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en tine
·-Meigs County h.it by .severe storm I

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v,uo~No.47

1 Section, 10 Pages 15 Cents
A Mullii))!!Jlio Inc. Newspaper

. ·: Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio! Mond~)', June 22,1981 .1

Copyrllllrted ""

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Extenalve . damages took place
tl!roughout Meiga County Sunday
.everilng u the l'fll!ul\ ~ beavy rain
. and wind storms jlllt aftet! 5p.m.
However, even Ulousb. residents
were without' power and there 'were
fallen trees aDd power lines, there
were no deaths &amp;lid only one injury.
SyraCWM! wu perhaps the wont
damaged by the stonn.
·
Trees were uprooted,
portions
.
, li
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roofJ were bloim off,

ind power

Unes were down. Middleport, particularlY in the area of Custer Street,
received considerable .damage. !&gt;
tree fell Into a traller, another Into a
houae, and another lllto a home at
Sixth and Palmer Street&amp;. 'file roof
of t,he Middleport Department Store ·
wu blown ·off and Middleport
Firemen responded to a call to help
there .•

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..._,

firemen were also called for transformer fires.
In Pomeroy, ~ tree feU across Butternut Aven!le, blocklng traffic, lim1)8 fell aci'088 ·power 11nes, throwing
part of the COmm!IDity into
darknese.
Mayor Clarence ,Andrews said
volunteers . were helpful. Several
men residing on Vale Street sawed a
tree aCI'088 Butternut Avenue.

...•

Mr. and Mrs. OrviiJe landaker
also aawed a tree blocking Willis
. ~; Bruc.e Reed, a coUncilman,
dlrecled traffic as a live power line
became a problem. A Rutland
resident said ti)at comriumity fared
well with IIWe damage there.
Crews from the Ohio Power Company were out all night to keep up
with damages' caused by the stonn.

Some power was restored In three
hours; other locations took abo11t
eight .hours; still others were
without power late this morning in
Pomeroy.
·
A spokesman for the Columbus
and Southern Ohio .Electric Company said crews of that firm were
tied up in Gallia County, with
damages and outages.

Workers were dispatched to Middleport and Pomeroy to begin work
on r~pairs In the two conununitiea.
Neither power company was able.to
give figures on how many residences
were out of service as a result of the
storm.
The outages were spotty, but
numerous homes were affected.

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I 1M NOr AFRAID OF
NA51YM~

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,Prisc.i lla's Pop
WE

~EED

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.._ BREAK. 60TT5.'
CLYDE TRIPLE'IT HOME - The Clyde Triplett
home, Syncue; ~lved damage to the roof Of the

boule u a larle tree wu uprooted by the severe storm
wbicbbitthevillagealabout5:15p.m.,Suudly.

COVERED - Tl)e large heme of lhe late Cliff
Wl1llams Was clao)aged 'll'ben a huge tree was uprQOted
Sllllday eveulug by a twister tbat bit SyraCUJe. The tree
oearly covered tbe enljre Croat portion of tbe h0111e.

Trees were uprooted throughout the vlllage, porUons of
roofs were blown off and electric and power lloes were
torn down. Syracuse is believed to have been bit the
hardeal by the severe storm.

' ClVJL wAR TREE - A tree planted as Emory and

struck a power Uoe causlag everything metal In the
home to become electrified. the bouse filled with
smoke and the Syracuse Fire Dept. was summoned.
One fireman, Mayor Eber Pickens, received an eleetrlcalshock. Mrs. Huston eatlmated lbatlO trees on the
property were uprooted. Tbe Hustons were stlll without
power aDd phone service at 7:15a.m. today, bowever,
workmen from Ohio Power aud General Telephone
were at Ute scene. It was reported a portion of the roo1
at the Ben Quisenberry re5ideoce·was blown off.

Eleven
climbers
•• •
nnssmg
Pope has ,,X-rays, blood tests
ROME - Pope~ Paul II underwent X-ra)'ll and blood tests today
u doctors tried to.leam why he baa a nagging lever that ili delaying
his recovery from a would-be assassin's gunshots.
· 0\lCtora aald the testa on the 61-yeaMid pontiff would help determine If he baa pnetimOnla or pleurisy, an lnflammation of the membrane that covers the lq and cauaes dlfflc:ult, painful breathing. ·
Dr. Emilio Treaalti, cliel medical officer for Gemelli Hospital, aaid
the pope had a chest X-ray and an X-ray ~ hla abdomen. The cheat Xray would reveal If he had pnewnonla, pleurisy or any Other lung in-.
fectlan and the X-ray ~ the abdomen would show If there were any abceu fonnations or any scar ti.ssue in the iarf!e Intestine, doctors said.

Mitterrand's party completes rout
PARIS ...:. President Francoi.s Mitterrand's Socialist Party won ·a
roclt1101ld majority of at ieut 75 aeats In the French National Aasernbly, enabilng him to enact hla economic and political program withOut
theCGmmunllta. . /
'
Witb 480 of the 491 assembly aeats decided, returns from the runoff
parliamentary elections SUnday gave 283 seall to the Sociallsts and
their allies of the Radical left Movement, a moderate party despite its

.name.

~the

•••

rout started by Mlttemnd's victory in the presiden-

tial electian May 10, the conservatives after 23 years In power won
only 152 of the ~ seats they had held. This included 82 for the
Gau1111ts led hy Jacques tblrac, the mayor of Paris; 63 for former
Prelldent VP!ry Gllcard d'Estalng's· Union~ French Democracy,
. and IMil for olherrlghtilts.

Testo~tooebahy in stable condition
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)- Doctors uy AU8tralia's·aeventh
teat-tube baby, bam three montha prematurely, baa underdeveloped
lunp, 1 condltloo ClllllliOil among p~ births, but otherwise is
In liable coodltion.
'1'11e2.4pound girl namedShama wu bon! Saturday to a 27-year-old

W0111111 who reqlltlled anonymity, eald officlala of Queen Victoria
'Medical Center.
.
ShanJII•u tbe sixth girl in seven Allltrailan births fertilized by the
tiiiHube procedure, ln which an egg Ia removed from the womb, fertlllled ln 1 81811 cllb and returned to the 11'01llb. The proceu,
pklleered hy t,wo British physlclana, ja uaed ll'hen the mother's
Fallopian tubeu"! blocked.
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Protest higher food prices··
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By CAROL W1IJJAMS
Auoclakd Prell Wrtler
PARADISE, Wash. (AP)
Eleven mountain cllmberi were
buried 'l!'hen a wall ~ice sheared off
a glacier on Mount Rainier early
Sunday and crashed frozen blocks
"the size of cars" onto a group of
resting mountaineers, officials aaid.
Rescuers who reached the scene
found no sign of life, and officials e:rpresaed liWe hope that any of the 11
would be found alive.
When asked it the missing cJim.
bers ftre presumed dead, Chief
Mount Rainier National Park ranger
·Bob Dunnagan sald "that would be a
reasonable presumption. You're
burled in up to 70 feet of solid ice. I
don't know of any situations like that
where anybody lived through it."
Another group of climbers reportedly ran Into trouble Sunday on
Mount Hood, 100 miles south of
Mount Rainier in Oregon.
The Hood River County Sherlfrs
office, which earlier reported
Bnother avalance had occurred, said
that some members of a climbing
party were injured when I(IJle
people fell.
"More than one fell because they
were roped together, but we don't
know how many were injurtd or how
badly they were Injured," aald
Sheriff's Sgl. Greg sanden:ock. He
said confilcting report.! placed the
number~ climbers In the party at 10
to17.
Larry Henderson, a Mount
Rainier National Park raliger, aaid
a group of 29 cllmben and guides
wu resting early Sunday IMI'IIing
at the bue of a RIAcier on the east
aide of the 14,41~ peak 1l'hen a
huge ,.11 ~ Ice broke oft and
•crashed down on them.
MOll of the party eacaped, but 10
climbi!nt and one gukle were swept
Into I ,11»-foot deep creva., tben
burled "bJ tons of Ice, aald tbe
Nau-l,Put!enlceranger.
The ljlued cllmben went back

roar people

do!m dloanlaln.

!rho

ietulned to the . . . Ill the Ice faD
briefly uw no ri&amp;P Ill lift, not m11 a
ICi'IP at ~ or eqalpment, al-

lidallllld.

'11!8 - ...uenllld the fll1lnl
Ice 11ft a .-atb Ill ndlble 110 ,n.
wtda 11M! '10 felt ..., llid . .
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liiiUIIce.a. I wllld.

Austla Brldge11111111eft for lhe Civil War was uprooted
duriDg tile slonD Sallday 1n Syracuse. The property,
01l'lled by Patd and Sblrley Hustoa, was probably the
moet severely damaged. The tree planted by the
Bridgeman brolben struck tbe HllltliD bome, breaking
a ll'lndow aDd damapq a light 1n the side yard. Mn.
Hualoa aald the Brldlemen brothers planted the tree
u they left for War aDd told tbelr Jl!lrenllto leave the
tree uatil their retum. The boys aever relllriied u they
both were kllled. A secoad tree at the Hustoa bome

Storms mar ·first day of summer
' By'I'heAuociatedPreu
High winds and raln swept
through the state today as Ohioans
already victimized by recent tornadoes kept a watchful eye to the
fky for a piOBalble new battery of
twi5ters.
The first day of summer Sunday
11'88 marred by stonnS, including a
tornado touchdown along the Allen
and Van Wert county Une, reported
by the counties' sheriff depart-

ments. The twister struck the Van
Wert County conununlty of Corr
verse then hit Ohio 81ln AUeli County.
National Weather Service
forecasters issued a tornado warning today until 8:30 a.m. for extreme southeutern Mahonlng County.
Afunnel cloud was reported by the
public at New Waterford al8 :05 a.m.
moving toward the northeast.

High winds this morning flipped
over seven small parked airplanes
at Lorain COunty Regional Airport,
blowing one into a pond.
Ai.,ort officais said twb of the
planes were destroyed, but they did
not have a dollar estimate on total
losses.
There were no injuries.
Nwnerous severe thunderstonns
and wind damage were reported in
. (Continued on page 10)

Convicts get chance at freedom
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) - A
veteran pi'OieCIIlor aaya he's concemed that rnori lall')'erl today are
leelilnC nell' triall for their cUenll
Yll!lllfter CGIIvlctlctna.
•
Tine 111111 irbo wwe convicted of
liiUrder haq been ,returned to
llel ... ~ tw ... trials

1rilllln bpaaUGIDIIIths.

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"'nln ..- be 1 mllfoo In t,he
pa k au IIIII their

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tnm ·. -.. en !llbiDa ex·

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eon.lctlana,"

£. Gilmartin
llld .... CIIQIJtl iiiid

IDthl

are

jury verdict when the pr~tor
could not gel witnesaes in the &amp;.yearold case for a retrial, and Hannon
was freed.
" It is the first time I ever set aside
short period of time.
For Joaeph Hlnnon, Albert Byrd a criminal verdict in my life," Barr
and Clarence Muldrow, though, the nonsaid. :
law hu provided a new chance at
fiedlola
· Byrd, convicted In June 1974 of
Hannon, convicted in tt75 ln the murdering David Flllppcine, wu
murder ol Eliie C.tdton, later 1I'I'Ole ·granted a ne:- trial In Auglllt 11180 by
1U 1111'11 petitloo for a new trial. The the Ohio ~ Court. The cue
motion II'U lllllalned by COmmon wu reveraellwhen it wulearned a
Plell J\ldge Charles J. Bannon in now-retired conunon pleu judge,
Jlilllli')'.
Sidney Rigelhaupt, took part in a
lllnnon said hla counae1 ... a plea bargaining aanematt to
..riJ blind man 1l'ho lild dllficulty reduce Byrd's charte from .
pr 1 l?l'W the cue. The lltuatian IIIJ'IVIted murder to
9lalllld hill COi1llltuUGnl1 rlghla, cbUp for I guilty plea, Tile ....
lflnlal 11111.
·
(lelll)ll, lelll in l*o In mt, 'II II d'
TNa ;rear, Bannon a« aside the •loaggrtntedmurder.

It's the first time In Gilmartin's 12
years u proeecutor that-three murder convictions have been returned
for retrillln the county over such a

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Commentary.
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. Pag-2,..:.Tile Dally Sentinel .
p.omeroy-Miclclleport, Ohio
Monday, June 22;1N,I

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; Threats to· ci~ right.s""'-~..___:.,_-____.;._..:...:.....:..:.__:.·_·. ;;______,. .;. . _·. _. __;;_·.--'-Jul_ia_n&amp;_nd_
The Reagan adminlsttation has
begun its campaign to dismantle the
civil-rights protections that were
slowly, often painfully wirtten into
statute and case law over the past 24
years. . .
Attorney General William French
Smith has resolved - even over the
objectloen .of the FBI - to roll back
reforms· that protect Americans
from illicit government survelllance.
He aillo wants to eliminate the independent special. j)I'OileCutor, to
legitimize bribery !1. foreign of.
ficials by U.S. corporations, to permit surprise searches of newsrooms
and to restrict pubUc Inspection of
government information.
For the first time since the Nixon
years, the actions of the Justice
Department are subject to the

review and approval of the White
House (tn the pei'IIOII of the
president's senior COWIIIelor, Edwin
Meese) and to pOlltical intervention
from powerful Republican
pollticlans. For eumple:
· -The White Jlouse inserted itself
into school-desegregation leticailon
in Shn!veport, La., and in st. l..wiil.
Tbe latter action came at the urging
of Misaouri's RepubUcan governor,
Cbristopher Bond.

- The Justice Department siruck
the term "white supremacy" from a
voting-rights suit against white
supremacy in Mobile, Ala. That
deletion waa urged by the state's
Republican senator, Jeremiall Denton.
-The Justice Department backed
off from a suit against jall conditions

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Cuurt Street
Pumeruy, Olllo
111-ln-!111
Uf:VOYfED TOntE INTEREST OFntE MEIGS-MASON AREA

•

ROBERTL. WINGE'IT

In Tex88. The suit llld been close to saying that government
critlclied by the lllate'~ Republican lswyers would not --.rily obey
governor, WUlamP. Clementa, Jr. · the .nation'• laws. Moreover, he ·
-Afer HOUle Repullciul Whip revealed lhl!t he either did not Jmow ·
Trent Lott objected to a federal suit
against priiOII cmdlltona.ln his state
of Miastaaippi, ··the attorney
general's office llllll!lWICed that the
Justice Department's Civil Rl&amp;hts
Division would no longer brlllg such
suits.
·
-The attorney general rejec!ed
the Civil Rights Dlvllion's recommendation that voting procedures in ·
Dallas, Jackson, Miss., and
Stateboro, Ga., be challenged ·as
rsclally biased.
-~dent ~gan's choice to
head the Civil Rights Dlvlston 1.t
W'lillam Bradford . Reynolds; a
lawyer with virtually 110 uperience
in civil rights.
.
-The Labor Department is
rescinding a Carter-era prohibition
on federal contractors' pun;hasing .
memberships in racillt private clubs
for their employees.
-The administration still bas
taken no position on the eXtension of
the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which
many have ca)led the most iJn.
portant civiJ.rigllts legislation of the
past century.
In a speech in late May, the attorney general came dange1:01111ly

cues can be overturned at tell. polls;
that Ronald Reagan W88 elected to
overthrow SUjlitllll Court deciaiona
thet his supporters do not like. He
· or did not· care about cue law in seems to belieVe that WJpopulai
civil rights.
laws do not have to be Obeyed and
. Smltha~rentiythlilkalll!ltcourt · that thett· violators .do not require
·

,punillhment.
A • •..'-...1
' Sucb ~ II - - - Ill a
private practlilonar. Ill the llltlon'a
lop lawyer, it ill an lmlatloll Ill
anirclly and an appeal Ill the racllt
lilatlncta that he has pledaed by ·

solemn oath to~. ·

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

PubiiHher/O mtr•1ller

GeDtral M1aa1er

'.

Pomerov-Middreport, Ohio

Mason whips Racine . 5-2
.in sunliner .leagu,e play
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Groups study November ballot issue

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Two and other Democrats charged Tipps and others aald the klck~r in popUlation.
non-parliaan statewide groups ap- earlier that the so-called FAIR (Fair the FAIR plan is thiB: A fiveRedistricting of Coft8reu ill done
parently will look more deeply into a and Impartial Redilltrlctlng) plan is member commission would pick the by the Legislature. CUrrently, the
proposed November ballot issue, d!lBfgned to sap the representation of moat equitable map submitted from GOP controls the Senate and the
backed
mostly by Republicans.
inner cities in the Legislature and in · the general public, as called for in House 1.t unde\' Democratic control.
I ,t :11'F.It.' \ Ofo' I H' INIUN llrt' Wl•lt-tinwd . Tky Kit41Uicl bt ku lhln :110 w1tfdli·!oq All
It
supposedly
would
take
the
the
U.S. House.
the plan. But GOP Gov. James A. The best bet II that a COIIIpl'lllllls
ldlt'rs om · tiUbjt•t·( tn •·ditin~ Mid mu~\ br siJ(IM'd wUJII IWmto, addrtt~ll 'ald le. .IIM'
1111miN •r . N umt~i J:nl'fll•• lk n: v.·ilt ht• puhllslwci . IA'Ilt'ni Hhl"'ld Itt• in II:HOd llllk',lddN'IIIIint(
monkey
business
out
of
the
In turn, that would weaken the Rhodes would get to subdivide. ·can be worked out 011 this.
IIII IIH ' r'U IIHiil i • · ~ .
reshaping of districts for · the voting power of the many blacks municipalities and townships of
Legisl•ture and U.S. House.
who live in those areas, McLin said. 5,000 or more into smaller units, as
Ohio stands to lose two of its
BensOn A. Wolman, executive
The veteran Dayton· lawmaker building blocks.
. present 2S seats in the House, due to
director of the American Civil Liber- says1while the plan is being billed as
The FAIR Corilll\ittee has ob-• the effects of the cenaus,10 that each
ties Union of Ohio, said that group fair, there is language in it, in- tained more than 160,000 of 285,000 could give· up one l!elt to achievn
will have a committee of inquiry volving the creation of subdistricts, needed to quallfy the proposal for compromise.,
.
look into aUegaUons concerning the as building blocks of a sort, under the November ballot.
Wolman said that while the ACW
plan from the Black Elected which gerrymandering still would
If it should pass, It would take will look into McLin's cllarje, the
Democrats of Ohio.
go on.
legislative redistricting llut of the group "ill conunitted to 11011- ·
At the same time, Wolman said in
Gerrymandering is a timeworn hands !1. the state Apportionment part!sanahlp, and historically we
' a letter thiB week to State Rep. C.J. practice Wider which both parties in Board, currenUy controlled 3-2 by bave propCIIed apportiOilllliD plalw
At precisely the time that Democrats are struggling to refurbish their tat- McLin Jr., D-Dayton, that he has the past have shaped district boun- Democrsts. The board draws new l!hich .could llAUre equality of
tered reputation as "the party of the people," the Democratic National OJm. been told the Ohio CQuncll of chur- daries to their parties' respective Ohio House and Senate dlltrlcta af. rep1111 llatloo while llllnimllln&amp; the
mittee l.t abandoning ita commitment to participatory politics.
ches ill dotng the 111111e thing.
advantage.
tereach~federaleer.m, to potential
for
.partisan
The DNC's drastic revision of the rules under which lt will sponsor a mid'McLin, who ill chairman of BEOO,
State Democratic Chairman Paul keep them as equal as possible in manipulation."
··
term conferenCe next year is a crude attempt to reinstate a discredited'
system under which an elite political organization dominated by party
"regulars" discouragesparticipationonthepartofgrass-rootal(ctivists. .
Even more significant, however, is the fact that the DNC's decision,
.
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reached at a recent meeting here, represents an unprecendented attempt to
undermine the procedural safeguards that protect lnatltutlonai democracy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ Ohio ped f
within the party.
·
rom 851,540 In IriO to nti,M in · But li should come u no surprise study shows 40 of Ohio's 8$ counties
10
In both the Republican and Democratic parties, the supreme governing has sustained a drop of percent in 19110, a decrease of 152,541 em- that the problem waallllllll severe in registered a decreNe tn manufac.
body long has been the national convention, which meets every four years • the number !1. persona employed In ployees or 17.9 percent during the 11l- Mahoaing County, !Jard hit by major turing employmeftt overtbe decade.
not ony to select a presidential candidate but also to provide policy guidance manufdeacturin8grimjo:n:"
year period;" the council report steel plant shutdowns. The county
Despite tbe 1-. Ohio CORtlnvea
011
1
for the ensuing four years.
deca •
said.
suffeced a 38 percent employmet to be a national leader In tbe ~
Subordinate to the convention but designated to carry on the party's work chronlcallOhly alugglahPubllecu~ture
'
Althouilh the 101111 in tholle counties decline, the report aald.
of manufacturing jobs ttoffen- the
0
between conventioll&amp; is the natlonal committee, composed of represenThe
c
totaled 152,541, the state's other
Other big losel'!l among the coun- kind which typically pay 111111111 the
tatives from each state and the national chairman.
Council, a pivate non-partlaan counties posted gain of 12,796 over ties and their percenta&amp;e decreaae hiihest wages. Ohio ranked fourth
Even fonner DNC Chairman RobertS. StraliSS, who built a reputation as 8 study group, says manufacturin8 the decade, leaving Ohio with a net in manufacturlni joba from 1t'IO to among the lltates In the manber ol
political wheeler-dealer second only to fellow Texan Lyndon B Johnson employment in the state reconled a decline of 139,745 manufacturing 1111l were Montgomery, 211.1 per- manufacturing employees in 1110. •
never was audacious enough to try to countermand a decision reached by~ net drop of 139•745 from 1t'IO to 1110• · jobs lltatewlde. ·
cent; Lucaa, 19.5 percent; SWnmit, · But It a11o retonled the fourth
convention delegates.
·
Ohio's eight largest counties a~
In total nwnbm only, Cu)'Bhoga 19.lpercent; Franklin,U,7percent; largest drop tn the number of IUch
But current DNC Chairman Charles T. Manatt is doing exactly that, so~bedthebruntoftheloaa.
County posted the largest single Stark,llpercent; andHamUton,l.l workenO'I'erthelaatdecadeuDang
brazenly Ignoring the wiU of the majority at the 19110 Democratic National
Manufacturin8 empl~nt fn drop over IN! laat 10 Ye&amp;l'll with a percent.
11 other lltates which Jlld similar
Convention, which approved a resolution calling for ''a mid-tenn party con- Ohio's eight larg~ counties drop- loaa of 49,033.
Statewide, the expenditure council ~.
ference in December 1982" with "at least one day ... devoted to plenary
debateandadoptionofpoUcyresolutions."
.
s!:n~tt a:~~re~e~=~~d ~r! n~xtpo~~ .
.
&amp;--""-'-"'--""-'-..,...-----philosophy In favor of a program emphasizing organizational techniques, ·
WASHINGTON (NEA)- The silly ploymentstandards.
reporters knew were being con- ~ .that repor1en bed
political strategy and similar nuts-and-bolts issues.
sidered.
season
started
early
thiB
year.
It
was
then
that
a
Labor
DepartTo sustain the tradition of building the party from the boltom up rather
violated the backgi'OIIId rules.
This period Ulllally begins In late ment preu official announced a
The result of thiB non-event waa J.n. 'l'here II, of coune, a M'IOUIIide
than the top down, the resolution adopted by the 19110 Democratic National
Committee specified that "at least tw~Mbirds of the (mid-term) conference July when the Congress and the ad- ' ground rule for the briefing. teresting, however. One wire ser- of this flrce; the growiJic - of the
m!n!atration flee, W88hlngton for Everything was to be "on vice, not willh!ng to give the story backgraund brlefinl by llllliJiban of
delegates shaD be eleCted at the congressional district level."
But the effort to preserve the concept !1. grass-roots democracy in tile cooler cllmea and the leu fortunate beckground," wbich meant that the backgrllund lltaiUI, reported not a the Reqan adrnlnlllnltloa.
aell!ction of delegates aillo was illegally brushed aside by the DNC, which reportel'll are left behind to llCI'OUIIge speaker could not be identified by word on the ·llrteflng. The The be~ wu l'liled Ill
. Wubtngton Paet did carry a story - tmlltldng of an ut fclrm by
then approved a Manatt·inspired substitute formula that would turn the up stories. It's lrallltional durin8 lliiJie or title.
thiB
season
that
major
coverage
is
Wlllltrlted with a large pktin of Secretary of ~ta Henry Killlln&amp;er.
meeting over to the professional poUticians with virtually no opportunity for
given
to
some
controversy
that
norBackground
briefings
are
used
llfan
llbove the caption "Labor of. who wu fvrever llivllll nporten1
broad-based citizen participation.
mally
would
nol
merit
even
a
freqllllltly by the. State Department ftclal who briefed reporten anda.r greet quotes that they attributed to
Under that new formula, all 372 DNC members would automatically
and the Pentagon and OI.'CIIionally \ the condition that hill name not be "a higb-levei State Ilepll1mml ol·
become conference delegates, as would another 3'12 people hand-picked by paragraph on page m.
This year's controversy began in by the White House and the Justice used."
each state's Democratic Party organization and 100 othel'!l personally selecflclal."
mid-May with T. Timothy Ryan- or Depu1ment. Seldom are they used
Likewille, one televlaim .network
ted by Manatt.
Manatt and others promoting that delegate-selection formula claim it ill · ~T. Tim, the unnamed source,., as by ageocil!l auch as the lAbor ran a brief ilound report frGm the ' The bllckgrounder ,continued
neceaaary to I:!IVe money by cutting down the size of the mid-term con- he has bewme known to the Departnient. But after dul,y voicing briefing; the 11p'Ylker wu identified during the carter )'lin IIIII is
their objectlona, the reporters set- as "a Labor [)eplnm.t aftlclal flourillinc under Reapn. Bit
ference. But their approach calls for more than 900 delegates, a nwnber har· Wuhington preu corpe.
Lui
month
the
lAbor
Department
tied
back to hear what wu .0 1m- who Wlllted to remain namel.a... reporten llld editorl'.... pvwlnc
dly conducive to Intimate discussion.
Simllar mid-term meetings in lr/4 and 1978 provided a forum for yeasty in- began a 181'1es ol preu brleflnp 011 portantthatltcouldbeaaldonlyon TheatoryinTbeNewYerkTimeut- iDcr •ncb' ..,-of tbe fGmaL
tributad aU lltatemeata to "I MIDJ of thmJ IJIIIII"'11IJ ... to
tra-party debate !1. iasues. But the 111112 se~~ion Is doomed to be what the regulatory changes coatemplated by background.
The "P"'ker turned out to be not llpOkl!lman who lp8Cifled that hla driW the line wltb R7ln, whO • a
Democratic COnference, an independent organlzatlon !1. party progiaalve~, the Reagan ldminlltraUOII. One ol
describes as "an expanded meeting of the Democratic National OJm. the le&amp;liona wu to addreM the su~ · Donov..n or COII7er but T. 1'lmothy name not be llled" but ncQd that the 1'1111111 lllddlnl)' llame . a lnaJor
ject of employer reauiltlona, ln- Ryan, the !ilplrtment'uollctlllr and department had iDvlted reporten media !!pre lnllled af a IIIINh 1,
mittee."
cludinc
afflmlative actiao.
a leadin&amp; apert on employ8r "to 1 ICbeduled brilllinc b)' T. fact' n,l"'ii'cc. . lllnaucrat.
That's hardly what the party needs at a time when Republicans and
Some
20
to
211
reporters
gathered
regulatlonl. Hill pr mntatlon •• 'l'lmothy Ryan."
.
'1'111 •••a• IIIII lllw the
Democrats alike generally agree that the GOP has captured the initiative In
at the appointed baur for that dellcrlbed by -l'llp(lltlar • "about
·Needle• to II)', the tabor Depart. rt I llllltlllll Ill 11111111 mdre af.
'tenns !1. offering tnnovativupproaches and appealing ideas to the voters.
For eumple, Democratic pollster Michaellluone bemoana the fact that briefing. Allo in lttendince wre theiiiOitbclrinl"thatbe'-lmrat- mall wu nat blppJ wltb lbe ildi!IID ........... ,....
there ill "no clear Democr1Uc llle888it, no articulate Democratic vision !1. Raymond Dllnovan, the MCntary of tended. 111111 nat on1J llid natblnc media'• eover 11 t1 lbe IJrltlllll. ., 1111 at IL • II\• ..,.
the future.,
labor, and Robert Qallyer, the Dew Ill&amp; llfwal Ill Giiilllllt 118 Earl 0., tha ' i IIDWII'I elllll fa '&amp;IMOIIN)Mlllllli till 111ft
U lawyer-banker ManaIt and his DNC supporten lulve thalr way, deputy under _...., ror em- 111111.Y 11""'11111 .,, £ that the prw iji IIIII.... lad Glflatlln GfthalllliiiiJIIMIII •
howeteJ, the Democrall wiU reject their mOlt valuable opportunity to
remedy that situation before the 11184 prealdentlal election.
N•w:o; Edlt.tr

1\ \ llt '\,

The party of
. the people?

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lltovo

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ll l1

U. S. Open crown

'ARDMORE, fA. (AP) _: D a v t d r - - - - - - -- - Grallam marched to the U.S. Open
NewHaven
Championship title with poise,
- PlwontWa.......
00 ll
.PI.
precislon and perfection.
GAMP; RESULTS:
He needed nothing fancy,
J .... u, Pt. P1ouant Frutl117, Pt. Plouant ·
WaterJon3.
miracle putte, no fancy bunker
J,.,. ll: Pl. l'lloNnl FMII II, Brule 1&lt;
shots. He reached 18 greens at the
Brule 4; Dtovo 7, Pl. Pleuul Watenon l;
l'&lt;&gt;mel'o)&gt; I, !lew Haven 2.
Merion Golf Club in regulation. He
'
JUIIlOIIDlVIBION
L
three-putted only once, and he was
tUM
Solilllury
1 o in the fairway 17 times.
. llldcllaport Wranglll'll
~
The first AustriaUan ever to win
l.olart
Synocuoo
2 2 the Open, the first foreign winner
BlU 'j Sport llllop
.
since Tony Jacklin of England won
. Middleport Paathel'l
Maoon
'
1 a in 19'10, Graham shot a final round
Newlblven
o0 33 frl, 3-under-par. For the tournament
Pomeroy
.
·
he was 68-83-7~7-273.
GAME Rl!liULTS
JuneiO: SallJbury:ll, l'&lt;lnmljll.
He moved ·from three strokes
Juneli: MiddleportP~I, Lot.art7 ; Middleport Wruglol'llll, Synocuool&amp;; SallJbury 22.
behind George Burns III at the start
New Biven 0.
Insurance Package
of the final roUI)d SWlday, and
JWit 17: BIU'o Soort Sbop II, Pomeroy 3;
literally swept aside Burns with his
Salllbury 21, Lelarll.: Mlddleport Wrall(!len 16,
Mason7; Syracu.eli, New HIIVen24.
consistency.
Do · ou own or operate a
."Today would have t~ be as good
Tanner beaten
.small
or medium·size
as I've ever played in my life,"
,
retail
store,
office, apart·
BRiSTOL, England (AP) - Mark Grilham said. "I ~an' t play any bet·
ment
Jr
church?
1
Edmondson of Australia defeated .ter."
:
Then - you may qualify
Burns,
who
led
after
the
second
Roscoe Tanner 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 to wtn the
!
for
State Auto Mutual's
and
third
rounds,
tumbled
from
conLambert · an~. Butler grass . courts
i
SERIES
ONE Business
tention
with
erratic
drives
that
left
tennis tournament.
him in the rough lime and again. He
• Pol icy .. . a modern· a~·
and Bill Rogers finished tied for
·tomorrow package plan
second place, three strokes back at
that combines an array of
Austin triumphs
276.
. broad property and liab ili·
"You can't wih when you're putEASTBOURNE, England (AP) . ty coverages requ ired to
ting
for pars instead of birdies,"
Tracy Austin blitzed Andrea Jaeger
safeguard your operp1&gt;-3, 6-4 for the singles title of the Bums said.
. lions. All for a VfK.Y attrac·
Rogers, a consistent big money
$125,0110 BMW women's grass ci&gt;urt
tive, affordable premium'.
tennis championships, a stagesetter winner on the tour but with only one
Let us expla.in ttie
victory, had a 69 on the fins! day af.
for Wimbledon.
superior features of
ter previous rounds of 70, 68 and 69.
SERIES ONE .. . the short
other hitters were Daria King, TamGraham was simply Wlyielding.
time we spe nd together
mi Eblin, Patricia Davia, and Beth • He birdied four holes and bogeyed
could prove interesting
only one, No.4, where he 3-putted.
and rewarding to you .
Blaine.
His 7-under-par was the second
Just give us a call or
Hitters for Pomeroy were Char· lowest ever in the Open. Jack
mail the handy coupon.
mele Turner, · Daphne DiUard, Nicklaus, a contender until the final
Heather Culiuma, and Terri Grover. nine, won the Open last year at
DALE C. WARNER'.
Salisbury is now 5-0 and Pomeroy Baltusrol with a record 272.
INSURANCE
o.;.Usbury blasted (2-2) Letart ~
John Cook and John Schroeder
as Barb Hatfield picked up the win tied for third place, six strokes back
BruleUtule .
v~

I. l
1 1
1 2

l
l l

.

and Melinda HiU suffered the IOSB.
Leading hittel'll for the winners
were Carla King with a home run,
two triples, a double, and single,
while Kime Eblin hit a home run,
double, and single~ four runs.
Miriam and Brickles each tripled for

at r:klaus, troubled by poor puttlng, never put on the charge
Graham and many others thought he
would. He finished at even-J&gt;ar 280
with Frank Conner, Lon Hinkle,
samuel Rachels and Chi Chi
Rodriguez.
Jim Thorpe, who held the lead af·
ter the first day with a 66, finished at
281 along with Ben Crenshaw and
Isao Aokl of Japan.

the wtnnel'!l. Leading Letart hitter
was Jodi Harris with a triple and two
singles. Alana Lyons and Lori
Adams each singled three times.

Bob Wagman

-------------

Please tell me more abOul the
SERIES ONEJuslness Policy.

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o'"''s"·c' - - - - - -- I
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PHONE

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,..,...,_J

SALE STARTS MONDAY, JUNE 22 THRU SATURDAY, JU.NE 27

U:, :

Batt1e 0 f the backgroun
. der

•

.81!!'11011 D~ION

PI.PlwontFruth

a

a

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tUM ·

t\lO. R. ~ credllefj with playing a good game.
lion vlllt!Da MuC11 downed Racine Weaver started and took the 1011 J.SallasufferedthelOIII!.
5-2 llelllnd the fine pitdlin&amp; Ill Don before ieWna.relief frGm. P. Bril~ · Todd PoweU had borne run and a
VanMeter. VanMeta!'lll'llc~autu in the third. ~combined to fan double, Keltli Macldcu: a double,
and ,aaked four in scq·the cli8ta. nine and walk o.ie:
· atott BilrtGIII and Marc Corsi Jwo
ce and pieldns up the win. ~·s
Laading bitten for Harrisonvtlle singll!l, and.j}~ McElroy, A.
Tony Riffle took the loU,' but still
were &lt;llarUe Blrrett with three Whaley each~1
managedlllfan 15•.,
·
singll!l, J.,..e Howard .with a triple
In Senior sOtuiau ~on Pomeroy
MuCil l)tttera were Bash wtth .a and lingle, Crlsa Haninc with a coasted put New aaven $-2. K.
iJOuble, Hysell two single~, Van dollble, $cott WW!ama, RoUmd Rought wu the winnlpg pitcher and
Meter a double, and Mltol11), Collins · Morris, Jiliori Rupe each wit~! Weaver. the loaer. A. Rlgga "-d a
~ and. ~rdaon ·eiCII'f: $gl~. singll!l. l..eadlng hlttera for the New triple, double, and lingle for the wiJI.
Racllle hlttera were Tony
with Haven Cubi were D. J~ with a ~ nrs, while Moore tripled, D. ·Stegall
two ·singll!l, Tony Rime a lingle, · sln&amp;le and double, B. Smith. ..two , .singled twice, A. Hatfieid doubled
Dennis 'f~;a single, RlcharQ singll!l, and P. Briles with ulnale. and singled, J. Bentley doubled, and
Hill and Jay BO.I!Ck each singles.
In other Bi&amp; Bend UWe Leque L. Pickett, P. Swindell, A. Pratt, and
Muon II II01J 4-4, while Racine ' action the Middleport · Braves beat Rought each added singles. Weaver
dropeto:l.l. .
·.1
Mason'• Ran&amp;ers 15-11. Jeff Nelson tripled twice for New Haven, ADenIn other ~ LeaCue
Racipe was the winner wltb ten atrlkeoilti sworth singled twice, Kimes tripled;
Haven. and five walks. Marahall suffered andGilmanandYohoalngled.
rolledtoan ... win
Steve Fisher picted
win for the 1011 althOugh he fanned three
Alao in the Senior League Dravo
Racine, and while'
only two and ·walked two. Redman · alld claimed a 7-3 win over Pi. Pleasant.
atrlkeoull, atiU ·
goOd SuWvan came cin In relief to fan two Debbie Michael was the winner with
control in
the
to pick and walk four combined.
no KO's and three walks, while
up the win.
inning
Middleport hitters were Donnie White suffered the loss.
hlghligbted by
bases Becker with a trip!,~ IIJ!d ·one hOme . Dravo hitters were Debbie
' loaded double
Racine from , run, Tim CaaaeU a i!ngle_and home , Michael with two doubles and two
a 44 deficit to
the lead. Riffle fU!I, Scott Hanntng a single and singles El$e ·Smith two doubles
aillo had a ajngle.
other hit double,~ CaastiJ a single, Tracy and two singles, Laren Wolfe, Traci .
was a Steve Fisher single. For New Holcomb a single; ihd Jason Bush a Mearns, a double and aingle, Missy
Haven .DiWllOI'l ha.d two·a!ngles and single aod double) For Muon Van Cummins and Teresa HiU each three
Pet11e1 two singles for ita only hits.
· Meter doublecl, ~~~ singled, singles, Tina Hill two singles,.Becky
The host New Haven ·~ SuWvan aiDgled sid' doubled, Star· Michael and Michelle Johnson each
defea.ted Rutland t-2 tn Big Bend t· cher singled and Deeter sini!led and a aingle.
Ue League action . here rece y. doubled tWice. ·
'
For Point MorrtsQn, Atkins, Lori
Mike Wolfe got the win,- relieving
In Minor League play Sugar RWl Birchfield, Logan, Whitman,
Troy stewart in the top !1. the third . Aahland romped New Hrien's Gian- Thomas, Dillard and Richards each
inning. In two and ODHhird innings ta 12-4, after great def~~~Sive plays reached.base safely.
!1. work, Ste)'IJ;I fanned four, didn't · that held New Haven scoreleu the
lnothe.rsOftball play New Raven's
give up a walk, and gave up three first three inning&amp;. &amp;ligar Run hit- Angels posted a 7-4 win over
hits. !no three and twoibirds innings terli were Jason Wrtg!lt with a home Pomeroy's Indiana. Missy Woods
of Wor11: Wolfe sttuck out nine, nui and triple, Terry ~uter with a and Tanuny Wright combined for
walked none and gave up three hits. triple and double, Shawn Hawley . Pome~oy while · Lana Arthur
Mike Bartrum took the 10SB for and John Haggy triples, and Brian claimed the win for New Haven.
Rutland, striltiilg · out eight and Hovalchik, Kevin Taylor, doubles. Teresa Johnson hit a home run for
walking seven.
•
Chase Cleland banged two doubles the host Indians.
,.... Reds managed only three hits for the winners.
SaUsbury blasted Pomeroy in the
off Bartrum. Mike Wolfe had a
Pomeroy Pizza Shack breezed to a Junior circuit 2&amp;-1. Barb Hatfield
double, and Troy Stewart, Pete lopsided 1~2 in over the New Haven was the winner and Dianna White
Oliver lingles. Rutland's two runs Yankees. New Haven is now I~ and the loser. Hlttel'll for SaUsbury were
llCOfed on along triple by Mike Bar- Pomeroy 1).2. Randy Hawley, Todd Carla King with twa home rims and
trum, who a1ao had a a!ngle. Other Powell, and Scott Barton combined two singles, Jodi Harrison a home
Rutland hittel'll were Joey Snyder for a ~tter, with PoweU picking run, triple, and three singles, Maria
with two lingll!l, and ~t Eails, M. up the win. Alter Hawley worked Musser a double and two singles,
Hart with lingles.
two-thirds of an iM!ng, Powell came Barb Hatfield a double and two
Harrisonville defeated th~ New on strong in a great effort. Powell singles, Julie Sisson a double, Kim
Haven Cubs 11-3. Crlsa Haning star- . fanned 12 of the 13 batters he faced Eblin three singles, April Brickles
ted and picked up the win. He was in 4 and one-third innings of 'work. two singles, Greta Kennedy two
relieved bY Scott WUUams in the Barton came on to post the save. The singles, Rhonda Zirkle two singles,
third inning, as the two combined to entire Pizza Sback team was and Jennifer COuch two singles.

OhII0 ma £ t ' •
nu ac unn.g emp1oy dr.ops

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.... li.UoN GIIU'

Page-3

I Graham captures

, IOFTIW.LAIIOCIATION

In:Meip.~ Pony lMgue a~ · ·~ out ten ~ wiit

'

The Daily Sentinel

&amp;ftball • ndings

.

Deem

P\lbll!ibtr

A .~ sManl

,M!Iflday, J"·ni'22, INI

. ..
298 SECOND sr., POMEROY, (1110
SIORliOJRS:
.
MOit..sAT. au.-1o r.M.
SUNDAY 10 A.M.·IO P.M.
~

,..

SOUTHERN

VINE RIPE

PEACHES

I

WATERMELONS
WHOLE

.

•

TOMATOES
·39~ LB.

29~Ul
,
•

BANANAS

'1oo.
J.

LBS.

RJR

JUMBO

CANTALOUPES

99CEAai

YB'OW

CARROTS

CORN

4 PKGS.

1~,,00

aii£SC1
.

PEPPERS
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00

.,_D .~TTUC.E

·

HALF RUNNER
•

GREEN BEANS
·Bushel
'12.99

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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

t

What's lo eat?1
ByDaleSIIIII

Your

even more nutritoua!
H you.are In a hurry, prepare the
cookie dough and form Into a roll on
walled paper or alwnlnum foil.
Package and keep In the freezer.
Thaw befm:e baking, then slice
cookies and bake as directed.
Baked, cooled cookies can be
frozen, toO. The cookies keep In the
f~r for several weeks - II they
last that long!
For other variations of this basic
recipe,
contact the Meigs County
~eggs
Extension
Office at 992-6696.
I cup shortening
Another idea for sWJIIIIer treats Is
~cups brown sugar
make your own fruit pops.
\Z cup water
2 cups white Dour
Fruit POJIII
I package (3 ounces) orange
liZ cups whole wheal Dour
flavored gelatin
I teaspoon soda
I teaspoon salt
\Z cup ~ugar
2
cups boiling water
IIZ cupS oatmeal
\i cup ralsinli (optional)
2CUpS orange juice
li cup nuts, chopped (optiona)
Combine gelatin and sugar In a
Thoroughly mix the eggs, shor· bowl. Add the boiling water. Stir untenlng and brown sugar. Stir in the til dlsolved. Add orange juice and
water. Combine flours, soda and salt mix. Pour the mixture Into two ice
and stir Into the brown sugar mix· cube trays. Place In the freezer.
tore. Stir in oatmeal and other Freeze until finn.
ingredients. CbiU dough at least 1
S&lt; .rving Sugge!!llon: Add sticks to
hour for easier handling, Drop by the fruit pops befote freezing, or af.
rounded teaspoonful about 2 inches ter freezing, remove from the tray
apart on a lightly greased baking and :ierve In a napkin or paper cup
sheet. Bake 8 to 10 minutes or'until for easy handling and eating.
The homemade fruit pops are
almost no imprint remains when
touched lightly. Makes about 6 dozen generally lower in cost than
packaged ones and this recipe con2\Z inch cookies.
tains
orange juice which has vitamin
Here's how to make a special treat
c.
for the kids. Spread the bottom of
The Extension Office has many
cooled cookies with a small amount
of ice cream. Top with another other recipes and ideas for snacka
cookie, making a "sandwich." for chldren. Contact the Meigs CounPackaged in sndwich bags and ty Extension Office for more Infreeze. Kids love 'em! Try mixing formation.
Home Eeoaomllt
Kids above aeem to be hungry
during the awnmertlme! What can
you prepare that Ia good to eat and
nutrltioua? Packaged snacka are of.
ten expensive !Jut mv have little
food value: ' Check labels for '
nutrltioolnformatilll. Making treatS
yourself can aave money. '!be
following recipe Ia a good, basic
cookie recipe:
llronSqar Drpos
0

Helen Help Us

Special correspoudeol
DEAR READERS:
I recently wrote that for every
problem, there's a self·help group
waiting to aid and comfort the af·
flicted. Mentioned a few but, of cour·
se, I can't them them all in the

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· By Ellea Ben
This will be the lut colWJUI for
a month, unlesa your llbrarlan
gets super ambltloua arid tries
writing columna from the West
about the American ul!riry
Association conference or
libraries In New Mulco.
I'll be leaving Meigs County on
Monday, June 22 (today), and
heading West with my husband
and sons by car. Back on the
farm Win be Kim Spanos, the new
OVAL children's conauitant, a
dynamite lady who has gotten an
enthusiastic reaponae from all
the Meigs Countlans who have ·
met ller. Kim and her friend will
take care of the cows, chicken,
ducks and cat whlle' we go off to
eliJllore browner pastures.
Our first stop will be Santa Fe,
New Mexico. That's where .my
menfolk will stay while I go off to
San Francisco· to learn more
about libraries. When I return,.
we'll spend a few dsys more in
Santa Fe and then heel home
again.
During those few days In New
Mexico, I )lope to talk with a New
Mexico State Ubrary c6nsuitant
and find out how llbraries in the
Southwest provide service. Uke
us, they are serving people who
are spread pretty far apart and
cannot get to town. I know they,
have a mail-a-book syatem,
thorugh I hear ·ours Is larger. I

"size up" those she and her husband
might like. Club parties are fun, and
not expensive. - RB.B.
NOTE TO READERS: Abnost
every fair-sized city has a Welcome
Wagon. Find the nwnber in your
local phone directory. - R

Oeseftek ."

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O s s e M o n l h oo 00 . . . . . . . . . , , ,

OSee Ytor ..

Dolly

.. , . ....

oo . . . . . . oo oo 00 00 00 00 00 •

SfNOLEI:OPY
PaiCII

ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY · .
country.

00 00 00 00 00 "

00 0 0 " "

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15 Cenu r

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Ssacriben ld daolrq 1o PlY U&gt;o carrier I
n111 r111111 1n """"'" lilrtct 1o nee _lloifr.
llntinel on • I, • or 12 month bu!.. CrecUt '
w111 bel!fven conier11&lt;h month.

,

No~ by mau permitled In IOWnl
where home carrier 1ervJct IJ IVIU.ble.

·-ill

M:UL IIIIIIICRII'I'ION8

·JM&lt;oslts

OlliouiWiol Viqlllls

,

oooO oooOOoO OOOOOOOO oO oo :

ooiJOJ•

IY•r "" " '"
ilaloo-a.it
00 0000

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00

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' 11J.IO '

oo .o oo OO O OOoO oOo0 000 000 °

oo oooo oo . , oo. oo . . . . . .. . . . . .

lllonlh .. . .... . .. .. .... . . , ..•..• •
.JYIIr . ...... , .. :: ········ · ! ;· ·· · ~

·Fernwood Garden Club .names
committees for year recently

Aaillary;

0

.• IRAL , ·.. . ·.
DEHII.(IIDIFIERS\ '.
~

BIKER RJRNllURE
I

llddllptlt, Olllo

NEW YORK
CLOlHING HOUsE

'c ou ALIVE CHOIUlS - Tile 18 meillllfr Come
Alive Clliral af ClaclaaU will appear Ill a pabllc

.

Wllal ca .... Psoriosis?
No one knows. Skin Injury, emotional stress and some forms of
lnfecti- are wid fa trigger Its development.
Who 0tt1 Psoriasis?
Men and women In equal numbers at any age, but most often
between the ages of 15 and 35. Psoriasis h• bHn diagnostd tor tha
first lime In people of advanced age. It also strikes children. About
150,000 new ~IMS of psoriasis are diagnostd Nth ~ar.
Is I'Mrialls CAintagiousr

No.

Wllat Does l'lorlaslt Look Like?
It lppNrs II sllwry lkln patchn. often on k - . Mel elbows. but
can be hlvnd on any part ot the body. The pafchtt, or plilqUII, art
c~mpostd of dtad skin cells which eccumutate In iaY~n.
Is 111trt • Cure tor Psoriasllr
No, but for many victims of the ell-, control It JIG'IIblt. Same
psorlatlcs may heve remlt~lons of lht ell- for tong ,.,... of
time. In rare caM1 sometimes tha d l - may d'Uppl .. •otiiiiJ .

cSHtce Houn by AI'•'"'-'
2ft4

Jack- An. -

·

o

'lbe lknember Come Alive . and serving local coilgreg~tions in
Olorus ol Cincinnati will make an whatever ·way it can. 'lbe program
appearance of the.Middleport Church ol Chrlltat7 p.m. Friday.
~ 1 .\ll~e Ia a summer traveling
~ ~ by the Clnpnnau Bible Col,lege as part of its.
i1llnlalry o1 training church leaders

of the group combines different
types of music, both Instrumental
and vocal.
The chorus is only one part of thli
Come Alive program. Chorus member a travel to Individual

congregauons in ' 13 week aeries of
one night progrilmB. Also involved in .
Come Alive are two camp teams and
six youth representatives. Together
they provide a firm repreientation.
of the achool they attend and the life
they encolirage.
The public is invited.

·S(Juthern Hills Arts Council
:to serve.four-county area :Arts Council and,to circulate an arts
newsletter to intlrested persona.
Anyone interested In being on the
council, desiring to receive a
newsletter, or having local news pel"
taining to the arts included in the
newsletter, •may contact Judi
Sheets, Rt. 4, Boa 146, Galllpolia, OH
WI, phone 446.71i&amp;s.

organllatiOilal meeting ol the four
county arts council. The Jackson
County Arts Council offered to
amend their articles of ln·

,.

are: President, John Seidel,
Wellston; Vice President, Jean Curtla, Rio Grande; Secretary, Judi
Sheets, Gallipolis; and. Treasurer,
Charles Fenwick, Jackson. UHy
Goldstayn ol .Jackson was apolnJed
• the agent for the newly formed
tii'OUP with the secretary oi State's

.Ch~ster cub

scouts receive awards

, Awanlli were presented at the .
Thurlday light meeting of the
ChaiterCIIb Scout Pack 236.
~ Frank Newsome, cubmaster
prtlided at the meeting with Den 2
glvinl! ~ openilll with the plecile to
!be Rig. '1'be Webllol had a skit, and
DeliS pr 11 anted tbe cloaing. .
•. Recelvlnll aWBrdti In Den 2 were
David Klag, 7111'1'11' arrows inc! one
BOld arrow; Tony Lee, one silver

arrow and one gold arrow.
Den 3, Scott Justis, Billy Johnson,
Thomas Hunter, all bobcat and
progreaa award patches; Tim Tom
Michaels, Ja.iOO Ridenour, and
Michael Hoffman, . progress award
patches.
Webeloa, Brtan Bailey, and Del
Caudermilt, athlete and out·
doorsman badges and Webelo
colors; Floyd Ridenour and Eric
. SUn, athlete and ouldoonman
badges, webeloa colon, and denner's cords; Jay Reyhnolds, athlete
badge; Andy . 8awk, den chief's

1

cord, and Mike Sim, den chief's
cord. ·
Leaders and parents attending
were Frank and Jo Ann Newsome,
Terry and Rod NeSoine, Ray and
Laudermilt, Sherr!, Jeff, Hawk,
Sherr! King, Carol and l.elghann,
Cathy Workman, Ray and Dottle
JUilil! and daughter, Unda persons
and infant daughter, Sarah Bailey,
Ula Ridenour and Matthews, Lynette Saunders and Jason, Mary Hunter, and Mrs. John Ridenour.
Refreshments were served.

. Conimittees for the rear were tendance at the State convention to
named at the recent meeting of the be held In August at Granville.
Fernwood Garden Club at the home
Also read at the meeting waa a
of Mrl. 'lbelma GOes.
communication from the Rutland
'!bey are Mrs. Ida Murplty, Friendly Gardeners Inviting memprogram; Mrs. Suzanne Warner, bers ·to an open meeting on Wedcivic; . Mrs, Marge Purtell, news nesday.
media; Mrs. Murphy, librarian; . Mrs. GOes presided at the meeting
Mrs. Jan Knapp, membenhlp; Mrs. with officers' reports being given
Evelyn l1!oma and Mrs. Helea .tol\n- along with the club collect and the
son, telephone; Mrs. Kathryn John· call to order. Mrs. Evelyn Thoma
son, sunslline.
had devotiOilll using Paabn 112 and
Mrs. Murphy, Mrs. Wanrer and two poems, "Two Roads" and "UpMrs. Helen Johnaon were appointed stream." Roll call was the favorite
to ffi!lke plans for the club which will wild flower of each member.
hoe! the C9ffee hour at the Region 11
Several of the members displayed
garden club meeting to. be held In aP.Ple head dolls which they made
Ol:tober in Meigs County. Read at follOWing last month's demonthe meeting waa a letter from Mrs. stration.
Francis Titus, Ohio Association of
Next meeting will be at the Zion
Garden Club president, urging at· Church of Christ with Mrs. Helen

ASTRO
·GRAPH ·
Junt23, 1911

There Is a possibility this
coming year that you could take a
trip of considerable distance that
you've always wanted to make. 1 t
will giv'! you great pleasure and
at the same time enhance your
education.
CANCER (June 21 ·JUIY 221 Try
not to let your feelings and
emotions take precedence over
your logic today. If they are per·
milled
to Influence your
judgment, mistakes are likely.
LEO (July 2l·Aug. 221 It's best
today that you . borrow nothing
from friends, but 11 you must
borrow something from a pal be
sure to return It in the same con·
dition you got it.
VIRGO (Aug, 23·Sept. 22) Nor·

.

l'lllid ttlelllllt, W'i..,.

mally you ' re
capable
of
operating rather well when the
heat is on, but todoy you could
blunder if required to make
decisions under pr~ssure .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Think
your Ideas through very carefully
today before acting. That which
you do Impulsively may have to
be done all over.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
Guard against being overly
possessive today with one you
love. The tighter you try to hold
this person to you, the harder he
or she will struggle to get free.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 2l·Dec.
21) Steer clear today of

Johnaon as hostess. There will be a
fUm and talk 111 energy by a
representative of the Ohio Power Co.
Mrs. Helen Johnson had the
program on drying wildflowers. She
1111id there are three ways to do this,
by air, pressing, and drying in sJiica
jell or with one-half borax and onehalf cornmeaL Flowers to be dried .
are best when gathered In midmorning after the dew dries, she
1111id. me foliage should he removed .
and dried separately or other foliage
such as boxwood, Ivy, laurel or copper beach can be used. For the
foliage, she said a mixture of onehalf glycerin and one-half warm
water can be used. '!be Rowers can
be set with a clear acrylic spray.
The hostess served refreshments
from a table with a rose
arrangement.
Don't take any type of wild gam ·
ble today that could affect your
income or holdings . Yielding to
reckless impulses might prove to

be very expensive.

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 201 II
you want others to do as you say
today, you must first set the

proper

Pxample .

Otherwise,

they'll have no ,reason to believe
you' re the one to lead them.
ARIES (March 21·Aprif 191 Be
careful today not to demand
things that you wouldn' t want
others to ask of you if the roles

were reversed. Be reasonable.
TAURUS

!April 20·May 201

Sometimes it is necessary to

discussing volatile topics on
which vou and your mate do not

spend money in order to make
money. Today, however, you
must be carefu l not to spend it on

agree. It won' t ta.ke much to light
the fuse.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan . 19)
People doing work or serv ices for
you must be handled with ex·
treme tact fodlly. When issuing
orders or Instructions, choose
your words carefully .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 191

the wrong people or things .
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Be
able to distinguish today between

being properly assertive or
merely too pushy . The former
breeds success . The latter will
antagonize others.

A work session of the Bend 0' the
River Artists Council was held
. - - - - - - - - - : - - - - recently in preparation for the art
. ·e:llllbilto be held In conjunction with
the Big Bend Regatta.
Portable display areas for paintings and photography were constructed, tables were set up for the
sculpture display, directional signs
were painted, and a reception table
was prepared with entry forms and
labeling former.
,___ _ _ _ _.:..,.____ The exhibit Will be held at the
Meigs County Museum, June 27 and
28 from I p.m. to 5 p.m. Artists

Council holds

work session

wishing to participate in the eKhibil
are to deliver their paintings, sculpture, photography, or poetry to the
museum Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 12 .
noon. Entry fee is $1 lor adults and
50 cents for school age children.
For more information residents ·
are invited to call Mrs. Juanita Lodwick, 9115-3592 or Jack Slavin, 992-

3710.
Attending the work session were .
Mrs. Lodwick , Don Salmons, .
Delores Long, Tom and Mary Rose,
Jack Slavin, Dixie Baeir, Sonny and
Rhojean McClure.

For Fowler females--bigger is better
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Go ce their mating was more than ranahead, ask any female Fowler's toad dam. The toads represented a diverwho's worth her warts and you'll se mating system, with each species
likely get the aame response.
breeding a different way.
Bigger Ia better, when II comes to
"I was again looking inlllally allnchooeing your man.
terference, how do animals deal
Ask Ohio State University with noiae, not just environmental
zoologlallJncoln Fairchild, and he'll noise, but sounds that their neigh\)ffer the lllJDe reply. From a toad's borsalaop{'Oduce," he said.
standpoint, that Ia.
In experiments, Fairchild wat·
"Bigger Ia better, II turns oat," ched as Fowler females hopped
says Faln:hild, who's been studying toward the larger males' songs,
thecommunlcatloo.patternaoftoads rejecting measlier men's cries. And
and other anlmala for more·than 10 aa smaller males tried to outsmart
years.
the females by squatting on colder
A theory never befote believed? spots - thereby deepening their
Maybe. Never before tealed? croakJ - or walling Clll the bank to
PerhaJIII. But quite liellevable and snare liiiiiJIPe(.'tlladiea bouncing
even provable, atleut forFalrchlld, by.
who heads Ohio State's Borror
Toads' sounds vary with .temLaborstory of Bloacouallca, which perature, according .to Fairchild,
hoi.- more than 21,000 animal with colder temperatures producing
recordlnga.
slower pulae rates. So it's a mad
"There are few cases where you acramble for the ·coldeilt spots,
can !how where anlmala are whether In water or Clll shore depenchooaing mates for their phylical at- ding 111 the night and the Ume o1
tributes," he aald. "Not for the real year, with the larger toads 111118lly
.estate they own or the car they CGming up the territorial vl$n.
drive. EJ;ceptlnFowler'sloads."
"It'a hard to llink that 1 amaU
Fowler's loads, found in the ' told tlinta, 'God, I've got to get my
eutem United Slates but not u cold apot lonliht.' But the amaller
COIDiiiOII or large •
American toads are more IUCI.'Wiful (attolda, rt~~emble your baalc, li'Jctinl femalea) In cold spOil," he
brownilh toad. They are about tt In- aald.
chea lone, not countln8lep, and nve
1bat may seem awful~¥ dlaperate
u to elcbt yeara. But unllb other to IClllle, but In the world o1 Fowler'•
toeda llld frop, Fowler temaiel are lolds, where men OUinumber the
altrlc:ted , to malel ol tile fl8llle - - at 111011 breedlllc spOil a
apeeill 111 tile volmN « their hundred to one, JOU do wbatever
iiiiiiDI callllld, C)! .....uentlf, the need&amp;tobtdone,Falrchlldllld.
.....,ollhllriille.
"On the bait olnllhta- and that's
'"l'bn'a no data to lhow that tbebell- u.,.fOIII'tllaolthemalel
1arpr llllader (llllllalt Fowler'• an lAIC( I N." he 111c1. "'lbe nit
loa*)," hlrel6l Ilk!, "but t11a or nJ&amp;hll, ffi81be 1 percent are lAIC•
..... dlffen wltl! ... ........ llllllfiiL"
'
1111111 llaft 11oww PJi]ll rat.,
Jaal wllllldnd olwice doll it like
~ • ""1111 PII'CIIplilll a1 a toluretller-Nw?
lauilir tJ :
, , Allll ... h can
"ll'• IIGt very ...~. bat It'•
tlltllelllllilriiiJII ....."
6t.Uf!l, I ..-,"be aid: "lt'l I
, ............ 1111 ft1t will lll1'lla, lliiii...S, very~.
-...
11 • Jllo Sort
of
like · 'NM·

dlap '

DAVID L. CARR, D.O.- OPfiCI, 671~911 ·

lUI

JII'GIIUiat 7 p.m. Suday at lbe Middleport Clliftb «
CllriR.
.
·

Chorus to ·appe~r on Friday locally

.~ward for an CJU1IIandlnl commonty
ileed; Joe Saimden, me sliver

Whit II l'lori11il?
A chronic skin disease that affects some 8 million people In this

11.00
IHO

. also laiow they hive bookmobllei
'nJESDAY
'
and .depolit collectip I'd like to
JOINT MEEIING, Drew Webltet
Jearn more about 1that deposit ·
~
38, Amerlcail Letlloo
collecttooa are, bow lheY operate, ·
'l'lielday,
7:30 p.m.; IOibDetJoo
what the 'prob)ems are, and how
junior
and
.Uor offlcen and Girll .-----'-----~­
much they COIL I ahlci want to
State
report
by Laiii'J Smith.
find out whether thole folks have ·
MIDDI,EPORT
• CHAMBER o1
figured out any other W8)'l of getCOmmerce, 7 p1m. Tuelday at of·
ling boob and people together.
..
flceaoiColwnblaGaoiOhlo.
My famlly and I will be coming
RINGERS QN·THE-GREEN, .
back to Melp County Clll July 12,
lmown handbell cbolr fiUil
IJillinilly
Then I'm off to Portsmouth with
Morristown,
N.~.. presenting
another (female) librarian for
at
7:30
p.m. Tuaday .at
three daya « Adult Bulc
i
Ml!I(Repilrt
F~t
Bapllat Church;
Education worllshope at Shawnee
State Parlt. (The other llbrariln,
Sharon Keller from Wellston,
also has Adult Basic Education
classes based at her llbrary.) So
far, I ckln't know whether your
libraries will have Adult Buic
Education claaaes next year. I
am expecting to have them, but .
.• FLARES
· perhaps only at Middleport
Public Ubrary In the daytime. As
.
. .
I get more lnfonnatlon, I'll pus
• STRAIGHT L£G.
.it on to you.
While I'm gone, I expect
everything ·to run smoothly at
your llbraries. Our staff Is.
capable and well-trained (and
I'm not patting my own bac!t for
that). I think you'll find they can
handle your request and get what
you want with a mlnimwn of
bother for you.
,18, 23, 37 pl Clp.
Stop In at our libraries and see
what they have to offer.

arrow; '1'lmnl)' · Clart, one sliver
arrow and a IPICial ball of fame

FAMILY CLINIC

fiA'ID

ol cltlunlliip 7:30
p.m. MGnday at l'llmeroy United
Metbodlat Olurch; public invited.

'lbe ~was selectad ala recent

Plibliahed every aflemoon, Monday tt:rolii!h
Fridoy, Ill Court Stn&lt;l, by U&gt;o Otsio Valley
PlibiWIIn!i Company • Maltlmedla, Inc.,
Pumeroy, Otsi&lt;&gt; 47811, lfn.llll. Second clu!
flCIIIiige pold al Pllmeroy, Ohio.

flt)II8CJI~

0

Page-S

counllea.

(USPS!-)
ADtvtlltl of M111tllae4il, lac.

S,Curler·--

y ,,.

Monda v, June 22, 19il1

coon~ area which COilllats of
Gallla, Jlicbon, Melp and Vinton

The Duily Sentinel

tile Dolly .
5esslfliel, 111 CossrtSt., """"""'·Olio ..711.

~

FILM, ,.,. Wltllaat 'Winners,"
deaUnl will ~ Inability to
defend qalnll nuclellr n1p0111,
dilcwllcln ol war between Ruull
and Anaica, . . opportunltlel.ild

tour

DEAR HELEN:
A woman who signed herself
"Friends Wanted" wondered why
there are no clubs where couples can
get acquainted. How about square
dances or bowling leagues, or card
clubs, or the church of their choices,
or even saying "hello" to neighbors?
If these folks wait for others to
make the first move, they may have
a long wait. When you relocate in a
new town, you must let people know
you're there! -ONCE A WNELY
NEWCOMER TOO
DEAR HELEN
"Friends Wanted" wished there
was a computer service to match up
compatible couples (who weren't
swingers) .
Why didn't you tell her about the
Welcome Wagon Club which contacs
recently transplanted people. II
usually spoMOrs a "Newcomers'
Club" - a great way to meet and

-lo

0

The Daily Sentinel .

MONDAY
•I

'
! RIO GRANDE - The ·Southern corporation to include the larger office.
Hilla N1a 'Council is the name of a area.
.
The councills immediate goals are
i1ewly formed arts council for the · Officers elected at the meeting to enlist consul~~!! from the OHio

Here's a suggestion:
If you or your family are troubled
(emotionally, physically, mentally)
and you need information and suppori from people who are traveling
your bwnpy road, ask for a nationwide list of self·help organizations
from:
Natinal Self-Help Clearinghouse,
Graduate Center, 33 West 42nd St.,
Room 1227, New York, N.Y. 10035
or:
Self·Help Center, 1600 Dodge Ave.,
SuiteS.122, Evanston, ru. lmll.
Include with your request a stamped, self-addressed, legal-sized en·
velope. (The last-named center
requires 35 cents postage.) - R

POfi'I'MAS'i'ER, Send

~.p~&gt;""""' .

. I &amp;ijiOIIIIIIWIIel

COlWIUl.

_
, tile AaiiOCissled ~. inl/ind Dof
ty Pnu Aoloclalloo and U&gt;o American
N._per Pliblllt:en Auoclallon, National
Advertlaing Repreaenlltlve, Branhlm
· lfesrapoper Sales, 713 111inf Avenue, New
Vaoi&lt;, New York 10117.

.
I

Racine Firemen's Auxiliary
plans annual 4th celebration

For every problem. . .
there 's a group to help
By Helen Hottel

.

L

Monday, Julle22,191i

·Sentinel Social Calendar

." -.
'b
.
,
.
,
.
,
.
Lt .ranes ·: ...~···

SOUle cruilchy peanut butter In with .
the ice cream. This makes the treat ·

MeiP CoiUity ~•loa

0'

0.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1111 WWWW:.V.J.-~-•.AI"'
wlllt we'..., It bllle •
-far
3

3

•

\

........

~-- .. Dwt N.C. . .
. .~ '7 ill&amp; . . II bwa!IW
1I •

I

~.....

'

'owler'•
......=:.Aprllllli4b
..........

I·=1

.... •

J-,

l?lllwtol?nl

~

...... 1'1111l'l

chirp when mounted, pick the males
and why they can afford to be ·
choosy, according to Fairchild.
But unless they're careful,
females can end up missing their
prince.
"H she happens to pick the wrong '
one, too bad," he said. "Once a •
female physically contacts a male,
the male mounts her (to fertilize her
eggs). It brings up the question, if
the biggest guy Is across the lake
and the next best is just ahead,
should she risk getting nailed by
someone well down her list?"
If the route Is ridden with puny
toads, why risk it indeed? It's not
that the larger Fowler males are
macho, they don't defend the
females and young. It's not that ·
they're more &amp;ggre881ve, they're not
the combative type. And It's not
because the amaller loads can't fel"
lllize 88 many eggs, they can.
"What you're left with is that the
larger male Is Importing 80111ethlng ·
to its offspring," he said. "It's
purely genetic. There's no data, but
by the process of elimination, it
lletiill the only tine you can take,
"A larger individual is one who '
has either grown faster or Is older,
and I have a sneaky llllpicton that
It's the growth rate rather than age .
that attracts females. It demon- .
strates that 88 an individual, you :
have survived, you've undergone a :
lot ol ordeals and can hack it.''
It's thole underlylnc questions - :
the why's of II all - that attracted :
Fairchild to loads and why he pur- ;
auee the study with other animala •
moat recently albatrllaa and frigate' .'
birds In the Midway Islands. And :
why he keepe lralllng the atlll UDall- :
awwed.
How loud must a mating call be ;
befllre It's heard by a female! What :
boppn when the environment Ia '
· modified or when odds favor the :
ma1e1, do the crank erGiktn acoreT ;

For Faircbikl. lwwev•, lt'a not ;

wllllhel Fowler'• toadl wla or ~ ·
or.,. bow they play the game.
:
Uftl ............." . . II nat :
thlt taa111 11o It
tblt war. :
or Ill)' aUierlldnllla, or bolrlt
lailll to peOple," he aalcl. "In ]lllpll, :
e1earl)' then'a more. At 1ea1t ,.. '

u...., ...

wiiJ hallie
1
pon41
11a1ptFliwltll,
wbta
II II I ltl1d lilll1l lllliP&amp; for 1 lhli*then'amore...

'*" ,
'

�The

Meigs property tr~~~fers
F. Clair Taylor, dec. to Ethel Winn
Taylor, Cert. of lrllnl!., Rutland.
F. Clair Taylor, dec. to Ethel Winn
Taylor, Helen Elaine Atkeson,
Eleanor Bernice Thomas, Cert. of
trans., Rutland.
Dale Edward Riffle, JOBephine C.
Riffle to Charles Raymond Wolfe,
Leis Marie Wolfe, 5acres, Letart.
Ronald E. Osborne, Ella T. Osbor- '
ne to Tony Jones, Shirley Jones,
48.88 sq. rds., Tuppers Plains.
S. G. Pickens, Emlly Pickens to
Samuel Larry Pickens, minerals,
Pomeroy.
Billy H. Cretsinger, Sharon K.
Cretsinger to Jewell L. Matthews,
Catherine J. Matthews, .234 acre,
Sutton.
Billy H. Cretsinger, Sharon K.
Cretsinger to Jewell L. Matthews,
Catherine J. Matthews, .155 acre,
Sutton.
Fred Older, Sharon Older to

LongBottom
News Notes

Margaret Eila Lewis, Lot lot .
Beban's Add., Middleport. ,
E~est M. Cale, Dovie Cole to
Billy Max · McLaugh\ln Sr., !".09
·
acres, Chellter.
C. R. Barnes, Trust Officer, Third
National Bank Trust Co., Trustee,
Francis M. Belleman, Affidavit,
Bedford.
. Nell Mlddleswart to James Lee
.\lien, Grace Allen, 4~ acres,
Lebanon.
James C. Staggs, Margaret Staggs
to EVerett D. See, Edna M. See, 12
~ere, Salisbury.
Eva Pauline Searles to Kenneth E.
Seari~,JI)dgmentEntry, Rutland:
Keaneth E. Searles, . Edith E.
Searles to Kenneth E. Searles, Edith
E. Searles, II&gt; acres, Rutland.
Carl M. Smith, Dottie L. Smith to
Carl M. Smith, Dottie L. Smith, Let
35, Middleport.
John F. Cook, Peggy Cook to
Monongahela Power Co., Ease.,
Olive.
James J. Proffitt, Shff., Waller
Bartrum, eta!, to James P. Lam·
bert, Robert Lambert, 25.54 acres.

By Melody Roberts
Long Bottom recently lost a very
dear friend and neighbor, Mrs.
Francis Nellie Andrew. For Nellie's
75 years she was very active in church and commUJ)ity activities, Nellie
was always there to lend a helping
hand. She had been ill for several
months before her untimely death.
We will all miss her very much.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins and
son, Kenneth, recently returned
from vacationing with the Senior
class of the Eastern High School, in
Florida. Agreat time was had by all.
Pearl Powell, as everyone knows
in Long Bottom, is one of the community's talented ladies. Pearl
recently held a Tupperware party,
the demonstrator was Frances Spencer. Pearl surprised the entire group
with a specially written song just for
the day, needless to say the crowd
loved it, so much in fact that Pearl
was invited tD sing before a
gathering of the Tupperware people
of Meigs County, she then was invited to perform her song in Zanesville ... Who knows, Pearl could be
making a commercial before long or
something else exciting that only
most of us dream about! !! She made
us proud; she even received a standing ovation at Zanesville.
Johnny Newlun had been in the
hospital a while back and is now at
home doing fine. Johnny's sister,
Phyllis, recently gave birth to a
beautllul baby daughter named
Virginia Marie.
Mrs. Sue Hayman's mother, Mrs.
Carrie Countess of Pound, Virginia
has been V!lcationing with her
daughter and family, for several
weeks, she will be returning home
after she attends her granddaughter's, Paige Hayman's
graduation from high school.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rebecca of
&lt;;olumbus" spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. John Hensley.
Mrs. Irene Starcher and Jerry are
vacationing in West Virginia for
several weeks.
Members of the Long·, Bott1111
Community Association gathered in
the basement of the home of Mrs.
Ernestine Hayman and made 10 batches of homemade soap. The soap
will be for sale at 50 cents a bar or
three bars for a dollar. Sa if you
would like to purchase a bar of good
smelling white soap stop by the Long
Bottom Community Building or
phone 98&amp;-3910 or ·~ or 98$-4275
if you would like more information.
Attending the soap making were:
Pearl Powell, Mae McPeek, Mildred
Hauber, Hilda White, Anita Neutzling , Ernestine Hayman and
Melody Roberts.
The Long Bottom Community
Association held their monthly
meeting Wednesday, May '!1, at 8
p.m. in the Community Building.
The Community Association held
a yard sale and bake sale Thursday,
May 28, at 10 a.m. Homemade soap
was also for sale.

Harrisonville
Social News
.\

Mr. and Mrs. Jennings Edwards
(former Hildred Stewart) and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lonas
(former Maple Edwards) of
Cleveland visited Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Carr Sunday.
Lavern Steinmetz returned to
California after spending the winter
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Steinmetz.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jewell and
Donald Blackwood, Columbus,
visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Wiseman.
Barbara Sieple, Indiana, spent the
weekend with Mrs. Frances Young.
Mrs. Catherine (French) Wright
of Connecticut visited her mother,
Adrienne French, Athens, .and friends here recently.
Mrs. Lois Hamilton and son,
Devin, of Nashville, Tenn., spent a
few days with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Millard Christian. She also
visited her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Grueser.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins attended a
Presbyterian Conference for a week
in Houston, Texas recently.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Waggoner were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Warfield, Michigan and Mr.
and Mrs. K. C. Welsh and Mr. and
Mrs. E. R. Carr.
Mrs. Myrta Wilson, Columbus,
was weekend goest of Ruby Diehl
and they attended the alumni
banquet at Rutland Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chapman
of Silver Spring, Md., visited a week
with Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Mrs. Jean Brown and Mrs.
Marilyn Collins of Ray, Oh., were
recent dinner guests of Mr, and Mrs.
Mike Epple.
Mrs. Gloria Riggs, Mark, Danny,
Paul, Linda and Lisa were Wednesday evening dinner guests of
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple visited
his sister, Florence Bair of Forest
Run Sunday.
Mrs. Eva Waggoner and Daany,
Columbus, were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. aod Mrs. Clair
Waggoner.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Alkire were Mr. and Mrs. Babe
Whaley, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Jannes Hewitt, ·Columbus, Mrs.
Virginia Burke, and Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Gilkey, Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball, Colwnbus, were weekend guests of Mrs.
Frances Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Harbour,
Mason, W. Va., Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King sold
their farm and moved in a trailer on
Pomeroy Road.

PRICE"'

Salisbury,
· Emmett Ray Heiney, dec. 1Q
Gladys Heiney, Cert. , ~ trans.,.
Olive.
·
.
Entt ' Ray , Heiney, dec. 1Q
Gladys Heiney, Cert. ~ trana.,
Olive.
Larry V. Parsons, Sonia E.. Parsons to Ki-amer Exp111ratloil eo.;
Ease.andmeterslle,Rutland.
James J. Proffitt, Shff., Virginia
Crew, eta!, to Arthur J. Slusher, pt,
Lot 2112, POC(leroy.
·
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, the
Onego Corp. to Donald Mills, ParcelB, Rutland.
Veterans Memoria1 Hospital Inc
of Meigs Co. ·to Board of CountY
Commissioners of Meigs Co., Ease.,
Salisbury
Frederi~k Caldwell Tucker Ermajean Tucker, Robert
Emrna Gene Tucker Hall to Indiana
National Bank, Int. iD Parcels, Olive
-Cliester.
Harold .B. Grimm, Violet H.
Grimm to Syracuse Racine Regicinal
SewerDisl,Ease.,Sutton.
John L. Arnott, Jenna L. Arnott to
Syracuse-Racine Regional Sewer
Dist., Ease., Sutton.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Clem P.
West eta! to Robert L. Rudolph, 25
acres, Lebanon.
WiHred J. Smith, Elizabeth E.
Smith, George Mann, Jean Mann to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Meigs.
Wilfred J. Smith, Elizabeth E.
Smith, George Mann, Jean Mann to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Meigs.
Wilfred J. Smith, Elizabeth E.
Smith, George Mann, Jean Maan to
J~es E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Meags.
WiHred J. SMith, Elizabeth E.
Smith, George Mann, Jean E. Mann
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Meigs.
Wilbur H. Rowley, Sr., Matilda M.
Rowley to James E. Diddle, right of
Way,Meigs.
Iva F. Carpenter to Freda Carpenter, Parcels, Lebanon.
Burl Drake to Painter Ridge Community Church, Inc., 1.33 acres,
Salem.
Gladys M. Steiner to Michael
Small, Karen Small, Rockford
Merriman, Suanne Merriman, parcela, Columbia- Salem.
Eula Eva Jeffers to Charles D.
Jeffers, Brenda K. Jeffers, 7.4 acres
Salisbury. .
.
•
Edwin Stanley Cozart to Ollie G.
McKlaney, Winnie McKinney, Let 7,
Racine Village.
.

, . lmhis .

· 'COMPLETE
.'
CLOSEOUT.
BU.Y NOWI

Call lor lrH sldiRI
ostimates, U9-2101 or
94f.JMO. '
· No Sunday Colis
··
.
~ ·.lHfc

·FrH Estimates
l'!tiSOIIeDit Prices,
Call Howard
tt9-2162 '
94N16P

.

l~ilt Gar•an"

..

'

•.

ttOBSTETTER REALTY

,.,. ,

Office 742-2003
GeorgeS. ll!lbsleHtr Jr.
.
NEW LiSTING - com·
mercia! ""'ulldlhg, 2
story, s, 2rid St., Mid·
dleport, $26,500.00. '
NEW LIST·I,!IG ~ Large
11 room, 2 \lOry home, 2
baths •. new gas furnace.
Could have 2 apart· ·
ments, live in one, rent
the other . Asking
$37,500.00.
FJ!~M 194 acres .
mlless, van land! Rd.,
near Mine No. 1. Asking
'

$55,000.00.

OWNER FINANCING
- Pomeroy. NIce two
story" brick home, 3
large bedrooms, l'h
baths , kitchen and
family room comb. with
fireplace . Good In·
vestment for $26,500.00.
REDUCED 48 acre
farm with 2 story larm
home,

pond,

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

F!hone 742·3171
Velma Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
Reel Estate- G.Mrol

Housing

.Rooflnt&amp;,Gulltr
·Remodeling
serving Your Aru tor•
20Yters

EUGENE LONG

Mrs. Richard Wynn, son West of
Orlando, Fla., spent a week with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma and other relatives.
Recent sunday dirmer gueata of
Iva Johnson were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma, Mrs. Patricia
Wynn, son West of Orlando, Fla. Aftemoon visitors Were Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Johnson, Tammy, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Holley, and Mrs. J . R.
Mui'phy, Peggy and Tyson Evana.
Mr. and Mrs. TCI!l Summerfield,
Candl, Wendy and CrystaiofMedlne
spent a week with Mr• .and Mrs.
Robert Russell and family.

Ads:

Public Notice
DIVISIOn Of Meigs County,
Ohio, 011 the 22lld day or
July, 1981at lO:IIOa.m.
Dated !his Ulh day Of
June. 1981 .
Kathryn Ann Scalf,
Netura1.,.rent"'
O..n1elle JOMfle Routh

t&amp;xc.vaflnt
t Septic Sysflms
ewater,s-1
GasLintl
·
tDumpTruck
• Trencller
LlctnudiB-

6-IAt.aiMII FwiMI
7-Yartl Sal~
·1 bcUon

'

MASON
TEXAOO
. '
MECHANIC &amp;
BODYMAN
ON DUTY DAILY

PH. 304-77l-9510
Lowell &amp; Doug Halfhill
Owner~

• Operators

SERVICE

-Addonund
remodeling
-Raollilg and guHer

. 4·17-tlc

MillER ELECTRI
SERVICE
For all of your wiring needs .
Lei George Miller check
your present ttlectrical
system.

Call742-3195
or 992-7680
· 2-S·Ifc

Waler-Stwt(· Eleclric
GIS Lint-Ditches
Water Lint Hootc-ups
Stpllc Tanks
County Cerlilied
Roush Lane
Cheshire. Oh.
Ph. 367-7560
·
H ·ltfc

any

in

house

COMPLETE

RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the smallest
Heater core to the
Largos! Radiator
R•d~tor Specie !lsi

NATHAN BIGGS
EKperltnct

JS Yr~-

S.MITH NELSON
. MOTORS INC.

Pomerov, OH.
. 9f2-2174

Ph.

5·7·1fc

ALL STEEL,

Farm Buldinp

POLE a'uiLDINCIS
15'K20' Up 10 40'K110'
PORTAILE STEEL
~TO RAGE
BUILDINGS

(4'x"', l'xl', 1'•10',
lO'r:IO', IG'x1r &amp;

I
I
I
I
I

;::::::::::::::~';4

ROGER HYSELL'S
GMMiE
Rep~lr

· 9 l.m.-5:30 p.m.

_HomHtOrSIIt

M-luthtHIIUUCUntt
H--Lotl I AcrN ...

· M-lutlstatt Wlnttd

Mobllt Homt IIIII Ifill Y .\rei II In lrtiCCIItftCI OI'IIY Will'! Cltl'l Wltl'l
ordtf, U Ctftl dltrtt lOr Nl Clrtyinl IOI NUfi'IMr Ill (trl of Tilt

Stnllntl.
Tltt Pllllllsl'ltr rtttn'tl tl'ltrlthttottllt or l'litcflfiYI•t ...mtcl
OlaitctiOftll, Tilt PUIIIItiMr Will 'lltt bt rtlpollllble tar m .... tharl ont
lr~corrtct

tensive remodeling.
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
13 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

.

.

SHAG

Reg.$15.95

.

$'7!9 Sq ~.
I Yd.,

1U5 &amp; u~

1

ln51alled

Cosh:n·Carry

..

ol'iye A Liitle- save A Lot

RUTlAND FURNITURE.

IOUII1IY

Main 51.

~--~----------~

~T~h~an~k~~~~f~or~th~e~lrr

. 915·3561 eCHt,..tt

••~""' ....,..

: and Mrs. Bernard Coole,

WORII'

Announcomtnls

Like C::rafts? love money?
ACT NOW Be the first Art·
craft Concepts Counselor In
your area. No Investment
and no delivery, Excellent
arrangement to add to your
family Income. 256-93-48,
Gallipolis.

• kindness
death 01 our
; son Gregory Chllder&amp;.
, Flowers, ' food, telephone
: calls, fo{lr . Tucker and Mr.
, Foglesong, end visits were
··deeply appreciated. Mr.

PAITIANDIIeVICI
ALLMAMil
lrN.....t'*l
• .......... TIAIIt

3

!

I

A'

742-2211

..' .

C111 Ken Young

IOrv'll'l
.......

From

Buy Now &amp; Save S2-S6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Remnants $2.:SO up. Grass carpel $4.99 yd .
Green and Brown.

APPliANCE SERV~

ewna.n

1111 PADDIN

From

I

HEAnNG

l

l Rolls
Rubber liacl!, '

CARPET ~

.KITCJIEN ·
· .CARPET

'7.99 &amp; up

.UUFPS
PWMBING
.·AND

Flrhltltrwta

OWNER HAS REDUCED PRICE - on !hiS 4
bedroom. l'h story hOme on 2 acres . In Eastern
district, full b1semen1, Insulated, above ground
swimming pool, and now only $«1,500.110.
NEW LISTING End of !he road lor seclusion. Mini
larm with chicken house, hog pen, garden and
cellar house, fruit trees and a small house with
fireplace. PRIVACY $14,000.110.
NEW LISTING - A real farm wllh U2 acres, 60
acres haylend, 80 past~re. Nice 3 bedroom home
with new kitchen and bath. 2 barns, other buildings,
even small rental house. All fenced and In bperallon
now. II you want a farm call on this one. $85,900.00.
NEW LISTING- Nice home In Pomeroy, good kit·
chen and porches, home in good c011dltion, family
room, I floor with basement. $26,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Mini farm, close In, nice 1 floor
plan, 3 bedroom hOme, barn, milk house, fencing,
over 5acrea, good large garden. ONLY $16,500.00.
RIVERVIEW IN POMEROY - Convenient
1ocat1011, 3 bedrooms. full basement, large lot. Won 't
last l011gll35,000.00.
FAMILY HOME PLUS RENTAL INCOME - 2
story hOme wllft • bedrooms. Lots Of remodeling .
For Income there Is a apartment and rentallrom a
store building. ALL FOR $36,000.00.
REAlTOR
HENRY E. CLELAND, JR. 992·6191
ASSOCIATES
JEANTRUSSELL949-2NO
DOTTIE TURNER "2-UU
IIOGER TURNER 9f2-51t2
OFFICE 9f2-2l5t

· Ridland Furniture Carpet Shop .
SP.RING CARPET SALE

I Side Hill ,Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742-24$5
5-ll ·lfc

ftl1ltti.WterPw"'"

Special wicker salel Clip
this ad and bring to Wicker
House, 41 Court St.,
GAllipolis and receive 25
off Wicker &amp; Benlamln
Moore paint In stock. to-•
closed Thurs.

•Mr. Miles Childers and
lamlly,

n

'
:PIANO
lt~sons. Lucy Jane

An....,cemlllll
LONELY
Christian
Singles. Meet Christian
singles lnyour aree. Write
Southern Christian Singles
Club, PO Box 1823, Sum·
mervllle, SC 2943 or calli ·
803·871-9850. 24 houri.
3

'Hay Fever' Home
Remedy, tradition for cen·
turlts, II works. For com·
plelt Info and receipt send
today self addressed stam·
peel fiiVtlope plus Sl .IIO to
S.R.A. Co., P.O. lox ~.
Galllpolla, OH 45631 .

, Bulmer. Harllord, WV 1822395. '

INSUlATION .
VInyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding
tlltsutatitn · ·
tSIWIIIDoln
tSiwm WIIMitwt
tReptac-t

Classified PageB

DaVAnNG

Gellla Ca. ArH Codt

mo.

- 614

--VIItltn
MJ-Itlt

ora•

... ..,
I

179-WIIIIIIt Disl.
1St OuyaR Dlst.
..)-Arlllll Dill.

1.111
IIIII

JUVI~fL&amp;·

PROI~ATI!
DIVI ION
IN THE MAT IR OF:

CHANGING THI NAME

S

It·

IllS

lllt'IS .

Mft

'3 ...
'4

,,, 21.11C

J

fJ

PHitrOY
tU-CIIISIIr
sa-~

'

10

I•

surance Co. has offered
servi ces for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County

$8,000, in city limits. Call
446·3748 or 256·1903.

Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in ·
dividual needs. Contact
Kail Burleson, your neigh·

Large 3 bedroom home, 3

tor

almost

a

3

bdr .,

full

immed .
po~session . Price reduced

century .

bOr and agent .

Jiving rooms, formal dining
room, 2 built in kitchens, 2

baths, 1 with shower. All
tully carpeted. Lots . of
paneling . Large swimming

pool in back. Seen by ap·
AUTOMOBI LE
IN · pointment only. m ·2ol04 af·
SURANCE been can· ter 4 p.m. Large recreation
celled?
Lost
your and laundry room .

Tools for installing carpet.
operator's L icense? Phone
Call675·3788 or 446·3253.
Modified A·frame, three
9'12·2143
SCASH!
FOR YOUR FURNITURE!•:4~~B~uce.si~n~
es~s~T-"ra~i!!ni~n"gONE PIECE
1975 Vega Estate wagon, 4
OR HOUSE FULL
cyl. , auto. , tilt wheel, AM·
COME TO
FM radio, PS. Call 256·6016
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
Crown City, OH .
OR CALL·
446·.775
Radio TV
16
OPEN 9 TOS
&amp; CB Repair
CASH lor your diamonds, RON 'S TV SERVICE
gold and silver, class rings, Specializing in Zenith .
wedding bands, silver and House Calls. Now servic ing
gold coins. Tawney Motorola Quazar . Call 1·
Jewelers, 422 Second Ave., 304·576·2398 or 4-46·2454.
Gallipolis, Ohio.

bedrooms, tNa baths, car·
pet. Spiral stairs, circular

stone fireplace. 8 acres .
992·7741.
THREE bedroom house.
fam ily room with fireplace ,

full

basement, all

pliances

and

ap·

draperies.

675·1542 after 5 p.m.

OR RENT · almosT new 14 X
70, 3 bedroom, 1 v, baths,

sitting on ni ce lot, ready to
move into. Phone 304·576·

2711.

Mobile Homes
32
18
Wanted to Do
for Sale
D.J .'s LAWN MOWER
PRICES
REDUCED
· used
REPAIR · On Neigh·
mobile
homes
and
travel
borhood Rd ., all makes ser·
TRI · STATE
viced. specializing in Lawn trailers.
Boy. Blades sharpened. MOBILE HOMES. CALL
Call 446·«25 after 5 p.m. 446·7572 .
Pick up and delivery
CLEAN USED MOBILE
available.
HOME S
KESSEL ' S
MOBILE
Will babysit in my home QUALITY
HOME SALES , 4 MI .
16C 8. 554. 388·8178.
WEST , GALLI POLI S, RT .
35. PHONE 446·3868 or 446·
Will do babysitting in my 7274 .
home In Syracuse. Good
references, very reliable.
1971 Schu lTz Homestead
Phone 992-3110 or 949·2791.
12x60, wash &amp; dryer , new
carpet, com . turn .• set on
HAUL gravei, limestone, lot 6 In Quail Creek In Rod·
coal, etc. Den cil Dunlap. ney, OH. $8,750.00 245:5420
Phone 675-5215.
or 388·8349.
Handyman. Needs work .

Phone 304-458·1042.

5
Happy Ads
Picking up easy·play organ
In your area. Low down
payment, low monthly
payment. Credit manager
collect, 614-592-5122.

l2~~M~on~eLy~to~L~o~a~
n ---

FHA·VA·Convential Home
Help Wanted
Loans, Columbus First
Wanted : Janitor to work Mortgage Co., -463 Second
7
Yard Sale
about 3D hours per week at Ave., Gall ipolis, Oh .. 446·
lusher's yard sale. Slate Presbyterian Church. Sub· 7172
Rt. 218 at Mercerville. mil application at 51 State : -==:::;~=:=:;::::=
Clothes, furniture, and new SI.,Galllpolis. . 9:00 am . 23
Professional
dishes. June 25 and26.
12:00 before June 30.
Services

"

EXPERIENCED
INS.
AGENT to work with
women's,
children's existing clients in
clothes, hOusehold Items. 2 Gallipolis. Good starling
miles east Of Racine on Income bonus &amp; expense
allowance, ex . frenge
state Rt. n•.
benilils. Thorough tra ining

5 lamily garage sale. June
23, 2•. Rain or shine. Men's,

Yard

sale

across

from

Bradbury School, Mid·
dleporl, TuesdaY. Wed·
nesday, Thursday, and
Friday. BQyer residence.
Furniture and clothing.

PubllcSale
I Auction
Neels Auction Hogsett,
WVA. Rt. 2. Every Sal. 7:00
PM . !Consignments
taken•. (will buy furniture)
Lonnie Nul367-7101.
Rodger'e Furnltu" and
Auction lam. Gelllpolls
Ferry, wv. Salt e-y
Fridly 7:30. New end used
merchendlse .
con ·
lllfll\'llloft liken It DIM.
Open 6 cll'fl I Mill 12 to 6.
I buy 1nt1qua OHler'S
AIICtiOII twrY Tunclly 11
em. Truck IMdl IIIIW mer·
chlndiM. ltlfMII111111· tor
everybody. HOWIIfd
•

COCk·I-IIOOfiUIIP'I· 9ft· 3m.

I

basement,

7 week old killen to a good·
home. 675·64...

ltllley.~.wv . ~·

'II 'II

"'-- - === ' - -

House

SANDYANDBEAVERin·

Bwks. old klllens, 2 gray WANTED TO BUY :
SILVER ,
GOLD,
and 1 black. 367·7257.
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS,
RINGS,
1 kiHen 7 wks·old. 446·4427. JEWEI.RY , MISC. ITEMS.
ABSOLUTE MARKET
COLLIE and Coonhound PRICE GUARANTEED.
ED BURKETT BARBER
Puppies. m -2770.
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
3 killens. 7 weeks old. To OHI09'12·3476.
good home . 9'12·7.546.
HARLEY·OAVIOSON, pr·
older model, but
elerably
Three free kittens, mother will consider new model it
killed on highway . Hand· reasonable. Must be In
raised and llller·lralned. good condition, in the $1500
Marvlne Caldwell. Tuppers to $2500 price range . Call
Plaln~. 667· 3493 .
9'12·5006.

m·W1.

'7 '11 '16

'7 '

~

·

247-LIIIrl Falls
,.,_RiciM
742-RIItlllld

111-C-'Y

If

. r

614

1

,,

'I

Mtlgs Co. ArN Code
m-Middltparl

.-Gelllpolls
167-CIItlhi"

--===:==:=:::::::===
Insurance

Flea Markel on Saturdays.
CAll ~75·5868.

Garage Sale. Lots of girl 's
clothes. saturday 0111y.
Rain
shine. 2'118 An·
end of 30th St.
NEW GARAGE OPENING nlslon
·by Junior
· Automatic transmissions
and all sorts Of mechanical I ~&gt;orr1en' Club softball
repair and malar and team .
minor auto body repair.
See James Smith or Tom YARD Slit behind theatre
Masters or call «6-7757.
l.n Pl. Ploaunl. Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday,
City Cab, office 39 State St. 9·? everything.
Gallipolis. open .5:30 nn
11 :30PM 7 days. 446.001 .
YARD sate·June 25 &amp; 26,
ThurSdaY and Friday. 4th
&amp; Buller St. (across from
New Haven Community
cover the
Building! 10 a.m. 1111•.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Bllln Milhoan
"f:il965

i3

root, catnip and sassafras I.
10 am to 6 pm daily. Also

I

Dl'

'

I Vt. (/II I

3
Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies. Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·02'14 ..

following telephone exchanges ...

'992-2411

'"· 992·2772

)j

The Meigs Co. Field &amp;
Game Club will have their
annual childrens fish ing
derby on Sal., June27, 8:30·
1 p.m. Ages 1-16. There wi"ll
be prizes, free eats &amp;
refreshments. Bring your
own fishing pole &amp; bait.
Location, 4 miles west of
Chesler on Shade River Rd.
Follow signs. There will be
a .chicken barbeque tor all
club members starting at 6
p.m.

acres, mid 40' s, assumable

Will do house painting &amp;
9
carpentry work . Free
loan. Call 304·273-9344,
estimates. 992·6190.
Mount Alto, WV A.

TV service call s . Free HOUSE for sale in Colum·
Free puppies, 446·0742 after Want to buy good rololiller estimates. Call 9'12-6776 or bus OH $33,900. Call after 6,
7PM.
in good cond., caii388·B193. 9'12·2034.
675·3269.

pi[ 992·2259

LEO MORRIS

wanted 10 Buy

BY OWNER Brick ranch,
near HMC , 3 or A bdr .• lots
of bull!·in cabinets. and a 1

Repair or remodeling, wall 112 bath, finished basement
paneling, ceiling or floor with den, lg. walk·ln closet,
tile, siding .and painting. shower, l~undry rm., 2 car
garage with electric
992·2759.
opener. central air and gas
Have· vacancy for elderly heat, owner will help llnan·
gentleman board and laun- ce. Call446·ol604.
dry included. m ·6022.
Nice frame home , 20
Will care for ambulatory minutes north of Pt.
person In my home. If in· Pleasant on Rt. 2. LR, OR,
3 , bdr ., F R with wood·
terested, call843·2624.
burner. full basement. 3-4

I PAY
highest prices CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
possible tor gold and silver diameter 14" on largest
coins, rings, jewelry, etc. end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
C011!act Ed BurkeH Barber slab . $10.50 per ton .
Shop, Mldc;lleport.
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock Springs Rd . ,
ATTENTION LADIES!!! Pomeroy. 9'12c2689.
Help pay · Off those .un·
wanted bills · Ylorklnll HARPER · HALSTEAD
evenings from 7: 3D to 10 :30 SALVAGE CO., llth and
p.m. as a fashion stylist. Viand Street, now buying
Earn $8.00 to $10.00 per metals 1copper, brass,
hour profit . Ideal for aluminum, lead, stainless
homemaker with family , steel, batteries and
radiators, ginseng, yellow
Call m-3941 from 9-6.

ln11rtion.

6·3·1 mo .

lUll

9

35. _ _ __ __

Instilled •

12 Plrk St.
Mlddlepot:t, Oh.
Pll. H2·6263
Anytime

AniiOIIncemtnls

3~.· --

J. . . ......

V•

17-Upheltt.rv

(Avn~t4wordt"rllntl

· 32. _ __ __

-----

lt-Gefttrtl Htwlinl
M-M .H. Rt,alr

a,

' 2'1. - - - - - 30. - -- - 31 . _ _ _ __

992-6215 or 9f2-7l14
P~ero. v, Oh.

1 1- Hom• tmproYtmtftfl
12-Pt•mllilll I IXCI'tlttlng
1)-IICCIYiflftl
IN-EIItdrkll
I llfrittratiOn

Up ,.,sword• . . ....
IMtrfiOft ... .. ... , ... ..... . .. ..... . u .oo
Up to 11won11 . . .tflrnUy inMrtlon . ,. ,, • .. , , ,. , , , . ,,, . •. ,. M.OO
Upton words . . .1111 Cltys instrfion .. . .. . ............. . ..... t.r.ICI

:18. - - - - --

V. C. YOUNG II

SERVICES ·

Rates and Other Information

Will lOki

If),

I

Tu..Uyttlnl Frtclt,.2:JI P.M .
.._,·_.,, Mtort put~llctUon
Suftday 2: II P.M. Frlelty

,,....111.....

V' Jll W,

IAcctutrl"
n-Auto Rtpllr

SI-FtrrM tor Slit

26.
27.

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLUS
MEIG~OUNTV;

==:i["

1:1--YIIII&amp;.W.O.
74-MOtiiN'C~I ..
15-Auto Pt111

25.

RE

-Auto 1nd Truck
Repair
- Trlnsmlstloll

Hrs:: Mon.-Fri.

n-AutoS twllll

- ·Mtiidn-2:11 on Sahlnli't

-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
CFree Eslimatts)

SMALL

.RI. 3, IOK 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 114;143·2591
6·15-lfc

eTRANSPORTATION

1
1t-Moltllt
HON:tl
tor Stle

24.

3

64-Hay&amp;Grlll'l
&amp;S-IMII I Fertlllitr

tREAL ESTATE

23.

2&lt;76,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~WA~S~H~-;;~

Q-Li.,..tkll

U-Pr.ttSIIONI
S.rvicn

PH. 367·7671
Qr 367·7560

"From Jlx30"

P&amp;S BUILDIIIGS
n

71-Trwclr:l ftf' iatt

o,ortunlty

work

6·15·1 mo.

UtilJ Bulldinp

tFINANCIAL
n-Moner to Leu

At.

Any size buill to your
sptCiliCitlons. Mocltll
In Melts. Gollia and
Mason Counties.
FREE ESTIMATES
All Buildings
GuaraniNCI

Sizes

Sizes from 41110 12144

••-Far"'
lt~ul•'"•t
lt-Want.cltoluy

Went-Ad Advertising
DtadllnH

HJ 5t"-Jto31 H.P,
HA 60"-2HO H.P.
HE 60''--45-10 H,P,
All Models AVIIIIbie

changes thai have .to be
made. Back hoe and
doser service available.
"2-203'
5·20·1.mo.

l.,_W•ntlrdToOo

11- RHitOrl

RESIDENTS
sewer line connections,

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

fOYARD

RACINE-sYRACUSE

Don't wail. Contact Ohio
Valley Plumbing for

8Ql(

weHA'!CijEE ,

:r 1- lusilltU5

ROUSH
REESE~ CONS11UCTION
New Homes - ex•

TRENaiiNG
SERVICE ·

~"T~VEI'l.

14-IUIINII Ttalnlng

Now ·Taklng Enrollment
lor Summer Classes.
In F!omeroy &amp; Racine
Ages3andUp

J&amp;C
SANITAnoN

. ---;!)

.

U-IIIMirlltcl

Call949·2710

Trash Pickup l.n
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·5016
or 992-7505

56-Ptltl tor ....

&amp;CIIIPiir

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

5·24·.1 mo.

and

12-llhNtld W111ted

Pulllic Notice

IVDIIODJ
I .... DIO Dope the
~f~";'ifJ:! WilT AD BY

12-CI, ;rv. I Mill: IIIUtpfMtll
SI-AIItfctYtl
M-""'IIC. ""rcbuciiM
g..;.hll411ftllv...ill

It-HelP WI~

water, buill In kitchen,
$25,000, In Crown City, OH .
CAll 1·304·525·0391 week·
day, on weekends and In
evening 1·JO.I·522·1735.

perienced . m ·7314 .

I MERCHANDISE
lt-Ho'IMMMI GMIII

f-Wanhd lo luy

5 rms &amp; bath, 2 1&amp;2 acres
of land , new carpet, city

our home. Trained and ex·

41-~'"''""''' tor R~t~t

.,_,.,~lkSale

6·8·1 mo.

1G-Nic

(6) 22, lie

45-, ............. .......
46-btctferltftf
47-WtntMI t. ltftt

J-Ht~t~WAdl

By OWner, 4 .bc;lr., spill·
level, !lvjng rm., dining
rm. comb .. eat·ln kitchen,
!g. family rm., 2 112 bath.
Located In Tara Estates.
Club house and pool
privileges. Kyger Creek
S!=hool District. ShOwn by
app. only 367-7835.

12 Situations Wanted
Will care for the elderly in

.......,.rhMitl ..... ..,,

4-GIWMWI~

,...,..,,..,rv,

NEW L)STING- 3 yr.
old ranch home with 2
bedrooms, carpeting,
utility, bath, F.A. fur·
nace, out cellar, several
buildings and 2 wooded
acres. JUST W,OOO.
MODERN 7 room home
with 4 bedrooms. bath,
nice kitchen, lull
basement, natural gas
furnace, city water on
Rt. 124 In Syracuse.
$37,500.
1620 SQ. FT, - This
large home was built tor
a family. 2 bath tubs,
birch kitchen, full
basen1ent, natural gas
furnace wllh attached
wood burner and large
level lot . City con·
venience. Store near .
POMEROY - Nice
remodeled 3 bedroom
home. Has formica
bath, electric baseboard
heat, nice kitchen, car·
petlng, large porch,
patio . and garden .
Asking 535,000.
'
NEW LISTING 3 yr.old,
3 bedroom ranch' home
with family room ,aftd
woodburnlng flre!l1ace.
2 .lull baths, dOubt~
level wooded lot. Asking ,
$69,900.
.
340 ACRES 5
bedrooms. 2 full baths,
free gas, lorced air lur·
nace, modern kitchen,
large family room ,
garage and lots 01 river
frontage. Excellent hun·
ling fbi' deer, etc.
$225,000.
NICE OLDER HOME Nice carpetng, dining' ·
room, 3 bedrooms, ·
natural
furnace,
basement,gasgarage,
st.
windows &amp; doors. Lot
66x1110 In Pomeroy out
Of all lloods tor only
$27,500.
'
NEW LISTING- Nice,
older home with 4
bedrooms In excellent
condition. Has central
heat and ·llr con·
dlllonlng, Lovely kit·
chen and den with
fireplace. Ltrge lot with
nice view. You can walk
to tile storH.
HAVE

.........

.
~"""""

I-III MIMtrtlfn

U-Schlttllnltrvctlon

ROTAVATORS

and

.,_RENTALS
.................

1-A,.._~teelll"h

DANCE
SJUDIO

AREA

sundeck

ANNOUNCEMENTS

I

•-c.rt~ Of,.....

CARPENTER~$

· l:\!!.~l-992-332S

garage,

' .
.
Write your own ·ad and order by mall· with this ·
coupon! cancel your ad by phone wllen you get
reau111: Money not refuOO.ble. .
·

.tNCICIIOt

Ph.W-~22

EAF~RDm

Weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Snilth were Mrs. Daniel
Worley, Stacy, Daniel of Daniele, w.
Va., Mrs. Iva Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Knapp, Kail, Kevin and
Charlie.
Julie Stevens and Barbara Steadman of Fairfax, Virginia,.Mrs. Julie ·
Stevens of Nebraska, mother, were
recent visitors of Mrs. Iva Johnson.
Mrs. Larry Barr and Michelle of
Rutland were Tuesday evening
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma and with Mrs. Iva Johnson.
Stacy Jo Worley was Friday
evening visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
McElroy, Jeff, Joey and Jessica.

.

,Call Coiled

Headquarter~

Phone

wooctburners Installed. ,
CALL i

Residential

.

crete, storr,1 windows,

F;:ri Esllmatu

&amp;Commercial

VIRGIL B. SR." • 110'
.216 E. Second Street

CLASSifiED AD INDIX

ti!~PLOYMENT

Klichen ca!lfnels, both
nmodellnt. raollng 1
,_..Iter, siding I plumlllnt. I IIKirlcal, con-

lrreOulat route, common

carrier. Our drivers are
gone 5·6 days per week. For
on application call 800·558·
5091 . Schneider Tank
Lines. EOE.

'

PH. 992·7201

M&amp;S BUILDING

several

bldQS. $35,000.00.
LOTS - One acre
building or trailer sites.

'

Claulflecls
·and
. Savell I
.
.
I' '

J&amp;F
CONTRACIING

EXPERIENCED PROFE·
SSIONAL SEMI DRIVERS
needed lor ' transporting
bulk commodities for en

or Writ' D1ily Sentinel Classified Dept.
.111 Court St., Pomeroy, O;, 45769 ..

SERVI(:ES

· PRODOCTS
· · Siding

Wolf Pen ..
News Notes

_returns, Sentinel Want

• ,.l_

· POMEROY

--~Sinall investment, !aige~
Public Notice
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JUVENILE·
PROBATE
DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF:
CHANGING THI! NAME
OF Daniello Jaunt Rausn
.to Daniello Joullt Scoll
Cllt No, 2:1461
NOTICE
Notice II hereby given
that kathryn Ann scoll,
natural parent of Daniell;
Josette ROuSh, age five 15)
years, who resides at Mid·
aleport, Ohio, Intends to
mal&lt;e application to the
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division of Meigs
county, Ohio, tor an ordlr
to change her daughflr's
name to Danlelle JOM!Ie
Scoll.
Said application 11 HI far
hearing In tht common
Pleas court, Prollltt

"Btautiful, Custom

All typtS If 1'101 work,
ntw or rtfllir . 111Hits
and downspouts; ptter
cltanlnt and Jllllnllnt.
All work tuarantNCI. ·

BISSEll
' ~IDING 00.·
I

,

H. L WRITESEt
, · ROOFING. ·

~····

'

. ,.

Upriaht Yews
Maple Trees
Mqnalia Trees
Ma~ OHIWS

Someone to mow ha v. 67 5·
1076.

'&amp;Qfi'KM1r

Homll for Salt

J1

Help Wanltcl

II

They'll Do It Every Time

PHONE 992·2156

Pay
Cash for:.·'·
.

'

'

Vlnyi&amp; ·Aluminum ·
- SIDING

c. Hall:

.- -

.'.{B·u siness ·Services
'

. AD INFORMATION

·C:urb Inflation.

'

The DliiV

Olilo

June 22,1911

Ohio

.........

,

COMMERCIAL and In·
dustrlal
photography,
Phone 446·2'109 or 446·7226
after •p.m.
-------INCOME TAX AND AC·
COUNTING SERVICE
program . Send resume or Call 446·7068 for ap·
call C.W. Langsford CLU, polntment anytime.
931 Highway 28 Suite 308,
American United .Life, Plano tuning and repair,
Milford, Oh, 45150 or calli· Love your neighbor tune
Sl3·2ol8·1222. EOE
your Plano. Bill Ward,
Ward5 Keyboard . 446·,1372,
Immediate opening for RN Gallipolis.
supervisor 3 to 11 shift, exc.
starling salary, contact , GALLIA Cleaning and
Judy Holley, RN, director Reni·A·Mald Service Inc.,
Of Nursing, Pinecrest Care Free Estimates, bonded,
Center. 446·7112, Gall ipolis, Insured, phone 245·9234.
E.O.E.
Cleaning by the week, mon·
lh or contractual.
S1B5.00 to 5500 weekly doing
mailing work . No ex· FOR all your photography
perlence required . AP· needs go to Tawney Studio,
PLY : Circle Sales, P.O. 424 2nd. Ave. , Gallipolis,
Box 224·0, Richmond Hill, Ohio. Passports, family
NY 11418.
'
photos. weddings, and com·
mercia! photography.
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person Building and remodeling .
and earn good money plus Carpentry. Free estimates.
some great gifts as a Sen· 675-2«0.
llnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and gel on
the eligibility list at 992· WELL drilling, both rotary
&amp; cable tools, usually wells
2156 or m -2157.
In 1 day. Call Ray Beagle
304-195·3841.
Opportunity Is yours just
tor the aaklng, Ask your
Beeline stvllsl and she will CHARLES 1'. Knopp Water
De htppy to help you join Well Drllllnt. pump sales
tho Beeline world of and service, 3CW·675-5211.
fashl011 end success. Phone LNvt name and number or
992·3U1 between the hours ceu 30&gt;4-927-3609.
'

'

Wanlld: Llve·ln house
keeper In Portland, Ohio.
IQ·ol636.

ExperienCed dairy farm
htnd neecltd. Ce119&lt;19·2579.
NEED someone to Install
carpel. MUll have own
taoil. Clli6t5-1371.
woman to slay with elderly
lady In COII&amp;=Iie on

372·
._,.flit: bit IIIVIL l'l1ollt Mtktnd.
~lllt.WV.
,~~~.

.. .-

019-6.

COl·

.

0-

~

T

.
0

1973 Crown Haven, Hx65,
three bedroom, new car·
pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x6•,
two bedroom, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12x6C, two
bedroom. new carpel. 1976
Cameron, 12x60 , two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/ 2, new
carpet. 1970 PMC, 12x60
two bedroom , new carpel,
B &amp; s Sales. Inc., 2nd and
Viand Street, Pt. Pleasant
WV Phone 675·«24.
8x45 2 bedroom trailer
Brown 's Trail er Park
M inersvill e, Ohio.

US ED Mobile Home. 576
2711 .

1971 Oarian 12 x 65, 3
bedroom s. 1972 Crown
Haven, H x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau , 14
• 60, 2 bedrooms. B v. S
Sales, Inc. 2nd end Viand
Sis. Pt. Pleasant, WV
Phone 675·«24.
1969 Gregory 12 X 55, 3
bedroom partially fur
nished, wall to wal l car

peling, air condltl011lng
underpinning. S-4.000. 773
5170.

"" Schultz H x 65, good
condition , all new carpet
partially furnished, un·
derpinnlng and porch, on
rented lot. $8500. CAll 615
4591.
JJ

Farms tor Sate

"'--.:..=.=='-"'=-

55 acres, nine room house

barn, minerals, secluded ,

hunting. Morning Star
area. $65,000. Additional
101 acres available. 949

good

2630 .

3;;5- ,L::;
ot;:-s•&amp;-;A;-:c:::rN
= p"'t"LOTS · Real nice campsite
011 Raccoon Creek, oil
utilities available, 1300.
down, owner will finance
call after 3 p.m., 256·6413 .

"

Beautllul8. level lots, Fair
field
Church Rd ., approved
31
HOllies far Salt
sub division, city school,
5 ROOM house, U rural water, 3 3/4 acrn,
ChiiiiCCIIht Rd., only 13,500, 110,0110. 1 114 acre 14,500,
OWner will finance, 10
Caii...,GorU/r1615.
doWn 379-2196.
NEW CABIN or smell
home, completely fur· 4 acres on Flovd·Ciark Rd.
nl-.13900. Call446-0390. close to Rl. 160, $8,0110. Call
446·Gm.
. . _ with acr.... for
lilt, 2 or ~ bdrl., fully cer· 2 acres on F loyd-Cial'll Rd.
peted, 2 blmt, 279-2251 or CIOII 10 Rl. 160, ~
Phone ...-G390.
)79·23G,Iflar 6PM.

�The Dally Sentinel
22,1981

Misc. Mtrc~nise
North Gall Ia Estates Is now
offerJilg beautiful 314 acrea
· bulldl.nO lots, rural water,
road frontage available, ·
low doWn payment low
l'nonthy payment can be
arranged; or will trade for
mObile hOme of equal
value. Call 367-~7 or 3889692.

\

Available vacant lot
samll bUilding Ideal
Used car sa.ln, produce, or
ri~.b business, Good location
:~ner 2nd and Sycamore,
Gallipolis. For Information
Call 881 ·~ day, 446·1775
at night.

~ene's Carpet . Clnnlng, ; - ~.

deeP llream extraction.

.

Apartment In Pomeroy. 4 ©8 H.P. rolotlller with
rooms and bath. 992·5621 .
tvnes 'behind the axle. 245- - - - - - - - - . 9587, Thurman,OH.
1 bedroom apt. fur.nlsned.
utilities paid. No pets or Timber .for sale, 20 acres
drunks. John Sheets, 3'12 standing timber, Ph. 446miles south 'Middleport Rt. 3974,
-APARTMENTS . Fur nished or uhfurnlshed. 6751371 davs. 675 -3812
evenings.

145 ACRES 412-378-1804.

-.....__

Effiency

apartment,

utilities paid. Call 675-4426
atter6 pm .
45
Furnished Rooms
SLEEPING ROOMS for
rent, Gall Ia Hotel.

Houses tor Ren!
41
2 bdr. home unfurn, 1 ""' " ' '
Rt. 7. No Pets, dep . req.,
256·1413, Gallipolis.
SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
House for rent, 57 Olive St. Park Central Hotel.
1 bdr., unfurnished,

pets, you pay utilities, dep. Sleeping rooms. 1200 Ohio
req., $150. mo. 446-7886. Af- StreeT. 675-2222.
ter 5 4-46-4045.
46
Space for Rent
1013 2nd Ave., Gallipolis.
1200 sq. ft. for rent, office
2bdr ., unfurn. house,
or retail located in Spring
pets, you pay utilities,
Valley Plaza. 446-733210:00
req., $150. mo. 4-46-7886
to 7:30 or 446-2172 .
ter 5 446-4045.
3· bdr. house unfurn., very Mobile home lot for rent
nice. Rodney Vllllage II, near town water furnished ,
sec. dep ., references . .446- 446-6306.
4416 after 7PM.

GALVANIZED Culvert,
11.· up. Bridge, . etc ..
Steel, 10c lb. up. 925-0884. '

S~. 35

For Sale: 1000 galle~
PLASTIC septic tanks.
State.approved. Phone 286· JUNE , SPECIAL:· Buy
5930. Jackson, Ohio.
fishing · rHI at regular
price, get rod of_ equal .
Quarar VIdeo-Tape recor· volue half price. Matchedder and camera with 5 rod and reel combOi, V&gt; off
tapes. Like new. $800.00 regular price. Rod or real
only ~5 wcent off regula'r
446-1805.
price. Trl County Sporl]l
Shop. 675-2988.
0~10 HIGHWAY PATROL
38 s&amp;W In presentation
case. 40 yr. commeratlve, a pc setting Cape C~ Ware
by Avon, Items still have
Ph . 446-G548.
contents. 895-3597 after 5
Flat Allis model 6-E dozer, pm .
cargo wench, 1800 hrs, Flat
Allis model 545 end loader, Ohio Valley Cleaning. Call
rubber li r e , comp . us for carpet cleaning
overhauled, exc. cond., · 1 before 9 am any day 675314 bucket. 1976 Chevoret 2 1213.
ton truck, heavy duty 16 II.
bed, twin holst, well Approx. 80 yards well to
oqulped, low mileage, all woll carpet, long shag,
are like new. Priced for from reputable manufacquick sale. Call Ripley, turer, best offer. 675-3077.
WVA, 304-372-6390.
1964 Wolfe travel trailer,
Buy, sell, &amp; trade horses self contained, 304-576·2203
and ponies. Wanted to buy after 5 pm.
rough or damaged, horse
or stock trailer. 379-2761.
8 tt .. slate top pool table
$300. Mag ic Jeannie
Restraunt and store equip- Lowrey organ with bench,
ment, used. RADCO J0•- earphones, and library of
523-1378.
muSic boOks. $1200. Call
304-458-1848 after 5 pm .
Hotpoint Deluxe Electric
Range, •-burner double SAMPLE SALE . New
oven. Call 446-1615, after brand name back to .school
5:00 446-1244, Gallipolis.
clothes. Sizes 3 toddler, 6
slim girls and boys. Girls
couch for sale, 6 mos. old., size 10 slim and pre-teen 10.
exc. cond ., 446·3337, Nor· 122 Highland Avenue, Pt.
Pleasant. Monday 10-6 p.m.
lhup, OH .

1 tool box for In-Ford, 1 new Reduce safe &amp; fast with
fiberglass CJS Jeep cover, GoBese Tablets 8, E,-Vap
Gallipolis location , 1st 12 volt refrlg. for van, new "water pills" Nelson Drug.
One 2 bedroom house.
Elcameno fiberglass top,
2 bedroom mobile home. floor, 446-3432.
'
Amerigo truck camper and
One 3 bedroom apartment.
675-4045.
Building Supplies
Secluded private trailer lot truck, loaded. Call after 4 55
weekdays anytime on
--;:;::--:;-;:;;:::;;;;----;;;~;: I'" wooded area. Ideal for weekends 614·446-1102. ALL TYPES of building
House, 3 bedroom , i
that summer outdoors.
materials, block, brick,
paid. Call 675-4426 after 6 Contact Brown's Trailer Gallipolis.
sewer pipes, windows, linpm .
Park, 992-3324.
etc. Claude Winters,'
For sale '75' 360 Honda gd. tels,
Rio Grande, 0. Call· 245cond
..
sell
cheap.
Set
of
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
42
Mobile Homes
5121 .
Park, Route 33, North of diamond rings wedding &amp;
for Rent
engagement
114
karat
call
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
56
Pets for Sale
388-a.37, Vinton, Oh .
Mobile home lor rent, 3 992-7479 .
bdr., completely nurn ., 446POODLE GROOMING.
9669., Gallipolis.
TRA ILER spaces for rent. 1970 Holiday traveler cam- Call Judy Taylor at 367Southern Valley Mobile per, self·contaJned, exc. 7220.
2 bdr., unfurn. mobile Home Park, Cheshire. Oh. cond., $2,995. Dune buggy,
red fiberglass body, S500. DRAGONWYND
home . Ref.. dep. req., 992-3954.
CAT·
Go cart, slingshot, 5 HP, TERY
Georges Creek Rd. Call
- KENNEL, AKC
new $435. Corvalr van,
4-46-4229.
TRAILER space 3 miles $1,795. Sears air cond ., Chow Chow dogs. CFA
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at 23,000 BTU, $400. 1'180 Himalayan, Persian and
2 bedroom trailer for rent. oldY, 675-3248.
cots.Seal &amp;
mOdel mopeds, 9 left In Siamese
Brown's Trailer Park. 992point Hlmllayan &amp;
stock,
s•
over
cost
1.50
3324.
Persian kittens. Call
Trailer space, tine MPG . Call446--4626.
3844 after 4 p.m.
locati on, lov,i rent, no outFor rent, lOx 50 2 bedroom side dogs. Also house fo
For sale 14 II. Starcraft HILLCREST KENNEL
mobile home. Raci ne area. rent. PhOne/675-4386.
motor
boat, 45 HP Chysler Boordlng all breeds, clean
992--5858.
I
motor all remote control, Indoor-outdoor
fai: llllies.
runs good. Call 4-46-2798
Also
AKC
Reg.
Dober6 room house for· rent on 48 Equipment for Rent
446-9689.
mans. Call.t-46-7795.
Nye Avenue. $150 per mon· ENDLOADER
and
th, S50 deposit. 367-7811.
backhoe. $80 per day. MICROWAVE OVEN, 9ood
Operate yoursell . Ray cond.,
THE FISH TANK and Pet
2 or 3 years old . 367- Shop,
2101 J efferson Ave.
Mobile home, 2 bedrooms. Beegle, 895-3841.
7824.
675-2063, Pt. Pleasant. DutAdults only , no pets,
ch dwarf rabbits $10.99,
deposit required. Utilities
Two month spring special mini lop rabbits $19.99, and
• . . .. .. .. . . . . . . . . P' ,
paid. 2 mil es on S.R. 143.
for upholstering furniture . 20 gal. aquarium with full
992-3647.
Ric herd Mowery, Sr. hood$51 .95. Open lH.
OWner. 675-4154.
51
Household
Goods
Two bedroom furnl•hed
AKC
Dachshund ,
tra iler, $180. month plus
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
POOL S: Pomeranian an Poodle
utilities. $100. deposll.675- Sofa, chair, rocker, ot- SWIMMING
PRE -SEASON SALE:
6987.
toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa, $999.00 INSTALLED ! !! pups 895-3958.
cha ir and loveseat, $275. Above ground pool COM·
Two bedroom house trailer Sofas and choir-S priced PLETEL Y INSTALLED English Blue Tick. 3 112
on Ashton-Upland Road. from $275. to $695. Tables, starling at S\199.00. Price In· months old. $75. 675-1642.
$150 plus utilities and $38 and up to $109. Hlde·a· · eludes pool, deck, fence,
damage deposit. 3 miles beds,S340., queen size, $380. filter , liner, and In· AKC Lhasa-Apso, 3 vears
Recliners, $165.. S295., stallatlon under normal old, good with children. $75.
from Rt. 2. 675·4088.
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5 ground condition. Free 675-1642.
pc. dinettes from $79. , to
Two 2 bedroom house $365 . 7 pc., $189. and up. shop at home service. Call
trailers for rent, furnished, Wood table and 4 choirs, 1·800·624-8511.
57
Musical
1 with central air, good for S350 up to 5495. Hutches,
Instruments
working couple or couple $300 . and $375., maple or Insulated storage building.
with 1 child . $150 per month pine finish . Bedroom suites 8x10 with 7ft. ceiling. Ideal Hammond H-112 orgsn.
Beautiful walnut fin ish, 25
plus deposit. 675-4088.
- Bassett Oak, $649., work shop. $799. See these note pedal clavier, preset
Bassett Cher ry, $765 , Bunk at Kingsbury Home part. keys, A, B drawbars; many
bed
complete with mat· store.
Apartment
other extras, excellent con·
44
tresses,
$250. and up to
for Ront
dillon. CaiiJO.t-882-2-189 .
$350 . Captain's beds, $275. Serlo mattress with plastic
House for rent, 57 Olive St. complete. Baby beds, $89. cover. $30. 992-5501 .
58
Fruit
1 bdr., unfurnl•hed, no Mattresses or box springs,
&amp; Vegetables
pets, you pay utilities, dop. full or twin, S55., firm, S6S.
roq ., S150. mo. 446-7886. Af- and $75. Queen sets, S185. 5
s!rawberrles-plck your
dr. chests, 549. • dr. chests, ALL types of granite, mar- own, Claude Winters, 245·
)er 5 4-46-4045.
542 , Bed frames, S20.and ble, and bronze memorials. 5121.
1 Bedroom apt. oil utilltl os $25., 10 gun - Gun cabinets, Display Jot on Ma in St. Pt. ·--===::;:=::=:=::::;::==
Paid. 675-5104 or 675-5386, S350., dinette chairs S20. Pleosant Granite Com- 59
ForSaleorTrade
and $25. Tappan gas or pany. Phone 675-5548.
"'-,.--'==='-!.!=~
Pt. Pleasant.
electric ranges, $285.
2 Quarter horse mares, 1
USED
.
Ronges, 26' TROUTWOOD travel buckskin and 1 gray. 367FURNISHED APT . Cen- refrigerators, and TV's,
ltalair, neat and parking, 1 3 miles out Bulavllle Rd. troller and comp site on 7533, GalliPOliS.
Raccon Creek. Close to
or 2 adults only . 446·0338.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon. Ohio
River. $500 down.
thru Fri. , 9am to5pm, sat.
OWner
will finance. 614·256446·0322
Apartment for rent, un'
1216.
....
furn ., 4 rms., utilities Pd .•
no children or pets, 4461637, Ga lllpolls,OH .
Office

space

•• • I JI

L. W

downtown

'

"

-"•

--. ........
.-- ... . .

Furnished apt . $195.
Utilities Pd- 1 bdr., adults.
446-.... 16.

53
Antiques
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
1 bdr. apart., turn., $150 • tibles or entire estates.
Nothing tao large. Also,
mo. 446-2572, Gallipolis.
guns. pocket watches, and
' coin collections. Call 614·
Furnished 3 rms, upatoln 767·31" or 557-~11.
apt. Utilities paid, SliD per
mo. NOdtp .. adults onlv. 94
MIIC. MtrciiiiiiiiH
~OC:uat, Gallipolis. Coli 446- · 54
lUI or 446-3870.
RAT~IFF POOLS &amp; SER·
VICE, Complete sales, serFurnllhed 2 bedroom up- vice, supj)lles and Instain apartment. Adults stallation. 416-1324.
only, no pets. Middleport.
992·3174.

~~:'.JD
!fl&lt;lll~ 011 Til!
6

11CTACDOUGH . .
11)~ . IIACN!L-utlfll!fl
POIIT

Eq~lpment

61

1978 HONDA Civic, good
79 Massey Ferguson 200 D. condition, $2,900. or best ofB.ulldozer diesel, 7 fl. fer. Ph. 304-675-3781.
blade, wench, 151 hours.
Cali256-1345.
1978 CONCORD, 58,000
miles, priced to sell. 304Int. diesel tractor,
458-1075.
Holland baler, hay rake,
hay conditioner, fertilizer
spreader. disc.. backhoe
blade. Call 446-3228.
72
Trucks for Sale
1'169 Int. 1600 series for sale
Ford mower for trailer A-1 or trade , 367 -7533,
shape will sale lor 112 price Gallipolis. ·
of new one. Ray A, Baker,
446·0736.
1976 Ford F-100, 58,000
miles, new tires &amp; paint,
Four 15,00 gallon tanks $2,175. 446·3709, Bidwell,
located above ground at OH .
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone 1-304-422-2781.
1979 FORD PICKUP, 6 cyl .,
outo., 26,000 miles with 22
TROY·BILT ROTOTILLE- ·ft . camper, self contained.
RS, Discounts! Immediate Call245-5034.
shipment. Call (703) 9~2 3871 or write ~lckory Hill
Nursery, Rt. 1 Box 390 A 1976 Ford 1 ton 12 fl. flat
bed, am·fm stereo, p.b.,
Fishersville, VA 22939.
p.s. Phone 992-5715.
John Deere Bulldozer with
heavy duty trailer. Phone 1971 Ford truck V-8 stan304-675-2088 or 30~·675 - 4560 . dard shift. 985-4225.

t:" ~~vt~~~ !
AND DOOR. 614-698-8205. . •;-·

INSTALL fireplace facing
or chimney, dry wall,
plaster, stucco, free est.
Simulated brick or stone,
Greg Burdette, call 675·
6357.

1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON
SUPER G~IDE , all
custom ; also a 1973
HARLEY DAVIDSON
ELECTRA GLIDE, needs
pinon shall. 992-6281 .

HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
Contractors · Build, siding,
remodel, concrete, roofing,
free estimates. Call col ..
614·259-2814 ask for Charles
or Mike.

19110 Honda 400CM less than
1.000 miles, exc. cond.
$1,500. firm . 992-6283 or.992-

1967 Mustang 6 cvt.. auto, 2772.
light blue, gd. cond ., call
379-2138 after 6 PM,
1915 Honda CB 500, ex Go Ill polls.
cellent condition. $700. 304·
458-1833.
1971 Pinto • cyl., auto; 1973
Pinto 4 cyl., 4 spd. Call 379- 1970 ~onda , excellent con 2138 after 6 PM, Gallipolis. dillon,
mileage 19,5•2,
many new parts. S-450. Call
1973 Volkswagen Super 675-5730.
Beetle, exc . Cond .. 446·9644
after SPM.
1976 KAWASAKI KE 125,
882·3145.
1976 Monte carlo, PS, .PB,
auto, air, must sell, best of- 1980 KaWaskl KZ 440 LTO,
fer. 379-2260, Gallipolis.
like new. 304-883·2618.

For sale sears best trollng
motor, like new or will
trade for small gas engine.
Call256·6690.

1978 FIBERFORf.l Walklkl
17 fl., 115 h.p. Mercury
motor, Tennesee trailer,
1974 Plymquth Satellite, 318 skis and accessories.
cu. ln. engine, auto. trans., $5,000. 256·6002 or 446·2471 .
p.s., a.c., low mileage. Best
offer or trade. 304·773·5013.
Sale or Trade. 1979 BAJA
Boat, 16 ft. trl-hull, 115 h.p.
Mtrcury outboard motor
with power trim . Easy load
Tenn. trailer. Complete
covers and lots of extras.
Like new, very llffle usa.
992·6288.
1968 Pontiac, call 446·0969.

1m

:a

biothara. (Repeat; 80 mlno .)
loatd·Coplloned; U.S.A:)
AMERICAN p.t.TMOUC
MOYIE -(ADYENTU,_) ''
·~ountlln Men" 1180
([) MOYI! ·CCOMEDY) " '
'.'l)IJ&amp;.her'a Pet" 18118
Ill' llal •
ABC COMEDY
!_CiAL
(I){!§) WKRPIN CINCINNA·
T1 Andy and Herb convince Mr.

I

Carlson to program a 'Dear

Abby' lype advice ahow for
WKRP llstenera end Herb Ia put
In cheroe of·finding the pertect
~~~- i_Repoat)
{J) (H)
GREAT PERFOR·
MANCEB 'Three Cheever Storleo: The Sorrows ot Gin' Thlo
atory, one of John Cheevar'a
beat known, centarionan eight

year oldolrt'a aearch tor t1mlly
Jctantlty, 1nd ataro Edward Herr·

ANNIE

•.

mann,

~llac

M8E.IIONDAYNIGHTBA·
SEBALLMIIwaukeeBrewereat
Balllmore Orioles; or Boat on
Red Sox at New Vorl&lt; Yankees.

~~.__)--r.--~,.-,_ &lt;1 FE$TIVAL•.

(Reglon·wm determine game to
be t!!,avloed In your erea.)

. •l

'

ewtml TMETIMCONWAY

•
•

great white hunter In aaarch or

:~

SHOW Tim Conway playa a
rzan . IRapeet)

C_BN UPDATE N!WS
~Conatanceuaeaallothenoclal
•
FLAMINGO ROAD

8:118
8:00

(I)

"

clout 11 a Wheldon 1nd har lntluenco with Sheriff Tltuo Sam·

-

pletohumlllatalaneandget~er

run out ol town. (Repeat; 2

hre .)

(I) 700CLUB
• ()) (!§) M.A.S.H. While the

1:

4077ih plolo uurprlaetocheer
up homealck B.J. on hlo wed·
ding annlvereary, a fearful
Charteeleeentonanlnapactlon
tour to the front lines .

(!!_ep.!_etl

MARTHA C~ARKE,
UGHT AND DARK Thla unusual

(I) {ll)

·•

I100d cOI!dlllon.

(Anowera tomorrow)

Satul!lay's l Jumbles: CREEL OLDER SUPERB PUSHER
An-: How you might address a German barber"HERR DRESSER"
.

BRIDGE
Unexpected hands
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
NORTH

Alan: "Freak hands are
always interesting, but they
are hard to write about
because successful bridge is
based on averages and you
don't have enough freak
bands to make averages
mean anylbin$. Still, why
don't we wrtte about a
few?"
Oswald: "Here's one from
actual play. It has appeared
before because it is an actual hand from the 1937 Spingold Cup finals . I am not
sure of lhe actual cards,
except I do know that East
held queen and one diamond
so the grand slam could not
be beaten. Naturall y. it was
bid at both tables."
Alan: "I guess you were
declarer at one table: I also
assume that you won the
heart, played a few trumps,
cashed the clubs and one
high diamond, entered dummy and thought. 'What was
your main problem?"
Oswald : " Yes, I was
declarer. My problem was
that it was in the last 18
boards of the match. We had
a 2000 point lead, but this
band would cost us almost
all of it if I went down and
the other declarer. made it.
My problem was to decide
which way he would play
the hand and to make his

tholnltlllotagooofwortdngwHh

other dan cera and exploring

COMPLETE SEWER IN ·
S'T ALLA TION &amp; backhoe
service for the Racine- '
Syracuse sewer district.
Dozer work If needed. 949- ,
2293.

now ldou for.lhe otago. (80

.9tJ098713

6-22,81

.QJ9 165

.

·----

WEST

EAST

••

----

.QJ 108 76 4 .KS32
• 64
tQ2
• J 10 8 3
t 976 l4 2
SOUTH

.AKIO S3!
.A
tAKJ

.AKQ

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Wn l Nortb EaJI
Soutb

4•

Pass

s•

••

Pass,

Pass

2.

7t

play. Of course, when the
queen came up my problem

was over."
Alan: " What would you
have done if East had
played low?"
Oswald: "I don't know.
However, Morrie Elis, the
other declarer, said that he
would have tossed a coin
and let me try to outguess
that. "

8:30 r&amp;lcmJHOUSECALLSWhen
t.1r _Pockier, tho hollf!ltolodmln·
latrator, tria a to Interfere with
operatlnoroomprocedurea.Or.

Mlchaolo decldoa to t1ko an
9J!trlllon. (Ropaotl
10:00 l!J WIMBLEDON '81 HIOHUGHTI HBO &amp;porte provldeo

He's cnewinQ

Dozer work. Small lObs a
specialty. 742-2753.

·,t up!

aamedaycoveregeofthlamoat
preetlgloua event ln tennis;
Barry Tompklna and Arthur

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer service. Specializing
In septic tank. 675·12:U.

- Allie give cOI!II)rehenalve mid·

week coverage to the preUmln·
'Ill' ~tch·UI'• ·

WWtml LOU GRANT Abitter
olrlko over eutomotlon,lod by
an aggre11ive· reporter, apiHa

J. E. While Construction.
Block and concrete, morta·r, $and and gravel . Rt.
33, two miles above New
Haven. 882-2148.

the city room and torcea Lou to

take management'• aida
ogalnot hlo otoH. (Ropool; eo
l!!!no.)
(I) SEARCHINGFDRWORDIN
AYENUI! The llruQgle 1nd od·
venture ohorod by oil immigrant
groupo lo evoked In thlo vivid
recreation ot the v1nlohad
Hung1rton community ot Brld·
goport, Connecticut. (80

SHE LOO&lt;S MORE
LIKE THE HEAD OF

THE G.F$rAPO/

10:28
.

10:30

;mln~~PDATEN!WS
TIIIBISTII!UFE
'

110¥1! -(ADYINTURE)
,.. " "lulch Cooofdr And

The lundtMtiCicl" "'"
~ T8S 1!¥1111110 li!WS

:t:~m~D.
lii!WI
•

PROGRAM

(J)

ALU!~ ATL.ARGI!

11:11
11:30

BARNEY

TEN!WI

ONIQHTIHOW

'Bftt of Caraon' Guaata: Erma
Bombeck, Poll Fountoln,
Cludo "ktns, WillY Stock.
t; eo mlno.)

E

11088 BAGLEY IHOW

''PESTO't5 GUARANTEED, MA'AM···
IT KILLS A~VTHING THAT CRAWLS

VII o(WimfiNl" "EI
"1141

~~~-(1) Cl8 LATE

IIOVII
'QUINCY. M.E.: Dirk "ngol'
Quincy holpol pollco offlcor
ptovohlo lnnoconctlfterbelng
occUIOCI of killing 1 1-·ogor
high on PCP. (Ropoot) 'HARRV
0: 811tn1 Kllf Adtet mon le or·
. I'IIIOdatllll prlrllt~-"'
murder ond hlo wlfo
to deland him.

t~~.~t• VJtal
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I " Little Sir - "
5 Claret hue
8 Shakespearean
role
9 Twist or Hardy
13 Facile
It Affected
by age
15 Presley 's
"- Shook Up"

16 Crone
17 Either (Lat. )
18 Priestly
place
zo Stowe
,character

Zl SUck
U Fruit
bUght
!3 Actress

39 Teen--ager's
concern
48 Rather
41 "Freebie and

the - "
DOWN
1 English
composer
2 Gennan
Yestenlty's Alllwer
3 Greeting for 11 Late news Z5 Hindu deity
the space
hour
%7 Human being
_1% Narrate %9 North Pole
shuttle
4 Sphere
16 Sacred
VIP
5 Beads
19 Mahjong 30 Turkish city
1 Mournful
piece
31 Grow
221U
hwnor
towards
verse
i3 Rivulet
evening
7 Clangor
24 Fit for
38 Purpose
10 Parisian's
plowing 37 Yak
shOut

Keaton

Zl"- Grit"
%'1 Shady
money

ZSL.A.
athlete

!9 Various
3!Subslde

U.Parrot
~Brazil

14 Susan Hayward film
S5 Sci.{!
creetures
371naect
31 11- .Me•'
(Ruth Et·
ling lllllg)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ia

C&amp;IPIOQUOTIS

DIZ

NGWM I
IW

NIL

SRSU

S ZQ B NSQ:

UGKMW NGWMBPW OSGZK

WMS

cart VOW ......ly 1111111111
homt-IIU atnio.,..,"

KSUXVQ

.......,...

AXTDLIAAXa
LONGFILLOW

One letter ainlp)JI ltando for 1nother. In this WBplt A la·
ulld fOr the three L'1, lC for the two O's, ott. Sinclt letten,
a1101tn1Pht11 lilt len)llh ancl form1tlon· of the worcla ant 1U
'hlata.ladt ai, the toclelttten are clllerent.

ZB

Til liTATE
UPHOLSTIIl)'SHOP ·
1161 lee. Ave., Galllfllllla.

city

Field
Z5 ACtreSS

NGWM

s:':.J.~.~- Doro111r

t

I I I I ) THE ( I I I I ]

SERVICES:
Aclulf
Cere Horper•a
Center. ~==~~~i:~~"I"Nvlcllllt 1111 ,..,.....1 17
Upltollllt r

.. .... .

1 &amp; 2 f!ldroom tvrnflhed
apartmenll. 992·5434 or 992•
5914 or 882-2J66.
.

Maw( I

Now arrange tHe circled - . , to
tonn the Slllptiea ........ .. SiiG'
gesttd by the above cartoon.

look Into the year of a tahtnted
dancer-choreographer trace1

MObile hol'ntt meved,
lleenlld, end llandlcl. 5762711 or 67H391.

eftw5pm.

Sigourney Weaver,

ElleenHeckart,RacheiRober1e
and Mara Hebel 01 tha girl. (80
mlna.)
8:30 (I) NEW BIB~E BAFFLE

HJI:I- E:K.-1 OPRY? OUT THE-AH- GtYI
HEIZE IN T11' FRANCISCO
MIWLE 0'
ISHAV!Ntl
THE
ASUi\1-\Eit

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE, call 367-7471 or
361-GS91 .

by orlglnol-.

l I I X)

~

WOODSHOP - Cabinets. 14 ·
Electrlcel
picnic tables, porch
&amp; Refrigeration
swings, most Wood produc·
Is. 101 Court St., Gallipolis. QUALITY Cooling and
Healing Service, call 388Call 446-2572.
'1698.
•
WEATHERALL' CON CRETE · quality and ser· Fuller Electric Co. com- ;
plete rewiring, commercial 1
vice, coli 675-1582.
or residential, ond elec· .trlcal melntalnance, also
PAINTING · Interior and on call. Ph. «6-2171, .
ex t erior, plumbing, Gallipolis.
roofing, some remOdeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.
•
SEING Mtchlne repairs,
service. AuthOrized Singer ,
BING'S CONCRETE CON- Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
STRUCTION - $peclallrlng Scissors. · Fabric Shop, '
In concrete driveways, Pomeroy. 992-2284.
sidewalks,
patio,
'
~
basement, · garage floors
end etc. Free estimates. 11 JACK'S REFRIGERAT IOveer$ experience. Call 367- N. air condition service,
commercial, Industrial.
7891 .
PhOne 882·2079 .
WANTED TO DO all types
General Haullnv
of exterior PAINTING. IS
Fret , estimates. VERY LIMESTONE, gravel and
REASONABLE RATES. sand. All sizes. At Richards ,
CALL 614·256·1591 after and Sor), Upper River Rd., •
4:30PM, Gallipolis.
Gallipolis, . Ohio. Cell 446- ' :
7785.
..
'
Does vour hOUM need a
I''
lace lift? or iutt a lillie JIM'S DEPENDAIILE
makeup? Call 1111 &amp; I' ll water delivery. Call 256· i'
have II looking young ageln 9368
anytime.
In no time . Will do til types
of lnttrlor work; PIMIIng,
ceilings, flooring, t~IUI NOWHAU~INGhousecoal, :
exlerlor work,
lng, &amp; llmtllone lor driveways. · '·
lhlngllng, eny alze lnd Cell for esllmati1367-7101 . •
lllliPf. 3D YHI'I .,......lenct
"·
In carpentry. Roltrsuces OILLARDS WAT!Il ":
provided upon requett. 992- DELIVERY Service. Call " '
6293.
......~~ .
'Ill

74 Pontiac- Flreblrd, S500, 76 TRIUMPH 750 Bon·
446 · 3920 after 6: 00, neville, all new wheel
Golllpolls.
bearings, 6500 miles, good
condition, 304-458·1075.
'77 Trans Am, near loan
value $3,800. ~- 1136, bet- 7"s==:::;
'
B=oa
=ls
=.=
ncr= =
ween 9AM &amp; &amp;PM.
Motors for Sole

tBOYDUL~ -

tlome to two young orphaned

INTERIOR and exterior
painting, Mark White, call BACK HOE service. Larry
245-9561 .
Sldenstrlcker. 675-5580.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hatfelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Frl!j! estimates.
Call 446-2107.

IJ 0 I I

farmer eo that ~· can give a

Wv

Home
Improvements
Plumbing
FOR BEST In Carpet 82
&amp; Heattnp
Cleaning - Cell Smeltzer's
steamwav. Call 614-446CARTER'S PLUMBING
2096.
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
STANLEY STEEMER
Phone 446-3888 or 4-46-.._.77
Carpet Cleaning
446-4208
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
PAINTING - - Residential Route 160 ot Evergreen
and commercial. 1nterlor Phone 446·2735.
and exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free estimates. 17
GENE PLANTS
yrs. exp. with references
AND SONS
call 367-778• or 367'7160.
Plumbing • Healing - Air
conditioning. 300 Fourth
JIM MARCUM Roofing
Ave. Ph. 4-46-1637.
spouting and siding. 30
years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling . SOUTHERN SERVICE
CO. - He&amp;ting - mObile
Call388·9857 .
nome furnaces. electric hot
water tank repair . Call ofCALL 446·2801 for termite, flee, 446 -3008 nlgh.t,
roach, bird , rodent. emergency·no. 367-7131 .
sp iders, fleas and other
small Insect control. Free
estimates given. A local J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
company
locaed In Rt. 1 G~lllpolls, 367·7853.
Gallipolis area . Bill
D. c , contractors 'PlumThomas.
bing, electrical, heating,
STUCCO PLASTERING - roofing, aluminum; vinyl
textured ceilings, com- siding, end hOme painting.
mercial end residential, 675-3376 or 675-12-40. ·
.free estimates. Call 2561182.
DOZER · backhoe, dump
SANDERS
CON - truck . Call446-4537.
TRACTING , Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
DOZER work ' excavating,
landscaping, 446-2787.
land clearing. Call446·0051 .

1980 Honda Odessey, $1 ,000.
256·6205, Crown City, OH .

1980 Mustang CObra turbo,
4 sPd .• PS, PB, air, recaro
seals, AM-FM cassette,
sun root. loaded. 675-6690.

ataraaa the aged caretaker at

tPLAAILl.

the School for the Blind who
trleato become 1 rNpoct1blo .

F &amp; K Tree Trlfl)mlng,
stuml:' removal . 675·1331 .

81

vans&amp;4W.D.
HOLSTEIN Heifers, 73
ready to freshen, average 1980 J EEP CJ -5, 6-cyl ., 41200 lbs. or better, 388-9329. spd., exc . cond., call 4.46·
1211 . .
5 White-face heifers, 2 with
calbes, 3 coming fresh, ap- MUST SELL, Make me an
proximately 2 months. 2•7· offer 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, •
2841.
spd; low mileage, canvas
top, will trade, call 446·1211
TWO year old half quarter or 446·3594.
&amp; American saddle horse,
1000 lbs. Ideal for children. 1975 Chevy &gt;to ton 4 wheel
304-675-5365.
drive. Lift kit, big tires.
992·2679.
--==::::;:;'="';;=;;;:::::;==
6:4
Hoy &amp; Grain
"'--- ---'-= -==!!!!.-:.....
74
Motorcycles
straw for sale. 949-2273.
1981 Honda 900F Super
HAY for sale, 75 cents a Sport fairing · &amp; headers,
$3,200. 367-7593, Bidwell,
bale, 304-458-1524.
•
OH.

446·1875, Gallipolis.

G

.

H~nderson,

Phone 675·2250.

SllltiONS

FACETMEMUSIC
7:118
C!18__UPDATE NEWS
8:00
• ClJ L!fTl,E HOUSE ON
Til! PRAIRI! Dub Taylor guest

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar. and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446-2454.
ViCe1

5

73 Chevolet Blazer. Call

RIQIARD

COOK' S TeleVISIOn 5er-

1955 GMC 112 ton, stepslde
pickup, 4 new tires and
63
Livestock
while rims, bucket seats,
cond ition ,
Holstein Dairy Herd 34 e xcellent
cows, 23 milking, 11 due In mileage 58,663, Phone 6755730.
next 7 weeks. 388·8419.

71
Autos for Sale
1976 Chysler Cordobo, low
miles, gOOd con d., 1111
wheel, crul$e, priced right,
446-8661 , Gallipolis.

I!OU-YWOOD IQUM!S

(H) DICK CAVETT SHOW

HARPER Halstead, lawn ;,;
mower repair and snar· ,
penlng - service, 10 a.rn.-6 .. !·
p.m. 675·5868.
.
.

-

~R'IWILD

•.

call388·8646.
- - - - - -- - '
For sale special built Ford DAVE'S appliance repair, ,..
truck with 1111 off camper,
dryers~
plum· .'tl&lt;
with extras. Call 367-7167, washers,
bing, electric, gener•l hl!ln· "'ii
Cheshire. on.
dyl'nan. 576-2921 or 675-5689. :.:
1977. Apache Clmmaron,
approximately 24ft. crankup fiberglass; gas or electric refrigerator, awning,
sleeps six. Like new . $3,000.
985-3504.

G.:-J:!

7:30

~~~~~~~E

1H9 Z-21 end 1976 station
wagon deluxe. Can be '"" 76
Aute Parts
2 miles out S.R. lG. 992· _ _&amp;!!!.!:A~~-:!:!!~IOI'!!.I!!es!-_
36-17.
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto PII'IS. auto repair,
1'71 CUTLASS Salon. 675- wrecker HrYlct, buy
:1722 or 675-5571.
automobll•, radlotors end
III!Mrles. 446-7717.
MORRISON'S Auto Hies.
....,_... 11 Htneltrson, WV. PhOnU751574or675-2811.

~\

7:00 ' !1). PIIIIA~
.
(J) :
PROQIWI

CONTINIOUS no leak gut"
terlng, : custom made for .,
your home. For free .,.

1977 BONANZA
trailer,
35 ft.fong, a.ctravel
., tip~~~~~~~~;:::=r::;::::::;:~:;::;:;:=:~
out room. New awning,
Farm
71
Autos for Sale
deluxe Interior, full bath,

•

VIe~ -

.

-------'~~ · .,

1976 20 ft. STARCRAFT,
self contained, call 304-6755334 after 4 p.m.

1 bdr. unfurn. apartment,
downtown
Gallipolis
location, no pets, adults
only, newly remOdeled. 4463432.

·e

·f! . .
'h

RINGLE'S 'SERVI.CE :
Complef·t ' building, , .. .,.
E &amp; V WELDING ~alnt a.· femodellng, repairing; . · ·:
Bodv Snop, Georges Creek largit or small lObs.done ef· ':,
R.d : Gallipolis. 446-9304, tor· . .fiCitntiY. PhOne "5·• !II' .:. :
mafly with Gallipolis 675-4560..
·
. • • ,
Motors, 3_veers.
,,
LOCKSMITH
Service. ~:.
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding Realden.llel, automQIIve. " :·
S175; any color,frea pickup l!mergency .service. Call ;.
&amp; delivery In Gallipolis 882-2079.
·
. ·•·
area, Hammond Body
· •· :·
)r--,~1 Shop.-22-lMIII St. 379·2782.
H &amp; 0 CONSTRUCTIO!'I. ·, ·:
Remodeling, and repairs,
.
Commercial and reslden; "
71
Complng .
,
ilal . Phone675-6357.
Equipment

7.

2 bedroom furnished cottage, uptown. $225 month
plus utilities. Call675-2022.

Rentals

~­

Free estimate~. reasonable :; .·
rates. Scotflguard, ?92·6309. ·, • ·

NIce Mobile Home lot. APARTMENTS
AND
Letart .Falls. 50x120. with MOBILE HOMES675-4130.
drilled well. Land contract
with small down payment.
2 BEDROOM apartment,
247·2841.
utilities paid, will consider
one .older child. call 675BY owner, 3 apartment 1883.
house on approx. 1 acre.
Live In one, rent others to Apartments. 675-~.
make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
City water, will consider SLEEPING ROOMS on
land contract. 675·1883 9-5 Viand Street, Pt. Pleasant.
304-773-9110.
p.m.
100 x 110 Jot. 304-882-2954.

The Daily S!lntinei- Page-9

Ohio .

X

LXDS

LIQQVSQ
USLEBZLGOGVGWJ.'

N.

WGDS

ABMZLBZ .

y.-.,·~ 1le; IT IS NEVER TOO LATE TO GIVE

UPYOOR

.,,,

CES.-HENRYDAVID'l'HOREAU

�Storms.

Ma1ion. finn ·awarded water tank cOntract·
.

••

(CGQiinuedfrwoJIIIe1) ·.

~Ohio fromMdna and
Wayne counttea. '. east through

~

Geaup and Portqe cqunllel Into

MahorilnC cOunty.

.

~

( ~~l~ l/id

. •

Stonnl .caUMd IJOWel' outqes and
downed trees wblch nee allated

road

cloelnp. ~- Electric ·
illuminating Co. npoiied. :M,!IQO
Cllllomen without powar thla morning. The uUllty es:pected .to have
power reatond.by afternoon.
In Berlin Center, near

B)'BOIIROEi'LICH
. funds, The engineering phue of the fund; f4,000 to ·general government,
Meeting lil regular ,!MIIon Moo- P"!li!Ct will· amount to f79,260. and .,809 to street maintenance.
day nlgbt, Mldd1epm VIllage Coon- . During the dilcuAion, Mayor Fred
Mayor Holfman read a letter from
ell voted to enter Into a contract with Hoffman pointed !llit that the .new .the Colwn~ office of the Depart- ,
F!oyd G. Brown .aDd Alsoctates, tank will be quite beneficial Ill the ment of Housing and Urban
Limited, Marion, Ohio, for community Binee the. l)l'!lllent tank Development following a June 10
engineering work on a new 250,000 would be ~uate sllould a financial management inspection in
!lllllon water tank.
problem develop. . ·'
Middleport.
'nil! tank, accompanying lines and Council voted on the division of The Inspection covered from Aug.
a roadway to It wlll,be paid through federal rev~nue sharing money for 23, 1979 through June 10, this year.
Houalng and Urban Development 1!182 with ta,OOO to go to the safety The inspection report found no

•

Yoong~amill~~wua~

damaged and minor injuries were
reported.
.. .
An Allen County borne and a bam
Were damaged, and ' trees were
uP~ Sunday by
tornado,
aberlff deputies ~d.
In the o.rke County com'munity of
Ani!Onla, about 10 miles from Indiana, a tornado damaged a house
Commllllity School ud tile Pomeroy ll'lrlll Baplll1 C~h. II II ex· •
and a traller late Sunday momlng,
peeled to opeD early Ill tile Week altbaagb the regatta ~ IIIII llegiD
IIDW 'lbanday eveulug.
·
according to the town's fire·department. And In Union· County, either
high winds or a tornado downed
,power lines and trees north of
Marysville, the sberltrs depar!mert
said. Trees also were down In
Opponents of the bill, meanwhile, Colwnbiana County.
·
"If it comes out of coinmittee, I'll
put it on the floor," he said.
rallied at the Statehouse . last
No \njurles .were reported in the
Riffe said the latest bill differs Tuesday, carrYing · signs urging state, and damages were limited.
'
'
legislators to defeat the measure.
,---.,..!-----....:...__;
_ _.J.._ _;.;.__ ___,__7""~from the Senate measure,
"It Is not 'dove bill. The bill that
The bill is among dozens.on which
dealt strlcUy with doves Is dead," House and Senate commiUees have
Riffe said bf the Senate measure.
scheduled hearings this week Ia
The current bill technieally would lawmakers return from a weekend
cover any wlld animal which federal recess.
law or regulation authorizes taking,
House members are to bold their
possessing or transporting.
first Door session of the week late
When James introduced the latest Tuesday morning, while the Senate
bill, he said it would affect crows Is to convenes that afternoon.
and coyotes as well u doves. But according to wildlife officials, only
James' bill already has drawn
crows and doves would be covered.
predictable support and opposition.
Russell L. Scholl, assistant chief in
The Wildlife Legislative Fund said
tlie wildlife division, said the federal the bill recognizes the U.S. Fish and
regulations pertained to migratory Wlldllfe Service and the Ohio
or rare and endangered species. Division of Wildlife as goverwnent
·Coyotes are not Included in either agencies competent to manage
category, he said.
wlldllfe.

e

a

CARNIVAL MOVES IN - Tbe Smith Carnival, headquartered ID

Florida, moved lllto Pomeroy Sunday to set up for Big Bend Regatta
Weekeod. The carulval will he loeated In the area hehlud the Meigs

Voi.30,No.41
Copyrighted 1911

ment and would he covered by the
proposal.
James was the House sponsor of a
Senate-passed dove bill, shot down
twice earlier this year In close House
votes.
The Senate bill was killed last
month when it lost on a 43-47 vote in
the 99-memher House. Fifty votes
were needed for passage.
Rep. Eugene B.ranstool, !).Utica, a
leading opponent of the measure,
said at the time that a separate bill
with the same purpose could be introduced. He said he doubted
whether House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, would
bring it to the floor.
But Riffe said at a news conference last week that he wowd let
the latest bill rise or fall on its own
merits.

World congress deals with problems
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Management of cities' headaches is
a worldwide challenge, some BOO
mayors and local government of·
ficials from 53 countries were told at
an international conference under
way this week. .
The 25th World Congress of the International Union of Local
Authorities, chaired by Colwnbus
Mayor Tom Moody, will discuss city
government on a worldwide scale
during Its five-day meeting.
On hand are mayors from Europe,
Asia, Latin America, the Far East
and the United States.
"If we fail to make a real con.
tribution to those who live in our
cities, to those from whom and to

whom we have pledged our lives,
then, very simply, we have wasted
their money ... ," said Moody,
president of the IULA for the past
four years, during the opening day
Sunday.
The organization was formed in
1913 so local officials In France and
Belgium could band together in opposition to nationalism and war.
President Reagan sent a message
lauding the group · for "understanding the need for decentralization and the Importance of
competent local goverwnent of·
ficials."
One international problem was
discussed Sunday. "The ability to
deal with the problems of hunnan set·

Area deaths
Lawrence Haley
Lawrence (Larry) Haley, 58,
Roseville, Ohio, died Saturday,
He was born at Rutland September 22, 1922, the son of William
and Madge Romine Haley. He was
an employee d the Robinson·
Ransbottom POttery Co., Roseville.

tiements is perhaps one of the most · tiements do not lend .themselves to
complicated and difficult tasks con- final and fixed solutions," said Arcot
fronting a society !&gt;ecause our set- Ramachandran, executive director

Hospital news
·aospitalDlschargeaJunH9
George Bethel Jr., Moody Brannon, Mrs. Ernest Cornwell, Jr. and
daughter, Shane Facemire, Nancy
Fowler, Della Guthrie, Herbert
Harrington, Dina Howard, Clarence
Jordan, Sharon McCorkle, Gertrude
Miller, Pauline Myers, Larry
Newman, Myrtle Potter, James
Rainey, Mrs. Steven Rawlins and
son, Frances Schaver, Harold
Smith, Robert Snowden, Christina
Sprouse, Roger Walker, Vlrgll Watson II, Eugene West, Marion
Williams.

J

Roseville. Burial will he in Rose Hill
Cemetery.

Neva Baias

BIR~

·

Karry Blanton, Vinton , a
daughter; Wllliam Caughey, Bid-

\

•'

\

.

.

(

.

.
• Summer'fun time! We can outfit you with anything you need. Come
on'" now while the selections are still god. •

• Take your pick of regular shorts, action shorts, denim cut-offsplus swim trunks, cool knit shirts, tank tops, tube socks.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Always o_n the go?.
Use our convenient.
drive-in facility.

Three hurt in Ohio storm Monday
· ANDOVER- Upto3.1nches ofra.lnfeU along the.Maumee River as
·
.In southern Portage County, three women were sent to the hoepital
Monday after a tree crashed into their traller, pinning them inside.
Though the storm wu not officially tenned a tornado, funnel clouds
were reported In the area, with several other trallers blown over.
Pollee In Wooeter ft!1d Lodi also reported seeing funnel clouds.
·
Tile Lakeside Trailer Park at the BerUn Reservoir In western
Mahonlnil County wu hlt by what witneasea called a tornado early
Monday mornlng, leaving a half-mile-long path of damage estimated
at~.ooo.
·

heavy rains and winds swept across much of northern Ohio.

'

Teen·ager sentenced to prison
UMA - A Preble County teen-ager who pleaded guilty to charges of
fatally shooting his mother, brother and two sisters has been sentenced to 12 to 50 years In prison on four voluntary manslaughter
·
charges.
Allen County Judge Robert Light ·sentenced Scott Creech, 17, of
Eldora!lo on Monday afte( denying a defense request for a trial on invO]Wllary manslaughter charges.
Creech, tried as an adult, pleaded guilty In March to the voluntary
rnanaiaughter charges, but later changed his story and asked for a
new trial. The trial was held in Allen County because of pubUcity In
Preble County.
The bodies !lf Creech's 39-year-old mother, Chris Ann; 11-year-old
brother, Robert; and sisters, Kathryn Marie, 9, and Rachel Rebecca,
•· were found Sept. 24, 1980, by his father when he returned home from
work.
'

ISLAMABAD, Paklatan ~ Soviet planes bombed rebel strongholds
in parts of Kandahar, Afghanistan's second largest city, and hundreds
of people were heUeved killed, an Afghan who claimed to have seen the
bombing reported.
"lllooU like a place destroyed by'earthquake," said the ~yeaJ'Oid
~of an Afghan gov~ent corporation who arrived Monday.
He said Soviet tanks entered Kandahar, southwest Afghanistan, and
two nearby villages after the bombing Fridsy, and fighting between
rebela and Soviet and Afghan goverwnent 1roopB continued through
theweetend.
·
The sources said he lived in Kandahar and requested anonymity,
fearing reprisals against his relatlvesstlll there.

Today's lottery winner
C1EVELAND- The nwnher selected Monday night in the Ohio Lot-

tery's dally game "The Nwnher" Is 201.
Tile lottery reported earnings of S$29,102 from the wagering on the
draWing. Lottery offictala said sales prior to the drawing totaled
~,378, and holders of wiMlng tickets are entitled to share $371,276.

Weather
Clear tunlght. Lows 80-a. MosUy sunny Wednesday. Highs In ihe
mid-81L Chance of rain ·near zero percent tonight and 20 percent Wedneaday. Wlnda light and variable tonight.
ElteDded 01t1o Fareeut- Thursday through Saturtlay: A chance of showers and thundenstorms Thuraday. Fair Friday and Saturday. Highs In the mid-'101 to low 1011. Low! in tile~ and low 80s.

tWSDA Y NIGHT A 1 CROW'$

All The Kentbcky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!

at y

en tine

Tues~;~ay,

1 Section, 14 Pag es

June 23,1981

1S Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

House panel opens hearings on hill
to circumvent Ohio's speed limits

,.Soviet planes bpnm ~Jrongh~lds

well,adaughter;JeffKittle,Polnt
Discharges Juoe!O
Pleasant,
a daughter; Tom Wood·
Faye Ball, Arnott Barnett, Joe ~ard~,Gall1~·polls~,adaug~hter~
.
~~~~~~~
Bradley, Floyd Chambers, Ror1ald
Deweese, Sharon Drummond,
Wilma Edwards, Dexter Flfe, Mrs.
Curtis Fulks and daughter, Ronald
Grady, Opal Grueser, Wilmer
Halfhill, Clyde Marks, Grover
Neville, Jean Newsome, Garland
Oldaker, Janet Pauley, Helen
Pickens, Charles Randoiph, Dana
Rayburn, Cecil Richanta, Eleanor
Robson, Elph Rosa, John Smith, Cyn, thia Wiseman.

Neva L. Balas, 75, Rt. 1, Reedsville, died Saturday at St. Jospeb's
Hospital, Parkersburg.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Sam, in April of this year.
He was a member of the Roseville She was survived by one sister, MarUnited Methodist Church, Roseville jorie J. McCloskey, Colwnbus. An
Masonic Lodge, a veteran of WWJJ , aunt and uncle Mr. and Mrs. Alvin
and a graduate of Rutland High Myers, Meigs Coutny, survive.
BIRTIIS
School.
Funeral will he Wednesday at 1
James Clark, Pomeroy, a son;
He is survived by his wife, Sally, p.m. Schoedinger East Chapel, 5360
one son, Donald, Hamilton, one E. Livingston Ave., Columbus.
Divorce filed
daughter, Mrs.Debbie Ross, Burial will he in Green Lawn
Roseville, four grandchildren, two Cemetery. Friends may call7-9 p.m.
Two couples filed for divorce and
brothers, Marvin, Colwnbus, and Tuesday.
one filed for a dissolution of
marriage In Gallla County Common
Wllliam, Dayton.
Pleas Court Friday.
Four sisters also survlye - Mrs. Oscar Jones
Georgie B. Jones asked for a
Ed (Bernice) Nelson, Mrs. Shennan
divorce
from James P. Jones and
Oscar 0. Jones, 76, Coy Hill Rd.,
(Kathleen ) Tillis, and Mrs. Pauline Danville, died Sunday at HMC Judy Harvey filed for divorce from
Tillis, Rutland; and Mrs. Edward following a short illness.
Wllliam Harvey.
(Dorothy) Archer, RoseviUe.
Betty Lou Mooney and Leroy
Arrangements are now being
Funeral will he Wednesday at 11 made by the Walker Funeral Home, Mooney filed for a dissolution of
a.m. at the &lt;;annan Funeral Home, Rutland.
marriage.

IVERY

Randolph Waugh, Jackson, a
daughter; Richard wolfe, Ravenswood, a son.
DllclwJea JIUie n
Herbert Adkins, James Clark,
Teresa Gillespie, Bob Hughes, Brenda Ingraham, OtUs Johnson, Harold
Loockado UI, Mrs. John Moss and
son, Roy Price, Dillard .Sanders,
Charles Stutes, Pam Thompson,
Carol Toops, Ernest Ward, Derrick
Wilson.

RecollUllended for resurfacing are
a part of North Second f\ve.;
Rutiand St. .to Mill St., a part of
Pearl . st., aprons on side streets,
Dock St. , a spot near Locust and
Third and a ditch on Middleport Hill.
Officials felt that all of the recommended resurfacing can he done on
funds set aside for the project.
Mayor Hoffman commended Bill
(Continued on page 10)

I

· Pomeroy-Middl!!port, Ohio,

Legislature again studies -dove bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio I(AP) Legislators are preparing to begin
their ~econd battle of the year over
the fate of small, quarter-pound bir·
ds called mourning doves.
The House Agriculture and
Natural Resources Committee is to
open hearings Tuesday on a bill that
would make the dove and other wlld
animals on the federal game list subject to hunting in Ohio.
Sponsored by Rep. Ronald H.
James, I)-Proctorville, the measure
would authorize the natural resources department's division of wildlife
to establish hunting seasons for wild
animals which already may he
taken under federal regulations.
Although mourning doves curren·
tiy are protected from hunting in
Ohio, they are classed as migratory
game birds by the federal govern-

deficiencies and pointed out that Middleport" Vliiage Hall Friday to
Village accounting recorda were discuss the program. Village of.
most thorough and fully docllmented ficlalS will talk to the representative
and that Internal controls were more at-8:30a.m.; banking people at 9:30
than adequate.
. and insurance people at 10:30.
The mayor also pointed out the
Council voted to advertise at once
Powell St. water line Improvement for 475 tons of asphalt and 350
should he started any day.
gallons of tack, in place, in order to
It was aMounced a representative carry o11t the recommended street
from the Chicago office of the Dood resurfacing program in the town in
insurance pi'OI(ram will be at the August.
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A posed by the federal government in
House panel ts to open hearings this 1974 to reduce gasoline conswnption
week on a bill circumventing,Ohio's "hasn't saved one-half of I percent
55 mph speed llrilit amid warnings of energy."
such action will lead, to more t~affic
The Ohio Department of Highway
fatalities and a 10811 of federal atd.
Safety .wants to put the brakes on
The Houae Hig~ays. and Hig~ Jo.~on's ~m, however.
way Safety Conunittee 11 to hegrn
We don t want to go back to 70
consideration '!"ednesday of Rep.
mph highw.~y ~peeds and runaway
~ve Jo~ s. measure~ trac- death tolls, , sa1~ Earl";,Retch, ~e
tically e~Ung penalties for
departments director. But ~t. s
speeding vtotations of up to 70 mph.
~ctiy w~t wtU happen if this btU
. JOOilson, a Republican from ~orth
ts passed.
.
Canton, said the 55 mph limit lm·
The measure ts among dozens on

Bridge opening delayed
because of bad weather
The ~ew bridge between Rave01wood and Meigs County will not
open as soon as expected aceordiog to the Rave01wood News.
The lleWIIpaper reports It was hoped that the bridge would open by
July-AulllJBI, but that loclemeot'weather has puabed back the opeolug
to Auguat&amp;ptember,stDJ ahead of the Oct. 30 target date.
The big job atDJ to be completed on the •18 mliUon span Is painting.
Tbe newspaper reports also Ohio has come up with the mooey to
upgrade Route 338, leading to tbe bridge on tbe Ohio side of the river.
The plan Is for wldeolq Route 338 from 18 to 24 feet.
The Ravenswood Chamber of Commerce Is reported to he planDing several special eveall to mark tbe opeulug of the new bridge.

'Cycle victim reported in
stable'
at
.
'
. Holzer
. . . _..__
•.. condition
'

An Athens County man who suffered burns from a motorcycle accident Monday momlng is still In
stable condition at Holzer Medical
Canter, according to a hospital
spokesman.
.
Dennis J . Horvath, 24, The Plains,
was moved from the Intensive care
unit Monday after being treated for
first and second degree bums.
The Gallla-Meigs Post of the Ohio
. Highway Patrol said this morning it
Is still investigating the aceident, in
which Horvath and another motorcyclist, Billy J. Wllliams, 24, Rod·
ney, were both injured.
The patrol said the pair were both
southbound on SR 7 in Meigs County
near the Gallla County line at 1:27
a.m. when ll)ey apparentiy crashed
and one of the bikes burst Into flame.
WUllams was treated lind released
for multiple bruises.

...

~..

In other matters Monday, the
patrol cited a Pomeroy man in a onevehicle accident.
Troopers said a truck driven by
Douglas C. Clelland, 20, was eastbound on SR 124 in Meig~ County at
10 a.m. when he failed to stop at the
intersection with SR 338, went off the
road and hit a fence.
Moderate damage was reported to
the truck and Clelland was cited for
fa,ilure to obey a stop sign.
The patrol Investigated a car fire
on SR 7 in Gallla County Monday
night.
.
.
The report satd the gas tine on the
car, driven by Glenna F. Dalton, '.fl, .
Asht?n, W.Va., _broke at 9:!15 p.m.,
causmg the engme to catch ftre.
A ,tru~ and 18 men from the
~aJUpohs Fire. Depa_rtment extingulshed the ftre, which severely
damaged Dalton's auto.

which hearings are slated as the
General Assembly hegins what may
he its last two work weeks of the
~on before swnmer recess.
Much legislative attention will he on
a House-Senate conference committee trying to work out differences
between the two chambers on the
state budget for the ~~al year startmg Jwy I. ~other )Otnt conference
pan~lls to ftmsh work on a bill' rem·
statmg the death penalty and send it
to Gov. James A: Rhodes.
. .
Although keepmg the 55 mph lurut,
Jolmson's bill would invite drivers to

go faster by reducing fines for any
speeding violation of less than 70
mph Reich said. He· credits the
lowe~ limit with cutting down traffic
fatalities. In the seven years before
the 55 mph limit the state's average
annual traffic de~th toll was 2,523, In
the seven years since, the average
annual toll has dropped to 1,982.
In a typical 55 mph car accident, a
passenger's chances of survival are
about 30-t()ol in his favor, according
to Reich. But at 70 mph, the chance
of avoiding fatal injuries drops to 5I).
50.

Inflation hits 8.4
mark in May
WASHINGTON (AP ) - A sharp
rise in housing coslll pushed the
nation's annual inflation rate to 8.4
percent in May, more than three
points above the previous month 's
rate, the government reported
todsy.
But for the first time since early
1979, the 12-mpnth gain in the consumer price index was less than 10
percent - a f~trther bolstering of
economists' predictions that the
double-digit crunch is finally at an
end'. Prices in May were 9.8 percent
higher than in May 1980.
May's rise in housing coslll primarily reflecting higher mortgage interest rates and bouse prices
- accounted for inost of the 0.7 percent monthly increase, the Labor
Department said in its report.
Declines were posted, however ,in
gasoUne and food prices.
The May data means that for the
first five months of the year, inflation also rose at an 8.4 percent an·
nual clip, well below the 12.4 percent
rate registered for all of last year.
Specifically, the department's
report said:
- Housing coets rose 1.3 percent,
boosted by an increase of 2.1 percent
in mortgage interest rates and 0.9
percent in house prices. Rent rose
0.8 percent, the largest gain since
October. Housing prices overall rose
0.7 percent in ApriL
- Gasoline prices continued
declining, falting 1.5 percent, after a
1.4 percent drop in ApriL

- Food and beverage prices
declined 0.2 percent. Grocery prices
were off 0.5 percent from April,
reflecting a sharp drop in prices of
fresh fruits and vegetables.
- Prices of new cars rose 2.4 percent, partly as a reswt of American
manufacturers' ending their rebate
programs.
- Medical care costs climbed 0.9
percent, led by rises in doctors' fees ,
up 1.1 percent in May. Charges for
medical services rose 0.8 percent,
while hospital room fees were up 0.3
percent.
- Entertainment prices rose 0.5
percent ·after a slower gain of 0.2
percent in ApriL
·
- Costs for apparel and upkeep
were down 0.2 percent, after rising
0.2 in April and I percent in March.
The decline reflected a drop in
prices for women's and girls' prices
due to pre-swnmer sales.
All of the figures are adjusted for
seasonal variations.
May 's 0.7 percent rise overall
follows increases of 0.4 percent in
April and 0.6 percentin March. ·
The report said the unadjusted
consumer price index rose to 269.0 in
May, which means that ·goods and
services costing $10 in 1967 would
havecost$26.90 last month.
. The Labor Department also said
real spendable earnings - after
taxes and after adjusting for inflation - dropped 0.4 percent in May
for an average married wage earner
with three dependents.

Squads answer
four caJJs Monday
Four calls were answered by local
emergency units Monday, the Meigs
County Emergency M_edical Services reports.
The Pomeroy Unit at 11 :01 a.m. .
took Charles Mullen from 113 Second
St., Pomeroy, to Veterana Memorial
Hospital. At 2:30 p.m., the Middleport Unit pl~ed up Mullen at his
home at Fourth and Fisher Sts. In
Middleport and he wu again taken
to Veterans Memorial.
The Middleport Unit at 10:42 a.m.
·took Betty Mathews froni Imperial
Electric Co. to Holzer Medica~ Center. Monday evening, the Middleport
Unit took Pete Klein, Rutland St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospllal. He
wu dead upon the unit'sarrlval.

PIAn· barbecue

We are open:
9 to 1 Monday thru Thunday
'
9 to 7 Friday
9 to Noon Saturday

•Combinltion Dinnir On~
•Dininl Raom On~
Served with: Whipped
· Poatoes, Chicken Gravy, Cole
· Staw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.
Sorrv, Np Substitutions, Exclpt · B•v•rages
which have an additional price.

Crow•s Family Restauran'
228 W. MAIN
•(

Ptl iil-1432

~

~

Trustees to meet

Tlte board of trulleea ol Colwllbill
'l'owniNp wtD IJIIIt Ill lpaClal
-*'~.Jn•.•tlOa.m.

II th iowllllllp llulldlniiiCC!OI'dlng to
the clerll, Gloria Hultlln.

Farmers·

Free .elothina day

Bank

.... elctilt .., •

Your Community Owned· Bank

ba beld at

lllllmetlaD Amtr...... Of, Clll
Mrmlwr FOI('

-

The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department will 11(10111101' a cliicken
barbecue on Saturday, June 'll,
beginning 11 11 a.m. The event will
be held behind the fire station. Dinners an P and chlcllen only ~.50.

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1

--

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