ida-." Yes, but every tlmt! you
Melpc-ty
B• ••ledety
place one of theae animals Clll!liDI! family of Colwnbus were Memorial visitors of Mrs. Helen Johnson and Saturday evening witil Paul Orr,
. ' POMEROY
- Well, just when I out of aiiO-Cilled l'apOIIIIble adult's holiday · visitors of Mr. and Mrs. family also with Mrs. Hamm &lt;i Bashan. On Sunday they attcndc'li
thCJu8hl all of the eounty'a cruel and horne, there· are hundreds comlng Howard Thoma, Sr. and Mrs. Iva Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. harley Smith, .. hureh at Sutton and were dinner
heartieu people had " gone out o1 irrelponllble pet ownen' Johnson .
r til'sIs .,f Mr. and Mrs. Bub Lee, Bnb
Mr. and Mrs. Pa,ul Darnell are Kanauga, was recent visitor of Mr. .-wei Bt~c ·ky.
lllrllght" - . up pop -lltuationa home&amp; who have no homeS to go to which Ia why there are mliiiODB of . p!lrents of a new daguther, Melissa and Mrs. Charley Smith.
that Indicate nothing hu changed.
D. D. Clelwtd, Columbus. visited
Mr. Hennan Will, Peach Fork,
J'or inllanca, a few days ago a beautiful animala euthanized an- Dawn. They a lao have a son, Jeffrey.
""
Sunday with Denzel Cleland and
Mrs. Iva Johnson spent weekend wBB Sunday afternoon visitor of Mr. Mt·. and Ml's. Clayton All en.
woman called the humane BOCiety nually ln thla country. So you place
and Mrs. Charley Slnith, Mr. and
with Mrs. J. R. Murph7and Peggy.
reportinl that she had picked lip your three or four kiU.. yearly Mr. and Mt·s. Derrol Weber, F11rt
Mrs. Ethel Clark, PagevWe, Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kevin.
three puppies ~ the road In remember that each female dog at
Wayne. Ind.. s~ nt a few days with
~ {Relr Horner Hlll). the end rA a seven year period can
Mrs. Mru'dil Keller.
She had puled two little dead ones have caused ita own pel populaUon
111'. w1d Mrs. Billy Rubert Allen
on the road prior to CGmlnll 8CI'OIII to expand to a figure of 4,372. And
;11111 Kcdhcr int!, Westerville, were
cats can put doglto shame in the
the lucky Ill L'IDe.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Van Meter, Dan Hendricks, Washington, W. Va., wt·l'kelld guests nf Mr. and Mrs.
Now then. they will only renl8in pnduction department.
Columbus, spent the weekend with Ollie Sams, ·Coolville, Mrs. Patty Clill'l'"' Allen. Barbara Kni~hl and
"lucky" If we can find homes for
Mrs. Ada Van Meter.
Gluesencamp, Mrs. Betty Ward, C: r;;dy t·alh l nn thm n Saturday af·
u.n: 'l11ey will be bir clop So, think qain, If you lhir* that
MrS. Ada FOK and BW, Bennont, Mrs. Diane Davis, Mrs. Sue Dalley, 1t•I'!I!H IIi .
day - rllblnow they are just lill to your lone cat having klltenl or your Oh., were weekend visiton of Mrs. Zana and Janet Middleswart, Sam
llol~t rt Newell has relurnc'li hnmc
eight weea old - one Ia quite fluffy, one cute dol having puppies Ia all Nell Middleswart and other Persons, Mrs. Lois Barnhart and c1ftcr u;ulcrguin~ surgery at tlw
two have med!am lqth hair, one rllht. An intelllgent and responsible ·relatives ln the area.
C111mlcn Clark Hospilal , Parkers·
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, local.
hu a tuD tall, one a half of tan and pe&amp; owner automatically has. both
Mrs. Bernice Evans, Gallipolis,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush, bul'j.,:.
the atblr a bobbed tan. 'l11ty are all malll and females altered the &amp;pent severs! days ,ecenUy with Mr. Racine, were supper guests of Miss
Mrs. Elizabelh Wickham and
1ema1e and Ill cute as the' dick-. mlJIIte they are old enough. II Ia not· and Mrs. Mike Evans and famlkly.
farnily,
Riclnnund, visitl"tl rchttivcs
Leota Birch a recent evening.
An1QIIwllbllw&amp;Q•tblmlnd who inlelllrent nor Ia It decent to throw a
1
,.,...
Salul'day.
They were supper
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Pratt,
Susan Bums and Tom Durst,
, ClllliWIIIflloodhonieplease call Bvinl creature out to the llde of the_ Newark, visited Mrs. Helen Smith, Pomeroy, visited Mr. and Mrs. R. R. l!llt•sts nf Mr. and Mrs. B. K.
: ,7011D.
road or dwnp reiiiJCIIIIiblllly on Portland, on Sunday.
l{iti l•f HI\I r .
Durst on Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eichinger
• Nallllory- AM~ WVIlllll ethen.
Hollie Starcher l1penl Friday with
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkinson,
' • II 1 Wllllalown llamlllitarian
lMt cruel trick - a very precnanl hla sister, Effie Starcher at San- Shawn Skevtn, Colwnbus, Mrs. Nita "''" Sul.an nah, Culwnbus, Mr. and
' - . _ IIIII victim of "6upped" doc wudnljlfled in Middleport and dyville, W. Va.
WellS, Long Bottom, Mr. lind Mn . Mrs. D&lt;•1ald Eichinger, Rin Grande,
ldlla
fw Y'lll· Sbe Ia IIGI after rGID1inr around for "who
tbole visiting Mr. aild Mrs. Mike Monty Proffitt, John Wells, Por- '"' ~'~' wc'ekend guests 1 ~ Mrs. Opa l
1n pldlllllth'have tmn mw lone" acanc1 and Mlddleswart and famlly recenUy tland, and Mr. and Mrs. DeMy Eil' hiJtgcr and I .aura. Mr. and Mrs.
, lllj .mma11 o1 har own 111)' IIIOI'e liunp'y, a 1.111c; dale woman were Mr. and Mrs. Danny Ot!burn, Roush and daughters, local, visited O." mis Eicl:inger joi tll.'!l them for
: 't.cww lha II nat well II10IIIh to with a Iii llelrt todt har ill and Belpre, Mr. and Mnt. Rick Oaborn with Mrs. Fannie Durst recenUy.
din11 cr un Sunday.
• jUJ b Clll'l for them. BUT, cared for har until · llhe had her and 11011, Utile Hocklnc, Jackie and
M is.~ Sandy WtHtd , Belpre. spent a
' • • • ......,, lift a dim about babl• - nlneoltblm '111eyarenow
wt•Pkl'lld with Mr. and Mrs. Bub
, bar or 111111111 ... '!'bay U. drapo . old .ll1lllllb to ba placed IIIII wa llll
w.. .t.
Don Williams and snn, David,
; . - pPGI' dlf• II• llinllla on apin'- 111)'0111 intlnlttd ill adapo
At IIIII IIICIIII•t, ..... four tiJrC I cute lltt)lllecJe 'type Puppy
("uhunhu.s , were weekend guests of
Mrs. Ma rcia Keller.
: adlllt "" two lillck and . to . . . Clll'!Jt Hamane ~­
• Uldlla flllllltllll ... tr. to •11111.
!!""''"' Hnllon has returnc'li home
a fh •r undergoing surge ry at
.: Ifill&amp;
old. '!'bay are Iliac*,
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital ,
, , . .••• n . • •· and·all
Pumcruy.
: are .. IIIIi 111111 dullac tlilllp

Racine Social Events

WQlfPen NewsNotes

'CAKE

MIXES

69'

16.5 01. Betty Crocker

16oz. Helni

BBO .

89' BREAD 4/1110
RCCOLA
•• •1601.
Pull
101. Ruffles

ARMOUR

J"

Hoofs and Paws

Stiversville News Notes

14 az.

li.S oz. BeHy Crocker

Social
calendar ·
SOtmiERN LOCAL Board of
Education Monday at 7::10 p.m. In

Carmel News,. By the ~ay · ·1 .

Church May 10 ws 81. Choir members pesent were 15. Mother's Day

was observed. Mrs. Della Curtis was
the oldest mother present..Mn. Dian
Anderson was the youngest. Both
were given a pot of flowers. All
mothers received a small flower.
Mr. Paul Jacobs, Kentucky, Mrs.
Theu Davis and neighbor, ColWJibUB, visited Mrs. Tina Jacobs on
Mother's Day.
·
Mrs. Bertha Parker received a
Mother's Day call from her
daughter, Mrs. Jeannine Tally,
Texas, also a call from her
daughter, Mrs. Gayle Kasper,
Dayton. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alkire,
Columbus, Miss Cleo Parker,
Colwnbus, visited Mrs. Parker on
Mother's Day.
Mr. John C. Stahl of Stockdale,
w~o was killed recently in a motor·
cycle accident, was a nephew of
Mrs. Nonnan Schafer, Mrs. Pearl
Gilkey and a coUBin of Mrs. Vern
Story.
Mr. Bently Peoples, Florida, for·
merly of this community, is very iU
in a hospital in Florida.
Allendance Sunday moming at the
Free Methodist Church was 80.
Choir members present were 15.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Eichinger,
Colwnbus, attended church at the
local church. Mrs. Eichinger was
the fonner Miss Agnes Griffith who
lived in this community a number of
years.
Mrs. Audra Hayes, Shade, · and
Mrs. Grace Richardson, Athens,
visited Sunday with Mrs. Della
Stahl.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Wells, Mid·
dleport, visited recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Nonnan Schafer.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell visited
over the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Faye Countryman, Greenville.
Mrs. Grace Stobart, who had been
in Holzer Medical Center, was able
to attend church Sunday.
Mrs. Brenda Haggy, Middleport,
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore Sunday.
Attendance at the morning ser·
vices at the Free Methodist Church
was 69. Choir members present were
15. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Barton sang a
duet.
Mrs Linda Jacobs spent a week
with her son, Paul Jacobs and
family in Kentucky.
Mrs. Kathy Pullens is a patient in
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
Mrs. Grace Stobart ill a patient in
Holzer Medical Center.
. Mrs. Mabel Tracy is visiting
relatives in California.
Norman Fisher, Senecaville,
called on Thomas Gene Parker
recently.
The Senior Citizens Choir sa ng at
the local church Sunday evening.

Chester News Notes

• EF

SISTER
SISTEI,t:

Pomero.r, OH.

200 W. Main Sl

DAVE, .LINDA, IKE &amp; .
JUDY WELCOME YOU
TO OUR

.

My sister and her husband send
their kids to a very strict private
school. I don't think they learn as
much as we ·do in public school. But
what I really dlslike is how teschers
try to run the kids' and parents'
lives.
Here are two examples ..Sis spent
$12 gettlnr her n!JJe.year-old !lOll's
hair styled. Next day the school sert
him home with a note saying hia hair
was too long and he'd have to have It
trimmed so it doesn't toUch hia
collar. (Oh, yes, they must wear
shirts with collars and lies, plus
jackets.)
Next, the school canceled a swim
party becall!l 101111! of the mothers
allow their daughters to wear
modified bikini suits: ~ are
scarcely sea symbols, but school of·
ficlalasaid II "limply wouldn'tdo."
What do you think about this? -

10 a.m. ancl6 p.m.

IRING YOUR BIBLE

come apart eaally.- IRENE

.Have friend help in break-up ?

- -·

DERMATOLOGY · .

r-

Helen Help Us

Special corretponclents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I've found another girl I like better
than Jenny whom I've been going
with for two years.
. I don't know how to tell her, and
think it would be a lot easier if I
asked my best friend to give her the
. word. He owes me, so he'd do it. And
he's very tactful about saying the
right thing.
· Isn't thia better than a big scene?
- NORMAN
DEAR NORMAN:
· 11lis is like hiring a hit man and
saying, "Please be kind." Face your
g.f. with the truth and don't weasel!
- HELEN
P.S. FROM SUE: Even ltifmakes
you feel like skunk.

· ChemiCIIs
Shoe Derlillutli
Cosmetics

·Off.'ce· 6711: 1!971 ·

Cleaning venetian blinds

BYHELENANDSUE~L

resr
tor: Tnliil•ntS ·
·
Food

~~h other peaple eat today. graduted SaturdaJ fnm Oblo
C4Jme to some concluaiona on bow · Unl~. wu beld lltllrday nilht
atthe~Im.
.
.Acne • · · ·
you want to look . when YOU are
Mn. 1ner 1J!11 .Mil. Whitebllld
j.
eatlng. Then eat that way. Follow hoeted the dllllet pll'tf. Attelldlng
one of the aloweN!Itlng behavlon at·· beaidel the honoree and llielr JIII'M"
· one meal today.
ta were Mr. and Mrs.. WIIJ'I'ell
All
· Your au.nlh!rllolly
· ·
and Mrs Den
·
Hereiaasneakyexercieeforyou. ~=:·o.~ weber,~
GENERAL
rt'ssneakybecauaenoonewilllmow
EdU-'--" ...............
that you are doing it. You can do it Mr.llld Mrs.
-~ ""'"""""
. I
. ;ru
· ·,
· when waltlng ala red llgbt ortalldng Falls; Mnl.
Frydman and
Otnee
a...
by Appellilmeld
Sarab, lficll1and Pull, m., llld Mill
.
.
.
on the telephone.
Whitehead's filnce, Walter tlenlch,
. ZfH JaeiDII!I
It's called "Reveille Breathlnr."
·
The initial movement Ia limilar to ~Cin:l~evllle=·:..;__ _ _ __J3JIIi'i ipt,
sipping a drink tJu:auch a llraw.
Breath in {sip ln) wblleplllliing your
stomach out. Hold for one lleGild
and then reverse, pu1Jinr :rOar
stomach in and elhailng.
MOIII people need a little .tlmt! to
master thia one. Won It Into your
schedule as frequently as you can.
This is one of the inost effective
stomach exercises.
Do 11 only three times on each occasion to avoid the poulbillty of
hyperventilation.
To obtain a folder of illustrated
exercises, send a stamped, self·
addressed letter-size envelope to
The Diet Workshop Inc., Dept. IE,
111 Washington st., Brookline, Mass.
02146.

Polly's Pointers

BY POU..Y FISHER
Sputa! corre8pondeut
DEAR POU..Y - I just bought
new venetian .blinds for all my
windows , but
they're an absolute horror to
clean! The air
pollution in our
area leaves a
greasy black film
on everything.
I've tried using a
paint brush, a rag
POU..Y .
and a feather duster, but nothing
seems to work easily. Any ideas? F.M.J.
DEAR F.M.J . - My friend Coco
swears by the following method:
Get an old or inexpensive cotton
· glove. Put it on one hand and dip that
hand in wann, soapy water. Then
just run your fingers over each slat
· in the blinds. You can rinse in the
· same way, using clear water. Those
binds will be clean and sparkllnR,

ALLERGl . . ' .
. . Tlllll{ 1111 "rNa. .

SIUtl', dagpter 111 Mr. llld Jlrl,
Harold Sauer, Route 1, MlddllpGrt,
whO &amp;ndUfed fram Rio Orude
CoJlele, and Jull Wblltbead,
daugbtw 1af Mr. llld J1r1. 1me11
Whltebeld, Reedlrille, who

•

L. Catr, D.O. ·

Tamors Iemond · •

."incharge."

- Walk around the block if the
weather pennits.
- If you are visiting where an
.irresistible food is being served,
leave the room. U you are at home,
·throw it out. Do not worry about the
expense. Do not be concerned about
your lack of will-power. Just get rid
·of it.
- Don't let eating out lead you
,down the rosd to failure. There is no
reason that you can't remain com·fortably in control while dining out.
Simply choose a menu from your
diet that will work in a restaurant.
Remember, you do the choosing.
Don't let the menu choose for you.
You can and will resist temptation if
·. youwantto.
Your Dally Diet
Yogurt is not the panacea that its

Davl~

·CLINIC

The Daily Sentl,el- Page-7

l!'omeroy- Middleport, Oliio

_..

'1

_.call .,_'t -

• t.:

..a

;............
: •
•

m
.

business m eeti ~g . Cleo .Smith,
assisted by Opal Eichinger and
Louise Hines, served homemade ire
cream and iced tes to Erma Cleland,
Charlotte Smith, Dixie Beair, Clara
Conroy, Inzy Newell, Clarice Allen
and Opal Hollon.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert Allen
and Katherine, Westerville, spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Durward Conroy,
Memphis, Tenn., spent a week with
Mr. and Mrs. Errol Conroy and Mrs.
Goldie Wolf.
Mr. and Mrs. Spence Tederick,
Old Washington, called on Mr. and
Mrs. John Wickham on Memorial
Day.
Mr. and Mrs. George Stace, Fin·
dlay, called on Mr. and Mrs. Erroll
Conroy, Memorial Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Oris Frederick have
gone to Winter Hsven, Fill. to be
there for the wedding of their grand·
daughter, Miss Jean AI)Jl Roush, on
June 13.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen spent
Friday in Ashland, Ky., with Robert
Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
springfield, spent a weekend with
Mrs. Letha Wood.
Mr. and Mrs. David Tysinger,
Tan and Brenna, hav~ returned to
their home in Spartanburg, S. C. af·
ter spending a week with Mrs. Enna
Cleland and other relatives.
Mrs. Audrey Rowan and Mrs.
Lydia Berry, Belpre, called on Mr:
and Mrs. Clayton Allen and Denzel
Cleland Saturday.
, Mn. Opal Eichinger entertained
with a dinner on Sunday evening in
honor of her son , Donald's
graduation from Rio Grande and her
daui!hter. Laura's graduation from
Eutem High School. Prelent for the
occasion were Mr. and Mrs. Mack
McCroJ, Lake Station, Ind., Donald
VanMeter, Jackson, Mr. and Mn .
Raymond VanMeter, Younptown,
Mr. llld Mrs. Charles Eid1lnler and
'Suunnah, Columbua, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Eichinger, Rio G.,...se, Debbie and Terry CUrfman, Marietta,
Mr. and Mra. Dale Maidena, Xriatle
and Colen, Mrs. Larry Wolfe and
1-. .Eldon
and Leda
..... all of Radne, Mr. and Mn.
Tam Nke, Mr. and Mn. Daanll
llchlnter, Kria and lliJcheUe
wo., aeo Smith and Nita .r.a
Ritd1le, Ill local.

Kraeuter

Keith Darst
I

�~.~M~e~ig~s~~C:;-:arp-::-e-:-n:-te-r,~P:;-e-rs-=-o-na-.;ls~~r==iii-"'j"j'j=::;:B~u=.s.=,..=n=e=.s=s.=S=·e=rv~
. ==i~c:;:e~.s~. ,,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J~ets and
w\ughter and Mrs. John Dunham,
·
.
·
New Boston, Illinois, we~ called
here by the serious illness oqheir
mother, Mrs. Reed Jeffers. They
Visited .other relaUves here, irr
eluding Mrs. Richard Jeffers' parenUllian G. Smith, Affidavit, Mid- ts, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Bailey. The
dleport.
.)
Jeffers returned home while Mrs.
Delbert F. Mitchell, Julis K. Mit- Dunham (Janet Jeffers) remained
chell to Marlin L. WOlfe, Emily for a longer stay with her mother.
Wolfe, 6.52 acres, RuUand.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree
Franklin King, Jr., Louella E. called on Mr. and Mrs. T. J .
King to William J . King, Cledith Spurlock, Albany. The Spurlockll
Jane King, .582 acre, Scipio.
recently returned from Melrose,
Marjorie Milhoan to Dallas Florida, where they had spent
Weber, Lots, Middleport.
several montl)s.
Vivian Pierce to Carol F, Pierce,
Mrs. Reece Prather, Kettering,
Parcels, Pomeroy.
was a Mother's Day weekend guest
Dale Warner, Mary Belle Warner, of her mother, Mrs. Lewis Smith,
George H. Warner, Grace M. War- and attended services at Temple
ner to Dale Robertson, LeJ!ora An· Church on Sunday. Each mother and
nette Robetson; 4.171 acres, Bed- daughter reseived a silk rose at
ford.
Mother's Day service at Temple
James F. Graham, Brenda W. Church, with special poems, songs,
Graham to Laura J. Bond, fonnerly and remarkll being used to honor the
Laura J. McGraw, (traiiSfer Ease. 2 mothers.
and3),Sutton.
. Mrs . Ben Gryclko (Eileen StansRichard B. Hayman, VirgiQia I. bury); Annapolis, Md., came by AmHayman to Richard B. Hayman, trak to Athens, then her sister
Virginia 1. Hayman, 9 acres, Olive.
brought her to the horne of her
Evelyn M. DeBellis, Martin M. mother, Mrs. Dale Stansbury where
DeBellis to Rodney A. Pullins, Lot she spent a few days. On Sunday,
54, Nailors Run Add., Pomeroy.
they attended a family gathering at
Patricia Anne Shain to Emil A. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clair Dale
Plichta, Kathryn V. Plichta, Par- Stansbury and son, Groveport,
cels, Letart.
Others present included Mr. and
R. E. Cuckler (aka) Raymond E. Mrs. Harold Oxley, local; Larry
Cuckler, Elizabeth Cuckler lo Stansbury and sons, Reynoldsburg,
Patricia Lou Cuckler White, Paul D. and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Barton and
White, Randi Ganoe Cuckler Gillet- children, Groveport. Mrs. Gryctko
te, Harold Ted Gillette, 164 acres, new home from Colwnbus.
Bedford.
Mrs. Adrian Fisher, Worthington,
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elecspent
a few days here with her
tric Co. to Hartley, hartley and HarMrs. Maude Holcomb.
mother,
tley Inc., Middleport, .74 acre.
Mr. and Mrs. Jlrn Rutan, ColumErnest A. Wingett, Maxine G.
Wingett to Billy H. Cretsinger, bus, spent a weekend with her
Sharon K. Cretsinger, Ease., Sutton. brother and siBter-irrlaw, Mr. and
A. Ray Brown, M. Eileen Brown to Mrs. Harold Gillogly and attended
William R. Smiddle, Elizabeth Rose commencement exercises at
Alexander High School where their
Amoriya, 15 acres, Scipio.
son,
Bruce Gillogly and another
Edna M. Summerfield, dec. to
daughter,
Jeffrey Gillogly, son of
Earl Swnmerfieid, Buel Summerfield, Charles Swrunerfield. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Gillogly, were
Mildred Caldwell, Irene Parker, members of the graduating class.
Kathy Cheadle, who underwent
Rexal Swrunerfield, Cart. of TrailS.,
surgery
at O'Bleness Memorial
Chesler.
Hospital,
AtheiiS, is convalescing
Frances Fleming, dec. to Branch
satisfactorily.
Fleming, Aff. for TrailS., Rutland.
Guests of Ida Denison have inBranch Fleming, Madolyn
cluded
Mr. and Mrs. John Knotts,
Fleming to Robert Dailey, .73 acre,
Columbus, Velmia Jordan McCallie,
Rutland.
Anna E. Hilldore to Syracuse- Mobile Ala.; Annabel Thomas and
Freda Whetstone, Columbus; Mr.
Racine Regional Sewer Dist., Right
and Mrs. Eddie Jordan, West Palm
of Way, Syracuse.
Ralph S. McKenzie, Dorothy
McKenzie to Syracuse-Racine
Burdell Black, Effie Black to
Regional Sewer Dist., Right of Way,
Leading
Creek Cons. Dist., Right of
Sutton.
Way,Salisbury,
Lawrence Rexroad, Rosemary
James L. Mash, Connie N, Mash to
Rexroad to William M. Pooler, Jr. ,
Leading Creek Cons. Dist., Right of
Sharon Ann Pooler, 58.49 acres ,
Way, Rutland.
Chester.

P·r operty
Transfer.S

.,., .

=..~

·The Daily Sentinel
Z43 w.t 17 Sl, IIW Yilt, IY
10011. Prill RAilE, MIOI£SS,

ZIP, Sl2E, lid m11 RUIIIU.

We str.. mlined the sewrng to
save you time so you can save
money! Send now for NEW I98 i
SPRING-SUMMER PATTERN CAT·
AlOG . 100 styles, free pattern
(Oupon. ($2 Value). Catalog, $1.
AU CRAFT IOOIS .. $2.0f IICh
134-14 Quldl Qliltl
UJ.fllllloo Hollie Quilti•l
130-Swtlllri-S. Jl-51
1Z9-Qildl/EIIJ r....mn
Books and Cataloe - add 251
11th for postage and handling.

CeUa!nrin,Maeysville,I\D(IDaWII
Walker, Thunnan, .apent aevj!raj
~ys here with their fa~r. Dale
Dye, and .Mr. · and Mrs. Olester
Baumgardner, Coahoctori, were
weekend guesla ol her father, ·Mr.
Dye, and attended the Colbmbia
High School Alurqnl · Banquet at
AlbanyElementarySchool.
Mr. and Mrs. Davld'Cburch (Betty
Rutherford), MesqUite, Tex., and
her 1!011, G~ George, Dallaa, Tex.,
vacationed:. here with her grand'mother.,
Daye Canode,.lier aunt
and uncie, Mr. and M~. Mendal Jardan and other relatives. While they
were enroute here, Mrs. Church's
gt'andfather, Daye Canode, passed .
away so they were here for the
funeral along with her mother, Neva
llaker, and friend, Port Jefferson,
her brothers, Howard Rutherford,
Carlinsville, Ill., and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Rutherford and Carolyn,
Springfield, Oh., and sisters, Mr.
imd Mrs. William FiBber, Kettering
and Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Gump and
family, Sidney. Other relatives from
a distance who attended the Canode
funeral at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home in Albany included
Mr. and Mrs. William Canode, Hamden; Mr. and Mrs. marvel Earl
C,.node, Stephen and Gary, Gibsonburg; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Jenkins and family, Wellston; Sally,
Dillow, Westerville; Jack Jeffers,
New Lexington.

Mrs:

Seventy-one alumni and guests
were served a delicious ham dinner
by Albany Grange when the C\)lumbia High School Alumni Assn. met on
Saturday evening. Arthur Crabtree
served as president because of the
illness of Stanley Robinson, elected
president. Ada Belle Robinson, Lancaster, served as secretary. treasurer and Zelia Foster Seiple
assisted with arrangements for the
evening's activities. Officers for the
1981-1982 year will include Rex
Shenefield, president; Anna
Elizabeth Turner, vice president,
and Eleanor Jean Brookhart,
secretary-treasurer. Among alWMi
and guests attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Jennings Edwards and guest,
Elyria; Velmia Jordan McCallie,
Mobile, Ala .; Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Jordan, West Palm Beach, Fla.;
Mary Sisson Henneke and guest,
Delaware, Oh.; Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Baumgardner, Coahocton;
Mrs. Celia Irwin, Marysville;
Gerald Collins, Columbus; Clemma
Vale, Cardington; Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Dudgeon and guests and Mr. and
Mrs. John Starkey and sons, Sugar
Grove ; Mr. and Mrs. Claire
Dudgeon, daughter and guests,
Reynoldsburg; Lena Moore
Hamilton, Medway; Gamet Starkey
Moore; Cann; Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Dale Stansbury, Groveport; Ina
Sams, Newark; Ada Belle Robinson,
Lancaster; Harold Hane, Columbus,
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Parker,
McArthur. Five members of the
class of 1931 were present. They
were Neva Radekin Nicholson,
Merlum Radcliff Huffman, Mendal
Jordan, Hildred Steward Edwards
and Mary Sisson Hemeke.

WANT AD INFORMATION
'

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
e ANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTALS

1- c 1rciOtTMnks

41- HOUII, fOr Rent

J-lnMtmorlam
)-AnntuncementJ
4-G iveawt.,.

42- M*It "'m"
tor Rtnt
44-A.plrtlll .. fl liM' llfll

45-FUnMIIMCII ROOfllll
,.._S.,.tt for Rent

5-H&amp;pp't'Ailll
6-LOII.IIICI Pounct

47-Wtllltd tt Rtllt
41-ECIUittmtnt for Rtnl

7-Ytrel Slit
t-P~Jbllc So~le

1 .t.uctlott
t-Wtnllel to IY'f

eMERCHANDISE

51- Htulttltkl Gootlt

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 - HtiP~utMI

n - Situttld Wnltcl
IJ-IIIIUriiiCI

U- CI, TV, Rtdllllllllltmtnt
JJ-AnliiiUtl
54-MitC. MtrcMMIIII
JS- I .. IIcllnt S"PIIIIIS
56-l'•h lor S.ft

14-IUIIIIIU 1'rtNII"' ,

11

Help wanted

IJ-Scl.ols lr'ltruc:tlctn
16-Racuo, TV,

is currently seeking
qualified
REGISTERED NURSES
for
Nursing Care Unit
primarily geriatrics
and
Acute Care Nursing Units

EXCELLENi SALARY AND BENEFITS
Contact.: Director of Nursing

Pleasant Valley Hospllll
Valley Drive

Point Pleasant, W. Va.
equal opportu~ity em,ployer
I

11

LIVE$TOCK

61- p:lrfft IIIIIYipfl'llftf

42-WtltH tt by

e FINANCIAL

72-TrYCIII ftr Stll
tJ-LI•fstocM •

21-lultftiUI
0 ..........

M-Hiy&amp;Grtla
61-S_. I Ptrtillltr .

22-MOMy to Loan

2l-PNfttslen.l
5trV!tt•

ITRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE
11 _HIIMiftrstlt
l2-IIMIIIM M•ntn
ltr,lllt
»-Ptrml for Slit
M-IUIIMII luU•IItl
,._LfhiACI'Nfl
»-ltullltatt Wtnttt
J7-1Ntfwl

W•nt-Ad Advortlalnl
Delli II nos

......,......,...kl....

- ·-1,1100
·
TllttHy
tflrv ,r..."
yt:•- P.M.
1-yi,II~.M . ,_

11 -Auttlftrltlt
U- Vtlll I 4 W.D.

Utility· Buildines ·

SiJeo.lrom c.•ro 1lx40

$15,000.00,

l

I

conditon.

second

inves tment at $26~ 500 .00.

NEW CONSTRUCTION

... ._...

port, situated on choice
corner 101. S38,7oo,op.
SALEM STREE'r Rutland co~v 2
bedroom,. 1 bath .: ~ome
that is comfortable and

neat. Good cohOition,
also garden spot: Asking

$25,000.00.
'
UNION AVENU

-

Two ~Story

well buill home, 3
bedrooms, lull .'base·
ment, garage, bi ~- back
yard for lhe ' 'kids .
$26,500.00,

COMMERCIAL ' PRO·
PER TV - Pomeroy Ideal

..,,.......,
1

.........

Rates and Other lnfor,matlon
u,,.1sWif11a. ........,,...,....,, ...... ... ; .• , ...... ... . taM .

u, .. ,...,.. .. ~,.,....,....., ............. ........ .. ..,..
u, .. u ..... .................. .. ' . ... ' ... .. .. ........ .. "·"

..............,.. .... .,.........,...........,..........
II""'
IA•trlttf ....... PtrNM»

.....
............ "' ...
IMtiMf.
. · - - .. -

.. C...

fti, ....... ,....,... ................. ,......, ... ......
. .ICHIMI. Till,......... Wll ..... rMII""'fllllt 11r..,. .... Mt

r------..----........-.........----- .
,C
. urb Inflation.

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.- Fri.
. 9 a.m.·S:30 p.m.
992-5682
lo-7·1fc

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING ·

992-2478
'
or
Blain Miljloan
985-3965
6-1·1 mo.

Cafl lor · tree siding
estimates, 949-2801 or
949·!1140.
,.
No Sunday Calls . .
3·11 -lfc

• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems

new or repair. gutters

and downspouts, .gutter_
creaning and painting,

• Water, Sewer &amp;

Gas Lines
• Dump Truck

gu~ranteed .

e ·rrencher

Free Eslimales .

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Reasonable Prices .

Call Howard
949·2862 '
949-2160

"Beautiful, Custom

CONTRACTING

All types of roof work,

All work

PUWNS
EXCAVAnNG

J&amp;F

'·

PH. 992-7201
5·21 ·tl c

'

'

BISSELL
SIDING. CO.

· PH~ 992·2.259

Pay Cash for:.
Claulfleds and
Savell I

Built Garages''

HOUSE, 5bedrooms,livlng
'"'

$20,000,()().

I

NEW LISTING -;- A one year old 110 fool long 3
bedroom ranch with a 2 car garage, concrete front
porch, large barn, corn crib, ahd live. nice laying
acres, whjch are partly fenced with a board fence .
Home ~as 2 lull baths, large family room wllh wood
burner, huge living room with Ioyer, and many .
more extras, $62,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Beaulllul newly constructed
English Tudor spllt·entry home close to Middleport.
Featuring 3 bedrooms. 2'13 baths, family r(&gt;Om and
large living room wllh separate dll'llng room ,
garage ahd workshop. Good location - UNDER
CONSTRUCTION. S$.4,900.00.
NEW LISTING - This home has possibilities, large
family home or upper and lower apartments. 4
bedrooms, full balhs, 2 kllchens. Live In one level,
rent the other. 41h Ave. in Middleport. Carpeting,
kitchen equipment, some lurnllure. Nice lot.
$33,000.00.
'
STEP INTO YESTERDAY - Original wood work
and beautiful hardWood floors. Spacious rooms
dOwnstairs wllh big staircase leading upstairs to a 3 .
bedroom ano;t lull bllth. 112 bath In ullllly room and
family room also. Good location In Middleport and
at Yesterday's Prices. $29,500.00.
SIX ACRES OF PRIVACY - And is at the edge 01
town A l'h storv frame home with 3-4 bedrooms,
large uti lily room, nice cabinets In kitchen, and 2
outbuildings. $29,500.00. '
CUTE STARTER HOME - This two bedroom hOme
Is practically maintenance free . II has new

SUPERIOR
VINYL

PRODUCTS

' Siding·
Roofing &amp; Guller
Remodeling

serving Your Area for

20 Years

EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates
Call Collect
Ph. 843-3322
5·8·2 mo. pd.

'

Velma Nicirisky, Assoc .

Phone H2·3092 '
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171 '

M&amp;S BUILDING

CARPENTER'S

MASON TEXACO

DANCE

MECHANIC &amp;
BODYMAN

kitchen cabinets, bath

Real Estate- General

ousing

.T

STUDIO

remodeling, roofing &amp;
gutrer, siding &amp; plumb-

ing &amp; elec::trical, con·
crete, storm windows,
woodburners insta Ued.

Now Taking Enrollment
tor summer Classes .
to Pomeroy &amp; Racine

Ages3 and Up

Headquarters

EAF~RD[9

VIRGIL B. SR.• I A t I (J~

_ 216 ~- 5ec0tld Slreer
Phone
1· ( 614) ·992-3325

WHAT DO YOU THINK
- of this 3 bedroom
add;on,

with

trai ler

sfiding grass door to
sundeck

on

a

river

tronl lol of 3.7 acres tor
or retire·
ment? 1968 FfeetwQ9d,
equipped kit .. 3
bedroom, 1'12 baths, and

relaxation

gas F .A. furnace for on·

IV 513,500.
NEW LIS~fN~ - Very
nice 3 vr.old brick ranch
home with over 3 acres.
3 bedrooms, 11h baths,
central

ai r

heat.

&amp;

Equipped ' kit c hen ,
patio, located on hard

road only a few miles

from

town .

Asking

$57,000.00.

CAMPfNG LAND The woods wl1h big gam
enear Forked Run lake.
Enjoy the outdoors this
summer and camp out.
14. 6 acres.
FREE HEAT - Also 7
8tres of land with a
small house and L.C.
water. Minerals, other

buildings .
Only
$11,500.00, owner will
help finance ~
1978 H·ILLCREST 14x70 With storage rm.
Nice 3 bedrooms, l'h

CALL:
Paul Sigman-992·2984
Pal Milcheii-742·2S62
6·7·1mo.

J&amp;C

CARPENTER
SERVICES" .

SANITAnON
'SERVICE

- Addonsand
remodeling

- Roolingand gutter

2'h acres of pr · Jacy.

GOOd stone 4 rm. home
wllh bath, nat. gas fur·
nace al'ld city water.

NEW LIST! NG - Brick

veneer

J

bedroom

ranch . 2 lull baths, lots
carpeting, equipped
birch kitchen, full base·

of

wood burning
fireplace . Pallo, garden
and finished garage.
$75,000.
YOU CAN DEDUCT
YOUR MORTGAGE IN·
TERUT FROM YOUR
INCOME TAX.
&amp;

H' 111\·in rf
Ht.'.JCir

11.1/(/.'('o

(Free Estimates·)

V. C. YOUNG II ·
992-6215 or m-7314

Garages - Buildings
- Barns-Equlpmonl.
Shiels
POLE BUILDINGS
. IS'xlO' upto4D'x100'
PORTABLE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS
(4'xU', l'xr, l'xlO',

10'xl0', IO'xll' &amp; up)
Any size bull! to your
specifications. Models
In Meigs, Gallla and
M11on Counties.
FREE ESTIMATES
All Bullclfntt '

PH. Guor•nteld
367·7671
or 367·7560

IKMARD
ROTAVATORS
HJ 50"-20-30 H.P.
HA 60"-lHG H.P,
HE 60"-45-IG H.P.
All Modefs Available

LEO MORRIS
AI. I Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
PH, 742·2455
5·11·11c

~Ml
fL_wnHA

Ad

CHESHIRE 4·12-llc

p~

CIIALL
-MD

Lowell &amp; Doug Halfhill

2. _ _ _ __

.Rutland '
·SPRING

.Carpet Shop
SAU

CARPft

• f'rtlll

. ...

~

6. _ _ _ ____:__
. 7. _ _ _ __

Mlu.ER ELECTRI
SERVICE ·

·---9.

I;

For all of your wiring need~.

J0·'---.....-11 .
12.
13.
14.

Let George MiiiP• ,.heck
~lectrical

svslem.
, ..\.
Residential "· ~

&lt;:" " ·

&amp;Commercial : ..1[~1;

- --

$61,000.00.

'

' '' ''
"

"'

hoe and
~ &lt;1-lllt'J•

s··20·1 mo.

COMPLETE
' RADIATOR
SERVICE .
From the Smallost , _
Healer Core lo . 'tile
,Largest Radialor
Radialor Speclailll
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experllnce

'" ".

....' .
'

lnMomorl&amp;m
In memory of Oris Gaut
who passed !IWay June 15,
19U, Through the fifty
years we watkN hand In
hand tOOtlhlr, lht sweetest
memories of lht happiest
days, llngar still, and
always will. SlnctiiiiNrfy
morn, Lord, when you
catiN him- away, so
qulckly, we hid ho lime ro
say IIQOCibye, bul each yoar
draws ua closer, to 1t1e time
when we Cln be tooet11er
agaln ·to sray. Until then,
Lord, contented I'll be, and
live ond enjoy the years as
vou loan tlllm to me. SICily
miSIId by his wife, Lucy
ondfamlly.

28.
29,
JJ.
]1. _ _.;.__ _

:n. _ __ __

I
I
I
I

2
In Momor11m
IN L.OVING memory of
Jamie Burgess on his 24th
birthday, Jun• 13. Happy
BirthdaY Jamie. God only
lOOk lhe best. He tOOk tile
best when He tqok you,
Nobody knows the sadness
we have In our hearts lor
ypu. 1 miss and love you,
Granny.
3'!.._--..!A~n!!'noun=~ce!!m!!'on=ts~­

SWEEPER and ·- lng
machln. repa)r, parts, end
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hall mil• up
Georges creek Rd. Call
446-0294 ..

NEW GARAGE OfOENING
· Automatic transmissions
all sorts of mechanical
IN MEMORY ol our and
r•palr and ma1or and
betovld son, James A mlhor
auto body repair.
•Jamie' Burgeli on his 2~1h See James
Smtih or Tom
blrthd1y. Tht houW Is now
so quiet. That echDH wllll Masters or call 446-n57.
vour tlugllttr; And hearts
vou flllell wllh gfldiiiU, CitY Cab, off let 39 State St.
Yeern now lor God's GalliPOliS, open 5,30 n11
httftlttr; For !lien " - 11 :30l&gt;M 7 days. 446-0-~Sl.
hearts that mill you, will
be freed ol grief and pain, I PAY
hlgllell priCH
1n lht 1011 ol - ' reunion, Ptlllfbl• lor IIOid and sliver
1n hteven with you coins, rings, tewefry, etc.
someday. Sadly miSled bY, Conlee! Ed Burkel! Barber
Mom end Dad.
·
Shop, Mldcllepori.
'

sMITH NELSON
Ph.

5·7·1fc

BGS
SALES I SERVICE
U.S. RI.SOEast ·

•'

' dh

3

ACRES OF YARD OR GARDEN - An as a
year old 24~60 double wide wllh an equipped krtchen, incl. dishwasher, utility room with washer
and dryer, large living room, 3 bedrooms, 2 blllhs,
huge aded·on family room and a nice back porch.
$37,900.00.
ALL ON ONE FLOOR - Approx , 6 years? ld ..It h. as
3 bedrooms, large carpeted kllchen, noce 11v1ng
room ahd full basemen! that needs concrete floor .
S19,500.DO.
· TO BUY A HOME OF YOUR
NOW IS THE TIME
OWN - INTEREST RATES WON'T DROP AS
MUCH AS HOUSING COSTS WILL RISE .
1.1

35. _ _ _ _ _.;_

l

doser service available.

a used No. ISO Ntw
Hotllnct routlcl hi~
!~flora, bolh In ex'
Cfllonl condition.

-..,.-

34. _ _;__

......'

_

changes that have ro be

Hl-2,174

25.
24. 27.

-----~~m~:oy, Ohio 45~6~----- ... J

sewer line connections,
and any in house

MOTORS INC.

WHY PAY RENT?- When you could own th l~ cute
2 bedroom horne with 2 garages under for 1ust a
small down payment and less each month !han rent .
Mostly carpeted and Is cozy. $15,500.00.
TRAILER &amp; LOT IN RACINE- A 12&gt;&lt;65 Gregory
with 2 bedrooms, equipped kllchen, and ·nice living
room . 11 has all newwlnng, storage bu,lldlng and ap·
'prox 1 85 acr•s of ground. JUST $11,000.00.
WANT . MINERAL RIGHTS TOO? This 113 acre
farm has a lot ol bi&gt;Hom land, pasture land, and
trees 11 also has 2 houses. Live In one and rentlhe
other. several barn• and buildings. ASK 1NG

u.

.
l

Don' I wail. conlacl Ohio
Valfey Plumbing tor

Pomeroy, O~i. ·

22 .
23.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729

RACINE-SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS

992·2036

18.
19.
20.
21.

aluminum siding, new roof, new bath, new septic,
new carpet, and 1 1/8 acres. $24,900.00.

I
I
I
.I
- -- - - 1
I
I

16.

U ·lf t

made. Back

n.

33.·__:_

15.

Call742-319h ;\.
or 992-7680

'

I

'..J.

-\

·.
.A.''' ''

REALTOR
HENRY E. CLELAND, JR. H!-6191
ASSOCIATES
JEANTRUSSELL949-264f
DOTTIE TURNER H2·5492
ROGER TURNER Hl-5492
OFFICE H2·22S9

Giveaway
COLLIE and Coonhound
PuppiH. H2·2n0.

4

Announcemonto
ATTENTION LADIES II I
Help pav off those unwanted bills working
evenings from 7: JJ 10 10:30
p.m. as a fashion stylist.
Earn $8.00 to $10.00 per
hour profit. Ideal lor
homemaker wllh family.
Call H2·39411rom 9-6.
3

Lostand Found
Found: female coon hOund,
Rutland . Leading ·Creek·
Depot Street area. 742·2249.

6

LOST· Man's quartz watch
In New Haven, WV.
Reward . 882·3!U8.
7
Yard Sale
Michigan Yard Sale 50 Nell
Ave., Gafllpolls. Wed . June
101hru 17. 91o ?. ·
GARAGE SALE. Old Rt. 7,
Addison. women's clothes
sizes 16·18 112, household
Items, some collectibles,
.ere. June 15·20. 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.
Backyard Sale. Never
before offered, Texas
Rd.,Galllpofls . Mo~ &amp;
Tues. &amp; Wed. 10 unlll ?.
Plenty of everything.

sale TueSday June
16. 9 8. Four miles out
Ripley Road, Pl. Pleasant.
Dennis Roush residence.

Neals Auction Hogse«,
WVA . Rt. 2. Every Sal. 7:00
(Consignments
lraker1), (will buy furniture)
Lonnie Neal 367-7101.
$CASH I
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
.Q OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL·

exchan8es ...

s· t4·1 mo.

r 1nane1a1

BE A WINNER! Beal In·
flotlonl Work your own
hours demonstrating
MERRI ·MAC toys, gilts,
and home decor Items. We
need party . plan demon· 23
strarors in this area. High
in ·
vestment, no deli11ering, no

commission .

No

Professional
Services
COMMERCIAL and industrial
photography.
Phone 446·2909 or 446-7226
alter 4 p.m.

collecting , Cafl 1011 tree
now! 1-800·553·9077, · or
wrlle: MERRI ·MAC 801
Jackson sr.; Oebuque,
lowa52001 .
INCOME TAX AND ACCOUNTING SERVfCE ·
Opportunity is yours iusr Call 446·7068 for ap·
tor the asking. Ask your polntment anytime.
Beeline stylist and she will
be happy to help you join Piano tuning and repair,
the Beeline world of Love your neighbor tune
fashion and success. Phone your Plano. Bill Ward,
H2 · 39~1 between the hours Wards Keyboard. 446·4372,
ol9·6.
Gallipolis.
RESIDENT MANAGER
COUPLE PART TIME :
small apartment comple~.
Middleport area , No e~·
perlence necessary. Will
train. Apartment and all .
utilities plus salary.
Looking lor . mature
married couple. Excellent
opportunity for rellred or
semi· retired looking lor ad·
d.i lional income. No
children or pels please, 1·
614·86H186 from 9·4 only.

PIANO TUNING and ser·
vice, all makes and
mOdels. Call Bob Grubb at
4-46·4525. Formerly with
wards Keyboard.
GALliA Clean in g and
Rent-A-Maid Service Inc ..
Free Esllmates, bonded,
insured, phone 245-9234.
cleanIng by Ihe week, mon·
thor contractual.

FOR all your photography
to needs go loT awney Studio,
424 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio. Passports, family
photos, weddings, and com·
NEED someone to install mercia I pholography.
carpet. Must have own
tools. Call675·1317.
c &amp; F Cleaning Systems .
Offices, residentlals, car·
Woman to stay with elderly pets, Upholstery, windows,
lady In Coltagevllle on floor. and general cleaning .
weekend . 372-3398 Col· 446·2783 8to5 PM.
tagevllle, WV.
Someone to 'mow hay . 675·
1076.

Mobile Homes
for Sale ·
PRICES REDUCED · used

mobile homeS and tra11el

!railers. TRI -STATE
MOBILE HOMES. CALL
446-7572.

S mob. homes, will sell one
or all, already set up in

par k-underpinned, and lot

is ava i Iable for rent. Priced

al S3,000 to $8,000. 1·286·
3258, in Jackson , OH.
1981 Fairmontl4•52, 2 bdr.,

gas furnance, good cond .,

$9800 . 00 ,
Gallipolis.

245 ·9283 ,

ClEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUAL ITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GA LLI POLIS, RT.
35. PHONE 446-3868 or 446·
7274.
34 acres with

14~70

Vi c-

torian Trail er, A/ C, rural
water, goOO barn. Will sale

trailer or land separate.
Call446·6253.

10x55 expando LR, 2 bdr.,
all lines go with it , $2,000.
Call446·6240, Bidwell, OH .
1971 Schu ltz Homestead
12x60, wash &amp; dryer, new

carpet, com. turn ., set on
lot 6 in Quai l Creek in Rod-

ney, OH . $8,750.00 24.5·5420
or 388·8349.

1969 Vindale with expando

on lOOxJOO lot, with river·
view, carpeted, 2 car

garage and utility room .
256·6527 or 256·6236.

31
Homeolor Sale
Jobs Overseas-Big money
5
ROOM
house, 64 14•65 memory mobile
last. $20,000 to ssc,ooo plus
must be moved from
per year. CAll 1-716·842· Chillicothe Rd., only$3,500. home
lot.
A
Iter
5PM call 245-9218.
Call
446·4038
or
446-1615.
6000, ext.1594.

12 Situations Wanted
SOMEONE to share
oU6·4775
driving and expenses from
OPEN9T05
Gallipolis to Marshall
Unlverslly from June 16
through
July 17. Phone 446·
CASH -foor your diamonds,
gold and sliver, class rings, 2460.
wedding bends, sliver and
gold coins . Tawn•y Repair or remodeling
Jewelers, 422 second Ave,, work, flooring, doors. wall
Gallipolis, Ohio.
paneling, ceiling, or floor
tile, siding. H2·2759.
GOOd 17 ft. aluminum
canoe wllh paddle. Phone Will do roofs, gOOd rates ,
4-l6·1956 or 256·9307.
free esllmates. Call afler 5
a!H2-5825.
WANTED TO BUY:
GOLD,
SILVER, Temporary cleaning &amp;
PLATINUM, STERLING· baby sllllng ~ervlces
COINS,
RINGS , available. Call949-2005.
JEWELRY, MISC . ITEMS.
ABSOLUTE MARKET Will care !Dr the elderly In
PRICE GUARANTEED. our .home. Trained and ex·
EO BURKETT BARBER perlenced. H2·7314.
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIOH2·3474.
.

Free to good home; 6 week
old kltnns. Black &amp; while,
raised by hand, motlllr
kiiiN on highway, filler
trained. Call 667-J.493 ·alter
5 p.m weekdays, ·an day
Saturday &amp; Sunday, Can be
Th• Meigs Museum, 1"4 seen at Howard CaldWell,
Bullernur Av•nue, will be one mile south of Tuppers
open Fridays from 1·3 for Plains, Ohio.
1111 summer months.
To lfQOCI home female
Meigs Co: Fish &amp; Game siamese cat declawed.
Association will hav• a Must be kept InSide. olol6meeting saturday June 13 2310.
at7p.m. ·
Pl. Boxer puppies ....·3870.
Reduce sale &amp; lost with
GoBHe tablets &amp; E.Yep Dachshund Cairn cross HARLE.Y·DAVIOSON, pr·
water pills. Nelson Drug mat• 1 112 old, very frlen· eferabiY oldlr mOO.f, but
will consider new model II
diY.36N727.
.
Store.
reasonable. Must be In
good condlllon, In lhe $1500
Christian Male tiger cat, 1 yr. old, to $2500 price range. Call
LONELY
$Ingles. Meet Christian 388·8343.
m-5006.
singles lnyour area. Wrlle
Southern Christian Singles orange Kitten CAll 379BEDS·! RON, . BRASS, Old
CIUb, PO Box 1123, Sum· 2727
merville, SC 2943 or calli· , __· - - - - - - - turnllur•, gold, sliver
dollars, wood Ice boxes,
803·171·901, 24110Urs.
•·
stone jars, antiques, ere .•
complete
households .
PIANO Lessons. Lucy
Write: M.D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Bulmer. Hartford, wv
Pom•roy, Oh. Or '1'12-n60.
2395.
Old furniture, copper and
4
GlvHtnY
brass, ke«&lt;es. spill hickory
balkets. stone !Irs wllh
names. 446·3925.

dining room, kit·
large family room .
Drive. $49.500. 675-

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gilts as a ~en·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and gel
lhe eflglblllly llsl at H2·
2156orH2-2157.

bedroom furnished
;,.,.,.. $180. month plus
:
someone
SIOO. dep0$11.675- Wanted
houseclean. H2·3018.

Classified Pages cover
the following telephone
•

13

lnsunnce

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage In Gallia County
lor almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet In·
dlvidual needs. Contact
Kall Burleson. your neigh·
bor and agent.
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
cell•d? Lost your
operator's License? Phone
H2·2143

BUY this 7 room energy el·
tic lent home in Add ison 1977 HOMETTE trail er,
and .forget about high in· Ux70, 3 bdr ., 1112 bath, k it·
terest. We'll finan ce it at 10 chen turn., $10,000 or $3,000
percent! Bargain pr iced at ·down and take over
$35,900. Pi ck the plan lhat payments. 446·7«0.
suits your finances. $2,000
down $350.00 monthly 1973 Cr-own Haven, 14x65,
payment. $5 ,000 down three bedroom, new car·
$300.00 monthly payment. pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x64,
$10,000 down S25C.OO mon · two bedroom, new carpet.
lhly payment. For more 1972 Champion, 12x60, twodetails call 675·3240 days, bedroom, new carpet. 1976
367·7536 nights.
cameron, 12x60. two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
NEW CABIN or small carpel. 1970 PMC, 12x60,
home, completely fur · two bedroom, new carpet,
nished, $3900. Call 4-l6·0390. B &amp; S Sales, Inc. , 2nd and
Viand Street, Pl. Pleasant,
WV Phone675·o1424.
House with acreage lor
sole, 3 or 4 bdrs., fully car·
peled, 2 barns, 379·2258 or 8xo45 2 bedroom trailer.
Brown' s Trailer Park,
379·2343, alter 6PM .
Minersville, Oh io.

1 mile from HMC , upon hill
behind FOOdland, 1 yr. old , 12x52 unfurn ished Shullz
3 bdr., 2 fullbalh , br ick ran· Mobile Home. 3 bedroom, 2
added on, 12x22 living
ch, full basmr .• 446·7709 ,
room,
new
carpet
1hroughou1, nice level lol
By owner· I yr . old 3 bdr., with utility building on E.
FR, LR With stone Main St., Racine. 949·2191.
fireplace, large kilchen,
dining area, 2 baths, ulit.
room, carpeted thru·our. 1976 Windsor Home 14x70,
double garage, heat pump, In real gOOd cond . Call 992·
barn, 23 acres, fruit trees, 5533.
clly schools, 3 mls. to
Cinema, 3 mls. to 0.0. 1968 12 ~ 40 mobile home, 1
Mel ntYre Park, $115,000. bedroom, very gOOd con·
379·2196 tor appoinlmenr, dillon. $4200.00. 985·4133.
Gallipolis.
1968 12x50 2 bedroom, gas
House lor sale-S rms. &amp; hoot, parlly furnished , air
bath, carpeted thru·oul, conditioned, clean , $5,500.;
cent. air, 1 car garage, 1 1968 10•55, 3 bedroom, gas
good our building, 112 mile heol, partly furnished . Has
from Sliver Bridge Shop· large
In li ving
ping Center. 446·4752 ,
&amp; dryer.
Gallipolis.
10x50 1

15 Sclloolo Instruction
SUMMER SCHOOL IN·
STRUCTION · Does your
child need extra help?
Review .program for
reading
or math .
Presbyterian Church. Call
~·ol052.
Propare lor
cl-nowf
Home. 576· •

F.....r

'7.tt &amp; up· '12.15 aup

-•

'"'llilled

I

I

I

It'

..

1111

1111

'

ROSE8UHS
II STOCK

3.------··5. ----_ _ _ __

5·24-1 mo.

your present

_;_..c----

1.

Owners · Operators

John peere,
-1 ~~==j~~~~:~~~==:::.ll 'AulhoriiN
614·ol4l-Jt21
NewPhone
Holland,
Bush Hog
farm equipment dealer.

KllatEJ

ltFPifD

PH. 304.773-9510 . '

Pomeroy, Oh.

• Roofing work
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·3-1 mo .

Gao Line· Ditches
Wafer Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
County Cerllfltd
Roush Lane
. Cheshire, Oil.
Ph,

REESE BUILDINGS

balh, car·
port, and J112' acres of
land on RIs. 7 and U3.
Handy lo town tor only
$24,000.00.
NEAR OLD DEPOT ~

- Plumbing and
efeclrical work

ROUSH
REESE~ CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex•
TRENatiNG
tensive remodeling.
SERVICE
• Electrical work
warer·Sewer· Electric

can rent the corner lot.

carpeting,

work
- Concrete work

. Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-501.
or 992-7505
4·17-tlc

Quality Built
Economically PrieN

bedroom home, closets,

ON DUTY DAILY

t========:t========j-;:::::======::::;
''YOUNG'S

balhs ,
furnace ,
carpeting, bar, and you
Only S12,000.
NEAR POMEROY - 3

Call949-2710
6·8·1 mo.

! l wanrea
t ) For Sale
( ) Announcem•nl
1 ) ~;or Rent

'

SIIT!SFY YOUR NEE Do

location!

R-"-...... &amp;lltCIYIIffll

•

POMEROY, · O~IO

' Vinyl.&amp; Aluminum ·
.
SIDING
"

Large A· frame w~tti gas
furnace, on Main•Street.

11-lltCIYI....

lt-M.M• • .,..,

Ph. 414-843-2591 ;, I
6·15-lfc
·
'
'

- Three bedrooi;n ranch
style home, carp~t.~ car·

IAccnMf'in

11-lltetflcll

Racine, Oh.

•"

iloor has two mooern
furnished , 2 bed'room
apar!ment with ·private
enlrance. Call tor more
details.
,.,~
RIVERVIEW - 'MID·
DLEPORT ~ ' Two
story. 4 be&lt;!room liome,
some remodeling, Great

Pomeroy -

608 E. MAIN

Rt. 3, Bo¥ 54

NEW LISTING -'- Ex·
cellent . Commercial
Bldg., large two story
brick, full basement,
gas forced air turMce &amp;

air

RHI ESIIIO- General

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

NEW LIS
REAL BAR~A!N ' Two story ' ~~modeled
home, 3 .bedrqom~1 bath,
living room;- d!.nl?ll' kit·
chen, full · basemen!.
Near shopping; tor only

77-Autelttttlr

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

'From lOxlO''

SMALL '

75-AwteP'arll

.SERVICES ·

j .

'sizes
1

Homos for Sele

Large 3 bedroom home, 3
living rOQms, formal dining
room, 2 builtin kitchens, 2
bath$, 1 With shower: All
fully carpeted. Lots of
paneling. Large swimming
, Will do bllby ~lttlng In my pool
In back. seen by aphOI))e 256·1763.
pointment only. H2·2404 af·
ter ~p. m. Large recreation
Will do babysitting In my and laundry room .
hOme In Syracuse. Good
references, very reliable. THREE bedroom hOtise ,
Phone H2·3110 or 949·2791 ,
family room with fireplace ,
full basement, all ap·
HAUL gravel, limestone, pllances and draperies .
coal, etc. Dencll Dunlap. 675·1542 afler 5 p.m.
Phone 675-5215.
Two Story House and lol on
Carpentry and remocfellng Broad Run Rd . No land
on~ roofing, 576·2989.
contract but wi II lake a
deed of trust. 882·2407,
WORK wanted-Carpenter
· &amp; roof work, house pain· 5room home, bath, allelec·
ling. Free estimates. trlc, 2 years old, 5
Phone Mason, 773-5921.
a~res,$26,500. Bud Chattin
Road, Pl. Pleasant. 675· ·
1828.

ALL STEEL

7f-~tcftye:ltl

'

·- -·

l,i~~~~~==~··~~ijJ:;~iij=::~~~~r===:;~~~~==:r
Fllfll Buildings

31

Cake
Decorallng,
specializes Wedding cakes,
675-2588 or 675·1553, Pt.
Pieasant, WVA .

' '

ment with family room

t FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;

ICIR... W
,.,_W,ntttl lD Do

LEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

The Daily

Pom•roy-Midclleport, Otlio

Beach, Fla.,andTbnBeach,Akton.

3 Perfect Parts!

FASHION a wonderful look for
yoursell for the new season with
three easy pieces. Soft Ja(ket,
soft tank top, strarght pants. Mi•
them, match them!
.
Prinled Pattern 4939: Misses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, !6, 18. Size
11 (bust 34) jackel, pants 2'4
yds. GO'; top Ill yds. 45".
$2.00 .. IICh jllltlm. Add 5M
r. IICh flllllm .. pWp
.... hlodli•&amp;. s..• te:

1981

I

\IParll St.
MlcNiepart, Oh.

flll.ttHW
AnYttmt

'

10

WatllwdteDI
D.J.'a LAWN. MOWER
RlfOAift • ' On Neighboll II- ltd., elllllllfcll-·
VIOtMI. IMcllllllfll In Llwn

'II 'II

Call • "Ill lfter 5 p.m.
Pldl 1111 encl Clellvery

'7

I'

-. .
---

1

11011. ...... IIIII'!MIIId.

evalltble.

•

'II '11

......
._
tnet•
,i

......
---

�Television
•
•
VIewmg
·

Aplrlmellt
----~m~R~M~t_____

.
House for rent, 51 Olive St.·
1 bdr.. unfurnlilheil, no
.
paIS• vou Ply utiii.IIH. dep.
req., S150. mo. 446-7886. After 5 4-46-~;

GOOD
USED
PLIANCES • -WIII~·s;
dryers,
r•frlgerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appllances, . 1911 E.11tern
Ave., "'!6' 711911.

1 Bedroom apt. all utlllllts
paid. 675-5104 or 675-531d•.
ATTENTION :
(IM Pl. Pleasant.
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
Fur.ntshed Apartment.· pay calh or ctrtllltd check
$21)0. Utilities pd, lbdr., fir- for •ntlquH and Cclllec·
st floor, adults, ~-4416 af• ' llbiH · or omlre HtaiH.
Nothing too large. Also,
ter7PM.
· guns,
pocKet witcheS, and

1909 Gregory 12 X 55,
bedroom partially fur· .
nlshed, wall to well carpeting, air conditioning, ·
underpinning . $4,000. n35170.

lf77 BONANZA travel
trailer, 35ft. 1-.1.c., tipout room. Ntw awnlf!ll,
dtluxe Interior, full blth,
c a u • -·
·

.

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

... . ..... .....
..
...........
.~

t

r------

6 room hou• for rent on
Nyt A - . $150 per month, 150 dtpollt. 367-7111.
Smell 2 bedroom treiler In

1971 CUTLASS liton. Ms-

countr'(. Prtfer 1 adUlt.

:p~~

1100. per month. ,..,_2321,

IVINIIIG
7:00 ~

. d)4-691-nos.

'

.

2f foot 'litiiOWitone 'HARPER ' 'Halalted&lt; 'llwn :' .·
countrv clu~ trlve11raller. repair end IIIII'· ·
LOeded. N.,er been iiMd. penlng •rvlce,
10 l.m.-6
Has 21 toot ewntng. 742-2211 p.m. 675-5NI. .
days or 7-G-2201 after 5.
. I
DAVE'S appllet!CII repelr,
·Fiberglass Travel Tretter. wallltrs. drvera. Ilium13 fl. 950 1111,. fully equlp- bing, electric,
han·pad, sleepo foUr, excellent dyman. 57~2f.ll or615-5619.
condl!lon .• n3-5-GO 'alter 4

NEEDseverallterrisotfurnllu re,
apptla ncn,
televisions.' Big discounts
for qualllv purchase.
Village Furniture
Jackson Ave. 675-1n3.

Furnished Apart
I coin collecllons. Call 61•
$150. Ulllltles pd. ';':,; 767-3161 or551·3-411.
bath, one child acc811fabta,
4-46-&gt;4416 after 7.
54 Misc. Merchlndlse
RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER· a1G ·dl.scounts for
Farms for Salt
Small apartment for one VICE, tn and.above ground carrv at Village Futrnll~!.!
I I""~
pool kits, Immediate 2405 Jackson Avenue,
q acre, 4 bedraomm, living person, CaU416' 151S. ·
1773.
delivery
and
complete
Inroom, with woodburner,
new kitchen, 1'1• bath; 2 bedr. garage apart .• verv stallation available. Also
swlnnlng pool, fruit trees, nice. $150.00 plus ullllties all pool supplln and services for exiSting pools.
many extras. Co Rd. 30. 4 monthly. Callol-46-4336.
For dttans and directions·
miles from Pomeroy Nease
to local dloplay, 4-46·1324.
Settlement. Low $50's. 949FURNISHED APT. Cen·
2560.
tral air, heat and parking, 1
KACH·ALL portable metal
or 2 edults only. -"6-0331.
buildings, sizes &gt;lft.xlott. to
35
Lots &amp; Acreage
1211.x«lft. Gallipolis Block
Furnished 2 bedroom up- Co., 123112 Pine St., call 4-16LOTS - Real nice campsite stairs apartment. Adults 2783.
on Raccoon Creek, all only, no pats. Middleport.
utilities avai lable, $300. 992-3874.
WONDER STOVE · mfg .
down, owner will finance,
by United States Slove.Co.,
call after 3 p.m., 256-6-413.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furniShed wood and coal bur(ler with
apartments. 992-5434 or 992- blower, Gallipolis Block
Beautiful &amp; level lots, Falr- 5914 or 882·2566.
co. , call4-16m83.
~leld Chur.ch Rd., approved
sub division, city school,
1 bedroom apts. avalleble Gravely, 12 HP, two wheel
rural water, 3 3/ 4 acres,
$10,000. 1 114 acre $4,500. at Riverside Apts. Equal model, new, $500 below list.
Owner will finance, 10 Opportunity Housing. Call Outdoor Equipment, Jet. 7 Two veer old quarter hor992-7721.
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. 4-16- se, 1000 lbs, Ideal tor
down 379-2196.
children. $700. 615-5365.
3670.
Four 15,00 gallon tanks
APARTMENTS.
Fur
4 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd .
above ground at
located
close toRt. 160, $8,000. Call nished or unfurnished. 675· For sale Glass shOWcase Two day couches with mat- Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
1371
days,
675-3812
ching
table,
like
new.
$125.
$150.
cash
register
$125.
4-16-om.
each. Phonel -304-422-2781.
evenings.
Store shelves, chest type 675-1622.
freezer, yard roller S«l:
2 acres on Floyd -Clark Rd.
White shingles, wood bur- 8 pc setting cape Cod Ware Hellion Big round baler.
2
BEDROOM
apartment,
clj)se to Rt. 160, $4,000.
utilities paid, adults only, ner cheap . 379-2196, by Avon, Items still have 1975 model. $2,300.00. 992Phone 4-16-0390.
no pats. 675-1883 9·5 week· Gallipolis.
contents. 895-3597 alter 5 751f.
days.
pm.
Two cemetery lots, 8
TROY-BILT ROTOTILLE ~
SNAPPER 8 HP elect.
graves, Graham Stallon
start
riding
mower
30
ln.
AND
2 bedroom furnished trailer RS, DIScounts I 1mmedlete
Cemetary above New APARTMENTS
cut, list $1218-sale $1050. on Crab Creek
Rd., shipment. Call (703) 942MOBILE
HOMES
675·4130.
Haven. Phone 882-2619.
Outdoor Equipment. Jet. utilities furnished. S225 3871 or write ,Hickory Hill
~ursery, Rt. 1 Box 390 A ·
Rts. 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. month. 675·3682.
Fishersville, VA 22939.
BY owner, 3 apartment 2 BEDROOM apartment, 446-3670.
hOtJse on approx. 1 acre. utilities paid, will consider
62
wanted ro Buy
L(ve In one, rent others to one older child. call 675- canoe 17 11. fiberglass, Sears air conditioner,
1883.
$175. Callm- 3921 .
21 ,000 BTU, used 1 season. WANT TO BUY Old furmake your payment. Can
$225. Call882·2f58.
niture and Antiques Of all
be converted single home.
C(ty water, will consider 0
Furnished Rooms
kinds, caii .Kenneth Swain,
Canoe 17 II. · fiberglass, Redwood picnic table. Also 256·19671n the everilng.
land contract. 675-1883 9-5
SLEEPING ROOMS for 5175· Phone 992 -3921 ·
Baby walker. 895-3546.
P- ~ ·
rent, Gall fa Hotel.
63
Livestock
1'180 model Sears Kenmore Ohio Valley Cleaning, Call
Two cemetery lots, 8
gf,aves, Graham Station SLEEPING ROOMS and washer and dryer heavy us for carpet cleaning REGENCY Inc. ApartCemetery above New light housekeeping apt., duty, large caps, can be before 9 am any day 675- ments, $200 . · month,
Park central Hotel.
seen at Gold Van Lines, 47 1213.
utilities partially paid. 2
Haven. Phone882·2619.
Bedroom, superior neighSycamore, Gallipolis.
borhood. 675·6722, 675-5386.
'h acre lot at Apple Grove, 4~6~___,S~pe~c~e:..!f~or~R~e!!!n!!.t_
Antiques . Also outside
FEVER SUF - doors, beds, round oak
w:v. Priced on Inspection. Secluded private trailer lot HAY
FERERS AVOid expense Of table with matching buffet. 5 geese $10 a. pair, call 675·
675·6928.
In wooded area . Ideal lor the
needle, English family Call304-576·2538.
5086.
that summer outdoors.
tradition for centuries. 11
contact
Brown's
Trailer
Two cometary lots, 8
works. For more In·
Two year old quarter horse
graves, Graham Station Park, 992-3324.
formation send today self 55
Building Supplies
1,000 lbs. Ideal for children,
Cemet!rV above New
$700.00 675-5365•
addressed stamped enHaven. Phone 882-2619.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home velope plus Sl.OO to S.R.A. ALL TYPES Of building
Park, Route 33, North o1 Co ., P .O. Box 284, materials, block, brlck,
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call Gallipolis, OH, 45631.
-~· · ~ ···._
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
,,
992-7479.
litRJIIS
leis, etc. Claude Winters,
1973 Dodge motor home gd. Rio Grande, 0. Cell 2ol5TRAILER spaces lor rent . cond ., make offer. 4-16·32(1 5121.
71
Autos tor Sate
41
Houses lor Rent
Southern Valley Mobile alter 5, Ga llipolis.
1976 Chysler Cordoba, low
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
56
Pets for Sale
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, 1 car 992·3954.
miles, good cond., tilt
Sterling Chains, 16' $4.00, POODLE GROOMING.
garage, garden space, air
wheel, cruise, priced right,
18'$5.00, U'$6.00. Add$1.00 Cell Judy Taylor at 367· 4-16-8661. Gallipolis.
cond., unfurnished, on Rt. 7
over looking the Ohio TRAILER space 3 miles postage &amp; handling. Cash, 7220.
tram town tunclion 2 &amp; 62 at check, or money order to J .
River. 367-7270.
74 AMC Sportaboilt StationoldY , 615·3248.
Daniels, 15 Evans Hgts.,
DRAGONWYND
CAT · wagon, 6 cyl., p.s., p.b.,
Gallipolis,
Oh
ol5631.
2 bdr. home unfurn, Lower
TERY · KENNEL, AKC good cond. 4-16·lo152.
Rt. 7. No Pets, dep. req.,
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
New wedding gown &lt;never Himalayan, Persian and 74 Road Runner, many ex·
256-1413. GallipoliS.
4S Equipment for Rent
worn)
size
516, Siamese eels.Seal &amp; cream tras 367·0107 or 4l6-tl648 at·
reasonablely
priced.
446- point Hlmllayan &amp; While
ENDLOADER
and
House lor rent, 57 Olive St.
ter5.
Persian kittens. Call 4-161 bdr. , unfurnished, .., backhoe. 180 par day. 0769, Gallipolis.
3&amp;.1-4 alter 4 p.m.
pats, you pay utilities, dep. Operate yourself . Ray
77 Trans Am, near loan
req ., Sl50. mo. 4-16-1886. AI· Beegle, 895-38-41 .
1 set o1 dishes service lor 8,
value at S3800. 4-46·11 36
Harllqulnn paperbacks, HILLCREST KENNEL
ter 5 4-16·-1045.
91Wo·8PM.
pull down ceiling light. 388- Boarding all breeds, clean
'
'
83(1, Vlnton,OH .
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
1013 2nd AVe., Gall Ipolis.
Also AKC Reg. Dober· 1970 Ford Mavrlck 100,000,
2bdr., unlurn. house, no
body exc., car doesnot run,
pats, you pay utilities, dep
CONTROL hunger and lose mans. Call ~- n9s.
make
otter. Ph. 379·2280.
req., 1150. mo. 4-16·7886 af- 51
Household Goods
weight with New Shape
ter 5 4-16-4045.
Diet Plan and Hydrex AKC
Reg .
female
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Water Pills. Fruth Phar- Pomeranlao, $50. 2ol5·9112, Corvette 1978 sliver anSOfa , chair, rocker, ot- macy.
nlversttv edlllon L12 loaded
Thurman,OH.
Mobile Homes
42
toman, 3 tables, ssoo. Sola,
with extras. very loW
tor Rent
chair and loveseat, $275.
Two morith spring special 2 AKC registered tov male mileage, ex. cond., 367-7560
Sofas
and
chairs
priced
or 367-7671.
Trailer for rent, contact
from 1275. to $695. Tabln, lor upholstering furniture . chocolate poodle puppies. 8
Carrv Out in Cheshire.
S38 and up to Slot. Hlde-a- Richard Mowery, Sr. -·old. 1150 ea. 992-7102.
v.w. Sci rocco, exc. cond.. •
beds,$3«)., queen stze, $380. OWner. 675-4154.
spd, «1 MPG, elloy wheels,
2 bdr. Mobile Home new Recliners, $165., 1295.,
Surprise dad on Fathers new llrn, cassette radio.
Capt. Dee's. Adu Its on tv, no Lamps from $11. to 165. 5 SWIMMING
POOLS :
pats, sec. dep, and rei. 4-46- pc. dinettes from $79,, to PRE·SEASON SALE: Day with a new puppy. 4-16-f500.
Collie, beagle, end opanlel
2491 .
S365. 7 pc ., $189. end up. 1999.00 INSTALLEDIII types, main, females,
Wood table and 4 chairs, Above ground pool COM- vour choice Of colors. ln- 1970 model 442 Oldsmobile,
') bdr. mobile home near 135D up tO 1495. HUIChH, PLETELY INSTALLED formetton call Humane convertible 446-UlB,
Gallipolis.
cap. Dee's. Adults only, no 1300. and 1375., maple or startlngaiS99f.OO. Price In· SOCiety 992-6505.
pato, sec. dep. and rei. 4-16- pine finish. Bedroom suites eludes pool, deck, fence,
- Bassett Oak, Uo4f., filter, liner, and In2A91 .
1980 Pontiac Flreblrd,
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk stallation under normal Selling aut AKC registered yellow bird edition, fully
cocker
itpanlels,
black
bed complete with mat- ground condition. Free
equlpad, low miles, ex.
2 bdr.. unlurn. mobile tresses.
I25D. and up to shop ar home servlca. Cell mele, black female, bleck cOnd., 446-4160 after 5PM,
home on Georges Creek, S35D. Captain's
&amp;,
while
female,
ell
young
1275. 1-f()()-624-1511 .
Gelllpolls.
ret., and dep. req. 4-16-4229, complete. Baby beds,
d0gl.l43·26a.t.
beds, llf.
G~lllpoils .
Mattresses or boK springs, Insulated storage building.
71 Toyota CorOlla, auto, elr
lull or twin, 155., firm, $65,
with 7ft. ceiling. Ideal . THE FISH TANK and Pet cond., , AM· FM, lOW
and $75. Queen sets. 1115. 5 lxlO
shop. 1799. see these Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave. mlluge. 2ol5-f1J2, Thurdr. chests,$49. 4 dr. cheSts, work
Pl. Plenant.
at
KingSbury
Homl parts · 675·2063,
$42. Bed framn, 120.and
Guinea pigs $7.9f and 10.9f, man,OH.
alore.
125., 10 gun - Gun cabinets,
Perakets 114.9f, Zebra FinS35D.. dinette chain 120.
ch 112.95, Gerbils 12.98. 1969 Cemaro 1150, County
and $25. Tappan 011 or Used couch and chtlr. $150 OpenlH.
Rd. I, (Tick Ridge), Box
or belt Offer. 992-7721 .
electric rangn, $315,
3)7, Oalllpolll.
USED
•
Rangn ,
AKC
Dachshund,
ALL types Of granlh, mar- Pomerenlan en Poodle 1970 Camaro, V-1, autO, oct
2 bdr. mobile home 16x65, 4 refrigerators, and TV's.
ble, al!d bronze memorialS. pups895-3951.
rriile out Bulavllle Rd . $115 3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
lhapo, 11300, 4-46-5517 or
9am to 7pm, Mon. Display lot on Main St. Pl.
mo. plus one month dep. Open
256-lm, Gallipolis. ·
lhru Fri .. 9am to5pm, Sat.
Pleasant Granite Com«6--11199 after 5::111.
pany. Phonl675-5541.
Boxer puppln, 2 male, 2
4-46·0322
2-dr. Statton
Mobile home for rent, 3 1.::========1========~ lemale, call 57._2f19 or 51fr
body, very
bllr., completely num., 4462673 alter 4::111 PM.
cond. el!d
,.,., Galllpolla.
Adorable
AKC
Ptklntle
They'll Do It Every_Time
fiUPPits, AkC Paadll pup2 bedroom trailer tor rent.
plea, shots and wor- lN-C DodiM ln IICIOd rvnnlng
B.-own's Trailer Park. 992~L'f
med.CFA Htmlalyln will cond., wfll 1111 chtap, 4-46trede reasoneble. 1-304-7CI- 2159 or Mekdlya 446-01"JJ!l4.
NfU ....
1002.
F9f: rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
1976 Olcllmobllt ltltlon
miltllle home. Recine area.
Black Md tan coon datil. 10 WIQin. lMt Cl~ Z-29.
992-5151.
w•ka old. Excellent 992-:160.
biiiOdllne. 675-563-4 or 6756933.
2 bedroom Ulllltlet paid.
Adults only . Deposit
required. 2 miles out on St.
Rt. 1-43. 992-3147.

' oiUIIItl, tilt

tlllde fOr
For rr•:...,l
ADYANCI .' t ·
GUTTER ,

e I'M· IIIAGAZINE
D I'IIOGRAII

~~¢1'.\ro . ,
NAIIMU.! 011 THl

e 1JlTIC IIACIIlL-LI!HRIR
TACDOUGH
m

-•1

pm ..

.

~ii~lllfYE

7:30

RON'S Television service.
Specializing In Zenith al!d
MDttirole, Quazar, · 1tid
hOUit calla: P~ 57.-:me
or4-46-2-154.

ANOTM!R Lll'!
· DAVID ltTTIIIIIAN:
tOOICIII!l FOil fUN COIMdian
Devldlottormontokeothohlgh

road ~o aome unlikely place•

, whe!• he uuo hlo •uniquely
inlolnative eye to find humor in
the mo1t mundane leiaure

activltloa.

Ser·

W

wv "

~~~::;:~R'I WILD

.

HOUYWOOD IIQOARES
@ DICK CAVITT IHOW
Gnat: DlmtNinetteDe Valolt,
founder of Britain's Royel

Ballot.
\1)

T and R building,
remodeling, also ·papering,
carpet Installation, and
general · home
Im provements. 675-5689, 675- ·
5304.

,.,.,

Sale or Trede. 1f79 BAJA
Boat, 16 11_-trl·hUII, 115 h.p.
Mercurv aulboard motor
with- trim. EIIY toed
Tenn. trailer. Complete
covers al!d lots ol extres.
Like new, vary little use.
992-6288.
•

PAINTING - Interior el!d
exterior, plumbing,
rooting, some remodtllr)ll.
20 vrs.exp. Ceii381·N!2. •

Auto Plrts
&amp;ACCIUMIH
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker Hrvlct, buy
automobiiH, radleton and BRICK, BLOCK, AND
STONE WORK, 2.56-6735,
battertas. 446-7717.
Crown&lt;;ltv, OH, · .
4 Goadyllr, poiYQIIII
radial tim. p255, 701115 fOr -WANTED TO. DO 111 types
exterior PAINTING.
Corvette, White railed Itt· Of
Freo astlmatel. VERY
ter,llkanew4-46-770f.
REASONABLE RATES.
CALL 614-256-l.M 'after
4 1.-s•s, whllt spoke 4:JIPM, OIIIIPGIII. . ·

tires.

wi!MII, 1200

I IUD,

alts on Ford truck. 1125.

....133.

'

New 1910 ChivY truck bed,

:1. whtel biH. mo. 51611

' .........

~liM Far Vullurn"

ClliiOYIE -(CLASSIC) "\lo
"lndltcrMI" 1131
C1J 1DJ • AIC COMEDY

P!AP!!

Saturday's
.

I

l:

(Anowero tamouow) · •
Jumbles : NATAL JUOGE INCOME SHADOW
Answer: What melodies do ghosts slng?HAUNTING ONES

lro!o-

contllnina 110 ..-,to ...-

do IIIII 1100

,.,., ......., zip codl

::r·

fars1.15 pootpald

hiM, N..-, NJ. 07148. lnc:ludo-

rub checb pey*t to New r r;-t.aic:U

BRIDGE
Common sense play
'•

By O.wald Jaeolly

at ourly

CIJ ~

QA£AT PERFOR-

MANCES 'ThreaCheever Ste&lt;-

111: 0 Youth and Beauty' John
Che4pver'e.etory of an athlete
who didn't die young, deal awith
one of the authOr' 1ta vorita aub·
• jects.theAmtricanmale'atear

!l!Joeing hlo youth. (80 01ina.)
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SliOW
Cllllli.IIONDA YNIGHT lA·
SEBAU. Team a and aite ol the
game waa unavailable at pre sa
time.

GCIJ(JI) THE TIM CONWAY
SHOW Gut~~ I: Harvey Korman.

epaat)

8:58
1:00

ffi

~IN UPDATE NEWS
.ffiFLAIIINOOAOADAn

angry, grieving mother learns
thelecta bah indthe death of her
!II*Qitlmatechild inaauapicioua
mill blaze and threatens to ex·

AIUYOOP

-pollthepowtffulandeviiSher·
iff Titus Sample. (Repeat; 2
hro.)

.

(]) 700CLUB
.I]) tlDJ II.A.S.H. Hawkeye
betaB.J. he can go an entire day
without telling a joke, and
Charles geara up lor a confron·
talion .with the officer who 'ex·
iled' him to Korea. (Repeat}

C1J

@

A BAYOU LEGEND

William Grant Still's opera ,
baaed on a foUc legend, tell athe
story of Bazile, 1 young Idealist
who Ia in love with a apirit, Aur·

"rJ-

lnvarllbly the
"IJ led. · Woul

1-U-&amp;l

tl
'KQ J 10
tKQ42
tQ7U
EAST

WEST
-t151
,1151

table and
ck of clubs

you belleve
that 1a1 than half the declarers manafecl to make the

t87S

'1At72

t7U

tiO

tKU
tJ 1011!
SOUTH
tUQJ Ill

overtrick?'
Oswlld: "Not at all. It Is
one of the oldest 'book' hands
used .by 'lniten since the days
of WOrk and Leaz. Unfortunately, 1111111 avera1e pllyers haven't read those old
boob and '!.be plly 1s too elementary for modem boob."
o\JID: "I clldn't klml It wu
a book bllld. It just struck me
u COIDIIlOD play. Soutb
bu 12 cinch tricka and bla
only chance for 13 is either to
lneU tbroup a he.trt, wlllch

•s

tAU as

tA

Vulnerable: North-8outh
Deller: North
West N.... Eut s....

••
••~

Puo
Puo
Pus
Paa

won't hafpen, or to aet up the

~=~~· clubs

..

NORTH

udAiuS.III

nHerbglveahlokilchanofre&amp;h

8:30 lJJ

•

(II I I I

Prfntanawerhare: [I]

coat of pink paint and, acciden-

(!!ep88t)

Ill'~ &amp;UT

AN' YOU'RE

orrllllQI tho circled lotterw to
form the eurp&lt;l11 ons-. u eugQettad by tho llbOVe c.rtoon.

Allll: "Here ia a bllld from
a ~ New York tournameaL ·Tbe spade llam wu bid

tally, glvea his five year old
di!IJghter'a pet frog Green·
peace, the brush, too.

Paa
Paa
Paa
Paa
Paa

INT

Pus

It
st

.

INT

Opening lead:+J

for a lieart

Oswald: "He oeeds to flDd
the klq of clubs l1lll'decl ooly
nrlce and to flDd lhree entries

to dummy. Two to aet up the
clah queen aDd 011e more to
&amp;et back to cull it. He drlltn
!rumpa dllcanllnl nro hearts
from dummy. Tben ace of

diamonds to dummy's four
and the overtrick baa been

dlal'lllliKII, jack of diamonds
overtabo by dummy's queen,
club ruff, alae of di&amp;mGiJds to
dummy's kiD&amp;, club ruff and
the klnl falll.l'lllally, tllree of

sary wu to retain the tbrel! of.
cllainoDds for the final entry· .
to dummy."

acored."
Alan: "AU that

wu oeces-

ore. He ia pursued by Clothilde
who will atop et nothing toanare
him for • huablnd. (80 mlna.)
Q:3D • C1J lliJ HOUSE CAUS A
television news team wants to

GABOUNE AWY

opand two dayo at Konaington
Hoopllal tllmlng a typicol doy

and everyone eeema to ap·
prove but AM Andaraonwhosu-

•

fllO!'II troubll. (Rtpul)
tO:OO \!J 110¥11 ·(COIII!DY) "'
"TM Jeri&amp; II 1t7t

C1J 'TIIIVIMIIO NI!WI

eCIJ(I) CUREPOIIll: THE

DIFINII OF THE UNITED
IT ATIIC8SNIWICOfftopondtnt Dan Rather onchoi'Othio

·

speclalnewsserlllfocualngon
U.S. defenae and the coming of
age of the nuclllr*'• .Rather Is
joined by Spaclol Corrtopon -

IWff'/ OTY 15 A
CIANSEROUS PLACE

•'

TO LIVE! YOJ'VE
GOTTOKfEPM

•'
."
,
·:
'
:1

dtnt WaHtr Cronkila. alld corrtopondtnto Ed Sradlty, Herrv
Roa-. Boll Schitllor, AI ·
chard Tl.-.illlld and l&lt;t Pa,pu. (Part two of a five-part-o; 110 mlno.)
10:18
CBNUPDATINIWI
10:30
THIS IS THE UFI
NON-FICTIOII TILlY~
IIOII 'Cryotal City: The Brown

m

Out' Thia documentary by

Robar1 Holguin io aboula oman

STEP
OF

Ttl&lt;IIIOWft IIIII flit alftglahan-

dtdly

both the

a-t:al Hallllt!l .
LIMESTONE, gravel end
Hnd. All sizes. At Rlclllnll•
and Son. Upper Rl- Rd.,
I Gllllpolls. OhiO. Cell ,7715.

~
lty THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSII
41 Tltrew,
1 Strip of metal
a.s a Frisbee
s He played
41 Lava SOIII'te

Patton

DOWN

If Roman
emperor
11 Coated,
U I roof
u One on
the IIIOVt
14llannonlze
u uterary

1 Boston's
airport

zMike amencls

~~frfll

S Grant·Dunne

111m (1937)
4 Opp. of
vert.

5 Glned
I Service
affairs
1 Scrap

colledlon

11 Grand (Nova Scotia)

Yesterday'l Alnrer
II Mope
It Locale
zz Soviet

Z'1 Necessary
zt "Scme of
-Days"

netrS

• O!attered

source

31 Plato's

11 "C'-la vie" BType of Z3 WlllleS
f!Wtetplllce:
U More
e:um
Z4 Lombard and • "-Hear Informative
I Elutlc;
namealkes
a Wiltz?"
a For Wille!
resilient zs We111111ited
37 Meredith
%1 DilcoVery
lZ Spot
Item
MacDAlter•w~.,.,....,.....,.,_

potrder

DCrltical

'

JACK'S REFRIGERATID- ~r·
N. air' condition awvlce,
commercial, lnduatrlat .
Phone 112-207f.

!I Man's
'inan"

aPan:el
Z'l Stack
portra}al
aBucllwald
11:11
11:30

' BARNEY

tiN

LJTn.E TAT£R

OOIH'IN

··BUT HIS

DMCIIIIc

pi«:e
Dl'uk
lUll- up

B's

NGime
far tJkes
.lllftled
1'1 Gamblen'

. ARE -TERRIBLE!!

-

.
I

.llrlltly

JIM'S

DEPENDABLE
weter dtllvery. Ctll 25t9361.,vtlme.
.

DILLARDS WATeR
O.LIVIRY hrvlce, Cllt
4-46-7604.

r r )

lr~~ WKAPIICtNCINNA-

SEWING MACHINE ,,.
repairs. service, all m.akn. · :
992·221&gt;1. The Fabric Shelp, : •
Pom•rov . Authorized .-~
stnw Salel Md servtc•. ·~­
we illarpM Set-..
'

-Aw.,11111111111
- Ollie.
lllflnl
Gllllpllltt.
CD
- .....,.._ Ill' NIIM • 446ft.

tAitAH. ,. Ill'. - ..lila. "Ill., S~M~r' •

~

Fuller Electric Co. Com·
plete rewiring, commercii I
or rntcltnllet, al!d etectrlcel melntalnance, 1110
an call. Ph. -"6-2171,
Gllllpolll,

NOW ljAUL I NG 11ouH coal
I. lltlltt'- for drlvew1ys.
C11110r •ttmatel367-71111

eo

min&amp;.)
U.S.A..)
AIIIIIICAN CATHOLIC
MOVIE -(ADYENTUIIE) ''

IOIId-Copllonod;

DOWT YOO
lll:t06HlZE I"C, Mit.
eai? I lli'KYI'i YOU•

HOW Ei&amp;CS.~
AJII::e FOUI'JP,
NA"TURAL.L.Y.-

.(I) LITTlE HOUlE ON

cldent, Adam decldea to retum
to law eChooland become the
law~er that Walnut GrO'III

'I

lllOTHIRS

ltOIItn•

I

IFEEGUR

T1tE PRAIIIIE Having regained
hi a aiQht 11 the teault of en ac·

neodo. (Repoot ;

!

IS

.I I · 'I

- - No. 15;

RICHARD 111111110118

D

8:0D

1969 Chevy Nova, good con· at
dillon. $475. 30H73-5.t38.

Home
Improvements
' ' BES.T In Carpet
FOR,
72
trucks for Salt
Cleaning -. Call Smeltter's
Steamway. Call 614·-1461980 Toyota 4 WD Truck, 2096.
.
HORSE SHOEING and
a.c., am-fm stereo, tilt
breaking. 675-3137 or d75·
Wheel, 11,000 miles, $7500.
6626.
STANLEY STEEMER
firm . Aller 1 p.m ., 256-112-4.
Carpet Cleaning- ·
' -"6·4201 .
1978 FORP '4 ton 4-wheel
drive, 675:1121.
.
PA INTING - RHidentlal 12
Plumbing
---~
·
•=H!!:ea~t~ln!Jig_:___
and
commercial.
Interior
1970 Chevy Blazer, 4 speed,
CARTER'S PLUMBING
4 x A, 6 cylinder. 1900. 304- and exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free ntlmates. 17
AND HEATING
773·5250.
yrs, exp. with referencn
Cor. Fourth end Pine
call367-71a.t or 367-7160.
Phone 4-16·3888 or 4-16·&gt;4477
73
Vans I 4 W.D.
'1-"980'---JE-'E'-"P=c"'J·::..5,!!6!!:,c:::.•_l., -4• JIM MARCUM Rooting ·.
.DEWITT'S PLUMBING
'
AND HEAliNG
spd., exc. cond., call 4-46· spouting and siding. 30
years experience. Free Route 160 at Evergreen
1211.
estimates. Remodellilg , Phone4-46-2735.
MUST SELL, Make me an Call388'9857.
otter 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, 4
GENE PLANTS
spd, low mileage, canvas CALL 4-46·2801 for termite,
AND SONS
top, will trade, call4-16·1211 roach, bl'rd , rodent, Plumbing - Heating - Air
spiders, fleas and other conditioning. 300 Fourth
or -146·3594.
small .Insect control. Free Ave. Ph. 4-46·1637.
79 CJ5 Jeep, 6 cyl., 3 spd., estimates given. A local
13.000. 256-1260 alter 3:00, company locaed· 1 In SOUTHERN SERVICE
Gallipolis area.
ai11 CO. - Heeling - mObile
Crown Ci:lly, OH.
Thomas.
,_. ,.
'•
.home furnaces. electric hot
water tank repair. can Of74
Motvrcyclta
STUCCO PLASTERING · flee, 446-3008 night,
360 H d
on e, 1977. Gd. cond., textured ceilings, com· emergency no. 367-7131 .
$600. 4-46-2196 before 9::111 merclal and ,...ldentlal,
free ntimatn. Call 256·
AM or after 8:00PM.
J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
1182.
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367-7153.
Susukl 75, gd. cond., -"6·
SAN DE R S
CON 1000, Gallipolis.
TRACTING, Carpentry D. C. Contractors Plum·
&amp; patnllng, concrete, bing, eleCtrical, heating,
1974 HARLEY DAViDSON work
rooting, aluminum and
4-16·2787.
landoceplng,
SUPER GL'IDE, all
vinyl siding. 675-12«1.
custom: also a 1973
HARLEY DAVIDSON INSTALL fireplace facing 13
EXCIVItlnt
ELECTRA GLIDE, needs or chlmnev. drv wall,
plaster,
stuCco,
tree
est.
pinon shall. 992-6311.
DOZER - blckhoe, dump
Simulated brick or stone, truck. Callo446-ol537.
Greg Burdette, call 6751970 Honda CB350. a.t:l-261U. 6351,
DOZER work · excavating,
.
.
BSI' 650. Thunderbolt. HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE land clearing. Cell416-0051 .
Good cond. 13.000 miles. ·c ontractors · Build, siding, · - - - - - - - With helmets. 1700. 992· remodel, concrete, rooting, . &amp; V Inc., Backhoe sar526-4.
lree nttmates. call col ., vlce. 985-35A9or9~-2822.
614-259-2814 ask for Chlrln
1975 Suzuki dirt bike, ex· or Mike.
COMPLETE SEWER IN·
cellent condition. $600. 675·
STALLATION. &amp; blckhoe
2848.
INTERIOR end exterior · service for the Recine·
painting, Mark White, call Syracuse sewer district.
OOler work II needed. 911·
1976 Kawasaki KZ 750, tully 2ol5-f561
•
'
2293.
dressed. 67H813.
.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning teatured b'( OOler work. Small lObi a
7S
Boats and
_ _.!M!!Co~ton=~'or~St!!l!.t__ Heffel! Brothers Custom specialty. 742-2753.
ZINN'S LANDING has 1 Carpets. Free estlmaiH.
EDWARD'S Backhoe and
nice selection Of clean USed Call&lt;l-46-2107.
Dozer Servlci. Spaclellzlng
R'unabouts $500 &amp; up.
In
septic tank. 675-123.1.
Gallipolis.
· WOODSHOP - Clblnets,
picnic tables,- poroh
BAC~HOE Service. Llrry
ZINN'S LANDING has 2 swings, most wood prodUc· Sldenstrlcker.
675-5510.
IS.
101
Court
St.,
Galllpotll.
ChiS-Crafts, one 1m 25 ft.,
114,000. One lf79 21 fl. twin Call4-16-2512 ..
llectrlcli I
engine w/low · hours.
&amp; lefrlpatton
S21,000. Stop In or call for WEATHERALL CON·
more details and In- CRETE - quality tlld ser- QUALITY Cooling al!d
.
formation .
Gallipolis. vice, call675-1512.
Heeling Service, can • ·

NOIL'B .

FACITHUIUIIC
CJN UPDATE NEWS

7:58

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Here's how to work It: A.IYDLI .AAXa

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01111 letter tlllnplr atande for uotller. In thla sample A 11 . Uld fer tht tine L'a. X fer tht two O's, et~. Sln11e !etten,
the llnltb dd farmatton of the words are an ·
ta.
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JONII BOYS WATII
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Cards ..
for Dad ~.·

- · · tip~ane
There "s nothing like
a Hallmark Father's
Day
to make .
hlm feel special on

Robert J. Hawk

INSTANT TEA

card

Robert J . Hawk, 57, 1Al6 Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, died Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospita.
He was a son of the late MlJford
and Addie Haselton Hawk. Surviving are his wife, Delores Sinclair
Hawk; a son, Robbie, at borne: four

3.6 Oz.
PLUS ONI QUART DICANTIR

Sunday, June 21.

14 die in storms
(Continued from page 1)
into the swollen Pedernales River,
stepping on rocks tllat stllJ were
above the water. But when they tried
to return to shore they sUpped and
fell into the 111Bhlng stream.
Rangers said the victims were swept
over two sets of waterfalls.
Two bodies were recovered, and
law enforcement officials were sear-ching for the other two people.
Traffic accidents claimed three
more Uves, including that of a 4year-old girl who apparently
drowned when her parent's car
washed into a creek.
Many other central Te11111 rivers
continued to spill from their banks
Sunday as heavy thunderstorms
continued to throttle the sodden

area.
Hundreds fled their homes in
Austin, San Antonio, San Marcos
and surrounding towns after the
latest round of flooding began Saturday. Since Memorial Day, the floods
have done at least $35 mllllon ln
property damage, mostly in the
Austin area.
Lightning claimed the lives of two
Ohio men + Michael Colwell, 38, of

c
·~t:q;d

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NILSON'S 110, tUt

Kings Creek, and John Mootz, 32, of
Frankfort, authorities said.
In Maryland, where rain blinded
motorists and turned roads into
deathtraps, 23-year-old Lynn
lberesa Schaffer of Baltimore
drowned after being swept away
from her stalled car early Sunday,
authorities said.
.
Joseph Brenny, a spokesman for
the Todd Cowity coroner's office,
said 21-yearo()ld Gary Otteson of
Burnsville, Minn., was struck by
lightning and killed during a softball
A foreclosre was filed in Meigs
tournament Saturday. Nine other
County
Cimunon Pleas Court by
people were Injured.
CoJJUDercial Banking and Tl1l8t Co.,
Parkersburg, against Dlyde J .
Morlan, Coolville, et al.
Plan special session
Cathy Jo Olkaker, Middleport, and
Syracuse Council will meet in George C. Oldaker filed for ·
special session Tuesday, June 16, at di&amp;olilUon of marriage.
7p.m.
Seize Japanese vessel

Special meeting

. JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) -

'

.

.

All The Kentucky. Fried Chicken You Can .Eat!

.

•Combination Dinner
•Dining Room On~

-

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.......
IVII•o•

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Served with: Whipped
Poatoes, Chicken Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.

Stod&lt; No. 11117 • 3
Pc. '"-' ...... ~ .

lonl
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Sorry, No Substitutions, Except Beverages
which have an additi·onal price.

.. Crow's. Family Reitaurant
228 W. MAIN

. . PH. 992-5432

BEN FRA.NKI.IN
.

POMEROY, OHIO

!

POMEROY., OHIO

...........
"·"·
.
.

DF

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

'

Farmers
Bank

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Your Community Owned Bank

•

M~mbrr

FDIC
•
'

.

3 N. PLIEIIET

For Just

A

Japanese fishing vessel seized for
allegedly fishing in a prohibited zon£
in the North Pacific was being escor
ted to Kodiak, where it will be turned
over to local authorities pending for-mal legal proceedings, the U.S.
Coast Guard said.

A special meeting of Racine
Masonic Lodge 461, Free and A~
cepted Masons, will be held at 7 p.m.
Tuesday with work in the Master
Masona Degree.

.

•a••
NUOII'I-. "'·" .

..r

EVERY tiJtSDA Y NIGHT AT ·cROW'$

All Regularly' Priced Merchandise ·
Mon.,.June 15 thru~ Saturdar, Ju.ne ·20
Clean
of

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