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l"'lllo.oo

. VOI.30,No.44
, Co!JYrlphtod 1911

en t i n e
· 2 Section; 1&amp; Pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia l~c ..Newspaper

'

, . Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, W!dfttSday. June 17,1981

Agreement should end coal strike
-

.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Stritlng .mine, cOn.structi~
~ are withdtawlng pickets after ~ a tentative contract that WOUld aU011" 'filii-scale' ~ producUon In the East and Midwest fqr the flrat time In alrnqst
. three monlha.
·
Three houra after negotlawrs· returned to the
bargalnins table here Tueaday, they aimounced settlement on a 40-month contract likely to end the 83-day
strike by 11,500 construction .wbrkers, Whose picket
lines delayed the return to work by as many as 60,000
miners In seven states. .
·
Willard Easelstyn, secretary-treasurer of the United
Mine Workers, said the pickets would be withdrawn,
meaning that 11010e 160,000 miners who approved a 40month contract of their own on June 6 will be free to dig

.. the coal. He 8aid he didn't expect any problem In winning approval of the contract in the coaifielda.
· ·
· In Alabama, miners IM!gim returning to work at ihe
l1 p.m. shift change Tuesday alter the pickets were
taken d01111. ·
The UMW called a meeting of the
member
bargaining council today, beginning the I ().day
ratification prOcess. Some union offlclala said they
thought'the proce&amp;'l could be completed sooner.
·
The miners and the construction workers have
separate contracts with indUBtry. The UMW nmers
ratified bY a better than 2-1 margin an accord with the
Bituminous Cnal Operators Association, bill the construction workers, ~ members of the union, had not
been able to agree on a separate pact with the

~lion of

Bitwnlnous Contractors, representing

some 350 contracting companies.

lntenslv~ weekend bargaining failed to produce an
agreer)lent tllat Esselstyn had said on Saturday
seemed "pretty close." .
The two sides broke off talks late Sunday and spent
the next day assessing their positions. Esselstyn accuHd the Industry bargaining"team of walking out on
the negotiations, and spoke,smen for the ABC refused to
comment.
.Bargainers for both sides were smiling broadly and
congratulating one another, however, when they
emerged from a downtown Washington hotel suite
Tuesday night.

"I feel as though it is the best contract that can be
reached at the time," Esselstyn said. "I think we got a
fine pensi~n deal, a fine dental plan."
"We got an agreement," he said. '·I don't see any
benefit to 9Uf picket lines at this time."
Elmo Hurst, chief bargainer for the ABC, said, "I
think it is a good contract for the construction
workers.''
He declined comment when asked if the ABC, which
repr~ts some 350 mine contracting !inns, made
concessions. But Hurst did say, "We'll live with it. I
prefer not to comment on the specifics until the rankand-file construction (workers) have had a chance to
vote on it."

Delnocrats draft tax cut alternative

,WOocllfor Mitn

WASHINGTON (AP) - As which likely will be much more tO
Preaident Reagan calls for a tax cut Reagan's liking.
· .
now, "not IIOIIlewhere down In a
Reagan said the public and the
.misty fuiure," House Democrats are calendar are calling for quick acdrafting alternatives In a move that tion.
could daah Reagan's hope of
ADemocratic task force from the
deUvering the first installment on Ways and Means Conunlttee is putOct.!.
..
ting the finishing touches on a subAt a news conference Tuesday, stitute personal tax cut that would
Reagan challenged the laW!IWikers deliver considerably more relief
to live up to a commitment to have than Reagan proposed for those
the tax bill, along with a.budget, on making leils than $50,000 a year.
.
his desk before starting their August
A
second
task force, working on
vacation.
"Only then can we say as elected the business lax reduction, is
repre!elltatives that we truly deser- presenting the committee several
altematlves, none of which includes
ve a rest;" he said.
the president's proposal. Reagan
But there were growing concerns wants to aUow businesses a faster
that final action will not be taken on tax write-off for money spent on
buildings and machinery.
the bill until perhaps early October.
The House Ways and Mearlll Com- Democrats are concerned that such
mittee now plans not only to dump changes would do tittle for comthe president's proposed 25 percent panies whose biggest Investment is
across.the-board cut In pei'S!Inal tax for labor; they want to 1;0ncen~ate
rates but to rewrite his bustnesll tax, more on cutting the corporate tax
cut plan as wen. And whateverplan rate.
Reagan wants high-income
ill passed by the House must be
reconciled with the Senate ven~ion, Americans to get a full 25 percent

.

. NorthWestern• ConqUest•

•· golf woods made with aluminum-and-wood lamlnotedheads. ·

'-

11.97Doz.

• r"•. '

aj al•nt• ..,Iaiii

Save o~ "Pro Shop" longdistance balls. Durable.

.

0Ur Reg~ 11ar 3A 7to 3.97

• ·

11011' of

_bqllt.

ciiHen 001'

iSurtyn• ~-

"'

I

Save

2 66

·

,
live A Colortuii~Mrl Cap

By Aaoclated Preu
said Wayne Muir, broiler lll!lnager
'Heat that wiped out a multitude~ · at the Paramount Poultry Co. of
Florida chickens' CniwWd up tlie Jacksonville, which has )qat :IAJ,OOO
East Coast and forced SOiile schools chickens since Silturday.
to close early, while exhausted
The temperature l)it 105 degrees in
Southern CaUfornla firefighters got Kenansville, N.C., and the heat set
the upper hand on fires that have recorda for the date In Raleigh and
burned 30,450 acres.
Aaheville.
Flood waters retreated In Kansas,
Los Angeles also sweltered under
Indiana and Tell8ll, where at least 22 record-breaking heat as the mer·.
people have died In violent stonns cury hit 105 degrees.
since the weekend.
It didn't get quite as bot in New
Fort Myers, Fla., suffenid under York City, but the 93-degree heat
triple-digit temperatures for the fif- that made Tuesday the hottest day
th conaecutive day and the mercury of the year was coupled with a temhit a record 102 degrees for the perature-hwnidity Index of Ill, which
second straight day in Jacksonvij]e, matched the highest reading for ali
Fla.
.
of last IIUfiUIIer.
"Birda don't have sweat glands
Chlll-seeklng New Yorkers bought
like hWliBill do, ao when they get plenty of cold drinks and Italian ices
hot, they llteraUy roast in the heat,"

,

taxes."
Reagan said the $10,000 to $50,000.
$60,000 Income bracket "certainly
covers aU of the middle c~. They
pay 72 percent of our taxes and 73
percent of our tax relief or more is
going to that bracket of workers."
Later, O'Neill told reporters: "I
would never personaiJy attack the
president of the United States or the
office of the president of the United
States. I trust he will hold the same '
respect for the speakershlp."
Reagan claimed growing support
in Congress for his tax-cut bill and
caUed for quick action. Democratic
leaders said that's just what they
want, too.
"We don't have the luxury of
writing a bill in the basement of the
White House," said Ways and Means
ChairmaR Dan Rostenkowski, o-m.
COAL TALKS - Elmo Hunt, left, of the Association of Bttumluous
"We've got to be educated" on the
Contractors
and United MiDe Workers Association Se&lt;retary Treasurer
complex provisions in the
Winard
Esseislyn
arrive at a Wasbiugton hotel Tuesd!ly from resumption
president's program, he added.
of oegotlaUoWI. The two sides reached agreement Tuesday night on a 40mooth contract for the 11,500 mine construction workers who walked off
the job March 27 when a three-year contract expired. (AP Laserpboto).

from Manhattan . vendor Paul
Ramirez, but- he ll!ked, "What good
is getting rich if you die of the
heat?"
'
Temperatures hit triple digits
aCI"08/l the South, along the Atlantic
Coast and in the inland Southwest
and California.
Washington, D.C., suffering its
hottest June In history, sweltered
under 100 percent relative hwnidity
and schools in suburban Virginia
and Marylancl closed early because
of falling air-conditioning systems.
Southern California fires fed by
hot, dry winds have destroyed 65
homes in six counties: Riverside,
San Bernardino, Loa Angeles,
Orange, Ventura and San Diego .
Several firefighters and residents
were reported injured In .the In-

creaslngly successf!d blttle against
the fires, but there were no deaths. ·
There was more rain but no new
flooding tn Tens, where at least
nine people have died in floods. A
search was underway in San Antonio
for a man in his early 30s who v.·as
seen "bobbing up and down" after
being swept into the overflowing San
Antonio River.
Indiana residents were cleaning
up after tornadoes and high winds
Monday night damaged several
buildings, overturned cars and
uprooted trees. One construction
worker .drowned and. two others
were missing after they fell into a
rain-swollen river Tuesday in South
Bend when part of a bridge they
were working on crumbled.

Teachers will
•
hold session

Give Dad o f'lEIW cap for flsl\lll'lQ.
Ea. 01 one lie'll el'l)oy for any sport.

.

which we submitted is not aimed at
belp~ the great crOS&amp;-section of
people wbo have been burdened for
too long by big government and high

Heat, . fires, floods continue in U. S.

'

OUr Regular 12.88

'

cut in tax rates, just as low-Income
earners would, on ground&amp; the welloff are more likely to invest their tax
reduction in ways that would benefit
the economy.
Democrats. are up8et that the
Reagan plan targets only 17 percent
of its tax reUef to the 63 pe~nt of
couples and individuals who earn
less than $20,000 a year. That group
pays 16.2 percent of current taxes.
Several Dem~ts on the Ways
and Means Committee began sounding the theme Tuesday that
Reagan's plan would worsen a
dramatic shift in the tax burden
from corporations to individuals. A
few years ago, they noted, corporations paid :IAl percent of federal
income taxes; today, they pay 12
percent; within five years, they
would pay 8 percent.
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
Jr. sharply criticized Reagan's plan
several days ago as too generous to
the rich. The president Used his news
conference for a reply:
"I think it is sheer demog&lt;lgllery to
pretend that this economic program

'

Teachers of the Meigs Local
School District will hold a meeting
Aug. 31 to begin the new school year,
according to a calendar for 1981-32
approved by the dlltrlct's board of
education Monday night.
Students will begin classes on
Sept. I but will be dilmiased on Sept.
7, Labor Day. The first six weeks
will end Oct. 9.
The aecond six weeks will begin on
Oct. 12 with an inletvlce teachers
meeting set for Oct. 21. A parents
conference will be held on 'lbunday,
Oct. 22,8 to 9:30 In the evening arid a
second such conference with parents
will be held from 6 to 9:30 p.m. on
Oct. 'ZI. The second six weeks will
end on Nov. 2$ beginning the
Thanksgiving weekend.
The third six weeki will begin on·
Nov. 30 with classes closinl! on Dec.

23 at the end of the day for the
Christmas vacation which will go
until Jan. 4. There will not be classes
on Jan.!&amp;, Martin Luther King Day,
and the third six weeks will end on
Jan. 22.
Ateachers meeting on Jan. 25 will
mark the begiMing of the fourth six
weeks and there will be a parent conference day on Feb. 5. The fifth six
weeki-will end on March 5.
March 8 will mark the opening of
the fifth six weeks. There will be no
classes on March 19, a parent conference day, or on April 9, Good
Friday. The six weeks will end on
April!&amp;.
The final six weeks will begin on
April 19 with May '11 being a final
day for students and achool officially
cloalng on May 28 with a teachers

meeting.

Man given prison. sentence
Cliord Edward Smith, ,'ll, for-

rnerl1 of Pomeroy, was given 1 six

....
......

_..._
,

a

month to five year penal inltitutlon
l6lllenee on a 81'011 MKU1 Jm.
· Jl'wltlm charie when he appeand In
the .... County Common PleM
CourtW. .ay.
Sraltb appeued before Judie .
Jellll C.lllcaa.after altered a plea of
plltJ to the chirp, • felony of the
ro.th ...,.., NUlla from an lncldlat wblcb occ:waid Ill PGIMOOJ In

, a It-..::~~~
'*"-''willa
..............
lbefltaiiJ.

IIYtltlsatlon wu done

..........., "' lbe .......,
Net Dlp;i ....... the olllce "

TODAY

•• :~IN THEW

p;rents f~ce eviction

LOS ANGELES - The parents of a 6-rriont!Kild girl face eviction
hearings next week because a court has upheld an "adults only" policy
at their mobile home park. .
Steven and Barbara Zipp lost their fight Tuesday to prevent the
owner of the park from filing an eviction action against them.
Los Arigeles Superior Court Judge Robert Wei! noted that there is a
specific state law giving mobile home parks the right to restrict
residents to adults.

Accident leaves worker dead
COLUMBUS, Ohio - cne worker was killed and three were injured
while installing a duct at the new electric generating plant being built
by the city.
Thomas DeVoe, assistant city service director, said a steel duct
weighing about 4 tons was being lifted into place inside the plant when
a cable holding it fell, causing the duct to crash 25 feet below to the
ground Tuesday afternoon.
The men, employees of Babcock &amp; Wilcox, one of the contractors at
the site, were standing beneath the duct, DeVoe said.

City pays relatieves $23, ()()()
AKRON, Ohio - The city of Akron has paid $23,000 to the relatives
and estate of a !&amp;-year-old youth shot and killed by police during a robbery attempt in 1979.
The city's three claims commissioners approved the award In the
death of John Lee Woods. Woods was killed by police in a stakeout as
he fled after allegedly trying to hold up an Akron store. The youth was
carrying a pipe that looked like a gun.

Biker dies when gun goes off
CLEVELAND - A bicyclist was killed after a revolver he was
carrying in his waistband was jarred loose, struck the road and
discharged, police said.
•
One bullet struck the victim, Leonard King, 35, in the upper abdomen. King was riding a bicyle on Cleveland's east side at about 2:2G
a.m. Tuesday when the freak accident occurred, police said.
Pollee liaid King's l!Hpeed bicycle apparently hit a concrete bllick,
causing his gun to fall to the ground. Powder residue on his body indicated King was shot at close range, said Dr. Lester Adelson, deputy
Cuyahoga County coroner.

Winning Ohio loUery number
CLEVELAND - The number selected Tuesday night In the Ohio
Lottery's dally game "The Nwnber" Is 68'1.
The lottery reported earnings of $433,184 from the wagering on the
drawing. Lottery officlals !IBid ~~ales prior to the drawing totaled
•19,841, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share $386,877.

Weather
Clelr llilllght and BUJIIlll Thur9day. Lows tonight In the upper 5011.

lfllbl 'l1nlradaJ ill the tow IIOe. Chance ol rain near zero percent
tonlgilt and n..raday. Wlndl1011thw elterly leu than 10 mph tonight.
By ne A111 claiM Preu

Frllllr ...... ....,:
hlr Frlllay ..t S.-*7.

aawen ud 11
..... .,... •. Lftllllller" .... low ...

deniOI'IIII !haa*y.

I

�F'omeroy-Middleport,·Ohio

Commentary

Pag-2-The Dally Sentl..-1
Pomeroy-Middlepo,.,, Ohio
wednesday, June 17,1981

. ·aryJmo·ll· ers vs. Ch'ns
• •t
• 1·1an1
The M
ytL.~
As everyone knows who cares to
lmQw, thlre ill a dlvl.sion among
CathoUca on the subject of liberation
, · theology. Wilen the pope went down
to Mexico this last time, he threw a

lot of holy water on the subject, but
falled to douse the fial)les that move
some Catholics to · understand the
Gospels as a prophecy of Karl Marx;
whose doctrines to be sure have warts, but who really should be baptized
as the friend of the oppressed of this
world.
What the pope aaid to the bishops
at Puebla in 1979 was, "In sOme
cases people claim to show Jesis as
politically committed, as one who
fought against Roman oppression
and the authorities, and also as one
involved In the class atruggle. This
idea of Christ as a political figure, a
revolutionary, as the subversive
man from Nazareth, does not tally
with the church's catechesis. By

confusing the insidious pretexts of
Jesus' accusen with the - very dlfferent - attitude of Jes111 himself,
IIOllle people advance as the cause rl
his death.the outcome of a political
conflict and nothing Ia aaid of the
Lord's will to deliver himself and of
his consciousness of his redemptive
mia81on."
Now that Is quite a mouthfpl, and
though everybody knoWs there are
good and bad popes, and p0pe5 tha!
have said and wlll say wllly things,
in fact nWJS and priests have to
grant to the pope pre-emptive
authority over what Pope Jolin Paul
here called "the church's
catechesls. '' Nonetheless, the
Maryknollers and their allies go forward under the banner, sometimes
irnpliclt sometimes explicit, of a
thing called "Christian Marxism," a
concept one has as tough a time with
as "Jewish Nazism."
·

.Will~m F. Buckley Jr.

____
. _·

~-----

Consider, for: lnstance, a few com- tries as E1 Salvador ancl ~r
The nuns aixl ~- who go from about abnormal peOple, Clile flildlll
menll ~ cutro'a Cuba that .have there bunger, bureaucriUc arrogan- seminaries to the poverty ghettos of no easier to preacribl far 11M* who
appeartd In the official publication ce, torture IIIIUng, they rea~ against !...I!till America would dO well, aa kill nuns In E1 Sa!YIIdclr tbln ror
of the Maryknollen. "There Is an
II. But the big lesson of the 20th ceo- ProfeSBOr Michael Novak has those who kill Beatles In New York.
tory ill that reacti0111 against suggested, to read Adam Smith, who
impressive spirit of revolutionary
Wbat iB needed, U , I 18)', Ia I
sltustiol)s ldlous or even merely un- (u .was his habit) predicted every_idealism in ~ Cuban people and in
aiglilf!cant
~ of the
pleaBint reqUire the exercile of thing that would happen,
their lifestyle ... There Is no doubt
curriculum
at
Marylmo1l. Because
that the !)uban revolution has COO: historical dl.scrimlnation. Abnoat . ~ social ,arrangements
although
theae
men
and wamen are
tributed to better education and
eve!')'OI\e . w11o experienced · the • In !...~!tin America .and In North
to
be
praised
for
their
COipoi'IIICia
mWicalattention for the !Bland's 10 shambles of the Weimar Republic ~erica: p!'e\Ucting (and this wu ,
of
mercy,
they
must
be reinlnded
million population. (!!top! There Is a sought deiiJWtely an alternative to ~ Ye&amp;J:S ago) disorder and poverty
that
the
sove.,elgn
taw:
Is
ID IIWe the
it. But the alfi!inatlve that ought not In the one part of the wor.ld, and
daub~, and it Is well-founded). It em·
Lord,
and
one
cannot
do
this, and
to have appealed was an progress and affluence in the other.
pha1uzes the dlgulty of wom~n.
authoritarian regime presided wer People don't kill nuns. In catholic also love either Fi~ Cutro or the
workers and campesln01. Another
by Adolf Hitler, which quickly countries because they are nuns, or hideous pollclea evoked by the mendevelopment is the dedicated inevolvedintoatotalltarianregime.
at least not normal people. And tion Of his name.
ternationalism permeating Cuban
society, the realization of penonal
responsibility for people outside the
nation's borders. These advances in
a brief span of 20 years are unparalleled in !...~!tin America."
Hardly unparalleled. A few hundred men led by Cortes, and a few
hwxlred led by Pizarro, transformed huge hunks of !...~!tin America
in less than 20years, and as a matter
of fact, killed fewer people in doing
so. But, of course, the passage. here
quoted might have been publiBhed in
M z~~~eo~
Pravda. Its appearance in a
WM~IN6TOI'I ,P.C,
publication officially devoted to
spreading the Gospel of the Lord,
describing a country that persecutes
religion and seeks to indoctrinate an
entire nation in atheism, reminds us
that the Catholic church is hardly
the monolith so widely advertised
and suggests that one of the most
urgent tasks Is the organization of a
missionary order to evangelize the
Maryknoll missionary tl'der, to
which end this is a humble contribution.
It should quickly be said, as after
aU it should be said about many of ~pr-------------,-------.:::.::;::=::=::::::~!!~
the early communists and, I sup- ~·­
pose, Nazis, that these folk are vT1i'\
driven by idealism. When HULME ©i!l81 ~ WOIZ'!M ~R-TE"tEi:JJAM...
Maryknollers go dOwn to such coun-

ME

WORRY? 1--__.....:.--=::::::=:l

r--------------------·"1,
The Daily Sentinel
III Cu urt SI~ t

Pumt!roy, Obit
ll~!ttl·!l51

OHOTED TO 'MiE INTEREST OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
PAT WHITEHEAD
J\ sHlst.ant PubliHht r / Cu ntro.lh=r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

'

·. Some Reds hold
:practice at UC·

\

Nrws Edllor

U :1TF.IL1i ftfo' OI"INJCJN 011rl' "At'lt'llml'd. Tllt"y 11buuld br lt'11N tha10 .100 wnrds illflK All
ldh ·r,. wrt· ~ouhjt•t·l ln t•ttitinl( .•nd m1.1.~1 IM· Mlt~;IM"d with naunl', 11ddrftri11 ud lfirphunr
~IUiflhrli•r. N11 un ~ll(l\l.;t lt•ll.l•n; "-'Ill ht• puhlisht•d, l.t'tlt•li sht!Uid ~· In J(ltoUd Ll ~lt'. auldrt'!oi~lllJ!:
• ~-~ •w, , nultwr.-ntll lltit·~ .
. '

Actors, musicians, TV personalities
. Sponsors say school
ver,y common sight at U.S. Capitol
'

.

'

districts will benefit
-OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - sponsors of a proposal to overhaul Ohio's
: method of collecting property taxea
· say the state's 815 local school
diatrlcts stand to benefit most by Its
·enactment.
Sen. Thomas F. Walsh and
Franklin County Treasurer Dana G.
Rinehart said 70 percent of the new
revenue the changes would yield
would go to school systems - many
ol which face chronic funding
problems.

.

Walsh, a Republican from Canton,
has readied for introduction this
week a bill implementing some rl.
Rinehart's suggestions for
ellminating ootdated and inefficient
tax coDectlon procedures.
"CoDectlon devica in Ohio date
back to IIOIIleWbere around 1857,"
Wal!h said, adding they have not undergone a aerloua update since 1929.
"I think llliJietlting better must have
come along en route."
Deta1la r1 the proposal were
outlined at a news conference as
leglalaton headed back to the
Siatehoule after a weekend recess.
Senaton will command the
spoWght In the General Aslembly
this week u they wrap up work on
their pared-down vendon of the state
budget for fiscal year 11182. In addition, the Senate Judiciary Committee is expected to vote on a major
program authorizing construction of
a aeries of new prisons to alleviate
current overcrowded conditions.
Walsh's property ,tax collection
bill ill expected to produce $245.7
miWon during the fint year It Is in
effect It Is projected to yield aboot
_.million each following year.
Tbe single largest one-Ume
..~ would be the _.., mllllon
produced by revl.siOIII in the
procedure for payment of back
lues. As PJ~ treasurers

would be allOWed to collect back
taxes through delinquent tax cer-

tificate sales. Tbe bill would abolish
what was described as the timeconawnlng and costly foreclosure
system currently used.
Tbe certificate proposal Ia similar
to a procedure now in use in Florida.
It allowa an unpaid lu: bill to be sold
to lnveston who pay it off in exchange for a primary lien on the
property and interest earnings. An
investor Ia entitled to collect the loan
made·to pay the taxea and Interest
and could wind up with Utle to the
property If the debt Is not eventually
paid.
Another $44.7 million Is projected
to be available through a provision
in the bill that would permit
treasurers to accept any property
tax payment that ill short or late for
legitimate reasons.
Under current law, lreasuren
may not accept payments that are
flled momenta after the deadline or
are pennies short of the total amount
due. H enacted, the bill 'II'OUld permit
treuuren to accept the lncornd
paymenll in cerllin cues and bUI
the taxpayer for the rest.
Other aectlons of the plan would
grant dlacounta for early payment of
property taxes; permit the computerization of property tax bllling
ol mortgage C011lp811ies; and Improve the late-payment penalty
structure to discourage nonpayment of property taxes.
Walsh, who said Monday that he
hopes hearinga on the measure can
becln next week, predicted some rl
the suggestions would probably run
into problemll.
"Regardless of how good It Is,
there's going to be O!JPDIIUon from
people who resilt change," Wailh
aaid.

Today in history• ••
Today Is Wednesday, June 17, the !68th day of 1981. There are 19'1 days
left in the year.
Toclay's hlghllgbt ill hiltory:
On JWJe 17, 19'12, a break-in waa discovered at the Watergate complex
in Wullington, laadlng to the eventual downfall of the NiiEon adm!nlllrltion.

WASillNGTON (AP) - TOUrists Jennifer Jonfli, Linda Kelsey,
expecting to find a touch of James Earl Jones, Ossie Davis, IIHollywood at the White House may zak Perlman, Leontyne Price, John
be at the wrong end.of Pennsylvania Amos, Jack Klugman, Jean
Avenue. For a glimpse ol en- Stapleton, Patti IA!Pone, Jerome
tertainment figures, they should Robbins and Edward Albee.
visit the Capitol.
Subjects have ranged from hunger
Actors, musicians and televl.sion In the Hom of Africa and marketing
personalities are becoming alm01t baby formula in Third World nations
as common a sight in congressional to protecting funds for national encorridors as lobbyisls.
dowments for the arts and
Witnesses at congressional humanities from President
hearings in recent weeks have in- Reagan's budget knife.
cluded Liv Ullman, Valerie Harper,

founded by an art collector.
Brian Concannon IIi fictional,
product of the Imagination of
William Flanagan, author of "The
Chalnnan," publlahed recently by
Dell Publishing Co. David Mahoney
Is actual. Olances are he Ia
somewhat riled, too.
Mildly upset also are some other
executives who, recognizing that
cycles come and go, foresee a
plllllible spate of novels about

Other screen and 1V penonalities
don't testify. They just sort of drop
in, making an appearance in the
visitors' galleries for several
minutes before mwlng on.
Comedian Bob Hope, for instance,
paid quick villlts to House Speaker
'l1lomas P. O'Neill Jr. and Rep.
Claude Pepper, J).Fla.
Actor Tony R8ndin testified
several days ago before a House Appropriations subCommittee to urge
Congress to Ignore a Reagan ad-

ministration propoeal to cut federal
lunda for neurological ...-ch at
the Natlonallnatltutea of Health. ·
Rep. Ike Skelton, J).Mo., Ia trying
to torpedo plana to create a new
Navy rank - that of commodore-'

admiral.
The new rank, authorized . by
Congress last year, would c&lt;me between the current ranka ol captain ,
and rear admiral. Tbe rank of Clllllo
modore - which historically came
between captain and rear admiralIs not in current Navy use.

bustness, in which they may serve as
the basis for only slightly fi&lt;.'tionallzed characters. Flanagan
himself has another business novel
in the works.
Whatever other Impact It has,
"The Chainnan".bu provided a bit
of warm weather diversion from the
routine Delli about the IJiiOIIeY IIUP'
ply, taxes, lnflaUon, Japanese iJn.
porta, on prices and a meandering
stock mariet.

"Can a longtime blllln. reporter 1
suddenly nritch frun writing flcts I

to creating fiction?" ub Jack •
O'Dwyer's Nenletter, a p•bllcaUon
of media . and public relaticn
newa."Yes," he quotes F11napn u '

-~.

'

In h..alnu and media elrclea, ,
however, queationa alit about what ,
Is fact and wbat ill flcUon In "The

Olalnnan."

dltion, the union Is conducting joint
studies of occupational ·health
problems wltb llf'llll8loulllljldlcal
organilatlont; lneludlnl the
National Cancer 1n1t1tute and the
Harvard Sdlool of Pablle Health.
"The same inaovatm tllilrp
we've done In health IIIII aafetJ I
want todoiD -.mlei."IIJIII&amp;
zocchl - and that's why he lila candidate for OCAW'a lntemat!al
presldeney even though the man
currently holdiDg that job Ia 11 r'l'll
~~

SENIOR DIVISION

TMnt

Pl. PINs. Fruth
POIMrov
Hllllnd MiiiH

'

'•

'

L.

2 0
2 1
3 1
2 1

Brnlund Brazie
( 2
Middltporl
.
I 2
NewHav•n
1 1
Pl. Pleasant
o 1
MIIOn
0 3
Gam. rftllil1: June 2, Brule and
lrazlt 20 MaiOll $; Dravo 2.5 N.w
Hawn Hih and Mi- 3 Pomeroy
5; MlddiiJIOrt 5 Pl. Pleasant Fruth
17i June •• Pomeroy 11 Pl. PiNIInl
Frvtll 12; Hih · and Mi- 7 Pl.
Pl-nl 5; J - 9, Middleport 20
Ire... and lrult7; HllundMI17 Dravo 11 PotMrov II MaiOII 1,
June 11, Dravo 11 Bruit and lrazi•
9; Nft HIVIfl S Mlddi-.xwt 3; Hits

•1

&amp;spkl fnm tile • • llld Onlll

"
.
.I'
•f

DOOfaUW ·'

andM'-12~1.

JUN10tl DIVISION

w.

L.

22 '0

'

1
•1
1
0

1
2
1
I

0 I
D0

'• D I

,

I•
......,.
..

W.

DriVO

union'• ......, CWitiilllon - Ill
Jllld.Aapat, will pit prooOOII

Boltlill.
And In 181'7, China IIIIIOIIIlCed It bad aploded Ill flnt hydropn bclmb.
r. ~ qo: The United Btalea and Jal*lliped an agreement to
1 •ntheilllndata.InantoJiplil.
Five J11t1 qo: Rlatlng ecPimwlln I blat IDwnlhlp In South Africa,
IIIII
pollcewwelrylnlto J'llllnorcler. .
0a1 ,... qo: lrllnlan new....,.. rtplltild thet the newly e1eetec1
Pli'lllment - unliMI)' to lalie ap the . . at Amlrlcan lloltqea uatll

Borg defeated McEnroe in five
driiJ1lltiC sets In last year's final,
while Tanner took the super Swede
nament.
to five sets In the 1979 cham. After the Swedish superstar on pionships.
Tuesday drew tiearded Californian
McEnroe, seeded No. 2, play~
Peter Rennert In the first round ol American left-bander Tom
next week's toumameirt, bookies Gulllkson in the first round, while
made Borg the oddHn favorite to Connors, the No. 3 seed, starts his
win hlulath atra1ght champiOIIIhip. fint-round match ~gains! fellow
Other odell quoted by the bookies . American Dick Stockton.
were 7-t agalnat John McEnroe, 12-1
Meanwhile, the Women's Tennis
aga1n1t Jimmy Connors, and ?»-! .. Association aent an official protest
aga1n1t both Czechoslwalda's lv~ to Wimbledon about the women's
IAindlandAmericanRoecoeTanner. aeedtng lilt. It wu Hana ManAs defending champion, Borg will dlikova ol Czechollovalda, the
open the tournament on the famed Auatrallan lll!i French Open chamcanter Court of the All-England Club pion, ill second ~ce behind Chris
nsU{CJIIday.
'
Evert Lloyd. ' '
has been selected as a 4-6 favorite to
win the Wimbledon tennis tour-

st~ndings

In lt'lll, when Maaocchi iDd
Robert F. Ga. flnt faced eadl
other In the contat for the lll1iGD
~. aa. won, but Ills
llllfiiD at victory - llilly IbM
. 3,000 Wlea out of . -....
183,GIOC81l
Tblllll l'lrlll, to be blkl at the

f

jj

(

•

Phlllie · Pete Rose, a Cincinnati
native, called UC baseball Coach
Glenn Sample and asked if they
could hold informal practices at a
field on campus. ,
.
Foster, Dan Driessen, Dave Concepcion, Ron Oestet and Ken Griffey
showed up for Tuesday's workout.
Rose missed the practice because he
returned to Philadelphia for a day.
Sample said the players do plenty
of charity work for UC and help his
players, so he Is haPPY to repay the
fa von.
He said It inspires his players
when they practice with the Reds.
"It's a thrill (or the college
playen," he said.."It's like you're a
scientist and Albert Einstein comes
lnand~ays, 'Hello."'
Tbe players are surprised at the
power ot soine of the athletes, Sample aaid. Foster hit some that are
still rolling out in the stadium,"
Sample said.
Tbe only time Sample sees balls
fly into neighboring Nippert
Siadluni Ia when someone like
Foster or Johnny Bench takes hitting practice.
It Is 346 feet down the left field line
at the UC field and 385 feet down the
.right field line. "It's a bigger park
than Riverfront," Sample said.

Borg Wimbledon choice

M-G·M ~Is

'

Ontblldlte:
111111'1, Mary Q1!een of Scots was imprisoned In Lochleven Caat1e In
Scotland.
In It'll, Sir Francil Drake landed on the California coat.
In 17'11, the Revolutionary War battle of Bunter ijlll wu fought near

Preparing himself Is . something
Foster bu worked bard at this year. ·
BefOI'I! the ·began, he pracUced betting by taking 50 or more
IIWinp each day right handed. Then
he uerctaed the left ann the same
way.
Meanwhile, Cincinnati players are
practicing each day at UC, much to
the delight of UC baseball piayen invited to join them.
.Practice sessions began Monday
when Foster and Philadelphia

WIMBLEDON (AP)".:._ Bjorn Borg

A union official with vision..____Ro_be_rt_Wa_lters_ ·
DENVER (NEA) - When Tony memben are employed In three of
Mazzocchi· Is in the midst of his the nation's riakiest categories of'inrapid-fire description of his yislon of dustrial facUlties.
In oil refineries, chemical inAmerica's future (which Is almost
all of the time), hi! faintly resembles stallatlona and nuclear plants
Woody ·Allen and sounds vaguely throughout the country, OCAW
like Archie Bunter.
· members daUy face the danger of
But what Mauocchi Is saying being apoaed to torlc or carprobably Is unmatched anywhere in clDocenlc maleriall that not only afthe nation. A aelf-deacrlbed "junior fect their health and mortality but
high school drop-out," the 55-year- ·also may Irrevocably disfigure or
old native ol Brooklyn, N. Y., may retard their offspring.
"We think we die aubatantially
be the country's moat thoughtful and
before
the rest of the population,"
visionary union official.
Consumer advocate Ralph Nader, says Muzocchi. "We thlnt our
who rarely often atravagant children have more birth defects."
To deal with thOle elualve, Clllllo
praise of othera' work,
unequivocally describes Mazzocchi plex and controveniallsauM, Mazas "tlie flnelt labor leader In thta zocchi hu organized a pioneering
coUntry today." Fr11111 others come health and safety program unmatched by any other union.
equally lavish appraisals.
'!be OCAW bu initilted the
Mazzocchi Ia heaWI and llfetr
director of the Denyer-beaed 011, world'• only ltudy at birth defects
Chemical and Atomic Worlten, 1 linked directly to the work-place . .
union whole lppmlmately 110,000 YlronJDiflt at the panntl. Ill ad-

CINCINNATl (AP) - George
Foster hopes the baseball strike enda soon so that the hot bat that
enabled hlm to Jump ,off to a fll!lt
start this season doeaa't cool off.
When the atrJte bei!an Friday,
Foster was hitting .'Jill and Willi tied
with llllve Kingman and Mike Schmidt lor the league lead In holne
111111 with 14.
After practice Tuesday at the
Unlvendty of Cincinnati, he said a
long strike could make it more difficult for playen to stay tuned mentally.
"It's important to be ready all the
time. You're able to stay physically
ready, but the mental part Is more
difficult," Foster aaid. "You can't
emphasize them like you can in a

game.''

Fictional novel upsets business community
NEW YORK (AP)- Brian Concannon: poor kid fr11111 Brook!)'II who
becomes the country's highest paid
executive as chairman of Apple Enterprises, a food, liquor and fashion
conglomerate founded by an art
collector.
David Mahoney: poor kid from the
Bronx who earns one ol industry's
highest salaries as bead of Norton
Simon Inc., a conglomerate in food,
liquor, fashion and other products,

8'l'lUIII: - 1t'1 DOt - . two, tbree atrltel, yea're oat lD baseball
\ tOday, lt't jalt pllja .trike, Keeplug up wilb the ltrlke Ia avid ClDcbulati
1Rid fu, 1Aalae ~OmOre, UDioa Ave., Pomeroy. Louise bu a Ufesize
--..m, dretHd In a Reds' ulform, In !rout of ~r bome. Tllesday'a
tip poiDted eat \'011 Strike- lllly 5." Loalae will upda!e tbe alp u lbe
atrille movea111111.

])OLLAR

BOBHOEFUCH

I

·'

Midgets post
9-7 victory

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

�Pig-.4-The Diily Sentinel

'. Chicago Tribune buy~ Cubs

Announce

... · CIDCAGO ~~~ .:._ The Chicago ·.·. In 1J111C111111!iD the • • "!igle)' unWhlldeathlnltsl.
Cl!be, cbarler inemben of ~ · said be lllllnilni tbe dab to 1 ,
P.K. .Wrtpy toak rmr
t111t
Nilllonil League who have not won~ stable - ' ~ lltabilabed entity lime and rut tbelell,!.~ W~
pennant ln '38 yeara, have •sold cornmll&amp;ed to keeping .the Olblln .ln 1m..-. jOIIJII ..
for $20.5 mllll&lt;11 by WWiam Wrigley . Olleaio and that the Tribune Co. II . aiiiUIIlfll opera::.:.- IIIIo
.
~ the parent f1n;n nf the' Chicago f~ able to meet Ita com- · Wrigley,
Tribune,
mllmentl to tbe aharellolders of the flnandal probieiJII .. ._...I
by
· Wrigley, a chewing game club 81141 ·the National . League. · estate tu: ~..:.:._ ::::!..~
magnate and head of the WWiam W!igleyC&lt;Ilirolledl1percentofthe . fromlhedeatbeor..... , _ - .........
Wrigley Jr. Co. whoee fatber and stock.
·
aabortllmeofeachotlll!f.
grandfatber before him OWDed the
The Cube 1re one~ eight original
The Chicago SiiJI.'l'lmes reported
club, agreed Tuesday to the sale r1 charter members rl the National the club face4 a ponlble 13 miDloo
tbe learn to the Tribune Co., a League alq wjth New
lou tills year. AttendiDee Ia don
privately owned firm with IJlietOO, ~delphiJ.~.IAula, liar- more than 220,001 ~ to the.
newspapei'S, radio and television tford, Loulivllle imd CinciJmati. The same number of holne dalat .Jut
.s)ations and cable TV operations; · Cubs ilre the on)y team of that group year.
. ' ..
The sale was quickly approved by to tematn 1n the same· city where
The Wrigley bold is belleved1to·be ,
tbe club's boardofdln!ctorsandnow theystariedln1m.
the longest cooliliuOIII ownenbip of
needs the approval f!. the .National
The Wrigley family came ooto the .. a team In the National l..e~~Jle·
League and the club's stockholders.
~bBU acene In 1916 wben WWiam
·

softball

.;,t

_u ._,

.a. ._...... !:ut

vort,.

stanton
R. Cook,Co.,
chi~fialdexecullve
officer
of Trib\lne
he was
elated over the transaction, noting
tbe Cubs and· Tribune Cu. broadcasting properties have been "
associated for years.
WGN radio first broadcast Cub
games In 1924 and WGN-TV began
its'television coverage In 1948. ·
Cook said Tribune eo. newspaper
and broadcast subsidiaries would
continue independent coverage o1.
the ne.ws of baseball conalstent with
the company's edltorlaltradillon.

Wrigley bualneumen
Jr. and aeveral
other
Chicago
purdJased
the
club from the Tall family of Cinclnnati. Wrigley became majority
stockholder In 1921 alld ran the club

r~~~giJ~i~liir

r-;:::;=======::;1
FAMfLY CLINIC ·

CUBS SOLD - The cellar-dwelling Chicago Cubs,
wbo make tbelr bome In Wrigley Field, bsve been sold
by owuer Wllllam Wrigley lo the parent company of the

Chicago Tribune for $20.5 mllllon, it waa aDDouuced
Tuesday iu Chicago. A meeliug of the board of directors of the team bas been schedUled to vote on the sale.
(AP Laserpbotot.

Today's

Sports World

JOHN A. WADE._ M.l)., INC.
·vETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, .NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
OfRc. Ho.irl' by Appointment Only

.· ~LL (t14).tt2-a1CJ:'.
·. or·(3CM)675-12tM

ilh l!!it

Tesl for: Inhalants ·
Food
Chemicals
Shoe Derm ilitis
Cosmetics

GENERAL PRACTICE

Planl are to uae the JC flelda.
!'Teum will be clullfled open, A, B
and aCCI!I'dlnC to put
and

c,

recorda

Ieveii a! acmpetltlan. 'lbe top twO
teams out ol eacb c1aaa will advance
' !AI &amp;tate tournament.
'lbe dales are July 3, 4, and 5. Entry will be f'/5. E:ntry fee ahould be
paid by June 28. The drawing will be

..

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY; 0.'
'

.

.

PRK:ES GOOD tHROUGH SAT., JUNE 20,1981

. JWle28.

Intereated teams ahould C&lt;lltact
Gene Wlae, 4011 s. 5th st., Middleport, 118M224; James Keams,
8os 42, Albany, ~16, or Sclltt
HAmilton, RR 1, Belpre, ·UU629 or
373-3145.

Middleport, Oblo, 88U224; James
Keams, Box 42, Albany, Obi~. 6986516; ScoU llamllton, RR 1, Belpre,
Oblq, 42HG9 or office ~1~.

Zftt JaebQa Ave.

wv Z5SSI

BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC WTER
1. H. BILLMAN II, O.D.
Provides Such Services As

VISION EXAMINATIONS
'
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES
. OPEN M.·T.·W.·F. 9-5
.
CLOSED THUR.·SAT.·SUN.
113 Court St.
· Ponieory, Oh.
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

992·2920

STORY &amp; STORY
AnORNEYS AT LAW

Steven L. Story

. Karen H. Story
236 w. 2nd., Pomeroy, Oh. (Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)

OFFICE PH. 992-6624

HOME PH. 992·3523

OFFICE HOURS: MON •.fRI. 8:30 TO 4:30.
SAT. 8:30 TO 12:00 NOON
Evenings By Appointment

popular Yomiuri Giants, the most
frequent champions in Japa~'s 45
yeanJ of pro baseball, said American
players face a "difflcWt transillon"
here becauae of the language, dlf·
ferent P,Itchlng stylea and pressures
to perform.
"I know I'm going to be highly'
criticized whatever I do," he said.
Altbough balling 1 mpectable
.269 witb nine homers after • slow
start, Th01'11811011 hal been criticized
in sports papers for uot living up to
expectatioos as a succeaaor to
Japan's aiJ.tlme home run king

'lbe 1181, dlltrlct 12 A8A women's
slo pitdl aoftball tournament will be
held for the first lime ever In the ·
Athennrea.

GRADE A

Whole Fryers......~!·.
CRISPY SERVE

try fee wm be fll and ahould be paid

Oftlce Bean by Appolatmeat

($22'/,IXXl) or more for fanner major
leaguers such as ex-New York
Yankee Roy White or ex-Dodger
Charles Manuel, who led the Pacific
League last year with 48 home runs.
In return they are expected to
hammer the fences daily, obediently
take par! in grueling practice
sessions and quietly fade away at
season's end when the team goes
looking for a new "gaijin" - the
word for foreigner, which literally
means uoutsider.''
Former Dodger Gary Thomasson,
who plays fOr tbe Immensely

STORE ftOURS:
Mon.-511. 8 am·IO pm
'SundiJ 10 am-10 pm

'

by July l Drawing wm be July 6.
Contact: Gene Wise, 409 S. 5th St.,

Office 675-6971

THE MIRACLE AT MARION - Ilea Hogan blasta from a trap oa the
l%th hole during tbe third round of the U. S. Open In 1950. A year before
Hogan had been so badly injured 'In an accident that doctors sald be mlgbt
never walt agalD let alone play golf. Hogan woo the playoff after a threeway tie. (AP Laserpboto).

'

The 1911 dlatrict 12 A8A men's slo
pltdl IIOitbeU toumament. will be
held July 10, 11, and 12 for the first
time ever in the Middleport,
Pomero, area. Plans are to uae the
Mlcldlepori, Syracuae and Kyger
Creek baD flelda. Teams will be
clalslfled open, A, B and C, according to put record and competiUGIII. Top two ~ will IJd.
vance to the State Tournament. En·

Tumors Removed
Acne
Psoriasis
Exzema
All Skin Diseases

1

tournaments .

ball tournament July 3--5. Entry fee
will be fl5. It will also be a hit your
own ball type tournament. For ~
tber lnfonnalloo contact. John
leinley, Fairland athletic director,
at lllllh\116.

TeaiiDI and Treatment

Pleualat,

'

The Fairland Athletic Booeters

ALLERGY

pt

'

, will sponsor an liSA sanctioned soft.

DERMATOLOGY

tbe pelvis, a broken collarbone, a
fractured left ankle and a smashed
right rib.
In order to halt the clotting of
blood, doctors perfonned a two-hour
abdominal operation, tieing off the
principal veins in his legs.
After the accident, Hogan lay flat
on his back for :;8 days. When he was
transferred home, he began by
walking around his bed - at first
one lap, then two, then three - in
agonizing pain.
It was late in August before he
could pick up a golf club. In Decem·
ber, 10 months after the accident, he
dared to try a round of golf, legs bandaged from ankles to hips, riding a
cart.
In January, the sports world was
electrified to read tbat Hogan bad
entered the Loll Angeles Open.
Hogan trudged the course stifflegged, In constant pain, tying Sam
Snead for the title, the playoff
delayed by rain.
Then came Merion, bringing with
it not only the pressure of the Open
· but also the supreme test of having
to go 36 holes on the final day.
An unknown named Lee Mackey
from Blnningham, Ala., shot a
record 64 the first day. Hogan was
eight shots back. Ben fired a second
round 69 to move to Within two shots
and survived the 36-hole marathon
to tie Uoyd Mangrum and George
Fazio for the title. The next day he
won the playoff witb a 69.
Hogan went on to win two more
Opens and score an unprecedented
Triple Slam in 1953, winning the
Masters, U.S. and British Opens,
skipping the PGA. He played in five ·
tournaments and won them all.
But nothing compared witb the
odyssey at Merion.

cisco Giants, hitting .311 witb 11
homers In his first year witb the
Carp, and another ex-Giant, Terry
Whitfield, hitting .323 with 13 homers
as a rookie with the Pacific League
SeibuUons.
Behind the slugging Lee brothers
- Leron, .322 with 10 homers, an~
Leon, .311 with nine - the Lotte
Orions have a firm grip on first
place in the Pacific League.
Yet allis not "arches" (Japanese
lingo for home run) and accolades
for the 24 foreigners, almost aU
Americans, who play the inscrutable
game of "besuboru."
By Japane3e pro baseball standards, the Americans get big money
- more than 10 mllllon yen ($45,000)
for a player with U.S. minor league
e~perlence to 50 million yen

(

D8 'd, L C
D0
VI
•
arr• · •

Former major leaguers ride high in Japan
TOKYO (AP) - While American
major leaguenJ make their pitches
at the negotiating table, American
expatriates are busting fences and
building averages again this year in
Japan - where the only baseball
strikes come on curves and fast·
bella.
As of Wednesday, 31&gt;-year~ld Jim
Lytlle, a former Los Angeles Dodger
playing for the Hiroehima carp, was
leading the sia·team Central League
with a .347 average and one-time
Toronto Blue ,Jay Tony Solaita was
pacing tbe Pacffic League with 18
bomers for tbe Nippon Ham
FlghtenJ.
With !IOJlle 50 games in the 130game season played, ~her outstanding foreign "helpers" are Art
Gardner, formerly of the San Fran-

:--.

~.

•

By WUI Grimaley
AP Con rijl0ild1111t

ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) · · Merion
and tbe miracle of Ben Hogan.
Much of tlie history of American
golf is woven Into the whibl-faced
traps, subtle mounds and unique
basket flagsticks of the Merion Golf
Club on the outskirts of
Philadelphia, where the U.S. Open
again will be played this weekend.
It remained, bowever, for the
grim-jaw~\(! Texan to provide the old
course with the sport's highest
drama.
It was the fabled comeback of 1950
- a story that has been preserved in
history books, movie film and word
of moutb generation to generation.
Hogan undoubtedly remembers
every blade of grass, every difficult
lie and every stab of pain of that
memorable experience, but he
doesn't Uke to talk about it.
"You'll have to write it from what
you saw," he said when reached by
telephone in his office at the Ben
Hogan Golf Company in Fort Wortb,
TeXBB. "After all, you were there."
Hogan, an anny lieutenant in
World War II, won his first Open at
Rivie111 in Loll Angeles In 1948 with
276, the first time a winner had
broken 280. On Feb. 2, 1949, he and
his wife, Valerie, were driving home
along a lonely Texas highway from
Phoenix, Ariz., when a huge transcontinental bus lunged out of tbe
haze and skidded into tbe patb of tbe
Hogan car.
Inatinctively, Hogan threw his
body in front of Valerie to shield her
from injury, a heroic gesture that
probably saved both of their lives.
The steering wheel of the car was
driven through the driver's seat like
a spear.
Valerie's injuries were minor.
Hogan suffered a double fracture of

The Daily Sentinel-Page-:-~

Wtdnelday, June 17,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiC!

If

fitting's ·
your

concern,
see us!

POPUlAR
PIX'OS
PULirON

.Latonia racing results
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Select
Husky captured the $1,100 featured
pace mlleatLatonla In 2:02Tueaday
night and pald$28, 112.40 and$UI.
Stony Derra placed, $17.40 and
$5.80, and . Foolish Question was
'third, SUI.
The fi.6 double of Sultan Sllrook
and Imago
and the crowd of
1,07hragered$94,995.
·

paid•.

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Glacier Valley, driven by Dick
Delley, edged J . King Way by a neck
·Tuesday· night to win the feature
pace at Scioto Downa in 2:00 f.li.
The wlnnet ~'~~turned $11, $4.40 and
$2.80. J. KlnjJ Way paid $2.40 and
$2.211, while !Nrd-place Melvin Best
returned SUI.
The ninth race trlfecta of ~10
paid $11211.11. .
The crowd ol. 3,945 wagered
$32'1,809,.

120l

'

.. '

$ 39

GrCJund Beef...... ~ ..
.

.

$ 59
GrCJund Chuc:k.... ~.
~K~
.
.
k.
$ 29
Cube Stea s~ .......~•.

Thistledown results
NORTII RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Triocala and Bare Knucklea have
joined the field for the 47th I'WIIIing
ol the Ohio Derby' Thlltledown
track officials uy.
The two horaea are to arrive Thuraday to prepare for Sunday'•
$110,001 race, the most preatlgiOUI

YeiiCJw CCJrn...
DARI FRESH

~eventlntheatate.

2% Milk ............~.~ .

Trlocala, winner a! tbe Count
Fleet and Rockaway St$el at
Aqueduct thla )WI', hal eamed
. , . for owner VIola Sommer. .
Flnt place ~~~lllfiiii,WV.

The Daily Sentinel
lt-.-1

A-ollldll

11&amp;6

EICIC:CJil ..•..............~.
FRENCH CITY
.
W1eners............ !~G~.

M ,lloo.

19

The Pecos 1155 Ia, by far, our best-selling
boot. For the heel·hugging lit o.f your life, stip
on a pair of PIICOI boola.
·

69

FLAVORITE
.

Margarine...........~

'SIZES
AMI/A
· ~14

ABC

•11 ..15 7·1

-·-~~·---·

DE

7-14 Sol

~15

EEEEE

OORON~

.. 14 7·14

......,,Oiolo-

POITIIAI!D: ........... ftltlloll7

......,m oa.ta,

--·-IUIKaiPftllll-

0111 ..... ....... ... . .... .. ... .. .. .
Qlllllllllt ....... .......... ..... .

Toilet

.,.'
.•.

T·

'

~ .Issue

. $ 49
IROU.

.....~1{~~-

• ••

aiEF BOY-AR·DE~

FrCJzen P1zza....

2~ .o:.

OI!IY.- .... .. ,,, j,, ,, , ,, , • .- ••. •.

":QI"* ·

_. ............... ........... lleo•t·

COUtmiY 'IIMII

IHOWIOAT

LEMONADE

$119

•.,.7 .

lO qr. Sill

lSOZ.

·4/$1

MAXW&amp;L HOUSI
MA11111UND

. Qfft£ .
39 oz. CM

$549

Limit One Ptr Customer
..... Only .......... .

Olllr

........ '"'

GILATIN

30Z.
BOX

4/$1

Limit One Per Customer
Goecl Only at Powell's
Offer Expires June 20, 1911

�Page-6-The Dally Sentinel

Pomerov-Micldleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 17, 1tll

Four co·ntenders a~ling as ·u.S. Open nears

TIRED EYE;S- Aorold Palmer squirts drops lulo his eyes lo reUeve
the glare and iaUgue Thesday afternoon during practice round at the U.

S. Open In Ardmore, Pa. Palmer and the other players faced temperatures lu the 90s with high bumldlly Tuesday wblle slzlug up the
Marion Golf Club's course. (AP Laserpboto).

ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) - At l!lBBt .
four potential leading contenders Including defending champion Jack ·
Nicklaus - are llllfferlilg from a
variety of ilia B!ld a.ilmellts on the
eve of the first .round of golf's 8lst
United Sta~ Open ChamplODB!Up.
Lee Trevino, J,ohnny Miller lind
David Graham join Nicklaus on a
list of the walking wounded that
would be more appropriate to a
National Football League training
camp than a golf course.
And stiU another top player, Andy
Bean, IB injured so badly he isn't
competlilg. Bean, winner of the Bay
Hill Classic three months ago, has
. his halld in a caat in an attempt to
repair some tom ligaments.
Nicklaus, who ' iB gunning for a .
record llfth American national
championship, has been troubled by
a stomach aliment for three months.
He .checked himself into a cUnic for
diagnosiB ~d treabnent last week
and has been given a clean bifi of
health.
Trevino, who beat Nicklaus in a
playoff for this title in 1971, the last
time the Open was played at the
historic Merion Golf Club,. hasn't
played competltively.in a month and
had a brief hospital stay for treat·
ment of a chronic bilck aliment.
Miller, a former Open champion
and a tw~rtime winner this season,
has been troubled by a shoulder injury that, at one time, threatened to
knock him out of the 156-man field,
He took cortisone shots early this
week and said "I'll play if I·have to
crawl around."
Graham, a former PGA champion
and winner at Phoenix early this

of the Yw title.
wbom are healtby ·
•
' Floyd; enjoylq.IIM: beatleiBOn of ·
blllt-year career, acofecl .his third ' ..,,._.__ _ __.11111!1. .1
victory of the
lui week. 1\
former Mutm and PGA cbamplon
be bas flnillbed 10\lel" than 12th oruY
'· For All Occasions
once Iince January.
· · Wilson Is, quite simply, the belt
player in the game. He hai won the
Masten and two otbef
tbli
year, holds his customary~ atop
Ph. 992-6342
.
the season's money-wliullnc 1ist and
317 N. 2nd ·
Middle.,Ort
i8 seeklhg a fifth consecutiVe Player
·

.. •

.

•
•

•

•

•

By Till AuocJ.ted Press
Toledo's starting ~tcher Terry
F~lt41\ made five runUcored In the
·~ IJIDiq ltand up for a 7-2 lll'
ternatlonal I...eague baseball victory
over the Tidewater Tides.
· In CJ!ber IL action Tuesday night,
Columbua edged Pawtucket 3-2,
!Ucbmlllld upeet Rochester 4-2 and

.e..on

events

•

· · '
·•
•
•

·
•

•

~

•

c:.
•

1
I.

•

•

•

•

I
I
I

·Saveonnew
Grandos .Coffee

~

•

~'

·

I

I

IAYI U" 10.40% ON

IOO... COIYCUTIIRS

I
I.

.PAlED TO OTHEIIUIDS" AT UOCEI.

"JM -lllfD ctST ee1 1m. 11 mu lUll• Ill

I
I
I
I
I
I

- --

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

ol

=.,.l¥ailab6t b

;..,.. ~ ~uired to be
1111 in tteh ICI'OQtf Store, IJictpl ..

, . . in . . .. " ... do M1 OIJt.CJI., ~
tltm. we _. ott. vou your chotee of 1 COI"'''PPI'ibte itlm,
~ twlil*l, rtftectino the llmt M\linga or a r~
which will . . . you to purchaee me ldvtrtiMd ittm •• ""

••tilldllfiOt.., :J'JdM. .

EllllDII LtW PIICI
EMBASSY

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
hill ..... WOU buy 11 krog. is guattnlM for your totil
· 1 tion ru;sn:lwa of !1'\lr'lufacM•. If y0u are not utis·
l'lld, I{IOglr wll rwMict your item vnrh the..,.... br1nd or a
lXII . . . . . tnnd 0t tlfund tour pyre hilt pnc:e.

IN·STOIE GIOUND 01
CHUI PAK

..

I•;

and enjoy a
taste of Europe
even more!
'

I~

11•

I .:

I'll,...,

Beef Patty Mix ...... lb.

1
I

lllf CHUCK AIM IONEUIS

:I ·.Botton Roll Roa1t ..

·

lb.

IN THI PIICI KIOGII

l-Ib.
Roll

Meat Bologna ........
· lb.

1
I

1
.
I
LIIIT 3PIIMDUITH COIPO• . I
I 12 LIMIT ONI COUPON PU FAMily
I
111
I • -::.:'..~: ::~~I.:~·~:il
I I •

••••••••••••••••••

1000 ISLAND . Flf.NCH 01

Boston Butt
SLICEOINTO
Pork Steaks

$219
·gC

PIOZEN

5-HI. AVG. WHOLE

~::~:.

Morton Pot

LIMIT 4PLWI

s119

MILKOI

Con

~~~: $1

l·lb.
Pkg .

ClOVll VAlUY

Ma....,rine
··l ·lb.
Quarters .. •••·

3
$549
CoHee .... ~~-

Mlnhmalow
Creme ..... IJJo•·•• ·

KIAPT AM. .CAN Oil
PIMINTO

.

0.• !lfttlles. 'lit~~-

Pretzel I ... "• .

KEllOGG'S

Special K ll·••· $139

...

sgc
49c

GOlD CRill

M•ah·

lb

mallowa ... ~ ••

110 SAVINGS ON
·C HANDILI., OUTDOOR
LIGHTS, COLONIAL
T~IU LAMPS.

&amp;., ............ .

~l

..•

•••

•

I"L-

•
......mea
... • J..... .
AYOfr'D"ll

M•••rin
..........
Vl.......,s ... 11·••·
c."
I(IOGII

Ylellll
~--

89C
Kal11r Rolls .. .. ....Pit;:

990
led' Pl•m• ........ :.
~h Lemont. I ~r ggc
.

15
Swllt Con ........ ~ar
~en Pepp~n.. 3,., 51
i:t Lettice .. .88°
C

IN TIIIIIUIII YIUOW

lunch

.

6C

lOlli AVAILAIU ONlY AT YOUIIIl'lll- I
POMIIOY-

s....

- .... .. . c••
IIOGII

u..

.....

fiiSH

lb.

.

HlllCIEST

Mlrtachino

~

PUSH IAKID
CALIPOINIA

PHI'
1· ·01 .
Halves ..... c••

TIL 7pm

••

79c:

69 C

Country OY~n...

CerHI; ..

r;iece•
S499
Fried Chicken luck.t $399·
SLICED TO 01011 LIAN TINDR
Roast Beef.. .......... lb.
fiiiHIAKID
l-Inch 99C
Lemon Pie .. .. .. ... ,..
(WITH WHII'PID TOPPING)
$2
99
Strawberry Pie ·~~:h

39f:

IE"~;r,~k:~ 511~
~;k:· ..... $14~
Coconut . •••·
•

$149

3$ 29

. R.C. 100,

~ier

C

29

AVAILAII.E ONL V IN
STOIIS WITH
DILIDEm.
HOT fOODS
AVAILAILE lltm

Diet Rite
or R.C. Cola

29

.

White or ·
BuHermllk Bread

iiTiMNI,tLE IOTTLES.

CaiHonla

1312 E IIIII AIL

15.5·oa .

KIOGII

ggc

JUMIOIID

SHOWIGOIIII!IS - Dan
FUIOIEalr UCII1l

Pork 'N'

Beans .......

"YONDAU

It's time again for The lighting Center to make big savings possible. Name brand
lighting fixtures can be yours at hard to believe low prices~ But quantities are ........
limited, so come early for the best se.lection.
All sales are final. :

sPaL PIICD Ofl srBiiL

69

c

AVONDAlE

GOlD CIISI

Kroger
-Sherbet ......... ~'·c:;~l.
KIOGII
$129
Cottage Cheese .... t.:,~·
KIOGII
2
luHercrust Bread .2f::~·
·
DIOOOIANT
10
$199
Right Guard .. .. .. .. ... c::·
2

Lighting Sale

.............. lb.

s:ithfleld Bacon
KAHN'S
Meat Wieners .....
COUNTIY CLUI ICE

5

Beans .. .. .. 16·••·
Con

49c

• 3 $109
Piet ~~!·.

Avondale

FICiur .. .. .. . ,;~b

Green

Mixed Fryer P•rts
lb.

Kroger
......
Drtssing ... ....

AVONDALE CUI

Grade A
Large Eggs

HOU'YfAIMI.
U.S.O.A. IIIPICTID

LOW PIIC[

95c

:

Kroger
• ..... •...
·oo .
Gel1t1n

19

$

I

[I( IIIli

.,......

.I ·

·~-~J 149

IT ALIA.H LIQUID ,

$1 09

1 u.s. GOV"T GIADED cHOICE.

$129

SAVE
40c

A ILEND OF lllf I HYDIATED TEXTUIED
VEGITAILE PIOTEIN KIOGEI"S PIO

I

Gunnoe's
Sausage

1·:

::s

IEMIA5SY

Any Size Pkg. $129
Ground Beef .... lb.

SQUHO DIALIIS.

(2-LI. lOLL ... $2.17).
WHOLE HOG

AVONOAU

Sweet
PHI ........ 17·01.
Con

CHOICE

0000 MINOAY, JUNI 14 THIU SATUitOAY , JUNI 20, I til

~

Salad
.
30' " '
DrtiSing....
Jo •

USDA

CCWYIIGHt'ltll • THI 110011 CO. ITIMS AND ,_ICES

Pro sports transactions

HTING CENT

Second inning. George Frazier, pit- Parks,~.
ching the last three and twO'thirds
innings, got the aave.
In the eighth, Laribee hit another·
Richmond'· itoche~ter Z
long fiy ball down the right field line,
Larry Wbiseitton's two-nm triple
which just went foul. Red Sox in the fourth inning helped lead
Manager Joe Morgan was thrown Richmond to its victory over
out of the game for arguing the call.
Rochester.

.

WI IISIIVI THI liGHT TO LIMIT QUANnTIIS. NONi

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY.
J
&amp;20

The Daily Sentinei-Pagl!-7

The losing pitcher was Danny

mitz with the winning nm in the

Charlie I'uleo, lM, took the Joss.
Collimbua, S, Pawtucket Z
ColiUIIbUa, with Bill CaStro pitching, acored three runs in the first
two inning~! and held on to defeat
Pawtucket.
castro, ~. picked up his second
win in two starts as a Clipper as
Juan Espino drove in Danny Scb-

CharJestonovercamesyraCWIIS-7.
.have a bad game. Ies a
Felton, now +4, gave up a lead-off psychological thing, but I've seen it
home nm to Mike Howard In the first happeri a lot of times." . . ,
·
Inning, . the aizth. of tbe year for · The Mud Hens had six hits in the
Howard.
second Inning, Including solo home ,
"A lot of times when you give up 8 · nms by Mark Funderburk, his 11th, ·
hit to start the game, you have a and Johnny Walker, his tbtrd. poe
good game," Felton said. "U you Estes also drove in two runs in the
strike the first batter, you ususUy second with a single.

IN POMEROY ANDGALLIPOLISSTOR~S .

' I

•

Toledo, Columbus, Charleston post diamond triumphs

PliY.k.J '' Tim Walllon and Tom Kite, all of

year, declines to dilcull hi.
problem l)ut bu 80Uiht medical belp
inthelutCOiiJ)Ieqhnielll: ,'
,
Nicklaus, ~Uy relieVed tljat his
problem
dl a relatively·minor
DBI~!fe, shot 8 85 in biB flrst pra~ce
round 111 Merion and appears to be
fll'8l" the.peak of his game.
He bas not won.thllaeuon but, ~~
age 41, be plays 8 llgbt sebellule and
concentraleuolely on golf's majora,
the U.S. and BrltlshOpe~, the.
Masters~nd PGA.
. .
Hla chief rivals are Ray Floyd,

w.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

wednesday, June 17,1981

16·cu .

...... c."

63C:.
49c
43c:
39c~

(ii!ITIII L. . PIICI)
-

V"

=%'. .~~~· $4 79
DAYT1111

110011

w..lflrlhlre
,.....

S.C. ... .. . ·~ ·
110011

Slelk
S.C. .. " .. 'tr.··

lot er-

COUNTIY OVIN
41-Cl

$1 09

c......... ,.,:

...
...- =.
,
·-·

IIG v•u.ll

Wlfen ..... '~·

22c '
59c '
~.~·
59c...;.
l::

T.-to

· ·"Ill.

hate ..... . ~··

O&amp;C

�•
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel ·

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Wednesday, June 17,1981

.. Wednesday, June 17,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oliio

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

.

Celebrate birthday

We,dding plans made

Health Review

The worth of salt.· , .do we

Bobby Jeffers
Bobby J elfers, Hilant Road,
Pomery, was honored on his 13th bir.thday with a wiener roast and overnight guests. Attending were Timmy
Evans, Jeff Evans, Syracuse; Steve
Hudson, Middleport; Gerald Moore,
Rod Harrison, B~ce Hysell, Rhonda
Jeffers and Mr. and Mrs. Roger Jeffers, Pomeory.
.
. Ice cream, cake and Kool-Aid
were served following the wiener
roast. Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Morris and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Gilmore and family, Mrs.
Leona Wallace and Raybon,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Pqton and family, Dexter, and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Jeffers, Syracuse.

By Robert G. Stoekm.al,
D.O., Ph.D.
Alallltant Profeuor of
Family Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
Q~TION: Because of my
condition my doctor told me to
restrict my salt intake to two
grams a day. Could you explain
the importance of salt to the
body?
ANSWER: The salt referred to
in the low salt diet is common
table salt, sodiurrt chloride. The
dietary ·restriction is actually
aimed at the sodium in the table
salt. Sodium (in its positively
charged ionic fonn) is a major
component of the fluid that
bathes and nourishes the body's
. cells (extracellular fluid). In addition sodium has an important
role in the regulation of body
water distribution and of the
balance of fluid pressure within
and outside of cells. It also functions in the maintenance of normal activity of muscle (including
heart muscle), nerve and cell
membranes in general.

The average dally American
diet contains about 10 to 14 grams
of sodium ch!oride (about two to
2~ teaspoonfuls) . Approximately
one-third is added. at the table,
one-third is added by processing
and cooking and one.-thlrd is contained as a natural part of the
food.
There Is general agreement
that the amount of salt in .the
average diet is far more than is
needed, the recommended
"adequate and safe" amount
being only about one.-fourth of
that typically consumed. A
healthy individual can handle a
wide range of sodium intake, conserving It when It is in short supply and excreting it when it is in
excess. Unfortunately about 10 to
20 percent of Americans bave a
predisposition to high blood
pressure which may be triggered
by excess salt intake. Also certain heart, kidney, liver and other
conditions can be aggravated by
excess sodium intake and retention.
Q~TION: What foods have
large amounts of salt? .

need it?

ANSWER: Proceaaed . foods ·
that contain large amounts of salt
include: canned and dried soups,
canned vegetables, cheeses,
tomato juice, frozen dinners, and
condiments such as soy sauce,
catsup and salad dreaslng. Items
such aa Instant pudding, breakfast cereals, ice cream, cookies,
cake and bread also contain sufficient amounts. Baking s«$,
bakillg powder, monosodiuni
gultamate (MSG), soft drinks, .
soffened water and even
medicines contain sodium. ·
Q~TION: What can I do· to
limit my intake?
ANSWER: CUt back, starting
with the salt shaker and obviously salty foods. Restrict your
intake of those foods I've mentioned. See your physician and
nutriUonist for an appropriate
diet and a more complete list of
foods to avoid. Don't rely on
labeling · since this is grossly
inadequate. Don't use salt substitutes without first discussing
them with your physician. Do
have regular checkups including ·
blood pressure determination.

Final plans have been made for
the wedding of Jull Whi!ehead,
ReedavWe, and Walter Hensch, Ckcleville, ,on Sunday, JWJe 21, al2:30
in the afternoon. Ronald LaUghery
Will perform the ceremony.
The Galbreath Chapel on the Ohio
University campus, Athens, wt11 be
the setting for the wedding with
music to begin at 2 p.m. by Dr.
Eugene Wickstrom, organist.
Miss Whitehead has chosen her
sisters, Jean frydman, Highland
Park, m., and Jane Hensch,
Cuyahoga Falls, to be her honor at- ·
tendar\ts. Her 9ther ajtendants will
' be Susie Goebel and Teresa Szntth,
Reedsville, Cindy Ritchie, Tuppers ·
Plains, and Bettie Bow of Athens.
Edward· Hensch, brother of the
groom, Cuyahoga Falls, will be the

David Grinnell and Alex ComeUa ci
Mayfield ViUage, Don Finkle, fileSOil, Arizona, Mark McCJeod, Mentor, and James Nemicek of Mayfield
Heights. Mial.sarah Frydman, niece
of the· bride, wW be the nower gtrl,
and Master Frankie Palmlaano,
nephew of the grc!Oill, wW be the.
ringbearer. The gracious custom ci
open church wt11 be obeerved.

Banquet June 19
The St. Paul United Methodist
~h, Tuppel'9 Plains, wW hold a
father-lion banquet June 19: at 8p.m.
Dinner will be served by the.
women Of the church with a program
in tribute to father to be .beld
following the dinner.
' ·

CORRECTION I
.

SPENCER'S
.
.

.

FAS~CHEK

IN CELEBRATION OF lHEIR
1st ANNIVERSARY IS GIVING.AWAY
5.BAGS OF GROCERIES

.

EACH DAY DURING .lHIS SPECIAL SAlf.

National Youth Fund. Barbara Fry .
reported 0!1 the county bake sale.
The legislative report was given by
Willlam Radford.
It was announced that the Pomona
Grange will meet on July 10 with
Jackson County Pomona Grange.
members to be guests. There will be
a potluck dinner at 7p.m.

Day theme with singing of the
national anthem. Mrs. Beuna
.
Grueser gave facts on the Star
Spangled Banner, and facts about ·
the War of 1812 were given by Elma
Loucks·. Nancy Morris read "What
'
is an American" and Helen
Blackston read "Flag Day Don'ts"
with Opal Grueser concluding with
r__:Th~e~pro~gr~a:m~c~a~m~-ed~o~ut~a~Fla~g:_~"0~1~d:G~lo~ry~.'~'_ _ _ _ _ _j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'TltE SPECIAL ON 1 LB. OF

FAS,...,CHEK BREAD IS 4 LOAVES FOR $1.29

1\

I

Bake sale Saturday
A bale sale will be held by the
junior high youth group of Middleport Church of Christ Saturday
beglnlng at 8 a.m. at Vaughan's Cardinal. Those with donaUons of baked
goods are asked to call Cathy Erwin,
992-3686.

Smith is patient
Sharon Smith, Pomeroy, is a
surgical patienl at University
Hospital in Columbus. Her operation
is scheduled for Thursday.

Thursday
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday at I: 15 p.m. at Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Nancy Morris is hostess, Susie
Pullins in charge of program and
Lottie Leonard in charge of the con-

test.

An n u~

Yield

FRIDAY
CLOSING PROGRAM, Riverview
Community vacation Bible school
7:30 p.m. Friday at Riverview ·
Elementary School; public invited. ,
ICE CREAM social and bake sale 1
at Chester United Methodist Church
starting at 7 p.m. Friday by United
Methodist Women.
FATHER-sON banquet wiD be
held at the St. Paul United Methodist
Church, Tuppers Plains Friday
beginning at 6 p.m. Dinner will be .
served by the ladies of the church.
Following the dinner a Father's Day
program will be presented.
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
potluck dinner 5:30p.m. at the center. Open to all ages. Take a covered
dish, own table service, and 50 cents
to cover the cost of the meat and
beverages. Music and dancing by
the Stringdusters. SA'ruRDAY
BAKE SALE, yard sale, car wash,
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at
Syracuse Fire Station by Meigs
Paramedic Class to raise funds for a
heart monitor.
SUNRISE GOSPEL singers, 1:30
p.m. Saturday at Middleport
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash St.
Public invited.

Current
lnleresl
Rate

12%
13.606%·

&amp;-month Money Market Certificate
$10.000 mimmummvestmen1 reQuir8Q . lnlt(eSI may ~e pajd 11lilnlhiy. Quaflerly or ai
maJUriiy direclly to you or translerred in!O anolher D~amona Savings account. EllacIIYft annual yield base~ on re1nves1men1 of principal and inleresl at malui'ily , This is
an annual rale sub;eclto change at renewal. Federal regulalions prohibit compound·
lng oi 1nlelesl and reQuirea subslanliai interest penally lor eatly withdrawal.

By Polly Fisher
Special con-espondeat
DEAR POLLY - We've redone
our kitchen walls with new waDpaper, but there
are some areas
where excess
paste dried on the
wallcovering. The
manufacturer recommends wiping
the dried paste off
with a damp
cloth, but this
POlLY
doesn'ts'lCm to work very well. I'm
afraid chipping or scouring will
damage the paper. Can you tell me
how to safely remove this dried
paste? - V.B.
DEAR V.B. - Most of the time, a
damp cloth will remove such spots.
If the paste is particularly stubborn
- and yours certainly seems to be sponge the spots with a solutioo of
sugar and club soda. Tbat should
handle the problem. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Before I visit my
doctor, I write him a letter asking
whatever questions are on my mind.
When I get to my appointment, he
can bave some of the answers ready
and there's no danger of my forgetting what I wanted to ask. - MRS.

The i8dlea auxiliary ci the Orange
· Fire Department will sponsor a
Father's Day dinner saturday, June
20, at the fire staUoo In Tuppers
Plains beginning at 4:30p.m.
ActlviUea Include crowning of a
father, cake walt, and special music
by the Francis Andrew band.

Potluck Friday
A potluck supper will be held at
the Senior Citizens Center Frill!ly at
5:30 p.m. The social is open to all ·
ages. Everyone Is Ill take a covered
dish and their own table ·sei'viee.
There will be 50 cent charge to
cover the cost of meat and beverage.
Following the supper, an evening of
muiic and dancing will be hefd with
the Stringdusters playing.

a

· Receive awards
Several awarda were received by
. the American Legion AuxiliarY
· Lewis Mahley Post ?JI:I, Middleport,
at the recent Eighth Dlatrict swnmer convention beld at Lancaster.
Representing the unit at the convention were Mrs. Lula Hampton,
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith, and Mrs •
Margaret Bowles, president. The
unit received awarda for community
sei'vice and veterans' affairs, took ·
first place in Group lin children and
youth and Americanism. They also
received a certificate of
achievement for having reached
goal on Oct. 'rl, 1980 making it the
74th goal unit, and citations from
Department and National for
meritorious service in carrying forward the program by enrolling a
1961 membership.

R.G.
DEAR POLLY - To store
blankets or quilts, I roll them up and
secure the rolls with a strip of nylon
hose. I find my linen closet holds
more and is neater when I use thi•

GosPEL INSPIRATIONS - "Tbe Gospel IDsplralloal'' wW be featured at the MI. UDioo Baptist
Cbun:b J'ath.er's Day services Juue Z1, all p.m. Pastor

Tom Dooley wt11 deliver tile message al moroiDg ser--

vtces.SandayScbooi1satt:45•.m.Followingthemorolqservlces a polluek dbmer wiD be served. Fathers
attending wiD be presented gUts.
.
•· '

'

·

Miss Juli Whitehead, bride-elect of
Walter Hensch, wa,; honored at a
bridal shower given recently at the
home of her aunt, Mrs. Denver
ReedsvilJ Hostesses M
W~ber, th Mrs ej hn S 'th Mrs.
Myers
M:.
Weber.
The bride's col~rs of orchid, suede
rose and pink were carried out In
d
ti
thr bout th
G~'!e~~lac~u:n a tab!:~=
with a pink cloth and an overlay of
white net to which waa attsched
flowers in the three colo1'9. Wedding
bells were suspended above the
table with streamer&amp;.
Games were played with prizes

bein~s .

\_

.

/1

,

oy Margaret Brown and Jane Hensch, siSter of the bndeJanice Young. The door prize was elect, Phyllis Larkins, Rose Niday,
awarded to Patty Grossnickle.
Marlene Putman, Janice Young,
Joymar golf
Punch, wedding cake, nuts and Mamie Buckley, Verna Rose,
decorated mints were served from a · Margaret Cauthorn, Nola Young,
winner named
plnk covered table centered with an Margaret Brown, Geraldine
Winnel'9 in goH for the Ladies
arrangement of orchid, rose and Holsinger,
Roberts, sarah,
AssoclaUon of the Jaymar GoH Club
pink silk flowers In a silver con- Suste and Nadine Goebel, Margaret
were Margaret FollrOO, low gross;
tainer. Orchid candles flanked the and Patty Grossnickle, Lucille
Joan Childs, low net; Nonna Custer,
flower arrangement.
Smith, Phyllis Hetzer, Janet and
low putts. The women play at the
Attending and presenting gifts Usa Hoffman, Elizabeth Smith,
club every Tuesday at 8:30a.m.
were Maxine Whitehead, mother of Dolores Frank, and the hostesses.
Other playel'9 were Grace Elch,
the bride-elect, Gladys Meredith,
Sending gUts were the Hensch
Liz .CUUer, Jane Brown, Elizabeth
Fay sauer, Lillian Pickens, Grace family, Marilyn and Susan Hannum,
whse, Nancy Reed, Sandy Koenig,
Weber, aunts of the bride, Teresa Gladys Williams, Phyllis and Kim
Mary Morrl.!, Peggy Moore, Cathy
Carr, Frances Reed, Mary Alice Reed, Betty and Sheila Bucbanan,
Gard, Garren Snyder, Maxine
Bise, Betty Bow, Janet Connolly, Nancy Buckley, Barbara and Edith
Guldll, Velma Rue, Donna Nease,
Opal Harris, Vivian Humphrey, Henderson, Ella Qlborne, Mae
and lJUian Moore.
Hump.b rey, Cathy Spencer,
•
Roselll8ry and Lauren Young,
Darlene ~· Jodie Smith, Violet
Ice cream
and
Dee Smith, Nell Wilson, Mabel
WEDNESDAY
LADIES
AUXILIARY,
Rutland
Hetzer,
Teresa Collins, Barbara
social Sqturday
REVIVAL at Morris Ciapel Chur- Fire Department, 7:30 p.m. Wed-' M~ters, Usa Grossnickle, Eiica
'
The Unileli Methodist Women of ch, county road 35, between Port- nesday at the firehouse in Rutland: · Boring, Pat Martin, sandy Cowdery,
the Cheater United Methodist Chur- land Rnd Racine, Wednesday Ann Barrett to take the traveling Pamela Chaney, Ruth Anne and Kay
ch wW hold an Ice cream social and through June 20, at 7:30 p.m. prize. All membel'9 urged to attend Balderson, Mace! Barton, Karen
bake sale at the church beginning at . nightly. Rev. George Hoschar guest since final plans wW be made for the Walker, and Robin Douglas.
speaker. Special singing each ox roast to be held July 4.
7 p.m. Friday.
evening. Public invited.
'111URSDAY
CPR CLASSES to be given WedName omitted
nesday and 11rursday at fire house in
FIGURE FIGHTERS meeting,
..
The name of Carol Smith was Tuppe1'9 Plains at 1 p.m. To register 6:30p.m. at Racine Fire Station. For
omitted from the final six weeks phone 667-J94! or667-3644. Sponsored more information call 992-2156 or
honor roll of the Meigs Junior High by Tuppers Plains ER Squad.
949-2607.
School in Middleport.

·a~

Da~d

sa~dy

niethod. - MABEL
DEAR POLLY - If your,
houseplants have wilting, yellowing:
. leaves; even when !he soil is damp,'
you may be over-fertilizing. Another:
sign of over-fertill7.atioo is a white or:
yellowish crust on the surface of tilt·
soil. To cure the condition, decrease
feedings and water the plantil
thoroughly several times to drain,
the excess salts out of the soil. Be:
sure to allow this
water to•
drain away as fast as possible. - :
BEN .
DEAR POLLY - You can kill
slugs in the garden by sprinkling salt
on them. It sounds a little strange,
but it really works! - R. R.
DEAR R. R. - Not much stranger:
than my own method. In my last gar-·
den, I used to set out sballow pans o(
beer among the lettuces. The slugs
would crawl into the beer and die.
This summer I'm going to keep the
salt shaker handy as well. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - This Pointer bas
saved me quite a bit of money. I put
petroleum jelly on the gasket around
the door of my refrigerator to keep it
lubricated and tight-fitting. There's
less chance of having to replace the
gasket, and the tigher seal saves
energy. - ROSE
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colWIUl. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

excess

' ·1,lVeS '
SaVe
•

·

.
every. fallllly knew CPR. The
Amertcan Heart Assoc~alton has
~oumaybeabletosavealifeifyou developed a basic life support
k
cardiopulmonary program that teaches CPR to local
~:::Citation (CPR). CPR is a basic police, fire and rescue squads and
, life-saving technique used to revive other mterested persons.
.
a person whose heart has stopped- Learning the CPR techmques
. beating _ a condition called cardiac takes only a few boors, but knowmg
arrest. A combintion of chest com- , • it couldsa~e a life. Anyone can lear
ression and mouth-to-mouth ,.· CPR, but 1t must be learned and perbreathin is used to keep blood and formed correctly. If someone who
oxygen Jowing throughout the body has not receaved
trammg traes
until the victim can receive ad- to perform the technaque, he can do
vanced cardiac life support.
more harm than good.
.
In order to prevent brain damage,
CPR can be le~med by s upervtsed
CPR ust be performed within the practtce on spectally-desagned manfirst f~w minutes after a victim has niki~. It should never be practiced
stopped breathing. Within four to six on a hvmg ~rson.
.
..
minutes after cardiac arrest, the
Persons mterested m learnmg
brain will not receive enough oxygen more about CPR may contact the
to supply aU its cells. In those parts Meigs County Heart Branch at P. 0 .
of the brain where the cells are star- Box 100, Pomeroy 45769.
ved of oxygen, the cells will start to
dieandcannotbereplaced. CPRcan To meet June 18
help keep oxygen supplied to the
brain.
Rock Springs Better Health Club
Over one million Americans suffer will meet June !8, at I : 15 p.m. at
heart attacks each year. Almost Rock Springs United Methodist
650,000 of these people die - more Church.
than baH of them before reaching
Nancy Morris is the hostess, Susie
the hospital.
Pullins is in charge o[ the program
Thousands of lives could be saved . and Lottie Leonard is in charge of
each yer if at least one person in the contest.
Would you know what to do if
omeone's heart stopped beating?

CP~

.

·"

IN TIME FOR DAirS DAY
•

'

TRUCKLOAD SALE
THURSDAY 12 NOON
TO 9 P.M. &amp; FRIDAY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
'

'3995

SAVE 40% TO.50% OFF THE TRUCK
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
. i,\c:,

~,~t\.~

When you've gott~ rely on y~ur car, rely on maintenance-free Delco
Free~omll Battenes. For .Quick, powerful starts in any kind of weathereven m the grueling heat of sum~er. Get ready r)OiN,for the summer driving
months ahead. Ask for the Inflat1on Busters. Get Delco Freedom TI starting
power today.
·
*Offer ends June 30, 1981 or when supplies run out.

AC·DELCO.

a---.. .

~..,;,;,--------•AVIIilllllllt thef·wi·Pinl PM Auto...

-~--

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS -~uta•-.

.111 • •

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
144 w. second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone: 992-2139

Route33

Mason, W,'VI.

PlioiM: ~64-773-5511
'

• •••f-

POLAROID ONE STEP
CAMERA

RUBBER BACK SAXONY CARPET
'5.99 sq. yd.

I··

CPR ffiay

'
W:h
'
h
d
h
if
h
.
.
ea
onoree
0
s
ower
.
JUlZ Zte

Social ·calendar

DEMOCRAT CLUB, 8 p.m. Thursday at the Carpenters Union hall in
Pomeroy.

Highest Yield.
Guaranteed Rate.
Erfecl ive

f;other's Day
dinner set

::u

Social Calendar

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Well entertained recently at their home
with a dinner honoring their
daughter, Amber Lee, on her fifth
birthday.
Those attending were her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Well
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles White,
Mrs. Doris Snowden and Terry, Mrs.
Kilty Darst, Keith and Ginger, Mrs.
Pearl Hoffman, and Sarah Jane
Harris.
Sending gifts lo Amber were her
three aunts, Miss Beulah White,
Mrs. Hazel Hawk, and Mrs. Florence Hannay, and Mr. and Mrs. Herb
Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Darst and Craig
and Miss Helen Crabtree.
A cookout is being planned at the
hOme of Amber's godparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Anderson, Middleport.

,.

Excess paste on walls

.I

RACINE, OHIO

Petition on hazardous waste topic of :Grange
A petition which would place on
the ballot an amendment to the constitution giving townships and counties the power to regulate land use
particularly as it relates to the dwnping of hazardous waste was signed
by members of the Rock Springs
Grange at a meeting Thursday night
at the hall.
It was noted
that the
Ohioa
Legislature
has already
set up
board to decide about hazardous
waste dumping without any
regulatory control from the area in
which the dumping is to occur.
A contribution was made to the

best man. Other groomsmen will be

Polly's,Pointers I

In and
:around Meigs

WE MUST $ELCTHIS TRUCKLOAD BY .FRIDAY AT 9 P,M.
'

Cash .&amp; Carr.v

WAYSIDE FURNITURE

AND
Polaroid'• OneSIOII
The WO&lt;Id's simple.! camera

BURST

HEAVY DUTY 3 TRAY
'

TIMEX

TACKLE BOX

WATCHES
·.
15% OFF

"
.sUNGlASSES
, DISCOUNTED 15%
HIIIMUK

· FAlHER'S.. DAY

BUXTON &amp;

ITY

BI_LLFOLD,S
·lf.t OFF

OLD SPICE COLOGNE
'5"

CROSS

PEN &amp; PENCIL SET

DAFTER SHAVE.. ..... '4°'

CARDS "Tile
Verv
Best"

00
MENNEN SKIN BRACER..'2
'18
11-----~!!'-...a.~~~~~-t ENGLISH LEATHER
AFTER SHAVE ............ '4 00

LIGHTERS, RJNTS
&amp; R.UID.

ANE SEI fCTION OF

LEATHER MUSK
OOLOONE ••••••••••••••••• '610
CHANEL FOR MEN ••••• •12•

i:AJioE COLOGNE........... ..
STE_RLING AFTER
PIPES, AND POPULAR
&amp; COlOGNE SET. •••
(J
33! MATCHABEUI,
MUSK GIFT SET.

�Pag-1o-The Daily Sentinel

FA C july 4th art entries due
Area artists, both professional lind·

amateur, who plan to participate In
the Annual River Recreation
Festival Exhibit to be held on July 4
INn 10 a.m. untl15 p.m. In the city
park In downtown Gallipolls; must
have their entries delivered to
Rivetby no later than 3 p.m.
Tuesday,June23.
Riverby, the home of the French
Art Colony, is located at 530 First
Ave. In GaJIJpolls. According to Jan
Thaler who is chairing this year's
Art E;xhibit, entries will be accepted
on June 18 between 10 a.m. and 3
p.m., June 20 and 21 between I p.m.
and 5 p.m., and June 23, between 10
a.m. and 3 p.ll'l. No more than fiv.e
entries will be accepted per artist.
Entry forms may be hand delivered
with the art objects. Special French
Art Colony labels must be attached
to all entries, and they will be
available at Riverby, Mrs. Thaler
said.

Assisting Thaler in cataloguing
and p-epartng the entries for
judging will be Ginger Taynter. Mrs.
Taynter reminds aU artists who plan
to exhibit their work must have
produced since July, 1979 and not
previously exhibited in this show. All

Wldnesday, June 17,1981

Ohio

entries must be framed or matted
and secilrely wired for hanging.
Matted wprks should be covered
with acetate, available at Riverby,
have a protective backing, and have
a hanger attached. ~lings not
meeting these requirements may be
disqllallfied.
Entries wiU be judged and ribbons
awaided in each category. Artists
may register at a professioilal or
amateur level, with amateur status
divided according to adult, high
school or elementary school level.
The professional category includes
those who are or have earned their
liVing through their art and those actively selling their work and
receiving conunissions regularly.
The artist wiD determine his or her
status.
Purchase prize awards wiU be
selectedbythejudgesincooperation
with the purchaser. Chairing the
purchase awards portion of the total
program will be Peggy Evans.
Anyone wishing to make a purchase
award should contact Mrs. Evans at
44&amp;-1819 or 44&amp;-2325. "Individuals or
businesses wishing to make a purchase award find this program most
beneficial in building an outstanding

Astrograph

ari coUectlon . for their ~ or
. · business, due to the es:ceUent wort
that is offered by area art1111.
Although those who participate In
the show with their art come
primarily from the tri-state. area,
there is no restriction on place of
residence for artists who exhibit Jil
the River Recreation Festival Annual Show," said 'thaler.
Three judges WiD juror the 1981
show, with the judging taking place
at 10 a.m. June 30, and the purchase
award selection at 10 a.m. on July I,
at Riverby. Appl'Oiimately 35 to 40
works will be selected this year to.be
lnstaUed in the galleries at the FrenchArt Colony for viewing from July
7, throughout the remainder of the
mon\h. Announcement of the judges
wiD be made early next week.
Entry forms should be picked up
at Riverby or at PJ's in downtown
GaJIJpolls.
In addition to Thaler, Taynter and .
Evans, assisting in this year's show
wiD he Pat Bastiani in charge of per·
sonnel to lnstaU and diamanUe the
show in the city park July 4, and
Marjorie Rinehart accepting the en'
tries at Riverby. ·

Junell, 1911 .
. T~ls coming year vou should be
able to make certain changes
which you have been unable to
make thus far. One coulq be quite
beneficial where your work or
career Is concerned.
GEMINI (May 2l·June 20)
There ore possibilities for gains
today from joint ventures.
However; what you reap may not
be too larjle, nor Is It apt to come
tooeMIIy. ·
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
Companions todaY wltl reflecl
your treatment of them. To win
their cooperation you must first
show

a

willingness

to

Volunteers finalize plans
for July 4 celebrations

HEARING TESTS SET
tHURSDAY,

For Pomeroy, Ohio

.· EUCTRONIC

'
'lbe ~ Volunt.- Fire Depa1'
tment, during ita ncuJar meeting
'!'lltlda7 evenlrig, diacullled the upcoming "Fourth of July"
celebraUon that It 11p01110n eac~
year. After a 11!111 diacullion, details
of tile celebration were announced. ·
This year's celebration Includes a
fuU day of acheduJed actlvitll!l! in the ·
Racine area, including a beautiful
flreworg dilplay that wiU serve aa a
. grand f\llal~. 'lbe fheworb d!splay
JB one of the main attractions, and as
in the paat W1li be • .quality production. DonatiOns. are atlll .being accepted for the fireworks fund drive.
A flag-riiling ceremony wiU kick
off the day at 9:45 a.m. in
recop!Uon of our Country's Independence and : freedOm. At 9:15
a.m. parade entrees wiU line up at
the Southern Junior High School
playground. The parade wiU begin
at 10 a.m. and proceed through
Racine, circling back to the starting
site for judging of Ooata and
bicycles. '
·
The Racine Volunteers wU1 pay
three cash prizell in two categories
to award winning noata. There will
be theme and non-theme Clltegories,

JUNE 119 A.M.

HEARING TESTS

TQ12 NOON

Will BE Given By
H. William Mattingly

be

cooperative yourself.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Even
though you·ve been working a bil
harder than usual lately, ther~
are still some tasks whlcri you've
failed to handle and should take~
care of today.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) When
participating In fun activities
today,, relax and enjoy yourself.
1.1 ,you worry about things you feel
you should be doing, you'll spoil a
goodtlme.
·
LIBRA CSept. 23·0ct. 23) A
slow start Is likely today, but
your determination grows as you

BEL TONE Consultant Who Will Be At;
. MEIGS INN, POME~OY,,OHIO
Anyone who has irouble hearing is welcome to have it hearing teat us· ·
ing mode~n electronic equipment to determine If his loss IS one which
may be helped. Some of·the cause~ of hearing loss will be explained
and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
We Also Strvicund Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Banerles And Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN CAL.L FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 992-3629

become more Involved
especially if there is something
you went completed.
;

FArnER'S DAY

SCOR PID (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
You have -the ability today to
determine that which Is practical
and that whi ch is · wishful
thinking. Adhere to your logical
assessments.

JUNE 21

___

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.

21) Your· material prospects are

Ihla Kimes recipient
of 50-year pin award
A 00-year pin was presented to
Ihla Faye Kimes at the recent
meeting of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, held recently
at the haD.
Dorothy Ritchie, district deputy,
made the presentation and Mrs.
Kimes had a brief response in appreciation. It was noted that Betty
Roush had earlier presented Evelyn
Gaye Gaul with a 00-year pin at her
home recently.
Ritchie, chainnan of the good of
the order committee, reported that
she had taken potted flowers to Hat·
tie Frederick and Leona Babcock,
charter members, at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
Mary K. Holter, council captain,
thanked all those who took part in
the Memorial Day parade and had a
part in the program at the cemetery.
Alta Ballard extended thanks to the

members who went to the funeral
home at the time of her father' s
death. It was noted that Mrs. ilatr
cock is hack at the Pomeroy Health
Car e Center after bein g
hospitalized.
At the June 16 meeting quarterly
birthdays will be observed. There
will also be a silent auction by the
miscellaneous committee.
Attending the meeting besides
those named were Unda Beasley,
Opal Hollon; Margaret Amberger,
Margaret Tuttle, Thelma White,
Zelda Weber, Inzy Newell, Daisy
Canter, Ethel Orr, Ada BisseU, Mae
McPeek, Esther Smith, Doris
Grueser, Enna Cleland, Nina Win·
die, Thelma McMannis, Leona Hen·
sley, Lora Damewood, Ada Neut·
zling, Cathy Clifford, Sandy White,
and Carolyn Holley.

Reedsville UMW meet
Reedsville United Methodist
women met with Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, with Mrs. Lorraine Wigal
assisting hostess. Mrs. Dolly Reed
opened the meeting by reading
Proverbs 31, followed with prayer by
Mrs. Marlene Putman . The
program, entitled "God's Love,"
was _led by Mrs. Sandy Cowdery and
assisted by Mrs. Violet Satterfield. A
candlelight service to honor
Mother's Day was held with several
recorded songs played. The
program closed with "The Lord 's
Prayer."
·
The business meeting was con-

dueled by Mrs. Reed, president.
Nineteen shut-in calls were made.
Cards were signed for several frien·
ds. Mrs. Puiman gave a report on
the visit to Pomeroy Health Care
Center. District meetings were an·
nounced. Bible quizzes were held.
Refreshments were served to Mrs.
Leona Ruth and Mrs. Virginia
Walton, guests; members, Mrs. Ver·
na Rose, Mrs. Reed, Mrs. Cowdery,
Mrs. Satterfield, Mrs. Puiman, Mrs.
Vivian Humphrey, Mrs. Sandy
Roberts, and Mrs. lillian Pickens.
Mrs. Roberts was awarded the
door prize.

more than you' re entitled to

Strive to be grateful, not greedy. ·
C,tiPRICORN &lt;Dec. 22·Jan. 19)

Wolfe, Brendlzutle.

Gnde I - Shown Diddle, Leoliee Dudding,
E!Wobeth Smith, Melanie VanMeter.

Grade 5- Patrece Orcle, Leanne Clark, Mar-

Special singers set ·
The Sunrise Gospel Singers wiD be
at the Ash St. FreewiU B11ptist Chur·
ch in Middleport at 7:30 p.m. Satur·
day. The public is invited.

greater today If you are able to
operat'e independently. Free
yourself from. things or persons

Name ..... ............. .... ... ... ........ .......... .... ..... ....

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)
Sometimes it's helpful to get off

Address .. . .. . . ........ : ..... ..... , ... .. ...... . .......... .. . .... .

alone so that one can sort things

out pr ivately. Today a little
solitude will help you collect your
thoughts.
PISCES . (Feb. 20·March 20)
This is a good day to spend some

OUTSTANDING MOTHER Mrs. Helen MIUer was selected
" oullltanding mother of the year" ·
and presented gift&amp; at the recent
mother-daughter banquet held at
the Bradford Church of Christ. A
Cbrlsllan lor 69 yean, abe was
also the oldest mother present.

Entertain ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills entertained with a dinner party in
honor of their children who were aU
home together for the first time in
over three years.
At the dlriner were Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Boring, CaUoway, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. David Mills and Christie
Mesa, Ariz.; Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Riley, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Martin, Michael and Matthew,
ReedsviUe; Mrs. Grant Boring
ReedsviUe; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Fischer and Mrs. Nora Mills, Middleport.

cess over choppy seas.
TAURUS (April 20·May

Casual Boots, Worlcshoe1
and H~usesllppers.

•

have to make today may not be

easy ones. Nevertheless, do what
is best, not merely what is most

UMMtomeet
Men from the Syracuse CIUBier of
the United Methodist Church met
recently at the Forest Run Church
and decided to hold an
organizational session of the United
Methodist Men's group on July 8.
The meeting wiD be held at the
Forest Run Church at 7:30 p.tn. Kenneth Imboden was present and
discussed the present emergency
system that serves the county. The
number to caD in case of any
emergency is~ -

.·

"Next To Elberfelds In Pomeroy"

expedient :

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

.·''

Phone 742-2100
Prici!S Effective Thru Saturd;;y,

•

,.

,.•

/Oth

JtHH!

:~

•

Eckrich

SMOKED SAUSAGE .......... ~~~~ $1.89

The Life Science Church wiU be
The Democrat Club wiD meet
Thursday evening at 8 p.m. at the featured on WSAZ-TV3 Chapel Sunday, II a.m. to11 :30a.m.
Carpenters Union haD in Pomeroy.

PACKAGED WIENERS•••••••~~!:$1.29

''

HAM SAlAD ••••••••••••••••••• ~~•.$1.39

.~TRUCKLOAD

.PARKING LOT SALE
~~~;3· CL95EOUT
SALE

UMITED QUANnTY
· MUST BE SOLD
Tj)DAY •••

'tHESE .ARE BEAUTIFUL CABINEtS. ••
DON'T PASS·UP lHESE BARGAINS
.

to
'

60%
.

OR MORI

(Y!a(§~
Air Conditioner ·

ODD BATHROOM BASE CABINETS,
Wl.l. CABINEts .... SEE 1HEM AT
1'

TJII UGHIING CINTIR

·------··---.,--·-----=-~-~. -- -----~

r

l' .

liJieclal

pi'IIgram for troubled played voUeybaU and basebaD," prognim waa about four months.
School truancy and running away
teeni noted ita flnt anniverBBry this aaid Bl'e!!kenridge.
Jiane. The ·Conununity Mental
. When it opened ~ year after are the most frequent problell'll that
Health Center's Children's Reaiden- much cOntroversy, the Children's · brings the teens into the program,"
fee Is equlred. Aa a grand finale to tlal Treatment Program hou8es up Residential Treatment Program said Breckinridge.
Referrals have generally been
the show, Racine firemen wiU to 10 adoleiC8nts from Gallia, replaced the Nei.sOnville Program
made
from juvenile court or
provijle the comedy by dreaing up Jacbon and Meigs Couitties.
that housed children from aU over
for a beauty pageant. The To date, 25 children from the ages the state: "Thj.!r new, local facility Children's Services. "Moat of the
ffi!ISQuaraded 1oca14 wiD be featured of · 11 to 18 t.ve resided at .. the has proved to have had several ad- children have been on probation or
in the s[!C101 and "Misll Racine" wiD proV&amp;tn's GaJIJpolls home, repOrted · · vantages over NelsonviUe," said are now on probation," said
be crowned.
BiD Breckenridge, the ·program's Br.eckenrtdge. The teens attend Breckenridge. He said that 40 per·
The department e:qll'esles ita coordinator. He said that one local schoolll and are close to their cent of the children have been in
thanks to those already entered in resident completed high school this families. "The program is meeting a lamer care and that 40 percent came
the parade and talent show; Au area· spring.
.
significant need here," he said. With from one-parentlamilies.
"Our primary goal is to get the
organizations, Churches buainesaes
"On June 5, for the first arr an intensive program such as this,
clubs, and individuals ~re
nlve~ celebration; the Program "We have a chance to try many dif· child hack into his or her own
invited · to participate In the ac- staff mVIted back aU the people wh!l ferentthings until we find something home," said Breckenridge. Clinical
staff of the program uae iildividual
tlvities. For further information or had been in residential care, and that works."
to enter · write: July Fourth their families. We had a cook out and
"The average length of stay in the and lami!y"therapy to work through
problems.
Celebration," P. 0. Box 181, Racine, .
.
Ohio 45Til or call 94t-H, 93-2520. Poultry exhibitors must meet new rules
Albelll UYetiOtt Sales
Below Is an official entry for those
. S.Oirday,Jue U,IJII
Poultry exhibitors at the Meigs a negative test for Pullorum disease CATIU: PRICES'
not yet entered in either the parade
F -r Steer" (Good arid ChoiceJ3JJO.iOO lbo.
County
Fair in August miiSt meet within 12 months; or poultry must 53UOO:
or talent show.
51J11.100 lbo. l&amp;.oo.M.
.
·
requirements
of
the
state
on
poultry.
have
had
a
negative
test
Pullorum
F-r ~e~en (Good and choice J:tO&amp;IiOO lbo.
'
· According to regulations received disease within 90 days of the lair; or, 14.5t-!6.Zi; 51J11.100 lbo. 3&amp;-49.75.
Feeder Bull!' (Good and choice) :tJJO.iOOJbo.
by the MeiKS County Fair Board,
exhibited poultry must test negative 51.5N2; 51J11.100 Jbo. 16-6$.75.
Steen and Heilen t9.50-66.90.
each exhibitor must comply with one for Pullorum disease at ·the Slauchter
Slaq~ter Bull! ' (Over 1,010 lbo.) « .it-!6.20.
Sr;J/e Saturday
of the foUofring: poultry to be
fairgrounds at a state approved Slaughter Cows: UtiUties 43.85-48; CaiYlera
andCutters »-44.:1!.
,. A bake sale, yard sale and car exhibited must have been obtained tester.
Cow" ( By tlleHe&amp;d ) :!0-44~ .
The fair board reports also that Springer
wash will be held at the Syracuse from a Dock or hatchery or InCow and Calf Pairs (By the Unit) 420-M5.
eals' cChoice and Prime )16-41.50.
Fire Station Saturday from 9 a.m. to dividual which Is a participant in the sheep exhibited at the fair this year vBaby
Calves: (By the Head) 3$-92.50.
must
be
registered
and
papers
must
National
Poultry
Improvement
HOG PRI CES,
5 p.m. by the Meigs County
Hogs : (No. I Barrows and Gilts ) 2:1»-2.'ll lbs.
Paramedic Class. Proceeds will go Plans for the eradication of disease be pres ented to confirm 48.»-41.00.
registration.
·towards the purchase of a heart (all commercial Ohio hatcheries
Butcher Sows 30.2:5-40.
Butcher Boar:s 36-t1.10.
This year's fair is scheduled from Feeder
meet this requirement); or poultry
monitor.
·
Pigs : (By the Head) W9.
must be from a flock which has had Aug. 18 through Aug. 22.
A

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cordtauf

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0

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· ( .·.. tiOBSTETTER REALTY
Office 742-2003
s. Hobstener Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - Com·
mercia! building , 2
story, s. 2nd St .• Mid·
dleport, $26,500.00.
NEW LISTING - L.arge
11 room. 2story home, 2

Ge~orge

baths, new gas

Could nave

•

0

•

•

MOORE'S AMERICAN
HARDWARE
"There's something for everyone at Moore's"
124 West Main St.
992-2848

SUPER SAVINGS .ON FATHER'S DAY SPECIALS
.

JUNE 18, 19 &amp; 20

furna ~e .

2

apart ..

the other . Ask ing
S37 .500.00 . .
FARM - 194 acres
mlless. Van zandl Rd .•
near Mine No. 1. Asking

• 14"CUT

HOMELITE
ELECTRIC

ss.s.ooo.oo.

OW,NER FINANCING
- Pomeroy . Nice two
story brick home. 3
large bedrooms. w,
baths , kitchen and
family room comb. with
llreplace. Good In·
vestment for $26,500.00.
. REDUCED 48 acre
farm with 2 story larm
pond,

.......age
12 oz. Bordens Pimento
Single Sliced. $

EIIGIIIE OIL

ST-40

ments, live in one, rent

'

WEED TRIMMER

I ', Ill'

several

Phone 742·3092

,. . ....

ST-80

PUBLIC AUCTION ·
e
e
e

CELERY........~.~~~~.4f

atEESE..~-~?: ...1.59 POTATOES .... ~~R. '2J9

·•ut· relalt 1114.111

12 oz. Donald Duck

ORANGE JUICE••••••••••••••••• ~:~. 99'
INSTANr COFFEE •••••••••••·.~:~.$4.7 9

14

Kraft Deluxe

SUPER AUTOIA TIC CHAIN SAW •
SXL Chain Saw 16''

Ju.._ &amp;1!·~

us oz.

YIICAI

MIISTIH

•uuNS

#A944C
!ttAD!K sr~tr.. ~Y

• FULL 5-YF.AR WAR RANTY

.
)

• UnbreAkable steel t asc
• Stan 11ess steell1ner

• Keeps conJenls hoi or cold ali oay
rt l~t~hl lrJ

t'] 1ll

IAUPIIICI
Hom..te•luo.,XL
• Automatic and manual chllin oiling
• Oiaplacement 3.55 cu. in . (57.4cc)
• Chromed chain
• Full J'ldlua handle bar
• HtiYV duty
IALAD

= SJ.9J77
•MS:t

W,

.

Mix or Match

Can

glk

~~·························· ·

CIHL
CIMI

·

w

.,.

.

~ ~~ •••••.........•... ~::.~
16 oz. Luclty LHt

..

Can

.2/Sl M

llr~~······················

.....

·.

El~

lilY RfiE PuootNG.·........ u ..~::.2/79'

....... w

TRASH BAGS

• Milk• ·lil

12.5 en. Morton House

POrk&amp;GIII},

$4811

THERMOS
BOTTLE

10 oz. Folgers

~~!!~TE ······~··········~:~.$1.29
CREAM OF MUSHROOM
sour
.....
· .~ .•..... ~ ................2113•
oz.
MACARONI DINNER •••••••• ~::. $1.09

PlfC(

gasoline powered
automatic string feed
lightweight for
easy handling

IAWPRICID

11

. II • ~ •

STRING
R

1Dlb. White F edago New

FACIAL
TISSUES
•••••••••
~ ••••• !.~~Jf
oz.

' ~ ""H I

SAIT\4
SAL£

HIPTY

30 ct. California

·

'.h oU i f •,lo •o · l ... .. ~

tll!o! ll 1114• ~"'' ~lto~Oy C.OII IH...

BANANAS ........~~: .3f

200 ct. White Puffs

,., I,...

' " ' •H •I • "1 '1 ~ ·• 1 I"" ''"'' "''•' ''•'' ~ I
II• 1~1 ·" -1 •IO •f• ll • .o•ltu' tn'"" '" Qu~- "'

Vel mil Nicinsky, Assoc.
'

IALI PRICI

IIIII• retell t4t.05

bldgs. $;15,000.00.
LOTS - One acre
building or trailer si t.,;.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171

''

FOI ALL IOMILITI CIAII
SAWS ' GASOLIIII S'IIIICi 'IIIMMIIS
..PACI
$3ft

e LIGHTWEIGHT
e 14" CUT
e AUTOMATIC FEEDLINE

GoklenRIPI!

1.5 oz. H. .hey'a ·

Next To The PIU. Hut

•

home,

,.,

Homemade

•

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
FORECL.OSURE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE .
OF
FORECLOSURE OF
LIENS
FOR
DELINQUENT
L.AND
TAXES BY ACTION IN
RE"', BY COUNTY
TREASURER OF MEIGS
COUNTY,OHIO
Public notice I$ herl!bv ·
given that on the 7th day Of
May, 1981 the County
Treasur.,. of Meigs Countv,
Ohlq filed • com..=lnt rn
the coul't of Com
Pleas
(0....,., on pip 12)

CHAPMAN SHOES

20)

Some of the choices vou may

~ 50%

----

Type of entry or act ...... . .... . . . ... . . . . .. . . .. .... . .... . ....... . . .

necessary . You won' t sai l to s.uc·

SAVE

..

20% OH All Men's Dress.

seen much of them lately . Let
them know you stil l care.
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
Beware of tendencies today to
make that which you hope to ac·
complish more difficult than

TV feature

Club to meet

even in light commercial installations

·INGELS FURN. &amp;

Circle one - Parade, Talent show

Eckrich

COoling Problems

16,000 BTU . '499.95

Telephone number . ........... . ........ . . ... . .... .. ...... . .. , . . . . .

FATHERS DAY SPECIAL

t ime wi th friend s of long stan·
ding, especially if you haVen' t

.I solve BIG

Model, features, capacity for only

wllb a t5 flnt place ~ and $2
second place prize for the best
decorated bicycle. Award&amp; WiD be
presented ,in three different age
gtoupa.
. FoUowing the Pfll'!lde, volunteers
wiU sponaor a chicken barbecue,
featuring complete dinners and Individual chlckena. The junior
firemen, firemen's almiliary, and
~ Emergency Squad will also
serve ref~elils throughout the
~y.
.
.
The Junior · Firemen will. also
feature a mud it and-car demolitjon
game in conjunction with varioiL'l
games and comitetltion beld on the
Junior High grounds. The games,
held for local youngsters, wiD begin
atlp.m.
On July 4, volunteers will sponsor
a talent show at 8 p.m. in the junior
high school building. Cash prizes of
S50,.P5, and $10 wiD be awarded to
the first three places. A $2.50 entry

who encumber you.

Honor rolls announced
ty Cleland, Heather Shuler, Tiaa Sloter.
Grade 6 - Matt Harrill, Matt JeweU, Rachel
Reibel, Tammy Thew.

each with a ISOflnt prize, t25 second
priZe, and fiJ third prize.
.
~ yputh lire urged to decorate
their ~lea, motorcycles, and g~
carla with red1 white, and blue. The
youngiitera can cub In on the fUn

Program has .·anniversary

RACINE V.F.D. JULY FOURm
CELEBRATION ENTRY

Your chances for success are

-.

The all-year honor roll for the Racine Elementary School Is being ......-...1. To be u.ted
!ludentl must have been I\IJ'I1ed to tht honor roll
...~Iii-durin!! tile put school year.
Tho roD Includes '
Grade I - JtMY Varney, Trevor Petrel,
Dovld lhle, Andy Hill.
Grade Z - Colin M.lldena, Johfl Bill Hoback,
Jason Ctrele Jarrod Circle, Jennifer Damroo,
Shlhmon COunts, Jan Willlama:, Shelly
Wlnebnnntr, Mayla Yoocham, JeMlferSmltlt
Grade 3 - Amy Hanilon, Kathy lhle, Anaela
Manuel, Alill WIUiord, Aimee Wolfe, Trlcia

.GIFT-SLIPPERS

encouraging tQctay, but you could
be disappointed if you expect

The Daily Sentlnei-Page--"11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

• ' '14~

---

-ssu

II

~..~~~L.MUIJ"

HOSE MASTER
MINISUPRBIIEI

LEVER WATER NOZZLE

...AYYOUTY
tl12 WIR£

,

...

�Pom
Public Mollet

Public Notice

(Continued fran p~ge 11)

We svllle
OH
the
unknown spouse I any
whose name and addr~ss

01 Me Dl County

Ohio at
Pomeroy Ohio for the
foreclosure of liens for
dellnquen faxes assess
ments
pena t es and
charges aga nst ceria n
rea property situated r
such county as descr bed n
said camp ,In!
The 0b1ect Of the act on s
to obla n om the court '
udgment Ioree os ng the
ax 1 ens aga nst such rea
oslate and ordering the
sale of such real estate to
the sal sfacllon of lhe tax
ens thereon
Such act on s b ought
aga ns the rea propertv
only and no pe sona 1
shall be entered
judgment
here n
The pe manen parce
numbe of each parcel n
c uded n such act on1 the
fu street address or the
parcel
ava lable a
descr pt on of the parce a
sta em en of the a moun of
taxes
assessments
penalties and charges due
and unpa d on such parcel
and the name and address
of the last known owner
the eof as such appear on
the gene al fax sf, a as
more fully set forth n the
complaint. are as follows
CASE NO 81 DL T 39
Parcel No POMV 9 Sera
No 81 DL T 39 I lied n the
name of FRANK D JEN
N NGS f v ng whose
ast known address s 680
L ncoln Road Pomeroy
Oh o the unknown spouse
f any whose name and ad
dress are unknown the
unknown he rs dev sees
lega ees adm n st ators
executors and or ass gns of
Frank 0 Jenn ngs dec
s tua ed n Pomeroy
V I age County of Me gs
and Sta eo Oh o
Be ng a thai part of the
realestatedescribed nand
conveyed b~ deed from The
Pomeroy Rea ty Company
to Hobart D lion dated
May 3 1949 and recorded
n Boo 164 Pg 31 of the
Deed Records of Me gs
county Oh o to wh ch
reference s hereby made
for a def n te and pa
t cu ar descrlrt on thereOf
EXCEPT ha part the eof
ty ng E Of Po nt Lane (fo
merly known as Po nt
AI ey conveyed bY. Hoba I
D 1 on and Fern D lion h s
w fe tow I am T C&gt;ruese
and F o a De Grueser by
deed dated Ju y 11 1950
and recorded n Book 165
a pg 691 of sa d Deed
Records eaov ng 4 6'1 acres
Sou h of L ncoln He ghts
and west ol Po nt Lane
Deed Ref Vol 69 pg
104 Me gs County beed
Records
JUDGMENT
5349 60
p us ace ued taxes
assessments pena t es and
costs of act on
CASE NO 81 DL T 40
Parce Nos 11 030 005 ll
030006 Sera No 8 DLT
40 t tied n the name of
CHARLES CHEADLE f
1 vlng whose add ess s
unknown
the unknown
spouse f any whose name
and address are unknown
the
unknown
he rs
devisel!s
eoatees ad
executors
m n strata s
and or assigns of Cha les
Cheadle f dec JOHN G B
SON f 1 v ng, whose ad
d ess s uriknown the
unknown, spouse f any
whose name and address
a e unknown the unknown
he rs dev sees egatees
adm n stra ors executors
and or ass gns of John G b
son I dec
tuated n Scip o Town
sh p County of Me gs and
Sta eo!Oho
Commend ng 13 rods 9
nks W ol the S E corner
of James Reeves and n
center of road ead ng f om
John Douglas to James
Reeves lt1ence W lA 62
cha ns o center of oad
lead nplrom Ha r sonv le
to Oil ver s store thence
N 4 2 deg E 2 and 25 100
cha ns hence N 56 ' d..,
E 6 cha ns thence S 79~
deg E 57 100 cha ns then
ce s 30 ' deg E 11 and
92 100 cha ns to p ace of
commenc ng conta n ng 9
and 60/ 00 acres
SAVE &amp; EXCEPT a I fe
es ate to John G bson
there n
Deed Ref Vo 94 ~g -io\2
Me gs Coun y Deed Recor
ds
ALSO
he fol ow ng
described real estate
s uated n Sc p o Twp
Coun y Me gs and Sta e Of
Oho
Commenc ng 13 rods 9
1 nks w Of he S E corner
of James Reeves land n
center of road lead ng trom
John Douglas to James
Reeves thence W 4 62
cha ns to center of road
tead ng rom Har sonv e
to 0 ver s sto e hence N
4
deg E and 25/100
cna ns thence N 29 deg
E • and 25 HJO cha ns
thence N 4 h deg E 14
and 50&amp; 100 cha ns thence
N 29 dog. E • and 25&amp; 100
cha ns thence N 4 2 deg
E 14 and 50 100 cha ns
thence N 56 2 deg E ~
cha ns hence S 79'1• deg
E 57 100 cha ns thence s
30V2 deg E 11 and 92 100
cha ns to place of com
menc ng contB n ng 9 and
60 100 acres
SAVE AND EXCEPT W
half of above descr bed
trocl wh ch has been con
veyed to 0 Ia Chead e
Deed Ref Vol 93 ~a -loll

are unknown the unknown

he s dev sees egatees
adm n stra ors executors
and or ass gns Of Bern e
I dec CORA
Nelson
STRAUSBAUGH I v ng
whose ast known address
s Wllkesv I e OH the
unknown spouse f any
whose name and address
are unknown the unknown
he rs dev sees egatees
adm n s rators executors
and or ass gns of Co a
Strausbaugh I dec NEVA
KENNEDY
If
v ng
whose ast known addr\\SS

j

are unknown the unknown

he rs

•d'''"'''

dev sees

adm n strators

legatees

t)(ecutors

and or ass gns of Neva
dec VONA
Kennedy
CHAPMAN
f
vlng
whose ast known address

11

1 1 ~~~ ~~~~
last known address s Dex
ter
OH
he unkown
spOuse f any whose name

Help

qualified

ALL STEEL

REGISTERED NURSES

Farm Buildmp

for

Slzts
From 30x30
SMALL

Nursing (:are Unit
primarily geriatrics
and
Acute Care Nursing Units

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3 Box.S4
Racone Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 IS lie

GAUGE
- Transmessoon
Repair
Hrs Mon Fro
9am530pm

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

992

2478

or

Blain Milhoan
985 3965

992 5682

V

W Va

Po1nt Pleasant,
r1

Vinyl &amp; Alumrnum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1
equal opporlumty em p oyer

_,

executors
of John

Public Notice

S tuated n Sa em Twp
County of Me gs and State
o Oh o
Beg nn ng 3 ods and ll
ff E of S E. co ner of Wm
C Tu ner s and n Sec 2

CARPENTER
f I v ng
whose as known address any parcel of rea estate
may file an an
s 187 E State St A hens above nI sled
such acl on sell ng
OH the unknown spouse 1 swer
any whose name and ad fo th the nature and
d
ess are unknown the o cia med and any defense
of Sa em Twp Me gs Coun
he rs dev sees or
ob of
ect nterest
on toowned
the
amount
y Oh a
unn ng hence unknown
egatees adm n strators
10 rods n southeas er v executors
to
ec
osure
Such
answer
and/or ass gns of
d ect on to s one co ne
be f edgned
In theClerk
off ce of
of
Roll n F Carpente r I dec must
the unders
thence n a sou hwes ertv JOHN
E
CROSS
f
v
ng
d re ton 13 ods to ne be whose ast known address Court and a copy hereof
served on the County
tween James Nelson and
s 616 S 4th Sl Newton
An han-; Ha mon a a po n
Prosecuto on o before the
the unkown spause 1s
4 ads N w of the curve fowa
h day of July 1981
any
whose
name
and
ad
f no answer sf led on or
co ne on sa d ne hence dress are unknown the
before the date s~c f ed as
n a no hwes er y d rec
he
rs
dev
sees
unknown
ton a ong I ne oco ner of
the asl day for II ng an an
egatees adm n st a ors swer
sa d James Ne sons and execu
a
udgment of
ors
and
or
ass
gns
of
foreclosure w I be tak~ by
Anthony Harmon s and
John E Cross
f dec default as fo any parce
th~nce N 2 ads to Wm C
CROSS JONES I 1 sled n the ocmpla nt as to
Turners and thence N 7 ALTA
v ng whose ast known wh ch no answer has been
ods a ong E ne of sad address
s 124 W lllh S S
f ed Any parcel as to
Wm C Tu ne s and
Newton
owa
the wh ch a foreclosure s
thence E 3 ods and 1 f
hence S 7 ads o p ace of unknown spouse f any taken by default Shall be
name and address so d for the sat sfact on of
beg nn ng est mated a whose
a e unknown the unknown the taxes assessments
three ac es be the same he
s dev sees egatees penalt es charges
and
mo e or ess
n stra ors executors costs
ncur ed
n the
Deed Re Vo 53 pg 29 adm
and
o
ass
gns
of
Alta
Me gs County Deed Recor Cross Jones f dec DEN Ioree osu e that are due
ds
CROSS f v ng and
Atunp•
anv d me pr or to the
JUDGMENT $33 51 pus VER Dlast
known address f ngofanen yofcon
accrued taxes assess whose
s Baxte
owa
the
men s pena es and costs unknown
f rmat on
e ofanya
spouse f any owner
or I of
enhosader
of act on
whose name and add ess parce
s ed n the com
CASE NO 8 DL T 45 a
the unknown
Parce
No 05 003 019 hee unknown
nt may edeem such
dev sees egatees pia
Se a No 81 DL T 45
ed admsn st
parcel by tender ng to the
a
tars
executors
n he name of MAR ON
County Treasurer the
RHODES f v ng whose and or ass gns of Denve
amount
of
taxes
0
Cros~1 f dec MART N
address s unknown the K RKENDALL f tV ng
pen• res
assessments
unknown spouse
any
las known add ess and charges due and un
whose name and address whose
s
508
N
K sr Muskogee
pa d on such parce
are unknown the unknown
loge he
w h a I cosls
the unknown wh
ch have been ncurred
he s dev sees ega tees Oklahoma
spouse
f
any
whose
name
adm n s rators executors
n
n any proceed ng
address a e unknown
and o ass gns o Mar on and
s luted aga ns such far
unknown
he
rs
th
e
Rhodes f dec
eel unde Sec 5121 18 o the
dev sees lege ees ad
S uated n Leta t
Rev sed Code Upon the
stra
ors
execu
ors
m
n
Coun y ol Me gs and
and or ass gns of Mart n f rmat on Of sale lhere
of Oh o
furentry
he equ
of
Be ng a pa of a o for K kendal ifdec HARRY shall
f I ng be
of no
anv
of ty
con
mer y conveyed to Mary K RKENDALL f v ng
on
Any
person
redempt
ast known address
Bake by Hannah Cook whose
s Alb.lon
owa
the thereafter cia m ng anv
Sa d ands be ng about m d unkf'ffiWnfie
r ghten t upon
tie and
In
s dev sees or
any nte
suchespar
way of 100 a of No 218 of egatees adm
strators ce sha I be foreve ba red
Range 1 Town 1 Sec 36 executors and ornass
gns of
0 CP
con a n ng 4 2 MAUD KIRKENDALL
and foreclosed of any such
acres more or ess
r ght t tle1 nteres n en
DEC ROSS H KIRKEN
upon ano any equ ty of
EXCEPT 1 h a lay ng n DALL
If 1 v ng whose lost
he N W co ne of above known address
redemption In such porce
s B smark
descr bed and the same M
ssour
the unknown
hav ng fo me y been spouse
f any whose name
deeded o Jonathan Far ey and address
otCommon Pleas
are unknown
ALSO
the fa ow ng he unknown
(6 3 10 11 Jtc
he
rs
descr bed rea
esta e
sees
egatees ad
s ua ed n Letar Twp dev
m n strata s executors
Pub lc Notice
Coun y of Me gs and State and
o ass gns of Ross H
o Oh o
kendall f dec ALLIE
One and one ha f a of K
K McFARLAND f v ng
0
1
and n Range 12 Town 1 whose
known address
and n 100 a lot No 2 8 and s R t 1ast
E v ns M ssour
desc bed on ~up ca e of the unknown
spouse f any
alley
exlendong
from
An Drd nanceto
vacate
the
886 as W end ol&lt;9 a
whose name and addess Ham lton Street to Locust
Deed Ref Vo 76 pg are
unknown the unknown Street between Lots 4f s 6
50 Vo 86 gg 596 Me gs
he rs dev sees egatees 1 and 25 on the Eas and
Coun y Deed Reco ds
JUDGMEN T $72 65 pus adm n strators executors ~0::, 24 8 9 o 11 on the
ace ued taxe s assess and o ass gns of AI e K
and
f dec The
men s pena es and costs McFa
Be t orda ned by the
unk nown spouse f any
Counc I of the V llage of
of act on
whose name and address M ddlepor asfo ows
CASE NO 81 DL T 46 a e unknown the unknown
Sec I . That the alley ex
Pa ce
No
1 02 007 he rs dev sees eoatees
end ng I om Hamilton
Ser a No 82 DL T ~ It ed adm n strators executors
street to Locust Street be
n the name o BER r HA A and o ass gns of NELLY tween
Lois 4 5 6 7 and 25
COOK DEC the unknown K RKENDALL DEC EM
on
the
East and Lots 24 8
spouse f any whose name MA GARDNER f v ng
9 0 11 on the West s
and address a e unknown whose
as known add ess hereby vacated Said lots
he rs
th e unknown
s Cov ngton Ky c o Cl I
are located In Behan s Sub
dev sees
egatees ad ford
Myers the unknown d v son Village of M d
111 n stra ors
executors spouse If any whose name dlepor
and or ass gns of Bertha A
address a e unknown
Sec 11 Th s Ord nance
Cook dec FRED CAR and
Shal ake effect and be n
unknown
he rs
the
PENTER f v ng whose dev sees
ega ees ad
force f om and af er the
ast known add ess s 772 m n s ra ors execu ors
South Eureka Ave Co um and
aw est date allowed by
a ass1gns of Emma ear
bus OH
he unknown Gardner
Idee HERB Me
Passed the 8th day of
souse f any whose name CLELLAND
f I v ng
June1981
and add ess are unknown whose add ess s unknown
he unknown
he rs the unknown spouse f any
M L Kelly
dev sees
egatees ad whose name and address
of
m n strata s executa s are unknown the unknown Pres dent
Counc I
and o assrgns of Fred Car He rs dev sees egatees
A est Jon Buck
penter f dec HA TT E C
n strators executors
Clerk
WALKER f v ng Whose adm
and o ass gns of Herb Me
ast known address s 78 N Ce
and fdec
7 24 21
Cong ess S Alhens DH
6) 1
&lt;
n Sc p o Twp
the unknown spouse f any
gs
and
Stale
Me
whose name and address
Mise Merchan se
are unknown the unknown
he rs dev sees legatees
adm n strators executa s
and or ass gns of Half e C
Walker If dec LOUISE
BIODSDN f v ng whose
last known address s 187
E State 51 Athens OH
the unknown spouse If any
whose name and add ess
are unknown the unknown
he rs dev sees eaatees
adm n stra ors executors
and/or ass gns of Louise
Bddson Idee ROLLINF

Larc'Je~k ~p~~t~~

~8 M~aN~E

~;::====~'=:;;:;;=:!~~=====:=:=:=~

PUBLIC AUCTION
10 AM -IATUIDAY JUNI! It 1111
Property ol S11r1"" UHII Funlllurt 41 S - &amp;
Olive Sis 0.111,..11 Funtlturt Will Dt Hid at IUC

Phone
11614) 992 3325

Repa.r

Bu11d1np
S zes lrom 4x6 to 12~40

Contact· Director of Nurs1ng
PI
t
II
u..sp1tal
easan
a ey 1111
Valley DIIYe

ROGER HYSELL'S
-Auto 111d Truck

Utilily

EXCELLENT SALARY AND BENEFITS

and address are unknown 1~:~~~;,.._;.;,_..,~-,;.-..;;...;;._
the unknown
he rs ] 1
dev sees
ega tees
ad

and o ass gns
Ne son f dec

own no or
any r ght I tie or
In or lien upon

Beautrlul CuSiom
Bu It Gorages
Call for free Std ng
est mates 949 21101 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calls
tfc
3 11

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
1111 evpes of roof wqrk
new or repa r gutters
an~

downspouts gulfer
clean ng and parnt ng
All work guaranteed
Free Estimates
Reasonable Pr ces
Call Howard
949 2162
949 2160
2 4 tfc

J&amp;f
CONTRACJING
eBockhoe
eEXCIVIIIng
e Septic SVslems
• Water Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
eDumpTruck
el'rencher
L censed r. Bonded
PH.

992 7201

5 2llfc

·~~~~~~~~=~~~::====~~~fr~~=.~~~~~~
CARPENTER'S
M&amp;S BUILDING

VI

PRODIJCJS
Srd ng
Roofing&amp; Gutter
Remodel ng
Serv ng Vour Area for
20 Years
EUGENE LONG
Free Estimates
Call Collect
Ph 843 3322

MASON TEXACO
ME"u•NIC
\d1ft

&amp;

BODYM•N
"
ON
PH

DUTY DAILY
304-77'19510
'~"

Lowe 1&amp; Doug Halfh II
Owners Operators

s 24 1 mo

DANCE
STUDIO

I&lt; tchen cab nets

bath
remodel ng roof ng &amp;
gutter srd ng &amp; plumb'
rng r. e ectr cal con
crete storm w ndows
woodburners nslalled

CALL
PauiSigman-992 2984
Pat Milchell-742 2562
6 71 mo

J&amp;C
SANITATION
111
SERVICE
Trash P1ckup In
The VIllage of
Middleport Oh
Ph 992 5016
992 7505
or
4 171fc

Now Takrng Enrollment
for Summer C asses
In Pomeroy I Rae ne
Ages3and Up
Call949 2710
6 81 mo

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"
Addonsand
remOdel ng
-Roofing and guller
work
-Concrete work
-Plumb ng and
electrrcal work
(Free Esl mates!
C YOUNG II

V

H2 6215 or "2 7314
Pomeroy Oh

~~~~~~~~~gm~§~~=¥=¥~m~~~~~~~=~
lhN
REESE
TRENCHING
Q

For all of your w1r

rng needs
Let George M er c"'"'".t
your present clectrrcal
system
Res dent a
&amp;Com mere al
Call742 3195
or 992 7680
2 8 tfc

Q

SERVICE
water Sewer Electrrc
Gu Llne-0 tches
Water Lone Hook ups
Sept c Tonks
Cou.nl¥ Cerlrlled
Roush Lane
Cheshore Oh
Ph 367 7560

~~=~~~:=:~~~!=======!:7:1:lf:c~

CONSTRUCTION
ex

New "omes

I

d j
enslve
remo e
mg
t ElectriCal work

t Rooftng work
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583
6 3 1 mo

RACINE SYRACUSE

&amp;D[A

nn

RESIDENTS
Oon I walt Cootact Oh o
Va ley Plumb•ng for
sewer I ne connect ons
and any
n house
changes that have to be
made Bac~ hoe and
doserserv ceavailable
992 2036
s 20 1 mo

~~~~~~~~~~~;::::::::::;~:;==~

HOWARD
Rat··vAroRS
n

HJ 50 -20-30 H P
HA60' -25-60 H P
HE 60' ~5-111 H P
All Models Available

LEO MORRIS

COMPLETE
RADIATOER
SERVIC
From the Smallest
Healer Core to lht
Largest Rodlator

au ILDI NGS

lS x20 up to 40'xtoe
PORT/IBLE STEEL
s T 0 R A G E
BUILDINGS
(4 xl6
rxl rx1r
IO'olO 10 x12 &amp; up)
Anv slzt buill 10 yCMOr
specifications Models

Mason
Covntlts
In Mtlgs
Go lila ilnd
FREE ESTIMATES
All Buildings
Guoronltld

PH. 367·7671
Or 367"I•s60
CHESHIRE

MUFF'S
PWMBING
AND

HEAnNG

12 Puk St

Middleport Oh
Ph 992 6263
Anytime
6151mo

Radiator SPtCIII Sl
NATHAN BIGGS
31 Yrs E xperlonct
SMITH NELSON

IOMITOOU
Socket 1t11 l'lndlr ~ viii DIDt wrtnch 111

"""* ,...,

AIITtaUU .

1 11M 1IUfftla. 2 lniiQUt idr~et~wllrlra. 01c1

SAU
KllDB

CARP£T
Fl'lllll

'7.91 &amp; liP

He.ulc uartE•rs

SMds

POLE

X

CENTRAL REALTY

Hnu.;;inq

G1r1111 - lulldlngs
- B~rno-l!q41l-t

REDUCED
Rl 1 Side Hill Rd
MOTORS INC
Rutland Ohio
Pomeroy OH
Ph
PH 742 2411
PRICES
H!-2174
.,
5 11 lfc
H ·nc
AtHENS SPORT
ON All
CYa.£S
Stimson Ave Alhtns
SHRUBS AND
ROSEBUSHES
you want it
you ve got it 111
IN STOCK
~POMEROY
LANDMARK lt.--Rutll--ld-Furnitn--C-.-.-Shop--.1
I

WHAT DO YOU THINK
- of this 3 bedroom
troller with add on
slid ng glass door to
suncteck on a r ver
front 101 al 3 7 •~res lor
relaxation or retire
ment? 1968 Fleetwood
equipped
k I
3
bedroom 1 11 balhs and
ges F A furnace for on
Jy $13 500
NEW LISTING- Very
n ce 3 yr old brick ranch
home wllh over 3 acres
3 bedrooms 1v, baths
central air r. heal
Equipped
kitchen
patio located on hard
road only a lew m les
from town
Ask lng
$5700000
CAMPING LAND The woods with big gam
enear Forked Run Lake
Enjoy the outdoors th s
summer and camp out
U heres
FREE HEAT - Also 7
acres Of land w th a
small hOuse and L c
water M nerals other
buildings
On y
Sll 500 00 owner wl
help finance
1971 ltiLLCREST
14x70 With storage rm
Ill ce 3 bedrooms 1 '
baths
furnace
carpet ng bar end you
can rent the corner lot
Only$12 000
NEAR POMEROY - 3
bedroom home closets
carpel ng bath car
port and I 2 acres of
land on Rts 1 and 143
Handy lo lown for only
$24 000 00
NEAR OLD DEPOT 2 , acres ot p vecy
Good stone 4 rm home
with bath nat gas fur
nace and city water
NEW LISTING - Br ck
veneer 3 bedroom
ranch 2 full baths lots
of carpet ng equipped
b rch kitchen full base
ment w th family room
&amp;
wood
burn ng
1 replace Pat o garden
and finished garage
$75 000
YOU CAN DEDUCT
YOUR MORT\lAGE IN
TERf:ST FROM VDUR
INCOME TAX

Quality Built
Economlcallv Priced
REESE BUILDINGS

lion
VI!AILYCLIARANCI!SALI
Tht stare Is OVII STOCKID lndlht lolloWIIII Will
be Hid
I.IVIIIII room IUiftt, dlnen. Mil all lyllfl allteds
box IPfiiiP lo lllllh sua. ntw Mill lemps &amp;
lll'l(lkers. like -llllllmlllc Wnher rlfrllll'llln.
25 II cu In CIIID frMu Oll1tr dMp frwle dryers,
111 rlftiiiS, ..,..'-"1 . . ,.,...,colfetlo tndlebltt,
movie projector lnd IOIII'IIOI'e

the followmg telephone
exchanges

1s currently seeking

~~eS'OaN'

m n st ators

Clase1fied Pages cover

Business Services

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

u~kn~~~~~pous~H t a~~e
whose name and address
are unknown the unknown
he
rs n sdevat()
sees
egatees
adm
s execu
ors
and o ass ?ns of Vona

s

Me
gs County Deed 5177
Reco00
dSJUDGMENT
p us accrued laxes
assessments, penalt es and
costs of act on
CASE NO 81 DLT 41
Parcel No
OJ 037 005
Ser a No 81 DL T 41 II ed
n he name of CARL NE
CASTEf!., aka CAROLINE
CASTeR f I vlng whose
address s unknown the
unknovwn
f
whose

Public Notice

TheDa

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

Clll----

NEW LISTING
Beaullfu 1 newly con
Slructed EIIIIISh Tudor
spill entry hOme close to
F I 1 3
Middleport eo ur ng
bedrooms 2 h baths
faml y room end arge
living
room wl~h
separate dining room
k hop
garage • nd wor s
Good local on UNDER CONSTRUC
TION $54 900 DO
NEW LISTING- A one
year old
tool Jonv 3
bedroom ranch with 11'2
car garage concrete
front porch large barn
corn crib and five n ce
h e
laying acres wh c ar
parlly fenced wllh a
board fence Home has 2
lull bathS large tamllv
room with wood burner
llh
huge I vlng room w
foyer and many more
exlras S62 000 DO
NEW LISTING - This
homehasj~C~Uiblllteslarge family home or
upper and lower apart
ments 4 bedrooms 2
full baths 2 kitchens
Live In one level rent
the o111er ~ Ave n
Middleport CarDtllng
kitchen
equlpmtnl
some furniture Nlc elot
S33 0011 00
STEP INTO VESTER
DAY - Original wood
work and beautiful
hardwood
floors
Spacious
room a
downstairs wllh big
slolrcue leading
upstairs 10 a 3 bedroom
and full blllh V:! bath In
utility room and family
room also GoOd Iota
1 on In Middleport lnd
at Ynterdey s Prices.
129 500 00
S 1X
A C R E5
0F
PRIVACY - And II al

eo

lht edit ol town A 1....

storY lreme home with
3 4 btclrooms large

ullllly
coblntll Inroom
kltchtn nice
lnd
1
oulbulldlngs
129 500 00
CUTI
STARTI!I
HOMI Thll two

btdl'ltom II PfiC
IICIIIY melnlen1nce
trtt
It hu new

Middleport
Pomeroy
Area-992
985-Chesler
843-Portland
247-Lelart Fa I s
949-Raclne
742-Rutland

~VInlon

245-Rio Grande
379-Walnut Drs I
256-Guyan Olst
643-Arabla Dlsl

Pont P easant
Area-67S
4S8-Leon
S76-App e Grove
773-Mason
812-New Haven
an-Letart
937- Buffalo

In Mergs County

In Gallll county
Call

«&amp;.:2342

In Mason County

c.'"'

roof -1111111 lie -

11111

.....
.....

II tile Tillie '- lty
..
Owtl-

01c1

C1lllll'l' klllle IIIII rw1 -

2 1111111' MWing
midllnet. nuan Cilblnlf, Old tlble1 "'I
...... Clll1lf IIHIIII0-111 ,..11011
Aucn•ur'a IMII1 Tl1la 11 • ..., cti1111111t a1 fjHfl
111111... &amp; 1111111111 lu Tllla Is lilly 1 11!1....1
...... Tl1lre . . . . ..., llellle .... 1111111...

11.----•~~;i;!:=::t
r

Free Dobermai'l
Gallipolis

w II do baby silt ng n my
home 256 1763
home
n my

•

--rtrMt;('ll&gt;

&amp;AM SIL8Ef&lt;
8 f:Utfb:&gt;O !'tO'
. .,...··"•• ~LTIMOI'e

992 2156

HAUL gravel
mestone
coa etc Dencll Dun ap
Phone 675 S215

,oil'

675-1333

.

. ..

' ' '"
' '
' '
'
'' ' '' . , ' ' ' •• ' ' r

-' ''''

Big Bend CB Club mem
bers would like to !hank the
follow ng
donors
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Flower Shop
Clarks
Jewelry Store Jay Mars
Golf Course Crafty Lady
Handcrefl Doug s Morine
Sales &amp; Service Certified
Gas Station
Krogers
Crow Cr~w Porter ott
Reuler Brogan Ins V 0
EdWards Gravely Traclor
Ew ng Funeral Home
Mullen
Ins
Legger
Monu men! Co
Logan
Monument Co Dale War
ner Ins K &amp; C Jewelers
Meigs Inn
Landmark
Knight s Low Office
Pomeroy Bank Farmers
Bank Crow Crow Ill att
Bernard Fults ott Sears
Story &amp; Story ett Da IY
Senllnel J m Stewart Wine
Shop Jim O'Brien all
Beacon
Gas
Stat on
Pomeroy cement Block
Co G &amp; J Motor Parts
Meigs Tire Shop New York
Clothing
Swisher Lohse
Pharmacy J &amp; R Sport
Shop
Kldd e
Shop
Moore s La Mar s F ullon
Thompson Tractors Chal
leau Beauty Shop Two s
Co Ebersboch Hardware
st flier s Home &amp; Auto
Chapmen Shoe Store
Merguerlle Shoe Store
Modern Supply
Nelson
Drug Store Tom s Corry
OUI Da e Hill Ford Trac
tors Mlck s Barber Shop
Fabric Shop V sto Gas
Slatlon The Dabble Shop
Swetzels Francis Florist
MIDDLEPORT
Quality
Print Shop Merk v Store
Vaughan s Groc
Napa
Molor Parts Lazy Day
cafe Ace Hardware City
Ice &amp; Fuel Valley Lumber
P" H 11 (Ford&gt; Heritage
House Burkett Barber
Shop
Bohr Cloth ers
Dan s Leather Shop I ngel
Furniture
Candy
carousel Firestone M d
dleporl Depl Store M d
dleporl Book Slore
Baker's Furniture Store
Dulton
Drug
Ben
Franklin Heiner s Bakery
Rawlings Funeral Horne
Slale Farm Ins
Sport
About Shop Tony s Carry
out
amond sav ngs &amp;
Loan Wllkersons (Small
-Inti) Down ng Childs
Ins Middleport Shoe Box
RUTLAND Dairy Dellghl
J m Rickman S Markel
Rutland Salvage Rutland
Furniture Store Miller s
Brothers Groc
Rutland
Groc
Evelyn s Groc
CHESTER
Newells
Sunoco Ridenour's Supply
Jim R dtnour's TV &amp;

o

Radio Gauls Groc Baum
Lumber
Gaul s Shake
Haven
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Keebaugh S
Shake Shoppe
Hawk s
Pennroll Tuppers Plains
Hardware
Lodwlcks
Groc B 1o J Ges Slallon
MINERSVI L.LE
Gene
Coleman
(Ashland)
GALLIPOLIS Bobs Radio
Shop ATHENS Jonnle B s
RadiO Shop
MASON
RouSh Riverview
Golf Course G lo J Motor
Las Corry Oul Meson
FurnltVre Stare Meson
Auto Mart Bob I Metkel
Cerole'l Coulffures Shop
Bob 1 Thick Shake Terry s
Body Shop Betty 1 Beauty
Shop
Meson Texaco
Honocker s
B
Shop
Howell candv Co
FollfiORII Funeral Home
ROUUII'I Boclv Shop NEW
HAVEN W.V. Heelfh Aid
Phlrmecy Ben Frenklln
Greens HardWare Ace
HtrdWare
Walermallon
Patch New Haven Fur
nlturt Store lurriS Blrber
Arullrlle J-lers
FhikhtFtr 'TtxKO Greggs

wv

c

Merkt! Me- Co

McClung • Farmers
Millers Ins

II~=~~;~:~

LAFF A DAY

LOST Old TNT area I
rna e Keeshond block and
gray answers to name of
Bear If found please I e
up and call 675 6736 after 6
pm
Yard Sale

I
Public Sole
_ __.,...,&amp;"-"A""u"'ct"'lon"'--:----:unwanted Unneeded fur
nllure hOusehold tools
and antique Items turned
lnlo cash
Soles every
Thursday 7 pm Con
s gnments accepted day of
sale 12 noon to 6 pm King
Kole Auction and Sales Ml
AJto WV Ken Ko e Auc
tloneer

Vard Sale 49 Garf eld Ave
Gallipolis June 17 18 Tup
perware Avon collect on
cloth ng
sheets
bed
spread pots and pons and 9
Wanted to Buy
ots of others Items
~-...!!:====-'--SCASH
Vard Sa e 170 Portsmouth FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE P ECE
•teatlon 1 Rd on Rl Ul Galllpol s
••
Junel718 9? Bedroom set
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
and clothes etc
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
Announcements
OR CALL
Super Carport Sa e One
446 4175
NEW GARAGE OPENING mile from june! on Of Rt
OPEN9TOS
Automatic transm sslons 160&amp; 0 J Wh le Rd Fol ow
and a1 sorts ol mechan cal the s gns from there Table
repa r and ma1or and ot free Items Addlllonsl CASH for your diamonds
minor auto body repair
!ems added da ly Wed gold and silver class r ngs
See James sm th or Tom Thurs &amp;Frl
wedding bonds sliver and
Masters or call.u6 7757
gold coins
Tawney
Jewelers
422
Second
Ave
Garage Sale Wed &amp; Thurs
C ty Cab office 39 Slate St
June 17th 18th 503 Circle Galllpo s Oh o
Ga I polls open 5 30 I
Ave across from Spring
11 JOPM 7 days 4.46 Ooi.SI
Valley Shopping Center Good 11 11 a um num
canoe w th padd e Phone
Gallipolis
4.46 956 or 256 9307
Kanauga Dr ve- n F ea
Markel Sat &amp; Sun June 20 Yard Sale Frl and Sal 9to
&amp; 21 Gall pol s
5 0 J
White Road Wanted used a r con
Mary
Rusk
Proceeds for Westerman d !loner
James
446
0728
Method
sts
Church
1 PAY
hlghesl prices
poss b e far go d and silver Clothes Mela cabinet
table and mise
co ns rings lewe ry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Garage Sale nice clean
Shop M ddleport
garage sa e June 18 20
TO
BUV
Thurs &amp; Fr 9 dark Sat 9
A TTENT ON LAD ES t
SILVER
noon Chaple dr ve 114m
Help pay off those un out Bulavllle Rd on ell PLATINUM STERLING
wanted bllls working Portable d shwasher tools COINS
RINGS
even ngs from 7 30 to 10 30 mens ladles s ze Jr 5 JEWELRY MISC ITEMS
p m as a lash on stv 1st children s clothes cur ABSOLUTE MARKET
Earn S8 00 to SlO DO per talns
tab eclolhs
ap PRICE GUARANTEED
hour prof t
deal for pllonces
shoes
baby ED BURKETT BARBER
homemaker w th family
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
tems etc Rain or shine
Call992 3941 from 9-6
OHI0992 3476
Porch Sale
Wednesday
The Me gs Museum 144 only 9 ? Raln or shine
Butternut Avenue will be Furn lure appliances and
open Fridays from 1 3 for mise
621 Third
Ave
the summer months
Galllpo •
Anyone hav ng a good sized
dog to giveaway and
know s how to bark phone
142 2761
L.ONELY
Christ en
Singles Meet Christian
singles nyour area W lie
Southern Christian S ng es
Club PO Box 1823 Sum
merv lie SC 29483 or cal 1
803 171 9850 24 hours
PIANO Lessons Lucy Jane
Bulmer HoFIIO d WV 882
2395
Femo e Beegle 9 Wks o d
3677753
Free to good home 4
adorable k liens 2 long
hair and 2 short ha r 8
wks old 1 304 895-3953

Garage Sele Frl only good
clean children s clothing
toys and mise 10 5 Map e
51
Rio Grande
OH
Morgans
Yard Sale June 16 17 18
From 10 5 at 435 Headley
51
M ddleporl Lots of
m sc Items rain cancels

s family

garage sale June
17 19 9 4 dally at Roland
Morris residence
Long
Ho low Rd Just off the 4
lane Watch for s gns
Larger size clolhlng some
ant que d shes Rain or
shine
Garage Sole 4th Ave Mid
dleporl
Th s Thurs
FridaY Antiques to can
n ng jars Biggest sale
ever

COLLIE and Coonhound
Pupp es 992 2770
YARD SALE
Marv n
McGuire residence Rl 7
Free to good home 6 week bvpass Pomeroy Thurs &amp;
old kittens Black &amp; white Frl
raised by hand mother
killed on highWay lllter PORCH SALE evenings af
!rained Call 61&gt;7 3493 alter ter 6 30 pm sundav af
5 p m weekdays all day lernoon 1':! mile be ow Wal
Saturday lo Sundav Can be terson s Grocery Jerry s
seen at Howard Caldwell Run Armslrong reslden
one mile south 01 Tuppers ce
Plains Ohio
-------Garage Sale L.ots of g r s
Antique plano aport clothes
Seturdly only
ready to f nlsh Must Ra n or shine 2918 An
pickup 949 2779
n slon Drive end of 301h 51
sponsored
by Junior
Killen&amp;. 2 tigers 1 light women s Club softball
grey Can be Sftn at 398 team
Grent St Middleport or
call992 2520 offer 6 p m
Yard Sale Wedneedey and
Thursday
2305 Lincoln
Avenue
PI
Pleasant
Tree tell aut your own
firewood Call 949 2475 for
more Informal on
Yard Sale Salurdly June
20 9 to ? Seller s kitchen
4 puppies Norwelgen elk cabinet d sh cabinet an
llque dllhel collection soil
hOUnd &amp; collie 949 2560
and. pepper 1
mise
Farley s Tra ler Park
KITTENS and Collie pup Gallipolis Ferry wv Rain
pies Free to • good hOme cancelli
256-1352
1 nice IUiomallc Whlrpool
wllhing machine ntedt •
lltlltMrk 1 maltrea 2917
Brook Drive PI PI-nt
ar675-641111

3 famllv yard sale Thur
lldey and Friday June 18
11111 19 9 to 4 Ellen Layne
l'llldtllet Bultar 51 New
Heven WV Trailer court

trallw no 4 Mtn -

and

f1rv.r

children clolhlng
end many mise

ltema

MDihW cat lnG 1 WWk Old
111ne1t kttten 1 1tm111 a
111111 km-. 7 " " " Old

fto3 1\loml•out
ltel on tlllht lfll
....... lllD$111
bllbY cltll1n.

Help Wanted

Health Coord nator Partt
me Respons b ties are to
plan
8.
mplemenl
educallonal &amp; sc een ng
programs to help organ ze
support groups to assist
elderly persons n need of
se v ces upon discharge
from medica fac I I es
Prefer person w lh degree
n nurs ng or hea th
educat on We are an Equal
Oppo tun ty Employer
Send resume to Me gs Co
counc I on Ag ng Box 722
Mulberry
He ghts
Pomeroy Oh o 45769

23

Wanted
L ve n house
keeper n Port and Oh o

843 4636

NEED someone to nsta I
carpet Must have own
tools ca 675 1317
Woman to stay w the derly
lady n Cot agev e on
weekend
372 3398 Cot
tagev lie wv
Someone to mow hay 675
1076
Camp 0 rector for voc
Day Camp Must have
col ege educat on and be
able to work w th chi dren
of al ages No phone ca Is
Apply 812 V and Street PI
Pleasant wv Sen or Com
mun ty Cen er
Dependable man to wo k
on da ry farm 675 5271

SOMEONE to share
driving and expenses from
Gall polls to Marsha
un vers ty from June 16
through July 17 Phone 4.46
2460

Supers for bee h ves Phone
742 2925 after 4 p m
HARPER
HAL.STEAD
SALVAGE CO lllh and
v and Street now buying
meta s (copper
brass
aluminum lead stainless
steel
batteries and
rad ators g nseng yel ow
oot catnip and sassafras)
10 am to 6 rm delly A so
F ea Marke on Saturdays
CA 1675 5868

......
---.

. " '" .. ..'
...........

Repa r or remodel ng
work floor ng doors wa I
panel ng ce I ng or lloor
tile s ding 992 2759
W I do roofs good rates
free est mates Call after 5
at992 5825
W II care for the elder y n
our home Tra ned and e)(
perlenced 992 7314

Help wanted

EXPERIENCED
INS
AGENT to work with
exist ng cl ents In
Galllpol s Good starting
ncome bonus &amp; expense
allowance ex
frenge
benlflls Thorough Ira nlng
program Send resume or
cell c W Langsford CLU
'131 Highway 28 SU te 308
American U n ted L. fe
Milford Oh 45150 or call 1
513 248 1222 EOE
$185 oo to 1500 weekly doing
ma ng work
No ex
perlence requ red AP
PLY C rcle Sales P 0
Box 224 o Rlchmond HIll
NY 11418
GET VALUABLE Ira nlng
as a you~g business person
and earn good money plus
soma great glfll 11 a Sen
tlnel route carrier Phone
us right awav end get on
lht eligibility list at 992
2156orf92 2157
Opportunity 11 yours lust
tor lht liking Ask your
Betllne stylist lnd lht will
bt heppy to htlp you join
the IIHIIno world of

Profess onal
services

COMMERC AL and n
dustr al
photog apny
Phone 446 2909 or 446 7226
after 4 p m
NCOME TAX AND AC
COUNTING SERVICE
Call ~46 7068 for ap
po ntment any me

P ANO TUNING and se
v ce
all makes and
models Ca Bob Grubb at
446 4525 Forme ly w lh
Wards Keyboa d

Homtslor Sole

NEW CABIN or sma
home
completely fur
n shed $3900 Call.u6 0390
Good Income property
Apartment house wllh
three units and room to
make the fourth apart
men! Has been completelv
remodeled and Inc uded
some furniture Pr ced
ght
103 Laurel St
Pome oy Hayes Realty
Char es M Hayes Broker
Neac E Carsey Br Mgr
Box 406 Pomeroy Oh
45769 Phone 992 2403
Beaut fu I country home
ocated near Chester Oh
Must be seen to apprec ate
Th s home can be pur
chased on Land Contract
by the r ght party Cal
today for an appo ntment
Hayes Rea ty Charles M
Hayes B oke Neacll E
Carsey Br Mgr Box 406
Pome oy Oh 45769 Phone
992 2403
THREE bedroom house
tam ly room w lh f rep ace
ful
basement a I ap
pi ances and draper es
675 1542 alter 5 p m
Two Story House and at on
Broad Run Rd No and
coni act but w II take a
deed of trust 882 2407
32

Mob leHomes
fo• Sale

PR CES REDUCED used
mob le homes and !rave
I a lers
TR STATE
MOBILE HOMES CALL
4.46 7572

5 mob homes w se one
or a
a eady set up n
park underp nned and o
sa \Ia ab e for ent Pr ced
at SJ 000 to S8 000 1 286
3258 n Jackson OH
CLEAN USED MOB LE
HOMES
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOB LE
HOME SALES 4 M
WEST GALL POLIS RT
35 PHONE 446 3868 o 446
7274

GALL A c ean ng and
Ren A Ma d Serv ce nc
Free Est mates bo ded
nsu ed phone 2ol.5 9234
Clean ng by the week mon
lh o contractual
FOR all your photog aphy
needs go to Tawney S ud o
424 2nd Ave Gall po s
Oh o Passports fam ly
photos wedd ngs and com
mere al photography

c &amp; F Clean ng Sys ems
Off ces res den Ia s car
pets Upholstery w ndows
f oar and general c ean ng
446 2783 8to5 PM
l4x65 memory mob e
home mus be moved rom
ot Aile 5PM ca 245 92 8
31

Homes for Sale

S ROOM house
64
Ch 11 cothe Rd only SJ 500
Call446 -4038 or 446 16 5
BUY lh s 7 room ene gy ef
I clent home n Add son
and forget about h gh n
teres! we II f nance at 0
percent Barga n pr ced at
$35 900 P ck the p an that
suits your I nances S2 000
down S350 oo mon h y
payment
$5 000 down
$300 00 month y payment
SlO 000 down $250 00 man
thly paymen
For more
deta s call 675 3240 days
3677536 n ghts
House w th acreage to
sale 3 or 4 bdrs ful y ca
pe ed 2 barns 379 2258 or
379 2343 afte 6PM

19 7 HOMETTE Ira er
14x70 3 bdr 1 bath k
chen furn SlO 000 or SJ 000
down and ta ke o-ve
payments 446 7440
1973 Crown Haven 14x65
three bed oom new ca
pe 1971 Cameron 14x64
two bedroom new carpet
1972 Champ on 12 x60 two
bedroom new ca pel 1976
Cameron
12x60
tw o
bedrooms bath &amp; 2 new
ca pet 1970 PMC 2X60
twa bedroom new carpet
B &amp; S Sa es Inc 2nd and
v and Street PI Peasant
wv Phone67S 4424
8x45 2 bed oom
B owns T a e
M nersv e Oh o

Have vacancy fo elderly
gent eman boa d and laun
d y ncluded 992 6022
13

11

Money to Loan

FHA VA Convent a Home
Loans
Co umbus F rst
Mortgage Co A63 Second
Ave Gall pol s Oh 446
7172

BEDS RON BRASS o d
turn lure
gold
sliver
dollars wood Ice boxes
stone jars ant ques etc
Comp ete
households
Wr te M o M ller Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760
Cock a poo puppy 992 3478

22

wanted Jan tor to work
about 30 hours per week at
Presbyterlan Church Sub
m t appllcat on at 51 Stale
Sl Galllpol s 9 00 am
12 DO beforeJuneJO

AVON
Represen at ve
needed n PI P easan
Meson New Haven and
Rt s82 and 2 areas Must be
over 18 For ntormat on
call675 1429 or 882 2645

:,:41 1111tw11n lht hours

.... Thurldey lnd

11

HARLEY DAVIDSON pr
elerably older model but
wll consider new model I
reasonable Must be n
good conct t on In the $1500
to $2500 pr ce range Ca I
992 5006

111111011 11111 ltUCCtM Phone

675-231L

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv ces for fire Insurance
coverage In Gall Ia Coun y
for almost a century
Form home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet In
diYidual needs Contact
Ka 1 Burleson your neigh
bor and agent
AUTOMOB LE
IN
SURANCE been can
ce led?
Lost
your
operators L cense? Phone
992·2143

16

By owner 4 bdr spit
!eve
v ng rm
d n ng
rm comb eat n kitchen
lg foml y rm 2 2 bath
Located In Tara Estates
Club house and poo
prlv leges K...,ger Creek
Schoo D str cl Shown by
app only 3677835

s

rms &amp; bath 2 1&amp;2 acres
of land new carpet c ty
water bu It n k !chen
525 000 n Crown c ty DH
CAll 1 30• 525 0391 week
day on weekends and In
evening 1 304 522 735
BY OWNER Br ck ranch
near HMC 3 or 4 bdr lots
Of built n cabinets and a
half I nlshed basemen
with den lg walk In closet
shower laundry rm 2 car
garage with
e ectr c
opener centra air lind gas
heat owner w help f nan
ce Ca I 446 4604
Mod fed A frame w lh 3
bedrooms 2 baths car
peted
stone circu ar
fireplace
sp rei slelrs
utllly room Pr vale 8
acres 992 77 41

3 bedroom home 3
1!!''----'w~a~n!!!led=to"-'Do=­ Large
living rooms formal din ng
WORK wanted carpenter room 2 buill n kitchens 2
lo roof work house pain baths 1 with shower A
1
F
II t
fully carpeted Lots Of
:.:::.. ~:;. 7f:_~a 05 paneling Large swlmm ng
pool In bllck Seen by ap
PAINTING Interior em polntment only 992 2404 of
rtor Point Pleasanl Area ltr 4 p m Large recreat on
estimates Call 675 and laundry rPOITI

1968 12x50 2 bedroom ga s
heal partly turn shed o
cond I oned c ean S5 500
1968 10x55 3 bed oom gas
heat party furn shed Has
arge expando n I v ng
oom washer &amp; drye
$4 SOD
1966 10x50
bedroom fue o I fu nace
pa tly fu nlshed carpeted
S2 800 K ngsbury Home
Sa es
111 E
Ma n
Pome oy 992 7034
12 x 50 1960 Grate Lakes
Ira ler
three bedroom
Cal 7~2 2263 or see at
Rut and
2 bedroom tra e for sa e
1968 turn shed with new un
derp nn ng fuel o 1 tank
w th o
f n erested ca 1
698 6784 befo e noon or af
ter 8 p m at Me gs Co
Beegle Cub
USED Mob e Home 576
2711
1971 oa an 12 x 65 3
bedrooms
1972 crown
Haven 14 x 65 w th 8 x o
expando 3 bedrooms 1973
Utop a 12 x 65 2 bedrooms
1972 1nvader 14 x 70 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau 14
x 60 2 bedrooms B • s
Sales nc 2nd and V and
sts Pt Pleasant WV
Phone 675 442•
1969 Gregory 12 X 55 3
bedroom portia Y fur
nlshed well to we I car
pel ng al r cond t on ng
underp nn ng S4 000 77~
5170
Schultz 14 x 65 good
condition all new carpel
partlaiiV furnished
un
clerlllnnlng and porch on
rented ot 11500 CAll 675-

111

1111 Fll$ IIIII

31

Cake
Decorating
specializes Wedd ng cakes
675 2.588 or 675 553 PI
Pleasant WVA

DIWfllllll-... .
OWNII -M811A,..UIID FUINITUII

..e&amp;--=.
...
......... •rtw

Wanted to Do

D J s LAWN MOWER
REPIIIR
On Ne gh
borhood Rd all makes ser
v ced Special z ng In Lawn
Boy Bledes sharpened
Call 446 4425 after 5 p m
Pick up and de verv
avo able

Klltens 7 weeks old 446
11127

..

1111--··

....,.,

ANY PERSON whO hll
anyllllng to give away Indio
does not olftr or 11tempt
offer any olht• thing lor
sole may place an ad In tills
column
will be no
charge toThtre
the adVertiser

11

Picking up easy play organ
n your area Low down
payment
low monthlY
payment Credit manoger
collect 61H92 5122

elumlnum tiding, ...,

mlrrar Old

nlat 1m111 *!net 1o pit life

Galllpoljs Area
.4&lt;16
367-ChtShlrt

They'll Do It Every T1me

II' ec&lt;*ML

4591

J

j

�Forms for Sole
.o acre,~ bedroomm, living
room, with woodburner,
new klichen, W• bath,
swlnnlng pool, fruit trees,
many extras. co Rd. 30. 4
miles from Pomer 0y Nease
.. ~ttlement. Low $50's. U9·

.
KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

33

Wright

2~.

Nice Mobile Home lot.
Letart Fails. 50x120. with
drilled well . Land contract
with small down payment.
247-2841 .

__

APARTMENTs
. Fur
nished or unfurnished.
675··
1371 days, 675 ·3812
evenings.
APARTMENTS
ANO
MOBILE HOMES 675·4130.

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx. 1 acre. 2 BEDROOM apartment,
Live In one, rent others to utilities paid, will consider
make your payment. Can one older child. call 675·
be converted single home. 18113.
City water, will consider
land contract. 675·1883 9-5 REGENCY Inc . Apart·
p.m.
ments, $200 . month,
utilities partially paid. 2
'h acre lot at Apple Grove, Bedroom, superior neighw .v. Priced on inspection. bOrhood. 675·6722. 675·5386.
675-6928.
Apartments . 675·5548.

'M

'::

~';

•

'

0

~~~~~~i~~~T~S~~~~~~~
Misc. Merchandise
54

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

Timber for sale, 20 acres
standing timber, Ph. 446·
3974.
Spring Special · for
upholstering furniture.
Richard Mowrey Sr .•
owner, 615·4154.

71

AUIOIIorSata

1974 Plymouth Sltelllle, 311
cu. ln. envtne, auto. trans..
p.L, a.c., low mil-. lnt
offer or trade. 304-713·5013.

Furnished Apartment.
$200. Utilities pd, 1 bdr .. fir·
st floor, adults, 446-4416 af·
fer7PM.

KACH·ALL portable metal GALVANIZED Culvert,
ft. up. Bridge, etc.
buildings, sizes 4ft.x10ft. to $2.35
Steel,
10c
lb. up. 925·0884.
12ft.x40fl. Gallipolis Block
Co., 123'h Pine St., call 446·
JUNE SPECIAL. Buy
2783.
fishing reel at regular
WONDER STOVE · mfg. price, get rod of equalby United States Stove Co., value half price. Matched
1
wood and coal burner with rod and reel combos, 1:! off
4S
Furnished Rooms
regular
price.
Rod
or
reel
blower, Gallipolis Block
only 25 percent off regular
SLEEPING ROOMS for Co .• caii446·278J.
price. Tri County Sports
rent, Gallla Hotel.
Shop. 675·2988.
Gravely, 12 HP, tWo wheel
SLEEPING ROOMS and model, new, S500 below list.
light housekeeping apt .• Outdoor Equipment, Jet. 7 Two year old quarter nor·
Park Central Hotel .
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. 446· se, 1000 lbs, Ideal for
chi ldren. S700. 675·5365.
3670.
46
Space for Ren!
pc setting Cape Cod Ware
SNAPPER 8 HP elect.
Secluded private trailer lot start riding mower JO ln. by Avon. Items still have
in wooded area . Ideal for
list Sl218·sale SlOSO. contents. 895-3597 after 5
that summer outdoors. cut,
Equipment. ·Jet. pm .
Contact Brown's Trailer Outdoor
Rts. 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph.
Park, 992-3324.
2 bedroom furnished trailer
446·3670.
on crab creek
Rd .•
COUNTRY MOBILE Home 1973 Dodge motor nome gd. utilities furnished. S225
Park, Route 33, North of cond., make after. 446·32.0 month. 675·361l2.
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call after 5, Gallipolis.
992·7479.
.
Ohio Valley Cleaning. Call
Sterling Chains, 16' $4.00, us tor carpet cleaning
TRAILER spaces for rent. 18' $5.00. 24' $6.00. Add $1 .00 before 9 am any day 675·
Southern Valley Mobile postage
&amp; handling. Cash, 1213.
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh. check, or money order to J .
992-3954.
Oaniels, 15 Evans Hgts.,
Gallipolis. on 45631.
TRA ILER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
1976 CR 125M Honda dirt
For Sale woodburner stove
oldY, 675·3248.
'
bike, engine camp. rebuilt
$75, new gas cook stove
$350 . 00.
379·2574,
$175 reg . $279, used refrlg.
,._ , '
46 Equlpmenlfor Rent
Building supplies
Patrlot,OH .
SJS, 3 wOOd blfold louver 55
ENOLOAOER
and doors $15 each. Mosely CB ALL TYPES Of building
1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON
backhoe. sao per day. beam $45, 36 ln. storm door materials, block, brick, 71
Autos for Sale
Operate yourself . Ray $30, 6-4 Rambler American, sewer pipes, windows, lin· :..!-.-~~!..!!~=-­ SUPER GLIDE, all
3811·8368.
tels, etc . Claude Winters, 1976 Chysler Cordoba, low custom ; also a 1973
Beegle, 895-3841.
Rio Grande, 0. Call 245· miles, good cond., tilt HARLEY DAVIOSON
Hair care Items, 2 fur 5121 .
wheel, cruise, priced right, ELECTRA GLIDE, needs
pinon shaft. 992·6281.
coats, knee length. 367·
446·11641, Golllpolls.
7781 , Bidwell, OH .
56
Pets for Sole
74 AMC Sporlabout Station· 1970 Honda CB350. 843·2684.
51
Household Goods
POODLE GROOMING.
Sears Kenmore air con- Cali
wagon.
6 cy i,, p.s .. p.b.,
dilioner 20,000 BTU, uSed 7220. Judy Taylor at 367· good cond. 446·1452.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
75
Bo.stsond
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot· only 1 yr . $425. Bedspread
Motors fill' Sale
toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa, and 2 matching priscilla
V.W. Sclrocco, e•c. cond., .C FIBERGLASS BOAT 22ft.
C/IT · spd,
chair and loveseat, $275. curta ins, SSO. 245-9498, Bid· DRAGONWYND
40 MPG, alloy wheels, CRUISERS INC., Little
TERY
·
KENNEL,
AKC
weli.OH.
Sofas and chairs priced
new tires, cassette radio. Dude Trailer. 1811 Mer·
Chow
Chow
dogs.
CFA
from S275. to $695. Tables,
. 446·9500.
·cruiser 1.0. Full gallery,
$38 and up to SIO'I. Hlde·a· For Sale: 1000 gallon Himalayan, Persian and
stand·up head. U.H.F .
Slomese
cats.
seal
&amp;
cream
beds,$340 .. queen size, $380. PLASTIC septic tanks.
Recliners, $165., $295., State approved. Phone 286· point Himllayan &amp; White 1970 model «2 Oldsmobile, radio, many extras! Bear
Persian kittens. Call 446· convertible 446 ·9818, Run Rd . on Racoon
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5 5930. Jackson. Ohio.
Creek,OH. $6,995.
Gallipolis.
3844 after 4 p.m.
pc. dinettes from S79. , to
$365, 7 pc .• Sl89. and up.
Wood table and 4 chairs, Quarar Video-Tape recor· HILLCREST KENNEL
1980 Pontiac F Irebtrd, Sale or Trade. 1919 BAJA
S3SO up to $495. Hutches, der and camera with 5 Boarding all breeds, clean yellow bird edition, fully Boat, 1611. trl·hull, 115 h.p.
$300. and $375., maple or tapes . Like new . $800.00 lndoor·outdoor I ac lllties. equlped, !ow miles, ex. ~rcury outboard motor
pine finish . Bedroom suites 446·1805.
Also AKC Reg. Dober· cond ., 446·4160 otter SPM, with power trim. Easy load
Bassett Oak, S649.,
Gallipolis.
Tenn. trailer. complete
mans. Cali 446·7795.
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk Two month spring special
covers arid lots Of extras.
bed complete with mal· for upholstering furniture.
Ll ke new, very little use.
dad on Fathers 1970 Camara, V·8, auto, gd. 992·6288.
tresses, $250. and up to Richard Mowery, Sr. surprise
shape,
$1300,
446·5577
or
Day with a new puppy.
SJSO. Captain's beds, S275. owner. 675-4154.
Collie, beogle, and spaniel 256·1932, Gallipolis.
complete. Baby beds, $89.
MotorbOat and trailer for
types, males, females,
Mattresses or bo~ springs, SWIMMING
POOLS : your choice of colors. In· 73 Chevotet Blazer. Call sale or trade. $900. 4511·1780.
full or twin, $55., firm, $65. PRE · SEASON SALE : formation ca ll Humane
446·1875, Gallipolis.
and S7S. Queen sets, 1185. 5 $999.00 INSTA LLE.OI!!
76
Auto Ports
dr. chests, $49. 4 dr. chests, AbOve ground pool COM· Society 992-6505.
&amp;Accessories
$42. Bed frames, S20.ancl PLETELY INSTALLED
1973 Buick LeSabre Custom
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets, starting al$999.00. Price In· Seiling out AKC registered • dr., one owner, family CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
SJSO., dinette chairs $20. eludes pool, deck, fence, cocker spaniels, black car. with dlx. equip,, good Auto parts, auto repair,
and $25. Tappan gas or filter , liner, and In· male, black female, black mechanical cond., good wrecker service, buy
electric ranges, $285.
stallation under normal &amp; while female, all young tires. Gels 17 plus MPG on automobiles, radiators and
USEO
.
Ranges. ground condition. Free dogs. 843·2684.
reg . gas, $850.00. 9 to 5 call batteries. 446·7717.
refrigerators, and TV's,
446-4607, evenings call 446·
shop at'home service. Call
3 miles out Bulaville Rd. 1·800·624-8511 .
.
THE FISH TANK ond Pet 2602.
~
Goodyear, polyglan
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
radial tires, p255, 70Xl5 for
thru Fri., 9am to5pm, Sat.
675·2063,
Pl.
Pleasant.
Insulated storage building. Guinea plgs$7.99 and 10.99, 1973 Volkswagen Super CCir'letle, while raised let·
446·0322
Beetle, exc. Cond., 446·96«
8~10 with 7ft. ceiling, Ideal
like new 446·7709.
work shop. 1799. See these Porakets 114.99, Zebra Fin· after 5 PM.
GOOD
USED
AP · at Kingsbury Home parts ch $12.95, Gerbils $2.98.
16·5's, while spoke
Open 11-4.
PLIANCES · washers, store.
1976 Monte Carlo, PS. PB, 1wlheeils, 1200 tires, I tug,
dryers,
refrigerators,
auto, air, must sen. best Of·
Ford truck. $125.
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
AKC
· Dach .S hund,
ptlances, 1918 Eastern Insulated storage building. Pomeranlon an Poodle fer. 379·2260, Gallipolis.
8x10 wilh 7 ft. ceiling. Ideal pups 895·3958.
Ave., 446·7398 .
work shop. 1799. see these
1972 Regency 12x60 Moijlfe New 1980 Chevy-truck bed,
and many other Items at
Home, 2 bedroom, new· long wheel base. $700. 576·
Winged back green her· Kingsbury Home parts and Adorable AKC Pekinese stove
&amp; refrigerator, new
cuton sofa, co·ordlnallng accessory store. Rl. 124 puppies, AKC Poodle pup· 1 ~~ft:~; natural gas heat, 2635.
chairs, 12 ~ 22 carpet and Minersville, Oh. 992-5517.
pies, shots and wor· I·'
&amp; dryer, air con·
painting, excellent conn
AuteR!fl!ir
r:~c:.:..!::::l~alr.;g..r~~ dttloner. S6.ooo.992·67.11 .
dillon. $350. 615·5976.
BURIAL lots for sale. 8002.
ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE.
2~ hr. wrecker
Beautiful, perpetual care,
1968 Javelin, vinyl top, service. "Big
53
Antiques
uprlghft monument per·
or small" we
milled. Forut Hill Black and tan coon dogs, 10 good cond. Call992·7214.
tow them alii 2332 Eastern
ATTENTION :
(IM · Cemetary Rl. 2 North. weeks old . Excellent
Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
PORTANT TO YOU) Will Phone 675·5541 (James H. bloodline. 675·5634 or 675· 1978 CUTLASS Salon. '675·
444-2445
or Nlght · 446·
pay cash or certified check Lewis)
6923.
2722 or 675·5571 .
092.
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also, ALL types of granite, mar·
guns, pocket watches, and bte. and bronze memorlatL
coin collections. Call 614· Display lot on Main St. Pt.
Pleasant Granite Com· AKC Lhasa·Apso, 3 years
767·3167 or 557-3411 .
pany. Phone .675-$541.
old, good with children. 175.
675-16-42.
54 Misc. Merclllndlll
26' TROUTWOOD travel
CONTROL hunger ondl- !ratter and camp site on 57
Muslcol
welght with New Shape Roccon Creek. Cloee to
Instruments
Diet · Plan and Hydre• Ohio River. ' 1500 dOwn.
Water Pills. Fruth Phlr· Owner will finance. 614-2.56· Lowery Orgon, 1500. 446·
7508, Gallipolis.
1216.
macy. ·

Furnished Apartment,
1150. Utilities pd. Share
bath, - child acceptable,
446-4416 after 7.

7 alumlun windows 4x6, 1
lndust. alum. ~ 3ft., 200
gal. gas tank, Ph.
Vlnton,OH.

Small apartment for one
person. Call 446·1578.

Carport Sale Movlngl
Miscellaneous Items, 2 cor· NI!I!!OMveratllemsolfur· Clbbego, pick your own 25
pels, etc. 6-43 5th Ave. Thur· nlture, applloncn, _ , . 1 IINCI. R.VIIIrl
lellvlslonl. Big dllcounts
llday and Friday 9105.
Orchard, Itt. 7
for quality purchaH. l'iach
Lower
ltlvar ltd.,
VIllage Furniture 2605 Gllllpolll. Ph
• .._.• •
4X12 ewlmmlnv pool-only Jacfllon Ave. 615-1m.
111111 UNCI 3 fiiOI., lll'lnd
,_pump (IIIII I~ 11011). I
IIG diKOUnll lor tnlllnd
H.l". ro!Ofllllr wftll~= _.., at Vlllaga Fumllura
behltld lila .....
'
:MOS JICIIIIOII A-, 615Tnurm-. ·OH.
1m.

41
Houses for Rent
2 bdr. nome unfurn, Lower
Rt. 7. No Pets, dep. req.,
256·1413, Gallipolis.
House for rent, 57 Olive St.
1 bdr., unfurnished, no
pets, you pay utilities, dep.
req., $150. mo. 446·7886. Af·
ter 5 446·4045.
1013 2nd Ave., Gallipolis.
2bdr.. unfurn . house, no
pets, you pay utilities, dep
req., $150. mo. 446·7886 af·
ter 5 446·4045.
OR LEASE with option to
buy . 1,921 sq. ft ., 3
bedroom. • baths, earth
brown and brick, large
family room with pool
table, all electric, heat
pump, kitchen built In, Hotpoint appliances includ ing
dishwasher,

large

lot ,

private. partiallY wooded,
200 ft. frontage, on Rt. 2

close to Kaiser, assumable
loan, owner will fianance

second mortgage, minimal
lnterest. 273·2021

One 2 bedroom house . .One
2 bedroom mobile 'home.
One 3 bedroom apartment.
675·-4045.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. mobile home 16x65, 4
mile out Bulaville Rd. SIBS
mo. plus one month dep.
446·4899 after 5:30.

Mobile home for rent, 3
bdr., completely nurn., 446·
9669 ., Gallipolis.
2 bedroom trailer for rent.
Brown' s Trailer Park. 992·
3324.

For rent, lOx SO 2 bedroom
mobile home. Racine area.

992·5858.

6 room house for rent on

Nye Avenue. SlSO per month, sso deposit. 367-7811 .

2 bedroom furnished trailer
on Crab Creek
Rd.,
utilities furnished. $225
month . 675·361l2.
Two bedroom furnished
trailer, $180. month plus
utilities. $100. deposll.675·
6987.
One bedroom trailer in
Henderson ,

air

con ·

dilloned. Everything fur·
nlshed . Rent by week ' or
month. 675·6730.
Two bedroom house trailer
on Ashton· Uptand Road.
SlSO plus utilities and
damage deposit. J miles
from Rl. 2. 675-4088.
Two 2 bedroom house
trailers for rent, furnished ,
1 with central air, good for
working couple or couple
wilh 1 child. $150 per monrn
plus deposit. 675·4088.
44

Apartment
for Rent
House for rent, 57 Olive St.
1 bdr., unfurnished, no
pets, you pay utilities, dep.
req .• SlSO. mo. 446·7886. Af·
ter 5 446·4045.

1 Bedroom apt. all utilities
paid. 675-5104 or 675·5386,
Pt. Pleasant.

FURNISHED APl'. Cen·
tralalr, hell and parking, 1
or2 adulllonly. 444-0331.
Apllrtrnent fill' rent, un·
furn., • rmt., utllltln pd.,
no children cir ""• 4441637, Galllpolfa.OH.

a

..... .........
•

• • ••

••• • , -

~

•

•

... , '

•

'

•••

•

'

0'

n

11

E i. V WI!!LDING Paint &amp;
Body Sfloll, G-ges Creek
Rd. Gallipolis, 444-9304, lor·
mailv with Gallipolis,
Mol0n,3yun,
·

H I D ,CONSTRUCTION.
Ramocllllllll, ancl repairs.
conwnerclat and restdell·
llal. Phone67H357.
.·

•

, , , , , , ... L U I

• •

0. C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrical, heating,
rooting, aluminum, vinyl
Siding, and home painting.
675·3376 or 675·1240.

SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING. Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, 446·2787.

13

•11349.

INSTALL fireplace facing
or chimney, dry wall,
plaster, stucco, free est.
Simulated brick or stone,
Greg Burdette, call 675·
6357.
HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
Contractors · Build, siding,
remodel, concrete, roofing,
free estimates. Call col ..
614-259·2814 ask for Charles
or Mike.
INTERIOR and exterior
painting, Mark While, call
24.5-9561 .
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffell Brothers custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call ,446-2107.
WOODSHOP · Cabinets.
picnic tables,
porch
swings, most wood produc·
ts. 101· court st .. Gallipolis.
Call446·2572.
WEATHERALL CON·
CRETE · quality and Sir·
vice, call 675·1582.
PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumbing,
rooting, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call 388-'1652.
81 NG'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION • Specializing
In concrete drlveweys,
sidewa lks,
patio,
basement, gorage 11001'1
and etc. Free estimates. 11
Vlln experience. Call 367·
7191.
.

BRICK, BLOCK, AND
STONE WORK, 256·6735,
Crown City, OH.
WANTED TO DO all types
Oltltrlor PAINTING.
Free nllmares. VERY
REASONABLE RATES.
CALL 614·256-1m alter
4:30PM, Golllpolls.

EVENING
7:00 CD II PM MAGAZINE
(}) NEW IIBLE BAFFLE

I

WI!! WOitK:I!P;;-:T:HI!!;-;::::;~W:I!-:-GA;::N:-;IlE:.:;-L::
IV:&amp;it::tT:-:W:::IEJ.I
RIS H!lt HU!IMNP
Wit MAI&lt;t OU~ ~UNP5 UP
WA&amp; I&lt;IL~E:D 0111 , WI!
THAT WAY, I~ YOU'D LiKE.
eot teMt TiltNit!l we
WANTA GIVI HI-Fl. ;

IIUT WE WAIIINA
PA~ A LITTLI!:
Vi!IITONH!R
0Uit5!LV1!9.

REPORT
·
NEWS
FAMILY FEUD
7:30
BULLIIIYE
(}) ANOTHER UFE
([),BASEBALL Atlanta Braves

II

va Montreal Expos

~

'·

ClliiCil JOKER'S WILD
C!J HOLLYWOOO SQUARES

'•

Guest : Singer lena Horne.

(l liiD DICK CAVETT SHOW

"•

RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
Ql FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 ; _CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00
IIC!J REALPEOPLEAnar·
@I

'

'

OO

CRieD 'IJH~\.1 I

tll58

"Some

Cerwe

Running"

Cll(H)GI CIWILIE'SANGELS
The anoe Ia enter the glamorau a
wortdolcompetitlvebodybuild·
ing, and lind themaelvea In the
midst of a deadly struggle
between two muscular men
vying lor a championship and
two conniving managers who
will stop at nothing to share in
the lucrative payoff. (60 mins.)

CJ Cll @I SPECIAL MOVIE

PRESENTATION 'Silent Vic·
lory: The Killy O'Neil l Slory'
t979
(]) AMERICAN ODYSSEY in

l H.HOW THAT l--AM' GO
wHEM YOO CAME
SHOOTIH' OUT 0' TIIAT
HOLE iH TH' 6fWJi'IQ
I THOOOHT··

H0\11 COIJLO I IllHEI'I DP.ILLIM' IH'll\
itti0\11 YOU WERE THEM TU~ELS l'iOOLO
EZRA EOM/ YOO MEPt'l TR.OUB!.E! ·
LOOK JUGT UH.E PR.ESGURE POPPED ME
YOUR BMTHER! ruTTA THAR Llli.E A
w

October ol 1979, a lawyer, a
tea cher and a ranch ·hand ran
the New York marathon and
then began a month·long.jour·
ney of e~tptoratlon , challenge
and adventure traveling across
America in a recreational11eh i·
cle. (60 min a.)

TELL TH'
TR.UTHIT '1/AG
K.IHDA FUti.1

~ T'

HEEHW!

lllJ ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL 'Homo ond Away'

ISOLDA~HED

James and Tristan discover
that too much professionalism
can be a dangerous thing.

COftK.'

8:58 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
9:00 CD 0 C!J DIFF'RENT
STROKES Arnold de cides to
use his birthday party to brighten up the life of the pesky girl
next door who Ia hospitalized
with a serious disease.
(Repeal) (C losed-Captioned)
I.Il 700~UB

C1J

(j2) liJ ABC SUMMER
MOVIE 'Teiefon' 1977
(])liD FABULOUS PHILADEL·
PHIANS: FROM ORMANOYTO

ALLEYOOP
LOOK 0¥EP. ~ERE!
WHO'RE '!HOSE GU'IS?

~lEY,

MUTI 'Mutl and Alicia de Larrocha' The c,tebrated Spanish
pianist Ali cia de Larrocha and
the Philadelphia Orchestra
perform Mozart's Concerto No.
25 inC Major for Piano and Or·
chut ra, with Riccardo Muli
~nd._u9!lno. (60 min a.)

- -:;.!\.'- '

U:JO W D L!J THE FACTS OF LIF'

... :~ ·

C &amp; V Inc., Backhoe ser·
vice. 985·3549 or 949·2822.
COMPLETE SEWER IN·
STALLATION &amp; backhoe
service for the Racine·
Syracuse sewer district.
Dozer work If needed. 949·
~-

Tootle Ia Invited to model de·
algnerJeana ln Hew York and Is
bewildered by the glamorous
fashion world there. (Repeat)

10:00

.

c:tA~.P

The

will
ce&gt;me

EDWA:RD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
In septic tank. 675·123-4.

and

Tn~toti.nd

(Repeal; 80mlna.)

Let's see what
tomorrow brinqG

him ahome
someplace!

([) TBlEVENING NEWS
CJCIJIJJ) CIIS REPORTS: THE

DEFENSE CW THE UNITED
STATESCBSNewocorrespondent Dan Rather anchors this
speclalnewsseriesfocusingon
U.S. defenaeand the coming ol
age oft he nuclear era. Rather is
joined by Sptclll Co"eapon·
dent Walter Cronkite, and cor·
respondents Ed Bradley, Harry
ReaSoner, Bob Schieffer, Ri·

1'--..--.:__--~

get
niml

BACKHOE Service. Larry
Sldenstrlcker. 675·5580.

CD II C!J QUINCY Quincy

aervea on a Jury In a homicide
case and, despite court rules
that hela not to use his ex per·
lise, he questionathe't'a lidityof
evidance,leading to a mistrial.

GASOUNE AlLEY

Dozer work. Small lobs •
specialty. 742·2753.

J , E. Whitt Construction.
Block and concrete, mor·
tar. sand and gravel. Rt.
33, two miles above New
Haven . 882·2148.

chord Threlkeld and Ike Pap·
pas. (Panfowof a fi't'e·part ser·

lea ; 60mina.)

C1J MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Ouche11 ofOukeStreet: ANice
Claaa ol Premiaea' When Loui·
sa Ia forced to take work as a
cook , and her huaband begins
drinking heavily. aha dreams of
owning a hotel with Trotter as
manager. Norah sa house·
keeper, and hera• If uchel .(60
mins.)
(jj) NEWS

I! lecfrlcal

&amp; ltefrlpnllon
QUALITY Cooling and
Heating Service, call 311·

WINNIE

!IECAU5E eHE ......,_,L.,

""'·

5\JPFORT YOU, llJT SHE
Plt7 TilE NEXT BEST
THING 51£ C0ULt7

Fuller E.lectrlc co. Com·
plele rewiring, commercial
or rnldenllal, and etec·
trlcal malntalnance, alio
on call. Ph. -«6·2171,
Gallipolis.

. FCR YOU!

t0:t5 (])STANDING ROOM ONLY:
TOPBAHANAIURLESOUEAn
Jll ·new production of the

Broadway claaalc 'Top Banan·
a, ' featuring Jack Carter, Edie
Adame and Heft&gt; Edelman in a

burleaQVtproductloncomplete
with baggy pants comedy ,

SEWING MACHINE .
repairs, 10rv1ce, all makes.
992·2214. The Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . Authorized
Singer SaiB and Service.
Weltlarpen Scissors.

aaucy atrlptla M and ITiualc by
Johnny Uercer.·Spec ial guest
'appearances by Steve Allen,
Marty Allen, Rote M~rie and
GeorgeJeaael.

t0:~8 ~ CBN UPDATE NEWS

JACK'S REfRIGERATIO·
N. air condition Mrvice,
commercial, lnduslrlol .
Phone 112·2079.

10:30
BARNEY

,.
'

..
HOW COME TATER IS THE
ONLV ONE WHO GITS TO USE
,..~ '"· TH' RECLINER?

IGLOBONj

KI
Answr: "K I
I

IIIAX MOMfl
NASL SOCCER Atlanta

Chiefs
va
Earthquake

San

Jose

- ~ OUTER UMITS
10:58
_C!IN UPDATE NEWS
tt:oo
•wrn•Cil®Wat
NEWS
(])
PROGRAM
UNCED
VE ALLEN AT LARGE
11:28
UPDATINIWS
t1:30
THETOIIIQIITSIIOW '

m

Rich and Myrtle Whitcher. (60
mine.)
AOIIIAQLEY SHOW

I

IlllillY HILL SHOW
(I)

C81 LATE IIOVIE

..

WHY YOU f7HOUI..D
NEVE~ C:ONFIDE A

SECRET 'TO A

~ELA'TIVE.

I I

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

xxx ] rI x xr
WILL

(Answers tomorrow)
YeSielday·s [ Jumbles: TOXIN AGATE DROWSY UNLOAD
Answer: How a place can beCome a " palace"BY ADDING AN A
Jumble Book No. 1S; containing 110 puutes. Is awalllbtllor 11.7!5 poatpeld
1rom Jum!Mt, eJO tnil ntWipiptr, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. OfMI.Indude JOU'
name, address. zip code and make checks payable to Newspapll'booka.

BRIDGE

_____.....,

More "Uter" play;._
By Oswald Jacoby
llld AJaD Soatac
Here is another of Tony
Prlday's 1945 hands. You are
rather disappointed with ·the
dummy. It would have been
nice to see five trumps and
maybe a singleton in one of
the black suits, but you have
to play with what you have .
You see two trump entries
to dummy and can finesse in
both black suits, but West's
double suggests that he wlll
bold hac~ black kings and
p_robably four trumps as well.
You think about setting up
dummy's diamonds but allandon tbat play. It won't get you
your 12 ttlclls.
You wln the first trick in
dummy and decide to try a
black suit finesse . "Uter "
wbicb one of two? Obviously
the spade to take advantase
of that 10 spot. You lead tt.
West takes bls king and leads
a second trump.
·
Now you wm in your hand,
cash your ace-Jack of spades
to discard a club from dummy
and lead ace and queen of
clubs for a ruffing finesse
against West. He pla~s his
·king. You ruff, return Wtth the
king of diamonds and make
the last three tricks with vour

NORTH
.Q 10
.Q J 106
tHS32

1-17-11

•ae

wm

EAST

.3

.K 8 S

.97432

. , 542

t87
• Q1064
.K10H
.9S2
SOUTH
.AJ6
.AK98
tAK
.AQJ3
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Wftl
North East Soat~
2\1
2\1

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Obi.

4.

st

6t
Pass

Pus
Pus
Pass
Pus
Pus

44o

4 NT
5 NT
e•
Pass

Opening iead:•2

two trumps and the jack of
clubs.
You have played wei~ but : · :
you give mental thanks to ·
West for his rather silly
double.

~ ~UttVJtJtl
by THOMAS JOS.EPH
ACROSS
43 Row
1Hyde Park
DOWN
stroller
1 Old hat
5 Astound
2 More
1t Japanese
seasoned
aborigine
3 Laos woman
11 "Porgy and
Wall (Fr.)
Bess"
5 Rearward
d Whimper
character
13 Medium's
7 Nigerian
Yesterday's Alllwer
concern
warrior
19 Feat feted 31 Kenya people
15 Ready to roll
8 "Don Giovan- in footage 32 - nous
11 Man's
ni" role
%0 - Lull · 33 Alswan
nickname
9 Vivify
Z3 Take heed 35 Georgia
17 Ullmann
12 Refer (to)
%4 Generally
lost. of 18 Steno's aid
14 Inventor's
zs Aryan 38 Convene
20 Existing
stock·
%6 Cluster
39 FrequenUy,
%1 Basking goal
in-trade
%8 Horse (sl.) in verse
Z% Heavy blow
Z3 Fake

«

!a Noted
M~wkcruef ~4-~-+--~

27 Squared away b--1-+ZI "Have -~
Will Travel... " 1-.4-~...JIJI
zt "I - to Your
. Wedding "
38 Paint
34 -deco
35 Detective (sl.)
:!a Blackbird
(var.)

37 Conjure up,
as spirits
40 Pacific
Islands
41 Ratlons
4! River
In Hades

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A is
used for the three ,L's, X for the two O' s, elc. Sinll• lellers,
apostrophes , the length and formation of lhe words are all
·
hints. Each day the codelefters are different.

Gueett : Gerald Lewton, Terry

NOW HAULING houw cool
I IITfttonl lor drl-ays. ·
can lor nllmatn 367·710!

CRYnOQUOTES

QD I I K

TAVK

DNL

GKAYGP

YA

.

'Roeebud' tP76

SDWYAE

tJIIIIOVll~)'•li

ZTN

OQL

HTNVX

DP

DP

OQLK

UDNNLA

(I) AIC C»TlCCIIID NIWS

"Mr.
........... Jo ......."lt7t

DILLARDS , WATER
DI!!LIVIItY Service. Call
....7....

111• AICNIWI~

PEAIIIT11

JONES IOYS WATER
SlltVICE, Clll 367·7471 or
. . .J.
I

t1:46~~T~)
•••li "hie~ c-w, And

'Oe .............. , .
11:00 &lt;Il. AIC .-nuNE

SDXL

TOQLNP
YO

ELTNEL

ZT N

11111' loOked Ill a l i i - ; lnd

Gophar'l aleter rHppnre

.,_.., f0111t1HI Hd Wertat·

edillloc. IR-t: 70mfnl.l

'l

QDML

OQLSPLVMLP .

SLNLXYOQ

ANYTIME TIUNGS APPEAR TO
YOU

;w:n:A~or~.~~~

ooupll....... ~deUVhlor
•nd tt• tlillbud 1te ICCidtfl-

J

. (J

"SPECIALS
MOVIE ·(DRAMA) "'

'1'eAI-\, A,flD 514€
11-V&gt;T Ole',w.

h
I -

ILYBBAF

tist whp createa In acents ,
another who paint a murals on
securitygateeln aghetto, a tour
ot the gravea of Hollywood
legenda and a visit to an erotic
bakery In New York City.
epeat; 60 mine .) ·

BORN LOSER

DOZER - k · elCCIVatlng,
land clearing. Call446-0051 .

General Hlllill!l
LIMESTONE, gra,.t ancl
lind. AIIIIZn. AI Rlcllardl
lnd son. Upper River Rd.,
Golllpolls, Ohio. Call 446·
77U.

WHAT MAKES HIM RUN .
WILD KINGDOM 'Why

G Cll TIC TAC: DOUGH
CIJ (jj) IIAC:NEIL-LEHIIER

CAPI'AIN EASY

tiJJ

~~LINTHEFAMILY

Constrvatlon?'

JIM'S DEPENDABLE
water delivery. Call 256tUianyttme.

EASY credit avaHiblt , _ 5I
Prult
to pur chan furniture, I' __....,!!I!..:V!.!!p!!~=·•~•!.s_ _
televisions. or appllancn. Strawbarrlll·plck your
Village Furniture 2605 own. Claude Winters. 245JKkiiOII Ave., 675-1m.
5121.

Television
•• •
VIewmg
JUNE·17, 188.t

Excovollng
OOZE R • backhoe, dump
truck. Call444-4537.

IS

5:

•

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,STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, corn·
mercia! and residential.
free estimates. Call · 256·
1182. .

of

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The Daily

DICITRACY

Homa
lntp!'!VInt!!!ll

Farm IQUI!IIIIIIII
79. 11.\1ue~ Ferguson 200 D.
·BulldDZer · dt.tMI, 1 11.
blade, wench, 151 110Url. MORRISON'.$ Auto aates.'
~li1derson. WV. Phone 675- Auto Palnllrig ·1 Saildlnt · . CONTI NIDUS no ltlk gut·:
Cli.11256·1345. ·
157~0f 675·2811.
1250, free,llfc~up &amp; ctellv•rY terlng, cuatom made tor .
In' Gall)polis area, Ham· y~ur hOme. For free ·
tnt. diesel tractor, New 77 o'LDSMOBILE, Cutlass, inond BOdy ltlop319,2782.
ftllmotn, cell ADVANCE
Holland baler, hay rake,
-===:=:::=,;
'
=:·
SEAMLESS GUTTER
~ .. owner, 3.50 , V·8, 1 1r,
:::
.....
hay conditioner, lertlllz•r
calliflblll .
AND DOOR. 614-698-1.,.,
spreader, disc., backhoe erviN, radio, tope, call304· 71
67HI65 after 5 p.m.
lgulpment
blade. Call446-1991.
HARPER Hotatead, lawn
TRUCK
T OPPER. . mower
repolr and lhar·
Tobbacco setter, 1011. lime 1H9 Chevy Nova, good con· fiberglas, w1111 sliding win· penlng Mrvlce, ·10 a.m.·f
dillon.
W5.
304-773-5438.
spreader, small 2 wheel
dOW lor 6'1t ft. GMC or
Chivy truck, $325. Calf 388· p.m. 675'5168 •
trailers, 73 Chevy 1 ton. 379·
2322, Patrlot,OH .
1976 Ford Pinto station· 933-4 alter 6 p.m.
DAVE!S ippllance repair,
we~n, with ac, am-tape,
walhers, dryers. plum·
standard,
excellent·
con·
Four 15.00 gallon tankl
1977 BONANZA travel bing, etectrl~. 111neral han·
trailer. 35ft. long, a.c., tip- dyman. 576·292! or 67H689•
located abOve ground at dillon. 304-458·1536.
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
out room. .New awning,
each. Phone 1·304-422·2781. IN7 Volkswagen. Call 675·. deluxe Interior, full bath,
ROWS Television $ervlct.
or 675·6513.
call388·1646.
$peclallzlng In zenith and
Turn over plow with 3 point
Motonota, Quazar, and
h!tch for garden tractor. 72
1981 29 foot Yellowstone hOuse calla. Phone 576·2398
Trucks for Slott
304-882·,3332.
.
country club travel trailer.
1910 Toyota 4 WD Truck, Loaded. Never been used. or~2454.
a.c., am·fm stereo, 1111 Has 21 fool awnlng.742·2211
COOK'S Televtston ser·
wheel, 11,000 miles, 17500. days or 742·2201 alter 5.
62
to auy
vice, Henderson, WV
WANT wanted
TO BUY
Old fur· firm. After 7 p.m., 256·1124.
· nlture and Antiques of all
1977 Apache · Clmmaron, · Phone 675-22SO.
kinds, call Ke~neth Swain, For sate 1976 Chevy Luv approximately 2• fl. crank·
.
256·19671ntheevenlng.
truck with topper after up fiberglass, gas or elec· F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
5PM446·1537, Kerr. OH.
trlc refrigerator, awning, stump removal. 675-1331.
sleeps six. Like new. $3,000.
63
Livestock
985·3504.
T and R building,
1976
Ford
1
ton
12
ft.
'flat
1 Gurnsey milk cow. 245·
remodeling, also papering,
bed,
am·fm
stereo,
p.b.,
.
5348, Thurman. QH . ·
carpet Installation, and
p.s. Phone 992·5715.
general
home im ·
For sale 8 yr. old Reg. Ten· 1971- Ford truck V·8 stan·
pnovements, 675·5689, 675·
n'!Sse Walking horse 11250,
5304.
"
3 yr. old Tennesse Walking dard shift. 985·4225.
norse ssso. 2 yr. old Reg.
HORSE SHOEING and
Quarter horse $500, 1 yr. 1978 FORD '4 ton 4·wheel
675·3137 or 675·
breaking.
Home
drive,
675·1121
.
11
Reg. Quarter horse $300,
6626.
Improvements
also just recleved 125,000
nt. of while oak Inch tum· 1970 Chevy Blazer. 4 speed. FOR BEST In Carpet
ber S150 per thousand. See 4 x 4, 6 cylinder. $900. 304· Cleaning · Call Smeltter•s
Jerry Henderson, Jackson, n3·5250.
Plumbing
Steamway, can 614·446· 12
OH, 9811·2971.
&amp;HHtlng
2096.
1979 J·lO pickup~ x 4, six
CARTER'S PLUMBING
6 yr. old reg. Quorter horse cylinder, 4 speed, $4900, or
STANLEY STEEMER
AND HEATING
gulldlng black western or take over payments. Also
· Carpet Cleaning ·
cor. Fourth and Pine
hunt seat. 614·384·2295, 1977 Yamaha XS 750 D,
446·4208
Phone446·3888 or 444-«77
Wellston, OH.
$1401). 675-3436.
PAINTING · Residential
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
5 while-face heifers, 2 with 1973 Chevy Luv, with top· and commercial. Interior
AND HEATING
calbes, 3 coming fresh, ap- per, good running con· and exterior, mobile home
Route 160 at Evergre•m
proximately 2 months. 247· dillon. $1250. 675·1186.
roots. Free estimates' 17 Phone 446·2735.
2841.
yrs. exp. with references
cal1367·7784 or 367·7160.
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.D.
GENE PLANTS
Two year old quarter horse
ANOSONS
1,000 lbs. Ideal for children, 1980 JEEP CJ·5, 6-cyt .• 4· JIM MARCUM ROOfing ·
1700.00 675·5365 .
.
spd., exc. cond., call 446· spouting and siding. 30 Plumbing · Heating · Air
conditioning. 300 Fourth
1211.
years experience. Free Ave. Ph. 446·1637.
Six year old Black Mare
estimates. Remodeling.
with stud colt. For more In· MUST SELL, Make me on Call388·9857.
SOUTHERN SERVICE
Offer 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, 4
formation call 8112·3399.
spd, low mileage, canvas CALL 446·2801 tor termite, co. · Heating · mobile
top, will trade, call 446·1211 roach, bird, rodent, home furnaces, electric hot
Mare with colt, one due In or
water tank repair. Call of·
446·3594.
August. 304-882·2750.
spiders, fleas and other flee, 446· 3008 night,
small Insect control. Free emergency no.-367·7131.
74
Motorcycles
estimates given. A local
company locaed
In
360 Honda, 1977. Gd. cond., Gallipolis area . Bill J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Healing,
$600. 446·2196 before 9:30
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367-7153.
Thomas.
AM or after 8:00PM.
61

3 bdr.; clean, carpeted~ un-

furn. , upstat rs apartment.
Prlilale entrance, parking
off street, dep., adults, no
pets, 112 utilities paid, $175
35
Lots &amp; Acreage
mo. 44 Locust St. Gallipolis
LOTS · Real nice campsite or ca11446·J310.
on Roccoon Creek, all
utilities available, $300. Furnished 2 bedroom up·
down, owner will finance, stairs ~partment. Adults
call after 3 p.m., 256·6-413.
only, no pets. Middleport.
992·3874.
Beautiful &amp; level lots, Fair·
field Church Rd ., approved
sub division, city school, 1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
rural w~ter , J 314 acre_s, apartments. 992·544 or 992·
$10,000. 1 II4 acre .$4,500. 5914 or 8112·2566.
Owner will finance, 10
down 379-2196.
1 bedroom opts. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
4 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd. Opportunity Housing. Call
close toRt. 160, S8.000. Call 992·7721.
4-46·0390.
2 acres on Floyd·Ciark Rd. Apartment In Pomeroy. 4
close to Rt. 160, $4,000. roomsand bath. 992·5621.
Phone 446-0390.

-

:.: : .. ":..
..

2 nice 2bdr. apartments.
Vlnlon,OH 381HQ68.

June17, 1911

HAVE OVERLOOKED

CIUSHOLM

Rare sculpture
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP)- The Smithsonian's Hlr·
shhorn MJIIel!lll and Sculpture Garden has acquired a
ran wooden ICIIIpture by the modem inlllter, Paul
Gauguin (1...1903~ .
The ICIIIplure, euved by the French artiat duriJtc hla
flnt JWidence In Tlhlti,ls being eldllbited In 1 apecial
installation It the lllllleWll through Sept. 30.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 1J,l911

Mayor's Court
Eight defendants forfeited bonds,
seven of them on speeding charges,
m the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrewa Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
charges were Jolir) Ft. Nelson, Middleport, $25; John Hood, Middleport,
$2'1; Gregory Woodward, Gallipolis,
$2'1; Glen Dunfee, Guysville, $31;
Fton Qul1len, Ftacine, $30; .Dale w.
Hlll, .Flilclne, $29, and Donald Duncan, Point Pleaaant, $27. Forfeiting •
a ~ bond posted on a disorderly
manner charge was Thomas Do!'!il,
Pomeroy.
Fined $150 and costs in the court
on a reckless operation charge was
Roger Hysell, Pomeroy.

Three pel'!lons forfeited bonds in a
busy night of court Tuesday conducted by Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman.
Forfeiting were Joseph F. Caldwell, Columbia Heights, Va., $150
driving while under suspension, and
$350, driving while intoxicated;
Robert E. Kimes, New Haven, $350,
driving while intoxicated; $150,
driving while under suspension, and

PROMOTED - Brenda McGrath has been named to the posl!lon of
teller with Bank One of Pomeroy. Mrs. McGrath, a graduate of Eastern
High School, Uves at Mason, W.Va., with ber husband, Ronald. She joined
Bank One in March, 1980, and has completed one A.!. B. course.

Meigs County happenings..
Deliver trimmer

Dale Riffle, Rt. 2, Racine, and
Josephine Riffle, Middleport, filed
for dissolution of marriage.
Janet G. Marcum filed for support
Wlder the Reciprocal Agreement
Act against David W. Marcum.

Phil Roberts, county engineer,
told the Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday that the
MoTrim (mower-trimmer) has been
delivered.
Roberts also reported several
drainage problems have developed Veterans Memorial
due to the abundance of rain.
Admitted--Helen Holt, MidBob Bailey, EMS coordinator, met dieport; Joe Moore, Rutland; Oscar
with the board and discussed the Jones, Langsville; Carolyn Reeves,
overall operation of the Emergency Pomeroy; Unda Butcher, Pomeroy ;
Medical Service.
Floyd Cummins, Racine; Media
Schoonover, Rutland; Carl Davis,
Middleport.
Marriage license
Discharged--Okla Walke r,
A marriage license was issued to Timothy Stearns, Edna Parsons,
L!oyd Emerson Martin, 35, Albany Lula Phillips.
and Joan Trout, 41, Albany.

Court actions filed

Emergency calls

Five calls were answered Tuesday
A suit in the amount of $17,299 bas by local emergency unilli, the Meigs
been filed in Meigs County Common CoWJty Emergency Medical Service
Pleas Court by Randolph Fraley, reports.
Jr., Middleport, against Richard
AI 12:41 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit
Bailey, Middleport.
took Carolyn Reeves, Pomeroy, to
The suit is for parts, machine Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
tools, money loaned and labor.
Syracuse at 6:45 p.m. took Floyd
Filing for divorce were Jeannie Cummins from the fire station to
Starcher, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, again- Veterans Memorial and at 8 p.m.
st James H. Starcher, Rt. I, Long took Carl Teaford from her residene
Bottom; Pauletta Sue Tiemeyer, to Veterans Memorial ; Rutland at
Middleport, against David Lloyd 3:42 a.m. took John Klein from
Tiemeyer, Calnp Pendleton, Calif.; Meigs Mine 2 to Veterans Memorial
Leota Young, Joliet, lll., against and at 9:51 a.m., took Oscar Jones,
Reid Young, Rt. 1, Minersville.
Salem St., to Veterans Memorial.

Market
report
Ohio Valley Liveatock Co.
MARKET REPORT
Sale every Saturday ol1 p.m. Prices lal&lt;en

IMI;SOOtoiiOOJili. ~, II00

.

, SPECIAL
OF THE WEIKI
'' '
.

speeding.

(

.

Other hearings included ; Mark
Haley, Middleport; $100 and costs,
diSorderly manner; James Jones,
Middleport, three months probation,
disorderly manner; Teresa Jones,
Middleport, three months probation, .
disorderly manner; Sally Lambert
Middleport, $100 and costs,
derly; , Leslie Miller, Middleport,
three months probation, disorderly:
James Morrison, Mld\tleport, $100
and costs, d~o!'llerly manner.
Other court actions included Ftoy
J. Neff, ·Middleport, fined $10 and
costs, no operator's license, and sentenced to five days in jail on a
reckless operation charge and 10
days on a charge of fleeing an officer; Jack Partlow, Pomeroy, $100
and costs; Arnold Priddy, Middleport, · $liO and costs; Melanie
Pullen, Middleport, $100 lind COilts,
and Sally Schanlon, Middleport, $100
and costs, each on disorderly manne_r charges; Pauletta Tiemeyer,
Middleport, three months probation
disorderly manner.
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DOG ................ 49•

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WITH FRIES·.~............'89 41.
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dlso;

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ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
.

SAVE ENERGY... SAVE MONEY

-KEEP COOL

WITH QE ROOM AIR CONDITIONERS

Browning, Bobby Arnold, Nancy
Neutzling, Theron Durham, Diana
·crosby, Ronald Wood, Pauline
Snowden, Jonathan Well, Allee
Ward, Nicklois Leonard, Ftobert
Williams.
Custodians - Betty Wyne, Robin
Satterfield, Marvin Dodrill, Paul
McDaniel, Jr., Daniel Norman, Ella
Mae Southern.

HI-EFFICIENCY

5,000 BTU

GE CARRY.COOL~

b WABHING'roN (AP) - The
Meanwhlle,the.reportallorevt..d · The Reagan administration,
·nation's ·fJCOIIIIitV If"' evan more · a GNP~ inllatlon ineasure meanwhile,IB precllcting little or no ·. ·
~ tblll reported earlier durin&lt; downward - aetttnc tbe .brOadly overall economic growth In the
the flnt line hiOI1Ibs ci tbla year, bUedGNPimpllcltpricedellatorat second and . third quarters. If
~ at an U percent annual U percent. 'ftle deflator had been ~ paaes the :p.wldent's
~te, the~ for 1111 qu.rter atnce flnt fi!PO!'ted at ~.8 pertent, then ecciOOmlc package, that sbould spur ·
~lrll,theg"'erpment.reported ~reviBelltolOpercentonemorith some· recovery by the end of, the
~- ' ·
· ·
ago.
· · ·· ·
year, administration ~IBis say.
: , The CGmmerCe DejJarimellt also·
The report also said that beforeDavid Ernst, vice pnlllident of_
l.aid that befun tu toiporate IU corporate pi'Gfits roee at a Evans Economlai in Wuhington,
}lroflia I'OIIe s.l peiocent , 1n the . -.Jiy adjlllled annual rate it predicted the,t "What we'll see In the
;JIJIUar)o.~ quarter ~thlir than · $Z!f.ltilll9ftlntheflntquarter.
lhird'and foui'th quartera _is a fairly.
~.7pe~ceatuarilt""'IJriported. ·. · ~te profits hn CUrrent moderate 1ncreaae In nia1 wages,
Tbe revflloiii 'CUIII !IDI.dly after production, adjusting for . and that will set the_Biage for more
ieparate newl'lfiOI'II• An.tcans' . depreciation' and Inventory COilBID1l8l' strength."
~ lncomi·ind 0n u.s. factory ~ COits,·I'OIIe 10.7 percent
Wem-tay's Commerce report
11111 Indicated the lllttonaJ ·eCGnomy . l'l!ther thim 10.5 percent u flrat · said that while peraonallncome wu
CONSIDER FUNDS CUT- Re(ll. Pllll Barton, D- WMDetd•y on Capitol HDl durbtg a teta!Oa of the puel
was ·barely -erawllnl ~ by May. njlorted;
,
·
riling 0.8 percent to a seasonally adCallf., left, aDd Jolm Albbrook, R-Oblo, both members meetillg to coaskler rettorlng some luDdJ cut from
.Jilitanalyltadeierlbedthaliltuatton · AI reported earlier, Commerce jusledannualrateoft2.387trilllonln of the HOUle EducaUoo and Labor Committee, cbat scbool alltdent lOBDS and other education related
programs. (AP Laserpboto)
ua.-rl,ymmtable"breather''af· · Depiiibldltofflclalasaldrla!ngper- May; .peraonal spending was cllm•lertberObqa~gtowth.
sona1 conaumptlon,apendb)g and ex- bing 0.7 percent to a rate of $1.885
· •"Real" GNP .... tile .·Inflation- ports helped push the rapid growth trllllon. ·
adju.tid 111ta1 Y.Jue,of the nation's lntheflrA.quarterGNP.
Subtracting spending from afterlioodl and lervte. - rGie to a That pin, the JDOBt in about three tax Income- which rose 0.5 percent
-.Jiy ldjltlted annual rate of years, IUI'pl'lsed many economilts; : to a rate of u·.985 trilllon -left new
t2.1153 lrilllon In the flnt quarter, 'lbey later llid th&amp; ftnt quarter, penonalsavingsatanannualrateof
today's Commerce Departnitnt · pushed by auto rebateS and other jill! over $100 billion, dOWIJ. 2.1 perreport lafd.
retail sales promotions, apparently cent from April, the report said. .
'!be~ rate of increase had bad bonuwed · economic growth
A separate Federal Fteserve
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Still, Michel said, it is virtually Republican-controlled Senate combeen reported at 8.5 percent two from the followlnJ thne monthl.
Board report said manufacturers Reagan adr)'linistration is telling certain that Republicans will at- mittees have reconunended.
montba qo, then WM revised to u
Private anaiyJta said there waa no · used Ml.l percent of their factories' House Ftepubllc8ns to be more "bar- tempt to alter the Democratic
Debate by the full House is not expercent last month. Even the loweat cause for concern In WednesdAy's capacity in May.
.
dnOIIed" In battling for budget package of cuts on the House floor.
pected untU next week at the
of thole figures waa the blcgest Commerce report that personal InThat was the highest utilization changes, even after Democrats
He said Republicans are ready to earliest, giving the Republicans a
quarterly pin Iince the t percent come roee a Jaclduster 0.8 percent since April 1!81, Jlllt before last rearranged some spending cuts battle Democrats over their rejec- few days to decide whether to subpowthlntheMCODdqaarterof1rll. for the 1leCODd month In a row In year's recession. fll!t it was alao an moretothepresident'sliking.
tion of Reagan's call to transfer con- mit their full substitute or simply
Real GNP rw :U pereent in the May, a gain which probably was increase of only 0.1 percentage point . The House Education and Labor trol of nearly 100 specific federal press for minor amendments in the
final quarter of 111110.
eaten up lpunedtat.ely by lnOation.
over April's figure.
Committee voted Wednesday to
programs to the states. Under the Democratic-backed plan.
restore milli01111 of dollal'!l for administration's block grant plan,
Michel said the administration
student loans, impact school aid and states generally would parcel out the estimates lhst, even with the
programs for the elderly and han- money as they see fit.
Education and Labor Corrunittee
dicapped which It had cut last week.
The $37.8 billion package of cull&gt; changes, the overall cuts recomThe committee got the money for
recommended by House committees mended by Democratic-controlled
restoring those cuts by making furwas accepted Wednesday by the conunittees for 19112 would fall $8.2
ther
reductions
in
child
nutrition
House
Budget Committee and sent billion short of the permanent
·•.
programs, public service em- to the floor. Tbe vote was a mere for- changes needed to put federal spenPOINT PLEASANT - A young p1oyment and emergency school aid, mality required under the law, and ding on a track toward the
child was killed )IVben be ran in front as the administration wanted.
did not Indicate Republicari a()- prmdent's goal of a balanced
of a IIIVYinc pickup lntcllln front of
B~ director David A. Stock- proval of the cuts.
budget in 1964.
•
. .. . . . ._..~ Ave. bern&amp; · 1nan met ptivately Wedne.say witli
"Hour ullimate objecUve Ia to get
The House commiU!le cvta tatal
12:32 p.m. ~edneaday..
· House Republican Leader RObert H.
7 billion more than reqUired by to a balanced budget in 1964, we've
. Dead is John I. H8JJ, 21 montha, Michel of iJUnoil and other key the budget outline ~ &amp;()- just got to be hardnosed about
the 1011 of Johnny Davll Hall and House Republicans and told them he proved last month. But they still fall meeting
'
those spending
JlllltA. Cochran Hall.
was not satisfied.
short of the $39.6 billion In cuts that limitations," he said.
The child ran from behind a
Michel indicated be was not comparted car Into the path of a truck plet.ely Comfortable with the adOARDING'rON, Oblo - TOI'I1Ido Ylctlml c.n apply for aid today
drlvet~ by Willard D. HWtt, 38, Point ' ministration's stubbom position.
tllwch Saturday at 1 center set up by the Federal Emergency
· Pleasant.
"I'm not all that hung up on saying
. Manqtment Apncy at Cllrdlr1p1n-Unculn High Sdioof. ·
Hunt
wu
unable
to
avoid
hitting
we've
got to have everything we
F&amp;MA lllupadmlnlalnllveofflces In Marion on w~.
By The Auocilted Press
the
boy,
PolniPleaaantpollcesald.
want,"
he said.
will be followed by another highl'relld..a Reqan declared Cardington and other parta of MOITOW
High
pressure centered over the pressure area that will settle in the
Oftlcets
llid
no
cltatloM
were
Mlchel!llid
that,
overall,
he
might
County diluter - . making them eli81ble for federal aid. Much of
issued to the driver of the truck.
be 88tiafied trying to change a small state this morning provided the nice state Friday evening.
the c:enlral Ohio eommunlty of 1,700 people wu deatro:Jed Saturday by
The victim was taken by Point number of "very serious dlf- weather. Tbe high pressure will drill
Skies will be mostly sunny today
• ttrllter that ldlled four people and Injured 56.
Pieasant rescue squad to Pleasant fmnces" rather than offering a slowly east today.
and Friday ,and partly clouCy
MI. Courter said FEMA otllclals will arrange for Immediate
A cold front in the Plains will tonight. Highs today will be In the
V~ H~ltal, and then to Sl complete substitute plan enemersencr needl and temporary houllng or llmlled home repairs.
Marys H011p1tal, Huntington, W.Va., compassing everything Reagan move to northwest Ohio tonight and low 80s, and lows tonight will be eo to
wherebedledat2:0Cip.m.
wants.
through the stste by Friday. This 65.

Reagan battling Democrats
on school assistance cuts

Area Death
Betty Lou McNally
Betty Lou Kimes McNally, 55,
Sandusky, died Tuesday at
Providence Hospital, Sandusky.
Mrs. McNally is survived by her
husband, Thomas McNally; two
daughters; two grandchildren; her
mother, Eva Kimes Hollon, Chester;
her sle()-father, Roscoe Hollon,
Chester; one brother, Jim of Key
West, Fla.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at the United Methodist
Church, Sandusky. Burial will also
be in Sandusky. Friends may call at
the Frey-Goff Funeral Home, 804 W.
Washington St., Sandusky at

·EXCEU.ENl STOCK OF

ROOM AIR CONDIT10NERS
FREE DELIVERY - · DEPENDABLE SERVICE .

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
Mechanic St. - Pam-

oreman .&amp; Abbott's

~

Child dies·

in accident

n.

'Victims can get assistance

Sunny weather will continue

Springer cowa by the head 210-335.
Cows and calves by the head 300-530· Veal
calves Cholet and Prime 74.50-90; good &amp;2.56-n.

Babrcalv" by lheheod~itll,

Tap hOgs 21J).2!K1Jbo. !11-44.
Boars 36-411.
Pipbythehead 12.50-32.

-Whirlpool
.

Sows fOOibs. and upJS.-42.

Ashville clerk mui-der victim

:=.:in=.~.:== Eastern bo~~:rd will place two tax

WASHER/DRYER PAIR

moRE~

5 lltyln1 Cydts
3 Temp. Selection

Multi-Cydl
Healy Duty

shop the bargains
in the
(

wASHJNGroN - 'ftle Reapn admlnlatratton is prepared to
pi'OieCIIIe air lrafllc I.'GIIirollln If IIIey Cll11 out their threat to llrlke
neat
mGn tiiiD llalf the llltiGD'• c.'C1IIIIJadal air traffic, 11Y1 TnalpaNUGn Seeretal1 Dmr Ln1a.
. NtilltilltiOIJI
tha IOf&amp;lllldllt and the controllera bruke off
Wedrw'ly wileD ulllon tllll'llaton wallred out of Informal talks after
rajec.1lnl the Fedtnl Avilltlan Admlniltnllon's nge offer.

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.CALL TODAY FOR HOME DELIVERY

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BuuaCII In T*ID lllld tbn were unconfirmed liij10111i that the
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IJu alliin .... 111 public ~~nee AJMollab.Rallollah
J(hoalal, IIJe llltllr fl tbl NVIIIullanlry Nllme. IJtrlpped blm last
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flrCII.

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.Winning Ohio lottery number
Deluxe

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efore voters in November

Meetin8 In regular seuion Wed- · $5011,000 bond issue before vtiters and mathematics and Eng!i8h instructor

May prosecute controllers·

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Corunor Ray ClmiiJ said Harold Flann, 11, apparently'died from ·
a ahatpiJ IMat. An autopsy waa to be perfonned In Columbus.

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PH. "2-1556
Pomeroy, OH.
Loc•• t~ atthe End otthe P.omeroy-Mason Brldtt"

ondCuU.rs3'1~. ~-

The Daily Sentinel

.2

iP rofits ·r ise;

ADOlPH'S DAIRY· VALLEY

Holstein steen and bull! 300 toiiOO Jbil. 48-62.
Bulls 1,000 lbs. and up 5l .»65 . ~ .
Slallghter COws - UUUUes 41-45.25; Canne~

THERE'S ACARRIER NEAR YOU!

' 1 Section, 14 Pltfl IS Cltlts
. A Muttlmecllo tnc. Newsee:r

......1Pomeroy-MI~Iepor!, Ohio, Thursday, June 11,1981 ·

~2. 50 .

Sentinel Ads

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from

Veal cal"" steady. Cows II lo $L50 higher.
Feoder
theca1Uelleady.
aucllon of Soluroay,
1l.
T""'1-al
Feeder steers: Good and Choice 2SO to 300 IDs.
63-72; llllllo4011 lbo. BUD~; 100 to 500 lill. 57.511.. 700Jill.
61.5l&gt;58.50;
700toS»Jbs. 51.50-:16; Mil and
over U.~
.
Feeder Heifers: Good and choice250 lo300 lbs.
~.50; lllllto 100 lbo. M&lt;12; 100 lO 500 Jill. 5Z61.50; 500toll00 Jbo. ~7 .11 ; 1110 lo 700 Jbo. I7-M;
700 to llllllill. 42 .~; 1110 and over 11-57.
Feeder Bull" Good ond Choi"' 250 to 3110 lill.
IJ0.71; 3110lo 100 1ill. 5H6; 10010500 Jbs. !H!.50;
500 to 1100 Jill. 52.5l&gt;58; 1110 lo700 1bo. &lt;U&amp;; 600 to
700 lbs. 48-$6 ; 700 to 1100 Jbe. 46.50-61 ; IIXIand over

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$100, poasession of marijuana, and
Clyde A. Taylor, Mason, $27

.
enttne

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Board hires classified employes
Nwnerous non-certified suhsiitute
employes were hired for the next
school year when the Meigs Local
School District Board of Edu.cation
met Monday night.
The group Includes: Cooks Belva Glaze, Audrey Wood, Mary
Dorst, Lida Jones, Golda Reed,
Jacqueline Carl, Helen Milhoan,
Ruby Rife, Sandra Sargent, Virginia
Buchanan, Sharon Black, Jaanne
Edwards, Merium Hoffman. Aides
- Martha King, Gloria Riggs, Debbie Hensley, Vera Holliday, Carolyn
Satterfield, Robin Satterfield, Paige
Smith.
Secretaries . - Debbie Hensley,
Martha King, Vera Holliday,
Carolyn Satterfield, Robin Satterfield, Paige Smith.
Bus drivers - Ella Mae Southern,
Juanita Lambert, Virgil Carl, Rufus

I

••tr In till Olio

nesday right, the Eastern Local
School District Board of Education
voted to place two tax -meuui'lll
belen VGters of the district the
November election. .
'!be board will place a four mill,

at

Deputies
checking
complaints

this issue would provide funds for
building maJntenance throughout
the district. It would run for a five
year period, If apprOVed by voters.
The second meuure IB a three mW
operating levy which would supplemeniiiiOIIIl)'B lost from the state
by the dilc:ontlnuance of an earlier
levy.It ,ouud be a conllnulng levy.
The board acc.e pted the
realcnationB of Kathryn Simpson,
Chester Elementary School !ueber;
Carol King Bmrer, llgh school
Englilh tucher, and Donna Chadwell u advilor of the junior class.
The board hired Scott WoUe of
Racine as · a high school

for the next school year. It was
agreed to continue with services of
the Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Educational Cooperative and to participate with the county · and the
other two scbool districts of the
county on the .services of a special
education supervisor. It was also
agreed to pay the district's share involved In maintenance of classroom
driver's education equipment. A
fioor buffer for the high IIChool was
purchased at a price of $475.
Tellboots were purchased at a
cost of ...,.. These are county a~
ted books and will include a new
spelling text for first through eighth

gl'llders, a new senior history book,
new seventh and eighth grade
· mathematics books and new
driver's education texts.
A 1981-32 school calendar was
adopted with teachers to meet on
Aug. 31 and the first day of cluaes to
be beld m Sept. 1. Tbe last day of
classes will be May 'll with tucbers
to bold their final meeting on May
28. The July meeting was changed
toJuly22.
Attending were Supt. Richard
Roberts, board members, l:lorael
Larkins, James Caldwell, Roger
Gaul, Daryl Well and Bemard
Shreibers and Treasurer Eloise
Boston.

Engineers will repair boat ramp
llllde the Corp! to npalr the ramp,
Jl'leldl, eaiTJinlllltln Gl liUP'
port fnlm Muon, Hartford, aad
New Haftll ctty aftletala, w..t to
Well Vtrplla Bacnlaay of State A.

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M= Nn teak up tbe CUI and
'IV'*' t*etM llftl'll tiiDII wltb
tilt Rut~n~toa Cerpe, alld
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tnapedlon or the stte wiD be made,

11111111 will be dumped at tile end of
the brakta .,.mp and,plenldq will
be plllced over the 111ont, the Corpa
told ...!ICblll Lamlia!t llld the
I')' fancla and fill IOIIiill
Wl1lld be naJJable lor the .._
Wbell Ill wu biuJ.... .. ..
Pi¥ J • Fllldiallld be , . IIIIer
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