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.

'Meigs·board llCcepts resignation
reslgnaUon.

' · By !lOB IIOEFUCH
The resignation of board member.
br. Keith Riggs wu accepted at
Monday's regular meeting of
theMel8l Local Board of Education.
llolrd Prelldent l,arry Powell
I* unted Dr. Riggs' short letter of
resignation which, he said, he had
received just prior to Monday's

Aspecial meeUng was set for June
25 and at that time, rema,lnlng board
members who have the l"e!!PDDIIIbllty
of lliJililiC a replacenwlt, will interview eandldatea for the vacancy.
An)'OI!e l.nterelted In filling the
vacancy II asked to contact the of.
flee of Superintendent David L.
Gleason.
U the four board !lleliibers,
Powell, Carol Pierce, Richard.
Vaughan .00 Robert Snowden can-

meeting. .
.
Dr. Riggs, whose .tenn of office ex-

pires on Dec. 31, 1983 gave penonal

reasons· for the cause of his
.

not agree on a replacement member, the replacement chOre would
then go to the Meigs County Board of
Education. It is reported that should
the county board fall to come up with
an appolnbnen~. then the task of
filling the vacancy would become a
decision for the probate court judge.
The Jl!!rson appointed to the vacancy
would serve until Jan. 1, 1982 with
the vacancy to be filled at the
November election and the electee
to take office on Jan. 1.

•

was improperly conducted and that • ce whO voted against providing
materials were not available to their tutoring for the seven students comc)llldren. Through Rev. Mr. Kliittel, mented that such action would bring
the group charged that the learning complaints. from other parents who
disability class program was wqwd ask for .tutoring for their
mlsrepreaented to them.
children on the allegation that their
Earlier this spring, parents ap- children had not been properly
peared before the board lodging taught.
protests on how that classroom was
The Rev. Mr: Knittel contended
cooducteil. AB a result, a teacher that such requests would be 8 comwas removed from the class for the pletely different situation and that
remainder of the school year.
the removal of the teacher from the
Board members Powell and Pier(Continued OJ1page 10)

at y """entin e

e
Vai.JO, No.43
Capyrllhltd 1911

The lout members attending last
night's meeting came to a sp~t 2-2
vote on a req~est to provic14! tutoring
for some seven learning disability
Students of the Pomeroy ElementarySchoot
The Rev: William Knittel was
spokesman for seven sels of parents
who had requested that tutoring be
provided for their children during
the swnmer months. The parents
charged that the classroom which
their children attended the past year

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June -16,1981

·2 section, 10 Pages

.

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

.

Walko1:1t protests legislation
LOS ANGELES- Aqout 2,000 longshOremen and shipyard workers
held a one-day strike MOnday in Los Angeles and Long l!each harbors
to pl'IJtest a proposed fedenl bill that would cut harbor employees'
medical coverage.
The walkout was organized by a coalition of 10 unions representing
00,000 harbor workers, a coalition spokesman said.
The bill, sc!)eduled for a hearing Tuesday In the Senate, would end
Coverage for about half the workers covered by the current
Longshoremen , and Harbor Workers Compensation Act, said Bob
Forrester of the coalition.

DGHT
I

Arsonists, children start fires
LOS ANGELES - ' Arsonists and children playing with fireworks
started liOI'Ile of. the wlrid-fed fires that blackened 8,1m ael'es In
Southern California, destroying or damaging at least 23 homes, offleials say

·'

POinABLE
INDOOR..()UTDOOA PORTABLE LAMP ,
Acljuaelble llhldl, PUih Button Swl~c!). Hanger
Rlne, TDUIIh Brtl~ Rel!st1nt Pl~atlc Clll!.
'
'
XT100NE! - With Evnldy 8 Volt Batt~ry,

= ION'I -.... n ..:.

0

°

Hundreds of firefighters in six Southern California counties battled
the !Ires, whipped by searing Santa Ana winds that pushed the temperature to a record 102 degrees In Los Angeles. Resfdents in rural
areas were forced to eave their homes Monday.

Two men hW!l in explosion
OOLUMBUS, Ohio - Two men Injured in an explosion in an underground vault Monday remained In serious condition, according to a
spokesman at University H01pilal.
J-lle!ll• crt Richwood and Jobn G.• Wllllaml crt Orient were
Working on power transformers In the vault when the explosion ocCliJ'I'ed In front of the Columbus 6: Southern Ohio Electric Co. building
at about 12:30 p.m. Monday, offlciailsald.

Congregation backs Rabbi
CLEVELAND - Admirers and congregation members have come

to the aid of Rabbi Bernard Kahan In his hour of greatest need, but a
judge must decide if the clergyman merits mercy.
Kahan pleaded guilty Monday in U.S. District Court In Cleveland to
two counts of mail fraud on grounds that he operated a coupon

echeme.

.

Kahan's lawyer, Timothy Potts, gave federal Judge Thomas D.
Lambros !&amp;letters from persons who are asking the judge to be lenient
and show mercy in sentencing Kahan.
OWMt.ut ohleld
· e2l Wolf ClrcJIM Flvor-t bulb will

...... ,...

r-.,..,..

.....tdudd
..... f• 011

Lambros then sentenced Kahan to two concurrent o~year prilon
Ierma, but delayed executing the sentence for 90 days. After 90 days,
the Judge can reduce the sentence, place Kahan on probation or
execute the sentence.

blllo.

Winning Ohio lottery number
•"111Jlnto car
•Attache• t. any •tet·~ll

•Flu length 1J'

CLEVELAND -1be number selected Monday night In the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" is 243. '
The lottery reported earnings of ·S375,927 .50 from the wagering on
the drawing. Lottery !fiiclals ssid sales prior to the drawing totaled
S585,MUO, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$7Jlll,7!6.

Plans found in documents.
LONDON - Plans.fOr a British attack on the Soviet Union just after
Warld War II,~ atomic bombs and germ warfare, have been IOilnd
in documents at the Public Record Office, the Times of London reported.
'
The newspaper said technical tmmoranda concemlng the attack,
subm!Ued to the chiefs of staff between January and July !M8, included a lilt of Russian clUes with populationa rl more than 100,000
that were within b&lt;mbing range of bases In Engialld, Cyprus and In-

SEARCH FOR Vlt'I'IM'S BODY - Area rescue personal worked
tbrougbout the Dlgbt In an attempt to recover the body of 14-year old
David Scott Meskew, Vlntou, who is missing and presumed drowned In

Stitt chosen as acting police chief
By KATIE CROW
George Stitt, a pollee officer for
the past year, was named acting
pollee chief, for a six month
probationary period for Pomeroy
Village following an executive
session of Pomeroy £c!ullcil "'C!!!f'Y
night.
.
Harry Lyons, who has been serving as acting chief, will remain on
the force as a police officer.
In other ,matters, Betty Baronick,
council woman, suggested that the
village either repair .the road under
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge or close
it.
Council voted to close the road to
all traffic except to persons who live
in the area. Council reported the
closing of the rosd is necessary since
it does not have the necessary funds
to repair the rosd. The rosd was
closed to traffic this morning.
. REJECl' REQUFST

Council failed to approve a request
from Pointview Cable (the
necesSary assignment) for the sale
of, Pointvlew Cable to Cable En-

reiiCIIII'I could ilve him.

IIIIII'IIID&amp;-

Police arrest land owner
ROME - Balian pollee made their first arrest Monday In the death

Amedeo PI"'N; 44,- charged with manalaughter anctlocked up
In Raine'• Reclna «;oe1i prilol).
.

S&amp;ate JII'OI8CIIIIir Glancarlo Annat! said there was no inmledlate
plln to lll'inl chM'a• againlt Pilegna'• wife, Plera, who Ia coowner 9f
the land rl olive trees and vineyards IIIII' FrascaU, 15 miles aouth of

Rame.

•

I

Since the village is one of the few
whose franchise does presently need
approval by council for assigrunent
and encumberance, council voted
not to approve the request.
Harold Brown asked that a financial statement from the new system
be secured and what services the
new company will offer.
Council also discussed at length
wor~ presently being done on
Pleasant Ridge.
Donnie Ward, an employe of the

The Medical Executive Com- Ehlinger, D. 0. on Friday, June 12th,
mittee of Veterans Memorial 1981. The findings of the Medical
Hospital has recommended im- Executive Committee based on the
mediate niinstatement of Dr. Nor- hearing which took place on Friday,
man J. Ehlinger as an active June 12th,!981 are as fellows :
hospital staff member with all · "We, the Medical Executive Comcharges cleared and completely mittee of Veterans Memorial
Hospital find Dr. Ehlinger to be
exonerated.
This Is the gist of a statement without fault during his tenure at
lss¥d by the committee today Veterans Memorial Hospital. We
following 8 hearing and a later
meeting of ·the committee on the
matter.

of ~year-Old Alfredo Ramp~ taking Into cuStody the owner of the land
where the boy ftiJ Into an abandoned well. Alfredo died before

•

tertsinment of W.Va.
A letter was re~d from Richard P.
Newell, regional manager of Midwest Corp., Pointview Cable TV
stating the Midwest Corp., was in
the process of having its cable RV
systems purchased by Cable Entertainment of W. Va., with Its
operating base located in Zanesville.
One stipulation in the letter was
that Cable Entertainment will pur,
chase only those cable systems
whose franchises penni! their
assignment to the new company.

street department, told council he
has worked the last three days on
Pleasant Ridge cleaning out ditches.
Ward said he needs 7Jl feet of 10 inch
pipe lor a culver! at an approximate
cost of $200. Council approved the
request.
Bill Young, councilman, asked
that a progress report from the
street department be submitted to
council each month.
Bruce R,eed, councilman ,
suggested that repair be made to
Mulberry Ave., near the Sacred
Heart Church. Council pointed out
that the repair was the responsibility of the water department.
Larry Wehrung, councilman ,
suggested the glass in windows on
property located on Court St., that is
posing a dangerous problem, be
taken out. Council agreed. It was
suggested that council obtain the
aerial ladder from the fire department in order to take out the glass.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
suggested that motorists use the
bypass during construction of the

sewer line being laid in upper
Pomeroy.
Young reported that two dusk to
dawn tights will be installed at the
Sugar Run Park soon with a third
light to installed later.
Sharon Mattox, a Pomeroy
resident, met with council to report
that a neighbor's dog was running
loose and is jumping on her children
and posing a threat. It was indicated
that a petition is being signed by
residents concerning the problem.
The police department in the past
two weeks made 25 arrests, answered 216 calls and complaints and
drove the cruiser a total of 2,315
miles,
The mayor's report for the month
of May, showing receipts in the
amount of$2,265.99 was approved.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Mayor Andrews. Attending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
Walton, clerk, Baronick, Wehrung,
Reed, Young and BroWn, council
members and Ward.

Committee wants doctor reinstated

Tbere wiD be a bearlllgbl tbe U. S.
Diltrlct Court, ~IDIIIhas, oa Tlluraday, J111111 11, lo ~trabl Dr. No~
mao Ebllqer from exerclllllg
be1pltal prlvllelel UDtli IUCb
prlviJegel are reiDitated by tbe
llollrd of Tn11jel Gl Veterans
Memorial H•pltal, a~ lo a
llateillellt luaed by the _hospital Ibis

dia.

Raccoon Creek near the Vluton Dam. Meskew and two friends were
wading In the swollen creek when currents pulled him under the water.

find all charges individually to be
either trivial, out-of-proportion, uncalle&lt;l for or absolutely false . The
vote of the Medical Executive Committee is unanimous in this respect.
"RECOMMENDATIONS:
"In order that this hospital function again as a progressive, fair institution for the people of Meigs
County, we, the executive staff of

Veterans Memorial Hospital recoJn:
mend anlklr direct the follQwing :
(I ) We direct the immediate reinstatement of Norman J. Ehlinger,
D. 0. as active staff member with all
charges cleared and completely
exonerated.
(2) We recommend that the Board
of Trustees publish a public apology,
(Continued on page 10)

Tbe 11111temepl furtber gys:
"'l'lle boipltal, luellllllll tbe Board
of Truteea aad llle majority .. llle
Oledlail.-rf, do. DOl l'ftellllle the
nlllorlty af a 1111811 cnuP G1
pllysldul plllpurtedlr reprelelltlllg
tile medleal llaff ud ldelltlylllg
tbem~elvet
11 lbe Medical
~c-!Uee."

Weather
IIGIIly c1oudT wltb

icattered llbowwalcJalilX, 111rcer1n1 luto Wed-

...,lllllniiDI.IMI... part!Jeloulb'W.._., ~.Lon

tCIIIIPliDillt l,owiOI. .... ,....., Ill U.ltw. . a.-crt nln
llpawilltmiii*IIIIIW ts,dq. 1rladn ' 1J ..-mpbtaniiM-

*i•*
,·

. , . ,• •

I

.......

·· Tlftw
....
at•l ..,, Mftw Jlj. ...,eMdJwltii
Ph ...... ., 7 f £111&amp; . . J'rlllr ... I II ..
1111 7 ' 1 w •rl aMI·
111111 Ia Ill ...
a.-lu .... 'ftza 5 I-~~~ ..,.,..,.... lklll;.

1

••=•

0

...

Dr. Ehlinger had earlier 'filed a
law ault ~Pins~ the holpltal after

havlnl ~removed frGm the...,,
'l1le llatement illued by the

Medical Esecutive Committee
nadl:
'.
'"nnt Medics! Executive Com!ftittee of Vetera111 . Memorial
lbplta1 held a hearinl of the
chart• qallllt Dr. Noi'IIWI

RACINE IINJtHOI..ET - . A csr drivel by David
Gt I Iliff, Ractae, ntered u ope11 alley Ia tbe
Vlllap, l i l t - II u abnlpt 118p at Ita I I led!•
wltJI 'T IIWIMnelallll....., alarp We .-the

mW'IIc wltll llle lldewalk. Tile . .
........... .., . . ~allvwedart.lltalfta

feet . . . . . .
=

Ullboiilqly drift 1Dto tile area. Tbe ial'le bele n1 attrtbated ta 111111te11aaee werll by tbe Raeme Water
~ ... bH beell marlled earlllr. V~tllllali,
!low ever, • WiitMiiplud -dial bahln!d 111e
a11eJ. Gi I I lalf IDd -ben tl tile '"-eese
Em l)leii.J ..... are illlwl at tbt aeeae. Til rellliPt te awderldt da.....elellle veblcle.

�' ..

•

Tuncllly, June16, 1911

Commentary

'

. •
Pagt-2-The.Pally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, June 16,1911

an idea who~e time. has -passed'!'..&amp;~-· ______

Busing:

J_am
..·.. . es_
. . · J._.K_ilpa_triC_k.

The Collins arne·~~ WO\IId ap- ImpoSe busirlc Scepl 88 an abeolUte
Carter vetoed the measure and it was precisely to assign cbildren to said, ·'stigmatize the ~Iclarice." ply, of coune, only to court actlona last resort. WemaynotyetrebamiO
Wone sWI, the quotu that are fixed
was too late to mount an effort to schools by reason of their race. In as mlnirnuma today may become taken by the Department ol Jutlce. the wise conCept ol netgbMrboodd ·
override.
place of a color-blind Constitution,
maximuma tomorrow. "Throughout The amendmen~ would not· affect !!ChQols, attended by nelglillorbood
Mr. Carter thought the Helms- the device of bilslng has given us a liistory, quotas have become the petitiona from private llfOIIJIII· But cbi!dreil. In the procaa we may
Collins amendment, as It was then col~nselous Constitution.
means by which the upward opposition to raclal-balanc:e bualng travel towafd better race relatjona
identified, would set a dangerous
For most parents the con- mobility of some troops bas been Ia now ao widespread Plat only the Plan the Ul-advlaed buses could ever
precedent. "It would effectively stltutional objections have been out- hampered." .
most foolhardy federal judge would. bring us,
allow the Congress tQ tell a president weighed by human objections. In an
that there ·are certain con· effort to achieve ephemeral racial
stltutionally mandated remedies for balances, the lower federal courts
the invasion of constitutional rights have subjected children and parents
that he cannot ask the courts to ap- · to monstrous inconvenience.
ply." But in attempting to exalt the
Children were eut out of after«hool
powers of a president, Mr. Carter activities; parents could not easily
proposed to undenninethe powers of
participate in school programs. The
Congress. If Congress is unable to sheer cost of operating the buses.ate
command how the people's money into school budgets.
shall be spent - or shall not be spent
And the ultimate irony waa that
- the whole concept of a republican busing simply didn't work. The tidy
form of govenunent may as well be little quotas and percentages
abandoned. Congress bas the power prescribed in court decrees could
through the appropriations process not possibly be maintaitled. In one
to put the Justice Department on a city after another, the phenomenon ""~C~~fj~i!!_~~---_:----------~
short leash or along one. In the mat- of white fllght appeared. There was
~
ter at hand, a short leash will do black fllght also; as the Los Angeles'
nicely.
.• experience made clear, lhousands of
As a mechanism for enforcing the
black parents are as fed up as their
doctrine of Brown vs. Board of opposite numbers in white comEducation, racial-balance busing munities.
never bas made constitutional sen- ' In a little noticed address to the
se. The whole thrust of the Supreme American Law institute last month,
Court's historic 1954 opinion 1s that Attorney General WUllam French
children must not be aSsigned to Smith said flatly that "we must find .
schools by reason of their race. But better remedies" than racialwhat was the purpose of busing? It balance busing. Such orders, he

!

I.
I

.

WASHINGTON - It wasn't even
much of a fight In the House last ·
week when James Collins of Texas
trotted out his anti-busing amendment. An Issue that once would have
churned great waves of emotional
argument this time stirred hardly a
ripple. The amendment passed, ~
122.
The idea of racial-balance busing
of school children Is an Idea whose
time bas passed. As voters in 1m

Angeles demonstrated some months
ago, taxpaying parents are fed up
with busing. Federal judges seem
also to be losing tbeir enthusiasm for
this flawed attempt at social
engineering. The Collins amendment reflects overwhebning sentiment In Congress. In the matter of
busing, let us bid good riddance to
bad rubbish. It was a wretched idea
to begin with.
Tbe Collins amendment, attached
to an authorization bill for the ·
Department of Justice, says In
language too clear to be evaded that
the department may not spend
public funds to bring any sort of
court action to require "directly or
indirectly'' the busing of any student
to any school but the one cl05eSt to
his home. Substantially the same
provision passed both houses of
Congress last December, but Mr.

..

~_,~~
--~

Letters .to editor
.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cu11r1 Slrt't'l

U.S. Supreme Court
•
t
t IOD
• al
COnS
1
U
t
rules law
.

Pumt'rll}', Otlio
61M9z.215t

Ut:\ un:o TO lliE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE..\

.

.

.

~fb

!Slm~ ~,_.,..,,....,c:::~, =

~v

ROBERT L. W!NGETI
Publboht'r

PAT WHITEHEAD
i\o,;, i ~l.&lt;l n l

BOB HOEFLICH

Publisht&gt;r/Cunlrullt'r

Gt'neral Mar&amp;agu

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nl'\h Edltvr
!\ Mt:MRt:R uf Tht· .t~ ~oda tl'd Prt'~~. hiland Dally Ptnli A!ilit•rlaUoll and thr
Amt•rkiln Nl ' t~ispotpt' r Puhli.~ IH·rs A ~S ft(' bllinn .

l.l·:n ·t:tt."i fW OI'INION :.m · '"' t•knmt•d. Tbty shutlkl bt&gt; It'll~ than 38CI .-urds lnAI(. All
ldh·r ' ar~ · suhj.t·d ln 4'ttitm~: and must hot· .~ il!lnt11 •JUt ftl~', Mddrl1ili ud k'lrphmw
1 mml~t ·r ~~~ un." ,l(n4·d ll'lwr~ ~till ill· puhlidwd . Lt•tlt · r~ ~ hnuld ht•inK• Mid Lll~tt·. add""'slnll,
1'\111''• 11&lt;~ 1 III'T\IIIU+Iitil'\,

Dissent and
the teamsters
Veteran observers of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters
noticed some extraordinary changes at the union's recent quinquermial convention here.
To be sure, it was business as usual as delegates quickly rubber-stamped a
tong list of organizational changes proposed by their leaders and just as
quickly nH!lected those leaders to new live-year tenns. But the delegates
did not act without debate or dissent as in years past.
The Teamsters - unlike all but two of the country's other 44 major unions
- choose only about 10 percent of their convention delegates by direct vote
at the local )eve!. The rest attend by virtue of their positions on local or
regional councils; this insures that 90 percent of the delegates represent the
union's power structure.
Within the union is a small but vocal reform group called Teamsters for a
Democratic Union. These rebels, though they number only a few hundred of
the union's two million membei'll, are making themselves a thorn In the side
of the lfiidership through their access to the media.
A number of TDU members - including the group's president, Pete
Camarata of Detroit- got themselves elected as delegates and then tried to
force the convention into embarrassing public votes pn controversial issues. '
Tbe few dissidents who attended past conventions complained that they
could not be heard. 'This year the leadership under President Roy Williams
made a great show of allowing all delegates o speak. The proceedings were
everi videotaped ao thst no one could later claim to have been silenced.
But although the dissidents were allowed to criticize leadership proposals
and to present counterpi'OpOSBls of their own, they were viciously attacked
by other delegates whenever they did ao.
The sharpest achange occurred on the second morning of the convention
when the dissidents p~ the formation of an ethics committee to investigate charges of leadership wrongdoing. This followed a long, heated
debate over a TDU proposal for direct election of union officials by the membership.
As soon aiJ the ethics proposal was Introduced, the microphone was seized
by Ed Lawson, head of the Canadian Teamsters and a TDU target In Vancouver. Hia denunciation of the di.uidentlwon a lhunderoua recept1111.
Anumber of delegates joined in the attack. Lui to apeak was 'n-year-old
Wliliam Presser, who for many yean headed the Ohio union.ln the spirit of
the good old days of Teamsters convention, Prener shouted into the
micrOpbooe: "I'm sick of all this talk. Let's vote the goddamned thing
down."
. Shortly thereafter the convention receued for lunch. Camarata was
holding an impromptu news conference when he was aet uporl a group of
Teamsters shouting "llar" and "CIIIIIIIIie, go home." There wu IOiiie
plllhing and shoving before convention Mr!leanl-aNmil arrived.
111o1e who challenged Clmarata - he.called them "goona" - identified
themle)veelater as mehlber ol the new organiiiU1118rlltMrbood of Teamsters and Strong Amerlcaill. Tbelr leader, Jim 11-. of Younptown, Ohio,
uld that the grpup wu ellablllhed to "apoee the TDU for the oCmmlea
lhly are." He added that he and aeven fel1o'lr memberl were sueata 11 the

convention.
Ree.e delcribed the group as "an educational project" Ql Jldde Pi 1 er,
-ofWllllamPre•erandHeadof theUilionlnOlio. Tht)'OIIIIIerPI
r is
COIIIidered one of the union's 11101t po walullelden. '
.
So, the 1181 conveotlon w1111o dowli • Gillin wliich dluent wu heanl but
not well aCcepted by the Wilon power lirlleUin. n - clear tlilt the
pthlrlng was manipulated to lbow lbe d......,'lldi of ranHncHI1e-.
port. It was also clear lbat lbe ptllwlnl wu manlpul.atecl to ~bow the
dillk!entl' Jack of I'W-ud-ftlllliJIPOit. nwu a11o clear lbet the~
iWii8lned in finn control and that lbe nbe1l wauld nat-- their lilftH ...
adcpted

-'------- -- - -

Supports Baer
This is a follow·up to a letter printed in the June 9 Sentinel. This Is
being written with the hope of fur.
thering interest of parents and the
publicinourattempttogetMr. Baer
re-hired as head teacher at Syracuse
Elementary. This i.uue demands the
attention of all parents, teachers,
voters, and taxpayers as it affects
the future credibility · of our
educational system and administrators.
I would like to make a comment on
a couple of the school board's
reasons for not rehiring him. One
member said we needed a "change"
at Syracuse. I and all concerned
with this issue disagree! Why
.change? I've · had a devoted and
capable head teacher for the past
nine years, why give him up without
a word of protest?
We could be assigned one of those
who alleaedly sent students home
with bruises in the recent put. Tbls
is one of the real problems the board
should be aoMng.
As for Mr. Barr's manner of
speech toward Mr. Ord, could it
have been any
dlsresnectful
than Mr. Pylea cuning a member of
the public in a recent board
meeting?
Personal arxVor political grudges
do not have a place in a school
system and especially not if it means •
the pDIISibUlty of ruining the Individual's fut~n as 1 'teacher and
admini.strator. - Ed Neutzllng,
Syracuse.
·

seen In the I'Oiid days earlier. About
one-fourth mlle on down the road
was a filth pup - dead and in the
road. I decided I must do something
about this. So I called the lunane
society Who said it could take the
pups and try to lind new homes for
them. And ao three alit ol five were
saved.
I've said aU this to get to the point
of abused animala. When I saw tho6e
poor IIWe hungry puppies I thoUght
to myself- they'd be better off dead
than in this condition. ·Everi the dog
pound or a bullet through the head is
more humane than droppJng five
helpless puppies In the middle of
nowhere. Death by an automobile or
starvation 'is likely to happen when
animals are dropped. Luckily for
them I came along. Tbls disgusts me
very mucl). I love my animals and
care for them the best I can.
It breaks my heart to - anlmala
abused. ·if this kind of treatment is
done to your peta, I pray to God for,
your children. - Donna Evana, .
Pomeroy.

WAS!llNGTON (AP) - The tnat a due-process challenge to the
Supreme Court today ruled that the civil penalties that can be levied unfederal government's tough strip der the act was "premature."
mining law Is constitutional.
In other action today, the high
By a 9-0 vote, the justices overcourt:
turned two decisions that bad struck
-Ruled on an 11-1 vote that it is not
down major portions of the act, but
automatically unconstitutional unthey indicated that serious questions
could develop later when the law Ia der the 8th Amendment outlawing
cruel and unusual punishmeni to
applied in specific instances.
Congress passed the controversial house two prison inmates in a cell
law four years ago In an effort to designed for one prisoner.
-Left intact affirmative action
reduce pollution and force the coal
plans
of the Detroit Pollee Departindustry to restore lands thst had
ment and the Seatue Fire Departbeen used for strip mining.
Tbe federal agency that ad- ment and refused to 1\ear arguments
ministers the law bas been a major in the separate cases that the plans
target for regulatory cutbacks by fostered illegal " reverse
discrimination" against whites.
the Reagan administration.
What's there to do?
- In a case from the Nixon· era,
Writing today's majority opinions
What is a young boy or girl to do?
in two separate cases, Justice agreed to review a ruling allowing
public
access
to
Information
under
It
seeJll8 there is a lack ol things to
Thurgood Marshall rejected claims
the
Freedom
of Information Act that
do
here in Melgjs County for our
that Congress overstepped its bounis
obtained
during
law
enforcement
young people. There Ia alllating rlnt
ds in passing the Surface Mining
investigations.
here In the county, but it' a aliWe bit
Control and Reclamation Act of 1977.
-Ruled unanimously that 1 state
too far from Mlddleport or Puliltro)
He also rejected claims that may impose on parents who abanand
only one Bowling Lane In
provisions of the act violated lan- don their children a more severe
Pomeroy
which has a lot ol age on it.
downers' rights to due process.
penalty U the parents leave their
Our
kids
of today want IOIIIelhing
But Marshall made it clear the home state.
exciting to do but it's not here for
court was ruling on a pre- Agreed to decide tbe conthem ao they usually wind up gettin&lt;
enforcement challenge to the act's slltutlonality of a comprehensive
in trouble. I was In trouble a few
provisions.
federal program for state regulation
times before we finally got the best
Marshall Indicated, for example, of electritity and natural gas.
sheriff
we ever had and he
that there may be merit to lan-Ordered l.Alulsiana tO refund
straightened
me out but fast. .
downers' claims that their property more than $500 mlilion plus interest
I am a Meip County resident and
'11iere
is
little
to nothlni for our
is being taken without just com- collected through a two-year-old, tax reside in Scipio Townahlp. Today as
younger
folka
to
do here in Melgjs
pensation once the act Is applied to on natural gas which the justices J was about one-half mile from my
,
County.
I
know
Uke
everyone el!ie, It
individual parcels of land.
struck down on May 26 as un- home, three Blll&amp;ll puppies came out takes IIICIIleY to build dance halla or
He also said the court concluded constitutional.
of the brush'and began following me. bowling lanes, showa or jUlia place
They looked just like a dead pup I'd to eat. - Floyd H. Cleland.

more

Helped save pups

What to do with knee""'-s_ _ _Art_Buc_h_w_ld

Management and players negotiate strike
.

.

'

'

'

NEWYOIU((AP)-Manlpnlent
andpllyenweruettomeetatthe ·
blrplnbra' table today for the lint.
time Iince the buellllhtrlte began,
anditwaillllrnedlbatanotblrbighlevel meellng 1IOiild take ~ ln.
New York. ·
Baltimore Orlol• owner EdWald
~· W~ Georli! Stein~r. owner of the New York

I

Yalill:ees, and perbapa Tau
RalJ&amp;era OWDer Eddie ad1es planned to. ineet today wllb .....-n
. Commluioner·Bowle Kahn In 1111 ef·
fort to get ta1ka iiiO\IInll. Tbere Will
poalblllty !bat atlll more owners
woald join the IUillinit.
·
FederalmediatorKennethMoffett
said negctlaticlia would begin at 2
p.m. at the Doni Inn In New York.
· ··
The two aldel have nilt n\et alnce
' · Friday, the flrat-daY games were
~ cancelled beca- of the strike.
Chiles told a Dallas i-adlo station
. 1: Monday that he no longer. nil ~
&lt;;' ~nt to. take a passive role In the
· .f~ strike. He·sald "somebody ha to do
. ,~, something to make lhingll happen.
1:'!:' I'm not .content to sit back in Fort

Anyone who bas been flying
touriat class these days bas noticed
that the airllnes are placing their
rows closer and closer to each otber,
making it more difficult to get your
entire body Into a seat.
I was on a shutue to New York
City the other morninll; and the

stewardell announced
carry-«~

that,

an

luggage bad to be placed
under your seats.
The man nst to me callecP her
over and said, "What do I do with
mylmees?"
'
The stewardess uld, "I beg your
pardon?"

"My briefcase Ia under the - t in
front of me, but I don't have any
place for my tnees."
''Neither do I," I told her.
"Could I put my knees in the
overhead rack?" he wanted to know.
"No," she said. "1bat would be
againlt regulatlona.lt would~
a safety hallrtl in cae we hit tar-

bulence."
"Why don't you put them on your
chest?" Isucgested to my seatmate.
"I was hoping to read my
newsplper," hereplled. "It'saimost
impossible to turn a page if you have
your kneel on your chest."
Tbe atewardeu said, "FAA
regulationa forbid you to put your
knees on your chest while the safety
beltsign is on."
"Why doesn't the FAA have a rule
that an airllne haa to provide room
for a peuenger's tnees?"
"Because the airllnea have been
deregul,ated to increase competition.
They can now put the rows as c101e
together as they want. The governmentis no longer concerned with leg

room.••

My ~e&amp;bnate said, "I'm in the cattle ~ anilthe government sW1
hu lltrict J'elli)aUCIIII u to how
many cattle may be lldpped in a car.

.

'

'

Worth and walt for

IICiriMthlnc

-

~tabledllpitePJuestlons

to

&lt;n!eldon'heeanyl'eiiOlution.
wm't be back aoon. l'f.litionll
harden. Then'• no turn1n1 back."
Thtoalh today, 84 games
meetWith,otbei'CIIIIIIrlandwulllbeen cancelled by the strike, 30
....IDthecltybJMGIIdaynlglil.
Major lAque Player Relatlona the National League and.34 in the
Wll1lama, lltelniJioennlr, HoUlton Committee, wblcb negOtiates for the American League. 'l1lull far, owners
Allnl owner John McMulleli and owoe.'I,Aid ita bu'plnlns team "is · . have shared in a llll!tual assistance
Ner O'Malley of the lAB Anples · in place and wiD remain In place,'' fund aet up more than a year ago to
Dodgen playeCI 1rey roles In thestatementsajd.
handle such a contlmency. The fund
avoldlirg a J'ell1l]aMeasan ~~!'ike last
Manaaelnent bargainers also in- provides aboutS100,000 per game
year after uprlng-lralnlng walkout elude American League President be shared by the two clubB.
over • new collecUve barplning Lee Mad'hiU; bil NaUonal League
After. 163 playing dates have been
· qreement ,tped .out 92 exhibition counterpart, Cllub Feeney, and ai- cancelled, or on June 24, the owners ·
game~.
·
· . ·
torneys. ·
' ·
have a $50 milllon insurance plan
.Players Bob Boone of the · The oilly iuue ~Ina that of that will pay tile club&amp; $100,~ iler
Pbilade1phta Pliilllel, Steve Rotlera COillpelilltlon .to teams losing free date for500 dates, or unW Aug. 8.
·of the Montreal Elpol ind Mark agents. 80th sides have offered
According to Donald . Fehr,
BeJancer of the Baltimore Orioles variations on the owners' original general counsel for ·the players
were named to conduct the,players' (JI'OpDIIa) that wwld have com- assocjation, players stand to lose
llde of the negotiations. Marvin penaat.d a team losing a about 14 million a week in salaries.
Miller, 'm!cutive director ol tilt "premium" free agent through the Some players on at least one club,
Major ~gue Players .WnclaUon, i'Hiilry draft with a player of major the Montreal Expoa, found themremoved bliiiBelf from the league callber. Previowdy, com- selves in the curious situation of
barpln1ng team after negottationa peiiiBikln had been a pick in the owing the club money. Since aome of
stalemated Friday.
amateur draft.
ihe Expoa have received bimonthly
, In a statement released Monday,
The New York Times quoted one instalbnenll on their salaries, they
management negotiator ' Ray owner,whorequestedanonymlty,as actually have been overpaid, the
Grebey said' ~ would remajn at the saying, "The thing Is ao set in con- club Said.
~lnN.WYort."
• ·
A IICIUl'W with the Ranien said
~ weuld travel to NeW York to

!bat

lie, too, replace himlielf. The
statemeat did - uy who made the
liigeltiCIIII.
'l1le board of cUrec:ton of. the

FAMILY CLINIC

· ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY '
What I• Psori..i57
A chronic skin disease that afteds some 8 million people In this
country .

What causes Psoriasis?
No one knows . Skin in jury, emotional stress and some forms of
infections are said to trigger its development .
Who Gel$ Ploriasis?
Men and women in equal numbers at any age, but most often
between the ages of 15 and 35. Psoriasis has been diagnosed for the
first time in people of advanced age. It also strikes cht 1dren ..l\bout
150,000 new cases of psoriasis arE! diagnosed each year.

'Is Psoriasis Contagious?
No.
What Does Psoriasis look like?
II appears as silvery skin patches, often on knees and elbows, but
can be found on any part of the body . The patches, or plaques, are
c~mposed of dead skin cells wh ich accumulate in layers.

Is There a Cure for Psoriasis?
No, but for many victim s of the disease, control is possible. Some
psorlatics may have remissions orthe disease for long per iods ot
time . in rare cases sometimes the disease may disappear entirely .

DAVID L. CARR, D.O.- OFFICE, 675-6971
2924 Jackson Ave.

Office Hours by 1\ppointment
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

''t: N·1c
' kl.aus·' ·

ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) - There is
a different feell!lg, a. dlfferert
outlook, for Jack Nictla111 in the
U.S. Open this year.
"Last year I wasn't sure. I wasn't
sure where I was or where I Wll
going. This year I am,'' Nicklalll
said befOre a practice roui1d on the
Merion . Golf Club, where he will
defend his American national championship beginning Thursday.
· Last year, there were doubts.
Tbls year, there are none.
Last year, coming into the U.S.
Open, Nicklaus' matchless career
appeared to be nearing an end. Hla
gilme was, at best, questionable. At
age 40, he hadn't won in two years.
He was, he later admitted, considering retirement from the game
he bad dominated ao long.
. There were doubta and . selfdoubts.
All were erased by his recordsetting triumph at Baltusrol and a
aubeequent victory in the PGA,
pushing his record collection of

111111or prG!ellional titles to 17. And
tbeY ~ Nict1a111: llature
as the dominant force In golf, at
least Insofar u the "-case Big
Four events are concerned.
· He ha not won this seaaon. But
that is not significant. ·
"I changed my priorities several
years ago,'' aald Nictlaus, generally
considered the finest player the
, game has known. "U I had not, I
would be gone from golf now. 1
would not be playing.
"Between the ag• 25 to 35, I expected to win every time I played. I
prepared for every toumament like
I prepare for the majon~M~W.
"I simply couldn't conUnue like
that. Ifl had, I'd have bumed myself
out and be out of the pme. r didn't
want to 4o that. I sW1 ••JoY golf. I
enjoy playing golf. I enjoy the competition, the work that'• required to
get ready for competition. I want to .
continue to enjoy it."
So he hacked off on his schedule,
cut down to "the llllljora and tho6e
tournamental feel it's nee rry to
·play to prepare for the majon," he
With that restricted schedui4!, "I
can't ezpect to win (the routine
, evenll) as freq~ u befon. I
, can't apect to compete for leading
; ~ becaUIII I don't play
enough. But till~ II no lqer among
my prlorltlee...

~

I'

l

;" •.•• "\ .', i;;'
,JP

outlook
different

sald.

You'd think we would have the same speak at a lunch today."
rights asanimais."
'I'll be careful."
"I'm jllll a atewardeas. U you
We put our legs aCrDIIII each
have any complaints, why don't you . other'slape.
make tham to management?''
The pUot,announced we were lhlrd
"Could I check my kneea In the lnllnefortakeoff.
baggage compartment(" he asked.
"I'm aorry, we're jult about to
The stewardesa came down the
take eft and we can't check aile to check if our safety belli were
anything."
futened.
The stewardeas went away. I tur"1bat's not pennitted," she Aid
ned to the man and uld, "I have a sternly.
.
suggestion, if you don't mind. Why
"Where, does It aay so in the
don't you put your linees on my lap regulaU0111?" my aeatmate clenJaD.
and I'll put my kneea on your lap. In ded.
that way we'll both ·be more com"Look ·what fw've llarted,'' aha
fortable."
uld. "Everyone II putUnc hialep In
the peraon'slap next to him." .
"You're not gay are you?" he . It actually .,...•t I bid trip, and
wanted'totnow.
. when we got to t. Guardia we
''Heck no, and I aaswne you're not shared a lui Into New York. Foreither." •
tunately it wu a Cha!*er cab and
"Well, let's give it 1 try," he aald.
we could both iilretcb our 1ep u fLr .
"Try nat to take tile creue out of u we wanted. The ride put ~We
.
my panta,'' I beged him. "I have to airline to ahame.

The Dally Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.

-····

~

~

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Sttop now for men'1 fiohlon belts
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4 Tile Daily Sentinel

'

I,

,,

Successful weekend gives· ·Meigs 7·0 record

Today's

Spo.rt.s World.

RACINE-Melgl' American Le61on
bueblll team to
· i'eceotly
lour
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.__,. straiJhtltlll*
boollt Illwon
record
to

By AssoCiated Press
The men to watch ln tbe backroom
wheeling and dealing efforts to end
tbe present baseball strike are
George Steinbrenner and Edward
Bennett WUllams:
They were instrumental in
cracklng tbe impasse before. They
are apt to do it again, sooner than
most people expect. They are not silting around counting their insurance
payments while ballparks decay.
They are pressing for immediate action.
Williams, eminent Washington,
D. C., lawyer and sole owner of the
Baltimore Orioles, flew into New
York overnight. The fli'St man he
looked up was Steinbrenner, the
shipbuilding tycoon who signs those
million-dollar contracts with the
New York Yankees.
They had a Tuesday date with
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn in the
latter's 16th floor Rockefeller Plaza
offices.
Their mission: Get the strike off
the track. Get the ball players back
in the parks. Get those turnstiles
clicking, those hot dogs, peanuts and
team pennants moving again,
players out of mufti and into the
dugouts.
Play ball!
Neither would admit it or even
comment on their ·roles but they are
spearheads of the game's "New
Breed"- a corps of bright, forward·
looking owners anxious to pull the
sport out of its musty, archaic
wedlock with tradition and transplant it into the reality of the 20th
Century.
"The owners are sticking
together," insisted Williams.

· HH on tile M111C111 wttb dual wlnl
over GlOUIIer and Welllloa.
· ·,In Saturday's l1rat pme agaililt
GIOUIIer, Rob CUJinlncham and Ken"We are working through tbe com- ny Brown pltcbed Melia to a 4-2 win,
mittee- we are 100 per cent beblrld while lllowinl only five bill. 1be
the committee (Player Relationa duo combined for six slrlkeoull and
Committee,)" said Steinbrenner, six walks. OIJ:on and BuiUette got
" but there is no reason tbe owners tile call for .Glouster, fanning ' four
shouldn't have some input. We are in!! walking tine.
'
the ones involved."
CoDecting bill for Meigs were
The story of strike developments Zane Beegl,e witb two slnglea, Kent
C81Ulot be .found in newspaper Wolfe a doullJe, Roger Kovalchik,
headlines nor in the communiques · Jerry Fields, Bob Foster, Terry
from negoti~tlng 9e58ions. It's WiylaDd, and Tony Riftle singles.
taking place behind tbe 8Celles bet·
In tbe second game, Meigs ex•
ween a few adamant traditionallsls, ploded tor 15 bill and 17 1'111111, while
slill looking for Kenesaw Mountain
Landis to poke .his craggy-haired
head over the box seat railing; and River Downs results
the progressives who realize
CINCINNATI (APJ - Johnny
baseball baa changed and can never
Nears,
ridden by Charles Woods Jr.,
be the same again.
·
tooi
an
early lead and romped to a
It's now big business - live· TV,
Madison Avenue marketing, six·letlllh victory Monday In tbe
conglomerate financing, tax writeof· featured eighth race at River Downs
fs, million-doDar-a-year salaries and and paid f4;" andn,~.
players who come to the ballpark · Davey Rotb placed, paying ...60
with an agent on one side and a and $3.80. Justamar was third for
lawyer on the other, laden with f4,40,
The 4-5 double cl Fore ~r
briefcases.
and
Aurebob returned .-e.20. The
It's a game that Steinbrenner,
boss of the giant American Shil&gt;' crowd of 3,021 bet $350,944.
building Company, knows well. The
same for Williams, fonner owner of Scioto Down results
the Washington Redskins, one of tbe
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Barkeenest legal minds in the country.
They are buttressed by otber en- nacle won tbe featured eighlh race
terprising club owners wbo feel Monday at Scioto Downs and paid
basebaD needs fresh, new vision and $Ul, $3.40 and $2.60.
0. Obadias was second and paid
better understanding of modem conditions - men such as Peter $2.60 and $2.40. Willow First was
O'Malley of the Dodgers, John Mc- third and paid $3.20.
Barnacle covered the mile in a
Mullen of the Astroe and Eddie
time of2:01 flat.
Chiles of the Rangers.
The ninth trifecla of »&amp; paid
Despite protestations of unity
among the owners, it's well·known $552.60.
The attendance was 4,011 and the
thai there is a sharp schism in the
handle was$357,744.
ranks.

Summer baseball results
In Big Bend Little League action
the New Haven Reds claimed a 4-2
extra inning win over Pomeroy
Powell's Giants. New Haven took a
2-o advantage in lhe fifth inning, but
PoweD's tied the score in lhe bottom
of the sixth. Neither team could
·muster a run in the first extra inning, but ln the eighth, New Haven
· plated two runs and held on for the

: win.

Rob Grimm who started for the
winners was relieved by Mike Wolfe
and Matt Fisher. The tMo fanned
nine and walked four. For Powell's
· Giants Brian Tannehill got the start
: and Todd Hysell came on to relieve.
: They fanned 13 and walked 12.
: Jor Burris tripled and singled for
the winners, while teammates Dale
Smith and Mike Wolfe singled and
doubled respectively.
Pomeroy outbit the winners, but
: couldn't score when it reached base.
: Lee Powell had two singles for the
: winners, Don Dorst doubles and
Steve Musser had the key hit that
drove in two runs, sending the game
into extra innings. Musser's hit
came with two out in the bottom of
the first frame. Brian Tannehill,
: James Nonnan, Scott PoweU, and
: BiU Brothers each singled.
The Racine Reds recently posted
two straight wins in local tittle
league play, defeating Chester 8-4
and Stewart 11-9. At home against
Chester's Chieftains Racine's Don· nie Riffle pitched a great game lo
: pick up the win. Riffle was the star· rer and collected three strikeouts,
before gelling relievCd by Mark Porter who got the save. Porter fanned
five, whilethepaircombinedtowalk
eight. B. Ritchie suffered the loss
with three strikeouts and three
walks. Brian Diehl and Jamie Hensler each tripled for the winners.
At Stewart against the Lancers,
Racine claimed an ll-7 win. Matt
Jewell pitched a good game for the
win in going tbe distance. Jewell had
11 strikeouts and 13 walks. P. Bartell
lrik
suffered the loss with five s eouts
and eight walks.
For tbe winners Brian Diehl and
Malt Jewell each doubled, while
Mace doubled twice for tbe Lancers.
The Pomeroy Plnltes defeated the
host New Haven Cubs 11·2 behind a
one hit pitching perfonnance by
Huey Eason. Euon struck out five
batters and walked eight. Taking the
loss for New Haven was J. T. Uoyd
'

Kitchen hit a home run. J. Hood, P.
Melton, and S. Broome each singled.
Barrett had four singles for
Hanisonvllle, Cline tripled and
singled, and Haning doubled.
Morris, Haddox, Howard, and Riggs
singled for the losers.
The Tuppers Plains Tigen boJ&amp;
bed the Reedsville Bullets 11-4 to
boost their record to 9-0 overan. The
undefeated Tigers were led to tbe
win by Eddie Collins who fanned
nine and walked four. Mltth
Barringer suffered the loss with five
strikeouts and eight walks.
Eddie Collins, Jeff Caldwell, Brian
Burst, and Brent Bissell each
banged doubles. Collins, Bissen,
Drenner, Spencer and Myers each
singled for the winners. Milch
Barringer had a horne run and Mark
Griffin a triple for Reedsville.
In Minor League action Sugar Run
Ashland rolled by Salem Center 11·2.
Stacey Shank tripled for tbe winners, while Brian Kovalchik, Terry
Peuter, and Chris doubled. For
.Salem Center Dennis Edmonson
doubled.

.a1ao hadand
• • agood
ni~Otherwltb~!ten
two
·doubl•
triple.
for the Plnl.es were Brian Layll with

~~~-OO:ea~~

homerun. Phil

Kine a double, and

ar~~rteldlulnlle.1beionebiuor

tile Calllwa m.te by Paula-..

llli't'IIGm'lll

dropped a 1Z.U

dr.td" to the Indiana. Baker t11e w1ri11111C ptdler, while Hanlnl
..... the - M. Baker hid •
trtpllltrlhewl Pl'l,wbileE.....
... diJ allied and llnPd. and J. R.
- +

f

0

lllrliltc atwo-hitter, and reconlln8 a · Kov8icblk, and nelda added ~ea. .

perfect fOI!l'forofour day et .tbe
A w~ pme wWI Vl!*n .
,plate.
. ·
.
County · ha~ been eanealltd,
· BrowD fanned ellld and Wllked ' . however, tbe locel dilmcllldela wiD
jlllt one in CllllltaDdlnl pltchiDc per- · ·return to action tbla wrrlwMI In a
fornlaJice, Trace and SlmpiOn com. ~at Atlleno. Albina,
blned for four ltrlkeliala and four Meigl, . Wellltolf, and Q-oabvWe
Wilko In pitchlne 111n18 for Wellaton. will CIJIDI)IIIe In tbe IGunll1 ~
BrowD led Me1p · wltb three Meigs playing at 11 a.m. and J p.m.
lin8Jea, a long Heme run, and three on Saturday.

KO\IIlcblk
oincJed;
.FGIIter
aing!ed,
RBI'L Wolfe
ilnlled
and doubled,
·and lleelle claubled.
After. a big four run flral Inning,
lllelp claimed tile aecond game cl
tbe twlnblll 7·1 on a five bit, one run
pllchlni perfonnance by Jeff
Wayland. Waylalld Kt dOWII nine
batters via lllrlboul8 and Walked
Sports transactions
' jlilt two In I fine effort. COUinl. Ray I
and Sboot went Che diiWiea for
~~~ Wellalon, farlllblc nine and walklni

. TiprCab fer Jim lfolchl&lt;io,

dol......, toddo.

=c:=..t::t:"l:'i
l.:lllnh...nddnltcltitlce.

BUFFAW~t.oz':.r

fullbock,

year

to a

series

of

·

111..... ·
flvo ·one-

entract•.

CLEVELAND BROWNS-SIIno4 lteviA

McGill, .. tackle. clolmOd Groy,
·
"'
procedural
waivers
from
Detnllt LIOIII.
' ll1e

DETROrr UONs-sJcned Mark Nlcbols, :;:tu.";"elr~ctaGroco, Ollenalve IUinl, 1u
NEW ENGLAND, PATIUOTS -"lpot!Cno

~

In girls' softball action tbe
Pomeroy Indiana shut out the Middleport Dusten 6-0. Tammy Wright
was tbe winning pitcher with one
strikeout and no walks. Shelly
Stobart came on in relief to fan one
and walk none. Elise Meier suffered
· tbe loss with four strikeouts and
three walka, before Tina Hendricks
:e!ts~ issue one walk and no
For the winners, Shelly Slobart

1be vlailing New Haven Bravea

len.

MelpbittersWere Wolfewilba
®,able IIIII liniJe, ltevU:blk witb I
horrtt filii, Terry Waylalld witb a
double, and rltldnllll Nidi a:-rd

••••,

.

.

'

.

0.

..................
~·---­
, I I. •

•i-'-,

..._

Earlier In the week, MelgJ battled
Belpre to a U tie art. nine__
itlnlng8.
._....
In that p1111 Jlocer Ku•"""""

·•'""' '.111
LD•r-.

I'IK;OI'ded 13 ~and allowed
jUit ft"' walb liiiJIOther greit pii~~~:'Jb-Acqlllml Kyle GI'IIOOOI'I. · , chinl ~. Roser Gaul
q . . - , oo walven from ll1e Ooklond banged twG lllnclea. wblle Wolfe,
Ralclon. Relouecl Crail-.~.
Slanod Homer
-"II boc:t, ud lloat

A memorial service for deCeased
memben highlighted tbe Thuntlay
meeting of tbe Philatbea Women
held at tbe Middleport Church of
Christ.
Mary Martin had the program
with Rose Reynolds, Betty
McKinley, EDa Mae Daugherty,
Frances Roush, Calby Erwin, Farie
Cole, Reva Beach taking part. Mrs.
Cole gave devotiona, and those
reported ill were Martha Searls,

.

J-.

~~·~1-~·~ooon Pee wee event 11et
Mlnldl, pard Slcned John lldlrro,lree llfel)lllci - · t o o -year controct.

No-'=~

IIARTFORDWIIALERII R)..... Gntllllllen,
1 oatto, to a ~il•"' contract .

GEORGIA-NomedRayGol!dlroctoralf'*'
ball
.
rocr.ulttns.
. SUPPERY ROCK- Named Fred Goldlmllh
hood footboll

.,.,h.

APPB.UUNCI8 - , 'Die Y.... Jlelleven,

The annual Pee-wee league tournamenlat Mlcldlepon Park wiD be
held June 1).2!. QIIJdren through
IIIII . .10 wtn be allowed to compete. J'or furtbet lnfonnation caD.
982-60M lodl'y,(Tueaday) after 10
p.m.

1:11 JL11L aa'l'llmday, Ja. %1, flnt ~ cllbe ID'
-.1 r.pua, ud au p.m. oa Frtday,·Jtme 21. MatiDg

Anxiety may tri er overeating

·YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO AnEND

By IAU L Llllldluer
(Nialll of U parll)
It's time to leam how to relu.
That's part ol being good to yourself
and llvinl thin.
Relulng relieves arudety, which
trluera eating for many people.
Relaxation ts an art and, like any
art, ta1tea time to master: TOO
deciSion to practice relaxation ts tbe
firll and moat Important step.
Relaxation can be especially belpful before lileala to help you slow
down and concentrate on your
dieting goala.
Before you start, conjure up some
positive thoughts about yourself and
· what you are dOing.
Jnltlllly, ael aside five minutes for
relaDtlcn Try to work up to 20
mlnutlll day.
Start by liUinC camfortably In •
chair. aaee your eyes and ~
cenlnite on your feet. TlgiQn your
foot muaclea for a count cl three.
Then ,.u. Repeal tbla proceaa ol
tena1na and re1uinR u you move up
to your liMa and tbiP.
.
Switch to your anna. Make a tight
flit wtlh both banda. Hold II for Jl
count Gl three. Then releaae. Notice
' tbe tenllon flowiD8 out cl your hand.
Then 1en1e and re1u your wrist.
Continue.with tbe olber parll of your

·GOSPEL MEETING
JUNE 15 thru 21
7r30 NIGHnY
Sunday 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
IRING YOUR IIIU

ann.

Nat tense and relu your head
and parll cl your face. Then do tile
aame with your whole body.
Some len8ion will be relieved even
If you practice re1uln8 for.Olily five

rnlnulll II a time. And remember

' tbat lClU care enough about yOW'Ielf
to try liOIDelbinc new.

Social calendar
CHES~~~t~CIL
O.uah'n
p.m. •

323 •
cl America, ru.lly, 8
tbe 11111. Qall'tlrly lirtbdayl

wW • allrar ftd. llllelt a...Uon by

! ~&amp;tr:S:~:;:,
.

Sllii8CIUPTlON RATa
llyC.m..w-OnnMi .............. .. .......... rua
OneM&lt;rih ., , .. ,, ... ,,,,,,,,., ..... ...41

TIMidly, lqae cl Mn. Wi11lam
Manti db Mn.lllrley llrvwD, COo
llollllil R"IP"w plarllt, thank cl·
fwirll II be llbD, Mn. Robert

'

m.•

OneVNr .........................
SINGLI!:COPY
PIIIC&amp;'I
Dolly """" """ .. """"" 15~

WoodnnltolraveclnotiGna.
SPBaAL IIIITING, Racine
l.codp til, rr. ud ~

s.bocribmt not der!lrinc to JIIIY.the corrior

" r-. 7:Jip.m. "-117; won 1n

TNY mnit in .dvlnl't direct ICI 11le DIUy
Sentinel "" 1 I, I or II 111011111 bull. Cradft
will bo &amp;lvtn carrt.r eoclr llllllllh.

IE ...........

_... WWIIB POST II,
Allwl• IAIIGD 'I'DIIda1: Dinner
at 7 p.ai. tGI wed bF lllllltlllc at a

' '

No KUbtrcripll .... b)' malt pmnltted in townl
where home carrier IWI'Vict ill Willable.
MAILIIIIISCIIII'nON

, p.m. It :illl 10 .... 111 new c:GDlfl" #11111dll1lnlo Tllallwlllalao
: be iliiiiiJIIIID of at!ll J ..
:::a.....Y

.

lMmth ........... .. .. ........... fiUI
lltl ·~ .. .. · ............ .. · .... 111M
I
r .... iiii.OiliiiioiiO.." .... 111.•

v..

up tile lfUIIIIaft iJrls, Ito r, Lyu Kloea, CIDdy Parter,
Jayue Hoeflleb, ADele HGUCIIlDI, Stepballle HGUCIIlDI,
T1u Eut, PHyWa Davis ud Joy Hudlea; ..ell from
lbe left, Raltdy Olbonll!, Director Marc Fllllz, aad
Craie Dant. Not pletared Ia me111ber, VIcky Boyles.

I

'.....,.. • • -le ,_., 11/lbe Mldtl!eport FinI
Baplbl a-ell, will be . . . ., nro a)llltll8llcel atlbe
. - I Bllllall Repua. 'J'IIe P"'IJl will appear at

Miller time
NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) John Miller, a freshman player on ·
tbe Connecticut College buketball
team, was sitting on tbe bench In a
game against Vassar, wondering if
he would ever get a chance to play.
Witb Connecticut ahead by 15 points and less than five minutes to go,
his friends in tbe balcony rolled
down a sign which said: "It's Miller
time." The coach took the hint and
sent Miller into the game. John
played tbe last four minutes and
scored three points ... a season high
for him.

through eight, and Miss Flame, ages '
nine lbrough 13, will be selected on
tbe basis of one penny per vole.
There will be cash prizeS and

trophies awarded In these two contests as well as the Miss Rutland

pageant.
Girls interested in entering any of
tbe events are asked to contact Jack
Walker or Jo Ann Stewart at their
earliest convenience.
Also, registrations are being taken
for participation in the annual
parade. These are to be made Ibis
week with Lily Kennedy, 742-2861, or
Charl\'1 Barrett, 742-2578.
.

Philathea women meet

f'()IJ'I'MASTER ' Send odd....., lo1lte Dolt,
Senlin&lt;l, Ill Court St., Pmteroy, Ohlo46'118.

IIIMVALilfiiiiNCIIIpaiQuo.
ell, etllltJ l'llt .. bitS 11 Jilin.
Jalld lilt llelrle, l'ect 11 iiiJ

~.·~~~.v~

vour
Independent Aalllt "·-'Jl
.,.. • •
More Thin One C.DinJ. Ill His
thI ("·Dol'1CJ· for VtOUr . · ~
N--'
' E....
RU
-

.

'

A beauty conleat to select Miss
Rutland will be held as a part of tbe
annuill July 4tb celebration of tbe
Rutland Fire Department.
Contestants m"'t be 13 tbrolllih 18
yeat'll of age, single, must have
parental consent and · must be a
resident of · Rutland Township or
Rutland Villalie. The contestants
will undergo Interviewing by a panel
of judges, will present a talent act
and will appear in formal gowns as a
part of tbe competition. The ~
lestanl8 will take part 1n tbe annuill
paradewhlchsllrtsat!Oa.m.
In conjunction, with the
celebration, 8 Miss Spark, ages four

c:=-

II:_narrow~;;ly;;def;;ea;led;;the;;;Pui;'*;;'OJ~Jn.;;~;Y~•;;. ;";";"';"~"~";";"~";";";";~

.

TueSdiJY, June 1,,1981 '

f1ii~!~ii~~~

Bruce Taylor

3Muotlr ....
...... ;·:
• Mtnth •.... · .. •.............. ". •
1

BytheBend

Fire. Dept. to sponsor
July 4 beauty.contest

WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST

""'.., ••t vtrpoto

Th-e Daily Sentinel
'

Tlle-

~Pirates unieaabed a 14 hit at- · bard each singled.

feel 'night
the plate
three
,singles
andata triple.
Roddwith
Harrilon

posting a 17-6 vletory
. Kovalcl!lk and GllllpoJIJ' FGIIter'
1eunet1 up for· an ,eight strikeout,
.five walk ' perfOI'IIliiiCe. Burdetle,
eamj,ben, and Fai1'ea took tuma on
tbe mound for GIOIIIIer, fanrdnc
tliree and lasulng five free pa11ea
Racer Gaul bad two IIIJIIIes,
Brown a home run, Wolfe a ilngle,
Fields three singlea, Tony Riffle a
single, Joe Bob Hemsley two alncJes,
Mike BilleD a double, Wayland a
double and single, and Kovalcblk,
Foater singll'l.
.
BROWN'S DAY
· Sunday afternoon IJi Racine was
Kenny Brown Day as Brown led
Meigs to a 7~ Win over Wenston by

dians 6-4 in local softball action,
Angie Tennant was the wil\ning pit·
cher with three strikeouts and one
walk. Tarruny Wright suffered the
loss, fanning two and issuing no
walks. Donna Long hammered a
Shot makes hall
home run for tbe winners.
Dravo posted an 11-9 win over
CULLOWHEE, N.C. (AP)- RonBrazle and Brazle in senior softball nie Carr, a 6-foot-2 guard for tbe
play. Debbie Michael picked up tbe Western Carolina basketball team,
win with four walks and no made one shot last fill which carried
200 W. Main St.
Pomnr, Ott.
strikeouts, while Tracy Hennan suf- aU the way to the BasltetbaD HaD of
fered tbe loss. Hennen walked four Fame 1n Springfield, Mass.
and fanned two,
In a game between Weatem
Carolina and Middle Tennessee,
From' Zion, Illinois
Renee Smith and Becky Michael three-point playa were lllowed as an
each had four bits and three runs ,..:expe~rlme~~n~ta!p~prov~ed~by~tlle~N~CAA.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:!:::!~~~:!::!:~~
scored to lead Dravo. Smith had a
double and three singles and
Michael had four singles. Laren
Open Dally
10·9; Sunday J.6
I
Wolfe had a triple and single, Debbie
Michael a double and single, Trad
Mearns 8 double, and Teresa HID,
Michelle Johnson, and Linda
The Saving flace ..
O'Brien each a single.
For tbe losers Tracy Gennan
tripled and singled twice, Vicki Wise
tripled, KeWe Tyree doubled and
singled, while Unda stewart, Penny
Dewhurst, and Rhonda Little singled
Two big innings boosted host twice. Mae Nakarnllto, Megan Clle,
Mason to a 1~ win over previously . and Angie Fisher each singled, while
unbeaten Syracuse. Decker was the Lisa ADen added a double.
winning pitcher for Man, striking
out three and giving up no walka . .----------~
Mike Kloes suffered tbe loss,
striking out three and walking just
The Uuily Sentinel
one. Doug Owens came on in tbe
fVIPII-)
A Dtvlololrol-_lor.
tbird to fan two, maintaining perfect
control for no walka.
Publ ~lto&lt;t every anon-, _ , iJinlulfr
For Mason, BiDy Marshall hit a
Frid!y, Ill Court su..t. bY tiro Ohio Valioy
Publiloltlng Cotnpony • llultlmodia, lne.,
home run, Starcher tripled and
Purneroy, Ohio ••• fn.%111. ,.
pootap prtldii........,,Ohio.
'
doubled, and Sullivan tripled. Bennett singled twice, while Tucker,
Mombft ,
PnM, lntan4 DoilY Pnort "-irrtiGn and the Amoricon
Decker 1111&lt;1 Grande! singled once.
New.,.por Publilheno-loo Shawn claimed tbe lone Syracuse hit
AdvertiKinK RepruentaUn, iil'lllhun
N......,per S.ltr!, 11:1 tlllnl A...,.., New
whiph was a single.
York, N&lt;w York 10011.
'
Softball Actlou

banged a home run, Heather Woods
tripled, and Tammy Wright doubled.
For Middleport Elise Meier singled
twice, Shannon Stewart, Tina J1en.
:efanned four and walked only dricb, Kay Smith, and Nancy lfuO.

tack aa Dave Hendrlcb had a per-

Tui!Ciay. Jype JUU!

Pomeroy-Middleport, Olllo

at .-. .. a 7:• p.m.
zU
11r a.•
n ' .. .-.
- '

111

2.50

ln negative terms. Without even

having met you, I know that you are
not doing yourself justice.
Write down three good things
about yourself each day for the next
four days. When you feel good about
yourself, It's easier to stay on a
strict diet.
It's OK to brag to yourself. It's
also OK to ask for help from your
spouse or a friend.
.
One clthe ways to follow your plan
is to share it with someone else. Be
sure to eat with that person, Eating
with othen brings out your company
manners, which are a wonderful aid
to dieting.
YeurCbanl!ngBody
The best way to work on a flatter
turnnly Is to keep your abdominal
muscles pulled ln. Practice doing so
as often as you can. Properly exercised, the abdominal muscles are
tbe best girdle of an.
"Half a Hula" will work on your
waiSt as well as your abdomen. To
start, stand comfortably witb your
. knees relaxed, your feel apart and
your hands on your hips. Keep your
OOdynllla~eyourwaiit .

I, Tuell your hips under and swing
Year Dally Diet

There II no added fat on your diet
plan. That is becauae fat is very high
in calories. ·For example, mayonnaiae, butter and salad oil have 100
calorie~ per tebleapoon.
For tbe same 100 calories, you
could eat an egg or three ounces of
chicken. Of courae, eggs, bread,
chicken, cheese, antf many otber
foods contain some fat.

TodaY'S menu caDs for you to eat
12 ounces cl cottage cheese, two
cups cl chopped celery, carrots and
green peppers and one whole cantaloupe.
ADow yourself. illl the no-calorie
beverages you desire.
Y-CbaqiagWaya
Who are you? What do you think
about yourself?
You are likely to think ol yourself

them to the left as far as poesible.
2. Circle your bipa fgrward,
pushing your front pelvic bcfues forward and up.
3. Continue in a circling movement
to swing your bips as far as poeslble
to the right.
4. Return to tbe starting position.
5. Repeat steps one through four
starting from tbe right. ·
Do Ibis exercise twice to the left
and twice to the right. Work up to
four times each way dally.

Polly's Pointers

Make fiurniture polish .
h
b
;IJ
wtt easy e.eswax rectre

Pearl Reynolds, Gertrude Miller,
and Trudy Williams.
·
Nora Rice, president, thanked aU
those who helped with the father-son
banquet on June 7. It was decided to
serve dinner for "Come Alive"
Singers fnm C.B.S. on June 26 at
5:30 p.m. Committees appointed
were Regina Swift, Clyda Aliensworll), Dorothy Roach, Clarice Erwin, kitchen; Betty McKinley, Sandy Gibb6, dining room; Grace
Hawley, EDa Mae Daugherty, and
Mildred Hawley, clean-up.
A junior high bake sale was announced for June 20 at Vaughans
starting at 8 a.m. Anyone with
donations cl baked goods should contact Cathy Erwin. The July 9
Philathee meeting was announ~ed
with Sharon Stewart, Becky Loving,
Beulah Roush, Louise McElhiney,
and Margaret LaDance as hostesses.
The program will be on cake
decorating presented by Mrs.
Stewart.
Attending the meeting were Mary
Bailey, Reva Beach, Farie Cole,
Clara Conroy, EDa Mae Daugherty,
Cathy Erwin, Grace Hawley, .Lula
Mae Quivey, Mary Martin, Betty
McKlnley, Evelyn Murray, Rose
Reynolds, Nora Rice, Beulah Rol,ISh,
Regina Swift, Mabel Walburn, and
Frances Roush.

Faith Perrin
Perrin initiated
ATHENS - Faith Perrin of
Pomeroy is one of 32 students recently initiated into the Ohio University
chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.
.Phi Beta Kappa, founded in 1776,
recognizes those students with high
scholastic achievements who meet
certain liberal arts distribution
requirements.
Perrin, a senior majoring in preveterinary medicine, is the daughter
of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Perrin of
213 Mulberry Ave.
Perrin, who is also a member of
Omicron Delta Kappa leadership
honorary, has received a Dean's
Achievement Scholarship and the
Rush Eliot Pre-Professional
Scholarship.

.

Plan grange session
Hemlock Grange will meet at 7
p.m. Saturday at the hall. Laurel
Grange will visit. Ali members are
urged to attend.

To meet Thursday ·
Rock Springs Better Health Club
will meet at I: 15 p.m. Thursday at

the Rock Springs Methodist Church.
Nancy Morris will be the hostess.
Susie Pullins will present the
program, and the contest will be
conducted by Lottie L. . nard.

ASTROGRAPH
June 17, 1981
This coming year you 're likely
to make a shift in the type of
friends who will appeal to you .

Pals who are doers with a more

serious outlook are apt to be the
companions you'll seek .
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) Be
especially careful if making any
larger purchases today , You 're
too willing to believe what you
want to hear and you could make
a bum dea l.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) All
transactions today , especially
legal mailers, must be clearly
defined and detailed, step ·by·step
and put in writing . Assumptions
will prove unwise.
LEO
(July
23 · Aug.
22)
Something you may have neglec ·
ted to take care of could surface
today . Don' t waste time making
excuses. Attend to the matter at
once.
VIRGO (Aug, 23·Sept. 22) Un ·
characteristically, today you
could allow your social interest to
woo you into spending far beyond
your means. Save your dreaming
for when you 're sleeping .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23 ) Be
careful what you say about
anybody today, even those wno
mav deserve a tongue lashing . It
could make YOU look bad, in ·
stead of the wrongdoer .
SCORPIO (Del. 24·N·ov. 22) II
'you've made a mistake, don' t try
to cover it uc w ith a lot of

rationalizat ions . Taking a stand
on a hopeless cause is fruitl ess.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J·Dec .
21) A material involvement must
be nandled prudent ly today . if
you display an unrealistic approach , you cou ld alienate others
altogetner .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. IY)
This is not the day to get into a
t 1 nger·poi nt ing contest w i th
associa tes regard ing who is r ight
or wrong . Each could end up
making things much tougher for
the other .
AQUARIUS ( Jan. 20· Feb. lY )
Politi cal intr igues could cause
you problems today, whether it
be wi th your peers or at work .
Don' t be placed in a position
where you must choose sides.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)
Si tuat ions mav develop in your
business deali ngs today whi ch
w ill require extreme tact to rec·
t ily . Keep palsy witn persons who
can make you money .
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Gel
all the facts before lasning out 11
you hear some unfl atteri ng
things were said about you . You
could mak e matters worse by ac·
cusing an innocent person.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
you allow an unpleasan1 material
matter to get the best of you
today, about all you' ll accomplish
is to cause an unprOductive day .
Keep cool.

•

By Polly Fllller
DEAR POU.Y- U you have had
8peclal etrnlpODdeDt
shortening on hand for time
DEAR POU.Y -My grandfather and are W1IW'e u to wbether It's nlll
Wl8 I furniture .
frehl, try tbla teat befonnrilnc II:
Melt one or two lablr 'PM• cl tbe
maker and he
alwaya mixed b1a
shortening In alldllet and let It lit at
i"lQJJ tempnlure ~ u tile
own furniture
. shortening Ia I'IJidd, • wiD ll1)tll
"""'... tte aaldtt
terrible In tbe
It attn
:;;;"~ better .
ame111 OK, tile shortening II attn
tban anythln1
goodtouae.
lftllallle In lbe
To ll'e8M blldD&amp; tina, mb: two
ltOrea. I think bla
tablelpoona Gl Dour witb e11e
formall.bad beetPOlLY
. wu In It, bull can't remember tbe
ol ahortenlnc In • cup.
Gild frrlred*da. I:¥ you belp witb

momb.. u

llldlaraelpeT -II&gt;WE

:=

DEAR MOWE- '11le
ftmllla II a 10011 all-papoire
palllb llllde with~ II WIUI:
.... or dJip four CUICel cl
~uJ!u Into • et11w cu 11 ' •

=- .::re
eab

~

IIWDI~~

euler and ... .... tban eGIIo
veatloaal ........ 81111 llotrrq. It
also lllfti • loveiJ allldlll brvim
el'llltCIIIheelb.- MfiS. II.

the bOOt makes tbe boola aaeood as
new. Be, sure boola are completly
dry
applylnc
Blue. -

before

HELEN

the

And be careful not to get any glue
on your flngera! - POU.Y
Polly will aend you - cl her
slgDed tbank-JOU newapaper coupGD
cllppen If abe yoar· favorlll
PollMr, Pllft or Pntbllua In her
colunm. Write POlLY'S POIN·
TERS 1n cu:e cl tbla i*wapaj)el'. ·

Regatta to ftature
arts and crafts·show

food-.
•
..,.

DEAR POLLY- W. meklnc a
- l r l t ad
........ pllllllled wltllllilt ...... clnll'a
lfllalrllD..t~·~
(DOI'f. .ft lbe Pill a~ ..... ....
..... t
"•
hllll'C wlllll lbe

,.... lllllfll IIIII lllllllle, 81111

•

..., w- if the ..... ipiD lMo

AWARD - Mn. laeirel . . . . NC!IItw a "tead•r ol tile maa111
~,._tile .... WIIIIIIIK Ill I, Jllltw ol tile W'IICII'I Ulllled
P I t . .ll Q
llell .... aa -rd Ia prtl II I t1 tile ...
a • Jl I ' .... llatllrtllll ..... wltlnalrialla,_..llvea
. . . , 175 rtllr I 79 ,fr I illftJW~-. ....
. r.- '),, . . I, f, .. , I I ill II_.._, .. " lltrt''
tMI'M' •lltb
,ww'lllllaa IOwllleamn Q LAUle

a

. -.

.... ~,...a ...
(
....
,..
....................
l

REUtER -BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E. Main
992-6681

lllkokil• . . lSI I

\'lralldlBir ..,.

J

,,

111

anllelteY.Mr.lltiiiiii ... Mn.

�•

~-~~~~~======~~~·I'
· A fatheN!on banquet was held Phyllis Gilkey, MUtzl Saltsman,
recentlY at the Middleport Church of Amy Erwin, and Jennifer McKinley.
Christ with Robert McElhinney
Fathers and 80118 attending were
be~ iecOgnlzed as the oldest Kevin and :Joe Loving, Dayton
father, and Scott Saltsman, the McElroy, Robert McElhinney,
youngest father, attending.
David Horton, Raymond Baker,
· 'lbe banquet was aerved by the Dana Swift, LawreDI!e Stewar\,
Phllathea Women of the cburcl1 with Mack, Barry and Greg Stewart,
· Amy Erwin having charge of the Glen Evans, Raymond Cole, He!'
program. She read "What is a main Kincaid, L. D. Hartinger,
Father" with Glen Evans having a WUbur Theobald, Earl aild Scott
solo, and Danny Thomas reading "A McKinley, Bob, Paul and Scott
Father's ,Job." Joe Loving, MattEr- Melton, Wlllard Boyer, Ted and Ted .
win, Scott Melton accompanied by Riley, Jr., Osby and Adam Martin,
Kevin Loving, sang "He's StiU Sam and Steve Crow, Mike Gerlach,
Working on Me."
W. T. Grueser, Scott Saltsman, Don
Assisting wi~ the dinner were and Mat~ Erwin, Jim, Jared, Ailron,
Nora Rice, Cathy Erwin, Frances · aild' Adam Sheets, Lester and
ROush, Farie Cole, Betty McKinley, Richard Bailey, and Dan and Danny
Marilyn Wilcox, Reva Beach, Thomas.
'lbelma Boyer, Becky Loving,

TOPS plans for 4th
"Blast off with TOPS - Freedom honor on the float.
Honored as the weekly best loser
from Fat" will be the theme of the
float to be entered in the July 4 was Linda Stewart with a loss of four
parade at Rutland byTOPSOH 1466. pounds. She was sung to by other
Plans for the float were finallzed members and presented a dollar.
at last week's meeting with Nellie Runner-up was Connie Black. The
Haggy to purchase supplies and previous week's best loser was
members to work on making the Phyllis Clay. Flower fund donations
decorations following this week's were taken and members were
asked to contact absent members to
meeting.
Members were reminded to take encourage them to help with the
miscellaneous items for the picnic float. Geraldine Fauber was
basket and that there are only three welcomed into the club as a new
more weigh-ins before Miss July 4th member: Secret pal responsibilities
is selected. She will have the seat of were reviewed.

TOPS 570 holds
weight workshop
A workshop on weight loss to be
held at Grove City on Saturday was
announced when TOPS OH 57a of
Pomeroy met last week.
Delores Long presided at the
meeting with the 18 members attending showing a loss of 11 pounds.
Trina Faulk was the weekly queen
with Frances Haggy as runner-up. It

Graduates
Academy

from

was noted that the spring wardrobe
contest ended on June 9 and that the
wiruiers will be announced at this
week's meeting. Anyone who has not
paid her money for the contest is
asked to do so immediately. KOPS
night will be observed the week
before the Meigs County Fair.

RADFORD, Va. - Diana E. Rice
of Reedsville, was recently named to
the spring quarter dean's list at Radford University in Radford, Va.
Rice, a junior home economics
education major, is the daughter of
Harley Rice of 51488 Riee Run Road.
A student must be enrolled
fulltime and have a grade point
average of at least 3.4 before being
named to the dean's list.

On Dean 's List
PENSACOLA, Fla.- Helen Marie
King, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil C. King of Pomeroy, was
· named to the Dean's List by Joel H.
1
Ir11 t'ullenix, Dean of the college, at
Pensacola Christian College for
academic achievement during the
spring semester of the 198«h''1 school
. year. She w named to the Dean's
List as a result of earnign a " B"
average or higher.

.

Baby shower held .
Mrs. Roy (Chestene) Bickle was
honored with a baby shower May 20
at the home of Mrs. Gary Barry,
Fairfield-Centenary Road.
Refreslunents consisted of punch
and a cake decorated and blue and
pink booties.
Attending the shower and sending
gifts were: Virginia Barry, Lois
Layne, Trena Jeffers, Wanda
Williams, Sharon Johnston, Eileen
Halley and Deanna Skrobot, Lula
Preston, Brenda Drwnmond, Mary
Pelfrey, Katherine Harrop, Roberta, Heather and Jarrod Harrop,
Roberta, Brenda and Paula Cox,
Rhonda Cusack, Mariane Minor, Pat
and Robin ,Brister, Malme BJ"lllTIfield, Norma Harrison, Mavis
Sakoski, Brenda Renfroe, Unda McComas, Kim Mays and Debbie
Davis.

,

ALL STEEL

ROGER HYSEll'S

Farin BuUdinp

GARAGE

Sites

.'\i

"From l0x30"

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

SMALL

AlliENS SPORT
CYCLES
StilmSI&gt;n 4ve. Athens,

· Utility Buildings .
Sizes from 4x6 to 12•40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3; Box 54
Ph. 614·843·2591
·
6·15·!lc

Garages - Buildings
- Blrns-Equl,m..,t,
· · S~Mi~S
POLE BUILDINGS
IS'xZV' up to 40'x1118'
PORTABLE ST&amp;Ii!L
STORAGE
BUILDINGS
C4'x16', l'xr, 1'•10',
IO'xiO', 10'XI2' &amp;upl
Any sin built' to your
spec:lllcatlons. .Models
In Meigs, · Gllllla and
Mason Clountles.
FREE ESTIMATES
All Buildings
Guarantted

,.
'
I'
.I

992·5682

I

Icenhower and Dwight

CAT 1).6.(.

Farm Ponds ·Land
ng- Roads.
Call:

Birth announcement
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Icenhower, Rt.
I, Middleport, announce the birth tl
a son, Dwight Wayne on May 21, at
Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed seven J)OIIIldil
d
ed
.
and ftve ounces an measur 20 inchesin length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.

PULLINS

EXCAV~TING

992 •2478
or
Blain Milhoan
985-3965
6-\~ 1 mo .

CONTRACTING

··

ROOANG. ·

All types of root work,
new or ropalr gutters
.and downspout&lt;, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard •
· ::::~~:~

'

"Beautjlul, Custom
Buill Garages"
Call lor free siding
estimates, 949- 2801 .or
949. 2860 .
No Sunday Calls
3·n.llc

New Homes - ex•
tensive remodel· .
·
mg.
.
e Electrical work
e Roofing w·o rk
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·3·1 mo. · '

•Dump Truck

Serving Your Area tor
20 Years

Lic ~ nsed

&amp; Bonded

PH. 992-7201
5·21 1fc

l&lt;itche'n ' cabinets, ' bath
remodeling, roofin9 &amp;
gutter, siding &amp; plumbing &amp; electrital, eon-

Rooling &amp; Gutter
Remodeling

crete, storm windows,
woodburners installed.

AREA
RESIDENTS
sewer line connections,

house
changes tha·t have to be
maae. Bac~ hoe and

CALL:
Paul Sigman-992· 2984

any

in

doser service a ~ailfble.

992·2036
5·20·1 mo.

Pat Milchell- 742·2562
6·7·1 mo.

5·8·2 mo . pd .

Ir;~~~~===~E===;:::::::i~=======j-========

CARPENTER'S

MASON TEXACO

J&amp;C

DAN.CE
STUDIO

MECHANIC &amp;
BODY MAN

SANITATION

Now Taking Enrollment
for Summer Classes.
In Pomeroy &amp; Racine

ON DUTY DAILY

Ages land Up

PH. 304-773-9510

Ca 11949·2710

Lowell &amp; Doug Hal/hilt
.owners · Operators

weekend attendance of 3,0011 with

H ·1 mo.

SERVICE
Trash Pickup In
The Village of

M~~.~;~~-~~1~h.
'
or 992·7505
, _ ·tfc
, 17

5·24·1 mo.

HCMARD
ROTAVATORS
HJ 50"-2Q-30 H.P.
HA 60"-25-60 H.P.
HE 60''-45-1~ H.P.
All Models Available

LEO MORRIS
Rl.l Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742·2455
. ','
5 11 1

r~=~~~~~=~~=======~~=======~=====~-~-t~c~

about
grounds800
during
people
the who
conclave.
live on the 1
Fellowship and preaching ser·
vices are still the mainstay .of the
camp meeting, with an early·
morning service scheduled at 6:45
a.m. Various meeting and classes
continue through the day, climaxing
with the 7 p.m. evening service
featuringguestspeake. rs.
Youth and children receive special
attention with programs and events
scheduled for six different age
groups throughoutthe day.
Sabbath School will continue at the

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

- Addonsand
remOCiefing
- Rooting ana·gu,er
work

MILLER ELECTRIC REESE ~
Gl Gl
SERVICE
.
TRENI'W1UING
For all DI your W1r·
SERVICE

inq needs .
~ l ectr ic&lt;ll

- Concrete work

your pre se nt

- Plumbing and
electrical work
!FreeEslimates)

syllem.
Residen•oal
&amp;Comm ercial
Caii742 ·319S
or 992 · 7680

V• C' YOUNG .II

992-6215 or 992-7314

·
Water·Sewer·Eiectrlc
G L' o 1·t h
as .ne- c es
water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
countyCertlfied
RoushLane
Cheshire,
Oh.
Ph. 367.7564l

Let George Moiler check

coMPLETE
RADIATOR
5 E RV ICE
FrOm the Smallest
Heater · Core to the
LargestRadlotor
Radiator Spec:lollst
NATHAN IIIGGS
35 Yrs Ex~rl' tnce
· ~·

SMilH. NELSON
MOTORS INC,
Pomeroy, OH.

992-2174

Pit.

af-~~=~=P~o~m~e~ro=y~.O~h=·~~t:::=:::;:::::'~H=II~&lt;=t=:~=~=~1~· 7:·1:':::'c=-~~~~~~~5~·7~·1~1c~
clve
ri

·u
Communt'tJl BUt~aers
The Community Builders Club
metattheh omeofM r.andM rs. Roy
Hannum for the May meeting. At·
tending were Mr. and Mrs. Harliss
Frank, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Osbor·
ne, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Myers and Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Pickens. The next
meeting will be a cook-out at Forked
Run State Park June 2() at6:30 p.m.

Plus Vest'•

. t d p a tl ern
P nne

4626

SIZES 8-20

.

ClaSS .JfJ'ed Ads

SPRING-SUMMERPAnERNCATALOG. 100· s(}les, free patte~n
coupon. ($2 Value). CalaiO&amp;. $1.
MJ.CMIOOIS
.. $Z.OOU&lt;h
134-14""'ctQuil1s
133-f. llamt Quiitin ·
130-SIIIIIIn-Sl• 38-~
~:;'~,~~dd ZSI
each 101 poslaee and handline.

W~Nl AD

eAtra

cash

tor
su opp tng sprees

Chester F. Kodym, son of Ruth M.
Kodym of 700 Main St., Point
Pleasant, W. Va., has been
promoted in the U. S. Air Force to
the rank of senior ainnan.
Kodym is a supply facilities
specialist at Ellsworth Air Force
Base, S.D., with the 28th field maintenance squadron.

U.S. Rt. SO East
Phone 614-662-3121
'Authorized John O...re,
New Holland, Bush HOi!
farm equipment dealer.
2 used No. ISO Ntw'
Holl•nd round hay
balers, both In ex·

INFORMAnON

eel lent c:ondition.

PHONE 992-2156

Is Promoted

.BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

or in gyou

5-1~ · 1

or Write Daily Sentinel (:iassified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy-, o,, 45769

eANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTALS •

l- c 1rd•f Th•'*•
t- In Mt moritm

11- HOUtts tOr RIM
12- Mobllt Homts

)-Announcements

ttr Rent
4t-Apartmtntt lor Atnt

mo.

DUFF'S
PWMBING

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

·oo

iiEAnNG
12 P1rk St.

45- Furnlshtd Rooms
..,_Sputfor Rent

Middleport, Oh.
Ph. "2·6263 .
Anytime

41- Wuttcl to Rent
U - Equlpmtnl tor Rent

6·15-1 mo.

eMERCHANDISE

t-Wtlltldta Buy

h - HoUHNid Goocta
j2- CI, TV, R1ila l!!qulpm'tnt
U - Antllllltl
J4 - MIK. ~rctla!MIIst

eEMPLDYMENT
SERVICES
,, _ ._.,war~ttel

U- lull«&lt;kltJuNIItt

u - Sthult.a W•nt.a

.u- Pt h

11- lnsur•nc:•
1•- 1uslnt ss Training
11-ScMols lnstrv ctlon

·~- ,.,

n - Livntecll
M-Htf' &amp; Grilli

O~tP~rtvnlty

65-StH I Ptl111irtr

n - MOMy to Loan

•

U- fl'roltss lonet
Strvlctt

Tlleslx·-Sa•IIIIIJ.._ 1:111111 '1111. Stop in today and take advantage of

e TRANSPORTATION

eREAL !!:STATE
)l - Momn 1., s•t•
H- MetH.. Melnes

tars...

»--'''"'' .... 1111
14- llftlftttt lwilcfiMt

n - Autol'torle..
11· YtMitW.D.

_.........
me et.......
.

IACCftHtttl

,,_.....,

)t-lottl .,,....

·w-•ulltlettWtllttd

REDUCED

eSEIIVICES
••- Hemtlmpn...Miftb
tt-Pium'-int&amp; ••c~Yatflt

Want-Ad AdvtrliJing
DNdllnH

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

D-l•hutMt

••""""'*"
..............
.,.tr
17-u_,.,.,
tt-llft'tr~t

~

TutllleyttlnPrltltrii ii,,M,
..... , . . . . . tl'lltlt..

-

-.,-

.M.•

-

R1tft and Otlltr Information
Uollts-.. _....,_ .............. ......... ... ....

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

l'edlral rogulatlons rtqulre a subltontlol Interest penalty for premoture
,.j-ew•Iof cortlflcoto 1\Jnmand prolllblls compounding of Interest.

....... -

, Tilt actual return til Investors on TrHSUty Bills is higher. 4utomatlc rtNWable
at ma!vrity ollt,.preyolllng rota.
.

-·-all----..... 1111 • • ....,,

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

...- - - ............ , .......... .. 11..
· - · -... lloo1

PRICES
Oil AU.

.......

wanlld to Buy
SCASHI
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
DNEPlECE .
OR HOUSE FU~L
COMETO
.
420L:,VREc-.ti~ONp
. 446-ms
DPEN9T05

' ·

Middl-'·
· Pomeroy
o\ree-th
915-CitHter ,
UJ-Porlland
247'-Letort Foils
94V:..Raclne
742-,.. Rutland

•

Point Pleasant

CASH lor your dlampnd!lo
gold ana sliver. clan rings,
wedding bands, silver .and
go I'd · coins. Ta.wn~y
Jewelers, .m Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

451-Leon
574-Apple Grove
"

77,\i~Mason

"812-Ntw Haven

• ,; 1 895-'-~etart

937-Bullalo
In Meigs County

In Galllo County

Cal ~2342
·

992·2156

In Mason county

675-1333
~
-''

. . ..'
''

'

. ' . .' ' '

''' ~

' ' ' ' ·•' • r

i

A

Giveaway

.

Wanted used ilr
con· ~~~~~~~~~#;;:!!~===;;:~~
dltloner. Mary Rusk
James, 446·0728.
.
11
Help Wanted
Wanted:
Llve·ln house
.WANTED TO BUY :
SILVER, keeper In Portland, Ohio.
GOLD,
PLATINUM, STERLING· 843·4636•
COINS,
. RINGS,
JEWELRY, MISC. ITEMS. NEED SO!l1eone to Install
ABSOLUTE MARKET carpet. Must have own
PRICE GUARANTEED. tools. Call675·1ll7.
ED BURKETT BARBE·R
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT, Woman to stay with elderly
OH 10 992-3~76.
lady In Cottageville on
weekend. 372·3398 Col·
HARLEY·DAVIQSON, , pr· tageville, WV.
eferably older model, but
23
Prolesslonal
will consider new .model II Someone to mow hay. 675·
services
reasonable. Must be In 1076.
COMMERCIAL and In·
good condition, In the $1500
dustrial
to 12500 price range. Call
photograp~y..
Camp Director lor YOC Phone 446·2909 I!J:..4l6·7226
'192·5006.
Day Camp. Must have after 4 p.!IJ
... . . -·"
college
education and be
BEDS·IRDN, BRASS, old able to work
with children
furniture, gold, silver of all ages. ·No phone calls. INCOME TAX AND AC·
dollars, wood Ice boxes,
COUNTING SERVICE ·
812 Viand Street, Pt. Call
446:7068 for ap·
stone Iars, antiques, etc., Apply
Pleasant,
wv.
Senior
com·
Complete
households. munlty Center.
polntment anytime.
Write: M.D. Miller, Rl. ~.
Pomeroy, Oh. Or'/92·7760.
Dependable man to work Piano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbOr tune
Cock·a·poo puppy. 99l·:M7S. on dairy farm . 675·5277.
your Piano. Bill ward,
Wards Keyboard . 446·4372.
12
Situations
wanted
Gallipolis.
·
Supers for bee hives. Phone
7~2 -m5 alter 4 p.m.
SOME·DNE to share
driving and expenses from PIANO TUNING and ser·
Old furniture, coppe~ and Gallipolis to Marshall vice, all makes and
brass. kettles, split hickory University from June 16 models. Call Bob Grubb at
baskets, stone jars with through July 17. Phone 446· 446·.1525. Formerly ·- With
Wards Keyboard.
2460.
nam... 446·3925.

KIliens, 2 tigers, I light
grey. Can be seen at 398
Card of Tllltnks
Grant St., Middleport, or
' sin·' .. call
I wiSh to extend my
'192·2520 alter 6;:&gt;.m.
cere thanks and ap·
.,
preclallon ' to my many Male tiger cat, 1 yr. old,
( l wanrea
.. 17.
friends lor the many cards; :188·8343.
( I For Sale
lelteni, gills and visits
18.
( I Announcement
while I was a patient .at
\9
.
.
·
_
__
_
_
( 1 F:or Rent
Holzer HoSpital. I extend Orange KItten CAll 379·
20.
spec:lallllanks to my neigh· 2727.
bors, Mr. and Mrs. Robert.
'21. - - - - - Harden, Or. Walker, and Will give away to good
·, 22.
tile nurses. Your kindness hOme 3 puppies 256·6623 or
''
I. - ----..:.....:..
will never be.forgotten .
23.
256·6So15.
Frankie fw\umaw
2. -----~..:..
3. _ _ _ __
u: .:....-.---KITTENS and COllie pup·
25.
2·
In Memoriam
pies.
Free, to a good home.
4. ~""""'---26.
256·1352.
'
In
Memory
of
Herbert
5. - - ---'-WhiHington who paJSe&lt;l
27. --~6. - -'-- - ' - away I year ago June I, 1 nice automatic Whlrpooi
28. - - ' - - - - 1980. God saw lllat you washing machine, needs a
7. - ..:...-"-- 29.
were suffering, the · hills little work. 1 mattress. 2'117
' 30.
were hard to climb, so he BrOOk Drive, Pt. Pleasant
8. - - - ---9.
I
your weary eyelids or675-640.
31. _ __ _ _
10. .1._..;;__ __
and whispered 'Peace be
thine' . In my heart your 7 week old kltten to ·a good
'32. _ ...:.,_ _ _
11 .
memory lingers, but I home. 675-6414.
know In vain to weep tears
12.
~--·of Jove can never wake you
13.
from
your peaceful, happy Mother cat ard 6 week old
34 .~-sleep. When days are dark female kitten. 1 female, 2 HARPER · HALSTEAD
14.
35. _ _ _ __
and lonely one( everylhln.g male· kittens, 7 weeks old. SALVAGE CO., 11th and
15.
goes .wrong, I seem to hear 675·2384.
Viand Street, now buying
16.
you whisper 'Cheerup,
metals (copper, brass,
smile. and carry on'. Each Kittens. 773·5936.
aluminum, lead, stalnl..s
time I look at your picture
steel, batteries and
Mail This Coupon with RemiHance
you -m to smile and
radiators, ginseng, yellow
The Daily Sentinel
root, catnip and sassafras).
say'don'l grieve, I am
10 am to 6 pm dally. Also
sleeping, we. will meet ,
Lost and Found
BoJ 729
again someday'. Honey,l'll '----'===-==-Flea Market on Saturdays.
- - - - Pomeroy, Ohio:45769
always love you . Wife· Found In·Swisher Hill area CAII675·5868.
Gloria and children and of Kyger Creek, I to I 1&amp;2
grandchildren.
yr. old male hunting type
doll. mad. size, light brown,
..
In loving memory of Edna short haired. Call 367-7594
alter
5:00.
Thomas on her birthday
Jwne 16. You're always In
our thou!ihts, no matter Found: female coon hOUnd• I IT:::::::::::Jff!l~~~==
where we go, You'·re Rutland. Leading Creek· Jl
always In our helrts, Depot Street area. 742·22&lt;19. Wanted : Janitor to wor~
because we loved you so.
abOUt 30 hours per week at
Sidly miJSed by Edllll.
LOST· Old TNT area, 1 Prasbyteril&gt;n Church. Sub·
male Keeshond, bl~tck and mil application at 51 State
gray, answers to name o1 St.,Galllpolls. 9:00 am ·
1
Announcoments
•Bear'. If found, pleaoe tie
SWEEPER and sewing up and call 675-6736 after 6 12 :oo before June 30. :
machine repair, parts, and pfl1.
EXPERIENCED
INS.
suppll... Pick up and
pjEW LISTING ~--------1· AGENT to wor~ with
dtli-y,
Davis
Vac:uum
Beautiful newly con·
nlstlng ' clients In
structed English Tudor Cleaner, One hall mile up
Gallipolis. Good startl~g
Georges
Creek
Rd.
Call
split· entry home close to
Income bonus &amp; expense
Middleport, Featuring 3 446-029~..
YordSIIt
7
allowance
•.. ex. lrenoe
1
bedrooms, 2 /:J baths,
benltlts.
ThOrough
tralnlnv
NEW GARAGE OPENING Michigan Yard Sale 50 Nell program. Send resume
lamily room and larve
or
· A~tomatjc transmissions Ave., Gallipolis. Wed. June call
l i v i ng room with
C.W.
Langslord
CLU,
10
lllru
11.
91o
?.
and all sor11 of mechanical
separate dl~lng room,
931 Highway 28 Suite 308,
garage and workShop . repair and maJor and
American United Life,
minor auto body repair. GARAGE SALE. Old Rt. 7, Milford,
Good location Dh, .C.SI50 or calli ·
UNDER CONSTRUC· See JamH Smllll or Tom Addison. women's cloth... 513·24·1222. EOE
Maste,..orcall AA6-n57.
TION. $5-4,900.00.
sizes 16-18 112, hOUMIIOid
iRGILB.SR. '
NEW LISTING - A one
Items. some collectibles,
_ .216 E. Second Street
year old 80 loot long 3 City Cab, office 39 State St. etc. June 15·20, 10 a.m. to 6 $185.00 to 1500 weekly dolnv
mailing work. No ex·
bedroom ranch with a 2 Gallipolis, open 5:30 1111 p.m.
perlence required . AP·
Phone
car garage, concrete · 11:30PM 7 days. '"1·0451.
PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
front
porch,
large-barn,
.1·1 l!,4)·992·332S
Backyard Sale.. Never Box 224·0, Richmond Hill,
corn crib, and five nice
...
. ,
I PAY . hlgltHI prlcH before offered, Texas NY 11418.
laylnv acres, which are
WHAT DO YOU THINK
Rd.,Galllpolls.
Mon
&amp;
pOSSible
lor
gold
and
sliver
partly fenced with a
- o1 this 3 bedroom
&amp; Wed. 10 until ? .
board fence. Home has 2 colm, rings, lewelry, etc. Tues.
GET VALUABLE training
trailer with add·on.
Plenty of eve~ythlng .
Contact
Ed
Burkett
Barber
lull
bath!,
large
lamily
as
a young business person
Sliding VIliS door to
Shop, Middleport.
room with wood burner.
and earn good mone;y plus
sundeek on a river
Yard Sale ~9 Garfield Ave. some great. gilts as a Sen·
'
huge livinG room with
·front lot of 3.7 acr .. lor
foyer~ and many, mora
ATTENTION LADIESJll Gallipolis. June 17'11. Tup· tlnel route carrier. Phone
·relaxation or retire·
extras. $62,000.00.
HelP pay off those un· perware,. Avon collection, us right away and vet on
men!? I'M&amp; Fleetwood,
wanted
bills working clothing, sneets, bed· the eliolblllty ·nst at 992·
equipped kit.. J
NEW LISTING '- This
evenlngslrom7:
30to10 :30 spread. pots and pans, and 2156 or 992-2157.
bedroom. 1'11 ,baths, and
hOme ltas posslbllltlesp.m.
as
a
fllltlon
stylist. lots of others Items.
ga~ F .A. furnace lor on·
larve lomlly home or
Earn
11.00
ID
110.00
ly 113,500.
upper •nd lower apa~t · ' hour profit. Ideal per
lor Yard Sale 170 Portsmouth
' NEW LISTING- Very
111ents. A bedrooms, 2 hOmemaker wltll family
. Rd. on Rl. Ul, GallipoliS.
nice 3 yr.oid brick ranch
lull baths1 2 kllc~ens .
Call992-3941
from
9-6.
honle wllll over 3 acres.
June 17·18, 9·? Bedroom set
Live In one level, rent
3 bedrooms, 11h bath!,
and clollles, etc,
the other. 4111 Ave. In
central air &amp; heat.
Middleport. Carpetlno •. The Meigs Museum, loU
Equipped k i!chen,
Butter,nut Avenue, will be Super Carport Sale One
kitchen equipment,
patio, located on hard
some lurnilur&amp;. Nlc elot. open Frldaye from 1·3 lor mile from ]unction of Rl.
rCNtd only a lew miles
lht summer monllls.
m,ooo.oo.
160 &amp; O.J. Whitt Rd. Follow
from town. Asking
the
slgm from there. Table
STEP
INTO
YESTER·
157,000.00.
'
DAY - Original wood
Anyone having a good sized of free ltwms. Adcllllonli
, CAMPING LAND
· and beautiful
dog to giveaway and Items acldtd dally. Wed·
The ]IYoodl wltn big oam
wood lloors.
know's haw to bark phont Tllurs.&amp;Frl.
, enear FQrked Run Lake.
lous
r'o oms
7&lt;12·2761.
· EnioY the outdoors this. 1.ditwn·stalrs wilh big
Yard Sale. June 16, 17, 11.
summer and comp out.
staircase leading
From
10.5 at (15 Headley
LONELY
Christi
an
14.6 acres.
upstairs to a 3 bedroom
St. 1 Mlddl_,. Lots of
SlngiH.
Mitt
Christian
FREE HEAT- Also 7
1
and full balll. h bath In
singlll lnyour ar•. Wrltw mloc. ltwms, rain cancels.
acres of "nd with a
ullllty room aild family
Southern Chrllllen Singles
St!Jall hOulle ·lnd L.C.
room also. Good toea·
Club, PO Box 1123, Sum· s famil~ gerage sale June
water. Minerals, other
'lion In Middleport and
mervlllt, SC 29ol83.,.. calli· 17·19. 9-4 dally at Roland
buildings .
Qnly
it YesterdaY's Prices.
103·171-91511,
2~ hours. .
111,500.00, owner will
Morris rnidtnce, Lono
$29,500.00.
help fln1nct.
Hollow Rd. Just off tile ~·
SIX ACRES OF
1~1 ltfLLCRIST lane. Watch for slgm.
PIANO
L._..
Lucy
Jane
PRIVACY - And IS at
1~1C711
storage rm.
Bulmer. Hartford, WV 112· Larger size clotlllng, some
the. edge o1 town. A 1v.
Nl.. 3 l!eclfOIImS, 1'1'1
antique dlllltl. Rain or
2395.
story frame hOme with
balll
furnace,
1111nt.
3·4 bedrooms, large
clr·iiftiino,_ bbar; and you
utility room, nice
corner lot.
GarlOt Sale. 4th Ave., Mid·
cabinets In kltclten, and
2
outbulldl~gs .
ANY PERSON who ~ dleport . This Tllurs.,
529,5110.00.
. 111yt111ng 10 give WilY lf!ll friday. Antlq- to call'
doH not Olftr Of ltt.nlpl to nlng 1ars. lliggest 111e
STARTER
ollli' any allier tiling far
- This two
llle!IIIY -'-1111 ad In 11111
home II prac:·
COIU""'· There Will be no PORCH SAL&amp; t¥111111111af·
maintenance
..,. 6:30 pm, SUnclly ...
cllll'll to tile*'-""' .
~-klmir.u'mt siding,
has new
t-1 _ , 111 mile belOw W1t·
••
,_
lerlon'l
Gro«rY 1 Jerry's
Kltt.ns 7 WMkl old .w6·
sepRun; Armatrong resldtn·
Cllrpet, and
IIYJ1.
Wlnttd: aomeone to
Cl.
124.1110.00.
haullc...n. 992-3011.
Tl-.llluy
!;OLLIE and CllanllounCI
Porcll Slit. mll 111
0.l'u!IIIIIL •am.
MII'IIUIItwA-. JUIIII7
W.t
endl...

·
l

,........,,--.===:;--

... . ... ....
-.II I

........
Gil ~

01

• • o 0 . ... . .

Repair or remodeling . GALLIA Cleaning and
work, flooring, doors, wall Rent-A -Maid Service Inc .,
paneling, ceiling, or floor Free Estlma)es, bonded ,
insured, phone 245·9234.
tile, siding . 992·2759.
Cleaning by the week, moo·
Will do roots, gOOd rates, thor contractual.
free estimates. Call alter 5
FOR all your photography
at992·5825.
needs go to Tawney Studio,

Will care lor the elderly In

::m
:

Mill.-

......

-·

toa.

Yanl Slle. WtllntUIV
.._ 17. ' to .. C10Cl ...

~~1
Drtw.NIW

WY.

424 2nd. Ave., Gallipol is,

BY OWNER
Brick
ranch,.
near
HMC, 3 or
4 bdr.,
lots :

of bulll·ln cabinets, and a

hall finished basement
with den, lg. walk·in closet,

shower, laundry rm., 2 Cllr .

garage with electric
opener. central air and gas
heat, owner will help flnan· .
ce. Ca/1446·4604.
Modified A·lrame with 3
bedrooms, 2 bllths, car·
peted, stone circular

fireplace, spiral stairs,
utility room . Private. 8
acres. 992·77 41.
Large 3 bedroom home, 3
living rooms, formal dining

room, 2 built in kitchens, 2
baths, I with shower. All
fully carpeted. Lots of
paneling. Large swimm.J ng

pool in back. Seen by ap·
pointment only. 9'/2·2«l4 al·
ter 4 p.m. Large recreation
and laundry room .
THREE bedroom house,

family room with fireplace ,

lull

pliances

and

draperies .

675·1542 after 5 p.m.

Two Story House and lot on ·

Broad Run Rd . No land

contract but will take a

deed of trust . 882·2&lt;107.

5 room hom e. bath, a 11 elec·

tr ic , 2 years old, 5
acres,$26.500. Bud Chattin
Road, Pl. Pleasant. 675·
1828.
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1977 HOMETTE trailer,
14x70, 3 bdr .. l'h bath, 'kit·
chen furn ., SIO,OOO or $3,000

perienced. 992·7314.

Insurance
13
SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered

Offices, residentlals, car·

services for fire Insurance

coverage In Gallia County
tor almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
propefty coverages are
available to meet In·
dlvldual needs. Contact
Kall Burleson. your neigh·
bor and agent.
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
celled? Lost your
operator's License? PhOne
992·2143
15 Schools Instruction
SUMMER SCHOOL ' IN ·
STRUCTION · Does your
child need extra help?
Review program for
reading or math .
Presbyterian Church. Call
4~6·4052 .
Prepare for
classes now I
TV
16 .
Radio
_ _.!&amp;~C!:;!B~R!Ie,a=ir_ _
RON'S TV SERVICE
Specializing In Zenith .
House Calls. Now servicing
Motorola Quazar. Call I·
30.t·576·2398 or 446·245.4.

#

basement, all ap·

Ohio. Passports, family
photos, weddings, and com· down and take
mercia I photography.
payments. 446·7440.

our home . Trained lind ex-

t.

*'"'

n - Awttl.,.lr

...... ,,.,,M.,rNir

tod&lt;;ly's high rates while they are sflil in effect

..IWMl
1111

72-Tn&lt;IIIJfet'S.It

,t- ,1 111tntn'

A.P.Ra

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

n - Wtnlti tt lu•i

eFINANCIAL

Elulic ellortil!ssly nips lhe
wsisl of lilt PREm·EASY
DRESS£S-,ou'JI Willi ...,., 11111
ol them for diJ 111d Mllilll. And
the lesllht lOps tl1tm Ill nut~.
Printed Paltlfn 4626: llisla
Silll8~ 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. 20.
SUI b ~ 341 tills 3 JIB
4~11Ci llllric.

for Salt

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I._Raclio, TV,
&amp;CI Rtp&amp;l r
11- WifiiiM To Do

JUNE 22, 1981

GalliPolis Area

'

.

Don 't wait. contact Ohio
Valley Plumbing lor
and

EUGENE LONG
Fri! 1 ~~~,o:;,~:es
Ph. 843·ll22 ·

~c '

•

· Area-175

CONSI'RUCilON

VINYL

• Excavating

• Septic Systems
• Water, sewer &amp;
Gas Lines

Vocation Bible School

throughto11
ninth
grade. The closing
:30eachdayforageilfour
9a.m.
program will be at 7:30p.m. Friday.
Those wishing information should
call Pat Martin, 378-6233 or Marlene
Putman, 378-6371.
Revival services are under way
this week at 7:30p.m. each evening.
Speaker is Nonnan Taylor, Evans,
W. Va. The public is invited.

BISSELL
·s.iDING CO.

PRODUCTS
Siding

• Backhoe

··Trencher

REEDSVILLE- Riverview community vacation Bible school is
being held this week through Friday,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

I~~~~~~~~~t=======j~=====~~j~====~~~
SUPERIOR
J&amp;F
M&amp;S BUILDING RACINE-SYRACUSE

dleport.
Maternal
great-~
and· Mrs. Charles
Ohlinger,
Mid·
grandmother is Mrs. Icy Bland,
West Colwnbia.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford . l~enhower;
Pomeroy. Paternal great·
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clay
Eblin, Pomeroy.

%

'

446

1

N•ls Auction HO!ilett,
WVA. AI. 2, 1!very Sat ..7:00
PM '. cconslgnments
taken); (wl)l buy furniture)
Lonnlt Neii36H101 . .

.

367-Chellllre ·
381-Vinton
245-RioGraiiCie
Uf-'Woioiut Dlst;
256-"Guyan Dist...
6&lt;13-'-Arabla Dlst.

~~~~~~~~~·
H. L WRITESEL
.ROUSH

4- GivtiWIY
J-H1ppyAds
6-LII'lhnd Found
1- YII'CI $111
I - PUbliC Salt
&amp; Auction

lHRU MON.

Savet·••

I

.

.

Classified P~ cover
the following telephone
'
exchanges...
·.· .

~~

Mr. and Mrs. Rick

local
church at 2 p.m. Saturday
ternoons.

·Curlt InflatiOn.
.Pay CCIIII for :.:
··cra•HIWs C.ncl

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560

Racine, Oh.

.

Adventists to attend camll
'f'

Seventh-day Adventists from
Special Agent Daniel 0. Toban, Pomeroy who will be attending the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil 0. Toban 112th annual camp meeting at Mount
of Route 2, Pomeroy, has graduated Vernon are taking part in a century·
from the U. S. Air Force Special lr&gt;- old tradition adapted to 198lliving.
vestigations Academy at the Per&gt;Often called Bible conferences,
tagon.
the flavor of the old-lime camp
The agent studied law and in- meeting is still seen at Mount Vervestigative techniques, with special .non, where many will Uve in teriiB
training ln criminal, coun- for a week, as did their forefathers.
terintelligence and fraud in- However, tents are being replaced
vestigations, and is being assigned by recreational vehicles, modern
to the office of special investigation.
camping equipment, and dormitory
Toban will now serve at Hill Air and motel rooms.
Force Base, Utah.
The session opened Friday and
continues through Saturday night,
June 20. Church officials expect a
On Dean 's list

RE~;~r.ts

Business Services

Church holds·banquet

over .

C &amp; F Cleaning Systems. 1973 Crown Haven, 14x65,

three bedroom, new car· ·

pets, Upholstery, windows, pel, 1971 Cameron, 14x64,.
floor. and general cleaning. two bedroom , new carpet ..
446·27838 to5 PM.
1972 Champion, 12K60, two
bedroom, new carpet. 1976 ·
Cameron,

S'ATISI'Y YOUR NEEOS

12x60 ,

two ·

bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
carpet. 1970 PMC, 12&gt;&lt;60,.
two bedroom, new carpet,
B &amp; s Sales, 1no,. 2nd anc1·
Viand Street, Pl. Pleasant,.· '
WV Phone 675·4424.

Bx.C.S 2 bedroom trailer.
Brown's Trailer Park,
Minersville, Ohio.

ll

Homes lor Sale
5 ROOM house, 64
Chillicothe Rd .. only $3,500.
Call446·«l38 or 446·1615.
BUY this 7 room energy el·
flcient home in Addison

and forget about high In·
terest. We'll finance it at 10

12x52 unfurnished Shultz
Mobile Home. l bedroom, 2
added on. 12x22 living
room,
new carpet
throughout, nice level lol
with util ity building on E.
Main St., Racine. 9A9·2191.
12. 40 mobile home, 1
very good con· ,
dltion . $4200.00. 985·4133.
1968

bedroom ~

1968 12xSO 2 bedroom, gas
heat, partly furnished,. air '

percent! Bargain priced at condllioned, clean. $5,500.; •
$35,900. Pick tile plan that 1968 10x55, 3 bedroom, gas
suits your finances. $2,000 heat, partly furnished . Has·
down $350.00 monlhfy large eKpando in living
payment. $5,000 down room, washer &amp; dryer.
$300.00 monthly payment. $4,500.; 1966 10KS0 1
SIO,OOO down S250.00 mon· bedroom, fuel oil furnace,
11
Wanted to Do
thly payment. For more partly furnished, carpeted:
D.J.'s LAWN MOWER details call 675·32«1 days, $2,800. Kingsbury Home'
Sales, 111 E. Ma in.
REPAIR · On Neigh· 367·7536 nights.
Pomeroy. 992-7034.
borhood Rd., all makes ser·
vlced. Specializing In Lawn NEW CABIN or small
Boy . . Blades sharpened. home . completely fur · 12 x 50 1960 Grale Lakes
Call 446·.U25 alter 5 p.m. nished, Sl'IOO. Call 446·0390. trailer, three bedroom.
Pick up and delivery
Call 74).2263 or see at.
available.
Rutland.
House with acreage for
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs., fully car·
Auto Painting B. Sanding peled, 2 barns, 379·2258 or USED Mobile Home. 576·
$250, free pickup &amp;delivery 379·2343, after 6PM.
2711.
In Gallipolis area, Ham·
mond Body shop379·2782.
1 mile from HMC , up on hill 1971 Darlan 12 x 65, 3
behind Foodland, 1 yr. old, bedrooms. 1972 Crown
l bdr., 2full bath, brick ran· Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
eKpilndoi 3 bedrooms. 1973
ch,lull basmt., 446·7709.
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
By owner· I yr. old 3 bdr., bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
FA, LR with stone x 60, 2 bedrooms. B lf• s
fireplace, large kitchen, Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
dining ar~a, 2 bathSt util . Sts:• 'Pt. Pleasant. wv .
room, carpeted thru·out, Phor e 675·.U24.
Will · babysit In my home double garage, heat pump,
barn, 23 acres, fruit trees, .
i60 &amp; 55-4. 388·8178.
city schools, 3 mls. fo 14 x 70. 2 expandos, 2
i
Cinema, 3 mls. to D.O. bedrooms, 2 baths, fully
Will do babysitting In my Mcintyre
1115,000. fu rnished, on rented 'h
home In Syracuse. Good 379·2196 torPark,
acre lot, beautiful lawn and
appointment,
references, very reliable. Gallipolis.
garden, city water and
Phone '192·3110 or 9&lt;19·2791.
sewer, au electric..will hold
mortgage with reasonable
House lor sale·S rms. &amp; down' paymenl. 675-6704.
bath, carpeted thru·out,
cent. air, l car Qllrage, 1
good out bull~lng, 112 mile 1974 Mobile home, 14 x 60,
from Silver Bridge ·shop· located at Two C's trailer
WORK wanled·Cilrpenter ping Center . 4.~6 · 4752, park. Call 882·2456 or 882·
3338.
.
&amp; roof work, houM pain· Gallipolis.
ling. FrH Htlmatel.
Pllone Mlaon, m -5921 . • Modular hOme, 112 acre lot, u x 70, 2 eKpandos, 2
123,000. Located on bedrooms, 2 balhs, fully
PAINTING: lntwriOr·exle· Georges Creek Rd .. furnished, on rented 112
acre lot, beautiful lawn and
riOr. Point PINMnl Area. Gelllpolls, 446·4765.
garden, city water · and
Prte "tlmaiH. Call 675·
sewer, all electric, will hold
4519.
LAFF . A. OA Y
mortgape with reasonable
~..::::.::....:......:..:~:.:..:.:.......,1 d'!W" payment. 675-6704.

=~MA..:.:

Will

bellysll

~LIOII-.

'

In

worlt,

my

a1536.

1969 Gregory 12 X 55, 3
bedroom partially fur·
nlshed, wall to wall car·
petlng, · air conditioning,
undtrQinnlng. k.OOO. 773·
5170.

.' '

------- -···
1974 Schultz 14 x 65, 1100c1

condition, all ,_ carpet,·&lt; 1
pertially lurnlfllltd. un-1 ••
dtrpinnlng lnd l(l!rch, on
rented lot. 11500. FAll 6754591 .
'

1

l

�' t '

Mobile Hoonn
for Sale
PRICES REDUCED ·
mobile homes and
trailers . TRI ·S
MOBILE HOMES.
4-16-7572.

MobileHomn
lor Rill!
Q bdr. Mobile Home rww
C::apt. Dee's. Adults only, no
pets, sec. dep. a~d ~et • .u62-491 :

5 mob. homes, will Se.il o~
or all, already set up In
park·underpiMed. and 101
Is available for rent. Priced
at $3,000 to $1,000. 1·28632SB,InJ~~
.. ,OH .

2 bdr. mobile liome near
Cap. Dee's. Adults only, no
pets, sec. dep. and ref. 446·
2491 .

Fum., mobile hom• for
rent , 1 mile out of
Gallipolis, suitable for 1 or
CLEAN USED MOBI .~E 2 middle aged people. Very
HOMES
KESSEL ' S reasonable rent, with dep.
QUALITY
MOBtLE and 1 year lease. If In·
HOME SALES, 4 MI. terested 446·3587.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT.
35. PHONE '446·3168 or~- 2 bdr. mobile home 16M65, 4
7274.
mile cui Bulavlll.e Rd. $185
mo. plus one month dep.
34 acres with 14x70 Vic· 446·4W afler 5:30.
torlan Trailer, A/C, rural
water. good barn . Will sale
trailer or land separate.
Call446·6253.
Apartment
for Rent
1971 Schultz Homestead
12M60, wash &amp; dryer, new House for rent, 57 Olive 51.
carpet, com. furn ., set on 1 bdr., unfurnished, no
lot 6 In Quail Creek in Rod· pets, you pay utilities, dep.
ney, OH. $8,7.50.00 245·5420 req., $150. mo. ;w,·71186. AI·
ter 5 446·4045.
or 388·8349.
'

•

&lt;

1969 Vlndale with expando
on 100x300 lot, with riverview, carpeted, 2 car
garage and util ity room.
256·6527 or 256-6236.

1 Bedroom apt. all ulllllles
paid. 675·5104 or 675·53116,
Pt. Pleasant.

Furnished Apartment.
$200. Utilities pd, 1 bdr., fir ·
Ux6S memory_.. motii'le. st floor, adulls, ~· 4416 af·
home must ~e moved from ter7PM.
lot. Aller 5PM call245·t218.
Furnished Apartment,
S1.50. Utilities pd . Share
·bath, one child acceptable,
446-..16 after 7.
apartment tor one
Call446·1578.
ISHED APT. Cen·

air, heat and parking, I

or 2 adults only . +46·0338.

35

· l,ols &amp; Acreage

Apartment for rent, un·
!urn., 4 rms., utilities pd .,

Sl - Hoilsellold Goods
54
Misc. MerclulniM
LAYNi:'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ol·
swimming pooi·only
tomon, 3 labln, 11500. SOfa,
used 3 ,mOl,. brand
pump (still In box,), I
chair and toveseat; $275.
scifu and chairs priced
rolollll~r with tv,.s
from $275. -to Mf5, T1bleo, ~~~~~~~. ~1~he axle. 2-15-95171
A•-aOH. '
'
$38 ,and up to S199- Hl ...
beds,SUI., queen size, S380.
Recliners, $165.. S295,. Timber far sale, 20 acres
Lamps from $11. to' $65. 5 standing limber, Ph . .146·
pc. dlnetteo from $79., to 3t74.
$:¥5. 7 pc., $189. and up.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
S350 up ' to $495. Hutches, Two month spring speC:Ial
$300. and $375., maple or for upholstering furniture.
pine finish. Bedroom suites Richard Mowery, Sr.
· Bassett Oak, $6-4,,, OWner . 675-41~ Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete with mal· SWIMMING
POOLS :
tresses, $2.50. and up to PRE -SEASON SALE : •
$350. Captain's beds, $275. $,,_00 INSTALLED! !I
complete. Baby beds, $89. Above ground pool COM·
Mattresses or box springs, PLEtELY INSTALLED
full or twin, sss.. firm. $65. alerting atSW\l.OO. Price!~­
and $75. Queen sets, $185. 5 eludes 'pool, claCk, fence,
dr. chests, $.4,, 4 dr. chests, filter, liner, and In·
$.42. Bed frames, $20.and stallallon under normal
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets, ,graund c9ndlllon. Free
$350., dinette chairs $20. shop at home service. Call
and $25. i appan gas or 1·800-624·8511.
electric ranges, $285.
1 - -- - - - - '- USED
·
Ranges, Insulated storage building. J
~ef.:;:f::~~rs.i~ra~ITI~·~d. 8xlo with 111. ceiling. Ideal ~
work shop. $7W. See these
~t.':,nF~~-~a~ ,g~~,;,, ~~- at Kingsbury Home parts 56
Pels for Sale
446·0322
store.
Surprise dad on Fathers
Used couch and chair. $1.50 Day with a new puppy.
GOOD
USED
AP · orbestoffer. Wl-7721.
Collie, beagle, and spaniel
PL lANCES · washers,
types, males, females,
dryers,
refrigerators,
,
your choice of colors. In·
ranges . Skaggs Ap · Insulated storage building. formation call Humane
pllances, 1918 Eastern 8X10 with 7ft. ceiling. Ideal Society W2·6S05.
Ave. , 446-7398.
work shop. S7W. See these
and many other lt.ems at
Klngsbury Home parts and 57
Musical
accessory store. Rl. 124 ---'•~n~st"-ru=m,e,_nt,sc__
53
Antiques
Minersville, Oh. Wl-5587.
Lowery Organ; SSOO. 446·
ATTENTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will A~L types of granite, mar· 7508, Gallipolis .
pay cash or certified check
and bronze memorials. Thomas Organ-california
for antiques and collec· ble,
lot on Main St. Pt. 221 . Wonderful Instrument.
tibles or entire estates. Display
Pleasant
Granite Com· Suitable tor small church.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns. pocket watches, and pony. Phone675·5~ .
446·2474, Gallipolis.
coin collections. Call 614·
26' TROUTWOOD travel 8
Fruit
767·3167 or 557·3411.
trailer and camp site on 5
&amp; Vegetables
Raccon Creek. Close to
~
Misc. Merchandise
Ohio River. $500 down. Strawberr ies-pick your
RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER · Owner wfll finance. 6U·256· own, Claude Winters, 245·
VICE, In and above ground 1216.
5121 .

2 bdr. home unlurn, LOl'ler 45
Furnished Rooms
Rt. 7. No Pels, dep. req .,
256·1413, Gallipolis.
SLEEP! NG ROOMS for
rent, Gall Ia Hotel.
House for rent, 57 Olive St.
1: bdr ., unfurnished, no SLEEPING ROOMS and
pels, you pay uti lilies, dep. light housekeeping . apt.,
req., $150. mo . 446·7886. Af. Park Central Holel.
ler 5 446·-1045.
46
Space tor Rent
1d13 2nd Ave., Gallipolis:
private l(aller lot
Secluded
2bdr., unfurn. house, no
in
wooded
area. Ideal for
ptts, you pay ulllilles, dep
req., $150. mp . +46·7886 af. that summer outdoors.
Contact Brown's Trailer
ter 5 446·4045.
Park, m -3324.

::._-======-

OR LEASE wilh option lo
b~Y 1,921 sq . fl ., 3
bedroom, 2 baths, earth
brown and brick, large
fa mily room with. pool
table, all electric, heat
pump, kllchen built in, Hot·
point appliances Including
dishwasher, large lot,
private, parllally wooded,
200 fl . frontage, on Rl. 2
close to Kaiser, assumable
l~n,

owner

will

fianance

second mortgage, minimal
lriterest. 273·2021
Mobile Homes
for Rant
Mobile home for rent, 3
bdr., completely nurn .. +46·

42

~- · Gallipolis.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park . Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. call
m -7479.

tRAILER spaces for rent.
southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.

---=-=-= ==---

EASY credit available now
to purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave ., 675 · 1~73 .
NEED several items of fur·
n lture , appliances,
televisions. Big discounts
for quality purchase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave . 675·1773.
BIG discounts for cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 6751773.
.
Spring Special
for
upholstering furniture.
Richard Mowrey Sr.,
owner. 675· 41~.
'
GALVANIZED Culvert,
S2.35 11. up. Bridge, etc.
Steel, lOc lb. up. 925·0884.
JUNE SPEC IAL. Buy
fishing re'el at regular
price, get rOd of equal
value half ' price. Malcl*l
rOd and reel combos, 'I&gt; off
regular price. ROd or reel
only 25 percent off regular
price. Trl County Sports
Shop. 675·2988.
Two year old quarter hor·

se, 1000 lbs, Ideal for
children. $700. 675·5365.

8 pc semng Cape COd ware
by Avon·, Items still have
contents. 8t5·35t7 after 5
pm.

2 bedroom furnished trailer
on Crab Creek
Rd.,
ulllllles furnished. $225
HAY FEVER SUF · month. 675-3682.
FERERS Avoid expense of
the needle, English family
tradition tor centuries. 11 Ohio Valley Cleaning. Call
works . For more In· us for carpel cleaning
formallon send today self before 9 am any day 675·
oddressed stomped en· 1213.:
velope plus $1 .00 to S.R.A.
Co ., P.O . Box 284, ss
BulldlngSupplles
~_!==~=='-Gallipolis, OH, 4S631.
ALL TYPES of building
1973 Dodge motor home gd. materials, block, brick,
plpas, windows, lin·
cond., make offer. 446·32-13 sewer
tels, etc. Claude Winters,
after 5, Gallipolis .
Rio Grande, 0 . Coli 2-15·
5121 .
Sterling Chains, 16' $.4.00,
18"$5.00, 2ol' 16.00. Add$1.00
S I
S6
_,P_,e,.ts,_,f,c,_
r
postage &amp; handling. cash, ""-_
check, or money order to J. POODLE GROOMING.
Daniels, 15 Evans Hg!S., Call Judy Taylor at 367·
Galllpolis,Qh45631 .
7220.

::::•=•--

1 set ot dishes service for 8,
Haruqulnn paperbacks,
pull down ceiling light.
83-13, Vlnton,OH .

m-5151.

+· room hOUse for rent on
·Nye Avenue. SlSO per mon!11, $50 depoSII .•367·7111 .
2 DR . mobile home In New
Haven, ldulllonly, no pets,
675-lm or 675-291'6 after 3. .
2iledroom furnished trailer
on Crab . Crtet&lt;
Rd.,
utll HI• furnished. 1225

month. 675·~-

Two bldrOOfllo furnished
lrtller, 1110. tnonth plus
ullllll•- 1100. depoSil.675·
.,.7,
OM bldrOOm trailer In
Henclenon, air con·
ciiiJIIIIcl. •verylhlng fur·
nltlllcl. Rlllf by - k or
f!llllllfl, 67H730.

HlmproiiiMMII

I ..

H I. 0 CONSTRUCTION.
Rtmocleling, end repairs.
~~lal and r•lden·
liel. Phone 67H357.

"&lt;

n

AutoR!p!ir
ROBERTS BROTHeRS
GARAGe. 24 h" wrecker
14trvlce. "Big or small" we
tow !hem alii 2332 Euttrn
Ave, Gaillpolla, Ollio. Day
• ~2445 or Night · ·4464792.
E II V WELDING Paint &amp;
Body Shoji, Georges CrHk
Rd. Gallipolis, 446·9304, for·
melly • with Gallipolis
M9f0rs. i years.
Camping
Equipment

Television
VIewmg ·

•

.' '.

•

·'•'

. ~ , ..
"

CONTINIOUS no Ink gut· ' 1
ltrlng, cualilm ·, made lor. .: ·
your home. For free
,,
•tlmata, call ADVANCE· &gt;,;
SEAMLESS GUTTER o, t
AND DOOR. 614-691-8205.
S•

!!VINING
1:00 (I). PM MAGAZINI
·
()) IIl
PIIOGRAII

l

HARPER Halalud, lawn

~~ I

mower repair and lhar· · •1;
paning service, ·10 a.m.-6
p.m. 675-5168.

Autos for Sole

196-4 Dodge In good running
cond., will sell cheap, 446215torweekdays446·0168. ·
73 Chevolet Blazer. Call
446·1875, Gallipolis.

1. · t

11

-7:30

m

have the mental power to con·

out room. New awning,
deluxe Interior, full bath,
call318·86-46.
- - - -- - - - 1911 29 foot · Yellowstone
country club trawl trailer.
Loaded. Never · ~n USed.
Has 21 fool awning. 742·2211
or 742·2201 after 5.

....

_,..2=-===!!....-

Home, 2 · bedroom, new

STANLEY STEEMER
carpet Cleaning
446·4201

COOK'S T•levlslon 5er·
WV .
~~.:;:;. .,~-~g:.rspn, .
F &amp;· K Tree Trimming,
slump removal. 675·1331.
T and R building,
remodeling, also papering, ·
carpel lnslollallon, · and
general
home ·im ·
provements. 675·5689, 675·
5304,

trolllght? OroonBoanhcltl thlo
inqulaitlve ap.::lal that e:r.·
plorea these and other quea·
t1on1 concerning th'e plan eta.

the at are lftd ourselves.
(lET SMART
.(I) JOKER'S WILD
HOL~YWDDD SQUARES
(Jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW

I

~
J(

Guest: Tommy Tune , director

'

lind choreographer.

~

BORNI.Cm:R
·~ . '

. ,.'·•

C.~, Wl~c.K

,..-

~&lt;ee?.;

Me

(!!opoot)

ol!!.t;.

ffi LOBOAraehofburgtarieeat
the homes of weellhy and in·
fluentiat Atlantans who hire
young, beautiful babysitter•
requiresthespe cialattentionof
Shtritf lobo and his deput ies.
{BeJ!!Iat· 60 mine.)

''·

:·
...,.•..
.

llJLVtiil ~DVEY: ACIRCLE OF
CHILDREN, PART IIJonoAiex·

~

•

~ I'Ui15T'RE

YU!1 PJH ~ OOH'T YOU
M&amp;UH' I\BOIJT, ltEMEMI!Eit M~'?
GIRL'? YCIJ GliiU:
·l·l'M MillE•'
YOU'VE 60T BOTll
OAitS IH

YOU THINK. l'il
DEAD'? WAlTA 'MIHNIT!
1'VE 60T $OIIf
IDEHTIFICATIOH
~AH'

LOOK.IT !tiGHT THAit! C+l"' WHCW!~
. EZitA EOH!
IT SAYS EZRA EON!
I'!OULDAr:&gt;EAr:&gt; MAN
I THOUGHT
HEED ACR.EDIT CIIRD? YOU WERE
USE '!:It LOAF, GII1.L! . ELl EOH!

(Cioaod ·Capt ioned: U.S A.)
@mino.)
(Jj) PRIMAL IIAN: IATT~E
FOR DOMINANCE
8:30 (}) GOOD NEWS
(])
MOVIE
'
·(SCIENCE-FICTION) "
"CIOII lncounterl Of The

'
,._LLEYOOP
,_.I 'D UKE TO-lUCK
ALL INlO 1'1-l' JUNGLE
01/Elt THERE I

•"'""'-for*'-·"·

ll/hlllltblltt. redlltwa·llld
bltttrltl.,..m7.

remoelellng,

II" VIC~:

sin.

....

(Repeat)

~loood· Captlonod)

OPRYLAND: NIGHT OF
STAllS AND FUTURE&amp;TARS
Gltn Campbell , Ben Varoan .
Mickey Gilley, Dobby Boone

(!J

I was

kiddinq!

and Johnny lee are joined by
host Gene Kelly and eight aep ir·
ing young partorfnere drewn
from the ranka otthoae appear-

ing at Oprylond IJ.S.A. (80 .
mina.J
()) (jj) MYSTERY! 'Rumpola
and the Lea mad Friends' Rum·
pole delendaan accuaed safebreaker andhia all ack on police
procedure arouaesthe ira of
ferocious Judo a Bullingham .

(Ciooed-Captloned: U.S.A.)
@mln~J

,D:30 CIJ 1)1). TDD C~OSE FOil
COMFORT Bed lam arupla

)OUR MOTHER. IS
ALIVE AND WELL .
5\iE VISITED 'THE

1 MN'E NO MI&amp;TAI&lt;e NONE AT ALL.
LVTING
l. 8RIN6 JEWS
IN, DIP I?
Fbi'IIOMf"/

ORPHANAGE JUST
AFTER lOU LEFT, TO
SEE HOW )OU' WE1&lt;E
6ETliN6 ALON6 !

YOU

wt'len Henry and his new bon
drag a couple of theatra·go8ra
from their aeals, then accua1
them of stealing San 'a puraa
and uaino
ner t lckata .

MEAt~

SHE REALLY
C'IIIIE5 ABOUT

ME?

l8t~at)

10:00 CIJ• C!J NEROWOLFEDnoof
A.rchie'a oldeat friends ia alain
on the at epa of Nero's brownatone and the painfulevldanca
points to the victim' 1 widow and
beat friend . (Repeat: 80mina.)

(]) ilJI •

HART TO HAIIT

Jennlter'a uncanny resemblance to a nefarious Egyplian
prlnce11 torceathe Han ato un·
ravel the ancient curae of a
mummy that myaterloualy
ragainalite to stalk Jennifer.

dent Dan Rather anchora thia
apeclalnewaaerleafocualngon
U.S. detenuand the coming of
age of the nuclear era.Rather ia

BARNEY

jolnod by Speclol COfl'lljiCO·
doni WIHOI Crolll&lt;ho, and COl'·
retponclenlo Ed Bred ley, HorTY
Ree-.r, Bob Schlolfor, Ri·
cllord Throlkeld ond lko Pop ·
pu. (Partthrll ot alive-pan
WJel; 80 ntlna.)
CIJ IHI!IILOCK HOlliES AND
. WA,_

-- IF HE DON'T
WANT IT WRUNG
•

-

Nf!WI

M

10:11 .

CINUPOATEN!WI

10:301~~=11
INIIIISTOIIY

10:11
11:00

~~.CIJ

PIOUIIDOP~TI

1ti-k/'1ITI
~I •• "Ur-

..

11:11
11:acl

I'M 601N6

'

FAMOUS

fi
.r: )

WI AU.III AT LAIIGI
UI'OATI NIW8
TIIUOtlllllfiiiOII

CIMIII:.._..IGINu&amp;&amp;llll
... DlaMa Wllallk. · (10

IIGIBIMLITIIICIW

t

110¥11 iCOIIIDYl •••

~"Ill'~

r: =:rJH~::
·ff'i

_

•rC.LATIIICMR
'CANNON: Ytley 01 The

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

011111141' c - 1 1 111re41'to
oltlr u , _ , _ !Hito ot

. . . . . , aervtee/

Anawerhere: ev

Now arrange the Circled lattora to
loon tho ouip'ile ana"'· aa suggested by the obo.. Cll1cch.
.

[I I XI I) ITJ 0
(AnSMrS tOmonOW)

YeSietday'aj Jumbles : SHAKY LINGO REFUGE FAMILY
AnaMr: How eggs are lound, nalurally- IN LAYERS

BRIDGE
Which of two?
By Oawtltl JII!Gby
...AiuSoalq

•I•

,.

II

'

•

J

NORTR
.AKU2
.KQt
tAK732

.,3

ezpert Tony Pridav in the
19U "Brltlae World.'1
"Uter" Ia a LIIID word that
can be rouohiy triDilated
"which of two:O
Weat led the ace and five of
tnunpt. You are oa lead and
need the rest of the tricb.
You will 10 after 1111dea or
tlliiiiOIIdJ firflt, bul which
one? Aquiet check llbowl that
If both Iaiii break u
u
f·2 you cao come to 2 euy

1-l~l

... .

'lbe nelt lleVeral articles

will be baled ou an article
called ·"Uter" by British
WEST

I!AST
.Q 10 at
.72

•1.5

tJI016S
t9
• K J 10 7
.AQIIII
SOI.Irll

•n
.JIOIIII

tQ4
•u3

food

Vulnerable: Botfl
Dealer: North
Wetl
Nor111 Eul
2+
Paa

tricb.

· Suppo~e ooe breaks 4-% and
tbe other breaD 5-1 can you
make your slam? Now you
find the wiDDIDI solution. U

.,,. .. .,

Sootli
2NT

Paa

p. .

Paa
Pua

you ~after dlimonda lint
and
break 5-1, you will
need a s spade break to get
bome. U you start on spades
and they break f.2Lyou don't
care bow tllamonas behave.

Paa

~

Opening l~d:• A

You can set up your fiftb
spade for your 12tli trick and
you see tb&amp;t If spades break r.1 you can still ~ter dia·
mOndll and get
If that

Splde. Epter dUJJiml by ruffin£ a club to rut another
IJIIde. Now you cao dilcard
ooe club on tile 1ut s}l8de and ·
ooe on a pM1 dl•llllll"'.

lult breaks H .

So you IW't OD IJIIdea. Cash
dummy's ace-kill~ and ruff a

~~.,.ito•-'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 Imitation
gem
7 Glance at

f3 Bog
ff Badly come by
t5 Spectacle
fl Dnnk I bit

11 Mediumistic

DOWN
I "Down by the
Old Mill - "

state
1! RodenWke

llliJl1lllal

2 Plllted

11 Conductor,
Frill -

3 Cried wolf

f Solhem
1 Perfume

If Napoleon's

i.sle

Yeltenlly'a .uner
17 Decorticate

n Sign style

1 World ZS Esau's
15 Before lee
1 Andresa film
father-iJI.law
II Sbort drinlt;
I Sought aid rl Earth goddeu
u Destiny
tl.eafy receu !I Neophyte
UGynt's
II SanS clwer D Swampland
mother

JZ AccOmpany

ss Propoa1ion

.

Sf Olbfln

patriot
D Shoe style
ft Wile about
U Ott Oft

rllllgh
~ehooler

Zl Irani's

ancestor
!4 Strew

IS Flub
Gordon's

&amp;lrlfrlend
Z'l Storace area

•Standard
st Iblen
heroine
DHaphlwd
1$ Vennln
Dlntimate
n ConlteU.tlon
DSuc:cea
ss Beehive State
fl Dahl
!I' Golonka

t.r-++-+-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXB

work

it :

II J.ONGFELLOW
Oae !&amp;Iter simply ~tendo for another. In thlt sample A is ·

ued for the three L's, X for the two O'a, ett. Sln&amp;lt lellen,
apottrophea, the len&amp;th and formation of the words are all
hlnll. lacb day tbe code leiters are difrtrent.

CIYPTOQUOTBS

KQVNTJZ
LZ

NATQCU

C!TQC

LZNNZG,

KXXZKG
V IW

Nl ,

AKH Z·

UIJZN .A TQC . - SGKQETU .

I.

EATUAIPJ
Yeetea ..y'a Clifl= ONE SHOUW EmlER BE A:
WORK OF ART OR
AWORK OF ART.-a!CAR WilDE

.Poerlaureale
NEW YORK (AP, - A1bar1o R101 11u- 1111 Ill]
Walt
Polta.Whilmla A!Nrd a1 t.ht A-..•
-•-.r ri1 •·
I

lVI".a

HIIIIIIIIIIIC!ipt, ."One Ntcht Ill a FamiU.r Room "
wullleded lntm more lban 1.100 maniiiCiipt8. It win
be pultlllhed br Sheep Mlldow Prse.
R101, ...wu barn In NCip)es. Arll.,lllfl now Uvea ill
Ice HOUle Canyon at tbe bue of tbe Pinal MOUI1telnlla
Globe, Ariz .

...... •w'CIII 10M_.
IIIIDiaua.-.·on

.. '

,'

L

·

1

IHZGPIIBZR

1WIUGifT ZONE

~-"II•

'

BEMY
GUEST!

job awtepplng gift a at o deport·

ment at ore , butlnerne turna
'the store into a dlaaater area
when she get atipay Of! nrft"' titled
French canditl . ~Repeat)
(Cioaed·Captioned; U.S.A.)
8:58 (}) CBNUPDATENEWS
Q:OO (}) 7!IQ_CLUII

(Rtpoet: 80 mlna.) (Closed·
!&lt;fll!!oned: U.S .A.)
•LV ill CIIREPOIITS:THE
DIFENSE DF THE UNITED
STATE8C8SNewaccrroopon·

.,..,

building,

=;:t~1f.
..,.

WELL WHY.

NOJ', HERE,

When Chriny can't return to
pey her rent , Jeck , Janel and
Furley come up with their ideal
temporary roommate only to
have the decieion awept out of
their henda by the arrival of
Chrissy' a cute, but clumsy cou·

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE, call 367-'7-171 or

IUNGLI'I
Cemplete

LEY Laverne and Shirley take

l])ilJI. THREE'BCOIIPANV

='dad upon....,..,_ ....,.....

CHARLtli•s IALYAGI
Auto 111111. auto rt~~~lr,
wrecktr Mnlce, lluy

...

Third Kind" !NO
l])ll2J. LAVERNEANDSHIR·

... •

SuSUkl -75, gd. cond. , 446· sidewalks,
pa!IQ, SEWING MACHINE .::
1000, Gallipolis.
baMflltnl, . garage floors repairs, service, all Makes. ,,
and etc. FrH estlmeta. 11 m -2214. The FabriC Shop, 1,:
lt74 HARLEY DAVIDSON years experience. Call367· Pomeroy . AUthorized • ,
· Singer Sales and Service. ''"
SUPER Gl.IDE, ell 7"1.
We sharpen Scl11ors.
..i~:
custom; also a lt73
•f •
HARLEY DAVIDSON BRICK, BLOCK, AND
ELECTRA GLIDE, needs STONE WORK, 256·6735, JACK'S REFRIGERA.TIO· •~~:
Crown City, OH.
'
pinon shaft. 992-6211 .
N. air condition service,
commercial, lnduslrlel .
lt70 Hondo CB350. 143·2684. WANTED TO 00 all types Phone 182·2079.
of , exltrlor PAINliNG.
nllmalts. VERY u
Genaral Hautllll
BSA 650. Thunderbolt. FrH
REASONABLE
RATES.
Good cond. 13,000 miles. CALL 61~·256-1591 · after LIMEStONE, gravel and
With helmets. 1700. 992- 4:30PM, Galllpcills.
sand. Allslzn. AI Richards
526-4.
and Son, UPP&amp;r Rl- Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ollio. Call .w.i· •
o- your hou" nitd . a 7715.
7S
Boats and .
feet lift? Or luit a lillie
"'
Moten for Sale
'
makeup? Call nw &amp; I'll
--'==='-"'=-JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
•
;
IItva
II
lOOking
young
IOiin
Sale or, Trade. 1m BAJA
.J
Boat, 16 fl. lrl·hull, 115 h.p. In 110 time. Will do Ill types waltr delivery. Call 256
.
1
Mercury outboard motor of lntwlor - k ; paneling, ,..anytime.
eelllnp,
flooring,
etc,;
plua
with IIOMr trim. Euy lo.d
"
Tann. trailer, CompleM txterlor work, rooting, NOW HAULING._ COli I
covers and 1011 of txlr&amp; Shingling, .any alza allel
Like MW, very lilllt UH. lhlpt. 10 yqn exc;llnce Call for estlmalll 367· 7101
In c•p;;•h J. RerWitct~
992-6211.
192· DILLARD$ WATER
7;:;
DILIVI!RY Service. Call )
6= ==;;AIIto::::::=i,i:'1::=rll;;===
&amp; AcCIIIIrltl

hra.)
CIJNOVA 'T~eDeadSoaLivoa'
Novalooka at the posoibility of

cooperation emerging aa are·
ault of ulf·intereat betweanthe
joint owners of tt'lia geological·
ty, historically and chemically
Intriguing body of wa ter.

--------- '

1

anderracraateatheroleofMary '
McCracken, a woman deeply
committed to teaching emo·
. tlonally disturbed children.
Mary Ia now a fu ll-lime thar·
apeutlc teacher torn between
her own needs and thademand·
ing needs of her students. (2

ANNIE

"f

AKC
Dachshund ,
Pomeranian an POOdl• v .w. SCI rocco, txc . cond., ~
ipd, &gt;Ill MPG; alloy WIIHII,
pupslf5-3t51.
MW lim, caiMI!W radio.
446-,500,
Boxer puppin', 2 milt, 2
ftmalt; call 576-291t or 5761970 model 4ft Oldlmobll-.
J'n lfltr 4:30PM.
converllblt 446-tlll,
Galllpolla.
Adorable AKC Peklnllle
puppin, AK C Poodle puppita, ahotl and wor· "" Ponllec fill reb Ird.
rntei.CFA HtmiiiYin will yellow bird ICIIIIOit, fUlly
lrlldl rtalortlblt. 1·304-74- IQUipad, taw "'"... ...
Ctlnd., ....4110 lflw SPM,
1110:1.
GllllpoiiL

Fonzle'a flu fe\lered imaaina·
tion transporta the entire gang
into an outrageously biurre
and norritylng nightmare involv·
ing clanging chaine, a murky
laboratory and a mad scientist.

+

In c:oncrete driveways,

I_rJ rn

va New York Meta

~:..

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3818 or 446·4477

NULDOA~

(]) ilJI .. HAPPY DAYS

KID...

.....
..

=---

I I

RICHARD SIMMONS
SHDW
• FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 ; HERITAGE SINGERS
BASEBALL Atlanlo Brave a

HORSE SHOE ING and
•'
'&lt; '
breaking. 675·3137 or 67.!"
6626.
. ' ,.
1u-m"'b"'tn=1
1--=2- --;::p::&amp; Healing

I I

iBl

.,.

Corvette lt71 sliver en·
nlverslty edition L821oaded
with extres, very low
mileage, ex. cond .. 367-7560 ·
or 367-7671.

tfli~&amp;EIAL~ Cincinnoli

do VI Phlladolphlo Pl!illito
ANOTHIRUFE
WHATONI!ARTH?Whyoto

---···
..... ....
- .... ....

.
1•7o Ford Mavrlck 100,11110,
body exc .• car doesnot run,
make offer. Ph. 379-2210. , ·

TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEIL-t,EHRER

~~PORT

DAVE'S appliance repair, '
washers, dryers. plumbing, electric, general han· ··•
dyman. $76-2921 or 675·5689. · .

.

DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CF A
: .· :.: ~. : ... : !;: : .
m -3954.
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats.Seal &amp; cream
TRAILER space 3 miles CONTROL hu9ger and lose p&lt;ilnt Hlmllayan &amp; While 71
Autos for Sale
·from town junction 2 a. 62 at weight with New Shapa Persian klllens. Call 446·
m6 Chysler, Cordoba, low
Diet Plan and Hydrex J8.4.C afltr 4 p.m.
old Y, 675·3248.
miles, good cond., lilt
Water Pills. Fruth Phar·
macy .
·
HILLCREST KENNEL . · wheel, cruise, priced right,
41 Equipment for Rent
Boarding all breeds, clean 446·11661, qauipolls.
7
alumlun
windows
4x6,
1
Indoor-outdoor
tacllltles .
END~OADER
and
backhoe. SIO per dey. Indus!. alum. door 3 fl., 200 Also AKC Reg. Dober· 74AMC Sporlaboul Station·
wagon, 6 cyl., p.s., p.b.,
Operate yourself . Ray gal. gas lank, Ph. 318·834t, mans. Call446·77'5.
good cond. 441\·i452.
Vinton, OH .
Beegle, 895:~1 .

llle FAMI.YFEUD

dlno11url extinct ; do8s man

1973 Buick LeSabre Custom
lap
4 dr., one ow~~r, family
car, wllh dlx. equip., good
mechanical. co~d., good
tires. Gets 17 plus MPG on 11
tmp..!!~'::.~nts
reg. gas, $850.00. ' to 5·call _
446·4607, evenings call 446· FOR BEST In carpel
2602.
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway. Call 614·446·
1972 RO!iency 12x60 Mobile 20H.
stove &amp; refrigerator, new
carpet, natura l gas heat;'
washer a. dryer, air con·
dllloner. 16,000. m -6111 .

=::~AMILT

i

•

RON'S Television. S,rvlce. , ,
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, · Quazar, . and
house calls. Ph- 576·2398
.or 446-2-154.

71

e

, JUNe 18, 1181

DEWITT'S PLUMBiNG ' "
PAiiHING · Residential
AND HEATING
1972 Buick LaSabre. m - and commercial. Interior
2892 $3~ .00.
and exterior, mobile home Route 160 at Evergreen
Cabboge, pick your own 25
roofs. Free estimates. 17 Phone 446·2735.
cents a head. Raynors 1974 Plymouth satellite, 318 yrs. exp. with references
.. .
Peach Orchard, Rl. 7 cu . ln. engine, auto. trans., caii367·77B4 or 367·7160.
GENE PLANTS
Lower
River
Rd ., p,s., a.c., low mileage. Beat
AND SONS
Gallipolis. Ph. 446·4807.
mfer or trade. 304·773·.5013 . JIM MARCUM Roofing
Plumbing · Healing · Air
'· .
spouting and siding. 30 conditioning. 300 Fourth
-- · · -"",.,
" '' " ' '..1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675· years experience. FrH Ave. Ph ....·1637.
estimates. Remodel ing .
2722
or 675·5571 .
.... , .-..'
-,
Call318·m7.
SOUTHERN SERVICE
co.
· Heating. · mobile
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
61
Farm Equipment
Henderson, wv. Phone 675· CALL -144-2101 for termite, home furnaces. electric hot
roach, bird, rodent, water lank repair. Cill of·
79 Massey Ferguson 200 D. 1574 or 675·2881 .
spiders, fleas and other flee, 446 · 3008 night,
Bulldozer diesel, 7 ft.
small Insect control. Free . emergency no. 367· 7131 .
blade, wench, 151 hours. 77 OLDSMOBILE, Cutlass. estimates given . A local
one owner, 350, V·9, air, company locaed
Call256·13ol5.
J &amp; P Plumbing a. Heating,
cruise, radio, tape, call 304· Gallipolis area . B
· Rl. 1 Gallipolis, 367-7153.
675-3165
afler
5
p.m.
Hydrallc loader wilh 5 ft.
Thomas.
.'
bucket, for farm tractor,
D. c. Contractors Plum· ..,.
like new $600, Phone Wl· 196' Chevy Nova, good con · STUCCO PLASTERING - bing,
electrical,. healing,
3921 .
dillon . $475. 304-773·5438.
textured ·ceilings, com· roofing, alumrnum. vinyl
mercia! and residential, Siding, and home painting.
diesel tractor, New ·lt76 Ford Pinto station· free estimates. Call 256· 675·3376 or 675-1240.
Holland baler, hay rake, wagen, with ac, am·tape, 1182.
ha~ condiiJoner, fertilizer standard, excellent con·
~
E~CIVIIint
· SANDERS
spreader, disc., backhoe dillon. JO.I· -158· 1~.
CON ·
blade. Caii446·1W8.
TRACTING, Carpentry DOZER · backhoe, dump
72
Trucks fOr Sale
work &amp; painting, concrele, truck . Call4t6-4537.
Four 15,00 gallon tanks 1980 Toyota 4 WD Truck, landscaping, 446·2717.
located above ground at a.c., am·fm stereo, tilt
DOZER work · excavating, •
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
land cl•arlng. Cell-1 . .•
INSTALL
fireplaCe
lacing
wheel,.
11
,000
mlleo,
17.500,
each. Phone I·JO.I·.c22·2781.
~
firm. Aller 7 p.m., 256·1124. or chimney, dry wall,
plaster, stucco, frH est. c &amp; V Inc., Backhoe ser· '
1
Hellion Big round baler.
Simulated tlric~ or stone, vice. t85·354t or9..,.2122.
•
1975 model. S2,JOO.oo. m - For sale 1976 Chev\1 Luv Greg Burdelle, cell 675•
truck
with
topper
alter
7519.
6357.
5PM 446·1537, Kerr, OH.
COMPLETE SEWER IN ·
STALLA T ION &amp; backhoe
Turn over plow with 3 point
HOWARD
&amp; PISTOLE service .lor the Racine·
hilch for gordl&gt;n tractor. 19YB FORD &gt;t• ton 4·wheel Contractors · Build, siding, Syracuse - r dlllrlcl.
drive, 675-1121.
304·882·3332.
remodel, concrete, roofing, Dozer work If needed. 94t·
tr" estimates. Call ·col., 2293.
lt70 Chevy Blazer, 4 speed, 614·25'9·2114 ask for Charles
62
wanted to Buy
4 x 4, 6 cylinder. $900. 304· or Mike.
Dozer work. Small lobs a
WANT TO BUY Old fur -' 773·52.50.
specially. 742·2753.
nlture and Antiques of all
INTER IOR and exterior
kindS, call Kenneth Swain, 1979 'J-10 pickup 4 x 4, six painting,
Mark While, call EDWARD' S Backhoe and
256·19671n the evening,
cylinder, 4 speed, $.1900, or 245-9561 .
Dozer Service. specializing
take over payments. Also
In
septic.lank. 675-1234.
1977
Yamaha
XS
7.50
D,
6-::l:__ _,L:.:I.v:.:e::::s:::toc
= k_ _
CAPTAIN
STEEMER
Car·
11«10. 675·3436.
pel Cl•onlng f•alured by BACKHOE Service. Lorry
1 Gurnsey milk cow. 245 ·
Hllffelt Brothers Custom Sldenslrlcker.'
534, Thurman, OH .
675·5510.
1973 Chevy Luv, with lop· Carpets. Free estimates.
per, good running con· Call446·2107 .
S whlle·face heifers, 2 with dillon. 11250. '675·1186.
J . E. White Construction.
calbes, 3 coming fresh, ap·
Block and concrete, mor~~t~~lmately 2 months. w - 7
,;;3;====:v:;:1;:n;:1&lt;;&amp;:=;4;:;w
;;_
::;D;=,== WOODSHOP · Cabinets, tar, sand ana gravel. Rf. ,
picnic tables,
porch 33, two mlln above New
swings,
most
wood
produc·
1980 JEEP CJ ·5, 6·cyl., 4· 11. 101 Court St., Gallipolis. Haven. 182·214.
5 geese SlO a pafr, call 675· spd., exc . cond., call -"6· Call446·2572 .
1211.
5086.
14
;:=====:E~I~tc':;tr::;i;ca:';l;==
::
!
_
_!&amp;~R~tf~r!.!IPe!.r:..ll,_,lon=..._
j
WEATHERALL ' CON ·
Two year old quarter horse MUST SELL, Make me an CRETE · quality and ser·
QUALITY Cooling and :
1,000 lbs. Ideal for children, Offer 1910 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, 4 ylce, call675·1512.
Healing Service, cell 318·
$700.00 675-5365.
spd, low mileage, canvas
'1698.
I
top, will trade, call .W.1211
end
PAINTING
·
Interior
Six year old Black Mare or446-35t4.
exterior, plumbing , Fuller Electric Co. Com· ~
with stud colt. For more In·
rooting, some r•m~llng . plete rewiring, commercial •"
formation calll82·3m.
74
Motorcycles
:II) yrs. exp. Caii31H652.
or residential, and tfec· .I .•,
360 Honda, 1977. Gd. cond.,
trlcal malntalnance, also '·
Mare with coli, one due In MOO. ·446·211'6 before 9:30 BING'S CONCRETE CON · on Clll. Ph. , 446·2171, 1 . :;
August. 304·182·27.50.
AM or afl•ri :OOPM. ·
STRUCTION · Specitllzlng Galllpolla.
:•
'
'

77 Trans Am, near loan
value at $3100. 446·1136
9AM·8PM.
For rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom
mobile home. Racine area .

II

Allie Pam
&amp;Ac-'ts

!~=======~=========~1977
BONANZA travel ·
trailer, 35 11. long, a.c., tip-

..

I

by Larry Wnghl

1

no children or pets, 446· pool kits, immediate
delivery and complete In·
LOTS' · Real nice campsite 1637, Gallipolis,OH .
stallallon available. Also
on Raccoon Creek, al l
utilities available, $300. 2 nice 2bdr. apartments, all pool supplies and ser·
vices for existing pools.
down, · owner will finance, Vinlon,OH 388·11368.
For details and directions
call after 3 p.m ., 256·6413.
lo local dis~ lay, 446·1324.
Furnished 2 bedroom up·
Beautiful &amp; level lots, Fair· stairs apartment. Adults
field Church Rd. , approved only, no pets. Middleport. KACH · A~L portable metal
buildings, sizes 4ft.x10fl. to
sub division, city school, W2·3874.
.1211.x.wtl. Gallipolis Block
rural weter, 3 31"' acres,
1
$10,000. I 1/ 4 acre $.4,500. 1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished Co., 123 12 Pine •SI., call 446·
2783.
owner will finance, 10 apartments. m -5434 or Wl·
down 379·21.96 .
5914 or 882·2566.
WONDER STOVE · mfg.
4 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd. 1 bedroom apts. available by United Slates Stove Co.,
close to Rl. 160, SB,OOO. Ca ll at Riverside Apls. Equal wood and coal burner with
blower, Gallipol is Block
+46·03t0.
Opportun ity Housing . Call Co., call446·2783.
W2-7721 .
2 acres on Floyd· Cl-ark Rd.
close to Rt. 160, $.4,000. Apartment in Pomeroy . 4 Gravely, 12 HP, two wheel
mOdel, new, $500 below list.
Phone 446·03t0.
rooms and bath . m -5621 .
Outdoor Equipment, Jet. 7
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. 446·
BY owner, 3 apartment APARTMENTS . Fur · 3670.
house. on approx. 1 acre. nished or unfurnished . 675·
Live In one, rent others to 1371
days , 675 ·3812 For sale Glass showcase
make your payment. Can evenings..
SISO. Cash ·register 5125.
be converted single home.
Store shelves;· chest type
City water, will consider
vard roller SAO.
land contract. 675·1883 H 2 BEDROOM . apartment, freezer,
uti lilies paid, adults only, White· shingles. wood .bur·
'
•I
'
'.II
no pell. ·•1s, 111:1 9·5 - k· ner . cheep. 37, •2tt ••
'•
&gt;J
Gallipolis.
days.
·
\1.1 acre lot at Apple Grove,
w.v . Priced on Inspection.
APARTMENTS
AND SNAPPER 8 HP elect.
675·6'21.
MOBILE HOMES675·4130. start riding mower 30 in .
cut, list S1218·sale $10.50 .
TWJO t erhetary lots, 8
Outdoor Equipment. Jet.
2
.BEDROOM
apartment,
graves, Granam Station
Rls. 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph.
Cemetary above New utilities paid, will consider 446·3670.
one
older
child.
call
675·
Haven. Phone882·261'.
1883.
Canoe 17 II. fiberglass,
$175. Phone W2·3921.
REGENCY
Inc.
Apart·
41
Houses for Rent
ments, S200 . month ,
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, 1 car utilities partially paid. 2 1980 model Sears Kenmore
garage, garden space, air Bedroom, superior neigh· washer and dryer . heavy
cond., unfurnished, on Rt. 7 borhood. 675-6722, .675·5386. duty, large caps, can be
seen at Gold van Lines, 47
over looking the Ohio
Sycamore, Gallipolis.
River. 367·7270.
Apartments. 675·5~ .

p.m;f

'

'

••
'1

�.

.,.

.
(Continued from page I)
claasroom this spring was an indication that proper instruction and
procedures had not been followed.
Virginia Strong, county learning
disability claas instructor, appeared
before the board. She said that
testing of the students at the
Pomeroy Elementary School llad
been conducted as requested by the
board. She said that testing llad
disclosed that the main average gain
In reading for Pomeroy students of
the c1aBs was .5 while the county
gain for the year was .6. She said
that this is not a significant dif.
terence. In mathematics, Strong
said lbat the county mean average
gain for the past school year was .9,
about a lull year, while the Pomeroy
students had a mean average of .985.
· Mrs. Strong stated that it appears
that instruction did take place in the
Pomeroy classroom.
However, parents contended that
their children might have made
much more progress if there had
been proper instruction and
materia b.
A general discussion was held on
learning disability classes during
which it was pointed out that two
more such classes were added to the
high school level since it had been
determined that students could n~
cope in the regular classroom mailistream. The tutoring request then
came to the split vote.
: Before leaving the meeting, the
· Rev. Mr. Knittel said that he had
filed a complaint with the Ohio
Department of Education and that
he would be in touch with the department today to inform it of the lack of
action by the board.
· Dr. Robert Weinfurtner of the
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative was present
with two of his staff members to explain the work of the cooperative in
relation to school district including
computer service which Treasurer
Jane Wagner felt would be quite
beneficial to the district. The board
voted to continue services of the
cooperative. '
ACCEPTS RESIGNATIONS
The board accepted the
resignations of teachers, Mildred
Bailey and Carl Brannan, and uncertified personnel, Helen Quivey
and Ben Davidson. By a ~2 vote with
Snowden casting the dissenting vote,
the board hired Rusty Bockman as
seventh and eighth grade science
teacher and as ninth grade basket·bau coach. Bill Williamson of Simmons Motor Co., was employed·as a
lllgh school auto mechanics instructor pending certification.
Snowden cast his negative vote on
the motion which included as three
hirlngs because he indicated that he
felt a teacher in one school should
not be particularly be working with
the students in another such as in
Bockman's case. He stated he felt
students do not get the full influence
of the teacher under these circumstances.
The Meigs County Jaycees were
given the use of the Meigs Stadium
in Pomeroy for Big Bend Regatta
events and pee wee ball officials
were given use of the facility behind
the Pomeroy Junior High School.
The board approved several lund
transfers requested by Treasurer

Veterans Memorial
Admissions : Paul SeUers, Portland; Ardella Johnson, Middleport;
Amanda Grogg, Shade; Karen
McGrath, Langsville; Mary Tennant, New Haven; Florence Horton,
Pomeroy; Karl Smith, Long Bottom.
Discharged : Granville Parsons,
EUen Couch, Esta David, and Oscar
Klein.

.j
..
SALE ENDS SAT., JUNE 20, 1H1 '

~·.

•'

··,

'.

No action· taken . Pomeroy man hurt in wreck·
on·Baer request .·

Wagner and Instructed wagner to
make an advance draw' on tax
collections through · the county
auditor as needed. Conference at'
A delegation of Interested per- Racine, and . Isabel Lewis at
tendance approvals were given Leda
aons met with the Southern Board Syracuse, .
·
Mae Kraeuter, Bennlta lcirig, Becky
of Education Monday night and
Subatliute bus drivers emCotteriU and John Blaettnar.
asked that Bill Baer be appointed , ' played were WUllam DowJile, Jr.,
Custodian Robert Moore was tranas head teacher at Syra~ Bobby Dudding, Kathleen
sferred to Pomeroy Elementary
Elementary. However, the board Morris, Raymond OUver, Ray
School.
tooknoactionontherequest.
Proffitt, Aaron Sayre' and Hilton
Treasurer Wagner was authorized
In
other
business,
the
WoHe,
Jr.
. to advertise for bids on student aeresignation of Eleanor Wingett
Substitute cooks employed
cident insurance, neet Insurance,
Was
accepted. Mrs. Wingett ser- were June Ashley, Violet Bush,
tires and tubes, gasoline, oil .and anved as bead cook at Syracuse Geraldine · Cleland, Virginia
ti-freeze, fl!el oil, coal, milt and
Davill, Cathryn Grady, Linda
Elementaryformanyyears.
dairy products, bread and bakery
The
board in other action em- Holter, Dorothy Johnson, Lois
pr'oduts, meat and produce and dry
played the loUowing: Joyce Mugrage and Florence Thornton.
goods.
Thoren as district lunch room
Sustltute custodians hired were
The board nominated Carol Pierce
superintendent for the 1981~ Cathryn Grady, !Wbert Lewis,
as a candidate for the Southeast
school year; Carla Shuler as Lols Mugrage and Thelm~
Region and the AU Ohio School Boarcheerleading advillor; Larry Salser.
.
ds.
Wolfe as girls' varsity assistant;
The board entered Into a conSupt. David 1.. Gleason was
Daniel Riffle ad full time. tract with the Meigs County
authorized to employ a paint crew
assistant bus mechanic; Joe Board of Education for an ID
which Will begin working in class
Foreman as maintenance repair- EMR supervillor.
.
rooms where there are no roof leaks.
man
replacing Unley Hart who is
Attending were Sue Grueser,
Teachers will be making up the
retiring.
. president, Don Smith, vice
crew and will be paid $4.50 ah hour
Head cooks hire&lt;! were Alma
president, Denny Evans, Shirley
during the summer months for their
Johnson at the high school; Mary
Johnson, and Charles Pyles,
work.
board members Bobby Ord,
Easterday at the junior high;
The board also authorized Supt.
Dorothy Sayre at Letart; Esther
superintendent, and Naney Car·
Gleason to secure bids on repairing
Wolfe at Portland; Anna Obitz at
nahan, clerk.
or replacing roofs on live buildings
in the district. The painting and roof
work will be paid for out of the
monies raised through the recent
bond issue approved by the district's
(Continued!~ page I)
Memorial Hospital with his responvoterS. The board also discussed as we are doing, to Dr. Ehlinger for sibilities, and use the money in·
tended to pay lor this position to ob- i
revamping of the present junior high this injustice and inCOI)venience.
(3) We recommend that the Board
tain new equipment lor the hospital.
structure, moving the central offices
"These recommendations are
from the building, so that the of Trustees seek a highly qualified
building can accommodate all of the administrator for Veterans made without malice and with due
junior high students. The central Memorial Hospital.
consideration of the facts involved,
(4) We recommend the dismissal
and in a sincere effort to repair the
building which it is reported costs a
serious damage that the hospital has
great deal to keep open for some of two nurses.
eight classes a day would be closed.
(5) We recommend that one nurse
incurred. We feel these things will
Supt. Gleason asked members to be reprimanded and placed on one eliminate tension and controversy
within the hospital.
think about a feasibility study on the year probation.
process so that professional recom(6) We recommend reduction of
"Finally, we would like to inform
mendations will be forthcoming on one department nurse to floor nlirse the public ahd board that the vast
changing the junior high building to with reprimand.
majority· of our employees are exaccommodate all of the students.
(7) We recommend dismissal of a
cellent, weU-trained individuab.
The board adopted a school calen- temporary administrative assistant, With their help we feel our hospital
dar lor 1981~ with students to start charge the staff of Veterans can be one of the finest in the area."
classes on Sept. I and attend their
final day on May 'II. Michael Kloes
was approved as a junior high
The Meigs County Jaycees will floatable material or objects such as
tuition student and a request by Tina hold a Great River Rat Raft Race on wood, oil drums, bathtubs, etc.
Geary, a Meigs High 1979 graduate, the Ohio River, 1 p.m. Sunday, June Mechanical advantagll devices are
to attend cosmetology classes was 28, as a part of the Big Bend Regat- pennitted only if they are man. powered, such as rudders, props. AU
tabled for further study.
11\.
The board discussed whether to
Deadline lor entries is Saturday, crew members will wear life jackets
issue notes or bonds on securing fun- June 'II, and trophies will be awar· at all times. No alcoholic beverages
ds from the million dollar bond i.ssue ded in each class. The motto lor the will be permitted and crew memand the matter was tabled until event is "anything that floats but no bers under 21 must have parents'
signatures. All entries will be
more information is secured. That boats."
matter will be taken up at the
All entries must be homemade and disqualified for unsportsmanlike
special meeting. The next regular manpowered; entries may be con- conduct:
Interested participants are to.cau
meeting was changed to July 13. It structed or comprised of any
99U568 or 99UII81.
was agreed to add any old school
buses and other unused materials in r------------------------1
the district to an auction sale which
is planned to dispose of the old church property which lB located on
Pearl St.
Supt.Gieason is in touch with an
auctioneer who will give a date as to
when he can conduct the auction.
The board named numerous noncertified substitute peraoMel for the
next year. The financial report of
Wagner was approved and the board
moved into executive session to
BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA
discuss personnel and negotiations
614/992·2133 .

Committee wants ••• ·

·Jaycees sponsor raft race event

A Pomeroy man was cited in a juries.
two-vehicle aceldent in Meiga CllunAnother two-car crash was inty Monday, the Galll4-Meip Post of vestigated by the pa~ bt Gallia
the Ohio Highway Patrol said. . · Couilty Monday.
The patrol ~d a vehicle driven by · According to the report, two cars,
Brad W. Malllews, 18, was !lOUth- one driven by Betty J. campbell, 89,
bound on SR 7 at the Intersection Bidwell, and the other by Lucretia J.
with· U.S. 33 at 12:38 p.m. when he Just!~. 19, Bidwell, coWded on •.
reportedly coWded with an auto curve while traveWng on Morgan
driven by Louiae H. Delong, 46, Por- Twp. Rd. 40 at 2p.m.
t1and
·
Slight damage was done to bolb
neiong was attempting to make a cars and there were no citations
left tum onto 7 from 33 when the issued.
crash occurred, the report. said. .Emergency calls
Damage was moderate to Delong's
vehicle and sUght to the. Mathe11!9
Three calls for assis!ani:e were anauto. Mathews was cited for'failure swered ·by local units, the Meig
to yield.
. County Emergency Medical 8ervice .
The patrol btvestigated .another reports.
'
ai!Cident in the Meigs area early' · · At noon Monday the Rutland
Monday afternoon.
· squad tranapor!ed James R.. Vam:e
Troopers said a vehicle driven by ··Inn
Mine No. 2 tO the Holzer
Sandra !,.. Grubb, 23, Albany, was Medical center. At 8:18p.m. I(arl
eastbowld on Scipio Twp. Rd. 53 at Smith of Long Bottom was taken
12:45 p.m. when her auto coWded from Eastern High School to
with a westbound .car driven by Veterans Memorial Hospl~ and at
Katherine A. Richards; 49, Albany.
. 3:42 a.111. Tuesday, John Klein was
MOderate damage was reported to taken from Meigs Mine No. 2 to
both autos and there were no in- Veterans Memorial Hospital. : .

Meti

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INGELS FURN. &amp;JEWELRY
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. .BANK ONE .._

LEASING ·
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. .TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY.
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agreed to send a letter of thanks to
with Riggs
non-certified
It was
Dr.
for hispersonnel.
services on
the
board.

tw;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;2;;~~===~=====~~;;;~

ELBERFELDS IN POME_
ROY

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JUNE 15
John Bailey, Jeremy C!lnnolly,
Paul Darst, Enuna Forthe, William
Louden, Biddie Provens, Joseph
Rice, Ethel Shively, Philip Smith,
Ernest Stwnbo.
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bender,
Ravenswood, W.Va., daughter; Mr.
and Mrs. DaMy Farleigh, Wellston,
. daughter.

· FATHER'S DAY

CHAIR -SALE
· - Berkline &amp; Kroehler ~lity
-Durable Ccwers
-Sturdy Frames and Mechanisms

The (jjfffil)ij....

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!T~u!es~d~a~v~,J~u~n~e~1~6~,1~98~1~------------------~-------:::::::::::P:a~g~e::l:~::T:h:e:D:a:il~v:s:e:n:tl:n:ei::::::::::::~:---~--------------~:P~o~m~er~o~y~M~id:d~le~po~rt~,~O~h~l~

Dr. ;Riggs resigns •••

.

.,. .'

·-".

I&amp; li:r lb If

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Lounging T. Y. VIewing Full Recline

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cutting torque.
'
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e 12-MONTH LIMITED
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• ACME WESTERN BOOTS
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992·2165

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PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS
LAWNS AND GARDENS

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i
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Front lncl Allvnmtnt-112.11 Most PISIIftltr Clrt
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