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Voi.30, No.33

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e·n ttne

Mldd

I ~ection , 12 Pages

d 5 Cents

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DENVER , (AP) - President
Rdgan, facing the most unrecep- .
tive audience since llis inauguration,
told the NAACP Monday that
"~overnment is no longer the strong
drafthorseofminorityprogress."
After .a restrained Welcome from .
5,000 convention delegates and a
scolding from their chairwoman, the
p~dent asserted that govefliJIIent
aid programs to mirloritieil• hav.~

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50 PAiiE PHOTO ALBUM

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IPICfACULAI

•Forks
•Spoons
•Spatulas

MarshAIIan

99

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president by declaring that "the
NAACP does not necessarily subscribe to the views that are about to
be expressed."
She also noted the flap which
surrounded then-candidate Reagan
last year when he failed , unlike the.
other major White House con·
tenders, to appear at the 1980 convention of the National Association
· for the Advancement of Colored

COOliNG UTENSILS

-'ULY4TH ~~

•Magnetic Pages
•Holds your
Favorite photos
lor years

'
failed and urged the civil hghts
)~roup to "hitch up a fresh horse" namely free enterprise,
Reagan said his tax and budget
cuts will "miJve us toward black
~conomic freedom because it is
aimt!jl at lifting the enti~e count~
and not jus! parts of it. "
Margaret Bush Wilson, chair·
worn~ of the 400,000-member
organization, introduced the

18" BBQ

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GRILL

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"

PRESIDENT WITH NAACP DffiECI'OR President Reagan talks with Benjamin . Hooks,
executive director of the NAACP, prior to fteagao's acJ.

'

.

dress lo the opening session of the NAACP convenlion
In Denver on. Monday, Pictured center Is Mrs. Hooks,
(AP Laserphoto),
\

People - on the grounds that his in·
vitatjon had been misplaced.
Reagan, who was sitting on the
platfonn, appeared non-plussed
when Ms. Wilson recalled, "There
was some confusion about our in·
vitation to our honored guest. U:st
year as you may remember, but
then, he was only a candidate for the
presidency of the United States."
The president, who read his 2(1.
minute speech from a teleprompter,
was interrupted by applause about
12 times, but the overall response
was cooL The applause came, for
example, when he said he is committed to equal treatment of all
citizens, that he wishes the slayings
of young blacks in Atlanta would be
solved, and when he said his communication with black 'leaders
should never stray from "our
national commitment to battle
discrimination.''
But the president's words were
greeted with silence when he said
the government was "no longer the
strong draft horse of minority
progress," and suggested it was
time to rely more upon the freeenterprise system.
Shurtfly after the presfdent depar'
ted the convention center, the
audience sang the civil-rights theme
sung, "We Shall Overcome."
In the speech, Reagari said AI·
torney General William French
Smith is studying the Voting Rights
•Act which is about to expire, He said
he would have a decision regarding
extending the act later, but declared
that he rega rds voting "as the most
sacred right of free. men and

women."

THANKS, MR. PRES IDENT - President Reagan rerelves a hug
from Mrs, Margaret Bush Wilson. chainnan of the board of the NAACP,
alter he addressed delegates at the NAACP national convention In Denver on Monday, I AP Laserphotu l.

• 3 way height

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adjustment

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.Millions .blame deaths on Americans

$599

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NELSON'S
S7.H

• Broadcloth with

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flouncts
• Polyest•r knit

CHARCOAL

Trustees hike tuition fees
•

BRIQUETS

TOUICHOICI

ATHENS, Ohio- Trustees at Ohio University have approved tuition
and fee increases totaling $52 a quarter, effective this !all,
The hike will raise undergraduate fees to $384 a quarter, up 11.8 per·
cent above the current rate.
·
Trustees attributed the increases during Saturday's session to the
low' level of state funding tentatively earmarked for universities and
next year and to the state's new position that students should pay more
of the costs or higher education,

10 Lb. Bag

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J2 Oz•

• T•rry, St'!irred dre11•s
• DresHs with Cryatal Pleating

NELSON'S IIG.

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NILION'S 110, VALUIS TO tll."
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Deputies probe chain incident
COOHOCTON, Ohio - Sheriff's deputies are investigating why a
state mental patient was kept chained to a bed in a fannhouse near
here. •
Detective Lt. Dane Shryock sllid Monday that a fanner obtained
custody of the patient about six years ago from a s!Bte mental hospital
and was paid by a private trust to care for him,
Acting on an infonnant's tip Saturday, deputies found the patient, a
5&amp;-year-old man, secured to a bed with a heavy link chain and padlock
attached to his ankle in what ~hey described as an unsanitary condition,

NILSON'S 110. MC

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CANVAS RAFTS

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•Take along to

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·Shooting report big hoax

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WASHINGTON - Mayor Marion · Barry was "as surprised as
anybody" to hear the news bulletin that he had been shot. It was a
hoax, af\(1 a television anchonna11 admitted to 'his viewers: "We've
been had, folks,"
,
,
Washington's three networ.k stations interrupted nonnal p'togramming Monday night to report that Barry, 45, had.!Jeen,seriously wounded in a shooting at his home, A half hour later, they broke in again to
say it wasn't true.

\GALLON PITCHER

Conduct house to house searclr

(U .S, flit. Na, 0 ·110, 7111

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SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador ,- Anny reinforcements who lolled a
leftist attack on the port city of La Union were going house-to-house'to
flush ouvuerrillas holding civilian hostages, military sources said,
Scattered shooting continued Monday after the reinforcements
• secund the city, 120 miles southeast of the capital, said the soutces,
who uked not to be identified for eecurity reasons.
•
Tilt localanny command decreed a curfew f1'Q114 p.m. to 5a,m, No
afflclll figures ol dead and Injured were released, but residents in
telephone interviews sald 50 people were kllled,
,

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· CLEVELAND - A Cuyahoga County common pleas jury of eight
women and four men was to resume deliberations today in the murder .
trial of Orlando Morales, accused in the murder of 14-year-i&gt;ld Tammy
Seal8.
'
Morales, 24, was charged with two counts of aggravated murder and
one count each of kidnapping and felonious sexual penetration .
The defendant and the victim are from Cleveland's westside.

20"x3S"

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Jury deliberates man's fate

22Cb.

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PALMOLIVE LIQUID

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Motltly cloudy tonight and Wedneetlly with tiCattend ahowel'll and
' tiultlentonna, Thundentorml tonight poulbly IeVert. Lows tunJ&amp;ht
In the mid loupperllOS.'Highs ,Wedneetlly In the lowiOa,tllance o1 rain
· 40 pen:ent lonlcht and ~ percent Wednelday, Winds euterly to
IOUtheuter!y ~10 mph too18ht. .
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triM. Rillllln lbt-iow Ill rniHOI ,....,. .... In
till mid ....... Ill Fl1dlr llltllllturdaJ. Lows In tile low 1o miHll
,...., aadJ'rldar IIIII In till mid Ill upper llllllturdly.

Slow_..._

Nelson's Drug

BEIRUT, Lebanon I API - With
chants extolling their "martyrs"
and condemning America, more
than a million Iranians turned out
today for the mass funeral of the 72
political leaders killed in the born·
bing of the ruling Islamic
Republican Party's central
headquarters, Tehran Radio said.
" What happen ed was an
American crime," one unidentified
speaker told the throng as it assernbled lor the funeral procession
through the Iranian capital. "The
crimes of America arc well known
all over the world, America calls it·
self a civ'i!ized nation . Such
civilization is a barbaric civilization ,
It is a civilization to enslave
tnankind."
Parliament Speaker Hashemi
Ralj;anjani told the mourners they
must fight on lwo fronts, one the bat·
tlefield with Iraq "and the other an
internal one,"
''With your detennination; you
can defeat the enemy and the Fifth
Colwnn trying to create distur·
bances," he declared. '
He said the bodies of those killed in
the bombing Sunday night would be
taken to thei r birthplaces for burial.
There was speculation that the

foes of the Islamic zealots con·
trolling the government might try to
•nake trouble , The Interior Ministry
urged the public to "be careful that
no disruption of public order occurs.
because • that is just what your
enemies expect.''
Mourning demonstrations . were
repor:!,.ed in Cities throughout Iran
Monday, Fanatics of the Hezbollah,
or Party of God, many with shaved
heads, raced through Tehran 's
streets on motorcycles displaying
posters of Ayatollah Mohammad
Beheshti, the Supreme Court ·chief
justice and leader u! the Islamic
Republican Party, who was one of
the bombing victims.
About 7,000 people marched
through the center of the capital.
Shops were shut and lung li nes of
black-dad · mourners waited to
donale blood for the injured.
Wi nesses said there were about 90
people meeting on the ground floor
of the tw&lt;&gt;-story party headquarters
Sunday when a bomb detonated and
the building's roof collapsed. It was
not clear how many people were in·
jured, Tehran Radio raised the
death toll to 72 Monday night.
Earlier reports had said 69 died.
Besides Beheshti, considered the

must powerful member of the
regi me after Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khumeini. tiw blast killed four
Cabinet mi nisters. eight depu ty
mi nisters , 21 Parli ament membe rs
and a number of ufli cials of the parly.
The twu men who served wi th

Beheshti un the presidency council
that took over the duties of ousted
President Abolhassan Bani.Sadr Prime Minister Muhammad Ali
Rajai and Rafsanjani - narrowly
escaped death. sources told The
Associated Press. The sources sa id
Raja i and Rafsanjani were called
out of the meet in~ just before the explosion.
Alth ough no group claimed
responsibility fur the bombing,
spokesmen for,the Khomeini regime
blamed the United States and leftisl&lt;
opposed to clerical domination of the
country.
The presidency coun cil vowed a
"showdown with the enemies of
Islam to the last breath."
Several government leaders accused the Muj ahedeen Khalq , a
group whose ideology blends Islam
with Marxism, and the Marxist·
Leninist Fedayeen Khalq,
Ayatollah Hussein Ali Montazeri,
• the countr y's second-ranking

religious leader, charged that the
bombing was the work of "the
criminal America and its merCt!nary age nts . ~~ Montazeri's son,
Hojatoleslam Muhammad Mon·
tazeri. was killed in the ex plosion.
The U.S. government refused to
cununent, and State Depa rtment
spokesman Dean Fischer told repor·
ters in Washinl(lon : "I simply do noi
want to dignify such accusations."
He added, however, that "we
deplore all acts of violence."
Kho.neini seemed tn link the
fugi ti ve BanhSadr to the bombing
when he asked. "Who are those sit·
ling in corners? Arc they hwnan
bei ngs or :javage beasts who dare
not themselves emerge'!. They send
other people's ehildren ... tu carry out
sabotage."
But guvernrnent spokesma n Beh'.ad Nabavi tuld reporters in Tehran
.that Bani-Sadr "may have been in·
funned in advance, but he dues nut
have the power behi nd him to do
such things."
Nabav i S&lt;Jid the government has
accepted in part Bani-sadr's reported conditiulllj for coming out of
hiding to sta nd trial. He said the ex·
president would be allowed to plead
his case and Iran 's borders would be
sealed.

11th· hour budget.agreement possible
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - With a
fiscal deadline hours away, HouseSenate conferees headed back to
work today in an eflort to hammer
out a compromise version of Ohio's
proposed budget bill.
.But the prospects for an interim
spending plan, instead of an $8.9
billion document to cover all fiscal
1982, appeared to be increasing.
"It's likely enough that we
requested LBO (Legislative Budget
· Office ) to prepare a four-month
budget and have it ready," said Sen.
Stanley J, Aronoff, R-Cincinnati.
"With every hour that Jll!sses, an interim budget becomes ~ore o! a
possibility."
But veteran Statehouse observers
said an lith-hour agreement still'
was possible If differences could bo!"
resolved.
Aronoff said Gov, James A.
. Rhodes' administration also is drafting ari · Interim budget. House
Speaker. Vernal G, Riffe Jr., O.New
Boston, has ordered a temporary
budget prepared In case it is needed.
Adoption d an interim budget
coveting part of the uri ftlcal year,
w!Jich beglna at midlllght, would
allow atate IIOVt!l'lllllellt lo continue
paying ill bills while efforta at

readlinl agreement on a pertnanenl

spehdiJw plan were undtlr way,
The cvnfnllt.'t committee met
behind clolld t1oor1 for I~ houn
belen rece.lng late Monday. The
panel reported maktns 1t1111t
prtllleu, but reached 110 flllll
qrealWil.

"We're much ckler ... of ClltiJ'II
we are," llid Rep. Myrl H.

Shoemaker, [).Bourneville, chair- four months to cover the first month
of the new federal fiscal year which
man of the commiltee.
Conferees said they couldn't •.;ree starts Oct. I.
But GOP conferees said such a
on 16 to 18 major items out of more
than 4oo changes the ~nate made in temporary budget shouldn't be
the House-passed version of the bill. pegged at cu rre nt spending, but at
Senators cut spending levels by levels perhaps 2 percent lower.
, about $220 million from the House · "We're $50 milli on In the red right
bill to offset revised tax revenue now," Van Meter said. He referred
projections lower than expected,
Aronoff said the changes considered by the conferees so far
would havr. restored less -than $1
million o! the amount sliced by the
Senate. But the major items still in
dispute could, il adopted, cost from
$10 million to $20 million and force
the budget out o! balance, he said.
Republicans on the panel insist
that if Democrats want to restore
funds for specific agencies - such
liS the energy department or civilian
conservatior corps ..,. they must cut
an equal amount elsewhere.
Aronoff and Shoemaker ·agreed
that If an interim budget becomes
necessary, it should continue for

to a deficit that has forced the state
to postpone paying some of its bills
until the new fiscal year starts July
I.

"Our emphasis would il&lt;~ keeping
the basic )iCrvices to people going... "
sHid Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter. R·
Ashland, about Senate plans fur a
temporary budget.

Early deadline
Ill order to permit elllployeel to
olriene tile Feurtb t1 July
beiiiiiJ, the Tllllea 8ewtlael wW
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1nmoe 1or
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TEAM COMPETITION WINNER-Tile team of Bels Dlstribatt.l Co,,
tile team eompetltten at the aa.allrotljump held at Melp
Stwlll 1 Ill Pameray, Saturtlwy, Pk!tured are, k , Bill YOUifl, 11'-.1
melater, aDd Dick Akers, tellm !lpOIIAIII'.

Dw,._, -

�'
tuesday, June 30,1981

•

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\

The Daily Sentinel
lll l'uurt Str~ l.
Pnmt'JU}', Ohio

614-99Z·Z I56
Ut-:rt ,TED TO THE INTERF..STOFTHE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl~ht&gt;r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

speaking fondly . of old Hupmobiles devastation. Nothing remamejl. The
and Packards. Good enough in their · city hfid become an .open field: No
day, but ...
trees. No wood. No bodies. It was, in
We buttered Jacqueline's good ·a ghastly way, neat."
French bread and chatted casually . The bombs we dropped upon
of how these missiles might be fired. Japan, as the gentleman from out of
The whole idea, he emphasized, is town observed, were the merest
never to have to fire them. By the Model T's, The mind of man cannot
time the MX could be fully deployed, conceive the destructive power of
five years hence. the Soviets would today's atomic missiles. We are
have, 4,000 Intercontinental talking of great cities Wiped OUt in
warheads, each of them packmg 20 fractions of a second, of millions
limes the destructive power of the _ .
outmoded little bom~ that ~
obliterated Nagasaki. II is irn· ,,•
peralive. he said. that we have
retaliatory power, hoping it will not
be used.
Dessert, messieurs? Merci, mais
non. We emerged into the sunlight of
a sununer afternoon, content with
the conversation. This is the way the
world is. atoms and avocados, manners al ive and cities dead.
When l"ill we and the Soviets come
mutually to our senses? When will
all the imperiled peoples of this earth rise up, and through their leaders
demand that this insanity be stopped' No problem in our lifetimes nul energy, not water, not race
relations, not the trivial perplexities
of politics and budgets- no problem
cries so urgently for solution as the
problem of atomic arms.
Morton Sontheimer, writing
recently in Newsweek, looked back
al Nagasaki 36 years ago. He was
among the first Americans to enter
lhecity after the bomb was dropped.
He stood at Point Zero. awed by the
'

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'w_\ Editnr
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' " "''"· 11"1 p • · r~" na hti• ·-.

Impenetrable
'Iron Triangle'
· More than 20 years after President Eisenhower warned of the dang¥
posed by the "military-industrial complex," that unofficial yet powerful
alliance continues its unrestrained growth.
That chilling conclusion is unavoidable after reviewing a meticulously
documented book-length study of the problem recently published by the
Council on Economic Priorities, a New York-based independent research
organization.
When Eisenhower, in his farewell address in January 1961, spoke of the
potential threat from "this conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large anns industry," he included only those two clements in the
coalition.
But the new CEP study, "The Iron Triangle : The Politics of Defense
Contracting," adds a third component - the members of Congress who arc
overly enthusiastic about both the financial suppor1 the defense contractors
can provide to their campaigns and the economic value of military production facilities in their states and congressional districl&lt;.
Dr. Gordon Adams, author of the CEP report, identifies a variety of
mechanisms - none of which allow any measure of citizen par1icipalion under which the politicians, contractors and government procurement officers protect and promote their own interests, often at the expense of the
public.
"Over the years, the defense industry has become an active par1icipanl
in (government) policy-making," .says the repor1. "People, power and
·· money move freely among three centers- congressional, executive I Defense Dcpar1menl) and private industry - creating a community of shared interests and assumptions which defends itself against outsiders."
Among the bonds that unite that triumvirate :
Political action committees: The PACs maintained by eight defense con, tractors - Boeing, General Dynamics, Grumman, Lockheed, McDonnell
Douglas, Nor1hrop, Rockwell International and United Technologies - contributed more than $1.25 million to candidates for federal office between 1976
and 1980.
AI least 40 percent of those funds went into the campaign treasuries of ·
members of the House and Senate who sit on appropriations and
authorization committees that have jurisdiction over defense anq space
programs.
The revolving door: CEP identified more than 1,900 individuals who
moved between the gov~ent (the Defense Depar1menl or the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration) and the eight defense contractors
during the 1970s.
'
Some of those people changed jobs several tiines, switching, for exam:pie, from a senior engineering position at a contracting firm ID a
. procurement job in the same field at the Pentagon and back to their corn: pany again.
-

One former Defense Depar1ment official describes the danger inherent
:in that practice : " Positions (in private industry) are offered to (govern: rnent) procurement officers who have demonstrated their appreciation for
: industry's particular problems and conunltments."
·Washington operations: Industry lobbyists operate from eKpensively
: furnished, professionally staffed Washington offices whose principal
; mission is to generate .more taxpayer-financed contracts for their com-

. .

: •~

•
CEP found that during a two-year period in the mid-1970s, five con• :: tractors- Boeing, General Gynamics, Grumman, Lockheed and Rockwell
:: international- spentS16.8 million to operate their Washington offices, most
;· of it relmburaed by government contracts. Rockwell alone SJll!nt S'l million.
:
Other devices: Military contractors are heavily represented on Defense
': Department "advisory committees," where they consult on govenunent
:. programs, prjects and policies in which they have a direct corporate in-

Lawmaker beats
WASHINGTON (AP) - "I love
being a member of Congress,"
House Agr(cuiture · Committee
Cha irman Kika de Ia Garza mused
one day. " It be a Is picking
asparagus. "
. Just how the Texas Democrat
didn't say, which goes to show that
the reasoning often gets lost in the
rhetoric when a lawmaker is trying
to make a point.
Rep. Jim Collins, [).Texas, for instance, gave this reason for why
Congress should cut federalfunds to
public broadcasting:
" If I asked the mayor of New York
City what was tlie most important
thing in New York City - was it the
sewer, the garbage or public broad-

dead and uther millions maimed, of
aJnai!Sive radloactive tallout spread
by winds around the world. In such a
war~rewouldbenovictory; there
would be survival only - and survivai in' an unimaginable land in
which civilized hwnans would fight
like savages for the means of
existence.
I see by the papers that Eugene V.
Rostow, the president's nonilnee to
head the Anns Control and Disar- ·

casting - he will tell you that the
most significant problem is what to
do about t~e sewer sy§tem and mass
1
transit."
Another example :
Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, [).Texas,
complained recently that the
Sequoia, the presidential yacht sold
by Jimmy Car1er, had returned to
Washington and that its present
owner intended to make it available
to Ronald Reagan.
Gonzalez told the House that the
yacht had returned "like Banquo's
ghost" in Macbeth.
"I do not begru,dge the president
perks," Gonzalez said. "I do wonder, though, if he would deign to give

I
I

.

farming
programs, House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill Jr. keeps' insisting that
Reagan's honeymoon with Congress
isover.
At a recent news conference, New
Jersey Gov. · Brendan Byrne, a
Democrat, was asked about
O'Neill's contention.

Byrne looked pointedly at Hugh
Carey, Democratic governor of New
York. Said Byrne: "Hugh Carey will
field the questions on whether the
honeymoon is over."
Carey, whose recent marriage has
generated Its share of publicity, was
Although you wouldn't know it asked the same question.
from recent votes supporting
"You mean for the president?" he
President Reagan's economic asked.

l

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The Daily Sentinei-Page,.-3

d.-1~ 14 ~·tt'liiJ-t'twin.
1'111 ,.,_ "lllllln« :pr.!rided early
Glcie*r ~ tine

fire-•are•_,.... hd 8nct

111
MetIll
~
plateil ftft llll.hl! b4IUDI!I half rl the
Gllllil&amp;er sc«ed seven more
limellln ·an e,lqllaliYe second inning
at~ and ime nwre In the fourtti.
·While trailin,tl by six the Meiga' gang
hadtop&amp;ay Clltch up buebaU:. .
The early ,ottions of the game set
up a dramitlc
Jerry Fields
played long ball in the foarlh inn!hg,
hitting a long drive over the fence
and n,rrowing the score to 11-3. With
the score I~ 11 in the fif\h, Kent
Wolfe )lit a long home nin over the
right field fence giving Meigs a IZ.Il
lead. A sixth illl\illl! walk to Fields, a
sacrifice bunt by F011ter, and a hit by
Terry Wayland gave Meigs an extra
insurance~ ·
.·.' .
Bob Foster, in relief of Robbie
1'11111

frame.

finilh:

Cunningham, gained the win with
Brown getting the save. They
walked eight and fAnned thr~.
Loser Dl:wn and Campi)j!ll combined to walk four and three for
Glouster.
Wolle had two singles and a home
run for Meigs, Terry Wayland three
singles, Joe l!ob · Hemsley two
singles, Fields a single and horne
run, Roger Kovalchik a single and
home run, and Brown, Leonard
singles.
Two highly co.n'tpetilive battles
hil!hlighted Sunday's play. Meigs
splitlhe·twlnbili by winning the first
J().l,then dropping the second, 64.
Kovalchik, another Meigs County
pitching ace, went the distance to
pick up the victory, Ianning five and
wa.lking just one in a good outing.
Star1er Cooksey suffered the loss.
Born came on in relief. The duo fan-

Racine's Reds took a 7-6 triwnph
over the Stewart Lancers in the
Eastern Little League Tournament
at Eastern High S~hool. Matt Jewell
picked up the \Yin in relief, and
helped his own cause with a home
run. Jamie Hensler and David MilMillen each tripled.
In Big Bend Little League action,
Pomeroy Powell's won an 11-5
decision over the Mason Rangers.
Todd Hysell was the winning pitcher
with nine strikeouts and one walk.
The Mason Rangers' hurler was
Troy Tucker, who got relief from
Billy Marshall. They fanned 11 and
walked two.
For Powell's Giants James Nul'
man had a double, Brian Tennehill
had a triple, Lee Powell a single and
home run, Scott Powell a double,
and Todd Hysell, Brian Ingalls each
a single. For Mason Ed Starcher had
two singles, Chuckie Sullivan a
home run, and Terry Henry, Troy
Tucker, Billy Marshall, and Terry
Hawkins each had singles.
Also in local little league play.
Pomeroy's Giants defeated
Syracuse 12·2. Dave hendricks 'got
the win for the Pirates, striking out
four and not walking a single batter.
Amburger took the loss for
Syracuse. He was relieved by Todd
Lisle in,the bottom of the third .
For the Pirates , Phil King and
Rodd Harrison each had a single and
a double, Gerald Moore, Rex Haggy,
and Brian Freeman each had two
singles. Gregg Fields and Danny
Carl each had singles.
For Syracuse, Cunningham and
Riffle each had doubles. while Kloes

and Baer each \l"d singles.
The game was called In the fourth
inning due to the 10 run rule.
In a rematch, Syracuse droJ!ped a
5-4 decision to the Pomeroy Pirates.
. Huey Eason was tl.e winning pitcher
with 12 strikeouts and only one walk.
Mike Kloes suffered the loss with
five strikeouts and·one walk .
Gerald Moore had three singles
for the winners, Brian Free1nan had
a horne run· and triple, Eason had a
horne run , and Haggy singled. Doug
Owens had a home run and double
for Syracuse, Shawn Cunningham
had two singles, and D. Amburgey
had a single. Both teams were
credited with playing good games
and both were well pitched as each
hurler had outstanding control.
In Minor League action, Pomeroy
Sugar Run Ashland defeated the
Harrisonvtlle Reds 6-5. Harrisonville jumped to a 3-0 lead in the first
inning, while holding SRA scoreless.
SRA got two in the second, then
plated four in the four1h on singles
by Brian Kovalchik, Ke\'in Taylor,
Stacey Shank, and a triple by Shawn
Hawley. Terry Reuter doubled in the
inning.
Harrisonville plated two runs in
the bottom of the four1h, but good
defensive_play by both clubs allowed
no runs in the fifth.
· For the ,.mners, Sllnn Hawley
tripled, Terry Reuter and Stacey
Shank each doubled and Jason W.
Shank, Joey McElroy, Ryan Fosler,
Chase Cleland, Brian Kovalchik,
Kevin Taylor, Jody Smith, and
Chuck Mash each singled.

Pee Wee Actioa
In Pee Wee league baseball action
the Middleport Cubs tripped
Pomeroy Powell's 7-3. Pitching was
good by both clubs with the starting
pitcher for both sides going the
distance. A couple of very big
miscues by Pomeroy played ' big
par1 in the end result of the game.
J uey Loving and Luke Burdette ·
made up the pitcher-eatcher com·
bination for Middlepor1 and also
collected all of the hits for the winners. -Loving fanned 12 and walked
five. Terry Fields had a great effor1
for Porneroy, but still suffered the
loss ~pile fanning 15 and walking
seven.
Burdette hit ·a home run and
· singled twice for the winners and
Loving singled and doubled. For
Pomeroy, Fields and Dec ker
Cullwns each doubled, H. Cleland
III. Nick King, and Cary Betzing
each singled. Belzing had two
singles.
·
Also in Pe'i. Wee play, Pomeroy
Powell's bombed Rutland 21-12. A
balanced hitting attack led by Terry
Fields, and good relief pitching
111lide the diffe11!11te for Powell's.
Overall. Powell's collected 25 hits In
Rutland's two.
In two innings of work, star1ing
pitcher Terry Fields walked II and
fanned two. Hank Cleland III pitched three fra_mes to fan eight and
walk 10, while Dennis Boothe pulled
the string to fan two and walk just
four. Walls and Johnson pitched for
Rulland, fanning six and walking 13.
Terry Fields had a great night at

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) Owners of small businesses in Ohio
stand to benefit from separate bills
that are heading for the Senate after
winning unanimous approval in the
House.
Both measures were introduced
by legislators serving their first terms In the General Assembly.
Rep. Lee I. Fisher, O.Shaker
Heights, said enactment of his bill
would mean the state's 165,000 smai ~ ..
incorporated businesses would no
longer have to operate under rigid
requirements governing large cor- ,
porations.
• His measure would authorize the

The Meigs Ri!Jing Club held its annual Ohio Valley Horse Show
Association horse show recently at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. '
Here are the results:
Lead-In: Ryan Beckner, Shawna
Dunfee, Summer Williamson, Jamie
Ord, Kyle Ord; Open Bareback

shareholders of an Ohi()oChartered
corporation to enter into what is
known as a "close corporation
agreement." It would allow such an
agreement to supersede ail but
specified provision.• of the state's
general corporation law.
Fisher, an attorney, said the effect
would be ID give fa.mily-owned
businesses and other small corporations the freedom to conduct
their internal affairs under an
agreement a mong
their
shareholders.
.
It could contain provisions af·
feeling, among other things,

1nanagement of corporate business,
rights of dissolution, voting
requi rements, and dividends or
division of profits.
Ail of the shareholders of the corporation, whether or not they are entitled to vole, would have to approve
entering into the agreement.
Fisher said the close corporation
proposal is sbnilar to laws already
in effect in two dozen states.
"Businessmen and women understand that their business is sulr
jecl to rules and regulations,"
Fisher said.
"But what th~y cannot understand

is that all too often these rules make
nu sense. They appear to have been
written for General Motors and not
Al's corner garage or Peggy's travel
bureau," he said.
Fisher said as many as 90 percent
&lt; ~Ohio's small businesses which are
incorporated could be aflec'led by
the bill.
Also heading for the upper chamber is a m~asure sponsored by Rep.
Larry V. Ballweg, R'Dayton, that
would create an ·office of small
business ombudsman within the
slate Depar1ment of Economic and
Community Development.

Big Bend
standings
Tt'lm

Too much Timerman.____Wl_ill_ia_m_F._B_uc_kl_er_J~r.
Question : What is worse than lot'
turing one Jew?
Answer: Torturing two Jews.
Question: What is worse than
killing one black child in Atlanta?
Answer: Kiliihg 28 black children
in Atlanta.
Question: If there are 10 hwnan
rights, what is worse than violating
one of them?
Answer: Violating two of them.
Obvious? Incredibly, no. The
Jacobo Timemian disease has done
more to make more peQple say silly
things than anything since McCar1hyism, at the high point of
which we were told by Ber1rand
Russell that to read Thomas Jefferson In America required physieal
courage. Timerman has so outraged
analytical thought that he can apparently get away with saying
anything.
Tom Wicker, · to be sure, would
always rather weep than laugh. But
who'd have thought anyone ·could
have got him to achieve such heights

of_preposterousness as he achieved
when he wrote in the New York
Times, "Nowhere, in any society or
any political system, whether of left
or right, are those principles
(human rights) more systematically
violated today than they are in
Argentina." To level such a cbarge
in the age of Gulag, Afghanistan,
Iran, the boat people, Castro, the
Cultural Revolution, Uganda, the
Central Africa! Republic, is a lapse
into sheer idiocy. On the order c1
saying that traffic jams in New York
are worse than the Black Plague.
But Wicker hangs in there. The
distinction ~een "authoritarian"
regimes aoo"lotalitarian" regimes
is "dubious."

,.What's dubious about it? Is the
nghllo go to church or not to go to
church uninteresting to Wicker? The
right to leave the country or not? To
quit a job? To join a union?
Suddenly the Tlmerman, promoters, no doubt acquirlfll! their

habits from their hagiographee
(sic) , ceased to thiilk. Every time
Timerman says something
outrageous, they reply : What's,.
really outrageous about it? Isn't it
enough that the Argentines tortured
a s!ngle Jew? "What does II matter
if one Jew Is being tortured rather
than 10?" asks Tlmerman. "Would
that change the point?" I\ depends
on what point you are trying to

make.

•

" 'Silent diplomacy' Is silence,"
says Ttmerman. Oh? But silent
diplomacy got him out ol jail..
"A vote for Ernest Lefever is a
vote for the cold war." "Return to
McCarlhytsm?" Say that again?
Says Ttmennan: "... Ale:rander
Haig and Jeane Kirkpatrick ... do
nothjng. They don't worry abolt
hwnan rights. For them everything
is pnly Communists and allies. They
. are looking for . a war. No matter
' than the allies may be torturen and
Nazis." How do you carry on conversation with men who say such

Ptnr-M:roy Pjratcs

New Ha~o~cn Red»

M•sun

Autlamd
Middlcpor1 Br11vc~
Mlddh."J&gt;urt Indian~
Nl'W Havt&gt;n CubH
HaiTisuovllle
~IU"Itl'11)' Pu~A·ell 'll Gla nlS
Pet WHGirll
Ttan~

·New Haven Braves
~m-.eruy Jlm'a Gutr
New Ha11.'m An!(t!IK
Mlddl&lt;poir( Mld((LiJ!
M"""'
Middlepwt Oulters
Mlddlepurt Dwlters

Pmneruy Dale C. Wamt!r
Pft WH Be)'•
Tnm
Masoo CUll!
Middl&lt;poir( Cubo

' 1

: :
31

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W. L.
• 0
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Middleport MWilalltlll

:~

I I

MaiWil Plratea
New Haven Oodl(l!nt

Pt•rneroy Puwell's
Rulhtnd
New Havm Yankl'tll

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\

4 I

2 I

2 •
.!_ I.
0 9

SHie m~ter
H~trrisorwlllt'

MG-MAua.
SENIORS T

team

nor

W. l..

Pt. Plca!llltl Fruth

I 0

Pumeroy
•UU and Ml ~

4 I

~ ~~·

4 %

3 l
3 2
2 4

Mlddl&lt;poir(
New Haven
Brllzle a.nd Bnak.&gt;
I S
Pt. Pte.lllllnl Water.tOR
I 3
Malltlfl
I S
Garnt! rnulla1Junt! II, Mlddleport 10 Hlb •nd
Mltulel7 ; J~ne D, Porlli!I'U)' 1 Dravo o·: Hilltnd
MU.O..II' II&lt;w lla"" t ; Pl. -~ Fnllllt

DOONESBURY

4; Pl. Pleuonl Wol&lt;non Ill -lo """
Btoalo II; -Ill, -!&lt;purl I! - . , 0; Ni!W
Hovtn II Bmle ood llrllle I ; Pl . Frulh II New 1111...,11.
'
.RJNIORI
W.L.
1 I
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4 I
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I

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DariBeamandMaclt~.Jr.

Western Pleuure: Micll Jones,

Phillips and Q. J. Beam.
Walk-Ttut Pony: Mica Jones, Kim
Ewilll!, llrldget Hart and Summer
Winiarnson. Roadster Pony: Robert
Greer, Joe Roush, Harley George,
Earllcard and lb Lewis. Walk-Trot
Hon!e: Mlcv Jones. Cone Race:
Plul Cain, Charlie Ohlinger, Larty
French, Sherry lndesteltd and Mark
Roush. Registered . Appaloosa
PIIIISUre - Tamnty Pl!il)lps, Heidi
L!1 John, Debbie Dunfee, Greg Dunt~ aJid Dllrla !ltaA!ty. Open
Plewure ·Horse: Frank Beckner,
Dan 8eam, WDiiam Greer, Connie
Stantoo and Randy Pierce.
Youth Barrels: Mike Douglas,
John Greer, Mike ~las, Mike
Douglas, Mark 'Rt&gt;U.Sh; Ladies
Barrels: .Ruth Krebs, Sherry Indeslead, Ka·y Hale, Ruth·Krebs, and
Vale~e Jeffers. Open Barrels : Mike

Ohlinger, and Edwin Roush_
Western Horsemanship under 14 :
Mica Junes. D. J. Beam. Nikki
Roush, Cindy Riffle and Lisa Saunders.

Non-Registered
We ster n
Pleasaure Horse: Mica June,,
Cheryl Riffle, Beth Glockner and
'fonda SeidenabeL Flag Race: Kelly
Meeks, Mike Jones, William Gree r
and Danny Elias.
Open Registered Pleasure Horse :
Frank Beckner, Dan Beam, Grant
Newland, Debbie I.ewis and Will iam
Grc'er.
Egg and Spoon : Kathy Stanley,
Tanuny Phillips. Sherry Indestead,
Debbie Lewis and Heida La John.
Re~ist ered
Quarter Horse
Pleasure: William Greer. Dan
Beam, D. J. Beam, Connie Stanton
and Grant Newland.

FAMILl t:UNIC

ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY
What is Psoriasis?
A chron ic skin d isease that affects some 8 million people in this
country .

What Causes Psoriasis?
No one knows . Skin injury. emotional stress and some forms of
1nfect1ons are sa id to tr igger its development .

Who Cets Psoriasis?
Men and women in equal numbers at any age, bu1 most often
between the ages of 15 and 35 . Psoriasis has been diagnosed for the
lirst tim e in people of advanced age. It also strikes children . About
150,000 new cases or psoriasis are diagnosed each year.

Is Psoriasis Contagious?
No.

What Does Psoriaois Look Like?
It appears as si lvery skin patches. often on knees and elbows. but
can be found on any part of the body . The patches. or plaques. are

composed of dead ski n cells which accumu late in layers.

Is There a Cure for Psoriasis?
No , but for many victims of the disease, control is possible Some
psoriat lcs may have remiss ions of t he dt sease tor long periods of
time. In rare cases sometimes the disease may disappear entirety.

DAVID L. CARR, D.O.- OFFICE, 675·6971
1924

Oflice Hours
Jackson Ave. -

by

Appointment
Point Pleasanl, WV

25550

~~J~::n:G~ree;:r:·~~~~M~R~~~·~T~~~~~·~uy~~J•;~::s,::K:e:l:ly~M==ee:k:s:·:C~h;a:r~li~e~~~--------~~--------~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.r

·n~l'
li ~.1'

Punwmy Pim Sh.llck
S)'fHCUIJt!

decency of · our civil servants,
because we have achieved a level of
civilization lhal makes this consensually .odious. In Argentina, the'
rnajority of the people go for types
like Peron. They go, in shor1, for extremes. They speak and act in exlrernes. They speak and act like
Jacobo Timerman, and
one
hope he goes back to--Israel, where
diplomats are realists, before he
corrupts the thinking ~ more
Americans than he now has.

Pleasure: Dan Bealli, 1'ammy
Pl!illlps. Scott Ferris, Mack Layne,
Frank Beckner; Western Pleasure
Pony 48"-61'" Nikki Roush, Mie"d
Jones, Tracey Michael, Cathy Jo
Jlobllletter, Rhonda Zirtle; Poles :
Mike Jones, Charlit Ohlinger, Kelly
Mieks, Ruth Kretls and Greg Linscott.
_
Walk-Favorite Gait: 'Buddy
,Williamson, Karel! llelm, Debbie
.Jones, Gl"'lllt Newland end Dan
Beam.
.
English Pleasure: Connie Siant011,
Tanuny PhiDips, Ute Saunders and
Unda Newland.
English Equitation: Tammy
~· ~
Phillips and Ute Saunders. Men's
a 1 ' Western Pleasure: Wllllmn Greer,
Buddy Williamson, Frank Be&lt;:kner,

l:

Syre~cllSt'

things?" To the extent it is true, it is
not new (we did accept the company
of Conununlst 1Qr1urers to fight the
Nazis). To the extent it is new Haig and Kirkpatrick ·don't care
about hwnan rights - it is not true.
If Timerman, back in Argentina,
spoke as recklei!Siy about other
Argentinians as he now speaks about
Americans, I am not surprised he
got into trouble. In America we don't
torture people for making libelous
statements questioning the basic

Meigs, Fosler banged two singles
and Terry Wayland, Kovalchik, and
Cunningham each sin~led once.
Parkersburg North comes to
Syracuse tonight for a single game.

the plate with three doubles and two Middlepor1 actually outhit Pomeroy,
singles, Nick King had two singles but it was Jim 's Gull that claimed
and a triple, Todd Smith a single and the win. Missy Woods and Tammy
a double, and Cary Betzing a single Wright combined fo r, th ree
strikeouts and two walks, with
and triple.
Joe Roush and Decker Cullums Woods ling the win. Tanuny Mc. JEFFWAYLAND
had three singles each. Duane John- Farland suffered the loss, fanning
son, Wesley Young, and Hank lwo and walking one.
Tanuny Wright had three home
Cleland each had two singles each,
The Daily Sentinel
runs
for the winners and Shelly
while Dennis Boothe added a single.
I USPS lt5-IIIUI
Walls singled for Rutland and Hut- Slubart had a lnple. other hitters
ADlvii!IOI of Mu.IUmedla, lnr.
ton doubled. Pomeroy ended the were D. Manley , Hysell. Henderson,
Baily, and Heather Woods. Tammy
Publrsht.'d every aflemoon. Mo!ld&lt;ly thmugh
season with a 4-7 record.
F'ridily, Ill Court Street, by the Oh10 Valle)'
McFarland
and
Paula
Gilkey
each
Softball Play
Pubhshin~ Cumpanv • Mulhmedta . Inc .
Purn~roy, OhiU t$769·. 992·21fl6. &amp;rund cliL'!.~
In the Junior Girls' softball league had home runs for Middleport,.whil e
ptt!.taMe ~id 01t Pomeroy, Ohio.
Leanna
Plants,
Jody
Taylor,
and
undefeated Salisbury, 7-4J, rolled to a
Mernbt~ r : Ttw A"-iOC!alt:d Pn-:-i.~, lnlnlld Dai·
14-11 win over Point Pleasant Bill's Lesley Carr each doubled. Teresa
ly Pret-i.'i Assuculli un a1td the Allll'ri l'an
Spor1 Shop. Barb Hatfield was the Johnson had two singles and a triple,
Nt'wsp~:~pcr Publi.~ht!r.1 A'i.'iOCilltivn, Nal10r1al
Allve rti s in ~ Representative, Branharn
winning pitcher with four strikeouls Heather Woods a double, and Missy
Newspa~ r S..les, 733 ThinJ Avenue. Nt&gt;w
and five walks. Sherry Hug art suf· Woods a single. Pomeroy is 9-2 and
Yurk. Ne111· York 10017.
fered the Joss with four strikeouts Midd leport is H .
POSTMASTER: St-nd add.re!i.~ tu 1l~ Daily
Salisbury rolled to a 14-7 win over
and five walks.
&amp;ntmd , Ill CuurlSt .. Po1neroy. Ohio45769.
Leading hitters for Salisbury were lhe Middlepor1 Wranglers. Barb
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Barb Hatfield with a double, tripl e. Hatfield got the win with two
By Caniu or Molor Roulr
. . . .. . . . . . . .
. . n .oo
and home run , Maria Musser with a strikenuls and no walks. Tammy Orlt'Wt'i.'k
On~ Mt tnth .
.
. . U .40
double and single, Rhonda Neece a Cremea ns walked four and fanned
Ont'Y t• ar ... . . . . . . . . .
. ~2 . 1kl
SINGLE COPY
double and single, Jodi Harrison none, whil e Melissa Downing came
PRICES
three singles, Kim Eblin three on in relief lo walk six and fan lwo Dail)'
ISCen{.oj
singles. Carla King a double and for I he Wranglers.
Sub."l..· nbt'r~ unl de:-~ 1 rin.: to JlliY lht· carrier
For the winners Darla King
single, Jennifer Couch three singles,
111a~· remit 111 id v ttn~ direct tu TilL' Douly
Sentinel on a J, t1 ur 12 munlh 00~ 1 s Credit
Rhonda Zirkle two singles and Darla doubled and singled, Marcia Musser
~~.· Hitlt.· g1ven l'H rrlt'r eac h month.
doubled, and Judy Harrison, Kim
King a single.
N11 s ubst"rip li tlll~ b)-' m..ail Pt!nllitll!d 111 t own~
Leading hillers for Bill's Spurt Elbin, Carla King, Barb Hatfield,
wht-rt&lt; lu11rw l'arrier .'&gt;ei"""V ICe isavailuble.
Shop were Kelly Schultz with two Rhonda Zirkle. and Rhonda Neese
MAILSURSCRIPTIONS
si11gles, Tanya Stewart two singles. each added a single. Fur the
Oftiu nd WetJI Vlq:lnia
Wranglers.
Gina
F'ollrod
had
a
home
Valarie Bernard two singles. Other
:I M111 1Ih .. ...... . .. • ... .
' 11 0.50
SI X llltolllh
Sl 1.50
hitters were Donna Stewart. Carla run, Kim Dent had a double. Melissa
1 Yl'ar
53.1.00
0\\uning
,
Fullrod,
Dent,
Amy
Woodall. Marney Reymond with a
Ra\t's Outside Otdo
and Wt'fit \'irglnla
single each. Salisbury is 7.0 while Radekin. Carole Baily, Judy Miller,
:1 M11t1lh
. $11.00
HuliJ·
M1ller.
Anita
Smith
and
Ca
rol
Bill 'sSpor1 is 2-2.
fiM1111IIi
. 12&lt;UII
1
Yt'IU
.
.... 1311.00
Pomeroy Jim's Gull edged Mid- Smith each singled.
dlepor1's Midgets 17·12 last night...------------~===========

Meigs Riding ~lub horse show results given

•

ned three and walked seven.
Meigs stuck to its dramatic comefrom-behind style in the contest. After trailing 6-2 Meigs exploded for
eight runs in the- fifth inning,
highlighted by a Fosler grand siam
horne run.
Besides the clinching home run
Foster singled, Hemsley singled
twice, and Fields, Wayland, Riffle,
and Jeff Wayland each singled once
in the eight hit attack:
Meigs dropped the second game 64 with Brown suffering the loss.
Hagon collected the win for Athens.
He walked fi ve and fanned six.
Aller leading 4-2 through the fifth
inning, Athens erupted for the four
big runs in the sixth, led by marty
Long with two doubles. Meigs had
chances in both the sixth and seventh innings, but ran out of steam.
Wolfe and Fields had doubles for

Racine's Reds advance in.Eastern tournament

Small business owners could benefit .

:: terest.
;:
TOOle contractors have, in the past, also provided lavish entertainment
:; to Pentagon officials and members of Congre~~~, including mid-winter
. ·: vacations in the Carib~n and goUing, hunting and fiBbing npeditiona.
:~
The result ill an impenetrable "Iron Triangle" - preciJely what
•· EIJenhower feared two decades ago when he warned the nation to "guard
•' against the acqulaitlon ol unwarranted influence ... by the military•industrial complex."

•

eon:

mament Agency, is in no particular
hurry to re5ume negotiati01111 with
the SOviet Union. It would be "at
least nine months,'' he said, before
anything could get started toward a
SALT III treaty.
Meanwhile, we corrunil$3.6 billion I
to.the MX, and the SdYiets match our
deployment with new capacity_of
their own, and the unwinnable race
goes on. Toward what incredibl~
end?

:I

a ride, maybe a berth, perchan~e
even a swabbie's job to people who
are losing their jobs and their hopes
in the budget bloodbath."
Usually written statements placed
in the Congresssional Record are
more to the point and more
calculating than floor statements.
But not always.
Rep. Rober1 K. Doman, R-Calif.,
included this sentence in.an essay of
sor1s he put in the Record :
"Pluralism in the ethical realm is
nothing other than relativism· pure
and simple."

•

BY SCOTJ' WOLFE
While wi)Uild ·~ 1M
This past . weekend, Meigs' GIOI!Sier ~' tht lrleill .iffellle HAmerican Legion Baseball team had ploded otr 1011ng plie1!e\'-ro.ta,l!ild
another successful home stand ·reliever G. ~. n.t lllir l1ld,
claiming three victories in lour however, (u 12alld walk rctor.
MtipiM!tted .1'0111111 lll'tlle tint ingames , on the Syracuse tur:f. The
ning,
scortna ~ ,.. an4
wins bOOst the talented Meigs squad
to an outs~nding 14-Z.l record, dne l!"OIIingthet~)Jtthepme. 'nie
big first innilll! ga~Wayla~d acltlecl
of the best in the Sou~ region.
'Local fans wiln~ an olil- ~upport and .sparked .,~ Melg:i
standing display of blisebitll during deleRse, which allOWed Ollly one rt~no-,
the stand and gave strong support to ner to advanee u far as.third bllse
the victorious -diamond men that the entire game.
1Kenny · Brown had two singles,
provided the excitement.
'A wide variety of action Kent Wo)fe a double and two singles,
highlighted the'-weekend,' beginning Jerry Fields two 114lubles, Bobby
early Satunlay . ·afternoon ·when Footer two singleS, ;Terry' Wayland
Meigs'.Jeff Way,Jand hurled a no hit- an1l Joe Bob Hemsley singles, TOlly
ter against the Glouster Legion- Riffle a double, al)d Jeft Wayland a
double and single.
naires.
.
The secood game )fU very much
Meigs claimed the 12-0 shut-out,
behind a robust 14 ·hit attack and in contrast to the first as GloUster
picked up 15 bits, while Meigs potJJtWayland's 13 strikeouts.

I

aspar~gf:ts

.

legion team rolls .on

Page-2-Th.e Daily Sentin.!J
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Tuesday, June 30,19•1

Missllesattoss . at~k~-----~~~-----h-~_t_K_~-~~·_k
We were talking, over the wine and
silver, of the death pf nations.
I must amend that last remark.
The gentleman is convinced, as the
Depar1ment of Defense contends,
that only by building the MX system
can the death of nations be deterred.
The system, it is said, would make
our strategic missiles invulnerable
to Soviet attack, thus niaking
possible a retaliatory assault to
counter the enemy's first strike.
Such a prospect, it is said; would
discourage the Soviets from even
considering atomic war.
There is no question, said the gentleman from Mar1in-Mariella, that
the Soviets have missiles of
exquisite accuracy. But so, he ~aid
with modest pride, have we. The
missiles his company will build will
be marvels of efficiency and power.
He spoke with something approaching nostalgia of our present
Minuleinen. He might have been

i"omerov-Middleeort, Ohio

' ,
,

Commentary
WASHING TON - We lunched at
Jacqueline's the other day, the gentleman from out of town ·and I, and
good amenities were all about avocado stuffed with crab, a glass of
wine, white tablecloths and crystal
gleaming. Jacques, the senior
waiter, hovered by. A hum of
civilized conversation filled this
civilized room.
We had met to discuss the
hydrogen bomb.
The gentleman from out of town ·
had come from Mar1in-Marietta,
where par1 of his task is to promote
the MX missile. He was tall and slender, utterly composed. an expert in
his field, an affable man just doing
his workaday job. Today his job was
to persuade a columnist that our
nation should build 200 giant
missiles, each equipped with
multiple pretargeled warheads, to
be shifted back and for1h among
4,600 shelters in Utah "and Nevada.

I

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Computer

low at a New Low Price!

MOVING SALE
IF YOU BUY THEM,
WE DON'T HAVE TO MOVE THEM I

CLOSEOUT ON ALL USED TIRES
TUBE TYPE AND TUIELESS
PASSENGER AND SMALL TRUCKS

15", 16" and 16.5"

GOOD BUYS Check Out Our Prices.
Our New Address As Of July 1

MEI·GS TIRE CENTER
242 W. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

'

'•

�'
.
Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport,

Tuesday, June 30,1981

Ohio

Sentinei- Pa

The

•

Ump~

lose;courtroom ·case;
bas.eball strike continues ·

POWELL'S - Pictured are members of the 198!
·powell's Little League team lor this season. They are,
front, I tor, Nick King, Hank Cleland, Duane Johnson,
goey Roush, Todd Smith, Raymond Ward; hack, I tor,
•

Coach Roger Young, Cary Belling, Wesley Young,
Terry Fields, Decker Cullums, Demils Boothe, Billy
Gilkey and Coach Hank Cleland.

jndians' fans follow Hayes, Band0
;CLEVELAND lAP) - The slrike
by maj or league baseball players
has allowed minor league prospects,
such as Von Hayes and Chris Banda
of the Charleston Charlies, to gain
uilexpectednotorlety.
Th e Cleveland Indian s
organization makes no secret thai
Hayes, a 22-year-old third baseman.
and Bando, a 25-year-old catcher.
are the blue chip prospects of the
o~ganization.
·when the strike began three weeks
ago, radio station WWWE in
CJ.eveland began broadcasting the
C}Iarlies' games on the Indians net·
work. Baseball heat writers for such
newspapers at the Plain Dealer and
'!'he Press, both Cleveland da ilies,
and the Akron Beacon Journal have
ventured to Charl eston and other
Midwest cities to cover the Charlies.

Priortothestrike, no radio station
broadcast Char lies games, and news
about the minor league pruspecili
fi ltered into Cleveland in piecemeal
fashion.
Now Cleveland fans, in lieu of
following such major league
favorities as Bert Blyleven and Joe
Charboneau , can follow the daily exploits of Charlies, and the regular Indians-b€at writers have reported
that Hayes and Banda are sure-fire
sta rs of the future.
Bando previously had a following
in Cleveland. A native of suburban
Solon, Bando is the younger brother
of major-leaguer Sal Bando of the
Milwaukee Bre wers. The stocky
switch-hitter finished last week with
a .306 batting average so far in the
International League season.
Devoted Indians fa ns remember

.·

Hayes, a left-handed hitter, because
uf a .350 batting average in spring
training. He made the team, but did
not get a plate appearance and was
sent to Charleston a week into the
season.
,
GoingintoSunday'saction, Hayes
had a .316 batting .average against
International League competition.
For now, the two players are
behind veteran major leaguers.
Toby Harrah handles third base for
Cleveland when there's no strike ,
and Ron Hassey splits time with Bo
Diaz behind the plale for the lndians.
Another strike henefit, as far as
the Charlies are concerned, is that
Indians Manager Dave Garcia has
been in Charleston to see the
prospects.

•'

r----"------------------

-BANK ONE,. _

~------------------~
.. --~-----------------------

Shriver wins at Wimbledon
:·WIMBLEDON, England i API i')m Shriver has something tu prove
to'herself : that she can win a string
oi,great matches, and not just one.
·she played a great match Monday,
dJ)feating her IB-yea r-&lt;Jld rival
T)'acy Austin 7-5, 6-4 to reach the
Wimbledonsemifinals. It earned her
a:crack al top-seeded Chris Evert
Ooyd, who has beaten her in all
seven uf their previous meetings.
~ The statistics will not worry
si\venth-seeded Shriver too much.
'l'lie Hoot-11 Lutherville, Md.,
player. who will turn 19on' Saturday,
ehded an 11-makh losing streak
a~ainst Austin in front of a packed
drowd of 14,000 on Wimbledon's cen-

By Aaoclated Preis
protected In any con~pensation from are federal questions of .colective
Their Manhattan offices are 18 to 20 last week.
bargaining and unfair labor pracseparated by only about a half dozen
"It's. like somebody driving up to · tices."
,
.
short city streets, but the striking your houae in an old, broken down
Attorney Richie Phillips,
Major League Player~ Association car with no engine, .no wheels, the representing the umpires, appealed
and baseball's Player Relations windshield shattered and the tail the ruling.
,
·
Committee remained much farther light broken and asking you to buy · In another Philadelphia courapart!)lanthattoday.
itt said Fehr. "You say, 'No,' and troom; two fans filed a $10 million
No talks were scheduled in the so, the next day, he comes back with civil suit against both sides In the
walkopt, which has shut down the tall light fixed. Will you buy it stalemate.
baseball for !9 days and almost' cer- then?"
William Halloran and Maury
tainly has added the July Fourth
Fehr said the next move is lip to Galonoy charged "intentional and
holiday weekend, traditionally one management.
·
reckless disregard for the rights d.
of the sport's top gate attractions, to
"But as far as the players are con-· others,'' and charged ,lllat ,the .
its mounting casualty count.
cerned, It's been their move for a players and owners had "injured
Both sides ·talked briefly with long time."
and damaged innocent bystanders,"
Federal MediaJor Kenneth Moffett
Elsewhere on tl)e strike front, a by denying the fans their right to see
on Monday but no progress at federal judge ·in Philadelphia ·baseball games.
resuming negotiations was reported. refused to return to state court a suit
The suit added that the publfc will
Donald Fehr, general counsel of the filed by the Major League Umpires be subjected to violent crimes by in- .
players .association, thinks the Association, which seeks to block dividuals unable "to.rid themselves
stalemate over compensation to payments from a $50 million strike of tensions and problems," by at..
teams losing free agents is the re- insurance policy. The insurance tending games.
·
entry draft is destined to continue provides t~ owners with $100,000 for
In Cincinnati, Mayor David Mann
for a long time.
every canceled game after a 153- met with civic leaders seeking ways
"I believe a significlmt number of game deductable.
to cut the city's economic losses in
owners have written off the season,"
Judge Dopald Van Artsdalen last the strike. 'Mann said that every
said Fehr. "If that happens, then the Friday dissolved a temporary in- game the Reds fail to play at Riverstrike will still be on next April. If junction won by the umpires in state front Stadium costs the city about
the summer is over, there is a lit court and then denied a petition to $900,000.
less incentive to settle it over the return the case to.the state court's
"I don't thiOk we'll ever make
winter. The owners think the players jurisdiction on Monday. "It seems to things as though there wasn 't a
will collapse but they won't. This · me there is federal jurisdiction," baseball strike, " the major said .
thing could go on forever."
Judge Van Al'lsdalen said. "There "But !think we can cut our losses."
Meanwhile, the players missed an
entire paycheck for the first time
today. Players are paid on the 15th
and 3oth of each month.
Fehr characterized a revised
management proposal on compensation made al last week's
bargaining sessions as "so
minimal...not something that will
lead to an agreement."
Management reduced its formula
for defining ranking players who
would qualify for compensalion
BANK ONE OF PoMtROY. NA
from 50 and 33 percent to 40 and 25
614/992·2133
percent and increased the number of
second level players who may be

ter court and said afterward she was
full of confidence for the semifinals.
I.l uyd. who defeated Shriver, then
16 years old, in the final of the United
States Open lhree years ago,
defea t ed lOth-seeded Mirna
JaiJsovec of Yugoslavia 6-2, 6-2 in a
little over an hour to clinch her place
1n the semifinals.
Lloyd, 26, had very little to worry
about Monday. Th e ch unk y
Jausovec, who had earlier upset fifth-seeded Andrea Jaeger, did not
ha ve the consistency to disturb the
No.! seed.
The Yugoslav player mixed up her
shots intelligently but made too
manyunforced errors.

OPEN DAILY 10-9;

SUNO~Y

WED. THURS.• , FRI., SAT.

1-6

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

THE· SAVING PLACE

'

London Pool offers
"
July swim classes
•

;; Swillllning classes will be offered
~t London Pool in Syracuse July 6
(hrough July 17, with sign-up day tu
llC Sunday, July 5 from II a.m. to 1

I-YEAR FUT
UmPAIIT

531 JAO&lt;SON PII&lt;E · Rt.35 WEST
PhOne 446· 4524

Our Reg, 12.96 Our
best Interior)lalnt.

Jt.rn.

No Ektra Cost

LATU FLAT
HIIUSUAIIIT

'Plan horse show

..

•· The New Haven Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its first annual
horse show July 5, starting at 12
noon. There will be 14 classes including $100 barrel and $100 pleasure
classes. Refreshments will be
available. A donation of $1 per person will be received at the gate.

'

tant.

·--.,_..,..._._.._..__.._..___. __.._. .__ _.._._._.._.._._..l
Your Hope for The Future
1
Has Arrived.
i

OUR BEST

·~

114 E.

,._.,_t e;rperc.r"

M1inSt."

m-NI7

PomtrOY, Olllo

0

Aprogram on "Happy Housepil!n- ,
ts" was presented by Mrs, Joyce
Manuel when the Bend 0' the River •
Garden Club met recently at the
home of Mrs. Hayman Bamitz.
Mrs. Manuel In conjunction with
her program displayed a picture of
an unusual flower called the Sacred
Lily of India owned by Mrs. Hazel
Fox of East Letart.
For roll call members nameil their
favorite garden vegetable recipe.
Devotions were given by Mrs. Ber- .

Tour gardens
A tour of the gardens of Mr~ and
Mrs. Arthur Strauss was held recenUy when the Middleport Arnllteur
Gardeners met ~me of Ber·
nice Ann Durst.
Mrs. Strauss 'was co-hostess for
the meeting with Miss Erma Smith
opened the meeting by reading the
gardener's creed taken from the
25th anniversary yearbook of the
club.
Mrs. Harry Davis gave devotioils
using as her topic, "The Vase." Miss
Smith read an article "Somebody'
Loves You" by Helen Steiner Rice.
The 51st &amp;Mall·CGnVentioo of the
Ohio AssocH!tjal ol Garden Clubs
45
6
was
annuunced
for Aug. • and at
Den~
UnivenitY;Granville.
The DOminating comn\lttee will
report at the July ml.'eting when
Mrs. Harold Lohse and Mrs. Charles
Blakeslee ·will be hostesses. Mrs.
Frank \ Powers , Middleport
librarian, will have the program.
Attending the meeting were Mrs.
Carroll Swanson, Miss Kathryn
Hysell,' Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, Mrs.
Eddie Burkett, Mrs. Erroll Conroy,
Mrs. Wallace Fetty, Mrs. Harry
Davis, Miss Erma Smitll, and Mrs.
JeanMoore.
'

nice Carpenter who used "Trees" as
her topic. she noted that trees that
are toughened and hardened by the
elements along·the llrnl!er line are
the ones ·which make the best.
· violills. Easy Uvlng, she !laid, never
puts resin in our lives. It takes the
troubles and-erperiencea of life to
make a better person. She concluded
with a poem, "!Didn't Have Time to
Pray."
Timely tips on gardening were
given by Mrs. Ruth Barnitz who
suggested removing bugs from
bushes, looking for and spraying for
bag worms, planting bulbs for late
flowers.
·
The traveling prize was b~o~ght
by Mrs. Barnitz. A picnic was planned for July at the Carpenter home.
The Barnitz home and porch were
decorated with hanging baskets and
other plants.

TUESDAY
MINERAL Lodge Odd Fellows
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the hall.
Refreslunents will be served.
POMEROY EASTERN Star, PBst
Matrons, Tueday, June 30 at the'
home of Mrs. Dorothy Woodard,
Langsv!Ue.
'
THURSDAY

OUVE Township Trustees ·Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Reedsville Fire
·station.
EVANGELINE CHAPTER,
Order of the Eastern star, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Worthy
matrons are requested to wear
the dress of their year. Past worthy matrons and past worthy
patrons night will be observed.

CHUNK

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
FOR HEARING AID SELECTION,
SERVICE OR CONSULTATION
BASED ON 32 YEARS EXPERIENCE
AND/OR FOR REFERRAL TO APPROPRIATE
MEDICAL SPECIALISTS CALL .

Xi Gamma Mu Sorority will sponsor a tennis tournament at Syracuse
courts on July9,10,1l,and i2. Twerity trophies will be awarded. For additionallaformaUon caD m-7214.

DILES HEARING AID CENTER
444 W. LIN ION ST., ATHF. NS, OHtO
614 -SY4 -JS71

We Serve Meigs. Gallla and Mason Co.
on a Regular lasli.
FOR APPT . CALL 614 -594-JS71

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•

•BROYHILL

4-PC.PAIIT
PAllO

.

'

Hold bridal fare

A personal shower and bridalluncheon honoring Becky Painter,
recent bride of Bill Amberger, was
held recently at the home of Cookie
Salser.
OES to meet
Pat Smith and Mrs. Salser were
hoste~s for the shower. Games
Mason Chapter 157, Order of were played with prizes going to the
Eastern star, will have installation honored guest, Vicky Cummins and
of officers oo Wednesday at 8p.m. at Claudia Roush. Others attending
the Masonic Temple. All surroun- were Diane Bing, madeline Painter,
ding chapters are invited. Potluck Vicki Smith and. Bonnee, Tanya
refreshments will follow the Salser, Megan Manuel, Bonnie
meeting.
Wood, Margaret Amberger.

Taurnament set

•AMERICAN
MARTINSVILLE

Call us. Calli • .

JWUti~l\-~ll ~).:
3n.fllrantt lttrbitt
....._..=.-

·

·Social Calendar BOLOGNA ..................... ~~
Garden club hears
program on houseplants
12 oz.
LB.
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..

Regatta parade.

I

LOW LUSTRJ

LATEX GLOSS
HOUSE PAINT

ANew Ufe. Pnad lis Fut&amp;n with
1.ife IIISIRIIC8. As an
in-dent l(llllt we can find
iust the rWrt poky tD fit Jill
- - -- - -·

rode on this attractive float In the annual Big Bead

- 1981 Big Bead Regatta Queea Ca11le
Sheets and her court, AUcla Evans aDd Beth Ritchie,

mJ

(17)

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Dining Room Suites

Our Reg. 13,,. 9-yr.
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'I Classes offered will be in~rmedl a te , advance beginners and
Jieginners age seven and up. Classes
liill also be offered to water babies·
age newborn to six years , however,
UJey must be accompanied by an
adult.
;~Adult beginners and adult swimmer classes will be held in tht
eyening from 6:45p.m. to 7:15p.m.
'!'he lessons are $12. Instructors are
Page Cleek and Jaye Ord. Sign-up
&lt;Jay will be Su nday, June 5, from 11
~Jn . lo l p.m.

. Clo" I P.M. Sat., July 4th

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June

Plan _picnic.·
·Business Services
"""
for July 4-= ' . l;:::::::=;:===;r;::::;::=:::::::::::;'l';:=::::;::;:=;r;;:=====,
J&amp;C
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:;

What's·
Cookin'?
'

.

'

plaUniled~Mfo~,_:J_,~~

A picitlc was .
when the Allbury
e ........,
Women met at 'the home of Mn.

By Dalel\f. Sloll
Meigs C01111ty E,xteulon
. Home Economist

HelenTeaf.i.-d.

.

.

· Mrs. Mary Cundiff !JIIIlried the
• meeting with 8 reading, ani!

Are yoia I~ for a quick and

Child has an enUre chapter· In
~'Julia Child's Kitchen" devoted
easy sununerttme .
to this ·very subject. · Here ·Is t~e
dish that's in·
straight stuff on how to hard cook
teresling enough
for a cqmpany
eggs: -.
' ,
.
Cover eggs II\'ii pan with water
meal? Try eggs!
to come at least one inch above
The . humble
the eggs. Bring rapidly to boiling.
carton of eggs of·
Tum off heal, cover and let stand
fers dozens of
for 15 minutes. Cool promptly and
possibilities for
thoroughly in ice and water nutritious dishes
·this
makes the shells easier to
that are quick to prepare.
remove
and helps prevent the
Omelets, for example, are great
dark
green
surface on the yolks.
for a light supper. Try a meat and
Now
that
you've hardcooked
vegetable-filled omelet,
eggs,
what
do
you do with them?
blueberry muffins and a tossed ,
Pickled
eggs
are
a good choice
salad for a unique supper.
for
picnics.
They're
easy to carry
Here is a basic recipe for
(! u:;e a plastic bag ) and they're
making an omelet, followed by a
really good with picnic foods.
dozen ideas for fillings :
. PICKLED EGGS
2eggs
Makes I eggs
2 T. milk
Calories per egg:
~. t. salt
Ab0ut80
1'.! t. butter or margarine
About "• cup jujice drained
Beat eggs, add seasonings and
liquid. Cook in frying pan in from canned beets
';' cup vinegar
which butter has been melted,
'• cup brown sugar
but do not stir while cooking. A
'iz teaspoon salt
spatula may be run under the
12 cloves, wbole
coagulating omelet occasionally.
6eggs, hard cooked, peeled
By lifting the mass, the thin egg
Mix beet juice, vinegar, brown
mixture flows underneath and
reaches the h~at of the pan. When sugar, salt, and cloves in a
completely coagulated, add saucepan. Bring to a boil. Cool.
Place eggs in a quart jar. Add
filling, fold over and place on hot
beet juice mixture.
platter.
To keep eggs irrunersed in the
A dozen omelet filling ideas:
pickling mixture, fill a small
1. CrumbJed.crisp bacon
plastic bag (intended for food
2. Cltopped, cooked ham
use) with water ; fasten securely
3. Shredded chicken
4. Finely chopped spring onions -to prevent leakage; and place on
top of eggs.
5. Sauteed mushrooms
Refrigerate overnight.
6. Well-drained chopped
For optimum eating quality,
spinach
7. Grated . swiss or cheddar u:;e within two days after
preparation.
cheese
Just a reminder - the picnic
8. Jelly, jam or marma lade
season is upon us and many
9. Hot, drained broccoli
10. Sliced, cooked smoked families will be setting out for
their favorite picnic spot over the
sausage
Fourth. Plan ahead to care for
11. Sprouts
12. Finely chopped green pe~ the picnic foods so that you won't
have to remember July 4th, 1981,
per and well-drained tomatoes
Use a total of 2 to 4 tablespoons as the year that everybody got
of filling. Use combinations such food poisoning. The rule of thumb
as che ese/bacon/msuhroom is: keep hot foods hot; keep cold
foods cold. On a hot day-, foods
omelet. Yum!
While we're talking about eggs, spoil very quickly.
If you would like a copy of
I just know that the burning
question on everyone's mind is directi.ons for making an in" How do you hard cook an egg?" sulated picnic cooler from card·
Actually , people have devoted a board boxes, call the Extension
lot of time to this topic. Julia Office at 992-6696.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
3
4
Rt. ' Bo• s
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2S91

~iner

'served.
The · "Have a Good Day" tracts
1

AftiENS SPORT

, .. n

~Q.ES
·

·

~··-:

., . ......, •.

.' :· ura'illM
~ na

Trash Pickup In

Elect offtcers

:~'!:.'C'1·

GilliE··

-Auto and Trtjck
R(lpair
.-Transmission·
Repa 1·r
H rs.: M on.- F rt.•
9 a.m.· 5' 30 p.m .

. Bu•'It Gorages "
Call. for
!roe
siding
t
949 2101
11•

949·:1860.

or

•

PH'• 992•720-1

~~!~~~~~~

HA 60"-25·60 H.P.
HE 60"-45-10 H.P.
All Models Available

LEO MORRIS
Rt. 1 Side Hill Rd.

R~~~-a7~~:~~;o

0.. ' 01

APrLUIR

RACINE·SYRACUSE
AREA
RESIDENTS

Don' t wait. Contact Ohio

..

Valley Plunlbing lor
sewer line connections,

and

Announce birth
MIDDLEPORT_ The Rev. and
Mrs. Alan Blackwood, Middleport,
pound,
12 ounce daughter,
are announcing
th birth ofGabrielle
a seven
Elise, oo Sunday, June 21, at
Pleasant Valley H011pital.
Grandparenta are Mr. and Mrs.
Harold E. Hubbard, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ohler Oliver,
Byesville. Great-grandparents are
Mr. and Ml'll. Harold T. Hubbard,
Park Sl, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Dean BlackwOod, Sr., Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Alice Epple, Byesville. The
Rev. and Mrs. Blackwood also have
ason, Nathan Alan, 4.

anv

in

house

changes that have to be
made. sac~ hoe and
doserserviceavallable.
992·2036
5·20-l mo.

00,,,.,.,.

,o,yen

•Dishwuhen

••••ot•

eANNOUNCEMENTS

RENTALS

l - c 1rd ol T~t•nll•

• 1-HOUitt ttr Rtnf

2-ln Mtmorlorn

u - MobUt Hornn
fer lent

)-A ~Wt~Unctmtnts

wif :

4-Givnway
s-HappyAdl
t-LO'It arM! FO\IfMII

44--AINI11'1..nfl for Rtnf

JhN

t~r~~

JRENafiNG
,,.1,. .
S. E R V

Rot

water-sewer-Electric
Gas Lint· Ditches
water Line Hoot&lt;-ups
septic Tanks
county certified
Roush Lane

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
• ::;:~m

c~~~~!~~j 5~·

INSULATION

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
e Insulation
•

7-Yorcl S111
t-Publlc Sa lt
I Auction

Q-E1111Uiprn•n1 lor Rent

u - Fuml•ltod •oems
tr-Iplet for hnl

n- wanttcl re ••n•

eMERCHANDISE

,_Wanfod to ltl't'

51- HoUitMICI GOOCII
U - CI, TV, ltlcllo EqUIJtl'ftlfll
U --AnliGUtl
H - Misc. MtrChii'ICIIN
11- luildlftl 5UPS~IIII

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
lt - HtiPWII'Ifld

12- Situtttd Wtnttcl
l:t-lnturaltCt

u--Pelt lor Silt

14-lutll'lnt Tn lnil'tl

ts-Sdtoolllfltlruction

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCk

16-Ridio, T\1 ,
&amp;CI ltpalr •
ll-Wanted To Dt

'1-fr~r"' E4YIMttnt

n-WI..,..tolurt

e FINANCIAL

72-TrU&lt;bfwk,.
6r-LfYtttedl
M-Hiy&amp;Grtln

~· - ·ltt l"ti~J
OptiOt'"'"'ty
n-Monov to L.un
11-Proftltionll
StrYiCH

U - SHd &amp; Ftrlllhtr

eTRANSPORTATION
11 - Au toll• Jete
1l- Yittt&amp;4W, D.
7rt-Metwcrclft

e REAL ESTATE
11 _ Mom.. tor slit
H - Mclltilt Homtt
ftr S•Jt

71- Auto lllrtt
&amp; ACC.UII'itl

lJ-Firmt tor St ..
M-lvsllttU lwllflntt

71- AuleltiNir

n-Liftl .,,,,..

»-ltalltlaft'Wntt4

eSERVICES

27- IIMI,.,I

••- Homii111Wf¥tlftlfl"
12- PI""'._ I ••u¥1111\f
ll-I1U¥1tlttl
M- lltclrlUI

Wlnt-Ad Advtrllllng
Deadlines

••turNy
T. . ., .......,...,I:.P.M .

- ~Y·21ll"'

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

·-~·
...
,._M·"·
•
.,.,,
,_u_....
a I

~

J~Htfff2:• fi.M. Pr~IY

___

ecl..,...ltl

-.

Rjtes and Other Information
u, .......... ....... .....,.. .. ....... , .......... .... .. u .•

.. .,.._.. ........................
.,."'""_
...............
.. ··· .,
·~-·~-~~
....,......,
..........
_............................
_,._..., ................
-··c.."'"'
···· ··· ··~·· · -· · ··· ·

'

---

&gt;

··-~IUIIJI .............. _
·n.-----·-·~~toct--­
.

I

·

,.

l"rKIIGII 23. leginntlll at
lht notlllHII -~~~ Btld
~ IGUIII

-Plumbing and

electrical work

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG II
or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

Public Notice
public rood soutn 70 deg.
50' west 104.4' to a stone
culvert;

thence

PH.

304-773-951~

Low•ll &amp; Doug Hallhill
Owners - Operators

down

ra:vlne south 27 deg. 00' east
220' : thence down ravine
south
67 line
deg.of00'Fraction
east 30'23;
to
the east

• Storm Windows
• Replacement

ate•

' "'"" ,,.,.,....
• opt. Hou .. owom

5·24·1 mo.

1:~~:;;;:::~~;:~

DOZER WORK

- ..·--

acres.

-~~~·
.....
.a • •

k
• Electrical wor
• Roofing work
13 Years
·
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

Siding
Roofing &amp; Gutter

STUDIO

f
serving Your Area ar

Now Tokinv Enrollment

Now, an impressive, complett line
of weddlnt ' end ....

- and

(4'x1'' • l'xl', 1'?'10;,

IO'xlO',lO'lU' &amp; up)
Any size buill to your

Relsonobty

Let GtDrge Miller check
your present t~ledrlcal ·
system .

- Look
obllption.

Mlson Counties.
FREE ESTIMATES
· All Buildings
, Guoranleed

&amp;Commercial

Catl742·3195
or 992·7680
2·8·11&lt;

without
•

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich
109 High St.. Pomeroy
6·28·1 mo.

PH. 367-7671
or 367-7560
CHESHIRE 4·1

M&amp;S BUILDING ·
kitchen cabinets, bath

remodeling, roollng &amp;
gutter, siding &amp; plumbIng &amp; tiKirictl, con·

lh PRICE.

co........

PUIUC NOTICf
The Botrtlllf Truslftl of

e;:-i-~WIH
v
·•

16 E. SfC.Ontl Strtet

'

H.614) ·992,3325

NEW ~1ST lNG - Code
bOilt quality home. 3
99~·2259 .
bedrooms. bath, shower
In basement, w..a ·
NEW LISTING- A big
lilrnlnO Hreplace with
lot with a· l'h sTory
-c•... on eecll skle.
frame home. Modern
Kitchen with brelkfi'SI
kitchenette. frotH and
nook, alnlng, full
rear porch , and .2
baltmtnt', · rt10ft1 for
bedrooms. Also an extre
lllap, family rOOI)'I. car
lot. $29,900.00 .
.00 2 car garage aerO$$
street on 2nd lot . Only
NEW LISTING - Han·
$28,500.
dymall'' ~pocial NIW LISTING
Would make a nice ren· ' Building lot or set· up for
tot with some fixing up.
treller near river .
A Jlh ltory frame .
Water, electric and sep·
S10,500.00.
tic tank. JUST 16;500.
BARGAIN
J
PIIET ·ry ANO BIG
bedrooms, 2 stories,
VAliD - l&gt;.pprox. v,
bath, lots of WOOd
acre . Home has 4
cablnell In the kitchen,
bedrooms, tamlly room,
nttunl gas forced air
living room, and big kl!·
furnace,
garage,
chen. Mos! of !he wails
storage over and level
are paneled . JUSI
lot near shopping. Only
$20,500.00.
$18,500. OFFER Wl!n·
led.
DO YOU NEEp A LOT?
CHESHIRE - Lovely ,
.-For a home, a trailer,
large ·• bedroom home.
or whatever. Approx . 1
F1m11y room Of dining ,
acre of nice laying land
2 tub balhf,. one en·
with water and electric
cl~. Nat II Ill for ·
available. 53,.500.00.
ced tlr turnece, dish·
washer In birch kitchen,
SOUTHERN DISTRIC 'r
enc-.1 back porch,
- Cute 2 bedroom home
nJce pttlo wltll river
With a lull · IIIMment,
front1ge. $4.5.000.
d!lhWIIhtr, WOOd ·
21 ACRII - Plus free
burner, ahecl anct many
lola of home sltes
rnoreextrtt. $29,900.00.
rlooklnlt the Ohio
- netr R-vflle.
IS THE HEAt &lt;lET ·
JUit $15,000. Owner Will
Tl NG TO YOU? - If so,
I
this 3 bedroom home
with centr11 air b what
YOtl need. Hae clfpellng
every\lllllle, nice kit·
&amp;-.=.hllllllse....m.

•
E

•.
,

'
'

GtorlaH~

I

,

Kittens. oil ~olors and
ages. Contact Humane
Society, 992-6505. Puppies
end adult dogs .
7 week ofd kittens. Litter

trained. white wllh some
d~rk
markings . Mid·
dleport. 992·7873.

i

IN•••---------------1

·

IAt!tlreu
I

jPhOMt

.1 Jlorge cats. 3 baby kiHens,

l

a weeks old. w -:m1.

I

7 week ofd kiHens. LIHer

trained, white with some
dark markings . Mid·
dleport. 992·7873.
31aroe cats. 3 baby kiHens.

aweeks old. 247·3M1.

Four Border collie puppies.
Phone 675·5761.
Brown female pupp)i,loves
children. 675·5506.

s

Htppr Ads

•·
17.
18.
19.

&lt; 1 wan!ea
1 ) For Sale

I 1 Announcement
( ) !"or Rent

6

Ltsllnd P'Otlnd

20 .

$185.00 to S.500 weekly doing
mailing work. No ex·

out Neighborhood Rd. July
1,2,3. 8 till dark.

• Family Yard Sale Thurs.
&amp; ·Fri., 1 mile out Rt. 211 .
Clothes all sizes. !urn.• and
misc. Items. 9to 5.

Garage sale. July lsi and
2nd. Clothing, roli ·a·way
bed, stereo console, tables,
misc .

Garage Sale Rain or shine. Basement sale 411 Lewis
Old oak table, chairs, and St. Clothing, dishes x
China Cobinet. Dishes, misc. July 1st and July 2,
floor mOdel stero, antiques, and July 3.
and much more. July lSI
2nd. 9:00 to 9:00 July 3rd 8. Garage Sale. Wednesday,
4th 2:00 to 9:00. 2 miles Thursday, Friday . Boys
west of Gallipolis on Rt. bike, aquarium complete,
101.
29 gal .. misc. Items, 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m.. 2900 Anniston
Yard sale Wed. &amp; thurs., Drive.
noon to 8, next door to
Kanuaga Drive_- ln.
Public Sale
a
&amp; Auction
Thursday July 2, 9·5. Car· Neals Auction HogseTt,
port Salel67 Woodland Dr., WVA . Rt. 2. Every Sat. 7:00
Gallipolis. Lots of goodies. PM . 1Consignments
taken), (will buy furniture)
Yard Sale 1 mile below Lonnie Neol367·7101 .
Eureka Wed. 8. Thurs.
Rodger's Furniture . and
Yard sale Friday July 3rd. Auction Barn. Gallipolis
52 Lincoln St., Gllllpolis, Ferry, WV. Sale every
Oh. Street behind Bob Roc· Friday 7:30. New and used

--

merchandise .

Con ·

slgnments taken at barn.
Open 6 days a week 12 to 6.
I buy antiques . Dealer's
Auction every Tuesday 11
am. Truck loads new mer-

chandise. Something for
everybody . Howard
Beasley, Mason, WV. 304·
773·5471.
wanted to Buy
SCASH!
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO o
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
'
OR CALL·
446·4775
OPEN9T05

9

s. _...:__ _

26.

··-----

.·-.'

11.

32.- - " - - -

FOUND : Smtll bltck
femtlt poodle typo puppy.
lucks lhtm ...... Town·
Rd. &gt;144. NH540.
:.o!~~:::;.~~

I

3,1_._ _
35. _ ___;._ _

Stle. 144 Mulberry
July 1,2,3. From to-? .

FOUND: Smtll ~ltck
!emile poodle type puppy.
Bucks btm are1, Town·
ship Rd. &gt;144. NH540.

30.

31. _ _ _ __

'

11

27.
28.
29.

'1· 0 . ' - - - - - -

12.
13.
·14.
15.
16.

~

I'
f

't

help mentge In businetS In
lht Golllpolll II'H, Ctll
44/J--4273 or 446-9332.
Part·tlmt front office help
In Pomeroy tru. Mull be
tble Ia typa, k"" flln. •n·
1wtr pnonn, aull
cua-. anti do llgllt
boOkkttplng. Afllllr lly - ding rewmt or writing.

I
I

I
I

_____!~~~~~~~~-----~J
1
I ~.
'

Full or partlmt. Help wan·

ted lntergellc ,..._ to

I

1'.0 . lox 729-H, Pon\tt or .

M

..

WELL drilling, both rotary
8. cable tools, usually wells
in 1 day . Call Ray Beagle
304·895·3841 '

1971 Schultz Homestead
12x60, wash &amp; dryer, new
carpet, com. turn., set on
lot 6 in Quail Creek in Rod·
nev, OH . $8,750.00 245·5420
or 388·8349.

Real Estate

For sale 1974 Freedom
mob ile home and lot,
110x250, locaTed z miles
abo-ve

AP·

and earn good
some great gifts as a

home, completely

fur ·

nished , $3900. Call446·0390.

tinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on House with acreage for
the eligibility list at 9'!2·

2156 or 992·2157.

Opportunity is yours lust
for fhe asking . Ask your
Beeline stylist and she will
be happy to help you
the Beeline world

Henderson,WVA.

Mobile home on 2 lots for
sale by owner, Wayne

Jividen . Caii441J·1675.
sale, or 4 bdrs., tully car·
barns. 379·2258 or 3 bdr . central air, nat. gas,
carport, 1/ 2 acre, storage
379'·2343 af!er 6PM.

building, Centenarv. 24x40.

Beautiful

View!

1 mile

Call446·3556.

from HMC, 1 yr . old 3 bdr.,

2 full bath, brick ranch, full 1973 Crown Haven, t.cx65.
basement, 2 plus car three bedroom , new carfashion and success . Phone
garage, WBFP, 3 acres. pet, 1971 cameron , 14x64.

992·3941 between the hours Call406·7709.
of 9·6.
Full or part time help . Ap·
ply in person Syracuse
Dairy Bar.
Full or part time help. Ap·
plv

in

person Syrac use

Dairy Bar.

Over 2600 sq. ft . of li ving
space. City schools, 1 acre

landscaped lawn, priced

will below market value .

Call&lt;l-46·3199, Gal lipolis.

two bedroom , new carpel.
1972 Champion, 12x60. two
bedroom. new carpet. 1976
Cameron. 12x60, Two
bedrooms. bath &amp; 112. new
carpel. 1970 PMC, 12X60,
two bedroom . new carpet ,
B &amp; S Sales, Inc ., 2nd and

Viand StreeT. Pl. Pleasant,
House for sale 3 bdr .• lg. WV PhOne 675-4424 .

living room , family room , 1

1/ 2 bath, uti lily room, eat·
NEED someone to install in kitchen , f ireplace . Cal l b:45 2 bedroom tra iler.
Brown's Trai ler Park,
carpet _ Must have own 446·0929, Gal lipolis .
Minersvi lle, Ohio.
tools. Caii67S·1371.
3 bdr. home kit.. dining rm ,
Older lady in good health living rm. with fireplace. 2 bedroom, 12 x 54 fl.
will provide free home to large fam ily room wi!h Mobile Home for sale on
working girl or older wood burner, 1 112 baths. nice v,. acre lot, garage,
female companion. Phone Fenced in back yard. Nice partially furn ished , air
Salem St .,
675·1786 or 675·4013.
barbecu e
a rea , C ity conditioned.
Rutland
.
7•2·2740.
schools. Ca ii44/J·2003 .
12 Situations Wanted
possession! 5
Summer Tutoring for Immediate
. farm home on 8 rolling.
elementary students. Call bdr
acres, large white house
992·5651 or 9'!2·2634.
with log cabin and 3 out
buildings at Hillcrest, 1
Will care tor elderly in my
home .
Good
meals ,
reasonable. 992·6022 .
Insurance

13

For personal

in-

ask for Wavne France . An

equal opporTunity com·
WANTEO TO BUY : panv .
GOLD ,
SILVER ,
items.
PLATINUM, STERLING· 15 Schools Instruction
COINS,
RINGS , '.!_~===="-"'"'Moving Sale. Weds.· Frl., JEWELRV, MISC. ITEMS . McNabb Cera mics New
July 1· 2· 3. Maytag ABSOLUTE MARKET classe! now forming
automatic washer $40., PRICE GUARANTEED . limited number accepted .
Danville, follow signs from ED BURKETT - BARBER Special beginners class
124 out 325. Briar Ridge Rd . SHOP, MIDDLEPORT , beginning July 6th . Class
limited to 8. Call Now 446·
OHI09'!2·3476.
2nd house on right.
1786 Sharon McNabb, Cer·
Porch Sale. Drop leaf BEDS·IRON , BRASS, old tilled Duncan InsTructor.
table, camel bark trunk furniture, gold, sliver
Radio TV
over 100 years, metal top dollars, wood Ice boxes, 16
&amp; C8 Repoir
table, rugs, etc. 6th house stone jars, antiques, etc .,
households .
on left north on old 33 above Complete
RON ' S TV SERVICE
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Spec
County Rd. 18.
ializi ng in Zenith.
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·7760.
House Calls. Now servicing
YARD SALE. Wed., Thurs.
Motorola Quazar. Call 1·
CHIP WOOD. Poles max . 30H76·239a or 446·2-45-1.
&amp; Fri. Soli boat S150., roll ·
away bed, toys, baking diameter 14" on i~rgest
dishes, curtains, bedding. end. S12.SOper !on. Bundled
Rain or shine. 10 minutes slab . 510 .50 per ton . 11 . Wanted to Do
north of Pomeroy on 33. Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co., O.J.'s LAWN MOWER
Rock Springs Rd ., REPAIR · On Ne igh ·
992·2420.
Pomeroy. 992·2689.
borhood Rd .. all makes ser·
vlced . Specializing In Lawn
Yard Sale. carroll Teafor·
ds, corner Brotd &amp; Main. HARPER · HALST
Boy. Blades sharpened.
Call 446·4425 after 5 p.m.
Recine, Oh. Fri. &amp; Sat. 3rd SALVAGE CO., 11th
VIand Street, now
Pick up and delivery
&amp; 4th. lll·dark. LoiS of nice
metals (copper, brass, available .
Items.
aluminum, lead, stainless
batteries end work wanted, All kinds
ly yard sale. Neut· steel,
radiators,
yellow masonlllry
work ,
resident corner of root, catnipginseng,
and
sassafras)
.
&amp; Frog, Syracuse. 10 am to 6 pm dolly. Also flreptac@S, chimneys, tree
estimates. 614-682·7813.
&amp; 2. Lots of 1100&lt;1
1
&amp; maternity clothes. · Flea Market on Sal\lrdeys.
CAII675·5868.
Roln or shine.
Will do babysitting In my
home In Syracuse. Good
references, very reliable.
Phone 992·3110or 9-49·2791 .

4. _ _:_,_ __

••
7, _ _ _ __

required .

dog . terview, call 453·0696 and

HtlpWinled
Like Crafti? Love money?
ACT NOW Be the first Art·
craft Concepll COtlnsetor in
your artt. No Investment
and no delivery. Excellent
orrongement to~ to vour
family Income. 256·9341,
Gallipolis.

3. _ _ _ __

Homos lor Stie

Homes for Sale
For information call after
PLY: Circle Sales, P.O. 31
Box 22-4-D, Richmond Hill, 5 ROOM house, 64 6:00PM 675·4310.
NY 11418.
Chillicothe Rd .. only $3,500.
1978 Festval Mobile home
Call 446·4038 or 446·1615.
14x70, 3 bdr .. 2 bath,
GET
as a v.oung bu!;ine55
NEW CABIN or small SIO,OOO . 256·9309.

start .

RegisTered Beegle
Call offer 5 446·4996 .

25.

2. _ _ _ __

perience

AUTOMOBI LE
IN ·
CASH for your diamonds, SURANCE been • cangold and silver, class rings, celled?
Lost
Yau r
wedding bands, silver and operator's License? Phone
gold coins. Tawney 992·2143
Jewelers, 422 Second Ave .•
Gallipolis, Ohio.
LET'S TALK ABOUT your
future now. Career op·
WANT TO BUY Old fur · portunity for person with
niture and Antiques of ail sales potential but no sales
kinds, call KenneTh Swain, experience. Leads furn. on
256·1967 In !he evenings.
up to S200·1300 a week to

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

1. _ __ __

I

1111 8. Avon, quills, clothes,
dishes .
'

21.
22.
23.
24.

lu72f

I6) 30, l!c

l
l

write your own ad ana ordtr by mall wilh this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you oet
rnults. MOMY not retundable .

Mall This Coupon wllh RtmiHiftCI
Tile Dilly 5tt1Hnel

lor

Yard sale in Leon 1·2·3. 9

""·

Curb Inflation.
Pay ~sh fo~
Claulflecls and
Savell I

Phone

.... ,.
----·

1I'r,;~:'~~~~~~~~:
PrnH ttl .

T~R~~~~:Ll~:
.

crete, storm windows,

-e."Mii••.l.ll.lll
. POMEROY,O.

WANTED · Lease men, !O
leasae oil and gas proper·
ties, GAIIIa and surrounding counties, Inquire to
Groat Bend Oil Inc. 269
Lower
River
Rd .•
Gallipolis. Call446·4285.

r-----------------------· - - - - - - -

011-; in!)

'

.

Bulmer. Hartford, WV 812·
2395.

Yard Sale,Julv 1. IOA.M. ·
YARD SALE, clothing, 5P.M. Lot 19, K and 1(,
Rd .
quilts, antiques, depression Locust
glass, and mlac. Items. Men.Ladles,children and
J~ly 2 8. 3. Gollle, Oh, Rt. Infant clothes. baby Items
and household items.
233.

___________;,·-----1

Rttl Esltte - Gtner11

-

woodbumers Instolled.

--------

3 Com

N l!,u/r/tl:lrter5
Rttl E1l1te- Gtntrll

J81·11()0,

4 Family Yard Sale 2 miles

31

Large 7 room hou~e,
basement, gas heat and
work shop. Will accept
reasonable cash Offer upon
Inspection . 105 Park Drive.
lmmedltle occupancy.
INCOME TAX AND AC· Three room furnished cot·
COUNTING SERVICE · tage for rent. utilities In·
Call 446· 7068 for ap· eluded. Phone 675·1580.
pointment anytime.
Dave 0' Neal Real Estate
Broker. ·
Piano l\lnlnw and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your Piano. Bill Ward, 32
Mobile Homes
Wards Keyboard. 446·-1372.
fqr Sale
Gallipolis.
PRICES REDUCED · uSed
mobile homes and travel
GALLIA Cleaning and trailers
TRI · STATE
Rent·A·Mald Service Inc .• MOBILE . HOMES
. CALL
Free Estimates, bonded,
insured, phone Z-45-9234. 446·7572.
Cleaning by the week, mon·
CLEAN USED MOBILE
thor conTractual.
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT.
35. PHONE 446·38611 or 446·
7274.

Yard sale July 1 thru 4th.
4th Slroet In Bidwell. Cell

Bauers Barber Shop will be
open all diV ·Thursday,
July 2nd. Closed Saturd~V chi's Restaurant.
July 4th.
6iemlly yard sale, July 2&amp;
3. 9·7. Rlggscrest Manor, 1
mile north of Eastern High
(J#tio Vallry PubliMIII•f.fl. i1 111feritt¥ • Mally1u~ • Cla11i/iH SeMJice ANY PERSON WhO has School. Children 8. adult
to
give
~wav and
anything
{f~r .dV@rli~Wn .,.J rud•n "/tir e Trib.,..,, &amp;..tint!/ •nd Rqiltf!r.
does not offer or anempt to clothing, toys, C.B. an·
/\'11te Cla11i/i«&lt; Acla placed;,. lftY otlt' n/ '""' IMIH!N Ia lilled i1t •II offer any other thing for tennas. Misc. Items.
th~. Rul'llilllf fiVB li,QDD h01t1n i11 l rontiea, tlrit 11ert1i« Ki~• sate may place an ad In this
lf"W'It'r MiWJitl~n Ill Mlll llMr t'l•••lfi«l Mitw.rfl•*'- a11d our f'Nd~t,...
column. Th@re w ill be no Yard S~le. 9·5, June 2'1 ·30,
July 1. 760 Ash St., Mid·
charge to the advertiser.
dleport.
KIHens, call446·'176.
Moving Sale. Weds.-Frl.,
July
1· 2· 3 . May lag
Tobacco plants to give automatic
washer $4W.,
ADVANTAGES TO THE READER
away . Cell245·9194.
Denville, follow signs from
124out 325. Briar Ridge Rd .
Stt 111 Mllers In t"t Tri-Count-t
112 Irish SeHer, 1 vr. old, 2 2nd house on right.
black &amp; tan pups. Walker &amp;
4 newborn pups. Cali 318·
Porch Sale. Drop leaf
8203.
table, camel bark trunk
over 100 years. metal lop
3 kiHens, 2 grov &amp; yellow. table, rugs, etc. 6th house
Coli 446·1527.
on left north on ofd 33 above
County
Rd. 18.
naricnft• COMINrl lttrn In otlttr cMnfles
•
.... - .. ,..... ~ .
Reg
.
German
Pollee.
Call
446·3171 .
YARD SALE . Wed .• Thurs.
&amp; Fri. Sail boa! 5150 .• roll ·
bed, toys, baking
.
I COLLIE and Coonhound awav
dishes, curtains. bedding.
Puppies. 992·2770.
Rain or shine. 10 minutes
north of Pomeroy on 33.
Part collie puppies. 10. 2
bilck, rest brown. 6 weks 992·2420.
old. 992·3923.
Yard Sale. Curoll Tea,tprds, corner Brood &amp; Moln ,
Four lovely kiTtens, 3 Roclne, Oh. Fri. &amp; Sat. 3rd
males, 1 femeie. 992·6260.
&amp; .Cth. IO·dark. Lots of nice

1. Selection:

Jlesidential

Ptolessllllltl
Services
COMMERCIAL end In·
dustrlol
photography.
Phone 446·2909 or 446·7276
after 4 p.m.

7--~......:Y:.::t:.:;I'II:.SII=Ie:..·- ' -

•

Call949·2710
· 6·8·1 mo.

quid!: service.

specifications. Models
in Meigs, Gallia and

LONELY
Christian
Singles. Meet . Christian
singles tnyour area. Write
Southern Christian Singles
Club, PO Box 1823, Sum·
mervliie, sc 2'/oiSJ or call 1·
1103·871-9!150, 2• hours.

works. For complete Info
and receipt send todtY self
addressed stamped en·
velope plus Sl.OO to ·s.R .A.
Co.. P .O. Box 214 ,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

THE COMMON

AgesJandUp

priced,

'Hay Fever' Home remedy,
tradltln for centuries, II

---------..1.!!"'"--------~ PIANO Lessons.J,.ucv J1ne

tor Summer Classes.
In Pomeroy &amp; Racine

niversarv Invitations
and
accessories'.

All' us
IJpl\tll YM
Maple T•

1It~:::~;~~a'

1Nlll~
.ltl,

3
Ann~~t~ncements
1 PAY
highest prices
possible for gold tnd sliver
coins. rings, Jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Snop, Middleport.

For all of your wir·
ingneeds.

-Portrolts
-Weddings
-Anniversaries
-Passports

Sheds
IIOLE BUILDINGS
15'x20' uplo~O'•IOO'
PORTABlE STEEL
STORAGE
BUILDINGS

machine repair, parts, and

supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Coli
446·0294 ..

NEW GARAGE OPENING
· Automatic trensmisstoris
and all sorts of mechanical size 7·7112, wringer washer,
repair and major and bedding, linen, fans,
1 want to thank all of mv minor auto body repair. dressers. single bed with
!emily and friends In See James Smith or Tom spring &amp; maHress, 3 half
manresses, 2 full mat·
Columbus, Carroll Ohio, Masters or caii441J·77~ .
tresses. Mav be left at
Meigs Co., and Gallipolis
for the cards and flowers City Cab, office 39 Stilt St. Salvation Army, 115 But·
th1t was sent to me while 1 Gallipolis, open 5:30 till ternut Ave.. Pomeroy.
Marked for Russeii·Vance
wu in the hospital. Garnet' 11 :30PM 7 days. 441&gt;·0451 :
family
. Or call 8-13·3474.
Wise.
Ser101,1s calls only.

ing.

Fr'ee Estimates
Call Collect
Ph. a43·3322 ·

~

CUI- " fill SfiWI
reserving
John IL------l""-":x.-1

3
Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing

' ' "~

Clrd of Thanks
I w1ntto thank all of my
family and friends In
Columbus, Carroll Ohio,
Meigs co., and Gallipolis
for the cardl and flowers
th1t was sent to me while I
wu in the hospital. Garnet
Wise. ·

~~~m!~~~:

EUGENE LONG

Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772 .

at II dlftlfllllll

f

' ' "' ' ' '
·W
'""

0

DANCE

20 Ye.ars

'
thence south along said
east line 595' to the center
of Shade River; thence up
. I'A'J 1u 1 ,.
CALL:
center river south 50 deg.
"" '""'
Paul
Sigman-"2·2984
30' west 188': !hence up
Farm Ponds' -l!iind
P•t Mitctlelt-742·2142
center of river north 79deg.
Cleari-. Roads.
6·7·1 mo.
30' west 260': thence up
....
Call:
center of river norTh 39deV.
so· west 5411': thence up
PUW"
center of river north 40 deg.
I'"
COMPLETE '
oo· west 410': monee up
rvi'IUAftiiQ
RADIATOR I
center of river norTh 17 deg.
'--llftlln
SERVICE
oo• west 420' to the north
992,2471
From
the 5111111111
line of said Fraction 23;
or
Hatter Cort ltD ltle
!hence eost along sold nor·
Blain Milhoan
Ltrgest )lldlttor
th line lOBO' !o the place of
beginlng, containing 21.77
915-3f6S
.
RodlatorSpaciiiist
acres.
6·1-1 mo. pd.
NATHAN BIGGS
FOURTH TRACT: Being I~~~~~~~~~
IS Yrs. Experienc.
In sec. 16. Beginning south r,
520' from the northwest
-SMITH NElSON
corner of said Sec. 16; than·
ce south 67 deg. 00' Ollf ZSO'
··MOTORS INC.
down ravine to center of
Pomeroy, DH.
Ph.
Shade River; thence up tho " · - 992·2174
river souTh 15 deg , 00' weal lla1S1111. 1
5·7·!fc
-135': !hence up 1t1e river
south 50 deg. 30' wesT 140
feet to the west line of Sec.
tal ill.
16: thence north' elong said
westllne595' to the place of
beginning, containing 2.02
S4
Misc. Merchlniu

llf 1111
yurt

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

"'"'"'•• "•" ""
• ,.

VINYL
PRODUCTS
Remodeling

- Barns-Eq 1ipment.

-Rooting and gutter
work
- concrete work

'

The following real erstae
situated in the County of
Melgj In the sate of Oh lo,
and 1n the • Town ship of
Chester, and bounded and
described as follows :
FIRST TRACT: Being In
Section 17. Begln~lng north
35' from the southwest cor·
ner of said Section 17; then·
ce north 2605' : thence east
1452' ; thence south 2067;
thence south 77 deg. 10'
wes I 1205' to a by·road:
!hence south 31 cleg. 10'
west 126' along 1111~ by·
roed : thence south 41 deg.
45' west 251 along said by·
roed to the place of begin·
ning, · oontalnlng 75.33
acres.
SECOND TRAC"t:: Being
In ' Section 23. Beginning a!
1t1e soultlealt corner of said
sec. 23; thence north
269...5'; thence west 990';
thence south 1320': thence
west 226'; thence south 31
deg . 45' east503' to the con·
ter of Shade River; thence
down center of river south
35 deg. 00' west m· : thence
center of
south
', __ : _c··c_::
45'•. c
· southP
thence
thence
lOUth
to lilt
23; thence
1101111 -th line ttlt
to lht plact of be!llnng, conltlnlng 64.36
acros.
THIRD TRACT: lelng In

•" 01 '~• 1 •• 1 ••"

!'Special A

Needed 'badly. Summer &amp;
winter boys clothing, mens
sizes 16·16112, 17·17'12, sh lr·
ts, flannel, t·shlrts, sweat·
shirts, 42·44, 44·46, bloe
leans or slacks 36x32,
38x32, -40x32, •2·44, briefs,
gym shorts, sleepweor,
large to XX large. Anyone
with long thermal un·
derwear &lt;2·44·46, cotts X
large, shoes 9'12. 10, 10'/,,
12·13. Ladles wear. Slacks
14·18, 34·31 waist, tops
large 40·-42, sleepwear
Iaroe 42, boots 9·9112, shoes
6-6 112, underclothing 38·-40B,

1n Mason County

ALL MAKES

.w.... ,,' .

~==;:;;;;;;::::j~=======j~=~5~-8~-2~m~o~-~pd~·==~=======~ ·.,•
"YOUNG'S
Quality Built
Economically Priced
lHE PHOID MILLER ElfClRI
CARPENTER
REESE BUILDINGS
SERVICES"
SERVICE
PLACE
Garages - Buildings
- Addons ind
remodeling

992·2156 .

PARTS AND SERVICE

992·5682

All
work.new or repair guners
and -downspouts, gutter
cleaning and ptintinlAll work guaranteed.

• Storm Doors

In Meigs County

446-2342

23

'

LOST-young temate dog,
ptrl COllie, part Shepherd.
Phone 304-675-1761. •

Yard sate Mon .• Tues .• &amp;
Wed . Georoes Creek Rd.
Would 1t1e man who wit· off BUllVIlle. Jeep
nessect the accident In Cherokee. clothing, tovs.
Jones Bovs parking lot plants. and etc.
June Wh please call 742·
2n6, or write Riley Me·
Yard Sale Bob Youngs
Clellan. Rutlai\d,OH.
Trailer Park Tues. 30 and
Wed. 1st. Noon to ?
Gwen Folmer Is now something for everyone.
working at Kay's Beauty
Salon, 169 N. 2nd, Mid·
dleport. Coli 992·2725 for
appointment.

TO PLACE AN AD c/LL
In C•llla county

'

Yard Sale July 2 &amp; 3 at Cox
cakesJor all oc· residence, Old State Rt. 160
at E'vergreen acrou from
DeWilh Plumbing,

''

C£ SERVICE

Call Ken Young

DUTY

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

·'

~;~====~5~-l~l-~!f~c~t=======2~-4~·~!fc~t======'~-7~-~~~~~~cj~=====~6-~3-~l~m~o~.:
J&amp;l BLOWN
SUPERIOR
CARPENTER'S

Small investment, large
MASON TEXACO
MECHANIC &amp;
returns, Sentinel Want Ads. ONBODYMANDAILY

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

::

·

~~======~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::~~~~==~-~M~o~~-,~,H~o~m~o~P•;••~·==~
tOYARD
H. L WHITESEL 'REEsEROUSH

~92- 6215

PHONE 992-2156

.:
,,
'• ·
'

· .... coin Laundrin

No Sunday c.ails
3· 11 ·11c

Glenn Cundiff, Jr.
The Rev. Stanley Merrifield gave
a prayer of thanksgiving preceding
the picnic. Ways of making money

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on order of
sale lssoed out of !he Com·
mon Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, In the case of
John Hayes and Eliza~J~&gt;Ih
Hayes, Pla intiffs, vs .
Roland McDole, et al .,
Defendants, upon a
judgment therein ren·
dered, being Case No.
17,786 ,in said Court, I will
offer for sale al the front
door of the Courthouse In
Pomeroy, Meigs County,
OhiO, bn the 8th day of
August. 1981. at 10:00
O'Clock A.M.. the following
lands and tenements, to·

::.,

Gta Llnos
• Dump Truck
eTrencher
Llco'nsed&amp; Bonded .

•'

BISSEll
SIDING CO,
esI lma

Officers were elected at the recent
meeting of the Eagles Class of the
Asbury United Methodist Church
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

have discussed
a while elephant
sale
at the
and it was
agreed
to
were
July 20 meeting. Officers elected
were Helen Teaford, president;
Vera Van Meter, treasurer; and
· Ruth Crouch, secretary. Devotions
were on God's Guidance. Prayer by
Bill Winebrenner closed the
meeting.

1'1\eigs co. Area Cadi
, .14
~Gtlllpoll$
992-Middltport
J'7...,.CIIeshlre
Pomeroy
JA--1-VInlon
915-Chester
245-R lo Grinde
343-Portland
376-WIInul Dlsl.
247'";Letart Foils
25r-Guyln Dlst.
949-Riclne
643-Ar•blt Dist.
742-RUIIInd
MaSOII Co. W. VI.
Are• Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
451-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
812-New Haven
195-Letart
937-Buffalo

.(J)fi'IJI:l'IJJ · ::[1

Annlltlncements

ATTENTION LADIESIII
Help pty off those un·
Wtnled bills working
evenlnga irom 7: 301010:30
· P.m. •• • fashion styllat.
·Earn SI.OO 1o SlO.OO poi'
hlltlr profit. ldetl for
homemtklr with family.
Ctll992-3941 from 9-6.

Gtllil c!o. Area Code
.
6U

:;

· · • I~ ' , .
••~cavlltl..

12 Park.St.
ddl
rt Oh
Ml
epo
• •
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

TheVIIIageol .
M 1'ddleport ' Oh •
' Ph. 992·50 16
or 992• 7505

·

~

were served.

'

~I:'DUU'I:'

BING

Alii\ ·· · .

''Buutiful, Cus1om

Sllm•son

Bernice Winebreriner,

Mrs. Margaret Eichinger, and Mrs.
Nora Houdashelt. Refreslunents

,

PWM
,

~II"'·
JIIIUI nt&amp;~.&amp;: iJ

were distributed to memben to be
passed out to their friends and shut·
ins. ·The program by Mrs. Irene
Parker was entitled, "Children
Withoot Homes." Mrs. Kloes had the
spiritual life closing, "Two Golden
Days.'' Others present were Mrs.
Linda Ferrell, Mrs. Beulah
Winebrenner, Mrs. Christina

Buy Sentinel classifieds

WANT AD INFORMATION

'
'

".,•
fr~~~~==6=·1=5~-t~fcgrr~§~~~~4~-1~7-~tf~cn~~~~~- ~6~·15~·~1mo~-~m~~~~~~5~·2~1~
tf~c~
••'"''~dt•;FuturtRetertttet

birtllday
Mrs. Opal Kloes
wasThe
obBoom
andof Helen
!lice.

Mr~.

IJtitJ Buildiill

Sizes from 4M6to 12M40

Ha_rmongavethesecretary'sreport.
A total of 92 sick visits were repor·
ted, and Miss ' Marcia Karr gave
devotions on the lives of Carrie Ten

Grirrun,

.SANITATION

SiteS

"From ~II"
.• SMALL \.

•

3

· Classified Pages cover the .
followiDg telephone exchanges .•.

•'

At,.Liti•L

·.fnBuM!p

The Daily Senti

mile south of Vinton on

2 mobile homes, 2 bedroom
furnished , 10x50, 12x47.
Brown's Trailer Park,
Minersvi lle, Oh.

Do

to

the

sewer

con -

Stale R!. 160. Old McGhee struction in the area
homestead . Land Contract . Kingsbury Home S~ les is
25 per cent down 8 per cent mov i ng Its 14 w ide mobile

interest or 10 per cent down hOme operation to its
12 per cent Possible renta l Belpre Lot, which is 1618

with com mitt to purchase . washington Blvd_, Belpre,
No fees. Wr ite Bob Mur· Ohio. We will continue to
phy, 433 South FiresTone sell mOdulars, sectionals
and used homes at 1100
Biv ., Akron, Oh4.C301 .
East Main St ., Pomeroy .

--

Double wide home, 112 acre

lot, $23,000, land contract USED Mob ile Home . 576 ·
oppo. Located on Georges 2711.
Creek Rd., Gallipolis, 446·
4765 .
1971 Dorian 12 • 65 , 3
1972 Crown
BY OWNER : 4 Bdr. split·
X 65 with 8 • 10
leveL living room / din ing le;,"pao11:io, 3 bedrooms. 1973
room combination, eat-In

x 65, 2 bedrooms.

kitchen. lg. fam ily rm., 2'1&gt;

1-4 x 70, 3

baths, located in Tara
Estates, Club House and

Nashau, ,,.

firm . Kvger Creek School

WV.

B 11• S

pool privileges, S75 ,000

Viand

District. Shown by appl.
only. 367·7835.
Modified A·frame, three

1974 SchulTZ 14 • 65 , good
. all new carpel,

992·7741.

4591.

bedrooms, two baths, ca r' •~-- 11 • 1 1
furnished , unpet. Sp iral stairs, circular
no and porch, on
stone firepla ce. a acres.
lot. SSSOO. CAll 675·
Large 2 story stone home, 1971

well insullated. with 3 large
bedrooms, one lull bath, 2
112 baths. formal dining
room, newly remodeled kif·
·chen built in Including dish·
washer , basemen! with
work shop , 2 car garage
with work shop, large oar·
den. 2 porches. 5411 Grant

Winchester 12x69,
3bdr ., kitchen. dining area,

bath , utility, unfurnished,

good condition. Call 773·
5728.

Assume loan $1,000 down
on 1979 mobile home , 3
bedrooms, one and half
,cenTral
air .
st.. Middleport.
s59,soo.
:~12 . 96
wanting
quick sale To
senle ,:~:·~~~~:fha ~t~n:T::e:r~e~s~t;
$215.50.
estate. Ca116U·384-3809 for
In·
appointment. (Aller 1PM)

1

House for sale by owner. 197 3 MANCHIN

12x65

Beautiful c;ountry home, 1 mobile home, set up . 304·
v.. acres. 3 bedrooms, large 458-1812 .

living room with fireplace,
family room , I bath, kl!·
c hen w i t h s to v e ,
refrlgerator, lots oi
cabi nets; aTtached 2·car
garage with automatic
door opener. Large barn, 8
x 12 Utility building. Tup·
pers Plains and Chesler
water. with softener . Home
heated bV LP gas, or coa l
and

woodburner

==::::::====;===

33

Farms lor Sale

·~-...!:C~="'-'="--

55 acres, nine room house,
barn, minerals, secluded,

good hunting. Morning Star
area . 565,000. Additional
101 acres available. 9..49-

2630.

ac · In Meigs County, 7 room

comoda!lon. PrQperty Is farm house and build ings,
five
veers old. Other nice with 16 acres. 1·614-7-42·
Carpentry, roof work,
22l9.
house painTing. Free features not mentioned .
Priced
In
low
30's.
985·3560.
EstimaTes. Speciality barn
Must sel l. Leaving stale.
roots. 992-.1349 or 773·5921.
Seven room, ba!h, ail elec·
Modern 3 bedroom total tr
ic home. Approx imately
electric
hoi'ne,
main
HAUL gravel, limestone.
eleven
acres. Has a garage
coal , e!c. Dencll Dunlap. tenance tree. On e large and small pond. S25,ooo.oo.
lot.
Reduced
price.
742·2047.
Phone 675·5215.
Call 675-378-4 or 675·1682 al·
te r 3:00p.m.
Modern 3 bedroom total
._ ...... .
electr ic home. main ·
tenance free. On a large
lot.Reduced price. 742·2047. 3~5--'L"'o,_,
ls~&amp;:.:A
:::c~r.:;
e•::cto:e:..__
lualntll
~1
LOTS
·
Real
nice
campsite
Opportunity
THREE bedroom house, on R~tccoon Cr~k, all
For aale Water Well family room with fireplace, utilities available, S300 .
Drilling Business $20,000. full basement, ail ap· down, owner will finance,
For complete lntormaton pllances and dr~perles . call after 3 p.m., 256·6413.
Call 675-6493. Must 675-1542 after 5 p.m.
NCrlfice-Serlous inquires
Beautiful &amp; level lots. Fai t:
only.
'
OR RENT · almost new l.C X field Church Rd ., approved
70, 3 bedroom. 1 •12 baths, sub division, city IChool,
siHing on nice lot, ready to rural water, 3 3/4 acres1 ·
22
MCIMY to Loan
move Into. Phone 304·576· SIO,OOO. 1 l/ 4 acre $4,500.
FHA·VA·Conwnllat Home 2711.
owner will finance, \0
Loana. Columbus Flrll
down 379·2196.
Morto-gt Co., ol63 Slclllld
5
ROOM
hOtlse
for
salt.
Ave., Galllpotll, Dh., 446·
Call anytime 304-773·5524.
nn
145 ACRES 412·371· 1110-1. '

.

_........ .

.,

�\

June 30,1981

OhiO
Lots &amp; Acruge
4 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd.

close to Rt. 160, $8,000. Call
~-0390.

,.

Apartment
torRent ·
Furn. efficiency apt., $125,
utilfles paid, adults. «6·
3844 after 7 PM.

2 acres on Floyd-Clark Rd.
close to Rt. 160, 11;.000. Furnished efficiency apt.
S125. Utilities pd., Share
Phone «6·0390.
bath, adults. ·call ~- 4416
after3PM.
BY owner, 3 apartment
house on appro•. 1 acre.
Live In one, rent others to Second floor finished ef·
make your payment. Can flclency apt. Furnished,
... I&lt; JuUel,' BID, I
only, no pels. 729 2nd
'Romeo
be converted single home. adults
Ave.
Gallipolis.
Call
~nOI jlisl anolber 'boy
City water, will consider
land contract. 675·1883 9·5 0957.
lirl' ... ?"
p.m.
1
Unfurn. 2 bdr . garage apt. 5,_,1_.,.H,_,o;::u~s:::.e:::hO::I=.d.=G:::ood=s'-­
Call ~- 237 4 or 446·0284, _
Gallipolis.
Brookwood 2 piece sola
unit, queen size hldeabed.
Brown· beige plaid, 5400.00.
1 BDRM. apart. In Mid· Phone 675-1786.
41
Houses for·Rent
dleport, very nice, private
porch, large yard, $175 mo.
House for rent, 57 Olive St. Call 992·5880 afer 6.
53
Antiques
1 bdr., unfurnished, no
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
pets, you pay utilities, dep .
req ., $150. mo. 446·7886. AI· JACKSON ESTATES AP· PORT ANT TO YOU) Will
TS. has 1 bdr. apts. rent pay ca,sh or certified check'
ter 5 446·4045.
starting at $152 per mo. for antiqUes and - collectibles ·or entire estates.
Call 446·2745.
3 bdr. house $275. Very
Nothing too large . Also,
nice, Rodney Village II.
Apartments for rent. Call guns, pocket watches, and
446·4416 after 3PM.
coin collections. Call 614·
4-16-1578.
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
For rent new small 5 rm.
brick, carpet, range, lg. 1 bdr. apt. in Rio Grande. 54 Misc. Merchandise
front porch over looking 0 . Call 446·0157.
River, lawn mo . free. You
RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER·
pay $9.00 water, electric 1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished VICE . Complete sales, ser·
mo. Unfurnished. 15 min. aportments. 992 ·.5434 or 992· vice, supplies and in·
from Gallipolis, lower Rt. 5914 or 882·2566.
slallallon. 446·1324.
7. Want middle age couple
or lady, no children, $200
KACH·ALL portable metal
per mo. Call256· 1198.
· 1 bedroom apts. available buildings, sizes 4fl.x10fl. to
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Coil 12ft.x40ft. Gallipolis Block
Nice 2bdr . unfurl). hOuse. 992·7721.
Co., 1231h Pine St., call 446·
Buill· in range, ·large back
2783.
yard, close"'o school. Call For' rent 1n Middleport--2
256· 1185.
bedroom furnished apart· WONDER STOVE · mfg.
men!. No children. Call 1· by United States Stove Co.,
wood and coal burner with
Re·Listing . 3 bdr ... 1 112 304·882·2566.
blower, Gallipolis Block
bath, fully carpeted, with
g~rage , over look ing Ohio
Co
.. call~ 2783.
Furnished apartment In
River, on Rt. 7. Call 367 Middleport.
1
bedroom,
7270 In Kyger Creek School $125 per month. 992·5545, For Sate: 1000 gallon
district.
weekdays between 1 a.m. PLASTIC septic tanks.
Stale approved . Phone 286·
and 3 p.m.
5930. Jackson, Ohio.
2 bdr. house, basement,
garage . Rose Hill. Furnished apartment, · 2
Pomeroy . Deposit, lease,
deposit required . Sears dehumidifier 20 pt.,
required . No pets $225 per bedroom,
No
pets.
No calls after 6 auto shut off, $80. Call 245·
mo. 614-678·2513.
5602 after 5.
p.m. 992·2937 .

·- ------

Mobile Homes
for Rent
3 bdr. trailer, S200mo. $100
dep. furnished . Phone 367·
42

APARTMENTS .

Fur ·

1371
days,
evenings.

675 ·3812

0271 .

APARTMENTS
AND
Beautiful mobile home MOBILE HOMES 675-4130.
with garage on 1 acre lot .
118 mile from North Galli a Apartments. 675·5548.
High School on Rt. 160.
'Completely furn ., including
washer ahdotlry~r . Call 388· 2 bedroom apartment. Call
675·6020, 9:30 to5.
8436.
.. ·-

EASY credit available now
to · purchase furniture,
televisions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave., 675·1773.
NEEDseveralitemsolfur·
nlture,
appliances ,
televisions. Big discounts
for quanlty purchase.
VI II age Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675·1773.

GALVANIZED Culvert,
$2.35 fl. up. Bridge, etc.
Sleet, lOc lb. up. 925-0884.

.,.,.

E &amp; V WELDING Paint &amp; H &amp; 0 CONSTRUCTION.
Body Shop, GOQrges Creek Remodeling, and repairs.
Rd. Gallipolis, 446·9304, for· Commercial and restden-•
mally 1\\fth Gallipolis tial. Phone 675-6357.
M9tors, 3 years.
CONTINIOUS no leak gut·
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding terlng, cusiom made lor
1175, anv cotor,free piO(Iup \lo~r home. For free
&amp; delivery In Gallipolis estimates, call ADVANCE
area, Hammond Body SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR. 614-698·8205.
ShOp, 221 Mill St. 379·2782.

AIR

•

71

BIG discounts for cash and
carry at VIllage Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773.

CONDITIONERS

sale :priced,
sizes in
stock,
expert allInstallation
available. Village Fur·
nlture, 2605 Jackson Ave.,
304-675·1773.

l-=======::;:=:;:======o:•:::::":-:::::"'~
-

Air conditioned, all utilities
furnished . Outskirts Hen ·
derson . $230. month . Phone
675-6730.
Trailer 2 bedroom, com·
pfetely furnished . washer.
dryer and air condition,
pirvate lot , upper Mason.
References

Required .

Phone 77J.9123.
Furnished two bedroom
trailer 5150 . monthj .
Reference

and

deposit

required.
Apartment
for Rent
House for rent, 57 Olive St.
1 bdr., unfurnished, no
pets, you pay utilities, dep.
req ., $150. mo. 446·7886. AI·
ter 5 446·4045.
44

1 Bedroom apt. all utilities
paid. 675·51().1 or 675·5386,
Pt. Pleasant.
FURM15HED APT . Cen·
tralalr, heat and parking, I
or 2 adults only. ~·0338 .
Apartment for rent, un·
turn., 4 rms., utilities pd.,
no children or pets, ~1637, Galllpolls.OH.
2 bdr. apartment tg . LR
ond Kitchen. Across from
Honda Shop no ~Is . Call
«6·3\137 or 307·0560 .
1 l)dr, unfurn. apartment,
downtown
Gallipolis
location, no pets, adults
only, newly remodeled . &lt;4463.m.

Gibson

niture, 2605 Jackson Ave .. New Holland, 451 Mower,
exc. cond .. 2 yrs. old. CAl)
675·1773. '
446·6566 or 446·4030.
Lowest prices on Bemco

bedding In the area. Call Four 15,00 gallon tanks
for prices: Village Fur· located above ground at
nlture, 2605 Jackson Ave. Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone 1·304·422·2781.
675·1773.

fro s t

Blue Tick pups.
blood line money can
Phone 458·1503.

free

ft . $75. 949·2275.

~

ALL types of granite, mar·
ble, and bronze memor ials.
Display tot on Main St. Pt.
Pleasant Granite com·
pany. Phone 675-5548.

51
Household Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

SOfa, chair, rocker, ot·

loman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa,
!8
Fruit
1
chair and foveseat, $275. 26' TROUTWOOD travel
&amp; vegetables
Sofas and chairs priced trailer and camp site on
from $275. to 1695. Tables, Roccon Creek. Close to Cabbage pick your own, 25
S3B and up to $109. Hide-a· Ohio River. $500 ctown . cents o head . 5 miles below
beds,$340., queen size, $380 , Owner will finance . 614·256· town, GAllipolis. Raynor
Recliners, 1165., S295., 1216.
Peach0rchard,446·4607.

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

Lamps
from from
118. toS79.,
165.to5
pc. dinette!
7 pc,, 1189. and up.
wood -table and 4 chairs,
$350 up to 1495. Hutches,
SJOO. and S375., maple or
pine finish . lledroom suites
· Bassett Oak, $649.,
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete with mat·
tresses, S250. and up to
$350. Captain's beds, S275.
complete. Baby beds, $89.
Maffrnses or box springs,
full or twin, SSS., firm, 165.
and S75. Queen sets, SIBS. 5
dr. chests. S-49. 4 df. chests,
142. Bed frames, S20.and
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
S350.. dinette chairs 120.
and 125. Tappan gas or
electric ranges, S285.
USED
.
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri ., 9arnto5pm, Sat.
~-0322

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES • washers,
refrigerators,
Skaggs Ap·
~~~::.~~~ ~1~918 Eastern

71

'"'"'"'

on sale now. Village Fur-

refrigerator-freezer, 13. cu.

. .. .."..._ .......
. ... .
............

$365.

,,

Bu ilding materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win · .Pony and saddle. Very gen·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude tie. $125.00. Phone 675·3184.

Scaffold. Phone 675·6850.
~

..... .... .
-__ .........

Largest selection of
Zeniths &amp; RCA color TV's
in the area . All 1981 models 6::1--.F"'a"r"m""E"'.q" u";'"'pm=e:::nt;--

Thomas Organ. 2 key boar ·
ds, foot pedals, excellant Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
for beginners or ex · Call 245·5121.
perienced players, $200 .
Call446·4225.
56
Pels for Sale
One bdr. furn . mobile home Furnished efficiency apt. Koken Barber chair, POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
with ref . &amp; dep, no pets, all utilities paid . Deposit barred type, excellant for 7220
.
barber shop or recreation
adults !&gt;Rly, just out side required . Phone 895·3450.
room, $250. Call ~-4225 .
Gallipolis city limits. For
info. call446·3587.
DRAGONWYNO
CAT ·
45
Furnished Rooms
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Topper
3'8"
high
for
pick
SLEEPING ROOMS for up truck, removable back Chow Chow dogs. CFA
2 bdr. mobile home near rent, Gall Ia Hotel.
&amp; full door, good cond ., Himalayan, Persian and
Capt. 0 . Ad~lls only, no
Siamese cats.Seal &amp; cream
S200. Call ~ - 4225 .
pets, sec . dep., and ref . Call
point Him ilayan &amp; While
SLEEPING
ROOMS
and
446 · 2~91 .
Persian kittens. Call ~light housekeeping apt ., 72 Ford pick·up util ity
3844
after 4 p, m.
Park Central Hotel.
S500 or best offer. ldaco
For rent, 10• 50 2 bedroom
Number
10
Drilling
Rig,
mobile home. Racine area .
good condition. Call 446· HILLCREST KENNEL ·
992· 5858 .
4"'6'--__,s,.p,o"'ce,_,_,
foccr_,R,e,_,nt,__
Boarding all breeds, clean
8508.
Office space downtown
indoor-outdoor fa cilities.
6 room house ~ for rent on Gallipolis location, 1st
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
1971 GMC 1500 series pick · mans. Caii«&lt;-7795.
Nye Avenue. $150 per mon· floor, 446·3432.
up, fair cond . 1,200 lb .
th, $50 deposit. 367·7811
tobacco
base. Call388·8351.
Secluded private lraller lot
AKC Reg . Chow Chow pup·
Mobile home, 2 bedrooms. in wooded area . Ideal for
pies, black, red, beige, exc .
Adults only, no pets, that summer outdoors. Stove with microwave pedigree. $400.00 each. Call
deposit required. Utilities Contact Brown's Trailer oven . Call 367·7824.
576·2511 or 762·2035, Glenpaid. 2 mites on S.R. 143. Park; 992·3324.
wood , WVA.
992·~7 .
6,000 BTU air cond. $95,
COUNTRY MOBILE,Home 5,000 BTU air cond. $95, AKC Reg . white male toy
2 bedroom trailer for ren1. Park, Route 33, North of Maytag auto. washer $95, poodle, all shots, house
Brown's Trailer Park . 992· Pomeroy . Large tots. Call Philco refrig. 2 dr . frost broken, 1 female minlatJre
free $125, 30 in. gas range poodle. Call 446·9417.
992·7479.
3324.
$95, Whirlpool port. dish·
washer $55, Whirlpool
Two bedroom furnished TRAILER spaces for rent. refrig. $75. Skaggs Ap· SOUTH AFRICAN peach·
trailer, $180. month plus Southern Valley Mobile pliance, 1918 Eastern Ave., fa ced lovebird and cage.
utilities . $100. deposit.675· Home Park , Cheshire, Oh. Gallipolis, 446·7398.
446 6139.
992·3954.
6987.
10 year POA Pony 5511• in.
POOLS : pleasure Huntseat contest
Two bedroom house trailer TRAILER space 3 miles SWIMMING
on Ashton-Upland Road . fromtown lunclion2&amp;62at PRE -SEASON SALE : 44 7 yr . $600. 9'12 fl. Coach·
t&gt;••• .IJU INSTALLED!! !
$150 plus uti lilies and oldY , 675·3248.
ground pool COM· man truck camper, air con·
damoge deposit . 3 mites
PLETELY INSTALLED ditloner, self contained.
from Rt. 2. 675·4088.
Mob i le
Home
Lots , starting al$999 .00. Price in· Very good . $4,.500. 742·3019.
married couples only . eludes pool, deck, fence,
Two 2 bedroom house Phone 675·1076.
filter , liner , and in · THE FISH TANK end Pet
trailers for rent, furnished,
stallation under normal Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
1 with central air, good for Mobile Home site. Phone ground condition. Free 675·2063, Pt. Pleasant. Out·
working couple or couple 675·4636.
shop at home service. Call ch dwarf rabbits $10.99,
with 1 child. $150 per month
mini lop rabbits $19.99, and
1·800-624-8511.
plus deposit. 675·4088 .
20 gel. aquorlum with full
48 Equipmentfor Rent
Insula red storage building. hoodl51.95. Open 11-4.
2 BDR: mobile home; New ENDLOADER
and 8•10 with 7ft. ceiling. Ideal
Haven, adults only, no pets, backhoe . $80 per day . work shop. $799 . see these AKC
Da c hshund ,
JOH/5·1452 or 675·2996 af· Operate yourself . Ray at Kingsbury Home parts Pomeranian an Poodle
terl.
pups 895·3958.
Beegle, 895·3841.
store.
One bedroom mobile home.

.:========:...L:========:.:l

II"

T.hey'll Do It
I7AP 607 FEPiff' WITII JIAN/OP.
~ 7llii LONE PHoNe •••

CAU. 'lt&gt;&lt;I8ACI(,

liiiNCif~ --'IEM ...
AFTE~ I CAU.

IWjl( .. -

Aute Parts
A AtciiiOriH

1mprovomonts
Hoover Sweepers repaired
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
at empire Furniture, 842
·Auto JNirll, auto repair, Second
Ave, Gallipolis, OH. ••
wre&lt;:~ef
service, . buy
IUtomobiiH, radiators and
RINGLE'S SE~VICE :
batlwtiH. 446·7717.
Complete
bufldln 'g ,
remodeling; repairing, • ·
Allie ltep~lr
T7
iarge or small lobs done ef·
llctentiy. Phone 675·2018 or
ROIERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker 675·4560.
serviCe. "Bill or·amall" we
Sorvlce.
tow lllom alii 2332 Eastern LOCKSMITH
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day Residential, automotive.
· ~- 2.US or N lght · .w.- Emergencv service. Call
112·2079.
4792.

Two mont/1 spring special
for upholstering furniture .
Richard Mowery, Sr. .
Owner. 67H154.

Bumper hitch tor 1980·81 T· Farmall A with cultivators,
Bird or Cougar,half price . good for tobacco, $1200. 304·
Also dog house for sa te. 675· 576·2911 .
6918 .
Gravely tractor with 30
11 HP r iding mower, 2 ch mower, roto tiller, plow
years old, 3().1·675·2959 or and new tires, good con·
dillon $14011. 304-675·6253 af·
304·895·3695.
ter6p.m.
3 TON Lucks air con ·
ditloner, $500. Excellent
coni:liton, 304·895·3936.
Livestock
63
3 yr. old Reg. Angus bu ll.
1 6 ft. Sears Kenmore
DeWalt Radial arm saw freezer
used twice. Ideal Good confirmation. Rt. 2.
with stand, one 5 1!2 ln . for camping or fishing . Thurman, Oh. Call 1·614·
Skill Power hand saw, 1 Phone 675·4001.
286·6333.
Fawn Fleetwood vending
mochlne. Write P.O. Box
205, Gallipolis or call 614· 5-:::Sc_..;B:::U::.:I!!fd:.::ln::.;g'-'S"u"'p"'p"'lie,sc_ Young turkeys for sale. 843·
2542.
~ · 2465 .

nished or unfurnished . 675·

by Larry Wright 76

Every Time

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

.a a_._, ,, .. , . ,., . , , ,
~

0 I 'J I

71

Autos for Sole

PS, PB, PW, $1995. ~ - 7332
between 10 &amp; 7:30 or 446·
2172.
1975 Mercury Monarch
Ghia, SlBOO ; like new Go·
Cart $250. Ph . 256·6495,
Crown Clly, OH .
1981 Buick Regal LTO.,
black, 2dr., red velour in·
terior, loaded, 8,000 mites .
Call245·5405.
68 Flre,blrd 4011 engine. 4

spd ., hurst trans., e•c .
cond., never been driven In
winter, $2000. Call Jackson,
OH, 286·6500 .
78 Camero balck, T·top,
air. cond., AM·FM stero 8·
track . Call 446·4002 ,
Gallipolis.
1977 MGB red convertible,
gd. oond. Call ~- 3939,
Gallipolis .
75 PONTIAC Station ·
wagon, A.T., P.S., P.B.,
air, good cond, $650. 256·
1959.
1974

Equipment
TRUCK
TOPPER,
fiberglas, with sliding win·
cloW lor 61'J lt. GMC .or
Chevy truck, $325. Call 388·
9J3.4 after 6 p.m.

1970 . VW squareback.
overhauled, new brakes.
111611 Cobra truck camper,
Exc . $1,200. 698·680-4.
fully contained, $600.
Harris Float Boat, 24 II
1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675· with motor, many extras.
272~ or 675-5571.
.1977 heavy duty 3/, ton
Chevrolet truck. Fully
MORRISON'S Auto sales. equipped for hauling cam·
Henderson, WV. Phone 675· per. 307·7748.
157~ or 675·2881.
1973 25 Car·a·Van motor
191l MUSTAN'G II GHIA · home. 304-773·5945.
Exc. cond., 31 ,000 miles,
304·675-2205 after 5.
1N9 18 lt. camper. $1800.
304·773·5134 alter 5pm.
1964 Rambler American 4
door, automatic, 6 cylln· 23 foot motor home. Cheap.
der, SSOO.oo. 304·882·2767.
74 Dodge ChaSSIS. Call 675·
4632.
1973 Camero,type LTD,
goodcond . Phone675·1424.
Trucks for Sate
For sale 1976 Chevy Luv
with topper. ~- 1537 after
5PM.
.
72

Truck and 23 fl . 5th wheel
type camper. E•. cond.,
together or separate.
Phone 256·6582 .
1974 Chev. 314 T pick up
truck, $650 , Call 446' 4225 ·
1964 Ford 1/2 ton pick up
standard, 6 cvt., fair cond.,
$150 . Call ~- 3145 evenings
after 5PM.

7..1_ _A::.U:::I:::o:.sf:.:o::.r.=:S::.al:.:e_ _
1972 Datsun truck-sale or
1976 Chysler Cordoba, low trade' for milk cow. 1970
miles, good cond., tilt Toyota Corono for parts.
wheel, cruise, priced rlghl, 304-895·3434.
446·8661. Gallipolis.
1970 Chevrolel6 cyf. Sale or
1975 Toreno auto, 4 dr ., air, Trade. 675·2149.
PS, PB, $650. Call ~ - 7629 ,
Gallipolis.
73
vans &amp; 4 W.O.
1977 VW Sci rocco ex . cond., 1980 JEEP CJ·5, 6·cyl., 4·
40 MPG, price reduced. spd., exc. cond., calf ~·
1211.
Call 446- 9~ , Gallipolis.
75 Ford Granda Ghia, AC,

Camping

...
•

. ····-·'
' -

'" '

'

r

PAINTING · Re!ldential
and commercial. Interior
and exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free estimates. 17
yrs. exp. · with references
call307·7784 or 307·7160.
JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding . 30
years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling .
Coll388·9857 .
·

I

1976 RM 250 Suzuki , S6011.
E•celfent condition, 3o.l·
895·3963.

PLYMOUTH Road
Runner, 360, .- berrf!l, p.s., New Moped . $450.00 Phone
p.b., air cond., am·lm, rear 675·1076.
defogger, new tires,
lOIII lnd
shocks, and battery. Color 75
Motors for Salo
Is metal flake sliver, black
Interior, 47,000 miles, never
been driven In winter, e•c. 1978 FIBERFORM Walklkl
cond . 12300 firm . Call 992· 17 fl .. 115 h.p. Mercury
motor, Jennesee trailer,
5880.
skis a'r.d accoasorles .
$5,000. 256-6002 or ~-2~78 .
1961 Chrysler Imperial, a
classic beauty wit~ every
available option for that 21 ft. Sklffcrall WOOd boat
year, very good cond. Call with C!lddy cabin, complete
covered top, table, lee ba•,
388·9907 ask for George.
sink, 120 HP Inboard·
outboard
MercCrusler
1980 Mustang Cobra turbo, motor and trailer 14,000.
4seats,
spd ., PS,PB,
recaro Calf 446·«J..2, Gallipolis.
AM· FM air,cassette,
sun roof, loaded. 675-6690 .
1.6 fl. boat, 45 h.p. motor,
trailer, ski equipment.
77 Trans Am near loan Exc. cond . S6011. 691·6104.
value $3800. Call ~- 1136
9AMto8PM. .
16 fl. boat, 45 h.p. motor,
trailer, ski equipment.
1969 z-28 and 1976 station Exc. cond . $6011. 691·6104. •
wagon delu•e. Can be aeen
2 miles out 5.R. 143. 992· 1963 1411. GLASPAR ski
~~boat wllll75 HP motor and
trailer, all eccHIOI'IH ex·
1976 Pontiac Sunblrd for ceptsk!s. 11500. Phone )().1·
sate. 6 cyl, 5-speed. 12.300. 195-3-172 after 6 p.m.
GOod condition. 742-2249.
17' BOAT, 120 HP Inboard·
1971 Mercury Marquis outbOard Willi trailer four-door. P.B., P.S., air. tile jackets. S1MIII. :104-576Excellent condition. Ac· 2911. Nlcaple-.boat.
capt trade, S1.395. Call I·
661·3015 • .
Alltt ... I'll
&amp;ACCflllrtl!
1970 Dodge Statton wagon.
S350. Exc. cond. Ingels Fur- 1910 l'rowler ea"'"" 17 n.
niture. 992·2635.
IUIIV lllf contlfflld, ex.
cond. Cell 266-6626, Crown
1N7 Dodge Coronet. 6 cyf., Clty,OH.
auto. 742-26411 or 742-~.
1971 Ford P'lber,i111 Iep1970 V•W IQUartiiiCk. per. Ill 111411111 ..... IIOorl.
overnauted, , _ brektl, l'lloM .....·10?7 lltflf'l
7:QOP'M.
Exc. l1,200. 691..eo4.

, \. .

PROGRAM

·'::I

UNANNOUNCED
®e FAMILY FEUD
riJRICHARDSIIIIIONSSHOW

I"

PEMYTH

'Wildfire' Part I.

8(1) TICTAC DOUGH
l.l) (jj)

MACNEIL-LEHRER'

·1 REPORT

(\OJ

NEWS '

..

7:30 rnDHILLSTREETBLUESTo
· enaure·p eaceandaecurityfora .

1Pr8e identlal ract-llndlng toUr of ;
his precinct, C~ptain Furilto•t
'mu stllrs t arrange atruCes mong
warring
teenage
gangs.
(Repeat; 60 mine.)

[)

() I

[J1

fHALVtS
t
'I I I XJ

l
I

.

j

SAYILE

131 ANOTHER LIFE

WIMBLEDON '81
WOllEN'S QUARTER FINALS

HBO Sports provides ned·day

coverage of the women's
quarter finals in this moat prea!.!W_ioua event in tennis.

JU CIJ JOKER'S WILD
W HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
il l@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11Q)
RICHARD SIIIIIIONS
SHOW
112)QI FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 l if) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 f1) HERITAGE SINGERS
l&amp;·l(fi) QI HAPPY DAYS Fonzie·

I I I) ONJ I rx. I)

. Answer here{

(Answers iomorrow)

'· Yesterday's
'
I Jumbles:

PENCE BURLY REBUKE LIQUID

Answer: Whalthe Inventor of that automallc

II

BORN LOSER

Now arrange the · •
lorm the surprfae
galled by lhe above ca"oon.1.. . 1

'

(4)

Ser·
wv

packaging machine made-'-A BU,tiDLE

JumbloJ-.

rrum-

No. 11, conlllning 110
II IVIIIIblo for S1.15r:Jolhil-1*, Bo• :W. Norwood, N.J. 07&amp;18. lncludlrow
,....., addrtal. ziP coda and mekt chtctl payatMe to Nnspaperboakt.

1ram

gallantly takes Jenny Pi cca lo

F a. K Tree Trimming,
stump removal . 675·1331.

as his bride in a hilarious mock
ceremonyatthaJellerson High

general

lm·
provements. 675·5689, 675·
5304.

12 .

home

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

0

[J1 @I WALTER CRONKITE'S UNIVERSE CBS News

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone ~-3888 or ~- «77

I THIH[ IT GEEMED LIII.E
ALOH6Eil. TIME THAN IT'G
ACTUALLY BEEM,OLIVER..

"'UHTIL MIGG P!:ASE
LEAI/i:G. 'rS, 91\HIB,

{60miOS.)

iTil PRIMAL MAN: HUMAN
FACTOR
8:05 (!) BETWEEN GAMES SHOW
8:30 1 2 111 BASEBALL Cincinnat i

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Healing,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 307·7853.

DILLARDS WATER
DELIVERY Service. Call
~- 7~.
.

Reds vsHouston Astros (In the
~ve nt of a players' strike , alter nate programming will be
&amp;Ired .)
' 3 I GOOD NEWS

AILEYOOP
WELL, '!OU ARE,
SENATOR .. JHANKS
10 DOC \\CNMUG'S
liME· MACHINE!

REAL TIME·

8 'li2JQI LAVERNE AND SHIR·

l'RJI.VEL!
IT'S MIND·
BOGGUNG!

LEY Wh en !he girts step out .
theu, zanv tn enda L enny and
Sq u•ggy bunon their lips for
o nce. and lantas•zeabout what
:. riot hi e would be if they were
silent movre sta r s. (Repeal)
(Closed-Captioned; U.S.A .)

O (l)®J FLOWhenFiomekes

Earl esconhertothetormal ball
mark lng her membership an
exclusive club, he helps her
mn kc a b1g .mpressiOn, but not
l hP k•nd she hoped tor .
(R epeat)
8:35
BASEBALlAtlant a Braves
vs San Francisco Giants

in

m

8:58

OASOUNE Au.EY

9:00

ru not have you

treatinq Rover
like

he's

3 700CLUB
' ol(i2)QI THREE 'SCOIIPANY

m HtLL STREETBLUESToensure p eace and secu rity tor a

a

Pr cs1dentiat lact·finding tour of
h1 s pr ecinct , Ca ptain Furillo
111 ustl irst arrangeatruce among
warr1n g
teenage
ganga .
(Repeat : 60 mins.)
0
~ CBS TUESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Transplant'
1979 Stars : Kev in Dobson .
Mel 1nda Dillon.

doql

m

(l)lfl)

PON'T FReT... niAT
AJ.OTCE
M&lt;.;IVCC::&gt;.

IIVSTERYI 'Aebecca '

Ep is ode 1. Jeremy Brett and
Joanna David star in thialaleot
a young br ide ensnared in her
rtc w husba nd' !! dark peat .
( Ciosed ·Capl ioned : U.S.A.)
(60 m•ns.)

WINNIE

9:30 (4) MOYIE ·IDRAIIIAI "\lo

)I:)U!VE
TO

"IEiectrk; HorNmen" 1871
(J) 1m. TOO CLOSE FOR
COIIIFORTHenry lo in a otale of

shock . Jackie and Sara th ink

,, . s exciling , and Muriel is torn
w•th anxiety when she gets a
photoassignmenttoS'hoot a pro
too tball star in the buff for a "
magazine
centerfold .

..
10:00 (})&lt;UJGIHARTTOHARTWhen
(Re~al)

Jo.nathan is miatakenly gi~en
$100 ,000 to kill an important

polil •cian , he poses as a hit men
to unravel the murder plot , and
a(ter Jenniteriakidnapped seta

otl explosive action at a coa·

'
....

BARNEY

VOU SHOULDA SEEN
HER TH' DAV WE
GOT HITCHED

WOW!! WHAT A.

..

BEAUTIFUL OLD
ANTIQUE!!

NOW HAULING house coal
Call for estimates 367·7101

tume ball when he and MIJI,
who ' s disguised in a shock ing
co stume , scheme to sa we her
l•t e . (Repeat ;- 60 min1 .)
(Ciosed ·Captioned ; U.S.A.)
m NERO WOLFE Duling Nor·
o's inwestigetlon of the dlaap·
pear anee of a ahipplno eJIIeCu·
tive, Archie 11 almoat run down
by a speeding auto , and ia
slugged and later locked up In a
t rf!ezor as he loliowa a aerie aof
leads. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
·

•

~Soli~

, t0:28 f11 CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 f11
UNANNOUNCED
&lt;t J INSIDE I TOllY
(fl) TWtLtGI4T ZOIIE

:~:: rn•-mar~:~.
NI!WI

'

I TIUNK

"

IT'SEiONMA
60 IN

rrs~61m.v

MARCIE!

lfi.IILL,

~1£~,

. 3I IOU NO Of TP.UMPITI
ri I
NAACP' NATIONAL
COIWEIIENCI!AndrowVouno,
Cor8tta1Cing, Julian Bond end

' e· '"'

Mowreys Upholstery Rt. 1
lOx 12A, Pl. Plttllnt," )().1675-4154.

NORTH

Here is another slam band
from the Cavendish charity
tournament. The NorthSouth bidding at this table is
not recommended, but they
did very well in the re!ult
column. ·South won the club
lead and proceeded (o cash
three dtamonds. three
' spades, two hearts and a
club for plus 600. Those
pairs wboJlayed a( four
hearts scor 650 and gained
two IMPs each at the
expense of this particular
pa1r.
However, the Held of at
least 14 of the 20 NorthSouth pairs reached the good
contract of six hearts only &lt;o
wind up minus I 00 when
hearts failed to break.
Tbus, this pair gained 12
IMPs against each of the
unfortunate slam bidders for
plus 168 IMPs and lost a
total of I 0 IMPs to those
who played in five hearts to
gain a net of plus 158 IMPs
for their bad btdding.
If tbe hearts bad dropped,
this pair would have made
seven for plus 720. T)ley
would lose 12 IMPs to each
of the 14 ·slam bidders and
while they would get a few
back from those who played
the heart ume thev would

in thle " ' ' " ol epeclala th1t

+AKQI082
.• 6 5
WEST

EAST

+J97

+10652
'QJ5 ·:

'7+J765 3
+H/82

Cha!~Jp l anlhipa.

'

,,
"'

+9

. .

+J1074J
SOUTH

+K 4 3
'KI0 96412

t4
+lt9

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

Pass
Pass
Pass

Nortb

EaSI

t+
3+
3+

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+2

have lost - over 15b IMPs
instead of gaining the same
amount.
Then[ the East-West pair
who Jl ayed against them
would have gained 150 IMPs ·
through sood luck and would
have fimshed eighth in the
field instead of lffth .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
2Liqueur
I Bucket
flavoring
5 Crumbly
3 Then
10 "- Christie" I Secular
lllnstantly
5 Words ·of
1% Commiser·
faith
ation
6 Guidry
13 Singing
of baseball
sisters
7 Almost
14 Rowan
immediately
Yesterday's ADBwer
IS You (Ger. ) 8 Fabled
21 "Double 25 Hatch
16 Texas peak 9 Think on
Indemnity " 27 "Stop, mAte!"
17 Filtered
11 Traversed,
author
28 Coiffure
19 Allegiance
as a ferry 22 Vatican
jewelry
20 Contemptible IS Coarse
chapel
29 Sequence
one
tobacco
23 Balustrade 34 Ending for
21 SoMy's ex 18 Volcanfc
24 "Terrific"
rub or nwn
zz Troll
ppex
pitcher
3S Tea variety
23 Incursion
%4 Math tenn
%5

Actress,
Barbara-

2C IA!tter
t7 Awaken
30 Bar passer
(abbr.)

31 Clever
1 convict (sl.)

,3% Tree
33 Workable
35Garbed
31 Set of nine
37 Bunny
38 Have a
second go
'38 Roee essence

b-+-++-+-t-

OOWN
I Of the
Vatican

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -flere'k how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
It

LONGFELLOW

. One letter simply slandt lor ano1her In th iS sample A it
'used for the three L's, X for lhc two &lt;l'&gt;. &lt;·1&lt;. Si ngle lellers,
apo11trophes, the length and formation col 1he wordo are all
biota. Each day ·the code letters are ditferent.
CllYnOQ\IOTES
'\

1'..

NVOBG

WZ

WA.

SXFHAZ

~

FZ

BV

Oi\B WS . WB '.

TFAUXH
SVVI

OMVA

TXKBZ

ROHWXZ . - KOSJXH -SN BB

· - IMIChol lri tile All·

!IIQiand

6-J0-81

+AQ8
'A8

~£VtWwd'

Jouo JackiOft wfR partleipalo

doya ooti¥tllel.
11:01
T811-IIIWI
11:11
CM_UPDA1'1 . . . .
11:30 mern WAl.IDOIITIIINIIItiCIIIUGHTI The ,.auHa
aodllighllgllllof irllportoallalt

'

slam hand

' By Oswald Ja&lt;Oby
ud AIID Soatag

DR.WAT&amp;ON

&lt;Ill NEWS •

Mobile homes moved,
llcenled, and bonded . 576·
2711 or 675·4398.

'(,

f

ITl SHERLOCK HOlliES AND

Light Hauling, tree work,
garage and basement
cleaned out. call anytime
245·92~. ASk lor Rov, Thur·
man,OH .

" - ---·.:Ucph"'o"'ll"'te~rvL__
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
446·7133 or ~- 1133 .

m CBN UPDATE NEWS

An't&gt;ld erwoman adopt sJack as
hPr su rr oga te son and smothers
h1m w1lh motherly love to the
po•nl o t mt erruptlng his roman·
h e •ntertu de with a beautiful
blonde. CRapeal) (Cioaed·
C &lt;.~pt lo ne d , U.S.A.)

&amp; limestone for driveways.

ii-===;;;;:;;:;::==

Special Correspondent Walter
Cronkite anchors this science
ma ga zi neseriea, ex a mining the
lull sco pe of scientific acli\lity
Involving the widest possible
range o f human c uriosity.
(f ) NOVA 'The / Sc ience of
Murder' Nova looks at the reality of murder through the eye a of
p eople whose j ob it is to deal
w•th death, lorensic scientists
and law enforcement profea s•onals Also fea tured is a discussion of the fn91ir..:~s and conch t•ons which creil'te this na·
t1o n·s cl imate ol murder.
(CI.:tsed·Captioned; U.S.A.)

ANNIE

UTHERN SERVICE
· Healing ' mobile
furnaces, electric hot
tank repair. Call of·
flee, 446· 3008 night,
emergency no. 307-7131 .

Ashworth 'Installment Ser·
vice. Carpet, vinyl,
ceramic tile, I I - tile, for·
mica counter tops, all work
guaranteed: Call ~-8019.

BRID.GE

costume ball, only to suffer the
most outrageous shock of his
life when the marriage proves to
be binding . (Repeal}
(7l LOBO It's another typical
day tn the Atlanta police station
when Sheri ff lobo investigates
a mad bomber whose carefully
plannedblast sripapart unlikely
c •ty targets. (Repeat ; 60
mina .)
·

T and R building,
remodeling, also papering,
carpet Installation, and

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
woter delivery . Call 256·
9Wanytlme.

'

EVENING

CIJ

RON'S Teteylslon Service.
Specializing In Zenith end
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454:

BING'$ CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION ·Specializing
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
basement. oarege floors
and etc. Free Htimates. 11
Ytln experience. Call 367·
7891 .

your hOuse neod a
feco 1111? Or just a little
makeup? Call me &amp; I' II
rtavelllaoklftO vouno aoaln
In no time. Will doall typn
of Interior work; panelinG,
c:etnnes. ''-'"'' otc,; plus
exterior work, rootlne;
IIIJIItllng, lftV IIZI lnd
-... II ,..,. experience
In Clflltlllry. ltoforencn
provided upon requatl. 992·
6293.
·
.

•,

l:OO m 8 PM MAGAZINE

INTERIOR and e•terlor Fuller Electric Co. Com·
painting, Mark While, call pfete rewiring, commercial
245·9561 .
or residential. and elec·
tricot malntalnance, also · ~ ·
on
call. Ph . 446·2171, •:
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
'. .
pet Cleaning featured by Gallipolis.
Hoffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates. SEING Machine · repairs.
service. Authorlzect Singer
Call446·2107 .
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Fabric Shop,
WOODSHOP • Cabinets. Scissors.
picnic
tables,
porch Pomeroy . 992·228A .
swings, most wood produc·
ts. 101 court ,st., Gallipolis. 'JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
Call446·2572 .
N. air condition service,
commercial, 1ndustrlal.
WEATHERALL CON · Phone882· 207~.
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, calf 675·1582.
15
General Hauling
LIMESTONE, gravel and
PAINTING · Interior and sand. All sizes. AI Rlchards
uterlor, plumbing, and Son, Upper River Rd .,
roofing, some remodeling. Gallipolis, Ohio. Call ~ :zo yrs. e•p. Call388·9652.
7785.

o-

'

JUN! 30, 1VB1

HARPER Halstead, lawn
mower repair and shar·
penlng service, 10 a.m. -6
p.m. 675·5168.

COOK'S Television
vice, Henderson,
Phone 675·2250.

•

~ewmg

D. C.· Contractors Plum·
bing, efeclrlcol, healing,
rooting, aluminum, vtnyl
siding, and home painting.
CALL ~-2801 fQr termite, 675·3376 or 675·1240.
roach , bird, rodent,
Excovallng
spiders, fleas and. other 13
small Insect control . Free
estimates given. A tocat DOZER · backhoe, dump
MUST SELL, Make me an company
locaed In truck. Call ~- 4537.
offer 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyf , 4 Gallipolis area.
Bill
spd, tow mileage, canvos Thomas.
DOZER work · excavating,
top, will trade, calf ~·1211
land cteartng. Call446·0051.
or 446·3594.
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
textured ceilings, com· COMPLETE SEWER IN·
1965 C·JS Jeep, cloth top merclal and residential, STALLATION &amp; backhoe
and . metal top, $1,200. free estimates. Call 256· service for the Racine·
Phone 675·1.564.
Syracuse sewer district.
1182.
Dozer work If needed. 949·
7.,;:4_ _,;,M:::oto=r:..:c:~.Y.::CI~es=-._ SANDERS
CON · 2293.
1974
Norton
850 · TRACT I NG, Carpentry
Commando, 1~27 actual work &amp;. painting, concrete, Dozer work . Small lobs a
specialty. 742·2753.
miles, orglnal, exc. cond., landscaping, ~- 2787.
$2,000, Colt ~ · 8637 .
INSTALL fireplace facing EDWARD'S Backhoe and
1980 suzuki GS 550, limited or Chimney, dry wall. Dozer Service. Specializing'
edition, 1,342 miles. Calf plaster, stucco,. free est. In septic tank . 675·1234.
Simulated brick or stone,
256·9307 after 5:30PM.
Greg llurdet!e, call 675· BACKHOE Serv ice . Larry
6357.
' Sldenstrlcker. 675·5580.
197~ 360 HOnda new tires.
new battery, good con·
HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE 14
dillon, 5400. Calf ~-7754.
Electrical
Contractors · Build, siding,
I Refrigeration
remodel~ concrete, roofing,
1979 Honda CB 750K, tow free estimates. Call col. , QUALITY Cooling and
mileage/ ex. c:ond., extras. 614-259·2814 aSk for Charles Healing Service. call 388·
Call-446-2714.
or Mike.
9698.
1980 KDX Kawasaki 175.
Good cond. S950. 992·7039 .

Television
•

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
81
Home
AND HEATING
Improvements
Route 160at Evergreen
FOR BEST In Carpet Phone ~-2735 .
Cleaning · Cali Smeltzer's
GENE PLANTS
Steamway. Call 614-~AND SONS
2096.
Plumbing · Heating · Air
conditioning. 300 Fourth
STANLEY STEEMER
Ave. Ph. 446·1637.
Carpel Cleaning
~-4208

.

ID!CKTRACY

TI• '

A

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

1uesday, June 30, 19t1

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Accident victim said fair
Jeff Thornton, 20, Racine area,
.was injured when struck by a truck
as it was backing up to a gas well on
private property in Rutland Township on Monday evening the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department reported.
Driver of the truck was Evert
Harrell, who is employed by Central
Oilfield Supply, Logan.

Thornton was taken to Veterans night.
Memorial Hospital and was admitted. According to the sheriff's
Deputy Manning Mohler apdepartment Thornton is listed in fair prehended the two . men afier
condition.
arriving at the scene·and finding gas
The department arrested James cans and a hose that was left beside
A, Will, 19 and Robert E. Johnson, one ofthetrucks.Thetwoarelodged
21, both of Pomeroy, in connection . in Meigs County Jail and are exwith the theft . of gas from the peeled to appear in Meigs County
Salisbury Township garage Monday Court today.

Meigs County happenings •••

•

•

Deputies probe
minor complaints
Two reported thefts and a minor
accident are being investigated by
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
Mrs. Clara Heines, Hemlock
Grove, reported at 16 horsepower
riding mower was taken from her
property Saturday mornin!l.
Anna Leamond, Racine, reported
that late Friday or ea rly Saturday
lumber was b ken from where a
house is under construction un Tanners Run Road . Two weeks ago rafters were taken.
John R. Krider, 20, Rt . 1. Long
Bottom, said sometime Sunday
night his truck was struck while
parked at a night club below Mid·
dleport on SR 7.

Announce winners
· Winners in the first Big Bend
Regatta chain saw cut contest held
at Marauder Stadium Sunday afternoon were conducted today.
Class wi nners, first through third,
respectively, were : 0 to 2 - T. R.
Cullums. Lowell Ridenour, George
Francis; 2. 1 to 3.5 - Debbie
Cheva lier. Bruce A. Myers, Rich
Koblentz; 3.6 to 4.5 - Elmer Newell,
Don Lambert, John B. Ridenour ; 4.5
to 5.5 - Dun Lambert. John Swarz.
Steve Nelson; 5.6 and up - T. R.
Cullmns, Don Lambert. Russ Well ;
open stock. 0 to 4.5 - John B.
Ridenour. T. R. Cullums; 4.6 and up,
open stock, Don Cullums, John B.
Ridenuur. T. R. Cullums: modifi ed,
T. R. Cullums, Rob Birchfield, Mark
Goeglei n.

Truslt'c•s will llH't'l
Olive Township Trustees will meet
in regular season Thursday. July 2.
at 7:30p.m. at the Reedsville Fire
Station.

Vaccinate 77 animals
Sixty-ei!lhl dogs and nine cats
were vaccinated against rabies at a
recent rabies clinic sponsored by the
Meigs County Department of
Health.
Dr. David Krawsczyn who conducted the clinic felt that the event
was worthwhile because ap. proximately 90 percent of the
animals vaccinated were animals
which he had not worked with in the
past. Mrs. Jennifer Krawsczyn and
Nancy Ackerman assisted with the
clinic. The next rabies clinic will be
held in the smruner of 1982.

Enwrg-c·ncy calls
Six emergency runs were made by
loca l units Monday, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Service reports.
Middleport at I: 17 p.m. treated
Ruth Maag at her Lincoln St. home;
Middleport at 4:42 took Clara Peck
from Cook Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at I :01
p.m. took Margaret White, Ebenezer
St.. to Veterans Memorial ; Rutland
at 2:55 p.m. took Chad Williams,
Main St., to Veterans Memorial ;
Rutland at 7:29p.m. took Jeff Thornton to Veterans Memorial, and Tuppers Plains at 2:27 p.m. took Carl
Findling, Sumner Road, to Veterans
Memorial.

To c•nd marriag-t•s
A. Evelyn Woodford, Syracuse,
and Freddie S. Woo dford ,
Harrisville, W. Va .. and Therrill S.
Randolph, Jr., Reedsville, and
Debra K. Randolph, Parkersburg,
filed for dissolution of marriage in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Cheryl A. Imboden was granted a
divorce from Ernest E. Imboden, II
and Linda Beliveau granted a di vorce from Michael Beliveau.
Kenneth E. Hayes was appointed
as a special deputy sheriff.

.Parade entrants
being accepted
Entries .for the "Fourth of July
Celebration" in Racine are still
being accepted by the Racine Volunteer Fire Department. Any individual, group, or organization is
welcome to participate in either the
parade or talent show.
Prizes will be awarded. to parade ·
wfnners, including theme and ·nonthem e floats, ·and three bicycle
divisions. The annual parade will
begin at!~rounds
10 p.m.in atRacine.
the Junior High
School
After the parade the Volunteers
will have a chicken barbecue at the
fire station, host games at the Junior
High School, sponsor a talent show
at 8 p.m., and host a beautiful
fireworks display. Highlight of the
day will be the crowning of Miss
Racine, a comedy act by the Racine
Firemen. The talent show itself wiU
award prizes of $50, $25, and $10 to
the first three places. Entry fee for
the show is $2.50. Admission is one
dollar for adults and 75 cents for
children over 12.

BLOWN APART- ASpring Valley, Calif. fireman
works his way through the remains of an apartment
building that exploded Monday morning in Spring

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'

No Frills~-Just De.a ls
THE WHOI.E MONTH OF JUI.Y, WE'I.L BE CELEBRATING OUR

15th ANNIVERSARY ·
To show our appreciation for your patro.nage, over the past 1Syears,
we're making our most popular tire available at affordable prices.
Watch our ad for more deals each week.

.

Yard salt• st'f
The Junior American Legion
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post
128, will hold a yard sale at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Parsons, at
the crossroads behind the Dairy
Delight on SR 143 on Thursday,
Friday and Saturday beginning each
day at9a.m.

I

REMINGTON
TIRE SALE
rv a·

..

Prolw minor wrt•&lt;'k
Light damages were reported to
two cars in Hn accident on Nye Ave..
Monday. Pomeroy Police said a ca r
driven by Ca rl R. Hall , Jr ..
Pomeroy. went left to center and
struck a ca r driven by Isaac Mohler,
Route 4, Pomeroy. There were no injuries.

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
ROLL-UP

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Wayne Samuel Michael to Sybil
Ebersbach, parcels, Chester.
Sybil Ebersbach to Wayne Samuel
Michael, Gary I. Michael, Parcels,
Chester.
Hattie C. Woodard to Hattie C.
Woodard, William A. Woodard, Parcels, Rutland.
Noah Chasteen, heafy Chasteen to
Kramer Exploration Co., Right of
Way Agree., Rutland.
Noah Chasteen, Leafy Chasteen to
Kramer Exploration Co., Meter site
agree., Rutland.
Christina &amp;huler O'DonneU to
William F. O'Donnell , Lot,
Pomeroy.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vt•lt•rans l\1t&gt;mnrial
Admitted--Mi ldred
Hudson,
Pomeroy; Eugene McKenna,
Rutland ; Julia Payne, Rutland;
Clara Peck, Cheshire; June
Rid~nour, Chester; Jeffrey Thornton. Racine.
Discharged-Olive Young.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JUNE 29
Phyllis Dailey, Billy Board,
William Boggs, Roy Burns, Jack
Cash, Kathleen Chapman, Opal
Conger, Marvin Deckard, Irene
Dickens, Patricia Ferguson, Faye
Gibbs, Diana Gill, Mrs. John
Gillespie and daughter, Mrs. James
Harless and daughter, Patricia
Howell, Jo Ann Jennings, Mrs.
Michael Johnson and daughter, Barbara Magneson, Doug Randolph,
Norman Rayburn, Isabelle Scott,
Margaret Stichtenoth, Seth Sobert,
Lisa Vickers, Dorothy Wiseman
Mrs. P'aul Wright and daughter
'
BIRTHS
Mr. and Ml'8. George Cupp Jr.,
daughter, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Zinn, son, Thunnan .

PORCH BLINDS
-

VINYL SLATS
NYLON STITCHING
6FT. DROP
STOCKED IN 4', 5', 6' , 8' and 10' WIDTHS

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

I

FREE INSTALLATION AND BALANCING

Marriag-e· lirc•nst'
A marriage license was issued to
Wilson Patrick Kelley, 34, Guysville,
and Madolyn Mae Pickett, 23, Rt. 2.
Pomeroy.

Valley. Eight persons were injured in the yet unex- .·
plained mishap, only one seriously. (AP Laserphoto).

..

SIZE

IACH

EXCISE

A78-13
878-13
C78-13
878-14
C78-14
E78-14
F78-14
G78-14
H78-14
G78-15
H78-15
L78-15

t33.45

1.69
1.80
1.90
1.92
1.93
2.14
2.28
2.44
2.62
2.50
2.72
2.95

~

....,-;u
34.52
35.39 .
37.40
' 38:Jff

--.s.a

~··
.45.69
47.12
49.20

POMEROY
606 E. Main
Front End

Alignment- ~

TAX

'tREAD WEAR 120
. .

HOME . ~ &amp;

.AUTO

Ph. 992-2094
Pomeroy, Ohio
$12.50 Most Passenger Cars -- Brake Service

•

-The-Great
Decision Maker
' '

More often than not', she's the one who buys the clothing
and the groceries for her family . And she's a smart shopper.
·In these days of double-digit inflation, she can't afford not
to be. She'll spend money on the barg_ains that·will stretch
those dollars, as long as she knows shere they are.
That's why she reads The Daily Sentinel
· She
knows that she can save time· and money by finding the
values and money-saving coupons that are included eve ry
day in the The Dally Sentinel
Read the The Da_lly_s.entlnel You'll discover why .sma t t
shopp~rs shop us first .

•

The Daily Sentinel -.
992-2156

..

'

I

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